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.. meta::
   :PG.Id: 43264
   :PG.Title: The Phantom Airman
   :PG.Released: 2013-07-20
   :PG.Rights: Public Domain
   :PG.Producer: Al Haines
   :DC.Creator: Rowland Walker
   :DC.Title: The Phantom Airman
   :DC.Language: en
   :DC.Created: 1920
   :coverpage: images/img-cover.jpg

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THE PHANTOM AIRMAN
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   .. _`"It was as though the mighty concussion had blown a hole in the universe."--*Page* 245.`:

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      :alt: "It was as though the mighty concussion had blown a hole in the universe."--*Page* 245.

      "It was as though the mighty concussion had blown a hole in the universe."--*Page* `245`_.

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      THE
      PHANTOM AIRMAN

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      BY

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      ROWLAND WALKER

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      AUTHOR OF "DASTRAL OF THE FLYING CORPS," "DEVILLE
      McKEENE, THE BRITISH ACE," ETC, ETC.

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      S. W. PARTRIDGE & Co.
      4, 5 & 6, SOHO SQUARE, LONDON, W.1  

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      MADE IN GREAT BRITAIN
      *First Published* 1920
      *Frequently reprinted
      This Impression issued* 1931

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   CONTENTS

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   CHAPTER

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I.  `The Secret of the Schwarzwald`_
II.  `The Wonder 'Plane`_
III.  `"Tempest" of the Aerial Police`_
IV.  `A Midnight Consultation`_
V.  `The Aerial Liner`_
VI.  `An Up-to-Date Cabin Boy`_
VII.  `A Duel with Words`_
VIII.  `Sons of the Desert`_
IX.  `The Phantom Bird`_
X.  `The Brigand of the Eastern Skies`_
XI.  `The Air-King's Tribute`_
XII.  `The Maharajah's Choice`_
XIII.  `The Missing Airship`_
XIV.  `Betrayed by the Camera`_
XV.  `Diamond cut Diamond`_
XVI.  `The Ghostly Visitant`_
XVII.  `The Watchers`_
XVIII.  `"Live Wires"`_
XIX.  `The Devil's Workshop`_
XX.  `"Hands Up!"`_
XXI.  `The Coming Fight`_
XXII.  `An Aerial Duel`_

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.. _`THE SECRET OF THE SCHWARZWALD`:

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   THE PHANTOM AIRMAN

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   CHAPTER I

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   THE SECRET OF THE SCHWARZWALD

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Rittmeister Heinrich von Spitzer, late
flight-commander in the German Air Service,
was one of the Prussian irreconcilables, who,
rather than submit to the peace terms enforced
by the Allies after the defeat of Germany,
resolved to become an aerial brigand, an
outlaw of the nations, and to wage a bitter
warfare of violence and plunder against his
late enemies.

His proud spirit refused to bend before the
conquerors, for the iron shaft of defeat had
embittered his soul, particularly against
Britain, whom he had ever regarded as the
evil genius of the Entente.

One day, when his plans were well matured,
he unburdened his spirit to a couple of his
friends, kindred souls, men after his own
heart, both of them apt pupils of the great
Richthofen, who was still referred to by his
disciples as "the red airman."  They had
been engaged that day in dismantling an
aerodrome on the edge of the Schwarzwald;
to them, at least, a hateful job.

"Comrades," he said, "this peace has
ruined us.  *Germania delenda est*, but I will
not sit still amid the ruins of the Fatherland.
Glorious we have lived, like kings of the air;
let us not inglorious die."

"I am with you, Rittmeister.  I will
follow you to the gulfs," exclaimed one of his
companions, named Carl, who had been a
famous scout pilot in the Richthofen "circus,"
and the lightning flashed from the young
airman's eyes as he spoke.

"But what can we do against the empires
of the world?" asked a Gotha pilot who had
raided the English towns a score of times.

For answer the chief turned a withering
look upon the last speaker and said:--

"Max, you have faced death a hundred
times in the air, and over the British lines.
You have thirty enemy machines to your
credit, and yet you ask me what can we do?"

"What of it, Rittmeister?  Tell us what
is in your mind."

"Listen, then, both of you, and I will tell
you what still remains for brave men to do.
All is not lost while courage and hope remain,"
and whilst he spoke the German chief drew
his two friends away from the half-dismantled
aerodrome on the southern edge of the
Schwarzwald, to a narrow path that led
amongst the trees.

When the aerodrome was hid from view he
began to speak once more, huskily at first, as
though restraining some pent up excitement.

"I am in possession of a secret," he said,
"which I may not tell even to you unless
you first swear to follow me on some great
adventure."

They both looked at him, not a little
amazed and bewildered, and neither spoke for
a moment.

"I have chosen you," continued Spitzer,
"because I know you to be men of daring and
resource.  You are both dissatisfied with the
condition of things in the Fatherland.  Ach
Himmel!  This occupation of the sacred
German soil by the Britisher, the Frenchman
and the American is breaking my heart.  I
will endure it no longer, but I will strike a
blow at the enemy before I die."

As he spoke thus, he almost hissed out the
words which he uttered, for his voice had now
lost its strange huskiness, while his eyes
gleamed like the fierce glittering orbs of the
tiger about to make its spring from the hidden
jungle.  Nor was his present madness without
its visible effect upon his two companions,
for he had strange powers of magnetic
influence, this Prussian Junker.

"Donner and Blitz, but you are right,
Rittmeister!" exclaimed Carl, the blood
mounting to his temples.

"And you, Max, what say you?" and the
chief fixed the Gotha pilot with his eyes.

"Ja! ja!" he assented.  "I am with you also."

"But the end of this adventure is death!"
continued von Spitzer, speaking now more
deliberately.  "This much I must tell you
in all fairness before I proceed further.
However much we achieve--and we shall
accomplish not a little--there can be no other
ending."

"Bah! we have looked too often into the
face of that monster to be afraid," returned
the scout.

"You speak truly, Carl," replied the chief.
"When your machine went down in flames
near Cambrai, you passed so close to me that
I stalled my Fokker to let you pass, and I
saw the smile upon your lips that day as you
looked into the face of death.  I never
expected to see you alive again, but you were
saved for this."

Then, amid the gloom of the dark aisles of
the Schwarzwald, these two men swore to
follow their chief on this last great adventure,
as they had followed him during the darkest
days of the war.

"And now I will tell you the secret which
I hold, and which at present is known only to
two other men," said the Rittmeister, and,
sitting down about the gnarled roots of an
upturned tree, the two airmen listened to
the following story:

"You have heard me sometimes speak of a
great mathematician and engineer, by name
one Professor Weissmann," began von Spitzer.

"Yes, we have heard of him," replied the others.

"He is the greatest living scientist;
moreover, he is a practical engineer, and during
the last four years he has devoted his time
entirely to designing, constructing and
perfecting with his own hands, assisted by one other
mechanic, a wonderful aeroplane, compared
to which neither the Allies nor the Central
Powers have anything to approximate."

"Donnerwetter, but why wasn't it ready
before?" exclaimed Max.  "It might have
turned the tide of battle in the autumn of 1918."

"It's no use crying over spilt milk,"
replied the chief.  "It could not be completed
before."

"And you say that this wonderful machine
is now ready," interposed Max, who had flown
every type of machine from a single-seater
scout to a heavy bomber, and whose
professional curiosity had now been thoroughly
awakened by the words of the German ace.

"It is ready, and what is more to the point,
it is at my disposal," returned the chief
briefly.

"Der Teufel!  But where is it?"

"I can lead you to it, for it is less than three
miles from where we sit at the present
moment."

"Himmel!" exclaimed both the pilots,
springing to their feet.  "Take us to see it,
Rittmeister; we have given you our promise."

"Be calm, my friends; you shall see it
to-day.  But let me put you on your guard.
You must not speak of it aloud, but only in
whispers, for the secret of this machine is
jealously guarded, and its whereabouts is
unknown, save to the professor, his assistant
and myself."

"Has it ever been flown?" ventured Max.

"Yes."

"Who was the pilot?"

"I was."

"You, Rittmeister?" exclaimed the amazed airmen.

"Yes."

"And you are satisfied at her
performances?" asked Carl, gazing steadfastly into
the eyes of his chief.

"More than satisfied.  She is the most
wonderful and responsive thing I have ever
flown.  You will say the same when you have
seen her, and made a trip or two."

"Phew! take us to see her now; I would
give ten years of my life to fly in her," said
Max, who was getting almost feverish in his
anxiety to see this wonderful thing and to
handle her controls; for such is the lure of
the air, especially to those who have climbed
into the azure and sailed amongst the clouds
in the days of their youth.

"You shall fly in her," replied Spitzer.

"When?" asked the eager youth.

"When we start our great adventure,"
replied the chief.

"And when will that be?"

"To-morrow, if you are willing; all our
plans are laid."

"Why to-morrow?" asked the others simultaneously.

"Because delay is dangerous.  There is
always the danger that this secret, so jealously
guarded, and hidden away in the depth of the
Black Forest, may be discovered.  You know
that Germany, under the Peace terms, is
forbidden for the present to manufacture
aircraft."

"Yes, yes; we know it only too well."

"Well, even now," continued von Spitzer,
"the British Air Police have got wind of the
thing, and their agents are in a dozen different
parts of Germany trying to fathom the
mystery of this phantom aeroplane, but so
far they have not succeeded.  All the same, it
is time for us to get away, and that is why I
have confided my plans to you to-day.  Do
you wish to withdraw?" and there was just
a faint suspicion of a sneer in the tone of the
speaker's voice, as he said this.

"Withdraw?  Ach Himmel, no, a thousand
times no!  I am ready to start to-day,"
flashed back the ruffled Carl as he replied.

"Gut!" grunted von Spitzer.  "Then you
shall see this wonderful thing to-night at
sunset; I dare not take you there before,
and to-morrow, ach! to-morrow, this great
adventure will begin."





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.. _`THE WONDER 'PLANE`:

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   CHAPTER II


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   THE WONDER 'PLANE

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The sun was sinking amongst the pines of the
Schwarzwald when the three airmen, after
traversing for several miles the wild unbroken
solitudes of that primeval forest, emerged at
length from the dark shadows of the trees on
to a little open glade, a natural clearing about
two hundred metres in diameter.

"Here we are at last!" exclaimed the chief.

"Himmel! what a perfect little aerodrome,"
cried the scout pilot.

"But where is the hangar?" asked the
more observant Max.

"Hist!  Let us wait for the signal,"
ordered the Rittmeister, waving his
companions back to the fringe of the forest.

"But there is not a soul to be seen
anywhere," expostulated Carl.  "No one ever
comes here."

"We must be careful; there is too much
at stake," whispered the flight-commander,
and then he gave a long, low whistle, repeated
twice.

Scarcely had the last sound died away, like
the sad piping tone of the woodland robin,
than a similar call came in response from the
opposite side of the glade.

"Follow me; the way is clear," said the
chief as he strode across the clearing towards
the spot whence came the signal.  And his
companions followed him, silently wondering,
for, somehow, they felt that they were treading
on enchanted ground, and that some
interesting *dénouement* would shortly take place.

As they neared the edge of the forest once
more, a movement amongst the trees attracted
their attention, and the next instant a solitary
figure emerged from the shadows and greeted
them.  It was the keen, lynx-eyed professor,
the great mathematician and engineer; a
man about fifty, dressed in a loose working
garb, wearing a battered felt hat above his
shock of white, wavy hair.

"You are welcome, children of the Fatherland,"
he said, extending his hand, and fixing
the two strangers with his piercing eyes, after
this brief salutation.

"I hope we are not late," began von Spitzer,
when the first salutation was over and he had
introduced his companions.

"The sun is amongst the pines and the
shadows of the Schwarzwald deepen," replied
the professor, speaking in the language of the
forest.  "It was the time arranged, but"--and
here he paused for a second--"there is no
time for delay," and an uneasy look spread
over his face.

"You don't mean that----" began the
chief, but the genius forestalled him by
adding:--

"Yes, strangers have crossed the clearing
to-day.  For the first time since I came here,
I heard strange voices amongst the trees."

"But they found nothing?"

"Nothing!" ejaculated the professor.

"Good!  Then my friends may view the
aeroplane," said Spitzer.

"Certainly; let them follow me," and
through an opening barely fifteen feet wide,
the professor led the way to a combined
hangar and workshop, carefully camouflaged
and hidden away amongst the trees.

The next instant the two young airmen
received the greatest surprise of their lives.

"Der *Skorpion*!" announced the professor.

"Donnerwetter!" came the involuntary
cry from both the strangers as their eyes fell
upon a new type of aeroplane, with an angry,
waspish look about it, that the Bristol Fighter
used to wear during the later days of the
Great War.  Yet it was not a Bristol Fighter
by any means, for it was twin-engined, and
steel-built throughout, with a central conning-tower,
tapering off to a sharp point to improve
the stream-line, and a closed-in be-cabined
fuselage into which four or six persons might
with ease be stowed away.

"But her engines!" exclaimed Max.
"How small they are."

"But how powerful!" replied Spitzer.
"Each one develops anything up to 400 horsepower."

"Is it possible?" asked Carl, who was
already carefully examining the starboard
engine, in its covered in and stream-lined
casement.

"The propellers are different, too; they're
something like the Fokker's, but shorter, and
they have a peculiar twist, which I have never
seen before.  What is that for, Rittmeister?"
asked the Gotha pilot.

"For vertical climbs, Max," replied the
chief, for while the professor stood by, and
looked on, interested and amused at the
growing enthusiasm for his idol, the
Rittmeister, who had been secretly schooled in the
hidden mysteries, explained them point by
point, for he was a great mechanic and
mathematician was this ex-flight-commander.

"Vertical climbs?" echoed the other.  "I
thought it was impossible."

"Impossible?  Rubbish!  Nothing is
impossible to the man of science.  Have you
never heard of the Helicopter?"

"You mean that hybrid mongrel the
verdammt Yanks and the Britishers have been
experimenting with of late, and which has
caused so many accidents?"

"The same; only they went the wrong
way about it.  This propeller, with this
driving power behind it, practically gives the
vertical ascent, especially when once flying
speed has been obtained."

"Blitz, but it is wonderful!" concluded
Max, his enthusiasm growing by leaps and
bounds, as he continued his examination.

"Why, the propellers are made of steel,
and so are the planes," exclaimed Carl, who
was now carefully examining the material of
which the aeroplane was made.

"Steel, tempered steel, every bit of
it--fuselage, propellers, tail fin, rudders.  There's
not an ounce of wood about the *Scorpion*,"
returned the mentor.

"Then the danger of fire is lessened,"
ventured Max, whose one dread in the air
had always been that of fire.

"That danger is eliminated," replied the
chief, in a tone of certitude.

"Except by petrol.  By the way, where are
the petrol tanks?" exclaimed Carl, who had
never missed them till now.

"There aren't any," replied the Rittmeister,
smiling.  "I was waiting for that question."

"No petrol tanks?" came the astonished
cry from both the airmen at once.

"They're not necessary," returned the
other; "and that's the greatest mystery of all."

"Himmel!  Am I dreaming?" exclaimed Max.

"No, you're wide awake.  Don't stare like
that, man!"

"Der Teufel, but how is she driven?"
demanded the scout, staring with wide-open
eyes from Spitzer to the professor, and from
the latter to his mechanic, who had stood by
all this while, with arms akimbo, silently
amused at the bewilderment of the two
strangers.

"Listen," began the Rittmeister.  "I
cannot explain everything now--time will not
permit--but you shall learn all these things
before many days are over."

"Yes, go on!"

"The professor has spent years on this
series of inventions, both in the workshop and
the laboratory, and each discovery has been
co-ordinated and fitted into the scheme.  The
greatest of all his discoveries is the fact that
he has been able to discover and to harness an
unknown force to drive the motors of the
*Scorpion*."

"A highly compressed gas, I suppose,"
interposed Max, who had taken a science
degree at Bonn.

"Certainly, it is a *most* highly compressed
gas, extracted at great pains and labour from
the elements.  The formulæ for this wonderful
new element exist only in the still more
wonderful brain of the professor.  It has not
been committed to paper even, in its final
terms and ratios, so that, even should this
machine be captured, which it certainly shall
not be whilst I am its pilot, it could not be
used, once the present supply of this Uranis,
as we will call it, is used up."

"That is why the engines are so small,
then?" ventured Max.

"Precisely!"

"And what is our present supply of this
wonderful element?"

"Do you see this?" said the Rittmeister,
pointing to a few small cylinders, each about
two feet long, and six inches in diameter,
which lay carefully piled upon each other on
the floor near the *Scorpion*.

"Yes."

"That is the world's supply at present,
excluding the two cylinders which are already
fitted on the machine."

"The world's supply," ejaculated Carl, who
was thinking of the huge petrol tank, which
in a Fokker scout would last only three hours
with the throttle wide open.  "That won't
last long, unless the pressure is enormous."

"The pressure is enormous, my friend;
so enormous that if anything happened it
would----"

"Blow a hole in the universe, I reckon,"
interposed Max.

"You are right, and that is the only danger
connected with the *Scorpion*.  The other
danger you mentioned, that of fire, is altogether
eliminated.  There would be nothing to burn
if one of these cylinders exploded, for there
would be nothing left--in the vicinity."

"*Sacre bleu*!" exclaimed Carl, *sotto voce*,
for, brave youth that he was, he shuddered at
the thought.

Max was the more practical of the two,
however, for he belonged not to the highly
sensitive scouts, but to the heavy bombers,
and he merely asked to satisfy his curiosity:--

"How far will one of those cylinders take
us, Rittmeister?"

"Ten thousand miles," replied the chief,
"that is, one fitted to either engine."

"Good!  Let me see, there are ten here,
and one already fitted to either motor
makes a dozen.  Why, they would carry
us"--and here he made a rapid calculation--"they
would take us twice round the world."

"Precisely, and with a little to spare, when
we had completed the double trip."

"And what speed would she pick up, say
at a level flight?"

For answer the chief looked at the professor,
as though uncertain whether to reply to this
question.

"They have taken the oath, sir," he pleaded,
"They cannot withdraw," and the great
scientist nodded his acquiescence.

"Two hundred and fifty miles without
being pushed," he replied at length.

"Donnerwetter!  And what if she were pushed?"

"I cannot say, she has never been driven
beyond that."

"What a deuce of a noise she will make--like
a whole formation of Gothas, I should
imagine," said Max.

The professor smiled, but left it to the
Rittmeister to explain this last point.

"The engines are silent, but there is a
slight hum from the propellers.  That cannot
be effaced at present, but it is nothing."

Then, having given all these details, the
visitors made a closer inspection of the
machine.  They were permitted to climb into
the conning-tower, to handle the controls, and
the two swivel machine guns mounted there.
They were shown into the little cabin, where
four men might sit at the little table, or lie
down at full length, but could not stand
upright.  The steel struts, steel folding wings,
the carefully packed spares, the little mica
windows in the cabin--these, and a dozen
other things, were pointed out and explained
to them--the stores which were already
packed, comprising chronometrical instruments,
maps, charts, ammunition for the guns,
compressed food, etc., until their bewilderment
grew, and their astonishment became
unbounded.

"Why, she scarcely needs an aerodrome at
all!" Carl ventured at length.

"Scarcely," replied the chief.  "At any
rate, not for a long time."

"She is weather proof; she is wonderfully
camouflaged.  She could hide in a desert, or
a meadow," said Max.

"And she carries her own stores for a long,
long trip," ventured Carl, who was just dying
for the morrow to come.

"And if she were chased, she could make
rings round anything, even a Fokker scout,
or a verdammt British S.E.5," added Max.

"So you are satisfied, both of you?"
asked the Rittmeister.

"Perfectly satisfied.  I am only longing for
to-morrow, so that I may turn aerial brigand,
buccaneer, or what you like," answered Carl.

"And you, Max?"

"I am ready, chief, to follow you to the end
of the world, for mine eyes have seen the
wonder 'plane."





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.. _`"TEMPEST" OF THE AERIAL POLICE`:

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   CHAPTER III


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   "TEMPEST" OF THE AERIAL POLICE

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Colonel John Tempest, D.S.O., M.C., etc.,
late of the Royal Air Force, and now Chief
Commissioner of the British Aerial Police, sat
before a pile of papers in his office at Scotland
Yard late one evening.  He was anxious and
worried, for something had gone seriously
wrong with his plans.

It was his duty to investigate and track
down all aerial criminals, whether brigands,
smugglers or revolutionists of the Bolshevist
type.  For this purpose he had been appointed
by the Government to the command of the
British Aerial Police, whose functions included
the patrolling of the routes of the great aerial
liners throughout the British Isles, and the
All-Red route to Egypt, India, and other
British possessions, and the careful guarding
and watching of the aerial gateways and ports.

Some of the best scout pilots of the war,
including two famous secret service men,
named Keane and Sharpe, were detailed to
assist him in this important and ever-increasing
task, for aerial crime of twenty different
kinds was becoming more and more prevalent
since the war.

So far his efforts had been conspicuously
successful, and he had brought many of the
offenders to justice, but at the present moment
he had to confess himself baffled--utterly
baffled by a series of unfortunate occurrences
which it had been beyond his power to prevent.

"There is some master-mind behind all
this," he exclaimed to himself, rising suddenly
from his chair, and beginning to pace the
room, much in the same way that he used to
pace his squadron office, in the old days, when,
as commander of a squadron of scouts during
the Great War, he had attempted to outwit
the daring of the German airmen.

"I wonder now--I wonder what happened
to that missing German professor!" and
Colonel Tempest suddenly halted, and placed
his left hand to his forehead, as some powerful,
new idea had arrested his mental faculties.

Then, walking across the room swiftly, he
switched on a shaded light which illuminated
a large map of Germany, showing the aerial
routes, the lines of occupation by the Allies, etc.

"It is just possible," he murmured to
himself, "that the two things are connected--the
disappearance of this eminent scientist
and the appearance of this extraordinary
flying machine."  Then he switched off the
light, and returned to the sheaf of papers and
documents on his desk.  He sorted out one
and placed it on top; it was a decoded
message, received some days ago from one of
his agents at Constantinople.  It ran as
follows:--

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"Mysterious aeroplane, phantom-like
in appearance, passed over here yesterday
flying at terrific speed.  All our signals
disregarded.  No navigation lights
showing.  Our fast scouts gave chase but left
hopelessly behind.  Came from direction
of Adrianople, crossed the Bosphorus, and
disappeared rapidly flying south-east.
Time shortly after sunset.

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.. class:: noindent

AERIAL, CONSTANTINOPLE."

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"That is three days ago," continued the
Colonel, still thinking aloud, "and here are
four similar messages from other sources
showing quite plainly the route taken.  Great
Heavens! if I were not tied to my desk in
this place, I would take the fastest scout in the
country and chase this infernal night-wizard myself."

A soft tap at the door startled the
Commissioner, for during the last three days he
had become highly nervous; this affair was
getting on his mind, but he recovered himself
instantly and called out in a deep voice:--

"Come in!"

The door opened softly and his confidential
secretary entered, and announced:--

"Two more cables and a wireless message, sir."

"Anything from Keane or Sharpe yet?"
demanded the chief.

"Nothing, sir."

"Then what are these confounded things?"

"More about that aerial brigand, sir."

"Let me see them," and Jones handed the
messages to his chief.

Consternation and alarm were both visible
on the face of Tempest as he read the news.

"So the devil has already got to work,
Jones," he remarked, quoting from the sheets,
laconic phrases such as "Oil tanks at Port
Said burning for three days.  Crew of
mysterious aeroplane suspected."  (Delayed
in transit.)  "Wireless station at Karachi
utterly destroyed, after brief visit by strange
airmen."  The third was a wireless message
which proved most disconcerting of all to the
Commissioner.  It announced that a silent
aeroplane, showing no distinctive marks
whatever, passed over Delhi "this afternoon" at
a speed estimated at not less than three
hundred miles an hour.

The chief of the aerial police leaned back in
his chair and groaned.

"Three hundred miles an hour!" he gasped;
"but the silent aeroplane idea is a fallacy.
It is impossible with any type of
internal-combustion engine.  It must either have been
too high up for the good people of Delhi to
hear it, or its engines must have been shut
off, or well throttled down.  Bah!  I know too
much about aeroplanes to swallow that."
Then rounding upon Jones, who was standing
by awaiting instructions, he said sharply:--

"Did that second message go out to Keane?"

"Yes, sir."

"And there's still no reply from him?"

"Nothing whatever, sir."

"H'm.  I cannot understand it.  Send it
out again by wireless telephone; he may be
on his way back by aeroplane now, and
possibly within reach."

"Right, sir," and Jones disappeared to
stab the ether waves again in search of Keane.
At that moment the telephone bell on the
Commissioner's desk rang.  It was the Home
Secretary asking for Colonel Tempest, for the
same messages concerning the aerial brigand
had reached him.

"Hello, Tempest; is that you?"

"Yes; who is that?"

"Lord Hamilton, speaking from the Home Office."

