Oferta wyłącznie dla osób z aktywnym abonamentem Legimi. Uzyskujesz dostęp do książki na czas opłacania subskrypcji.
14,99 zł
Najniższa cena z 30 dni przed obniżką: 14,99 zł
This spring was the most treasured possession of Kurt, since without him there could not have been a trout farm that gave him life. There was never a day when he did not inspect it, and it was very fashionable to keep a thermometer in it to see that the temperature does not change. He never knew a change of more than four degrees – from thirty-eight degrees to forty-two. When he picked up the thermometer, he noticed a flicker of white in the dark jaws of spring. Something rose, spinning in a rush of water.
Ebooka przeczytasz w aplikacjach Legimi na:
Liczba stron: 280
Contents
I. A CLOSE CALL
II. SLEUTHS OF THE AIR
III. THE GHOST PLANE
IV. WHEN THE STORM BROKE
V. TEA AND TOAST
VI. A MIDNIGHT MYSTERY
VII. BROWLE'S BAD MORNING
VIII. "OLD CROSSCUT"
IX. ON THE CRAG FACE
X. JACK'S SECOND CHANCE
XI. "THE JOLOGIST"
XII. A SPOT OF OIL
XIII. THE TREASURE-SEEKER
XIV. FOGGED
XV. WHEN THE TANK WAS EMPTY
XVI. UNDER ARREST
XVII. A DUD NOTE
XVIII. JACK MAKES A PROMISE
XIX. FIRE
XX. A DAY'S FISHING
XXI. DICKY SETS A TRAP
XXII. THE LAST OF MARK NYLAND
XXIII. JACK'S BAD JOB
XXIV. UP TO THE CEILING
XXV. IN THE HEART OF THE STORM
XXVI. DICKY TAKES A HAND
XXVII. THE ATTACK ON THE HANGAR
XXVIII. KIP WANTS WAR
XXIX. NIGHT IN THE RIFT
XXX. NO ESCAPE!
XXXI. UNDER THE HILLS
XXXII. THE D.H
XXXIII. AIR MANOEUVRES
XXXI. DRIVEN DOWN
I. A CLOSE CALL
“YES, my little lads, you’re doing very nicely,” said Curtis Clinton, with a smile on his pleasant sun-burned face, as he gazed down into the clear pool where hundreds of tiny trout darted about. He scattered a little food for the baby fish, then went up to the head of the pool where a tiny spring of ice- cold, crystal-clear water bubbled up from a small crevice in the limestone.
This spring was Curt’s most cherished possession, for without it the trout farm which gave him his living could not have existed. There was never a day when he did not inspect it, and it was a fad of his to keep a thermometer in it to see that the temperature did not change. He had never known a change of more than four degrees–from thirty-eight degrees to forty-two. As he lifted the thermometer he noticed a flicker of white in the dark mouth of the spring. Something rose spinning in the rush of the water, and as it came to the surface he picked it out. He could hardly believe his eyes when he found it to be a small fragment of newspaper.
“Of all the rum things!” he gasped, as he turned and, carrying the paper very carefully, took it back to his little bungalow, which stood further down the slope close above his biggest pond. There he laid it flat on a sheet of blotting paper which drew the water from it, and taking this outside pinned it on a board in the strong spring sunlight.
In a very few minutes it had dried sufficiently for the print to become visible, and, getting a magnifying glass from the house, he scanned it eagerly. The first word he made out was Tiedende in large letters, and this he saw was part of the title.
“Dutch!” he exclaimed. “Well, if this doesn’t beat cock- fighting. Will some one kindly tell me what a piece of a Dutch newspaper is doing in my spring? And here’s the date too, May 3rd. Why, it’s only about three weeks old.” He frowned thoughtfully. “Well,” he said at last, “the whole country is full of underground streams. This paper must have fallen into one of them through a cleft and come through goodness knows how many miles of dark rock pipes until it came out through my spring. But Dutch–why Dutch?”
His musings were sharply interrupted by a hoarse shout.
“Mr. Clinton, them there boys o’ yours is up to some new devilment. Flying like kites. You better come an’ see.”
Curt, bolting round the corner of the house, almost ran into a man hurrying in the opposite direction.
