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diff --git a/old/20tom11.txt b/old/20tom11.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..d7875ca --- /dev/null +++ b/old/20tom11.txt @@ -0,0 +1,7626 @@ +The Project Gutenberg EBook of Tom Swift in the Land of Wonders +by Victor Appleton +(#20 in our series by Victor Appleton) + +Copyright laws are changing all over the world. Be sure to check the +copyright laws for your country before downloading or redistributing +this or any other Project Gutenberg eBook. + +This header should be the first thing seen when viewing this Project +Gutenberg file. Please do not remove it. Do not change or edit the +header without written permission. + +Please read the "legal small print," and other information about the +eBook and Project Gutenberg at the bottom of this file. Included is +important information about your specific rights and restrictions in +how the file may be used. You can also find out about how to make a +donation to Project Gutenberg, and how to get involved. + + +**Welcome To The World of Free Plain Vanilla Electronic Texts** + +**eBooks Readable By Both Humans and By Computers, Since 1971** + +*****These eBooks Were Prepared By Thousands of Volunteers!***** + + +Title: Tom Swift in the Land of Wonders + +Author: Victor Appleton + +Release Date: Apr, 1996 [EBook #499] +[Yes, we are more than one year ahead of schedule] +[This file was first posted on March 11, 2002] +[Most recently updated: March 11, 2002] + +Edition: 11 + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ASCII + +************************************************************************ + + + + +Scanned by Charles Keller with +OmniPage Professional OCR software +donated by Caere Corporation, 1-800-535-7226. +Contact Mike Lough <Mikel@caere.com> + + + + + +TOM SWIFT IN THE LAND OF WONDERS + +OR + +The Underground Search +for the Idol of Gold + + +BY VICTOR APPLETON + +AUTHOR OF +"TOM SWIFT AND HIS MOTORCYCLE," +"TOM SWIFT AND HIS BIG TUNNEL," +"THE MOVING PICTURE BOYS SERIES," +"THE MOTION PICTURE CHUMS SERIES," ETC. + + + + +THE TOM SWIFT SERIES + +1 TOM SWIFT AND HIS MOTOR CYCLE +2 TOM SWIFT AND HIS MOTOR BOAT +3 TOM SWIFT AND HIS AIRSHIP +4 TOM SWIFT AND HIS SUBMARINE BOAT +5 TOM SWIFT AND HIS ELECTRIC RUNABOUT +6 TOM SWIFT AND HIS WIRELESS MESSAGE +7 TOM SWIFT AMONG THE DIAMOND MAKERS +8 TOM SWIFT IN THE CAVES OF ICE +9 TOM SWIFT AND HIS SKY RACER +10 TOM SWIFT AND HIS ELECTRIC RIFLE +11 TOM SWIFT IN THE CITY OF GOLD +12 TOM SWIFT AND HIS AIR GLIDER +13 TOM SWIFT IN CAPTIVITY +14 TOM SWIFT AND HIS WIZARD CAMERA +15 TOM SWIFT AND HIS GREAT SEARCHLIGHT +16 TOM SWIFT AND HIS GIANT CANNON +17 TOM SWIFT AND HIS PHOTO TELEPHONE +18 TOM SWIFT AND HIS AERIAL WARSHIP +19 TOM SWIFT AND HIS BIG TUNNEL +20 TOM SWIFT IN THE LAND OF WONDERS +21 TOM SWIFT AND HIS WAR TANK +22 TOM SWIFT AND HIS AIR SCOUT +23 TOM SWIFT AND HIS UNDERSEA SEARCH +24 TOM SWIFT AMONG THE FIRE FIGHTERS +25 TOM SWIFT AND HIS ELECTRIC LOCOMOTIVE +26 TOM SWIFT AND HIS FLYING BOAT +27 TOM SWIFT AND HIS GREAT OIL GUSHER +28 TOM SWIFT AND HIS CHEST OF SECRETS +29 TOM SWIFT AND HIS AIRLINE EXPRESS +*** + + + + +Tom Swift in the Land of Wonders + + + + +CONTENTS + + + +I A WONDERFUL STORY +II PROFESSOR BUMPER ARRIVES +III BLESSINGS AND ENTHUSIASM +IV FENIMORE BEECHER +V THE LITTLE GREEN GOD +VI UNPLEASANT NEWS +VII TOM HEARS SOMETHING +VIII OFF FOR HONDURAS +IX VAL JACINTO +X IN THE WILDS +XI THE VAMPIRES +XII A FALSE FRIEND +XIII FORWARD AGAIN +XIV A NEW GUIDE +XV IN THE COILS +XVI A MEETING IN THE JUNGLE +XVII THE LOST MAP +XVIII "EL TIGRE!" +XIX POISONED ARROWS +XX AN OLD LEGEND +XXI THE CAVERN +XXII THE STORM +XXIII ENTOMBED ALIVE +XXIV THE REVOLVING STONE +XXV THE IDOL OF GOLD + + + + + +TOM SWIFT IN THE LAND OF WONDERS + + + + + +CHAPTER I + +A WONDERFUL STORY + + +Tom Swift, who had been slowly looking +through the pages of a magazine, in the contents +of which he seemed to be deeply interested, +turned the final folio, ruffled the sheets back +again to look at a certain map and drawing, and +then, slapping the book down on a table before +him, with a noise not unlike that of a shot, +exclaimed: + +"Well, that is certainly one wonderful story!" + +"What's it about, Tom?" asked his chum, Ned +Newton. "Something about inside baseball, or a +new submarine that can be converted into an +airship on short notice?" + +"Neither one, you--you unscientific heathen," +answered Tom, with a laugh at Ned. "Though +that isn't saying such a machine couldn't be invented." + +"I believe you--that is if you got on its trail," +returned Ned, and there was warm admiration in +his voice. + +"As for inside baseball, or outside, for that +matter, I hardly believe I'd be able to tell third +base from the second base, it's so long since I +went to a game," proceeded Tom. "I've been +too busy on that new airship stabilizer dad gave +me an idea for. I've been working too hard, +that's a fact. I need a vacation, and maybe a +good baseball game----" + +He stopped and looked at the magazine he had +so hastily slapped down. Something he had read +in it seemed to fascinate him. + +"I wonder if it can possibly be true," he went +on. "It sounds like the wildest dream of a +professional sleep-walker; and yet, when I stop to +think, it isn't much worse than some of the +things we've gone through with, Ned." + +"Say, for the love of rice-pudding! will you +get down to brass tacks and strike a trial +balance? What are you talking of, anyhow? Is it +a joke?" + +"A joke?" + +"Yes. What you just read in that magazine +which seems to cause you so much excitement." + +"Well, it may be a joke; and yet the professor +seems very much in earnest about it," replied +Tom. "It certainly is one wonderful story!" + +"So you said before. Come on--the `fillium' +is busted. Splice it, or else put in a new reel and +on with the show. I'd like to know what's doing. +What professor are you talking of?" + +"Professor Swyington Bumper." + +"Swyington Bumper?" and Ned's voice +showed that his memory was a bit hazy. + +"Yes. You ought to remember him. He was +on the steamer when I went down to Peru to +help the Titus Brothers dig the big tunnel. That +plotter Waddington, or some of his tools, +dropped a bomb where it might have done us +some injury, but Professor Bumper, who was a +fellow passenger, on his way to South America +to look for the lost city of Pelone, calmly picked +up the bomb, plucked out the fuse, and saved +us from bad injuries, if not death. And he was +as cool about it as an ice-cream cone. Surely +you remember!" + +"Swyington Bumper! Oh, yes, now I remember +him," said Ned Newton. "But what has +he got to do with a wonderful story? Has he +written more about the lost city of Pelone? If +he has I don't see anything so very wonderful +in that." + +"There isn't," agreed Tom. "But this isn't +that," and Tom picked up the magazine and +leafed it to find the article he had been reading. + +"Let's have a look at it," suggested Ned. "You +act as though you might be vitally interested +in it. Maybe you're thinking of joining forces +with the professor again, as you did when you +dug the big tunnel." + +"Oh, no. I haven't any such idea," Tom said. +"I've got enough work laid out now to keep me +in Shopton for the next year. I have no notion +of going anywhere with Professor Bumper. Yet +I can't help being impressed by this," and, +having found the article in the magazine to which +he referred, he handed it to his chum. + +"Why, it's by Bumper himself!" exclaimed Ned. + +"Yes. Though there's nothing remarkable in +that, seeing that he is constantly contributing +articles to various publications or writing books. +It's the story itself that's so wonderful. To +save you the trouble of wading through a lot +of scientific detail, which I know you don't care +about, I'll tell you that the story is about a queer +idol of solid gold, weighing many pounds, and, +in consequence, of great value." + +"Of solid gold you say?" asked Ned eagerly. + +"That's it. Got on your banking air already," +Tom laughed. "To sum it up for you--notice +I use the word `sum,' which is very appropriate +for a bank--the professor has got on the track +of another lost or hidden city. This one, the +name of which doesn't appear, is in the Copan +valley of Honduras, and----" + +"Copan," interrupted Ned. "It sounds like +the name of some new floor varnish." + +"Well, it isn't, though it might be," laughed +Tom. "Copan is a city, in the Department of +Copan, near the boundary between Honduras and +Guatemala. A fact I learned from the article +and not because I remembered my geography." + +"I was going to say," remarked Ned with a +smile, "that you were coming it rather strong +on the school-book stuff." + +"Oh, it's all plainly written down there," and +Tom waved toward the magazine at which Ned +was looking. "As you'll see, if you take the +trouble to go through it, as I did, Copan is, or +maybe was, for all I know, one of the most +important centers of the Mayan civilization." + +"What's Mayan?" asked Ned. "You see I'm +going to imbibe my information by the deductive +rather than the excavative process," he added +with a laugh. + +"I see," laughed Tom. "Well, Mayan refers +to the Mayas, an aboriginal people of Yucatan. +The Mayas had a peculiar civilization of their +own, thousands of years ago, and their calendar +system was so involved----" + +"Never mind about dates," again interrupted +Ned. "Get down to brass tacks. I'm willing +to take your word for it that there's a Copan +valley in Honduras. But what has your friend +Professor Bumper to do with it?" + +"This. He has come across some old +manuscripts, or ancient document records, referring +to this valley, and they state, according to this +article he has written for the magazine, that +somewhere in the valley is a wonderful city, +traces of which have been found twenty to forty +feet below the surface, on which great trees are +growing, showing that the city was covered +hundreds, if not thousands, of years ago." + +"But where does the idol of gold come in?" + +"I'm coming to that," said Tom. "Though, +if Professor Bumper has his way, the idol will +be coming out instead of coming in." + +"You mean he wants to get it and take it +away from the Copan valley, Tom?" + +"That's it, Ned. It has great value not only +from the amount of pure gold that is in it, but +as an antique. I fancy the professor is more +interested in that aspect of it. But he's written +a wonderful story, telling how he happened to +come across the ancient manuscripts in the tomb +of some old Indian whose mummy he unearthed +on a trip to Central America. + +"Then he tells of the trouble he had in +discovering how to solve the key to the translation +code; but when he did, he found a great story +unfolded to him. + +"This story has to do with the hidden city, +and tells of the ancient civilization of those who +lived in the Copan valley thousands of years ago. +The people held this idol of gold to be their +greatest treasure, and they put to death many of +other tribes who sought to steal it." + +"Whew!" whistled Ned. "That IS some yarn. +But what is Professor Bumper going to do about it?" + +"I don't know. The article seems to be written +with an idea of interesting scientists and +research societies, so that they will raise money +to conduct a searching expedition. + +"Perhaps by this time the party may be +organized--this magazine is several months old. +I have been so busy on my stabilizer patent that +I haven't kept up with current literature. Take +it home and read it! Ned. That is if you're +through telling me about my affairs," for Ned, +who had formerly worked in the Shopton bank, +had recently been made general financial man- +ager of the interests of Tom and his father. The +two were inventors and proverbially poor business +men, though they had amassed a fortune. + +"Your financial affairs are all right, Tom," said +Ned. "I have just been going over the books, +and I'll submit a detailed report later." + +The telephone bell rang and Tom picked up +the instrument from the desk. As he answered in +the usual way and then listened a moment, a +strange look came over his face. + +"Well, this certainly is wonderful!" he exclaimed, +in much the same manner as when he had finished +reading the article about the idol. "It certainly +is a strange coincidence," he added, +speaking in an aside to Ned while he himself +still listened to what was being told to him +over the telephone wire. + + + +CHAPTER II + +PROFESSOR BUMPER ARRIVES + + +"What's the matter, Tom? What is it?" +asked Ned Newton, attracted by the strange +manner of his chum at the telephone. "Has +anything happened?" + +But the young inventor was too busy listening +to the unseen speaker to answer his chum, +even if he heard what Ned remarked, which is +doubtful. + +"Well, I might as well wait until he is +through," mused Ned, as he started to leave the +room. Then as Tom motioned to him to remain, +he murmured: "He may have something +to say to me later. But I wonder who is talking +to him." + +There was no way of finding out, however, +until Tom had a chance to talk to Ned, and at +present the young scientist was eagerly listening +to what came over the wire. Occasionally Ned +could hear him say: + +"You don't tell me! That is surprising! Yes +--yes! Of course if it's true it means a big +thing, I can understand that. What's that? No, +I couldn't make a promise like that. I'm sorry, +but----" + +Then the person at the other end of the wire +must have plunged into something very interesting +and absorbing, for Tom did not again +interrupt by interjected remarks. + +Tom. Swift, as has been said, was an inventor, +as was his father. Mr. Swift was now rather old +and feeble, taking only a nominal part in the +activities of the firm made up of himself and his +son. But his inventions were still used, many +of them being vital to the business and trade of +this country. + +Tom and his father lived in the village of +Shopton, New York, and their factories covered +many acres of ground. Those who wish to read +of the earliest activities of Tom in the inventive +line are referred to the initial volume, "Tom +Swift and His Motor Cycle." From then on he +and his father had many and exciting adventures. +In a motor boat, an airship, and a submarine +respectively the young inventor had gone through +many perils. On some of the trips his chum, +Ned Newton, accompanied him, and very often +in the party was a Mr. Wakefield Damon, who +had a curious habit of "blessing" everything +that happened to strike his fancy. + +Besides Tom and his father, the Swift household +was made up of Eradicate Sampson, a colored +man-of-all-work, who, with his mule Boomerang, +did what he could to keep the grounds +around the house in order. There was also Mrs. +Baggert, the housekeeper, Tom's mother being +dead. Mr. Damon, living in a neighboring town, +was a frequent visitor in the Swift home. + +Mary Nestor, a girl of Shopton, might also +be mentioned. She and Tom were more than +just good friends. Tom had an idea that some +day----. But there, I promised not to tell that +part, at least until the young people themselves +were ready to have a certain fact announced. + +From one activity to another had Tom Swift +gone, now constructing some important invention +for himself, as among others, when he made +the photo-telephone, or developed a great +searchlight which he presented to the Government +for use in detecting smugglers on the +border. + +The book immediately preceding this is called +"Tom Swift and His Bit, Tunnel," and deals +with the efforts of the young inventor to help a +firm of contractors penetrate a mountain in +Peru. How this was done and how, incidental- +ly, the lost city of Pelone was discovered, bringing +joy to the heart of Professor Swyington +Bumper, will be found fully set forth in the book. + +Tom had been back from the Peru trip for +some months, when we again find him interested +in some of the work of Professor Bumper, +as set forth in the magazine mentioned. + +"Well, he certainly is having some conversation," +reflected Ned, as, after more than five +minutes, Tom's ear was still at the receiver of +the instrument, into the transmitter of which +he had said only a few words. + +"All right," Tom finally answered, as he hung +the receiver up, "I'll be here," and then he turned +to Ned, whose curiosity had been growing with +the telephone talk, and remarked: + +"That certainly was wonderful!" + +"What was?" asked Ned. "Do you think I'm +a mind reader to be able to guess?" + +"No, indeed! I beg your pardon. I'll tell you +at once. But I couldn't break away. It was +too important. To whom do you think I was +talking just then?" + +"I can imagine almost any one, seeing I know +something of what you have done. It might be +almost anybody from some person you met up +in the caves of ice to a red pygmy from the +wilds of Africa." + +"I'm afraid neither of them would be quite +up to telephone talk yet," laughed Tom. "No, +this was the gentleman who wrote that interesting +article about the idol of gold," and he +motioned to the magazine Ned held in his hand. + +"You don't mean Professor Bumper!" + +"That's just whom I do mean." + +"What did he want? Where did he call +from?" + +"He wants me to help organize an expedition +to go to Central America--to the Copan valley, +to be exact--to look for this somewhat mythical +idol of gold. Incidentally the professor will +gather in any other antiques of more or less +value, if he can find any, and he hopes, even if he +doesn't find the idol, to get enough historical +material for half a dozen books, to say nothing +of magazine articles." + +"Where did he call from; did you say?" + +"I didn't say. But it was a long-distance call +from New York. The Professor stopped off +there on his way from Boston, where he has been +lecturing before some society. And now he's +coming here to see me," finished Tom. + +"What! Is he going to lecture here?" cried +Ned. "If he is, and spouts a whole lot of that +bone-dry stuff about the ancient Mayan civilization +and their antiquities, with side lights on +how the old-time Indians used to scalp their +enemies, I'm going to the moving pictures! I'm +willing to be your financial manager, Tom Swift, +but please don't ask me to be a high-brow. I +wasn't built for that." + +"Nor I, Ned. The professor isn't going to +lecture. He's only going to talk, he says." + +"What about?" + +"He's going to try to induce me to join his +expedition to the Copan valley." + +"Do you feel inclined to go?" + +"No, Ned, I do not. I've got too many other +irons in the fire. I shall have to give the professor +a polite but firm refusal." + +"Well, maybe you're right, Tom; and yet that +idol of gold--GOLD--weighing how many pounds +did you say?" + +"Oh, you're thinking of its money value, Ned, +old man!" + +"Yes, I'd like to see what a big chunk of gold +like that would bring. It must be quite a nugget. +But I'm not likely to get a glimpse of it +if you don't go with the professor." + +"I don't see how I can go, Ned. But come +over and meet the delightful gentleman when +he arrives. I expect him day after to-morrow." + +"I'll be here," promised Ned; and then he +went downtown to attend to some matters con- +nected with his new duties, which were much +less irksome than those he had had when he +had been in the bank. + +"Well, Tom, have you heard any more about +your friend?" asked Ned, two days later, as he +came to the Swift home with some papers needing +the signature of the young inventor and his +father. + +"You mean----?" + +"Professor Bumper." + +"No, I haven't heard from him since he +telephoned. But I guess he'll be here all right. +He's very punctual. Did you see anything of +my giant Koku as you came in?" + +"Yes, he and Eradicate were having an +argument about who should move a heavy casting +from one of the shops. Rad wanted to do it +all alone, but Koku said he was like a baby now." + +"Poor Rad is getting old," said Tom with a +sigh. "But he has been very faithful. He and +Koku never seem to get along well together." + +Koku was an immense man, a veritable giant, +one of two whom Tom had brought back with +him after an exciting trip to a strange land. The +giant's strength was very useful to the young +inventor. + +"Now Tom, about this business of leasing to +the English Government the right to manufac- +ture that new explosive of yours," began Ned, +plunging into the business at hand. "I think +if you stick out a little you can get a better +royalty price." + +"But I don't want to gouge 'em, Ned. I'm +satisfied with a fair profit. The trouble with +you is you think too much of money. Now----" + +At that moment a voice was heard in the hall +of the house saying: + +"Now, my dear lady, don't trouble yourself. +I can find my way in to Tom Swift perfectly well +by myself, and while I appreciate your courtesy +I do not want to trouble you." + +"No, don't come, Mrs. Baggert," added another +voice. "Bless my hat band, I think I know my +way about the house by this time!" + +"Mr. Damon!" ejaculated Ned. + +"And Professor Bumper is with him," added +Tom. "Come in!" he cried, opening the hall +door, to confront a bald-headed man who stood +peering at our hero with bright snapping eyes, +like those of some big bird spying out the land +from afar. "Come in, Professor Bumper; and +you too, Mr. Damon!" + + + +CHAPTER III + +BLESSINGS AND ENTHUSIASM + + +Greetings and inquiries as to health having +been passed, not without numerous blessings on +the part of Mr. Damon, the little party gathered +in the library of the home of Tom Swift sat +down and looked at one another. + +On Professor Bumper's face there was, plainly +to be seen, a look of expectation, and it seemed +to be shared by Mr. Damon, who seemed eager +to burst into enthusiastic talk. On the other +hand Tom Swift appeared a bit indifferent. + +Ned himself admitted that he was frankly +curious. The story of the big idol of gold had +occupied his thoughts for many hours. + +"Well, I'm glad to see you both," said Tom +again. "You got here all right, I see, Professor +Bumper. But I didn't expect you to meet and +bring Mr. Damon with you." + +"I met him on the train," explained the author +of the book on the lost city of Pelone, as well +as books on other antiquities. "I had no +expectation of seeing him, and we were both +surprised when we met on the express." + +"It stopped at Waterfield, Tom," explained +Mr. Damon, "which it doesn't usually do, being +an aristocratic sort of train, not given even to +hesitating at our humble little town. There +were some passengers to get off, which caused +the flier to stop, I suppose. And, as I wanted +to come over to see you, I got aboard." + +"Glad you did," voiced Tom. + +"Then I happened to see Professor Bumper a +few seats ahead of me," went on Mr. Damon, +"and, bless my scarfpin! he was coming to see +you also." + +"Well, I'm doubly glad," answered Tom. + +"So here we are," went on Mr. Damon, "and +you've simply got to come, Tom Swift. You +must go with us!" and Mr. Damon, in his +enthusiasm, banged his fist down on the table with +such force that he knocked some books to the floor. + +Koku, the giant, who was in the hall, opened +the door and in his imperfect English asked: + +"Master Tom knock for him bigs man?" + +"No," answered Tom with a smile, "I didn't knock +or call you, Koku. Some books fell, that is all." + +"Massa Tom done called fo' me, dat's what he done!" +broke in the petulant voice of Eradicate. + +"No, Rad, I don't need anything," Tom said. +"Though you might make a pitcher of lemonade. +It's rather warm." + +"Right away, Massa Tom! Right away!" cried +the old colored man, eager to be of service. + +"Me help, too!" rumbled Koku, in his deep +voice. "Me punch de lemons!" and away he +hurried after Eradicate, fearful lest the old +servant do all the honors. + +"Same old Rad and Koku," observed Mr. +Damon with a smile. "But now, Tom, while +they're making the lemonade, let's get down to +business. You're going with us, of course!" + +"Where?" asked Tom, more from habit than +because he did not know. + +"Where? Why to Honduras, of course! After +the idol of gold! Why, bless my fountain pen, +it's the most wonderful story I ever heard of! +You've read Professor Bumper's article, of +course. He told me you had. I read it on the +train coming over. He also told me about it, +and---- Well, I'm going with him, Tom Swift. + +"And think of all the adventures that may +befall us! We'll get lost in buried cities, ride down +raging torrents on a raft, fall over a cliff maybe +and be rescued. Why, it makes me feel quite +young again!" and Mr. Damon arose, to pace +excitedly up and down the room. + +Up to this time Professor Bumper had said +very little. He had sat still in his chair +listening to Mr. Damon. But now that the latter had +ceased, at least for a time, Tom and Ned looked +toward the scientist. + +"I understand, Tom," he said, "that you read +my article in the magazine, about the possibility +of locating some of the lost and buried cities of +Honduras?" + +"Yes, Ned and I each read it. It was quite +wonderful." + +"And yet there are more wonders to tell," went +on the professor. "I did not give all the details +in that article. I will tell you some of them. I +have brought copies of the documents with me," +and he opened a small valise and took out several +bundles tied with pink tape. + +"As Mr. Damon said," he went on while +arranging his papers, "he met me on the train, and +he was so taken by the story of the idol of gold +that he agreed to accompany me to Central America." + +"On one condition!" put in the eccentric man. + +"What's that? You didn't make any conditions +while we were talking," said the scientist. + +"Yes, I said I'd go if Tom Swift did." + +"Oh, yes. You did say that. But I don't call +that a condition, for of course Tom Swift will go. +Now let me tell you something more than I could +impart over the telephone. + +"Soon after I called you up, Tom--and it was +quite a coincidence that it should have been at a +time when you had just finished my magazine +article. Soon after that, as I was saying, I +arranged to come on to Shopton. And now I'm +glad we're all here together. + +"But how comes it, Ned Newton, that you are +not in the bank?" + +"I've left there," explained Ned. + +"He's now general financial man for the Swift +Company," Tom explained. "My father and I +found that we could not look after the inventing +and experimental end, and money matters, too, +and as Ned had had considerable experience this +way we made him take over those worries," and +Tom laughed genially. + +"No worries at all, as far as the Swift +Company is concerned," returned Ned. + +"Well, I guess you earn your salary," laughed +Tom. "But now, Professor Bumper, let's hear +from you. Is there anything more about this +idol of gold that you can tell us?" + +"Plenty, Tom, plenty. I could talk all day, +and not get to the end of the story. But a lot +of it would be scientific detail that might be too +dry for you in spite of this excellent lemonade," + +Between them Koku and Eradicate had managed +to make a pitcher of the beverage, though +Mrs. Baggert, the housekeeper, told Tom afterward +that the two had a quarrel in the kitchen +as to who should squeeze the lemons, the giant +insisting that he had the better right to "punch" +them. + +"So, not to go into too many details," went on +the professor, "I'll just give you a brief outline +of this story of the idol of gold. + +"Honduras, as you of course know, is a +republic of Central America, and it gets its name +from something that happened on the fourth +voyage of Columbus. He and his men had had +days of weary sailing and had sought in vain +for shallow water in which they might come to +an anchorage. Finally they reached the point +now known as Cape Gracias-a-Dios, and when +they let the anchor go, and found that in a short +time it came to rest on the floor of the ocean, +some one of the sailors--perhaps Columbus himself-- +is said to have remarked: + +"`Thank the Lord, we have left the deep +waters (honduras)' that being the Spanish word +for unfathomable depths. So Honduras it was +called, and has been to this day. + +"It is a queer land with many traces of an +ancient civilization, a civilization which I +believe dates back farther than some in the far +East. On the sculptured stones in the Copan +valley there are characters which seem to +resemble very ancient writing, but this pictographic +writing is largely untranslatable. + +"Honduras, I might add, is about the size of +our state of Ohio. It is rather an elevated table- +land, though there are stretches of tropical +forest, but it is not so tropical a country as many +suppose it to be. There is much gold scattered +throughout Honduras, though of late it has not +been found in large quantities. + +"In the old days, however, before the Spaniards +came, it was plentiful, so much, so that the +natives made idols of it. And it is one of the +largest of these idols--by name Quitzel--that I +am going to seek." + +"Do you know where it is?" asked Ned. + +"Well, it isn't locked up in a safe deposit box, +of that I'm sure," laughed the professor. "No, +I don't know exactly where it is, except that it +is somewhere in an ancient and buried city +known as Kurzon. If I knew exactly where +it was there wouldn't be much fun in going after +it. And if it was known to others it would have +been taken away long ago. + +"No, we've got to hunt for the idol of gold +in this land of wonders where I hope soon to be. +Later on I'll show you the documents that put +me on the track of this idol. Enough now to +show you an old map I found, or, rather, a copy +of it, and some of the papers that tell of the idol," +and he spread out his packet of papers on the +table in front of him, his eyes shining with +excitement and pleasure. Mr. Damon, too, leaned +eagerly forward. + +"So, Tom Swift," went on the professor, "I +come to you for help in this matter. I want +you to aid me in organizing an expedition to go +to Honduras after the idol of gold. Will you?" + +"I'll help you, of course," said Tom. "You +may use any of my inventions you choose--my +airships, my motor boats and submarines, even +my giant cannon if you think you can take it +with you. And as for the money part, Ned will +arrange that for you. But as for going with you +myself, it is out of the question. I can't. No +Honduras for me!" + + + +CHAPTER IX + +FENIMORE BEECHER + + +Had Tom Swift's giant cannon been discharged +somewhere in the vicinity of his home it could +have caused but little more astonishment to +Mr. Damon and Professor Bumper than did the +simple announcement of the