CHAPTER XV.

  A DARING ESCAPE.

  The menace of the steady gray eye and the swaying gun muzzle wereenough for Grove and Needham.

  "Here's a go!" growled Needham, casting a yearning look around him towardthe timber.

  "I'm going to make a 'go' of it, all right," averred Matt, grimly, "notwo ways about that. What are you doing with your right hand, Needham?"

  Needham's hand had wandered toward his hip. Matt was watching bothscoundrels so sharply that not a move they made escaped him.

  Needham brought his hand around in front of him.

  "What are you trying to do, King?" queried Grove, evidently seekingto gain time and give Brady, Pete or Whipple a chance to come on thescene.

  "I'm trying to get away from this place," replied Matt, "and I've notmuch time to waste in talk. I guess you know that fully as well as Ido."

  Still keeping the rifle trained on the two men, he climbed out of thecar to the ground.

  "Now," he went on, "I'll tell you fellows what you're to do, and thenwe'll be able to work quicker. You will both get into the car, and getin together so that I can cover you more easily with this one gun.Needham will then place his back against the upright timber that helpssuspend the car from the hoop--and mind you take the timber farthestfrom the driver's seat. On the bottom of the car there's a coil ofsmall rope. With that, Grove will tie Needham to the upright. Is thatclear?"

  "Why, what the blazes----" began Grove, but Matt cut him short.

  "There's no time for talk, I tell you!" he called, sharply. "Brady andthe other two may show up here, and I'm going to have this work donebefore that happens."

  "But----"

  "Get into the car!"

  Matt's finger flexed ever so slightly upon the trigger of the gun. Thewatchful eyes of Grove and Needham detected the movement and both madehaste to tumble into the car.

  "I'd give a farm to know what you've got up your sleeve," growledNeedham, as he backed slowly against the upright timber.

  "Move more quickly," warned Matt, "or you'll find what I've got in thisgun. I used to be in Arizona, and I know how they deal with matters ofthis sort down there. They're not in the habit of wasting so many wordsas I'm doing. Pick up that rope, Grove," he added, "and get busy withit. Mind you tie hard knots! No fast-and-loose plays at this stage ofthe game."

  Grove was a bit languid in his operations, and as he worked he gavemore attention to the quarters from which Brady, Pete and Whipple mightbe expected than he did to the tying of Needham.

  "Grove," called Matt, sternly, "I'm not going to bother much more withyou! Move faster, and pass some of that rope around Needham's arms. Idon't want his hands left free. Pull the coils tighter."

  After a fashion, Grove got his comrade tied.

  "Will that do you?" he demanded, gruffly, turning to glare at Matt.

  "That will answer. Now turn your back to Needham's."

  "Say, by thunder I'm not going to stand for----"

  "_Turn your back!_"

  Matt shoved the muzzle of the rifle toward Grove's breast, and the manmade haste to place himself against the upright piece of the car'sframework.

  It was Matt's intention, then, to drop the rifle and proceed with thetying of Grove himself, but the girl suddenly appeared and climbed intothe car.

  "I'll do the rest, Matt," said she, picking up the loose end of therope.

  Matt had planned to have the girl remain in the thicket, taking no partin his operations; but she had different ideas.

  Grove and Needham both glared at the girl.

  "The old man will make you sorry for this!" fumed Grove.

  "I expect he will," replied the girl. "He has made me sorry for a lotof things lately."

  Around and around the bodies of the two men Helen coiled the rope.Then, when she had come to the end of it, she made it fast with a knot.

  Pausing a moment after she had finished, she drew a revolver out ofNeedham's hip-pocket and dropped it on the driver's seat.

  "You had better have that in your own hands, Matt," said she, quietly."It will be easier to handle than the rifle."

  "Don't get out of the car, Helen," called Matt, as the girl was aboutto climb over the rail. "You can't stay here after this."

  "I can and I must."

  Her resolve to remain with her father was unshaken; but there wasa bright light in her eyes which Matt had not seen there before.Evidently the success that was attending Matt's plans to get away withthe air-ship had lifted a grievous load from her spirits.

  Walking around the car, Helen picked up the bag which they had takenwith them into the swamp.

  "This must go with you, Matt," she continued, pushing the bag under thedriver's seat, "along with the rest of the stuff piled up on the groundthere."

