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diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes new file mode 100644 index 0000000..6833f05 --- /dev/null +++ b/.gitattributes @@ -0,0 +1,3 @@ +* text=auto +*.txt text +*.md text diff --git a/4994-0.txt b/4994-0.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..0657a9f --- /dev/null +++ b/4994-0.txt @@ -0,0 +1,6968 @@ +Project Gutenberg's Five Thousand Miles Underground, by Roy Rockwood + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with +almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + +Title: Five Thousand Miles Underground + The Mystery of the Centre of the Earth + +Author: Roy Rockwood + +Release Date: January 26, 2014 [EBook #4994] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: UTF-8 + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK FIVE THOUSAND MILES UNDERGROUND *** + + + + +Produced by Jim Weiler and Roger Frank + + + + +[Illustration: THE FLYING MERMAID SANK LOWER AND LOWER TOWARD THE +MYSTERIOUS HOLE.] + +------------------------------------------------------------------------ + + Five Thousand Miles Underground + + Or + + The Mystery of the Centre of the Earth + + BY + + ROY ROCKWOOD + + Author of “Through the Air to the North Pole,” “Under + the Ocean to the South Pole,” “The Rival + Ocean Divers,” Etc. + + ILLUSTRATED + + NEW YORK + CUPPLES & LEON COMPANY + +------------------------------------------------------------------------ + + GOOD BOOKS FOR BOYS + + By Roy Rockwood + + THE GREAT MARVEL SERIES + + THROUGH THE AIR TO THE NORTH POLE + Or The Wonderful Cruise of the Electric Monarch + + UNDER THE OCEAN TO THE SOUTH POLE + Or The Strange Cruise of the Submarine Wonder + + FIVE THOUSAND MILES UNDERGROUND + Or The Mystery of the Centre of the Earth + + Cloth. Illustrated + Price per volume, 60 cents + +------------------------------------------------------------------------ + + Copyright, 1908, by + Cupples & Leon Company + + Five Thousand Miles Underground + +------------------------------------------------------------------------ + + CONTENTS + + I WASHINGTON BACKS OUT + II THE FLYING MERMAID + III WASHINGTON DECIDES + IV WHAT DID MARK SEE? + V ATTACKED BY A WHALE + VI THE CYCLONE + VII A QUEER SAIL + VIII THE FLYING MERMAID DISABLED + IX THE MUTINY + X FOOLING THEIR ENEMIES + XI MYSTERIOUS HAPPENINGS + XII THE BIG HOLE + XIII DOWN INTO THE EARTH + XIV MANY MILES BELOW + XV IN THE STRANGE DRAUGHT + XVI THE NEW LAND + XVII A STRANGE COUNTRY + XVIII CAUGHT BY A STRANGE PLANT + XIX THE BIG PEACH + XX OVERHAULING THE SHIP + XXI THE FISH THAT WALKED + XXII THE SNAKE-TREE + XXIII THE DESERTED VILLAGE + XXIV THE GIANTS + XXV HELD BY THE ENEMY + XXVII A FRIEND INDEED + XXVII A GREAT JOURNEY + XXVIII THE TEMPLE OF TREASURE + XXIX BACK HOME—CONCLUSION + +------------------------------------------------------------------------ + + FIVE THOUSAND MILES UNDERGROUND + + + CHAPTER I + + WASHINGTON BACKS OUT + +“Washington! I say Washington!” + +Throughout a big shed, filled for the most part with huge pieces of +machinery, echoed the voice of Professor Amos Henderson. He did not look +up from a small engine over which he was bending. + +“Washington! Where are you? Why don’t you answer me?” + +From somewhere underneath an immense pile of iron, steel and aluminum +came the voice of a colored man. + +“Yas sir, Perfesser, I’se goin’ t’ saggasiate my bodily presence in yo’ +contiguous proximity an’ attend t’ yo’ immediate conglomerated +prescriptions at th’ predistined period. Yas, sir!” + +“Well, Washington, if you had started when you began that long speech +you would have been at least half way here by this time. Hurry up! Never +mind tightning those bolts now. Find the boys. I need them to help me +with this engine. They must be around somewhere.” + +“I seen ’em goin’ fishin’ down by th’ brook a little while ago,” +answered the negro, crawling out from under what seemed to be a combined +airship and watercraft. “Jack says as how yo’ gived him permission t’ +occupy his indisputatious period of levity in endeavorin’ t’ extract +from th’ liquid element some specimens of swimmin’ creatures.” + +“If you mean I said he and Mark could go fishing in the brook, you’re +right, Washington,” replied the professor with a smile. “But you waste a +lot of time and breath trying to say it. Why don’t you give up using big +words?” + +“I reckon I was brought up t’ it,” replied the colored man grinning from +ear to ear. He did not always use big words but when he did they were +generally the wrong ones. Sometimes, he spoke quite correctly. + +“Well, I suppose you can’t help it,” resumed Mr. Henderson. “However, +never mind that. Find the boys and send them to me.” + +“With th’ least appreciatableness amount of postponement,” answered the +messenger, and he went out. + +Washington White, who in color was just the opposite to his name, a +general helper and companion to Professor Henderson, found Mark Sampson +and Jack Darrow about a quarter of a mile from the big shed, which was +in the center of a wooded island off the coast of Maine. The lads were +seated on the bank of a small brook, fishing. + +“Perfesser wants yo’ immediate,” said Washington. + +“But we haven’t caught a single fish,” objected Mark. + +“Them’s the orders from headquarters,” replied the colored man. “Yo’ +both got t’ project yo’selves in th’ vicinity of th’ machine shop. I +reckon th’ new fangled contraption that th’ perfesser is goin’ t’ +navigate th’ air an’ sail th’ angry seas in, am about done. He want’s t’ +try th’ engine.” + +“Come on then,” said Jack. “We probably would not catch any fish, +anyhow, Mark.” + +Accompanied by Washington, the youths, each of whom was about eighteen +years old, started toward the big shed. + +While they are on their way opportunity may be taken to tell a little +about them, as well as about Washington and the professor, and the +curious craft on which the scientist was working. + +A few years before this story opens Mr. Henderson had invented a +wonderful electric airship. He had it about completed when, one day, he +and the two boys became unexpectedly acquainted, and, as it developed, +friends. + +Mark and Jack were orphans. After having rather a hard time knocking +about the world trying to make a living, they chanced to meet, and +resolved to cast their lots together. They boarded a freight train, and, +as told in the first volume of this series, entitled, “Through the Air +to the North Pole; or the Wonderful Cruise of the Electric Monarch,” the +cars were wrecked near where Professor Henderson was building his +strange craft. + +The boys were cared for by the scientist, and, after their recovery from +hurts received in the collision, they accepted his invitation to make +the trip through the upper regions in the airship, to search for the +north pole. With them went Andy Sudds, an old hunter, and Tom Smith and +Bill Jones, two farmers, but who were hired as helpers on the voyage. +The party had many adventures on the trip, having battles with savage +animals and more savage Esquimaux, and were tossed about in terrible +storms. After making some scientific observations, which the professor +was much interested in, they started back home. + +Having found he could successfully sail in the air, Mr. Henderson +resolved to try what it might be like under water. + +He moved his machine shop to a lonely spot on the Maine coast, and +there, with the help of the boys, Washington, Andy and two machinists +constructed a submarine boat, called the _Porpoise_. + +In this the professor resolved to seek the south pole, he having a +theory that it was surrounded by an open sea. After much hard work the +_Porpoise_ was made ready for the voyage. + +What occurred on this great trip is described in the second book of this +series, called “Under the Ocean to the South Pole, or the Strange Cruise +of the Submarine Wonder.” In that is told how once more Tom and Bill, +with Andy, the boys and Washington, accompanying Professor Henderson, +had many thrilling experiences. + +They were caught in the grip of the grass of the terrible Sargasso Sea. +Monstrous suckers grasped the boat in their powerful arms, and had to be +fought off. They were caught in a sea of boiling water and imprisoned +between big fields of ice. + +By means of strong diving suits they were able to leave the ship and +walk about on the bottom of the sea. They visited a graveyard of sunken +ships, saw many strange monsters as well as many beautiful fish in the +great depths to which they sunk. Many times they were in dire peril but +the resources of the professor, the bravery and daring of the boys, no +less than the help Washington and Andy Sudds, the hunter, rendered at +times, brought them through. + +Those of you who read of their adventures will recall the strange island +which they came upon in the Atlantic Ocean, far from the coast of South +America. + +When they first drew near this island they were almost sucked into the +depths of a great whirlpool, caused by water pouring down a big hole +that seemed to lead far into the earth. They reversed their ship just in +time. + +But, on going to another side of the island they were able to approach +safely, as at this point the great hole was farther from the shore. Then +they landed and investigated. + +They found the island was almost circular, and the hole was also round, +but not in the center of the land. It was an immense cavity, so wide +they could not see across, and as for the depth they could only guess at +it. Looking down they could only see rolling masses of vapor and clouds +caused by the water which poured down from the ocean with the force of a +Niagara. + +Gazing down into the big hole Mark suggested it might lead to the centre +of the earth, which some scientists claim is hollow. The professor +admitted that the cavity looked as though it led to China. + +They had no means of investigating further the mystery of the opening +and returned to their submarine, completing the voyage to the south +pole. + +It was now about two years since they had come back from that eventful +trip. One of the first things the professor did, after docking the +_Porpoise_, was to shut himself up in his study and begin to draw plans. +To the questions of the boys he returned no answer for several days. +Then he announced he was working on a craft which could both sail on top +of the water and navigate the air. + +In time the plans were done, and, in order to keep the work secret, the +shop was moved to an island which the professor owned. + +Parts of the _Monarch_ and the _Porpoise_ were used in constructing the +new craft, so there was no need to get other help than that which the +boys, Washington and Bill and Tom could give, since the two latter +accepted an offer of the professor to remain and work for him. The boys, +of course, would not leave their friend. + +The professor realized that he had a more difficult task in his new +venture than he had set himself on other occasions. For a ship to be +light enough to rise in the air, and, at another time, and with no +change, to be strong enough to navigate the ocean, was indeed something +to tax Mr. Henderson’s ingenuity. + +However, in the course of a little over a year the larger part of the +work was done. Inside the big shed was the huge affair which, it was +hoped, would enable its owner to be master of both air and water. + +“Did the professor say anything special?” asked Mark of Washington. + +“Nope. I reckon he were too busy problamatin’ the exact altitude +projected in an inverse direction by th’ square root of th’ new engine +when operated at a million times inside of a few seconds, but he didn’t +say nothin’ t’ me. I were busy underneath th’ ship, fixin’ bolts when he +tole me t’ find yo’. I wouldn’t be s’prised if he had th’ thing goin’ +soon.” + +“Do you think he’ll be generating the new gas to-day?” asked Jack +eagerly. “That’s the most troublesome part; to get that gas right.” + +“He didn’t say nothin’ t’ me 'bout it,” Washington stated, as he walked +along beside the two boys. “He jest seemed anxious like.” + +“We’d better hurry,” advised Mark. “He may be at an important part in +his experiments and probably needs us. I hope it will work. He has spent +many days on it, and we all have worked hard. It ought to be a success.” + +“Perfesser allers makes things work,” declared Washington stoutly. + +“That’s a good way to feel about it, anyway,” observed Mark. “Well, +we’ll soon know.” + +The three hurried to the shed which they could see as they rounded a +turn of the path through the wood. They noticed an elderly man +approaching with a gun on his shoulder. On one arm he carried a game +bag. + +“Guess Andy got something for dinner,” remarked Jack. + +“I hopes so, honey,” put in Washington. “I’se got a sort of gone feelin’ +in my stomach!” + +“Any luck, Andy?” called Mark, when he came within hailing distance. + +“Fine,” replied Andy Sudds. “Rabbits and quail. We’ll have a good dinner +to-morrow.” + +While Andy entered the living part of the big shed to put away his gun +and game, the boys and Washington kept on to the engine room. They found +the professor, with Bill and Tom, busy fitting pipes to the small engine +which was set up at one side of the structure. + +“Come, boys, I need your aid,” remarked Mr. Henderson as they entered. +“Take off your coats and pitch in. Tighten up these bolts, Jack. Mark, +you mix up those chemicals the way I taught you, and see that the dynamo +is in working order for Washington to attend to.” + +In a little while the shop was a veritable hive of industry, and it +resounded to the sound of hammers, wrenches and machinery. In the +background was the big ship, which seemed like two immense cigars, one +above the other, the lower one the larger. + +“Where was you calalatin’ t’ take this here ship when it gits done, +Perfesser?” asked Washington, during a lull in the operations. + +“Do you remember that big hole in the island we visited on our