"I guess you"re right, Tom. Well, that ends it I suppose."
"Ends what?"
"Our trip to the platinum mine."
"Not a bit of it. I"m going to have a hunt for it."
"But how can you when Mr. Petrofsky can"t go along to show us the way?
Besides, we wanted to help rescue his brother, and now we can"t."
"Well, I"m going to make a big try," declared the young inventor firmly. "And the first thing I"m going to do is to get our friend out of the clutches of the Russian police."
"You are? How?"
"I"m going to make a search for him. Look here, Ned, he must have been taken away some time to-day--perhaps only a few hours ago--and they can"t have gone far with him."
"How do you make that out?" Ned wanted to know.
"Well, I guess I"m detective enough for that," and Tom smiled. "Look here, the doors and windows are open. Now it rained last night, and there was quite a wind. If the windows had been open in the storm there"d be some traces of moisture in the rooms. But there isn"t a drop. Consequently the windows have been opened since last night."
"Say, that"s so!" cried Ned admiringly.
"But that"s not all," went on Tom. "Here"s a bottle of milk on the table, and it"s fresh," which he proved by tasting it. "Now that was left by the milkman either late last night or early this morning. I don"t believe it"s over twelve hours old."
"Well, what does this mean?" asked Ned, who couldn"t quite follow Tom"s line of reasoning.
"To my mind it means that the spies were here no later than this morning. Look at the table upset, the dishes on the floor. Here"s one with oatmeal in it, and you know how hard and firm cooked oatmeal gets after it stands a bit. This is quite fresh, and soft, and--"
"And that means--" interrupted Ned, who was in turn interrupted by Tom, who exclaimed:
"It means that Mr. Petrofsky was at breakfast when they burst in on him, and took him away. They had hard work overpowering him, I"ll wager, for he could put up a pretty good fight. And the broken furniture is evidence of that. Then the spies, after tying him up, or putting him in a carriage, searched the house for incriminating papers.
That"s as plain as the nose on your face. Then the police agents, or whoever they were, skipped out in a hurry, not taking the trouble to close the windows and doors."
"I believe it did happen that way," agreed Ned, who clearly saw what Tom meant. "But what can we do? How can we find him?"
"By getting on the trail," answered his chum quickly. "There may be more clews in the house, and I"m sure there"ll be some out of doors, for they must have left footprints or the marks of carriage wheels.
We"ll take a look, and then we"ll get right on the search. I"m not going to let them take Mr. Petrofsky to Russia if I can help it. I want to get after that platinum, and he"s the only one who can pilot us anywhere near the place; and besides, there"s his brother we"ve got to rescue. We"ll make a search for the exile."
"I"m with you!" cried Ned. "Jove! Wouldn"t it be great if we could rescue him? They can"t have gotten very far with him."
"I"m afraid they have quite a start on us," admitted Tom with a dubious shake of his head, "but as long as they"re in the United States we have a chance. If ever they get him on Russian soil it"s all up with him."
"Come on then!" cried Ned. "Let"s get busy. What"s the first thing to do?"
"Look for clews," replied Tom. "We"ll begin at the top of the house and work down. It"s lucky we came when we did, for every minute counts."
Then the two plucky lads began their search for the kidnapped Russian exile. Had those who took him away seen the mere youths who thus devoted themselves to the task, they might have laughed in contempt, but those who know Tom Swift and his st.u.r.dy chum, know that two more resourceful and brave lads would be hard to find.
CHAPTER V
A CLEW FROM RUSSIA
"Nothing much up here," remarked Tom, when he and Ned had gone all over the second floor twice. "That sc.r.a.p of paper, which put me on to the fact that some one from the Russian government had been here, is about all. They must have taken all the doc.u.ments Mr. Petrofsky had."
"Maybe he didn"t have any," suggested Ned.
"If he was wise he"d get rid of them when he knew he was being shadowed, as he told us. Perhaps that was why they broke up the furniture, searching for hidden papers, or they may have done it out of spite because they didn"t find anything. But we might as well go downstairs and look there."
But the first floor was equally unproductive of clews, save those already noted, which showed, at least so Tom believed, that Mr.
Petrofsky had been surprised and overpowered while at breakfast.
"Now for outside!" cried the young inventor. "We"ll see if we can figure out how they got him away."
There were plenty of marks in the soft ground and turf, which was still damp from the night"s rain, though it was now afternoon. Unfortunately, however, in approaching the house after leaving the aeroplane, Ned and Tom had not thought to exercise caution, and, not suspecting anything wrong, they had stepped on a number of footprints left by the kidnappers.
But for all that, they saw enough to convince them that several men had been at the lonely house, for there were many marks of shoes. It was out of the question, however, to tell which were those of Mr. Petrofsky and which those of his captors.
"They might have carried him out to a carriage they had in waiting,"
suggested Ned. "Let"s go out to the front gate and look in the road.
They hardly would bring the carriage up to the door."
"Good idea," commented Tom, and they hurried to the main thoroughfare that pa.s.sed the Russian"s house.
"Here they are!" cried Ned, Who was in the lead. "There"s been a carriage here as sure as you"re a foot high and it"s a rubber-tired one too."
"GOOD!" cried Tom admiringly. "You"re coming right along in your detective training. How do you make that out?"
"See here, where a piece of rubber has been broken or cut out of the tire. It makes a peculiar mark in the dirt every time the wheel goes around."
"That"s right, and it will be a good thing to trace the carriage by.
Come on, we"ll keep right after it."
"Hold on a bit," suggested Ned, who, though not so quick as Tom Swift, frequently produced good results by his very slowness. "Are you going off and leave the airship here for some one to walk off with?"
"Guess they wouldn"t take it far," replied the young inventor, "but I"d better make it safe. I"ll disconnect it so they can"t start it, though if Andy Foger happens to come along he might slash the planes just out of spite. But I guess he won"t show up."
Tom took a connecting pin out of the electrical apparatus, making it impossible to start the aeroplane, and then, wheeling it out of sight behind a small barn, he and Ned went back to the carriage marks in the road.
"Hurry!" urged Tom, as he started off in the direction of the village of Hurdtown, near where the cottage stood. "We will ask people living along the highway if they"ve seen a carriage pa.s.s."
"But what makes you think they went off that way?" asked Ned. "I should think they"d head away from the village, so as not to be seen."
"No, I don"t agree with you. But wait, we"ll look at the marks. Maybe that will help us."
Peering carefully at the marks of horses" hoofs and the wheel impressions, Tom uttered a cry of discovery.