"Oh, yes, my lord."

"I say, Tempest, what is this news just to
hand about aerial highwaymen romping half
round the British empire, destroying wireless
stations, and burning out the big oil tanks
along the All-Red Route?  I thought you had
all these aerial criminals well in hand.  There'll
be a deuce of a row about all this when
Parliament meets in two days' time."

"Well, er--we're doing our best to deal
with it, sir, but it will take time to lay these
fellows by the heel, I fear."

"Have you got the matter in hand?"

"Yes, sir."

"What have you done?  I shall be
bombarded with questions shortly; in fact, the
Colonial Secretary's here now.  He's complaining
that the routes are not sufficiently well
patrolled.  What steps have you taken to deal
with these marauders?"

"I've wirelessed to all the aerial stations,
to get their fastest scouts out all along the
line at once to look for these bandits, and I'm
staying on here all night expecting news every
moment."

"Very well.  Keep me informed of everything
that happens.  It's becoming very
serious.  You have full powers to deal
effectively with these criminals, and they may
be shot down at sight if they don't respond to
signals."

Then, as the angry minister rang off, another
tap was heard at the door, and the imperturbable
Jones entered once more, and announced:

"Message from Keane and Sharpe came in
whilst you were speaking on the telephone, sir."

"Good!" ejaculated Tempest, as he wiped
the perspiration from his brow, for he had
expected something much worse from the
Home Secretary.  "What does the message say?"

"They received my last message, sir, and
are on their way home by the fastest
aeroplane.  They are due at Hounslow aerodrome
at midnight."

"Excellent!  What time is it now, Jones?"

"It wants ten minutes to midnight, sir,
and I have sent out the fastest car to meet
them and bring them straight here.  They
should be here in half an hour, sir."

"Have you told them at Hounslow?"

"Yes, sir, and they have already got out
the coloured lights and the ground flares."

"You have done well, Jones, but you had
better not leave the office to-night.  I'm very
sorry, but I may want you.  This is urgent
business; we're up against something this time,
and unless Keane and Sharpe have found
something out, we're going to be beaten."

"I'll stay, sir, but what about you?  This
is your third night-sitting, and you've had
nothing since lunch.  Shall I order supper for you?"

"Oh, thanks, Jones, but I'd forgotten.
Yes, you may order me coffee and a sandwich,
and get something for yourself.  You're getting
the strain as well, and I don't want you
to break down."

When left alone, Colonel Tempest once
more began to pace the soft-carpeted room,
much as a captain paces the bridge when his
thoughts are unduly disturbed by some
untoward event during the watch of the second
officer.  Every other minute he consulted his
watch, and wondered why the time passed so
slowly.  Twice he rang down to the lobby
attendant and asked if Captain Keane had
arrived, and twice the same answer was
returned.

Then he looked at the maps on the wall, and
followed with his finger the trail of the All-Red
Route which the aerial liners followed, linking
up the empire and half the world.  Now and
again he would glance shrewdly at the large
map of Germany, as a skipper eyes the weather
quarter when a storm is brewing.  Occasionally
he would murmur half aloud:--

"A silent engine ... three hundred miles
an hour.  Gee whiz! but they have beaten
us two to one.  We shall never catch them."

Then a slight sound caught his ears from
outside the great building.  The soft purr of
an approaching Rolls-Royce motor and the
sharp blast of a Klaxon horn followed.

"At last!" he cried.  "Here they come!"





.. vspace:: 4

.. _`A MIDNIGHT CONSULTATION`:

.. class:: center large bold

   CHAPTER IV


.. class:: center medium bold

   A MIDNIGHT CONSULTATION

.. vspace:: 2

The next moment the door burst open and
two men in flying helmets and leathern coats
entered the room, and saluted the Colonel.
Without any ceremony the latter greeted them
warmly, almost joyously, for their cheerful
presence gave almost instant relief to his
over-burdened mind.

"Good evening, Keane.  Good evening,
Sharpe," he exclaimed, stepping forward and
gripping each of them warmly by the hand.

"Good evening, sir."

"Now, have you discovered anything?"
began the chief, without waiting for them to
divest themselves of their heavy gear.

Keane looked at the Commissioner for a
second or two and then answered:--

"Yes, and no, Colonel."

"H'm.  That means something and nothing,
I presume."

"Exactly, sir," continued Keane, who acted
the part of spokesman.  Then, speaking more
solemnly, and in lowered tones, he continued,
"We are up against something abnormal; I
had almost said something supernatural.
When you recalled us we were hot on the
trail of the man who, in my opinion, is
behind this conspiracy."

"You mean this Professor Weissmann?"
added the chief of the aerial police.

Keane nodded.

"I thought so.  This man is evidently an
evil genius of very high mental calibre, and
he has determined, out of personal revenge
for the defeat of Germany, to thwart the
Allies, and in particular Great Britain."

"He is a master-mind, and a highly
dangerous personality; dangerous because he
is so clever.  And now that he has secured a
few daring airmen for his tools, there is no
end to the possibilities which his evil genius
may accomplish before he and his crew are
run to earth," replied Captain Keane.

"I know it, I know it--look here!" and
the colonel handed him the batch of cables
and wireless messages which showed how the
*Scorpion* had already got to work.

"H'm! and there will be worse to follow,"
added the airman after he had glanced through
the list.

"Now, tell me briefly what you have
found, Keane, after which we must get to
work to devise some immediate plan to
thwart these aerial brigands.  But first take
off your flying gear, and sit by the fire,
for you must be hungry, tired and numbed
after that cold night ride."  Then, ringing for
his attendant, he ordered up more strong
coffee and sandwiches.

"Thanks, Colonel, I will not refuse.  It
was indeed a cold ride, and we had no time to
get refreshments before leaving the aerodrome
at Cologne this evening," said Sharpe, as he
divested himself of his heavy gear, sat by the
fire and enjoyed the coffee which soon arrived.

A few moments later, the three men were
engaged in serious conversation, although the
hour of midnight had long since been tolled
out by Big Ben.

"You sent me," Keane was saying, "to
discover the whereabouts of this great German
engineer and man of science, this brain wave
whose perverted genius is likely to cost us so
dear."

"And you were unable to find any trace
of him?" interposed the chief.

"Well, we were unable to come into contact
with him, for we found that since peace was
concluded he had vacated his professorial
chair at Heidelberg University, where he had
been engaged for some considerable time, not
only on some mechanical production, but in
an attempt to discover some unknown force,
evidently a new kind of highly compressed gas
to be used for propulsive purposes."

"Had he been successful?"

"That, it was impossible to find out during
our short stay over there," replied Keane,
"but I discovered from someone who had been
in close touch with him just about the time
peace was signed, that he had expressed
himself in very hopeful terms."

"Was he a very communicative type of
man, then, did you learn?"

"No; on the contrary, he seldom spoke
of his work, but on this occasion, when he
communicated this information, he was very
much annoyed at the defeat of Germany, and
considered that his country had been betrayed
into a hasty peace."

"And what happened to him after that?"
asked the colonel.

"Shortly afterwards he disappeared
completely, taking with him all the apparatus
connected with his research work, also a highly
skilled mechanic who had been specially
trained by him for a number of years.  But
he left not a trace of himself or his work,"
said the captain, pausing for a moment to
light a cigarette.

"Do you think he is acting under any
instructions from his authorities?"

"No, certainly not; he distrusts his present
Government entirely, and considers them
traitors to the Fatherland."

There was another brief silence, whilst
the three men, wrapt in deep thought, sat
looking into the fire, or watched the rings of
tobacco smoke curling upwards to the ceiling.
At last, Captain Sharpe observed:--

"A powerful intellect like that did not
suddenly disappear in this way without some
ulterior motive, Colonel Tempest."

"Obviously not," returned the latter briefly,
for he was deep in contemplation, and his
mind was searching for some clue.  At length
he turned to the senior captain and said:--

"This silent engine theory, Keane, what
do you think of it?"

Keane shook his head doubtfully, and the
colonel handed to him once more the recent
wireless message from Delhi, adding merely:--

"Do you think it possible?"

"Scarcely," replied Keane carefully, "but
with a master mind like this, one never knows.
It will be necessary for you to consult the
most eminent professors of science and
chemistry at once."

"I intend to visit Professor Verne at his
house first thing to-morrow, or rather to-day,
for it is already morning."

"But the aeroplane," added Sharpe, who
had been perusing the Delhi message, "this
also must have been specially built for this
new gas."

"Given the one, the other would naturally
follow, and would be the lesser task of the
two, for this man is a great engineer as well,"
said Keane.

"It is a deep well of mystery," continued
Tempest after another pause; "but
something must be done at once.  To-morrow the
morning papers will be full of it.  Next day
Parliament meets, and questions will be
asked, and it will all come upon us.  I shall
have to meet the Home Secretary as soon as
I have interviewed Professor Verne, and Lord
Hamilton will not be easily satisfied.  The
public will also be clamouring for information
on the subject, and they will have to be
appeased and calmed.  The Stock Exchange
will begin to talk also, and to demand
compensation for the companies whose properties
have been damaged.  Insurance rates, marine
and otherwise, will be raised, and Lloyd's
underwriters will not fail to make a fuss.
Now, gentlemen, what steps can we take to
deal with these raiders in the immediate future?"

Send us after this mystery 'plane on fast
scouts with plenty of machine-gun ammunition,"
urged Sharpe.

"I cannot spare you for that, but I have
already ordered strong patrols of aerial police
to search for the brigands.  I must have you
here or somewhere within call.  At any rate,
I cannot let you go further than Germany.
It may be necessary to send you there again."

"On what account, sir?" asked Keane.

"To find the aerodrome which this raider
calls 'home,' for he must have a rendezvous
somewhere if only to obtain supplies and
repairs."

"And that secret aerodrome must be
somewhere in Germany, hidden away in
some out-of-the-way place," ventured Sharpe.

"But in what part of Germany?" asked
the commissioner.

"Let me see," cried Keane, rising to his
feet, and walking across the room to where
the large map of Germany hung upon the
wall--"why, it must be in the Schwarzwald!"

"The Schwarzwald!" exclaimed the other two.

"Yes, it is by far the best hiding-place
in the whole country.  One may tramp for
days and never see a soul.  It must be
somewhere in the Schwarzwald."

"Then to the Schwarzwald you must go
to-morrow, adopting whatever disguises you
desire, and you must find this hidden spot
where the conspiracy has been hatched,"
concluded the colonel.





.. vspace:: 4

.. _`THE AERIAL LINER`:

.. class:: center large bold

   CHAPTER V


.. class:: center medium bold

   THE AERIAL LINER

.. vspace:: 2

The airship liner, *Empress of India*, was
preparing to leave her moorings, just outside
the ancient city of Delhi, for Cairo and
London.  This mammoth airship was one of
the finest vessels which sailed regularly from
London, east and west, girdling the world,
and linking up the British Empire along the
All-Red Route.  She had few passengers, as
she carried an unusually heavy cargo of mails
for Egypt and England, and a considerable
amount of specie for the Bank of England.
Several persons of note, however, figured
amongst her saloon passengers, including
the Maharajah of Bangapore, an Anglo-Indian
judge, and a retired colonel of the
Indian army.

She was timed to depart at mid-day, and
during the morning mailplanes had been
arriving from every part of India with their
cargoes of mail-bags, already sorted for the
western trip.

The great mammoth now rode easily with
the wind, moored by three stout cables to the
great tower which rose above the roof gardens
of the air-station.  An electric lift conveyed
the passengers and mails to the summit of
this lofty tower, from whence a covered-in
gangway led to the long corridors which lined
the interior of the rigid airship.

"Have all the engines been tested?" the
captain asks of the chief engineer, as he
comes aboard with his navigating officer.

"Yes, sir."

"All the passengers aboard?" he asks next
of the ground officer.

"All except the maharajah, Captain, and
I expect him any moment."

"Excellent," replied the skipper.  "There's
a good deal of bullion aboard from the Indian
banks, I hear, and the rajah himself is likely
touring a lot of valuables with him, I understand,
as he is to attend several court functions
at St. James's Palace."

"Yes, sir.  I hope you won't meet that
aerial raider," replied the ground officer.

"Poof!  What can he do?  He can't board
us in mid-air!  Besides, I hear that the
aerial police are on his track, and that all their
fast scouts are patrolling the mail routes."

"Yes, you'll have an aerial escort with
you for the first two hundred miles, Captain.
They'll pick you up shortly after you leave here."

"Absolutely a waste of time.  The police
could be much better employed in searching
for these rascals."

"Well, perhaps you're right," replied the
ground official.  "They certainly cannot
board you in mid-air, as you observe, and
they cannot set you on fire as they did the
early Zeppelins, for helium won't burn."

This conversation was interrupted by shouts
and cheers which reached the speakers from
down below.

"Hullo! here comes the rajah.  I must
go down and welcome him," said the captain,
as a fanfare of trumpets announced the
arrival of the great Indian chief.

Then, with all the ceremonial and pomp
of the East, the Maharajah of Bangapore was
welcomed aboard the luxurious air-liner, and,
accompanied by his personal attendants, he
was shown with much obsequiousness to his
private saloon.  His baggage, containing
treasures worth a king's ransom, was
likewise transferred, under the supervision of
his chamberlain, from the ground to his suite
of apartments.

The clock in the palace of the Great Mogul
in the old city of Delhi strikes twelve, and the
captain's voice is heard once more, as he
speaks from the rear gondola:--

"All ready?"

"Yes, sir, all clear!"

A button is pressed and the water ballast
tanks discharge their cargo to lighten the
ship, and then swiftly comes the final order:--

"Let go!"

And as the cables are slipped from the
mooring tower, the light gangway is drawn
back, the crowd down below cheer, and the
giant airship backs out, carried by the force of
the wind alone till she is well clear of the
station.  Then her engines open up gradually.
She turns until her nose points almost due
west, then slips away on her four thousand
miles' journey over many a classic land,
desert, forest and sea towards the centre of the
world's greatest empire.

About four o'clock that afternoon, as Judge
Jefferson sat and talked with his friend Colonel
Wilson in one of the rear gondolas where
smoking was permitted, he remarked that
this was his seventh trip home to England
by the aerial route, and declared that he could
well spend the rest of his lifetime in such a
pleasant mode of travel.

"There's no fatigue whatever," he added;
"nothing of the jolt and jar which you get
in the railway carriage.  As for the journey
by sea, I was so ill during my last voyage
that I simply couldn't face the sea again.
A storm at sea is of all things the most
uncomfortable.  If we meet with a storm on the
air-route we can either go above it or pass on
one side, as most storms are only local
affairs."

"Not to speak of the time that is
wasted by land or sea-travel," added the
colonel.

"Exactly," replied the judge.

"Only to think that in forty-eight hours we
shall be in London, even allowing for a two
hours' stay in Cairo to pick up further mails
and passengers."

"Wonderful!  Wonderful!" agreed his companion.

"And the absence of heat is some consideration,
when travelling in a land like India,"
continued the colonel as he flicked off the end
of his cigar.

"Yes.  The stifling heat, particularly in
May, June and July, when you get the hot
dry winds, is altogether insufferable in those
stuffy railway carriages, while up here it is
delightfully cool and bracing, and the view
is magnificent."

"Hullo! what is that fine river down
there?" asked the judge, as he looked down
through the clear, tropical atmosphere on to
the delightful landscape of river, plain and
forest three thousand feet below.

"Oh, that must be the Indus, the King
River of Vedic poetry, a wonderful stream,
two thousand miles in length," said the
colonel, consulting his pocket map.

"Can it really be the Indus?"

"It is indeed."

"Then we have already travelled four
hundred miles since noon across the burning plains
of India, and we have reached the confines of
this wonderful land," replied Jefferson.

"Yes, we have indeed.  We shall soon
enter the native state of Baluchistan.  See
yonder, right ahead of us, I can already make
out the highest peaks of the Sulaiman
Mountains.  We are already rising to cross them."

"And this evening we shall cross the
troubled territory of Afghanistan."

"Yes," replied the colonel, "and by midnight,
if all goes well, we shall be sailing over Persia."

"Persia, the land of enchantment," mused the judge.

"And of the *Arabian Nights*, those wonderful
tales which charmed our boyhood--the
land of Aladdin, of the wonderful lamp, and
the magic carpet."

"The magic carpet," laughed the judge.
"This is the real magic carpet.  The author
of that wonderful story never dreamt that the
day would really come when the traveller
from other lands, reclining in luxury, would
be carried through the air across his native
land, by day or by night, at twice the flight
of a bird."

And so these two men talked about these
wonderful classic lands over which they were
sailing so serenely, of Zoroaster, the great
Persian teacher of other days, of Ahura Mazda,
the All-Wise, and the Cobbler of Baghdad,
until the tea-bell startled them.

Then, finding they were hungry because the
bracing air had made them so, they passed on
to the snug little tea-room, where, amid the
palm-trees and the orchids, they listened to
soft dulcet notes from a small Indian orchestra
which accompanied the maharajah.  Here, they
sipped delicious china tea from dainty Persian
cups, and appeased their hunger, as best they
could, from the tiny portions of alluring
*patisserie* which usually accompany afternoon tea.

But, later that evening, they did ample
justice to a fuller and nobler banquet, which
had been prepared for them in the gilded
and lofty dining saloon; for they were the
honoured guests of the Maharajah of Bangapore.
And he entertained them right royally
as befitted one of his princely rank.

And in all the wondrous folk-lore and
tradition of the ancient Persian kings, was there
ever a more regal banquet, or one more
conspicuous by the splendour of its oriental
wealth than this long-protracted feast?  Rich
emblazoned goblets of gold, bejewelled with
rare and precious gems, adorned the table,
for the prince had brought his household
treasures; they were to him his household
gods, and heirlooms of priceless worth.

Never the Lydian flute played sweeter
music than these soft native airs which
wandered amid the eastern skies, as, under the
silver moon, the long, glistening, pearl-like
airship sailed on beneath the stars, while down,
far down below, lay the ruins of Persepolis,
where the ancient kings of Persia slept their
last long sleep.





.. vspace:: 4

.. _`AN UP-TO-DATE CABIN BOY`:

.. class:: center large bold

   CHAPTER VI


.. class:: center medium bold

   AN UP-TO-DATE CABIN BOY

.. vspace:: 2

While the great, mammoth air-liner is racing
like a meteor across the eastern skies, on its
way to Cairo and London, it is necessary to
introduce to the reader a chirpy, little fellow
called Gadget.  In fact, this cute little chap,
who stood a matter of four feet two inches in
his stockinged feet, deserves a chapter or two
all to himself.

Now Gadget did not belong to the passengers,
nor did his name appear at all in that
distinguished list.  Neither did he rightly
belong to the crew, except in the matter of
his own opinion--on which subject he held
very pronounced views.  But he certainly
did belong to the airship, and appeared to be
part of the apparatus, or maybe the fixtures
and effects.  He certainly knew the run of
that great liner, every nook and corner of it,
better even than the purser or the navigating
officer.

To tell the truth, this insignificant but
perky little bit of humanity was a stowaway,
who had determined, at twelve years of age,
to see the world, at the expense of somebody
else.  How he came aboard, and hid himself
amongst the mail-bags, until the airship had
sailed a thousand miles over land and sea,
still remains a mystery.  But it happened
that, when the *Empress of India* was crossing
the blue waters of the Adriatic sea, on her
outward voyage, there came a tap at the
captain's door one afternoon when the latter
had just retired for a brief spell.

"Come in!" called the air-skipper, in
rather surly tones, wondering what had
happened to occasion this interruption.

The next instant, the chief officer entered
the little state-room, leading by a bit of
string, attached to one of his nether garments,
the most tattered-looking, diminutive, but
perky little street Arab the captain had ever
beheld.

"What in the name of goodness have you
got there, Crabtree?" exclaimed the skipper,
starting up from his comfortable bunk, at
this apparition.

"Stowaway, sir!" replied the officer briefly.

"Stowaway?" echoed the captain.

"Yes, sir."

"Where did you find him?"

"Didn't find him, sir.  He gave himself
up just now.  Says he's been hiding amongst
the mail-bags.  What shall I do with him, sir?"

"Tie him to a parachute and drop him
overboard as soon as we are over the land
again," shouted the captain in angry tones.
"I won't have any stowaways aboard my ship."

This was said more to frighten the little
imp than with real intent, though the
air-skipper spoke in angry tones, as if he meant
what he said.  He was evidently very much
annoyed at this discovery.

"He's half-frozen, sir," interposed the
chief officer in more kindly tones.

"Humph!  Of course he is," added the
captain.  "This keen, biting wind at three
thousand feet above the sea must have turned
his marrow cold.  Besides, he hasn't enough
clothes to cover a rabbit decently.  Just look
at him!"

The little chap's eyes sparkled, and his
face flushed a little at this reference to his
scant wardrobe.  But he knew by the changed
tone in the captain's voice that the worst was
now over.  He had not even heard a reference
to the proverbial rope's-end, a vision which
he had always associated in his mind with
stowaways.

"My word, he's a plucky little urchin,
Crabtree!" declared the air-skipper at length,
his anger settling down, and his admiration
for the adventurous little gamin asserting
itself as he gazed at the ragged but sharp-eyed
little fellow.

"What is your name, Sonny?" he asked at length.

"Gadget, sir," whipped out the stowaway.

"Good enough!" returned the captain
smiling.  "We've plenty of gadgets aboard
the airship, and I guess another won't make
much difference.  What do you say, Crabtree?"

"Oh, we'll find something for him to do,
sir.  And we'll make him earn his keep.  He's
an intelligent little shrimp, anyhow."

"How old are you, Gadget?" asked the captain.

"Twelve, sir!" replied the gamin.

"Father and mother dead, I suppose?"

"Yes, sir."

"Been left to look after yourself, Gadget,
I reckon, haven't you?" said the skipper
kindly, as he gave one more searching glance
at the small urchin, and noted how the little
blue lips quivered, despite the brave young
heart behind them.

There was no reply this time, for even the
poor, ill-treated lad could not bring himself
to speak of his up-bringing.

"Never mind, Gadget...!" interposed
the skipper, changing the subject.  "So you
determined to see the world, did you, my boy?"

"Yessir!" came the reply, and again the
sharp eyes twinkled.

"Well, you shall go round the world with
me, if you are a good boy.  But, if you don't
behave, mark my words"--and here the
captain raised his voice as if in anger--"I'll
drop you overboard by parachute, and leave
you behind!  Do you understand?"

The urchin promised to behave himself,
and, in language redolent of Whitechapel,
began to thank the captain effusively.

"There, that will do!  Take him away,
and get him a proper rig-out, Crabtree," said
the skipper impatiently.  "I never saw such
a tatterdemalion in all my life."

"Come along, now, Gadget," ordered the
chief officer, giving a little tug at the frayed
rope, which he had been holding all this while,
and, which, in some unaccountable way,
seemed to hold the urchin's wardrobe together.

This little tug, however, had dire results,
in-so-far as the above mentioned wardrobe
was concerned.  It immediately became
obvious that it not only served as braces to
the little gamin, but also as a girdle, which
kept in a sort of suspended animation Gadget's
circulating library and commissariat.  For,
even as the janitor and his prisoner turned,
the rope became undone, and, though Gadget
by a rapid movement retained the nether part
of his tattered apparel in position, yet his
library--which consisted of a dirty,
grease-stained, much worn volume--and his
commissariat--composed of sundry fragments of
dry crusts of bread wrapped in half a
newspaper--immediately became dislodged by the
movement, and showered themselves in a
dozen fragments at the captain's feet.

"Snakes alive! what have we here?"
demanded that august person, as he stooped
and picked up the book.  Then he laughed
outright, as he read aloud from the grubby,
much-thumbed title page:--

*Five weeks in a Balloon* ... by Jules Verne.

The mate grinned too.  He remembered how
that same book had thrilled him, not so long
ago either.  And, perhaps, after all, it was
the same with Captain Rogers.

"Where did you get this, Gadget?" asked
the captain, reopening the conversation, after
this little accident.

"Bought it of Jimmy Dale, sir," replied
the boy readily.

"And how much did you pay for it?"

"Gev 'im my braces, an' a piece o' tar band
for it, sir."

The captain ceased to laugh, and looked
at the boy's earnest face.  And something
suspiciously like a tear glistened in the eyes
of the airman, as he replied:--

"You actually gave away to another urchin
an important part of your scanty wardrobe
to get possession of this book?"

"Oh, it wur a fair bargen, sir.  Jimmy
found the book on a dust heap, but I wasn't
takin' it fur nothin'.  And then Jimmy never
had any braces."

"I see.  Very well, you can go now, Gadget.
Mr. Crabtree will find you some better clothes,
and get you some food.  Then you shall
report to me to-morrow.  See, here is your
treasured book," said the skipper, dismissing
the urchin once more.

"Thank you, sir," returned the boy,
pulling a lock of unkempt hair which hung
over his forehead, by way of salute.  "I'll
lend you the book, sir, if you'll take care of
it," and the chief officer smiled as he led the
little chap away.

