Ned stared at the polished plate, while Tom did things to it, making electrical connections, and tilting it at various angles.
"See anything, Ned?" asked Tom
The other shook his head.
"Whom am I supposed to see?" he asked.
"Why, Koku is at the other end of the wire. I'm having him help me."
Ned gazed from the polished plate out of a side window of the shop, into the yard.
"Well, that Koku is certainly a wonderful giant," said Ned, with a laugh.
"How so?" asked Tom.
"Why he can not be in two places at once. You say he ought to be at the other end of this wire, and there he is out there, spading up the garden."
Tom stared for a second and then exclaimed:
"Well, if that isn't the limit! I put him in the telephone booth in the machine shop, and told him to stay there until I was through. What in the world is he doing out there?"
"Koku!" he called to the giant, "why didn't you stay at the telephone where I put you? Why did you run away?"
"Ha!" exclaimed the giant, who, for all his great size was a simple chap. "little thing go 'tick-tick' and then 'clap-clap!' Koku no like—