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|
*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 75322 ***
TOM SWIFT AND HIS HOUSE ON WHEELS
OR
A Trip to the Mountain of Mystery
By VICTOR APPLETON
AUTHOR OF
"TOM SWIFT AND HIS MOTORCYCLE,"
"TOM SWIFT AMONG THE DIAMOND MAKERS,"
"TOM SWIFT AND HIS TALKING PICTURES,"
"THE DON STURDY SERIES,"
ETC.
_ILLUSTRATED_
NEW YORK
GROSSET & DUNLAP
PUBLISHERS
Made in the United States of America
COPYRIGHT, 1929, BY
GROSSET & DUNLAP, INC.
_Tom Swift and His House on Wheels_
[Illustration: "A RACE! WE'LL SEE WHAT YOU CAN DO AGAINST THE HOUSE ON
WHEELS!"]
CONTENTS
I. STRONG WORDS
II. THE NEW INVENTION
III. NED'S SUSPICIONS
IV. SURPRISING NEWS
V. WORK AND WORRY
VI. THE TRYOUT
VII. THE RACE
VIII. CUNNINGHAM ON THE WIRE
IX. DISMAL MOUNTAIN
X. JEALOUSY
XI. TRAILING THE MYSTERY
XII. THE WARNING
XIII. THE DESERTED HOUSE
XIV. A STRANGE DISAPPEARANCE
XV. ON THE TRAIL
XVI. TWO STRANGE MEN
XVII. THE CAPTIVE ESCAPES
XVIII. SHOTS FROM AMBUSH
XIX. PRISONERS
XX. IN THE CASTLE
XXI. PLOTS AND PLANS
XXII. THE ESCAPE
XXIII. SETTING THE TRAP
XXIV. JUST IN TIME
XXV. WEDDING BELLS
TOM SWIFT AND HIS HOUSE ON WHEELS
CHAPTER I
STRONG WORDS
Tom Swift, with a negative shake of his head, shoved several papers
across the table that separated him from a burly, red-faced man whose
eyes narrowly observed the young inventor.
"Then you refuse this contract, Mr. Swift--a contract for constructing
over one hundred thousand dollars' worth of machinery on which you can
make a handsome profit? You absolutely refuse it?"
The red-faced man in his eagerness was leaning forward now.
"Yes, Mr. Cunningham, I refuse!" was Tom's crisp answer. "The Swift
Construction Company does not care to handle it."
Mr. Barton Swift, father of the young man who thus calmly turned down
what seemed like a good business proposition, nodded in affirmation of
what his son had said.
"Is that your last word?" asked Basil Cunningham, who plainly showed
his English ancestry, not only in his face and figure but in his
general bearing and manner. "This refusal is final?" he inquired.
"Quite final and complete," answered Tom, as he added another document
to the pile of those he had pushed toward his visitor. They were blue
prints, specifications, and contract forms, but they all went across
the table. "The matter is closed."
"But, look here! I say, now!" and Mr. Cunningham began to wax excited,
not to say wroth. "I can't understand----"
"Do you mean to say you don't understand English?" asked Mr. Swift, and
the smile on the face of the aged inventor took away whatever sting
there might otherwise have been in the words. "I thought my son spoke
very plainly. He said 'no,' and that's what he means."
"But look here, Mr. Swift! Do you agree with him?"
"Absolutely!"
"And you won't consider the contracts further?"
"The matter is closed, I told you!" and Tom Swift's voice was a bit
sharp now.
With an imperious gesture the burly Englishman gathered up his papers
and began to stuff them into a leather brief case bulging with other
documents. If possible the red of his face deepened.
"Well," he began, "of all the----"
Tom Swift looked up sharply. He was on the verge of saying something
that, he himself admitted, he might later have been sorry for when the
door of the private office opened and a veritable giant of a man fairly
squeezed his way through the doorway.
"What is it, Koku?" asked Tom, not quite pleased with such an
interruption at this time.
"Excuse, Master," murmured the foreign giant, whose struggle with a
strange tongue sometimes got the best of him. "But new engine him have
come an' Mr. Jackson say him got to be lift up--so I lift if you want."
As if to demonstrate his strength, the giant put one finger under the
edge of the heavy table around which the three men sat and, with as
much ease as if he were lifting a feather, tilted it.
"My word, man! Don't do that!" cried Mr. Cunningham, for one of his
feet was close to the leg of the table and he evidently feared the
weight would come down on his toes when Koku let go.
"Don't worry," said Tom, with a smile. "Koku won't drop it."
Fascinated by this remarkable exhibition of strength, by which the
giant raised several hundred pounds on one finger, the Englishman
started to move from his proximity to Koku. But there was no need of
alarm, though the timely entrance of Tom Swift's gigantic henchman had
evidently stopped a tirade that was on the lips of the visitor.
"That will do, Koku," said Tom, in a low voice. "I will see Mr. Jackson
shortly and look at the new engine."
"Yes, Master," murmured the giant, whose whisper, however, was a hoarse
bellow in contrast with others.
Koku took himself out and Cunningham, staring at the closed door as
though he could not believe what he had seen, continued to stuff his
rejected contracts into his case.
"I'm sorry about this," said the Englishman in more subdued tones than
he had used before the advent of Koku. "I'm not only sorry, but I'm
disappointed and I think I haven't been fairly treated." His anger was
rising again, that was evident.
"How do you mean--not fairly treated?" asked Tom sharply.
"Why, dash it all, when I first broached this matter to you I was as
much as given to understand that your firm would go ahead and make the
apparatus for me."
"You were given to understand nothing of the sort," replied Tom quietly.
"I say I was!" and the Englishman banged his fist hard on the heavy
table that Koku had raised with one finger. "I tell you I have been
shamefully treated here, and I'm not going to stand it. I----"
Again the door suddenly opened and Basil Cunningham made a move as if
to hide beneath the table he had so lately pounded. But instead of
Koku, this time the intruder was an aged and decrepit colored man whose
whitening, curly hair made a pathetic frame for his black, wizened
face. No gentler creature, as a man, could well have been visioned, and
Mr. Cunningham, who had evidently been expecting a return of the giant,
looked a bit foolish.
"Did yo' all call me, Massa Swift?" asked the negro gently.
"No, Rad, we didn't call," said Tom, with a kind smile at the aged
servant who often claimed, regarding the young inventor: "I done
nussed him from a baby, dat's whut I done!"
"'Scuse me, Massa Tom," went on Eradicate. "But I thought I done heard
a noise in here, an'----"
"We were just talking, Rad, that was all. We have about finished," and
Tom looked significantly at the red-faced Briton. "I'll call you if I
need you, Rad."
"Yes, sah," and Eradicate shuffled out.
"There is no use in further wasting your time or my own, Mr.
Cunningham," proceeded Tom Swift, when the three again faced each
other. "My mind is fully made up, and you see that my father agrees."
"I agree fully with my son," added aged Mr. Swift.
"Then I'll have to get somebody else to carry out this contract!"
snapped Mr. Cunningham. "I'll go to some firm that knows how to take a
big profit when it's offered."
"That's your privilege," replied Tom, smiling. "We don't want it."
There was something so final in his words that Mr. Cunningham knew
better than to try other arguments. The last paper was thrust into the
case, and the way in which the Englishman snapped the lock showed his
anger. He caught up his hat, muttered a "good-day," and hurried out.
"Well, that's that," said Tom Swift, with something between a sigh of
relief and regret.
"Tom, you did just right!" exclaimed his father. "I didn't want to
interfere, but you gave him the right answer. We want nothing to do
with his sort, even though we may have to close down the plant on
account of lack of orders."
"We are running a bit short," Tom admitted. "And with all I spent on
the talking pictures, with no prospect of any substantial revenue from
them for some time, we may be financially up against it soon, Dad."
"Don't worry, Tom. We'll pull through, somehow. You can keep busy,
can't you?"
"Oh, yes, I've got to finish my House on Wheels," and Tom fairly
spoke of it in capital letters, so near to his heart was this newest
invention.
"Ah, yes, Tom, your House on Wheels," and Mr. Swift chuckled a little.
"I've been looking it over now and again. Seems as if you had a pretty
good thing there."
"I hope it will work out," responded the young man.
"Looks as if you were fitting it up for a trip around the world," went
on his father smiling. "Are you?"
"Not exactly, Dad."
"I might make another guess, Tom, my boy," and still the aged man was
laughing.
"Well, there's no law that I know of, Dad, to stop you from making
guesses," and Tom busied himself over several papers that seemed to
need close attention.
"Well, then, Tom, I'll guess that you're going to use your new House on
Wheels for a wedding journey. How about that?"
"Who says anything about a wedding trip?" cried Tom, his face almost as
red as the Englishman's had been.
"Oh, no one has _said_ anything, Tom," his father answered mildly. "But
from the manner in which you and Mary Nestor have been going about of
late, looking into furniture store windows and----"
"Oh, there's too much talk going on in this town!" exclaimed Tom, and
his father laughed heartily at his son's evident discomfiture.
"Well, wedding trip or world tour, your new House on Wheels appears to
be a clever bit of work," went on Mr. Swift. "When will it be finished?"
"Can't say, exactly. Though now that the new engine has arrived,
as Koku informed me, I can rush things. I've been waiting for the
machinery. That's why I'm glad, in a way, I didn't have to take on the
Cunningham contracts."
"Valuable as they were," remarked Mr. Swift.
"Valuable as they were," agreed his son. "And now, if you'll excuse me,
Dad, I'll go take a look at that new engine."
"I have some matters to attend to myself," said old Mr. Swift, who,
though he had given up active participation in the plant some time
before, still maintained a general supervision over certain matters.
He left the private office just as Ned Newton, the young financial
manager, entered in some haste. Nodding to Tom's father, Ned turned to
the young inventor and asked:
"What's this I hear about you turning down Cunningham's work?"
"I don't know, Ned, what you heard, nor how, so I can't reply."
"I was just coming in through the yard when I saw Cunningham getting
into an auto with a man who had a face like a rat's. He was a stranger
to me; but I knew Cunningham, of course. Say, he was mad, that
Englishman! I heard him muttering something about your having refused
his contracts and, as nearly as I could make out, he was cussing you up
hill and down dale and threatening not only to take his contracts to
another firm but to get even with you as well."
"Yes he was angry when he left here," admitted Tom. "But that's all
bosh about his going to get even. It was a plain business proposition.
Cunningham is a good business man, whatever else he may be, and
business men don't look for revenge just because one firm won't do
their manufacturing for them."
"Maybe not. It might have been a lot of superheated atmosphere. But
I can't understand, Tom, why you didn't take his work. There would
have been a good profit in it, you told me, after the preliminary
investigation."
"Yes, the profit was there."
"Well, then, what was wrong with such a handsome contract for the very
kind of machinery that we are so well equipped to manufacture?"
"If you really want to know, Ned, I'll tell you."
"Of course I want to know."
"Well, then, it's my opinion that Basil Cunningham is a plain,
unvarnished, first-water crook!"
CHAPTER II
THE NEW INVENTION
Ned Newton stood for several seconds intently gazing at his chum and
business associate after Tom Swift's emphatic rejoinder. Then, feeling
that as financial manager of the Swift plant he ought not too easily
give up a chance for making money, Ned remarked:
"Well, Tom, I suppose you know your own business best, but you ought to
have something to back up your opinion that Cunningham isn't straight."
"I've got enough to convince myself, Ned, though maybe not enough to
make you see things the way I do. In fact, I haven't any documentary
evidence, but I still maintain that Cunningham is a crook."
"In that case, of course we don't want anything to do with him," agreed
Ned. "But what sort of evidence have you, Tom?"
"I may be mistaken," replied Tom, who was willing to give any man the
benefit of a doubt; "but I have a very strong suspicion that the
delicate machinery Cunningham wanted us to manufacture for him would
infringe on the patents of certain English machines used for scientific
and optical work."
"Infringement!" exclaimed Ned.
"That's what it would be if we undertook it, and if it were found out
we would be liable to prosecution," stated Tom. "Even if we weren't
found out, of course I wouldn't undertake such work."
"Of course," agreed Ned heartily. "But are you sure? You have been
making some strong assertions against Cunningham."
"I don't believe I'll be called on to prove them in court, for this is
just between us," said Tom. "But I looked over the preliminary sketches
of the machinery this Englishman wanted us to make for him. At first
I was inclined to go on with it. But the other day I saw a notice
in an English publication concerning some new scientific machinery
just completed and it was almost identical with the blue prints and
specifications Cunningham showed me. If we turned out the machinery for
him he'd set up a shop over here for making those instruments and it
would get us in Dutch once it came out."
"That's right, Tom. I guess you acted wisely in turning him down.
He's mad, mad as a wet hen, but let him splutter. That's what he was
doing to the Queen's taste when he got in the auto with that rat-faced
individual."
"Yes, let him splutter," agreed Tom. "He can't harm us."
However, later on, he was to revise that opinion of the Englishman.
"Of course it's too bad to lose all that good money," mused Ned. "On a
hundred-thousand-dollar contract we could probably knock down twenty
per cent. at least."
"Yes," agreed Tom, "it would have been picking up a nice bunch of cash.
But I'm not going to make patent imitations under cover for anybody.
I want nothing to do with fraudulent stuff. We can get enough good
contracts, I think."
"Well," remarked Ned, with a shrug of his shoulders, "good contracts
aren't going around these days begging some one to take them into their
shop. But I dare say we shall pull through."
"Maybe I can get a lot of orders for my House on Wheels when I get it
completed," chuckled Tom.
"Nothing doing!" declared Ned, with a laugh. "You'll make only one
House on Wheels and I can see you and Mary rolling off in that to the
music of----"
"Hey! Where do you get that stuff?" exploded Tom, making an ineffectual
reach to punch his chum. "That's the second crack to-day. Dad made one
and now you. Where do you get it?"
"Well, since you turned down the Cunningham contract," went on Ned
somewhat hastily, producing some papers from his pocket, "suppose we
go into this Blakely matter. It isn't such a big thing, but we want to
keep the wheels turning."
"Sure," agreed Tom, and the two were soon deep in calculations.
To the old readers of these books Tom Swift needs no introduction.
But those to whom this volume comes as their first venture, it may be
necessary to say that Tom Swift was a brilliant young inventor who
lived with his father in the town of Shopton on Lake Carlopa.
The initial volume, entitled "Tom Swift and His Motorcycle," related
how Tom became possessed of a machine that was damaged when Mr.
Wakefield Damon, its rider, tried to climb a tree.
That was the beginning of Tom's mechanical activities, for he bought
the motorcycle cheap, repaired it, and had some wonderful adventures
on it. The tree-climbing incident also served to start the friendship
of Tom and Mr. Damon, a friendship that had lasted, though the
eccentric man, who blessed everything from his fountain pen to his
boots, was much older than Tom Swift.
After his experience with the motorcycle, the young inventor had many
startling and dangerous experiences in aircraft, submarines, and
in turning out, with the help of his father and with Ned Newton as
financial adviser, many strange machines.
Tom's latest invention is told of in the volume just before this one
you are now reading, entitled "Tom Swift and His Talking Pictures."
He made a machine which brought the images and voices of public
performers directly into the home. The making of this machine had
taken considerable cash, and though Tom had sold certain rights to a
syndicate, the money would not be coming in for some time.
"And that's one reason I was so anxious for this Cunningham contract to
go through," remarked Ned, who was talking business matters over with
Tom following the departure of the Englishman.
"We'll get other work to do," declared Tom. "To tell you the truth,
I'm not over anxious to clutter the shop up with any other stuff until
I get my House on Wheels well out of the way."
"Say, just what is this new invention, anyhow?" asked Ned. "I've been
so busy I haven't paid much attention to it."
"Well, the name tells just what it is," said Tom. "Briefly, it is a
glorified auto--a veritable house that one can not only live in but
travel in."
"You mean a house with rooms and a bath and--and--everything?" asked
Ned.
"That's it--a bath and everything. Of course, the rooms aren't large,
and the beds are to be folded back against the wall when they aren't in
use."
"What about eats?" asked Ned.
"There's to be a kitchen with an electric stove," replied Tom.
"Run a stove from a storage battery?" exclaimed Ned. "Say, it can't be
done! You'd have to have such a big battery that it would be a job to
cart it around."
"Not a storage battery," explained Tom. "My House on Wheels is to be
operated like some of the new, big jitneys, by a gas-electric motor.
There's a gasolene engine of twelve cylinders, and, by the way, it's
just arrived from Detroit, so Koku told me. Well, that motor operates
a dynamo which furnishes the current that drives the auto, operates the
stove and other appliances."
"Then you don't take power directly from the gasolene engine?" asked
Ned.
"Only in case of emergency; that is, if the electric motor goes on
the fritz. By using my gasolene motor to generate the current to run
the car I get a much smoother flow of power, and there are other
advantages."
"Does the dingus look anything like a house?" asked Ned.
"I object to your calling it a 'dingus,'" laughed the young inventor.
"But in outward appearance it is like a small house."
"With doors and windows?"
"Yes, and even window shutters. Aside from an entrance back of the
driver's seat, there is only one door, however, and that is at the
rear."
"How about a pair of steps?" asked Ned, thinking to stump his chum.
"I've provided for those, too. There are steps at the rear for easy
access to the interior, as my catalogs will say. Only, to keep small
boys from hitch-hiking on them, the steps fold up out of the way when
the House on Wheels is moving."
"Then you're really going to tour in it?" asked Ned.
"Sure!"
"Going to be pretty heavy, isn't it?"
"Oh, around two tons, I guess."
"It's no flivver, at any rate. But won't it move like a canal boat?"
"Canal boat! Do you want to insult me?" cried Tom. "On good roads
she'll do fifty or sixty miles an hour."
"Whew!" whistled Ned. "Guess I'd better go and take a look at this
thing."
"Come on," invited Tom.
He was preparing to lead the way out of his private office to that
part of the shop where he was constructing the new invention, when Mr.
Jackson, the manager, entered with an air that caused Tom suddenly to
ask:
"What's the matter?"
CHAPTER III
NED'S SUSPICIONS
"Have you given any orders about unpacking the new engine that just
arrived from Detroit?" asked Mr. Jackson of Tom Swift.
"You mean the twelve-cylinder engine for my House on Wheels?" the young
inventor inquired.
"That's the one."
"Why, no. Koku informed me only a little while ago that it had come.
But I couldn't come out to look at it because that Cunningham chap was
in the office. Why, is it being unpacked? And by whom?"
"It is, and by a couple of strange young men who say you just put them
on the pay roll yesterday to help with your new invention. They went at
the work as though they knew what they were about, but I thought I'd
speak to you."
"I'm glad you did!" exclaimed Tom. "I've hired no new hands, young or
old, for a long time. I wouldn't without consulting you."
"That's what I thought. But these fellows seemed to know what they were
about, and I didn't like to tell them to lay off."
"There's something crooked here!" exclaimed Tom. "This must be looked
into. Come on!" he called to Ned Newton.
As the three walked along a corridor that led to one of the main shops
where Tom's latest achievement in a mechanical way was in process of
construction, the young inventor closely questioned Mr. Jackson.
"Had they got the motor out of the packing case when you left them?"
Tom was anxious to know.
"Not yet. It's a pretty big piece of machinery and won't be unpacked in
a hurry."
"Then we may be in time!" Tom ejaculated.
"Time for what?" asked Ned.
"To stop any funny work."
"Whew!" whistled the financial manager. "As bad as that? Whom do you
suspect?"
"You never can tell," was Tom's reply. "Ever since I've been in this
business I've had to fight crooks and sharps. And I didn't like the way
Cunningham acted after I turned down his proposition."
"He sure was mad," declared Ned. "But do you think he knew anything
about your House on Wheels, and might try to put sand in the motor
bearings or hire some one to do it?"
"You never can tell," said Tom again. "Though if it was Cunningham, it
was pretty quick work."
"Crooks very often need to act quickly," observed Ned.
Tom hurried forward and was the first of the three to enter the shop.
In one corner was a heavy case and opening it were two men, the only
occupants of the place just then. At the sound of Tom's entrance they
turned, straightened up and looked apprehensive. And well they might,
for Ned cried:
"The rat-faced man, Tom! Look! The one who was with Cunningham!"
He pointed to one of the two whose countenance, especially in his
appearance of fright, did resemble that of a rat. An instant later he
and his companion dropped the tools they had been using and leaped from
a near-by open window.
"Stop them!" yelled Tom. But the rascals were too quick, and when
the young inventor and his friends reached the casement the two were
running across the yard toward the main gate which was, just then, open
to let in a truck.
"Stop those men!" yelled Tom, seeing several of his workman, as well as
Eradicate and Koku, loitering in the yard.
Not stopping to ask questions, several hands gave chase. The old
colored man joined in with a yell of:
"I'll get 'em fo' yo', Massa Tom!"
But his will was better than his deed, for his aged limbs refused to
take him over the ground fast enough. As for Koku, the giant would only
need to get within hand grasp of the rascals to put a stop to their
flight. But, like most big men, Koku was slow in getting started, and
the two plotters were beyond the gate before any of their pursuers were
within catching distance.
Tom and Ned leaped out of the window also, but reached the gate only
in time to see the two plotters disappearing down the road in an auto
that, evidently, was in waiting.
"Come, on, Tom! Chase 'em!" cried Ned. "Get out your electric runabout
and we'll overtake 'em!"
"Not a chance," Tom replied. "My runabout is having its batteries
charged and all the other fast cars are away on the other side of the
works. No, they've got us beat. I only hope they haven't damaged my new
motor."
"I think they didn't have a chance to do that," said Ned encouragingly.
"But who were they, Tom?"
Neither the young inventor nor any one else around the shop, including
Mr. Jackson, knew. The two men, one of whom looked like a rat, had
appeared at the main gate early that morning, it was learned on
checking up. They presented an order signed, apparently, by Tom Swift,
authorizing them to come in. It was a rule that any but the regular
workmen must have such an order to gain entrance to the plant. But this
order was forged.
So the two got in and falsely stating that they had come from the
Detroit plant of the concern which had made Tom's new motor, they
gained access to the shop where it had been left by a truck from the
freight office.
Had it not been that Mr. Jackson saw the men at work and wondered
enough about them to tell Tom, they might have carried out their plans,
whatever they were. That the plans were based on an intent to work Tom
Swift or his possessions some injury, could not be doubted.
A hasty survey, however, showed that the motor had not been taken from
its case, so it was not damaged.
"What was the game, Tom?" asked Ned, when orders had been given to
admit no more strangers to the plant on any pretext.
"Well, I'll say Cunningham, as a guess."
"You mean he put these men up to wrecking your motor after you turned
him down?"
"That's the way it looks to me, Ned. Of course it may have been some of
my other enemies. But since you recognized the rat-faced chap, why, it
looks suspicious to me."
"But what would be Cunningham's object? He didn't want you to make him
a House on Wheels, did he? Or sell him any stock in the enterprise of
manufacturing them?"
"No, he didn't mention the matter. I didn't even know that he knew I
had such a thing in mind, much less almost completed."
"Well, he found out in some way."
"Very likely. And when I refused to help him make machinery to turn
out infringements on English patented apparatus, he turned nasty and
decided to make me sorry."
"So it looks, Tom. Lucky you caught the plot in time."
"That's due to Mr. Jackson's foresight. It was a narrow escape. Half an
hour later and that motor would be fit only for the scrap-heap. Look
here!"
Tom held up a small bottle of a very powerful acid--one capable of
eating into and corroding the hardest steel.
"I picked that up where one of the scoundrels dropped it," Tom said.
"They evidently wanted to get at some of the valves on the cylinders.
A few drops of this acid in each one and the walls would have been so
scored that even reboring would not have made them fit to use again."
"A dirty trick!" exclaimed Ned. "I wish we could have caught them."
"So do I, for the sake of what may happen in the future."
Leaving Koku and Eradicate on guard over the new motor, Tom took
Ned to where the chassis and body of the House on Wheels were being
constructed. It was the first time Ned had seen the new invention and
at a glimpse of it, standing in the middle of the shop where it was
receiving its final coat of paint, the young manager exclaimed:
"Say, that's a peach!"
"Glad you like it," commented Tom.
The house stood up on a framework corresponding to the chassis on which
it would later be mounted. Tom opened the back door and a pair of
steps, hitherto concealed in a recess, unfolded, let down, and could
be used for entering the little dwelling.
There were four rooms within, two containing folding cots that made
comfortable beds. One room of those remaining was used as a kitchen.
The other was a living room, though if needful the two bedchambers
could also be utilized for this purpose, when the cots were folded away.
"And that's the electric stove, is it?" asked Ned, pointing to the
apparatus.
"That's it. And here's the pantry, the ice box, and so on," added Tom,
indicating the various conveniences.
"Pretty slick!" was the enthusiastic comment of Ned Newton.
"But where do you work the thing from?"
