"If it doesn"t, there"s likely to be trouble up above," went on the foreman, nodding in the direction of the great dam.
"What do you mean?"
"I mean that the water is getting too high. The dam is weakening, I heard."
"Is that so? Why, I thought they had made it to stand any sort of a flood."
"They evidently didn"t count on one like this. They"ve got the engineer who built it up there, and they"re doing their best to strengthen it. I also heard that they"re preparing to dynamite it to open breeches here and there in it, in case it is likely to give way suddenly."
"You don"t mean it! Say, if it does go out with a rush it will wipe out the village."
"Yes, but it can"t hurt us," went on the foreman. "We"re too high up on the side of the hill. Even if the dam did burst, if the course of the water could be changed, to send it down that other valley, it would do no harm, for there are no settlements over there," and he pointed to the distant hill.
It was near this hill that Tom intended to direct his projectiles, and on the other side of it was another valley, running at right angles to the one crossed by the dam.
As the foreman had said, if the waters (in case the dam burst) could be turned into this transverse valley, the town could be saved.
"But it would take considerable digging to open a way through that side of the mountain, into the other valley," went on the man.
"Yes," said Tom, and then he gave the matter no further thought, for something came up that needed his attention.
"Have you your explosive here?" asked the foreman of the young inventor the next day, when the weather showed signs of clearing.
"Yes, some of it," said Tom. "I have another supply in a safe place in the village. I didn"t want to bring too much here until the gun was to be fired. I can easily get it if we need it. Jove! I wish it would clear. I want to get out in my Humming Bird, but I can"t if this keeps up." Tom had brought one of his speedy little airships with him to Preston.
The following day the clouds broke a little, and on the next the sun shone. Then the work on the gun went on apace. Tom and his friends were delighted.
"Well, I think we can try a shot tomorrow!" announced Tom with delight on the evening of the first clear day, when all hands had worked at double time.
"Bless my powder-horn!" exclaimed Mr. Damon. "You don"t mean it!"
"Yes, the gun is all in place," went on the young inventor. "Of course, it"s only a temporary carriage, and not the disappearing one I shall eventually use. But it will do. I"m going to try a shot tomorrow.
Everything is in readiness."
There came a knock on the door of the room Tom had fitted up as an office in the old farmhouse.
"Who is it?" he asked.
"Me--Koku," was the answer.
"Well, what do you want, Koku?"
"Man here say him must see Master."
Tom and Ned looked at each other, suspicion in their eyes.
"Maybe it"s that spy again," whispered Ned.
"If it is, we"ll be ready for him," murmured his chum. "Show him in, Koku, and you come in too."
But the man who entered at once disarmed suspicion. He was evidently a workman from the dam above, and his manner was strangely excited.
"You folks had better get out of here!" he exclaimed.
"Why?" asked Tom, wondering what was going to happen.
"Why? Because our dam is going to burst within a few hours. I"ve been sent to warn the folks in town in time to let them take to the hills.
You"d better move your outfit. The dam can"t last twenty-four hours longer!"
CHAPTER XVII
THE BURSTING DAM
"Bless my fountain pen!" exclaimed Mr. Damon. "You don"t mean it!"
"I sure do!" went on the man who had brought the startling news. "And the folks down below aren"t going to have any more time than they need to get out of the way. They"ll have to lose some of their goods, I reckon. But I thought I"d stop on my way down and warn you. You"d better be getting a hustle on."
"It"s very kind of you," spoke Tom; "but I don"t fancy we are in any danger."
"No danger!" cried the man. "Say, when that water begins to sweep-down here nothing on earth can stop it. That big gun of yours, heavy as it is, will be swept away like a straw, I know--I saw the Johnstown flood!"
"But we"re so high up on the side of the hill, that the water won"t come here," put in Ned. "We had that all figured out when we heard the dam was weak. We"re not in any danger; do you think so, Tom?"
"Well, I hardly do, or I would not have set the gun where I did. Tell me," he went on to the man, "is there any way of opening the dam, to let the water out gradually?"
"There is, but the openings are not enough with such a flood as this.
The engineers never counted on so much rain. It"s beyond any they ever had here. You see, there was a small creek that we dammed up to make our lake. Some of the water from the spillway flows into that now, but its channel won"t hold a hundredth part of the flood if the dam goes out.
"You"d better move, I tell you. The dam is slowly weakening. We"ve done all we can to save it, but that"s out of the question. The only thing to do is to run while there"s time. We"ve tried to make additional openings, but we daren"t make any more, or the wall will be so weakened that it will go out in less than twenty-four hours.
"You"ve had your warning, now profit by it!" he added. "I"m going to tell those poor souls down in the valley below. It will be tough on them; but it can"t be helped."
"If the dam bursts and the water could only be turned over into the transverse valley, this one would be safe," said Tom, in a low voice.
"Yes, but it can"t be done!" the messenger exclaimed. "Our engineers thought of that, but it would take a week to open a channel, and there isn"t time. It can"t be done!"
"Maybe it can," spoke Tom, softly, but no one asked him what he meant.
"Well, I must be off," the man went on. "I"ve done my duty in warning you."
"Yes, you have," agreed Tom, "and if any damage comes to us it will be our own fault. But I don"t believe there will."
The man hastened out, murmuring something about "rash and foolhardy people."