So that was how Gadget became part of
the fixtures and apparatus of the air liner.
He was more than an adventurer, was Gadget.
He might even have been an inventor or a
discoverer, if he had met with better fortune
in the choice of his parents.  His sharp, young
brain was full of great ideas.

In less than a couple of days, rigged out in
a smart pair of overalls, which had been very
considerably cut down, he was soon perfectly
at home aboard the great liner.  But then
he was so adaptable.  As an up-to-date cabin
boy, the captain declared that he never knew
his equal.

He became a general favourite, and in a
very short space of time he discovered more
about airships and internal-combustion
engines than many a man would have learnt
in six months.

It was no use, therefore, to argue with the
boy that he didn't belong to the crew of the
*Empress*.  And it just wasn't worth while to
inform him that, as he was still of school age,
he would be handed over to the authorities,
or placed in a reformatory, as soon as the
vessel returned to England.  Gadget had
made up his mind that he wouldn't.  In a
little while it even became an open question
whether Gadget belonged to the airship or
the airship belonged to Gadget.

"I hain't argefyin' with you, I'm telling ye.
This is the way it should be done!" he was
heard to remark to one of the air mechanics
one day, after he had been on the vessel about
a week.  The point at issue concerned a
piece of work on which the mechanic was
engaged, and Gadget had even dared to
express his point of view.  The extraordinary
thing was that Gadget was right.

Ships and railway engines were all right
in their way, but they were not good enough
for Gadget.  Aeroplanes and airships were
much more to his liking.  He was thoroughly
alive and up-to-date, and though some months
ago, when this fever of world travel first
seized upon him, he had more than once
considered the question of stowing himself
quietly away on some outward bound vessel
from the West India Docks in London, his
fortunate discovery, and ultimate possession
of that tattered copy of *Five Weeks in a
Balloon*, had caused him to change his views.

Ever since reading that volume he had had
no rest.  Even his dreams had been
mainly concerning balloons and their modern
equivalents, airships.

"I will see the world from an airship," he
had confidently announced to himself one
day.  "I will sail over tropical forests and
lagoons, over deserts and jungles."

This had been his dream and his prayer.
But unlike many older folk, Gadget had left
no stone unturned in order to answer his own
prayer.  He had carefully followed the
newspapers (for he had earned many a shilling by
selling them) for the movements of the new
air liner and the opening up of the All-Red
Route.  And when the time had arrived for
the airship to sail, watching his opportunity
the little fellow had smuggled himself on
board, and here he was, having now almost
sailed around the world, crossing the Arabian
desert on the homeward voyage.





.. vspace:: 4

.. _`A DUEL WITH WORDS`:

.. class:: center large bold

   CHAPTER VII


.. class:: center medium bold

   A DUEL WITH WORDS

.. vspace:: 2

Gadget's activities, however, were not
confined merely to the duties of cabin boy,
although his diminutive size and his rapidity
of movement made him very useful in that
capacity.  To fetch and carry for the skipper
or chief officer along that 670 feet of keel
corridor was to him a life of sparkle and
animation.  But, when no particular duty
called him, the pulsating mechanism of that
mighty leviathan irresistibly attracted him.

His round, closely cropped, well shaped
head, and his roguish little face, would
suddenly appear in the wireless cabin or in
one of the four gondolas, where the powerful
Sunbeam-Maori engines drove the whirling
propellers.

Ship's mascot and general favourite though
he was, his sharp wits soon enabled him to
make himself almost indispensable.  At length,
however, the everlasting call seemed to be----

"Gadget!  Gadget!  Where is the little
rascal?  What mischief is he up to now?"

For it must be admitted that the overwhelming
curiosity of the urchin sometimes
got him into trouble.  In this respect he had
particularly fallen foul of Morgan, the third
engineer, a short, stout, somewhat stumpy
type of Welshman, whose spell of duty
generally confined his activities to the care of
the twin-engines in the rear gondola.

It appears that Gadget had unwittingly
broken the rules and regulations of the airship
by smuggling two parcels of tobacco aboard
during a brief stay in one of the air ports.
He knew full well that a little fortune awaited
the man who could unload smuggled tobacco
down the Whitechapel Road, and the temptation
had been too great for him.  He had been
discovered, however, and the captain had
punished him for the offence.

Now, Gadget was still smarting under this
punishment when one day he startled the
third engineer by his sudden and unlooked for
appearance in the rear gondola.

"How now, you little rascal!" exclaimed
Morgan, throwing a greasy rag at the boy.
"How much did you make on that tobacco?"

"Stop smokin' on dooty, will yer, an'
mind yer own bisness!" rasped out the urchin,
feeling that both his dignity and importance
were being imperilled by this reference to his
recent offence.

"Go away!" snarled the bad-tempered
Welshman, surreptitiously hiding the still
smoking cigarette.

"Yah!  Why don't yer get more 'revs'
out o' those rear engines?" yapped the
insulting little Cockney boy, repeating a few
words used by the captain himself the day
before, and preparing to beat a hasty retreat
through the doorway.

"You dirty ragamuffin!" shouted the
stout man, flushing with anger, and hurling
the oil can, which he held in his hand, at the
gamin.

For one instant the tantalising little street
arab disappeared on the other side of the door,
but, when the missile had spent its force,
and had crumpled up against the panelling,
leaving a pool of oil on the floor, the urchin's
head reappeared once more.  The opportunity
was too good to be lost.  All the vivacity of
the boy was pitted against the hot tempered
Welshman, and Gadget was a master of
invective, and had a wonderful command of high
sounding words, the real meaning of which,
however, he did not properly understand.
But he was just dying for another of these
encounters, so common in his experience of
things down Stepney way, or along the West
India Dock Road.

"Call yerself an ingineer?" came the next
gibe from the saucy, impudent little face,
now distorted into something grotesque and
ugly.  "We'll be two hours late at Cairo,
an' all because you ain't fit to stoke a
donkey-ingine."

"Ger-r-r-o-u-t!" shouted the angry man,
making a rush for his tormentor.  "I'll break
your head if you come in here again!"

"I'd like ter see yer!" came the tart
reply, ten seconds later, as the head
reappeared once again, for Gadget had retreated
swiftly some way down the keel corridor, as
his opponent made for him with a huge
spanner.

The engineer had determined to lock the
door of the little engine-room against the
little stinging gad-fly, but of course the
sharp-witted rascal had outwitted, or
"spike-bozzled" him, as they say in the Air Force,
by snatching the key and locking the
communication-door on the outer side.

Morgan was beginning to find out to his
cost that it was a very unwise proceeding
to cross the path of this pertinacious
stowaway.  He could not get rid of him, and this
morning, after the skipper's recent remarks,
he was trying to recover his lost reputation
by extra attention to his engines.  Besides,
the captain would be along on his rounds
again soon, and, if the engines were not doing
their accustomed revolutions, there might be
trouble.

Thinking he had now got rid of his tormentor,
Morgan turned to examine his engines,
when the key turned softly in the lock once
more, and the irrepressible mascot, peering
through the slightly open door, grinned, and
then gave vent to the one word, which means
so much:--

"Spike-bozzled!  Yah!"

"You're a little villain!" roared the engineer.

"You're an incubus!" retorted Gadget.

"Go away!"

"Swollen head, that's what you've got!"

"By St. David, if I catch you, I'll----"
cried the now exasperated Welshman.

"Abnormal circumference--distended
stummick, that's what you're sufferin' from.
The capten says so!" replied Gadget as a
parting shot.

This ungentle reference to his personal
symmetry was too much for the engineer, and
he made another wild rush in the direction
of his opponent.  This time, Gadget had no
opportunity to lock the door, but, turning
round, he bolted precipitately down the long
keel corridor, cannoning into the chief officer,
who was just coming along to the rear
gondola, and receiving a somewhat violent cuff
on the head from that dignified official, whose
gravity had been gravely endangered by this
sudden encounter.

"Here, you little rascal, take that!" cried
the angry officer, and Gadget, glad to get
away on such slight terms, and feeling that
he had given his opponent value for his
money, scampered off, and made his way
to the wireless cabin.

Here he assumed immediately an attitude
of respectful attention, and even prevailed
on the officer in charge to give him another
lesson on the Morse code, for the urchin had
a wonderful range of feeling which enabled
him at a moment's notice to adapt himself
to the circumstances of his environment.

"Wonderful, Gadget!  You're making rapid
progress.  You shall have a lesson in taking
down messages, to-morrow.  You have the
making of a good wireless operator in you.
I shall speak to the captain about it."

"Thank you, sir," replied the *gamin*,
pulling his lock of hair by way of salute.
This lock of hair, by the way, at the urchin's
special request, had been left there, when the
famous "R. D. clippers" had shorn off the
rest of the crop, when the airship's barber
had overhauled and close-reefed him, soon
after his first encounter with the captain.

Gadget's next visit was to the little
photographic cabin, where the wonderful negatives
and bioscope films were carefully prepared.
These were to record to the world at large
the wonderful panorama of the earth and
sky, photographed from the great air-liner
on her wonderful trip.

Here, again, by his artful, winning way,
which Gadget knew how to adopt when
circumstances demanded it, the little urchin
was on good terms with the photographic
officer.  The latter, who admired the boy's
character and wit, and pitied his upbringing,
had declared more than once that Gadget
possessed in a large degree that intuitive
genius which belongs to greatness, and
prophesied a brilliant future for the neglected
boy, if only he could be properly trained.

"Come to me for an hour a day, Gadget,
when the captain does not require your
services, and I will teach you photography.  Some
day you shall have a camera of your own,
and who knows, you may become a great film
operator."  And the grateful boy was only
too quick to learn what these skilful operators
had to teach.

So, into this new life of adventure and
travel, this little urchin entered with all the
zest and enthusiasm of which he was capable,
making many friends, and an occasional
enemy.  And all the while the great airship,
glistening in the tropical sun, sailed on across
the wide stretch of desert which lies between
India and Egypt, along the line of the
thirtieth parallel.





.. vspace:: 4

.. _`SONS OF THE DESERT`:

.. class:: center large bold

   CHAPTER VIII


.. class:: center medium bold

   SONS OF THE DESERT

.. vspace:: 2

The tropical sun looked fiercely down upon
the burning sands of the Hamadian Desert.
North, south, east and west, as far as the
eye could reach, in every direction, the
illimitable waste of desert stretched, save only
at one pleasant, fertile spot, where a cluster
of date and lofty palm trees fringed the banks
of a silent pool.

A small encampment of Bedouins, sons of
the desert, fierce-looking and proud, occupied
this charming spot.  Three small tents and
a larger one, a camouflaged fabric, part of
the loot of the garrison of Kut, completed
the camp.  There were a dozen men all told,
and as many noble, fiery Arab steeds.  The
men were well armed, with modern weapons,
too.  There had been too much loot in the
Mesopotamian campaign during recent years
for the Arab sheik and his followers to find
much difficulty in securing the very pick of
European weapons, ammunition and equipment.
But one thing was evident--all these
men were not real sons of the desert.  Three
of them at least were Europeans, as the reader
will shortly perceive.

An atmosphere of subdued excitement,
primed with expectancy, seemed to pervade
the camp.  The whole party were eagerly
watching and waiting for something.  But
what caravan, with its tinkling bells, its camels
and spices, its rich silks and ladings from
Persia or from Damascus had awakened the
predatory instincts of these kings of the
desert?  Besides, were they not too few in
number to engage a well-armed band of
Baghdad merchants?

Nay, it was no rich argosy of the desert
that these fierce men expected; their eyes
were directed one and all towards the skies,
for the days had now arrived of which the
poet spoke, when he

   |  "Saw the heavens filled with commerce,
   |    Argosies of magic sails,
   |  Pilots of the purple twilight,
   |    Dropping down with costly bales;"

and they were awaiting, with evil intent, the
passing of the Aerial Mail, which they knew
to be carrying vast treasures of gold and
other precious things from India to Cairo and
Europe.

The three Europeans who had collected
and organised these robber chiefs, by appealing
to their hereditary instincts, were none other
than our friends, Rittmeister von Spitzer,
and his companions Carl and Max, the
German irreconcilables, whom we left in the
dark shadows of the Schwarzwald preparing
for their adventure.

Already they had made a name greater
than Muller of the *Emden*, but they had made
themselves outlaws of the nations of the
world, and though for a little while success
and fame might attend them, yet they knew
that sooner or later the agreed price of their
adventure would be death.

"What news of the British air-liner, Max?"
called von Spitzer, as his subordinate
descended by a rope ladder from one of the
smaller trees, where an observation post had
been fixed, and an aerial mounted, for
the purposes of wireless telegraphy and
telephony.

"She left Delhi at mid-day yesterday,
sir," replied the operator, unclamping the
receivers which till now had been fixed over
his ears.

"Then she's running to scheduled time?"

"Yes, sir."

"Was it the official departure message
that you tapped?"

"It must have been, Rittmeister, for it
announced that a distinguished passenger
had joined her at the last moment."

"Indeed!  What was his name?  Did
you discover it?" asked the flight-commander,
who, to maintain his influence over
the wild sons of the desert, was wearing the
loose, flowing robes of an Arab sheik, richly
emblazoned and adorned.

"His name was the Maharajah of Bangalore,"
replied Max, the erstwhile Gotha pilot.

"What! the miscreant!  He was the man
who raised thirty thousand Indian troops
for the Mesopotamian campaign, and made
it possible for the British to advance on
Baghdad after their disaster at Kut."

"That accounts for it.  He is to be
decorated at St. James's Palace for some
eminent services he has rendered to the
British Government."

"We're in luck's way, Max.  I may spare
his life, as I do not seek to take any man's
life who does not oppose me.  But it's a
thousand to one he's carrying his jewels and
his household gods with him; it is the custom
of these eastern potentates.  I will strip
him as the locust strips the vine.  I will give
his jewels to these brave Arabs; it will
confirm my hold upon them.  We may need
their help upon another occasion.  But, this
is by the way, was there anything from the
professor?"

"Only this, Rittmeister; I have waited
since dawn for it," and the operator handed
to Spitzer a cryptic message of seven letters,
which, to the receiver at least was quite
unintelligible.  Max had pencilled it down as
follows:--"X--G--P--C--V--S--M," for it
had come through the ether by wireless
telegraphy and not by wireless telephone, like
the first message.  The reason was obvious.
One message was for public intelligence and
for use in the newspapers, and the other was
for more secret and sinister purposes.  The
cryptogram had come from the professor,
who, with his mechanic, had been left behind
in the Schwarzwald to collect information
for the brigands, and to obtain further supplies
of uranis for the *Scorpion*.

The Rittmeister eagerly grasped the little
strip of paper on which the message was
written, and retired to the small hangar where
the *Scorpion* was pegged down and stowed
away, remarking:--

"This is evidently urgent; I must get the
cipher-key and decode it at once.  Meantime,
I want you to rehearse the men in the parts
they are to play, and give Carl a hand with
the vibration drum.  The great liner is
almost due.  You may tell the sheik that
in addition to the large cargo of gold which
the airship carries, an Indian Prince with
jewels worth a king's ransom is on board."

"Your orders shall be carried out,
Rittmeister," replied Max, who was glad to be
relieved of his monotonous task of listening
hour after hour for coded messages, and
looked forward with some pleasure to the
coming adventure.

Shortly afterwards, Max, having delivered
his message to the Arabian chief, was standing
beside Carl under the shadow of a cluster of
trees on the very margin of the pool.  That
wonderful instrument, the vibrative drum,
which is fashioned somewhat on the principle
of the human ear, but with a large horn-shaped
receptacle for receiving the very minutest
sound waves, and focussing them on to a very
sensitive drum, was engaging their attention.

Every now and then, when they fancied
they heard a sound that broke the stillness of
the desert, they would listen acutely, turning
the horn this way and that way to discover
whence came the sound.

"They are due about mid-day, the chief
says," remarked Carl, after a brief pause in
their conversation.  "What time do you
make it now?"

"A quarter of an hour yet," responded
Max, consulting his chronometer, and making
a rapid calculation to allow for the difference
in longitude, for he still carried Central
European time.

"And they're sure to follow the 30th parallel?"

"Yes, it's their shortest route," replied
the wireless expert.

"Then they should pass within three or
four miles from here," observed Carl.

"Yes, unless they've drifted a little out
of their course."

"But we should hear them on the vibrator
even if they were fifty miles away in a silent
land like this."

"Undoubtedly."

"Listen!  Can you hear anything?" exclaimed
Max in a slightly nervous tone, after
a brief silence.

"No, I don't think so, but those fellows
over there must be quiet; they're getting
excited about the promised loot."

"Go and tell them, Carl; you speak the
best Arabic."

The German left the drum for a moment
and after expostulating for a while with the
sheik, he gained his point and the word was
passed along for silence.

The Arabs were greatly mystified by this
strange instrument, as well as by those aerial
wires affixed to the trees, and most of all
by that strange, weird machine, hidden away
behind the sand-proof curtains of the little
camouflaged hangar, like the sacred ark in
the holy of holies.

With wondering eyes they had on occasion
watched the *Scorpion* mount to the heavens
with marvellous ease and descend with like
facility--bearing its human burden aloft to the
very skies and bringing them safely to earth
again.

These strange gods which the infidels had
brought with them to their desert home were
greatly feared even by these brave, proud
men, and it was only the largesse and the
promise of still better things to come, from
the great white chief, which prevented these
sons of the desert from leaving this dreaded
spot.

The scout pilot, having obtained his wish,
now returned to the instrument, for his
companion was already beckoning to him.
Evidently the approach of the airship had
been indicated by the sensitive drum, but,
ere Carl reached the margin of the pool, he
noticed the Rittmeister emerge from the
hangar where he had been decoding the
message, and wave for him to approach.

"What is it, Rittmeister?" he called.

"The message.  Come here a moment!"

Max, who thought that a faint sound he
had just heard from the instrument might
portend the distant approach of the liner,
left the drum, for he knew there would be
plenty of time, and joined the other two by
the hangar on the other side of the pool,
for he also was curious about the cryptic
message, which he had taken earlier in the day.

"Was it from the professor?" he asked
in his first breath.

"Yes, he is in for a bad time, I fear,"
replied the Rittmeister.  "He will not be
able to communicate again for some time."

"What is the matter?" asked the others
simultaneously.

"Why, Keane and Sharpe are on his
track again.  You know the rascals; they
were secret service pilots and spies during
the war, and now they are scout pilots in the
British aerial police.  They're the left-hand
and the right hand of that confounded Tempest,
the little tin god at Scotland Yard, and
the brains of the aerial police."

"Himmel!  I hope he can outwit them,"
exclaimed Carl.  "They're keen birds, both
of them, and they have some exploits to their
credit."

"If he can't, then the length of our existence
is the capacity of those remaining eight
cylinders of uranis," ventured Max.

"And the length of the rope round our
necks as well," murmured his companion.

They all laughed at this, but Spitzer looked
keenly for an instant into the eyes of the
two pilots, as though he would search their
innermost souls, and make sure that they
would be game to the end.  But they
evidently read his thoughts also, for Max
announced:--

"It's all right, Rittmeister; we're not going
back upon our word.  The die is cast!" and
Carl in a brave attempt at another sally,
added:--

"The cast is--die!" at which they all
laughed again, as the old sea pirates laughed
before they blew up their ship, when they
saw that the game was up.

The next instant their thoughts were
diverted to another subject.  It was already
mid-day, for the sun by his altitude announced
it.  As they approached the drum, they
could now distinctly hear the hum of mighty
engines though still forty miles away, recorded
in that delicate instrument, and one thought,
uttered or unexpressed, came instinctively to
each mind:--

"Aircraft approaching!"





.. vspace:: 4

.. _`THE PHANTOM BIRD`:

.. class:: center large bold

   CHAPTER IX


.. class:: center medium bold

   THE PHANTOM BIRD

.. vspace:: 2

"Airship or aeroplane?" asked von Spitzer,
a moment later, as Carl closely watched the
delicate recorder, which, as the vibration
caused by the sound waves increased,
indicated not only the type of craft, but the type
of engine by which it was driven, and also
whether the engine was running with or
without defects.  So wonderful are the secrets
which man has already wrested from nature.

"Airship, decidedly!" replied Carl, after
a second's pause.  "Full-powered too; there
are four or five Sunbeam-Maori engines, and
all running smoothly."

"Her position?" demanded the Rittmeister next.

"Forty-four miles due east," came the answer.

"Then it must be the aerial mail from
India; she is just about due."

"Is she steering due west?" the chief asked.

"About two degrees south, that's all,"
replied Carl.  "She's evidently getting a
little drift from the upper currents."

"Good!" remarked the chief airman.
"Then if she continues steering steady, she
should pass within a couple of miles of us in
another twenty or twenty-five minutes.  Come
along, Carl, it is time for us to get away.
You will remain on the ground, Max.  You
have a difficult job.  As soon as we get
away, see that the tents are struck, and all
men and horses placed under cover of the trees."

"Yes, sir."

"And now sound the alarm signal, and
help us to get out the *Scorpion*; it is going to
bite to-day," ordered the Rittmeister as he
strode away, exclaiming,

"Who wouldn't be a king of the desert?
For one day at least it will be, '*Deutschland,
Deutschland ueber alles*!'"

The alarm being sounded, all the occupants
of the little camp went to quarters, just as
they had been rehearsed during the last few
days.  The camouflaged fabric was stripped
from the little hangar, and the *Scorpion*
was set free to bite once more.  She was
released from the ropes which held her down
and turned head to wind.  The steel folding
wings were snapped back into their sockets
and made secure.

"Are you ready, Carl?" asked the chief,
as he completed his rapid survey of the
machine, during which neither the propellers,
planes, tail-fin nor rudder escaped
his scrutiny.

"Aye, ready, sir!" came the reply from
the junior, who was now seated in the armour-plated
conning-tower, testing the controls and
examining his machine guns.

Without a moment's delay the chief
clambered up through the little trapdoor and
joined his companion.  Then he paused for a
moment whilst he swept the eastern horizon
with his powerful binoculars.

"I cannot see her yet, Carl," he said.  Then
turning to Max, who stood by the starboard
engine, he shouted, "Just try to pick up her
position again from the drum.  She may have
changed her course a trifle."

The Gotha pilot dashed off on his errand,
and after carefully listening for a moment, he
returned and said, "East-south-east, about
four degrees east."

"Good, she'll pass about five miles south of
us then; but she's not visible yet," replied
Spitzer.

"She's getting a good deal of drift, I
fancy," returned Max.

"Anyhow, we'll get up into the blue and
wait for her," said the airman, and waving
his hand for the signal to stand clear, he
pressed the self-starting knob, and instantaneously
both engines sprang into life, and the
whirring propellers started up such a dust
storm from the loose sand of the desert that
the Arabs were startled, and rushed to secure
their frightened steeds.

Within ten seconds the rev.-counter
indicated two thousand five hundred, and,
sufficient power for flying speed being thus
obtained, Max deftly removed the chocks from
the wheels, and this new type of desert steed
dashed off across the sands, and leapt into
the air, amid the cheers of the astonished
Bedouins.

"Allah, the Compassionate, the Merciful!"
cried the Arab chief, as he raised his
hands imploringly towards heaven.  "It is
the bird of destiny, my children, the phantom
of the desert!" and Max could scarcely
restrain a smile as he beheld the momentary
fear which had seized these strong, fierce men.

The next moment, however, they were all
busy striking the tents and bringing horses,
equipment, and all the camp effects under the
shadow of the trees.

Meanwhile the *Scorpion*, appearing exactly
like a huge grey phantom bird, soared
away in a north-westerly direction, lest it
should be observed by the occupants of the
approaching liner.

And in a few minutes, rising rapidly by steep
spirals, and an almost vertical climb, it had
disappeared from sight.  Soon it soared over
the camp again at ten thousand feet, and
appeared but a speck in the cloudless blue,
like the faintest suspicion of a tiny cirrus cloud.

Shortly afterwards a cry from one of the
natives directed the attention of all present
towards another tiny streak in the opposite
direction.  His sharp, piercing eyes had been
the first to discern the approaching airship.

"Allah, the Compassionate!" again began
the sheik, and Max, fearing that this strange
visitant might affect their nerves, called out
aloud in the best Arabic he could muster:--

"Allah be praised!  This stranger carries
gold and rare jewels across the desert.  He
must pay tribute to the sons of Jebel and Shomer!"

This appeal to their cupidity instantly
changed the demeanour of these fanatics.
Their fear departed.  Even when, later, they
heard the roar of the powerful engines which
propelled the airship, their one thought was
of plunder.

"The treasures of twenty Damascus'
caravans are in that great airship," cried
Max, fulfilling with considerable skill the
part which Spitzer had allotted to him.