trip to +the south pole?” + +“I suah does,” answered the colored man. + +“We are going to explore that,” went on the scientist. “We are going to +make a voyage to the interior of the earth in our _Flying Mermaid_.” + +“Go down into th’ earth!” exclaimed Washington, his eyes big with +fright. + +“Certainly; why not?” + +“Not for mine!” cried the colored man, dropping the wrench he was +holding. “No sir! I’m not goin’ t’ project myself int’ a grave while +I’se alive. Time enough when I kicks th’ bucket. No sir! If yo’ an’ the +boys wants t’ risk yo’ se’ves goin’ down int’ th’ interior of th’ earth, +where th’ Bible says there’s fiery furnaces, yo’ kin go, but Washington +White stays on terra cotta! That’s where he stays; He ain’t ready t’ be +buried, not jest yet!” and the frightened colored man started to leave +the shed. + + + + + CHAPTER II + + THE FLYING MERMAID + + +“Here! Stop him!” cried Professor Henderson. “Don’t let him get away. We +still need his help to get the ship in shape. He needn’t be frightened. +We’re not going to start at once.” + +Mark and Jack ran after Washington, whose progress was somewhat impeded +because he kept looking back as if he feared the new ship was chasing +him. + +“Come on back!” said Mark. “There’s no danger, and if there was we’re +not going to start to-day.” + +“Ain’t yo’ foolin’ me?” asked Washington, pausing and looking doubtfully +at the boys. + +“Of course not,” answered Mark. “You know Professor Henderson would not +make you do anything you didn’t want to do, Wash. He wishes you to stay +and help him get ready, that’s all.” + +“Well, Washington,” observed the aged scientist. “I didn’t think you’d +go back on me.” + +“I’d do mos’ anything fer yo’, Perfesser,” said the colored man, “but I +got t’ beg off this time,” and he looked at the _Flying Mermaid_ as if +he thought the metal sides would open and devour him. + +“Then help me get things in shape to generate the gas,” the scientist +said. “I want to give the new vapor the first real test in lifting power +to-day. On the success of it depends the future of the ship.” + +Seeing there was no immediate danger of being carried to the centre of +the earth, Washington resumed his labors. The professor, the boys, Bill +and Tom were also hurrying matters to enable a test to be made before +night. + +As will readily be seen, even by those not familiar with the +construction of airships and submarines, the chief problem was to find +some agent strong enough to lift from the earth a weight heavier than +had ever before been put into an apparatus that was destined to traverse +the clouds. For the _Flying Mermaid_ was not only an airship but an +ocean voyager as well. It had to be made light enough to be lifted far +above the earth, yet the very nature of it, necessitating it being made +heavy enough to stand the buffeting of the waves and the pressure of +water, was against its flying abilities. + +Professor Henderson realized this and knew that the chief concern would +be to discover a gas or vapor with five times the lifting power of +hydrogen, one of the lightest gases known, and one sometimes used to +inflate balloons. + +After long study he had been partially successful, but he knew from +experiments made that the gas he had so far been able to manufacture +would not answer. What he wanted was some element that could be mixed +with the gas, to neutralize the attraction of gravitation, or downward +pull of the earth. + +While he was seeking this, and experimenting on many lines, the +construction of the air-water ship went on. In general the outward +construction was two cigar shaped hulls, one above the other. Aluminum, +being the lightest and strongest metal that could be used for the +purpose, formed the main part of both bodies. + +The upper hull was one hundred feet long and twenty feet in diameter at +the widest part. It tapered to points at either end. It was attached to +the lower hull by strong braces, at either end, while from the center +there extended a pipe which connected with the lower section. This pipe +was intended to convey the lifting gas to the part which corresponded to +the bag of the balloon, save that it was of metal instead of silk, or +rubber as is usual. + +There were two reasons for this. One was that it would not be liable to +puncture, particularly in the proposed underground trip, and the other +was that it did not have to be so large as a cloth bag would have had to +be. It was also a permanent part of the ship, and on a voyage where part +of the time the travelers would be in the air and part on the water, and +when the change from one to the other would have to be made quickly, +this was necessary. It would have taken too long to raise the ship in +the air had a cloth bag been used to contain the gas. + +The lower hull or main part of the craft was one hundred and fifty feet +long, and forty feet through at the largest part, in the centre. + +It was divided into four sections. The forward one contained the +sleeping quarters of Professor Henderson and his crew. There was a small +stateroom for each one. Above was a conning or observation tower, +reached by a small flight of steps. From this tower the ship could be +steered, stopped and started, as could also be done from the engine +room, which was in the after part of the hull. + +As in the _Porpoise_ and _Monarch_, electricity formed the motive power +and was also used for many other purposes on board. Engines operated by +gas produced the current which heated, lighted and moved the ship, as +well as played a part in producing the wonderful gas. + +The ship moved forward or backward by means of a novel arrangement. This +was by the power of compressed air. From either end of the lower hull +there projected a short pipe working in a ball and socket joint, so it +could be turned in any direction. By means of strong pumps a current of +compressed air could be sent out from either pipe. Thus when floating +above the earth the ship was forced forward by the blast of air rushing +from the pipe at the stern. It was the same principle as that on which a +sky rocket is shot heavenward, save that gases produced by the burning +of powder in the pasteboard rocket form its moving impulse. + +In the case of the _Flying Mermaid_, it could be made to move backward +by sending the air out of the forward tube. Thus, when in the water, the +compressed air rushing from the pipe struck the fluid and forced the +ship forward or backward as was desired. It floated on the surface, the +deck being about three feet out of water, while the aluminum gas bag was +overhead. + +The engine room was a marvel of machine construction. It contained pumps +for air and water, motors, dynamos, gas engines, and a maze of wheels +and levers. Yet everything was very compact and no room was wasted. + +The use of the air method of propulsion did away with the necessity of a +large propellor such as most airships have to use, a propellor which +must of necessity be very light and which is easily broken. + +Next to the engine room was the kitchen. It contained an electric range +and all necessary appliances and utensils for preparing meals. There +were lockers and a large reserve storeroom which when the time came +would be well stocked with food. Forward of the kitchen was the living +and dining room. It contained comfortable seats, folding tables and a +small library. Here, also were many instruments designed to show how the +various machines were working. There were gages, pointers and dials, +which told the direction the ship was traveling, the speed and the +distance above the earth or below the surface. Similar indicators were +in the conning tower, which had a powerful search light. + +The ship was lighted throughout by incandescent lamps, and there was +even a small automatic piano worked by the electric current, on which +popular airs could be played. + +If the gas and the gravity neutralizer worked as Professor Henderson +hoped they would, as soon as the ship was completed, all that would be +necessary to start on the voyage would be to fill the aluminum bag and +set the air compressor in motion. + +The gas was made from common air, chemically treated and with a secret +material added which by means of a complicated machine in a measure did +away with the downward pull of the earth. Thus all that was necessary to +carry on a long voyage was a quantity of gasolene to operate the engine +which worked the electric machines, and some of this secret compound. + +The professor and his helpers had been working to good advantage. At +last all was in readiness for the gas test. + +It was proposed to try it on an experimental scale. Some of the fluid +was to be generated and forced into an aluminum cylinder under the same +pressure it would be used in the air ship. To this cylinder were +attached weights in proportion to the weight of the _Flying Mermaid_ +with its load of human freight, engines and equipment. + +“This cylinder is just one one-hundredth the size of the cylinder of the +ship,” said the professor. “I am going to fasten to it a hundred pound +weight. If it lifts that our latest contrivance will be a success.” + +“You mean if the little cylinder pulls a hundred pounds up the big ship +will take us and the machinery up?” asked Mark. + +“Certainly,” answered the professor. “If this cylinder lifts a hundred +pounds, one a hundred times as big (as that of the _Mermaid_ is), will +lift a hundred times as much, or ten thousand pounds. That is five tons, +or more than a ton over what I figure to be the weight of our ship and +contents. The latest war balloon can lift one ton with ease, and if my +machine can not do five times as well I shall be disappointed.” + +The last adjustments were made, pipes were run from the gas generator to +the cylinder, and the hundred pound weight was attached. + +“Everybody look out now,” said Mr. Henderson. “I am going to start the +machine and let the gas enter the cylinder. It is a very powerful gas +and may break the cylinder. If it does you must all duck.” + +The scientist gave a last look at everything. The boys got behind some +boards whence they could see without being in danger. Washington, who +had little fear so long as there was no danger of going under ground, +took his place at the dynamo. Andy Sudds, with Bill and Tom, stationed +themselves in safe places. + +“All ready!” called the professor. + +He pulled a lever toward him, turned a wheel and signalled to Washington +to start the dynamo. There was a sound of buzzing machinery, which was +followed by a hiss as the gas began to enter the cylinder under +pressure. Would it stand the strain? That question was uppermost in +every one’s mind save the professor’s. He only cared to see the cylinder +leave the ground, carrying the weight with it. That would prove his long +labors were crowned with success. + +Faster and faster whirred the dynamo. The gas was being generated from +the air. The secret chemical made a hissing which could be heard for +some distance. The gage registered a heavy pressure. Anxiously the +professor watched the cylinder. + +“There!” he exclaimed at length. “It has all the gas it can hold. Now to +see if it works!” + +He disconnected the pipe leading from the generator. This left the +cylinder free. It seemed to tremble slightly. There appeared to be a +movement to the hundred pound weight which rested on the ground. It was +as if it was tugging to get loose. + +“There it goes! There it goes!” cried Mark, joyfully. + +“Hurrah!” shouted Jack. “There she rises!” + +“It suttinly am projectin’ itself skyward!” yelled Washington, coming +from the dynamo. + +Sure enough the cylinder was slowly rising in the air, bearing the +weight with it. It had lifted it clear from the ground and was +approaching the roof of the big shed. + +“It will work! It will work!” exclaimed the professor, strangely +excited. + +The next instant the cylinder, carrying the weight, sailed right out of +an open skylight, and began drifting outside the shop, and across the +fields. + +“Quick! We must get it back!” cried Mr. Henderson. “If it gets away my +secret may be discovered and I will lose all! We must secure it!” + +But the cylinder was now two hundred feet in the air and being blown to +the east, the weight dangling below it, making it look like a miniature +airship. + +“We can never catch that!” cried Mark. + + + + + CHAPTER III + + WASHINGTON DECIDES + + +“We must catch that cylinder!” the professor exclaimed. “Some one may +find it when it comes down and analyze the gas. Then he would discover +how to make it. The cylinder must come down!” + +“Don’t see how we can proximate ourselves inter th’ vicinity of it +lessen we delegate th’ imperial functions of ornithological specimens t’ +some member of this here party,” observed Washington. + +“If you mean we can’t catch that there contraption unless we turn into +birds I’ll show you that you’re mistaken!” cried Andy Sudds. “I guess I +have a trick or two up my sleeve,” and the old hunter quickly threw open +the breech of his gun and inserted a couple of cartridges. + +He raised the piece to his shoulder and took quick aim. There was a +sliver of flame, a puff of smoke and a sharp report. The professor and +the boys who were watching the cylinder saw it vibrate up in the air. +Then there came a whistling sound. An instant later the metal body began +to descend, and it and the weight fell to the earth. + +“I’m sorry I had to put a bullet through it, Professor,” said old Andy +with a queer smile, “but it was the only way I saw of bringing it down. +Hope it isn’t damaged much.” + +“It doesn’t matter if it is,” the scientist answered. “I can make more +cylinders, but I don’t want that secret of the gas to become known. Your +bullet served a good turn, Andy, for it let the compressed vapor out +just in time.” + +“Then we may consider the experiment a success,” said Mark, as +Washington went to where the cylinder had fallen, to detach it from the +weight