young inventor. +The professor seemed to shrink back in his chair, +collapsing like an automobile tire when the air +is let out. As for Mr. Damon he jumped up and +cried: + +"Bless my----!" + +But that is as far as he got--at least just then. +He did not seem to know what to bless, but he +looked as though he would have liked to include +most of the universe. + +"Surely you don't mean it, Tom Swift," +gasped Professor Bumper at length. "Won't +you come with us?" + +"No," said Tom, slowly. "Really I can't go. +I'm working on an invention of a new aeroplane +stabilizer, and if I go now it will be just at a +time when I am within striking distance of success. +And the stabilizer is very much needed." + +"If it's a question of making a profit on it, +Tom," began Mr. Damon, "I can let you have +some money until----" + +"Oh, no! It isn't the money!" cried Tom. +"Don't think that for a moment. You see the +European war has called for the use of a large +number of aeroplanes, and as the pilots of them +frequently have to fight, and so can not give their +whole attention to the machines, some form of +automatic stabilizer is needed to prevent them +turning turtle, or going off at a wrong tangent. + +"So I have been working out a sort of +modified gyroscope, and it seems to answer the +purpose. I have already received advance orders +for a number of my devices from abroad, and as +they are destined to save lives I feel that I ought +to keep on with my work. + +"I'd like to go, don't misunderstand me, but +I can't go at this time. It is out of the question. +If you wait a year, or maybe six months----" + +"No, it is impossible to wait, Tom," declared +Professor Bumper. + +"Is it so important then to hurry?" asked Mr. +Damon. "You did not mention that to me, Professor +Bumper." + +"No, I did not have time. There are so many ends +to my concerns. But, Tom Swift, you simply must go!" + +"I can't, my dear professor, much as I should like to." + +"But, Tom, think of it!" cried Mr. Damon, +who was as much excited as was the little bald- +headed scientist. "You never saw such an idol +of gold as this. What's its name?" and he +looked questioningly at the professor. + +"Quitzel the idol is called," supplied Professor +Bumper. "And it is supposed to be in a +buried city named Kurzon, somewhere in the +Sierra de Merendon range of mountains, in the +vicinity of the Copan valley. Copan is a city, +or maybe we'll find it only a town when we get +there, and it is not far from the borders of +Guatemala. + +"Tom, if I could show you the translations I +have made of the ancient documents, referring +to this idol and the wonderful city over which +it kept guard, I'm sure you'd come with us." + +"Please don't tempt me," Tom said with a +laugh. "I'm only too anxious to go, and if it +wasn't for the stabilizer I'd be with you in a +minute. But---- Well, you'll have to get along +without me. Maybe I can join you later." + +"What's this about the idol keeping guard +over the ancient city?" asked Ned, for he was +interested in strange stories. + +"It seems," explained the professor, "that in +the early days there was a strange race of people, +inhabiting Central America, with a somewhat +high civilization, only traces of which remained +when the Spaniards came. + +"But these traces, and such hieroglyphics, or, +to be more exact pictographs, as I have been able +to decipher from the old documents, tell of one +country, or perhaps it was only a city, over which +this great golden idol of Quitzel presided. + +"There is in some of these papers a description +of the idol, which is not exactly a beauty, +judged from modern standards. But the main +fact is that it is made of solid gold, and may +weigh anywhere from one to two tons." + +"Two tons of gold!" cried New Newton. "Why, +if that's the case it would be worth----" and +he fell to doing a sum in mental arithmetic. + +"I am not so concerned about the monetary +value of the statue as I am about its antiquity," +went on Professor Bumper. "There are other +statues in this buried city of Kurzon, and though +they may not be so valuable they will give me +a wealth of material for my research work." + +"How do you know there are other statues?" +asked Mr. Damon. + +"Because my documents tell me so. It was +because the people made other idols, in opposition, +as it were, to Quitzel, that their city or +country was destroyed. At least that is the +legend. Quitzel, so the story goes, wanted to be +the chief god, and when the image of a rival was +set up in the temple near him, he toppled over +in anger, and part of the temple went with him, +the whole place being buried in ruins. All the +inhabitants were killed, and trace of the ancient +city was lost forever. No, I hope not forever, +for I expect to find it." + +"If all the people were killed, and the city +buried, how did the story of Quitzel become +known?" asked Mr. Damon. + +"One only of the priests in the temple of +Quitzel escaped and set down part of the tale," said +the professor. "It is his narrative, or one based +on it, that I have given you." + +"And now, what I want to do, is to go and +make a search for this buried city. I have fairly +good directions as to how it may be reached. +We will have little difficulty in getting to +Honduras, as there are fruit steamers frequently +sailing. Of course going into the interior--to the +Copan valley--is going to be harder. But an +expedition from a large college was recently +there and succeeded, after much labor, in ex- +cavating part of a buried city. Whether or not +it was Kurzon I am unable to say. + +"But if there was one ancient city there must +be more. So I want to make an attempt. And +I counted on you, Tom. You have had considerable +experience in strange quarters of the earth, +and you're just the one to help me. I don't +need money, for I have interested a certain +millionaire, and my own college will put up part +of the funds." + +"Oh, it isn't a question of money," said Tom. +"It's time." + +"That's just what it is with me!" exclaimed +Professor Bumper. "I haven't any time to lose. +My rivals may, even now, be on their way to Honduras!" + +"Your rivals!" cried Tom. "You didn't say anything about them!" + +"No, I believe I didn't There were so many +other things to talk about. But there is a rival +archaeologist who would ask nothing better than +to get ahead of me in this matter. He is younger +than I am, and youth is a big asset nowadays." + +"Pooh! You're not old!" cried Mr. Damon. +"You're no older than I am, and I'm still young. +I'm a lot younger than some of these boys who +are afraid to tackle a trip through a tropical +wilderness," and he playfully nudged Tom in the ribs. + +"I'm not a bit afraid!" retorted the young inventor. + +"No, I know you're not," laughed Mr. Damon. +"But I've got to say something, Tom, to stir you +up. Ned, how about you? Would you go?" + +"I can't, unless Tom does. You see I'm his +financial man now." + +"There you are, Tom Swift!" cried Mr. Damon. +"You see you are holding back a number +of persons just because you don't want to go." + +"I certainly wouldn't like to go without Tom," +said the professor slowly. "I really need his +help. You know, Tom, we would never have +found the city of Pelone if it had not been for +you and your marvelous powder. The conditions +in the Copan valley are likely to be still +more difficult to overcome, and I feel that I risk +failure without your young energy and your +inventive mind to aid in the work and to suggest +possible means of attaining our object. Come, +Tom, reconsider, and decide to make the trip." + +"And my promise to go was dependent on +Tom's agreement to accompany us," said Mr. +Damon + +"Come on!" urged the professor, much as one boy +might urge another to take part in a ball game. +"Don't let my rival get ahead of me." + +"I wouldn't like to see that," Tom said slowly. +"Who is he--any one I know?" + +"I don't believe so, Tom. He's connected +with a large, new college that has plenty of +money to spend on explorations and research +work. Beecher is his name--Fenimore Beecher." + +"Beecher!" exclaimed Tom, and there was +such a change in his manner that his friends +could not help noticing it. He jumped to his +feet, his eyes snapping, and he looked eagerly +and anxiously at Professor Bumper. + +"Did you say his name was Fenimore Beecher?" +Tom asked in a tense voice. + +"That's what it is--Professor Fenimore Beecher. +He is really a learned young man, and +thoroughly in earnest, though I do not like his +manner. But he is trying to get ahead of me, +which may account for my feeling." + +Tom Swift did not answer. Instead he hurried +from the room with a murmured apology. + +"I'll be back in about five minutes," he said, +as he went out. + +"Well, what's up now?" asked Mr. Damon of +Ned, as the young inventor departed. "What +set him off that way?" + +"The mention of Beecher's name, evidently. +Though I never heard him mention such a person +before." + +"Nor did I ever hear Professor Beecher speak +of Tom," said the bald-headed scientist. "Well, +we'll just have to wait until----" + +At that moment Tom came back into the room. + +"Gentlemen," he said, "I have reconsidered my +refusal to go to the Copan valley after the idol +of gold. I'm going with you!" + +"Good!" cried Professor Bumper. + +"Fine!" ejaculated Mr. Damon. "Bless my time-table! +I thought you'd come around, Tom Swift." + +"But what about your stabilizer?" asked Ned. + +"I was just talking to my father about it,' +the young inventor replied. "He will be able +to put the finishing touches on it. So I'll leave +it with him. As soon as I can get ready I'll go, +since you say haste is necessary, Professor Bumper." + +"It is, if we are to get ahead of Beecher." + +"Then we'll get ahead of him!" cried Tom. +"I'm with you now from the start to the finish. +I'll show him what I can do!" he added, while +Ned and the others wondered at the sudden +change in their friend's manner. + + + + +CHAPTER V + +THE LITTLE GREEN GOD + + +"Tom how soon can we go?" asked Professor +Bumper, as he began arranging his papers, maps +and documents ready to place them back in the +valise. + +"Within a week, if you want to start that +soon." + +"The sooner the better. A week will suit me. +I don't know just what Beecher's plans are, but, +he may try to get on the ground first. Though, +without boasting, I may say that he has not had +as much experience as I have had, thanks to +you, Tom, when you helped me find the lost city +of Pelone." + +"Well, I hope we'll be as successful this time," +murmured Tom. "I don't want to see Beecher +beat you." + +"I didn't know you knew him, Tom," said the +professor. + +"Oh, yes, I have met him. once," and there +was something in Tom's manner, though he tried +to speak indifferently, that made Ned believe +there was more behind his chum's sudden change +of determination than had yet appeared. + +"He never mentioned you," went on Professor +Bumper; "yet the last time I saw him I said I +was coming to see you, though I did not tell +him why." + +"No, he wouldn't be likely to speak of me," +said Tom significantly. + +"Well, if that's all settled, I guess I'll go back +home and pack up," said Mr. Damon, making a +move to depart. + +"There's no special rush," Tom said. "We +won't leave for a week. I can't get ready in +much less time than that." + +"Bless my socks! I know that," ejaculated Mr. +Damon. "But if I get my things packed I can +go to a hotel to stay while my wife is away. She +might take a notion to come home unexpectedly, +and, though she is a dear, good soul, she doesn't +altogether approve of my going off on these wild +trips with you, Tom Swift. But if I get all +packed, and clear out, she can't find me and she +can't hold me back. She is visiting her mother +now. I can send her a wire from Kurzon after +I get there." + +"I don't believe the telegraph there is work- +ing," laughed Professor Bumper. "But suit +yourself. I must go back to New York to arrange +for the goods we'll have to take with us. +In a week, Tom, we'll start." + +"You must stay to dinner," Tom said. "You +can't get a train now anyhow, and father wants +to meet you again. He's pretty well, considering +his age. And he's much better I verily +believe since I said I'd turn over to him the task +of finishing the stabilizer. He likes to work." + +"We'll stay and take the night train back," +agreed Mr. Damon. "It will be like old times, +Tom," he went on, "traveling off together into +the wilds. Central America is pretty wild, isn't +it?" he asked, as if in fear of being disappointed! +on that score. + +"Oh, it's wild enough to suit any one," +answered Professor Bumper. + +"Well, now to settle a few details," observed +Tom. "Ned, what is the situation as regards the +financial affairs of my father and myself? Nothing +will come to grief if we go away, will there?" + +"I guess not, Tom. But are you going to take +your father with you?" + +"No, of course not." + +"But you spoke of `we.' " + +"I meant you and I are going." + +"Me, Tom?" + +"Sure, you! I wouldn't think of leaving you +behind. You want Ned along, don't you, Professor?" + +"Of course. It will be an ideal party--we +four. We'll have to take natives when we get +to Honduras, and make up a mule pack-train for +the interior. I had some thoughts of asking +you to take an airship along, but it might frighten +the Indians, and I shall have to depend on +them for guides, as well as for porters. So it +will be an old-fashioned expedition, in a way." + +Mr. Swift came in at this point to meet his old +friends. + +"The boy needs a little excitement," he said. +"He's been puttering over that stabilizer invention +too long. I can finish the model for him +in a very short time." + +Professor Bumper told Mr. Swift something +about the proposed trip, while Mr. Damon went +out with Tom and Ned to one of the shops to +look at a new model aeroplane the young inventor +had designed. + +There was a merry party around the table at +dinner, though now and then Ned noticed that +Tom had an abstracted and preoccupied air. + +"Thinking about the idol of gold?" asked Ned +in a whisper to his chum, when they were about +to leave the table. + +"The idol of gold? Oh, yes! Of course! It +will be great if we can bring that back with us." +But the manner in which he said this made Ned +feel sure that Tom had had other thoughts, +and that he had used a little subterfuge in his +answer. + +Ned was right, as he proved for himself a little +later, when, Mr. Damon and the professor having +gone home, the young financial secretary +took his friend to a quiet corner and asked: + +"What's the matter, Tom?" + +"Matter? What do you mean?" + +"I mean what made you make up your mind +so quickly to go on this expedition when you +heard Beecher was going?" + +"Oh--er--well, you wouldn't want to see our +old friend Professor Bumper left, would you, +after he had worked out the secret of the idol +of gold? You wouldn't want some young +whipper-snapper to beat him in the race, would +you, Ned?" + +"No, of course not." + +"Neither would I. That's why I changed my +mind. This Beecher isn't going to get that idol +if I can stop him!" + +"You seem rather bitter against him." + +"Bitter? Oh, not at all. I simply don't want +to see my friends disappointed." + +"Then Beecher isn't a friend of yours?" + +"Oh, I've met him, that is all," and Tom tried +to speak indifferently. + +"Humph!" mused Ned, "there's more here than I dreamed of. +I'm going to get at the bottom of it." + +But though Ned tried to pump Tom, he was +not successful. The young inventor admitted +knowing the youthful scientist, but that was all, +Tom reiterating his determination not to let Professor +Bumper be beaten in the race for the idol +of gold. + +"Let me see," mused Ned, as he went home +that evening. "Tom did not change his mind +until he heard Beecher's name mentioned. Now +this shows that Beecher had something to do +with it. The only reason Tom doesn't want +Beecher to get this idol or find the buried city +is because Professor Bumper is after it. And +yet the professor is not an old or close friend +of Tom's. They met only when Tom went to +dig his big tunnel. There must be some other +reason." + +Ned did some more thinking. Then he +clapped his hands together, and a smile spread +over his face. + +"I believe I have it!" he cried. "The little +green god as compared to the idol of gold! +That's it. I'm going to make a call on my way home." + +This he did, stopping at the home of Mary +Nestor, a pretty girl, who, rumor had it, was +tacitly engaged to Tom. Mary was not at home, +but Mr. Nestor was, and for Ned's purpose this +answered. + +"Well, well, glad to see you!" exclaimed +Mary's father. "Isn't Tom with you?" he asked +a moment later, seeing that Ned was alone. + +"No, Tom isn't with me this evening," Ned +answered. "The fact is, he's getting ready to +go off on another expedition, and I'm going with him." + +"You young men are always going somewhere," +remarked Mrs. Nestor. "Where is it to this time?" + +"Some place in Central America," Ned +answered, not wishing to be too particular. He +was wondering how he could find out what he +wanted to know, when Mary's mother unexpectedly +gave him just the information he was after. + +"Central America!" she exclaimed. "Why, +Father," and she looked at her husband, "that's +where Professor Beecher is going, isn't it?" + +"Yes, I believe he did mention something about that." + +"Professor Beecher, the man who is an author- +ity on Aztec ruins?" asked Ned, taking a shot in +the dark. + +"Yes," said Mr. Nestor. "And a mighty fine +young man he is, too. I knew his father well. +He was here on a visit not long ago, young +Beecher was, and he talked most entertainingly +about his discoveries. You remember how +interested Mary was, Mother?" + +"Yes, she seemed to be," said Mrs. Nestor. +"Tom Swift dropped in during the course of +the evening," she added to Ned, "and Mary +introduced him to Professor Beecher. But I can't +say that Tom was much interested in the +professor's talk." + +"No?" questioned Ned. + +"No, not at all. But Tom did not stay long. +He left just as Mary and the professor were +drawing a map so the professor could indicate +where he had once made a big discovery." + +"I see," murmured Ned. "Well, I suppose +Tom must have been thinking of something else +at the time." + +"Very likely," agreed Mr. Nestor. "But Tom +missed a very profitable talk. I was very much +interested myself in what the professor told us, +and so was Mary. She invited Mr. Beecher to +come again. He takes after his father in being +very thorough in what he does. + +"Sometimes I think," went on Mr. Nestor, "that +Tom isn't quite steady enough. He's thinking +of so many things, perhaps, that he can't get his +mind down to the commonplace. I remember he +once sent something here in a box labeled +`dynamite.' Though there was no explosive in it, +it gave us a great fright. But Tom is a boy, in +spite of his years. Professor Beecher seems +much older. We all like him very much." + +"That's nice," said Ned, as he took his +departure. He had found out what he had come +to learn. + +"I knew it!" Ned exclaimed as he walked +home. "I knew something was in the wind. +The little green god of jealousy has Tom in his +clutches. That's why my inventive friend was +so anxious to go on this expedition when he +learned Beecher was to go. He wants to beat +him. I guess the professor has plainly shown +that he wouldn't like anything better than to +cut Tom out with Mary. Whew! that's something +to think about!" + + + +CHAPTER VI + +UNPLEASANT NEWS + + +Ned Newton decided to keep to himself what +he had heard at the Nestor home. Not for the +world would he let Tom Swift know of the +situation. + +"That is, I won't let him know that I know," +said Ned to himself, "though he is probably as +well aware of the situation as I am. But it sure +is queer that this Professor Beecher should have +taken such a fancy to Mary, and that her father +should regard him so well. That is natural, +I suppose. But I wonder how Mary herself +feels about it. That is the part Tom would +be most interested in. + +"No wonder Tom wants to get ahead of this +young college chap, who probably thinks he's +the whole show. If he can find the buried city, +and get the idol of gold, it would be a big +feather in his cap. + +"He'd have no end of honors heaped on him, +and I suppose his hat wouldn't come within +three sizes of fitting him. Then he'd stand in +better than ever with Mr. Nestor. And, maybe, +with Mary, too, though I think she is loyal +to Tom. But one never can tell. + +"However, I'm glad I know about it. I'll +do all I can to help Tom, without letting him +know that I know. And if I can do anything +to help in finding that idol of gold for Professor +Bumper, and, incidentally, Tom, I'll do it," and +he spoke aloud in his enthusiasm. + +Ned, who was walking along in the darkness, +clapped his open hand down on Tom's magazine +he was carrying home to read again, and +the resultant noise was a sharp crack. As it +sounded a figure jumped from behind a tree +and called tensely: + +"Hold on there!" + +Ned stopped short, thinking he was to be +the victim of a holdup, but his fears were +allayed when he beheld one of the police force of +Shopton confronting him. + +"I heard what you said about gettin' the gold," +went on the officer. "I was walkin' along and I +heard you talkin'. Where's your pal?" + +"I haven't any, Mr. Newbold," answered Ned +with a laugh, as he recognized the man. + +"Oh, pshaw! It's Ned Newton!" exclaimed +the disappointed officer. "I thought you was +talkin' to a confederate about gold, and figured +maybe you was goin' to rob the bank." + +"No, nothing like that," answered Ned, still +much amused. "I was talking to myself about +a trip Tom Swift and I are going to take +and----" + +"Oh, that's all right," responded the +policeman. "I can understand it, if it had anything to +do with Tom. He's a great boy." + +"Indeed he is," agreed Ned, making a mental +resolve not to be so public with his thoughts +in the future. He chatted for a moment with +the officer, and then, bidding him good-night, +walked on to his home, his mind in a whirl with +conglomerate visions of buried cities, great grinning +idols of gold, and rival professors seeking +to be first at the goal. + +The next few days were busy ones for Tom, +Ned and, in fact, the whole Swift household. +Tom and his father had several consultations and +conducted several experiments in regard to the +new stabilizer, the completion of which was so +earnestly desired. Mr. Swift was sure he could +carry the invention to a successful conclusion. + +Ned was engaged in putting the financial +affairs of the Swift Company in shape, so they +would practically run themselves during his ab- +sence. Then, too, there was the packing of their +baggage which must be seen to. + +Of course, the main details of the trip were +left to Professor Bumper, who knew just what +to do. He had told Tom and Ned that all they +and Mr. Damon would have to do would be to +meet him at the pier in New York, where they +would find all arrangements made. + +One day, near the end of the week (the beginning +of the next being set for the start) Eradicate +came shuffling into the room where Tom was +sorting out the possessions he desired to take +with him, Ned assisting him in the task. + +"Well, Rad, what is it?" asked Tom, with +businesslike energy. + +"I done heah, Massa Tom, dat yo' all's gwine +off on a long trip once mo'. Am dat so?" + +"Yes, that's so, Rad." + +"Well, den, I'se come to ast yo' whut I'd bettah +take wif me. Shall I took warm clothes or cool +clothes?" + +"Well, if you were going, Rad," answered Tom +with a smile, "you'd need cool clothes, for we're +going to a sort of jungle-land. But I'm sorry to +say you're not going this trip." + +"I---- I ain't gwine? Does yo' mean dat yo' +all ain't gwine to take me, Massa Tom?" + +"That's it, Rad. It isn't any trip for you." + +"In certain not!" broke in the voice of Koku, +the giant, who entered with a big trunk Tom had +sent him for. "Master want strong man like a +bull. He take Koku!" + +"Look heah!" spluttered Eradicate, and his eyes +flashed. "Yo'--yo' giant yo'--yo' may be strong +laik a bull, but ya' ain't got as much sense as +mah mule, Boomerang! Massa Tom don't want +no sich pusson wif him. He's gwine to take me." + +"He take me!" cried Koku, and his voice was +a roar while he beat on his mighty chest with his +huge fists. + +Tom, seeing that the dispute was likely to be +bothersome, winked at Ned and began to speak. + +"I don't believe you'd like it there, Rad--not +where we're going. It's a bad country. Why +the mosquitoes there bite holes in you--raise +bumps on you as big as eggs." + +"Oh, good land!" ejaculated the old colored man. +"Am dat so Massa Tom?" + +"It sure is. Then there's another kind of bug +that burrows under your fingernails, and if you +don't get 'em out, your fingers drop off." + +"Oh, good land, Massa Tom! Am dat a fact?" + +"It sure is. I don't want to see those things +happen to you, Rad." + +Slowly the old colored man shook his head. + +"I don't mahse'f," he said. "I---- I guess I +won't go." + +Eradicate did not stop to ask how Tom and +Ned proposed to combat these two species of +insects. + +But there remained Koku to dispose of, and he +stood smiling broadly as Eradicate shuffled of. + +"Me no 'fraid bugs," said the giant. + +"No," said Tom, with a look at Ned, for he did +not want to take the big man on the trip for +various reasons. "No, maybe not, Koku. Your +skin is pretty tough. But I understand there are +deep pools of water in the land where we are +going, and in them lives a fish that has a hide +like an alligator and a jaw like a shark. If you +fall in it's all up with you." + +"Dat true, Master Tom?" and Koku's voice +trembled. + +"Well, I've never seen such a fish, I'm sure, +but the natives tell about it." + +Koku seemed to be considering the matter. +Strange as it may seem, the giant, though afraid +of nothing human and brave when it came to a +hand-to-claw argument with a wild animal, had +a very great fear of the water and the unseen +life within it. Even a little fresh-water crab in +a brook was enough to send him shrieking to +shore. So when Tom told of this curious fish, +which many natives of Central America firmly +believe in, the giant took thought with himself. +Finally, he gave a sigh and said: + +"Me stay home and keep bad mans out of +master's shop." + +"Yes, I guess that's the best thing for you," +assented Tom with an air of relief. He and Ned +had talked the matter over, and they had agreed +that the presence of such a big man as Koku, in +an expedition going on a more or less secret mission, +would attract too much attention. + +"Well, I guess that clears matters up," said +Tom, as he looked over a collection of rifles and +small arms, to decide which to take. "We won't +have them to worry about." + +"No, only Professor Beecher," remarked Ned, +with a sharp look at his chum. + +"Oh, we'll dispose of him all right!" asserted +Tom boldly. "He hasn't had any experience in +business of this sort, and with that you and +Professor Bumper and Mr. Damon know we +ought to have little trouble in getting ahead of +the young man." + +"Not to speak of your own aid," added Ned. + +"Oh, I'll do what I can, of course," said Tom, +with an air of indifference. But Ned knew his +chum would work ceaselessly to help get the idol +of gold. + +Tom gave no sign that there was any complication +in his affair with Mary Nestor, and of +course Ned did not tell anything of what he knew +about it. + +That night saw the preparations of Ned and +Tom about completed. There were one or two +matters yet to finish on Tom's part in relation +to his business, but these offered no difficulties. + +The two chums were in the Swift home, talking +over the prospective trip, when Mrs. Baggert, +answering a ring at the front door, announced +that Mr. Damon was outside. + +"Tell him to come in," ordered Tom. + +"Bless my baggage check!" exclaimed the +excitable man, as he shook hands with Tom and +Ned and noted the packing evidences all about. +"You're ready to go to the land of wonders." + +"The land of wonders?" repeated Ned. + +"Yes, that's what Professor Bumper calls the +part of Honduras we're going to. And it must +be wonderful, Tom. Think of whole cities, +some of them containing idols and temples of +gold, buried thirty and forty feet under the +surface! Wonderful is hardly the name for it!" + +"It'll be great!" cried Ned. "I suppose you're +ready, Mr. Damon--you and the professor?" + +"Yes. But, Tom, I have a bit of unpleasant +news for you." + +"Unpleasant news?" + +"Yes. You know Professor Bumper spoke of +a rival--a man named Beecher who is a member +of the faculty of a new and wealthy college." + +"I heard him speak of him--yes," and the way +Tom said it no one would have suspected that +he had any personal interest in the matter. + +"He isn't going to give his secret away," +thought Ned. + +"Well, this Professor Beecher, you know," +went on Mr. Damon, "also knows about the idol +of gold, and is trying to get ahead of Professor +Bumper in the search." + +"He did say something of it, but nothing was +certain," remarked Tom. + +"But it is certain!" exclaimed Mr. Damon. +"Bless my toothpick, it's altogether too certain!" + +"How is that?" asked Tom. "Is Beecher +certainly going to Honduras?" + +"Yes, of course. But what is worse, he and +his party will leave New York on the same +steamer with us!" + + + +CHAPTER VII + +TOM HEARS SOMETHING + + +On hearing Mr. Damon's rather startling +announcement, Tom and Ned looked at one another. +There seemed to be something back of +the simple statement--an ominous and portending +"something." + +"On the same steamer with us, is he?" mused Tom. + +"How did you learn this?" asked Ned. + +"Just got a wire from Professor Bumper +telling me. He asked me to telephone to you about +it, as he was too busy to call up on the long +distance from New York. But instead of 'phoning +I decided to come over myself." + +"Glad you did," said Tom, heartily. "Did +Professor Bumper want us to do anything +special, now that it is certain his rival will be +so close on his trail?" + +"Yes, he asked me to warn you to be careful +what you did and said in reference to the expedition." + +"Then does he fear something?" asked Ned. + +"Yes, in a way. I think he is very much afraid +this young Beecher will not only be first on the +site of the underground city, but that he may +be the first to discover the idol of gold. It would +be a great thing for a young archaeologist like +Beecher to accomplish a mission of this