The Bedouins, whose feelings were now
raised to the highest pitch of excitement,
began to fear lest, after all, so rich a prize
might be lost, and they eagerly searched
the skies for the phantom airman, as they
called the Rittmeister, and shouted:--

"Where is the phantom bird?  Where
is the great white sheik?" and they
would have dashed out into the desert on
their fiery steeds, for they were already
mounted, but the German restrained them,
saying:--

"There is no need to hunt the quarry.  The
great white sheik will bring down the airship
on this very spot.  Be ready, when I give the
signal, to surround it."

Another anxious moment passed, and the
airship, travelling rapidly at some three
thousand feet above the ground, would have
passed them by some few miles to the south,
but at that instant, the Indian judge caught
sight of the picturesque oasis with its cluster
of palms far down below, and said to his
soldier companion:--

"Look, Colonel Wilson!  Just look at that
beauty spot after two hundred miles of yellow
desert."

"Ah, wonderful!" exclaimed the delighted
soldier.  "It is a little garden planted by
Nature in the solitary wastes."

"How picturesque!  I should like to
land there," returned the other.

"Let us ask the captain at least to change
his course slightly, so that we may pass over
it and photograph it as a souvenir of our
pleasant journey," said the officer.

At that moment the captain, passing down
the gangway, overheard the remark, and being
eager to oblige his distinguished passengers,
he telephoned his orders to the navigating
officer, who slightly altered the ship's
course, so as to pass almost directly over the
oasis.

It was while they were engaged in delightful
contemplation of this emerald isle embedded
in the gold of the desert, that another object
attracted the attention of the judge.  Chancing
to glance upwards, he caught sight of a
silvery speck six thousand feet above them,
and a little way on their beam.

"See, a tiny cloudlet in the sky; the first
I have ever seen in crossing these deserts."

"A cloud, where?" asked his companion.

"There, right up in the blue vault of
heaven," said the judge, pointing out the
speck which now seemed to have grown larger.

"Why, it is a bird; some great vulture of
the desert.  It seems to be diving right down
upon us!  These vultures, I hear, have often
attacked the airships in the desert.  It
evidently takes us for some new kind of prey."

"A bird!" cried the captain, who had now
joined the speakers.  "Let me see it?"

"There it is!" cried the two men simultaneously,
pointing out the grey, swift phantom.

The captain saw the bird-like object, and
one glance sufficed.

"It is an aeroplane," he said, and there was
just a touch of uneasiness in his voice.

"An aeroplane?" echoed the others, and
an instant later, viewing it through his glasses,
the colonel added:--

"Why, so it is; but I say, Captain, what
a peculiar type of aeroplane!  It is one of the
patrols, I expect, come to meet us."

"Your glasses, if you please, for one
moment," asked the captain, and he almost
snatched them from the hands of the officer.

The next instant a violent expletive burst
from the captain's lips.

Leaving his companions, he dashed down
the corridor to the wireless operator's room.
The operator was already engaged in
conversation with the aerial visitor by means of
the wireless telephone, and the captain took in
the situation at a glance.

"What does he want?  Who is he?"
blurted out the skipper.





.. vspace:: 4

.. _`THE BRIGAND OF THE EASTERN SKIES`:

.. class:: center large bold

   CHAPTER X


.. class:: center medium bold

   THE BRIGAND OF THE EASTERN SKIES

.. vspace:: 2

"Someone has signalled us to stop, Captain!"
said the wireless operator.

"Who is it?" demanded the irate skipper.

"He will not declare himself, sir!"

"Hand me that receiver, Robson!" and the
commander, clamping the ear-piece of the
wireless telephone to his ear, asked of the
intruder, "Who are you that thus dares to
order me to stop on a lawful voyage?"

"It is I, Sultan von Selim, Air-King of the
Hamadian Desert, who orders you to stop!"
came the reply from the aerial raider, who
now rode just a little way above the large
airship, and on the starboard side.

"Then I refuse!" thundered the skipper.

"You will do so at your peril," came the
quiet, cool reply, which rather disconcerted
the captain.

"I will call up the patrols, you brigand!"
continued the commander of the liner.

"One word to the patrols and I will blow
your wireless to pieces.  I have two guns
already trained on it," replied the air-king.

"I dare you to do it!" replied the brave
skipper.  Then, turning to the operator, he
said, "Send the S.O.S. with the latitude and
longitude to the patrols.  Smartly there,
Robson."

"Yes, sir."

"This is that raider we heard of at Delhi,
but he can't touch us."

The raider, however, had caught the
sentence, or part of it, and he understood the
order.  The next instant a burst of fire from
a machine gun, trained with wonderful
accuracy, blew the main part of the wireless
apparatus to pieces, and rendered it perfectly
useless for either receiving or transmitting.
How the captain and the operator escaped
injury or death will for ever remain a mystery.

Seizing a megaphone, the former dashed out
of the cabin, down the keel corridor and the
narrow slip-way, to the central touring gondola
on the starboard side, and, shaking his fist at
the raider, who sailed calmly alongside about
a hundred feet away, shouted through the
instrument: "You brigand!  You shall hang
for this!"

A mocking laugh, drowned by the roar of
the engines, which still continued full speed
ahead, was the only reply.  Evidently this
mad airman was enjoying the fun immensely.
At any rate he appeared very careless of the
other's threats.

"I mean it, you felon!" roared the skipper.

"Are you going to heave to?" came the
the reply through the raider's megaphone.

"No, certainly not!"

"Then you must take the consequence!"
came the mocking taunt, and the next
instant, "Rep-r-r-r-r-r-r-r!" came another
burst from that deadly machine-gun, which
seemed so effective every time it spoke.

This time the starboard engine, a 250-H.P. motor,
conked out entirely, and, for a moment,
there was danger of fire in the gondola, owing
to the petrol-feed being smashed in the general
break-up.

This made the captain think furiously.  He
now recognised, for the first time, that he was
absolutely at the mercy of this strange
highwayman of the air.  Evidently he was a
determined character, a master criminal, and
the skipper looked round for some means
of defence.

There was certainly an old machine-gun
aboard the airship, but it had never been used
and was not even mounted, for it was
believed that a peaceful trader would never
need it.  The police patrols constituted
the real defence of the trade routes, and
even with them a few smugglers were the
chief offenders.

The captain's eyes were fixed for the next
few seconds on the wonderful machine which
sailed along so easily and so quietly.  Once,
he had noticed, when the raider made a circuit
of the great liner, that the machine had shot
ahead at twice or thrice the speed of the
*Empress*.  The armoured conning-tower, over
the top of which the heads of the pilot and
his companion could just be seen, gave the
skipper an impression of strength, against
which he knew that even if he could have
replied with a machine gun, the bullets would
have pattered harmlessly against the sides,
and fallen away like rain-drops.

He was in a quandary, this brave air-skipper.
He had missed his chance of calling
up the patrols.  Yet, how could he, a British
captain, surrender to some foreign marauder,
or perhaps even to a British renegade; for he
knew not as yet who this bold fellow was.
Then he thought of his passengers, those
distinguished guests committed to his charge,
and last of all of the valuable lading: that
consignment of gold for the vaults of the
Bank of England.

"By heaven, it's the gold they're after!"
he exclaimed.  "I never thought of it before.
They've had the news ahead of us and
they've waited for the airship in this
out-of-the-world spot.  Confound them, but
they shan't get it if I can help it!" and the
captain nerved himself to still further
resistance, though he felt it was hopeless,
unless some outlying patrol should come up
quickly.

The raider seemed to have read his thoughts,
for he sailed close up again, and shouted
through his megaphone, "For the last time,
Captain, will you heave to?"

"No--o!" the courageous man replied,
though this time his voice wavered a bit, for
he wondered what devilry the stranger
would attempt next.

He had not long to wait, for the pirate
suddenly banked his machine, turned swiftly
outwards, and circling round till he came up
level with the great twin-engine in the rear
gondola, which drove the giant propeller
near the rudder, he opened once more a
terrific burst of fire which instantly put both
engines out of action.

This almost brought the huge liner to a
stop.  At any rate, she now made more
leeway than headway, for the only remaining
engines which could now be used were those
in the foremost gondola and port centre cabin.

"Stop!" signalled the captain to the
remaining engineers in charge of those engines.

And the next instant the huge, looming
mass, with her engines silent, lay there
helpless, levering away to windward,
shorn of her pride, and with the wreckage
hanging loose from her rear and central
gondolas.

Another surprise that now awaited the
crew and passengers of the air-liner was to
see the phantom raider careering wildly
around the beaten giant at enormous speed,
in almost perfect silence, though his two
propellers raced wildly as he dipped, spun
and rolled to celebrate his victory, and
to show off his amazing powers to the victims.

"Good heavens!" ejaculated the captain
as he watched all this.  "It was only too
true, then, what we heard at Delhi."

"You mean about the silent engines and
the speed of three hundred miles an hour,"
added the navigating officer, who now stood
by the skipper.

"Yes.  It's some amazing conspiracy.  I
cannot help admiring the rascals, though I
should like to hang the pair of them."

"Hullo! here he comes again.  I wonder
what he wants this time," and the next
instant the raider throttled down, and came
close up to the gondola, shouting as he did
so in perfectly good English:--

"Start that port engine, please, and bring
her to earth by that cluster of palm-trees
over there."

"What more do you want with us?"
replied the captain.

"I must see your passports, and examine
your cargo for contraband."

"Eh, what's that?" exclaimed the amazed
commander.  "What does he want to
examine our passports for?"

"We haven't any," remarked the navigating officer.

"And why the deuce is he to search for
contraband, I should like to know?" groaned
the skipper.

"Did you hear what I said?" called the
raider, who now appeared to be getting
angry at the delay.

"Yes," growled the other.

"Then bring her down at once, and let
out that mooring cable!"

And as there was no apparent help for it,
and not a single patrol had yet hove in
sight, the captain of the liner reluctantly
complied, wasting as much time as he dared
in the operation.





.. vspace:: 4

.. _`THE AIR-KING'S TRIBUTE`:

.. class:: center large bold

   CHAPTER XI


.. class:: center medium bold

   THE AIR-KING'S TRIBUTE

.. vspace:: 2

Far down below, the Arab sheik and his
party, ambushed amid the waving palms of
the oasis, had watched with keen and eager
eyes this thrilling encounter in the heavens
between the phantom-bird and the great
leviathan.  To them it seemed impossible
that the aeroplane, sometimes diminished by
distance to a tiny speck, could overcome the
mighty airship.

As the fight continued, and they heard the
rat-tat-tat of the machine-gun, sometimes
their doubts and fears overcame them, and
many were the cries that went up to Allah
the Compassionate, the Faithful, etc.  But
when they saw that at last the great white
sheik had won and the disabled liner was
slowly coming lower and lower, their pent-up
feelings gave place to wild excitement, and
shouts of,

"Allah be praised!  The bird of destiny
has won!  The great white chief has
triumphed!" while others, more practical, and
also more piratical, exclaimed: "Allah is
sending down the treasures of heavens into
the lap of the faithful.  Praise be to Allah
and to Mohammed his Prophet!"

It was with some difficulty that Max
restrained these wild men from dashing out
in their frenzy to capture and loot the huge,
lowering mass that now loomed but a little
way above them.  He began to fear that
they would not wait for the pre-arranged
signal, and he urged the Arab sheik to restrain
them, and to repeat the orders that the
occupants of the airship must not be touched.

Nearer and nearer came the huge mass,
steering badly and veering round in attempting
to gain the lee-side of the trees, lest she
should be totally wrecked in the mooring.
Two hundred feet of cable suddenly dropped
from her bow, and, when it touched the
ground, Max gave the signal, and with a wild
shout these fierce Bedouin horsemen suddenly
broke from cover, and galloped into the open.

"Ye saints!" gasped the Indian judge,
when he beheld this wild tournament of
galloping horsemen, brandishing their rifles
and long spears.  "Are we to be eaten
alive?"  Less than an hour ago he had
expressed a pious wish to visit this peaceful
garden in the desert; now, it was too near
to be pleasant.

"All hands to the cable!" shouted Max
in Arabic, and very quickly both horses and
men were struggling with the stout hawser.

"This way," shouted the Gotha pilot.
"Take it round and round these three trees;
they should stand the strain unless the wind
gets stronger," and selecting a small group of
trees on the leeward side of the grove, he
very quickly had the cable made fast in such
a way that the leviathan of seven hundred
feet in length swung easily head to wind, like
a ship riding at anchor and swinging with the tide.

Then the tribesmen, kept well in hand,
surrounded the prize, keeping some thirty
paces distant, for they had not yet quite
overcome their fears.  Never before had such
a thing been seen resting on the yellow sands
of the Hamadian Desert.

As the gondolas of the *Empress of India*
came to rest quietly on the ground, the
*Scorpion* descended in a rapid spiral, touched
the sands lightly and taxied up to the fringe
of trees.

Then, to the utter amazement of the
occupants of the dirigible, some of whom were
already descending from the gondolas,
a couple of men, wearing the loose flowing
robe of the desert, including that distinctive
mark of the Mohammedan world, the fez,
leapt from the machine and approached the
airship.

"Snakes alive!" ejaculated the colonel;
"but what have we here?" his eyes fixed
upon the two men.

"Some person of note, evidently,"
remarked his friend the judge, as he saw the
foremost of these individuals mount a richly
caparisoned horse which was held in readiness
for him, and approach in a dignified and
almost royal manner.

"This king of the desert is evidently some
European renegade who is challenging the
right of other nations to cross his domain
without his permission," said the soldier.

"He is some daring pilot, at any rate,"
replied the justiciary.

"I wonder now what he intends to do with
us," observed the other.

"Why, he intends to plunder us, of course,"
replied his companion.  "What else could
be his motive?"

The captives were not long to be left in
doubt as to the proceedings of this daring
freebooter.  Raising the megaphone which
he had used in the air so effectively, he
shouted in perfectly good English:--

"Abandon airship!"

And to make this order immediately effective,
the desert king ordered Max to see that
every member of the great liner, passengers
and crew, were immediately assembled before
him.  The navigating officer and the captain
were the last to leave the vessel; they did so
unwillingly, and not without a measure of
compulsion at the point of a revolver.  The
skipper's looks as he fixed them upon this
desert freebooter astride the fiery steed,
conveyed to the brigand much more than
mere words could have expressed.

Fixing him with his keen, malicious eyes,
the pirate said: "Are you the captain of
this vessel?"

"I am," replied the skipper in surly tones.

"Show me your bill of lading."

"Bill of lading?" echoed the captive.
"You must hunt for it if you want it."

The self-styled king of the desert frowned.
He knew that he was up against an English
skipper, and that he must adopt other
measures to gain his end.  Without lifting
his gaze from the commander of the air-liner,
or flinching a muscle, he replied firmly, "One
word from me, Captain, and your life would
be forfeit.  You would swing from that tree
by one of your own cables."

"I know that, brigand," replied the
prisoner.  "Get a cable and carry out your
threat; the rope that will hang you is not so
very far away, either."

"Very well," exclaimed the German.
"Then, I need only give the order to these,
my faithful subjects, and the whole of your
valuable cargo will be strewn on the sands,
and your airship will be alight.  I do not
propose to adopt those measures unless you
compel me.  I will give you five minutes to
decide."  As the pirate uttered these words
in a cool, nonchalant manner, he glanced at
the European emblem on his wrist, a gold,
gem-studded wristlet watch with luminous dial.

"I deny your right to interfere with a
peaceful trader," blurted out the captain,
when he saw the full force of the two
alternatives which had been offered to him.  He
was wondering, moreover, how much the
brigand knew about the presence of the
specie on the vessel.

"You deny my right, do you?" returned
the other.

"Yes.  Who are you?"

"I am Sultan von Selim, Air-King of the
Hamadian Desert.  I told you that once
before when I first challenged you in the air."

"Who made you king?" snorted the captain.

There was silence for the space of ten
seconds, during which time the brigand
consulted his watch again, then replied:--

"The Allies made me king, particularly
you *verdammt* English when you drove me
from my Fatherland with those impossible
peace terms.  King I am, and king I will
remain, of all the aerial regions where I choose
to abide, until there comes a better man
who can beat me in the air.  And you,
Captain, of all men, must know from what you
have already seen that my powers in that
realm are considerable."

The captain, having cooled somewhat after
this outburst, had to admit to this German
irreconcilable that there was certainly some
truth in his statement about being king of
the air.  Certain things were beginning to
dawn upon this English captain, and he was
now wondering how far it would be wise to
humour the brigand.  He added, however,
to his admission, the following words, "You
are only king by might!"

"Ha! ha!" laughed the outlaw, "but
that also is some admission.  My position is
precisely that of the British in India or
Egypt.  Withdraw your soldiers from these
two countries and what becomes of your
government there?  So am I King of the
Hamadian Desert till a stronger man comes.
When that time comes one of us must die.
There is no room for two kings, even in the
desert.  Till then I am supreme.  But come,
captain, four minutes have passed already.
Your bill of lading, quickly now, for we are
but wasting time, and these my subjects"--and
here the brigand waved his hand towards
the restive Arabs--"or rather I should say
my customs' officials, are waiting to examine
your cargo, and to levy the king's tribute."

The captain looked around first upon
his own followers and then upon the
impatient Bedouins--the vultures around the
carcase.

"I could have brought your ship down in
flames, but I preferred a milder method,"
continued the outlaw, as he watched the
seconds of the last minute being ticked away
on his jewelled watch.

"But helium will not burn!" returned
the captain smartly.  "That was beyond
your powers."

A mocking, sardonic laugh came from the
robber chief as the Englishman uttered these words.

"Would you like to see it burn?" he almost hissed.

The captain faltered in his reply; he was
not quite so decisive as he had been.
Evidently there was some sense of humour, if
not much, about this irreconcilable German.

"Here, Carl!" cried the bandit.  "Detach
one of those nineteen ballonettes from the
airship."

"Yes, sir," replied the subordinate,
stepping up to the king and saluting smartly.

"Take it away to leeward there, and show
this dull Englishman how he may learn
chemistry and science even from inhabitants
of the Hamadian Desert.  Here, take this,
you will need it," and the chief handed to his
assistant a small cylindrical tube with which
to carry out his orders.

Turning next to the Englishman, he
observed, "Know, you dullard, that a small
admixture of a secret gas, which is known
only to three living men, will make your
renowned helium flare like hydrogen.  You
shall see it in a short space of time."

"Recall your man, I will take your word
for it, Sultan!" exclaimed the captain, who
now felt that it must be so, for he was
already bewildered by the strange things
which he had witnessed that day, and he
had no desire to see this experiment carried out.

"You believe me, then," returned the
air-king, who seemed particularly to relish this
interview with the Englishman, especially
with this group of celebrities within earshot,
for they had listened eagerly to every word
which he had spoken.  And the German
knew that though his days might be
numbered, as indeed he felt they were, yet his
fame would be greatly enhanced by the
episodes of this day, for vanity was not the
least among his failings.

Once more he glanced at his watch; for
the allotted space of time had nearly run.

"How now, Englishman!" he exclaimed
in a harsher tone.  "The bill of lading, where
is it?"

The chief purser, receiving the captain's
nod, at once advanced towards the regal
horseman, handed him a bundle of papers and
said: "Here, sir, is the document you desire."





.. vspace:: 4

.. _`THE MAHARAJAH'S CHOICE`:

.. class:: center large bold

   CHAPTER XII


.. class:: center medium bold

   THE MAHARAJAH'S CHOICE

.. vspace:: 2

A dramatic episode followed the examination
of the airship's bill of lading by the *pseudo*
monarch and his so-called chancellor of the
exchequer, Carl, who aided his master in the task.

"Item one.  What does that consist of?"
asked the brigand.

"Mails.  His Britannic Majesty's mails,"
replied the chancellor.

"Where from?"

"From India for Egypt and London,"
replied Carl, maintaining a grave and solemn
deportment.

"H'm!  They may pass when the usual
tribute is paid," remarked the bandit in
serious tones, as though he had delivered
himself of some weighty pronouncement.

The judge looked at the colonel with raised
eyebrows when he heard this strange decision,
but the captain, forgetting his position for a
moment, blurted out:--

"Tribute indeed?  When did the King of
England pay tribute for his mails to be carried
across the Hamadian desert?"

The air-king eyed the speaker with apparent
amazement, mingled with a touch of scorn and
pity, then quietly observed:--

"That is the very point, Captain.  There
has been far too much laxity in this respect
in the past.  The liberties of the small nations
to make their own laws, and possess their own
lands in peace, have been greatly endangered
of late.  It is mere brigandage for a great
power to over-ride the native interests of
small communities.  But from to-day this
brigandage must cease, at any rate over the
territories where I rule."

The captain could find no reply to this
sally of the desert king's, and, while a smile
played about the corners of his mouth, he
looked beyond this robber chief, in his gaudy
trappings, to where the *Scorpion* lay
squatting like an ugly toad upon the sands.

At length the monarch resumed his
cross-examination with these words: "Come,
Captain, will you pay tribute for the transit
of mails across my territory, or will you not?"

"I will not!" replied the skipper.

With a flash of fire in his tones the brigand
ordered: "Take the first ten sacks of mails
out into the desert and burn them at once."

"It shall be done, O chief," replied Max,
who immediately detailed some of the natives
to carry the order into effect, when the captain,
urged to it by the judge, asked:--

"What is the amount of the tribute?"

"Ten thousand pounds in English gold,"
came the immediate reply.

"I cannot pay it," returned the captain.
"It is mere plunder," though the judge pointed
out to the commander quietly that it would
probably be more profitable to pay it and to
get away with the mails in a damaged airship,
than to leave the mails behind to be lost or
destroyed in the desert.

"He will take the gold anyhow, when he
comes to it on the bill of lading," added the
colonel, "though devil a penny I'd pay him."

"It isn't my money," argued the captain,
"so there's an end of it."

"How now, Englishmen!  We are wasting
time.  Will you pay the sum demanded?"

"No, I will not!"

"Very good.  Get out the rest of the mails
and burn them at once!" ordered the
monarch, and a couple of minutes afterwards
the first bags of mails, sprayed with some
inflammatory liquid, were blazing furiously.

"Item two!" called the desert king.

"Gold.  Nineteen boxes of bullion for the
Bank of England," called out the chancellor.

"Gold?" echoed the air-fiend, as though
he were utterly unconscious of the presence of
such a commodity, in face of the captain's
refusal to pay over a trifling ten thousand
pounds to secure right of way for his mails.

"Yes, sir.  Nearly one hundred thousand
pounds in specie."

"I thought we had prohibited the importation
of gold into these regions, chancellor,
because of its evil effects upon the minds of
the people."

"Yes, sir," returned the chancellor.  "We
decided to abolish its importation altogether
on that account, save only as tribute money
for the royal chest."

"Exactly," replied the bandit, in a tone of
assumed moral injury.  Then, turning to the
Englishman, he said: "You must know,
Captain, that most wars are caused by gold,
and by the unbrotherly strife which it foments.
You must know also that all wars are
sustained by it."

"Yes, I agree with you for once," returned
the prisoner, boldly, wondering at the ease
with which this confirmed brigand could turn
moralist.

"Then what must be done with the gold,
sir?" asked the chancellor.

"Every ounce of gold on the airship must
be confiscated," exclaimed the king of robbers
as he uplifted his hands in pious horror.  "Let
it be removed at once."

"Very well, sir," and this second operation,
which was more pleasing still to the waiting
Arabs, was immediately put into effect.

"Item three!" called out the chief.

"Ten boxes of valuables, including the
personal property and belongings of one of
the passengers," came the reply.

"What, do they belong to one person?"

"Yes, sir."

"What is his name?"

"The Maharajah of Bangapore, sir,"
returned the wise man of the exchequer, whose
task promised to be an easy one in the future,
judging by the vast amount of spoil which had
already fallen into his lap.

"The Maharajah of Bangapore?" repeated
the monarch, raising his hand to his forehead
for an instant, as though he would recall some
long forgotten episode.  "Is he amongst the
company present?"

"I believe so."

"Ask him to stand forth."

And the Indian prince, hearing his name
called in English, stepped forth and
confronted his old enemy of the Mesopotamian
campaign.  When their eyes met a flash of
fire, more eloquent than words, revealed
what was in each man's mind.  The prince
expected to be tortured to death and was
prepared for it, for, like all his people, he
was brave as well as fierce.  At last the
robber spoke.

"Prince Jaipur, you are an enemy of mine,"
he said.

"I know it!"

"Do you expect mercy after the way your
tribesmen massacred my men at Kerbela?"

The maharajah shrugged his shoulders, but
disdained to reply to this upstart robber
chief who styled himself a king.

"Do you know that your life is in my
hands?" exclaimed the bandit fiercely.

"I am not afraid of anything you can do,
brigand!" hissed the prince, and his voice
sounded not unlike the angry, venomous
snake in the jungle.  Another man might
have quailed before those glaring eyes and
those hissing tones.  But the German quavered not.

"I will give you a kingly choice," he said,
"as you are the scion of half a hundred kings
in your illustrious line."

"I ask no favours of a common Bedouin
robber," snarled the other.

