CHAPTER FOUR
THE ALUMINUM CHEST
ORISSA REALIZED QUITE perfectly that Sealskin Island was much farther away from the mainland than it appeared, so on leaving the shore she pursued a direction straight west for several miles, intending to make a turn and proceed south to the island which was the terminus of her flight. That prolonged the trip somewhat, but she figured it would prove more interesting to the spectators, since for a part of the journey she would be flying parallel with the coast. On the return she planned to run straight back from the island.
When she decided they had reached a point about as far out as was the island, she attempted to make the turn — a mere segment of a circle — but in spite of Steve’s warning Orissa was surprised at the stiffness of the steering gear. The engines were working beautifully and developing excellent speed, but the girl found she must apply all her strength to the wheel to make the turn.
She succeeded, and brought the head to bear directly upon the island, but the gear grated and stuck so persistently that Orissa’s effort sent the entire craft careening at a steep angle. Sybil gave a gasp and clung to the supporting rods and both girls heard a loud “chug” that indicated something was wrong; but the Kane balancing device was so perfect that almost immediately the machine righted itself and regained its equilibrium, darting swiftly and in a straight line in the direction of the island.
“What was it?” asked Sybil, putting her head close to Orissa’s to be heard above the whir of the motors behind them.
“The steering gear binds; that’s all,” was the quiet response. “I think it will work better when we are in the water.”
“But what made that noise? Didn’t something give way?” persisted Sybil.
“Glance behind us, dear, and see.”
Sybil carefully turned so as to examine the parts of the aeroplane.
“Oh!” she exclaimed.
“Well?” said Orissa.
“That chest that Steve loaded us with. It has broken away from its fastenings and is jammed edge downward against your gear.”
Orissa thought about it.
“That’s unfortunate,” said she. “I suppose the bolts broke when we tipped so badly. But it hasn’t interfered with our engines any.”
“No,” answered Sybil, still examining the conditions; “but it has interfered seriously with your control, I fear. Both your levers are thrown out of position and even the front elevator bars are badly bent.”
For the first time a worried expression appeared on Orissa’s face.
“If that is true,” she said, “our best plan is to return at once.”
“Do,” urged Sybil, her dark eyes very serious.
Orissa tried to turn the wheel. It resisted. She applied more strength. Something snapped and the released wheel whirled so freely that the girl nearly lost her seat. Recovering instantly she turned a pale face to her companion and said:
“We’re wrecked, Sybil. But don’t worry. With the boat under us and in this quiet sea we shall be quite safe.”
“I’m not worrying — especially — Ris,” was the reply; “but it occurs to me to wonder how you’re going to get down to the ocean.”
“Why?”
“You can’t stop the engines, unless one of us crawls back over the planes.”
“I can cut off the spark.” She tried it, but the engines chugged as merrily as before. “Guess there must be a short circuit,” gasped Orissa.
“And you can’t depress your elevator, I’m sure.”
“I’ll try it,” announced Orissa, grimly.
But the fatal chest balked her attempt. The elevator was steadfastly wedged into its present position; the engines were entirely beyond control and the two helpless girls faced one of the most curious conditions ever known in the history of aviation.
At an altitude of perhaps a hundred and fifty feet from the water the aeroplane sped swiftly on its way, headed a trifle to the west of south. It passed Sealskin Island even while the girls were discussing their dilemma, and stubbornly maintained its unfaltering course. The air conditions were perfect for flying; scarcely a breath of wind was felt; the sky above was blue as azure.
Suddenly Sybil laughed.
“What now?” demanded Orissa.
“I was thinking of the consternation on shore at about this moment,” explained Miss Cumberford. “Won’t they be amazed to see us continue this course, beyond the island? Not understanding our trouble, Daddy will think we’re running away.”
“So we are,” replied Orissa. “I wish I knew where we are running to.”
“I suppose we can’t stop till the gasoline gives out,” said Sybil.
Orissa shook her head.
