<h2 id="c14">CHAPTER XIV <br/><span class="small">DICK HANDLES A CONTROL JOB</span></h2>
<p>Flying close to three thousand feet above
Oyster Bay, level and stable, the airplane
seemed to be in perfect condition.</p>
<p>Jeff, for all his superstition, would have given
it as a pilot’s opinion that only some mistake
on Larry’s part, or a quitting engine, leaving
them with a dead stick, could cause danger.</p>
<p>Just the same the unexpected happened!</p>
<p>“There’s where President Roosevelt lies,”
Dick, in the last seat, because their places were
rearranged by Larry’s position as pilot, indicated
to Sandy, just ahead of him, the cemetery
beneath them.</p>
<p>Very tiny, in its iron fenced enclosure, the
last resting place of a national idol, was almost
invisible with its simple headstone; but Dick’s
statement was understood by Sandy to mean the
location more than the exact spot.</p>
<p>“I’ll get Jeff to ask Larry to spiral down for
a better look,” Sandy decided.</p>
<p>He transmitted the suggestion.</p>
<div class="pagenum" id="Page_122">122</div>
<p>“Sandy wants to see President Roosevelt’s
place in the cemetery,” Jeff spoke into the tube
of the Gossport helmet Larry still used.</p>
<p>“There it is, just off our left wing, buddy.
That’s right—stick goes to the left and a touch
of left rudder, but when you moved the stick
sidewise to adjust the ailerons you neglected
that-there bit of forward movement to tip us
down into a glide. Remember, it’s the double
use of the stick that works ailerons and elevators
both.”</p>
<p>Larry had overlooked that point for the instant.
It was his only difficulty in flying, to recollect
always to control all the different movements
together. The joystick, operating the
wing-flap ailerons by the left-or-right, lateral
movement, also raised or depressed the elevators
by forward-or-backward movement. However,
in any lateral position, the forward and
backward set of the stick worked the elevators
and in executing a control maneuver, even as
simple as going into a bank combined with a
turning glide, or downward spiral, the movement
of the stick should be both slightly sidewise,
for sufficient bank, and, with the same
movement, slightly forward, for depressing the
nose into a glide, returning the stick from
slightly forward back to neutral to avoid over-depressing
the nose into too steep a glide; if
not put back in neutral when the right angle was
attained, the depressed elevators would continue
to turn the forward part of the craft more
steeply downward.</p>
<div class="pagenum" id="Page_123">123</div>
<p>“Not too steep, Larry. Back with the stick.”</p>
<p>Just at the instant that Larry was about to
obey Jeff’s instruction a gust of air, coming
up warm, tilted the lifted wing more, and as he
corrected for that, trying to get the wing up
and the nose higher for a flatter spiral, his
movement was a little too sharp, and the sensitive
controls, working perfectly, but too sharply
handled, sent the craft into an opposite bank,
rolling it like a ship in the trough of a sidewise
wave.</p>
<p>Also, Larry meant to try to draw the stick
backward at the same time, coordinating both
corrections; but Jeff, a little less calm than
usual because of the superstitious fears that
kept riding him, neglected to speak the words
by which he would inform Larry that <i>he</i> was
“taking over” until the correction was made.</p>
<p>By that neglect, both drew back on the stick
at the identical instant, and the nose came up
much too sharply.</p>
<div class="pagenum" id="Page_124">124</div>
<p>Larry, not aware that Jeff meant to handle the
job, almost pulled the stick away from Jeff in
his anxiety to get the nose down again, and
Dick, in the last seat, thought he felt a sort
of thud.</p>
<p>“Hands off! I’ll take over!” Jeff said tardily.</p>
<p>He drew back on the stick for, with the
throttle rather wide—because Larry had feared
a stall as the nose went up and had thrust the
throttle control sharply forward—the craft began
to go down in a very steep glide, not quite
a dive, but with engine on full gun, sending it
in a sharp angle toward earth.</p>
<p>Naturally, when he pulled back on the stick
and it did not yield, Jeff shouted through the
speaking tube, “Let go!” for he thought Larry
had lost his head and was fighting his control.</p>
<p>Larry was not doing anything. He had removed
his hand from the stick, his feet merely
touched the rudder bar.</p>
<p>Jeff called out something.</p>
<p>They did not realize his words, but Sandy saw
his expression.</p>
<p>Almost as though he had been able to hear,
Sandy knew Jeff’s idea.</p>
<p>“The jinx has got us.”</p>
<p>Jeff cut the gun swiftly, and came out of the
bank pointed toward the wide, shimmering
waters of Oyster Bay.</p>
<p>“What’s the matter?” Larry swung his head
to call back.</p>
<div class="pagenum" id="Page_125">125</div>
<p>“Stick’s jammed!” Jeff grunted through the
tube.</p>
<p>“Jammed?”</p>
<p>“Stuck. It won’t come back. It’s the jinx!
Hoodoo! We’re heading down for the bay and
I can’t get the nose up!”</p>
<p>Dick, from the back place, saw Jeff struggling
with the stick.</p>
<p>If he did not hear, at least his flying study informed
him that something had gone amiss.</p>
<p>Equally, his quick mind arrived at a good
guess at the trouble.</p>
<p>The only reason Jeff would swing toward the
water and give up working with the stick must
be that the stick would not operate the elevators.</p>
<p>And that, to Dick, spelled disaster.</p>
<p>Its speed accelerated at the start by the engine
the airplane picked up speed rapidly because
its nose was steadily going down.</p>
<p>Jeff tugged madly again.</p>
<p>The stick, part of an installed auxiliary control
for instruction work, snapped out of its bed.</p>
<p>Jeff flung it disgustedly out to the side.</p>
<p>Larry sat quietly, knowing well that in no
time they would be diving toward a wet, deep
bay—and the end!</p>
<div class="pagenum" id="Page_126">126</div>
<p>Sandy, not fully aware of the situation, but
tense, thought of his ’chute, in the seat-pack.