"Listen.  I will give you the choice of
drinking this deadly poison, or of being
dropped ten thousand feet from my aeroplane.
Which will you take?"

The prince shuddered slightly, and glanced
up into the cloudless blue, as though
anticipating what such a death might mean, then
looked at the small phial which the brigand
held forth in his hand.

"Yes, ten thousand feet!" continued the
German, as he noted the anxious look which
overcast the Hindoo's face for an instant, as
he gazed up into the sky.  "Then I will loop
the machine, and, with your hands pinioned,
you will be thrown out and drop, drop----  Which
will you choose?"

"I will drink the poison," replied the
prince, who had now regained his usual
composure.

"Very well.  Let him be securely tied to
that tree to await our pleasure," and the
maharajah was instantly seized by three or
four powerful Arabs, and secured to a tree
some twenty paces away.

"What about his valuables, sir?" asked Carl.

"Have you examined them?"

"Yes, sir."

"And what do they consist of?" asked the king.

"His jewels, his gold and silver plate,
studded with rare gems of priceless value.
They are worth five times the value of the
specie," whispered Carl.

"And what else?  You said there were ten boxes."

"Part of his regalia and numerous ceremonial robes."

"They are all confiscated!" announced
the monarch.  "The sun will set in another
two hours, and at sunset the Indian must die."

"There is nothing else, sir, of much value.
All the gold and this personal property has
been secured.  Here is the list of passengers,
for there are scarcely any passports held by
the strangers," and here Carl, who had paid a
visit to the aerial, whispered something to his
chief.

"Good!  Then, in your opinion, chancellor,
sufficient tribute has now been obtained
from these strangers who have crossed our
territory without permission," said the bandit
aloud for all to hear.

"Yes, sir."

"Then let them board the airship at once.
She will be cast adrift in ten minutes."

At this there was a scramble for the
gondolas, and very quickly all, save the captain
and the navigating officer, were aboard.  The
judge and the colonel, however, prevailed
upon by the maharajah's men, descended
again to intercede for the life of the Indian.

"You have taken the man's jewels," said
the colonel.  "At least you might spare his
life."

"You may have his body," remarked the
airman, "but he must first drink the phial,"
and a stern look appeared once more in the
robber-bandit's eyes.  On this point he was
unbending, and remained like adamant.

"The airship is ready now, sir," said the
captain, making a final appeal for the life
of the maharajah.  "I should like to report,
at any rate, when I do complete my journey,
that all my passengers are safe, though I
expect to be two days late with only two
engines and this beam wind.  Once more,
will you release the Indian?"

"Bring him before me!" commanded the
monarch at last, with a bored expression,
and the Indian, still bound hand and foot,
was brought before the pseudo king.

"Unloose his hands," came the order.

"They ask me to spare your life, Indian
dog!" continued the robber, addressing the
prince in contemptuous tones.  "If you
sue for it yourself, you may have it,
otherwise..." and, instead of completing his
sentence, the speaker shook the little phial
in the face of the prisoner.

"I will not ask my life of you, serpent!"
hissed the captive.  "From you I will accept
no favours.  Robbed of my family heirlooms,
my jewels and my household gods, I prefer
to die.  Give me the poison, and I will show
you how a real prince of the royal line of
Indus can die!"

For one awful instant, the desert chief glared
at his enemy, who had dared to refuse his
generous offer.  Then, in angry tones, he cried:--

"Indian dog!  I offered you mercy, but
you spurn the gift of Allah and ask for death.
Then take this and drink it!" and he tossed
him the phial.

"Stay!" cried half a dozen voices from
amongst the group of passengers.

But their expostulations were in vain, for,
with an eagerness to hide his disgrace in death,
which only a proud oriental can show, the
prisoner caught the phial, withdrew the small
cork, and drained the contents before his
horrified friends could interfere.

The next moment, the body of the maharajah
lay prostrate upon the sands of the
Hamadian desert.





.. vspace:: 4

.. _`THE MISSING AIRSHIP`:

.. class:: center large bold

   CHAPTER XIII


.. class:: center medium bold

   THE MISSING AIRSHIP

.. vspace:: 2

Horrified and aghast at the foul deed which
had been done, the passengers and crew of the
air-liner, who had left the gondolas at the cry
of consternation which went up, now crowded
around the fallen prince.  Even those fierce
sons of the desert who witnessed the dire act
could not restrain an involuntary shudder, but
they merely shrugged their shoulders, or
remarked: "Kismet!  It is the will of
Allah, the Compassionate, the Merciful,"
and after some such invocation, their piety
appeared to be satisfied, for they immediately
returned to their treasure.

The captain and his friends were loud in
their protestations and imprecations after
their first and futile attempts to rouse the
prostrate man, for they believed him to be
already dead.  They glared at the pseudo
caliph, who appeared to be entirely unmoved
by the heart-rending spectacle.  And if, at
that moment, any weapon of offence had
remained in their possession, it would
certainly have been turned upon the offender,
whom they now regarded as a murderer.

But every weapon had been carefully
removed from the air-liner and her
complement; even the unmounted machine-gun
and the one box of ammunition placed
aboard on her first voyage, were now in
possession of the bandits.

The captain in particular was furious, and
he turned upon the German fiercely, shook
his fist at him and cried, "One day you will
pay for this, sirrah!  The arm of Britain is
long enough to reach you!"

A mocking laugh was the only reply which
the German gave.  Then, looking once more
at his jewelled watch, he signified that the
time for the airship's departure had almost
arrived.

"Three minutes more and I shall cut her
adrift," he said.

"But the maharajah?" asked the captain.
"What can we do with him; we cannot leave
his body to the vultures."

"Bah!  Take him away with you.  He
will live again in seven hours; it was only
morphine!"

Bewildered, but yet relieved by these words,
they quickly ascertained that the prostrate
man was not actually dead, and they hurriedly
placed him aboard the airship and administered
emetics.

"Let us get him away at once," urged the
Indian judge; "perhaps the higher altitudes
will quickly dissipate the effects of the
morphine."

"Are you ready there?" shouted the
caliph, who had ridden with his escort up to
the central gondola.

"Yes," came the response.

"Then remember, the next time that you
invade my dominions without my permission
you will not escape so easily.  As you know
to your cost, the King of the Hamadian desert
is able to defend himself and his people, even
from the insults of a great power."

The captain made a slight bow, half ironical,
in response to this kingly assertion, and
asked,

"Is there any communication which your
majesty would like to have delivered to my
Government?"

"Yes," replied the monarch, drawing from
under his loose robe a sealed packet, which
he appeared to have had in readiness for the
occasion.  It was addressed as follows:--

.. vspace:: 2

.. class:: noindent white-space-pre-line

"To Colonel John Tempest, D.S.O., M.C..
Chief Commissioner of the British Aerial
Police, Scotland Yard, London,"

.. vspace:: 2

and across the top left-hand corner it was
marked "*Confidential*," and also "*To be
delivered personally by the Captain of the
Air-Liner, Empress of Britain*."

The skipper, apparently bewildered for a
moment by this strange request, for it seemed
to him like a letter from a condemned man
to his executioner, looked the packet over
for a few seconds.  Noting the great red seal
on the back, he read the imprint embossed on
the huge wafer.  It read as follows, and was
circular in form:--

"From Sultan von Selim, Air-King of the
Hamadian desert," and the crest was a
scorpion, with the solitary word in Latin,
"*Scorpio*."

The caliph waited patiently until the
captain had examined the exterior of the packet,
and recovered from his amazement, and then
said, "Before you depart, Captain, you must
promise me that you will deliver that packet
in person to Colonel Tempest, who is not
unknown to me."

The captain did not answer for a few seconds,
for he was wondering what new conspiracy
was this.  He was wondering also whether
the conveyance of this packet was not after
all the real reason for the forced descent of
the airship.

"Do you promise, Captain?" asked his
interrogator, looking at him fixedly.

"Yes, I promise."

"On your honour?"

"On my word of honour, I promise to
deliver it."

"Then good-bye.  I will 'wireless' the
patrols to look out for you."

"Thank you," replied the skipper acidly.

And the next moment, seeing that only
his own accomplices and reputed subjects
were left on the ground, the Sultan gave the
order, "Let go!"

So the huge cable was slipped, and the
leviathan left her moorings at once.  The
north-west wind carried her clear of the trees,
and, as she had left nearly two tons of her
most precious cargo behind, she rose rapidly,
then started falteringly on her long journey to
Cairo as her two remaining Sunbeam-Maori
engines burst into life.

The sun, which had shone with pitiless
might upon the Arabian desert that day, was
sinking like a huge red ball beneath the
horizon when the great air-liner, drifting
considerably from her course, but still making
progress in her journey towards Cairo,
disappeared from the watchers' view.

With strange impartiality, inexplicable in
such a robber-bandit, the spoil had been
divided amongst the Bedouins, who, to their
bewilderment and surprise, were now rich,
each one of them, beyond the dreams of
avarice.  Their gratitude to Allah, the Giver
of all Good, and to the great white sheik was
unbounded.  Never before had their greedy
eyes beheld such treasure; never before had
they gained a prize so easily; and some of them
even wondered whether, after all, Mohammed
had not appeared to the Faithful once more
in the person of the great white sheik.

Long before midnight, however, the last
man, with heavily-laden beast of burden,
had disappeared, swallowed up, as it were,
by the very sands of the desert, so that, when
the full round moon approached the meridian
and changed the gold of the desert to silver,
not a vestige of man or beast remained.  And
of the camp, only a few ashes marked the
spot where once a fire had burned.  The
*Scorpion*, too, had taken its departure
for an unknown destination, carrying its
mysterious crew far, far away from these
burning sands, for the indomitable
commander knew only too well that the captain
spoke truthfully when he said that the arm
of Britain was very long, and could even
reach to this wild desert land.

Before his departure, however, Heinrich
von Spitzer had sent off his promised message
in laconic terms to the Cairo patrols.  It ran
as follows:--

.. vspace:: 1

"Air-liner *Empress* with damaged engines
crossing desert towards Cairo.  Lat. 29-50 N.,
Long.  40-25 E. drifting W.S.W.  Wireless
deranged.  SCORPIO."

.. vspace:: 2

"Piece of bad luck, sir!" remarked the
commissioner's assistant at Cairo when he
received the message.

"H'm!  She carries the Indian mail, too,"
replied his chief.

"Yes, and a good deal more, sir."

"What else does she carry this trip besides
passengers and mails?" asked the alert
commissioner.

"That big loading of specie, sir, for the
Bank of England.  Nearly a ton of gold, I
believe."

"Phew!  And isn't the maharajah of
somewhere or other coming on a state visit
to the King also?"

"Yes, by Jove, so he is!  We had a message
this morning saying that he would travel
by the *Empress*."

"Heaven help us if she comes down in the
desert with that cargo.  The Bedouins would
soon make short work of it.  The authorities
rely too much upon the patrols for these
long journeys," said the commissioner.

"We were asked to take particular care over
her this trip.  The Delhi patrols accompanied
her part of the way, and she was all right up to
mid-day, but she hasn't spoken to us since.
I have sent out one or two messages and have
had the patrols ready to go out and meet her,
as soon as I heard again from her, giving her
position, sir."

"And you've had no further reply till
this message came in?" asked the chief.

"No, sir."

"By the way, is her wireless damaged as
well as her engine?  I didn't notice."

"Yes, sir.  The message says: 'Wireless
deranged,'" replied the assistant, re-reading
from the aerogram.

"Then who the deuce sent the message?"

"Scorpio----  But who Scorpio is I
can't make out.  It must have been some
passing airman, for it cannot have been one
of our own patrols."

"Phew!  The mystery deepens.  Get the
patrols out at once, and tell them to take
plenty of ammunition with them.  It will
take a few rounds to scare off those Bedouin
fiends if once they get round a carcase where
there are such pickings."

"I don't think there's much to worry about
in that respect.  Those Arabs have a
wholesome fear of these air-liners, sir.  However,
I will get the machines off at once."





.. vspace:: 4

.. _`BETRAYED BY THE CAMERA`:

.. class:: center large bold

   CHAPTER XIV


.. class:: center medium bold

   BETRAYED BY THE CAMERA

.. vspace:: 2

The order was quickly given for the aerial
police scouts to start.  Within a few minutes
the patrols left Cairo and the adjoining
air-stations, and, spreading out fan-wise, they
crossed the Canal, the Gulf of Sinai, the
wild mountainous peninsula which bears
the same name, and the Hedjaz coast, until
they entered the desert regions beyond.  Then
they commenced their search by moonlight
for the battered and drifting air-liner over the
trackless, desert lands which lie between the
28th and the 30th parallels.

By a pre-arranged system of Very lights,
the patrols kept each other informed of their
exact positions during the night, and watched
keenly the eastern horizon for any response
which might come from the belated airship.

Meanwhile the air-liner, fighting manfully
against the freshening wind, made very slow
progress, and drifted still further and further
away from her course.  The air was full of
wireless messages both from Cairo and the
patrols, but she was as yet unable to reply
and define her position.  The engineer and
wireless operator, however, had been able to
receive some of the messages indistinctly,
and they knew at any rate that help was not
far away.

The captain was naturally very much
depressed by the turn of events.  Somehow
he felt that he had not acted very heroically
in the matter.  He had considered the safety
of his distinguished passengers perhaps too much.

"If I had had no passengers to consider,
I would have remained aloft until the whole
liner had been shot to ribbons!" he declared
to himself, when he at last retired for a few
minutes to his private cabin.  "They should
never have taken me alive!  But there, my
instructions stand--the safety of the passengers
and crew before anything else.  I was a
fool, though, to act as I did.  I ought to have
sent out the S.O.S. to Cairo without a second's
delay, instead of arguing with this brigand;
but there, whoever expected to encounter
anything like this?"

Then as his thoughts turned to the wonderful
machine, he endeavoured to docket all the
information he could remember about the
brigand's aeroplane, for he knew that he
would be expected to recount every detail
when he met the court of enquiry, "which,"
he murmured, "is as certain to take place
as to-morrow's sunrise.

"Gee whiz!  Three hundred miles an hour,
and silent engines to boot!  Phew! nobody
will believe me, anyhow.  Still, I shall have
to face the music, and also to explain why I
have lost a hundred thousand pounds of
specie," and the skipper looked down on the
white sands below, and for a moment he
almost contemplated suicide.

"I wouldn't mind if I could only bring
sufficient information to the authorities to
lead to the speedy capture of the villain, but
I can't.  There wasn't time even for a
photograph.  The bandit was aware of all
that, and I understand that every camera
was removed from the airship before he let
us go."

At that instant there came a slight tap at
the cabin door.

"Come in!" cried the commander, expecting
some further report from the sick-berth
steward about the condition of the maharajah,
who, half an hour ago, was said to be showing
signs of recovery, owing to the bracing air at
three thousand feet.

The door opened, and Gadget, the ship's
mascot, appeared.  Now Gadget's newest
hobby was photography, and through the
kindness of the photographic officer he had
become the proud possessor of a small pocket
camera.

"I got her, sir!  Thought you'd like to
see her ... begging your pardon," and
Gadget, with his dirty, but sunny, smiling
face stopped short and pulled his lock of hair
by way of salute, as the captain pulled him up
sharply by snapping out:--

"Got whom?  Like to see whom, Gadget?"

"The 'Clutchin' Hand,' sir," explained
Gadget, who now found himself floored for
once by his want of English.

"I don't understand, boy?"

"The bloke what played the dirty on us,
sir," replied the boy, opening wide his bright
blue eyes, and holding out three wet and
recently developed pocket films.

"Him what got the swag, sir," continued
the urchin, endeavouring to make himself clear.

"Oh, you mean that you photographed
the brigand!" replied the skipper as he
caught sight of the negatives, and snatched
at them eagerly, a new light coming into his eyes.

"Yessir!" exclaimed the lad.  "Him what
said he was a King of the Desert."

"Gadget!" exclaimed the captain, after a
brief examination of the films, which were
really three fine, clearly defined pictures of
the *Scorpion*, showing her in mid-air, when
alongside the *Empress*.

"Yessir," replied the excited youth, not
yet certain whether he was going to be hanged
or praised for his offence.

"You have shown more wit and skill than
anyone on board the airship.  You shall be
well rewarded for this, I promise you.  How
on earth you managed to get three good snapshots
like these, all showing different angles of
the machine, and to hide them away, is beyond me!"

"Thank you, sir!  Thought you'd like
'em," and the boy's eyes sparkled even more
than ever as the captain shook him by the
hand, and planted five new, crisp Bradburys
therein, then dismissed him.

"Great Scott!" exclaimed the captain,
"but that little urchin's saved my reputation.
These photographs may prove of more value
to the authorities than the lost treasure.  I
feel a different man.  Here is extraordinary
evidence against the culprit.  One photograph
shows the fiend actually firing a burst
at the twin engines in the rear gondola,
and another the faces of the two occupants
above the fuselage.  They will show more
evidence still when they have been
enlarged."  And the captain, after carefully
drying them, placed them in an envelope
and put them into his inner coat pocket,
muttering:--

"Smart little beggar!  I wish I hadn't
punished him the other day for smuggling
that tobacco aboard."

The captain, who had left strict instructions
that he should be called half an hour before
the end of the watch, in order that he might
relieve the navigating officer, was just about to
lie down on the couch for a brief spell, when
suddenly another knock at his cabin door
startled him, and immediately after his servant
entered and announced: "Seven bells, sir."

"Already?" exclaimed the captain.

"Yes, sir."

"Has the moon set, yet?"

"Yes, it is quite dark now, sir."

"All right.  Tell the navigating officer that
I'll be down in one moment."

At this very instant the telephone bell
which connected the cabin with the navigating
gondola rang furiously.  Snatching up the
receiver, the captain asked, "What's the
matter, Donaldson?  Is there another raider
on the starboard bow?"

"No, sir, but there's something very much
like a signal flash away in the north-west."

"Sure it wasn't a shooting star?"

"More like a Very light, sir, but very
faint," replied the navigating officer.  "Shall
I reply, sir?"

"Yes, give him three red lights.  I expect
it's one of the patrols looking for us.  I'm
coming down now," and the captain replaced
the receiver, and made haste down the
corridor which led to the chart and navigation
room.

The next instant three red balls of fire fell
from the airship earthwards in rapid succession,
and within a couple of minutes a faint
gleam of greenish light fell like an arc in the
north-western sky.

"Yes, the patrols have found us, sure
enough," exclaimed the captain, who had now
joined the officer.

After several further exchanges of fire-balls,
repeated now from two or three quarters, the
searchers closed in upon the straggler.  Then
a rapid dialogue took place by means of the
morse lamp, and, when dawn came, shortly
afterwards, no less than six fighting scouts,
running at about a quarter throttle,
surrounded the wounded leviathan, and escorted
her towards Cairo.

When the *Empress* reached that town, she
was already twenty-four hours overdue at
London, so the cables and the wireless stations
were busy with messages relating to the
missing liner, and with more than one inquiry
as to the safety of her cargo, evidently from
the consignees, or more likely still, from the
underwriters.

And when the captain told his story to the
Commissioner of Aerial Police at Cairo there
was another mighty stir, and both the cables
and the wireless were busy again, for the
whole civilized world was tingling with
excitement to know something tangible about this
man of mystery--the phantom airman.  And
the story of Gadget's photographs was told to
the world.





.. vspace:: 4

.. _`DIAMOND CUT DIAMOND`:

.. class:: center large bold

   CHAPTER XV


.. class:: center medium bold

   DIAMOND CUT DIAMOND

.. vspace:: 2

While the events recorded in the last few
chapters were taking place, a series of
adventures not less exciting and perilous had
befallen the two airmen, Keane and Sharpe, in
their endeavours to track that ingenious
conspirator, Professor Rudolf Weissmann, in
his secret retreat within the dark recesses of
the Schwarzwald.

After their midnight consultation with
Colonel Tempest at Scotland Yard, their
instructions were to proceed early next day,
by whatever aircraft was then available, to
Germany, and once there to adopt some
suitable disguise, and institute forthwith a most
rigorous search for the secret aerodrome.
They were to leave no stone unturned in their
efforts to track down this great German
irreconcilable, who had dared to hold a pistol
at the civilized world, and to bring back, if
possible, some tangible clue concerning his
two great discoveries.

"Time is short," the colonel said.
"Immediate action on our part is vital.  Spare
no expense in the venture, and if necessary
you must even proceed to extreme measures
to capture this daring outlaw and his accomplices."

"And what about this phantom aeroplane?"
asked Keane.  "Apparently it has already
left the Schwarzwald on its piratical expedition."

"It may return, and you must watch for
it.  Some of those scattered inhabitants of
the Black Forest are sure to have seen or
heard something of it.  Its trial trips must
have been carried out somewhere in the
vicinity."

"They are a simple and primitive type of
people who still inhabit those forest wastes;
wood cutters, lumbermen, makers of little
wooden clocks and musical boxes, most of
them, I believe," added Sharpe, who had often
traversed those regions as a British spy during
the Great War.

"Then they should be easier to handle,"
added the commissioner of aerial police, who
had a ready method of brushing away
apparent difficulties.  "I am compelled to rely
almost entirely upon your efforts.  Take your
pocket-wireless telephones with you and a
sufficient quantity of German gold and silver,
and start directly you have had a few hours'
rest."

"We will get away immediately after
breakfast, sir," replied Keane, who had already
made up his mind as to how he should proceed
in the matter, for he had fixed up his jumping-off
ground for the Schwarzwald, and also the
type of disguise he intended to adopt.

"Good-bye, both of you, and may good
fortune attend you!" said the colonel.

"Good-bye, sir."

Big Ben was striking three o'clock as they
left Scotland Yard and made for their quarters,
which were in that part of London known
as The Adelphi, a quaint, old-fashioned
ensemble of buildings of the Georgian period,
overlooking the Thames, not far from the
Watergate.  A few minutes later they bade
each other good-night, and turned in for a
few hours' sleep before their long flight across
England and France.

At seven o'clock they were breakfasting
together in a private room overlooking the
river, and discussing the details of their
coming adventure.

"The Schwarzwald!" Sharpe was saying,
as he helped himself to another egg and a
rasher of ham.  "Where do you think, now,
we had better start from, Captain Keane?"

"Mulhausen," replied the other promptly,
for with Keane the initial procedure was
already cut and dried.

"Mulhausen?  Capital!  I was thinking
of Strasburg, but your idea is better still.
Is there a good aerodrome there where we can
land?"

"Yes, on the banks of the little river Ill,
which runs into the Rhine a little lower down.
And once across the Rhine we are already in
the Black Forest, though we shall still have
a long tramp to the place which I suspect,"
added Keane, pouring out another cup of coffee.

"Oh, yes, I remember the place; the
aerodrome is near the junction of the
Rhine-Rhone Canal," replied his companion.

"You've got it, exactly.  Now we must
get away; it must already be seven o'clock,
and a fine morning to boot.  What says the
weather report about the Channel crossing?"

"Here it is," exclaimed Sharpe, passing a
copy of the *Times* across to his friend, who
turned over the pages and read as follows:--

.. vspace:: 2

"Flying prospects for to-day:--South-east
England and Continent, including the
Channel crossing, favourable for flying
for all types of machines till mid-day,
after that conditions will deteriorate,
squalls and heavy rains will predominate,
visibility will be poor, and conditions
will become unsuitable for cross-country
flying."

.. vspace:: 2

"Good!  Then we must get away at once,"
observed Sharpe, and within another five
minutes they were being hurled along towards
Hounslow, the aerodrome from which this
new adventure was to begin.

Forty-five minutes later a couple of
S.E.9s, the fastest machines in the service,
rose from the flying ground and steered a
course east-south-east for the Straits of
Dover.  Thirty-five minutes later, the
necessary signals having been accepted by the
Dover patrols, with throttles wide open, the
two daring young aviators rushed the Channel
at one hundred and fifty miles an hour.

The French patrols having been informed by
Dover, permitted them to pass unchallenged.
And now changing course till they steered
almost due south-east, they sped onwards,
catching now and again a glimpse of the old
battle-front of the days of 1914-1918, where
the shell-marked craters of the Hindenberg
line were still visible from the air.

Then they followed the railway line from
Laon to Rheims, left the ancient town of
Nancy to their left, and, crossing the Vosges
Mountains and forests a little to the north of
Belfort, they dropped down quietly to the
landing ground outside Mulhausen in Alsace,
as the clock in the Market Square struck the
hour of noon.

Having left their machines and flying gear
in charge of the commandant, they entered
the town, purchased a portable camp outfit,
and, dressed as tourists of the pedestrian and
naturalist type, continued their journey,
crossed the Rhine and entered the Schwarzwald,
ostensibly to study the fauna and flora
of the Black Forest.

"Phew!  I'm tired of this load.  Let us camp
here for the night, by this little clearing, where
these seldom trodden footpaths diverge,"
said Keane, some hours later, as, weary and
dusty with his three hours' tramp through
the bracken and the tousled undergrowth,
he threw down his heavy knapsack and nets,
and began to wipe the perspiration from his
forehead.

