Part 1 (2/2)
Puss realized that the majority on board the _Siren_ were against him. But he was not given to taking water; even his enemies, and he had many in Bloomsbury, could hardly say that Puss was lacking in a certain kind of grit; while stubbornness he possessed in abundance.
So he just shut his white teeth hard together, and looked scowlingly around the bunch of fellows. And many of them felt a little chill when those cold gray eyes rested upon them; for they knew of old what happened when Puss Carberry made up his mind to mark a boy for future attention.
Frank still stood there by the side of the boat, smiling. Perhaps his very apparent unconcern served to make the other still more angry. There had been bad blood between these two lads for a long time, and more than once it threatened an eruption, which somehow or other had up to now been stayed.
Although some weeks had pa.s.sed since the much-talked-of race between the rival aeroplanes, piloted by these two boys, in which Frank took his little craft up to the lofty summit of Old Thunder Top ahead of Puss in his biplane, as narrated in the first volume of this series, ent.i.tled ”The Bird Boys; or, The Young Sky Pilot's First Air Voyage,” the latter had never ceased to feel ugly over his defeat.
As usual he had what he considered a good excuse for his arriving second; but few persons ever knew how Puss and his helper Sandy had tried to injure Frank's airs.h.i.+p when it was directly beneath them, by deliberately dropping a sand bag, taken along, singularly enough, as ”ballast,” but with this very idea in view.
”Seems to me you've gotten the big head ever since you happened to drop on that rocky plateau on top of the mountain just three little seconds ahead of me, Frank Bird!” he said, with a steely glitter in his eyes that those who knew him best understood to mean coming trouble.
”Oh! I hope not, Puss,” replied the other, with a smile. ”I give you my word my hat fits me just as comfortably as ever. It was a close race, and the one who got there first hadn't much to crow about, for a fact. We happened to be lucky not to have any trouble with our new little Kinkaid engine, that was all.”
”Huh!” grunted his cousin Andy, shaking his head, and scowling at Puss in turn. ”But we had plenty of other sorts of trouble, all the same, sand bags full of it, in fact. They just rained down on us; but then Frank knows how to check up his engine suddenly, and the storm pa.s.sed by without any hurt!”
Some of the fellows, who happened to know what this sly reference on the part of the hotheaded Andy meant, began to chuckle. Of course such a thing would only serve to make Puss more angry. He chose to believe that they were all only trying to bait him.
Frank in particular came in for his dark looks. And Larry, who had once run in the same company as Puss, so that he knew his whims better than many others, took occasion to give Frank Bird a sly nudge in the side, as he whispered:
”Look out for him, Frank; he's getting near the danger point, sure!”
But Frank did not have to be warned. He had grown tired of warding off this ever threatening danger of a broil with Puss Carberry. Like his cousin Andy, the other had no father; and his wealthy mother had long since given up in despair the idea of controlling the headstrong lad. So that Puss had his way, whenever he wanted to do anything out of the ordinary.
Because Mrs. Carberry was one of his father's patients, and Dr. Bird esteemed her very highly, Frank had postponed the reckoning just as long as he could endure the insults of the bully. But he believed the last ditch had been reached, and was determined to no longer raise a hand to avert the threatening storm.
Puss had turned when Andy spoke, to flash a look in his direction. But it had no effect upon the other, who could be as reckless at times as the next one. Indeed, Frank often had to curb the impatience and daring of his chum.
”Oh! that's what sticks in your craw, does it, Andy Bird?” demanded Puss. ”Just because Sandy happened to drop that ballast, thinking we might make better time if we lightened s.h.i.+p, you choose to make all sorts of nasty insinuations about us wanting to knock you out! Shows where your mind is. Another fellow wouldn't ever let such a fool notion get a grip on him. And you'd better put a reef in that tongue of yours, my boy, unless you want to have it get you into trouble.”
Andy flared up at once, and would have replied; but Frank calmly stepped in between the two, as though he claimed first right.
”Neither of us have charged you with intentionally trying to disable our aeroplane by dropping that sand bag, Puss,” he remarked quietly. ”All we say is that it was a queer coincidence you wanted to get rid of your ballast just when we were walking up on you hand over fist, and about to pa.s.s under you, to take the lead. That's all!”
Again there was a low laugh from among the boys who stood around listening. To them it was a rich treat to see the recognized bully of Bloomsbury baited to his very face in this characteristic way; and they were enjoying it hugely.
”Well, let me tell you it ain't all, not by a jugful!” exclaimed Puss, his face taking on a purple hue, as it always did when he became enraged. ”Both of you fellows have got to stop speaking about that sand bag dropping, or there's going to be a licking in store for you. See?”
and he thrust his face close to that of Frank as he said this. Larry Geohegan fairly held his breath. ”Now it's coming; don't I know the signs?” he whispered to the boy next him.
Frank continued to stand there, close to the side of the speeding launch. They were about half way across the deep lake at the time.
Evening was coming on, for the sun had just reached the distant rugged horizon in the west.
”Do you refer to me when you say that, Puss?” he asked, with that same queer little smile on his face--a look that mystified the other, who could not understand what it meant.
”Yes, both you and that loud-mouthed cousin of yours. Just because luck favored you, and you won that blooming race by a head, you think I can't manage an aeroplane as well as you. Huh! perhaps you don't know that I'm going to take my machine with me when I go down to the cocoa plantation we own along the Amazon, and use it exploring where a white man has seldom been seen. You can just stay here and grow up with the country, while I'm doing great stunts. But as long as I stay here I'm going to stop this talk about trickery and low-down dodges. You're responsible for most of it, Frank Bird. I warn you what's coming to you.”
”Perhaps,” said Frank, pleasantly, ”you would be kind enough to tell me also when this awful punishment is going to fall on my poor devoted neck?”
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