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<h2> CHAPTER II. PROFESSOR FEATHERWIT TAKING NOTES. </h2>
<p>"To the house!" cried the professor, raising his voice to overcome yonder
sullen roar, which was now beginning to come their way. "Trust all to the
aeromotor, and 'twill be well with us!"</p>
<p>The wiry little man of science himself fell to work with an energy which
told how serious he regarded the emergency, and, acting under his lead,
the brothers manfully played their part.</p>
<p>Just as had been done many times before this day, a queer-looking machine
was shoved out from the shed, gliding along the wooden ways prepared for
that express purpose, while Professor Featherwit hurried aboard a few
articles which past experience warned him might prove of service in the
hours to come, then sharply cried to his nephews:</p>
<p>"Get aboard, lads! Time enough, yet none to spare in idle motions. See!
The storm is drifting our way in deadly earnest!"</p>
<p>And so it seemed, in good sooth.</p>
<p>Now fairly at its dread work of destruction, tearing up the rain dampened
dirt and playing with mighty boulders, tossing them here and there, as a
giant of olden tales might play with jackstones, snapping off sturdy trees
and whipping them to splinters even while hurling them as a farmer sows
his grain.</p>
<p>Just the one brief look at that aerial monster, then both lads hung fast
to the hand-rail of rope, while the professor put that cunning machinery
in motion, causing the air-ship to rise from its ways with a sudden
swooping movement, then soaring upward and onward, in a fair curve, as
graceful and steady as a bird on wing.</p>
<p>All this took some little time, even while the trio were working as men
only can when dear life is at stake; but the flying-machine was afloat and
fairly off upon the most marvellous journey mortals ever accomplished, and
that ere yonder death-balloon could cover half the distance between.</p>
<p>"Grand! Glorious! Magnificent!" fairly exploded the professor, when he
could risk a more comprehensive look, right hand tightly gripping the
polished lever through which he controlled that admirable mechanism. "I
have longed for just such an opportunity, and now—the camera, Bruno!
We must never neglect to improve such a marvellous chance for—get
out the camera, lad!"</p>
<p>"Get out of the road, rather!" bluntly shouted Waldo, face unusually pale,
as he stared at yonder awful force in action. "Of course I'm not scared,
or anything like that, uncle Phaeton, but—I want to rack out o' this
just about the quickest the law allows! Yes, I DO, now!"</p>
<p>"Wonderful! Marvellous! Incredible! That rara avis, an exception to all
exceptions!" declared the professor, more deeply stirred than either of
his nephews had ever seen him before. "A genuine tornado which has no
eastern drift; which heads as directly as possible towards the northwest,
and at the same time—incredible!"</p>
<p>Only ears of his own caught these sentences in their entirety, for now the
storm was fairly bellowing in its might, formed of a variety of sounds
which baffles all description, but which, in itself, was more than
sufficient to chill the blood of even a brave man. Yet, almost as though
magnetised by that frightful force, the professor was holding his air-ship
steady, loitering there in its direct path, rather than fleeing from what
surely would prove utter destruction to man and machine alike.</p>
<p>For a few moments Bruno withstood the temptation, but then leaned far
enough to grasp both hand and tiller, forcing them in the requisite
direction, causing the aeromotor to swing easily around and dart away
almost at right angles to the track of the tornado.</p>
<p>That roar was now as of a thousand heavily laden trains rumbling over
hollow bridges, and the professor could only nod his approval when thus
aroused from the dangerous fascination. Another minute, and the air-ship
was floating towards the rear of the balloon-shaped cloud itself, each
second granting the passengers a varying view of the wonder.</p>
<p>True to the firm hand which set its machinery in motion, the
flying-machine maintained that gentle curve until it swung around well to
the rear of the cloud, where again Professor Featherwit broke out in
ecstatic praises of their marvellous good fortune.</p>
<p>"'Tis worth a life's ransom, for never until now hath mortal being been
blessed with such a magnificent opportunity for taking notes and drawing
deductions which—"</p>
<p>The professor nimbly ducked his head to dodge a ragged splinter of freshly
torn wood which came whistling past, cast far away from the tornado proper