and bring both to the shed. + +“It seems so,” Mr. Henderson answered. “True, it was only an experiment. +We have yet to test the ship itself.” + +“When can we do that?” asked Jack. + +“I hope by Monday,” the scientist answered. + +“Will you try it in the water or air first?” asked Mark. + +“I’m almost certain it will float in the water,” the aged inventor said. +“It does not require much work to make a ship which will do that. But +the air proposition is another matter. However, since the cylinder rose, +I am pretty sure the _Flying Mermaid_ will. + +“But we have done enough work to-day. Let’s rest and have something to +eat. Then, with Sunday to sit around and talk matters over, we will be +ready for Monday’s test.” + +Some of the game Andy had killed was soon on the table, for Washington, +in addition to his other accomplishments, was an expert cook. During the +evening the boys and their friends sat in the living room of the big +shed and talked over the events of the day. + +Sunday was spent in discussing what adventures might lie before them +should they be able to descend into the big hole. Washington did not say +much, but it was easy to see he had no notion of going. He even began to +pack his few belongings in readiness to leave the service of Mr. +Henderson, for whom he had worked a good many years. + +No one remained long abed Monday morning. Even Washington was up early +in spite of the interest he had lost in the professor’s voyage. + +“I jest wants t’ see yo’ start fer that place where they buries live +folks,” he said. + +In order to properly test the _Flying Mermaid_ it was necessary to move +the craft from the shed from which place it had never been taken since +it’s construction was started. It had been built on big rollers in +anticipation of this need, so that all which was now necessary was to +open the doors at the end, and roll the craft out. + +This was accomplished with no small amount of labor, and it was nearly +noon before the big ship was moved into the open. It was shoved along to +a little clearing in front of the shed, where no trees would interfere +with its possible upward movement. + +Everyone was bustling about. The professor was busiest of all. He went +from one machine to another; from this apparatus to that, testing here, +turning wheels there, adjusting valves and seeing that all was in +readiness for the generating of the powerful gas. + +As the airship was half round on the bottom and as it rested in a sort +of semi-circular cradle; it brought the entrance some distance above the +ground. To make it easier to get in and out while preparations for the +trial were going on, Bill and Tom had made an improvised pair of steps, +which were tied to the side of the ship with ropes. + +Up and down these the professor, the boys and Andy went, taking in tools +and materials, and removing considerable refuse which had accumulated +during the building of the craft. + +Finally all was in readiness for starting the making of the gas. The +ship was not wholly complete and no supplies or provisions for the long +voyage had been taken aboard. The _Flying Mermaid_ was about a ton +lighter than it would be when fully fitted out, but to make up for this +the professor had left in the ship a lot of tools and surplus machinery +so that the craft held as much weight as it would under normal +conditions. If the gas lifted it now it would at any other time. + +“Start the generator,” said Mr. Henderson, to Mark. “We’ll soon see +whether we are going to succeed or fail.” + +The boy turned a number of levers and wheels. The machine which made the +powerful vapor was soon in operation. The professor had already added +enough of the secret compound to the tank containing the other +ingredients, and the big pump was sucking in air to be transformed into +the lifting gas. + +The boys and the professor were in the engine room. Andy Sudds, with +Bill and Tom, had taken their places in the living room, to more evenly +balance the ship, since the things in it were not yet all in their +proper places. As for Washington he was busy running from the shed to +the ship with various tools and bits of machinery the professor desired. + +The gas was being generated rapidly. Throughout the ship there resounded +a hissing noise that told it was being forced through the pipe into the +aluminum shell above the ship proper. + +“I wonder how soon it will begin to lift us,” said Mark. + +“It will take about half an hour,” replied Mr. Henderson. “You see we +have first to fill the holder completely, since there is no gas in it. +After this we will keep some on hand, so that it will only need the +addition of a small quantity to enable the ship to rise.” + +He was busy watching the pointer on a dial which indicated the pressure +of the gas, and the lifting force. The boys were kept busy making +adjustments to the machinery and oiling bearings. + +Suddenly, throughout the length of the craft there was felt a curious +trembling. It was as though the screw of a powerful steamer was +revolving in the water. + +“What is it?” asked Jack. + +“I hope it is the lifting power of the gas making itself felt,” the +professor answered. “Perhaps the _Flying Mermaid_ is getting ready to +try her wings.” + +The trembling became more pronounced. The gas was being generated faster +than ever. The whole ship was trembling. Tom and Bill came from the +room, where they were stationed, to inquire the meaning, but were +reassured by the professor. + +“Don’t be alarmed if you find yourselves up in the air pretty soon,” he +remarked with a smile. “Remember the _Electric Monarch_, and the flights +she took. We may not go as high as we did in her, but it will answer the +same purpose.” + +The gas was hissing through the big tube as it rushed into the overhead +holder. The gage indicated a heavy pressure. The ship began to tremble +more violently and to sway slightly from side to side. + +“I think we shall rise presently,” said Mr. Henderson. His voice showed +the pride he felt at the seeming success with which his invention was +about to meet. + +Suddenly, with a little jerk, as though some one with a giant hand had +plucked the _Flying Mermaid_ from the earth, the ship gave a little +bound into the air, and was floating free. + +“Here we go!” cried Mr. Henderson. “The ship is a success. Now we’re off +for the hole in the earth!” + +The _Flying Mermaid_ was indeed rising in the air. True it did not go up +so swiftly as had the _Monarch_, but then it was a much heavier and +stronger vessel, and flying was only one of its accomplishments. + +“It’s a success! It’s a success!” shouted Mark, capering about in his +excitement. + +“Now we’ll see what the centre of the earth looks like,” went on Jack. +“I can hardly wait for the time to come when we are to start on the +voyage.” + +At that instant, when the ship was but a few feet from the ground, but +slowly rising, the boys and the professor heard a shouting below them. + +“What’s that?” asked the scientist. “Is any one hurt?” + +Mark ran to a small window, something like a port hole in an ocean +steamer, and looked out. + +“Quick!” he shouted. “Stop the ship! Washington will be killed!” + +In fact from the agonized yells which proceeded from somewhere under the +craft it seemed that the accident was in process of happening. + +“Save me! Save me!” cried the colored man. “I’m goin’ to fall! Catch me, +some one!” + +“What is it?” asked the professor, making ready to shut off the power +and let the ship settle back to earth, from which it had moved about +fifty feet. + +“It’s Washington,” explained Mark. “He evidently tried to walk up the +steps just as the boat mounted skyward. He rolled down and managed to +grab the end of the rope which was left over after the steps were tied. +Now he’s swinging down there.” + +“Are you going to lower the ship?” asked Jack. + +“Of course!” exclaimed the professor. “I only hope he hangs on until his +feet touch the earth.” + +“Keep a tight hold!” shouted Mark, from out of the small window. + +“That’s th’ truest thing yo’ ever said!” exclaimed Washington. “You bet +I’m goin’ to hold on, and I’m comin’ up too,” which he proceeded to do, +hand over hand, like a sailor. + +The boys and the professor watched the colored man’s upward progress. +The ship had hardly begun to settle as, in the excitement, not enough +gas had been let out. Closer and closer came Washington, until he was +able to grasp the edge of the opening, to which the steps were fastened. + +“I thought you weren’t coming with us,” observed the professor, when he +saw that his helper was safe. + +“I changed my mind,” said the colored man. “It’s jest luck. Seems like +th’ ship done wanted me t’ go 'long, an’ I’m goin’. I’ll take my chances +on bein’ buried alive. I ain’t never seen th’ centre of th’ earth, an’ I +want’s to 'fore I die. I’m goin’ 'long, Perfessor!” + + + + + CHAPTER IV + + WHAT DID MARK SEE? + + +“Well, I’m glad you’ve decided at last,” the professor remarked. “Now +come inside and we’ll see how the ship works.” + +Once over his fright, Washington made himself at home on the craft he +had helped build. He went from one room to another and observed the +engine. + +“She certainly am workin’” he observed with pride. “Are we still goin’ +up, Perfessor?” + +“Still mounting,” replied Mr. Henderson. “We are now three hundred feet +above the earth,” he added as he glanced at a registering gage. + +The great air pump was set going and soon from the after tube, a big +stream of the compressed vapor rushed. It acted on the ship instantly +and sent the craft ahead at a rapid rate. By elevating or depressing the +tube the craft could be sent obliquely up or down. Then, by forcing the +air from the forward tube, the _Mermaid_ was reversed and scudded +backward. + +But it was more with the ship’s ability to rise and descend that +Professor Henderson was concerned, since on that depended their safety. +So various tests were made, in generating the gas and using the negative +gravity apparatus. + +All worked to perfection. Obeying the slightest turn of the wheels and +levers the _Mermaid_ rose or fell. She stood still, suspended herself in +the air, or rushed backward and forward. + +Of course the machinery was new and did not operate as smoothly as it +would later, but the professor and his friends were very well satisfied. + +“Now we’ll try something new,” said the scientist to the two boys as +they stood beside him in the tower. “I only hope this part succeeds, and +we shall soon be off on our voyage.” + +He turned several levers. There was a hissing sound as the gas rushed +from the container, and the ship began to settle down. + +“What’s th’ matter? Are we goin’ t’ hit th’ earth?” yelled Washington, +rushing from the engine room. + +“Keep quiet,” ordered the professor. “We are only going down, that’s +all.” + +“But good land! Perfesser!” exclaimed the colored man. “The ocean’s +right under us! You forgot you sailed away from the island! We’ll be +drowned suah!” + +“Leave it to me,” said Mr. Henderson. “The _Flying Mermaid_ is going to +take a bath!” + +“As long as it swims it will be all right,” observed Mark in a low tone +to Jack. “I’m glad I can take care of myself in the water.” + +Before Jack could reply the _Mermaid_ seemed to take a sudden dive +through the air. The next instant she struck the water with a splash +that sent the waves rolling all about. The craft rocked violently to and +fro on the surface of the sea. For a while there were anxious hearts +aboard, for there was no certainty but that the ship might not sink to +the bottom. + +But the old professor had not calculated and builded in vain. After +rocking about like a vessel newly launched, the strange craft rode +safely and upright on the water. It set down far enough to bring the +propelling tubes well under, but not so far but that the conning tower +was well out and there was a small deck available. + +“Now to see if we can conquer the water as we did the air!” cried the +professor. “Mark, start the air pump. Jack, you steer, for I want to +watch the machinery under the additional strain.” + +From the rear tube rushed such a volume of air that the ocean near it +bubbled and foamed. The ship trembled from stem to stern, and then, +after hanging for an instant as if undecided what to do, it began to +move forward as easily as though it had never sailed any other element +than the sea. + +“She fits her name!” the professor cried. “She is indeed the _Flying +Mermaid_, for she sails the ocean as easily as she navigates in the +clouds!” + +For a mile or two the craft was sent ahead over the waves. Then it was +reversed and run backwards. Satisfied that his long months of work had +not gone for naught, the professor after trying several experiments, +decided to try and raise the ship while in motion. + +With Jack and Mark to look after the air pumps, while Washington, Tom +and Bill busied themselves in the engine room, Mr. Henderson began to +generate the gas and start the negative gravity apparatus. All the while +the craft was forging ahead. + +There was again the hissing sound that told of the aluminum holder being +filled. For a few minutes there seemed to be no change, the _Mermaid_ +plowing forward. + +Then like a bird rising from the waves, or like a flying fish leaping +from the sea to escape some pursuing monster of the deep, the new ship +shot up diagonally from the surface and winged its way into the upper +regions of the air. + +“Success! Success!” cried the professor. “This proves all I wanted to +know. Now we are ready for our great trip!” + +Great were the rejoicings in the camp that night. It was like living +over again the days when they were aboard the diving _Porpoise_ or the +flying _Monarch_. To the recollections were added the anticipations of +what was before them in the trip to the interior of the earth. + +Busy days followed, for there was still much to be done to the _Flying +Mermaid_. The machinery, which was only partly