“Flying, Agar!” he exclaimed. “What do you mean?”
Agar, a grizzled old fellow who had a small farm a little way down the valley, grinned till his parchment-like face was a mass of wrinkles.
“It’s true, sir. I seed ’em from my place. They got something like a big kite, and one on ’em was right up in the air in it. I’ll lay it’s that there Jack Milner–him and Kip Carter.”
But Curt was gone. Rushing round to the shed, he got out his motor bicycle, sprang into the saddle, kicked off, and the next moment was roaring down the rough road at a perilous pace. Agar watched him.
“Looks to me as if he’s as like to break his neck as any on ‘em,” he observed. “Gosh, but I wouldn’t be master o’ them there Scouts for something! Young demons, specially that there Jack!”
Old Agar was a little prejudiced, for in point of fact the boys of the Pipit Patrol, of which Curt was Scoutmaster, were as nice a set of lads as any in all that wild countryside. As Curt often said, there was not an ounce of real harm in any of them. The only reason why they sometimes got into trouble was that they were healthy, open-air lads with a craving for adventure and a wild desire to be always trying something new.
“Of course, it’s Jack,” said Curt to himself, as he sent his machine crackling up the steep slope which ran at right angles from the valley road.
As he reached the top he came into view of the village of Garth lying in a hollow below, and of a great bare fell stretching steeply up to the right. On a ledge high up the hillside three boys were standing holding a fourth who lay spread on a kind of framework beneath a kind of tiny biplane.
“A glider!” gasped Curt. “How in sense did they get hold of a thing like that?”
He pulled up, left his bicycle leaning against the bank, scrambled through the hedge and began to run up the steep with long springy strides. He was still too far away for even his loudest shout to reach the boys, and his only chance of stopping them was to get near enough before Jack took off.
It was no good, for long before he was within hailing distance there came the gust of wind for which the youthful pilot had been waiting. Curt saw him signal with one hand to the others, saw them run forward down the slope holding the glider which tugged like a kite. Then they let go, and Curt’s heart was in his mouth as he saw the glider swoop upwards and outwards exactly like a rising kite.
“He’ll be killed,” he gasped in horror. “He can’t possibly know how to control the thing.”
Yet somehow the boy pilot did manage to control the machine. He worked his ailerons with surprising skill and kept on a level keel as the glider, with the fresh spring wind under her planes, soared onwards.
A freckled-faced boy with bright blue eyes was the first to hear Curt coming, and turned to meet him.
“Isn’t it fine, sir?” he cried, with glowing face. “And Jack’s promised that I shall have next turn.”
“Next turn, you lunatic! There won’t be any next turn. We shall be lucky if we ever see Jack alive again.”
Kip Carter’s face dropped.
“W-why, what’s the matter?” he gasped.
“Matter, Kip! Mean that you don’t understand how confoundedly dangerous it is? There are only about a dozen men in England who have ever handled gliders successfully. Jack knows nothing, and if the wind tilts him he’s done. He’ll come down like a stone.”
“I–I never thought of that,” said Kip in dismay, but he spoke to empty air, for his Scoutmaster was already plunging down the hill in pursuit of Jack.
“He’s in an awful paddy,” said Kip to Butter Briggs, a solid- looking youth who was gazing round-eyed at the glider. “We’d better go on after him.”
A fresh gust caught the glider and tilted it so sharply that Curt’s heart was in his mouth again. But Jack, who seemed to have no sense of fear, got her back on even keel. He was about fifty feet up, hovering in the wind stream like a hawk, and Curt, looking up from below, saw his face shining with delight.
“What an airman he’ll make!” was the thought that flashed through his mind. “My word, what an airman!” Then he stopped. “Jack!” he shouted. “Can you hear me?”
“Fine, sir,” replied Jack.
“I wish you’d come down, Jack. We’ve got to go to Fandle this afternoon. Can you manage it?”
“I think so, sir.”
“You’ll have to be careful,” said Curt, speaking in quiet, distinct tones. “The wind is gusty, and it won’t do for you to side-slip. Keep her head a little down and head for the leasowe.”
“Prickly sort of place to come down, sir,” grinned Jack, but he did as he was bid.
