“Surely you are not afraid, Alexis?” exclaimed
Chester.
“Afraid!” shouted Alexis.
“Of course I am not afraid. But” he
eyed the large aeroplane dubiously “but
a man was not made to fly about in the air like a
bird, particularly a man of my weight. Besides,
I do not like great height. If I stand upon a
precipice, I am immediately struck with the notion
that I must jump off. If I jumped from an aeroplane
I might upset it.”
Both Hal and Chester laughed.
“I was that way myself once,”
said Chester, “so I know just how you feel.
Many a man, otherwise very brave, has that same horror
of height. However, you will soon get used to
it.”
“Maybe so,” said Alexis
dubiously. “However, if one man can fly,
why, so can I. I am willing to take a chance.”
“Good!” exclaimed Hal. “Now
to get started.”
Leaving Lodz, the three had made their
way north, keeping as close to the German border as
was safe, until they had reached Riga, on the Gulf
of Riga, which extends in from the Baltic Sea.
Here they had at first thought of going part of the
distance by boat, but, because of the likelihood of
the approach of German warships in the Baltic, had
given up this plan and decided upon an aeroplane.
“We came to Russia in an airship,”
Hal had said. “We might as well go back
in one. Besides, it is quicker.”
And so it was agreed.
Ten miles south of Riga, surrounded
by Russian airmen, they climbed into the craft which
the Russian commander in the little city had provided
for them. The plane was large and roomy, having
a seating capacity of five.
Hal took his place at the steering
wheel and Chester climbed aboard.
Still eyeing the flying craft suspiciously,
Alexis followed Chester, and, sitting down suddenly,
took hold of the seat with both hands and hung on
for dear life, although the craft was still upon the
ground. Then he lowered his head and shut his
eyes.
Hal gave the word, and willing hands
started the machine along the ground. Gradually
it gained momentum until it was skimming over the
ground at a rapid gait. Then Hal threw over the
elevating lever, and the machine shot into the air
amid the cheers of the Russians below.
Alexis was conscious of a sinking
sensation in the region of his stomach, and he ducked
his head even lower as the car rose higher in the
air.
“Look up, Alexis!” shouted
Chester, reaching over and laying a hand on the Cossack’s
arm.
Now that the machine had reached a
good height, Hal held it steady, and it darted ahead
on a straightaway course. The plane shook with
the vibrations of the engine, but otherwise there
was scarcely a noticeable motion.
Now that the machine was more steady,
Alexis, in response to Chester’s command, slowly
opened his eyes and looked about. Seeing nothing,
he closed them again immediately, and again ducked
his head. Once more Chester yelled at him to
look about, and at last Alexis raised his head and
glanced into the distance.
“This is a terrible place for
a man to be,” he muttered with a shudder.
“If man were meant to fly he would have been
given wings. It is tempting the wrath of the
elements to be here.”
As he looked about him, however, and
became conscious of the steadiness of the craft, his
composure returned, and soon he was making inquiries
regarding the construction of the craft, its speed
and the height to which it could ascend. He glanced
over the side of the machine, and then looked quickly
upward again. The one glance below had made him
ill.
He smiled faintly. “I can’t
look down yet,” he said ruefully. “I
suppose I’ll get used to it in time; but now
I had better keep my eyes inside.”
“How fast are we going, Hal?” asked Chester.
“Sixty-five miles an hour,” was Hal’s
reply.
Alexis was astonished.
“Sixty-five miles!” he
ejaculated. “Why, it seems as if we were
standing still.”
“If we were close enough to
the earth you would soon notice the difference,”
said Chester.
For another hour they continued on
their way without incident, and then Chester discovered
the dim outline of a second aircraft trailing them
at a distance. It was not gaining, but even when
Hal put on more speed, at a word from Chester, he
was unable to shake it off.
“Evidently a German,”
said Chester. “I suppose he wants to see
where we are going.”
For another hour the plane pursued
them. Then Chester perceived that there were
two instead of one, and that both were creeping up
on them.
With a cry to Hal, Chester picked
two rifles from the bottom of the car.
“We’ll have to fight them off!”
he cried.
Alexis stirred uneasily in his seat.
“I was afraid of it,”
he muttered. “Now, what will happen to me
when I go hurtling through space to the ground below?”
He shuddered.
