酷兔英语

章节正文

at Sol Witberg--"in each of these cases I am compelled to give

the defendant the benefit of the doubt. Gentlemen, you are both
dismissed."

"Let us have a nip on it," Watson said to Witberg, as they left
the courtroom; but that outraged person refused to lock arms

and amble to the nearest saloon.
WINGED BLACKMAIL

PETER WINN lay back comfortably in a library chair, with closed
eyes, deep in the cogitation of a scheme of campaign destined

in the near future to make a certain coterie of hostile
financiers sit up. The central idea had come to him the night

before, and he was now reveling in the planning of the remoter,
minor details. By obtaining control of a certain up-country

bank, two general stores, and several logging camps, he could
come into control of a certain dinky jerkwater line which shall

here be nameless, but which, in his hands, would prove the key
to a vastly larger situation involving more main-line mileage

almost than there were spikes in the aforesaid dinky jerkwater.
It was so simple that he had almost laughed aloud when it came

to him. No wonder those astute and ancient enemies of his had
passed it by.

The library door opened, and a slender, middle-aged man,
weak-eyed and eye glassed, entered. In his hands was an

envelope and an open letter. As Peter Winn's secretary it was
his task to weed out, sort, and classify his employer's mail.

"This came in the morning post," he ventured apologetically and
with the hint of a titter. "Of course it doesn't amount to

anything, but I thought you would like to see it."
"Read it," Peter Winn commanded, without opening his eyes.

The secretary cleared his throat.
"It is dated July seventeenth, but is without address. Postmark

San Francisco. It is also quite illiterate. The spelling is
atrocious. Here it is:

Mr. Peter Winn,
SIR: I send you respectfully by express a pigeon worth good

money. She's a loo-loo--"
"What is a loo-loo?" Peter Winn interrupted.

The secretary tittered.
"I'm sure I don't know, except that it must be a superlative of

some sort. The letter continues:
Please freight it with a couple of thousand-dollar bills and

let it go. If you do I wont never annoy you no more. If you
dont you will be sorry.

"That is all. It is unsigned. I thought it would amuse you."
"Has the pigeon come?" Peter Winn demanded.

"I'm sure I never thought to enquire."
"Then do so."

In five minutes the secretary was back.
"Yes, sir. It came this morning."

"Then bring it in."
The secretary was inclined to take the affair as a practical

joke, but Peter Winn, after an examination of the pigeon,
thought otherwise.

"Look at it," he said, stroking and handling it. "See the
length of the body and that elongated neck. A proper carrier. I

doubt if I've ever seen a finer specimen. Powerfully winged and
muscled. As our unknown correspondent remarked, she is a

loo-loo. It's a temptation to keep her."
The secretary tittered.

"Why not? Surely you will not let it go back to the writer of
that letter."

Peter Winn shook his head.
"I'll answer. No man can threaten me, even anonymously or in

foolery."
On a slip of paper he wrote the succinct message, "Go to hell,"

signed it, and placed it in the carrying apparatus with which
the bird had been thoughtfully supplied.

"Now we'll let her loose. Where's my son? I'd like him to see
the flight."

"He's down in the workshop. He slept there last night, and had
his breakfast sent down this morning."

"He'll break his neck yet," Peter Winn remarked, half-fiercely,
half-proudly, as he led the way to the veranda.

Standing at the head of the broad steps, he tossed the pretty
creature outward and upward. She caught herself with a quick

beat of wings, fluttered about undecidedly for a space, then
rose in the air.

Again, high up, there seemed indecision; then, apparently
getting her bearings, she headed east, over the oak-trees that

dotted the park-like grounds.
"Beautiful, beautiful," Peter Winn murmured. "I almost wish I

had her back."
But Peter Winn was a very busy man, with such large plans in

his head and with so many reins in his hands that he quickly
forgot the incident. Three nights later the left wing of his

country house was blown up. It was not a heavy explosion, and
nobody was hurt, though the wing itself was ruined. Most of the

windows of the rest of the house were broken, and there was a
deal of general damage. By the first ferry boat of the morning

half a dozen San Francisco detectives arrived, and several
hours later the secretary, in high excitement, erupted on Peter

Winn.
"It's come!" the secretary gasped, the sweat beading his

forehead and his eyes bulging behind their glasses.
"What has come?" Peter demanded. "It--the--the loo-loo bird."

Then the financier understood.
"Have you gone over the mail yet?"

"I was just going over it, sir."
"Then continue, and see if you can find another letter from our

mysterious friend, the pigeon fancier."
The letter came to light. It read:

Mr. Peter Winn,
HONORABLE SIR: Now dont be a fool. If youd came through, your

shack would not have blew up--I beg to inform you respectfully,
am sending same pigeon. Take good care of same, thank you. Put

five one thousand dollar bills on her and let her go. Dont feed
her. Dont try to follow bird. She is wise to the way now and

makes better time. If you dont come through, watch out.
Peter Winn was genuinely angry. This time he indited no message

for the pigeon to carry. Instead, he called in the detectives,
and, under their advice, weighted the pigeon heavily with shot.