"The motor goes out there," and, going to the front of the house, Tom
showed where the big machine was to be mounted under a regulation auto
hood. "This little compartment will contain the driver's seat and the
controls," he went on, showing a space divided by a partition from the
sleeping quarters.
The kitchen was in the rear of the House on Wheels, and in front of
that was the combined sitting and dining room, the sleeping quarters
being forward.
"Putting the kitchen in the rear insures the odors being carried away
as the machine moves along," explained Tom.
"Then you're going to cook as you travel?" asked Ned.
"Sure!" assented Tom.
"That is you are--or some one else," chuckled Ned.
"What do you mean?"
"I mean that my suspicions are confirmed," went on Ned, with a
laugh, and taking care to get beyond Tom's reach before making his
next remark. He added: "I know where the first stop will be for this
traveling House on Wheels!"
"Where?" asked Tom, unsuspiciously.
"Honeymoon Lane!" yelled Ned, making a leap to escape his chum.
CHAPTER IV
SURPRISING NEWS
After all, Tom Swift had sense enough to take good-naturedly the
chaffing to which Ned Newton subjected him.
The young inventor could not but admit that his latest invention,
coupled with the fact that he and Mary Nestor had been more than
ordinarily chummy recently, would lead to the suspicion that there
might soon be a closer relationship between them than heretofore.
Mary and Tom had know each other a long time. Once her family and Tom
were marooned on Earthquake Island, and Tom had managed, under great
difficulties, to rig up machinery and send a wireless message. Mr.
Nestor had held a great opinion of the young man's ability and skill
ever since.
"I'll Honeymoon Lane you if I get hold of you!" threatened Tom as he
and Ned left the shop where the House on Wheels was nearing completion.
Various matters occupied the attention of the two young men for the
remainder of the day. Ned, charged with keeping track of the finances
of the company, was busy with negotiations looking to the securing of
manufacturing contracts that would keep the plant running. He was a
little disappointed that the Cunningham proposition had been turned
down, but he could but agree with Tom that to take a contract about
which there was any suspicion of wrongdoing would be poor policy.
As for Tom Swift, once he saw that the chassis and upper structure of
his new House on Wheels was nearing completion, he arranged with Mr.
Jackson to get the new motor on the block for a test. This took until
nearly night, and then Tom had things in shape for a preliminary tryout
of the machinery the next day.
"No need to ask where you're going, Tom," chuckled Ned when, after the
evening meal, which, as on many former occasions, he shared with the
Swift family, he observed the young inventor getting out the electric
runabout, the batteries of which were now fully charged.
"It's none of your business where I'm going!" said Tom with a smile
which took any possible sting from the words.
"Well, I'm on the same sort of errand," commented the financial
manager. "Mind if I take the roadster and give Helen a little spin?"
"Consider yourself a top and spin away!" chuckled Tom, and a little
later he was on his way to see Mary Nestor while Ned piloted the small
but speedy car in the direction of his sweetheart's home.
"Well, Tom, what's the latest news?" asked Mary when she had greeted
him and they were seated on the porch.
"Oh, nothing much." Tom decided not to tell her about the Cunningham
matter or the discovery of the two men tampering with the motor. "The
new House on Wheels is coming on pretty well, though."
"That's good. Am I to get a ride in it?"
"Of course!"
"Tell me about it," she suggested, and Tom launched into an
enthusiastic description of the interior of the new van-like vehicle,
telling of the rooms, the electric stove, the little pantry and ice box
until Mary exclaimed in delight:
"I can hardly wait until it's finished!"
"Which won't be long," commented the young inventor. "If the motor
tests out all right, and I think it will, all that remains to be done
is to put it in place and see how the whole affair works--I mean
whether I have designed it properly so that it will keep to the road
at high speeds."
Then they talked of other matters until some uneasy movements on the
part of Mrs. Nestor, in the house, warned the young man that the hour
was getting late and that he had better leave.
"I'll see you to-morrow, Mary," said Tom, as he started down the drive
to where he had left the runabout.
"Yes--I guess so," said Mary, and it was not until afterward that Tom
noted and remembered the curious hesitancy in her voice. But now he was
thinking of other matters.
It was when he was half way along the road that lay between Mary's
house and his own home that, passing along a lonely stretch of highway
at moderate speed, Tom saw, thrown across the road in front of him, in
bold relief by the brilliant rays of the moon, a gesticulating shadow
of a man.
The shadow was waving its arms as though in signal to the oncoming
motorist to stop, and when Tom sensed this he began to be uneasy and
was about to press the lever that would give him full speed ahead.
"I'm not going to be fooled by any trick!" he murmured. "There have
been too many hold-ups of late along this road. And if it isn't a
hold-up it may be another attempt by Cunningham to annoy me. Look out
there!" he yelled as the signaling figure and its accompanying shadow
took the middle of the road. "Out of my way or I'll run you down!"
"Bless my accident policy, don't do that!" cried a voice.
For Tom the reaction was so great that his hand slipped from the
electric speed lever, unconsciously pulling it toward the stop notch,
and the runabout began to slow down.
"Mr. Damon!" cried Tom. "Is that you?"
"That's my name," said the voice of the man and he and his shadow both
stepped to one side as the electric car rolled up and came to a stop,
with the application of brakes, opposite him. "Thanks for picking me
up. I don't know you, and I'm surprised that you could recognize me in
the darkness, but----"
"Oh, you know me, too!" chuckled Tom, and then the man cried:
"Bless my opera glasses! It's Tom Swift!"
"Of course!" agreed the owner of that name.
"Well, how in the world did you hear of my accident and come to get
me?" asked Mr. Wakefield Damon, for he it was. "Bless my carburetor,
but this is remarkable!"
"I didn't hear of any accident," said Tom, "and I'm sorry to learn
that you have been in one. I just happened to come past this way. At
first, I thought you were a highwayman. But when I heard you bless your
accident policy I knew you."
"It's lucky I spoke promptly!" chuckled the eccentric man.
"What happened?" asked Tom, as he made room for his friend on the seat
beside him. "Are you hurt?"
"Oh, no. But my auto stalled about two miles back and I couldn't get it
going. There wasn't any garage near, and I hated to go to some strange
house, rouse them and ask to use the telephone to have a towing car
come out to get me. So I started to walk, thinking I might meet some
kind-hearted motorist. I never dreamed you would come by."
"It was just chance," said Tom. "But what's the matter with your car,
and where is it? Maybe I can fix it for you."
"No, it isn't worth while. I think the points need filing and that
isn't easy to do in the dark. If you'll run me to your house I'll stay
all night, provided you have room. My wife is away so she won't miss
me. It will be time enough in the morning to send a garage man out to
get the car."
"All right," assented Tom. Truth to tell, he was tired and did not
relish working over a refractory auto at this hour of the night, or
rather, morning, for it was now past twelve. "We'll be glad to put you
up, Mr. Damon."
"And I'm glad it happened, Tom, for it will give me a chance to see
this new House on Wheels of yours. The last time I was over you were
just planning it," said Mr. Damon. "I expect, by now, it is making
regular trips."
"Not quite so fast as that. But we're about ready for a tryout."
"Then I'm just in time, bless my tooth brush!" chuckled Mr. Damon.
Next morning, Mr. Damon, after a view of the House on Wheels, to which
he gave enthusiastic praise, arranged with a garage worker to come and
get him and take him to where his stalled car had been left. Tom busied
himself over the motor block test and, to his delight, found that the
new engine was even better than rated.
"Of course it needs to be broken in," he told Ned. "But that is only a
matter of time. I'm going to rush things through now."
Orders were given for an extra shift of workmen to assemble the House
on Wheels and put the motor in place. Aside from some refinements and
equipment, the big, new car was almost ready for the road. To such
good end did the men work that day, urged on and aided by Tom, that
by night the motor was in place, connected to the drive shaft and the
machine looked almost finished.
"You could almost run it out as it is now," said Ned.
"Not for a couple of days," replied Tom, with a shake of his head. "But
at least it looks the part, so I think I'll telephone Mary and see if
she can't come over and take a look."
He hurried to the telephone in his workroom and was soon in connection
with the Nestor home, as Ned could tell by the talk. Mary was on the
wire, and the financial manager heard Tom say:
"What's that, Mary? You're going away? Why--why----"
Then came a pause. Ned knew Mary was speaking, and what she said seemed
to be surprising news for Tom Swift, judging by the look on his face.
CHAPTER V
WORK AND WORRY
Some matters of business routine called Ned Newton from the room while
Tom was still telephoning, and when the financial manager returned he
heard his chum say:
"Well, of course if it's all arranged there isn't anything more to be
said, I suppose." A pause. Then: "Of course I'll come over to see you
off. But--it's pretty sudden. What's that? Oh, yes, of course." Then
the good-bye.
Tom hung up the receiver with leaden fingers, and there was a
listlessness in his walk as he went back to where he had been working.
Ned tried to assume an air as if he had heard nothing, but it was
impossible to ignore the fact that Tom had received some unpleasant
news. If he wanted to speak of it--all right. If he didn't----
But Tom blurted it out.
"Mary's going away!"
"Away?"
"Oh, not for good," and Tom laughed nervously at Ned's startled
implication. "It's just on a visit to some relatives she had been
promising to go and see for a long time. Matters are now arranged and
she is going."
"Rather--er--sudden, isn't it?" asked Ned. For Tom had spoken of his
call on Mary the night before and had then made no mention of an
impending visit.
"Yes, very sudden. She didn't tell me until just now, when I asked
her to come over and take a look at the House on Wheels. But she says
she will be too busy packing. Very sudden!" and Tom's voice had a new
quality in it.
"Any special reason for her rush?" asked Ned, who felt privileged now
that his chum had given him the opening.
"Well, yes, in a way. The relatives to whom Mary is going on a visit
are giving a house party for one member of the family who is soon
to sail for Europe. Unless Mary starts to-morrow she won't see this
forty-second cousin, or whatever she is, and it seems there are family
reasons why she should."
"Then she's going soon?"
"Takes the train to-morrow morning."
"Going to be gone long?"
"She isn't sure how long. Hang it all! This upsets all my plans!" and
Tom moodily paced the floor.
"Oh, well, it isn't forever! Cheer up!" consoled Ned. "She'll be coming
back. My girl went away once."
"Yes, I know. But these people--they----"
Tom paused, significantly, it seemed.
"Well, what's wrong with them?" Ned wanted to know.
"Oh, nothing much, except they're fairly bursting with money."
"Well, that's a good thing, isn't it?"
"Not considering what money means and does nowadays. Mary's going out
of her depth, so to speak and----"
"Say, look here!" exclaimed Ned. "You needn't worry about your girl.
She's got a level head."
"Yes, I know. But when she gets among millionaires she's likely to lose
that level."
"I don't believe so. Why, you're no poverty-stricken chap yourself,
Tom, though I admit our bank account isn't as big as it will be when
the dividends from the talking pictures will come in."
"I'm not one, two, six in money matters compared to the Winthrop
family," complained Tom moodily. "They're filthy rich, and it isn't
going to do Mary any good mixing up with that bunch."
"You mean she'll come back dissatisfied with the simple life of Shopton
and vicinity?"
"That's what I fear."
"Oh, cheer up, disciple of gloom!" laughed Ned. "You'll find Mary just
the same when she comes back as she is now. Is she eager to go?"
"That's just it!" complained Tom. "She seems very keen about it."
"Oh, well, a girl likes a change. And it can't last forever."
"No, I suppose not. Oh, well, I'm a grouch not to wish Mary to have a
good time. But I did want her to see this House on Wheels," and Tom
acted like a small boy who has been kept home from a party.
"She'll see it soon enough," predicted Ned. "And it will look all the
better when it's complete and has had a tryout."
"Maybe," was all Tom would say, and then he plunged into work.
Ned expected that his friend would again go over to the Nestor house
in the evening, but Tom, with rather a set look on his face, announced
that he intended to work until late on his newest invention. However,
he did telephone to Mary and arranged to call for her the next morning
to take her to the station.
What took place at the train when Mary departed Ned did not know. But
Tom came back looking more gloomy than before and plunged into work
with a zeal which left his devoted chum far behind.
The Swift plant was a busy place in the days that followed. There
was always more or less of routine labor in connection with several
machines which Tom and his father had perfected, patented, and had put
on the market for general sale.
The latest invention of the young man, excepting the House on Wheels,
had been a machine for showing moving pictures in the home, in
simultaneous connection with vocal and instrumental effects by radio.
It was possible to sit in one's parlor and not only see a distant
theatrical performance, but actually hear all that went on. The vision
of the actors and actresses was reduced in size, but the pictures were
very clear. And the radio, of an improved type, clearly brought every
word and every note of music through the air.
This invention, or a share in it, had been sold to a syndicate which,
for a time, had fought Tom Swift fiercely. But now matters were
straightened out, though there was much detail to finish.
With that, and with overseeing the completion of his House on Wheels,
Tom Swift had plenty of work to keep him busy. He was also worrying, as
Ned easily guessed.
Though Tom received and wrote letters, the worried air did not depart
from him and Ned knew his chum had a sore feeling in his heart. He was
disappointed that Mary had not seen the new car before going away.
But if the young inventor was not privileged to listen to Mary's
praise, he had the chance to hear the enthusiastic comments of Mr.
Damon who came over a few days after his night break-down.
"Bless my safe deposit box, Tom!" exclaimed the eccentric man, "but I
regard your House on Wheels as one of the most marvelous inventions of
all time!"
"Strictly speaking it isn't an invention," said Tom. "It is merely an
adaptation of several existing ones. I've simply taken a small house
and put it on an automobile body."
"But you have done it very cleverly," said Mr. Damon. "This is an age
of travel, Tom, and everybody is doing it. Now the one great drawback
of travel is to find a place to stay at night, for no one likes to
journey after dark, unless in a sleeping car.
"So it has come about that there are hotels and you know what a
bother it is to arrange for a night's stay. But now you come along
with a house in which a person can travel all day, as in an ordinary
automobile. Then at night, when getting to a town, instead of having to
hunt up a garage and then a hotel, you just pull your bed down from the
wall and tumble in. It's great!"
"Well, I thought of that," Tom said. "I'm hoping it will be the success
I think it may be."
"Of course it will be!" declared Mr. Damon. "You can book my order for
one now, Tom."
"Consider it booked!" and the young inventor smiled for one of the few
times since Mary had gone away.
In spite of the fact that the House on Wheels was, to the unobservant,
well nigh complete the day Mary Nestor went away, Tom said considerable
yet remained to be done, and for another week he and his men labored
hard over the structure.
But finally the last coat of varnish was applied and given time to dry.
Not all the fittings were in place, but that was a small matter. The
big twelve-cylinder motor was connected and the brake test had been
satisfactory.
Then one evening, as Ned was about to leave to go to his home, Tom
remarked to him:
"Can you spare the time to make a trip with me, Ned?"
"A trip where and how?"
"I don't know just where, but as to how--in the House on Wheels."
"Is she all ready?"
"We'll give her a tryout to-morrow. Maybe the thing won't work as well
as I planned, but we'll soon know. If it comes anywhere near the mark
I've set, will you go with me?"
"On a trip? Sure!"
"All right," said Tom, pacing the floor of his office. "Well have the
tryout to-morrow. After that--well, we'll see!"
CHAPTER VI
THE TRYOUT
Tom Swift took his place in the driver's seat of the House on Wheels.
This compartment was not unlike the front seat in any large, van-like
truck, except that it was more comfortable and was equipped with a
number of dials, indicators and controls.
"Well, Ned, coming?" asked the young inventor, looking down at his chum
and smiling.
"I guess so, if you're quite sure she won't blow up."
"If she does, we'll go together!" joked Tom.
It was the day of the tryout, and while some work yet remained to
be done on the new machine, it was in shape for a road test. It had
been run around the big yard of the Swift plant and had acted in a
satisfactory manner. What it would actually do under road conditions
and off the level, was something yet to be demonstrated.
The big twelve-cylinder motor had met the block test and had been
able to propel the heavy car around the shops. Tom felt sure there was
plenty of reserve power, or would be when it had been tuned up.
Ned now climbed to the seat beside his chum. There was room for three
in this compartment, but though Mr. Damon had been invited to come over
for the initial run, the eccentric man had not appeared.
With Ned on the seat beside him, Tom touched his foot to the button of
the self-starter and with a roar the powerful motor sprang into life.
Though it was big and had the strength of many horses, so well was it
balanced that there was hardly any vibration, which spells the death
knell of many machines otherwise perfect.
Letting the motor warm up a bit, Tom carefully tested the various gear
and control levers. Then, gently letting in the clutch, the House on
Wheels rolled slowly out of the shed where it had been constructed.
"There she goes!" cried Mr. Swift, who was almost as eager as his son
over the success of the venture.
"Rolling like an egg!" exclaimed Mr. Jackson, who had had no small
share in building the machine after Tom had planned it.
"By golly! She suah am a reg'lar ark!" was Eradicate's comment.
"Mistah Noah he'd suah be livin' pretty if he'd had one ark like dat
when de flood come! Ha! Ha!"
There was a subdued cheer from the assembled workmen as Tom Swift
proved that at least his machine would run smoothly, and with Koku
loudly warning idlers away from the gate, the House on Wheels
approached the open highway for the first time.
As might have been expected, any activity at the Swift plant was sure
to attract attention from the residents of Shopton. Though they were
accustomed to seeing many strange machines issue from the big gates, or
perhaps fly over the high fence, the matter never lost its interest.
So, on this morning, there was a crowd of sightseers.
Nor were they disappointed with the first view of Tom's new wonder.
Bright in its gay colors and varnish, the House on Wheels was a sight
for those who appreciate fine cars and machinery. Majestically it
rolled out on the big rubber-tired wheels and, driving slowly until
he was sure of the feel of the control wheel, Tom eased his machine
through the gates and straightened it out on the broad road.
"Hurray!" yelled a boy in the crowd. "It's a regular circus wagon!"
"I wish I had one like it!" echoed a companion.
For a little way, so slowly did Tom nurse the motor along, the
crowd could keep pace with the machine. Then, when he had the feel
that everything was going smoothly, the young inventor pressed the
accelerator down a little.
The result was at once apparent. As smoothly as a big locomotive, and
with the same hint of power in reserve, the big House on Wheels went
ahead so rapidly that the running crowd of boys and girls and men was
soon left behind and Tom and Ned had the road to themselves save for
an occasional motorist. But as this section was not ordinarily much
traveled, they were not bothered by many other machines.
Drivers of cars who passed or approached the House on Wheels stared
curiously at it, and more than one was heard to remark to a companion:
"Some advertising stunt, I guess."
"That might not be bad," commented Ned, after one or two repetitions of
this.
"What?" asked Tom, who was intent on listening to the hum of the motor
to detect a false note or failure of the oiling system.
"Using this for advertising," said Ned. "Many a firm would pay
big money to have a sign painted on the sides of this car, calling
attention to the merits of Blank's chewing gum or Hank's breakfast
food."
"There are no advertisements going on this!" decided Tom. "I'll make my
money some other way."
"Even if you have to take on Cunningham's proposition?" teased Ned.
"I'll never have anything to do with that crook!" said the young man as
he slowed down to turn a corner which would take them out on the big
state highway. "I'll close down the plant before I'll help him infringe
on other inventors. I've had that done to me too many times not to know
what it means. No Cunningham in mine!"
They were now in comparatively open country, and though there was more
traffic on the state road than on the thoroughfare they had left in
coming from the Swift plant, there was not enough to worry a driver of
Tom's experience.
"You need a hill for a real stiff test," remarked Ned.
"That's the idea, and we'll come to one soon if we keep on going."
"Well, there doesn't seem to be anything to stop you," was his chum's
opinion. "Hop right to it!"
They were bowling along at an increased speed when Tom suddenly leaned
over and bent forward as if listening, which is exactly what he was
doing.
"What's the matter?" asked his companion.
"Sounds like a knock."
They both listened intently, for though Ned did not have Tom's skill in
inventiveness he was a good driver.
"There's something wrong," decided Tom, pulling over to the side of the
road to be out of the way of passing traffic. "I'm thinking one of the
oil feeds is clogged. Yes, she's heating up," he added, as he pointed
to the motor temperature indicator which was one of many dials and
gages on the instrument board.
The House on Wheels was brought to a halt and then Ned and Tom raised
the hood for a look at the motor. There was an unusual wave of heat as
soon as the sides were raised, and Tom's quick eye at once found the
seat of trouble. A small valve that supplied oil to one of the many
working parts was partly closed so that not enough of the lubricating
fluid reached the shaft.
They resumed the journey, and Tom ventured to open the throttle a
little, though he had no intention of getting up to maximum speed,
which should not be done with any new motor until after it has been
limbered up for at least five hundred miles.
The House on Wheels responded well and stepped along rather fast.
"This is the life!" cried Ned gaily. "When do we eat, Tom?"
"Not on this trip. I didn't pack in any grub. And you can't turn in and
go to bed, either. This is just a preliminary run so I can decide what
changes are needed."
"It seems to me that everything is fine," said Ned. "She's running now
like a sewing machine."
"Got to try her on a hill yet," was Tom's answer.
"I suppose so. If you go honeymooning in this you'll have hills to
climb," observed Ned, and he noticed that Tom did not now resent a
reference to a possible approaching marriage.
"We'll soon know what she can do on the up grade," said the young
inventor, with a look ahead. "We're coming to a hill now and it grows
stiffer the higher you climb. Yes, this will be a good test."
The first part of the hill was taken in fine fashion, somewhat to
Tom's delighted surprise. He had imagined the machine might labor,
especially while new and stiff. But up went the House, never faltering.
Then, after a little comparatively level stretch, the hill took a
sudden upward climb. For the first part of this the machine did well,
there being no undue strain. But suddenly, when about half way up,
there was a little jar, a sort of nervous shiver, and the motor stopped
dead.
So quickly did it happen that Tom had no time to apply the brakes and
Ned cried:
"Were backing downhill, Tom!"
"I know it!" responded the young inventor, a grim look on his tense
face.
CHAPTER VII
THE RACE
The House on Wheels was half way up a steep slope when the motor
stopped and the heavy, and somewhat clumsy car--clumsy because of
its bulk--began to go backward. Of course there were brakes. Tom had
provided a double set, and they would hold. He had tested them under
severe strains. But it took a moment for both the young men to realize
what had happened and to decide what to do.
Of course there was only one course of action after Tom had quickly
discovered that the stoppage of the motor was not momentary, and that
it could not be galvanized into action by the self-starter. The thing
to do was to jam on the brakes, which the young inventor did before the
backward motion of the House had gained it such momentum that it could
not be checked.
"Whew!" whistled Ned, as he felt the machine come to what seemed like
a reluctant stop. "That was a close call!"
"Oh, no," said Tom, half smiling. "I could have let her get up even
more speed than she had, rolling backward, and yet have brought her to
a stop with the one set of brakes."
"On this hill?" Ned was a bit incredulous.
"Yes, or on a steeper one. I want to try her on some mountain."
"Maybe you'll get the chance," Ned remarked.
"What do you mean?" asked Tom, for there seemed to be something his
chum was holding back. But as, just then, a peculiar buzzing sounded
from beneath the motor hood, Tom decided to investigate that before
asking any questions.
The brakes were holding the House on Wheels midway up the rather steep
hill, but on getting out of the driver's seat, which the two young
men did very soon after the accident, their first care was to block
the rear wheels with a log of wood which they dragged from a near-by
thicket. After seeing that this would keep the car from rolling back
downhill, even if the brakes should let go, Tom fastened a rope to the
log and the other end of the cable to the rear of the House on Wheels.
"What's the idea?" asked Ned. "Going to use that as a drag going
downhill on the other side?"
"No. But haven't you often noticed that where motorists have to stop on
a hill, and use rocks or logs to block them, they go away after getting
a new start and leave the obstructions in the road?"
"I've seen that many a time," agreed Ned, "and I've bawled 'em out for
it more than once. The trouble is that they aren't there to hear what I
think about 'em."
"That's just it. Well, I may want to start up without having to release
my brakes suddenly, hence the log of wood. And as I don't want to leave
you behind to roll the log out of the way, I fastened on this rope.
We'll pull the log behind us up to the top of the hill, where it is
level, and then we can stop and take it off."
"Good idea!" commented Ned. "Now let's see what's wrong. I do hope it
isn't anything serious."
"No, it can't be," decided Tom. "The motor was too severely tested for
that. It's just some little dingus that's out of order--maybe a broken
oil pipe or a loose wire."
It was the latter that proved to be the seat of the trouble when a
careful check-up had been made. In the haste with which the House on
Wheels had been assembled, this little item was overlooked. It required
but a short time to put the ignition cable back in place, and then,
having run the motor for some time, listening to the smooth purr of it,
Tom announced that he was satisfied there would be no further trouble.
It was when they were ready to start on again that Tom's wisdom in
blocking the wheels was demonstrated. For there was no need of a sudden
letting in of the clutch, after racing the engine in gear to get
momentum and speed enough to make a flying start uphill. The brakes
were already released. The log prevented the House on Wheels from
rolling backward, and the machine started slowly up the grade as if
taking off from a level. The log was pulled along by means of the rope,
and did not remain in the road a menace to following travelers.
"She's coming up in good style," commented Ned, as he observed the
increasing speed of the machine even though the grade of the hill grew
greater.
"Couldn't be better," agreed Tom, with a satisfied smile. "All the
power I need and then some! When she gets broken in I expect great
things of her."
"Looks so," murmured Ned.
In a short time they were at the top of the hill and a long, level road
lay before them. They made a momentary stop to cast off the blocking
log and then went on.
"I'm going back and take a look inside," said Ned after a while. "I
want to see how she rides."
There was a passage leading from the driver's seat to the interior of
the House, and Ned was soon making his way through the various "rooms"
as they might be called, though compartments would probably be the
better term. He sat in the small chairs, let down one of the cots and
stretched out on it and sat at the table, pretending to eat, though, as
yet, there was no food aboard.
"How is it?" asked Tom, as his chum reappeared in the communicating
passage.
"Slick as oil!" was the enthusiastic comment. "Rides like an ocean
liner."
"That's good. Then there's nothing wrong in the construction. I was
afraid she might sway too much."
"There is a little swaying," admitted Ned. "But I think that will be
smoothed out when you get a load in."
"I guess so," agreed Tom. "Well, come out here and try your hand at
it."
"What do you mean?" Ned wanted to know.
"I want you to drive for a while. You've driven lots of cars, and I
want you to get the feel of this. It seems a trifle stiff to me, and I
want to see if you get the same impression. I can loosen the gear up a
bit if it is."
"You mean you want me to drive your House on Wheels?" asked Ned.
"Sure! Why not?"
"I may wreck her."
"So might I. Accidents are always likely to happen. But I've got to get
some other impression than my own as to how she holds the road, takes
corners, and the like, and you're the best one I know to give me the
information I need. Besides, you'll be coming on trips with me, and I
can't always be at the wheel."
"Me come on a trip with you in this?" chuckled Ned. "Well, I like that!"
"What do you mean? Why wouldn't you come?"
"On yours and Mary's honeymoon trip? Excuse me!"
"Say, cut that stuff out!" and Tom seemed serious. "Who's said anything
about a honeymoon?"
"Nobody--nobody's said a word. At least, you and Mary haven't,"
admitted the financial manager. "But actions speak louder than words.
And I thought that's why you were getting this canal boat in shape."
"Nothing of the sort!" exclaimed Tom sharply. "I mean--of course--that
is, I--Oh, heck! Come on out here and take the wheel!"
"All right!" agreed Ned. "But don't blame me for what happens."
"I won't," and Tom steered the machine over to the side of the road to
bring it to a stop out of possible traffic while he changed places with
his chum.
After proceeding at a moderate rate for a mile or two, in order to
familiarize himself with the brakes and controls, Ned let out a little
more gas and the House on Wheels shot ahead on the smooth, level
concrete highway which the two had practically to themselves.
"How does she feel, Ned?" asked Tom, as they sped along.
"Fine."
"And how does she handle?"
"Light as a cork! There's no steering strain at all."
"I'm glad of that. I wanted to make sure of it."
"But take her yourself," urged Ned, guiding the House to the side of
the road in case any motorists were following. "You haven't had the
wheel when you had a chance to let out. Go ahead."
"All right," agreed Tom Swift.
He had not long been in the driver's seat, and was working up speed,
when from behind came a long, shrill whistle. For a moment the young
men thought it might be one of those signals connected to the exhaust
pipe of some speeding motorist. But a look into the rear vision mirror
showed a fast freight train approaching. Then, for the first time, Tom
and Ned noticed that they were running parallel to railroad tracks and
close to them.
On came the fast freight, and the engineer seemed either to be trying
to attract the attention of the occupants of the peculiar car or else
saluting them. Then Tom cried suddenly:
"I know what he wants!"
"What?" asked Ned.
"A race! And he's going to get it. Come on, steam baby!" yelled Tom,
noting that he was now even with the locomotive. "We'll see what you
can do against the House on Wheels!"
CHAPTER VIII
CUNNINGHAM ON THE WIRE
Three sharp whistles from the locomotive seemed to indicate, on the
part of its driver, an acceptance of the challenge. In answer Tom gave
three toots of his own horn and the race was on.
No better speedway could have been devised for a test of the
comparative powers of the fast freight and Tom Swift's House on
Wheels than the concrete highway and the steel track along which the
respective machines were now rushing. There was not another automobile
in sight along a stretch of several miles, and no other train on the
railroad. It seemed to have been made to order.
"Think you've got a chance, Tom?" yelled Ned. It was necessary to yell,
for the puffing, panting locomotive was so close that its exhaust
almost drowned one's voice. Nor was the House on Wheels altogether
quiet, for there was a subdued rumble and roar at its present high
speed which made talking anything but easy.
"I've got a good chance!" answered Tom, with a grim tightening of his
lips as his hands grasped more firmly the steering wheel. "I'm going to
beat this baby."
"It's a fast freight, Tom, the fruit express. It has the right of way
over everything except passenger trains. It's the crack freight of this
road and makes almost as good time as some of the through passenger
trains."
"Can't help that," replied the young inventor. "I'm not going to sit
back and take his smoke!"
Indeed, there seemed to be little danger of this. For though the
freight had crept up on the House on Wheels when she was gaining
headway, the two machines were not long on even terms before Tom's
House began to pull away.
But if he thought to gain an easy victory, he was mistaken. A quick
glance showed that the fireman was busy shoveling coal under the boiler
of the freight engine. Out belched volumes of black smoke and the
increased staccato of the exhaust showed that not only was the throttle
being opened wider but that the link motion was being taken up, making
a corresponding quicker cut off of steam at one end of the cylinders
and a duplicate fast expulsion on the other end.
"She's creeping up on us, Tom," observed Ned, looking back when, after
a little run, they had distanced the freight.
"We've got to expect that. But I've got something in reserve yet.
Though I daren't let the House out for all she's worth, I can still get
the accelerator down a few notches without damage. The race isn't over
yet."
Tom had taken part in many speed contests, and he knew how to jockey
with the best of them. He purposely let the freight slowly crawl up on
even terms with him. This was due not only to the increased speed of
the freight but also to Tom's slight slackening of his pace.
"I'll fool this bird!" he told Ned.
And when the engine was again up in front, so that the pilot was in
line with the bumper of the House on Wheels, Tom turned on more gas,
after a momentary cut-off, and again shot ahead.
He and Ned could almost see, in fancy, the chagrin on the faces of the
engineer and fireman as they were thus gently mocked. But the railroad
men were good sports and were not going to give up easily.
Again there was a frantic shoveling of coal, and there must have been a
more advantageous adjustment of the draft, or perhaps a forced one was
turned on, for suddenly the safety valve popped, which, at the speed
the engine had already attained, showed an increased pressure of steam.
"He's coming right after us!" cried Ned, as they swayed along.
On no other road but this concrete highway would it have been safe to
run the House on Wheels at the speed she was going. And few drivers
other than Tom Swift would have been capable of handling the heavy
machine with such skill and judgment.
The race was now on in earnest. Tom knew that it would not be safe to
push his motor much faster. Not that it was not capable of a higher
rate, but it would need to be broken in somewhat before he dared risk
it. On the other hand, the locomotive was not thus limited. So if it
was not yet at its maximum, there would be no danger in pushing the
mechanism to that point. And if the maximum was greater than Tom's
temporary one, then he would lose.
However, though forced draft was used, the big freighter appeared to
have reached the limit. For perhaps half a mile she held her own on
even terms with the House on Wheels. Then Ned asked:
"Can you do a bit better, Tom?"
"I'm going to risk it," was the quick answer.
The House slowly began to draw ahead and there was no replying response
on the part of the locomotive. Foot by foot Tom and Ned drew away. They
had a glimpse of the fireman desperately shoveling coal, but to no
purpose.
Gradually the gap that separated the two widened, and though brakemen
on top of the cars yelled and seemed to urge their mates to greater
efforts, it was not to be.
Tom Swift pulled away and won the race by a good margin. Not much
too soon, either, for when he was several lengths ahead the railroad
branched away from the highway it had been paralleling for several
miles and disappeared into the woods.
In recognition of the beating by a better rival, the engineer saluted
with three long blasts, to which Tom responded with like signals from
his horn.
"Well, that's that!" remarked Ned, as they slowed down, for they were
approaching another steep hill.
"Yes," assented Tom. "It's all over and I'm satisfied. The House on
Wheels couldn't have done better. Not a strain and not a bearing
overheated," he added, as he brought the machine to a gradual stop and
made a hasty examination.
"Going to take the hill?" asked Ned.
"No, we'll give her a rest and drift back," was the answer. "She has
done her duty and there's no use putting on too much strain."
"That's right," agreed Ned.
He had alighted from the driver's seat with Tom to stretch his legs,
and as the two were climbing back into the compartment they saw a
sporty runabout flash past them. Two men, one young, were in it and
they seemed much interested in the House on Wheels at the side of the
road. One of them leaned out and looked back.
At the sight of his face Ned exclaimed:
"Did you notice him, Tom?"
"No. Who was he?"
"That rat-faced chap who got into your shop and tried to put this motor
out of business."
"No!"
"I'm sure of it! Come on, let's chase after 'em!" proposed Ned eagerly.
But Tom Swift shook his head.
"We haven't a chance," said the young inventor. "They've got a much
faster machine than mine and a good start. The House wasn't designed
to race runabouts, though it can hold its own in a fast freight race.
Let him go, whoever he is."
The trip back to the Swift plant was without incident, except that when
Tom and Ned left the concrete highway and got into the heavier traffic
they were somewhat delayed by the crowding around and near approach of
other motorists who showed much curiosity regarding the strange, big
machine.
"How was it, Tom?" asked his father, as they turned in through the big
gates of the plant.
"Couldn't have been better, Dad," and he gave a short account of the
tryout trip, including the race.
"Dat's fine!" commented Eradicate who, with the freedom of an old
family servant, had been listening. "Better put her to bed now, Massa
Tom, an' let her hab a good night's rest. Dat's what I used to do wif
de race hosses down in ole Virginny."
"'Tisn't a bad idea," returned Tom, with a smile. "Give the motor a
thorough examination and test for any possible strains," Tom told one
of his men, who came out to help put the House on Wheels into the
special garage that had been built for it. "I pushed the motor pretty
hard, for a new one, and I want to be sure it's in good shape."
"I'll look after it thoroughly, Mr. Swift," promised the man.
Scarcely had Tom and Ned reached the private office, where some matters
awaited their attention, than the telephone bell rang. Answering it,
Tom showed some amazement when he learned the identity of the man at
the other end of the wire.
"This is Basil Cunningham, Mr. Swift," came the loud, somewhat rasping
tones of the burly Englishman. "We'll let bygones be bygones, if it's
all the same to you. I want you to take my contract and I'll add a
special ten per cent. bonus if you will rush it through for me."
For a moment Tom Swift was too surprised to reply. But he gathered his
wits together in a few seconds and called back:
"I wouldn't take your contract, Mr. Cunningham, for even an additional
bonus of twenty per cent!"
"You won't?"
"No!"
"Is that your final answer?"
"It is."
"But look here, Mr. Swift," and Cunningham's voice was almost whining
now, "what objection have you to making these machines for me?"
"Will you tell me what you intend to use them for?" countered Tom.
"No, I will not!" was the answer snapped back quickly. "It isn't any of
your affair!"
From the manner in which Cunningham banged the receiver on the hook,
Tom felt that the Englishman was in a towering rage. Ned could only
guess at half of the conversation, but Tom gave it to him in detail a
little later.
"Why do you think he is so secretive about what the machines are to be
used for?" the young financial manager wanted to know.
"Because there's a nigger in the woodpile--that's my opinion!"
"You still think Cunningham intends to infringe?"
"I do. The fact that he comes back to me after my first refusal shows
that he has tried to get other concerns to take up his work and has
failed."
"It would seem so," agreed Ned.
"Well, this all goes to show that my first impression is right," went
on Tom. "Cunningham is a crook, I'm sure."
"Then we're better off leaving him alone," commented Ned.
They were about to go over some business papers again when the
telephone rang once more.
"You answer, Ned," directed Tom. "If it's Cunningham say I will have no
further communication with him!"
Ned picked up the instrument, listened a moment, and then cried:
"What's that? Who are you? What do you mean? Don't be a coward! Give me
your name!"
"What's the matter?" asked Tom when Ned, by impatiently jiggling the
receiver hook, indicated that the person at the other end of the wire
had hung up. "Who was talking, Cunningham?"
"I don't think so. But it must have been one of his men. For he said:
'Tom Swift will regret not taking this contract! He'd better watch
out!' I tried to make him tell who he was, but he wouldn't."
"So," said Tom musingly, and with a little smile, "they are beginning
to threaten, are they? Well, I'm ready for them!"
CHAPTER IX
DISMAL MOUNTAIN
"Well, Ned, I guess that's about all!"
"Unless you want to put in another piece of bacon," was Ned Newton's
rejoinder to his chum's implied question.
The two were sitting in the House on Wheels, about a week after the
sensational race with the freight train. In the intervening time much
work had been done on the new invention. The motor was thoroughly
gone over, tuned up, and minor adjustments made. The furnishing of
the interior of the House was completed, from kitchen articles to bed
linen, and the vehicle was now equipped for a long or short journey, as
the owner desired. Ned's particular province was the pantry, and he had
furnished it, as Tom said, "with enough grub to last a month."
Following another and more severe tryout of the machine after the
freight train race, Tom had suggested to his chum that they go on a
week's crosscountry tour to further test the House on Wheels under
varying conditions.
"Have you any particular object in view?" asked Ned.
"Well, I thought maybe I'd surprise Mary," was the answer.
"Surprise her?" questioned Ned. "What do you mean?"
"We could call on the Winthrops where she is staying."
"Good idea. But where is it?"
"Just outside Chesterport."
"Chesterport!" exclaimed Ned, with every indication of excitement. "You
mean Chesterport in this state?"
"Sure. Why not? What's wrong with it?"
"Nothing. Only--Well, say, what are you going to do after you surprise
Mary in Chesterport?"
"After that we can keep on touring, if you like. We can go as far
beyond Chesterport as you like."
"We won't have to go far," murmured Ned, and there was a strange look
in his eyes. "Why didn't you tell me before that Mary had gone to
Chesterport?"
"I didn't attach any importance to it, for one thing," answered Tom.
"And, for all I know, I may have mentioned it to you a dozen times."
"No you didn't, or I'd have remembered it."
"What did you mean by saying we won't have to go far beyond
Chesterport?" asked Tom. "What's there of such importance?"
"It's queer you never heard of it," murmured Ned, looking over some
papers he hastily took from his pocket.
"For the love of Pete! Heard of what?" cried Tom, a bit exasperated by
his chum's curious manner.
"Dismal Mountain! The peak of mystery!" exclaimed Ned. "If you haven't
made any other plans after you pay Mary a visit, what's the matter with
keeping on to Dismal Mountain?"
"Nothing the matter, as far as I can see," admitted Tom. "But it is
the first time I've ever heard of the beast and I'd like a little
information. Why is the mountain dismal and what's the mystery about
it?"
"It's dismal because of the mystery," was the reply. "And as for what
that is, smarter lads than you have asked the question and haven't been
answered."
"Oh, cut it out! Be yourself!" advised Tom, with a laugh. "Get down to
brass tacks and let's have a little first hand information."
"That I can't give you, much as I'd like to," said Ned, with a serious
air, not at all in keeping with Tom's bantering words. "All I know
about Dismal Mountain is what I've heard or read, but that's plenty.
I've made a few notes here, and----"
"I should say you had!" exclaimed Tom, looking at the documents his
chum pulled from his pocket. "Looks like an election ballot."
"Well, they're mostly clippings from papers," went on Ned; "though I
have made some notes myself of what folks have told me. Look here!
Those are some newspaper clippings."
He spread a sheaf of them out on the table in the living room of the
House on Wheels where this talk was taking place. The House was in the
garage, but was all ready to run out at a moment's notice.
Tom saw that the clippings bore various heads, such as: "Dismal
Mountain Smokes Again," "Dismal Mountain Claims Another Victim," and
this appeared to be an account of a man who had disappeared somewhere
in the fastness of the forest around the place.
"You don't need to read them all," advised Ned. "I can shorten it by
summarizing it for you. Dismal Mountain is some distance south of
Chesterport--just how far I don't know. It's in a lonely section of the
country, away from any town or city, though there are people living
not far from the foot of the mountain.
"Some of these folks say the mountain is haunted. Others hold that it
is the resort of present-day moonshiners and bootleggers. I think that
comes as near the mark as any. Another version is that the strange
sights and sounds that are seen and heard are made by the moonshiners
or bootleggers to scare would-be investigators away."
"I can well believe that," murmured Tom. "What else?"
"Well, there's another theory that a squad of bandits or road agents
make the glens of Dismal Mountain their hiding places," went on
Ned. "They lie in wait there and hold up trucks carrying big loads
of valuable merchandise, such as bales of silk. There may also be
hijackers on the mountain--men who make a practice of raiding the
trucks sent out by bootleggers. Of course the latter being engaged in
breaking the law themselves, can't call on the law to protect them. So
the hijackers have it easy."
"Sounds like a right bad sort of a place," commented Tom.
"It's fully as bad as it sounds," declared Ned. "Not long ago, as you
can see by this clipping, there was a train hold-up not far from Dismal
Mountain. Some of the bandits are believed to have fled to that place
and may still be in hiding."
"This is getting worse and more interesting!" exclaimed Tom Swift. "I
only hope you aren't stringing me," he added, with a sharp look at his
chum.
"Indeed I'm not kidding you!" expostulated Ned. "You can read it there
for yourself. Of course I don't guarantee the truth of any of this, but
if I'm fooled, so are the papers."
"It looks authentic," admitted Tom, when he had glanced through several
clippings. "At least there have been a number of crimes committed in
the vicinity of this Dismal Mountain, and it may hold the criminals."
"That's what I think," said Ned. "And when I heard just now for the
first time that you are going to Chesterport, which is the nearest town
of any size to the mountain, I thought it would be a good chance to
visit the mysterious place."
"You're right!" exclaimed Tom. "I'm glad you mentioned this. I wouldn't
have missed it for the world. It's queer I never heard about the
mountain of mystery before, and yet it isn't a hundred miles away."
"It is only recently that all these stories became public," stated Ned.
"Besides, you were so busy working on your talking pictures and since
then on this House on Wheels that I don't blame you for not having
heard of this Dismal Mountain."
"It's going to be just the thing!" cried Tom, his face lighting with
pleasure. "With Mary away, I needed something to stimulate me and keep
me from going stale. This will do the trick! Let's see if we can't run
down this mystery!"
"I'm with you!" echoed Ned.
He was putting away his clippings and other information and Tom was
going to ask about the roads to Dismal Mountain and the possibility of
taking the House on Wheels when they heard a noise at the outer door of
the garage where the new machine stood. Then the handle was cautiously
tried.
"Look!" whispered Ned, touching Tom on the arm and pointing to the
latch that was slowly being raised.
CHAPTER X
JEALOUSY
Together Tom Swift and Ned Newton watched the door of the garage being
cautiously opened. There was something peculiar in this. In the first
place, no one who had a right to swing the door would have been thus
cautious about it. In the second place, no one was supposed to be in
that part of the shop just now except Tom and Ned. The young inventor
had given orders that he was to be left undisturbed with his financial
manager to make a final inspection of his new machine.
Rightly arguing that no one who had a right to be there would try to
enter in this manner, Tom Swift decided to find out who was opening
the door, and in such a manner as to capture the intruder if possible.
Accordingly, he made a sign to Ned to keep quiet and then began
creeping toward the door in as stealthy a manner as it was being
opened, which was a fraction of an inch at a time.
Ned, seeing his chum's intention, followed him, and the two were close
to the door when, unfortunately, Tom stumbled over a piece of wood left
by one of the workman. The noise, though slight, was enough to alarm
the person on the other side of the door. It was at once pulled shut
and footsteps could be heard in hasty retreat outside.
"After him!" yelled Tom, caution now being useless, and he and Ned made
a dart for the opening. They swung back the door, but it had stuck
a little, and the two youths were just in time to see a crouching,
running figure some distance away.
"Catch him!" cried Ned.
It was easier said than done. When Tom and Ned reached the place where
they had caught a glimpse of the running figure there was no sign of
the fugitive. Though an alarm was at once raised and a search made, no
stranger was discovered on the place.
"Well, what do you make of it?" asked Tom, when the two had returned to
where the House on Wheels stood.
"Hanged if I know what to make of it," Ned replied. "Whoever it was
thought no one was in here, and they thought they could either steal
your House or else damage it."
"It would be hard to steal it," replied Tom. "But it wouldn't take
much to wreck it. Looks as if some of the old gangs were after me, or
else some new one."
"I'm inclined to the latter theory," said Ned. "And the newest one who
would logically have it in for you is Cunningham. Isn't that the case?"
"I suppose so. Yet I can't understand a man of his business
ability--and I must admit he is shrewd--being foolish enough to risk an
attack such as this might have been."
"Unless he is so angry that he hasn't any common sense left," suggested
Ned.
"That may be it, yes. Well, the sooner we get started away from here
the better it will be for us."
"Do you think you'll escape your enemies, Tom, by starting on a trip in
the House on Wheels?" asked Ned.
"Not exactly! We've had experiences before in being trailed by those
who wanted to injure me or my father. But it isn't as easy for them to
get at me when I'm on the move. I can keep them guessing."
"There's something in that," admitted Ned. "Well, I won't be sorry to
be on the move, either."
It was two days after this, following a tryout of the House on Wheels
fully loaded and equipped, that Tom and Ned started on what they
thought was to be a pleasant little excursion, but which turned out to
be the beginning of a series of strange events.
"I'll let you know when I get to Chesterport, Dad," said Tom, when
bidding his father good-bye.
"Yes, do," urged the aged inventor. "This is a different machine from
any you have traveled in, and I should like to know how it behaves. We
might make some money out of putting them on the market."
"I'll think about that."
Ned made his farewells to Helen Morton and then, amid a chorus of good
wishes on the part of Mr. Damon and the shop force, the two young men
started off in the strange machine which attracted much attention all
along the road.
"Off to Chesterport!" gaily exclaimed Ned, as he sat beside Tom in the
driver's seat.
"And the mountain of mystery!" added the young inventor.
They reached Chesterport about the middle of the afternoon, but instead
of proceeding up the main street to the residence of the Winthrops,
who, Tom had told Ned, occupied a mansion in an exclusive part of the
town, the House on Wheels, under the guidance of its inventor, was
headed into a vacant lot near an automobile garage.
"What's the idea?" inquired Ned, in surprise. "Something gone wrong?"
"No. Why?"
"Why don't you run her up in front of the Winthrop's and call on Mary
in style?"
"That's just it, Ned. I'm afraid the Winthrop family wouldn't like
this kind of style. And it might embarrass Mary. You see, the Winthrop
people are old-fashioned, conservative people, dating back to the
Massachusetts Bay Colony, or something like that. Up to a few years
ago the older Mrs. Winthrop would never ride in anything but the
family carriage. She did grudgingly consent to an auto, in time. Her
daughter-in-law isn't much more liberal, and I'm afraid if we dashed up
and stopped in front of their place with this rather gaudy affair, the
ladies might have a fit and conclude that I wasn't the sort of person
Mary ought to marry."
"I see!" laughed Ned. "Well, maybe the House is a bit too much like a
circus van to park in front of a proud old lady's house. I see your
point. But what are you going to do?"
"Oh, we'll leave the House here under the eye of this garage man and
then you and I will hire a taxi and call on Mary in style."
"Count me out. I'll stay with the House."
"Nothing doing! You go with me!"
The young men had been wearing old garments, for they had anticipated
having to do some work on the car. But there was a miniature bathroom
in the House on Wheels and after washing and changing to fresh
garments, the two young men hired a taxi from the garage, near which
they had left the House on Wheels and went calling.
"Oh, I'm so glad to see you!" Mary exclaimed impulsively at the sight
of Tom and Ned. "Why didn't you send me word you were coming?"
"We didn't decide to come until so short a time ago," Tom answered,
"that we didn't really have time."
"He wasn't sure his old House could make the grade," chuckled Ned.
"Oh, then you have the wonderful House with you!" cried Mary.
"Yes, er--I--now--what pocket did I put it in, Ned?" asked Tom in mock
anxiety, as he searched through his garments. "I know I had it when we
came in, but----"
"Think you're smart, don't you?" mocked Mary.