completed, had to be +finished. Besides this the professor was working on some apparatus, the +use of which he did not disclose to any one. It was stored aboard the +ship at the last minute. + +Plenty of provisions had to be taken aboard, and many supplies needed to +work the _Mermaid_ and insure that it would go to the end of the voyage. +The materials for generating the gas and negative gravity, spare parts, +records for the automatic piano and other things were stored away. + +Some guns and ammunition were taken along as were a few revolvers, since +old Andy had said it was best to prepare for any thing in the shape of +enemies or wild beasts that might be met with in the interior regions. + +It was decided to make the start by sailing along the surface of the sea +for several days, as in the event of any weakness in the machinery being +discovered there would be less danger. If, at the end of four days, no +trouble developed, the professor said he would send the _Mermaid_ into +the air and make the rest of the voyage through the sky. + +The night before the start was to be made the professor, with the boys, +Washington and the other helpers, went about through the various shops +and buildings, locking them up securely. For they could not tell how +long they would be away, and they had to leave behind much valuable +material. + +As there were several things that needed attention they divided the work +up. Mark had finished his share and was walking back toward the living +cabin where they were all quartered, when, down at the shore, near where +the boat was moored, he fancied he saw, in the gathering darkness, a +moving figure. + +“I wonder who that can be,” he thought. “All the others are near the +machine shop, for I just left them there. Perhaps it’s some one trying +to spy out how the _Mermaid_ is built.” + +Knowing the professor wanted his secret well guarded, Mark walked softly +toward the little dock that served as a place whence the _Mermaid_ could +be easily boarded. As he approached he saw the figure moving. Something +struck the boy as peculiar. + +Though the object had some of the characteristics of a man it did not +walk like a human being, but shuffled along more like a huge ape or +monkey. It seemed bent over, as if it stooped toward the ground. + +“Who are you?” called Mark suddenly. + +For an instant the figure halted and then hurried on faster than before, +with a curious, shuffling walk. It was approaching the ship. + +Somehow it struck Mark as if it was an uncanny being; an inhabitant of +some other world. Then he laughed at his half-fear, and started on a run +toward the dock. + +“If it’s some tramp trying to find a place to sleep he’d better not go +aboard the ship, he might do some damage,” the boy thought. + +He could hardly see the figure now as it had passed into the shadow cast +by the boat. He was about to summon the professor to make an +investigation, when Washington started going the search light which was +placed just over the door of the living cabin. It was kept there as a +sort of beacon light, as, near the island was a dangerous ledge of +rocks. + +Then, in the blinding white glare from the big lantern as Washington +accidentally swung it toward the _Mermaid_, Mark beheld a strange sight. + +The figure he had been watching stood out in bold relief. Though it was +shaped like a human being it was not like any person the boy had ever +seen. It seemed covered with a skin twice too large for it; a skin, +which, in spite of the clothes that concealed it, hung in folds about +the arms and legs, dropping pendent like from the neck like a big +garment, and flapping in the wind. + +For an instant Mark was so startled he cried out, and the professor and +the others ran to see what was the matter. + +“There—by the ship! A horrible creature!” exclaimed Mark. + +Shouting to Washington to keep the light steady in the direction of the +dock, Mr. Henderson ran toward the moored _Mermaid_. Jack, Andy, Bill +and Tom, with Mark in the rear followed him. + +“Nothing here,” said the scientist, after a careful search about. “Are +you sure you saw something, Mark?” + +“Positively,” replied the lad with a shudder. He described the vision of +the darkness. + +“I guess it was a big otter, or maybe an enormous turtle,” the professor +said. + + + + + CHAPTER V + + ATTACKED BY A WHALE + + +But Mark was certain it was nothing like that, though a careful search +failed to reveal anything or any person near the ship. It was too dark +to examine for footprints, and even Mark, after taking a look all about, +felt he might have been deceived by shadows. Still he was a little +nervous, and could hardly sleep for imagining what the thing he saw +could have been. + +The next day every one was so busy that no one, not even Mark, recalled +the little excitement of the night before. Shortly after noon, final +preparations having been made, they all got aboard the _Mermaid_ and +started off. + +It was a bright sunshiny day, and the craft, speeding away from the +island where it had been constructed, over the dancing blue waves, must +have presented a strange sight had there been any spectators. For surely +no such ship had ever before sailed those waters. + +However, there was no other vessel in sight, and the island, as far as +the professor and his friends knew, had never been inhabited. + +“We will not try for any great speed,” Mr. Henderson remarked as he, +with Mark and Jack, stood in the conning tower managing the _Mermaid_. +“We don’t want to strain any joints at the start or heat any engine +bearings. There will be time enough for speed later.” + +“Yes, and we may need it more when we get into the centre of the earth +than we do now,” observed Mark. + +“Why so?” asked Jack. + +“No telling what we may run up against underneath the ground,” went on +Mark. “We may have to fight strange animals and stranger beings. +Besides, the atmosphere and water there can’t be the same as up here; do +you think so, Professor?” + +For a few minutes the scientist was silent. He seemed to be thinking +deeply. + +“I will tell you what I believe,” he said at length. “I have never +spoken of it before, but now that we are fairly started and may +eventually have a chance to prove my theory, I will say that I think the +centre of this earth on which we live is hollow. Inside of it, forming a +core, so to speak, I believe there is another earth, similar to ours in +some respects which revolves inside this larger sphere.” + +They were well out to sea now, as they could observe when they emerged +on the little deck. Above their heads was the aluminum gas holder, which +served as a sort of protection from the sun that was quite warm. The +_Mermaid_ rode with an easy motion, being submerged just enough to make +her steady, yet not deep enough to encounter much resistance from the +water. In fact it could not have been arranged better for speed or +comfort. + +“I think we will sail well to the eastward before making our course +south,” Mr. Henderson said. “I do not care to meet too many ships, as +those aboard will be very curious and I do not want too much news of +this venture to get out. We will take an unfrequented route and avoid +delays by being hailed by every passing vessel whose captain will wonder +what queer craft he had met with.” + +The boys enjoyed the sail, for the weather could not have been better. +Even old Andy, who seldom said much, seemed delighted with the prospect +of having strange adventures. He had his rifle with him, and, indeed, he +seldom went anywhere that he did not carry it. + +“For there’s no telling when you may see something you want to shoot or +that ought to be shot,” he used to say, “and it’s always the man without +a gun who needs it most. So I’m taking no chances.” + +They sailed all that afternoon without meeting with a craft of any kind. +Straight to the east they went, and when night began to settle down +Washington got supper. It was decided to run slowly after dark until all +hands were more familiar with the ship. + +Morning found the _Mermaid_ about a hundred miles from the island where +she had been launched. The night had been uneventful, except that Mark +told Jack he heard some strange noise near his bunk several times. He +was nearest the storeroom where spare parts, and the curious cylinder +the professor had brought aboard, were kept. + +“I guess it was rats,” said Jack. “They are always in ships.” + +“Old wooden ships, yes,” admitted Mark. “But I’ll bet there’s not a rat +aboard the _Mermaid_.” + +“Then you were dreaming,” said Jack, as if that settled it. + +Mark did not speak further of the noise, but he did considerable +thinking. However, the next night there was no further disturbance. + +The fourth day out, when everything had passed off well, the engines +doing their best, the professor decided to speed them up a bit, since he +was satisfied they had “found” themselves as mechanics term it. + +“We’ll see how fast we can go through the water,” said Mr. Henderson, +“and then I think we can safely turn our course south. We are well +beyond the ordinary lines of travel now.” + +Having oiled the bearings well, and seen that everything was in place +and properly adjusted, the professor and the boys took their places in +the conning tower, while Washington, Tom and Bill remained in the engine +room. Andy stayed on deck with his gun. + +“I might see a big fish, and we could vary our bill of fare,” he said +with a laugh. + +“Here we go!” exclaimed the professor as he shifted the levers and +turned some wheels and valves. “Now we’ll see how fast we can travel.” + +As he spoke the _Mermaid_ responded to the added impulse of the +compressed air and shot through the water at a terrific speed. The +sudden increase in momentum almost threw the boys from their feet, and +they would have fallen had they not grasped some projecting levers. + +“I guess that will do,” said the scientist. “I think we have speed +enough for almost any emergency. I’ll let her run at this rate for a +while, and then we’ll slack up.” + +Looking ahead, the boys could see the green waters parting in front of +the bow of the _Mermaid_, as if to make room for her. Two huge waves +were thrown upon either side. + +Suddenly, dead ahead, there loomed up a big black object. + +“Look out you’ll hit the rock!” cried Mark to the professor, who was +steering. + +With a turn of his wrist Mr. Henderson moved the wheel which controlled +the tube. It was deflected and sent the boat to larboard. + +At that instant from the rock two small fountains of water rose in the +air, falling back in a shower of spray through which the sun gleamed. + +“That’s not a rock! It’s a big whale!” cried Jack. “And we’re going to +hit him!” + +The professor had miscalculated the speed of the craft, or else had not +thrown her far enough to larboard, for, a second later, the _Mermaid_ +was almost upon the big leviathan. + +With a desperate twirling of the steering wheel the professor veered the +craft as far as possible. But all he could do did not suffice, for the +craft hit the whale a glancing blow on the side, and the ship careened +as if she would turn turtle. + +At the same time there rang out from upon deck the sound of a rifle +shot. Old Andy had taken a chance at the enormous creature of the deep. + +“Hurrah!” the boys heard him shout. “I give him one plumb in the eye! A +fine shot! And we hit him besides with the boat. I guess he’s a goner!” + +“I’m afraid not,” muttered the professor. “That was a bad blow we struck +him, but I think it will only ruffle his temper. We’ll have to look +sharp now, boys.” + +By this time the ship had rushed past the whale, but the boys, looking +through a window in the rear of the tower could see the huge body. Now +the fountains of water which the whale spouted were tinged with red. + +“He’s bleeding!” exclaimed the professor. “I guess Andy hit him in a +vital spot.” + +“But not vital enough!” cried Mark. “See! He’s coming after us!” + +And so it proved. The whale, angered, and, probably half crazed by the +pain of the bullet and the blow, was coursing after the ship, coming on +with the speed of an express train. Straight at the _Mermaid_ he lunged +his huge bulk. + +“We must escape him!” cried Mr. Henderson. “If he hits us he’ll send us +to the bottom!” + +He had made ready to slow up the _Mermaid_ to see if it had sustained +any damage from the impact with the whale, but when he saw the monster +coming after the boat he knew the only safety lay in flight. + +“Let us go up into the air and so escape him!” cried Jack, with sudden +inspiration. + +For an instant neither Mark nor the professor grasped what Jack meant. +Then, with an exclamation, the professor pulled forward the lever that +generated the gas and set working the gravity neutralizer, which would +enable the ship to rise. + +Faster through the water went the _Mermaid_, and faster after her came +the whale. Above the hum of the engines was heard the hiss of the +powerful gas. The ship trembled more violently. + +“We are rising!” exclaimed the professor, as he looked at a gage. + +The boys could feel the craft lifting from the waves which clung to her +as if they hated to lose her. The boys knew the gas was beginning to +operate. + +“If it is not too late!” whispered Mark, half to himself. + +For the monster of the seas was coming on, lashing the water to foam +with his terrible flukes, and sending aloft a bloody spray. His speed +was awful. + +Now he was but ten feet away from the fleeing craft—now but eight—now +five! Ten seconds more and the big head, like the blunt stern of a +battle ship, forced forward by the tons of blubber, flesh, bone and fat +behind it would strike the _Mermaid_ and crush it like an egg shell. + +Now if ever was the need for the _Flying Mermaid_ to prove herself +worthy of the name. Now, if ever, was the time for her to leave the +watery element and take to the lighter one. + +And she did. With a last tremble, as if to free herself from the hold of +the waves, the gallant craft soared up into the air, leaving the water, +which dripped from her keel like a fountain’s spray, and shooting aloft +like a bird, escaped her terrible enemy which passed under her, so close +that the lower part of the _Flying Mermaid_ scraped the whale’s back. + +“Saved!” exclaimed the professor. + +[Illustration: THE LOWER PART OF THE FLYING MERMAID SCRAPED THE WHALE’S +BACK.] + + + + + CHAPTER VI + + THE CYCLONE + + +It was only in the nick of time, for a second later and the big mammal +of the ocean would have struck the ship and split it from stem to stern. + +Higher and higher into the air mounted the _Flying Mermaid_, while in +the water below, the whale, incensed by missing his prey, was lashing +the waves to foam. + +“Well, that was a narrow squeak; as close as I ever care to come to it!” +exclaimed Andy as he let go of the steel rail to which he was clinging +and entered the conning tower. “I had no idea of hitting the big fish.” + +“I guess he would have taken after us whether you had fired at him or +not,” said Mr. Henderson. “He was probably looking for trouble, and took +the first thing that came in his way, which happened to be us. Some +whales are like that, so I have read; big bull creatures, exiled from +the school to which they once belonged, they get like mad creatures and +know neither friend nor foe. Something like rogue elephants, I imagine.” + +Now, having thus unexpectedly risen into the air, the professor decided +to continue travel in that style for a while at least. It would require +less force to propel the ship, and the going would be more comfortable, +since in the upper regions the _Mermaid_ rode on an even keel, while in +the water there was more or less rolling, due to the action of the +waves. + +Once recovered from their fright caused by the whale, and having lost +sight of the enormous creature, for they were now far above the ocean, +the adventurers began to think of something to eat. + +Washington lost little time in preparing a meal, and it was eaten with a +relish. The electric cooking stove worked to perfection, for the colored +man had learned how to use that aboard the _Porpoise_ and _Monarch_, and +could be depended on to turn out appetizing dishes. + +“What do you say to traveling through the air at night?” asked Mr. +Henderson, as he arose from the table. + +“Suits me,” replied Mark. “There’s less danger than in the water, I +think.” + +Bill, Tom and Washington arranged to stand the night watch, and, when +the professor had examined the engines and given orders about keeping +the ship on her course through the air, he retired to his bunk. Jack and +Mark soon followed. + +It must have been about midnight when Mark was awakened by a movement +that seemed to come from the storeroom next to where his sleeping place +was located. At first he thought he had been dreaming, but, as he found +he was wide awake, he knew it was no imagination that had affected him. + +“I certainly heard something,” he said to himself. “It sounded just as +it did the other night. I wonder if I ought to investigate.” + +He thought over the matter carefully as he sat upright in his bunk in +the darkness. True the noise might be a natural one, due to the +vibration of the engine, or to some echo from the machinery. As Mark +listened he heard it again. + +This time he realized it was the slow movement of some heavy body. He +felt a cold shiver run over him and his hair evinced an uncomfortable +tendency to stand upright. But he conquered his feelings and resolved to +keep cool and see if he could discover what had awakened him. + +He got up and moved softly about the little room that contained his +bunk. He could hear better now, and knew it was no echo or vibration +that had come to his ears. + +Once again he heard the strange sound. It was exactly the same as +before; as if some big creature was pulling itself over the floor. + +“Maybe it’s a snake; a water snake!” thought Mark. “It may have crawled +aboard when we did not notice it.” + +Then he remembered that the ship had not been open in any way that would +enable a serpent to come on it, since it had been started on its ocean +trip. Before that, he was sure no snake had entered the _Flying +Mermaid_. Still it sounded more like a snake than anything else. + +“I’m going to make a search,” decided the boy. + +He took a small portable electric light, run by a storage battery, and, +slipping on a pair of shoes and a bath robe, he left his stateroom. + +He had decided that the noise came from the storage compartment and so +made for that. The door he knew was not locked, since he had seen Mr. +Henderson go in late that afternoon, and the professor had used no key. + +Moving softly, Mark left his room and soon found himself in a corridor, +on either side of which were located the sleeping quarters of the +others. He did not want to awaken them, and, perhaps, be laughed at for +his curiosity. + +To get to the storeroom Mark had to go first from the corridor into the +dining room. He soon reached the door that guarded what he thought might +be a strange secret. Trying the knob softly he found it giving under his +fingers. + +“I wonder if I had better go in,” he thought. “Perhaps, after all, it +was only rats, as Jack said.” + +But, even as he listened he again heard the odd sound coming from the +room. This determined him. He would solve the mystery if possible. + +Cautiously he turned the knob. The door was slowly swinging open when +Mark was startled by a noise from behind him. He turned suddenly to see +Professor Henderson confronting him. + +“What is it, Mark? Is the ship on fire? What’s the matter? Is any one +hurt?” + +“I was just going in this room to——” began Mark. + +“Don’t do it! Don’t do it!” exclaimed the professor in an excited +whisper. “No one must go in that room. I forgot to tell you and Jack +about it. No one must enter. It contains a secret!” + +“I heard a strange noise and——” Mark began again. + +“It could make no noise! It would be impossible for it to make a noise!” +the professor exclaimed. + +“I heard something,” the boy insisted. + +“You were dreaming!” said the professor. “Now go back to bed, Mark, and +don’t let this happen again. Remember, no one must enter that room +unless I give permission!” + +Somewhat crestfallen at the outcome of his investigations, but realizing +that the professor could do what he wanted to aboard his own ship, Mark +went back to bed. But he could not sleep. All the rest of the night he +was wondering whether Mr. Henderson had some strange creature hidden +aboard the _Mermaid_. He feared lest the old scientist’s mind might be +affected and, in his wildness he had made some infernal machine that +would, in time, blow the whole ship apart. + +But tired nature asserted itself at last, and, weary with vain +imaginings, Mark fell into a slumber. The next morning he awoke with a +start from a dream that he was being devoured by an immense water snake. + +He said nothing to the others about his night’s adventure, for, as it +transpired, no one else had been awakened by his investigations. The +professor did not refer to his conversation with Mark. + +“There’s something queer going on aboard the ship this trip,” said Mark +to himself. “But I guess it’s none of my business. Professor Henderson +seems to know what he is doing and I guess I can trust him.” + +He resolved to think no more of the strange noises and movements, and, +for several nights thereafter he was not disturbed by them. + +The weather, which, up to this time had been fair, took a sudden turn +for the worse about the fourth day after Mark’s little night expedition. +One evening the sun sank in a mass of dull lead-colored clouds and a +sharp wind sprang up. + +“We’re going to have a storm,” said Mr. Henderson. “It’s liable to be a +bad one, too, from the way the barometer is falling.” + +He looked at the glass, and scanned the various instruments that told +how high up the _Mermaid_ was and how fast she was traveling. + +“We’re pretty high up in the air,” he said, “and scooting along at about +fifty miles an hour. We are going against the wind, too, but fortunately +it is not blowing hard.” + +At that moment there sounded from without a peculiar howling sound, as +if a siren whistle was being blown. + +“'Pears like there’s goin’ t’ be a tumultuous demonstration of +sub-maxiliary contortions in th’ empherial regions contiguous t’ th’ +upper atmosphere!” exclaimed Washington, entering from the engine room +into the conning tower. + +“What’s the trouble?” asked Mr. Henderson. + +“Terrible big black cloud chasin’ us from behind!” exclaimed the colored +man. + +Noting the alarm in Washington’s voice the professor glanced from the +rear window. What he saw caused him to exclaim: + +“It’s a cyclone! We must drop down to avoid it!” + +He sprang to a lever controlling the gas and yanked it toward him. There +was a shrill hissing sound, and a second later the _Mermaid_ began to +sink. The boys watching the gages on the wall of the tower, saw that the +craft was falling rapidly. + +But, with a rush and roar, the terrible wind was upon them. It caught +the craft in its fearful grip and heeled it over as a ship careens to +the ocean blast. + +“It’s a storm in the upper regions! We’ll find it calm below!” cried the +professor above the howling of the gale. He opened the gas outlet wider +and the ship fell more rapidly. + +“Are you sure we’re over the ocean?” asked Mark. + +“Positive!” the professor called back. “We have been traveling straight +south over the Atlantic for the last week. We will land in the midst of +the waters and float safely.” + +Lower and lower went the _Mermaid_. The wind was now blowing with the +force of a tornado, and, as the craft had to slant in order to descend, +it felt the power of the gale more than if it had scudded before it. +But, by skilful use of the directing tube, the professor was able to +keep the boat from turning over. As they came further down toward the +earth the force of the wind was felt less and less, until, as they came +within two hundred feet of the water which they saw below them in the +gathering dusk, it died out altogether. + +“Now we are free from it,” said the professor as the _Mermaid_ came down +on the waves like an immense swan. + +“Are you going ahead or going to stop here?” asked Mark. + +“We’ll keep right on,” Mr. Henderson answered. “No telling when the +storm may strike down here. We’ll go as far as we can to-night.” + + + + + CHAPTER VII + + A QUEER SAIL + + +Now that the fear and worriment was over they all began to feel hungry, +and, while Mark and Jack took charge of the conning tower Washington got +breakfast. The professor seemed preoccupied during the meal, and several +times, when Mark spoke to him, he did not reply. + +“I wonder if he is worried about something, or is thinking of something +which seems to be concealed in the storeroom,” the boy thought. + +But, after a while, the professor seemed to be more like himself. He was +busy over several maps and charts, and then announced the ship would try +air-sailing again for a while. + +“We can make better time above than we can on the water,” he said, “and +I am anxious to get to the mysterious island and learn what is in store +for us.” + +Perhaps if the professor had been able to look ahead, and see what was +soon going to happen, he would not have been so anxious for it to occur. + +It was shortly after dinner when, the gas container having been filled, +the ship rose in the air, and began sailing over the ocean, about a mile +up. The day was a fine one, and, as they were moving south, it was +constantly growing warmer. Down on the water, in fact, it was quite hot, +but in the air it was just right. + +Like some immense bird the _Mermaid_ went flying through the air. The +boys and the professor sat upon the deck in easy chairs. It was like +being on the top of some tall “sky-scraper” building which, by some +strange power, was being moved forward. Below them the ocean tumbled in +long, lazy swells. + +Suddenly Mark, who was looking through a telescope at the expanse of +water stretched out under them, gave a cry. + +“There’s a ship! She’s on fire!” + +“Where?” asked the professor, stretching out his hand for the glass. + +“Just to the port of the forward tube. See the smoke!” exclaimed Mark. + +Mr. Henderson looked. Through the lens he saw a column of black vapor +rising skyward. Mingled with it were red flames. + +“Lower the _Mermaid_!” he cried. “We must save those on board if we +can!” + +Mark ran to the conning tower, where Washington was, to give the order. +The colored man, who was looking ahead, intent on guiding the ship, did +not at first hear what Mark called. + +“Lower us! Send the _Mermaid_ down!” Mark cried again. + +The sudden shout and the excited voice of Mark so startled Washington, +that, fearing some accident had happened, he pulled the lever, +controlling the gas supply, with more force than necessary. + +There was a loud explosion, followed by a crackling sound, a flash of +light, and the _Mermaid_ came to a sudden stop. + +“What’s the matter?” cried Mark, feeling that something was wrong. + +“I don’t know!” Washington replied, as he dashed toward the engine room. + +The _Mermaid_, her forward flight checked, hung in the air, suspended, +neither rising or falling. + +“Why don’t we go on down?” the professor asked, hurrying to the tower. + +“There has been an explosion—an accident!” exclaimed Mark. “I guess we +can’t go down!” + +“But we must!” Mr. Henderson insisted, seizing the lever which should +have produced a downward motion. The handle swung to and fro. It was +disconnected from the apparatus it operated. + +The ship was now stationary in the air, moving neither forward nor +backward, neither rising nor falling. Washington had stopped the air +pumps as soon as he learned something was wrong. + +When Mr. Henderson saw the useless lever, which had controlled