<h2 id="c12">CHAPTER XII <br/><span class="small">THE HOODOOED AIRPLANE</span></h2>
<p>After their exciting day, the next two weeks
proved more than dull to the youthful members
of the Sky Patrol.</p>
<p>Nothing happened to clear up the mystery.</p>
<p>To the surprise of the yacht crew, Captain
Parks kept them all busy preparing, the day
after Mrs. Everdail’s dramatic discovery, for a
run to Bar Harbor, Maine.</p>
<p>That was unusual. After a trip across the
Atlantic, the yacht was ordinarily laid up for
awhile, giving its crew some shore liberty.</p>
<p>Captain Parks, however, agreed with Mr.
Everdail, who trusted him absolutely—if Sandy
did not—that it would be wise not to give any
person who had been on the yacht during its
crossing any chance to get away.</p>
<p>“On the run,” Mr. Everdail told Sandy and
Dick, “and while we lay over at Bar Harbor,
you two can watch for anything suspicious. My
wife won’t let me say that Mimi, the maid, could
be guilty—besides, how could she get into Captain
Parks’ safe?”</p>
<div class="pagenum" id="Page_104">104</div>
<p>“I think, myself, some man of the crew would
be the one to watch,” Dick agreed. “Maybe the
steward, who could have a reason for getting
into the captain’s quarters.”</p>
<p>“But it was a woman Larry saw, through the
glasses, at the stern,” Sandy objected.</p>
<p>“Well, then—there’s the stewardess who attends
to the ladies’ cabins,” argued Dick. “We
can watch her.”</p>
<p>They did, but no one on board asked for shore
leave, either on the day before lifting anchor or
during the stay in the Maine waters. Dick and
Sandy used ears and eyes alertly; but nothing
suspicious looking rewarded their vigilance.</p>
<p>Larry, staying at the old estate home with
Jeff, had some compensation, at least, for being
separated from his chums. Not only could
he keep an eye on things and be ready if Jeff
called for an aide; as well, he had his daily instruction
in ground school and in the air.</p>
<p>Already “well up” on all that books could
tell about engines, types of airplanes, construction
methods, rigging and even handling a craft
in the air, he got the practical personal experience
that is the only real teacher, and the thrill
of donning the Gossport helmet, with its ear
’phones and speaking tube through which Jeff,
in the second place of the amphibian or the airplane,
instructed him, correcting faults or gave
hints, was a real thrill.</p>
<div class="pagenum" id="Page_105">105</div>
<p>He learned, first of all, not to start up an engine
while the tail of the ship pointed toward
a hangar, or other open building, or toward a
crowd, in future, on a field.</p>
<p>The propeller blast threw a torrent of dust
and as Jeff told him, he mustn’t become that
most unpopular of airport nuisances, a “dusting
pilot,” whose carelessness flung damaging
clouds on airplanes in hangars and people on
the fields.</p>
<p>Learning to warm up the engine, to check up
on instruments, to keep the ship level while
taxiing down the field to head into the wind, to
make the turn, either in stiff wind or gentle
breeze, so that the wind did not tip the craft
and scrape wingtips—these and a dozen other
things he acquired in several early lessons.</p>
<p>The second place of the airplane had been
fitted with a set of dual controls, rudder bar,
throttle and “joystick” so that Jeff, for two successive
hops, let Larry put feet on his rudder
bar and lightly hold the stick as Jeff manipulated
the controls and explained, by use of the
Gossport helmet, why he did this or that.</p>
<div class="pagenum" id="Page_106">106</div>
<p>Jeff believed, as does every good instructor,
that showing, and explaining, is necessary as
a first step, but that a flyer is developed only by
practice during which he makes mistakes and is
told why they are mistakes and how to correct
them, thus gaining confidence and assurance by
actually flying.</p>
<p>“That-there time,” Jeff might say, “when the
caretaker ‘playing mechanic’ and pulling down
the prop till the engine catches, didn’t you open
up the throttle too wide? Better to open it just
enough to give the engine gas to carry along
on—and even cut the gun a bit more to let
it run fairly slow till it warms up. Turning her
up to full eighteen hundred revs don’t gain
while she’s cold, and it throws dust like sin!”</p>
<p>Or, as Larry taxied, learning to manage speed
on the ground by use of wider throttle for more
speed, cutting down the gas if the craft began
going too fast, he would catch an error:</p>
<p>“Did you forget last time to put the stick back
and make the blast on the elevators hold the
tail down while we taxi? Sure, you did—but
you won’t again, because you saw that if you
didn’t we might nose over. You ‘over-controlled’,
too, and almost nosed over before you
caught it—and then, we were going so fast I
don’t know what kept this-here crate from starting
to hop.</p>
<div class="pagenum" id="Page_107">107</div>
<p>“That’s right—easy movements always—don’t
jerk the controls—take it fairly easy. And
you are doing right to move the stick back to
neutral this time when the tail came up—kick
rudder a bit, isn’t she slanting to the right?