Grace Winthrop came in just then to be introduced, and she and Ned
paired off quite well, "considering everything," as Tom said afterward.
The story of the trip was told and both girls asked to be taken for a
ride in the House on Wheels, a petition that was quickly granted. Grace
Winthrop shared none of her grandmother's inhibitions against modernism!
"Oh, boys, you're just in time!" exclaimed Mary, as they were having
some lemonade out on the shady piazza. "Aren't they, Grace?"
"In time for what?" Tom wanted to know.
"The dance!" answered Mary. "We're having one to-night. You can stay,
can't you, Tom? And you, Ned?" She looked appealingly at Tom.
"Afraid not," he answered. "We have a number of engagements, and our
schedule----"
"Oh, Tom Swift!"
Mary's disappointment was so genuine that Tom, who had been a little
stiff with her at first, relented and said:
"We haven't dress suits with us."
"It's an informal dance," Grace made haste to say, and after being
urged a bit more the two visitors consented to come to the affair that
evening. They refused an invitation to dinner, as both Tom and Ned
wanted to see how it would be to get their own meal on the electric
stove in the House on Wheels.
The dance was a great success. Ned found Grace Winthrop a gracious
hostess, and he did not seem to miss Helen much.
In fact, he was having such a good time that it was not until late in
the evening that he noticed Tom sitting by himself out on the porch
and looking in one of the long windows at the dancing floor. Among the
couples foxtrotting about were Mary and a young fellow named Floyd
Barton to whom Ned had been introduced.
"What's the matter, Tom?" asked Ned, who had come out for a breath of
air. "Hurt your foot?"
"Hurt my foot! No! What makes you ask that?"
"You aren't dancing."
"I haven't had much chance!" was the somewhat grumpish answer, and Ned
saw his chum's gaze following Mary and her partner. To do him justice,
Barton was a fine dancer.
"Oh, ho!" mused Ned to himself, as he took in the situation. "Poor old
Tom is jealous!"
CHAPTER XI
TRAILING THE MYSTERY
The next day, after a late, lazy sleep in the bunks of the House on
Wheels, Tom Swift and Ned Newton, in fulfillment of a promise made the
night before, called to take Mary and Grace for a ride in Tom's latest
invention.
Tom and his chum called in a taxi to take the girls out to the House on
Wheels, for the young inventor rightly guessed that Mrs. Winthrop would
not appreciate the sensation that would be caused should the big auto
stop in front of her house.
"Hello!" Mary called to Tom and Ned as she came downstairs with Grace
to meet them. "Did you have a good time last night?"
"Fine!" answered Ned, who had thoroughly enjoyed himself.
"Are you all ready?" asked Tom, trying to smile but not making a great
success of it. He seemed anxious to avoid answering the question. But
Mary was not to be put off.
"I asked if you had a good time last night, Tom Swift," and Mary's
voice had a new quality in it. "Aren't you going to answer me?"
"Oh, I beg your pardon. Of course! It was a lovely affair. And I must
say you danced very well, Mary--you and Mr. Barton."
There was something in Tom's tone that made Mary look sharply at him,
but she said nothing more then.
"Well, are you all ready for the thrill of your lives?" asked Ned, to
cover the little moment of embarrassment that followed the interchange
between Mary and Tom.
"Does the machine go very fast?" asked Grace.
"Not at all," Tom made haste to say. "It isn't a racer, by any means.
It's just a comfortable way of traveling, that's all. There won't be
any particular thrill."
"I'm eager to see it since its completion," said Mary, and Ned noticed
that her manner toward Tom had changed a bit.
However, once they were started, the party was gay enough and Ned
thought perhaps his chum's natural jealousy would wear off. He learned,
by judicious questions put to Grace Winthrop, that Floyd Barton was
a rich young man of the neighborhood who had been paying Mary much
attention since her arrival in Chesterport.
"Mr. Barton thinks Mary is a lovely girl," said Grace to Ned.
"Well, he is certainly right," was the answer. "So does Tom Swift."
"Oh, well, that's different. Mr. Barton is just a very good friend. Of
course I know that Tom and Mary are engaged. But a girl must be nice to
those who are nice to her."
"Then you'd better start right in on me!" challenged Ned, and the two
laughed.
This was more than Mary and Tom were doing just then. They seemed to be
talking seriously on the rear seat of the taxi, Ned and Grace occupying
the auxiliary folding seats ahead.
However, once the House on Wheels was reached, the air cleared a bit.
Both girls went into raptures over the House, though Mary had seen it
before, when it was almost completed. They reveled in the appointments
and said the kitchen was "just darling," using so many other adjectives
to praise the other sections that Tom and Ned felt quite set up over
having had a hand in turning out the machine.
The House on Wheels was taken for a spin into the country with the
girls as guests, and the party remained out all day, eating "on
board," if that be the proper term. In the evening, when the return
to Chesterport was made, Tom and Mary seemed to have patched up their
little differences. Ned had an inkling as to what was at the bottom of
the trouble when he overheard Tom say:
"Well, but you didn't need to dance every number with him, did you?"
"I didn't! I danced with you three times! If I had known you were
coming I'd have saved more for you."
"I'm sorry I didn't send you word," murmured Tom.
"So am I," replied Mary, and then they talked of other things.
But that Tom still felt jealous pangs was evident the next day, for
the boys remained over for a lawn party Grace had arranged in honor
of Mary. There was no dancing this time, for the affair was held out
of doors. But Floyd Barton was there, with other young men, and even
Ned, in what few moments he spent away from Grace Winthrop, could not
help noticing that Mary was very often in the company of the young
Chesterport man.
However, she gave Tom some attention and called him to her side when
she had to preside at a little game. She seemed very sweet and
gracious, but there was a lowering look on Tom's face that did not
altogether vanish, Ned noticed.
At the close of the lawn party Mary accompanied Mr. Barton to the gate
to bid him farewell. When she came back Tom further showed the canker
that was eating him.
"Can't you stay over one more day?" Grace Winthrop was asking Ned, who
had announced that their plans called for starting off the next morning.
"I'd like to," Ned replied. "But of course----"
"We're going to pull out first thing to-morrow!" broke in Tom, with
more bruskness than seemed necessary.
"Oh, in that case then you won't be here," said Mary, and her voice was
tantalizingly cool. "I thought you were having a good time."
"We are!" exclaimed Ned.
"Too good," said Tom. "I guess you're having a good time too, aren't
you, Mary?" His question was rather pointed.
"Who, me? Oh, yes! Grace has entertained me lavishly, and----"
"I guess she hasn't been doing all the entertaining," and Tom pretended
to be much interested in a troublesome hangnail.
"Oh, of course her friends have been awfully sweet to me," said Mary,
purposely misunderstanding. "Well, if you boys won't stay, you won't!
Where are you going, Tom?"
"Oh, off on a little exploring trip," and he glanced toward Ned to make
sure he would not mention Dismal Mountain, since they had agreed it
would be better to keep their plans secret. "Got to try out the House
under all sorts of conditions."
"I suppose so," agreed Grace. "Well, can't you stop off again on your
way back?"
"We'll try," was all Tom would promise, though Ned was enthusiastic
when he said:
"I sure would like to!"
"Do try, then," urged Mary. "I'm having such a lovely time on this
visit that I want every one else to have fun, too. And you have been
working hard, haven't you, Tom?"
"A bit, yes."
"Well, now you'd better take a rest on this trip. Don't think about
business and don't run into any danger. Will you?"
She crossed the room and stood near him, while Ned and Grace went
outside.
"Will you, Tom?"
"Will I what?"
"Be careful to keep out of danger."
"Oh, I--Who'd care if I did get into danger?" His voice was hard.
"Who'd care? Well, I like that, Tom Swift! Wouldn't your father care,
and my father and mother, and Ned and Koku and Eradicate and--lots of
folks?"
"Anybody else?" asked Tom, with a half smile.
"Of course, you silly boy! I would! Is that what you wanted me to say?"
It would seem from Tom's pleased answer that it was.
So the little rift in the heavens appeared to have passed.
"All hands on deck!"
Ned Newton heard this hail from the depths of drowsy slumber as he
turned over in his cot the next morning.
"What's the row?" he asked sleepily.
"All hands on deck!" repeated Tom. "Come on, if we're going to get
started."
"What's the matter?" yawned Ned, parting the curtains and peering out.
"Are you the little early bird after the earlier worm this morning?"
"Somewhat. But we've been loafing long enough. Let's get on the move if
we're going to."
They washed, dressed and had breakfast, and then, having paid their
garage bill and taken on a supply of gas and oil, they set out down
the main road of Chesterport, having said good-bye to the girls the
night before.
They were on the road to Branchville, beyond which was the beginning of
the hills that rose to their limit in the peak known locally as Dismal
Mountain.
"I hope we run across a batch of moonshiners, some train bandits, and
half a dozen road agents!" declared Tom, as he grasped the steering
wheel.
"Ah, ha!" mused Ned. "The little green bug is still biting him!"
CHAPTER XII
THE WARNING
Though not a very great distance separated the vicinity of the mountain
of mystery from Chesterport, Tom and Ned decided they would occupy two
days on the trip. By hard driving they might have covered the trail in
a day and a night, but there was no special need of haste. Then, too,
Tom Swift did not want to push the motor of his House on Wheels to the
safe limit even, for he wanted to get it well broken in and limbered up
before trying any stunts with it.
"This is the life!" sang Ned, as they rolled along the level highway.
"Eh, Tom?"
"It sure is! Makes a fellow glad to be alive!"
"This is one of the best things you ever turned out of your shop," went
on Ned, indicating by a comprehensive motion of his hand the vehicle in
which they were riding.
As they motored along, their big car attracted much attention, not only
from passing machines but on the part of persons in towns and villages
through which they passed.
Noon came almost before the two travelers realized it, and, being
then on a country road with no settlement in sight, they pulled off
the highway, stopped under some trees and near a little stream, and
prepared to have lunch.
The pantry had been well stocked, and Ned and Tom, being used to
camping, had no difficulty in preparing a light meal, part of which was
set to cooking on the electric stove. In a little while there was a
most appetizing odor in the air and either this, or perhaps a sight of
the big machine itself, caused a passing man to stop.
He was obviously a hobo, a rather dirty, unshaven and ragged specimen
of tramp. Yet his face had an impudent, roguish smile and his manner
was ingratiating as he shuffled up in the dust until he was opposite
the House, outside of which Tom and Ned sat on stools in the shade.
They were waiting for the potatoes to boil.
"How's business, Boss--maybe I ought to say Bosses?" asked the tramp in
a hoarse voice. He leered and smiled.
"What do you mean--business?" asked Tom.
"The lunch-wagon business." The tramp seemed surprised at the question.
Very evidently he took the House on Wheels for one of those roadside
refreshment places.
"We haven't opened up yet," said Ned, carrying on the delusion.
"Smells like you had," commented the tramp, hungrily sniffing. "If that
ain't hash and onions cooking may I never eat another meal!"
He was vehement about it. From his looks he did not appear to have
eaten a meal recently.
"Is it hash and onions?" he asked.
"Guessed it first shot," commented Tom.
"But I can't see how you can expect to do much business here," went on
the hobo. "This road ain't much traveled."
"We're our own best customers," chuckled Ned, and at the man's look of
surprise he added enough information to show the nature of the House on
Wheels.
"Well, then it's a washout as far as it goes with me," sighed the
tramp. "I was goin' to ask if I couldn't do you folks some work for the
price of a hand-out, but if yours is a private concern----"
"Oh, I guess we can manage to get you something," said Tom
good-naturedly. A little later when he and Ned were eating in the
combined kitchen and dining room, they handed the tramp a generous
plateful, for which he expressed gratitude.
"Travel much in these parts?" asked Ned, as the hobo was about to
shuffle along.
"More or less, Boss."
"Ever been to Dismal Mountain?"
"No, I can't say I have. And, what's more, I don't intend to! So if you
folks is aimin' to have me go there to work for what you jest give me,
count it out! I'm sorry, but----"
"Nothing like that," interrupted Tom. "I just wanted to know if we were
on the right road to get there."
"Yes, you're on the right road," the tramp admitted, with a shake of
his head. "But what for you fellers want to go to Dismal Mountain, gets
me!"
"What's the matter with the place anyhow?" asked Ned.
"Oh, I don't know's there's much the matter with the _place_," and the
man emphasized the word. "It's the birds that hang out around there."
"Ghosts?" asked Tom, with a smile.
"Ghosts!" exploded the tramp. "I'd rather meet ghosts than some of the
guys what hangs out there. Tough babies--an' I don't mean maybe!"
"A rough crowd, eh?" asked Ned.
"Tougher'n what I like," admitted the tramp. "I don't claim to be no
saint, but I'm pretty decent compared to some of the hard-boiled eggs
that hide around Dismal Mountain."
"Then you wouldn't advise us to go there?" Tom asked.
"It's none of my business, Boss," was the answer. "You know what your
own game is better'n what I do. But I wouldn't advise you to take any
valuables with you when you go to Dismal Mountain."
"Thanks," murmured Ned. "We aren't wearing any diamonds."
"Some of the guys there'll steal the laces out of your shoes," went on
the tramp.
"Just what kind of criminals hang out there?" inquired Tom.
"A kind I never travel with," was the quick rejoinder. "I'm a bum--I
don't deny it--and I'm not lookin' for work. But I'd sooner work than
pull off some o' the things that those babies do. Keep your eyes open
if you go there."
"We will," promised Ned.
The tramp shuffled away, and when the two chums were again alone Ned
looked at Tom and asked:
"Think we'd better follow through?"
"Sure! Why not?"
"Well, there are only two of us and if there are some tough gangs up
there, or even a small band, we might run into trouble."
"I'm not going to run away from trouble," declared the young inventor.
"Maybe it would have been wise to have had at least Koku along. But I'm
not going back after him. We'll go on to Dismal Mountain and see what's
there. Are you with me?"
"I sure am, Tom!"
They rested after the noon meal, washed the dishes in the near-by
brook, to save the supply of water in the auto tanks, and then
journeyed on in leisurely fashion. They expected to reach the mountain
of mystery the following night.
It was dusk when they stopped the House on the outskirts of a little
village and prepared the evening meal. Then, having disposed of that,
they decided to go into town for the sake of the exercise and to see if
they could buy a paper.
They hired a couple of boys from a house near where they had parked
their machine to stand guard over it while they were in town, and one
can well imagine with what pride the youngsters accepted the commission.
"We won't let nobody come near it until you come back!" promised the
older boy.
"I got my baseball bat if they do!" chimed in his brother.
Stopping for an ice-cream soda in the only store of the town that
dispensed this refreshment and having bought a paper, Ned and Tom
lingered a while to listen to the somewhat excited and loud talk
that was going on amid a crowd of men in the place, evidently the
headquarters of the village gossips.
"And they got clean away!" one man declared. "Took every darn cent,
too!"
"Did they hurt the guards?" asked another.
"Shot at 'em, but missed. It was all over quick."
"Didn't they see which way the robbers went?" some one wanted to know.
"Off toward Dismal Mountain," another answered.
"Might have known it!" commented several. "That place ought to be wiped
out."
"This sounds interesting," remarked Tom to Ned in a low voice. "I'm
going to butt in."
Accordingly, he addressed the principal speaker and asked what all the
talk was about.
"Highway robbery, that's what!" came the vehement answer. "A couple of
men guarding the pay roll of the shoe factory here were held up this
afternoon and robbed of about four thousand dollars."
"I just now heard you mention Dismal Mountain," went on Tom. "Is that a
hang-out for highwaymen?"
"That and worse," was the reply. "Dismal Mountain is a good place for
honest folks to stay away from."
"Well, my friend and I claim to be honest," said Tom, indicating Ned.
"But we are on our way to Dismal Mountain and----"
"Don't go!" exclaimed an old man in the store. "I know more about that
place than most folks, and my advice to you is not to go there. Unless
you're officers aiming to arrest the scoundrels that hide there," he
added hopefully.
"No, we aren't officers," stated Ned.
"We were just going there to find out what gives the place its bad
name," added Tom. "We would rather like to solve the mystery."
"Well, be warned by me and keep away," went on the old man. "I used to
live not far from the place," he added, "and I don't want to see any
more such goings on as I witnessed."
"What were they?" asked Ned.
"I couldn't tell you," was the answer, with a dubious shake of the
head. "I've seen men go up that mountain and never come down. There
were queer noises and queer lights. Nobody that had a valuable horse
near Dismal Mountain ever left him in a field over night. If they did
he wasn't there in the morning."
"This sounds interesting," said Tom.
"_Interesting_, young man!" exclaimed the speaker. "It's _dangerous_!
That's what it is! _Dangerous!_"
There was so much interest in the recent hold-up that the departure of
Tom and Ned was little noticed. They went back to the House on Wheels
where they found the two boys had been faithful to their trust, and,
having paid and dismissed them, the two travelers turned in for the
night.
"Well, what about it?" asked Tom of his chum when they arose the next
morning and found it raining and blowing. "Shall we lay over?"
"Not on my account," declared Ned. "This storm doesn't seem to be going
to amount to much."
"Oh, it wasn't of the storm I was speaking."
"What then?"
"The warnings we had last night against proceeding to Dismal Mountain.
If you----"
"Nothing doing!" interrupted Ned. "I'll go with you to the end of the
trail!"
"That settles it. We keep on!" cried Tom.
After a hearty breakfast, they took their places on the front seat and
started off. For a time they followed a good concrete road, but it
soon branched off, and their way lay along a highway that had once been
good but which was so no longer.
As the day advanced, taking the travelers farther on their way, the
storm increased. By afternoon and after lunch, which they ate while
moving along, they were in the midst of a terrific downpour with a wind
which reached at times the velocity of a gale.
"She seems to weather it all right, though," remarked Ned, indicating
their traveling House.
"Standing up fine!" agreed Tom, much pleased with the staunchness of
his latest invention. "We'll be almost there by night in spite of the
storm and the bad road."
Hardly had he spoken than there was a fiercer burst of wind, which
dashed the rain like hail against the protecting glass in front. Just
then Ned pointed ahead as a loud crash sounded and cried:
"Look out, Tom! Stop! Danger!"
CHAPTER XIII
THE DESERTED HOUSE
Tom Swift, ever on the alert when driving any of his machines, from
the humble motorcycle to the more complicated apparatuses of the air
or undersea, lived up to his name in bringing the House on Wheels to
a quick but skillful stop as Ned Newton uttered the exclamation of
warning.
It was just in time, for the front wheels were almost against a big
rotten tree that the gale had blown down across the highway leading
toward Dismal Mountain. Tom's attention had been taken momentarily by
some of his dashboard gages, so he had not seen the sway of the tree
before it fell. But Ned's quick eyes had sensed the danger and had
given ample warning.
"Close call, that!" commented Tom, as he leaned back after pulling hard
on the emergency brake.
"Don't want 'em any closer," agreed Ned, as he looked through the
driving rain at the fallen tree. "If we had gone full tilt into that it
might have scratched some of the paint off the House."
"Worse than that," assented Tom. "It's lucky you yelled at me when you
did."
"Well, what's the next move?" asked Ned.
"Put on our umbrella clothes and see if we can cut that tree away,"
suggested Tom. "I don't believe we can very well turn around and I
don't want to navigate backward."
"No, it won't be easy," agreed Ned. "Well, let's hop to it. I don't
believe there's much traffic on this road, but what there is we don't
want to hold up."
"Speaking of hold-ups," said Tom grimly, "maybe we could get some of
the hold-up residents of Dismal Mountain to come to our help."
"They don't show up in any great numbers," remarked Ned, as he made his
way back into the interior of the car to get his raincoat and rubber
boots, which Tom had designated as "umbrella clothes."
They were in a lonely part of the country, in the midst of an extensive
piece of woods, it appeared, on a seldom-traveled road, about at the
beginning of the big peak known as Dismal Mountain. They had seen no
habitation for some time, nor had they met any other travelers, which
last was not remarkable, considering the state of the weather.
Tom carried a set of emergency tools in his House on Wheels and among
these were a couple of axes. In a short time he and Ned, fortified
against the elements, which appeared to be doing their worst just now,
were attacking the fallen tree with their sharp tools.
Fortunately the tree was pretty well rotted, and though it was large in
diameter, the trunk was punk-like in its character and the axes easily
bit into it. Chopping out small sections, the two travelers dragged
them to one side of the road until at last, after an hour's work, they
had cleared a passage for their auto and for any other vehicles that
might follow.
"Though if there are any other people foolish enough to drive up here
in a storm like this, they ought to be made to chop their own trees,"
commented Tom, as he got back on the seat.
"It wasn't so bad when we started up here," Ned reminded his chum.
"Oh, I'm not kicking!" Tom made haste to say. "I'm just talking to hear
my own voice. Whew, it's going to be a nasty night!"
"It already is one!" declared Ned, for darkness was rapidly falling and
they had no idea of what lay beyond them.
"Want to stay here?" asked Tom, always willing to give in on the
matter of stopping for the night.
"No, the road's too narrow in case anything else comes along, though
I don't believe it will. Let's push on, and maybe we'll get to some
decent place where we can pull up."
The motor, which had been stopped while the fallen tree was being
chopped away, was again put in motion and once more the House on Wheels
began the gradual but steady ascent that led up Dismal Mountain, by
this time in the young men's minds, a veritable mountain of mystery.
For about a mile the road was fairly good and firm. After that either
the highway had not been kept in repair or the heavy rain was washing
it away rapidly, for the House on Wheels careened from one rut into
another until it was swaying like a circus camel in the parade.
"Not so good!" commented Ned, as he banged up against the side of the
seat after a particularly heavy lurch.
"It is getting a bit thick and heavy," agreed Tom, trying to peer ahead
into the gloom which was pierced by two powerful headlights of the
auto. But powerful as they were, the gleams of the lamps appeared to be
swallowed up in the dark trees on either side of the road and by the
surface of the highway itself.
A comparatively light surface is needed to reflect the gleams of any
auto lamps properly, as you have noticed when driving first on concrete
and then on asphalt. You can see twice as well on the former as on the
latter. And in driving through woods on a dirt road, nearly all the
illumination is absorbed so that you get the benefit of very little of
it.
It was so in the case of Tom and Ned, and though for a little way in
front of the wheels they could see where they were going, beyond ten
feet all was gloom and darkness.
It was still raining hard and the wind was blowing. Tom had set in
motion the wiper of the glass in front of him so the drops did not
accumulate and distort his vision. But he needed all the artificial
aids he could command on a night like this and under the circumstances.
For the first time it began to be apparent to him and Ned that perhaps
they had done rather a foolish thing to come to Dismal Mountain in
this large van-like car. It was not exactly the kind of a machine
for prospect work, not being small or flexible enough for quick
maneuvering.
On the other hand, it was a portable base of supplies and the occupants
of it could stop wherever they found themselves and be comfortable,
which was more than could be said for a small car. So they kept
plugging along.
The motor was pulling powerfully. Tom was glad of this for he knew he
would need all the power he could command when they got into the upper
slopes where the grades would be stiffer.
On and on, up and up, the House on Wheels was driven until Ned began to
wonder where his chum would stop. He did not like to suggest a halt,
for there seemed to be no good place to pull up. The road was still
narrow. The House took up considerable room and there were places where
trees grew so close to each side of the road that it seemed impossible
to squeeze the big vehicle through.
But, somehow, Tom managed it, though once both sides of the car lightly
brushed great trunks that would have taken hours on the part of a
skilled lumberman to fell. However, luck was with the two venturesome
travelers.
After a stiff ascent, in which Tom had to drop back to second gear for
one of the few times since the trip started, they came to a somewhat
level stretch, as was evidenced by the easier pull on the motor. Ned,
always enthusiastic, exclaimed:
"Hurray! We're up!"
"Not half!" exclaimed Tom. "Don't fool yourself."
"Oh, gee!" sighed Ned.
"But we may reach a place where it will be wise to stop for the rest of
the night," went on Tom, trying in vain to pierce the dark forest ahead
and on either side. "The road is wider here and we can pull off it with
a chance for something else to pass."
"Nobody but us two are crazy enough to be out here on a night like
this," commented the financial manager.
"Guess that's about right," assented Tom. "Still, it's best not to take
any chances. I'll go along a bit farther and then we'll pull up and
call it a day's work."
The going was better until there was a sudden lurch to one side.
"In a hole!" cried Tom, and he quickly went into second and then into
first gear in an effort to pull out.
However, it was not to be. The House on Wheels slowly settled down and
not all the power of the motor could stir it. Finally Tom realized that
he was only sinking the rear wheels deeper into the mud by churning
them around.
"We've got to dig out!" he told Ned.