sort, +and beat Professor Bumper in the race." + +"Do you think that's why Beecher decided to +go on the same steamer we are to take?" asked Ned. + +"Yes, I do," said Mr. Damon. "Though from +what Professor Bumper said I know he regards +Professor Beecher as a perfectly honorable man, +as well as a brilliant student. I do not believe +Beecher or his party would stoop to anything +dishonorable or underhand, though they would +not hesitate, nor would we, to take advantage of +every fair chance to win in the race." + +"No, I suppose that's right," observed Tom; +but there was a queer gleam in his eye, and his +chum wondered if Tom did not have in mind the +prospective race between himself and Fenimore +Beecher for the regard of Mary Nestor. "We'll +do our best to win, and any one is at liberty to +travel on the same steamer we are to take," added +the young inventor, and his tone became more +incisive. + +"It will be all the livelier with two expeditions +after the same golden idol," remarked Ned. + +"Yes, I think we're in for some excitement," +observed Tom grimly. But even he did not +realize all that lay before them ere they would +reach Kurzon. + +Mr. Damon, having delivered his message, and +remarking that his preparations for leaving were +nearly completed, went back to Waterfield, from +there to proceed to New York in a few days +with Tom and Ned, to meet Professor Bumper. + +"Well, I guess we have everything in pretty +good shape," remarked Tom to his chum a day +or so after the visit of Mr. Damon. "Everything +is packed, and as I have a few personal matters +to attend to I think I'll take the afternoon off." + +"Go to it!" laughed Ned, guessing a thing of two. +"I've got a raft of stuff myself to look after, +but don't let that keep you." + +"If there is anything I can do," began Tom, +"don't hesitate to----" + +"Nonsense!" exclaimed Ned. "I can do it all alone. +It's some of the company's business, anyhow, +and I'm paid for looking after that." + +"All right, then I'll cut along," Tom said, and +he wore a relieved air. + +"He's going to see Mary," observed Ned with +a grin, as he observed Tom hop into his trim +little roadster, which under his orders, Koku had +polished and cleaned until it looked as though +it had just come from the factory. + +A little later the trim and speedy car drew up +in front of the Nestor home, and Tom bounded +up on the front porch, his heart not altogether +as light as his feet. + +"No, I'm sorry, but Mary isn't in," said Mrs. +Nestor, answering his inquiry after greeting him. + +"Not at home?" + +"No, she went on a little visit to her cousin's at +Fayetteville. She said something about letting +you know she was going." + +"She did drop me a card," answered Tom, and, +somehow he did not feel at all cheerful. "But +I thought it wasn't until next week she was +going." + +"That was her plan, Tom. But she changed +it. Her cousin wired, asking her to advance +the date, and this Mary did. There was something +about a former school chum who was also +to be at Myra's house--Myra is Mary's cousin +you know." + +"Yes, I know," assented the young inventor. +"And so Mary is gone. How long is she going +to stay?" + +"Oh, about two weeks. She wasn't quite +certain. It depends on the kind of a time she has, +I suppose." + +"Yes, I suppose so," agreed Tom. "Well, if +you write before I do you might say I called, +Mrs. Nestor." + +"I will, Tom. And I know Mary will be sorry +she wasn't here to take a ride with you; it's +such a nice day," and the lady smiled as she +looked at the speedy roadster. + +"Maybe--maybe you'd like to come for a spin?" +asked Tom, half desperately. + +"No, thank you. I'm too old to be jounced +around in one of those small cars." + +"Nonsense! She rides as easily as a Pullman +sleeper." + +"Well, I have to go to a Red Cross meeting, +anyhow, so I can't come, Tom. Thank you, +just the same." + +Tom did not drive back immediately to his +home. He wanted to do a bit of thinking, and +he believed he could do it best by himself. So +it was late afternoon when he again greeted Ned, +who, meanwhile, had been kept very busy. + +"Well?" called Tom's chum. + +"Um!" was the only answer, and Tom called +Koku to put the car away in the garage. + +"Something wrong," mused Ned. + +The next three days were crowded with events +and with work. Mr. Damon came over +frequently to consult with Tom and Ned, and +finally the last of their baggage had been packed, +certain of Tom's inventions and implements sent +on by express to New York to be taken to Honduras, +and then our friends themselves followed +to the metropolis. + +"Good-bye, Tom," said his father. "Good- +bye, and good luck! If you don't get the idol +of gold I'm sure you'll have experiences that +will be valuable to you." + +"We're going to get the idol of gold!" said +Tom determinedly. + +"Look out for the bad bugs," suggested Eradicate. + +"We will," promised Ned. + +Tom's last act was to send a message to Mary +Nestor, and then he, with Ned and Mr. Damon, +who blessed everything in sight from the gasoline +in the automobile to the blue sky overhead, +started for the station. + +New York was reached without incident. The +trio put up at the hotel where Professor Bumper +was to meet them. + +"He hasn't arrived yet," said Tom, after +glancing over the names on the hotel register and +not seeing Professor Bumper's among them. + +"Oh, he'll be here all right," asserted Mr. +Damon. "Bless my galvanic battery! he sent me +a telegram at one o'clock this morning saying +he'd be sure to meet us in New York. No fear +of him not starting for the land of wonders." + +"There are some other professors registered, +though," observed Ned, as he glanced at the +book, noting the names of several scientists of +whom he and Tom had read. + +"Yes. I wonder what they're doing in New +York," replied Tom. "They are from New +England. Maybe there's a convention going on. +Well, we'll have to wait, that's all, until +Professor Bumper comes." + +And during that wait Tom heard something +that surprised him and caused him no little +worry. It was when Ned came back to his +room, which adjoined Tom's, that the young +treasurer gave his chum the news. + +"I say, Tom!" Ned exclaimed. "Who do you +think those professors are, whose names we saw +on the register?" + +"I haven't the least idea." + +"Why, they're of Beecher's party!" + +"You don't mean it!" + +"I surely do." + +"How do you know?" + +"I happened to overhear two of them talking +down in the lobby a while ago. They didn't +make any secret of it. They spoke freely of going +with Beecher to some ancient city in Honduras, +to look for an idol of gold." + +"They did? But where is Beecher?" + +"He hasn't joined them yet. Their plans +have been changed. Instead of leaving on the +same steamer we are to take in the morning +they are to come on a later one. The professors +here are waiting for Beecher to come." + +"Why isn't he here now?" + +"Well, I heard one of the other scientists say +that he had gone to a place called Fayetteville, +and will come on from there." + +"Fayetteville!" ejaculated Tom. +"Yes. That isn't far from Shopton." + +"I know," assented Tom. "I wonder--I wonder +why he is going there?" + +"I can tell you that, too." + +"You can? You're a regular detective." + +"No, I just happened to overhear it. Beecher +is going to call on Mary Nestor in Fayetteville, +so his friends here said he told them, and his call +has to do with an important matter--to him!" +and Ned gazed curiously at his chum. + + + +CHAPTER VIII + +OFF FOR HONDURAS + + +Just what Tom's thoughts were, Ned, of +course, could not guess. But by the flush that +showed under the tan of his chum's cheeks the +young financial secretary felt pretty certain that +Tom was a bit apprehensive of the outcome of +Professor Beecher's call on Mary Nestor. + +"So he is going to see her about `something +important,' Ned?" + +"That's what some members of his party called +it." + +"And they're waiting here for him to join +them?" + +"Yes. And it means waiting a week for +another steamer. It must be something pretty +important, don't you think, to cause Beecher to +risk that delay in starting after the idol of gold?" + +"Important? Yes, I suppose so," assented +Tom. "And yet even if he waits for the next +steamer he will get to Honduras nearly as soon +as we do." + +"How is that?" + +"The next boat is a faster one." + +"Then why don't we take that? I hate dawdling +along on a slow freighter." + +"Well, for one thing it would hardly do to +change now, when all our goods are on board. +And besides, the captain of the _Relstab_, on which +we are going to sail, is a friend of Professor +Bumper's." + +"Well, I'm just as glad Beecher and his party +aren't going with us," resumed Ned, after a +pause. "It might make trouble." + +"Oh, I'm ready for any trouble HE might make!" +quickly exclaimed Tom. + +He meant trouble that might be developed in +going to Honduras, and starting the search +for the lost city and the idol of gold. This kind +of trouble Tom and his friends had experienced +before, on other trips where rivals had sought +to frustrate their ends. + +But, in his heart, though he said nothing to +Ned about it, Tom was worried. Much as he +disliked to admit it to himself, he feared the visit +of Professor Beecher to Mary Nestor in Fayetteville +had but one meaning. + +"I wonder if he's going to propose to her," +thought Tom. "He has the field all to himself +now, and her father likes him. That's in his favor. +I guess Mr. Nestor has never quite forgiven me +for that mistake about the dynamite box, and +that wasn't my fault. Then, too, the Beecher +and Nestor families have been friends for years. +Yes, he surely has the inside edge on me, and +if he gets her to throw me over---- Well, I +won't give up without a fight!" and Tom mentally +girded himself for a battle of wits. + +"He's relying on the prestige he'll get out of +this idol of gold if his party finds it," thought +on the young inventor. "But I'll help find it +first. I'm glad to have a little start of him, anyhow, +even if it isn't more than two days. Though +if our vessel is held back much by storms he may +get on the ground first. However, that can't +be helped. I'll do the best I can." + +These thoughts shot through Tom's mind +even as Ned was asking his questions and making +comments. Then the young inventor, shaking +his shoulders as though to rid them of some +weight, remarked: + +"Well, come on out and see the sights. It will +be long before we look on Broadway again." + +When the chums returned from their sightseeing +excursion, they found that Professor Bumper +had arrived. + +"Where's Professor Bumper?" asked Ned, the next day. + +"In his room, going over books, papers and +maps to make sure he has everything." + +"And Mr. Damon?" + +Tom did not have to answer that last question. +Into the apartment came bursting the excited +individual himself. + +"Bless my overshoes!" he cried, "I've been +looking everywhere for you! Come on, there's +no time to lose!" + +"What's the matter now?" asked Ned. "Is the +hotel on fire?" + +"Has anything happened to Professor Bumper?" +Tom demanded, a wild idea forming in his +head that perhaps some one of the Beecher party +had tried to kidnap the discoverer of the lost +city of Pelone. + +"Oh, everything is all right," answered Mr. +Damon. "But it's nearly time for the show to +start, and we don't want to be late. I have +tickets." + +"For what?" asked Tom and Ned together. + +"The movies," was the laughing reply. "Bless +my loose ribs! but I wouldn't miss him for anything. +He's in a new play called `Up in a Balloon +Boys.' It's great!" and Mr. Damon named +a certain comic moving picture star in whose +horse-play Mr. Damon took a curious interest. +Tom and Ned were glad enough to go, Tom +that he might have a chance to do a certain +amount of thinking, and Ned because he was +still boy enough to like moving pictures. + +"I wonder, Tom," said Mr. Damon, as they +came out of the theater two hours later, all three +chuckling at the remembrance of what they had +seen, "I wonder you never turned your inventive +mind to the movies." + +"Maybe I will, some day," said Tom. + +He spoke rather uncertainly. The truth of +the matter was that he was still thinking deeply +of the visit of Professor Beecher to Mary Nestor, +and wondering what it portended. + +But if Tom's sleep was troubled that night he +said nothing of it to his friends. He was up +early the next morning, for they were to leave +that day, and there was still considerable to be +done in seeing that their baggage and supplies +were safely loaded, and in attending to the last +details of some business matters. + +While at the hotel they had several glimpses +of the members of the Beecher party who were +awaiting the arrival of the young professor who +was to lead them into the wilds of Honduras. +But our friends did not seek the acquaintance +of their rivals. The latter, likewise, remained +by themselves, though they knew doubtless +that there was likely to be a strenuous race for +the possession of the idol of gold, then, it was +presumed, buried deep in some forest-covered +city. + +Professor Bumper had made his arrangements +carefully. As he explained to his friends, they +would take the steamer from New York to Puerto +Cortes, one of the principal seaports of +Honduras. This is a town of about three thousand +inhabitants, with an excellent harbor and a +big pier along which vessels can tie up and +discharge their cargoes directly into waiting cars. + +The preparations were finally completed. +The party went aboard the steamer, which was +a large freight vessel, carrying a limited number +of passengers, and late one afternoon swung +down New York Bay. + +"Off for Honduras!" cried Ned gaily, as they +passed the Statue of Liberty. "I wonder what +will happen before we see that little lady again." + +"Who knows?" asked Tom, shrugging his +shoulders, Spanish fashion. And there came before +him the vision of a certain "little lady," about +whom he had been thinking deeply of late. + + + +CHAPTER IX + +VAL JACINTO + + +"Rather tame, isn't it, Tom?" + +"Well, Ned, it isn't exactly like going up in +an airship," and Tom Swift who was gazing +over the rail down into the deep blue water of +the Caribbean Sea, over which their vessel was +then steaming, looked at his chum beside him. + +"No, and your submarine voyage had it all over +this one for excitement," went on Ned. "When +I think of that----" + +"Bless my sea legs!" interrupted Mr. Damon, +overhearing the conversation. "Don't speak of +THAT trip. My wife never forgave me for going +on it. But I had a fine time," he added with a +twinkle of his eyes. + +"Yes, that was quite a trip," observed Tom, +as his mind went back to it. "But this one isn't +over yet remember. And I shouldn't be surprised +if we had a little excitement very soon." + +"What do you mean?" asked Ned. + +Up to this time the voyage from New York +down into the tropical seas had been anything +but exciting. There were not many passengers +besides themselves, and the weather had been +fine. + +At first, used as they were to the actions of +unscrupulous rivals in trying to thwart their +efforts, Tom and Ned had been on the alert for +any signs of hidden enemies on board the steamer. +But aside from a little curiosity when it became +known that they were going to explore +little-known portions of Honduras, the other +passengers took hardly any interest in our travelers. + +It was thought best to keep secret the fact +that they were going to search for a wonderful +idol of gold. Not even the mule and ox-cart +drivers, whom they would hire to take them into +the wilds of the interior would be told of the real +object of the search. It would be given out that +they were looking for interesting ruins of ancient +cities, with a view to getting such antiquities +as might be there. + +"What do you mean?" asked Ned again, when +Tom did not answer him immediately. "What's +the excitement?" + +"I think we're in for a storm," was the reply. +"The barometer is falling and I see the crew +going about making everything snug. So we +may have a little trouble toward this end of our +trip." + +"Let it come!" exclaimed Mr. Damon. "We're +not afraid of trouble, Tom. Swift, are we?" + +"No, to be sure we're not. And yet it looks +as though the storm would be a bad one." + +"Then I am going to see if my books and +papers are ready, so I can get them together in a +hurry in case we have to take to the life-boats," +said Professor Bumper, coming on deck at that +moment. "It won't do to lose them. If we +didn't have the map we might not be able to find----" + +"Ahem!" exclaimed Tom, with unnecessary +emphasis it seemed. "I'll help you go over your +papers, Professor," he added, and with a wink +and a motion of his hand, he enjoined silence on +his friend. Ned looked around for a reason for +this, and observed a man, evidently of Spanish +extraction, passing them as he paced up and +down the deck. + +"What's the matter?" asked the scientist in +a whisper, as the man went on. "Do you know +him? Is he a----?" + +"I don't know anything about him," said Tom; +"but it is best not to speak of our trip before +strangers." + +"You are right, Tom," said Professor Bumper. +"I'll be more careful." + +A storm was brewing, that was certain. A +dull, sickly yellow began to obscure the sky, and +the water, from a beautiful blue, turned a slate +color and ran along the sides of the vessel with a +hissing sound as though the sullen waves would +ask nothing better than to suck the craft down +into their depths. The wind, which had been +freshening, now sang in louder tones as it +hummed through the rigging and the funnel stays +and bowled over the receiving conductors of the +wireless. + +Sharp commands from the ship's officers +hastened the work of the crew in making things +snug, and life lines were strung along deck for +the safety of such of the passengers as might +venture up when the blow began. + +The storm was not long in coming. The +howling of the wind grew louder, flecks of foam +began to separate themselves from the crests of +the waves, and the vessel pitched, rolled and +tossed more violently. At first Tom and his +friends thought they were in for no more than +an ordinary blow, but as the storm progressed, +and the passengers became aware of the anxiety +on the part of the officers and crew, the alarm +spread among them. + +It really was a violent storm, approaching a +hurricane in force, and at one time it seemed as +though the craft, having been heeled far over +under a staggering wave that swept her decks, +would not come back to an even keel. + +There was a panic among some of the +passengers, and a few excited men behaved in a +way that caused prompt action on the part of +the first officer, who drove them back to the +main cabin under threat of a revolver. For the +men were determined to get to the lifeboats, and +a small craft would not have had a minute to live +in such seas as were running. + +But the vessel proved herself sturdier than the +timid ones had dared to hope, and she was soon +running before the blast, going out of her course, +it is true, but avoiding the danger among the +many cays, or small islands, that dot the Caribbean +Sea. + +There was nothing to do but to let the storm +blow itself out, which it did in two days. Then +came a period of delightful weather. The cargo +had shifted somewhat, which gave the steamer +a rather undignified list. + +This, as well as the loss of a deckhand +overboard, was the effect of the hurricane, and +though the end of the trip came amid sunshine +and sweet-scented tropical breezes, many could +not forget the dangers through which they had +passed. + +In due time Tom and his party found +themselves safely housed in the small hotel at Puerto +Cortes, their belongings stored in a convenient +warehouse and themselves, rather weary by reason +of the stress of weather, ready for the start +into the interior wilds of Honduras. + +"How are we going to make the trip?" asked +Ned, as they sat at supper, the first night after +their arrival, eating of several dishes, the red- +pepper condiments of which caused frequent trips +to the water pitcher. + +"We can go in two ways, and perhaps we shall +find it to our advantage to use both means," said +Professor Bumper. "To get to this city of Kurzon," +he proceeded in a low voice, so that none +of the others in the dining-room would hear +them, "we will have to go either by mule back +or boat to a point near Copan. As near as I +can tell by the ancient maps, Kurzon is in the +Copan valley. + +"Now the Chamelecon river seems to run to +within a short distance of there, but there is +no telling how far up it may be navigable. If +we can go by boat it will be much more comfortable. +Travel by mules and ox-carts is slow and +sure, but the roads are very bad, as I have heard +from friends who have made explorations in +Honduras. + +"And, as I said, we may have to use both land +and water travel to get us where we want to go. +We can proceed as far as possible up the river, +and then take to the mules." + +"What about arranging for boats and animals?" +asked Tom. "I should think----" + +He suddenly ceased talking and reached for +the water, taking several large swallows. + +"Whew!" he exclaimed, when he could catch his breath. +"That was a hot one." + +"What did you do?" asked Ned. + +"Bit into a nest of red pepper. Guess I'll have +to tell that cook to scatter his hits. He's bunching +'em too much in my direction," and Tom +wiped the tears from his eyes. + +"To answer your question," said Professor +Bumper, "I will say that I have made partial +arrangements for men and animals, and boats +if it is found feasible to use them. I've been in +correspondence with one of the merchants here, +and he promised to make arrangements for us." + +"When do we leave?" asked Mr. Damon. + +"As soon as possible. I am not going to risk +anything by delay," and it was evident the professor +referred to his young rival whose arrival +might be expected almost any time. + +As the party was about to leave the table, +they were approached by a tall, dignified Spaniard +who bowed low, rather exaggeratedly low, +Ned thought, and addressed them in fairly good +English. + +"Your pardons, Senors," he began, "but if it +will please you to avail yourself of the humble +services of myself, I shall have great pleasure +in guiding you into the interior. I have at my +command both mules and boats." + +"How do you know we are going into the +interior?" asked Tom, a bit sharply, for he did +not like the assurance of the man. + +"Pardon, Senor. I saw that you are from the +States. And those from the States do not come +to Honduras except for two reasons. To travel +and make explorations or to start trade, and +professors do not usually engage in trade," and +he bowed to Professor Bumper. + +"I saw your name on the register," he proceeded, +"and it was not difficult to guess your mission," +and he flashed a smile on the party, his +white teeth showing brilliantly beneath his +small, black moustache. + +"I make it my business to outfit traveling +parties, either for business, pleasure or scientific +matters. I am, at your service, Val Jacinto," +and he introduced himself with another low bow. + +For a moment Tom and his friends hardly +knew how to accept this offer. It might be, +as the man had said, that he was a professional +tour conductor, like those who have charge of +Egyptian donkey-boys and guides. Or might he +not be a spy? + +This occurred to Tom no less than to Professor +Bumper. They looked at one another while +Val Jacinto bowed again and murmured: + +"At your service!" + +"Can you provide means for taking us to the +Copan valley?" asked the professor. "You are +right in one respect. I am a scientist and I purpose +doing some exploring near Copan. Can +you get us there?" + +"Most expensively--I mean, most expeditionlessly," +said Val Jacinto eagerly. "Pardon my +unhappy English. I forget at times. The +charges will be most moderate. I can send you +by boat as far as the river travel is good, and +then have mules and ox-carts in waiting." + +"How far is it?" asked Tom. + +"A hundred miles as the vulture flies, Senor, +but much farther by river and road. We shall +be a week going." + +"A hundred miles in a week!" groaned Ned. +"Say, Tom, if you had your aeroplane we'd be +there in an hour." + +"Yes, but we haven't it. However, we're in +no great rush." + +"But we must not lose time," said Professor +Bumper. "I shall consider your offer," he added +to Val Jacinto. + +"Very good, Senor. I am sure you will be +pleased with the humble service I may offer you, +and my charges will be small. Adios," and he +bowed himself away. + +"What do you think of him?" asked Ned, as +they went up to their rooms in the hotel, or +rather one large room, containing several beds. + +"He's a pretty slick article," said Mr. Damon. +"Bless my check-book! but he spotted us at +once, in spite of our secrecy." + +"I guess these guide purveyors are trained +for that sort of thing," observed the scientist. +"I know my friends have often spoken of having +had the same experience. However, I shall +ask my friend, who is in business here, about +this Val Jacinto, and if I find him all right we +may engage him " + +Inquiries next morning brought the information, +from the head of a rubber exporting firm +with whom the professor was acquainted, that +the Spaniard was regularly engaged in transporting +parties into the interior, and was considered +efficient, careful and as honest as pos- +sible, considering the men he engaged as workers. + +"So we have decided to engage you," Professor +Bumper informed Val Jacinto the afternoon +following the meeting. + +"I am more than pleased, Senor. I shall take +you into the wilds of Honduras. At your +service!" and he bowed low. + +"Humph! I don't just like the way our friend +Val says that," observed Tom to Ned a little +later. "I'd have been better pleased if he had +said he'd guide us into the wilds and out again." + +If Tom could have seen the crafty smile on +the face of the Spaniard as the man left the +hotel, the young inventor might have felt even +less confidence in the guide. + + + +CHAPTER X + +IN THE WILDS + + +"All aboard! Step lively now! This boat +makes no stops this side of Boston!" cried Ned +Newton gaily, as he got into one of the several +tree canoes provided for the transportation of +the party up the Chamelecon river, for the first +stage of their journey into the wilds of +Honduras. "All aboard! This reminds me of my +old camping days, Tom." + +It brought those days back, in a measure, to +Tom also. For there were a number of canoes +filled with the goods of the party, while the +members themselves occupied a larger one with their +personal baggage. Strong, half-naked Indian +paddlers were in charge of the canoes which +were of sturdy construction and light draft, since +the river, like most tropical streams, was of +uncertain depths, choked here and there with sand +bars or tropical growths. + +Finding that Val Jacinto was regularly engaged +in the business of taking explorers and +mine prospectors into the interior, Professor +Bumper had engaged the man. He seemed to be +efficient. At the promised time he had the +canoes and paddlers on hand and the goods safely +stowed away while one big craft was fitted up +as comfortably as possible for the men of the +party. + +As Ned remarked, it did look like a camping +party, for in the canoes were tents, cooking +utensils and, most important, mosquito canopies +of heavy netting. + +The insect pests of Honduras, as in all tropical +countries, are annoying and dangerous. Therefore +it was imperative to sleep under mosquito +netting. + +On the advice of Val Jacinto, who was to +accompany them, the travelers were to go up the +river about fifty miles. This was as far as it +would be convenient to use the canoes, the guide +told Tom and his friends, and from there on +the trip to the Copan valley would be made on +the backs of mules, which would carry most of +the baggage and equipment. The heavier portions +would be transported in ox-carts. + +As Professor Bumper expected to do considerable +excavating in order to locate the buried +city, or cities, as the case might be, he had to +contract for a number of Indian diggers and +laborers. These could be hired in Copan, it was +said. + +The plan, therefore, was to travel by canoes +during the less heated parts of the day, and tie +up at night, making camp on shore in the net- +protected tents. As for the Indians, they did +not seem to mind the bites of the insects. They +sometimes made a smudge fire, Val Jacinto had +said, but that was all. + +"Well, we haven't seen anything of Beecher +and his friends," remarked the young inventor +as they were about to start. + +"No, he doesn't seem to have arrived," agreed +Professor Bumper. "We'll get ahead of him, +and so much the better. + +"Well, are we all ready to start?" he continued, +as he looked over the little flotilla which carried +his party and his goods. + +"The sooner the better!" cried Tom, and Ned +fancied his chum was unusually eager. + +"I guess he wants to make good before Beecher +gets the chance to show Mary Nestor what +he can do," thought Ned. "Tom sure is after +that idol of gold." + +"You may start, Senor Jacinto," said the +professor, and the guide called something in Indian +dialect to the rowers. Lines were cast off and +the boats moved out into the stream under the +influence of the sturdy paddlers. + +"Well, this isn't so bad," observed Ned, as he +made himself comfortable in his canoe. "How +about it, Tom?" + +"Oh, no. But this is only the beginning." + +A canopy had been arranged over their boat +to keep off the scorching rays of the sun. The +boat containing the exploring party and Val +Jacinto took the lead, the baggage craft following. +At the place where it flowed into the bay +on which Puerto Cortes was built, the stream +was wide and deep. + +The guide called something to the Indians, +who increased their stroke. + +"I tell them to pull hard and that at the end +of the day's journey they will have much rest +and refreshment," he translated to Professor +Bumper and the others. + +"Bless my ham sandwich, but they'll need +plenty of some sort of refreshment," said Mr. +Damon, with a sigh. "I never knew it to be +so hot." + +"Don't complain yet," advised Tom, with a +laugh. "The worst is yet to come." + +It really was not unpleasant traveling, aside +from the heat. And they had expected that, +coming as they had to a tropical land. But, as +Tom said, what lay before them might be worse. + +In a little while they had