The leasowe was a rough field further down the slope, covered with clumps of brier and blackberry bushes. It was exactly because these were there to break a possible fall that Curt had ordered Jack to make for the spot. He knew that otherwise there was nothing for the boy to do but fly right across the valley. Then when he got to the dead area where the wind was cut off by the opposite hill he would drop like a stone. It was impossible to come back to the starting point, for a glider depends entirely for its flying power on the wind striking upwards on the cambered surfaces of its planes, and the moment it turns with the wind it is bound to fall.
Curt was in an agony as he followed just below the tossing, quivering glider. He was not the sort ever to make favourites among his boys, but now he had to acknowledge to himself that red-haired, cheeky, cheery Jack Milner was the one of them all whom he could least easily spare. It seemed to him too that he was the one whom his country could least spare, for a boy like Jack would make a splendid man.
A sharp puff caught the glider and lifted her several yards, and for a moment it seemed as if she were clean out of control. Beads of cold sweat started on Curt’s forehead as he waited for what seemed the inevitable crash. But again Jack cleverly got control, and again he forced her nose down.
“Got a bit of a bump that time, sir,” he called cheerily. “But the wind’s all right now, and I’m doing fine.”
“Keep down,” begged Curt. “If you go too far you’ll get into calm air and stall.”
“All right,” Jack answered. “Coming down now, sir.”
Down he came as easily and smoothly as any old hand.
“The boy’s a marvel,” said Curt to himself, and the words were hardly out of his mouth before the crash came.
The breeze at this lower level seemed to fail completely, the glider stalled, her nose came up, then she turned right over and dropped–dropped straight into the centre of one of those clumps of bramble on the near edge of the leasowe.
Curt felt sick as he heard the crash of the crumpling framework, and he ran madly towards the spot.
As he reached it Jack came crawling out from among the ruins. A large bleeding scratch ran all down one cheek, but that was not what was making his lips quiver.
“Oh, sir, I’ve broken it badly!” he cried in despair.
“Broken it, you lunatic!” answered Curt. “What does that matter if you haven’t broken yourself? Don’t you understand that you’ve had about as narrow an escape from death as any chap ever had?”
Jack’s eyes grew round as billiard balls as he looked at Curt.
This is a free sample. Please purchase full version of the book to continue.
This is a free sample. Please purchase full version of the book to continue.
This is a free sample. Please purchase full version of the book to continue.
This is a free sample. Please purchase full version of the book to continue.
This is a free sample. Please purchase full version of the book to continue.
This is a free sample. Please purchase full version of the book to continue.
This is a free sample. Please purchase full version of the book to continue.
This is a free sample. Please purchase full version of the book to continue.
This is a free sample. Please purchase full version of the book to continue.
This is a free sample. Please purchase full version of the book to continue.
This is a free sample. Please purchase full version of the book to continue.
This is a free sample. Please purchase full version of the book to continue.
This is a free sample. Please purchase full version of the book to continue.
This is a free sample. Please purchase full version of the book to continue.
This is a free sample. Please purchase full version of the book to continue.
This is a free sample. Please purchase full version of the book to continue.
This is a free sample. Please purchase full version of the book to continue.
This is a free sample. Please purchase full version of the book to continue.
This is a free sample. Please purchase full version of the book to continue.
This is a free sample. Please purchase full version of the book to continue.
This is a free sample. Please purchase full version of the book to continue.
This is a free sample. Please purchase full version of the book to continue.
This is a free sample. Please purchase full version of the book to continue.
This is a free sample. Please purchase full version of the book to continue.
This is a free sample. Please purchase full version of the book to continue.
This is a free sample. Please purchase full version of the book to continue.
This is a free sample. Please purchase full version of the book to continue.
This is a free sample. Please purchase full version of the book to continue.
This is a free sample. Please purchase full version of the book to continue.
This is a free sample. Please purchase full version of the book to continue.
This is a free sample. Please purchase full version of the book to continue.
This is a free sample. Please purchase full version of the book to continue.
This is a free sample. Please purchase full version of the book to continue.
This is a free sample. Please purchase full version of the book to continue.
This is a free sample. Please purchase full version of the book to continue.