  While she was on that side of the car she cast off the mooring-rope andflung it into the air-ship.

  Matt dropped the rifle and released the rope on the other side.

  The Hawk was now in readiness to take to flight. With nothing to holdit, the gas-bag began to feel the effects of the wind that was blowingand to move about in answer to the faint gusts. But it rode on an evenkeel, for its buoyancy had to be accelerated by the propeller before itwould rise, or could be maneuvered.

  The girl had started toward the bags, heaped up on the ground. Beforeshe could reach them, however, a loud yell from the opposite side ofthe island caused her to halt in consternation.

  "Dad!" she cried, wildly; "he's coming!"

  "Brady! This way, quick!"

  The clamoring whoops went up from Needham and Grove as they struggledfiercely to free themselves.

  Matt, seeing that there was not an instant to be lost, leaped into thecar and tilted the steering-rudder at an angle which would carry theair-ship upward.

  "Come along!" he shouted to the girl as he started the engine. "Getinto the car, Helen!"

  "Hurry, hurry!" screamed the girl, running directly away from the carand in the direction of Brady and Pete, who were making for the Hawk ata run.

  A pang of regret ran through Matt at the thought of leaving Helen Bradybehind to bear the brunt of her father's anger; but there was no timefor argument. He started the propeller, and the Hawk began to move upthe airy incline toward the tops of the trees that walled in the edgeof the "island."

  The struggles of Matt's two prisoners became desperately frantic. Soviolently did they wrestle with their bonds that the car tipped andswayed dangerously. Matt had no time to give to them, just then, beingwholly wrapped up in the maneuvering of the Hawk.

  He gave the rudder a further tilt, throwing the air-ship to an anglethat caused Grove's feet to slip from under him, so that only thesupport of the rope and the upright held him to his place.

  "Shoot!" he bellowed. "Why don't you blaze away at him, Brady?"

  Brady had evidently held his fire, hoping to get the air-ship backwithout injury; and, even now, as his rifle and Pete's began to crackmurderously, the target of their bullets was Matt.

  Two or three of the leaden spheres zipped past Matt's head, missinghim by the narrowest of margins. Strangely enough, however, Matt wasmore worried about the harm the bullets might do the gas-bag, or themachinery, than he was about any damage they might do him.

  Faster and faster he speeded up the engine, and the Hawk raced towardthe clouds. She cleared the tops of the trees, gained the clear sky,and, at a height of five hundred feet, was brought to an even keel.

  Then, and not till then, did Matt venture a look below. He was just intime to catch one fleeting glimpse of those he had left behind on the"island." What he saw aroused his anger and indignation.

  Helen, still true to her resolve to help Matt, had seized hold of herfather's rifle and was struggling to keep him from using it. The minutefigures were strangely clear, and Matt saw Brady lift his fist andstrike the girl down. Then the tops of the trees interposed and cut offthe unpleasant sight. Matt faced about, a steely glint in his gray eyes.

  "Here's a fine lay ou
t!" Grove was clamoring, far gone with chagrinand baffled rage. "One kid, single-handed, captures two of us and runsoff with the air-ship, right under the noses of Brady and the rest!Oh, well, we're entitled to all we get out of this. We don't deserveanything better."

  "You'll get something more than you expect," said Matt, picking up therevolver and pushing it into his pocket, "if you don't stop squirmingaround like that. It's hard to steer when you're rocking the car insuch a fashion. You fellows are my prisoners, so make the best of it."

  "Yes," growled Grove, "and us two aeronauts will have a fine tale totell when you take us where you're going to. You've stolen this car.That'll cook your goose for you."

  "Brady," answered Matt, "can have his air-ship back whenever he wantsto show up and claim it."

  There followed a brief silence, during which Matt noted that the windwas brisk, and from the north, and exulted over the speed the Hawkdeveloped in the teeth of it.

  Needham was first to break the silence.

  "If I had my hat, and was able," said he, craning his head around toget a look at Matt, "I'd take it off to you."

  The lad in the driver's seat made no response. He was hurrying towardSouth Chicago.

  Where was the Eagle? The skies in every direction were clear and theother air-ship was nowhere to be seen.

  Motor Matt, as he drove the air-ship steadily against the wind, keptclose watch of the captured aeronauts.

 
Stanley R. Matthews's Novels