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"Yes, I know. But we can't stop that now. Let's see if we can get a clue in these fellows!"
He pointed toward the two who had run off in the dark underbrush surrounding the hangar plaza, and he and Ned trailed them as well as they could. But from the first they knew it would be useless, for there were many hiding places, and, a little way beyond, was a clump of trees.
After a short search Tom gave up reluctantly, and came back to where Koku was now sitting on the ground.
"Are you hurt?" he asked of the giant.
"My mind hurt--that all," said the big man.
"I guess he means his feelings are hurt," Tom explained. "Do you know who they were, Koku?"
"No, master."
"But we must do something!" cried Ned. "They've got your airs.h.i.+p, Tom."
"I know it," said the young inventor, calmly. "But we can't do anything now. You can hardly hear her, let alone see her. She's moving fast!"
He pointed upward to the darkness. Like some black bird of prey the airs.h.i.+p was already lost to sight, though it would have seemed as if her white planes might render her visible. But she had moved so swiftly that, during the short search, she had already disappeared.
"Aren't you going to do anything?" asked Ned.
"Certainly," spoke Tom. "I'm going to telephone an alarm to all the nearby towns. This is certainly a queer game, Ned."
CHAPTER XII
A STRANGE DISAPPEARANCE
Disappointed and puzzled, Tom and Ned went to where Koku was standing in rather a dazed att.i.tude. The giant, like all large bodies, moved slowly, not only bodily but mentally. He could understand exactly what had happened, except that he had not prevailed over the "pygmies" who had attacked him. They had been too many for him.
"Let's take a look inside," suggested Tom, when, by another glance upward, he had made sure that all trace of his big airs.h.i.+p was gone. "Maybe we can get a clue. Then, Koku, you tell us what happened."
"It all happened to me," said the giant, simply. "Me no make anything happen to them."
"That's about right," laughed Tom, ruefully. "It all happened to us."
The lights in the hangar were switched on, but a careful search revealed little. The men, half a dozen or more, had come evidently well prepared for the taking away of Tom Swift's airs.h.i.+p, and they had done so.
Entrance had been effected by forcing a small side door. True, the burglar alarm had given notice of the presence of the men, but Tom and Ned had not acted quite quickly enough. Koku had been at the hangar almost as soon as the men themselves, but he had watched and waited for orders, instead of going in at once, and this had given the intruders time to wheel out the craft and start the motor.
"Why didn't you jump right in on them when you saw what they were up to, Koku?" asked Tom.
"Me wait for master. Me think master want to see who men were. Me go in--they run."
"Well, of course that's so, in a way," admitted Tom. "They probably would have run, but they'd have run WITHOUT my airs.h.i.+p instead of WITH it, if they hadn't had time to get it outside the hangar. However, there's no use in crying over lost biplanes. The next thing is how to get her back. Did you know any of the men, Koku?"
"No, master."
"Then we haven't any clue that way. They laid their plans well.
They just let you tangle yourself up with them, Koku, while the head ones got the motor going; an easy matter, since it was all ready to start. Then they tripped you, Koku, and as many of them as could, made a jump for the machine. Then they were off."
"Well, what's the next thing to do?" asked Ned, when another look about the shed had shown that not the slightest clue was available.
"I'm going to do some telephoning," Tom stated. "A big airs.h.i.+p like mine can't go scooting around the country without being noticed. And those fellows can't go on forever. They've got to have gasoline and oil, and to get them they'll have to come down.
I'll get it back, sooner or later; but the question is: Why did they take her?"
"To sell," suggested Ned.
"I think not," Tom said. "A big airs.h.i.+p like mine isn't easy to sell. People who would buy it would ask questions that might not easily be answered. I'm inclined to think that some other reason made them take her, and it's up to us to find out what it was.
Let's go into the house."
"Hark!" suddenly exclaimed Ned, holding up his hand for silence.
They all heard footsteps outside the hangar.
Tom sprang to the door, flas.h.i.+ng his electric light, and a voice exclaimed:
"Golly! Chicken thieves!"
"Oh, is it you, Eradicate?" asked the young inventor, with a laugh. "No, it isn't chicken thieves--they were after bigger game this time."
"Suffin happen?" asked the colored man. "Ma.s.sa Swift he heah a noise, an' see a light, an' he sent me out yeah t' see what all am gwine on."
"Yes, something happened," admitted Tom. "They got the Eagle, Rad."
"What! Yo' big airs.h.i.+p?"
"Yes."
"Huh! Dat's too bad, Ma.s.sa Tom. I suah am sorry t' heah dat. Who done it?"
"We don't know, Rad."
"Maybe it was dat low-down cousin ob mine what tried t' git mah chickens, onct!"
"No, Rad, it wasn't your cousin. But I'll telephone the alarm to the police. They may be able to help me get the Eagle back."
Within the next hour several messages were sent to the authorities of nearby towns, asking them to be on the watch for the stolen airs.h.i.+p. This was about all that could be done, and after Mr.
Swift had been told the story of the night's happenings, everyone went back to bed again.
Further search the next morning brought forth no clues, though Tom, Ned and the others beat about in the bushes where the men had disappeared.
One or two reports were heard from surrounding towns, to the effect that several persons had heard a strange throbbing sound in the night, that, possibly, was caused by the pa.s.sage of the airs.h.i.+p overhead. One such report came from Waterford, the home town of Mr. Damon.
"Let's go over there," suggested Ned, to his chum. "I'd like to see our friend, and maybe we can get some other clues by circulating around there."