<h2 id='chapXVI' class='c001'>CHAPTER XVI</h2>
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<div>THE YOUNG AVIATOR</div>
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<p class='c012'>“There he is, Dave,” said Hiram Dobbs.</p>
<p>“Yes, that is Jerry Dawson, sure enough.”</p>
<p>“You see he is here.”</p>
<p>“I knew before this that he was,” replied Dave.
“Mr. King told me this morning that young
Dawson and his father were both working for an
airman named Russell.”</p>
<p>“Well, Dave,” said Hiram in quite a serious
tone, “I want you to look out for that fellow.”</p>
<p>“Why? I never did him any harm.”</p>
<p>“Because I’m around a good deal, and I hear a
lot of things you don’t. That Jerry Dawson is a
selfish, vicious boy. His father, they say, is almost
as bad, and the man they are working for,
Russell, has been barred from some meets on account
of winning an altitude race by a trick.”</p>
<p>“I’ve heard of Russell, too,” responded Dave.
“He’s no friend of Mr. King, and that’s enough
for me. As to Jerry, though, I have no business
with him, and don’t intend to have if I can help
it.”</p>
<p><span class='pageno' title='129' id='Page_129'></span>“He’ll cross your path in some mean way, you
mark my words,” said Hiram warningly. “He’s
got an idea that he owes Mr. King a grudge, and
he’s crazy to pay it off. Down by the south
pylons early this morning, I saw him talking to
two of the roughest looking fellows I ever met.
You was at your practice, and Jerry pointed you
out to the men, and was whispering to them—something
about you, I’ll bet.”</p>
<p>“I’ll keep an eye out for him, but I’m not a bit
scared,” said Dave.</p>
<p>Hiram spoke of pylons just now as if he had
known what they meant all his life. It was nearly
a week after his first meeting with Dave, and a
vast improvement was visible in the manner, position
and finances of the humble but ambitious
farm lad.</p>
<p>Hiram had gone to work with a vengeance.
Mr. King had told him that there were many steps
to the ladder leading to fame and fortune in
the aviation field, and Hiram had taken this literally.</p>
<p>“Why, I’m willing to scrub floors, work as
candy butcher, tar ropes, wash dishes, peddle
programmes, anything honest to reach that first
rung,” he had told Dave back at Fairfield. “I’ll
make good every step I take, no matter how slow
or hard it is, I’m going to become an aviator, like
yourself, Dave.”</p>
<p><span class='pageno' title='130' id='Page_130'></span>“Me an aviator?” smiled Dave. “You flatter
me, Hiram.”</p>
<p>“Do I?” retorted Hiram. “Well, then, so
does Mr. King. And your teacher, old Grimshaw.
He says he never saw a person take to the
business like you do. Mr. King was bragging
about you, too, down at the office yesterday. He
actually talked about entering you in one of the
races next week.”</p>
<p>Dave flushed with pleasure. He was too sensible
to imagine himself a full-fledged aviator, or
anything like it. At the same time, he could not
deny that he had learned a great many new things
within the past ten days.</p>
<p>He did not look much like the tired, dusty and
threadbare boy who had left Brompton hungry,
barefooted and practically penniless. The one
hundred feet descent from the <i>Aegis</i> in the old inventor’s
parachute garment had been a complete
success. It had put Dave in funds, too, for Mr.
Dixon had given him a ten dollar bill for his services.</p>
<p>“I don’t pretend to be much more than a rediscoverer
as to my parachute device,” Dixon acknowledged.
“It’s up to date, and it does what
I claim for it, though. Tell you, Dashaway, I’ll
be over to the Dayton meet, and I’ll add a five
dollar bill to every one hundred feet you drop
with my apparatus.”</p>
<p><span class='pageno' title='131' id='Page_131'></span>“It really does work, doesn’t it, Mr. King?”
Dave asked of the aviator a little later.</p>
<p>“Oh, yes,” replied the airman, somewhat indifferently.
