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was almost as keen as though it had to do with his own fortunes. So as soon as they were comfortably seated in their room at a private house in the Virginia town, he turned an expectant face toward the other. His eager expression influenced Tom to keep his promise without delay.

      "It concerns a certain invention on which father has been working night and day for nearly a year now," Tom began.

      "Oh! That airplane stabilizer you once told me about?" quickly demanded the other.

      "Yes, Jack. It baffled his utmost skill for a long time, but lately he believed he had found the great secret that would make airplanes almost as safe to use as motor cars on the public highways."

      "You always said he was bound to get it ​if he lived," Jack went on. "But how was it your father turned to airplane experimentation, when he was never up in one in his life?"

      "I suppose my wildness to fly had something to do with it; but there was a stronger motive. Father always looks far into the future; and, like many other people since this terrible war has started and airplanes are taking such a big share in the fighting, he believes that the nation able to muster the most efficient fleet of monster fliers capable of carrying tons and tons of destructive explosives, will win"

      "I see now where you got that idea, Tom; for I've heard you speak of it more than once. Yes, and I believe the same thing. That is one reason I'm here at the aviation school learning to serve my country and the cause of democracy in the world. But go on. Tell me more about it."

      "Just when father felt absolutely certain that he had solved the problem," continued Tom dejectedly, "a terrible disaster came upon him as suddenly as a bolt from the blue."

      "Was it a fire that destroyed his papers and set him back in his calculations?" demanded Jack.

      "Oh, much worse than that!" came the answer. "A part of the design was stolen. He says he will in time probably be able to ​make it good, so that isn't the worst of it. He fears the stolen paper may get into the hands of the German high authorities on aeronautics and prove of priceless value to them in their further conduct of the war!"

      ​

      CHAPTER II

      LOOKING FORWARD TO ACTION

       Table of Contents

      Jack looked aghast at hearing Tom say this.

      "Has he some good reason for fearing such a thing, Tom?" he hastened to ask.

      "He has," came the other's reply. "There was a German who tried hard to get on friendly terms with my father. He finally hinted very broadly that his Government, in order to secure the secret of the new stabilizer, stood ready to double any amount of money our Government at Washington had offered."

      "Whew! then he must have been a secret agent of Wilhelmstrasse!" suggested Jack, with bated breath.

      "There's not the slightest doubt about it." And Tom frowned and looked very determined. "No one could have made such a promise unless he was in close touch with the German Legation at Washington and the pay agents of the Kaiser in New York City."

      "Of course your father refused to consider any offer from German sources," continued Jack, eagerly.

      ​He was very angry at being approached by an agent of a Government with which the United States was likely to go to war at any time since the Lusitania was sunk. He told this Adolph Tiessig what he thought of his nerve, and I guess must have shown him the door in a hurry, for I know father's temper."

      "And what happened next, Tom?"

      "Well, father was so busy just then on another experiment that he neglected to take proper precautions, a fact he is bitterly sorry for now. The time to shut and lock the stable door is when the horse is still safe inside. But then you know inventors are not like ordinary people, Jack; they live up in the clouds much of the time; and my father was always a great hand for putting off things."

      "Too bad, Tom, for I can begin to see this was one time that failing got him into trouble. So the paper was stolen, was it?"

      "No question about it, Jack, for father found his room had been entered, and the safe in which he kept many of his private papers, forced open and rummaged. But as luck would have it, he carried one of the papers in his pocket at the time, so that although the thief took the other away with him, it may be possible that even the clever airplane builders over on the Rhine or on Lake Constance, will ​have a hard time puzzling out the real meaning of his figures and incomplete design."

      "They are a keen bunch, though," said Jack, looking worried, "and if they set their minds to it the chances are they'll succeed in the end. But perhaps the thief may realize he has not secured the precious paper he was after, and on that account fail to deliver it to the German Embassy at Washington?"

      "Father, hopes that may turn out to be so," replied Tom. "But remember, Jack, this is to be kept a dead secret. Father has good reasons for not wishing it to become known to the Government yet; though you must understand there's nothing dishonorable about his motives."

      "I'll never breathe a word of it, Tom, you can depend on that. But doesn't he mean to put the case in the hands of the Secret Service men? They might manage to recover the paper before it falls into the hands of the enemy."

      "But to do that, don't you see, he would have to take the Government into his confidence, which he is loth to do just yet. No, he has hired a detective of national reputation, John Mullins, who is even now on the trail, and he hopes to intercept the thief. But since Washington is not many hours away from our home town by rail, it may be that the precious ​paper was in the legation safe before my father even learned of his loss."

      "But why should your father hesitate about letting the authorities at Washington know of his loss, Tom? Perhaps they might help him find that paper before the thief had found a chance to get it out of the country."

      Tom sighed heavily.

      "I think father has a fear that some jealous rival of his might circulate the report that the paper had not been stolen at all; and that the supposed robbery was only a clever ruse on his part to deceive the Government. In plain words, Jack, that my father, who would die before betraying his country, had conspired to sell his invention at an enormous price to the Germans."

      "That would be a terrible thing for any American to say of another!" Jack asserted, indignantly.

      "Still, there are men who would be guilty of throwing out such base hints; and you know how these are magnified by the public. Father is doubly troubled, you can see. I would give a great deal if only I could in some way be able to recover that stolen paper, and put it safely back in father's hands."

      "You've made me feel bad, Tom. I sympathize with your father, because I know from ​all you've told me that he expected this to be he crowning feat of all his inventions. And then, besides, his loss may make Germany the commanding nation of the whole world. Yes it's a great misfortune. I wish we could do something to recover that stolen paper."

      "Oh, I'd give years of my life if I only I could, Jack! But it's no use to dream of such a thing. Still, I suppose I will do that very thing—dream of it—and often wake up the belief that I've cornered this Adolph Tuessig and forced him to hand over father's latest and biggest achievement."

      "I can easily understand just how you feel. It may be the things will work on my mind too, so that I'll also dream I'm handing that paper back to your dad, proudly telling him how we hunted the German spy down and forced him to disgorge. But you said this misfortune at home wouldn't cause you to change your plans any, didn't you?"

      "I shall be more eager than ever to get a whack at the Kaiser, because it was one of his miserable spies who robbed my father of his secret. Our folks have already given their consent, and if only we can get passage aboard a steamer there's nothing to keep us from going across to France, who is eager to

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