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<h2> CHAPTER V. THE PROFESSOR'S UNKNOWN LAND. </h2>
<p>There was neither time nor opportunity for taking notes, for that long
rope straightened out in the fraction of a second, throwing all prostrate
as the flying-machine was jerked upward with awful force.</p>
<p>All around them raged and roared the mighty winds, while missiles of
almost every description pelted and pounded both machine and inmates
during those few seconds of extraordinary peril.</p>
<p>Fortunately neither the professor nor his nephews could fairly realise
just what was taking place, else their brains would hardly have stood the
test; and fortunately, too, that ordeal was not protracted.</p>
<p>A hideous experience while it lasted, those vicious currents dragging the
aerostat upward out of the air-chamber by means of grapnel and rope, then
casting all far away in company with wrecked trees and bushes, and even
solider materials, all shrouded for a time in dust and debris, which
hindered the eyesight of both uncle and nephews.</p>
<p>Through it all the brothers were dimly aware of one fact uncle Phaeton was
shrilly bidding them cling fast and have courage.</p>
<p>All at once they felt as though vomited forth from a volcano which
alternately breathed fire and ice, the clear light of evening bursting
upon their aching, smarting eyes with actual pain, while that horrid roar
of warring elements seemed to pass away in the distance, leaving them—where,
and how?</p>
<p>"We're falling to—merciful heavens! Hold fast, all!" screamed the
professor, desperately striving to regain full command of their air-ship.
"The tiller is jammed, but—"</p>
<p>To all seeming, the aerostat had sustained some fatal damage during that
brief eruption caused by the professor's little experiment, for it was
pitching drunkenly end for end, refusing to obey the hand of its builder,
bearing all to certain death upon the earth far below.</p>
<p>Half stupefied with fear, the brothers clung fast to the life-line and
glared downward, noting, in spite of themselves, how swiftly yonder dark
tree-tops and gray crags were shooting heavenward to meet them and claim
the sacrifice.</p>
<p>With fierce energy Professor Featherwit jerked and wrenched at the
steering-gear, uttering words such as had long been foreign to his lips,
but then—just when destruction appeared inevitable—a wild cry
burst from his lungs, as a broken bit of native wood came away in his left
hand, leaving the lever free as of old!</p>
<p>And then, with a dizzying swoop and rapid recovery, the gallant air-ship
came back to an even keel, sailing along with old-time grace and ease,
barely in time to avoid worse mishap as the crest of a tall tree was
brushed in their passage.</p>
<p>"Saved,—saved, my lads!" screamed the professor, as his heart-pet
soared upward once more until well past the danger-line. "Safe and sound
through all,—praises be unto the Lord, our Father!"</p>
<p>Neither brother spoke just then, for they lay there in half stupor, barely
able to realise the wondrous truth: that their lives had surely been
spared them, even as by a miracle!</p>
<p>That swooping turn now brought their faces towards the tornado, which was
at least a couple of miles distant, rapidly making that distance greater
even while continuing its work of destruction.</p>
<p>"And we—were in it!" huskily muttered Bruno, his lids closing with a
shiver, as he averted his face, unwilling to see more.</p>
<p>"Heap sight worse than being in the soup, too, if anybody asks you,"
declared Waldo, beginning to rally both in strength and in spirit. "But—what's
the matter with the old ship, uncle Phaeton?"</p>
<p>For the aerostat was indulging itself in sundry distressing gyrations,
pretty much as a boy's kite swoops from side to side, when lacking in
tail-ballast, while the professor seemed unable to keep the machine under
complete control.</p>
<p>"Nothing serious, only—hold fast, all! I believe 'twould be as well
to make our descent, for fear something—steady!"</p>
<p>Just ahead there appeared a more than usually open space in the forest,
and, quite as much by good luck as through actual skill, Professor
Featherwit succeeded in making a landing with no more serious mishap than
sundry bruises and a little extra teeth-jarring.</p>
<p>As quickly as possible, both Bruno and Waldo pitched themselves out of the
partially disabled aeromotor, the elder brother grasping the grapnel and
taking a couple of turns of the strong rope around a convenient
tree-trunk, lest the ship escape them altogether.</p>
<p>"No need, my gallant boy!" assured the professor, an instant later. "All
is well,—all IS well, thanks to an over-ruling Providence!"</p>
<p>In spite of this expressed confidence, he hurriedly looked over his pet
machine, taking note of such injuries as had been received during that
remarkable journey, only giving over when fairly satisfied that all damage
might be readily made good, after which the aerostat would be as
trustworthy as upon its first voyage on high.</p>
<p>Then, grasping the brothers each by a hand, he smiled genially, then
lifted eyes heavenward, to a moment later sink upon his knees with bowed
head and hands folded across his bosom.</p>
<p>Bruno and Waldo imitated his action, and, though no audible words were
spoken, never were more heartfelt prayers sent upward, never more grateful
thanks given unto the Most High.</p>
<p>Boy, youth, and man alike seemed fairly awed into silence for the next few
minutes, unable to so soon cast off the spell which had fallen upon them,
one and each, when realising how mercifully their lives had been spared,
even after all earthly hope had been abandoned.</p>
<p>As usual, however, Waldo was first to rally, and, after silently moving
around the aerostat, upon which the professor was already busily at work
by the last gleams of the vanished sun, he paused, legs separated, and
hands thrust deep into pockets, head perking on one side as he spoke,
drawlingly:</p>