left behind them all +signs of civilization. The river narrowed and +flowed sluggishly between the banks which were +luxuriant with tropical growth. Now and then +some lonely Indian hut could be seen, and +occasionally a craft propelled by a man who was +trying to gain a meager living from the rubber +forest which hemmed in the stream on either +side. + +As the canoe containing the men was paddled +along, there floated down beside it what seemed +to be a big, rough log. + +"I wonder if that is mahogany," remarked Mr. +Damon, reaching over to touch it. "Mahogany +is one of the most valuable woods of Honduras, +and if this is a log of that nature---- + +"Bless my watch chain!" he suddenly cried. It's alive!" + +And the "log" was indeed so, for there was a +sudden flash of white teeth, a long red opening +showed, and then came a click as an immense +alligator, having opened and closed his mouth, +sank out of sight in a swirl of water. + +Mr. Damon drew back so suddenly that he +tilted the canoe, and the black paddlers looked +around wonderingly. + +"Alligator," explained Jacinto succinctly, in +their tongue. + +"Ugh!" they grunted. + +"Bless my--bless my----" hesitated Mr. +Damon, and for one of the very few times in +his life his language failed him. + +"Are there many of them hereabouts?" asked +Ned, looking back at the swirl left by the saurian. + +"Plenty," said the guide, with a shrug of his +shoulders. He seemed to do as much talking that +way, and with his hands, as he did in speech. +"The river is full of them." + +"Dangerous?" queried Tom. + +"Don't go in swimming," was the significant +advice. "Wait, I'll show you," and he called +up the canoe just behind. + +In this canoe was a quantity of provisions. +There was a chunk of meat among other things, +a gristly piece, seeing which Mr. Damon had +objected to its being brought along, but the guide +had said it would do for fish bait. With a quick +motion of his hand, as he sat in the awning- +covered stern with Tom, Ned and the others, +Jacinto sent the chunk of meat out into the muddy +stream. + +Hardly a second later there was a rushing in +the water as though a submarine were about +to come up. An ugly snout was raised, two +rows of keen teeth snapped shut as a scissors- +like jaw opened, and the meat was gone. + +"See!" was the guide's remark, and something +like a cold shiver of fear passed over the white +members of the party. "This water is not made +in which to swim. Be careful!" + +"We certainly shall," agreed Tom. "They're fierce." + +"And always hungry," observed Jacinto grimly. + +"And to think that I--that I nearly had my +hand on it," murmured Mr. Damon. "Ugh! +Bless my eyeglasses!" + +"The alligator nearly had your hand," said the +guide. "They can turn in the water like a flash, +wherefore it is not wise to pat one on the tail +lest it present its mouth instead." + +They paddled on up the river, the dusky Indians +now and then breaking out into a chant +that seemed to give their muscles new energy. +The song, if song it was, passed from one boat +to the other, and as the chant boomed forth +the craft shot ahead more swiftly. + +They made a landing about noon, and lunch +was served. Tom and his friends were hungry +in spite of the heat. Moreover, they were +experienced travelers and had learned not to fret +over inconveniences and discomforts. the Ind- +ians ate by themselves, two acting as servants +to Jacinto and the professor's party. + +As is usual in traveling in the tropics, a halt +was made during the heated middle of the day. +Then, as the afternoon shadows were waning, +the party again took to the canoes and paddled +on up the river. + +"Do you know of a good place to stop during +the night?" asked Professor Bumper of Jacinto. + +"Oh, yes; a most excellent place. It is where +I always bring scientific parties I am guiding. +You may rely on me." + +It was within an hour of dusk--none too much +time to allow in which to pitch camp in the +tropics, where night follows day suddenly--when +a halt was called, as a turn of the river showed a +little clearing on the edge of the forest-bound +river. + +"We stay here for the night," said Jacinto. +"It is a good place." + +"It looks picturesque enough," observed Mr. +Damon. "But it is rather wild." + +"We are a good distance from a settlement," +agreed the guide. "But one can not explore-- +and find treasure in cities," and he shrugged +his shoulders again. + +"Find treasure? What do you mean?" asked Tom quickly. +"Do you think that we----?" + +"Pardon, Senor," replied Jacinto softly. "I meant +no offense. I think that all you scientific +parties will take treasure if you can find it." + +"We are looking for traces of the old Honduras +civilization," put in Professor Bumper. + +"And doubtless you will find it," was the +somewhat too courteous answer of the guide. +"Make camp quickly!" he called to the Indians +in their tongue. "You must soon get under the +nets or you will be eaten alive!" he told Tom. +"There are many mosquitoes here." + +The tents were set up, smudge fires built and +supper quickly prepared. Dusk fell rapidly, and +as Tom and Ned walked a little way down +toward the river before turning in under the +mosquito canopies, the young financial man said: + +"Sort of lonesome and gloomy, isn't it, Tom?" + +"Yes. But you didn't expect to find a moving +picture show in the wilds of Honduras, did you?" + +"No, and yet-- Look out! What's that?" +suddenly cried Ned, as a great soft, black shadow +seemed to sweep out of a clump of trees toward +him. Involuntarily he clutched Tom's arm and +pointed, his face showing fear in the fast-gathering +darkness. + + + +CHAPTER XI + +THE VAMPIRES + + +Tom Swift looked deliberately around. It +was characteristic of him that, though by nature +he was prompt in action, he never acted so hurriedly +as to obscure his judgment. So, though +now Ned showed a trace of strange excitement, +Tom was cool. + +"What is it?" asked the young inventor. +"What's the matter? What did you think you saw, +Ned; another alligator?" + +"Alligator? Nonsense! Up on shore? I saw +a black shadow, and I didn't THINK I saw it, +either. I really did." + +Tom laughed quietly. + +"A shadow!" he exclaimed. "Since when +were you afraid of shadows, Ned?" + +"I'm not afraid of ordinary shadows," answered +Ned, and in his voice there was an uncertain +tone. "I'm not afraid of my shadow or +yours, Tom, or anybody's that I can see. But +this wasn't any human shadow. It was as if a +great big blob of wet darkness had been waved +over your head." + +"That's a queer explanation," Tom said in a +low voice. "A great big blob of wet darkness!" + +"But that just describes it," went on Ned, +looking up and around. "It was just as if you were in +some dark room, and some one waved a wet +velvet cloak over your head--spooky like! It +didn't make a sound, but there was a smell as +if a den of some wild beast was near here. I +remember that odor from the time we went +hunting with your electric rifle in the jungle, and +got near the den in the rocks where the tigers +lived." + +"Well, there is a wild beast smell all around +here," admitted Tom, sniffing the air. "It's the +alligators in the river I guess. You know they +have an odor of musk." + +"Do you mean to say you didn't feel that +shadow flying over us just now?" asked Ned. + +"Well, I felt something sail through the air, +but I took it to be a big bird. I didn't pay much +attention. To tell you the truth I was thinking +about Beecher--wondering when he would get +here," added Tom quickly as if to forestall any +question as to whether or not his thoughts had +to do with Beecher in connection with Tom's +affair of the heart. + +"Well it wasn't a bird--at least not a regular +bird," said Ned in a low voice, as once more he +looked at the dark and gloomy jungle that +stretched back from the river and behind the +little clearing where the camp had been made. + +"Come on!" cried Tom, in what he tried to +make a cheerful voice. "This is getting on your +nerves, Ned, and I didn't know you had any. +Let's go back and turn in. I'm dog-tired and +the mosquitoes are beginning to find that we're +here. Let's get under the nets. Then the black +shadows won't get you." + +Not at all unwilling to leave so gloomy a scene, +Ned, after a brief glance up and down the dark +river, followed his chum. They found Professor +Bumper and Mr. Damon in their tent, a separate +one having been set up for the two men adjoining +that of the youths. + +"Bless my fountain pen!" exclaimed Mr. Damon, +as he caught sight of Tom and Ned in the +flickering light of the smudge fire between the +two canvas shelters. "We were just wondering +what had become of you." + +"We were chasing shadows!" laughed Tom. +"At least Ned was. But you look cozy enough in there." + +It did, indeed, look cheerful in contrast to the +damp and dark jungle all about. Professor Bumper, +being an experienced traveler, knew how to +provide for such comforts as were possible. Folding +cots had been opened for himself, Mr. Damon +and the guide to sleep on, others, similar, being +set up in the tent where Tom and Ned were to +sleep. In the middle of the tent the professor +had made a table of his own and Mr. +Damon's suit cases, and on this placed a small +dry battery electric light. He was making some +notes, doubtless for a future book. Jacinto was +going about the camp, seeing that the Indians +were at their duties, though most of them had +gone directly to sleep after supper. + +"Better get inside and under the nets," advised +Professor Bumper to Tom and Ned. "The mosquitoes +here are the worst I ever saw." + +"We're beginning to believe that," returned +Ned, who was unusually quiet. "Come on, +Tom. I can't stand it any longer. I'm itching +in a dozen places now from their bites." + +As Tom and Ned had no wish for a light, +which would be sure to attract insects, they +entered their tent in the dark, and were soon +stretched out in comparative comfort. Tom was +just on the edge of a deep sleep when he heard +Ned murmur: + +"I can't understand it!" + +"What's that?" asked the young inventor. + +"I say I can't understand it." + +"Understand what?" + +"That shadow. It was real and yet----" + +"Oh, go to sleep!" advised Tom, and, turning +over, he was soon breathing heavily and regularly, +indicating that he, at least, had taken his own advice. + +Ned, too, finally succumbed to the overpowering +weariness of the first day of travel, and he, +too, slept, though it was an uneasy slumber, +disturbed by a feeling as though some one were +holding a heavy black quilt over his head, +preventing him from breathing. + +The feeling, sensation or dream--whatever it +was--perhaps a nightmare--became at last so +real to Ned that he struggled himself into +wakefulness. With an effort he sat up, uttering an +inarticulate cry. To his surprise he was +answered. Some one asked: + +"What is the matter?" + +"Who--who are you?" asked Ned quickly, +trying to peer through the darkness. + +"This is Jacinto--your guide," was the soft +answer. "I was walking about camp and, hearing +you murmuring, I came to your tent. Is +anything wrong?" + +For a moment Ned did not answer. He +listened and could tell by the continued heavy +and regular breathing of his chum that Tom +was still asleep. + +"Are you in our tent?" asked Ned, at length: + +"Yes," answered Jacinto. "I came in to see +what was the matter with you. Are you ill?" + +"No, of course not," said Ned, a bit shortly. +"I--I had a bad dream, that was all. All +right now." + +"For that I am glad. Try to get all the sleep +you can, for we must start early to avoid the +heat of the day," and there was the sound of +the guide leaving and arranging the folds of the +mosquito net behind him to keep out the night- +flying insects. + +Once more Ned composed himself to sleep, and +this time successfully, for he did not have any +more unpleasant dreams. The quiet of the +jungle settled down over the camp, at least the +comparative quiet of the jungle, for there were +always noises of some sort going on, from the +fall of some rotten tree limb to the scream or +growl of a wild beast, while, now and again, from +the river came the pig-like grunts of the alligators. + +It was about two o'clock in the morning, as +they ascertained later, when the whole camp-- +white travelers and all--was suddenly awakened +by a wild scream. It seemed to come from one +of the natives, who called out a certain word +ever and over again. To Tom and Ned it +sounded like: + +"Oshtoo! Oshtoo! Oshtoo!" + +"What's the matter?" cried Professor Bumper. + +"The vampires!" came the answering voice of +Jacinto. "One of the Indians has been attacked +by a big vampire bat! Look out, every one! +It may be a raid by the dangerous creatures! +Be careful!" + +Notwithstanding this warning Ned stuck his +head out of the tent. The same instant he was +aware of a dark enfolding shadow passing over +him, and, with a shudder of fear, he jumped back. + + + +CHAPTER XII + +A FALSE FRIEND + + +"What is it? What's the matter?" cried Tom +springing from his cot and hastening to the side +of his chum in the tent. "What has happened, Ned?" + +"I don't know, but Jacinto is yelling +something about vampires!" + +"Vampires?" + +"Yes. Big bats. And he's warning us to be +careful. I stuck my head out just now and I +felt that same sort of shadow I felt this evening +when we were down near the river." + +"Nonsense!" + +"I tell you I did!" + +At that instant Tom flashed a pocket electric +lamp he had taken from beneath his pillow and +in the gleam of it he and Ned saw fluttering +about the tent some dark, shadow-like form, at +the sight of which Tom's chum cried: + +"There it is! That's the shadow! Look out!" +and he held up his hands instinctively to shield +his face. + +"Shadow!" yelled Tom, unconsciously adding +to the din that seemed to pervade every part of +the camp. "That isn't a shadow. It's +substance. It's a monster bat, and here goes +for a strike at it!" + +He caught up his camera tripod which was near +his cot, and made a swing with it at the creature +that had flown into the tent through an opening +it had made for itself. + +"Look out!" yelled Ned. "If it's a vampire it'll----" + +"It won't do anything to me!" shouted Tom, +as he struck the creature, knocking it into the +corner of the tent with a thud that told it must +be completely stunned, if not killed. "But +what's it all about, anyhow?" Tom asked. +"What's the row?" + +From without the tent came the Indian cries of: + +"Oshtoo! Oshtoo!" + +Mingled with them were calls of Jacinto, partly +in Spanish, partly in the Indian tongue and +partly in English. + +"It is a raid by vampire bats!" was all Tom +and Ned could distinguish. "We shall have +to light fires to keep them away, if we can suc- +ceed. Every one grab up a club and strike hard!" + +"Come on!" cried Tom, getting on some clothes +by the light of his gleaming electric light +which he had set on his cot. + +"You're not going out there, are you?" asked Ned. + +"I certainly am! If there's a fight I want to +be in it, bats or anything else. Here, you have +a light like mine. Flash it on, and hang it +somewhere on yourself. Then get a club and +come on. The lights will blind the bats, and +we can see to hit 'em!" + +Tom's plan seemed to be a good one. His +lamp and Ned's had small hooks on them, so +they could be carried in the upper coat pocket, +showing a gleam of light and leaving the hands +free for use. + +Out of the tents rushed the young men to find +Professor Bumper and Mr. Damon before them. +The two men had clubs and were striking about +in the half darkness, for now the Indians had set +several fires aglow. And in the gleams, +constantly growing brighter as more fuel was piled +on, the young inventor and his chum saw a +weird sight. + +Circling and wheeling about in the camp clearing +were many of the black shadowy forms that +had caused Ned such alarm. Great bats they +were, and a dangerous species, if Jacinto was +to be believed. + +The uncanny creatures flew in and out among +the trees and tents, now swooping low near the +Indians or the travelers. At such times clubs +would be used, often with the effect of killing or +stunning the flying pests. For a time it seemed +as if the bats would fairly overwhelm the camp, +so many of them were there. But the increasing +lights, and the attacks made by the Indians and +the white travelers turned the tide of battle, and, +with silent flappings of their soft, velvety wings, +the bats flew back to the jungle whence they had emerged. + +"We are safe--for the present!" exclaimed +Jacinto with a sigh of relief. + +"Do you think they will come back?" asked Tom. + +"They may--there is no telling." + +"Bless my speedometer!" cried Mr. Damon, +"If those beasts or birds--whatever they are-- +come back I'll go and hide in the river and take +my chances with the alligators!" + +"The alligators aren't much worse," asserted +Jacinto with a visible shiver. "These vampire +bats sometimes depopulate a whole village." + +"Bless my shoe laces!" cried Mr. Damon. "You +don't mean to say that the creatures can eat up a +whole village?" + +"Not quite. Though they might if they got +the chance," was the answer of the Spanish +guide. "These vampire bats fly from place to +place in great swarms, and they are so large and +blood-thirsty that a few of them can kill a horse +or an ox in a short time by sucking its blood. So +when the villagers find they are visited by a +colony of these vampires they get out, taking +their live stock with them, and stay in caves or in +densely wooded places until the bats fly on. +Then the villagers come back. + +"It was only a small colony that visited us to- +night or we would have had more trouble. I do +not think this lot will come back. We have +killed too many of them," and he looked about +on the ground where many of the uncanny creatures +were still twitching in the death struggle. + +"Come back again!" cried Mr. Damon. "Bless +my skin! I hope not! I've had enough of bats-- +and mosquitoes," he added, as he slapped at his +face and neck. + +Indeed the party of whites were set upon by +the night insects to such an extent that it was +necessary to hurry back to the protection of the +nets. + +Tom and Ned kicked outside the bat the former +had killed in their tent, and then both went back +to their cots. But it was some little time +before they fell asleep. And they did not have +much time to rest, for an early start must be +made to avoid the terrible heat of the middle of +the day. + +"Whew!" whistled Ned, as he and Tom arose +in the gray dawn of the morning when Jacinto +announced the breakfast which the Indian cook +had prepared. "That was some night! If this +is a sample of the wilds of Honduras, give me +the tameness of Shopton." + +"Oh, we've gone through with worse than +this," laughed Tom. "It's all in the day's work. +We've only got started. I guess we're a bit +soft, Ned, though we had hard enough work in +that tunnel-digging." + +After breakfast, while the Indians were making +ready the canoes, Professor Bumper, who, +in a previous visit to Central America, had +become interested in the subject, made a brief +examination of some of the dead bats. They were +exceptionally large, some almost as big as hawks. +and were of the sub-family _Desmodidae_, the scientist +said. + +"This is a true blood-sucking bat," went on +the professor. "This," and he pointed to the +nose-leaves, "is the sucking apparatus. The +bat makes an opening in the skin with its sharp +teeth and proceeds to extract the blood. I can +well believe two or three of them, attacking a +steer or mule at once, could soon weaken it so +the animal would die." + +"And a man, too?" asked Ned. + +"Well a man has hands with which to use +weapons, but a helpless quadruped has not. +Though if a sufficient number of these bats +attacked a man at the same time, he would have +small chance to escape alive. Their bites, too, +may be poisonous for all I know." + +The Indians seemed glad to leave the "place +of the bats," as they called the camp site. Jacinto +explained that the Indians believed a vampire +could kill them while they slept, and they were +very much afraid of the blood-sucking bats. +There were many other species in the tropics, +Professor Bumper explained, most of which +lived on fruit or on insects they caught. The +blood-sucking bats were comparatively few, and +the migratory sort fewer still. + +"Well, we're on our way once more," +remarked Tom as again they were in the canoes +being paddled up the river. "How much +longer does your water trip take, Professor?" + +"I hardly know," and Professor Bumper looked +to Jacinto to answer. + +"We go two more days in the canoes," the +guide answered, "and then we shall find the +mules waiting for us at a place called Hidjio. +From then on we travel by land until--well until +you get to the place where you are going. + +"I suppose you know where it is?" he added, +nodding toward the professor. "I am leaving +that part to you." + +"Oh, I have a map, showing where I want to +begin some excavations," was the answer. "We +must first go to Copan and see what arrangements +we can make for laborers. After that--well, we +shall trust to luck for what we shall find." + +"There are said to be many curious things," +went on Jacinto, speaking as though he had no +interest. "You have mentioned buried cities. +Have you thought what may be in them--great +heathen temples, idols, perhaps?" + +For a moment none of the professor's +companions spoke. It was as though Jacinto had +tried to get some information. Finally the +scientist said: + +"Oh, yes, we may find an idol. I understand +the ancient people, who were here long before +the Spaniards came, worshiped idols. But we +shall take whatever antiquities we find." + +"Huh!" grunted Jacinto, and then he called +to the paddlers to increase their strokes. + +The journey up the river was not very +eventful. Many alligators were seen, and Tom and +Ned shot several with the electric rifle. Toward +the close of the third day's travel there was a +cry from one of the rear boats, and an alarm of +a man having fallen overboard was given. + +Tom turned in time to see the poor fellow's +struggles, and at the same time there was a swirl +in the water and a black object shot forward. + +"An alligator is after him!" yelled Ned. + +"I see," observed Tom calmly. "Hand me the rifle, Ned." + +Tom took quick aim and pulled the trigger. +The explosive electric bullet went true to its +mark, and the great animal turned over in a death +struggle. But the river was filled with them, and +no sooner had the one nearest the unfortunate +Indian been disposed of than another made a +dash for the man. + +There was a wild scream of agony and then +a dark arm shot up above the red foam. The +waters seethed and bubbled as the alligators +fought under it for possession of the paddler. +Tom fired bullet after bullet from his wonderful +rifle into the spot, but though he killed some +of the alligators this did not save the man's life. +His body was not seen again, though search was +made for it. + +The accident cast a little damper over the +party, and there was a feeling of gloom among +the Indians. Professor Bumper announced that +he would see to it that the man's family did not +want, and this seemed to give general satisfaction, +especially to a brother who was with the +party. + +Aside from being caught in a drenching storm +and one or two minor accidents, nothing else +of moment marked the remainder of the river +journey, and at the end of the third day the +canoes pulled to shore and a night camp was +made. + +"But where are the mules we are to use in +traveling to-morrow?" asked the professor of Jacinto. + +"In the next village. We shall march there +in the morning. No use to go there at night +when all is dark." + +"I suppose that is so." + +The Indians made camp as usual, the goods being +brought from the canoes and piled up near +the tents. Then night settled down. + +"Hello!" cried Tom, awakening the next morning +to find the sun streaming into his tent. "We +must have overslept, Ned. We were to start +before old Sol got in his heavy work, but we +haven't had breakfast yet." + +"I didn't hear any one call us," remarked Ned. + +"Nor I. Wonder if we're the only lazy birds." +He looked from the tent in time to see Mr. +Damon and the professor emerging. Then Tom +noticed something queer. The canoes were not +on the river bank. There was not an Indian +in sight, and no evidence of Jacinto. + +"What's the matter?" asked the young +inventor. "Have the others gone on ahead?" + +"I rather think they've gone back," was the +professor's dry comment. + +"Gone back?" + +"Yes. The Indians seem to have deserted us +at the ending of this stage of our journey." + +"Bless my time-table!" cried Mr. Damon. +"You don't say so! What does it mean? What +has becomes of our friend Jacinto?" + +"I'm afraid he was rather a false friend," was +the professor's answer. "This is the note he left. +He has gone and taken the canoes and all the +Indians with him," and he held out a paper on +which was some scribbled writing. + + + +CHAPTER XIII + +FORWARD AGAIN + + +"What does it all mean?" asked Tom, seeing +that the note was written in Spanish, a tongue +which he could speak slightly but read indifferently. + +"This is some of Beecher's work," was +Professor Bumper's grim comment. "It seems that +Jacinto was in his pay." + +"In his pay!" cried Mr. Damon. "Do you mean +that Beecher deliberately hired Jacinto to betray us?" + +"Well, no. Not that exactly. Here, I'll translate +this note for you," and the professor proceeded to read: + + +"Senors: I greatly regret the step I have to +take, but I am a gentleman, and, having given +my word, I must keep it. No harm shall come +to you, I swear it on my honor!" + + +"Queer idea of honor he has!" commented Tom, grimly. + +Professor Bumper read on: + + +"Know then, that before I engaged myself to +you I had been engaged by Professor Beecher +through a friend to guide him into the Copan +valley, where he wants to make some explorations, +for what I know not, save maybe that it +is for gold. I agreed, in case any rival expeditions +came to lead them astray if I could. + +"So, knowing from what you said that you +were going to this place, I engaged myself to you, +planning to do what I have done. I greatly regret +it, as I have come to like you, but I had +given my promise to Professor Beecher's friend, +that I would first lead him to the Copan valley, +and would keep others away until he had had a +chance to do his exploration. + +"So I have led you to this wilderness. It is +far from the Copan, but you are near an Indian +village, and you will be able to get help in a week +or so. In the meanwhile you will not starve, as +you have plenty of supplies. If you will travel +northeast you will come again to Puerto Cortes +in due season. As for the money I had from +you, I deposit it to your credit, Professor Beecher +having made me an allowance for steering rival +parties on the wrong trail. So I lose nothing, +and I save my honor. + +"I write this note as I am leaving in the night +with the Indians. I put some harmless sedative +in your tea that you might sleep soundly, and not +awaken until we were well on our way. Do not +try to follow us, as the river will carry us swiftly +away. And, let me add, there is no personal +animosity on the part of Professor Beecher +against you. I should have done to any rival +expedition the same as I have done with you. + JACINTO." + + +For a moment there was silence, and then Tom +Swift burst out with: + +"Well, of all the mean, contemptible tricks +of a human skunk this is the limit!" + +"Bless my hairbrush, but he is a scoundrel!" +ejaculated Mr. Damon, with great warmth. + +"I'd like to start after him the biggest alligator +in the river," was Ned's comment. + +Professor Bumper said nothing for several +seconds. There was a strange look on his face, +and then he laughed shortly, as though the humor +of the situation appealed to him. + +"Professor Beecher has more gumption than I gave +him credit for," he said. "It was a clever trick!" + +"Trick!" cried Tom. + +"Yes. I can't exactly agree that it was the +right thing to do, but he, or some friend acting +for him, seems to have taken precautions that +we are not to suffer or lose money. Beecher +goes on the theory that all is fair in love and +war, I suppose, and he may call this a sort of +scientific war." + +Ned wondered, as he looked at his chum, how +much love there was in it. Clearly Beecher was +determined to get that idol of gold. + +"Well, it can't be helped, and we must make +the best of it," said Tom, after a pause. + +"True. But now, boys, let's have breakfast, +and then we'll make what goods we can't take +with us as snug as possible, until we can send +the mule drivers after them," went on Professor +Bumper. + +"Send the mule drivers after them?" questioned Ned. +"What do you mean to do?" + +"Do? Why keep on, of course. You don't +suppose I'm going to let a little thing like this +stand between me and the discovery of Kurzon +and the idol of gold, do you?" + +"But," began Mr. Damon, "I don't see how--" + +"Oh, we'll find a way," interrupted Tom. "It +isn't the first time I've been pretty well stranded +on an expedition of this kind, and sometimes +from the same cause--the actions of a rival. +Now we'll turn the tables on the other fellows +and see how they like it. The professor's right +--let's have breakfast. Jacinto seems to have +told the truth. Nothing of ours is missing." + +Tom and Ned got the meal, and then a +consultation was held as to what was best to be +done. + +"We can't go on any further by water, that's +sure," said Tom. "In the first place the river +is too shallow, and secondly we have no canoes. +So the only thing is to go on foot through the +jungle." + +"But how can we, and carry all this stuff?" +asked Ned. + +"We needn't carry it!" cried Professor Bumper. +"We'll leave it here, where it will be safe enough, +and tramp on to the nearest Indian village. +There we'll hire bearers to take our stuff on until +we can get mules. I'm not going to turn back!" + +"Good!" cried Mr. Damon. "Bless my +rubber boots! but that's what I say--keep on!" + +"Oh, no! we'll never turn back," agreed Tom. + +"But how can we manage it?" asked Ned. + +"We've just got to! And when you have +to do a thing, it's a whole lot easier to do than +if you just feel as though you ought to. So, +lively is the word!" cried Tom, in answer. + +"We'll pack up what we can carry and leave +the rest," added the scientist. + +Being an experienced traveler Professor Bumper +had arranged his baggage so that it could +be carried by porters if necessary. Everything +could be put into small packages, including the +tents and food supply. + +"There are four of us," remarked Tom, "and if +we can not pack enough along with us to enable +us to get to the nearest village, we had better +go back to civilization. I'm not afraid to try." + +"Nor I!" cried Mr. Damon. + +The baggage, stores and supplies that were +to be left behind were made as snug as possible, +and so piled up that wild beasts could do the +least harm. Then a pack was made up for each +one to carry. + +They would take weapons, of course, Tom +Swift's electric rifle being the one he choose for +himself. They expected to be able to shoot +game on their way, and this would provide them +food in addition to the concentrated supply they +carried. Small tents, in sections, were carried, +there being two, one for Tom and Ned and one +for Mr. Damon and the professor. + +As far as could be learned from a casual +inspection, Jacinto and his deserting Indians had +taken back with them only a small quantity of +food. They were traveling light and down +stream, and could reach the town much more +quickly than they had come away from it. + +"That Beecher certainly was slick," commented +Professor Bumper when they were ready to +start. "He must have known about what time +I would arrive, and he had Jacinto waiting for +us. I thought it was too good to be true, to get +an experienced guide like him so easily. But it +was all planned, and I was so engrossed in thinking +of the ancient treasures I hope to find that +I never thought of a possible trick. Well, let's +start!" and he led the way into the jungle, carrying +his heavy pack as lightly as did Tom. + +Professor Bumper had a general idea in which +direction lay a number of native villages, and it +was determined to head for them, blazing a path +through the wilderness, so that the Indians could +follow it back to the goods left behind. + +It was with rather heavy hearts that the party +set off, but Tom's spirits could not long stay +clouded, and the scientist was so good-natured +about the affair and seemed so eager to do the +utmost to render Beecher's trick void, that the +others fell into a lighter mood, and went on +more cheerfully, though the way was rough and +the packs heavy. + +They stopped at noon under a bower they made +of palms, and, spreading the nets over them, got a +little rest after a lunch. Then, when the sun +was less hot, they started off again. + +"Forward is the word!" cried Ned cheerfully. "Forward!"' + +They had not gone more than an hour on the +second stage of their tramp when Tom, who +was in the lead, following the direction laid out +by the compass, suddenly stopped, and reached +around for his electric rifle, which he was carrying +at his back. + +"What is it?" asked Ned in a whisper. + +"I don't know, but it's some big animal there +in the bushes," was Tom's low-voiced answer. +"I'm ready for it." + +The rustling increased, and a form could be +seen indistinctly. Tom aimed the deadly gun +and stood ready to pull the trigger. + +Ned, tho had a side view into the underbrush, +gave a sudden cry. + +"Don't shoot, Tom!" he yelled. "It's a man!" + + + +CHAPTER XIV: + +A NEW GUIDE + + +In spite of Ned Newton's cry, Tom's finger +pressed the switch-trigger of the electric rifle, +for previous experience had taught him that it +was sometimes the best thing to awe the natives +in out-of-the-way corners of the earth. But the +young inventor quickly elevated the muzzle, and +the deadly missile went hissing through the air +over the head of a native Indian who, at that +moment, stepped from the bush. + +The man, startled and alarmed, shrank back +and was about to run into the jungle whence he +had emerged. Small wonder if he had, considering +the reception he so unwittingly met with. +But Tom. aware of the necessity for making +inquiries of one who knew that part of the jungle, +quickly called to him. + +"Hold on!" he shouted. "Wait a minute. I didn't +mean that. I thought at first you were a +tapir or a tiger. No harm intended. I say, +Professor," Tom called back to the savant, +"you'd better speak to him in his lingo, I can't +manage it. He may be useful in guiding us to +that Indian village Jacinto told us of." + +This Professor Bumper did, being able to make +himself understood in the queer part-Spanish +dialect used by the native Hondurians, though +he could not, of course, speak it as fluently as +had Jacinto. + +Professor Bumper had made only a few remarks +to the man who had so unexpectedly appeared +out of the jungle when the scientist gave an +exclamation of surprise at some of the answers made. + +"Bless my moving picture!" cried Mr. Damon. + +"What's the matter now? Is anything wrong? +Does he refuse to help us?" + +"No, it isn't that," was the answer. "In fact +he came here to help us. Tom, this is the brother +of the Indian who fell overboard and who was eaten +by the alligators. He says you were very kind +to try to save his brother with your rifle, +and for that reason he has come back to help us." + +"Come back?" queried Tom. + +"Yes, he went off with the rest of the Indians +when Jacinto deserted us, but he could not stand +being a traitor, after you had tried to save his +brother's life. These Indians are queer people. + +They don't show much emotion, but they have +deep feelings. This one says he will devote +himself to your service from now on. I believe +we can count on him. He is deeply grateful to +you, Tom." + +"I'm glad of that for all our sakes. But what +does he say about Jacinto?" + +The professor asked some more questions, +receiving answers, and then translated them. + +"This Indian, whose name is Tolpec, says +Jacinto is a fraud," exclaimed Professor Bumper. +"He made all the Indians leave us in the night, +though many of them were willing to stay and +fill the contract they had made. But Jacinto +would not let them, making them desert. Tolpec +went away with the others, but because of what +Tom had done he planned to come back at the +first chance and be our guide. Accordingly he +jumped ashore from one of the canoes, and made +his way to our camp. He got there, found it +deserted and followed us, coming up just now." + +"Well I'm glad I didn't frighten him off with +my gun," remarked Tom grimly. "So he agrees +with us that Jacinto is a scoundrel, does he? +I guess he might as well classify Professor +Beecher in the same way." + +"I am not quite so sure of that," said Professor +Bumper slowly. "I can not believe Beecher +would play such a trick as this, though some +over-zealous friend of his might." + +"Oh, of course Beecher did it!" cried Tom. +"He heard we were coming here, figured out that +we'd start ahead of him, and he wanted to side- +track us. Well, he did it all right," and Tom's +voice was bitter. + +"He has only side-tracked us for a while," +announced Professor Bumper in cheerful tones. + +"What do you mean?" asked Mr. Damon. + +"I mean that this Indian comes just in the nick +of time. He is well acquainted with this part +of the jungle, having lived here all his life, +and he offers to guide us to a place where we can +get mules to transport ourselves and our baggage +to Copan." + +"Fine!" cried Ned. "When can we start?" + +Once more the professor and the native +conversed in the strange tongue, and then Professor +Bumper announced: + +"He says it will be better for us to go back +where we left our things and camp there. He +will stay with us to-night and in the morning go +on to the nearest Indian town and come back +with porters and helpers." + +"I think that is good advice to follow," put in +Tom, "for we do need our goods; and if we +reached the settlement ourselves, we would have +to send back for our things, with the uncertainty +of getting them all." + +So it was agreed that they would make a forced +march back through the jungle to where they +had been deserted by Jacinto. There they would +make camp for the night, and until such time as +Tolpec could return with a force of porters. + +It was not easy, that backward tramp through +the jungle, especially as night had fallen. But +the new Indian guide could see like a cat, and +led the party along paths they never could have +found by themselves. The use of their pocket +electric lights was a great help, and possibly +served to ward off the attacks of jungle beasts, +for as they tramped along they could hear stealthy +sounds in the underbush on either side of the +path, as though tigers were stalking them. For +there was in the woods an animal of the leopard +family, called tiger or "tigre" by the natives, +that was exceedingly fierce and dangerous. But +watchfulness prevented any accident, and eventually +the party reached the place where they had +left their goods. Nothing had been disturbed, +and finally a fire was made, the tents set up and +a light meal, with hot tea served. + +"We'll get ahead of Beecher yet," said Tom. + +"You seem as anxious as Professor Bumper," +observed Mr. Damon, + +"I guess I am," admitted Tom. "I want to +see that idol of gold in the possession of our +party." + +The night passed without incident, and then, +telling his new friends that he would return as +soon as possible with help, Tolpec, taking a +small supply of food with him, set out through +the jungle again. + +As the green vines and creepers closed after +him, and the explorers were left alone with their +possessions piled around them, Ned remarked: + +"After all, I wonder if it was wise to let him go?" + +"Why not?" asked Tom. + +"Well, maybe he only wanted to get us back +here, and then he'll desert, too. Maybe that's +what he's done now, making us lose two or three +days by inducing us to return, waiting for what +will never happen--his return with other +natives." + +A silence followed Ned's intimation. + + + +CHAPTER XV + +IN THE COILS + + +"Ned, do you really think Tolpec is going to +desert us?" asked Tom. + +"Well, I don't know," was the slowly given reply. +"It's a possibility, isn't it?" + +"Yes, it is," broke in Professor Bumper. "But +what if it is? We might as well trust him, and +if he proves true, as I believe he will, we'll be +so much better off. If he proves a traitor we'll +only have lost a few days, for if he doesn't come +back we can go on again in the way we started." + +"But that's just it!" complained Tom. "We +don't want to lose any time with that Beecher +chap on our trail." + +"I am not so very much concerned about him," +remarked Professor Bumper, dryly. + +"Why not?" snapped out Mr. Damon. + +"Well, because I think he'll have just about +as hard work locating the hidden city, and finding +the idol of gold, as we'll have. In other words +it will be an even thing, unless he gets too far +ahead of us, or keeps us back, and I don't believe +he can do that now. + +"So I thought it best to take a chance with this +Indian. He would hardly have taken the trouble +to come all the way back, and run the risks he +did, just to delay us a few days. However, we'll +soon know. Meanwhile, we'll take it easy and +wait for the return of Tolpec and his friends." + +Though none of them liked to admit it, Ned's +words had caused his three friends some anxiety, +and though they busied themselves about the +camp there was an air of waiting impatiently for +something to occur. And waiting is about the +hardest work there is. + +But there was nothing for it but to wait, and +it might be at least a week, Professor Bumper +said, before the Indian could return with a party +of porters and mules to move their baggage. + +"Yes, Tolpec has not only to locate the +settlement," Tom admitted, "but he must persuade the +natives to come back with him. He may have +trouble in that, especially if it is known that he +has left Jacinto, who, I imagine, is a power among +the tribes here." + +But there were only two things left to do--wait +and hope. The travelers did both. Four days +passed and there was no sign of Tolpec. Eager- +ly, and not a little anxiously, they watched the +jungle path along which he had disappeared. + +"Oh, come on!" exclaimed Tom one morning, +when the day seemed a bit cooler than its +predecessor. "Let's go for a hunt, or something! +I'm tired of sitting around camp." + +"Bless my watch hands! So am I!" cried Mr. Damon. +"Let's all go for a trip. It will do us good." + +"And perhaps I can get some specimens of interest," +added Professor Bumper, who, in addition to being +an archaeologist, was something of a naturalist. + +Accordingly, having made everything snug in +camp, the party, Tom and Ned equipped with +electric rifles, and the professor with a butterfly +net and specimen boxes, set forth. Mr. Damon +said he would carry a stout club as his weapon. + +The jungle, as usual, was teeming with life, +but as Ned and Tom did not wish to kill wantonly +they refrained from shooting until later in the +day. For once it was dead, game did not keep +well in that hot climate, and needed to be cooked +almost immediately. + +"We'll try some shots on our back trip," said +the young inventor. + +Professor Bumper found plenty of his own +particular kind of "game" which he caught in the +net, transferring the specimens to the boxes he +carried. There were beautiful butterflies, moths +and strange bugs in the securing of which the +scientist evinced great delight, though when one +beetle nipped him firmly and painfully on his +thumb his involuntary cry of pain was as real +as that of any other person. + +"But I didn't let him get away," he said in +triumph when he had dropped the clawing insect +into the cyanide bottle where death came painlessly. +"It is well worth a sore thumb." + +They wandered on through the jungle, taking +care not to get too far from their camp, for they +did not want to lose their way, nor did they want +to be absent too long in case Tolpec and his +native friends should return. + +"Well, it's about time we shot something, I +think," remarked Ned, when they had been out +about two hours. "Let's try for some of these +wild turkeys. They ought to go well roasted +even if it isn't Thanksgiving." + +"I'm with you," agreed Tom. "Let's see who +has the best luck. But tone down the charge +in your rifle and use a smaller projectile, or you'll +have nothing but a bunch of feathers to show +for your shot. The guns are loaded for deer." + +The change was made, and once more the two +young men started off, a little ahead of Professor +Bumper and Mr. Damon. Tom and Ned had +not gone far, however, before they heard a strange +cry from Mr. Damon. + +"Tom! Ned!" shouted the eccentric man, +"Here's a monster after me! Come quick!" + +"A tiger!" ejaculated Tom, as he began once +more to change the charge in his rifle to a larger +one, running back, meanwhile, in the direction +of the sound of the voice. + +There were really no tigers in Honduras, the +jaguar being called a tiger by the natives, while +the cougar is called a lion. The presence of these +animals, often dangerous to man, had been indicated +around camp, and it was possible that one had been +bold enough to attack Mr. Damon, not through hunger, +but because of being cornered. + +"Come on, Ned!" cried Tom. "He's in some +sort of trouble!" + +But when, a moment later, the young inventor +burst through a fringe of bushes and saw Mr. +Damon standing in a little clearing, with upraised +club, Tom could not repress a laugh. + +"Kill it, Tom! Kill it!" begged the eccentric man. +"Bless my insurance policy, but it's a terrible beast!" + +And so it was, at first glance. For it was a +giant iguana, one of the most repulsive-looking +of the lizards. Not unlike an alligator in shape, +with spikes on its head and tail, with a warty, +squatty ridge-encrusted body, a big pouch beneath +its chin, and long-toed claws, it was enough +to strike terror into the heart of almost any one. +Even the smaller ones look dangerous, and this +one, which was about five feet long, looked +capable of attacking a man and injuring him. As +a matter of fact the iguanas are harmless, their +shape and coloring being designed to protect them. + +"Don't be afraid, Mr. Damon," called Tom, still +laughing. "It won't hurt you!" + +"I'm not so positive of that. It won't let me pass." + +"Just take your club and poke it out of the way," +the young inventor advised. "It's only waiting +to be shoved." + +"Then you do it, Tom. Bless my looking glass, +but I don't want to go near it! If my wife could +see me now she'd say it served me just right." + +Mr. Damon was not a coward, but the giant +iguana was not pleasant to look at. Tom, with +the butt of his rifle, gave it a gentle shove, +whereupon the creature scurried off through the brush +as though glad to make its escape unscathed. + +"I thought it was a new kind of alligator," said +Mr. Damon with a sigh of relief. + +"Where is it?" asked Professor Bumper, coming +up at this juncture. "A new species of alligator? +Let me see it!" + +"It's too horrible," said Mr. Damon. "I never +want to see one again. It was worse than a +vampire bat!" + +Notwithstanding this, when he heard that it +was one of the largest sized iguanas ever seen, +the professor started through the jungle after it. + +"We can't take it with us if we get it," Tom +called after his friend. + +"We might take the skin," answered the +professor. "I have a standing order for such things +from one of the museums I represent. I'd like +to get it. Then they are often eaten. We can +have a change of diet. you see." + +"We'd better follow him," said Tom to Ned. +"We'll have to let the turkeys go for a while. +He may get into trouble. Come on." + +Off they started through the jungle, trailing +after the impetuous professor who was intent on +capturing the iguana. The giant lizard's progress +could be traced by the disturbance of the +leaves and underbrush, and the professor was +following as closely as possible. + +So fast did he go that Ned, Tom and Mr. +Damon, following, lost sight of him several +times, and Tom finally called: + +"Wait a minute. We'll all be lost if you keep +this up." + +"I'll have him in another minute," answered +the professor. "I can almost reach him now. +Then---- Oh!" + +His voice ended in a scream that seemed to +be one of terror. So sudden was the change that +Tom and Ned, who were together, ahead of Mr. +Damon, looked at one another in fear. + +"What has happened?" whispered Ned, pausing. + +"Don't stop to ask--come on!" shouted Tom. + +At that instant again came the voice of the savant. + +"Tom! Ned!" he gasped, rather than cried. + +"I'm caught in the coils! Quick--quick if you +would save me!" + +"In the coils!" repeated Ned. "What does he mean? +Can the giant iguana----" + +Tom Swift did not stop to answer. With his +electric rifle in readiness, he leaped forward +through the jungle. + + + +CHAPTER XVI + +A MEETING IN THE JUNGLE + + +Before Tom and Ned reached the place +whence Professor Bumper had called, they heard +strange noises, other than the imploring voice of +their friend. It seemed as though some great +body was threshing about in the jungle, lashing +the trees, bushes and leaves about, and when +the two young men, followed by Mr. Damon, +reached the scene they saw that, in a measure, +this really accounted for what they heard. + +Something like a great whip was beating about +close to two trees that grew near together. And +then, when the storm of twigs, leaves and dirt, +caused by the leaping, threshing thing ceased for +a moment, the onlookers saw something that +filled them with terror. + +Between the two trees, and seemingly bound +to them by a great coiled rope, spotted and banded, +was the body of Professor Bumper. His arms +were pinioned to his sides and there was horror +and terror on his face, that looked imploringly +at the youths from above the topmost coil of +those encircling him. + +"What is it?" cried Mr. Damon, as he ran +pantingly up. "What has caught him? Is it the +giant iguana?" + +"It's a snake--a great boa!" gasped Tom. "It +has him in its coils. But it is wound around +the trees, too. That alone prevents it from +crushing the professor to death. + +"Ned, be ready with your rifle. Put in the +heaviest charge, and watch your chance to fire!" + +The great, ugly head of the boa reared itself +up from the coils which it had, with the quickness +of thought, thrown about the man between +the two trees. This species of snake is not +poisonous, and kills its prey by crushing it to +death, making it into a pulpy mass, with scarcely +a bone left unbroken, after which it swallows +its meal. The crushing power of one of these +boas, some of which reach a length of thirty +feet, with a body as large around as that of a +full-grown man, is enormous. + +"I'm going to fire!" suddenly cried Tom. He +had seen his chance and he took it. There was +the faint report--the crack of the electric rifle-- +and the folds of the serpent seemed to relax. + +"I see a good chance now," added Ned, who +had taken the small charge from his weapon, +replacing it with a heavier one. + +His rifle was also discharged in the direction +of the snake, and Tom saw that the hit was a +good one, right through the ugly head of the reptile. + +"One other will be enough to make him loosen +his coils!" cried Tom, as he fired again, and such +was the killing power of the electric bullets that +the snake, though an immense one, and one that +short of decapitation could have received many +injuries without losing power, seemed to shrivel up. + +Its folds relaxed, and the coils of the great +body fell in a heap at the roots of the two trees, +between which the scientist had been standing. + +Professor Bumper seemed to fall backward as +the grip of the serpent relaxed, but Tom, dropping +his rifle, and calling to Ned to keep an eye +on the snake, leaped forward and caught his friend. + +"Are you hurt?" asked Tom, carrying the limp +form over to a grassy place. There was no +answer, the savant's eyes were closed and he +breathed but faintly. + +Ned Newton fired two more electric bullets +into the still writhing body of the boa. + +"I guess he's all in," he called to Tom. + +"Bless my horseradish! And so our friend +seems to be," commented Mr. Damon. "Have +you anything with which to revive him, Tom?" + +"Yes. Some ammonia. See if you can find a +little water." + +"I have some in my flask." + +Tom mixed a dose of the spirits which he +carried with him, and this, forced between the pallid +lips of the scientist, revived him. + +"What happened?" he asked faintly as he opened +his eyes. "Oh, yes, I remember," he added +slowly. "The boa----" + +"Don't try to talk," urged Tom. "You're all +right. The snake is dead, or dying. Are you +much hurt?" + +Professor Bumper appeared to be considering. +He moved first one limb, then another. He +seemed to have the power over all his muscles. + +"I see how it happened," he said, as he sat +up, after taking a little more of the ammonia. "I +was following the iguana, and when the big lizard +came to a stop, in a little hollow place in the +ground, at the foot of those two trees, I leaned +over to slip a noose of rope about its neck. Then +I felt myself caught, as if in the hands of a giant, +and bound fast between the two trees." + +"It was the big boa that whipped itself around +you, as you leaned over," explained Tom, as Ned +came up to announce that the snake was no +longer dangerous. "But when it coiled around +you it also coiled around the two trees, you, +fortunately slipping between them. Had it not +been that their trunks took off some of the pressure +of the coils you wouldn't have lasted a minute." + +"Well, I was pretty badly squeezed as it was," +remarked the professor. "I hardly had breath +enough left to call to you. I tried to fight off the +serpent, but it was of no use." + +"I should say not!" cried Mr. Damon. "Bless my +circus ring! one might as well try to combat +an elephant! But, my dear professor, are you all +right now?" + +"I think so--yes. Though I shall be lame and +stiff for a few days, I fear. I can hardly walk." + +Professor Bumper was indeed unable to go +about much for a few days after his encounter +with the great serpent. He stretched out in a +hammock under trees in the camp clearing, and +with his friends waited for the possible return +of Tolpec and the porters. + +Ned and Tom made one or two short hunting +trips, and on these occasions they kept a lookout +in the direction the Indian had taken when he +went away. + +"For he's sure to come back that way--if he +comes at all," declared Ned; "which I am beginning +to doubt." + +"Well, he may not come," agreed Tom, who +was beginning to lose some of his first hope. +"But he won't necessarily come from the same +direction he took. He may have had to go in an +entirely different way to get help. We'll hope +for the best." + +A week passed. Professor Bumper was able +to be about, and Tom and Ned noticed that +there was an anxious look on his face. Was he, +too, beginning to despair? + +"Well, this isn't hunting for golden idols very +fast," said Mr. Damon, the morning of the eighth +day after their desertion by the faithless Jacinto. +"What do you say, Professor Bumper; ought +we not to start off on our own account?" + +"We had better if Tolpec does not return +today," was the answer. + +They had eaten breakfast, had put their camp +in order, and were about to have a consultation +on what was best to do, when Tom suddenly +called to Ned, who was whistling: + +"Hark!" + +Through the jungle came a faint sound of singing +--not a harmonious air, but the somewhat +barbaric chant of the natives. + +"It is Tolpec coming back!" cried Mr. Damon. +"Hurray! Now our troubles are over t Bless my +meal ticket! Now we can start!" + +"It may be Jacinto," suggested Ned. + +"Nonsense! you old cold-water pitcher!" +cried Tom. "It's Tolpec! I can see him! He's +a good scout all right!" + +And then, walking at the head of a band of +Indians who were weirdly chanting while behind +them came a train of mules, was Tolpec, a cheerful +grin covering his honest, if homely, dark face. + +"Me come back!" he exclaimed in gutteral +English, using about half of his foreign vocabulary. + +"I see you did," answered Professor Bumper +in the man's own tongue. "Glad to see you. +Is everything all right?" + +"All right," was the answer. "These Indians +will take you where you want to go, and will not +leave you as Jacinto did." + +"We'll start in the morning!" exclaimed the +savant his own cheerful self again, now that +there was a prospect of going further into the +interior. "Tell the men to get something to eat, +Tolpec. There is plenty for all." + +"Good!" grunted the new guide and soon the +hungry Indians, who had come far, were satisfying +their hunger. + +As they ate Tolpec explained to Professor +Bumper, who repeated it to the youths and Mr. +Damon, that it had been necessary to go farther +than he had intended to get the porters and +mules. But the Indians were a friendly tribe, +of which he was a member, and could be depended on. + +There was a feast and a sort of celebration in +camp that night. Tom and Ned shot two deer, +and these formed the main part of the feast and +the Indians made merry about the fire until nearly +midnight. They did not seem to mind in the +least the swarms of mosquitoes and other bugs +that flew about, attracted by the light. As for +Tom Swift and his friends, their nets protected +them. + +An early start was made the following morning. +Such packages of goods and supplies as could +not well be carried by the Indians in their head +straps, were loaded on the backs of the pack- +mules. Tolpec explained that on reaching the +Indian village, where he had secured the porters, +they could get some ox-carts which would be a +convenience in traveling into the interior toward +the Copan valley. + +The march onward for the next two days was +tiresome; but the Indians Tolpec had secured +were as faithful and efficient as he had described +them, and good progress was made. + +There were a few accidents. One native fell +into a swiftly running stream as they were fording +it and lost a box containing some much-needed +things. But as the man's life was saved Professor +Bumper said it made up for the other loss. +Another accident did not end so auspiciously. +One of the bearers was bitten by a poisonous +snake, and though prompt measures were taken, +the poison spread so rapidly that the man died. + +In due season the Indian village was reached. +where, after a day spent in holding funeral services +over the dead bearer, preparations were +made for proceeding farther. + +This time some of the bearers were left behind, +and ox-carts were substituted for them, as it was +possible to carry more goods this way, + +"And now we're really off for Copan!" +exclaimed Professor Bumper one morning, when +the cavalcade, led by Tolpec in the capacity of +head guide, started off. "I hope we have no +more delays." + +"I hope not, either," agreed Tom. "That +Beecher may be there ahead of us." + +Weary marches fell to their portion. There +were mountains to climb, streams to ford or swim, +sending the carts over on rudely made rafts. +There were storms to endure, and the eternal heat +to fight. + +But finally the party emerged from the +lowlands of the coast and went up in among the +hills, where though the going was harder, the +climate was better. It was not so hot and moist. + +Not wishing to attract attention in Copan +itself, Professor Bumper and his party made a +detour, and finally, after much consultation with +Tom over the ancient maps, the scientist announced +that he thought they were in the vicinity +of the buried city. + +"We will begin test excavations in the +morning," he said. + +The party was in camp, and preparations were +made for spending the night in the forest, when +from among the trees there floated to the ears +of our friends a queer Indian chant. + +"Some one is coming," said Tom to Ned. + +Almost as he spoke there filed into the clearing +where the camp had been set up, a cavalcade of white men, +followed by Indians. And at the sight of one +of the white men Tom Swift uttered a cry. + +"Professor Beecher!" gasped the young inventor. + + + +CHAPTER XVII + +THE LOST MAP + + +The on-marching company of white men, with +their Indian attendants, came to a halt on the +edge of the clearing as they caught sight of the +tents already set up there. The barbaric chant +of the native bearers ceased abruptly, and there +was a look of surprise shown on the face of +Professor Fenimore Beecher. For Professor Beecher +it was, in the lead of the rival expedition. + +"Bless my shoe laces!" exclaimed Mr. Damon. + +"Is it really Beecher?" asked Ned, though he knew +as well as Tom that it was the young archaeologist. + +"It certainly