“It won’t sell much, though, outside
of amateurs.”</p>
<p>“Why not?”</p>
<p>“A professional won’t admit any lack of skill
or pluck, any more than a crack swimmer would
use a life preserver. Another thing, a crack operator
can’t be hampered with a suit tied around
his ankles. Still another thing, when the moment
arrives for an airman to desert the ship, things are
so desperate he hasn’t much chance of jumping
clear of the machine.”</p>
<p>Dave had also received some money from the
motion picture manager. Then Mr. King handed
him what was due him of a modest salary for the
broken week.</p>
<p>Saturday afternoon Mr. King had arranged to
ship his traps to Dayton, all except the monoplane,
in which he and his young assistant made the trip.</p>
<p>Dave found his friend, Hiram, on the new
grounds. The country boy was in high spirits.
He had worked tirelessly while at Fairfield.
When there were no visitors to the grounds, he
went into the town. He sold out a lot of leftover
souvenirs, and that Saturday afternoon
boasted gleefully of being for the first time in his
life the possessor of ten dollars.</p>
<p><span class='pageno' title='132' id='Page_132'></span>“All my own,” he announced, “and I’m going
to tidy up a bit. Come and help me pick out a
cheap suit, Dave.”</p>
<p>“Yes, and I need a complete outfit myself,”
explained Dave. “I tell you, Hiram, this is a
great day for two poor fellows who hadn’t a
quarter between them a week ago.”</p>
<p>“And see what we are learning,” added Hiram.
“If ever airshipping gets to be the go for
traveling about, we’ll be in right on the jump,
won’t we?”</p>
<p>Mr. King was pleased to see the improved appearance
of his young apprentice in a neat sensible
suit of clothes. He had taken a decided liking to
Dave, who was quick, reliable and accommodating.
Dave felt like a bird given its freedom after
a long and irksome captivity. His head was
full of aviation all of the time, however, and the
various airmen he got acquainted with were all
willing and glad to answer his questions about
this and that detail of the different make machines.</p>
<p>Monday morning, Mr. King had taken Dave
down to a roped-off section of the aviation field.
It held a tent covering an old type airplane, and
also housing a queer old fellow with one arm,
whom the airman introduced to Dave as Mr.
Grimshaw.</p>
<p><span class='pageno' title='133' id='Page_133'></span>“Here’s the young fellow I was telling you
about,” said Mr. King. “You’ll find him a likely
pupil.”</p>
<p>“I’ll soon know it, if that’s so,” responded the
gruff, grim old fellow. “Put him right through
the regular course of sprouts, eh?”</p>
<p>“That’s what I want. It’s what he wants, too.
Make it special, Grimshaw. I’ve great hopes of
him, and don’t want him worked in a crowd.”</p>
<p>Dave understood that his kind employer was
spending some money for his instruction. He felt
duly grateful. He entered into his work with vim
and ardor, determined to make rapid progress, to
show Mr. King how he appreciated his friendly
interest in him.</p>
<p>For three days Dave was with Grimshaw from
ten to twelve o’clock in the morning and two to
four in the afternoon. The rest of the time he
was helping about the little building, where Mr.
King made his headquarters. His employer was
preparing to enter for the first day’s altitude prize.
