Part 16 (1/2)

Our hero focused them on the airs.h.i.+p that was swiftly sailing across the open s.p.a.ce in the wilderness but so high up that there was no danger of our friends being recognized. Then the young inventor uttered a cry of astonishment.

”It's Andy Foger!” he cried. ”He's in that airs.h.i.+p, and he's got two men with him. Andy Foger, and it's a new biplane. Say, maybe that's the new clew Mr. Whitford wired me about. We must get ready for action! Andy in a new airs.h.i.+p means business, and from the whiteness of the canvas planes, I should say that craft was on its first trip.”

CHAPTER XII

WARNED AWAY

”Tom, are you sure it's Andy?”

”Take a look yourself,” replied the young inventor, pa.s.sing his chum the binoculars.

”Bless my bottle of ink!” cried Mr. Damon. ”Is it possible?”

”Quick, Ned, or you'll miss him!” cried Tom.

The young bank clerk focused the gla.s.ses on the rapidly moving airs.h.i.+p, and, a moment later, exclaimed:

”Yes, that's Andy all right, but I don't know who the men are with him.”

”I couldn't recognize them, either,” announced Tom. ”But say, Ned, Andy's got a good deal better airs.h.i.+p than he had before.”

”Yes. This isn't his old one fixed over. I don't believe he ever intended to repair the old one. That hiring of Mr. Dillon to do that, was only to throw him, and us, too, off the track.”

Ned pa.s.sed the gla.s.ses to Mr. Damon, who was just in time to get a glimpse of the three occupants of Andy's craft before it pa.s.sed out of sight over the trees.

”I believe you're right,” said Tom to his chum. ”And did you notice that there's quite a body, or car, to that craft?”

”Yes, room enough to carry considerable goods,” commented Ned. ”I wonder where he's going in it?”

”To Logansville, most likely. I tell you what it is, Ned. I think one of us will have to go there, and see if Mr. Whitford has arrived. He may be looking for us. I'm not sure but what we ought not to have done this first. He may think we have not come, or have met with some accident.”

”I guess you're right, Tom. But how shall we go? It isn't going to be any fun to tramp through those woods,” and Ned glanced at the wilderness that surrounded the little glade where they had been camping.

”No, and I've about concluded that we might as well risk it, and go in the airs.h.i.+p. Mr. Whitford has had time enough to work up his clew, I guess, and Andy will be sure to find out, sooner or later, that we are in the neighborhood. I say let's start for Logansville.”

Ned and Mr. Damon agreed with this and soon they were prepared to move.

”Where will you find Mr. Whitford?” asked Ned of his chum, as the Falcon arose in the air.

”At the post-office. That's where we arranged to meet. There is a sort of local custom house there, I believe.”

Straight over the forest flew Tom Swift and his airs.h.i.+p, with the great searchlight housed on top. They delayed their start until the other craft had had a chance to get well ahead, and they were well up in the air; there was no sight of the biplane in which Andy had sailed over their heads a short time before.

”Where are you going to land?” asked Ned, as they came in view of the town.

”The best place I can pick out,” answered Tom. ”Just on the outskirts of the place, I think. I don't want to go down right in the centre, as there'll be such a crowd. Yet if Andy has been using his airs.h.i.+p here the people must be more or less used to seeing them.”

But if the populace of Logansville had been in the habit of having Andy Foger sail over their heads, still they were enough interested in a new craft to crowd around when Tom dropped into a field near some outlying houses. In a moment the airs.h.i.+p was surrounded by a crowd of women and children, and there would probably been a lot of men, but for the fact that they were away at work. Tom had come down in a residential section.