Then they lit a small fire of dried twigs,
cooked their evening meal, and lit their pipes.

After a quiet smoke, during which time
they carefully re-examined a survey map of
the Schwarzwald, they began to talk in
low whispers, whilst the sun descended
amongst the pines on the western heights,
over which they had dragged their weary feet.

"It is my opinion," whispered Keane,
"that we are within five miles of that secret
aerodrome."

His companion nodded, almost drowsily,
although every faculty was kept constantly alert.

"It is just possible that one of these paths
leads to the very spot, but it will be necessary
to explore them both.  We must be extremely
careful, however, for this professor is sure
to prove a wily opponent.  I hope, however,
some wood-cutter or peasant may pass this
way soon, and that we may learn something
from him which will help us," continued
the senior airman.

"What if the wood-cutter should prove
to be the professor himself?" asked Sharpe,
with a humorous twinkle in his eyes.

"It is even possible," returned his companion.

"In that case it would be diamond cut
diamond, Keane, eh?"

The other shrugged his shoulder at the
very thought, and prayed that such a
contingency might not happen, at any rate
until something tangible had first been
discovered.

"In three hours it will be midnight," he
said.  "If no one passes this way by then,
I think we must carry out our search in the
dark.  Time is pressing; we must find
something within another forty-eight hours, or
poor old Tempest will be at his wit's end,
and calling us home again.  He cannot leave
us long on this trail."

"The greater the pity.  A fortnight is not
too long to follow a trail like this," said
Sharpe.

"Yet you had to do things pretty smartly
in those dark days of 1917 and 1918, Sharpe."

"Yes, and there was some danger and
excitement attached to it, which sharpened
one's wits."

"Never fear!  There'll be both before
we have finished this trek," returned Keane.

"Hist!  What was that?" said Sharpe
in an undertone, as he caught the sound of
broken twigs.

"Someone approaching," whispered his companion.

They listened acutely now, with every
sense keenly alert.  Again they heard the
sound, and it seemed to come from the
western side of the open glade, where the last
dull glow of the sunset still revealed the edge
of the forest.

The camp fire had died down to a smoulder,
but Keane instinctively held his ground
sheet before the dying embers, lest their
presence should be betrayed.  He was anxious
to learn something of the nature of this
visitor before he revealed himself.

"Bah!  It is some creature of the forest,"
observed Sharpe, after a moment's hesitation.
"A wild boar or a red-spotted deer, most likely."

He was right, for the next moment a series
of grunts proceeded from the spot whence
came the sounds, and, as though suddenly
startled by the consciousness of some human
presence, the beast, a fine specimen of the
*Sus Scrofa*, with fierce protruding tusks and
long stiff bristles, broke cover, trotted swiftly
across the glade, within thirty yards of the
two watchers, and entered the forest on the
other side.

"So much for that little incident,"
muttered Sharpe, as he released his grip of the
Webley pistol, which his right hand had
instinctively grasped, when the dark shadow
broke from the margin of the trees.

Keane shook his head as though he disagreed
with his companion, and remarked in a low
voice, "The creature was evidently startled
or it would not have fled like that.  Its
scent is very keen, and as the wind is blowing
from the west, it suspected danger from that
quarter."





.. vspace:: 4

.. _`THE GHOSTLY VISITANT`:

.. class:: center large bold

   CHAPTER XVI


.. class:: center medium bold

   THE GHOSTLY VISITANT

.. vspace:: 2

A few moments later the two men were
startled by the sound of a human voice,
trolling out the words of some German
folk-song, and approaching from the same quarter
towards the clearing.

"This is our man," exclaimed Keane, as
he removed the screen from the fire and
stirred the dying embers into a cheerful blaze,
piling on more dried twigs, so that the trees
about the glade seemed to dance like fairies.

"Some woodman or peasant returning
from a party," observed Sharpe.

"I wonder where his cottage is," replied
his friend; "it must be somewhere in the
neighbourhood."

"We must welcome him to a belated supper.
Perhaps this good Rhine wine will open his
lips still more, and he may tell us something
about the birds of the Schwarzwald."

"Particularly the phantom-bird," facetiously
observed Keane with a smile.

Nearer and nearer came the stranger,
breaking occasionally into snatches of song,
as though he would frighten away the goblins
and weird creatures of the forest, for of the
superstitious peoples of Europe, the peasantry
of the Black Forest are most given to
credulous beliefs.  Perhaps this is because
no other district of Europe is so rich in
quaint legend, folklore and ghostly tradition.

Now and then the approaching stranger
would stop his singing to address some remark
to a companion; evidently some beast of
burden trudging beside him.  The next
moment the figure of a man, leading a
pack-horse through the forest, suddenly emerged
upon the clearing.  Catching a sight of the
dancing flames which mounted skyward
as one of the airmen stirred the fire into
life, and beholding the dark figures of
the two strangers, the newcomer, suddenly
stopped, apparently half-terrified by the
sudden apparition.

"Geistlich!" he muttered, staring with
wide-open eyes towards the sudden flame.

"Guten abend, freund!" exclaimed
Keane, wishing to draw the man into conversation.

The man's fears departed as soon as he
discovered that he was addressed by human
beings like himself, for in his first wild flight of
fancy he feared it was far otherwise, and that
he had suddenly come upon one of those
forbidden glades, where the sprites and goblins
dance after dark.

"Guten abend!" he replied, and, being
asked to join the company, made haste to
do so, reining in his loaded horse and tethering
him to a tree-stump close by.

"'Tis late to travel these lonely woods,
friend," said Keane in excellent German.

"Yes, 'tis late, but the moon will soon be
up, and then, why, 'twill be better footing,"
replied the stranger, whose full, round face
and longing eyes were already directed
towards a wicker-covered bottle, which seemed
to hold something good, so that he smacked
his lips once or twice, and in fancy he was
already draining the sweet nectar which the
bottle contained.

"Have you far to go?" asked Sharpe.

"Why, yes, 'tis another seven miles to my
cottage in the woods."

"Then stay with us an hour until the
moon shall rise and clear away the goblins
of the Schwarzwald," urged Keane, who, by
this time, had been able to examine the
stranger's face by the light of the fire, and to
read it like a book.

"A simple, credulous fellow, a true peasant
of the Schwarzwald, untouched by the outer
world," he told himself.  "He should be
useful to us."  Then, passing to him the
wicker-covered bottle, he said:--

"Good Rhine wine from Bacharach, Hans.
Taste it!"

   |  "Ach, from Bacharach on the Rhine,
   |  Comes the finest sort of wine,"

exclaimed the stranger in the rude dialect
of the Black Forest, and his round eyes
sparkled as he clutched the bottle, raised it
to his lips, and drank half a pint without
stopping to take breath.

"'Tis a long time since I tasted such rich
and luscious wine, gentlemen," said the
peasant, handing back the bottle.

"Pray be seated and rest awhile," urged
his companions, and nothing loath to keep
such excellent company, Hans, if such was
really his name, sat down by the fire.

"Pray, what brings you to the lonely
Schwarzwald, gentlemen?  Have you come
to hunt for the wild boar, or to fish the
mountain streams?" he asked, "for I can
show you where the biggest fish are to be
found, and where the wild pig rears her
litters."

"Butterflies and birds, especially birds,"
replied Keane, pointing to his nets, and his
neat little boxes for packing specimens.

"Birds?  Ach, there is one bird which
sometimes flies in these parts which you
will never catch," said the peasant, speaking
in lowered tones, as though half-frightened
by his own words.

"Ha!  What bird is that?" asked the others.

"Hist!" exclaimed Hans, raising his
forefinger, and looking guardedly around.  "It
is the phantom-bird!"

"The phantom-bird?" echoed the two
airmen, who could scarcely believe their eyes
and ears, as they earnestly regarded this
solemn, frightened, half-childish man, who
had evidently seen the very thing they had
come so far to find, but who believed it to be
something supernatural.

The two Englishmen glanced at each other.
Had they really found someone who could
enlighten them about this mysterious
aeroplane, for he could certainly be referring to
nothing else?  And at that moment Keane
blessed his lucky star, which had led him to
choose these wild forest regions for their
jumping-off ground.  Still, they must not
appear too curious, lest they should betray
the reason of their presence here.

Keane shook his head as, with an apparently
incredulous laugh, and a sympathetic motion
of the hand, he would banish all tales of
ghostly visitants to the realm of limbo.
This only had the effect of egging on the
speaker to tell his tale, however.

"Ach, Himmel!" he exclaimed.  "Es war geistlich!"

"Did you see it, then?"

"Ya, das hab ich!" returned the other.

"Was it in the day or the night-time when
you saw it?" asked Sharpe.

"It was night, about this time, and
there was but a half-moon above the tree tops."

"Were you very much frightened, Hans?"

"Yes, I was scared to death almost.  I
thought the old man of the mountains had
come for me.  I had been to market to sell
my little wooden-clocks, and near this very
place the huge grey phantom bird swooped
down, then circled round and round and
disappeared there, over there!" and the
peasant, his eyes almost starting out of his
head with terror, pointed away to the east.

"Bah!  It was no bird, it was an aeroplane,
Hans.  You should not have been frightened,"
exclaimed Keane, who had been taking
particular note of the direction in which the
mysterious machine had disappeared.

"Yes, a ghost-aeroplane!" iterated the
Schwarzwalder.  "There has never been anything
like it before."

"Did anybody else see it?" queried Sharpe,
passing the bottle once again to Hans, who
stayed but a moment to wipe his lips with his
sleeve, and to take another deep drink of the wine.

"Ja, it was seen by Jacob Stendahl the
same night, not far from this very place."

"And who is Jacob Stendahl?" asked Keane.

"He is the woodcutter whose cottage is
down by the stream, two miles away.  That
path leads to his house.  He was terrified;
he said it was an evil omen, and next morning
his little Gretchen died."

"And what happened to you, Hans?" asked Sharpe.

"That same night my sow farrowed, and
all the litter were dead next morning," replied
the peasant gravely.

A deep silence followed this last remark, and
the Schwarzwalder brooded over his misfortune,
and lamented to himself the loss of his
fine litter of young pigs.

The two airmen felt certain now that Hans
had really seen the mysterious aeroplane,
and they plied him with a dozen further
questions as to the noise it made in passing,
and the speed at which it travelled, and
whether anyone else had seen or heard of it.
To some of their questions Hans could give
no coherent answer.  He said, however, that
very few people lived in this part of the
forest, and parts of it were seldom or never
trodden by human foot.  He had spoken
to one or two about it, and they also had
either seen or heard of it from someone else,
and the general opinion amongst the Schwarzwalders
in that part, was, that it was one of
the dead German airmen, whose spirit came
to visit the spot in a ghost-aeroplane.

"Which of the German aces is it, then,
that revisits this place, do they think?"
asked Keane.

"Some say that it is the ghost of Immelmann,
who used to come here before the war to
hunt the wild boar; others say that it is the
spirit of Richthofen, but I cannot say,"
replied Hans.

On the question of speed and noise,
however, the peasant declared that he was
certain.

"It must have been a ghost-aeroplane,"
he said, "because it was silent, and its speed
was like the passing of a spirit when it leaves
the body."

A deep silence followed these words, but
at the end of a few minutes Hans, pointing
to the east, said:--

"Look, friends, the moon is rising already.
It is getting lighter, and I must go."

Then, untethering his pack-horse, he
thanked the strangers for their hospitality,
gave them the direction and situation of his
cottage, where they would be welcome,
should they care to visit him during their
stay in the Schwarzwald, and, bidding them
adieu, started off on his journey through the
forest.





.. vspace:: 4

.. _`THE WATCHERS`:

.. class:: center large bold

   CHAPTER XVII


.. class:: center medium bold

   THE WATCHERS

.. vspace:: 2

They watched the Schwarzwalder and his
beast of burden disappear into the forest,
then for some minutes the two Englishmen,
buried in thought, sat by the embers of the
fire.  Neither spake to his companion for a
while, as, deep in contemplation, each
endeavoured to fathom in his own mind this
secret of the phantom aeroplane, this riddle
of the sphinx.  At last Keane addressed his
colleague.

"This travelling clock-maker has confirmed
our theory, Sharpe," he said.

"Yes, the simple fellow has helped us not
a little," replied the other.

"We must continue our search without
further delay, lest this talkative peasant
should himself encounter this genius, and
unwittingly announce the presence of two
strangers in the forest.  That is my great
fear now."

"You don't think this fellow misled us, Keane?"

"Why do you ask?  He was too dull-witted
to be anything in the nature of an
accomplice," replied the captain.

"Quite so, but he might have been a tool
in the hands of this mystery man," added
Sharpe, as a sudden feeling of suspicion shot
across his mind.

"In that case we ought to have followed
him, but I scarcely think it worth while.  A
dull-witted man of that type would have been
too dangerous to his employer, even when
used merely as a tool.  The only danger I
anticipate from that quarter, unless I am
utterly mistaken, is that the fellow may
encounter someone in the forest who is
engaged in the plot, and thus reveal our
presence, as I stated previously," observed
Keane, as he began to get his traps together,
ready for the march.

"Anyhow, we have learned something from
the Schwarzwalder."

"By the way, Sharpe, you might tune up
your little wireless pocket 'phone, and ascertain
if there are any messages floating around."

"So I will; we might pick up something,"
replied the junior airman, and the next
moment he climbed into a straggling,
low-branched tree, uncoiled a small aerial, and,
starting his little battery, listened attentively
for any stray message that might be floating
through the ether.

"Anything?" asked Keane, coming to the
foot of the tree.

"Nothing," remarked the other.

"Then we'll push off."

Five minutes later, having adjusted their
packs, collected their nets, and having stamped
out the remains of the fire, they were ready
to start.

"Which path shall we take?" asked
Sharpe, for there were two ill-defined,
grass-grown tracks which led away from the
clearing.  One led past Jacob Stendahl's cottage,
and had been followed by the Schwarzwalder,
and the other, the lesser trodden of the two,
led they knew not where.

"Let us take the one on the right," said
Keane, indicating the latter.  "It is more
likely to yield us something," and the next
moment they were hidden from sight amid the
dense undergrowth of this part of the forest.

Scarcely had they disappeared from view
when one of the upper branches of a tree near
to the edge of the clearing suddenly appeared
to move, then to swing loosely for a second,
and drop to the ground.  Then for a moment
there was silence, save for the call of a
nightjar which had been disturbed, but a moment
later a dark shadow debouched from the
edge of the forest and crossed quietly but
quickly to where the fire had been burning
a few minutes previously.

A low whistle, repeated twice, brought a
similar shadow from the opposite side of the
clearing, and the two indistinct, but human
shapes, met each other face to face.

"Who were they, Professor?" asked the
second arrival of the first.

"Himmel!  Ich weiss nicht, Strauss,"
replied his companion, who was none other
than the renowned Professor Rudolf Weissmann,
"but I fear that they portend us no good."

"Let us examine the ground to see if they
have left any clue behind."

So for the next few minutes the professor and
his mechanic searched the ground carefully
for any little souvenir which the travellers
might have left behind them.  And whilst
they searched, they talked in low, but eager
whispers.

"Did you hear that half-witted Schwarzwalder
talking aloud about the *Scorpion*?"
asked the professor.

"Yes.  He called it a phantom-bird,
did he not?" replied Strauss.  "I heard
nearly all he said, he spoke so loudly and
coarsely."

"Could you hear what the others said?"

"Not a word; they spoke so quietly, save
once or twice when they spoke to the clock-maker."

"Nor could I, and that is what makes me
so suspicious," returned Weissmann.

"They spoke good German, though,"
ventured the mechanic.

"Bah!  Of course they would.  Nevertheless,
it's my firm opinion that they're
foreigners, and that they're here for some
special reason."

"And that reason is?"

"To find out about the *Scorpion*," snarled
the mathematician.

"Ach!" exclaimed the other; "the *Scorpion*
is two thousand miles away."

"Then their next business is to find the
aerodrome," said the professor.

"Blitz! that they'll never do except by
accident.  Think of those live wires waiting
for them if they get within a hundred yards
of it.  We have found six dead men there
already; I don't want to dig any more
graves," returned Strauss.

They had continued the search for fully ten
minutes, and the professor, occasionally
flashing his pocket torch, was carefully examining
the long grass within a radius of some twelve
of fifteen feet of the spot where the fire had
been.  Wise man that he was, he carried
out his final investigation to the leeward
of the fire, trusting that the breeze might
have carried some paper fragment, used
in lighting a pipe or starting the fire, in
that direction.  Nor was he disappointed.
He was just about to conclude his search,
however, when his sharp eyes caught sight of
a piece of half burnt and twisted paper
hidden away amongst the longer grass.

"Donnerwetter!" he exclaimed under his
breath, as he flashed his torch upon the paper
for a second.  "I thought so; here is evidence
enough for an execution."

"What is it, mein herr?" asked the
mechanic, hastening to his side.

"Do you see that?" said his companion,
untwisting the paper once again and flashing
a light upon it.

"Ja! ja!" replied the other as he strained
his eyes in the attempt to decipher the
handwriting on the half-burnt sheet.  "But I
cannot understand it, for it is in a foreign
language."

"It is part of a small fragment of an
envelope, and the writing, which is in English,
is certainly almost undecipherable, but I can
distinguish the letters '...eane'."


"Ach, Himmel!  That is Keane!" replied
Strauss.  "He is one of the aerial police,
is he not?"

"You are right, Fritz.  This letter was
addressed through the English post to Captain
Keane, one of Tempest's best men, if not
indeed his most brilliant 'brain-wave,'"
hissed the professor.

"Donner und blitzen!  Then he has come
here to search for the *Scorpion*, and the
aerodrome."

"Yes, but look, he only left London
a few hours ago, for here is the London
postmark in the corner, bearing yesterday's
date."

"And his companion?  Who is he?"
asked the mechanic.

"It must be that other scout pilot, Sharpe;
they work together.  But, mark my word,
Friedrich Strauss, they are mistaken if they
think to find an easy victim in Professor Rudolf
Weissmann.  I'll teach them to track me
like a murderer through the Schwarzwald.
They have come to the Black Forest, and
here they shall stay."  And for once, the
quiet, mild-mannered professor jerked out
his words with unusual vehemence.

The mechanic saw that his chief was deeply
agitated by this sudden discovery, which
confirmed all his recent fears, and to allay his
feelings, he said,

"But they will never find the aerodrome,
Professor, or, if indeed they find it, they will
never enter it alive; think of the preparations
you have made for all uninvited guests,"
and the speaker shuddered, for he knew
something of the terrors of that "death-circle"
in the lonely forest.

"Bah! it is my secret they want, the
secret of that mysterious power which drives
the *Scorpion*."

"Uranis?" ventured the other.

The professor nodded, for he regarded it as
the greater success of the two.  Without it
the *Scorpion* would be useless; with it a
dozen *Scorpions* could be built, once the
facilities were provided.  Unfortunately the
discovery had been effected too late to win
the war for the Fatherland.  Besides, he had
not received the encouragement from the
government that he had deserved, and his soul
was consequently embittered.

"Come," he said at last, "we must get
back to the aerodrome and watch for these
half-witted Englishmen.  Once there we can
afford to laugh at them.  They will soon be
held in a vice.  But I must send a further
message to the *Scorpion* out on the Hamadian
plains, hinting how matters stand.  After
that communications may have to cease for
a while.  As for these death-hunters, they
will find out presently that they are up against
something far more terrible than anything
which old Jacob Stendahl or the wood-cutter
have ever imagined in their wildest fancy.
The secret of the Schwarzwald is not for them.
I hold the master-key, Fritz, and when I
die that master-key will be broken."

And the two men, who had been aware of
the presence of the Englishmen ever since
they entered the forest, and had watched
them accordingly, now moved off in the same
direction which the latter had taken half an
hour before.





.. vspace:: 4

.. _`"LIVE WIRES"`:

.. class:: center large bold

   CHAPTER XVIII


.. class:: center medium bold

   "LIVE WIRES"

.. vspace:: 2

Matters in the Schwarzwald were now
rapidly nearing a climax; the final contest
between German brains and English wit could
not much longer be delayed.  For the moment
Keane and Sharpe, unknown to themselves,
were enmeshed in the network of a deathly
trap.  Nothing less than a miracle, or
something approaching the same, could now set
them free from their perilous position.  One
thing was certain, and that was that this
clever but unscrupulous mathematician and
engineer, who was now their declared enemy,
would not hesitate to adopt the most extreme
measures to get rid of his unwelcome visitors.
Unfortunately his power, which almost
approached the supernatural, made him a
dangerous and a wily foe.

It was now past midnight, but the two
Englishmen, who had left the track some time
before at a point where its course was suddenly
changed, and had continued their journey
by the aid of a luminous compass, and the
uncertain light of the moon, came at last to
another halt.

"Let us stay here a while, Sharpe," his
companion had whispered.  "I have a strong
premonition of some impending danger."

"The deuce you have!" remarked Sharpe,
who well knew what this meant in a man like
Keane, whose psychic faculties were not to be
sneered at.

"Yes.  I cannot explain it, but there is
some hidden danger right ahead of us; of
that I am as certain as that we are in the
Schwarzwald.  We had better lie down a
while and await developments quietly."

Nothing loath, Sharpe unfastened his
shoulder straps, slid his equipment quietly to
the ground, and laid himself down beside his
companion.

For the moment all was quiet.  The moon
was hidden behind a bank of clouds, and
it was therefore very dark, but sounds
travel far in the night air of the forest,
and when they conversed, they spoke only
in whispers.

"It may be," remarked Keane, "that the
spot we seek is just in front of us, though I
cannot see any glade or clearing as yet; it is
too dark."

"Is it likely that there are any booby-traps
hereabouts, set by this wily professor?"
asked his companion.

"I cannot say; he may have some outer
system of defence."

"Or even a system of ground signals to
announce the approach of strangers, whose
presence might be undesirable to him,"
added Sharpe.

"It is possible," whispered Keane, whose
mind was actively engaged in preparation for
eventualities, in view of his inexplicable
premonitions.  Suddenly he started and
touched his comrade lightly with his raised
forefinger.

"Hist!" he said, in a voice which could
not have carried further than a couple of yards
Then he carefully raised his head, and, turning
his eyes towards the thicket through which
they had come, he tried to read the secret
which it contained.  His alarm was justified,
yet was he mystified not a little, for the more
immediate danger seemed to come from behind.

"Can you hear it, Sharpe?"

"Yes, the same crackling of twigs; another
wild boar," remarked his friend facetiously.

Keane shook his head, for his sensitive
ears had told him that the footsteps which he
had heard were those of human beings.  Nor
was he mistaken, for a moment later they both
heard distinctly, not merely the crackling of
twigs and the rustle of the bracken under
heavy footfalls, but voices, human voices,
conversing in a guarded and careful manner.

"None of your Schwarzwald peasants this
time," he murmured, fingering his Webley
already, for he instinctively felt that this
time they were beset by danger both before
and behind.  And indeed, these two men,
during all their adventures in the secret
service during the war, were never in more
deadly peril than at this moment, as they
were soon to learn.

Scarcely daring to breathe, much less to
whisper now, the two Englishmen watched
furtively for the coming of the strangers, who
were now less than a score of yards away,
but were approaching very stealthily, as
though they were searching for something on
the ground.

"Who can they be?" wondered Keane.
"And what can they be searching for?"

"Poachers," Sharpe was thinking, "merely
poachers, searching for their booby-traps."

Nearer and nearer came the dark shadows,
and both the airmen had their Webleys trained
on them now.  In that moment they might have
shot them down easily, and before long they
would regret they had not done so.  But that is
not the English way, for the ordinary Englishman
would give even a dog his chance, as the
saying goes.  Still, there are dogs and dogs,
and sometimes human dogs are worse than
the four-footed ones.  But the Englishmen
were uncertain; they did not know what
world-wide conspirators were these two men.
They did not know what fearful deeds would
happen even that day on the Hamadian
desert, two thousand miles away, but all of it
engineered from this spot, and made possible
by these two men.  And as they did not know,
they did not fire, but waited.

"Gott in Himmel, where does that
*verdammt* live wire begin?" asked one of the
men in a low but vehement voice.  It was
the professor himself, searching for one of
his own man-traps.

Sharpe glanced at Keane, but the other
motioned him not to fire.

"We're learning something, old man!"
he whispered.  "This is the gateway to the
aerodrome."

The two men had passed them now,
passed within six yards, and yet had missed
them.  They were now groping a little
way ahead, looking for secret signs and
marks lest they should be hoist upon their
own petard.

"Donner und Blitzen!  Have you found
it yet, Fritz?" called the professor a little
louder to his friend.

"Here it is, Professor!  Be careful ... there
are six wires already laid for those
*verdammt* Englishmen, Keane and--what is
the name of the other?"

"Sharpe!" rapped out the professor, as
though he had known the man all his life.

At these words the two Englishmen looked
at each other in blank amazement.  And
before their astonishment could subside, the
opportunity which had been given to them of
ridding the world of two great conspirators
had passed.