is!" declared Tom. "And he has +nerve to follow us so closely!" + +"Maybe he thinks we have nerve to get here +ahead of him," suggested Ned, smiling grimly. + +"Probably," agreed Tom, with a short laugh. +"Well, it evidently surprises him to find us here +at all, after the mean trick he played on us to +get Jacinto to lead us into the jungle and desert +us." + +"That's right," assented Ned. "Well, what's +the next move?" + +There seemed to be some doubt about this +on the part of both expeditions. At the sight +of Professor Beecher, Professor Bumper, who had +come out of his tent, hurriedly turned to Tom +and asked him what he thought it best to do. + +"Do!" exclaimed the eccentric Mr. Damon, +not giving Tom time to reply. "Why, stand +your ground, of course! Bless my house and +lot! but we're here first! For the matter of that, +I suppose the jungle is free and we can no more +object to his coming: here than he can to our +coming. First come, first served, I suppose is the +law of the forest." + +Meanwhile the surprise occasioned by the +unexpected meeting of their rivals seemed to have +spread something like consternation among the +white members of the Beecher party. As for the +natives they evidently did not care one way or +the other. + +There was a hasty consultation among the +professors accompanying Mr. Beecher, and then the +latter himself advanced toward the tents of Tom +and his friends and asked: + +"How long have you been here?" + +"I don't see that we are called upon to answer +that question," replied Professor Bumper stiffly. + +"Perhaps not, and yet----" + +"There is no perhaps about it!" said Professor +Bumper quickly. "I know what your object is, +as I presume you do mine. And, after what +I may term your disgraceful and unsportsmanlike +conduct toward me and my friends, I prefer +not to have anything further to do with you. +We must meet as strangers hereafter." + +"Very well," and Professor Beecher's voice was +as cold and uncompromising as was his rival's. +"Let it be as your wish. But I must say I don't +know what you mean by unsportsmanlike conduct." + +"An explanation would be wasted on you," +said Professor Bumper stiffly. "But in order that +you may know I fully understand what you did +I will say that your efforts to thwart us through +your tool Jacinto came to nothing. We are here +ahead of you." + +"Jacinto!" cried Professor Beecher in real or +simulated surprise. "Why, he was not my `tool,' +as you term it." + +"Your denial is useless in the light of his +confession," asserted Professor Bumper. + +"Confession?" + +"Now look here!" exclaimed the older +professor, "I do not propose to lower myself by +quarreling with you. I know certainly what +you and your party tried to do to prevent us +from getting here. But we got out of the trap +you set for us, and we are on the ground first. +I recognize your right to make explorations as +well as ourselves, and I presume you have not +fallen so low that you will not recognize the +unwritten law in a case of this kind--the law +which says the right of discovery belongs to the +one who first makes it." + +"I shall certainly abide by such conduct as +is usual under the circumstances," said +Professor Beecher more stiffly than before. +"At the same time I must deny having set a trap. +And as for Jacinto----" + +"It will be useless to discuss it further!" +broke in Professor Bumper. + +"Then no more need be said," retorted the +younger man. "I shall give orders to my friends, +as well as to the natives, to keep away from +your camp, and I shall expect you to do the +same regarding mine." + +"I should have suggested the same thing +myself," came from Tom's friend, and the two rival +scientists fairly glared at one another, the others +of both parties looking on with interest. + +Professor Bumper turned and walked defiantly +back to his tent. Professor Beecher did the same +thing. Then, after a short consultation among +the white members of the latter's organization, +their tents were set up in another clearing, +removed and separated by a screen of trees and +bushes from those of Tom Swift's friends. The +natives of the Beecher party also withdrew a little +way from those of Professor Bumper's organization, +and then preparations for spending the +night in the jungle went on in the rival +headquarters. + +"Well, he certainly had nerve, to deny, practically, +that he had set Jacinto up to do what he did," commented Tom. + +"I should say so!" agreed Ned. + +"How do you imagine he got here nearly as +soon as we did, when he did not start until +later?" asked Mr. Damon. + +"He did not have the unfortunate experience +of being deserted in the jungle," replied Tom. +"He probably had Jacinto, or some of that +unprincipled scoundrel's friends, show him a short +route to Copan and he came on from there." + +"Well, I did hope we might have the ground +to ourselves, at least for the preliminary explorations +and excavations. But it is not to be. My +rival is here," sighed Professor Bumper. + +"Don't let that discourage you!" exclaimed Tom. +"We can fight all the better now the foe +is in the open, and we know where he is." + +"Yes, Tom Swift, that is true," agreed the +scientist. "I am not going to give up, but I +shall have to change my plans a little. Perhaps +you will come into the tent with me," and he +nodded to Tom and Ned. "I want to talk over +certain matters with you and Mr. Damon." + +"Pleased to," assented the young inventor, and +his financial secretary nodded. + +A little later, supper having been eaten, the +camp made shipshape and the natives settled +down, Tom, Ned, Mr. Damon and Professor +Bumper assembled in the tent of the scientist, +where a dry battery lamp gave sufficient illumination +to show a number of maps and papers scattered +over an improvised table. + +"Now, gentlemen," said the professor, "I have +called you here to go over my plans more in +detail than I have hitherto done, now we are on +the ground. You know in a general way what +I hope to accomplish, but the time has come +when I must be specific. + +"Aside from being on the spot, below which, +or below the vicinity where, I believe, lies the +lost city of Kurzon and, I hope, the idol of gold, +a situation has arisen--an unexpected situation, +I may say--which calls for different action from +that I had counted on. + +"I refer to the presence of my rival, Professor +Beecher. I will not dwell now on what he has +done. It is better to consider what he may do." + +"That's right," agreed Ned. "He may get up in +the night, dig up this city and skip with that +golden image before we know it." + +"Hardly," grinned Tom. + +"No," said Professor Bumper. "Excavating +buried cities in the jungle of Honduras is not +as simple as that. There is much work to be +done. But accidents may happen, and in case +one should occur to me, and I be unable to prosecute +the search, I want one of you to do it. For +that reason I am going to show you the maps +and ancient documents and point out to you +where I believe the lost city lies. Now, if you +will give me your attention, I'll proceed." + +The professor went over in detail the story +of how he had found the old documents relating +to the lost city of Kurzon, and of how, after +much labor and research, he had located the +city in the Copan valley. The great idol of +gold was one of the chief possessions of Kurzon, +and it was often referred to in the old +papers; copies and translations of which the +professor had with him. + +"But this is the most valuable of all," he said, +as he opened an oiled-silk packet. "And before +I show it to you, suppose you two young men +take a look outside the tent." + +"What for?" asked Mr. Damon. + +"To make sure that no emissaries from the +Beecher crowd are sneaking around to overhear +what we say," was the somewhat bitter answer +of the scientist. "I do not trust him, in spite +of his attempted denial." + +Tom and Ned took a quick but thorough +observation outside the tent. The blackness of the +jungle night was in strange contrast to the light +they had just left. + +"Doesn't seem to be any one around here," +remarked Ned, after waiting a minute or two. + +"No. All's quiet along the Potomac. Those +Beecher natives are having some sort of a song- +fest, though." + +In the distance, and from the direction of their +rivals' camp, came the weird chant. + +"Well, as long as they stay there we'll be all +right," said Tom. "Come on in. I'm anxious to +hear what the professor has to say." + +"Everything's quiet," reported Ned. + +"Then give me your attention," begged the +scientist. + +Carefully, as though about to exhibit some, +precious jewel, he loosened the oiled-silk wrappings +and showed a large map, on thin but tough +paper. + +"This is drawn from the old charts," the +professor explained. "I worked on it many months, +and it is the only copy in the world. If it were +to be destroyed I should have to go all the way +back to New York to make another copy. I have +the original there in a safe deposit vault." + +"Wouldn't it have been wise to make two +copies?" asked Tom. + +"It would have only increased the risk. With +one copy, and that constantly in my possession, +I can be sure of my ground. Otherwise not. +That is why I am so careful of this. Now I will +show you why I believe we are about over the +ancient city of Kurzon." + +"Over it!" cried Mr. Damon. "Bless my +gunpowder! What do you mean?" and he looked +down at the earthen floor of the tent as though +expecting it to open and swallow him. + +"I mean that the city, like many others of +Central and South America, is buried below the +refuse of centuries," went on the professor. +"Very soon, if we are fortunate, we shall be +looking on the civilization of hundreds of years +ago--how long no one knows. + +"Considerable excavation has been done in +Central America," went on Professor Bumper, +"and certain ruins have been brought to light. +Near us are those of Copan, while toward the +frontier are those of Quirigua, which are even +better preserved than the former. We may visit +them if we have time. But I have reason to +believe that in this section of Copan is a large +city, the existence of which has not been made +certain of by any one save myself--and, perhaps, +Professor Beecher. + +"Certainly no part of it has seen the light of +day for many centuries. It shall be our pleasure +to uncover it, if possible, and secure the idol of +gold." + +"How long ago do you think the city was +buried?" asked Tom. + +"It would be hard to say. From the carvings +and hieroglyphics I have studied it would seem +that the Mayan civilization lasted about five +hundred years, and that it began perhaps in the +year A. D. five hundred." + +"That would mean," said Mr. Damon, "that +the ancient cities were in ruins, buried, perhaps, +long before Columbus discovered the new +world." + +"Yes," assented the professor. "Probably +Kurzon, which we now seek, was buried deep for +nearly five hundred years before Columbus landed +at San Salvadore. The specimens of writing and +architecture heretofore disclosed indicate that. +But, as a matter of fact, it is very hard to +decipher the Mayan pictographs. So far, little but +the ability to read their calendars and numerical +system is possessed by us, though we are gradually +making headway. + +"Now this is the map of the district, and by the +markings you can see where I hope to find what +I seek. We shall begin digging here," and he +made a small mark with a pencil on the map. + +"Of course," the professor explained, "I may be +wrong, and it will take some time to discover the +error if we make one. When a city is buried thirty +or forty feet deep beneath earth and great trees +have grown over it, it is not easy to dig down to it." + +"How do you ever expect to find it?" asked Ned. + +"Well, we will sink shafts here and there. If +we find carved stones, the remains of ancient +pottery and weapons, parts of buildings or building +stones, we shall know we are on the right +track," was the answer. "And now that I have +shown you the map, and explained how valuable +it is, I will put it away again. We shall begin +our excavations in the morning." + +"At what point?" asked Tom. + +"At a point I shall indicate after a further +consultation of the map. I must see the configuration +of the country by daylight to decide. +And now let's get some rest. We have had a +hard day." + +The two tents housing the four white members +of the Bumper party were close together, +and it was decided that the night would be divided +into four watches, to guard against possible +treachery on the part of the Beecher crowd. + +"It seems an unkind precaution to take against +a fellow scientist," said Professor Bumper, "but +I can not afford to take chances after what has +occurred." + +The others agreed with him, and though standing +guard was not pleasant it was done. However +the night passed without incident, and then +came morning and the excitement of getting +breakfast, over which the Indians made merry. +They did not like the cold and darkness, and +always welcomed the sun, no matter how hot. + +"And now," cried Tom, when the meal was +over, "let us begin the work that has brought us +here." + +"Yes," agreed Professor Bumper, "I will +consult the map, and start the diggers where I think +the city lies, far below the surface. Now, gentlemen, +if you will give me your attention----" + +He was seeking through his outer coat pockets, +after an ineffectual search in the inner one. A +strange look came over his face. + +"What's the matter?" asked Tom. + +"The map--the map!" gasped the professor. +"The map I was showing you last night! The map +that tells where we are to dig for the idol of gold! +It's gone!" + +"The map gone?" gasped Mr. Damon. + +"I--I'm afraid so," faltered the professor. +"I put it away carefully, but now----" + +He ceased speaking to make a further search +in all his pockets. + +"Maybe you left it in another coat," suggested Ned. + +"Or maybe some of the Beecher crowd took it!" snapped Tom. + + + +CHAPTER XVIII + +"EL TIGRE!" + + +The four men gazed at one another. +Consternation showed on the face of Professor +Bumper, and was reflected, more or less, on the +countenances of his companions. + +"Are you sure the map is gone?" asked Tom. +"I know how easy it is to mislay anything in a +camp of this sort. I couldn't at first find my +safety razor this morning, and when I did locate +it the hoe was in one of my shoes. I'm sure a +rat or some jungle animal must have dragged +it there. Now maybe they took your map, +Professor. That oiled silk in which it was wrapped +might have appealed to the taste of a rat or a +snake." + +"It is no joking matter," said Professor +Bumper. "But I know you appreciate the seriousness +of it as much as I do, Tom. But I had the map +in the pocket of this coat, and now it is gone!" + +"When did you put it there?" asked Ned. + +"This morning, just before I came to breakfast." + +"Oh, then you have had it since last night!" +Tom ejaculated. + +"Yes, I slept with it under my clothes that I +rolled up for a pillow, and when it was my turn +to stand guard I took it with me. Then I put +it back again and went to sleep. When I awoke +and dressed I put the packet in my pocket and +ate breakfast. Now when I look for it--why, +it's gone!" + +"The map or the oiled-silk package?" asked +Mr. Damon, who, once having been a businessman, +was sometimes a stickler for small points. + +"Both," answered the professor. "I opened +the silk to tie it more smoothly, so it would not +be such a lump in my pocket, and I made sure +the map was inside." + +"Then the whole thing has been taken--or you +have lost it," suggested Ned. + +"I am not in the habit of losing valuable maps," +retorted the scientist. "And the pocket of my +coat I had made deep, for the purpose of carrying +the long map. It could not drop out." + +"Well, we mustn't overlook any possible +chances," suggested Tom. "Come on now, we'll +search every inch of the ground over which you +traveled this morning, Professor." + +"It MUST be found," murmured the scientist. +"Without it all our work will go for naught." + +They all went into the tent where the professor +and Mr. Damon had slept when they were not +on guard. The camp was a busy place, with the +Indians finishing their morning meal, and getting +ready for the work of the day. For word +had been given out that there would be no more +long periods of travel. + +In consequence, efforts were being directed by +the head men of the bearers to making a more +permanent camp in the wilderness. Shelters of +palm-thatched huts were being built, a site for +cooking fires made, and, at the direction of Mr. +Damon, to whom this part was entrusted, some +sanitary regulations were insisted on. + +Leaving this busy scene, the four, with solemn +faces, proceeded to the tent where it was hoped +the map would be found. But though they went +through everything, and traced and retraced +every place the professor could remember having +traversed about the canvas shelter, no signs of +the important document could be found. + +"I don't believe I dropped it out of my pocket," +said the scientist, for perhaps the twentieth time. + +"Then it was taken," declared Tom. + +"That's what I say!" chimed in Ned. +"And by some of Beecher's party!" + +"Easy, my boy," cautioned Mr. Damon. "We +don't want to make accusations we can't prove." + +"That is true," agreed Professor Bumper. +"But, though I am sorry to say it of a fellow +archaelogist, I can not help thinking Beecher +had something to do with the taking of my map." + +"But how could any of them get it?" asked Mr. Damon. +"You say you had the map this morning, and certainly +none of them has been in our camp since dawn, +though of course it is possible that some of them +sneaked in during the night." + +"It does seem a mystery how it could have +been taken in open daylight, while we were about +camp together," said Tom. "But is the loss +such a grave one, Professor Bumper?" + +"Very grave. In fact I may say it is impossible +to proceed with the excavating without the map." + +"Then what are we to do?" asked Ned. + +"We must get it back!" declared Tom. + +"Yes," agreed the scientist, "we can not work +without it. As soon as I make a little further +search, to make sure it could not have dropped +in some out-of-the-way place, I shall go over to +Professor Beecher's camp and demand that he +give me back my property." + +"Suppose he says he hasn't taken it?" asked Tom. + +"Well, I'm sure he either took it personally, +or one of his party did. And yet I can't understand +how they could have come here without our +seeing them," and the professor shook his head +in puzzled despair. + +A more detailed search did not reveal the missing +map, and Mr. Damon and his friend the +scientist were on the point of departing for the +camp of their rivals, less than a mile away, when +Tom had what really amounted to an inspiration. + +"Look here, Professor!" he cried. "Can you +remember any of the details of your map--say, +for instance, where we ought to begin excavating +to get at the wonders of the underground city?" + +"Well, Tom, I did intend to compare my map +with the configuration of the country about here. +There is a certain mountain which serves as a +landmark and a guide for a starting point. I +think that is it over there," and the scientist +pointed to a distant snow-capped peak. + +The party had left the low and marshy land +of the true jungle, and were among the foothills, +though all about them was dense forest and +underbush, which, in reality, was as much a jungle +as the lower plains, but was less wet. + +"The point where I believe we should start +to dig," said the professor, "is near the spot +where the top of the mountain casts a shadow +when the sun is one hour high. At least that is +the direction given in the old manuscripts. So, +though we can do little without the map, we +might make a start by digging there." + +"No, not there!" exclaimed Tom. + +"Why not?" + +"Because we don't want to let Beecher's crowd +know that we are on the track of the idol of gold." + +"But they know anyhow, for they have the map," +commented Ned, puzzled by his chum's words. + +"Maybe not," said Tom slowly. "I think this +is a time for a big bluff. It may work and it +may not. Beecher's crowd either has the map or +they have not. If they have it they will lose +no time in trying to find the right place to start +digging and then they'll begin excavating. + +"Very good! If they do that we have a right +to dig near the same place. But if they have not +the map, which is possible, and if we start to dig +where the professor's memory tells him is the +right spot, we'll only give them the tip, and they'll +dig there also." + +"I'm sure they have the map," the professor said. +"But I believe your plan is a good one, Tom." + +"Just what do you propose doing?" asked Ned. + +"Fooling 'em!" exclaimed Tom quickly. "We'll +dig in some place remote from the spot where the +mountain casts its shadow. They will think, if +they haven't the map, that we are proceeding by +it, and they'll dig, too. When they find nothing, +as will also happen to us, they may go away. + +"If, on the other hand, they have the map, and +see us digging at a spot not indicated on it, they +will be puzzled, knowing we must have some idea +of where the buried city lies. They will think +the map is at fault, perhaps, and not make use of +it. Then we can get it back." + +"Bless my hatband!" cried Mr. Damon. +"I believe you're right, Tom. +We'll dig in the wrong place to fool 'em." + +And this was done. Search for the precious +map was given up for the time being, and the +professor and his friends set the natives to work +digging shafts in the ground, as though sinking +them down to the level of the buried city. + +But though this false work was prosecuted with +vigor for several days, there was a feeling of +despair among the Bumper party over the loss of +the map. + +"If we could only get it back!" exclaimed the +professor, again and again. + +Meanwhile the Beecher party seemed inactive. +True, some members of it did come over to look +on from a respectful distance at what the diggers +were doing. Some of the rival helpers, under +the direction of the head of the expedition, also +began sinking shafts. But they were not in the +locality remembered by Professor Bumper as being +correct. + +"I can't imagine what they're up to," he said. +"If they have my map they would act differently, +I should think." + +"Whatever they're up to," answered Tom, "the +time has come when we can dig at the place +where we can hope for results." And the following +day shafts were started in the shadow of the +mountain. + +Until some evidence should have been obtained +by digging, as to the location beneath the surface +of a buried city, there was nothing for the +travelers to do but wait. Turns were taken in +directing the efforts of the diggers, and an +occasional inspection was made of the shafts. + +"What do you expect to find first?" asked Tom +of Professor Bumper one day, when the latter was +at the top of a shaft waiting for a bucket load +of dirt to be hoisted up. + +"Potsherds and artifacts," was the answer. + +"What sort of bugs are they?" asked Ned with +a laugh. He and Tom were about to go hunting +with their electric rifles. + +"Artifacts are things made by the Indians--or +whatever members of the race who built the +ancient cities were called--such as household articles, +vases, ornaments, tools and so on. Anything +made by artificial means is called an artifact." + +"And potsherds are things with those Chinese +laundry ticket scratches on them," added Tom. + +"Exactly," said the professor, laughing. +"Though some of the strange-appearing inscriptions +give much valuable information. As soon +as we find some of them--say a broken bit of +pottery with hieroglyphics on--I will know I am +on the right track." + +And while the scientist and Mr. Damon kept +watch at the top of the shaft, Tom and Ned went +out into the jungle to hunt. They had killed some +game, and were stalking a fine big deer, which +would provide a feast for the natives, when suddenly +the silence of the lonely forest was broken +by a piercing scream, followed by an agonized +cry of + +"El tigre! El tigre!" + + + +CHAPTER XIX + +POISONED ARROWS + + +"Did you hear that, Tom?" asked Ned, in a +hoarse whisper. + +"Surely," was the cautious answer. "Keep +still, and I'll try for a shot." + +"Better be quick," advised Ned in a tense voice. +"The chap who did that yelling seems to be in +trouble!" + +And as Ned's voice trailed off into a whisper, +again came the cry, this time in frenzied pain. + +"El tigre! El tigre!" Then there was a jumble of words. + +"It's over this way!" and this time Ned shouted, +seeing no need for low voices since the other was so loud. + +Tom looked to where Ned had parted the +bushes alongside a jungle path. Through the +opening the young inventor saw, in a little glade, +that which caused him to take a firmer grip on his +electric rifle, and also a firmer grip on his nerves. + +Directly in front of him and Ned, and not more +than a hundred yards away, was a great tawny +and spotted jaguar--the "tigre" or tiger of Central +America. The beast, with lashing tail, stood +over an Indian upon whom it seemed to have +sprung from some lair, beating the unfortunate +man to the ground. Nor had he fallen scatheless, +for there was blood on the green leaves about +him, and it was not the blood of the spotted +beast. + +"Oh, Tom, can you--can you----" and Ned +faltered. + +The young inventor understood the unspoken +question. + +"I think I can make a shot of it without hitting +the man," he answered, never turning his head. +"It's a question, though, if the beast won't claw +him in the death struggle. It won't last long, +however, if the electric bullet goes to the right +place, and I've got to take the chance." + +Cautiously Tom brought his weapon to bear. +Quiet as Ned and he had been after the discovery, +the jaguar seemed to feel that something was +wrong. Intent on his prey, for a time he had +stood over it, gloating. Now the brute glanced +uneasily from side to side, its tail nervously +twitching, and it seemed trying to gain, by a sniffing +of the air, some information as to the direction +in which danger lay, for Tom and Ned had +stooped low, concealing themselves by a screen +of leaves. + +The Indian, after his first frenzied outburst +of fear, now lay quiet, as though fearing to move, +moaning in pain. + +Suddenly the jaguar, attracted either by some +slight movement on the part of Ned or Tom, or +perhaps by having winded them, turned his head +quickly and gazed with cruel eyes straight at the +spot where the two young men stood behind the +bushes. + +"He's seen us," whispered Ned. + +"Yes," assented Tom. "And it's a perfect shot. +Hope I don't miss!" + +It was not like Tom Swift to miss, nor did he +on this occasion. There was a slight report from +the electric rifle--a report not unlike the crackle +of the wireless--and the powerful projectile sped +true to its mark. + +Straight through the throat and chest under +the uplifted jaw of the jaguar it went--through +heart and lungs. Then with a great coughing, +sighing snarl the beast reared up, gave a convulsive +leap forward toward its newly discovered +enemies, and fell dead in a limp heap, just beyond +the native over which it had been crouching before +it delivered the death stroke, now never to fall. + +"You did it, Tom! You did it!" cried +Ned, springing up from where he had been kneeling +to give his chum a better chance to shoot. +"You did it, and saved the man's life!" And Ned +would have rushed out toward the still twitching body. + +"Just a minute!" interposed Tom. "Those +beasts sometimes have as many lives as a cat. +I'll give it one more for luck." Another electric +projectile through the head of the jaguar produced +no further effect than to move the body +slightly, and this proved conclusively that there +was no life left. It was safe to approach, which +Tom and Ned did. + +Their first thought, after a glance at the +jaguar, was for the Indian. It needed but a brief +examination to show that he was not badly hurt. +The jaguar had leaped on him from a low tree +as he passed under it, as the boys learned afterward, +and had crushed the man to earth by the +weight of the spotted body more than by a stroke +of the paw. + +The American jaguar is not so formidable a +beast as the native name of tiger would cause +one to suppose, though they are sufficiently dan- +gerous, and this one had rather badly clawed the +Indian. Fortunately the scratches were on the +fleshy parts of the arms and shoulders, where, +though painful, they were not necessarily serious. + +"But if you hadn't shot just when you did, Tom, +it would have been all up with him," commented +Ned. + +"Oh, well, I guess you'd have hit him if I +hadn't," returned the young inventor. "But let's +see what we can do for this chap." + +The man sat up wonderingly--hardly able to +believe that he had been saved from the dreaded +"tigre." His wounds were bleeding rather freely, +and as Tom and Ned carried with them a first-aid +kit they now brought it into use. The wounds +were bound up, the man was given water to +drink and then, as he was able to walk, Tom and +Ned offered to help him wherever he wanted to +go. + +"Blessed if I can tell whether he's one of our +Indians or whether he belongs to the Beecher +crowd," remarked Tom. + +"Senor Beecher," said the Indian, adding, in +Spanish, that he lived in the vicinity and had +only lately been engaged by the young professor +who hoped to discover the idol of gold before +Tom's scientific friend could do so. + +Tom and Ned knew a little Spanish, and with +that, and simple but expressive signs on the part +of the Indian, they learned his story. He had his +palm-thatched hut not far from the Beecher camp, +in a small Indian village, and he, with others, +had been hired on the arrival of the Beecher party +to help with the excavations. These, for some +reason, were delayed. + +"Delayed because they daren't use the map they +stole from us," commented Ned. + +"Maybe," agreed Tom. + +The Indian, whose name, it developed, was Tal, +as nearly as Tom and Ned could master it, had +left camp to go to visit his wife and child in the +jungle hut, intending to return to the Beecher +camp at night. But as he passed through the +forest the jaguar had dropped on him, bearing him +to earth. + +"But you saved my life, Senor," he said to +Tom, dropping on one knee and trying to kiss +Tom's hand, which our hero avoided. "And now +my life is yours," added the Indian. + +"Well, you'd better