That’s it, buddy, left rudder and back, and now
the right rudder—there she is, headed right.”</p>
<p>Mostly, Larry caught his own mistakes in
time.</p>
<p>Ordinarily cool-headed, he had to be told only
once or twice, and reminded almost never that
jerky manipulation of the controls was not good
practice or helpful to their evolutions. Easy
movements, continual alertness and a cool head
stood him in good stead.</p>
<p>Seeing those fine qualities, Jeff had Larry
thrilling and happy on the fourth day by letting
the youthful enthusiast for aviation take over
for a simple control job, straight, level flying.</p>
<p>“You’ll want to get the feel of the air, and
see how stable the average modern crate is,”
Jeff spoke through the Gossport tube. “How
does that-there wing look to you—kind of dropping?—remember
what I did—that’s the stuff,
stick to the left a bit and back to neutral, so the
other wing won’t drop! No use teetering back
and forth. They put neutral position into a
control so you can set ailerons or rudder or elevators
where you want them and hold them.”</p>
<div class="pagenum" id="Page_108">108</div>
<p>There was more than Larry had ever dreamed
there would be to keep in mind: there was the
maintaining of level flight; even in his simplest
personal contact with the controls; then there
was the job of keeping the horizon line at the
right location by watching past a chosen spot on
the engine cowling, else they would start to
climb or go into a glide. There was the real
horizon to distinguish from the false horizon,
which an airman knows is, through some trick
of the air, the visible horizon that is just a little
bit above the true horizon, so that to hold level
flight in a forward direction, that false horizon
is not held on a line with the top of the engine
cowling, but, to hold a line with the true horizon
the marking point is held just a trifle below that
false, visible horizon line.</p>
<div class="pagenum" id="Page_109">109</div>
<p>Had that been all he had to comprehend
Larry’s first control job would have been
simple. There was much more to watch—the
tachometer, to keep track of engine speed; the
air speed was learned by watching the indicator
on the wing of that particular type of airplane;
the position of the nose with relation to the
horizon had to be constantly noted and a tendency
to rise or lower had to be corrected: little
uprushes or warm air made the airplane tilt a
trifle to one side or the other and ailerons had
to be used to bring it back, the stick had to be
returned to neutral gently at exactly the point
of level flight after such correction and not sent
to the other side or the craft tipped the other
way and opposite aileron had to be applied;
then there was the chosen point such as a church
steeple, tall tree or other landmark selected as
a point on the course to hold the nose on—that
must be watched and a touch of rudder given if
the craft deviated from its straight line.</p>
<p>Nevertheless, complicated as flying appeared
to be on that first handling of joystick, rudder
and throttle, Larry knew that the happiest time
of his life would be his first successful solo hop,
and that the complicated look of the maneuvers
and the number of things to watch—level flight,
direction, maintaining flying speed, seeing that
altitude was maintained, that his own craft was
not menacing or menaced by any other in the air,
all these would become simple, second nature as
soon as the flying hours piled up and gave him
more skill and experience.</p>
<p>Morning and afternoon Jeff took him up.</p>
<p>Quick to learn, retentive of memory, not repeating
the same mistakes—even working out
some points for himself—Larry, at the end of
the fifth day, was gratified to have Jeff, as he
slipped off the Gossport, tell him:</p>
<div class="pagenum" id="Page_110">110</div>
<p>“The only trouble about this-here instruction
is that I’m scared you’re going to make a better
pilot than your teacher.”</p>
<p>“Oh, thanks—but I never could be any better
than you, Jeff.”</p>
<p>“Yes, you can,” the older man’s face became
doleful. “You ain’t the kind to let that-there
superstition bug bite you.”</p>
<p>“No,” admitted his pupil. “I think superstition
is just believing something somebody
else tells you until you are so busy watching
out for something to go wrong that you aren’t
‘right on the job’ with your own work—or you
are so busy waiting for some good thing to ‘happen’
that you don’t see Opportunity when it
comes up because you’re not watching Opportunity—you’re
watching Luck, or Omens.”</p>
<p>“Don’t I know it!” Jeff was rueful. “I want
to kick myself sometimes—but when you know
other folks has had their crates ‘jinxed’ by being
in the same hangar with one that has got the
name for being hoodooed—what would you do?”</p>
<p>“Just what I’m doing now,” Larry grinned.
“I know Mr. Everdail paid the company for the
ruined seaplane and moved it into the hangar,
here. I know your airplane almost touches it,
every night. But I don’t let that worry me,
because——”</p>
<div class="pagenum" id="Page_111">111</div>
<p>“Well, it worries me. I try not to let it, but
the worry is there, no matter what I do. You
see, I never thought, out in the marsh, about
anything going wrong because I took that big
wrench and put it in my tool kit after we salvaged
it out of the water. But I dreamt about
emeralds, last night, and so I went to a fortune
teller gypsy woman and she told me a dream
like that meant bad luck in business, and so I
said I was a pilot and told her all about the
seaplane——”</p>
<p>“You ought to be careful,” Larry interrupted.
“If she puts two-and-two together, emeralds
and a chase and a wrecked seaplane——”</p>
<p>“Oh, she was too busy talking to listen that
close.”</p>
<p>“They’re awfully quick—the way they guess
what’s in your mind proves that.”</p>
<p>“Oh, she won’t think anything about it. Anyhow,
she told me not on any chance to touch that
cracked up seaplane or anything that ever was
on it—and so—I put the jinx on my own crate
without meaning to.”</p>
<p>“I’m still willing to learn in it.”</p>
<p>“Well—I don’t know—it worries me.”</p>
<p>“It doesn’t bother me, Jeff.”</p>
<p>And it didn’t, for several more busy days.</p>
<div class="pagenum" id="Page_112">112</div>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />