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<h2> CHAPTER IV. THE PROFESSOR'S LITTLE EXPERIMENT. </h2>
<p>Again those involuntary riders of the tornado were tossed violently to and
fro in their seemingly frail ship, while the balloon itself appeared
threatened with instant dissolution, those eddying currents growing broken
and far less regular in action, while the fierce tumult grew in sound and
volume a thousandfold.</p>
<p>All around the air-ship now showed ugly debris, limbs and boughs and even
whole trunks of giant trees being whirled upward and outward, each moment
menacing the vessel with total destruction, yet as frequently vanishing
without infringing seriously upon their curious prison.</p>
<p>Sand and dirt and fragments of shattered rock whistled by in an apparently
unending shower, only with reversed motion, flying upward in place of
shooting downward to earth itself.</p>
<p>Speech was utterly impossible under the circumstances, and the fate-tossed
voyagers could only cling fast to the hand-rail, and hold those precious
air-tubes in readiness for the worst.</p>
<p>Never before had either of the trio heard such a deafening crash and
uproar, and little wonder if they thought this surely must herald the
crack of doom!</p>
<p>The tornado seemed to reel backward, as though repulsed by an immovable
obstacle, and then, while the din was a bit less deafening, Professor
Featherwit contrived to make himself heard, through screaming at the top
of his voice:</p>
<p>"The mountain range, I fancy! It's a battle to the—"</p>
<p>That sentence was perforce left incomplete, since the storm-demon gave
another mad plunge to renew the battle, bringing on a repetition of that
drunken swaying so upsetting to both mind and body.</p>
<p>A few seconds thus, then the tornado conquered, or else rose higher in
partial defeat, for their progress was resumed, and comparative quiet
reigned again.</p>
<p>The higher clouds curved backward, affording a wider view of the heavens
far above, and, as all eyes turned instinctively in that direction, Bruno
involuntarily exclaimed:</p>
<p>"Still daylight! I thought—how long has this lasted?"</p>
<p>"It's the middle o' next week; no less!" positively affirmed his brother.
"Don't tell me! We've been in here a solid month, by my watch!"</p>
<p>Instead of making reply such as might have been expected from one of his
mathematical exactness, Professor Featherwit gave a cry of dismay, while
hurriedly moving to and fro in their contracted quarters, for the time
being forgetful of all other than this, his great loss.</p>
<p>"What is it, uncle Phaeton?" asked Bruno, rising to his knees in natural
anxiety. "Surely nothing worse than has already happened to us?"</p>
<p>"Worse? What could be worse than losing for ever—the camera, boys;
where is the camera, I ask you?"</p>
<p>Certainly not where the professor was looking, and even as he roared forth
that query, his heart told him the sad truth; past doubting, the
instrument upon whose aid he relied to place upon record these marvellous
facts, so that all mankind might see and have full faith, was lost,—thrown
from the aerostat, to meet with certain destruction, when the vessel first
came within the tornado's terrible clutch.</p>
<p>"Gone,—lost,—and now who will believe that we ever—oh,
this is enough to crush one's very soul!" mourned the professor, throwing
up his hands, and sinking back to the floor of the flying-machine in a
limp and disheartened heap for the time being.</p>
<p>Neither Bruno nor Waldo could fully appreciate that grief, since thoughts
and care for self were still the ruling passion with both; but once more
they were called upon to do battle with the swaying of the winds, and once
again were they saved only through that life-giving cylinder of compressed
air.</p>
<p>Presently, the heart-broken professor rallied, as was his nature, and,
with a visible effort putting his great loss behind him, endeavoured to
cheer up his comrades in peril.</p>
<p>"So far we have passed through all danger without receiving material
injury,—to ourselves, I mean,—and surely it is not too much to
hope for eventual escape?" he said, earnestly, pressing the hands of his
nephews, by way of additional encouragement.</p>
<p>"Yes," hesitated Bruno, with an involuntary shiver, as he glanced around
them upon those furiously boiling clouds, then cast an eye upward, towards
yonder clear sky. "Yes, but—in what manner?"</p>
<p>"What'll we do when the cyclone goes bu'st?" cut in Waldo, with
disagreeable bluntness. "It can't go on for ever, and when it splits up,—where
will we be then?"</p>
<p>"I wish it lay within my power to give you full assurance on all points,
my dear boys," the professor made reply. "I only wish I could ensure your
perfect safety by giving my own poor remnant of life—"</p>
<p>"No, no, uncle Phaeton!" cried the brothers, in a single breath.</p>
<p>"How cheerfully, if I only might!" insisted the professor, his homely face
wearing an expression of blended regret and unbounded affection. "But for
me you would never have encountered these perils, nor ever—"</p>
<p>Again he was interrupted by the brothers, and forced to leave that regret
unspoken to the end.</p>
<p>"Only for you, uncle Phaeton, what would have become of us when we were
left without parents, home, fortune? Only for you, taking us in and
treating us as though of your own flesh and blood—"</p>
<p>"As you are, my good lads! Let it pass, then, but I must say that I do
wish—well, well, let it pass, then!"</p>
<p>A brief silence, which was spent in gripping hands and with eyes giving
pledges of love and undying confidence; then Professor Featherwit spoke
again, in an entirely different vein.</p>
<p>"If nothing else, we have exploded one fallacy which has never met with
contradiction, so far as my poor knowledge goes."</p>
<p>"And that is—what, uncle Phaeton?"</p>
<p>"Observe, my lads," with a wave of his hand towards those whirling walls,
and then making a downward motion. "You see that we are floating in a
partial vacuum, yet where there is air sufficient to preserve life under
difficulties. And by looking downward—careful that you don't fall
overboard through dizziness, though!"</p>
<p>"Looks as though we were floating just above a bed of ugly wind!" declared
Waldo, after taking a look below.</p>
<p>"Precisely; the aerostat rests upon an air-cushion amply solid enough to
sustain far more than our combined weight. But what is the generally
accepted view, my dear boys?"</p>
<p>"You tell, for we don't know how," frankly acknowledged Waldo.</p>
<p>"Thanks. Yet you are now far wiser than all of the scientists who have
written and published whole libraries concerning these storm formations,
but whose fallacies we are now fully prepared to explode, once for all,
through knowledge won by personal investigation—ahem!"</p>
<p>Strange though it may appear, the professor forgot the mutual danger by
which they were surrounded, and trotted off on his hobby-horse in blissful
pride, paying no attention to the hideous uproar going on, only raising
his voice higher to make it heard by his youthful auditors.</p>
<p>"The common belief is that, while these tornadoes are hollow, even through
the trunk or tongue down to its contact with the earth, that hollow is
caused by a constant suction, through which a steady stream of debris is
flowing, to be sown broadcast for miles around after emerging from the
open top of the so-called balloon."</p>
<p>"But it isn't at all like that," eagerly cried Waldo, pointing to where
the fragments were flowing upward through those walls themselves, yet far
enough from that hollow interior to be but indistinctly seen save on rare
occasions. "Look at 'em scoot, will ye? Oh, if we could only climb up like
that!"</p>
<p>Professor Featherwit was keenly watching and closely studying that very
phenomena through all, and now he gave a queer little chuckle, as he
nodded his head with vigour, before dryly speaking.</p>
<p>"Well, it might be done; yes, it might be done, and that with no very
serious difficulty, my lad."</p>
<p>"How? Why not try it on, then?"</p>
<p>"To meet with instant death outside?" sharply queried Bruno. "It would be
suicidal to make the attempt, even if we could; which I doubt."</p>
<p>Waldo gave a sudden cry, pointing upward where, far above that destructive
storm, could be seen a brace of buzzards floating on motionless wings,
wholly undisturbed by the tumult below.</p>
<p>"If we were only like that!" the lad cried, longingly. "If a
flying-machine could be built like those turkey-buzzards! I wish—well,
I do suppose they're about the nastiest varmints ever hatched, but just
now I'd be willing to swap, and wouldn't ask any boot, either!"</p>
<p>Apparently the professor paid no attention to this boyish plaint, for he
was fumbling in the locker, then withdrew his hand and uncoiled an
ordinary fish-line, with painted float attached.</p>
<p>Before either brother could ask a question, or even give a guess at his
purpose, Professor Phaeton flung hook and cork into those circling
currents, only to have the whole jerked violently out of his grip, the
line flying upward, to vanish from the sight of all.</p>
<p>That jerk was powerful enough to cut through the skin of his hand, but the
professor chuckled like one delighted, as he sucked away the few drops of
blood before adding:</p>
<p>"I knew it! It CAN be done, and if the worst should come to pass, why
should it not be done?"</p>
<p>Before an answer could be vouchsafed by either of the brothers, the pall
swooped down upon them once more, and again the supply of natural air was
shut off, while their vessel was rocked and swayed crazily, just as though
the delayed end was at last upon them.</p>
<p>For several minutes this torture endured, each second of which appeared to
be an hour to those imperilled beings, who surely must have perished, as
they lay pinned fast to the floor of the aerostat by that pitiless weight,
only for the precious air-tubes in connection with that cylinder of
compressed air.</p>
<p>After a seeming age of torment the awful pressure was relaxed, leaving the
trio gasping and shivering, as they lay side by side, barely conscious
that life lingered, for the moment unable to lift hand or head to aid
either self or another.</p>
<p>In spite of his far greater age, Professor Featherwit was first to rally,
and his voice was about the first thing distinguished by the brothers, as
their powers began to rally.</p>
<p>"Shall we take our chances, dear boys?" the professor was saying, in
earnest tones. "I believe there is a method of escaping from this
hell-chamber, although of what may lie beyond—"</p>
<p>"It can't well be worse than this!" huskily gasped Bruno.</p>
<p>"Anything—everything—just to get out o' here!" supplemented
Waldo, for once all spirits subdued.</p>
<p>"It may be death for us all, even if we do get outside," gravely warned
the professor. "Bear that in mind, dear boys. It may be that not one of us
will escape with life, after—"</p>
<p>"How much better to remain here?" interrupted Bruno. "I felt death would
be a mercy—then! And I'd risk anything, everything, rather than go
through such another ordeal! I say,—escape!"</p>
<p>"Me too, all over!" vigorously decided Waldo, lifting himself to both
knees as he added: "Tell us what to do, and here I am, on deck, uncle."</p>
<p>Even now Professor Phaeton hesitated, his eyes growing dimmer than usual
as they rested upon one face after the other, for right well he knew how
deadly would be the peril thus invited.</p>
<p>But, as the brothers repeated their cry, he turned away to swiftly knot a
strong trail-rope to a heavy iron grapnel, leaving the other end firmly
attached to a stanchion built for that express purpose.</p>
<p>"Hold fast, if you value life at all, dear boys!" he warned, then added:
"Heaven be kind to you, even if my life pays the forfeit! Now!"</p>
<p>Without further delay, he cast the heavy grapnel into that mass of boiling
vapour, then fell flat, as an awful jerk was given the aerostat.</p>
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