get home with it and take +care of it," said Tom. "I'll have Professor Bumper +come over and dress your scratches in a better +and more careful way. The bandages we put +on are only temporary." + +"My wife she make a poultice of leaves--they +cure me," said the Indian. + +"I guess that will be the best way," observed +Ned. "These natives can doctor themselves for +some things, better than we can." + +"Well, we'll take him home," suggested Tom. +"He might keel over from loss of blood. +Come on," he added to Tal, indicating his object. + +It was not far to the native's hut from the place +where the jaguar had been killed, and there Tom +and Ned underwent another demonstration of affection +as soon as those of Tal's immediate family and the +other natives understood what had happened. + +"I hate this business!" complained Tom, after +having been knelt to by the Indian's wife and +child, who called him the "preserver" and other +endearing titles of the same kind. "Come on, +let's hike back." + +But Indian hospitality, especially after a life +has been saved, is not so simple as all that. + +"My life--my house--all that I own is yours," +said Tal in deep gratitude. "Take everything," +and he waved his hand to indicate all the possessions +in his humble hut. + +"Thanks," answered Tom, "but I guess you +need all you have. That's a fine specimen of +blow gun though," he added, seeing one hanging +on the wall. "I wouldn't mind having one like +that. If you get well enough to make me one, +Tal, and some arrows to go with it, I'd like it +for a curiosity to hang in my room at home." + +"The Senor shall have a dozen," promised the +Indian. + +"Look, Ned," went on Tom, pointing to the +native weapon. "I never saw one just like this. +They use small arrows or darts, tipped with wild +cotton, instead of feathers." + +"These the arrows," explained Tal's wife, +bringing a bundle from a corner of the one-room +hut. As she held them out her husband gave a +cry of fear. + +"Poisoned arrows! Poisoned arrows!" he exclaimed. +"One scratch and the senors are dead men. Put them away!" + +In fear the Indian wife prepared to obey, but +as she did so Tom Swift caught sight of the package +and uttered a strange cry. + +"Thundering hoptoads, Ned!" he exclaimed. +"The poisoned arrows are wrapped in the piece of oiled +silk that was around the professor's missing map!" + + + +CHAPTER XX + +AN OLD LEGEND + + +Fascinated, Tom and Ned gazed at the package +the Indian woman held out to them. Undoubtedly +it was oiled silk on the outside, and through +the almost transparent covering could be seen +the small arrows, or darts, used in the blow gun. + +"Where did you get that?" asked Tom, pointing +to the bundle and gazing sternly at Tal. + +"What is the matter, Senor?" asked the Indian in turn. +"Is it that you are afraid of the poisoned arrows? +Be assured they will not harm you unless +you are scratched by them." + +Tom and Ned found it difficult to comprehend +all the rapid Spanish spoken by their host, but +they managed to understand some, and his +eloquent gestures made up the rest. + +"We're not afraid," Tom said, noting that the +oiled skin well covered the dangerous darts. "But +where did you get that?" + +"I picked it up, after another Indian had thrown +it away. He got it in your camp, Senor. I +will not lie to you. I did not steal. Valdez +went to your camp to steal--he is a bad Indian-- +and he brought back this wrapping. It contained +something he thought was gold, but it was +not, so he----" + +"Quick! Yes! Tell us!" demanded Tom +eagerly. "What did he do with the professor's +map that was in the oiled silk? Where is it?" + +"Oh, Senors!" exclaimed the Indian woman, +thinking perhaps her husband was about to be +dealt harshly with when she heard Tom's +excited voice. "Tal do no harm!" + +"No, he did no harm," went on Tom, in a +reassuring tone. "But he can do a whole lot of good +if he tells us what became of the map that was in +this oiled silk. Where is it?" he asked again. + +"Valdez burn it up," answered Tal. + +"What, burned the professor's map?" cried Ned. + +"If that was in this yellow cloth--yes," +answered the injured man. "Valdez he is bad. He +say to me he is going to your camp to see what +he can take. How he got this I know not, but +he come back one morning with the yellow pack- +age. I see him, but he make me promise not +to tell. But you save my life I tell you everything. + +"Valdez open the package; but it is not gold, +though he think so because it is yellow, and the +man with no hair on his head keep it in his pocket +close, so close," and Tal hugged himself to indicate +what he meant. + +"That's Professor Bumper," explained Ned. + +"How did Valdez get the map out of the +professor's coat?" asked Tom. + +"Valdez he very much smart. When man +with no hair on his head take coat off for a +minute to eat breakfast Valdez take yellow thing +out of pocket." + +"The Indian must have sneaked into camp +when we were eating," said Tom. "Those from +Beecher's party and our workers look all alike +to us. We wouldn't know one from the other, +and one of our rival's might slip in." + +"One evidently did, if this is really the piece of +oiled silk that was around the professor's map," +said Ned. + +"It certainly is the same," declared the young +inventor. "See, there is his name," and he +stretched out his hand to point. + +"Don't touch!" cried Tal. "Poisoned arrows +snake poison--very dead-like and quick." + +"Don't worry, I won't touch," said Tom grimly. +"But go on. You say Valdez sneaked into our +camp, took the oiled-silk package from the coat +pocket of Professor Bumper and went back to +his own camp with it, thinking it was gold." + +"Yes," answered Tal, though it is doubtful if +he understood all that Tom said, as it was half +Spanish and half English. But the Indian knew +a little English, too. "Valdez, when he find no +gold is very mad. Only papers in the yellow +silk-papers with queer marks on. Valdez think +it maybe a charm to work evil, so he burn them +up--all up!" + +"Burned that rare map!" gasped Tom. + +"All in fire," went on Tal, indicating by his +hands the play of flames. "Valdez throw away +yellow silk, and I take for my arrows so rain not +wash off poison. I give to you, if you like, with +blow gun." + +"No, thank you," answered Tom, in disappointed +tones. "The oiled silk is of no use without +the map, and that's gone. Whew! but this is +tough!" he said to his chum. "As long as it was +only stolen there was a chance to get it back, +but if it's burned, the jig is up." + +"It looks so," agreed Ned. "We'd better get +back and tell the professor. It he can't get along +without the map it's time he started a movement +toward getting another. So it wasn't Beecher, +after all, who got it." + +"Evidently not," assented Tom. "But I +believe him capable of it." + +"You haven't much use for him," remarked Ned. + +"Huh!" was all the answer given by his chum. + +"I am sorry, Senors," went on Tal, "but I +could not stop Valdez, and the burning of the +papers----" + +"No, you could not help it," interrupted the +young inventor. "But it just happens that it +brings bad luck to us. You see, Tal, the papers +in this yellow covering, told of an old buried +city that the bald-headed professor--the-man- +with-no-hair-on-his-head--is very anxious to +discover. It is somewhere under the ground," and +he waved to the jungle all about them, pointing +earthwards. + +"Paper Valdez burn tell of lost city?" asked +Tal, his face lighting up. + +"Yes. But now, of course, we can't tell where +to dig for it." + +The Indian turned to his wife and talked rapidly +with her in their own dialect. She, too, seemed +greatly excited, making quick gestures. Finally +she ran out of the hut. + +"Where is she going?" asked Tom suspiciously. + +"To get her grandfather. He very old Indian. +He know story of buried cities under trees. Very +old story--what you call legend, maybe. But +Goosal know. He tell same as his grandfather +told him. You wait. Goosal come, and you listen." + +"Good, Ned!" suddenly cried Tom. "Maybe, +we'll get on the track of lost Kurzon after all, +through some ancient Indian legend. Maybe we +won't need the map!" + +"It hardly seems possible," said Ned slowly. +"What can these Indians know of buried cities +that were out of existence before Columbus came +here? Why, they haven't any written history." + +"No, and that may be just the reason they are +more likely to be right," returned Tom. "Legends +handed down from one grandfather to another +go back a good many hundred years. If +they were written they might be destroyed as +the professor's map was. Somehow or other, +though I can't tell why, I begin to see daylight +ahead of us." + +"I wish I did," remarked Ned. + +"Here comes Goosal I think," murmured Tom, +and he pointed to an Indian, bent with the weight +of years, who, led by Tal's wife, was slowly +approaching the hut. + + + +CHAPTER XXI + +THE CAVERN + + +"Now Goosal can tell you," said Tal, evidently +pleased that he had, in a measure, solved the +problem caused by the burning of the professor's +map. "Goosal very old Indian. He know old +stories--legends--very old." + +"Well, if he can tell us how to find the buried +city of Kurzon and the--the things in it," said +Tom, "he's all right!" + +The aged Indian proceeded slowly toward the +hut where the impatient youths awaited him. + +"I know what you seek in the buried city," +remarked Tal. + +"Do you?" cried Tom, wondering if some one +had indiscreetly spoken of the idol of gold. + +"Yes you want pieces of rock, with strange +writings on them, old weapons, broken pots. +I know. I have helped white men before." + +"Yes, those are the things we want," agreed +Tom, with a glance at his chum. "That is--some +of them. But does your wife's grandfather talk +our language?" + +"No, but I can tell you what he says." + +By this time the old man, led by "Mrs. Tal"-- +as the young men called the wife of the Indian +they had helped--entered the hut. He seemed +nervous and shy, and glanced from Tom and Ned +to his grandson-in-law, as the latter talked rapidly +in the Indian dialect. Then Goosal made answer, +but what it was all about the boys could +not tell. + +"Goosal say," translated Tal, "that he know a +story of a very old city away down under ground." + +"Tell us about it!" urged Tom eagerly. + +But a difficulty very soon developed. Tal's +intentions were good, but he was not equal to +the task of translating. Nor was the understanding +of Tom and Ned of Spanish quite up to the mark. + +"Say, this is too much for me!" exclaimed Tom. +"We are losing the most valuable part of this by +not understanding what Goosal says, and what +Tal translates." + +"What can we do?" asked Ned. + +"Get the professor here as soon as possible. +He can manage this dialect, and he'll get the +information at first hand. If Goosal can tell +where to begin excavating for the city he ought +to tell the professor, not us." + +"That's right," agreed Ned. "We'll bring the +professor here as soon as we can." + +Accordingly they stopped the somewhat difficult +task of listening to the translated story and +told Tal, as well as they could, that they would +bring the "man-with-no-hair-on-his-head" to +listen to the tale. + +This seemed to suit the Indians, all of whom +in the small colony appeared to be very grateful +to Tom and Ned for having saved the life of +Tal. + +"That was a good shot you made when you +bowled over the jaguar," said Ned, as the two +young explorers started back to their camp. + +"Better than I realized, if it leads to the discovery +of Kurzon and the idol of gold," remarked Tom. + +"And to think we should come across the oiled- +silk holding the poisoned arrows!" went on Ned. +"That's the strangest part of the whole affair. +If it hadn't been that you shot the jaguar this +never would have come about." + +That Professor Bumper was astonished, and +Mr. Damon likewise, when they heard the story +of Tom and Ned, is stating it mildly. + +"Come on!" exclaimed the scientist, as Tom +finished, "we must see this Goosal at once. +If my map is destroyed, and it seems to be, +this old Indian may be our only hope. +Where did he say the buried city was, Tom?" + +"Oh, somewhere in this vicinity, as nearly as +I could make out. But you'd better talk with +him yourself. We didn't say anything about the +idol of gold." + +"That's right. It's just as well to let the +natives think we are only after ordinary relics." + +"Bless my insurance policy!" gasped Mr. Damon. +"It does not seem possible that we are on +the right track." + +"Well, I think we are, from what little information +Goosal gave us," remarked Tom. "This buried city +of his must be a wonderful place." + +"It is, if it is what I take it to be," agreed the +professor. "I told you I would bring you to a +land of wonders, Tom Swift, and they have hardly +begun yet. Come, I am anxious to talk to Goosal." + +In order that the Indians in the Bumper camp +might not hear rumors of the new plan to locate +the hidden city, and, at the same time, to keep +rumors from spreading to the camp of the rivals, +the scientist and his friends started a new shaft, +and put a shift of men at work on it. + +"We'll pretend we are on the right track, and +very busy," said Tom. "That will fool Beecher." + +"Are you glad to know he did not take your +map Professor Bumper?" asked Mr. Damon. + +"Well, yes. It is hard to believe such things of +a fellow scientist." + +"If he didn't take it he wanted to," said Tom. +"And he has done, or will do, things as unsportsmanlike." + +"Oh, you are hardly fair, perhaps, Tom," +commented Ned. + +"Um!" was all the answer he received. + +With the Indians in camp busy on the excavation +work, and having ascertained that similar +work was going on in the Beecher outfit, +Professor Bumper, with Mr. Damon and the young +men, set off to visit the Indian village and listen +to Goosal's story. They passed the place where +Tom had slain the jaguar, but nothing was left +but the bones; the ants, vultures and jungle animals +having picked them clean in the night. + +On the arrival of Tom and his friends at the +Indian's hut, Goosal told, in language which +Professor Bumper could understand, the ancient +legend of the buried city as he had had it from his +grandfather. + +"But is that all you know about it, Goosal?" +asked the savant. + +"No, Learned One. It is true most of what I +have told you was told to me by my father and +his father's father. But I--I myself--with these +eyes, have looked upon the lost city." + +"You have!" cried the professor, this time in +English. "Where? When? Take us to it! +How do you get here?" + +"Through the cavern of the dead," was the +answer when the questions were modified. + +"Bless my diamond ring!" exclaimed Mr. +Damon, when Professor Bumper translated the reply. +"What does he mean?" + +And then, after some talk, this information +came out. Years before, when Goosal was a +young man, he had been taken by his grandfather +on a journey through the jungle. They +stopped one day at the foot of a high mountain, +and, clearing away the brush and stones at a +certain place, an entrance to a great cavern was +revealed. This, it appeared, was the Indian burial +ground, and had been used for generations. + +Goosal, though in fear and trembling, was lead +through it, and came to another cavern, vaster +than the first. And there he saw strange and +wonderful sights, for it was the remains of a buried +city, that had once been the home of a great +and powerful tribe unlike the Indians--the ancient +Mayas it would seem. + +"Can you take us to this cavern?" asked the professor. + +"Yes," answered Goosal. "I will lead to it +those who saved the life of Tal--them and their +friends. I will take you to the lost city!" + +"Good!" cried Mr. Damon, when this had been +translated. "Now let Beecher try to play any +more tricks on us! Ho! for the cavern and the +lost city of Kurzon." + +"And the idol of gold," said Tom Swift to +himself. "I hope we can get it ahead of Beecher. +Perhaps if I can help in that--Oh, well, here's hoping, +that's all!" and a little smile curved his lips. + +Greatly excited by the strange news, but +maintaining as calm an air outwardly as possible, so +as not to excite the Indians, Tom and his friends +returned to camp to prepare for their trip. Goosal +had said the cavern lay distant more than a two- +days' journey into the jungle. + + + +CHAPTER XXII + +THE STORM + + +"Now," remarked Tom, once they were back +again in their camp, "we must go about this trip +to the cavern in a way that will cause no suspicion +over there as to what our object is," and he +nodded in the direction of the quarters of his +rival. + +"Do you mean to go off quietly?" asked Ned. + +"Yes. And to keep the work going on here, +at these shafts," put in the scientist, "so that +if any of their spies happen to come here they +will think we still believe the buried city to be +just below us. To that end we must keep the +Indians digging, though I am convinced now that +it is useless." + +Accordingly preparations were made for an +expedition into the jungle under the leadership of +Goosal. Tal had not sufficiently recovered from +the jaguar wounds to go with the party, but the +old man, in spite of his years, was hale and hearty +and capable of withstanding hardships. + +One of the most intelligent of the Indians was +put in charge of the digging gangs as foreman, +and told to keep them at work, and not to let +them stray. Tolpec, whose brother Tom had +tried to save, proved a treasure. He agreed to +remain behind and look after the interests of his +friends, and see that none of their baggage or +stores were taken. + +"Well, I guess we're as ready as we ever +shall be," remarked Tom, as the cavalcade made +ready to start. Mules carried the supplies that +were to be taken into the jungle, and others of +the sturdy animals were to be ridden by the +travelers. The trail was not an easy one, Goosal +warned them. + +Tom and his friends found it even worse than +they had expected, for all their experience in +jungle and mountain traveling. In places it was +necessary to dismount and lead the mules along, +sometimes pushing and dragging them. More +than once the trail fairly hung on the edge of +some almost bottomless gorge, and again it +wound its way between great walls of rock, +so poised that they appeared about to topple +over and crush the travelers. But they kept on +with dogged patience, through many hardships. + +To add to their troubles they seemed to have +entered the abode of the fiercest mosquitoes +encountered since coming to Honduras. At times +it was necessary to ride along with hats covered +with mosquito netting, and hands encased in +gloves. + +They had taken plenty of condensed food with +them, and they did not suffer in this respect. +Game, too, was plentiful and the electric rifles of +Tom and Ned added to the larder. + +One night, after a somewhat sound sleep +induced by hard travel on the trail that day, Tom +awoke to hear some one or something moving +about among their goods, which included their +provisions. + +"Who's there?" asked the young inventor +sharply, as he reached for his electric rifle. + +There was no answer, but a rattling of the pans. + +"Speak, or I'll fire!" Tom warned, adding this +in such Spanish as he could muster, for he thought +it might be one of the Indians. No reply came, +and then, seeing by the light of the stars a dark +form moving in front of the tent occupied by +himself and Ned, Tom fired. + +There was a combined grunt and squeal of +pain, then a savage growl, and Ned yelled: + +"What's the matter, Tom?" for he had been +awakened, and heard the crackle of the electrical +discharge. + +"I don't know," Tom answered. "But I shot +something--or somebody!" + +"Maybe some of Beecher's crowd," ventured +his chum. But when they got their electric +torches, and focused them on the inert, black +object, it was found to be a bear which had come +to nose about the camp for dainty morsels. + +Bruin was quite dead, and as he was in prime +condition there was a feast of bear meat at the +following dinner. The white travelers found it +rather too strong for their palates, but the Indians +reveled in it. + +It was shortly after noon the next day, when +Goosal, after remarking that a storm seemed +brewing, announced that they would be at the +entrance to the cavern in another hour. + +"Good!" cried Professor Bumper. "At last +we are near the buried city." + +"Don't be too sure," advised Mr. Damon, +"We may be disappointed. Though I hope not +for your sake, my dear Professor." + +Goosal now took the lead, and the old Indian, +traveling on foot, for he said he could better look +for the old landmark that way than on the back +of a mule, walked slowly along a rough cliff. + +"Here. somewhere, is the entrance to the cav- +ern," said the aged man. "It was many years +ago that I was here--many years. But it seems +as though yesterday. It is little changed." + +Indeed little did change in that land of wonders. +Only nature caused what alterations there were. +The hand of man had long been absent. + +Slowly Goosal walked along the rocky trail, +on one side a sheer rock, towering a hundred feet +or more toward the sky. On the other side a +deep gash leading to a great fertile valley below. + +Suddenly the old man paused, and looked about +him as though uncertain. Then, more slowly +still, he put out his hand and pulled at some +bushes that grew on a ledge of the rock. They +came away, having no depth of earth, and a small +opening was disclosed. + +"It is here," said Goosal quietly. "The +entrance to the cavern that leads to the burial +place of the dead, and the city that is dead also. +It is here." + +He stood aside while the others hurried +forward. It took but a few minutes to prove that +he was right--at least as to the existence of the +cavern--for the four men were soon peering into +the opening. + +"Come on!" cried Tom, impetuously. + +"Wait a moment," suggested the professor, +"Sometimes the air in these places is foul. We +must test it." But a torch one of the Indians +threw in burned with a steady glow. That test +was conclusive at least. They made ready to enter. + +Torches of a light bark, that glowed with a +steady flame and little smoke, had been provided, +as well as a good supply of electric dry-battery +lamps, and the way into the cavern was thus well +lighted. At first the Indians were afraid to +enter, but a word or two from Goosal reassured +them, and they followed Professor Bumper, Tom, +and the others into the cavern. + +For several hundred feet there was nothing +remarkable about the cave. It was like any +other cavern of the mountains, though wonderful +for the number of crystal formations on the root +and walls--formations that sparkled like a million +diamonds in the flickering lights. + +"Talk about a wonderland!" cried Tom. +"This is fairyland!" + +A moment later, as Goosal walked on beside +the professor and Tom, the aged Indian came to +a pause, and, pointing ahead, murmured: + +"The city of the dead!" + +They saw the niches cut in the rock walls. +niches that held the countless bones of those who +had died many, many years before. It was a +vast Indian grave. + +"Doubtless a wealth of material of historic +interest here," said Professor Bumper, flashing +his torch on the skeletons. "But it will keep. +Where is the city you spoke of, Goosal?" + +"Farther on, Senor. Follow me." + +Past the stone graves they went, deeper and +deeper into the great cave. Their footsteps +echoed and re-echoed. Suddenly Tom, who with +Ned had gone a little ahead, came to a sudden +halt and said: + +"Well, this may be a burial place sure enough, +but I think I see something alive all right--if +it isn't a ghost." + +He pointed ahead. Surely those were lights +flickering and moving about, and, yes, there were +men carrying them. The Bumper party came to +a surprised halt. The other lights advanced, +and then, to the great astonishment of Professor +Bumper and his friends, there confronted them +in the cave several scientists of Professor Beecher's +party and a score or more of Indians. Professor +Hylop, who was known to Professor Bumper, +stepped forward and asked sharply: + +"What are you doing here?" + +"I might ask you the same thing," was the +retort. + +"You might, but you would not be answered," +came sharply. "We have a right here, having +discovered this cavern, and we claim it under a +concession of the Honduras Government. I shall +have to ask you to withdraw." + +"Do you mean leave here?" asked Mr Damon. + +"That is it, exactly. We first discovered this +cave. We have been conducting explorations in +it for several days, and we wish no outsiders." + +"Are you speaking for Professor Beecher"' asked Tom. + +"I am. But he is here in the cave, and will +speak for himself if you desire it. But I represent +him, and I order you to leave. If you do +not go peaceably we will use force. We have +plenty of it," and he glanced back at the Indians +grouped behind him--scowling savage Indians. + +"We have no wish to intrude," observed +Professor Bumper, "and I fully recognize the right +of prior discovery. But one member of our +party (he did not say which one) was in this +cave many years ago. He led us to it." + +"Ours is a government concession!" exclaimed +Professor Hylop harshly. "We want no intruders! +Go!" and he pointed toward the direction +whence Tom's party had come. + +"Drive them out!" he ordered the Indians in +Spanish, and with muttered threats the dark- +skinned men advanced toward Tom and the +others. + +"You need not use force," said Professor Bumper. + +He and Professor Hylop had quarreled bitterly +years before on some scientific matter, and the +matter was afterward found to be wrong. Perhaps +this made him vindictive. + +Tom stepped forward and started to protest, +but Professor Bumper interposed. + +"I guess there is no help for it but to go. It +seems to be theirs by right of discovery and +government concession," he said, in disappointed +tone. "Come friends"; and dejectedly they +retraced their steps. + +Followed by the threatening Indians, the +Bumper party made its way back to the entrance. +They had hoped for great things, but if the cavern +gave access to the buried city--the ancient +city of Kurzon on the chief altar of which stood +the golden idol, Quitzel--it looked as though +they were never to enter it. + +"We'll have to get our Indians and drive those +fellows out!" declared Tom. "I'm not going to +be beaten this way--and by Beecher!" + +"It is galling," declared Professor Bumper. +"Still he has right on his side, and I must give +in to priority, as I would expect him to. It is +the unwritten law." + +"Then we've failed!" cried Tom bitterly. + +"Not yet," said Professor Bumper. "If I can +not unearth that buried city I may find another +in this wonderland. I shall not give up." + +"Hark! What's that noise?" asked Tom, as +they approached the entrance to the cave. + +"Sounds like a great wind blowing," commented Ned. + +It was. As they stood in the entrance they +looked out to find a fierce storm raging. The +wind was sweeping down the rocky trail, the +rain was falling in veritable bucketfuls from the +overhanging cliff, and deafening thunder and +blinding lightning roared and flashed. + +"Surely you would not drive us out in this +storm," said Professor Bumper to his former +rival. + +"You can not stay in the cave! You must get +out!" was the answer, as a louder crash of thunder +than usual seemed to shake the very mountain. + + + +CHAPTER XXIII + +ENTOMBED ALIVE + + +For an instant Tom and his friends paused at +the entrance to the wonderful cavern, and looked +at the raging storm. It seemed madness to +venture out into it, yet they had been driven +from the cave by those who had every right of +discovery to say who, and who should not, partake +of its hospitality. + +"We can't go out into that blow!" cried Ned. +"It's enough to loosen the very mountains!" + +"Let's stay here and defy them!" murmured Tom. +"If the--if what we seek--is here we have +as good a right to it as they have." + +"We must go out," said Professor Bumper simply. +"I recognize the right of my rival to dispossess us." + +"He may have the right, but it isn't human," +said Mr. Damon. "Bless my overshoes! If +Beecher himself were here he wouldn't have the +heart to send us out in this storm." + +"I would not give him the satisfaction of +appealing to him," remarked Professor Bumper. +"Come, we will go out. We have our ponchos, +and we are not fair-weather explorers. If we +can't get to the lost city one way we will +another. Come my friends." + +And despite the downpour, the deafening +thunder and the lightning that seemed ready to sear +one's eyes, he walked out of the cave entrance, +followed by Tom and the others. + +"Come on!" cried Tom, in a voice he tried to +render confident, as they went out into the +terrible storm. "We'll beat 'em yet!" + +The rain fell harder than ever. Small torrents +were now rushing down the trail, and it was only +a question of a few minutes before the place +where they stood would be a raging river, so +quickly does the rain collect in the mountains and +speed toward the valleys. + +"We must take to the forest!" cried Tom. +"There'll be some shelter there, and I don't like +the way the geography of this place is behaving. +There may be a landslide at any moment." + +As he spoke he motioned upward through the +mist of the rain to the sloping side of the mountain +towering above them. Loose stones were +beginning to roll down, accompanied by patches +of earth loosened by the water. Some of the +patches carried with them bunches of grass and +small bushes. + +"Yes, it will be best to move into the jungle," +said the professor. "Goosal, you had better take +the lead." + +It was wonderful to see how well the aged Indian +bore up in spite of his years, and walked on +ahead. They had left their mules tethered some +distance back, in a sheltering clump of trees, and +they hoped the animals would be safe. + +The guide found a place where they could +leave the trail, though going down a dangerous +slope, and take to the forest. As carefully as +possible they descended this, the rain continuing to +fall, the wind to blow, the lightning to sizzle all +about them and the thunder to boom in their ears. + +They went on until they were beneath the +shelter of the thick jungle growth of trees, which +kept off some of the pelting drops. + +"This is better!" exclaimed Ned, shaking his +poncho and getting rid of some of the water that +had settled on it. + +"Bless my overcoat!" cried Mr. Damon. "We seem +to have gotten out of the frying pan