There was practicing to do, and the <i>Aegis</i> needed
constant attention. Dave now knew how to oil it,
keep the tanks full and clean up the monoplane.</p>
<p>Dave had heard that his gruff old tutor, Grimshaw,
had been quite a balloonist in his time. A
fall from an airship had crippled him. He was
useful in his line, however, kept pace with all the
new wrinkles in aviation, and ran a kind of school
for amateurs.</p>
<p><span class='pageno' title='134' id='Page_134'></span>From the first step in learning how to run the
airplane, to the point when with a wild cheer
Dave felt himself safe in making a brief flight all
by himself, our hero’s progress was one of unceasing
interest and delight.</p>
<p>The first step was to learn how to glide. Dave
aboard the glider, Grimshaw and an assistant
helped get the airplane under way. They carried
the weight of the machine and overcame its head
resistance by running forward at its own rate of
speed.</p>
<p>Over the course Dave ran and repeated. As
the glider cut into the air, the wind caused by the
running caught under the uplifted edge of the
curved planes, buoying up the machine and causing
it to rise. At first Dave lifted only a foot or
two clear of the ground. Then he projected his
feet slightly forward, so as to shift the center of
gravity a trifle and bring the edges of the glider
on an exact level parallel with the ground.</p>
<p>“You see,” old Grimshaw would say, “you
scoop up the advancing air and rise upon it. Keep
the planes steady, for if they tilt the air is spilled.”</p>
<p>Dave soon learned the rudiments. He knew
that in his first experiment he must watch out that
the rear end of the skids or the tail did not scrape
over the turf or slap the ground hard and break
off. He kept the machine always under control,
so it would not get tail heavy. He guarded
<span class='pageno' title='135' id='Page_135'></span>against wing deflection, and the second day felt
proud as a king when his tutor relented from his
usual grimness, and told him quite emphatically
that he would “do.”</p>
<p>“Never stubbed the toe of the machine, and
that’s pretty fine for a beginner,” commented the
veteran airman.</p>
<p>It was not until Dave had a chance at a real
biplane that he felt that he had gained a glorious
promotion. He spent hours looking over a technical
book Mr. King had loaned him. He hung
around old Grimshaw every spare moment he
could find. It was the afternoon on his third
day’s tuition when Dave started his first real
flight.</p>
<p>He had learned the perfect use of the rudder
from running the airplane up and down the
ground. Dave knew the danger of leaving the
course unexpectedly in his frequent practice runs.
He knew how to gauge a rush of air against the
face, how to use the elevator as a brake to keep
from pitching forward. Dave had mastered a
heap of important details, and felt strong confidence
in himself.</p>
<p>Dave rose a few feet from the ground with the
motor wide open. He moved the rudder very
gingerly. The switch was of the knife variety,
and the throttle and advance spark were in the
form of pedals working against springs.</p>
<p><span class='pageno' title='136' id='Page_136'></span>“Ready,” called out Grimshaw, in his strange
forbidding voice.</p>
<p>“Ready I am,” warbled Dave, keen for the
contest of his skill.</p>
<p>“Then let her go.”</p>
<p>The biplane took a superb shoot into the air.</p>
<p>Dave was not afraid of forgetting how to run
the machine straight ahead. He had watched
Mr. King at the level too often for that. He got
fairly aloft, tried coasting, veered, struck a new
level, and worked the ailerons to decrease any
tendency for tipping.</p>
<p>On his second turn Dave had to use the emergency
brake, the stout bar of steel on the skid
near the rear end. He banked on a spirited whirl,
got his level, circled the course twice, and came
back to the ground flushed with excitement and
delight, without so much as a wrinkle put in the
staunch aircraft.</p>
<p>It was on this account that Dave felt proud and
then modest, as his staunch friend, Hiram, referred
to him as an aviator. He had entire confidence
now in his ability to manage an airship
alone. Dave had some pretty ambitious dreams
as he went on his way. Great preparations were
being made for the meet, which was to open the
next morning.</p>
<p><span class='pageno' title='137' id='Page_137'></span>Dave kept busy about the <i>Aegis</i> quarters. Just
at dusk Mr. King sent him to the town near by
to order some supplies from a hardware store.
Dave attended to his commissions and started
back for the grounds an hour later.</p>
<p>Just as he passed through the crowd about the
main entrance to the aviation field our hero turned
as he heard a voice say quickly and in a meaning
way:</p>
<p>“There he is!”</p>
<p>“Yes, it’s the Dashaway fellow,” was responded.</p>
<p>Dave made out two forms skulking into the
shadow of the office building. Then some passersby
shut them out from view.</p>
<p>“Hello,” said Dave to himself, “that sounds
and looks suspicious.”</p>
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