Part 20 (1/2)

”There's no telling. I'm going to be doubly on the watch. That fellow Blakeson is in the pay of the plotters, I believe. He has a big machine shop, and he might try to duplicate my tank if he knew how she was made inside.”

”I see! That's why he was inquiring about a good machinist, I suppose, though he'll be mightily surprised when he learns it was you he was talking to the time your Hawk met with the little mishap.”

”Yes, I guess maybe he will be a bit startled,” agreed Tom. ”But I haven't seen him around lately, and maybe he has given up.”

”Don't trust to that!” warned Ned.

The tank was now progressing easily along over fields, hesitating not at small or big ditches, flow going uphill and now down, across a stretch of country thinly settled, where even fences were a rarity.

When they came to wooden ones Tom had the workmen get out and take down the bars. Of course the tank could have crushed them like toothpicks, but Tom was mindful of the rights of farmers, and a broken fence might mean strayed cows, or the letting of cattle into a field of grain or corn, to the damage of both cattle and fodder.

”There's a barbed-wire fence,” observed Ned, as he pointed to one off some distance across the field. ”Why don't you try demolis.h.i.+ng that?”

”Oh, it would be too easy! Besides, I don't want the bother of putting it up again. When I make the barbed-wire test I want some set up on heavy posts, and with many strands, as it is in Flanders. Even that won't stop the tank, but I'm anxious to see how she breaks up the wire and supports--just what sort of a breach she makes. But I have a different plan in mind now.

”I'm going to try to find a wooden building we can charge as we did the masonry factory. I want to smash up a barn, and I'll have to pick out an old one for choice, for in these war days we must conserve all we can, even old barns.”

”What's the idea of using a barn, Tom?”

”Well, I want to test the tank under all sorts of conditions--the same conditions she'll meet with on the Western front. We've proved that a brick and stone factory is no obstacle.”

”Then how could a flimsy wooden barn be?”

”Well, that's just it. I don't think that it will, but it may be that a barn when smashed will get tangled up in the endless steel belts, and clog them so they'll jam. That's the reason I want to try a wooden structure next.”

”Do you know where to find one?”

”Yes; about a mile from here is one I've had my eyes on ever since I began constructing the tank. I don't know who owns it, but it's such a ramshackle affair that he can't object to having it knocked into kindling wood for him. If he does holler, I can pay him for the damage done. So now for a barn, Ned, unless you're getting tired and want to go back?”

”I should say not! Speaking of barns, I'm with you till the cows come home! Want any more machine gun work?”

”No, I guess not. This barn isn't particularly isolated, and the shooting might scare horses and cattle. We can smash things up without the guns.”

The tank was going on smoothly when suddenly there was a lurch to one side, and the great machine quickly swung about in a circle.

”h.e.l.lo!” cried Ned. ”What's up now? Some new stunt?”

”Must be something wrong,” answered the young inventor. ”One of the belts has stopped working. That's why we're going in a circle.”

He shut off the power and hastened down to the motor room. There he found his men gathered about one of the machines.

”What's wrong?” asked Tom quickly.

”Just a little accident,” replied the head machinist. ”One of the boys dropped his monkey wrench and it smashed some spark plugs. That caused a short circuit and the left hand motor went out of business. We'll have her fixed in a jiffy.”

Tom looked relieved, and the machinist was as good as his word. In a few minutes the tank was moving forward again. It crossed out to the road, to the great astonishment of some farmers, and the fright of their horses, and then Tom once more swung her into the fields.

”There's the old barn I spoke of,” he remarked to Ned. ”It's almost as bad a ruin as the factory was. But we'll have a go at it.”