<p>"I say, uncle Phaeton?"</p>
<p>"What is it, Waldo?"</p>
<p>"It'll never do to breathe even a hint of all this, will it?"</p>
<p>"Why so, pray?"</p>
<p>"Whoever heard it would swear we were bald-headed liars right from
Storytown! And yet,—did it really happen, or have I been dreaming
all the way through?"</p>
<p>Professor Featherwit gave a brief, dry chuckle at this, rising erect to
cast a deliberate glance around their present location, then speaking:</p>
<p>"Without I am greatly mistaken, my dear boy, you will have still other
marvellous happenings to relate ere we return to what is, rightfully or
wrongfully, called civilisation."</p>
<p>"Is that so? Then you really reckon—"</p>
<p>"For one thing, my lad, we are now fairly entered upon a terra incognita,
so far as our own race is concerned. In other words,—behold, the
Olympics!"</p>
<p>Both Bruno and Waldo cast their eyes around, but only a circumscribed view
was theirs. The shades of evening were settling fast, and on all sides
they could see but mighty trees, rugged rocks, a mountain stream from
whose pebbly bed came a soothing murmur.</p>
<p>"Nothing so mighty much to brag of, anyway," irreverently quoth Waldo,
after that short-lived scrutiny. "It wouldn't fetch a dollar an acre at
auction, and for my part,—wonder when the gong will sound for
supper?"</p>
<p>That blunt hint was effective, and, letting the subject drop for the time
being, even the professor joined in the hurry for an evening meal, to
which one and all felt able to do full justice.</p>
<p>Although some rain had fallen at this point as well, no serious difficulty
was experienced in kindling a fire, while Waldo had little trouble in
heaping up a bounteous supply of fuel.</p>
<p>Through countless ages the forest monarchs had been shedding their
superfluous boughs, while here and there lay an entire tree, overthrown by
some unknown power, and upon which the brothers made heavy requisition.</p>
<p>Professor Featherwit took from the locker a supply of tinned goods,
together with a patent coffee-pot and frying-pan, so convenient where
space is scarce and stowage-room precious.</p>
<p>With water from the little river, it took but a few minutes more to scent
the evening with grateful fumes, after which the adventurous trio squatted
there in the ruddy glow, eating, sipping, chatting, now and again forced
to give thanks for their really miraculous preservation after all human
hopes had been exhausted.</p>
<p>Although Professor Featherwit was but little less thankful for the
wondrous leniency shown them, he could not altogether refrain from
mourning the loss of his camera, with its many snap-shots at the tornado
itself, to say nothing of what he might have secured in addition, while
riding the storm so marvellously.</p>
<p>More to take his thoughts away from that loss than through actual
curiosity in the subject offered by way of substitute, Bruno asked for
further light upon the so-called terra incognita.</p>
<p>"Of course it isn't really an unknown land, though, uncle Phaeton?" he
added, almost apologetically. "In this age, and upon our own continent,
such a thing is among the impossibilities."</p>
<p>"Indeed? And, pray, how long since has it been that you would, with at
least equal positivity, have declared it impossible to enter a tornado
while in wildest career, yet emerge from it with life and limb intact?"</p>
<p>"Yes, uncle, but—this is different, by far."</p>
<p>"In one sense, yes; in another, no," affirmed the professor, with emphatic
nod, brushing the tips of his fingers together, as he moved back to assume
a more comfortable position inside the air-ship, then quickly preparing a
pipe and tobacco for his regular after-meal smoke.</p>
<p>A brief silence, then the professor spoke, clearly, distinctly:</p>
<p>"Washington has her great unknown land, quite as much as has the interior
of Darkest Africa, my boys, besides enjoying this peculiar advantage:
while adventurous white men have traversed those benighted regions in
every direction, even though little permanent good may have been
accomplished, this terra incognita remains virgin in that particular sense
of the word."</p>
<p>"You mean, uncle?"</p>
<p>"That here in the Olympic region you see what is literally an unknown,
unexplored scope of country, as foreign to the foot of mankind as it was
countless ages gone by. So far as history reads, neither white man nor red
has ever ventured fairly within these limits; a mountainous waste which
rises from the level country, within ten or fifteen miles of the Straits
of San Juan de Fuca, in the north, the Pacific Ocean in the west, Hood's
Canal in the east, and the barren sand-hills lying to the far south.</p>
<p>"This irregular range is known upon the map as the Olympics, and, rising
to the height of from six to eight thousand feet, shut in a vast
unexplored area.</p>
<p>"The Indians have never penetrated it, so far as can be ascertained, for
their traditions say that it is inhabited by a very fierce tribe of
warriors, before whose might and strange weapons not one of the coast
tribes can stand."</p>
<p>"One of the Lost Tribes of Israel, shouldn't wonder," drawlingly
volunteered Waldo, stifling a yawn, and forced to rub his inflamed eyes
with a surreptitious paw.</p>
<p>Professor Featherwit, though plainly absorbed in his curious theory, was
yet quick to detect this evidence of weariness, and laughed a bit, with
change of both tone and manner, as he spoke further:</p>
<p>"That forms but a partial introductory to my lecture, dear lads, but
perhaps it might be as well to postpone the rest for a more propitious
occasion. You have undergone sore trials, both of—Hark!"</p>
<p>Some sound came to his keen ears, which the brothers failed to catch, but
as they bent their heads in listening, another noise came, which proved
startling enough, in all conscience,—a shrill, maniacal screech,
which sent cold chills running races up each spine.</p>
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