"That"s what you did!" said Mr. Damon. "But what can we do now?"
"I don"t know," Ned was forced to admit. "But I should think we"d better go back to the last place where he was seen to pa.s.s in his auto, and try to get on his trail."
Mr. Damon agreed that this was a wise plan, and, after a casual look around the farmhouse and other buildings on Kanker"s place and finding nothing to arouse their suspicions, the two left in Ned"s speedy little machine.
"It is mighty queer!" remarked the young bank clerk, as they shot along the country road. "It isn"t like Tom to get caught this way."
"Maybe he isn"t caught," suggested the other. "Tom has been in many a tight place and gotten out, as you and I well know. Maybe it will be the same now, though it does look suspicious, that fake message coming from you."
"Not coming from me, you mean," corrected Ned. "Well, we"ll do the best we can."
They proceeded back to where they had last had a trace of Tom in his machine, and there could only confirm what they had learned at first, namely, that the young inventor had departed in the direction of the Kanker farm, after having filled his radiator with water, and chatting with a farmer he knew.
"Then this is where the trail divides," said Ned, as they went back over the road, coming to a point where the highway branched off. "If he went this way, he went to Kanker"s place, or he would be in the way of going. He isn"t there, it seems, and didn"t go there."
"If he took the other road, where would he go?" asked Mr. Damon.
"Any one of a dozen places. I guess we"ll have to follow the trail and make all the inquiries we can."
But from the point where the two roads branched, all trace of Tom Swift was lost. No one had seen him in his machine, though he was known to more than one resident along the highway.
"Well, what are we going to do?" asked Mr. Damon, after they had traveled some distance and had obtained no news.
"Suppose we call up his home," suggested Ned, as they came to a country store where there was a telephone. "It may be he has returned. In that case, all our worry has gone for nothing."
"I don"t believe it has," said Mr. Damon. "But if we call up and ask if Tom is back it will show we haven"t found him, and his father will be more worried than ever."
"We can ask the telephone girl, and tell her to keep quiet about it,"
decided Ned; and this they did.
But the answer that came back over the wire was discouraging. For Tom had not returned, and there was no word from him. There was an urgent message for him, too, from government officials regarding the tank, the girl reported.
"Well, we"ve just got to find him--that"s all!" declared Ned. "I guess we"ll have to make a regular search of it. I did hope we"d find him out at the Kanker farm. But since he isn"t there, nor anywhere about, as far as we can tell, we"ve got to try some other plan."
"You mean notify the authorities?"--asked Mr. Damon.
"Hardly that--yet. But I"ll get some of Tom"s friends who have machines, and we"ll start them out on the trail. In that way we can cover a lot of ground."
Late that afternoon, and far into the night, a number of the friends of Tom and Ned went about the country in automobiles, seeking news of the young inventor. Mr. Swift became very anxious over the non-return of his son, and felt the authorities should be notified; but as all agreed that the local police could not handle the matter and that it would have to be put into the hands of the United States Secret Service, he consented to wait for a while before doing this.
All the next day the search was kept up, and Ned and Mr. Damon were getting discouraged, not to say alarmed, when, most unexpectedly, they received a clew.
They had been traveling around the country on little-frequented roads in the hope that perhaps Tom might have taken one and disabled his machine so that he was unable to proceed.
"Though in that case he could, and would, have sent word," said Ned.
"Unless he"s hurt," suggested Mr. Damon.
"Well, maybe that is what"s happened," Ned was saying, when they noticed coming toward them a very much dilapidated automobile, driven by a farmer, and on the seat beside him was a small, barefoot boy.
"Which is the nearest road to Shopton?" asked the man, bringing his wheezing machine to a stop.
"Who are you looking for in Shopton?" asked Ned, while a strange feeling came over him that, somehow or other, Tom was concerned in the question.
"I"m looking for friends of a Tom Swift," was the answer.
"Tom Swift? Where is he? What"s happened to him?" cried Ned.
"Bless my dyspepsia tablets!" exclaimed Mr. Damon. "Do you know where he is?"
"Not exactly," answered the farmer; "but here"s a note from some one that signs himself "Tom Swift," and it says he"s a prisoner!"
Chapter XXII
Rescued
For a moment Ned and Mr. Damon gazed at the farmer in his rattletrap of an auto, and then they looked at the fluttering piece of paper in his hand. Thence their gaze traveled to the ragged and barefoot lad sitting beside the farmer.
"I found it!" announced the boy.
"Found what?" asked Ned.
"That there note!"
Without asking any more questions, reserving them until they knew more about the matter, Mr. Damon and Ned each reached out a hand for the paper the farmer held. The latter handed it to Ned, being nearest him, and at a sight of the handwriting the young bank clerk exclaimed:
"It"s from Tom, all right!"
"What happened to him?" cried Mr. Damon. "Where is he? Is he a prisoner?"
"So it seems," answered Ned. "Wait, I"ll read it to you," and he read:
""Whoever picks this up please send word at once to Mr. Swift or to Ned Newton in Shopton, or to Mr. Damon of Waterfield. I am a prisoner, locked in the old factory. Tom Swift"."
"Bless my quinine pills!" cried Mr Damon. "What in the world does it mean? What factory?"
"That"s just what we"ve got to find out," decided Ned. "Where did you get this?" he asked the farmer"s boy.
"Way off over there," and he pointed across miles of fields. "I was lookin" for a lost cow, and I went past an old factory. There wasn"t n.o.body in the place, as far as I knowed, but all at once I heard some one yell, and then I seen something white, like a bird, sail out of a high window. I was scared for a minute, thinkin" it might be tramps after me."
"And what did you do, Sonny?" asked Mr. Damon, as the boy paused.
"Well, after a while I went to where the white thing lay, and I picked it up. I seen it was a piece of paper, with writin" on it, and it was wrapped around part of a brick."