There was no help for it. Once more they donned boots and raincoats
and, hanging a portable electric light over the bogged side, they saw
where the right front wheel had sunk into a deep hole. It took the two
the best part of an hour to dig a slope in front and fill it with small
stones to make a firm surface so the machine could climb out. This the
auto did after several false starts, and once more they were on their
way.
The road shortly broadened and the trees were cut back from the highway
into a small clearing. This opening enabled the two to see better,
and in the gleam of the powerful lamps Ned noticed, just ahead, on
the right, a big house, from which, however, no lights showed. As the
car approached, it could be seen that the place was an old, deserted
mansion that had once been the stately home of some wealthy person, for
there were extensive grounds.
"Look!" exclaimed Ned.
"I see it," answered Tom. "Nobody home from the looks of it, but we can
pull up there and stop for the night. What say?"
"Suits me!"
Accordingly, Tom guided the big car into what seemed to have once been
a drive and he and Ned both experienced a feeling of relief. But if
they had known to what adventures the deserted house was a preface they
might well have hesitated.
"What do you make it out to be?" joked Ned, as the House on Wheels was
brought to a stop at one side of the old mansion. "Is it a hang-out of
bootleggers or road agents?"
"Take your choice," Tom answered, in equally light vein. "Luckily, we
don't have to depend on them for supper. We roll our own."
"And I'm going to roll mine right soon!" added Ned. "Boy, I'm hungry
and I don't mean perhaps!"
"Be with you in just a minute," Tom said, shutting off the motor and
putting on the emergency brake. He was glad to note that the ground
seemed firm beneath the wheels.
As he and Ned were alighting, thinking to have a look around the
outside of the deserted house before getting something to eat, Ned
uttered a low exclamation which Tom heard above the noise of the rain
that was coming down more gently now.
"What is it?" whispered the young inventor.
"Did you hear a noise in there?" asked Ned in cautious tones.
CHAPTER XIV
A STRANGE DISAPPEARANCE
Like game dogs, Tom Swift and Ned Newton froze in their tracks and
stood in the rain near the deserted house, waiting for they knew not
what. It was a lonesome, dreary place, dense woods being all around
them, and ahead, though some miles distant, the sinister summit of
Dismal Mountain with its suggestion of mystery. Only the fact that
the warm, comfortable and cozily lighted House on Wheels was near by
heartened the young men. They were rather tired from their trip, with
fighting the elements, and digging the heavy auto out of bog holes.
For several seconds they stood there, Tom seeking to tune his ears to
what Ned had said he had heard--a noise in the deserted house. But as
no sounds came to him, the young inventor began to believe that his
chum was mistaken.
"Guess it was only the storm," he said, still pitching his voice low.
"Maybe," agreed Ned. "Yet at first I was sure the sound came from the
house."
"It might at that, and still nobody need be in it," Tom suggested.
"In an old, deserted place like this there are always doors to swing,
windows to rattle, and shutters to slam."
"I suppose so," agreed Ned. "Well, shall we go in and have a look
around?"
"I don't know that it will do us any good or that we can learn anything
by going in this old mansion," was Tom's comment. "Yet as long as we're
here we might as well go in. If we're going to stay here all night----"
"Stay here all night!" interrupted Ned, in surprise.
"I don't mean in there," and Tom pointed to the dark and silent
mansion, "but in our own House. If we're going to camp out here it's
just as well to know the character of our neighbor."
"Sure," assented Ned. "Well, come on in and let's get it over with.
Then we'll eat. I'm hungry!"
"So am I. Got your flashlight?" and Tom produced one of these handy
little portable torches.
"Never go without it when I'm traveling with you," chuckled Ned. "You
always end up in some queer situation or other." This was true, as Tom
knew from past experience, so he did not comment on it.
A look behind the young men showed them that the auto was where they
had left it, the power shut off, the headlights glowing, and also some
lights turned on showing the cozy interior.
"I'll sure be glad to get back in it," murmured Tom.
"So will I," echoed his chum.
The deserted mansion the two had discovered half way up Dismal Mountain
was like many other tenantless houses in lonesome country districts,
only this was rather larger and better.
With the departing of the owner the place had been left to the mercy
of the elements and the whims of those who were more or less vandals
who took delight in needlessly breaking doors, windows and shutters.
Consequently there was no difficulty in getting into the place. The
front door gaped wide and, after flashing their lights into and around
a spacious entrance hall, Tom and Ned stepped inside.
"I guess this a hang-out for tramps now and then," remarked Tom, as the
two advanced down the hallway.
"Shouldn't wonder," agreed Ned. "They've got plenty of rooms at their
disposal, anyhow," he added as his light showed many apartments as
they continued on their way. Aside from broken boxes and barrels, with
here and there a litter of straw or leaves, there was no furniture in
the rooms.
Dismal and eerie to the extreme was the deserted house. Paper peeling
from the damp walls hung in strips like festoons of Spanish moss. In
places the plaster had fallen, leaving gaping holes that were like
sightless eyes staring at the intruders.
They went through the first floor, flashing their lights into nooks and
corners but discovering nothing. There were some signs of the place
having recently harbored such tenants as tramps. In one room a fire
appeared to have been burning not long since on an open hearth and some
empty tin cans scattered about seemed to give evidence that hoboes had
cooked a meal here some time.
"Shall we go upstairs?" asked Ned, when their inspection of the first
floor was finished.
"Might as well," decided Tom. "Then we'll know there isn't anything
here to annoy us after we get back to the House."
The front stairway was a large and imposing one, sweeping up to a
balcony where there was space enough for a fairly large room. From here
one could look down into the lower front hall. As Ned followed Tom to
this balcony he saw the young inventor turn and gaze intently at what
appeared to be a panel in the back wall of the landing. Tom's start was
so obvious that Ned asked:
"What's the matter?"
"I thought--I wasn't sure--but I thought I saw one of those oak panels
slide as I came up the stairs," answered Tom.
"You thought you saw a panel slide!" exclaimed Ned. "Say, this is like
a moving picture mystery."
"Maybe it was only the shadow of your flashlight," went on Tom.
He advanced to the rear wall and tapped on it. The lower part was made
up of what had once been beautifully carved, quartered oak panels. But
as far as the two adventurers could discover, all of them were in place
and none seemed movable.
"It must have been a shadow," said Ned.
"I guess so," agreed his chum.
The rooms upstairs, like those below, were bare and deserted, devoid of
furniture, but with the same festoons of drooping wall paper. In some
of the chambers there were piles of old bags and leaves in some corners
showing plainly that tramps had been sleeping there.
"It was probably these hoboes, who made this place a hang-out, that
gave rise to the stories about ghosts and bootleggers on Dismal
Mountain," commented Ned, and Tom agreed that this might be so.
The number and arrangement of the upper rooms confirmed the ideas of
the young men that this mansion had once been the home of persons
who lived in luxury and moved in high society. There were a number
of bedchambers, each with a private bath. But the latter rooms were
in worse ruin than any other part of the house, for the fixtures had
been torn out, probably by those who wanted the lead and brass piping
to sell to junkmen. Some of the porcelain bath tubs had been wantonly
cracked and broken.
It was when Tom, preceding Ned, walked out of one of the bedrooms into
the main hall that the young inventor gave another perceptible start
and uttered a low exclamation.
"What's the matter now?" asked Ned, with half a laugh. "See another
moving panel?"
"No, but, somehow, Ned, I feel as if we were being spied upon! Don't
you?"
"Spied upon! What do you mean?"
"Well, when I came out of that room," and Tom pointed back to it, "I
had a distinct feeling that eyes were following me. Didn't you ever
have such a feeling?"
"Yes; but not now. I think you're just over-worked and nervous. You did
most of the driving, and with that and the storm and getting bogged,
it's no wonder you're seeing things."
"Well, maybe that's it," agreed Tom, but his heart did not appear to
be in what he was saying. "I am tired. I'll be glad when we have had
something to eat and can turn in for a good night's sleep."
"Boy, you let loose an earful that time!" chuckled Ned.
He saw that Tom was flashing his light back into the room they had just
quitted and he followed his chum's example. But nothing was seen save
the same dismal ruin that confronted them on every side.
Going downstairs behind Tom, when Ned reached the landing where the
young inventor had said he thought he saw a panel move, he was suddenly
conscious of the same feeling that Tom had mentioned--that of unseen
eyes staring at him.
"But it's all bunk!" said Ned to himself. "It's just nerves. I'm not
going to speak of it. Tom has enough to worry about now."
However, he cast a quick look over his shoulder and even flashed his
torch on the oak paneling, a move which caused Tom to ask:
"What's the matter?"
"Oh, nothing," answered Ned, prevaricating just a little. But he felt
he had a right to, since, as he reasoned, Tom Swift had been under a
strain for several days getting the House on Wheels in shape for this
test trip. There was no sense in adding to his worries, especially as
it was such an intangible something that Ned had felt.
Yet he could not get over the sensation that he, too, as Tom had been,
was being watched by sinister eyes somewhere within that deserted
mansion. Eyes that were evil, that looked evil, and that hoped evil.
"Might have been bats," thought Ned. "Always have been bats in an old
house. That's what it was--bats. I'll be getting them in my belfry if I
don't get something to eat soon," he thought, with a noiseless chuckle.
Their footsteps echoed and re-echoed through the dark and eerie
mansion, but nothing happened, save now and then a distant and ghostly
hammering or clattering sound that plainly came from rattling windows,
banging doors, and swinging shutters.
"Well," remarked Tom, with a sigh of relief, "we've proved that there's
nobody around here to annoy us. Now for a good night's rest."
He stepped out of the front door, closely followed by Ned. The rain was
coming down hard and the wind had once more risen to the proportions
of half a gale. For a moment Tom and Ned stood on the big front porch.
Then Ned remarked:
"We must have got turned around and come out the back way."
"Why so?" asked Tom.
"Because we left the House right where we could see it from the front
steps, and it isn't in sight now. We must have got turned around and
come out at the back instead of the front."
"This is the front all right," said Tom in a queer voice. "It's where
we went in, but the House on Wheels is gone!"
"Gone!" cried Ned. "It can't be!"
"Look for yourself," asserted his chum. "You know where it was. In
plain sight with lights going, as we saw just before we went inside.
Now it's gone!"
There was no doubt of it. The House on Wheels had vanished!
CHAPTER XV
ON THE TRAIL
Their hearts oppressed with a sense of foreboding which they could not
fathom, Tom Swift and Ned Newton hurried down the broad front steps
of the old mansion, out into the wind and rain, and hurried toward
the clearing where they had left the warm, lighted, and cozy House on
Wheels. For a moment they hoped that perhaps the lighting system had
failed and that they could not see the big auto because it was shrouded
in darkness.
But as they lighted their way by means of their pocket flashlights and
reached the spot, near two large, distinctive trees where they had
halted the big auto, there was no question about it. Their car had been
taken away! It could not have rolled downhill, for it had been stopped
on a level spot, and Tom had taken pains to set the brakes.
"Some one came and got it!" exclaimed Tom, when it was certain that
the machine had vanished.
"Who was it?" came from Ned.
"Hard to say. But I guess we weren't wrong, Ned, in suspecting that we
were being spied upon by unseen eyes in that old house."
"I'm forced to believe that."
"While some watched us inside, to make sure we wouldn't come out and
interrupt the theft, others stole the House," declared Tom.
"Looks so," commented Ned. "Gee, but this is tough luck! What are we
going to do now?"
"We've got to hit the trail, of course, and see if we can't get it
back," was Tom Swift's prompt answer.
Though they were hungry and tired, the two young men did not hesitate.
In fact, they could not. Much depended on prompt action, for the House
on Wheels could not long have been taken away. Luckily Tom and Ned had
on rubber boots and rain coats, and their little electric flashlights
enabled them to see the trail. Without them they would have been at a
great disadvantage.
But with these gleams, flashing occasionally so as not to wear out the
batteries too fast, the two first made sure where the big auto had
stood and then began to trail it.
"They first swung around in a half circle and then went off this way,"
said Tom, pointing to the peculiar marks in the mud left by the tires
of the House on Wheels. They were tires especially made for heavy duty
and marked with ridges designed to prevent skidding, so the trail was
easily followed, particularly as the wet ground took a deep impression.
"It ought to be a cinch to trace her," remarked Ned, as the two young
men hurried on, their weariness and hunger forgotten in the excitement
of the chase.
"Yes, for a way, anyhow," agreed Tom. "But we may not always have soft
dirt roads like this to retain the marks. Though I don't believe there
are any concrete stretches in this neighborhood," and he motioned
toward Dismal Mountain, up the trail of which the House on Wheels
clearly had been driven.
"The ground will be soft for a couple of days after this rain, and we
can keep on following," suggested Ned.
"They may get too far ahead of us to leave us a Chinaman's chance,"
said Tom, with a sigh. "Remember, we're walking, and if the House only
crawled it could do ten miles to our one. Besides, they may run her
down off this mountain and onto a hard road, and then the tire marks
won't be one, two, six!"
On they splashed in the rain and darkness. The road taken by the House
on Wheels, as evidenced by the tire marks, led up the mountain and the
deserted house, with its gloom, its secrets and its spying eyes, was
soon left in the rear of the young men who pressed on, now and then
flashing their torches to make sure they were still on the right trail.
"Hark!" exclaimed Tom suddenly, when they had been thus going for
several minutes.
"What is it?" asked Ned, coming to a halt.
"Let's listen and try to hear the motor," suggested the young inventor.
"I have an idea those fellows, whoever they are, won't push the machine
too hard. They may run her only a little way and then lay over for the
night."
Accordingly, the two stood there with the rain dripping on them,
listening. But the only sounds that came to their ears were those of
the storm--the wind and rain, the clattering of tree branches, and the
swish of wet leaves.
"No use trying to hear anything," stated Ned, after a pause.
"No, I guess there isn't. We'll keep on."
Again the two plunged forward along the muddy road. They blessed their
lucky stars that had given them the forethought to put on rubber boots
and coats before venturing around and into the old house.
Tom, also, was glad he had equipped his car with those heavy and
peculiarly marked tires, for they were very easy to follow, even under
the adverse circumstances of rain and darkness.
In spite of the fact that the noise of the storm would seem to preclude
their hearing any sound made by the car ahead of them, Tom and Ned
stopped several more times and listened for any faint echo of a motor
ahead of them. But they heard nothing.
"Maybe I'm wrong, Ned," said Tom, after a while, pausing at a sandy
stretch in the road, where the wheel marks were very plain, "but
doesn't it strike you that these tire impressions are fresher than they
have been for some time back?"
"Fresher? Anybody would think we were trailing an elephant or some wild
animal."
"Well, we are, in a way. But you see the rain has the effect of washing
out the marks after a certain time. Now these marks here are sharp and
fresh."
"Yes, I admit it," said Ned. "But what of it?"
"Well," and Tom's voice had a note of triumph in it, "to me this means
that my House has passed here within a short time--minutes I should
say--otherwise the hard rain would have washed down some of the tire
ridges."
"Tom, you're right!" cried Ned. "She ought to be close now."
"That's what I think. Come on!"
Once more the two plunged forward. The tire marks continued to become
ever fresher until the seekers reached a place where a small road
branched off the main highway.
"They went up here!" cried Tom, indicating the trail that led up the
branch road.
"Sure enough!" assented Ned, flashing his light on the marks.
Up the road the two fairly ran until, so quickly that it was startling,
they came upon the big auto at a standstill in the middle of the
highway. The House on Wheels was in darkness, but there it was.
"We've found her!" exulted Tom, but he had the caution to speak in low
tones.
"Sure enough," agreed Ned and his voice was hardly more than a whisper.
"But what's the game, I wonder?"
That remained to be seen.
CHAPTER XVI
TWO STRANGE MEN
There were two theories to account for the taking away of the House
on Wheels. These at once occurred to Tom Swift and Ned Newton as they
stood in the rain and darkness near the auto, hardly able to believe
their good luck which had brought them to the machine within half an
hour of the theft.
One explanation was that the legal authorities of the place--state
police or local traffic officers--had come upon the parked House while
Tom and Ned were in the deserted mansion. Seeing no one in the big
auto, but observing that the lights were on, the authorities might have
concluded that there had been an accident or that the car was abandoned
and so had decided to drive it some place where it could be held
pending an investigation.
Another and more plausible theory, was that ordinary thieves, happening
upon the car, had decided to appropriate it for themselves. For it was
a car that any one might desire to possess.
As Tom and Ned stood behind the discovered auto, pondering over these
matters, it was more and more evident to them that the car had been
stolen and abandoned. But had it been abandoned for good, or were the
thieves just temporarily away from it?
That last consideration must give them serious pause.
For perhaps a full minute the two stood there, the rain dripping off
their hats and coats, while they considered. Meanwhile they were
using their ears and eyes to the best possible advantage; their ears
particularly. For soon after discovering the auto they had switched off
their torches and now stood in gloom. There was no light either in the
House on Wheels or at the headlamps, as Tom and Ned ascertained by a
quick glance forward.
No sound came from the stranded auto. There was no noise of movement on
the part of those who had taken the vehicle away and who might now be
in ambush near it.
"Well," questioned Ned in a whisper, "what'll we do?"
"Let's circle the House and see if we can spot anybody," was Tom's
answer, just breathed into his chum's ear.
The storm was making so much noise that ordinary sounds on the part of
the two would be covered, they thought. Still, they were not going to
take any chances and they used the utmost caution in proceeding.
"Come on!" whispered Tom.
"I'm with you!" answered Ned.
Side by side they started around the left of the House, intending to
make their way to the front and gain control of the machine. They were
not half way to their objective when there was a noise up ahead--a
crackling and trampling of the bushes and voices coming out of the
darkness.
Tom reached out and caught the coat of Ned who was moving away from him.
"Hold on!" whispered the young inventor, pulling his chum toward him.
"Let's see who these birds are before we bump into them."
It was good advice, as Ned admitted by following Tom into a little
recess of the underbrush about midway of the auto. Pushing themselves
back into the screen of shrubs, the two waited. They were not long left
in doubt as to the character or intentions of the men whose voices came
to them.
There were two men, as evidenced by the different tones. One said:
"Well, we got her all right!"
"You said it."
From the tones of the voices Tom and Ned judged one man to be big
and the other small, and, without sight of them, the hidden ones so
distinguished the two speakers mentally.
"It was easy," went on Big, to give him a temporary designation.
"Maybe it was too easy," suggested Small.
"What do you mean?"
"Well, I mean those two lads won't give up their machine so easily.
They may come to get it back."
"Let 'em!" chuckled Big. "We'll be ready for 'em."
"I'd feel better satisfied if we had kept on," said Small. "I don't see
the sense in stopping here."
"That's what the boss told us to do if we were lucky enough to get the
machine," said the other. "And we did."
"Well, if the boss told us to stay here, we've got to, I reckon,"
admitted Small. "But there's no use staying out in the wet. That's a
pretty nifty little outfit this fellow Quick turned out, and I don't
see why we can't take it easy in it and have some grub."
"There's no harm in that," agreed Big. "But the chap who got up this
dingus is named Swift, not Quick."
"It's all the same," chuckled the other. "And I can't get in out of
the wet any too quick and have something to eat. What say?"
"I'll be with you in a little while."
"Why, where you going?" asked Small, and there seemed to be a note of
suspicion in his voice.
There was a moment before the reply came and in that moment Tom and
Ned made several rapid conclusions. There was no doubt now but what
their car had been stolen. These were no state police or local traffic
officers who had run the car away for its own safety. They were thieves
and had evidently acted from a well-planned motive.
"They know you, Tom, or one of them does," whispered Ned.
"Seems so! By golly! I'd give a good deal to know just who is back of
all this!" Tom's voice though low was tense and angry.
"Maybe we can find out," whispered Ned.
"Hush!" cautioned Tom, and at that moment Small spoke again, saying:
"Where you going? What's the game? Why don't you come in with me and
help rustle some grub on that electric stove I saw."
"I can't come just now," was the answer.
"Getting cold feet?" demanded the other man sullenly. "Say, if you're
trying to double cross me----"
"Don't be a fool!" snapped Big viciously. "It's all part of the game
we're playing for the boss."
"Well, maybe it is. But I don't like you sneaking off this way leaving
me all alone in case anything happens."
"I've got to go. I've got to go tell the boss."
"You have?"
"Yes."
"Where is he?"
"A little way ahead, waiting. His orders were, if we got the car, to
stop here and for me to come on alone and let him know."
"All right, then I reckon you got to do it. But where is the boss?"
"Near the entrance to the castle."
"Oh! Well, all right. Go ahead, but don't leave me alone any longer
than you can help."
"Ho! Who's getting cold feet now?" jeered Big.
"Well, you never know what can happen," grumbled Small. "It's a nasty
night. Those fellows may get help and trace us here. I'm not afraid of
the two, but if they get a gang of police----"
"Forget it! They'll never find us. Besides, where could they get any
police on a night like this to come to Dismal Mountain?"
"Well, maybe they couldn't. Anyhow, don't be any longer than you can
help."
"I won't," promised Big. "Soon as I let the boss know we've pulled off
the trick I'll come back. You can wait inside and be cooking your own
grub. I'll eat when I come in."
"All right. Hop to it."
The sound of one man striding away in the darkness through the brush
could be heard. The two had evidently gone on ahead after temporarily
abandoning the House and had come back to hold their talk in front of
the halted machine. Now one was going away and the other remaining.
"What are we going to do now?" asked Ned.
"Let me think a minute," suggested his chum. "Did you hear that remark
about the castle?"
"Yes."
"Have you any idea what it means?"
"Yes, I heard something about it when I was looking up the history of
Dismal Mountain before I had any idea we'd ever come here. The castle
is an old stone building, built to represent its name. It was started
by a rich man who had an idea he'd like to live somewhat after the
English style. But either he died or his money gave out, for the castle
was never quite finished. It's an old, rambling pile of stone near the
top of this mountain of mystery."
"Anybody live in it?"
"That I don't know. Probably it's deserted like the old house, but it
may be the hang-out of some of the gangs infesting the mountain, and
it's very evident that our car has fallen into the hands of one of
these same gangs."
"Yes," agreed Tom. "But they won't have my machine long!"
"What are you going to do?"
"Get it back, Ned. There's only one man there now and we ought to be
able to easily handle him."
"He's likely to be armed. They both are I should say, and there is no
telling when Mr. Big may come back."
"I aim to do up Mr. Small before Mr. Big shows up," replied Tom grimly.
"As for being armed, we've got our own automatics."
"That's so!" agreed Ned, who, for the moment, had forgotten that before
getting out of the House on Wheels to go to the old house he and his
chum had put the weapons in their pockets. "Well, lead on, Tom."
"We'll wait just a moment to see that Big doesn't change his mind and
come back," suggested the young inventor.
But the echoes of the retreating footsteps of the other echoed fainter
and fainter above the sound of the storm and it was evident that he was
going on to seek the "boss," whoever that personage might be.
Waiting another few seconds, Tom and Ned heard Small enter the House
and a moment later there was a gleam of light within the auto. Tom
drew a deep breath. He could not bear to have any hands but those of
himself and his friends touch his latest pet machine. But it was now,
temporarily at least, captured by an unknown enemy.
"Come on now!" whispered Tom fiercely to his chum, drawing his
automatic and stepping out of their hiding place.
"I'm with you!" answered Ned, who had his own weapon in readiness.
CHAPTER XVII
THE CAPTIVE ESCAPES
Instead of proceeding to the front of the House on Wheels, the opening
by which the remaining man had entered, Tom Swift turned to the rear,
somewhat to the surprise of his chum.
"You can't get in that way," suggested Ned. "The back steps are up."
"I know," whispered Tom. "But they can be let down from the outside if
you know the trick. I arranged a duplicate control, for I didn't know
when I might run my machine into a tree and have to get in and out the
back door."
Ned knew that Tom was only joking with his reference to ramming
his beloved new car into a tree. But it was true that there was an
inconspicuous spring outside, on the rear of the machine. This, when
operated, let the folding steps down out of their safety recess and
enabled one to enter the rear of the House without reference to what
was going on in front.
"We'll give him a great surprise," whispered Tom.
Ned now understood what the proceeding was to be and he was close
behind his chum as the latter approached the rear of the big car.
Inside the lights were gleaming and the shadow of the intruder could be
seen passing to and fro at the windows. Evidently he had no suspicion
that the owner of the stolen machine was soon to take vengeance.
Pressing the switch of his flashlight for a brief instant, Tom
located the control spring and as he pressed it the steps slowly slid
down so he and Ned could mount them. The lowering of the steps also
automatically unlocked the rear door.
The storm, after a brief cessation, was raging again, and the noise of
this--rain on the leaves, drumming on the roof of the House on Wheels,
and the howling of the wind--was enough to cover any slight noises Tom
and Ned might make.
With Tom in the lead, the two young men entered the car. The intruder
could be heard rummaging about up in front, evidently with the
intention of appropriating to himself such portable property as he
could before the return of his companion, with or without the "boss."