"One--two--six!" they heard the
mechanic say, as he helped the professor over
the deadly maze, scarcely fifteen yards in front
of them, and then their dark forms had merged
into the trees and disappeared, their voices
becoming fainter and fainter.

"Great Scott!" gasped Sharpe, when he
recovered from his astonishment; "we've
walked right into the hornets' nest."

"We should have done if we'd gone another
fifteen yards," replied Keane, wiping the
perspiration from his forehead.

"Fortunate you had that presentiment of
impending danger," said his friend.

"We should have been lying dead and half
grilled over his deadly wires but for that
strange, weird feeling of mine," replied Keane.

"But there, after all our attempts at
concealment, he knows all about us."

"Even our names seem familiar to him,"
remarked the senior airman, greatly puzzled.

"I cannot understand it," replied the other.
"Who can have given him this information?"

"Who indeed?" asked Keane.  "It is as
great a mystery as the other matter."

"Can it be the woodcutter or the clockmaker,
do you think, for Hans is sure to have
called at Jacob Stendahl's cottage and told
him the news."

But Keane shook his head, as he remarked:
"Neither Hans nor yet the woodcutter could
possibly have told the professor our names.
This evil genius must have other sources of
information at his command.  Possibly he
has an agent at Mulhausen aerodrome, or
even at Scotland Yard.  To a man like this,
a thousand ways are open.  I cannot say,
but this I know, we are on the edge of the
biggest mystery I have ever encountered."

"And we might easily have shot him.
Bah! it would have been better to have
fired, Keane," added Sharpe somewhat
bitterly.  "Cannot we follow him now?"

"No!" replied his companion, firmly.
"It is better as it is."

"Why?" demanded the other.

"Rest content, Sharpe," said Keane.
"To-day we have discovered the aerodrome;
to-morrow we will capture it."





.. vspace:: 4

.. _`THE DEVIL'S WORKSHOP`:

.. class:: center large bold

   CHAPTER XIX


.. class:: center medium bold

   THE DEVIL'S WORKSHOP

.. vspace:: 2

Patiently, now, the two Englishmen waited
for the dawn.  Till then it would not be
safe to move in any direction.  As they lay
in the long bracken and ferns, however,
they were able to converse quietly, and to
discuss their plans for the coming day.  The
spot they had come so far to seek was now
before them.  The live wires, just a few feet
ahead of them, had been duly located, and
now that the danger was known, it was not
insuperable.  It was an added mystery to
them, nevertheless, how this wizard secured
sufficient voltage to make these wires so
deadly.  They assumed, however, that
powerful dynamos, worked by this same silent
energy that propelled the aeroplane, were
at work somewhere near this spot.

Dawn came at last; a faint yellow streak
lit up the horizon away to the east.  Then
a crimson flush revealed the distant
tree-tops, and the moon and stars faded away.
A hundred songsters awoke the stillness of the
forest, for another day had dawned, and the
sable curtain of night rolled westward.

"See, there is a clearing fifty yards ahead,"
were Keane's first words to his companion.

"It is the aerodrome, the secret aerodrome!"
replied Sharpe, peering through the trees.

"Let us work round a little way and find
the workshop or hangar.  I fancy we shall
find it on the other side of the glade."

"Mind those beastly wires, then!" replied
Sharpe, as he began to crawl through the
dense undergrowth after his companion, who
had already started to make a circuit of the
outer defences on his hands and knees.

The next half-hour was spent in cautious
creeping and crawling just outside those
death-dealing wires.  At the end of that
time, however, Keane made a discovery.
He had completed about half the circuit,
when, peering carefully through the trees,
he fancied he could make out the camouflaged
fabric which covered some temporary
building.  So carefully was this place hidden
amongst the trees that he had to look twice
or three times before he could make up his
mind that he was not mistaken.  At last he
convinced himself that he had located the
workshop, else, why should the place have
been so carefully hidden.  Waiting for his
companion to reach him, he pointed to the
object and whispered, "There it is, not
thirty yards away!"

"Shall we get over these wires, and rush
the place?" asked Sharpe.

"No.  Let us continue our journey until
we have completed the circuit.  We may
make another discovery yet.  Come along;
fortune favours the brave."

They had scarcely crept another hundred
yards, however, when a rustling in the leaves,
accompanied by a snort, revealed the presence
of another wild boar, which had evidently
scented their presence.

"Confound the pig!" muttered Sharpe,
who was afraid the sounds might lead to their
premature discovery.  But Keane thought
otherwise, for, to his quick mind and instructive
genius, this trifling event seemed providential.

"The pig!" he whispered, pointing to
the spot whence came the occasional snorts
of the angry, disturbed creature.

"What of it?" queried Sharpe.

"Let's get to the other side of the beast
and drive it against the wires."

"And roast the brute alive for the benefit
of their breakfast, I suppose."

Keane laughed silently, and wondered how
far the conspirators used this live wire to
keep themselves supplied with food.  He
knew, however, that a wild boar on the
live wires would soon bring out the inmates
of that mysterious house in the woods, and
would sufficiently distract their attention to
give the airmen their opportunity.

The next moment, having made a sufficiently
extensive circuit, so as to get the
wild boar between them and the wires,
they began closing in on the beast, an
operation not devoid of peril, should the boar
decide to attack them.  Fortune favoured
them, however.  The angry beast, noting
the approach of some unseen enemy, by the
movements of the tangled undergrowth, half
frightened and half infuriated, made off
in the direction of the clearing, uttering
further snorts.  The next moment he had
touched the first of those deadly wires, and,
with a wild scream which rang through the
forest, he leapt into the air, then fell back
quivering but dead across that fatal grill.

"Back--back for your life!" hissed Keane,
as he made haste back to the spot where
they had sheltered, close to the camouflaged
hangar.

The next instant the watchers saw the
professor and his assistant rush out of the
little building, towards the place where the
animal lay right across the first four wires.
In their excitement they both seemed to
have forgotten the presence of the two
Englishmen in the woods during the previous
evening, for they were both unarmed.  Or
perhaps it was that they imagined them to be
the present victims of their cunning.

"Hoch!  Another royal boar for the larder,
Fritz!" exclaimed the professor.  "We shall
have the winter's supply complete very soon."

"Gut, mein herr!" came the answer.

"Better go back and switch off the current,
so that we can take it away," urged the chief,
and, staying but a second to see the royal
victim, the assistant complied.

This was what the two Englishmen had
been waiting for.  The moment of action
had come at last.  Gripping their pistols, they
made ready to advance and take possession
of the hangar during the absence of the inmates.

"Sind Sie fertig, Friedrich?" called the
professor.

"Ja, das bin ich!" replied the other, as
he left the workshop, and rejoined his companion.

"Come along, the wires are dead now,"
whispered Keane, and, keeping well within
the shadows of the trees, the two men crept
forward, gained the rear of the structure,
then cautiously worked their way round and
entered the hangar unobserved.

One glance about the well-fitted
workshop sufficed.  There were no further
occupants, and they lowered their pistols.  Sharpe
at once sprang to the lever which regulated
the powerful electrical current and clutched
it.  In another instant the two men without
would have paid the extreme penalty, for
they would have been instantly killed by
their own evil device, but Keane stopped him:--

"Don't!" he said.  "We have much to
learn.  The professor at least must be taken
alive, if possible.  The secret he holds is
too precious to be lost.  Let us hide!"

"Where can we hide?" asked the other,
somewhat disappointed, and amazed at the
further risks which his companion appeared
willing to take in order to gratify an insatiable
curiosity.  "The tables may be quickly
turned upon us."

"We can shoot them as a last resort, if
that is necessary," urged Keane, who knew
the priceless value of the secrets which this
place contained.

"Hist!  They are coming."

"This way!" whispered Keane, and he
drew his companion into a little recess, which
had evidently been curtained off for the
mechanic's sleeping berth.

They had barely withdrawn themselves
into this narrow apartment when the two
men entered, dragging the carcase of the
wild boar with them.

"Leave it there for a moment, Strauss.
The message from the Rittmeister is due.
I must also send him that other message
again, as the first has not been acknowledged,"
were the professor's first words.

"Yes, sir.  Shall I start the dynamos
again?" asked the assistant.

"Perhaps you'd better, but first hand me
that message book and the secret code."

The next moment the professor was busy
at the wireless keys, transmitting some
message to the far deserts of Arabia.

"By all the saints," gasped Keane, "he's
sending a message to the raider, the *Scorpion*,
as he calls it.  I must have that secret
code at all hazards.  I wonder what he is saying?"

For some time the chief conspirator was
engaged coding and decoding messages at
the little table where the aerials, carefully
hidden amongst the trees without, had their
terminus.  And in that moment Keane
thanked his stars that he had waited for
this, for he saw new possibilities opening out
before him.  Once in possession of this
mechanism and the necessary codes, he could
communicate at will with the distant raider,
who was threatening the whole civilised world
by his almost superhuman powers of brigandage.
He could recall the raider also, and
make his capture certain, once he could secure
absolute possession of this little citadel.

For the present he could do nothing but
wait, however, and see how matters developed.
Once, the assistant came quite close to their
hiding-place, and both men again gripped their
Webleys.  At this moment even to breathe
seemed fraught with danger.  If the man
should enter the little apartment, he must die,
and the professor must be immediately threatened
with the same penalty unless he surrendered.

"Ha!  So far so good!" gasped Keane,
as the mechanic recrossed the workshop
without actually entering their hiding-place.

"Teufel!" spluttered the professor.  "Here
is that fool Tempest trying to communicate
with those two *verdammt* Englishmen who
are still roaming about in the Schwarzwald.
He little knows that we possess his secret code."

"Himmel!  What does he say?" asked the other.

"Wants them to report progress at once,
and let him know how matters stand," said
Weissmann in a mocking tone.  "He says he
will come over himself, if necessary."

"Donnerwetter!  Ask him to come,
Professor.  He might as well grill with his
accomplices on the live wires, for that's where
they'll be before the day is out, unless they
abandon their futile search," replied Strauss.

"This fiend is a perfect wizard!" thought
Keane, and his glance signified as much to
Sharpe.  "How he manages to get hold of
these secrets is beyond me.  And yet, there
is a defect in his mad science, for he does
not know that we're here, and that his own life
is in our hands.  Fool that he is, he will soon
learn that the wit of an Englishman is more
than a match for his boasted knowledge,"
and here the senior airman carefully withdrew
a cartridge from his Webley and inserted
another, silently--a cartridge that had a
specific mission.  His companion watched
him and repeated the action with his own
weapon, for he understood.

"Blitz! but I've half a mind to send for
Tempest," mused the professor, who was still
toying with the keys of the wireless instrument.

"Send for him, Professor," urged his
accomplice.  "Those Englishmen are getting
too close to be pleasant.  The British army
of occupation will be carrying out a thorough
search of the Schwarzwald if these men get
away, and then where shall we be?"

"We are in the neutral zone, though,"
replied the other.

"But we're contravening the Peace Regulations,
sir, and the English will not stand
upon ceremony.  It will be too late should
these men get away."

"Donner und Teufel!" rasped out the
angry professor.  "Don't speak to me of the
Peace Regulations.  There will be no peace
till Germany regains all and more than all
she has lost.  I will send for this Commissioner
of Aerial Police, for I believe that he
and his two accomplices, Keane and Sharpe,
are the only ones so far who know anything
that matters about the secret of the
Schwarzwald," and he began to tap the keys, reeling
out the words as he sent them.

Keane listened acutely for the cyphers of
the code.  They were:--

"Z--X--B--T--V--O--P..."

and he understood that Tempest was to come
at once, make for Mulhausen aerodrome,
then take a bee-line, east-north-east over the
Schwarzwald until he saw a smoke column,
where a suitable landing-ground would be
found, and his accomplices would await him.

"Ach!" shrieked the professor, with a
fiendish laugh.  "The smoke column will
mark his last resting-place.  They shall all
be buried together, these mad Englishmen.
We will have more live wires stretched across
his landing-ground, and as the wild boar died,
so will these men die who dared to follow me
into the Schwarzwald."

"The wild boar!  Hoch!  Hoch!" exclaimed
his companion.  "It is a fitting
tribute for the English are swine!"

"And the *Scorpion* shall witness the
inglorious end of these men," cried the
professor, as a sudden idea came into his mind.

"Der *Scorpion*?" queried Fritz, looking
up amazed from his task.  "What do you
mean, Professor?"

"Why, the Rittmeister will have finished
his work in the Hamadian Desert this
afternoon.  His instructions are to resign the
Sultanate of those regions for the present,
for the skies will be thick with British scouts
by to-morrow."

"But then he goes to Ireland to work with
the revolutionists there, does he not, mein herr?"

"Ja! ja! but I will ask him to call here
for a day or two before he proceeds.  He
will have much to tell us, and Spitzer, Carl
and Max would like to see these dangerous
opponents safely out of the way, for at present
they are the only enemies to be considered."

"Gut!" ejaculated Strauss, catching
something of the professor's enthusiasm.

Keane would have intervened before this,
for he had noted Sharpe's impatience, but
he intimated as well as he could by mute signs
and otherwise, that the fiend was doing their
work for them.

"Let him send this message first," he whispered
in his companion's ears, "and then----"  But
the sentence was completed by further
cabalistic signs.

Again the professor turned to the keys, and
sent his last instructions through the ether
waves to his confederate, the brigand of the
eastern skies.





.. vspace:: 4

.. _`"HANDS UP!"`:

.. class:: center large bold

   CHAPTER XX


.. class:: center medium bold

   "HANDS UP!"

.. vspace:: 2

"Haende in die hohe!" cried Keane as soon
as the last message had been sent.

"Der Teufel!" gasped the professor as
two swift shadows darted out from behind
the curtain, and the two men whom he had
just been discussing with such utter contempt
confronted him and his accomplice with
gleaming pistols.

"Hands up!" repeated Keane, anxious
to give the professor another chance.

With a blasphemous oath the man of
evil genius, who saw that he had been
outwitted, reached for a small hand grenade
which lay beside him on the table, and
shouted:--

"Never!"

"Then take that!" cried the Englishman,
and two puffs of greenish smoke, following a
sharp crackle, burst simultaneously from the
pistols, for they had both fired together.

The new Asphixor bullets took immediate
effect.  Both the Germans staggered, clutched
their throats as though to ward off the effects
of this new powerful gas recently discovered
and adapted by that eminent British scientist,
Sir Joseph Verne--then lurched and fell,
whilst their opponents stepped back and
quickly fitted on their safety masks.

"They are both sound asleep," observed
Keane, when, the fumes having cleared away,
he threw aside his respirator and carefully
examined the unconscious men.

"Let them sleep," said Sharpe, who would
have adopted even more drastic measures
if he could have had his own way.  "'Tis
scant mercy they would have shown to us if
we had been in their power."

"And now let us get to work, for they will
awaken in seven or eight hours, and we
have much to do.  We must prepare for
Colonel Tempest, and also for this raider,"
urged Keane.

"But they will not come to-day, Captain."

"Scarcely, but we must be prepared for
anything.  There are only a couple of us."

"Shall we secure these men, in case they
awake earlier than the stipulated time?"

"No, let us remove their slumbering forms
behind the curtain there; we will attend to
them before they awake.  I do not like the
idea of strapping down unconscious men,
even though they are criminals.  We will
watch them from time to time."

Then for the next half-hour they carried
out a careful examination of the hangar and
its contents.  They were amazed at the
intricate and wonderful mechanism with
which the place was fitted.  It seemed
impossible that these things could have been
transported hither without attracting
attention.  Parts of aeroplane wings, struts,
propellers, engine-fittings, strange, weird-looking
cylinders, retorts, analytical appliances,
instruments and vessels for chemical research,
powerful but silent dynamos, and numberless
other things, all neatly arranged, and
apparently in working order, half filled the place.

The further they carried their investigation
the more were these two Englishmen
bewildered by what they saw.

"Is it possible," gasped Keane, "or am I
only dreaming?  We have discovered the
home of the super-alchemist.  After this,
nothing will surprise me."

"We have discovered the devil's workshop,"
replied Sharpe, who did not appear to
be half so enraptured as his friend.

"Nay, we shall find the philosopher's stone,
or the *elixir vitae* soon," replied Keane,
continuing his investigation.

"We are more likely to find the *elixir
mortis* than anything else," said the gloomy
one.  "This place gives me the shivers.  I
am sure that I shall have cold feet for the rest
of my life."

"After this, Hermes and Geber will be dull
reading," continued the enthusiast.  "Give
me the Schwarzwald every time for the real
thrill of the alchemist."

"Their time might have been more
profitably employed, at any rate," remarked
Sharpe.

"Yes, it is a thousand pities that the
wonderful brain which designed and organised
all this should have had nothing better in
view than brigandage and world revolution."

"More misdirected energy," moaned
Sharpe; "the greatest brains often make the
greatest criminals."

"You're a veritable misanthrope, Sharpe!"
said his companion, laughing.

"I have reason to be," returned the other.

"What do you mean?"

"I mean this--we're not out of the wood yet."

"I agree; we're in the very centre of it,"
replied Keane.

"Yet you did not inflict the *coup de grâce*
on the diabolical vipers, and they will shortly
awake.  Moreover, the *Scorpion* may arrive
unexpectedly, and we shall be unprepared for her."

"What would you do?"

"Bring over the machines from Mulhausen,
ready to fight this air fiend when he comes."

"Ho!  So you're longing for another real
air fight, are you, like the 'scraps' we used
to have with the Richthofen 'circus'?"

"At any rate, we'd better prepare.  Then
I'd bind those two criminals hand and foot or
surround them with live wires, so that, should
they awake unexpectedly, they would not
dare to stir."

"There is certainly something in what you
suggest about bringing the aeroplanes over,
though we should have a deuce of a job to
land them in this place; they're by no means
possessed of the powers of a helicopter.
However, I'll get into touch with Colonel
Tempest and ask for immediate assistance,
and also ask him to bring over Professor
Verne to investigate these mysterious
engineering and chemical appliances."

So, leaving the workshop, the live wires and
the prisoners to the care of Sharpe, the senior
airman devoted all the rest of that morning to
investigating the wireless apparatus,
examining the secret codes, and trying to get into
touch with the Commissioner of Aerial Police.
In this, however, he was not very successful,
for the air was full of messages,
concerning an overdue air-liner which had been
expected for some time at Cairo.  Perhaps
his message had been jammed or lost in the
aerial jostle.

Colonel Tempest was almost at his wits' end.
He sorely needed the help of his able
assistants.  He wanted to send them out east to
chase this daring brigand off the trade routes.

He was unable also to comply with the
request for assistance, when at length it did
reach him, for all his best fighting men, with
the exception of these two in the Black Forest,
had been sent after the raider.  He promised,
however, to come personally at the earliest
possible moment, as soon as matters had been
cleared up a little.

Again and again Keane tried to reach him
with brief, but urgent coded messages,
for he was now getting extremely anxious
lest the raider should appear before they
were ready.  Sharpe, however, who was
eminently practical, had taken the
professor's own tip, and had laid wires
across the glade, which, when properly
connected up, would make it a dangerous
proceeding for a hostile aeroplane to land there,
while, in the event of a friendly one appearing,
the current could be immediately switched
off.  He had seen to the prisoners as well,
for, unknown to Keane, he had, on the first
signs of awakening, given to each of them a
sufficiently strong soporific to extend the
period of their quiescence for a considerably
longer period, so that, late that afternoon, his
friend was somewhat alarmed at their quietude.

That night they watched in turns, and
relieved each other every two hours.  When
morning came they climbed the highest trees
and scanned the horizon in every direction
for the promised help, and also for the
*Scorpion*.  But although the column of smoke
from the fire which had been lighted, ascended
all day in one long grey streak to guide the
British airmen, yet morning wore on to
afternoon, and no assistance came.

Keane sent message after message, but
apparently to no purpose.  The very heavens
were full of messages, for the whole civilized
world had been roused by the last daring
feat of the phantom airman.  London, Paris,
Cairo, Delhi and New York were clamouring
for his immediate capture and execution.
Strong things, too, were being said about
the incapacity of the much vaunted aerial
police, but all the world realised that the task
before these men was almost superhuman.

Twice an urgent message came recalling the
two Englishmen, but Keane replied with the
one word, "Impossible!"

And all this time the raider, who was
carefully hiding for a few days, delighted his
companions by retailing with much gusto
such of these messages as he had been able to
piece together from the aerial jumble.

"Let them send all their available machines
and pilots out east," he had said to Carl and
Max, "then we will quietly slip across
Europe to Ireland, where everything is ripe
for the promised revolution."

"And the Schwarzwald?" queried Max.

"Oh, we will call there for a few hours en
route," replied the pirate, calmly relighting
his pipe, "The professor will understand our
silence and inactivity."

So the third morning came, and Keane,
whose anxiety regarding the still sleeping
prisoners had been allayed by Sharpe, who
smilingly confessed what he had done, now
became fearfully uneasy as to the condition
of affairs.

"For heaven's sake light that beacon
again!" he ordered.  "If assistance does
not arrive to-day, all these secrets I have
endeavoured to rescue will be lost."

"What will you do?" asked his companion,
who was already applying a match to the
pile of dried tinder and sticks.

"Blow the whole place up," he replied.

"And shoot the prisoners?" ventured his
friend, slyly.

"No."

"What then?"

"Rouse them up, somehow, handcuff them
together and take them away."

"Some job that," remarked Sharpe, looking
up at the long thin trail of smoke, for there
was still an absence of wind currents.

Even as he gazed into the sky, however, he
caught sight of a tiny speck hovering at
twelve thousand feet, and he almost shouted,
"Aeroplane!"

"Where?" asked his startled comrade,
whose nerves had undergone some strain
during the past few days.

"Right up in the blue.  There, can you see her?"

"Yes, I have her now, but she's very high.
Can it be the *Scorpion*, do you think?" asked
the senior.

"Cannot say yet.  I'll fetch the glasses."

"Run for them, quickly!  I cannot hear
her engines at all.  It must be the brigand."

"Ah, there, I hear the engines now, very
faintly, though.  Rolls-Royce engines too,
thank God!" exclaimed Keane fervently, as
he recognised the well-known sound, and
knew that assistance had arrived at last, in
the shape of at least one Bristol Fighter.

"It's all right, Sharpe.  Cut off that
beastly current.  Tempest will be here in a
minute."

"Are you sure it's Tempest?"

"Yes.  Listen to that!  Now he's cut his
engine out again, and he's coming down.  It's
the chief right enough; I should know his
flying amongst a score of aeroplanes."

The wires were cut off, a temporary landing-tee
quickly rigged up on the ground, and
frantic signals were made to the pilot, who
was now rapidly coming down in sharp spirals.

A few minutes later the intrepid pilot
flattened out above the tree tops, dipped
again, banked steeply, and sideslipped almost
to the ground, in order to get into the
confined and narrow space which served the
*Scorpion* for an aerodrome.  Scarcely had he
landed when another machine, which had
followed him from England, performed the
same highly-skilled manoeuvre, and taxied up
to the little group.





.. vspace:: 4

.. _`THE COMING FIGHT`:

.. class:: center large bold

   CHAPTER XXI


.. class:: center medium bold

   THE COMING FIGHT

.. vspace:: 2

"Good-morning, Colonel!" cried the two
airmen, saluting their chief smartly, as he
still sat in the aeroplane, looking not a little
crabbed and sour, as he secretly swore at the
infamous stretch of ground misnamed an
aerodrome; then turned his gaze upon the
two airmen who had appealed for assistance.

"Morning!  So this is where you young
cubs spend your holidays, while the whole
world is ramping at me for not catching this
infernal brigand.  What have you got to say
for yourselves?"

Keane was not at all put out by this dour
greeting; he knew his chief too well, and
admired him accordingly.  Merit is not always
accompanied by a bland and urbane countenance,
neither do brains always accompany
a white shirt front.

"I have that to say which will almost make
you jump out of your skin, sir," replied
Keane, "but we must somehow get these
aeroplanes under cover, or properly
camouflaged, for the *Scorpion* may arrive any
minute."

"Eh?  What's that you say, boy?"
exclaimed Tempest, leaping from the fuselage.
"The *Scorpion*?"

"Yes, sir."

"Why, that is the name of your infernal
raider, isn't it, Captain Watson?" and here
the colonel turned and addressed his passenger,
who was none other than the skipper of the
air-liner which had been so roughly handled
in the Hamadian Desert.

"The same, sir."

"And the professor, Keane?  I sent you
to track the professor.  Have you found him?"

"He is our prisoner, Colonel," and Keane
bowed stiffly, and pointed to the half-hidden
hangar, where the two prisoners, who were now
partly roused, had been safely secured.