“That’s what scares me,” she admitted. “Even now the Mexican shore is a mere line at the left. We’re gradually diverging to a point farther out at sea, and when at last we alight, drained of the last drop of gasoline, how are we to run the boat back?”
“We can’t. Steve’s wonderful Hy will become a mere floating buoy on the bosom of the rolling blue,” responded Sybil lightly. “Oh, I’m so glad I came, Ris! I’d no idea we were going to have such fun.”
Orissa did not return her chum’s smile.
“Sit still and balance her, Sybil,” she said. “I’m going to make an investigation.”
Exercising the necessary caution she turned and knelt upon the foot bar, clinging to the seat rail and in this position facing the Aircraft so she could examine its mechanism. Sybil had described the condition of things quite accurately. The engine control was cut off and as the gasoline tanks fed from the rear Orissa had no way of stopping the flow. The steering gear was broken and the front elevator firmly wedged in position by the chest.
“I wonder if we could manage to move this thing,” she said, and getting a hand on one corner of the aluminum chest she gave a tug and tried to raise it. It proved solid and unyielding. Not heavy in itself, or perhaps in its contents, the thing was caught between the rods in such a manner that no strength of the girls, limited in movement as they were, could budge it a particle.
Realizing this, and the folly of leaving the seats to get at the gasoline feed, Orissa resumed her place and faced the inevitable as bravely as she could.
“Steve told me,” she said to Sybil, “that the gasoline would last a hundred miles in air and fifty in water; that’s at least two hundred miles in an air line. Have you any idea where we shall be by that time?”
“Not the slightest,” responded her companion, cheerfully. “Ocean, of course; but latitude and longitude a mystery — and not important, anyhow.”
Sybil Cumberford was a reserved and silent girl on most occasions. Few were attracted toward her, on this account. Her dark eyes seemed to regard the world with critical toleration and she gave one the impression of considering herself quite independent of her fellows. Moreover, Sybil was eccentric in character and prone to do and say things that invoked the grave displeasure of her associates, seeming to delight in confusing and annoying them. But there was a brighter side to this queer girl’s nature, which developed only in the society of her trusted friends. On any occasion that demanded courage and resourcefulness she came to the front nobly, and at such times Sybil Cumberford became vivacious, helpful and inspiriting.
Here was such an occasion. Danger was the joy of Sybil’s heart and the “breath of her nostrils.” Indifferent to the ordinary details of life, any adventure that promised tribulation or disaster was fervently welcomed. Then the girl’s spirits rose, her intellect fairly bristled and she developed an animation and joyous exhilaration entirely at variance with her usual demeanor.
So now, as Orissa Kane, a girl of proved courage and undaunted spirit, grew solemn and anxious at the perilous condition that confronted them, Sybil Cumberford became gay and animated.
“It’s such an unusual thing, and so wholly unexpected!” she said blithely. “I’m sure, Ris, that no two girls who ever lived — in this world or any other — ever found the
mselves in a like dilemma. We’re as helpless as babes, chummie dear; only no babes were ever forced to fly, willy nilly, for hundreds of miles through the air to some forlorn spot in the dank, moist ocean.”
Orissa let her chatter. She was trying to realize what it might mean to them and how and when, if ever, they might be rescued from their difficulties.
“Our great mistake,” continued Sybil, as they swept along, “was in not rigging the machine with a wireless outfit. To be sure, neither of us could operate it; but a wireless, in such a case — if we understood its mysteries — would solve our problem.”
“How?” asked Orissa.
“We could call up the shore at San Diego and tell them what’s happened, and give them the direction in which we are flying; then they could send a fast steamer for us, or perhaps Madeline Dentry would loan her yacht.”
“They may follow us with a steamer, anyhow,” said Orissa, thoughtfully. “If we manage to land safely, Sybil — which means if we drop to the water right-side-up — we could float for some days, until we were found and rescued.”
“Thirst is a terrible thing, at sea; and hunger is almost as bad.”