For the first time the young inventor and his chum now had a sight
of the man whom they had designated "Small," because of his voice.
His stature was in keeping with his tones. He was a short, squat
individual, but looked powerful, and his face had an ugly look as he
was observed moving about in the compartment near the front seat.
"Is that the rat-faced man you have been talking about, Ned?" Tom
inquired.
"No, this fellow is a stranger to me."
"I never saw him until now, either, as far as I remember," said Tom.
"But we're going to get better acquainted right away," he grimly added.
Looking to make sure his automatic was in readiness, an example
followed by Ned, Tom stealthily advanced through the two back rooms of
the house to the front one where the man was rummaging about.
Ned did not know just what Tom's plan of capture was, and perhaps the
young inventor did not himself. But suddenly, as Tom observed the
intruder pocket some toilet articles of silver, which, it developed
later, Tom had placed in a dresser for the exclusive use of Mary
Nestor, the young man's self control vanished.
With an angry exclamation Tom Swift fairly leaped into the front
compartment where the man stood and, leveling his automatic at the
intruder, the command came:
"Stick 'em up and do it quick!"
If the fellow had any intention of reaching for his gun, and a
momentary deflection of one hand toward the side pocket of his coat
would seem to indicate that, he soon gave over the idea as Tom went on:
"No tricks now! Put 'em up, and quick, or I'll let you have it!"
Ordinarily Tom Swift was the soul of politeness. But the sight of the
vandal taking the things designed for Mary was too much for his self
control. He "saw red," he afterward told Ned.
The look of amazement and fear on the man's face would have been
laughable had not the situation been so serious. There was but a moment
of hesitation and then up went the hands.
"Take his gun away, Ned," ordered Tom, and this was soon done. That
momentary motion of one hand toward the coat pocket had indicated as
plainly as words could have done where the weapon was hidden. It was an
automatic of expensive make, and Tom put it in his own pocket with a
grin of satisfaction.
"Now we've got you, let's hear your story!" ordered Tom, still
covering the man with his pistol. "What are you doing here?"
"No-no-nothing," the fellow half stammered. "I just came here to get
out of the rain. I saw this machine on the road, with nobody in it, so
I crawled in. I didn't take anything----"
"What about these?" and Tom reached one hand into another pocket and
took out the silver articles. "I suppose these grew here?"
"Oh, those! Well, I didn't think----"
"And I suppose you and the other man, who's gone to tell the boss, just
thought my car was parked back there for you to run off with. Is that
it?" went on Tom.
"Oh, so you----"
"Yes, I'm the owner and I know all about you and I've got you dead to
rights!" snapped the young inventor. Part of his statement was true, at
all events. Though he was far from knowing all about the man. Yet he
decided to bluff some more.
"I know you!" proceeded Tom. "Hanson's your name----"
"You got me wrong there, chief," said the man, with an uneasy smile.
"Gorro is my name."
"Gorro, then. I was coming to that!" snapped Tom, carrying out his
bluff. "But even if you aren't Hanson you're in with him and----"
"No, chief, honest, I don't know Hanson."
"Who was the fellow who went after the boss?" asked Tom. "You might as
well come through clean, for I'll find out anyhow."
Whether the fellow saw through Tom's bluff or whether he was just
naturally stubborn did not at once develop. At any rate, a cunning and
ugly light came into the prisoner's eyes and he said:
"Go ahead then. Find out the best way you can. I'll tell you nothing
and, what's more----"
The fellow who had admitted his name was Gorro seemed about to shout
and give an alarm, which might have been followed by a reckless attack
on his part against Tom and Ned. But Tom guessed the man's intention
and, stepping closer to him, pressed the automatic against his stomach
and fairly growled out:
"If I hear so much as a peep from you I'll let you have it!"
Again Tom Swift was forcing himself to play a part. It is very
doubtful, except to save the lives of himself and Ned, that he would
have pulled the trigger. Yet Gorro undoubtedly thought that such might
happen, for he shrank away and turned pale as he muttered:
"Don't shoot, chief! But I'm not going to give myself or my pals away."
"Well, don't try any monkey business then! Don't you make a sound. Now,
Ned, you go through all his pockets while I keep him covered. We'll see
who he is."
The man did not appear to fear that anything found in his pockets would
disclose anything, for he held his hands high and made no objections as
Ned went through his pockets.
After taking out the silver toilet articles there was nothing save a
knife, some odds and ends, and a small sum of money. This last Tom told
Ned to put back.
"Otherwise he might accuse us of having robbed him," said the young
inventor.
There were no papers to disclose the fellow's identity or throw any
light on who his companion or the mysterious "boss" was. And Gorro
might as well be the captive's name as any other.
"Sit down!" said Tom, giving the fellow a sudden push to a folding seat
on one wall. "I want to talk to you."
The action took the man by surprise, and Tom counted on this and also
on the fact that a person standing naturally dominates the one sitting
down. Police chiefs have found this out in questioning criminals.
But if Tom Swift thought to intimidate this man he was mistaken. Though
Tom and Ned took turns firing questions at him, under the threat of
the revolver, all Gorro would say was that he had seen the stalled car
there and had entered it to get shelter from the storm.
"You're not telling the truth and you know it!" said Tom sternly. "You
and that other man picked up this car near the old deserted house when
we two were inside. You drove it here, branching off from the main
road, and then you and your pal got out to find out where you were and
how near to the place the boss said he'd meet you. Then you two came
back, your pal went off to find the boss to arrange about going on to
the castle and you came in here. You see I know all about you."
The man's eyes opened wide at this evidence on Tom's part that he had
overheard some of the talk. Still he refused to answer any questions as
to his own further identity or that of the man who had gone to speak to
the "boss."
"No use asking me, I won't talk," snarled Gorro, and he relapsed into
sullen silence out of which nothing seemed to stir him. Tom and Ned
were a bit disappointed, but they were rejoiced to recover the House on
Wheels and to have one captive as a result of their work.
"Though what we're going to do with him is more than I know,"
confessed Tom to Ned in a whisper, as they withdrew to the far end of
the compartment and eyed the hangdog prisoner.
"Tie him up and leave him at the nearest police station," suggested Ned.
"The trouble is there aren't any police stations around here on Dismal
Mountain," answered Tom. "And I don't like to have him in here with us,
even if he is roped."
"No, he might get loose while we're asleep and do no end of damage,"
agreed Ned. "Well, I suppose the only thing we can do is to read him
the riot act and let him go."
"Yet I hate to do that," confessed Tom. "He'll only make more trouble
for us as long as we're in this neighborhood."
"Then you aren't going to clear out once you get started again?" asked
Ned.
"I am not! I'm going to solve the mystery of this mountain or know the
reason why!" asserted Tom Swift.
During this talk the prisoner, for such he was though not held in
bonds, seemed to be cocking his ears and listening to something that
was going on outside. For a time Ned and Tom did not notice this, being
too intent on their consultation as to what was best to do.
But all at once Tom Swift became aware that Gorro, if that was his
name, was listening to something more going on outside than merely the
fall of the rain and the howling of the wind.
"Look at him, Ned," said Tom in a low voice, indicating, with his eyes,
the prisoner. "What's he up to?"
Ned looked, but could form no guess. As a matter of fact, Gorro was
still sullenly sitting in the seat to which Tom had pushed him. But
there was a look in his eyes that boded no good.
"I'll give you one more chance!" said Tom suddenly, more for the sake
of breaking the tenseness than of any hope that it would break down the
fellow's resistance. "Will you tell?"
"No!" yelled Gorro. "And you won't be here much longer, either!"
With that he dived off the seat to the floor, where he wriggled along
like some clumsy snake and a moment later before Tom or Ned could stop
him or before Tom could fire, if he wanted to go to that length, the
fellow was out of the front door and rushing away in the darkness.
At the same moment there was another noise outside and a shout as
though some one had seen Gorro and had hailed him. Ned and Tom did not
doubt that the other man had come back and was taken by surprise to
see his pal thus leap from the House on Wheels they had so daringly
captured.
"There he goes!" yelled Ned, which was really a useless exclamation, as
Tom could see very plainly what had happened. "After him!"
"No!" shouted the young inventor, catching hold of Ned, who would have
followed the escaped prisoner. "Let him go! He's met his pal outside
and the other man has a gun. Let him go. Besides, we'd never locate him
in this downpour."
As he spoke it seemed as if the heavens had opened and let down a flood
of water, so heavily was the rain now beating on the roof and sides of
the House on Wheels.
CHAPTER XVIII
SHOTS FROM AMBUSH
Standing near the seat where, but a moment before, Gorro had sat
practically at their mercy, Tom Swift and Ned Newton looked at each
other, a little dazed by the suddenness with which it had all happened.
They had been so confident of their prisoner, and now he was gone and
his secret with him. But the situation was not as easy as it appeared
on the surface.
"Make everything snug!" exclaimed Tom, pulling himself together and
getting ready for action. "Look sharp!"
"What's the idea?" Ned wanted to know. "Are you going after this
fellow?"
"Indeed I'm not! But we're going to pull out of here as soon as we can.
I think it isn't a very healthy place. First, though, we've got to make
sure everything is all right, that the engine hasn't been damaged, and
look to make certain we haven't any more stowaways on board. Some one
may be hiding here."
It did not take long to ascertain that Gorro had been alone in his
short occupancy of the House on Wheels. None other of the gang was in
the place. A test which Tom and Ned then applied to the motor showed
that it was in good working order. The men had run the House a short
distance, but, unless morning should disclose some damage to the
outside of the vehicle, it seemed to be as it was when the two young
men left it to examine the deserted mansion.
As they hurried to and fro, making ready for a continuation of the
trip, Tom and Ned talked over what had occurred and speculated on what
it all could mean.
"It sure is mysterious," declared Ned. "They seem to have been waiting
there for you, Tom."
"Yet that couldn't be, for until I decided to come to Chesterport to
see Mary, not even you knew I contemplated such a trip. As a matter of
fact, I did not contemplate it until then."
"That's right."
"And we didn't mention Dismal Mountain to anybody that I know of."
"We told Mary we were coming here."
"Yes. But she isn't the kind of girl to broadcast such news. She never
talks of my plans."
"Her friend, Grace Winthrop, might have," suggested Ned.
"Nonsense! As if either of those girls would be in communication with
Gorro and his gang!" scoffed Tom.
"Oh, I didn't mean it that way!" Ned made haste to say. "But they might
have been talking our trip over between themselves while downtown
in Chesterport, and some of this gang might have overheard them and
decided it would be a good chance to get a fine new car easily."
"It's possible, but not very probable," answered Tom.
"Then there's that fellow," suggested Ned.
"What fellow?"
"Floyd Barton--the one who was showing Mary so much attention. She
might have let the object of our trip slip out to Barton and he may
have talked."
But Tom Swift shook his head.
"He's one of those rich chaps who don't care about anything but hanging
around girls and having a good time," said the young inventor, and Ned
surmised that there was little love lost between Tom and Floyd Barton.
"Well, maybe we'll get at the bottom of this some day," went on Ned.
"But those fellows, whoever they were, must have known we were coming
and been on the lookout for us."
"It seems so," admitted Tom. "And I wonder who the boss is! If we could
put our hands on him we'd have the key to unlock the whole mystery.
But, meanwhile, let's get going."
"Which way?" asked Ned. "Do you mean to say you're going to keep on in
this storm?"
"I certainly am!" declared his chum. "The House was built for rough
work, and this will be a good test. Besides, I have an idea that
staying round here isn't going to be exactly healthy. There was another
fellow with Gorro you know, and now that our late prisoner has gotten
away and met him, the two, in conjunction with the unknown boss, may
decide to make another attempt to capture our House."
"That's so," agreed Ned. "The quicker we get down off Dismal Mountain
the better."
"Down!" exclaimed Tom in a surprised voice. "I'm going on up!"
"Up!"
"Up, yes, to the top."
"Whew!" whistled Ned.
"Why, what's wrong with that?" Tom wanted to know. "Isn't that what we
planned to do--cross Dismal Mountain and find out the truth of some of
these weird stories?"
"Yes--But the danger?"
"There's more danger trying to turn around and go back down that steep
slope on a dark night and in a pouring rain when the roads may be
washed out than there is in going ahead," said Tom.
"I can't quite see that," and Ned shrugged his shoulders. "The roads up
ahead may be even worse than those we came up, as far as washouts go."
"Well, it will be awkward turning around, anyhow," Tom decided. "There
isn't any too much room to maneuver, and it will be safer to go ahead,
I think."
"Then I'm with you!" declared Ned.
Switching on the most powerful headlights, Tom Swift looked ahead as
well as he could up the dark and rain-swept road along which he was
soon guiding his vehicle. Back of him Ned was beating up the eggs and
slicing and chopping the ham to make an omelet. Already the delicious
aroma of boiling coffee permeated the House.
"Grub'll be ready soon now!" called Ned, as he slipped the omelet into
the frying pan.
"Good for you!" called back Tom from the driver's seat where he was
watching the road. It went on up the mountain in an easy slope and was
a fairly good highway.
"Going to eat with one hand and drive with the other, or are you coming
back and sit at the table?" asked Ned, when the meal was almost ready.
"Oh, I'll slow down and eat properly," Tom replied. "My coffee would
slop all over me if I tried to drink it while going along here."
A little later Tom came to a wider place in the road. Here he pulled to
the right and, putting on the brakes, but leaving the engine running,
in case they had to get out in a hurry, Tom climbed back and joined his
chum at the table.
"Not half bad, this, is it?" chuckled the young inventor, having tasted
the omelet.
"It would be jolly if it didn't storm so," replied Ned, with a little
shiver. "Listen to that rain, would you!"
It was dashing hard on the roof, sides, and windows of the House on
Wheels.
"Can't get in, that's one consolation," Tom said. "And I never sleep
better than when I hear rain on the roof."
"Do you intend to do any sleeping to-night?" Ned wanted to know, as he
filled Tom's coffee cup a second time. "If you do, I'd advise you to
reduce your quantity of coffee."
"I don't reckon we'll get much sleep to-night," said Tom, and his air
was a bit anxious. "I want to get well away from this place, and if we
do that and keep a lookout the rest of the night, we won't have much
time for enjoying our rest."
"No, I suppose not," agreed Ned. "Then coffee is the best thing you can
take. It will keep you awake," and he gave himself a second helping.
Under other circumstances Tom and Ned would have made the occasion of
the night meal in their traveling auto a jolly affair. But now there
was too much to think of. So, when they had satisfied their appetites,
Tom climbed back to the driver's compartment and started the car again,
while Ned cleaned up in the kitchen.
"Did you hear that?" Tom called to his companion after a period of
silence, broken only by the racket of the wind and rain.
"Yes," answered Ned. "Sounded like a shot. What was it?"
"Thunder. It's beginning to lighten again, and I think we're in for a
worse storm than any we've had yet."
"Maybe it will be a clearing-up shower," suggested Ned.
"Hope so," commented Tom.
He drove on, the lightning flashes coming more vividly and oftener now.
Ned came forward to sit beside his chum, and once, during the period of
a vivid flash, both of them saw something that caused them to start and
Ned to cry:
"Did you see that man with a gun?"
"I did!" answered Tom. "Just ahead!"
The lightning had revealed a sinister face peering out from behind a
bush.
"Better slow up, hadn't you?" asked Ned, straining his eyes through the
added darkness that followed the flash to get another glimpse of the
armed man.
"No, I think we'd better hasten on," was Tom's opinion. "He may have
been only a hunter who has lost his way."
"I hope he isn't hunting us," said Ned grimly.
There came another flash, but they had gone on past the place where the
man's face had been observed, and no other foes were now revealed by
the glare from the sky.
"There's one thing we ought to do," said Ned, after the House on Wheels
had rumbled on a little farther, the grade being steeper now.
"What is it?"
"Put out those lights back of us. They only show us up to those who may
be watching."
"That's right," agreed the young inventor. "Go in and douse 'em!"
At the same time he reached forward and cut the switch that controlled
the illumination of his dashboard. This left the auto with but the
bright headlamps glowing, and they kept any one who might be in front
of the auto from seeing anything of the occupants of the driver's seat.
In the darkness Ned sat beside his chum. The House on Wheels was being
driven on. Ned was about to ask Tom if he did not want to be relieved
for a while when there came a sudden sharp crack from the bushes on the
left of the road. At first Ned thought it was a preliminary to a burst
of thunder. A moment later he knew it had been a rifle shot.
Then came several more reports, and one bullet, fired from ambush,
shattered a window back of the two who had dared to try to solve the
mystery of Dismal Mountain.
CHAPTER XIX
PRISONERS
"They're firing at us!" cried Ned Newton.
"Guess there isn't much doubt of that!" was Tom Swift's grim rejoinder.
"Are you hit?"
"No. Are you?"
"Not yet, but we both may be if this thing keeps up."
That the bombardment was going to keep up was evident a moment later
when above the noise of the storm there were other shots and a second
window was shattered.
"Come on!" cried Tom, and with a quick motion he shut off all lights on
the House on Wheels, leaving it in gloom.
"What are you going to do?" asked Ned.
"Get off this seat. We're in too exposed a position here. They're
trying to pick us off!"
"It sure seems so!" agreed Ned.
"Follow me before the next lightning flash, or they'll see us," called
Tom into Ned's ear.
The motor was shut off and the auto stopped. The two slid down off the
driver's seat and plunged into the thick, rain-drenched bushes on the
right of the road.
"Got your automatic?" panted Tom, as he lunged forward.
"Sure!"
"Have it ready."
"What's the game?"
"We'll try to spot those fellows who were taking pot shots at us. Maybe
we can do a little potting on our own account."
"That would suit me," growled Ned.
Their position was most uncomfortable. Neither had on any protection
from the rain now, for they had taken off their rubber boots and coats
on getting back into the House on Wheels. They had even dived off the
seat without their caps. It was like emerging from the protection of a
comfortable room into the rain-swept open.
"Good thing we ate when we did, or we'd never have gotten anything,"
remarked Tom, as he tramped along beside his chum.
"That's right. But where are we, anyhow?"
There was no means of knowing. They were somewhere on the slope of
Dismal Mountain, out in the storm and darkness, seeking unknown enemies
and being sought by them.
For a little while after leaping from the car the two young men
remained in the vicinity of it. They could see its bulk looming over
the tops of the bushes by the glare of lightning flashes. Taking
advantage of this intermittent light, they now began to circle about,
trying to locate the man or men who had fired at them.
But the ambuscaders were playing safe, and did not show themselves. Tom
and Ned skirted around, soon becoming soaked to the skin.
Finally Tom, who was in the lead, saw by one long, bright flash a sort
of shelter where a group of big oaks grew amid some rocks.
"Let's put in over there," he proposed to Ned. "We'll be a little drier
than out here."
"Dry!" chuckled Ned good-naturedly. "I'll be wet for a week after this
soaking."
It was somewhat better in the shelter, and the two adventurers stood
there a few minutes, listening to the storm. Their situation was
anything but safe or comfortable. For it could not be said what moment
they might be seen by their enemies and fired on again.
Presently, above the racket of the storm, they heard voices in
conversation. Then, during a lull in the outburst of the elements,
several persons could be heard tramping through the underbrush and
approaching the rocks.
"They're coming!" whispered Ned, grasping his automatic.
"I think they haven't seen us," murmured Tom. "Keep still. Stoop down
and maybe we can hear what they are saying."
The men--there appeared to be at least three--approached the outer
circle of rocks in the center of which the two young men were hidden.
Then, as the lull of the storm continued, Tom and Ned, to their
surprise, heard the name Cunningham mentioned.
"Did you get that?" whispered Ned.
"Yes," Tom cautiously replied.
"Wonder if it's the same bird who wanted you to work for him."
"Might be. Keep quiet and listen."
What connection Cunningham's name had with the present activities was
not made clear, nor was it spoken again. But one of the men, evidently
more cautious than his companion, said:
"Don't be so free with names."
"Why not?" came the question.
"You never know who may be listening. Those fellows are somewhere in
these woods."
"Yes, and they'll be here for some time if they depend on that shebang
of theirs to take 'em out," went on another voice.
Tom and Ned stiffened on hearing this. It seemed to portend something
desperate.
"Why, did Jerkin drive the car away?" one of the party wanted to know.
"That's what he did. Those fellows shut off the engine and put out
the lights before they dived off that seat. But they didn't put the
machinery out of business and Jerkin soon had it going again."
"I'll say they dived off!" chuckled a voice. "I guess we would 'a' done
the same with bullets singing around our ears."
"Jerkin oughtn't to be so free with his gun," growled a voice that had
not hitherto spoken. "He might have bumped one of them off, and there
wasn't any need of that."
"The boss said to get that machine by hook or by crook," commented
another. "And I suppose that's what Jerkin was thinking of. But Cun----"
"Go easy on names!" snarled some one. "I told you before!"
"It was going to be Cunningham," whispered Ned.
"Yes," agreed the young inventor. "But what would that Englishman be
doing with this bunch of criminals?"
"There's no telling. We're getting an earful of more than rain, all
right."
"Well, there's no use hunting around for those fellows any longer,"
said some one. "What with this storm and the dark, we'll never find
'em. I want to get under shelter and have something to eat. It smells
as though they had cooked something in that queer auto of theirs."
"They did."
"Well, then I'm going to head for that and get some for myself. Where
is Jerkin going to park it?"
"At the castle."
The mention of this name caused Tom to nudge his chum. It was the
second time this place had been spoken of. Evidently it was a
rendezvous for the gang.
"Well, then it's me for the castle," went on the hungry bandit. "Do you
think Barton will be there?"
"Who, Floyd? Why he----"
"Say, will you fellows quit naming names?" snarled out the man who was,
evidently, the most cautious of the party.
"Oh, there's nobody around to hear," said one of the two who had spoken
the name of the young Chesterport man. "Come on, boys, let's go."
In the darkness, Tom and Ned sought to look one into the face of the
other. What did this mean--this mentioning not only of the name
of Cunningham but that of Floyd Barton, the rich youth who was so
attentive to Mary Nestor? Surely this mystery was deepening!
"Worse and more of it!" murmured Ned in Tom's ear, as they heard the
unseen talkers preparing to move away.
"That's right," agreed the young inventor.
They waited a little while, the sound of the retreating footsteps
growing fainter, and then, as the lull in the storm still held, Tom and
Ned started out of their hiding place.
"We've got to head for the castle and get back our machine," stated Tom.
"Surest thing you know!" agreed Ned.
They were out from under the clump of trees and in the open when a
brilliant flash of light came. In the glare, the two young men stood
revealed as plain as by day. The lightning glare likewise showed to Tom
and Ned three men not far away.
"There they are!" one of the trio yelled, pointing to the two.
"Get 'em!" shouted another.
"Come on!" cried Tom, and he leaped away, followed by his chum.
But they were in unknown territory and, blinded by the flash, could not
see where they were going. They reached the edge of a little gully
and, before they could recover their balance, they went plunging down
it, falling and rolling over and over.
"Come on! Come on!" yelled one of the three men, closely following the
fugitives. "We've got 'em!"
A moment later they did have them. Taken at a disadvantage, pounced
upon as they rolled, stunned, to the bottom of the gully, unable to use
their weapons, Tom Swift and Ned Newton were quickly made prisoners by
their enemies.
CHAPTER XX
IN THE CASTLE
Stunned and bruised by their unexpected fall into the gully and
manhandled by their captors, Tom Swift and Ned Newton were in a bit of
a daze as they were roughly pulled along. The men--there were at least
four of them now, as two were on each side of the prisoners--walked
their captives down the gulch in the middle of which ran a stream of
water, swollen by the heavy rain.
One of the four bandits--Tom and Ned mentally called them this--had
a flashlight which he used to pick out the path when the gleams of
lightning failed, as they did every so often.
"Well, we got 'em both!" chuckled one of the men.
"And without firing a shot!" added another. "It was easy!"
"A slick bit of work," put in a third gruff voice. "If----"
"No names now!" warned the fourth bandit.
By this time, their spent breath having come back and the cool rain on
their heads having revived them, Tom and Ned were able to realize their
desperate plight, and that it was desperate they had little reason to
doubt.
Each of them was in the firm grasp of two evil men who, it was evident,
would not hesitate to shoot if need be. But Tom Swift was not one to
endure mistreatment silently. As he walked along he turned to one of
his captors and demanded:
"What does this mean? Who are you, anyhow, and by what right are you
taking us away?"
"Keep your shirt on, buddy," responded the man in what, doubtless, he
meant to be a friendly and conciliatory tone. "You'll soon find out
where you're going."
"And why!" added another, with a chuckle.
"Look here!" burst out Ned. "Maybe you don't know who we are!"
"Oh, we know all right, buddy," said the man who had first spoken to
Tom. "It's because you are who you are that we got you."