the +outlet of gas from the holder, he ran out on deck. One glance told him +what had happened. One of the electric wires had become +short-circuited,—that is, the insulation had worn off and allowed the +current to escape. This had produced a spark, which had exploded the gas +which was in the pipe leading from the generator up into the aluminum +holder. Fortunately there was an automatic cut-off for the supply of +vapor, or the whole tank would have gone up. + +As it was, only a small quantity had blown up, but this was enough to +break the machinery at the point where the lever in the conning tower +joined the pipe. If it had not been for the automatic cut-off all the +gas in the holder would have poured out in a great volume, and the ship +would have fallen like a shot. + +“Can we do nothing to save those on the burning vessel?” asked Mark, +pointing to where a cloud of smoke hung over the ocean. + +“I fear not, now,” answered the professor. “We are in a bad plight +ourselves.” + +“Are we in any danger?” asked Jack. + +“Not specially,” Mr. Henderson replied. “But we must find a means of +lowering ourselves gradually.” + +“Then it will be too late to save any of those on the ship,” observed +Mark. + +“I’m afraid so,” the scientist made reply. + +The _Mermaid_ rested some distance above the surface of the waters. She +moved slightly to and fro with the wind, and rocked gently. The +professor was examining the broken machinery. + +“I have a plan!” suddenly cried Mark. + +“What is it?” asked Mr. Henderson. + +“Can’t we bore a hole in the tank, insert a small faucet or tap, and let +the gas out that way gradually?” asked the boy. “When we get down we can +rescue those in danger of fire, and, later, can repair the break.” + +“The very thing!” exclaimed Mr. Henderson. “I never thought of that! +Here, Washington! Bring me a drill, and a small stop-cock!” + +The drill was obtained from the engine room. Working rapidly Mr. +Henderson bored a hole in the lower part of the holder. As soon as the +metal was penetrated the gas, which was under considerable pressure, +rushed from the tank with a hissing sound. At once the _Mermaid_ began +to settle rapidly. + +But the professor was prepared for this. He thrust the end of the +stop-cock into the hole. It was screwed fast and the valve turned. This +stopped the flow of gas and checked the descent of the ship. Then, by +opening the tap the vapor was allowed to escape gradually, bringing the +_Flying Mermaid_ gently to the water. + +As the adventurers approached they could see that the vessel was now a +mass of flames. The wind was driving the fire toward the forecastle, and +the crew had sought refuge aft. But this expedient could not last long, +for, already the tongues of fire were licking the sides of the craft and +coming nearer and nearer the seemingly doomed men. The vessel was a +large one, and heavily laden. + +As those in peril caught sight of the _Mermaid_ settling down into the +water, apparently from the clouds, their fears gave place to +astonishment. So great was this that they ceased their cries of terror. +Then, as they saw that the strange craft navigated the ocean, for the +engines were started aboard the _Mermaid_, they began to call for help. + + + + + CHAPTER VIII + + THE FLYING MERMAID DISABLED + + +“We’ll save you!” shouted Mr. Henderson, who was on the deck, while Mark +was steering the craft. “Hold on a few minutes longer and we’ll be +alongside!” + +“They’re real! They’re real!” some of those aboard the burning ship +could be heard to shout. Evidently more than one of them had taken the +_Mermaid_ for a delusion of their fear-crazed brain. + +“They are real persons!” they called again and again. “They are coming +to save us!” + +Mr. Henderson ran his ship as near the burning craft as he dared. Then +he called to the crew to leap into the water and swim to him. He, with +Washington, Jack, Bill and Tom, stood ready to haul aboard any who were +too weak to help themselves. + +In a few minutes all of those left alive on the sailing vessel—fourteen +in all—had come safely aboard the _Mermaid_. The ship was now +completely enveloped in flames. + +“Are there any more left on her?” asked Mr. Henderson of one who +appeared to be a mate of the burning craft. + +“Not a soul!” was the answer. “The captain and ten men perished in the +flames. The fire broke out a week ago in the lower hold. We fought it as +well as we could but it got the best of us. Then it suddenly broke +through the decks, almost like an explosion, a little while ago, and the +captain and others were lost, and so were our small boats. We managed to +get aft but were about to give up when you appeared.” + +“What ship is it and where are you from?” + +“The _Good Hope_, laden with logwood, hides, jute and other materials +from South America,” the mate answered. “We were bound for New York.” + +“It is more like the _Last Hope_ instead of the _Good Hope_,” observed +Mr. Henderson in a quiet voice, as he saw the flames mount higher and +higher over the ship. A few seconds later the craft seemed rent by an +internal explosion. It appeared to break in two parts, and, amid a +shower of sparks and a cloud of black smoke, the vessel sank under the +water and was seen no more. + +The rescued men turned to behold the final end of their ship. They +betrayed no particular emotion, and some of them even laughed, which the +professor thought, at the time, was rather strange. But there was little +opportunity for speculation. The men were in a sad plight. Few of them +had more than the clothes they stood in, though each one wore about his +waist a belt, and all of them seemed to guard the leather circlets +jealously. + +The professor and his crew were soon busy supplying remedies for burns, +since several of the men were seared by the flames. Then, as it was +learned they had eaten nothing for many hours, it having been impossible +to use the galley, a meal was prepared and the survivors of the wreck +were well fed. + +The hunger of the newcomers having been appeased, they showed much +curiosity over the strange craft that had so opportunely come to their +rescue. Most of the sailors were ignorant men, and the professor had +little fear of them learning anything concerning his secrets. He +explained briefly about the _Mermaid_, but said nothing of whither she +was bound. + +The addition of fourteen men to the rather small accommodations of the +_Mermaid_ was a serious matter to consider. The ship was able to hold +them all, and even to sail through the air with them, since Mr. +Henderson had provided an excess of power. But it was going to be a +problem to feed so many, and still save enough provisions for the long +voyage which lay ahead. + +However, Mr. Henderson felt his first duty to be toward his fellowmen, +even if his voyage must be delayed, or given up for a time, while he got +more provisions. There would be no sleeping quarters for the sailors, +but when this was explained to them they cheerfully said they would +sleep on deck if necessary. In fact some of them had to, but as the +weather was warm and clear this was no hardship. A few found quarters in +the engine room and other apartments of the _Mermaid_. + +Finding, after an examination, that his ship was in good order save for +the broken gas apparatus, Mr. Henderson gave orders to proceed along the +surface of the ocean. The sailors wanted to see how it felt to mount +into the air, but Mr. Henderson, refused to attempt a flight until he +had made complete repairs, and this would take a day or more. + +At this there appeared to be some discontent among the survivors, and +they muttered to each other as they stood in a group on deck. But the +professor and his assistants were too busy with their preparations for +fixing the break to notice this. + +While the men were gathered in a knot near the after part of the small +deck, the mate separated from them, and, coming close to where Mark was +standing, unscrewing some of the broken parts of the pipe said, in a low +voice. + +“Tell the captain to watch out.” + +“What do you mean?” asked Mark quickly. + +“Hush! Not so loud!” the mate exclaimed. “If the men hear me talking to +you, or see me, they may kill me. Tell the captain to look out; that’s +all. Be on guard, and watch the engine room carefully.” + +“But why—?” Mark began, when, turning suddenly, the mate left him. It +was well he did so, for, at that instant, one of the sailors, who had +observed the two conversing, strolled in their direction. + +Much alarmed, Mark sought Mr. Henderson and told him what he had heard. + +“I suppose the fire may have turned the poor man’s head,” the scientist +said. “I wonder if he thinks the men I rescued would mutiny and take +possession of my ship? If they did they would not know how to work it, +so what good would it do?” + +“Hadn’t we better look out?” asked Mark. + +“I’m not afraid,” replied the professor. “I will be too busy the next +few days, repairing the break, to think of anything else. Besides, what +would they want to harm us for? Didn’t we save their lives?” + +Seeing the scientist placed no faith in what the mate had said, Mark +went back to his task. + +It soon became too dark to work, and it was decided, after supper, to +halt the ship until morning as it would be less risky. + +Mark did not sleep well, his dreams being disturbed by visions of +pirates and black flags. But morning came and nothing had developed. The +men seemed to recover their spirits with daybreak, and most of the crew, +after breakfast, greeted Mr. Henderson pleasantly, and asked to be +allowed to help fix the ship. + +It took the skilled labor of the professor, Washington and the boys to +mend the break, and, even at that, it was four days in the repairing. +But at last the final bolt was in place, and the _Mermaid_ was able to +resume her trips through the air. + +“We will rise the first thing in the morning,” said the professor to +Mark and Jack that night. “I am anxious to see how the ship behaves with +a big load aboard.” + + + + + CHAPTER IX + + THE MUTINY + + +Mark was awakened that night by feeling some one trying to turn him +over. At first he thought it was Jack, and sleepily muttered that he +wanted to be let alone. + +“Sorry I can’t oblige ye, my hearty!” exclaimed a rough voice in his +ear, “but I got particular orders t’ tie you up!” + +At that Mark tried to sit up, but he found he could not. He discovered +that he was closely bound with many turns of a rope, while in front of +his bunk stood one of the rescued sailors. + +“There,” said the man, with a final tightening of the ropes. “I guess +you’re safe.” + +“What’s the matter? What does it all mean?” asked Mark, much bewildered. + +“It means that we have possession of the ship,” the sailor answered, +“and, if you’re wise you’ll not make a fuss. It wouldn’t do any good, +anyhow, as all your friends are in the same condition.” + +Then, picking Mark up, as if he was a baby, the man slung him over his +shoulder and carried him to the living room. There Mark saw Jack, the +professor, Washington, and the others similarly bound. + +“Do you realize what you are doing?” asked the professor angrily of his +captors. “You are mutinying, and are liable to severe punishment.” + +“If they ever get us,” added one of the men. “We’ve got the ship now, +and we mean to keep her. You’ll have to run her or show us how.” + +“Never!” cried the professor. + +“I guess he will when he feels this,” said one of the men, as he dragged +from a recess two wires. “I happen to know something of electricity, and +when he feels these perhaps he’ll change his mind. I’ll start the +dynamo.” + +The sailor showed that he was acquainted with machinery, for soon the +hum of the electric apparatus was heard. + +“Now to make him tell!” the man with the wires exclaimed, advancing +toward the professor, who turned pale. + +“Stop! You must not torture the old man!” cried a voice, and the mate of +the _Good Hope_ stepped in front of the sailor with the electrified +wires. + +“Who’s going to stop me?” asked the man. + +“I will. It’s not necessary,” the mate went on quickly. “If we make him +weak we may kill him, and he can not tell us what we want to know. One +of the boys can tell us how to run the ship.” + +The mate came quickly over to where Mark lay, and whispered: + +“Consent to tell. It is the only way of saving his life. Tell ’em how to +raise the craft. Then leave all to me. I will save you all and the ship, +too, if I can. But consent.” + +Mark nodded his head, and the mate cried: + +“I knew I could fetch ’em. I have hypnotic power. This boy will raise +the ship for us. Loosen his bonds, some of you.” + +Satisfied that they were now on the way to experiencing a new sensation, +the sailors took the ropes off Mark’s arms and legs, and he was allowed +to rise. With a reassuring nod toward the professor he led the way to +the engine room, followed by half the men. He resolved to start the gas +machine slowly, so as to make the upward trip last longer, thinking +before it had gone far, some way of escape from the mutineers might be +found. + +While a crowd of the sailors stood near him, Mark operated the machinery +in the engine room that started the gas generating, and set the negative +gravity apparatus working. + +“You’d better not try any tricks on us,” said one of the men in an ugly +tone of voice. + +“I’m not going to,” replied Mark. “If you go out on deck you will soon +see the ship leaving the water and mounting into the air.” + +“Some of you go,” ordered a man with a big bushy red beard. “See if the +ship rises. When she begins to go up sing out. I’m going to stay here +and see how the young cub does it so I can work it myself.” + +Obeying the red-bearded man, who seemed to be a leader, several of the +sailors went out on the deck. It was quite dark, but there was a +phosphorous glow to the water which made the rolling waves visible. + +The gas was being generated, as could be told by the