Her previousflight having been eastward toward the bay, the
fastest motor-boat in Tiburon was commissioned to take up the

chase if it led out over the water.
But too much shot had been put on the carrier, and she was

exhausted before the shore was reached. Then the mistake was
made of putting too little shot on her, and she rose high in

the air, got her bearings and started eastward across San
Francisco Bay. She flew straight over Angel Island, and here

the motor-boat lost her, for it had to go around the island.
That night, armed guards patrolled the grounds. But there was

no explosion. Yet, in the early morning Peter Winn learned by
telephone that his sister's home in Alameda had been burned to

the ground.
Two days later the pigeon was back again, coming this time by

freight in what had seemed a barrel of potatoes. Also came
another letter:

Mr. Peter Winn,
RESPECTABLE SIR: It was me that fixed yr sisters house. You

have raised hell, aint you. Send ten thousand now. Going up all
the time. Dont put any more handicap weights on that bird. You

sure cant follow her, and its cruelty to animals.
Peter Winn was ready to acknowledge himself beaten. The

detectives were powerless, and Peter did not know where next
the man would strike--perhaps at the lives of those near and

dear to him. He even telephoned to San Francisco for ten
thousand dollars in bills of large denomination. But Peter had

a son, Peter Winn, Junior, with the same firm-set jaw as his
fathers,, and the same knitted, brooding determination in his

eyes. He was only twenty-six, but he was all man, a secret
terror and delight to the financier, who alternated between

pride in his son's aeroplane feats and fear for an untimely and
terrible end.

"Hold on, father, don't send that money," said Peter Winn,
Junior. "Number Eight is ready, and I know I've at last got

that reefing down fine. It will work, and it will revolutionize
flying. Speed--that's what's needed, and so are the large

sustaining surfaces for getting started and for altitude. I've
got them both. Once I'm up I reef down. There it is. The

smaller the sustaining surface, the higher the speed. That was
the law discovered by Langley. And I've applied it. I can rise

when the air is calm and full of holes, and I can rise when its
boiling, and by my control of my plane areas I can come pretty

close to making any speed I want. Especially with that new
Sangster-Endholm engine."

"You'll come pretty close to breaking your neck one of these
days," was his father's encouraging remark.

"Dad, I'll tell you what I'll come pretty close to-ninety miles
an hour--Yes, and a hundred. Now listen! I was going to make a

trial tomorrow. But it won't take two hours to start today.
I'll tackle it this afternoon. Keep that money. Give me the

pigeon and I'll follow her to her loft where ever it is. Hold
on, let me talk to the mechanics."

He called up the workshop, and in crisp, terse sentences gave
his orders in a way that went to the older man's heart. Truly,

his one son was a chip off the old block, and Peter Winn had no
meek notions concerning the intrinsic value of said old block.

Timed to the minute, the young man, two hours later, was ready
for the start. In a holster at his hip, for instant use, cocked

and with the safety on, was a large-caliber automatic pistol.
With a final inspection and overhauling he took his seat in the

aeroplane. He started the engine, and with a wild burr of gas
explosions the beautiful fabric darted down the launching ways

and lifted into the air. Circling, as he rose, to the west, he
wheeled about and jockeyed and maneuvered for the real start of

the race.
This start depended on the pigeon. Peter Winn held it. Nor was

it weighted with shot this time. Instead, half a yard of bright
ribbon was firmly attached to its leg--this the more easily to

enable its flight being followed. Peter Winn released it, and
it arose easily enough despite the slight drag of the ribbon.

There was no uncertainty about its movements. This was the
third time it had made particular homing passage, and it knew

the course.
At an altitude of several hundred feet it straightened out and

went due cast. The aeroplane swerved into a straight course
from its last curve and followed. The race was on. Peter Winn,

looking up, saw that the pigeon was outdistancing the machine.
Then he saw something else. The aeroplane suddenly and

instantly became smaller. It had reefed. Its high-speed
plane-design was now revealed. Instead of the generous spread

of surface with which it had taken the air, it was now a lean
and hawklike monoplane balanced on long and exceedingly narrow

wings.
. . . . . .

When young Winn reefed down so suddenly, he received a
surprise. It was his first trial of the new device, and while

he was prepared for increased speed he was not prepared for
such an astonishing increase. It was better than he dreamed,

and, before he knew it, he was hard upon the pigeon. That
little creature, frightened by this, the most monstrous hawk it



文章标签:名著  

章节正文