"Orders from headquarters," said one who had not yet spoken.
"Shut up!" some one snarled at him.
The storm, after that outburst in which so many things had happened,
now appeared to be subsiding. The thunder was not so loud nor the
lightning so glaring and frequent. The rain, too, had slackened.
"We have a right to know where you are taking us!" fiercely exclaimed
Tom. "If you don't tell us you'll have a fight right here and now!"
He was prepared to try a sudden pull away from the men that held him,
knowing it would be but a desperate chance, though willing to take it.
But the man on his right warned him:
"Don't try any rough stuff, buddy. We'll treat you decent as far as we
can, but we got orders to bring you in and we're going to do it. If you
come along peaceable you won't be hurt."
"Then tell me where we are being taken!" demanded Tom.
"To the castle, if that means anything to you," replied the man who had
warned against violence.
They were soon led out of the gully and found themselves on a road,
bordered on each side with trees and bushes. It was evidently the main
highway leading up Dismal Mountain--the same road on which they had
been traveling in the House on Wheels. But what part of it they were
on, they did not know.
"It ought to be somewhere around here," muttered one of the men,
looking up and down the road.
"There it is--down by the bend," said another.
Tom and Ned had a glimpse of a dark shape looming over the tops of
bushes and, for a moment, hoped it was their own car they had been
forced to flee from. But when they got up to it they saw it was an
ordinary auto.
"Get in!" ordered one of the men, and Tom and his chum, feeling this
was no time to fight, did as they were told. The auto, a big touring
car, held the two prisoners and two guards in the tonneau. The other
two guards mounted to the front seat and they were soon traveling on
in the darkness. The storm was now almost over, though the trees and
bushes still dripped water. What the hour was the two prisoners could
only guess, but it must have been long past midnight.
On up the dark and muddy road the big touring car was guided. It was so
gloomy that, aside from the fact that there were trees and bushes on
each side of the highway, Tom and Ned could see nothing.
"How you feeling, Tom?" asked Ned, easing himself in the seat.
"Pretty rotten!"
"So do I! But I'm glad we had that ham omelet."
"So am I!" laughed the young inventor. "But I'd like some dry clothes,"
he added.
"Same here."
Their captors did not seem to object to their talk, for there was no
command to be silent. Nor, it was evident, did they fear any alarm
being given or pursuit undertaken, since no precautions were taken.
Tom and Ned guessed that the rascals knew they were pretty safe from
disturbance while on Dismal Mountain.
How far they were driven, the two prisoners did not know. But about
half an hour after they had gotten into the auto it began to slow up
and the reason was evident. They had come to where a private drive led
off from the main highway. It was a drive leading between two great
stone posts which, in their day, must have supported immense iron
gates. But the gates had long since rusted away or been carried away.
"Is this the entrance to the castle?" asked Tom of the man who had
called him "buddy" several times, though perhaps more out of habit than
affection.
"This is the shack," was the answer. "You'll get out in a few minutes."
The drive of the old mansion, which had come to be called a "castle,"
was long and winding. But at length it came to an end in a big arc and
at the upper curve stood the old pile of masonry which had started out
to be a wonderful home, only it fell by the wayside.
No sooner had the car come to a stop on the drive, which was overgrown
with weeds, than a door, in what was evidently an entrance hall,
opened. A man, whom neither Ned nor Tom recognized, stood framed in the
light.
"Did you get 'em?" asked this man.
"Sure thing!" answered "Buddy," as Tom and Ned designated the more
friendly of their guards. "Is their machine here?"
"Rolled in just before you pulled up. Guess it isn't so easy to drive,"
remarked the man in the doorway.
"I hope they haven't damaged my House," murmured Tom, and Ned joined
him in this wish.
However, just then there was no way of knowing what had happened to
the big car. It was not in sight. In one or two lower windows of the
old half ruined castle lights showed. All the upper windows were in
darkness.
"Get down, you two!" gruffly ordered one of the guards.
Tom and Ned, stiff from the wetting they had undergone and sore and
bruised from their fall, alighted.
"Go on in," was the next command, and they thought it best to obey. A
night's rest, some more food, and a chance to consider their situation
was needed before they could make a break for liberty.
The two captives found themselves in what had once been a stately
reception hall, but which was now in almost the same state of ruin and
decay as was the old mansion where the young men had first lost their
House on Wheels. However, they had little chance for observation, as
they were fairly rushed out through a rear door, along a dimly lighted
passage, and thrust into a dark room. The door was pulled shut and
locked after them.
"Look here!" cried Tom angrily. "This is a rotten way to treat even a
dog, and we haven't done anything to you fellows! We want something hot
to drink and some dry clothes."
"Keep your shirt on, buddy," advised the man on the other side of the
door. "You'll be treated decent--anyhow for a while. I'll see you get
some dry things in a short time."
He was as good as his word, coming back in about fifteen minutes with
a pile of old but dry and serviceable garments. At the same time he
brought a tray of sandwiches and a pot of hot tea. This last was most
refreshing, and Tom and Ned ate and drank gratefully, once they had
taken off their wet clothes and put on the dry ones.
By the light of a lantern their guard carried they saw that they were
prisoners in a fairly large stone room containing one window with iron
bars across it. Upon what this window looked they had no means of
guessing in the darkness outside it.
"Where are we going to sleep?" asked Ned of the man who brought the
food and clothes.
"What's the matter with those bunks?" the man asked, with a chuckle.
He held his lantern in a dark corner and there, where the prisoners had
not before noticed them, were two cots with pillows and blankets on
them. "Turn in there," was the suggestion, "They're as comfortable as
those in that traveling house of yours, I reckon."
"Where is my House?" demanded Tom angrily.
"Ask me no questions and I'll tell you no lies!" replied the man,
though not unkindly. "Better take it easy now."
With their bodily needs taken care of, Tom and Ned were free to wonder
and speculate on what had happened, what it all meant and what the
future held.
"But it's all pretty much guess work," said Ned, when they were talking
it over.
"That's right," agreed Tom. "However, let's get some rest."
The bunks were comfortable, and in spite of their worry and anxiety
they soon fell asleep.
The sun was shining in their barred window when they awoke. They had no
sooner opened their eyes than the door was unlocked and a strange man
came in with a tray of breakfast. The coffee smelled most appetizing.
During the night Tom had had an idea. He determined to try to find out
something he much wanted to know. So, when the guard had set the tray
down and was going out, Tom suddenly shot at him:
"Tell Basil Cunningham I want to see him at once!"
"Wha--what's that?" stammered the guard, obviously taken by surprise.
"I said tell Basil Cunningham I want to see him at once!" snapped out
Tom.
The man appeared positively terror-stricken and hurried out of the
stone room.
CHAPTER XXI
PLOTS AND PLANS
More than anything else on Tom Swift's part, it had been a bluff to
name Cunningham and say he wanted to see him. Still, since the mention
of the Englishman's name and that of Floyd Barton, both Tom and his
chum had felt certain that the two were in some way mixed up in the
queer doings on Dismal Mountain. But Tom had no notion that the mere
mention of the Englishman's name would so startle the guard.
"Did you see that, Ned?" asked Tom, nodding toward the man who had left
so hurriedly.
"I sure did. What does it mean?"
"To my mind it means that Cunningham is a worse rascal than I thought
him, that he is one of the ringleaders of this gang, but that they are
surprised we have guessed it."
"Looks so. But what are you going to do next?"
"Eat," was Tom's laconic answer, and he moved toward the breakfast
tray which, to do their captors justice, was bountifully laden and
included a pot of steaming coffee.
Tom and Ned felt distinctly better after the meal, and they almost
laughed at each other, for they presented a queer appearance in their
borrowed clothes.
"But we'll have to wear them for some time," Ned remarked. "Our own
were so thoroughly soaked it will take a couple of days to dry them
out."
"Guess so," commented Tom. "Well, I've been worse off. Did you save
your flashlight?"
"Yes," and Ned produced it, having slipped it, with some other
possessions, from the pockets of his wet garments when the change was
made the night before. "They got my gun, though."
"And mine," added Tom. "We'll have to sing small for a time, even if we
manage to escape."
"Are you going to try that?"
"I surely am! But not right away. First I want to see what's going on
around this castle."
They had ample time that day, though not much opportunity, for
observation, since they were not released from the stone room. They
had some relaxation, however, for there was a bathroom connected with
it and they could wash and be comfortable. The man who came to remove
the breakfast tray was not the same one who had brought it in, but Tom
determined to experiment on him. Accordingly the young inventor snapped
out:
"When is Mr. Basil Cunningham coming to see me?"
The guard showed no alarm or even interest, merely grunting and
remarking:
"You'll have to ask somebody else. That isn't in my department."
"Gosh!" commented Ned, when the fellow had gone. "You'd think this was
a regular business!"
"I'm beginning to believe it is," was Tom's comment.
"What, a business place?" asked Ned, in surprise.
"Yes. Cunningham is a business man, you know, though I don't like his
style. He's clever and I think he has surrounded himself with a bunch
of crooks like himself and is carrying on a regular business in this
old castle."
"What sort of business?"
"Come here and take a look," was Tom's reply.
They could look out of the barred window into a courtyard. In it,
coming and going, were a number of men and auto trucks. The trucks
brought in rather large and heavy boxes. Some of these boxes were taken
on hand trucks into various rooms of the old castle.
"That's been going on all morning," said Tom. "Once, when you were in
the bathroom washing, I looked out of the grating in the door and I saw
some men passing along the corridor carrying things that must have come
out of the boxes."
"What sort of things?" Ned wanted to know.
As if to save Tom the need of answering, one of the boxes being
unloaded from a truck suddenly slipped, fell, and broke open. Out of
it tumbled what Ned recognized as high class scientific instruments,
optical goods, binoculars, telescopes and the like.
"That's the stuff they're bringing into this castle," said Tom.
"My word! What for?" asked Ned.
"To doctor it up and dispose of it, I believe," Tom replied.
"But where do they get it? They don't manufacture those things here, do
they?"
"Not yet. But I think they plan to," said the young inventor. "It was
machinery for turning out such goods that Cunningham wanted me to make
for him. But I saw his object--he wants to infringe on foreign patents.
This stuff costs money, with the duty and royalty that has to be paid,
and if Cunningham could bootleg it, so to speak, he'd get rich."
"But he seems to be making it," and Ned pointed to where men were
hurriedly gathering up the scattered telescopes and other instruments.
"No, he didn't make that! He stole it!" exclaimed Tom.
"Stole it?"
"Either he or some of his gang," was Tom's answer. "You know some of
those clippings you gave me about Dismal Mountain said that freight and
through express trains were held up and several cases of high grade
electrical, scientific and optical goods were taken."
"I remember," assented Ned. "I thought at the time that it was pretty
queer stuff for train bandits to take."
"Well, that's some of the stuff, I believe," went on Tom. "Cunningham
is evidently an expert in this line of goods and he knows how to
handle and dispose of them better than any other stuff that might be
stolen. I think he wanted me to make machinery to turn out tools like
these so he could say, if he were caught, that this old castle was his
manufacturing plant. But his greatest source of goods would be from
robbing trains."
"It doesn't seem possible!" murmured Ned.
"I know it. But there are the facts," said Tom, and his chum could but
agree with him.
For two days Tom and Ned were kept close prisoners in the old stone
room. During this time they discussed many plans and plots for
escaping. None seemed to fit in, however, or else the time was not yet
ripe, so they remained in captivity.
Meanwhile, the activity on the part of men bringing in cases of goods
and carrying them along the corridor and past the room where Tom and
Ned were locked kept up night and day. Except for small quantities of
what seemed to be bolts of silk, all the things were optical goods or
machines used by scientists--stuff worth a great deal of money. There
was a hum and buzz of work all through the old castle, but except for
men who came to bring them food, Tom and Ned had no contact with any of
their captors.
Then, one night, the same guard who had shown perturbation when Tom
first mentioned Cunningham, again brought in the tray of food. It
needed but a glance to show that he had been drinking, and Tom, with a
whisper to Ned, decided the man's befuddled state would afford them a
good opportunity to do some more bluffing.
So, having inspected the tray, as if to look and see that it contained
all he wanted, Tom stepped toward the man and in stern tones exclaimed:
"Did you give my message to Basil Cunningham?"
Instead of being alarmed as he had been before, the man leered in his
drunken manner and thickly said:
"Sure I did!"
"Oh, did you?" Tom was rather taken aback by this reply.
"I sure did, and he's coming to see you soon."
This was more and different news, and Tom and his chum did not know how
to take it. But Tom had another card he wanted to play.
Stepping toward the fellow the young inventor took him by one shoulder
and, giving him a shake, exclaimed sternly:
"Never mind about Cunningham! Send Floyd Barton to me!"
Tom had determined to try the effect of this name.
To his surprise, it did not upset the man in the least. He leered at
Tom and Ned with drunken gravity and mumbled:
"Barton's lucky--thash wha' he is! Lucky--hic--dog!"
"Lucky! What do you mean?" snapped out Tom.
"Mean he's goin' to marry a fine girl--thash wha' he ish! Lucky dog,
Barton--Lucky--hic--dog!"
"Who's the girl?" asked Ned, more for the sake of giving his chum a
chance to think up his next verbal attack than for any desire for
information. "Do you know her?"
"No, I don't know her. But I know her name. Name's Mary--thash wha' it
is. Mary--Mary--hic!"
Even yet the two were not suspicious, and Ned still joked.
"Mary Hick! That's a queer name," he chuckled.
"Not Mary Hick--no!" mumbled the half-drunken guard. "Not Mary
Hick--Mary Nestor. Thash who Barton's goin' marry--Mary Nestor--fine
girl--Mary--hic!"
"What's that?" cried Tom Swift, hardly able to believe his ears. "You
dirty scoundrel, don't you mention her name again! What do you mean
bringing her into this conversation? What has she to do with that sap,
Floyd Barton?"
"He's sap aw right--sure!" agreed the drunken fellow. "But he's got
money. Goin' to marry fine girl--Mary--hic--no, not Mary Hick--thash
wrong--Mary Nestor!"
Tom could restrain himself no longer. He stepped back, raised his fist
and was going to let it drive full into the face of the guard when a
sudden interruption came.
A man with a black handkerchief over the lower part of his face had
entered the stone room, and, as Tom was about to fell the insulting
guard, stepped between the two.
"You rotten beast!" Tom hissed.
He was suddenly pulled back by the masked man and swung to one side.
But Tom's blood was up. Nothing could stop him now.
"Out of my way, you!" he yelled at the man who had hold of him. "Who
are you, anyhow? None of your masked tricks with me! Off with that!"
Before the man who had stepped between Tom and the guard could put up
his hands to prevent it, Tom had torn off the black handkerchief.
There, with a startled frown on his beefy red face, stood--Basil
Cunningham!
CHAPTER XXII
THE ESCAPE
"Cunningham!" gasped Tom Swift, taken aback as much by the boldness of
the rascal in coming into his presence as by the force the Englishman
had used in swinging him aside. "You--Cunningham!"
"Yes!" hissed the crook, but he appeared agitated because of having had
his mask torn off. "You made a wrong move that time, Swift!"
"Wrong move! What do you mean?"
"I mean I came in here only to save this drunken fool from a beating
he well deserves. That has nothing to do with it. If you had kept
your hand to yourself and left my mask alone I would not have minded
so much. But, now that you have found me out, it will go hard with
you--both of you!" and he pointed an accusing finger at Ned.
"I'm not afraid of you!" blustered the financial manager. "Come on,
Tom!" he yelled. "It's even now! And the other man's fuddled. We can
handle Cunningham!"
At that moment another guard, attracted by the loud talking, entered
the stone room, and as he was armed with a rifle the odds were too
great to risk a fight.
"Better not try anything!" snarled Cunningham, putting in his pocket
the black handkerchief Tom had pulled from his face. "Yes, Swift, you
made a wrong move! We might have let you go, but, now that you made me
show myself, it is impossible!"
"So you're going to keep us here?" inquired Tom.
"Yes!"
"It can't be for very long," said the young inventor. "We'll be missed.
My House on Wheels will be traced. It was known we were coming to
Dismal Mountain and searching parties will soon be on our trail."
"They won't find you!" snapped Cunningham. "You've made your own bed
and now you can sleep in it. Take 'em out!" he ordered another guard
who had joined the one with the rifle. "As for you--drunken fool that
you are--clear out!" and his eyes blazed as he kicked the man who had
blurted out the news of the approaching marriage of Floyd Barton and
Mary Nestor. "Take 'em out!"
"Where, Boss?" asked one of the sober guards.
"To the dungeon, of course! Where else?"
Tom and Ned did not think it wise to put up a fight for, so they
feared, Cunningham, in his rage, might order them shot. So they
accompanied their captors along the corridor and down a flight of steps
to what was evidently the cellar of the castle. A little later they
were shut in another stone room, but smaller and much less desirable
than their former prison. They were, indeed, in a dungeon.
"Now maybe you'll wish you hadn't been so fresh!" sneered one of the
guards as he departed, locking the door.
Left to themselves, Ned and Tom looked at each other with somewhat
woebegone and puzzled faces. Their dungeon was dimly lighted and was
damp and depressing. It was almost like a prison cell.
"Well, I'm not going to stay here long!" declared Tom determinedly.
"What are you going to do?" asked Ned.
"Get out the first chance I see. This is sure rotten!"
"It will be if they don't feed us," agreed his chum. But they did not
have to worry long on that score, for presently a man they had not seen
before appeared with a tray of as good food as had before been served
to them. They were hungry and ate heartily. Then they were left alone
and talked matters over.
"What do you think of that fellow's talk about Mary?" asked Tom. "Think
there was any basis for it?"
"That drunk seemed to know what he was talking about. But you know Mary
better than I do," answered Ned. "However, I don't believe Mary would
ever consent to marry this Barton."
"Don't you?" cried Tom, and Ned saw that he caught at this straw.
"No, I don't. I believe, for reasons of his own, Barton has been
telling that story and he's circulated it among these men, hoping it
would reach you and break down your nerve!"
"It shan't!" cried Tom.
"No! Don't let it!" urged Ned. "It's a dirty, rotten game, Tom. They're
trying to get your nerve!"
"That's it--a game!" cried Tom Swift, with new energy. "Well, they'll
find that two can play at it! I'm out for revenge now, and when I meet
Barton----"
"I hope I'll be there to see the fight!" chuckled Ned.
However, if Tom and Ned hoped for any immediate change in their
captivity, they were disappointed. For three days they remained in
close confinement, and when meals were brought there were always two
guards, one with a gun and the other with a tray, so there was no
chance for a surprise attack.
Not giving up easily, though, Tom and Ned tried to escape from the
small stone room at night. They took a fork and spoon from one of their
trays, and with these simple implements tried to loosen some of the
window bars.
At first they thought they were going to succeed, for they dug out some
mortar. But it was only to find under the mortar that the bars were set
in lead upon which their tools made no impression. So they had to give
that up.
They were below the level of the ground, there being a little dug-out
area upon which the only window in their cell opened. So they could see
nothing of what went on in the courtyard on which they judged their
prison room faced, for they could hear trucks coming and going and the
murmur of many voices.
"Well, if we can't leave by the window we must try the door," said Tom,
when they had been locked up a week. They still had the spoon and fork
and hoped to be able to pick the lock. But a few trials convinced them
that it was too strong.
Then, unexpectedly, their chance came. The same guard, again drunk,
who had blurted out the gossip concerning Mary and Barton came in with
a tray of food for their supper, and in a flash Tom and Ned saw that he
was alone.
For once the cunning of their captors had slipped!
"We'll get him this time, Ned!" whispered Tom, and his chum understood.
Smiling with drunken vacuity, the guard had unlocked the door. The tray
was heavy and he had had to set it down on a stool outside to do this
and use both hands in carrying it into the cell.
"Now!" cried Tom suddenly, and he and Ned threw themselves on the
unsuspecting fellow. Before he could utter a cry Tom clapped his hand
over the guard's mouth and while he got a knee into the small of his
back, Ned bound the struggling hands.
In a trice they had wound strips torn from their bed clothes around the
man's ankles and improvised a gag which effectually silenced him. Then
they trussed him up so he could not move and, having taken from his
pockets a bunch of keys and a pistol, they were ready for their long
deferred escape.
"Talk about luck!" panted Ned, for the capture had not been easy in
spite of the fellow's drunken condition.
"We're not out of the woods just yet," cautioned Tom.
"Well, let's get out of this dungeon for a start," proposed Ned.
Then, having shoved the trussed guard under one of the cots, they
arranged the clothes on both of them to make it appear that the
prisoners were sleeping after their meal, and, having gone out by the
door, they locked their gagged guard within and stole swiftly down the
corridor.
They had to proceed cautiously, for they were unfamiliar with the
interior of the castle and did not know at what moment they might run
into Cunningham or some of his men. So they paused at every turn to
look about them before advancing.
Twice, as they did this, they saw forms or heard through the gloom
approaching voices and footsteps, and had to hurry back and secrete
themselves. But at length they made their way up a flight of stairs,
the same ones down which they had been taken after the exposure of
Cunningham's masked face. They were now on the ground floor of the
castle, where they had first been imprisoned.
It was night, and only a few dim lights here and there in the long,
deserted corridors showed them which way to go. They did not know what
turns to take. Any moment might send them stumbling upon a band of
their enemies.
They conversed in whispers, went a little way down one passage, only to
find that it ended against a blank wall, returned to try another with
like poor results. They wanted to get out into the open, to find the
House on Wheels if possible, and escape in that. But luck seemed to be
against them.
They wandered about, several times having to take refuge behind piles
of débris to escape groups of men. Presently they saw a light at one
end of a long corridor. Stealing toward it, they found that the light
came from an open room, whence proceeded the murmur of many voices.
Adjoining the large room, in which several men were gathered, was a
smaller apartment, a storage place, evidently.
"Come in here!" whispered Tom to his chum, and they slipped in not a
second too soon, for Cunningham strode down the hall and entered the
main, lighted room where a conference seemed to be going on.
Then, hidden in the small room and listening at a ventilator
communicating with the other apartment, Tom and Ned heard enough talk
to make clear to them the nature of the business carried on in the old
castle.
As Tom had suspected, Cunningham was a rascally but talented
manufacturer of fine optical and scientific machines and instruments.
He had failed in doing a legitimate business and had turned to crooked
ways.
As the talk went on, Tom saw why he had been approached to make
machinery and tools for turning out illegal goods. It was because
Cunningham wanted to sell them at an enormous profit, not having to
pay any patent royalties. Owing to Tom's refusal, and because of his
inability to get other firms to make any machines, Cunningham had taken
to stealing shipments of goods from large manufacturing concerns. He
had allied himself with a band of train robbers who, departing from the
usual holding up of pay and express cars, were looting fast freights.
Sometimes the trains were held up by means of false signals and again
cars on sidings were broken into and the cases stolen and brought to
the castle for distribution among fences, as dealers in thieves' loot
are called.
Cunningham was doing some manufacturing in the castle, it became known
to Tom and Ned as they listened, and this branch would have been
gone into on a larger scale had Tom consented to make the necessary
machinery.
Then, unexpectedly, the two heard some startling news. Floyd Barton was
Cunningham's nephew and the young man who had danced so often with
Mary Nestor was using part of his wealth in the illegal manufacture of
patented goods. Whether Barton was present at the conference, Tom and
Ned could not discover, for though they could hear the talk they could
not see the speakers.
"Well, we've found out all we want to know, Ned," remarked Tom, as they
got down off the box on which they had been standing to bring their
ears nearer the ventilator.
"I should say so! Why, this Cunningham is nothing but what you said he
was--a crook!"
"And those with him are just plain thieves!" said Tom. "Well, we've got
enough evidence to jail the lot of them."
"Including Barton!" said Ned.
"Yes, including Barton!"
"But first we've got to get out of here," went on Ned. "Come on, before
that meeting breaks up," and he nodded toward the other room.
He and Tom came out of their hiding place and, as they did so, Ned
saw, lying on a ledge, an automatic pistol. With an exclamation of
satisfaction, he picked it up, ascertained that the magazine was
filled, and put it in his pocket. Tom had the one taken from the guard.
"We've got to work fast!" Tom whispered to his chum, as they went back
along the corridor. "Try the first window you come to and we'll light
out!"
"This looks like a good one," said Ned, indicating a casement which,
they could see by looking out, was not far from the ground. "Come on!"
As Ned threw one leg over the sill and Tom was in readiness to follow,
they heard a noise behind them and saw Cunningham running toward them.
"Guards! Guards!" yelled the Englishman. "The prisoners are escaping!
Help me!"
CHAPTER XXIII
SETTING THE TRAP
Just for an instant Ned Newton hesitated. It was a critical moment.
"Go on! Go on!" Tom Swift frantically yelled to his chum. "Don't stop
now!"