by those erratic winds. And at the same instant the machine itself
recoiled, shivering and creaking in all its cunning joints under a gust of
wind which seemed composed of both ice and fire.</p>
<p>"Oh, I say!" gasped Waldo, when he could rally from the sudden blow. "Turn
the old thing the other way, uncle Phaeton, and let's go look for—well,
almost anything's better than this old cyclone!"</p>
<p>"Tornado, lad," swiftly corrected the man of precision, leaning far
forward, and gazing enthralled upon the vision which fairly thrilled his
heart to its very centre. "Never again may we have such another
opportunity for making—"</p>
<p>They were now directly in the rear of the storm, and as the air-ship
headed across that track of destruction, it gave a drunken stagger,
casting down its inmates, from whose parching lips burst cries of varying
import.</p>
<p>"Air! I'm choking!" gasped Bruno, tearing open his shirt-collar with a
spasmodic motion.</p>
<p>"Hold me fast!" echoed Waldo, clinging desperately to the life-line. "It's
drawing me—into the—ah!"</p>
<p>Even the professor gave certain symptoms of alarm for that moment, but
then the danger seemed past as the ship darted fairly across the
storm-trail, hovering to the east of that aerial phantom.</p>
<p>There was no difficulty in filling their lungs now, and once more
Professor Featherwit headed the flying-machine directly for the
balloon-shaped cloud, modulating its pace so as to maintain their relative
position fairly well.</p>
<p>"Take note how it progresses,—by fits and starts, as it were,"
observed Featherwit, now in his glory, eyes asparkle and muscles aquiver,
hair bristling as though full of electricity, face glowing with almost
painful interest, as those shifting scenes were for ever imprinted upon
his brain.</p>
<p>"Sort of a hop, step, and jump, and that's a fact," agreed Waldo, now a
bit more at his ease since that awful sense of suffocation was lacking. "I
thought all cyclones—"</p>
<p>"Tornado, my DEAR boy!" expostulated the professor.</p>
<p>"I thought they all went in holy hurry, like they were sent for and had
mighty little time in which to get there. But this one,—see how it
stops to dance a jig and bore holes in the earth!"</p>
<p>"Another exception to the general rule, which is as you say," admitted the
professor. "Different tornadoes have been timed as moving from twelve to
seventy miles an hour, one passing a given point in half a score of
seconds, at another time being registered as fully half an hour in
clearing a single section.</p>
<p>"Take the destructive storm at Mount Carmel, Illinois, in June of '77.
That made progress at the rate of thirty-four miles an hour, yet its force
was so mighty that it tore away the spire, vane, and heavy gilded ball of
the Methodist church, and kept it in air over a distance of fifteen miles.</p>
<p>"Still later was the Texas tornado, doing its awful work at the rate of
more than sixty miles an hour; while that which swept through Frankfort,
Kansas, on May 17, 1896, was fully a half-hour in crossing a half-mile
stretch of bottom-land adjoining the Vermillion River, pausing in its
dizzy waltz upon a single spot for long minutes at a time."</p>
<p>"Couldn't have been much left when it got through dancing, if that storm
was anything like this one," declared Waldo, shivering a bit as he watched
the awful destruction being wrought right before their fascinated eyes.</p>
<p>Trees were twisted off and doubled up like blades of dry grass. Mighty
rocks were torn apart from the rugged hills, and huge boulders were tossed
into air as though composed of paper. And over all ascended the horrid
roar of ruin beyond description, while from that misshapen balloon-cloud,
with its flattened top, the electric fluid shone and flashed, now in great
sheets as of flame, then in vicious spurts and darts as though innumerable
snakes of fire had been turned loose by the winds.</p>
<p>Still the aerial demon bored its almost sluggish course straight towards
the northwest, in this, as in all else, seemingly bent on proving itself
the exception to all exceptions as Professor Featherwit declared.</p>
<p>The savant himself was now in his glory, holding the tiller between arm
and side, the better to manipulate his hand-camera, with which he was
taking repeated snap-shots for future development and reference.</p>
<p>Truly, as he more than once declared, mortal man never had, nor mortal man
ever would have, such a glorious opportunity for recording the varying
phases of nature in travail as was now vouchsafed themselves.</p>
<p>"Just think of it, lads!" he cried, almost beside himself with enthusiasm.