Hal, in response to a command from
Chester, slowed down suddenly. Taking careful
aim at one of the pursuers, Chester emptied the magazine
of his first rifle. There came from behind the
sounds of screams, followed by an explosion.
“What was that?” cried Alexis in alarm.
“I got one of them!” replied
Chester calmly. “The plane has gone to
earth.”
The second pursuing plane reduced
its speed, but still clung on the trail of its would-be
prey.
“We’ll have to dispose
of it some way, Hal,” shouted Chester. “Turn
quickly and run toward it, and I’ll see if I
can’t send it to the ground.”
He held his rifle ready as he spoke.
Reducing the speed of the craft a trifle, Hal brought
its head about in a wide circle; then darted suddenly
toward the enemy.
But the latter was not caught unprepared,
and a rifle bullet whistled close to Alexis’
ear.
The giant Cossack clapped a hand to
his head and for the first time looked toward the
enemy. Then, reaching to the bottom of the machine,
he raised up with a weapon, and, aiming at the hull
of the enemy in the distance, poured the entire contents
of the magazine into it. At the same moment a
well-directed shot from Chester’s rifle struck
the pilot. He sprang to his feet, spun around
crazily, and plunged from the car. A moment later
and the aeroplane blew up with a loud bang.
Alexis, who had seen the pilot go
overboard, let out a cry of dismay. He could
not help but think of the terrible fall to the ground.
“Good work, Alexis!” cried
Chester. “I told you you would get used
to it before long.”
“I am not used to it,”
replied the giant, “but when a bullet whistles
past my ear I get mad. I just naturally have to
fight back.”
Nevertheless he made a brave effort
to appear unconcerned, and he took a look over the
side. At that moment Hal allowed the car to glide
slowly nearer the earth. For a moment Alexis
was unaware of this sinking sensation; but suddenly
treetops came into view, and the Cossack let out a
cry of alarm:
“We’re sinking!” he exclaimed.
Hal laughed.
“Just coming down to get a look
about,” he replied. “Now, if you will
look over at the earth a few moments, you will soon
overcome your uneasiness.”
Alexis, taking a long breath, did
so; and he continued to peer over the side, even after
Hal, touching the elevating lever, sent the plane high
in the air again.
Darkness fell and still the ’plane
sped on. Then, so suddenly that they seemed to
spring up from nowhere, the swiftly moving aeroplane
was surrounded on all sides as it seemed
to the voyagers by a score of hostile aircraft,
while shots rang out from several sides.
Hal acted promptly, as had always
been his wont. He allowed the ’plane to
drop a good quarter of a mile with a sudden lurch,
and then righting it, darted forward again. For
a moment they had shaken off the foe, but the latter
was not long in finding them. Searchlights flashed
in the sky, seeking out the prey.
By a series of clever maneuvers, Hal
succeeded in evading the hostile craft during the
long hours of the night, turning first this way and
then that, rising and falling. But with the first
gray of dawn, it became plain to both boys that escape
was practically impossible. Looking down Hal
saw water below him, and at the same moment the hostile
air fleet ten ’planes strong, swooped down on
them.
Chester’s rifle cracked, as
did that of Alexis. Bullets flew about all three
occupants of the machine, and then the craft, struck
in a vital spot, staggered. The ’plane
began to sink slowly. In vain did Hal try to
check the descent. The machine, still heading
slightly toward the north, glided toward the water
below.
Suddenly Hal made out something below
besides water. It was land. The lad breathed
easier, for it was plain, that at the rate at which
the craft was sinking, it could clear the water by
a good quarter of a mile, beyond which the lad could
see a sandy coast.
“It must be the coast of Sweden
or Denmark,” he said to himself, “in which
event we are safe, for it is neutral ground.”
The Germans, realizing that their
foe was sinking, did not waste another shot on it,
but swarmed after. Now the craft was close to
the water. Gently it skimmed over it, across
a short stretch of sand, and then settled slowly to
the ground.
Hal and Chester glanced about.
There was no one in sight on the sandy beach and the
Germans were coming right after them.
“Even though this be Sweden,”
said Hal, “unless Swedish troops come to our
aid, the Germans are likely to violate the neutrality
of the country and take us anyhow.”
“Not without a fight,”
declared Alexis. “Let me get my feet on
the ground again, and I will show you such a fight
as you never saw. On the ground I can fight.”
Now the ’plane was but a few
scant yards from the earth. It grounded with
a shock.