hissing sound. Mark +watched the machinery anxiously, for he knew much depended on him, and +the professor was not at hand to guide and instruct him. He watched the +dial of the gage which registered the gas pressure and saw it slowly +moving. In a little while it would be at the point at which the ship +ought to rise. + +Presently a quiver seemed to run through the _Mermaid_. Now a shout came +from the watchers on deck. + +“She’s going up!” + +The ship was indeed rising. The red-bearded man, who was addressed as +Tony, ran from the engine room to the deck. He saw that the ship was now +ten feet above the water. Back he came to where Mark stood by the gas +machine. + +“Lucky for you that you didn’t fool us, lad,” he said with a leer. “See +that you mind me hereafter. Now show me how the shebang works.” + +When the ship had risen as far as Tony desired he made Mark send it +straight ahead. The boy adjusted the air tube to carry the craft toward +the south, but Tony, seeing by a compass in which direction they were +headed, ordered Mark to steer due east. + +“Fix things so they will stay so, too,” added Tony. “I don’t want to +stop until I get a thousand miles away. Then we’ll come down, sail to +some sunny island, and enjoy life.” + +Mark locked the steering apparatus so as to keep the _Mermaid_ headed +due east. + +“Now you can go back to your friends,” Tony said. “When I want you I’ll +send for you.” + +With a heavy heart Mark rejoined the professor and others. He found them +with their bonds removed. But to guard against their escape several men +were on watch outside the door. + +“What are they doing?” asked the professor eagerly as Mark entered, and +the boy told him what had taken place. + +“They will ruin my ship and spoil the whole trip,” cried the old +scientist. “Oh, why did I ever go to the rescue of the scoundrels?” + +“Never mind,” said Jack. “Perhaps we may yet outwit them.” + +Morning came at last. The ship was still shooting forward at fast speed, +in an easterly direction. The sailors had learned, in their short stay +aboard, where the food and stores were kept, and they lost little time +in getting breakfast. They sent some in to their captives, including a +big pot of hot coffee, and, after partaking of this the professor and +his friends felt better. + +The mate of the _Good Hope_ came in to help clear away the dishes. As he +passed Mark he slipped into the boy’s hand a note. + +“Don’t read it until you are alone,” he said in a low voice, as he +hurried from the room. + +As soon as the other sailors had left, Mark glanced at the slip of +paper. It bore these words: + +“Open when you hear three raps, then two, then three, and keep silent.” + +“What is it?” asked Mr. Henderson. + +Mark showed him the paper. + +“I wonder what it means,” the boy said. + +“Do you think he is a friend of ours?” the professor asked. + +Mark told him of the mate’s conversation the night previous. + +“I think we can trust him,” the scientist went on. “He must intend to +pay us a visit when the others are asleep. When we hear the knocks as he +specifies we must open the door and let him in.” + +All that day the captives were kept in the living room. Once or twice +Mark was sent for to make some adjustment to the machinery, but the +apparatus, for the most part, was automatic, and needed little +attention. The professor, as well as the others, were all impatience for +the promised visit of the mate. Still they felt he would not come until +night. + +In fact it was long past midnight before Mark, Jack and the professor, +who were anxiously listening, heard the three raps, then two, then three +more. Mark quickly opened the door, and the mate stepped inside, holding +his finger to his lips as a sign of caution. Old Andy, Washington, Bill +and Tom had fallen asleep. + +“I have only time for a few words,” the mate said. “I am closely +watched. Tony mistrusts me. I will save you if I can.” + +“Why have they repaid my kindness with such actions?” asked Mr. +Henderson. + +“Because they are desperate men,” replied the mate. “They are nothing +more than pirates. They mutinied on the other ship, killed the captain +and those of the crew who would not join them, and started off to seek +their fortunes. I pretended to join them to save my life, but I have +only been watching for a chance to escape. + +“Because of lax discipline the ship was sent on fire. We tried to put it +out but could not. The rest you know. + +“I heard them plan to capture this airship, but could do nothing to stop +them. Then I resolved to pretend to act with them. They fear pursuit for +their other mutiny, and are anxious to get as far away as possible.” + +“Do you think they will abandon the ship in a little while?” asked the +professor hopefully. + +“I’m afraid not,” answered the mate. “I think they want to get rid of +all of you, so they can sail about as they please. Tony is a smart man. +He could soon learn to run this ship, he thinks.” + +“I doubt it,” Mr. Henderson answered. “But how are you going to help +us?” + +“I have not fully made up my plans,” the mate answered. “However I +wanted you to know I would do my best to save you. Now I must go. Be on +the watch and when I can I will let you know what I have decided on. I +will hand Mark a note when I bring your meals, just as I did to-day. I +think——” + +“Hark! What was that?” asked the professor. + +There was a noise outside the door, as if some one was listening. + +“Put out the lights!” whispered the mate, and Jack switched off the +electric incandescents. + +A knock sounded on the door and the voice of Tony called: + +“Mark! Come here! I want you to look at the gas machine. It has stopped +working, and we are falling!” + + + + + CHAPTER X + + FOOLING THEIR ENEMIES + + +Mark hurried into the corridor, taking care to close the door after him, +so Tony could get no glimpse of the mate who had risked so much to save +his friends. But he need not have been alarmed for the leader of the +mutineers was too excited over the stopping of the gas apparatus to give +any heed to who was in with the captives. + +“Do you think you can fix it?” he asked the boy. + +“I guess so,” Mark replied confidently. “If I can’t there is no danger, +for we will fall gradually and land in the water.” + +“But I don’t want to do that,” Tony objected. “I want to keep on through +the air.” + +Mark did not reply. By this time he was at the gas machine. He soon saw +nothing was the matter save that new material must be placed in the +retort where the vapor was generated. He refilled it, the gas was +manufactured once more, and the ship began to rise. + +“I will know how to do it next time,” Tony said with a grin. Mark +realized that every time he showed the leader of the mutineers something +about the ship it was putting the professor and his friends more and +more into the power of the scoundrels. But there was no help for it. + +The ship was still plunging ahead, and kept about a mile above the +earth. As there was no further need of Mark, he was told he could go +back to his friends. When he reached the room where they were held +prisoners, he found the mate had gone away, promising again to do all he +could for them. + +The next night, which it seemed would never come, for the day, locked as +the captives were in their room, seemed endless, finally closed in. +Mark, Jack and the professor were anxious to know whether the mate would +pay them another visit. As for Andy, Tom and Bill, while they were +interested in the ship, and wanted to be free from the power of the +mutineers, they did not lose any sleep over it. + +Shortly after midnight, there came again the peculiar knock, and the +mate entered the room. He seemed much excited over something, and, as +soon as the portal was securely closed he said to Professor Henderson: + +“Is there an island any where near here where men could live for a +time?” + +“What do you mean?” asked the scientist. “Do you want us to desert the +ship and leave these scoundrels in charge?” + +“Nothing of the sort,” replied the mate, who, had said his name was Jack +Rodgers. “But first answer my question. A great deal may depend on it.” + +Seeing Rodgers was in earnest, the professor looked over some maps and +charts, and announced that they were within a few hundred miles of a +group of islands. + +“When would we reach them?” was Rodgers’ next question. + +Mr. Henderson made a few rapid calculations on a piece of paper. + +“At the present rate of sailing,” he said, “we should be there about ten +o’clock to-morrow. That is, provided the ship does not slacken speed or +increase it.” + +“There is no danger of either of those two things happening,” said the +mate. “Tony is too afraid of the machinery to do anything to it. So you +may safely figure that our speed will continue the same.” + +“Then I can guarantee, with all reasonable certainty,” the professor +said, “that about ten o’clock to-morrow we will be less than a mile from +the islands. They are a group where friendly natives live, and where +many tropical fruits abound. One could scarcely select a better place to +be shipwrecked. But I hope the plans of Tony and his friends do not +include landing us there.” + +“No, nothing like that,” the mate answered. “Quite the contrary. But I +had better be going. I will try and see Mark some time to-morrow. Tony +does not mind when I speak to him.” + +With this Rodgers left the captives, as he heard some of the sailors +moving about and did not want to be discovered. The professor and the +boys wondered what the mate’s plan might be, but they had to be content +to wait and see. + +The night passed without incident. About nine o’clock the next morning +the mate came to the door of the room where the professor and his +friends were prisoners. He made no secret of his approach, but knocked +boldly. + +“Tell Mark I want to see him,” he said, as the professor answered. “All +of you keep quiet,” he added in a whisper. “There may be good news +soon.” + +Mark slipped from the room. He followed the mate to the upper deck +which, at that time was deserted as all the sailors were in the dining +room eating, which practice they indulged in as often as they could. + +“I have a plan to get rid of these rough men,” the mate said to Mark. +“It may work, and, again it may not. At any rate it is worth trying. It +all depends on you with what help I can give you.” + +“I’m willing to do my share,” Mark said, and for the next ten minutes +the boy and the mate were in earnest conversation. + +It was about thirty-five minutes later when there arose a sudden +commotion in the ship. Mark had returned to his friends and the mate had +disappeared. The confusion seemed to come from the engine room where +Tony had posted some of his men. + +“We’re falling down! We’ll all be killed!” shouted the men. “The ship is +falling into the sea!” + +“What is the trouble?” asked the professor as he heard the commotion. + +“It is part of the mate’s plan,” said Mark. “He told me to tell you to +do nothing. If Tony or any of the other men come to you just refer them +to me.” + +Two minutes later Tony came rushing into the apartment where the +captives were held prisoners. + +“Here! Come quickly, Mark!” he exclaimed. “Something has gone wrong with +the gas machine again, and you must come and fix it before we are all +dashed to pieces!” + +With every appearance of haste Mark rushed from the apartment, following +Tony. The latter led the way to the engine room. + +“Can anything be done?” he asked. + +Mark took a survey of the machinery. + +“It is too late,” he said as though much excited. “The ship is falling +down toward the sea with terrific force.” + +It needed but a glance at the height gage to show this. The pointer was +revolving rapidly about the face of the dial. + +“Will the ship stand the blow?” asked Tony. + +“Not at the rate it is falling,” replied Mark. “She will go all to +pieces when she strikes the water, and she may explode!” + +“What are we to do then?” asked the leader of the mutineers. + +“We must save ourselves!” cried the mate, running in at this juncture. +“Let our prisoners shift for themselves as best they can. Let’s all leap +into the sea. There we at least have a chance for our lives. But if we +stay on this ship we will all be drowned like cats in a bag.” + +“What do you propose?” asked Tony, his face white with fear. + +“When the ship comes near enough the surface of the water to make it +safe we should all drop overboard!” the mate exclaimed. “We are near +some islands, I understand, and we can thus save our lives by swimming +ashore.” + +This plan seemed to meet with instant favor, and a little later there +was a rush for the deck, as each one wished to be the first to escape +from the boat they believed to be doomed. + +Lower and lower fell the _Mermaid_. She was like a wounded bird which +the shot of the hunter has crippled. Down and down she fluttered. + +By this time all the sailors, save the mate were on deck. He and Mark +remained in the engine room. + +“Don’t let her get too low,” the mate whispered. + +“I’ll watch out,” Mark replied. “I want to give them a good scare while +I’m at it.” + +The ship was now within fifty feet of the water. There was a cry of +terror from the sailors. Some of them leaped over the rail and started +to swim ashore, as the ship was by this time close to a group of +islands. + +Suddenly, from the engine room the mate rushed. + +“Jump! Jump for your lives!” he exclaimed. “The ship is about to blow +up!” + + + + + CHAPTER XI + + MYSTERIOUS HAPPENINGS + + +The voice of the mate echoed through the _Mermaid_. Those on deck heard +it, as did Tony in the engine room, where he was vainly trying to +understand the complicated machinery. + +An instant later there sounded from beneath the ship a series of +splashes. More sailors were leaping from the deck of the craft to the +ocean. The distance was not great, particularly as they all landed in +water. + +“Quick!” cried the mate to a group of sailors