into the fire!" + +"How?" asked Tom. "We are partly sheltered here, +though had we stayed in the cave in spite of----" + +A deafening crash interrupted him, and following +the flash one of the giant trees of the forest +was seen to blaze up and then topple over. + +"Struck by lightning!" yelled Ned. + +"Yes; and it may happen to us!" exclaimed +Mr. Damon. "We were safer from the lightning +in the open. Maybe----" + +Again came an interruption, but this time a +different one. The very ground beneath their feet +seemed to be shaking and trembling. + +"What is it?" gasped Ned, while Goosal fell on +his knees and began fervently to pray. + +"It's an earthquake!" yelled Tom Swift. + +As he spoke there came another sound--the +sound of a mass of earth in motion. It came +from the direction of the mountain trail they had +just left. They looked toward it and their horror- +stricken eyes saw the whole side of the +mountain sliding down. + +Slowly at first the earth slid down, but +constantly gathering force and speed. In the face +of this new disaster the rain seemed to have +ceased and the thunder and lightning to be less +severe. It was as though one force of nature +gave way to the other. + +"Look! Look!" gasped Ned. + +In silence, which was broken now only by a +low and ominous rumble, more menacing than +had been the awful fury of the elements, the +travelers looked. + +Suddenly there was a quicker movement of +seemingly one whole section of the mountain. +Great rocks and trees, carried down by the +appalling force of the landslide were slipping over +the trail, obliterating it as though it had never existed. + +"There goes the entrance to the cavern!" cried Ned, +and as the others looked to where he pointed +they saw the hole in the side of the mountain +--the mouth of the cave that led to the lost city +of Kurzon--completely covered by thousands of +tons of earth and stones. + +"That's the end of them!" exclaimed Tom, as +the rumble of the earthquake died away. + +"Of----" Ned stopped, his eyes staring. + +"Of Professor Beecher's party. They're +entombed alive!" + + + +CHAPTER XXIV + +THE REVOLVING STONE + +Stunned, not alone by the realization of the +awfulness of the fate of their rivals, but also by +the terrific storm and the effect of the earthquake +and the landslide, Tom and his friends remained +for a moment gazing toward the mouth of the +cavern, now completely out of sight, buried by +a mass of broken trees, tangled bushes, rocks and +earth. Somewhere, far beyond that mass, was +the Beecher party, held prisoners in the cave +that formed the entrance to the buried city. + +Tom was the first to come to a realization of +what was needed to be done. + +"We must help them!" he exclaimed, and it was +characteristic of him that he harbored no enmity. + +"How?" asked Ned. + +"We must get a force of Indians and dig them +out," was the prompt answer. + +At Tom's vigorous words Professor Bumper's +forces were energized into action, and he stated: +"Fortunately we have plenty of excavating +tools. We may be in time to save them. Come +on! the storm seems to have passed as suddenly +as it came up, and the earthquake, which, after +all did not cover a wide area, seems to be over. +We must start the work of rescue at once. We +must go back to camp and get all the help we +can muster." + +The storm, indeed, seemed to be over, but it +was no easy matter to get back over the soggy, +rain-soaked ground to the trail they had left to +take shelter in the forest. Fortunately the earthquake +had not involved that portion where they +had left their mules, but most of the frightened +animals had broken loose, and it was some little +time before they could all be caught. + +"It is no use to try to get back to camp to- +night," said Tom, when the last of the pack and +saddle animals had been corralled. "It is getting +late and there is no telling the condition of the +trail. We must stay here until morning." + +"But what about them?" and Mr. Damon +nodded in the direction of the entombed ones. + +"We can help them best by waiting until the +beginning of a new day," said the professor. "We +shall need a large force, and we could not bring +it up to-night. Besides, Tom is right, and if we +tried to go along the trail after dark, torn and +disturbed as it is bound to be by the rain, we +might get into difficulties ourselves. No, we +must camp here until morning and then go for +help." + +They all decided finally this was best. The +professor, too, pointed out that their rivals were +in a large and roomy cave, not likely to suffer +from lack of air nor food or water, since they +must have supplies with them. + +"The only danger is that the cave has been +crushed in," added Tom; "but in that event we +would be of no service to them anyhow." + +The night seemed very long, and it was a most +uncomfortable one, because of the shock and +exertions through which the party had passed. +Added to this was the physical discomfort caused +by the storm. + +But in time there was the light in the east that +meant morning was at hand, and with it came +action. A hasty breakfast, cups of steaming coffee +forming a most welcome part, put them all +in better condition, and once more they were on +their way, heading back to the main camp where +they had left their force of Indians. + +"My!" exclaimed Tom, as they made their +way slowly along, "it surely was some storm! +Look at those big trees uprooted over there. +They're almost as big as the giant redwoods of +California, and yet they were bowled over as if +they were tenpins." + +"I wonder if the wind did it or the earthquake," +ventured Mr. Damon. + +"No wind could do that," declared Ned. "It must +have been the landslide caused by the earthquake." + +"The wind could do it if the ground was made +soft by the rain; and that was probably what +did it," suggested Tom. + +"There is no harm in settling the point," +commented Professor Bumper. "It is not far off our +trail, and will take only a few minutes to go +over to the trees. I should like to get some +photographs to accompany an article that perhaps +I shall write on the effects of sudden and +severe tropical storms. We will go to look at +the overturned trees and then we'll hurry on to +camp to get the rescue party." + +The uprooted trees lay on one side of the +mountain trail, perhaps a mile from the mouth of +the cave which had been covered over, entombing +the Beecher party. Leaving the mules in +charge of one of the Indians, Professor Bumper +and his friends, accompanied by Goosal, approached +the fallen trees. As they neared them +they saw that in falling the trees had lifted with +their roots a large mass of earth and imbedded +rocks that had clung to the twisted and gnarled +fibers. This mass was as large as a house. + +"Look at the hole left when the roots pulled +out!" cried Ned. "Why, it's like the crater of +a small volcano!" he added. And, as they stood +on the edge of it looking curiously at the hole +made, the others agreed with Tom's chum. + +Professor Bumper was looking about, trying +to ascertain if there were any evidences of the +earthquake in the vicinity, when Tom, who had +cautiously gone a little way down into the excavation +caused by the fallen trees, uttered a cry of surprise. + +"Look!" he shouted. "Isn't that some sort of +tunnel or underground passage?" and he pointed +to a square opening, perhaps seven feet high and +nearly as broad, which extended, no one knew +where, downward and onward from the side of +the hole made by the uprooting of the trees. + +"It's an underground passage all right," said +Professor Bumper eagerly; "and not a natural +one, either. That was fashioned by the hand +of man, if I am any judge. It seems to go right +under the mountain, too. Friends, we must +explore this! It may be of the utmost importance! +Come, we have our electric torches, and we shall +need them, for it's very dark in there," and he +peered into the passage in front of which they +all stood now. It seemed to have been tunneled +through the earth, the sides being lined by either +slabs of stone, or walls made by a sort of concrete. + +"But what about the rescue work?" asked Mr. Damon. + +"I am not forgetting Professor Beecher and his +friends," answered the scientist. + +"Perhaps this may be a better means of rescuing +them than by digging them out, which will take +a week at least," observed Tom. + +"This a better way?" asked Ned, pointing to the tunnel. + +"That's it," confirmed the savant. "If you +will notice it extends back in the direction +of the cave from which we were driven. +Now if there is a buried city beneath all this +jungle, this mountain of earth and stones, the +accumulation of centuries, it is probably on the +bottom of some vast cavern. It is my opinion +that we were only in one end of that cavern, and +this may be the entrance to another end of it." + +"Then," asked Mr. Damon, "do you mean that +we can enter here, get into the cave that contains +the buried city, or part of it, and find there +Beecher and his friends?" + +"That's it. It is possible, and if we could it +would save an immense lot of work, and probably +be a surer way to save their lives than by +digging a tunnel through the landslide to find +the mouth of the cave where we first entered." + +"It's a chance worth taking," said Mr. Damon. +"Of course it is a chance. But then everything +connected with this expedition is; so one is no +worse than another. As you say, we may find +the entombed men more easily this way than any +other." + +"I wonder," said Tom slowly, "if, by any +chance, we shall find, through this passage, the +lost city we are looking for." + +"And the idol of gold," added Ned. + +"Goosal, do you know anything about this?" +asked Professor Bumper. "Did you ever hear +of another passage leading to the cave where you +saw the ancient city?" + +"No, Learned One, though I have heard stories +about there being many cities, or parts of a big +one, beneath the mountain, and when it was +above ground there were many entrances to it." + +"That settles it!" cried the professor in +English, having talked to Goosal in Spanish. +"We'll try this and see where it leads." + +They entered the stone-lined passage. In +spite of the fact that it had probably been buried +and concealed from light and air for centuries, +as evidenced by the growth of the giant trees +above it, the air was fresh. + +"And this is one reason," said Tom, in +commenting on this fact, "why I believe it leads to +some vast cavern which is connected in some +fashion with the outer air. Well, perhaps we +shall soon make a discovery." + +Eagerly and anxiously the little party pressed +forward by the light of the pocket electric lamps. +They were obsessed by two thoughts--what they +might find and the necessity for aiding in the +rescue of their rivals. + +On and on they went, the darkness illuminated +only by the torches they carried. But they +noticed that the air was still fresh, and that a +gentle wind blew toward them. The passage +was undoubtedly artificial, a tunnel made by the +hands of men now long crumbled into dust. It +had a slightly upward slope, and this, Professor +Bumper said, indicated that it was bored upward +and perhaps into the very heart of the mountain +somewhere in the interior of which was the +Beecher party. + +Just how far they went they did not know, but +it must have been more than two miles. Yet +they did not tire, for the way was smooth. + +Suddenly Tom, who, with Professor Bumper, +was in the lead, uttered a cry, as he held his +torch above his head and flashed it about in a +circle. + +"We're blocked!" he exclaimed. "We're up +against a stone wall!" + +It was but too true. Confronting them, and +extending from side to side across the passage +and from roof to floor, was a great rough stone. +Immense and solid it seemed when they pushed +on it in vain. + +"Nothing short of dynamite will move that," +said Ned in despair. "This is a blind lead. +We'll have to go back." + +"But there must be something on the other +side of that stone," cried Tom. "See, it is pierced +with holes, and through them comes a current of +air. If we could only move the stone!" + +"I believe it is an ancient door," remarked +Professor Bumper. + +Eagerly and frantically they tried to move it +by their combined weight. The stone did not +give the fraction of the breadth of a hair. + +"We'll have to go back and get some of your +big tunnel blasting powder, Tom," suggested Ned. + +As he spoke old Goosal glided forward. He +had remained behind them in the passage while +they were trying to move the rock. Now he +said something in Spanish. + +"What does he mean?" asked Ned. + +"He asks that he be allowed to try," translated +Professor Bumper. "Sometimes, he says, there +is a secret way of opening stone doors in these +underground caves. Let him try." + +Goosal seemed to be running his fingers lightly +over the outer edge of the door. He was muttering +to himself in his Indian tongue. + +Suddenly he uttered an exclamation, and, as +he did so, there was a noise from the door itself. +It was a grinding, scraping sound, a rumble as +though rocks were being rolled one against the +other. + +Then the astonished eyes of the adventurers +saw the great stone door revolve on its axis +and swing to one side, leaving a passage open +through which they could pass. Goosal had +discovered the hidden mechanism. + +What lay before them? + + + +CHAPTER XXV + +THE IDOL OF GOLD + + +"Forward! cried Tom Swift. + +"Where?" asked Mr Damon, hanging back for +an instant. "Bless my compass, Tom! do you +know where you're going?" + +"I haven't the least idea, but it must lead to +something, or the ancients who made this +revolving stone door wouldn't have taken such care +to block the passage." + +"Ask Goosal if he knows anything about it," +suggested Mr. Damon to the professor. + +"He says he never was here before," translated +the savant, "but years ago, when he went into +the hidden city by the cave we left yesterday, he +saw doors like this which opened this way." + +"Then we're on the right track!" cried Tom. +"If this is the same kind of door, it must lead +to the same place. Ho for Kurzon and the idol +of gold!" + +As they passed through the stone door, Tom +and Professor Bumper tried to get some idea of +the mechanism by which it worked. But they +found this impossible, it being hidden within the +stone itself or in the adjoining walls. But, in +order that it might not close of itself and entomb +them, the portal was blocked open with stones +found in the passage. + +"It's always well to have a line of retreat open," +said Tom. "There's no telling what may lie beyond us." + +For a time there seemed to be nothing more +than the same passage along which they had +come. Then the passage suddenly widened, like +the large end of a square funnel. Upward and +outward the stone walls swept, and they saw +dimly before them, in the light of their torches, +a vast cavern, seemingly formed by the falling +in of mountains, which, in toppling over, had met +overhead in a sort of rough arch, thus protecting, +in a great measure, that which lay beneath +them. + +Goosal, who had brought with him some of +the fiber bark torches, set a bundle of them +aflame. As they flared up, a wondrous sight +was revealed to Tom Swift and his friends. + +Stretching out before them, as though they +stood at the end of an elevated street and gazed +down on it, was a city--a large city, with streets, +houses, open squares, temples, statues, fountains, +dry for centuries--a buried and forgotten city-- +a city in ruins--a city of the dead, now dry as +dust, but still a city, or, rather, the strangely +preserved remains of one. + +"Look!" whispered Tom. A louder voice just then, +would have seemed a sacrilege. "Look!" + +"Is it what we are looking for?" asked Ned in a low voice. + +"I believe it is," replied the professor. "It is +the lost city of Kurzon, or one just like it. And +now if we can find the idol of gold our search will +be ended--at least the major part of it." + +"Where did you expect to find the idol?" asked Tom. + +"It should be in the main temple. Come, we +will walk in the ancient streets--streets where +no feet but ours have trod in many centuries. +Come!" + +In eager silence they pressed on through this +newly discovered wonderland. For it was a +wonderful city, or had been. Though much of +it was in ruins, probably caused by an earthquake +or an eruption from a volcano, the central +portion, covered as it was by the overtoppling +mountains that formed the arching roof, was well +preserved. + +There were rude but beautiful stone buildings. +There were archways; temples; public squares; +and images, not at all beautiful, for they seemed +to be of man-monsters--doubtless ancient gods. +There were smoothly paved streets; wondrously +carved fountains, some in ruins, all now as dry +as bone, but which must have been places of +beauty where youths and maidens gathered in +the ancient days. + +Of the ancient population there was not a +trace left. Tom and his friends penetrated some +of the houses, but not so much as a bone or a +heap of mouldering dust showed where the +remains of the people were. Either they had fled +at the approaching doom of the city and were +buried elsewhere, or some strange fire or other +force of nature had consumed and obliterated +them. + +"What a wealth of historic information I shall +find here!" murmured Professor Bumper, as he +caught sight of many inscriptions in strange +characters on the walls and buildings. +"I shall never get to the end of them." + +"But what about the idol of gold?" asked Mr. +Damon, "Do you think you'll find that?" + +"We must hurry on to the temple over there," +said the scientist, indicating a building further along. + +"And then we must see about rescuing your +rivals, Professor," put in Tom. + +"Yes, Tom. But fortunately we are on the +ground here before them," agreed the professor. + +Undoubtedly it was the chief temple, or place +of worship, of the long-dead race which the +explorers now entered. It was a building beautiful +in its barbaric style, and yet simple. There were +massive walls, and a great inner court, at the end +of which seemed to be some sort of altar. And +then, as they lighted fresh torches, and pressed +forward with them and their electric lights, they +saw that which caused a cry of satisfaction to +burst from all of them. + +"The idol of gold!" + +Yes, there it squatted, an ugly, misshapen, +figure, a cross between a toad and a gila monster, +half man, half beast, with big red eyes--rubies +probably--that gleamed in the repulsive golden +face. And the whole figure, weighing many +pounds, seemed to be of SOLID GOLD! + +Eagerly the others followed Professor Bumper +up the altar steps to the very throne of the golden +idol. The scientist touched it, tried to raise it +and make sure of its solidity and material. + +"This is it!" he cried. "It is the idol of gold! +I have found We have found it, for it +belongs to all of us!" + +"Hurray!" cried Tom Swift, and Ned and Mr. +Damon joined in the cry. + +There was no need for silence or caution now; +and yet, as they stood about the squat and ugly +figure, which, in spite of its hideousness, was +worth a fortune intrinsically and as an antique, +they heard from the direction of the stone passage +a noise. + +"What is it?" asked Tom Swift. + +There was a murmur of voices. + +"Indians!" cried Professor Bumper, recognizing +the language--a mixture of Spanish and Indian. + +The cave was illuminated by the glare of other +torches which seemed to rush forward. A moment +later it was seen that they were being carried +by a number of Indians. + +"Friends," murmured Goosal, using the +Spanish term, "Amigos." + +"They are our own Indians!" cried Tom Swift. +"I see Tolpec!" and he pointed to the native who +had deserted from Jacinto's force to help them. + +"How did they get here?" asked Professor Bumper. + +This was quickly told. In their camp, where, +under the leadership of Tolpec they had been +left to do the excavating, the natives had heard, +seen and felt the effects of the storm and the +earthquake, though it did little damage in their +vicinity. But they became alarmed for the safety +of the professor and his party and, at Tolpec's +suggestion, set off in search of them. + +The Indians had seen, passing along the trail, +the uprooted trees, and had noted the footsteps +of the explorers going down to the stone passage. +It was easy for them to determine that Tom +and his friends had gone in, since the marks of +their boots were plainly in evidence in the soft +soil. + +None of the Indians was as much wrought up +over the discovery of Kurzon and the idol as +were the white adventurers. The gold, of course, +meant something to the natives, but they were +indifferent to the wonders of the underground +city. Perhaps they had heard too many legends +concerning such things to be impressed. + +"That statue is yours--all yours," said old +Goosal when he had talked with his relatives and +friends among the natives. "They all say what +you find you keep, and we will help you keep it." + +"That's good," murmured Professor Bumper. +"There was some doubt in my mind as to our +right to this, but after all, the natives who live +in this land are the original owners, and if they +pass title to us it is clear. That settles the last +difficulty." + +"Except that of getting the idol out," said Mr. Damon. + +"Oh, we'll accomplish that!" cried Tom. + +"I can hardly believe my good luck," declared +Professor Bumper. "I shall write a whole book +on this idol alone and then----" + +Once more came an interruption. This time +it was from another direction, but it was of the +same character--an approaching band of torch- +bearers. They were Indians, too, but leading +them were a number of whites. + +And at their head was no less personage than +Professor Beecher himself. + +For a moment, as the three parties stood +together in the ancient temple, in the glare of +many torches, no one spoke. Then Professor +Bumper found his voice. + +"We are glad to see you," he said to his rival. +"That is glad to see you alive, for we saw the +landslide bury you. And we were coming to +dig you out. We thought this cave--the cave of +the buried city--would lead us to you easier than +by digging through the slide. We have just +discovered this idol," and he put his hand on the +grim golden image. + +"Oh, you have discovered it, have you?" asked +Professor Beecher, and his voice was bitter. + +"Yes, not ten minutes ago. The natives have +kindly acknowledged my right to it under the law +of priority. I am sorry but----" + +With a look of disgust and chagrined +disappointment on his face, Professor Beecher turned +to the other scientists and said: + +"Let us go. We are too late. He has what +I came after." + +"Well, it is the fortune of war--and discovery," +put in Mr. Hardy, one of the party who seemed +the least ill-natured. "Your luck might have +been ours, Professor Bumper. I congratulate +you." + +"Thank you! Are you sure your party is all +right--not in need of assistance? How did you +get out of the place you were buried?" + +"Thank you! We do not require any help. It +was good of you to think of us. But we got +out the way we came in. We did not enter the +tunnel as you did, but came in through another +entrance which was not closed by the landslide. +Then we made a turn through a gateway in a +tunnel connecting with ours--a gateway which +seems to have been opened by the earthquake-- +and we came here, just now. + +"Too late, I see, to claim the discovery of the +idol of gold," went on Mr. Hardy. "But I trust +you will be generous, and allow us to make +observations of the buildings and other relics." + +"As much as you please, and with the greatest +pleasure in the world," was the prompt answer +of Professor Bumper. "All I lay sole +claim to is the golden idol. You are at liberty +to take whatever else you find in Kurzon and to +make what observations you like." + +"That is generous of you, and quite in contrast +to--er--to the conduct of our leader. I trust +he may awaken to a sense of the injustice he +did you." + +But Professor Beecher was not there to hear +this. He had stalked away in anger. + +"Humph!" grunted Tom. Then he continued: +"That story about a government concession was all +a fake, Professor, else he'd have put up a fight now. +Contemptible sneak!" + + +In fact the story of Tom Swift's trip to the +underground land of wonders is ended, for with +the discovery of the idol of gold the main object +of the expedition was accomplished. But their +adventures were not over by any means, though +there is not room in this volume to record them. + +Suffice it to say that means were at once taken +to get the golden image out of the cave of the +ancient city. It was not accomplished without +hard work, for the gold was heavy, and Professor +Bumper would not, naturally, consent to +the shaving off of so much as an ear or part of +the flat nose, to say nothing of one of the half +dozen extra arms and legs with which the ugly +idol was furnished. + +Finally it was safely taken out of the cave, +and along the stone passage to the opening +formed by the overthrown trees, and thence on +to camp. + +And at the camp a surprise awaited Tom. + +Some long-delayed mail had been forwarded +from the nearest place of civilization and there +were letters for all, including several for our hero. +One in particular he picked out first and read +eagerly. + +"Well, is every little thing all right, Tom?" +asked Ned, as he saw a cheerful grin spread itself +over his chum's face. + +"I should say it is, and then some! Look +here, Ned. This is a letter from----" + +"I know. Mary Nestor. Go on." + +"How'd you guess?" + +"Oh, I'm a mind-reader." + +"Huh! Well, you know she was away when +I went to call to say good-bye, and I was a little +afraid Beecher had got an inside edge on me." + +"Had he?" + +"No, but he tried hard enough. He went to +see Mary in Fayetteville, just as you heard, be- +fore he came on to join his party, but he didn't +pay much of a visit to her." + +"No?" + +"No. Mary told him he'd better hurry along +to Central America, or wherever it was he +intended going, as she didn't care for him as much +as he flattered himself she did." + +"Good!" cried Ned. "Shake, old man. I'm glad!" + +They shook hands. + +"Well, what's the matter? Didn't you read +all of her letter?" asked Ned when he saw his +chum once more perusing the epistle. + +"No. There's a postscript here. + + +"`Sorry I couldn't see you before you left. It +was a mistake, but when you come back----' + + +"Oh, that part isn't any of your affair!" and, +blushing under his tan, Tom thrust the letter +into his pocket and strode away, while Ned +laughed happily. + +With the idol of gold safe in their possession, +Professor Bumper's party could devote their +time to making other explorations in the buried +city. This they did, as is testified to by a long +list of books and magazine articles since turned +out by the scientist, dealing strictly with archaeo- +logical subjects, touching on the ancient Mayan +race and its civilization, with particular reference +to their system of computing time. + +Professor Beecher, young and foolish, would +not consent to delve into the riches of the ancient +city, being too much chagrined over the loss of +the idol. It seems he had really promised to +give a part of it to Mary Nestor. But he never +got the chance. + +His colleagues, after their first disappointment +at being beaten, joined forces with Professor +Bumper in exploring the old city, and made many +valuable discoveries. + +In one point Professor Bumper had done his +rival an injustice. That was in thinking +Professor Beecher was responsible for the treachery +of Jacinto. That was due to the plotter's own +work. It was true that Professor Beecher had +tentatively engaged Jacinto, and had sent word +to him to keep other explorers away from the +vicinity of the ancient city if possible; but +Jacinto, who did not return Professor Bumper's +money, as he had promised, had acted treacherously +in order to enrich himself. Professor +Beecher had nothing to do with that, nor had he +with the taking of the map, as has been seen, the +loss of which, after all, was a blessing in disguise, +for Kurzon would never have been located +by following the directions given there, as it was +very inaccurate. + +In another point it was demonstrated that the +old documents were at fault. This was in reference +to the golden idol having been overthrown +and another set up in its place, an act which had +caused the destruction of Kurzon. + +It is true that the city was destroyed, or rather, +buried, but this catastrophe was probably +brought about by an earthquake. And another +great idol, one of clay, was found, perhaps a +rival of Quitzel, but it was this clay image which +was thrown down and broken, and not the golden +one. + +Perhaps an effort had been made, just before +the burying of the city, to change idols and the +system of worship, but Quitzel seemed to have +held his own. The old manuscripts were not +very reliable, it was found, except in general. + +"Well, I guess this will hold Beecher for a +while," said Tom, the night of the arrival of +Mary's letter, and after he had written one in +answer, which was dispatched by a runner to +the nearest place whence mail could be +forwarded. + +"Yes, luck seems to favor you," replied Ned. +"You've had a hand in the discovery of the idol +of gold, and----" + +"Yes. And I discovered something else I +wasn't quite sure of," interrupted Tom, as he +felt to make sure he had a certain letter safe in +his pocket. + +It was several weeks later that the explorations +of Kurzon came to an end--a temporary end, for +the rainy season set in, when the tropics are +unsuitable for white men. Tom, Professor Bumper, +Ned and Mr. Damon set sail for the United +States, the valuable idol of gold safe on board. + +And there, with their vessel plowing the blue +waters of the Caribbean Sea, we will take leave +of Tom Swift and his friends. + + + + + + +End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Tom Swift in the Land of Wonders +by Victor Appleton + +************************************************************************ + +This file should be named 20tom11.txt or 20tom11.zip +Corrected EDITIONS of our eBooks get a new NUMBER, 20tom12.txt +VERSIONS based on separate sources get new LETTER, 20tom11a.txt + +Project Gutenberg eBooks are often created from several printed +editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the US +unless a copyright notice is included. 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