“But in that dreadful chest, which has caused all our trouble, Steve told me he had packed provisions. Probably there is water there, too,” asserted Orissa, hopefully.
“Yes, Dad said there was lunch for two. Well, that’s one good feed we shall have, anyhow, provided the chest doesn’t get away from us entirely, and we can manage to open it. In its present position, neither event is at all probable.”
She seemed to love to discover and point out the gloomy side of their adventure, that she might exult in the dangers that menaced them.
Meantime, swift and straight as an arrow the Aircraft continued on its course. Not a skip to the engines, not an indication of any sort that the flight would be interrupted as long as a drop of gasoline remained in the tanks. They could only be patient and await the finale as bravely as possible.
CHAPTER FIVE
THE LAST DROP OF GASOLINE
HOUR AFTER HOUR they flew, while each hour seemed, to Orissa, at least, a month in duration. Sybil chatted and laughed, refusing to take their misfortune seriously.
“But,” said she, “I’m getting famished. An air-trip always stimulates the appetite and that lunch of Steve’s is so very near to us — and yet so far! How did he expect us to get at the repast, anyhow?”
“Why, in water,” replied Orissa, “the chest and its contents would be handy enough. I do not think it would be safe for us to creep into the boat underneath us now, for we must maintain the aerial balance; but, even if we could get below, we couldn’t open the chest while it is wedged cross-wise among the braces and levers.”
“All true, milady,” commented Sybil, her usually pale cheeks now flushed with excitement. “Our present stunt is to ‘sit still and take our medicine,’ as the saying goes.”
By this time the Mexican coast had vanished entirely and only the placid blue waters of the Pacific remained visible, even from the altitude of the Aircraft. Once or twice they sighted a small island, bleak and bare, for this part of the ocean is filled with tiny islets, most of which are unfertile and uninhabited. Farther along, in the South Pacific, such islands have verdure and inhabitants.
At about four o’clock a change occurred in the atmospheric conditions. A brisk wind arose, blowing steadily for a time from the southwest and then suddenly developing puffs and eddies that caused the Aircraft to wobble dangerously. One powerful gust seized the helpless flying-machine and whirled it around like a toy balloon, but failed to destroy its equilibrium because the girls balanced it with their bodies as well as they might. When their craft was released, however, it pointed in a new direction — this time straight west. An hour later a similar gust swept its head to the southward, and in this direction it was still flying when the red sun dipped into the water and twilight fell.
“I don’t like this, Syb,” said Orissa, anxiously. “If the gasoline holds out much longer it will be dark, and when we drop our danger will be doubled.”
“What will be the fashion of our dropping, anyhow?” asked Sybil. “We can’t volplane, with no control of the rudder. Chances are, dear, the thing will just tip over and spill us in the damp.”
“Hold fast, if it does that,” cautioned Orissa. “If we become separated from the boat we will drown like rats. The engine may swamp the boat, in any event, but it has air compartments which will keep it afloat under any favorable conditions, and we must trust to luck, Sybil — and to our own coolness.”
“All right, Ris. A watery grave doesn’t appeal to me just now,” was the reply. “I’m too hungry to drown comfortably, and that’s a fact. On a full stomach I imagine one could face perpetual soaking with more complacency.”
“Hush!” cried Orissa. “Listen!”
Sybil was already listening, fully as alert as her chum. The speed of the engine was diminishing. Gradually the huge propeller slackened its rapid revolutions, while its former roar subsided to a mere moan.
“Thank goodness,” said Sybil, fervently, “the gasoline is gone at last!”
“Look out, then,” warned Orissa.
With a final, reluctant “chug-chug!” the engine stopped short. Like a huge gull the frail craft remained poised in the air a moment and then a sudden light breeze swept it on. It was falling, however, impelled by its own weight, and singularly enough it reversed its position and proceeded before the wind with the stern foremost.
Splash! It wasn’t so bad, after all. Not a volplane, to be sure, but a gentle drop, the weight of the heavy engine sustained by the “air-cushions” formed beneath the planes.