An exclamation of pleasure and surprise
broke from this dour-looking man when he
heard this news, and his face became wreathed
with smiles as he advanced to both Keane
and Sharpe, shook them warmly by the hand,
and said:--

"Thank you, my boys; I knew if it could
be done you would do it, though I could ill
spare you for the job.  Yesterday my
reputation was in shreds; I am to be charged with
inefficiency, and a public enquiry is to be held.
But you two wolf cubs have re-established my
character; I can never thank you enough.
Now lead on, show us this evil-minded
genius!  Professor Verne here, who has come
in the second Bristol, with Captain Hooper, is
anxious to see him.  He may redeem him yet
from the error of his ways, and it is vital that
this secret of his should be in other and better
hands, else it will always be a danger to the public."

So, whilst the party were conducted
indoors, and shown the marvels of the modern
house of alchemy, the two professors were
introduced, and began a series of disputations,
very embittered at first, as the German,
though relieved of his bonds, and made
as comfortable as the circumstances would
permit, resolutely refused to give any
particulars of his discovery, or even to display
the slightest amiability towards his
distinguished visitor, though they were not
unknown to each other, and had even studied
at Heidelberg together in their younger days.

Meanwhile, all possible steps were taken to
prepare for the possible arrival of the *Scorpion*.
The Bristol machines, after being carefully
stowed away in a gap between the trees, were
so camouflaged by branches of pine and larch
that they presented but a very indistinct
object from the air, and, unless their presence
were known, might easily remain unobserved.

After some time had been spent in
examining the highly developed and intricate
mechanism of the devil's workshop, as the
place was now called, the Commissioner
suddenly turned upon his chief mentor, and
said:--

"By the way, Keane, have you discovered
any drawings or designs of this wonderful
aeroplane?  I don't see any amongst this
pile of papers, and the professor does not
seem inclined to help us at all."

"No, sir.  We have searched the place
carefully, but we have found nothing.  Part of
the machine could certainly be reconstructed
from those spares, but all the important parts
are missing.  I have an overwhelming curiosity
to see the machine, though, and hope that I
may not have this pleasure much longer delayed."

"Then we have nothing but these photographs,"
returned the captain.

"Photographs?" echoed Keane.

"Yes.  Why, I forgot to tell you in the
bewilderment and excitement of the last
hour, that Captain Watson here managed to
secure three snapshots of the raider in
mid-air, whilst his airship was being attacked."

"It was the boy Gadget who secured them,
sir," interposed the air-skipper, anxious to
give credit where credit was due.

"Oh, yes, Keane, I ought to say that it
was a smart little beggar called Gadget, a
stowaway, who really secured the photographs,
and hid them away from the brigand.
We must see that the little chap is properly
rewarded when we return."

"Let me see the pictures, sir," requested
Keane, eager to get some idea of his future
opponent.

"Here they are.  I have had them developed
and enlarged.  They should be extremely
useful to us, as we shall shortly have to encounter
this Sultan Selim, Air King of the Hamadian
Desert, the world's greatest bandit, who had
the audacity to send me this document by the
captain."

And here the colonel, having retailed the
whole story of the fight in the desert, showed
the brigand's letter, which had been brought to
London the previous day by the fast aeroplane
which had carried the skipper of the air-liner.

Keane turned in amazement from the clear
photographs of the phantom-bird to the brief,
audacious letter of the phantom airman, and
read as follows:--

"To Colonel Tempest, D.S.O., M.C.,

Commissioner of Aerial Police, Scotland
Yard, London, W.C.

"Greetings from Sultan Selim, Air King
of the Hamadian Desert.  I regret to inform
you that of late there has been a serious
increase of aerial crime in these regions.
The frequent passing of large airships
containing mails and other commodities, without
due payment of tribute to my customs
officials, is a serious infringement of the
laws of my dominion.  This action not only
imperils the liberties of small communities,
but is also a crafty form of aerial brigandage,
inasmuch as it defrauds my exchequer of its
just and equitable revenue.  This practice
must cease forthwith, and I have taken
steps to-day which, in my opinion, will render
it unwise for this shameful trespass to
continue.  The bearer of this letter will give
you further details of the action which I
have been compelled to take on behalf of my
subjects.  Your five missing scouts will be
found between the wells of Nefud and the
Hedjaz coast.  I have destroyed their machines
as a salutary warning to future violaters of
these my dominions."

Keane could scarcely restrain a smile when
he laid down this wily, half-humorous,
half-threatening epistolary from the aerial pirate.

"What do you think of it?" asked the colonel.

"It's a topping letter, sir, but I think he's
trying hard to be funny, this von Spitzer, as
you call him.  A German with a sense of
humour, sir, that's the best way to regard
him," replied the airman.

"Humour indeed!" rasped out the
colonel, becoming ruffled.  "It's confounded
impudence, and worse, when you remember
that, apart from the damage to the airship,
which is considerable, there is a net loss of
specie and other valuables--to wit, the
Maharajah's jewels--which is estimated at a
quarter of a million sterling.  I only hope and
pray that we may encounter and waylay this
bandit before he does any more damage.  The
deuce only knows what he'll do next, or where
he'll go."

"Ireland is to be the scene of his next
adventure, sir," remarked Keane.

"Ireland?"

"Yes, sir."

"Are you sure?"

"I heard the professor say so.  They are
to work hand in hand with the revolutionists
there, and stir up strife which will make that
unhappy land a still greater thorn in the side
of Great Britain."

"Just what I feared!" exclaimed the now
irate commissioner.  "That explains partly
those mysterious messages and rumours
floating about Dingle Bay, and unfortunately I
have had to withdraw nearly all the aerial
police from that quarter to send them out east."

"You might as well recall them, sir."

"Why?"

"The raider has left the Hamadian
Desert by this time, and is in hiding
somewhere, but will call here on his way to
Ireland."

"H'm!  We're being thoroughly fooled,
and if you hadn't found this demon's nest I
should have gone mad.  At any rate I
should have been compelled to resign my post."

"Still, public opinion had to be satisfied,
and you sent the patrols where the public
demanded that they should be sent.  Besides,
if you recall them now, this raider will
probably pick up your messages and change
his tactics.  I can tell you this, Colonel, that
while he can get his necessary supplies of
uranis, and a few extra spares from the
workshop here, this von Spitzer intends to
carry out his mad policy of destroying the
civilized world by piecemeal.  It is all part
of a great plan to save Germany from the evil
consequences of the Peace terms.  But, whilst
we hold this citadel, and retain these two men
captive, his activities are limited to his
present supply of this secret element--uranis."

The colonel swore under his breath, and
went to examine the prisoners, to make sure
that there was no chance of their escaping,
for he felt the truth of Keane's words.  He
now felt grateful that the airman had not
responded to the message for his recall, although
it had amounted to a serious breach of
discipline.

"Ah, well," he said at length, "it only
remains to capture this raider, and the whole
system of their clever and daring attempt
to convulse the Allies, break up their
international system of mail transit, stop the
intercourse of civilized nations, and cause
a world revolution--all these things will fail."

So their efforts were redoubled to make
preparations to capture the wonder 'plane,
should it descend on the aerodrome.  A
couple of machine guns were found, and
mounted, under the charge of Sharpe and
Captain Hooper, though the skipper of the
airliner pointed out that the *Scorpion* carried
bullet-proof armour.

"You will need to hit her in a vital
spot," he said, "so that your first burst
may be your last, or she will be up again like
a helicopter."

"Then we must have the two Bristols
ready," urged the colonel, "though it's a
deuce of a hole to get out of with this new
type of a Bristol Fighter."

"And the petrol, sir?" asked Keane, who,
was rather anxious on this point, for he hoped
that the *Scorpion* would become his victim in
the coming air fight.

"There may be sufficient for another two
hours, certainly not more."

"That means unless the *Scorpion* chooses
to stay and fight, she'll simply leave us."

"Von Spitzer will fight unless I stop him!"
called out the professor from behind the
curtains, where he was confined under the
charge of his colleague of other days, for he
had been listening to the conversation.

"So much the better!" replied Keane, tartly.

"And when the fight is over there won't be
many of you left alive to tell the story," came
the rejoinder.





.. vspace:: 4

.. _`AN AERIAL DUEL`:

.. class:: center large bold

   CHAPTER XXII


.. class:: center medium bold

   AN AERIAL DUEL

.. vspace:: 2

"Message from the *Scorpion*, sir!" cried
Keane, a little before midday, from the little
key-board where he had been patiently
waiting for the last hour.

"Good!  What does the brigand say?" asked Tempest.

"Expects to be here within an hour."

"Then we haven't a moment to lose,"
replied the colonel.  "At the same time, I
am glad we have had this message, for to be
forewarned is to be fore-armed."

Then, turning to Keane, whom he knew to
be his best and most brilliant pilot, he said,
"Where would you like to be stationed, boy?"

A sudden gleam came into the youth's eyes,
for he saw that his chance had come.

"Let me have all the spare petrol from the
other machine, and let me get up above the
clouds in that new No. 7 Bristol Fighter
which you brought over, sir."

"I'm afraid it means certain death for you,
my lad," replied the chief, after a pause,
unwilling to permit the youth to take such
unknown risks, and yet still more unwilling to
deny him his request.  "This *Scorpion*,
according to Captain Watson, must be some
stunting machine."

"I am willing to take the risks, sir," replied
Keane.  "It is not my first fight with a Hun."

"Don't I know it, boy!" replied the other,
gazing with fond admiration into the frank
and pleasing face of the pilot.  "The ribbons
which you gained speak for themselves, but
they don't tell half the story.  Don't I
remember the morning when you went over
the line by yourself, and encountered seven
enemy machines, how you fought with them
for an hour and brought five of them down,
chased the others till your machine threatened
to break up, then turned and staggered home
with your wings shot to ribbons?" and the
colonel fondly patted the youth's shoulder.

"Then let me go, sir.  The brigand will be
not a little confounded to find himself attacked
both from the ground and the air at the same time."

"You shall go!" said the colonel after
another pause.  "Will you take a gunner with you?"

"No, sir.  I would rather go alone."

And while the petrol was drawn off from
the other machine, No. 7 was brought out,
filled up, and tested, ready to start at a
moment's notice.  The Vickers gun, fixed
forward to fire through the propeller, was
carefully examined, and several drums of the
new armour-piercing bullets placed in position.
Another moment was given to the alignment
of the gun-sight, a matter of supreme importance
in an aerial duel like this one promised to
be, for the slightest error in this respect would
be like courting disaster.

Ten minutes later the signal was given to
stand clear, the colonel himself swung the
propeller, and, instantly, the powerful
350 H.P. Rolls-Royce burst into life with a
crackle and a roar, and, when the chocks were
withdrawn, the Bristol dashed across the
ground, leapt into the air at sixty yards, and
by a steep climb just cleared the tops of the
trees on the edge of the forest.

"What are his chances, Colonel?" asked
Captain Hooper.

The chief shook his head as though doubtful
of the result, then, after watching the
machine for a moment, as it climbed in rapid
spirals up into the clouds which half covered
the sky at four thousand feet, he said:--

"There is no pilot aboard the *Scorpion*, or
any other machine for that matter, who can
hold a candle to Keane, but--it is the amazing
speed and climbing powers of the other
machine that I fear.  Still, it will be some
fight, and if we fail to trap the brigand down
here, well, it is just possible, despite his
disadvantages, that Keane may bring the rascal
down.  He'll have to keep well out of sight,
though, and run at less than half-throttle
behind that cloud bank till the moment comes
to strike.  And now to stations, all of you,
and keep well out of sight.  Professor Verne,
I am afraid you will have to take charge of
the two prisoners.  Don't let them get away
for heaven's sake.  You must shoot them first."

"I'll take care of them, Colonel," replied
the eminent man, "though it is a somewhat
unusual occupation for me."

"Needs must when the devil drives, Professor!
I told you it would be some desperate
adventure.  Have you had any luck with
that evil genius, yet?"

"Not the slightest, so far.  He is prejudiced
against the English mind, and is secretly
rejoicing over the expected arrival of the
*Scorpion*."

"Tell him from me, Professor, that if he
attempts to escape, I shall shoot both him and
his accomplice without the slightest compunction,"
said the colonel, as he turned away to
re-examine all his defensive posts, and to
alter the position of one of the machine
guns, which had been entrusted to Captain Sharpe.

Fifteen minutes passed away, and the
Bristol, hidden away behind the cloud bank,
kept its engine well-throttled down, lest the
roar of the powerful motor should reveal its
presence, when, suddenly, from one of the
watchers, the cry arose:--

"Aeroplane approaching from the south-east."

"Is it the *Scorpion*, Captain Watson?"
the colonel asked, as soon as the machine had
been located.

"Yes, it is the same brigand, sir."

Then, with amazement bordering on the
supernatural, the little garrison saw the
*Scorpion* moving across the sky at a miraculous
speed, and making directly for the secret
aerodrome.  Once or twice it circled around
at three thousand feet, then dived a clean two
thousand five hundred upon its objective,
silently, like a mysterious phantom bird.  At five
hundred feet it flattened out, rode gaily above
the tree tops, then swooping like a falcon, once
more touched the ground lightly, and came to
rest within thirty yards of the secret hangar.

"Haende in die hohe!" cried Colonel
Tempest, stepping out into the open, and
confronting the visitors with a couple of
revolvers, as they prepared to leap from the
armoured conning-tower.

"Ach Himmel!  We are betrayed!" cried
Spitzer.  "The *verdammt* English have
captured the aerodrome."

Without thought of surrender the brigands
tumbled swiftly back into the armoured
cell, just as a shower of bullets from both
revolvers swept the upper surface of the cockpit.

"Fire!" shouted Tempest, stepping back,
as the daring bandits, regardless of the danger,
started the propellers once more by means of
the self-starting knob, within the conning-tower.

And the next instant, even as the machine
turned and raced for safety, a terrific hail of
bullets from the two machine guns swept the
*Scorpion* from stem to stern.  One of her
machine guns was swept from its mountings,
and it is believed that one at least of her crew
was wounded, probably by the Colonel's
revolver shots, but as for surrender, the pirates
would have none of it, as, apparently unhurt
in any vital spot, the *Scorpion* recrossed the
aerodrome, staggering once or twice under the
fierce welter of bullets, managed to leave the
ground, and sail over the tree tops out of
immediate range.

"Confound it!  She's absolutely bullet-proof!"
shouted the colonel, who was furious
at his failure, for his object had been to
capture the machine and its crew wholesale,
because of its valuable secrets.

"We shall see no more of her!" exclaimed
Captain Hooper.

"Just wait a moment," said the skipper of
the air-liner.  "She'll have something to say
presently.  You don't know these infernal
brigands."

The last speaker was right, for a moment
later the infuriated Spitzer, sweeping round
at a frightful speed, swooped down upon the
little hangar, where he presumed the English
were in possession, swept the place with a
burst of machine gun fire from his remaining
gun, then dropped a bomb filled with high
explosive right into the middle of the structure;
whilst he, himself, was screened by the trees
from the enemy's fire.

The roar of the explosion was deafening,
and several trees in the vicinity of the
workshop were blown to fragments, whilst the
workshop was now a tangled mass of wreckage.
It was also burning furiously, and a thick
pall of dense smoke already hung over the spot.

"The professor!--we must save him!"
cried Tempest, who was already limping
from a bomb splinter which had pierced
his leg.

Captain Watson ran to help him, but the
two machine gunners, Sharpe and Hooper,
stuck to their posts ready for the next attack,
which they knew would not be long delayed,
for Spitzer, during his last circuit, had
marked the position of the two machine
gun posts.

As the rescuers hastened to the assistance
of the prisoners, they came upon Professor
Verne, bleeding from the hands and face,
dragging the prostrate form of the German
from amid the burning wreckage.

"Ah, you are wounded?" cried the colonel.

"It is nothing," replied the other.  "See
to the mechanic.  I fear he is killed, poor
fellow, by his own countrymen."

It was so; his mangled form was found
buried under the *débris* of the workshop.  The
German professor and his rescuer were both
helped to safety; then the battle began
again.

"Here comes the *Scorpion*!" shouted
Captain Watson.  "Look out there!" and
instantly the air resounded with the sharp,
short crackle of the air brigand's gun--

"Rep-r-r-r-r-r----!" as the raider swept the
machine gun posts.

At this very instant, however, the sound of
whistling wires came suddenly from overhead,
as something swooped down from the dizzy
heights upon the attacker.  Then the sharp
crackle of a Vickers gun rent the air, as, in
a headlong dive of two thousand feet, the
Bristol Fighter hurtled down, spitting fire
through the whirling propeller, and driving
its quarry almost to the ground by its
unexpected onslaught.

By a miracle almost, the *Scorpion* escaped
a terrible crash, flattening out within two
feet of the ground in the middle of the glade,
then started its upward climb to
out-manoeuvre its new opponent, for the rest
of this terrific combat was confined to the air.

The little garrison below came out to see
this thrilling spectacle, and even the wounded
German raised himself to watch the *Scorpion*,
as he expected, give its *coup de grâce* to its
clumsy opponent.  The fight now was for
altitude, dead angles, and the blind side of each
opponent, but more especially for altitude,
for this is the equivalent in an aerial duel of
the windward position, in the days of the old
frigates.

Once, after climbing on the turn, the two
machines approached each other dead on, and
each opened a burst of fire simultaneously on
its opponent.  Carl, the scout pilot, was
handling the solitary gun, and, if his aim had
been more steady, that would have marked
the finish of the fight.  On the other hand
Keane's bullets pattered with unerring aim
upon the armoured conning-tower, but with
little effect, for so far the finely-tempered
steel resisted even these armour-piercing bullets.

The watchers down below trembled with
rage--all save the German--when they saw
this fearful waste of markmanship, but up
there, calm and collected, the British pilot
clenched his teeth and muttered:--

"I must find his dead angle!  I will
attack him from below."

Then followed a series of thrilling
manoeuvres, in which the daring skill of the
Englishman alone saved him from his too-powerful
opponent.  The *Scorpion*, using its
superior speed, made a desperate effort to sit
upon its opponent's tail, a deadly position if
it could only be attained.  But, looping,
banking, sideslipping and occasionally
spinning, the Bristol out-manoeuvred its
enemy every time.

"Shade of Richthofen!" exclaimed the
infuriated Spitzer; "but this *verdammt*
Britisher is some pilot."

Carl had become nervous and agitated at the
gun, and his shooting had begun to annoy his
leader, who shouted angrily, "Let Max take
the gun, dachshund!"

But Max was huddled up in the bottom of
the cockpit with an English bullet through
his head; he had fired his last shot.

"Blitz!  Here he comes again!" shouted
the German pilot, as his opponent in the
roaring Bristol, with engine full out, made as
though he would ram his enemy in mid-air,
though such was not his intention.

"Himmel, what does he mean?" yelled
Spitzer, as he also opened out to avert the
threatened collision, then pulled over the
controls, stalled his machine, and attempted
a vertical climb.

"Thanks be!" muttered Keane, for this
gave him just the opportunity he sought.
For two brief seconds the nether part of the
fuselage, the only weak spot in the *Scorpion*,
was exposed, and with a quick eye and
unerring aim the British pilot poured a short
burst into the very vitals of his enemy, then
dived for safety.

It was the end of the fight, for the
armour-piercing bullets ripped through the softer,
thinner steel of its victim, passed through the
chamber where the high-pressure cylinders
which contained the uranis were kept, and
weakened or cracked one of those deadly
things, which were at once both the strength
and the weakness of the *Scorpion*--the only
thing, as her pilot once said, that its crew need
fear.

Down, down sped the Bristol, as though
conscious of the terrible catastrophe which
would shortly follow.  It was well that
she did, for, ten seconds later, it seemed
as if the end of the world had suddenly come.

.. _`245`:

Even while the *Scorpion* was poised in mid-air,
in the very act of her last vertical climb,
with nose pointed to the skies, the frightful
explosion occurred.  The terrified onlookers
threw themselves flat upon the ground, but
even the earth rocked, and huge trees of the
forest were uprooted.  It was as though the
mighty concussion had veritably blown a hole
hi the universe.  The *Scorpion*, with all her
crew, disappeared as if by magic, blown into
ten thousand fragments, and scattered like
blazing meteors to the very extremities of the
Schwarzwald, while the British aeroplane
did not escape but crashed to earth, with its
unconscious pilot still firmly holding the
controls.

Thus did the *Scorpion* meet her end, after
all the vaunted pride and skill of her founders.
In that place where she was born, there also did
she come to an inglorious end, in the very
presence of the evil-minded genius who had
designed her.  Even the dying German
professor at last saw the error of his ways, and
wished, in his latest hours, that his energy and
skill had been devoted to a purpose more
lofty and humane.

The great shock of that mighty explosion
was felt for a hundred miles and more.  In
far distant lands the seismographic
instruments recorded its effects.  Some said that a
great earthquake had occurred in central
Europe, but the Allied Command on the
Rhine thought that some mighty secret
ammunition dump in the Schwarzwald had
been accidentally destroyed, and they sent
assistance in every shape and form.  And
the first to arrive were the aerial patrols, with
medicines and supplies, for the survivors on
that blackened, devastated aerodrome.

The unconscious pilot was extricated from
the wreckage of the Bristol Fighter, and
after months of careful nursing he was
restored to convalescence, but he will never
fly again.  For his daring deed, he was
honoured by his country, and decorated by his
King.  Sharpe, Hooper and Captain Watson,
though severely wounded, recovered from their
injuries.  Professor Verne had a miraculous
escape from death when the brigands bombed
the hangar, and Colonel Tempest--though
for the rest of his days he will limp with the
aid of a stick--was mighty glad to lay down
his high office with a reputation untarnished,
and with the added honour of a knighthood,
and a substantial pension.

It now but remains to tell what happened
to that brilliant but misguided German, the
renowned Professor Rudolf Weissmann.  He
lingered for another day after the terrible
event which had befallen his fortune, and his
friend Sir Joseph Verne, constant as ever,
waited beside him and tended him amid his
sufferings, for there is a wonderful spirit of
brotherhood and fraternity amongst men
of learning.  They are the children of no
particular country, for their parish is the
world, and, like our own Shakespeare, the
whole earth claims them for its own.

And when he saw that the time of his
departure was at hand, this erring genius no
longer tried to withhold from the world the
great secret which he held, but, desiring to
make what amends he could for the evil he
had wrought, he freely offered to reveal the
secret to his old time friend and fellow-student.

But, alas, he had left it too long.  The
candle of life was flickering within him, and
the end was too near.  Even while, with true
repentance, he endeavoured to give the
hidden formula of the mysterious uranis to
his friend, he fell back exhausted and his
spirit fled.

So the wonderful secret was never revealed,
for it lies buried deep in a thousand fragments,
amid the dark recesses of the Schwarzwald.
But Hans, the clock maker, and his friend
Jacob Stendahl the wood cutter, and many
more beside, who dwell amid the legend and
folklore of the Black Forest, still assert that
at certain times, especially when the full
round moon casts its silvery light over the
Schwarzwald, the peasant who treads these
lonely paths may see the phantom airman on
his ghostly 'plane.

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   \*      \*      \*      \*      \*

.. vspace:: 1

As for Gadget, the little urchin of a
stowaway, the sharp-witted, up-to-date cabin
boy who photographed the raider in mid-air,
and rendered such valuable service to the
authorities, he was duly rewarded.  The
Commissioner of Aerial Police pinned a gold
medal on to his little tunic, soon after the
great air-liner returned to London, and even
delivered a speech in his honour, congratulating
him upon his resourcefulness and courage.

He is no longer a street arab, for Captain
Watson has adopted him, and sent him to a
preparatory school, where he is pursuing a
useful course of studies.  But, when the long
summer holidays arrive, you will find Gadget,
dressed in a smart little uniform, with plenty
of gold braid about his cap and tunic, standing
beside the captain or the chief officer, in the
navigating gondola of the *Empress of India*.
All who know him speak highly of him.  And
there are even those who believe that this
little, mischievous, up-to-date cabin boy and
erstwhile stowaway will one day be one of
out great air-skippers.

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   THE END.

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.. class:: center small

   THE LONDON AND NORWICH PRESS, LIMITED, LONDON AND NORWICH, ENGLAND

.. vspace:: 4

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   \*      \*      \*      \*      \*      \*      \*      \*

.. vspace:: 4

.. class:: noindent large bold white-space-pre-line

   THE GREAT
   ADVENTURE
   SERIES

.. vspace:: 2

.. class:: noindent

   *Titles uniform with this Series*

.. vspace:: 2

.. class:: noindent bold

   Percy F. Westerman:

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The Airship "Golden Hind"
To the Fore with the Tanks
The Secret Battleplane
Wllmshurst of the Frontier Force

.. vspace:: 2

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   Rowland Walker:

.. class:: noindent white-space-pre-line

The Phantom Airman
Dastral of the Flying Corps
Deville McKeene: The Exploits of the Mystery Airman
Blake of the Merchant Service
Buckle of Submarine V2
Oscar Danby, V.C.

.. vspace:: 2

.. class:: noindent white-space-pre-line

S. W. PARTRIDGE & CO.
4, 5 & 6, SOHO
LONDON, W.1.

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