"This alone will be sufficient to carry our names ringing through all time
down the corridors of undying fame! This alone would be more than enough
to—Look pleasant, please!"</p>
<p>In spite of that awful vision so perilously close before them, and the
natural uncertainty which attended such a reckless venture, Waldo could
not repress a chuckle at that comical conclusion, so frequently used
towards himself when their uncle was coaxing them to pose before his pet
camera.</p>
<p>"Is it—surely this is not safe, uncle Phaeton?" ventured Bruno, as
another retrograde gust of air smote their apparently frail conveyance
with sudden force.</p>
<p>"Let's call it a day's work, and knock off," chimed in Waldo. "If the
blamed thing should take a notion to balk, and rear back on its haunches,
where'd we come out at?"</p>
<p>Professor Featherwit made an impatient gesture by way of answer. Speech
just then would have been worse than useless, for that tremendous roaring,
crashing, thundering of all sounds, seemed to fall back and envelop the
air-ship as with a pall.</p>
<p>A shower of sand and fine debris poured over and around them, filling ears
and mouths, and blinding eyes for the moment, forcing the brothers closer
to the floor of the aerostat, and even compelling the eager professor to
remit his taking of notes for future generations.</p>
<p>Then, thin and reed-like, yet serving to pierce that temporary obscurity
and horrible jangle of outer sounds, came the voice of their relative:</p>
<p>"Fear not, my children! The Lord is our shield, and so long as he willeth,
just so long shall we—Ha! didn't I tell ye so?"</p>
<p>For the blinding veil was torn away, and once again the trio of
adventurers might watch yonder grandly awesome march of devastation.</p>
<p>"Heading direct for the Olympics!" declared Professor Featherwit, digging
the sand out of his eyes and striving to clean his glasses without
removing them, clinging to tiller and camera through all. "What a grand
and glorious guide 'twould be for us!"</p>
<p>"If we could only hitch on—like a tin can to the tail of a dog!"
suggested Waldo, with boyish sarcasm. "Not any of that in mine, thank you!
I can wait. No such mighty rush. No,—SIR!"</p>
<p>There came no answer to his words, for just then that swooping air-demon
turned to vivid fire, lightning playing back and forth, from side to side,
in every conceivable direction, until in spite of the broad daylight its
glory pained those watching eyes.</p>
<p>"Did you ever witness the like!" awesomely cried Bruno, gazing like one
fascinated. "Who could or would ever believe all that, even if tongue were
able to portray its wondrous beauty?"</p>
<p>"What a place that would be for popping corn!" contributed Waldo,
practical or nothing, even under such peculiar circumstances. "If I had to
play poppy, though, I'd want a precious long handle to the concern!"</p>
<p>More intensely interested than ever, Professor Featherwit plied his
shutter, taking shot after shot at yonder aerial phenomena, feeling that
future generations would surely rise up to call him blessed when the
results of his experiments were once fairly spread before the world.</p>
<p>And hence it came to pass that still more thrilling experiences came unto
these daring navigators of space, and that almost before one or the other
of them could fairly realise that greater danger really menaced both their
air-ship and their lives.</p>
<p>Another whirly-gust of sand and other debris assailed the flying-machine,
and while sight was thus rendered almost useless for the time being, the
aerostat began to sway and reel from side to side, shivering as though
caught by an irresistible power, yet against which it battled as though
instinct with life and brain-power.</p>
<p>Once again the adventurers found it difficult to breathe, while an unseen
power seemed pressing them to that floor as though—Thank heaven!</p>
<p>Just as before, that cloud was swept away, and again air came to fill
those painfully oppressed lungs. Once again the trio cleared their eyes
and stared about, only to utter simultaneous cries of alarm.</p>
<p>For, brief though that period of blindness had been, 'twas amply
sufficient to carry the aeromotor perilously near yonder storm-centre, and
though Professor Featherwit gripped hard his tiller, trying all he knew to
turn the air-ship for a safer quarter,-'twas all in vain!</p>
<p>"Haste,—make haste, uncle Phaeton!" hoarsely panted Bruno, leaning
to aid the professor. "We will be sucked in and—hasten, for life!"</p>
<p>"I can't,—we're already—in the—suction!"</p>
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