Orissa wiped the spray from her eyes.
“That would have been a regular bump, on land,” Sybil was saying affably, “but the old ocean has received us with gracious tenderness. Are we sinking, Ris, or do we float?”
How suddenly the darkness was falling! Orissa leaned from her seat and found the water had turned to a color nearly as black as ink. Beneath her the bow of the aluminum motor boat was so depressed that it was almost even with the water and as it bobbed up and down with the waves it was shipping the inky fluid by the dipperful.
She scrambled out of the seat, then, to step gingerly over the unlucky chest and crouch upon a narrow seat of the little boat, near the stern.
“Come, Sybil,” she called; “and be very careful.”
Sybil promptly descended to the boat, which now rode evenly upon the waves. In this position the propeller was just under water and the engine rested over the center of the light but strong little craft. But propeller and engine were alike useless to them now. Overhead the planes spread like huge awnings, but they carried so little weight that they did not affect the balance of the boat.
“Steve planned well,” murmured Orissa, with a sigh. “If only he had never thought of that dreadful chest, we would not be in this fix.”
As she spoke she kicked the chest a little resentfully with her foot, and it seemed to move. Sybil leaned forward to eye it as closely as the gathering darkness would allow.
“Why, Ris,” she exclaimed, “the thing has come loose. Help me to tip it up.”
Between them they easily raised the chest to its former position, where it rested just before them. Steve had bolted it at either end, but one of the bolts had broken away and the other had bent at almost a right angle. Perhaps this last bolt would have broken, too, had not the chest, in falling, become wedged against the braces.
“This horrid box has heretofore been our dire enemy,” remarked Sybil; “but let us be forgiving and encourage it to make amends — for it holds eatables. How does the cover open, Ris?”
Stephen had shown Orissa how to work the sliding catch and in a moment the girl had the lid open and held it upright while Sybil searched within.
“Hooray! We’ve discovered a regular cafeteria,” said the latter, jubilantly, as she drew out a number of parcels. “I was afraid we’d have to
nibble, Orissa, so as not to gorge ourselves to-night and starve to-morrow; but I reckon there’s enough to last two delicate girls like us a week. What shall we tackle first?”
“Let us plan a little, dear,” suggested Orissa, restraining her own eagerness, for she was hungry, too. “We cannot possibly tell to-night what this precious chest contains or how much food there really is. We must wait for daylight to take an inventory. But here are some tins, we know, which will keep, and that package of sandwiches on your lap is perishable; so I propose we confine our feast to those for to-night.”
“Perishable it is, Cap’n,” answered Sybil, consuming half a sandwich at a single bite. “If there’s only a pickle to go with these breadspreads I shall be content. It’s not only luncheon that we’re indulging in, you know; it’s our regular dinner, as well, and there ought to be two courses — pickles and sandwiches — at the least.”
“You must feel for the pickles, then,” returned Orissa, intent upon her own sandwich, “for it’s too dark to use eyes just now.”
Sybil found the pickles — who ever put up a lunch for two girls without including pickles? — and declared she was quite content.
“If we hadn’t discovered the eats, my dear Cap’n,” she remarked with cheery satisfaction, “I think I could have dined on my own shoes. That’s a happy thought; we’ll keep the shoes in reserve. I’d no idea one’s appetite could get such an edge, after being tantalized for a few hours.”
“Do you realize, Sybil,” asked Orissa in a grave tone, as she took her second sandwich, “that we must pass the night in this wiggly, insecure boat?”
“What’s insecure about it?” demanded Sybil.
“It won’t stand much of a sea, I fear. This attachment to the Aircraft was intended for pleasant weather.”
“All right; the weather’s delightful. Those long, gentle rolls will merely rock us to sleep. And — Oh, Ris! — we’ll have rolls for breakfast.”
“Do be serious, Syb! Suppose a storm catches us before morning?”
Complete Works of L. Frank Baum Page 551