Would there be time? Could he use it? He
waited, watching Jeff and Larry.</p>
<p>None of the three noticed Dick.</p>
<p>Seconds counted, he knew.</p>
<p>If the stick was jammed, it might be possible
to get into the fuselage. There he might operate
the elevator cable by hand enough to get that
nose up more, flatten the glide, maybe enough to
enable Larry, who alone had a stick, to swing
around and come down on land—somehow.</p>
<p>A crack-up would not be as bad, perhaps, as a
plunge, a dive into the bay!</p>
<p>Before his mind flashed the recollection that
in construction plans he had seen provision for
getting into the after part of the fuselage.</p>
<p>Not wasting a second, he was already free
from his safety belt, climbing with agile quickness
for all his plumpness, onto the fuselage.</p>
<p>It was a fearful risk.</p>
<p>Their speed sent them through the air so fast
that the wind was a gale there on the unprotected
top fabric of the fuselage.</p>
<p>With his cotton-stuffed ears tortured by the
pressure, with the fierce wind tearing at him,
Dick clutched the seat top as he tore away the
fabric flap covering a sort of manhole back of
his place.</p>
<div class="pagenum" id="Page_127">127</div>
<p>Headfirst he plunged in, scrambling, instantly
beginning to seek the points where the control
cables passed through channeled guides at each
side.</p>
<p>He was in a dark, stuffy, closely confined
and narrow space, his legs hanging out in
the roaring gale, unable to see, half suffocated
by the fumes collected in that restricted area.</p>
<p>He found a cable with exploring hands.</p>
<p>He tugged at it.</p>
<p>It was slack. That told his feverishly acute
intelligence that it was the cable whose lever
did not operate. He had seen that Jeff, when
he flung the stick forward to try to free it, had
been able to pull it back again without operating
the elevators.</p>
<p>Almost as his hand touched the cable and
twitched at it, his other hand, as he lay with
his weight on his chin, face and chest, contacted
something else—a large, roundish object, feeling
like a spare landing wheel tire.</p>
<p>He knew as though the light photographed
the truth to his eyes, that this tire-like object
had moved, shifted, fallen onto the cable, wedging
it.</p>
<p>Instantly Dick pushed it into the center of the
small space.</p>
<p>Gripping the cable, he twitched it sharply
once—twice—three times!</p>
<div class="pagenum" id="Page_128">128</div>
<p>In the dark, he did not know how close the
water was. He could not tell if his alertness
had been able to give back the use of the elevators
in time.</p>
<p>Larry, his hand idly on the useless stick, felt
it twitch three times.</p>
<p>Automatically he tested it. It came back, and
the nose began to come up a trifle. He did not
dare over-control. He had learned that lesson!</p>
<p>The water was rushing up at them—but the
stick—might——</p>
<p>Seconds to go!</p>
<p>He must not drag the ship out of that dive too
swiftly—a wing might be torn off.</p>
<p>But with his nerves taut, by sheer power of
his cool will forcing himself to work steadily
but not sharply, he brought the nose up, closing
his eyes to that wild nightmare of water
seeming to be leaping toward the airplane.</p>
<p>Jeff shut his eyes. Then he opened them
again. No use to try a jump, no use to do anything
but be ready if——</p>
<p>Sandy braced himself.</p>
<p>The airplane was flattening out!</p>
<p>Larry was operating the stick!</p>
<p>The nose came up steadily—with a fraction
of time to the good, they began to come out of
the glide to level flight.</p>
<div class="pagenum" id="Page_129">129</div>
<p>Larry braced himself against the slap of the
wheels into the surface water. That might offer
just enough resistance to nose them in.</p>
<p>He must be ready to open the throttle and
pull up the nose—but he must not do it too soon,
or do it at all in his strained, excited state—he
might go too far.</p>
<p>Level! The airplane skimmed, it seemed to
Larry, inches above the slightly ruffled water.</p>
<p>Gently he drew back the stick, opening the
throttle carefully.</p>
<p>“Golly-to-gosh!” he muttered, “that was
close——”</p>
<p>When he had lifted the craft and headed for
home, he glanced back.</p>
<p>Two legs waved over the last cockpit place.</p>
<p>And in that ridiculous position Dick, a hero
upside down, came to earth at the end of
Sandy’s birthday flight—on the thirteenth, a
Friday, as Jeff, white and shaken, hastened to
remind them.</p>
<p>“But you sure done some swell control job,”
he told Dick.</p>
<p>“Thanks,” Dick retorted, without smiling.</p>
<p>He turned to Larry.</p>
<p>“You did the trick, Larry,” he declared. “I
only loosened the cables—freed them——”</p>
<div class="pagenum" id="Page_130">130</div>
<p>“What made them jam, I wonder?” mused
Sandy.</p>
<p>“The jinx!”</p>
<p>Dick turned on Jeff.</p>
<p>“Yes,” he said very quietly for him. “The
jinx! The hoodoo. I think it’s broken, though—in
fact, I know it is.”</p>
<p>“Why?”</p>
<p>“Because.” Dick began to chuckle, “I’ve
thought of a sure way to break it.”</p>
<p>“How?” Jeff was regaining his color and his
curiosity.</p>
<p>But Dick grinned and shook his head.</p>
<p>He knew the answer to the puzzle of the missing
emeralds!</p>
<div class="pagenum" id="Page_131">131</div>
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