"He may shoot!" objected Ned, who was in no position to assume the
offensive, though both he and Tom were now armed.
"No, he won't!" Tom exclaimed. "He's only bluffing! A coward! Go on!
I'm right with you!"
"Here goes then!" and Ned, ignoring the frantic shouts of Basil
Cunningham, leaped from the window. It was a little higher up from
the ground than he had thought and his fall rather jarred him. But he
rolled over to be out of the way when Tom jumped.
The young inventor, after a glance back over his shoulder, which showed
that Cunningham was without a visible weapon, leaped over the window
sill and joined his chum below. Tom managed to keep his feet in his
leap. In the old castle, and as he leaned out of the window, Cunningham
continued to shout:
"The prisoners! They're escaping! Where are those confounded guards?"
The whole place was aroused now and other voices could be heard
mingling with those of the Englishman in excited shouts. Evidently,
those who had been present at the conference of which Tom and Ned had
overheard so much, were now joining, or getting ready to join, the
pursuit.
Lights flashed in many windows that had hitherto been in darkness.
There was the sound of running feet and the clank of metal as though
the guards were arming themselves with swords instead of rifles and
automatic pistols.
Ned got to his feet, to find Tom at his side. The young inventor
grasped his chum's arm, holding his automatic in his other hand, and
gasped:
"Come on! Run for it! It's now or never!"
"But which way shall we run?" asked Ned. "I'm all turned around!"
It was no wonder. The night was dark and the weird ruin of a castle
stood out in uncanny relief with lights in many windows. Tom and Ned
had leaped from a window at the rear of the place, a view of the castle
which they had never had before. So they were a bit confused.
"The main gate is around the other side!" panted Ned, as he ran on
beside Tom.
"Never mind that. There must be a back way out, and I think it will be
healthier for us to take that than the front way. They'll be sure to be
laying for us there."
"Guess that's true!" muttered Ned.
The eyes of the escaped prisoners were now becoming accustomed to the
darkness all about them, for they had come from comparatively well
illuminated corridors into the pitch black night, and this is always
confusing. They had a dim vision of a wall or a fence at the rear of
the castle. It was probably a continuation of the fence in front, with
its ornate and massive pillars, though the front gate was gone.
"If only the back gate is in the same condition we may be in luck," Tom
remarked as they ran on.
They looked back for just a moment and saw several figures leap from
the same window out of which they had jumped. Framed in the light,
these pursuers were easily visible.
Suddenly there was a sliver of flame in the darkness at the rear of
the castle. A sharp report followed and then the whine of a bullet over
the heads of the two fugitives.
"Hot stuff, Tom!" muttered Ned.
"They mean business!" assented the young inventor. "But we've got an
answer ready!"
He turned quickly and fired at random, purposely aiming over the top of
a dark patch that seemed to be composed of smaller patches. That it was
a group of bandits summoned by Cunningham, Tom did not doubt.
There was a momentary halt on the part of the pursuers at this evidence
of preparedness on the part of the late prisoners. But another bullet
came whining its vicious song over the heads of the two young men. When
Ned would have turned and fired, Tom called:
"Save your cartridges! We may need 'em later! Isn't that a gate just
ahead?"
He pointed to where the fence seemed to have a break in it.
"It's a gate, all right," Ned answered. "But closed."
"And with a man on guard!" added Tom, as they drew closer and saw a
figure emerge from some bushes to confront them. That it was a guard
was evident a moment later, for he stepped across the path to bar the
progress of Tom and Ned and was bringing a rifle to the ready as he
growled:
"Get back there! Nobody allowed out of this gate without the boss says
so! Get back!"
"Get back yourself!" snarled Tom, and as he spoke he fired, but aiming
over the guard's hat. So close was the bullet, though, that the fellow
dropped his gun in mortal terror and yelled:
"I'm through!"
Away he sped in the darkness.
"The fates grant that he didn't take the keys with him!" murmured Tom,
as he and Ned ran on toward the gates which they could make out more
plainly now.
"It isn't likely they're locked if a man was on guard," suggested Ned,
and so it proved. The rusty iron gates swung under the vigorous pushes
of the two, and a moment later they found themselves out in the road,
while behind them could be heard the confused shouts of their pursuers.
"Oh, for a car now!" cried Tom.
He and Ned were running down the road, not knowing and little caring in
what direction, so long as they were leaving the castle and its bandits
behind them. As they swung around a corner, where the road widened, Ned
saw a deeper patch of blackness and, pointing to it, gave a cry of joy.
"What is it?" demanded Tom Swift.
"The House on Wheels!" yelled Ned.
A moment later the fugitives came to where their vehicle was parked
beside the road. It was in darkness and there seemed to be no life
about it. Hesitating only a moment, to make sure of this, Ned and Tom
approached. In their hearts they were hoping that the machine would not
be in the possession of the enemy.
It did not seem to be. They were not challenged as they leaped to the
driver's seat, and in a moment Tom had switched on the lights.
"We're in luck, Ned!" he yelled, as a glance at the various gages
showed that there was plenty of oil and gas. "Now if they haven't put
it on the blink, well let them have a look at our tail light in about
two seconds!"
The self-starter hummed. There was a responding roar from the powerful
motor, and in another instant Tom Swift was heading his machine down
the mountain at ever increasing speed.
There had been several days of dry weather following the storm, and the
dust of the highway reflected the headlights well so that driving was
comparatively easy. The speed increased so that Ned called out:
"Aren't you hitting it up pretty fast, Tom?"
"Got to!" was the grim answer. "They're coming after us! Listen!"
He slowed for a second, silencing his engine a bit, and from behind
came the roaring exhaust of another car.
"They've got to go some to get me now!" exulted Tom. "We're on a down
grade, and as soon as the motor warms up I'll show them what my House
on Wheels can do!"
Faster and faster they sped down the winding road in the darkness. The
hand on the speedometer went to 25 to 30, and then on past 35. When it
got to 45 Ned looked at Tom and took a tighter grip of the seat rail.
"Will she stand it, Tom?" he asked.
"We'll soon find out!" was the laconic reply.
On toward 50 the hand was moving, and soon it had passed that figure.
Then it was 55! Still Tom Swift did not take his foot off the
accelerator.
"Whew!" whistled Ned. "She's doing better than sixty miles an hour,
Tom!"
"That's nothing--downhill!" was the response. But 60 seemed enough,
and at that speed--terrific when the size of the machine was
considered--Tom held the road wonderfully well. There was no longer the
sound of pursuit.
"I guess they saw our tail light and gave up!" chuckled Tom. "We're
well out of that!"
"What's the next move?" Ned asked.
"Stop at the nearest place where there are police and give the alarm!"
snapped Tom. "I'm not going to let Cunningham get away with the stuff
he's trying to pull."
They went on for several miles at this high speed, and then, when faint
dawn was rosily tinting the east, they came down off Dismal Mountain to
a level road and, inquiring of a passing truckman, learned the location
of the headquarters of the nearest State Police.
"So that's the secret of Dismal Mountain, is it?" asked a rather sleepy
sergeant who had been on duty all night. Tom and Ned had gasped out
their story, touching only the high spots of their capture and escape.
"Road agents, train robbers, and bandits hanging out in the castle,
eh?" went on the officer.
"Will you look after 'em?" asked Tom, leaving the station to get into
his House on Wheels again.
"I sure will, Mr. Swift. And thanks a lot for the tip. I'll spread a
net for these scoundrels. Dismal Mountain is going to lose its secret
and its mystery. Luckily, there aren't many roads leading down from it.
I'll have every one covered. Those fellows will walk right into my
trap, and those that don't come down--well, we'll go up and get 'em!"
he finished, with a grim laugh.
He hurried inside to send out a general alarm and Tom kept on toward
the House on Wheels.
"Where to now?" asked Ned.
"To Chesterport," Tom answered. But there was no enthusiasm in his
voice. Ned could guess why. The gossip Tom had heard about Mary Nestor
and Floyd Barton was eating at his heart like a canker.
The sun was scarcely above the horizon when Tom and Ned, leaving to
the State Police the work of rounding up the bandits in Cunningham's
gang, rolled in the House on Wheels up in front of the Winthrop home.
There was no stopping now blocks away for fear of wounding the social
sensibilities of Mrs. Winthrop.
CHAPTER XXIV
JUST IN TIME
Though it was very early, one of the men about the Winthrop place was
already astir, preparing to wash down the front porch with a hose. Tom,
followed by Ned, strode up the front walk, and the man, staring at the
big House on Wheels which had stopped at the front curb, looked in
surprise at the two rather unkempt and disheveled early morning callers.
"I'm Mr. Swift," Tom explained, smiling at the man.
"Oh, yes! Excuse me, sir! I didn't recognize you. I remember now! You
were here at the house party given for Miss Nestor. Of course! I didn't
know you--in--er----"
"These clothes!" finished Tom, with a laugh. "I don't blame you." He
and Ned still wore the old garments that had been given in exchange
for their own more fashionable attire. Doubtless some of the bandits
retained the new suits.
"Yes, of course, Mr. Swift," murmured the man. "Will you come in? It's
a little bit early, but----"
"Is Miss Nestor up yet?" asked Tom, and a moment later he realized what
a foolish question it was. It was barely six o'clock, and of course
none of the household would be up.
"No, sir," the man replied. "Miss Nestor isn't here now."
"She isn't? Where is she?" demanded Tom, a strange feeling around his
heart.
"She and Miss Winthrop and several other guests went on a houseboat
trip with Mr. Barton down the river two days ago."
"With Mr. Barton?" Tom fairly shouted.
"Yes, sir. He has a large houseboat. It was quite a party. But they are
expected back to-day."
"What time?"
"About noon, I think, sir."
"Where will the houseboat dock?"
"Down the river," and the man mentioned a certain dock.
"Thanks," said Tom, as he turned away.
"Depend upon it, Tom," asseverated Ned stoutly, "Mary doesn't know
Barton's character or she wouldn't even dance with him, let alone going
off on houseboat parties."
"That remains to be seen," and Tom's voice had a bitter tone in it.
"That remains to be seen."
"Where are you going?" asked Ned as he climbed up to the seat beside
his chum.
"Down to the dock to wait for the arrival of that houseboat. We'll park
there, get something to eat, and freshen up a bit. I want to have a
little conversation with Mr. Floyd Barton."
Ned could guess the interview would not be exactly pleasant for Mr.
Floyd Barton, and he smiled grimly.
It was so early that the passage of the big auto through the streets of
Chesterport attracted little attention this time. The dock was found
without difficulty, and in a vacant space near the river Tom parked his
House on Wheels. Then he and Ned got breakfast, of which they stood in
considerable need.
A hasty inspection of the auto showed that though the bandits had used
it roughly, no material damage was done. A thorough cleaning would put
it in shape again. There was considerable mud about, showing that it
had been run in the rain after Tom and Ned had fled from it.
A bath, a change to fresh clothes, bought as soon as the stores
were opened, and a rest soon repaired some of the ravages of the
imprisonment that showed on the two young men. Then they took their
ease in the House on Wheels while waiting for the boat to come back
with the merry party of young folks. It seemed a long while, but it was
scarcely noon when a whistle was heard and Ned, looking out, announced:
"Here she comes!"
Tom roused himself, squared his shoulders, and began to walk toward the
dock where some hands were making ready to moor the pleasure craft.
Ned followed. He wanted to see all that should take place.
"Wonder if the State Police will get Cunningham and his gang," mused
Ned, as they stood on the dock waiting for the boat to be made fast.
"They will, sooner or later," said Tom. "Just now I'm more interested
in the nephew than I am in that beefy Englishman."
The houseboat came to a squeaking stop at the end of the dock, and when
the gangplank was in place several laughing, and evidently happy, young
men and women began to disembark. Tom watched closely but did not see
Mary and Barton. A frown came over his face as he moved quickly down
the dock, followed by Ned.
Then Grace Winthrop, surrounded by a group of admirers, came off.
"It was a wonderful party!" said one girl.
"Just wonderful!" agreed Grace. "I hope you liked it, Aunt Mary," she
said to an elderly relative who had gone along as a chaperone.
"Oh, yes, it was nice," was the reply. "But it was a bit damp."
"Always is on the water! Ha! Ha!" chuckled a youth clad in a very gay
sweater. Then Grace caught sight of Tom and Ned.
"Oh, Mr. Swift! So glad to see you!" she cried. "Mr. Barton tried to
get word to you and Mr. Newton to come on our excursion, but Mary said
he couldn't reach you. She said you'd gone to Dismal Mountain. Did you
go there?"
"Yes," answered Tom, shaking hands, "I did. Where is Mary now?" he
asked, scarcely able to restrain his impatience.
"Oh, she and Mr. Barton must be down in the cabin yet," was the answer.
"I thought she came off, but she evidently remained to----"
Tom Swift did not stop to hear the remainder of the sentence. He strode
aboard the boat, made his way toward the cabin, but halted outside the
door at the sight of two figures in the room. Ned could look over his
chum's shoulder and see Mary with Floyd Barton standing close to her.
The approach of the recent prisoners was so silent that the two in the
cabin had not heard them.
"Now, Mary, why can't you be nice to me?" Floyd was saying, as his arm
went toward the girl who seemed to shrink away from him. "I gave you a
nice time, didn't I?"
"Yes, Mr. Barton, it was a lovely party."
"Why don't you call me Floyd?"
"I--I scarcely know you well enough." Mary's voice was low and she
seemed in distress. Her back was toward Tom and Ned.
"You'll soon get to know me better," went on Barton boldly. "I'm very
fond of you, Mary. Why are you so cold and distant? Now you and I--" He
almost had his arm around her now.
"Mr. Barton, stop! Stand away from me!" exclaimed Mary.
Tom Swift made a jump into the cabin and, with a hand on Barton's
shoulder, swung that surprised youth about.
"You dirty dog!" cried Tom, almost beside himself with rage. "I've
found you out just in time!"
He gave Barton a shove which would have floored that young man had not
Ned caught and held him.
"Oh, Tom!" cried Mary, and, holding out her hands she was soon clasped
in Tom Swift's willing arms. "Oh, Tom! I'm so glad you came! He--he----"
A look of disgust came over her face as she looked at Barton.
"He won't annoy you again," said Tom grimly.
But now Barton had recovered his poise and, pulling away from Ned,
demanded:
"What does this mean? How dare you come aboard my boat without an
invitation? Who are you, anyhow--Oh, it's Swift and partner!" he added
with a sneer, as he recognized the twain.
"Swift and partner!" chuckled Ned. "And the partner's name isn't Slow,
either," he added, as, putting out a hand, he caught Barton as the
latter was about to leave. Perhaps the rascal suspected something of
what was in the wind.
"What does this mean? Let me go! You have no right here!" stormed
Barton.
Mary soon recovered from the upset caused by Barton's advances and
stood beside Tom Swift. By this time the high voices from the cabin had
attracted the attention of several of the houseboat party, and they
turned back to see what the trouble was.
"Let me go!" snarled Barton to Ned. "If you don't----"
He made as if to strike Ned, but the latter, drawing his automatic said
calmly:
"Now take it easy! You can't get away any more than that rascally uncle
of yours can."
"My uncle! Is he----"
"By this time Mr. Cunningham and his gang of bandits in the castle are
under arrest," said Ned, though as a matter of fact he did not know
this. "The game is up, Barton!" he added grimly. "Ask Tom Swift if it
isn't."
Tom, a happy smile on his lips as he stood beside Mary, nodded in
affirmation. A desperate look came over Floyd Barton's face. He glanced
about wildly as if for a way of escape. Then he suddenly pulled loose
from Ned, but as he was about to run from the cabin he found himself in
the arms of a burly dock officer who demanded:
"What's the row about? And why have you that gun?" he asked of Ned a
bit sternly.
"Because I don't want that criminal to escape!" was Ned's answer.
"Criminal! Mr. Barton a criminal?" came in a startled chorus from many
of the late houseboat party.
"A criminal!" said Tom Swift calmly but firmly. "A partner with his
rascally uncle, Basil Cunningham, in the illegal operations on Dismal
Mountain. I am Tom Swift, and Ned Newton and I have just escaped from
that mountain of mystery. The criminals up there captured us and my
House on Wheels. They held Ned and me prisoners and we overheard enough
of their plots to send them all to jail. They're under arrest now,"
he added, giving more details and particulars of what had happened on
Dismal Mountain. "And you'll be under arrest too, very shortly, Floyd
Barton," concluded Tom.
"He may consider himself under arrest now," announced the dock man.
"I'm a special officer and I'll take him into custody."
"You can't! You haven't a warrant!" stormed Floyd.
"I'll hold you until Mr. Swift can swear a warrant out," said the
special officer, who knew and disliked Floyd Barton. "Come on now! Will
you go peaceably or do you want the bracelets?" and from a pocket he
took out shining handcuffs.
"All right!" said Barton, with a scowl at Tom Swift. "You win!"
CHAPTER XXV
WEDDING BELLS
Such excitement as this had never before been known among the circles
in which Grace Winthrop and her friends moved.
"Mother will be furious at me for ever having had Mr. Barton in the
house," said Mary to her friends.
"It wasn't your fault," they told her. "How could you know he was such
a rascal?"
"I couldn't! Oh, isn't it perfectly terrible!"
"Terrible!" echoed the girls.
"Rather jolly fun, I call it!" chuckled the young man in the violently
colored sweater. "It makes a bit of excitement."
If the truth be known, the girls may have felt the same way about it,
only they were not honest enough to acknowledge it.
While Ned left with the special officer to see that Floyd Barton was
locked up, pending formal charges that would be filed against him, Tom
and Mary went to the House on Wheels to be by themselves.
"Tell your mother I'll be along soon, Grace," was Mary's message to her
relative.
"Take your time!" and Grace's voice had a mischievous ring in it.
With much buzzing talk the party left the houseboat, having enough
news, with what was to follow, to keep gossip busy for months. Tom and
Mary entered the little living room of the House on Wheels.
"Oh, Tom," said Mary again, "I'm so glad you came when you did! It was
providential!"
"If I had been a little longer, would I have been too late?" asked Tom,
with a smile, as he sat down beside the girl.
"Too late for what?"
"Too late to ask you to marry me at once and have done with all this
worry?"
"Why Tom! Marry you at once? Oh--Tom--I--I----"
"Well, I heard, while I was held a prisoner in the castle, that you
were soon going to marry Barton. And so----"
"Going to marry _him_! Oh, never, Tom! _Never!_ Of course he was very
nice to me at first--but----"
"But what?" asked Tom, as she hesitated.
"Well--I--er--I----"
When Tom and Mary came out of the House on Wheels a little later he had
made certain of what he had suspected a long time, that Mary Nestor was
worth to him more than all else in the world.
When Tom and Mary arrived at the Winthrop house some time afterward,
they found a message from the State Police, announcing that Cunningham
and his gang had fairly run into the net spread about Dismal Mountain
for them, and with the exception of a few unimportant men, all were
captured.
When Floyd Barton, who had been lodged in jail, heard this news,
brought to him by Ned who went back to the castle to look things over,
the young man caved in and made a complete confession. He was more
a tool of his rascally uncle than anything else, but his money had
furnished working capital for the bandits.
Floyd had been particularly struck by Mary's charm and had conducted
a rushing campaign to make her capitulate to him. For a time, she
afterward confessed to Tom, she had been fascinated by him. But his
true character was soon apparent.
Thus the mystery of Dismal Mountain was cleared up. A search of the
castle revealed not only much loot, besides the valuable instruments,
but also machinery for turning out more. It had been Cunningham's
intention to set up the machinery he had hoped to have Tom Swift
make for him in this same castle and go into the illegal instrument
manufacturing business on a large scale. But with the rounding-up of
the gang, all these plans came to an end.
It was also discovered that many of the weird and ghostlike
manifestations seen on Dismal Mountain were caused by the Cunningham
gang with the object of keeping people away. Only Tom Swift's whimsical
decision to investigate the place brought the tricks to light.
"Well, I guess it's all settled," Tom announced to Ned one day, when
they had been guests at the Winthrop home for some days after all the
rascals were sent to prison.
"What's all settled?" Ned wanted to know.
"My wedding plans. Mary and I are going on our honeymoon in the House
on Wheels."
"What did I tell you?" chuckled Ned. "I knew, as soon as you began to
build it, that you'd use it for that."
"Only at one time," commented Tom, with a laugh, "it began to look as
if nobody but Cunningham would use it."
"That's right," assented Ned.
It developed that after Tom's refusal to have anything to do with
him, Cunningham had his men shadow Tom and, when the House on Wheels
was headed for Dismal Mountain plans were made to capture it and the
occupants. How well these plans succeeded, Tom Swift was in a position
to know.
Three weeks after the round-up of the gang there was a beautiful
ceremony in the Union Church of Shopton. As the wedding bells pealed
forth their joyous music, Ned Newton and Helen Morton, who had been
Mary's and Tom's attendants, marched down the aisle behind the happy
couple.
"Don't they sound nice?" said Ned to Helen.
"What?"
"Those wedding bells! I hope they'll soon be ringing for us, Helen!"
"Oh, behave yourself, Ned Newton," was all she said. "This is no time
to talk about such things!"
As Tom marched out of the church amid a shower of rice and old shoes
he saw in the crowd waiting to greet him many old and new friends. His
father was there, with Mrs. Baggert, the faithful housekeeper.
"Long life and happiness to you and your sweet bride, Tom!" called the
old lady.
"Thanks!" murmured the young groom.
"Dat's whut I say!" echoed Eradicate. "An' I's gwine to lib wif Massa
Tom an' Miss Mary when dey sot up housekeepin'!" declared the old Negro.
"Bless my pocketbook!" exclaimed Mr. Damon, who, of course, was among
the guests. "Tom Swift getting married! My! My!"
"Well, what's wrong with that?" asked Mr. Jackson.
"Why, it means the end of his wonderful inventions!"
"Nonsense! Nothing of the sort!" declared the shop manager. "Tom Swift
will never stop inventing. I shouldn't wonder, now that he's married,
but what he'll do the best work of his life."
"Well," said Mr. Damon dryly, "that remains to be seen."
Then, amid the continued ringing of the wedding bells, Tom Swift and
his bride went on their honeymoon trip in the House on Wheels.
THE END
* * * * *
BOOKS FOR BOYS
By VICTOR APPLETON
12mo. Cloth. Illustrated.
THE TOM SWIFT SERIES
TOM SWIFT AND HIS MOTORCYCLE
TOM SWIFT AND HIS MOTOR BOAT
TOM SWIFT AND HIS AIRSHIP
TOM SWIFT AND HIS SUBMARINE BOAT
TOM SWIFT AND HIS ELECTRIC RUNABOUT
TOM SWIFT AND HIS WIRELESS MESSAGE
TOM SWIFT AMONG THE DIAMOND MAKERS
TOM SWIFT IN THE CAVES OF ICE
TOM SWIFT AND HIS SKY RACER
TOM SWIFT AND HIS ELECTRIC RIFLE
TOM SWIFT IN THE CITY OF GOLD
TOM SWIFT AND HIS AIR GLIDER
TOM SWIFT IN CAPTIVITY
TOM SWIFT AND HIS WIZARD CAMERA
TOM SWIFT AND HIS GREAT SEARCHLIGHT
TOM SWIFT AND HIS GIANT CANNON
TOM SWIFT AND HIS PHOTO TELEPHONE
TOM SWIFT AND HIS AERIAL WARSHIP
TOM SWIFT AND HIS BIG TUNNEL
TOM SWIFT IN THE LAND OF WONDERS
TOM SWIFT AND HIS WAR TANK
TOM SWIFT AND HIS AIR SCOUT
TOM SWIFT AND HIS UNDERSEA SEARCH
TOM SWIFT AMONG THE FIRE FIGHTERS
TOM SWIFT AND HIS ELECTRIC LOCOMOTIVE
TOM SWIFT AND HIS FLYING BOAT
TOM SWIFT AND HIS GREAT OIL GUSHER
TOM SWIFT AND HIS CHEST OF SECRETS
TOM SWIFT AND HIS AIRLINE EXPRESS
TOM SWIFT CIRCLING THE GLOBE
TOM SWIFT AND HIS TALKING PICTURES
TOM SWIFT AND HIS HOUSE ON WHEELS
THE DON STURDY SERIES
DON STURDY ON THE DESERT OF MYSTERY
DON STURDY WITH THE BIG SNAKE HUNTERS
DON STURDY IN THE TOMBS OF GOLD
DON STURDY ACROSS THE NORTH POLE
DON STURDY IN THE LAND OF VOLCANOES
DON STURDY IN THE PORT OF LOST SHIPS
DON STURDY AMONG THE GORILLAS
DON STURDY CAPTURED BY HEAD HUNTERS
DON STURDY IN LION LAND
GROSSET & DUNLAP, Publishers, New York
*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 75322 ***
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