that hesitated before +taking the jump. “The ship may blow up any minute now.” + +The men needed no second urging. As soon as they struck the water they +began to swim ashore, as it was not far away. One after another they +jumped over the rail. Tony was the last to go. He urged the captives to +follow him, but they all refused. + +A minute later the only one of the pirate crew left on the ship was the +mate. The others were all struggling in the sea. Eventually they all +reached shore in safety. + +The airship was now within about twenty feet of the water. It was still +falling but not so rapidly. + +“Better send her up, now,” said the mate to Mark, and the boy turned the +necessary levers to accomplish this. + +Dipping into the water as a sea gull does when searching for food on the +wing, for she had come quite low, the _Mermaid_ mounted once more into +the air, and was soon sailing along over the heads of Tony and his gang. + +“What’s it all about?” asked Mr. Henderson, who seemed in a sort of +stupor. “I thought the ship was broken. How, then, can it rise?” + +“It was only a trick of mine,” Rodgers said. “The gas machine is not +broken. I had Mark fix it so that only a little vapor would be +generated. When the supply in the holder was not enough, and no more was +being made, the ship had to sink. Mark and I pretended it was worse than +it really was just to scare the scoundrels.” + +“And you evidently succeeded,” observed Mr. Henderson. “They have all +left us. I am glad you stayed.” + +“So am I,” said Rodgers. “I was just waiting for a chance to escape from +that crowd. This was the plan I thought of that night. I wanted to see +the men put on some island where they could manage to live, and which +was not too far away.” + +The _Mermaid_ was now mounting upward rapidly, as Mark had adjusted the +machinery properly. The craft was well rid of the pirate crew, and was +able to proceed on its way, and enable Mr. Henderson to carry out his +plans. + +When the _Mermaid_ had reached a certain height her prow was turned the +other way, and she was sent back racing over the ground she had just +covered. But now the ship was in the hands of friends. Fortunately no +great damage had been done by the sailors, and the professor was soon +able to get things in ship-shape. The engines had not been molested and +were working better than ever. + +“Now to make another attempt to reach the big hole in the earth,” the +professor cried. “We will be careful next time, who we rescue from ships +at sea.” + +The island was soon left behind, becoming a mere speck on the ocean. +Those aboard the _Mermaid_ knew no harm could befall the sailors, as +there were no savage tribes on the little spot of land. Eventually the +sailors were picked up by a passing vessel and taken to their homes. The +story of their first mutiny leaked out and they were properly punished. + +It required several days travel before the airship regained the distance +she had lost because of the plans of the pirates. Also, there were a +number of minor repairs to make, and the professor and his friends were +kept busy. + +“How much longer before we come to the big hole?” asked Jack, one day. + +“I think we ought to be near it in about two weeks,” the professor +replied. “I only hope we shall not be disappointed, and will be able to +explore it.” + +“'Tain’t goin’ t’ be no fun t’ be decimated an’ expurgitated inter a +conglomerous aggregation of elements constituting th’ exterior portion +of human anatomy,” said Washington in dubious tones. + +“You mean you’re afraid of being boiled in the steam from the big hole?” +asked Mark. + +“Jest so,” replied the colored man. + +“You don’t need to worry about that,” put in the professor. “I will not +take the ship down if there is any danger, though of course there will +be some risk.” + +The ship, having been fully repaired, was now able to be speeded up, and +was sent scudding along toward her destination. Rodgers proved a +valuable acquisition toward the crew, for he had sailed many years in +the waters over which they were flying, and was able to give the +professor many valuable hints. He had heard vague stories of the island +with the big hole, but had never been near it. He did not make the trip +however, as, at his request, he was put off at an inhabited island one +night. + +It was about a week after the sailors were frightened from the ship, +that a curious experience befell Mark. Washington was on duty in the +conning tower, attending to the apparatus as the ship flew through the +air, and all the others had gone to bed. Mark had remained up, later +than the others as he was interested in reading a book on science. + +About ten o’clock he became hungry, and going to the pantry got some +bread and cold meat. He set these on a table, and then, remembering he +would need some water to drink, started after some in the cooler, which +was in a little room near the tower. + +Washington heard the boy as he turned the faucet to draw the liquid, and +spoke to him, as the colored man was rather lonesome at his post. Mark +did not linger more than a minute or two, but when he returned to where +he had left the food he was much surprised. + +There was not a trace of it to be seen. The dishes were on the table, +but every vestige of bread and meat had disappeared. + +“I wonder if a cat or dog has been here,” was Mark’s first thought. Then +he remembered that no such animals were aboard the _Mermaid_. + +Something on the floor caught his eye. He stooped and picked it up. It +was a slice of bread, but in such shape that the boy stared at it, +puzzled as to how it could have become so. + +It was flattened out quite thin, but the strangest part of it was that +it bore what seemed to be the marks of thumb and fingers from a very +large hand. So big, in fact, was the print, that Mark’s hand scarce +covered half of it, and, where the bread had been squeezed into a putty +like mass (for it was quite fresh) the peculiar markings on the skin of +the tips of the fingers were visible. + +“It looks as if a giant grabbed this slice of bread,” Mark observed. +“There are strange happenings aboard this ship. I wish I knew what they +meant.” + +He looked all around for the food, thinking perhaps a rat had dragged it +off, but there was no trace of it. + +Suddenly the boy thought he heard a sound from the big storeroom. He was +almost sure he heard something moving in there. He started toward the +door when he was stopped by hearing the professor’s voice call: + +“Don’t open that door, Mark. Have I not told you that place must not be +entered?” + +“I thought I heard some one in there,” Mark replied. + +“There is nothing in there but some apparatus of mine,” Mr. Henderson +said. “I want no one to see it. What is the matter?” + +Mark explained matters to the scientist, who had, as he said later, +arisen on hearing the boy moving about. + +“Oh, it was a rat that took your stuff,” Mr. Henderson said. “I guess +there are some pretty big ones on the ship. Get some more food and go to +sleep.” + +Mark felt it best to obey, though he was by no means satisfied with the +professor’s explanation. He listened intently to see if any more noises +came from the storeroom, but none did, and he went to bed. + +Several times after that Mark tried the experiment of leaving food +about. On each occasion it was taken. + +“It looks as if the ship was haunted,” he said. “Of course I know it +isn’t, but it’s very queer. They must be strange rats that can get food +from shelves when there is only the smooth side of the ship to climb +up,” for on some occasions Mark had tried the experiment of putting the +food as nearly out of reach as possible. + +It took several nights to learn all this, and, as he did not want to +take any one into his confidence, he had to work in secret. But, with +all his efforts he learned nothing, save that there was something odd +about the ship that he could not fathom. + +At first he believed the professor had some strange animal concealed in +the storeroom, but he dismissed this idea almost as soon as he thought +of it. For what could the scientist want with an animal when they were +going to the interior of the earth? That some beast had slipped aboard +was out of the question. Mark was much puzzled, but finally, deciding +the matter did not concern him a great deal, gave up trying to solve the +mystery, at least for a time. + +The ship was now in the neighborhood of the equator and the climate had +become much warmer. So hot indeed were some nights that they slept out +on deck, with the _Mermaid_ flying through the air at a moderate pace, +for it was deemed best not to go at any great speed after dark. + +One night the professor, after consulting various charts and maps, and +making calculations which covered several sheets of paper announced: + +“We should sight the mysterious island to-morrow.” + +“That’s good news!” exclaimed Jack. “I’m anxious to see what’s below +inside of that big hole.” + +“Everybody git ready for their funerals!” exclaimed Washington in a deep +voice. “I ain’t got many——” + +“Cheer up,” interrupted Jack, poking Washington in the ribs. The colored +man was very ticklish, and he began to laugh heartily, though, perhaps, +he did not feel like it. + +Suddenly, above the sound of his shouts, there came a crashing, grinding +noise from the engine room. + + + + + CHAPTER XII + + THE BIG HOLE + + +“Something has gone wrong!” exclaimed the professor as he jumped up. He +reached the engine room ahead of any one else, and when the two boys got +there they found him busy twisting wheels and shifting levers. + +“Anything serious?” asked Jack. + +“It’s the gas machine again,” Mr. Henderson replied. “It broke where we +fixed it. However it doesn’t matter. I was going to lower the ship +anyhow, as I want to approach the island from the water. We will go down +a little sooner than I counted on.” + +The disabling of the gas machine caused the vapor to escape slowly from +the tank, and this made the ship sink gradually. By means of the +emergency stop-cock the descent could be controlled almost as well as +though the machinery was in working order. Half an hour later the +_Mermaid_ rested on the water. + +It was a little rough, as there was quite a swell on, and not so +pleasant as floating in the air on an even keel, but they made the best +of it. + +On account of the little accident, and not being certain of its extent, +it was deemed best not to send the ship ahead. So they laid to until +morning. + +For the better part of two days all those on board the _Mermaid_ had +their hands full mending the break and making other repairs found +necessary. In that time they lay to, floating idly with the currents, or +blown by the wind, for the professor would not start any of the engines +or apparatus until the ship was in good condition. + +In this time Mark had several times recalled the curious happenings in +regard to the disappearing food, and the mystery of the storeroom. But +there were no further manifestations, and no other signs that there +might be a strange visitor aboard. + +“I couldn’t have imagined it all,” said Mark, “but I guess what did +happen may have been caused by natural means, only I can’t discover +them.” + +It was about two days after this, the ship having sailed scores of miles +on the surface of the water, that Mark, who was in the conning tower +exclaimed: + +“That looks like a waterspout ahead of us.” + +“That’s what it is!” Jack agreed. “What shall we do?” + +“Call the professor!” said Mark. “He’ll know.” + +When Mr. Henderson came, he looked for a long time at a cloud of black +vapor which hung low in the east. + +“It may be a waterspout,” he said. “We’ll rise in the air and see if we +can avoid it.” + +The ship was sent up into the air. As it rose higher and higher, the +professor, making frequent observations from his conning tower, cried +out: + +“That is no waterspout!” + +“What is it?” asked Mark. + +“It is the steam and vapor rising from the big hole in the earth! Boys, +we are almost there!” + +“Are you sure that’s it?” asked Mark. + +“Almost positive,” Mr. Henderson replied. “You can see how much warmer +it has become of late, as we approached the equator. We are almost due +at the island, and I have no doubt we have reached it.” + +As the ship flew forward the mass of dark vapor became more pronounced. +Through the glasses it could be noticed to consist of rolling masses of +clouds. What lay beneath them no one knew. The adventurers were going to +try to find out. + +Now that they had arrived at the beginning of the main part of their +journey, the travelers felt their spirits sink a little. It was one +thing to plan to go down into the depths of the earth, but it was quite +another to make the actual attempt. Still, they were not going to give +up the project. The professor had confidence in his ship and believed it +could safely make the trip. Still it was with no little apprehension +that Mr. Henderson watched the nearer approach of the craft to that +strange island. + +“Perfesser, are yo’ really an’ truly goin’ t’ depress this elongated +spheroid an’ its human consignment int’ that conglomerous convoluted +mass of gaseous vapor regardless of th’ consequences?” asked Washington, +as he gazed with wide opened eyes at the sight before him. + +“If you mean am I going to let the _Mermaid_ go down into that hole you +are perfectly correct,” the scientist answered, “though you could have +said it in fewer words, Washington.” + +“I—I guess I’ll get out an’ walk,” the colored man made reply. + +“This isn’t any trolley car,” observed Mark. “Don’t lose your nerve, +Wash. Stay with us, and we’ll discover a gold or diamond mine, maybe.” + +“Is there diamonds down there?” asked the colored man, his fright +seeming to leave him. + +“There are all sorts of things inside the earth,” the professor +answered. + +“Then I’m goin’ along!” Washington declared. “I always did want a +diamond ring, an’ I knows a little colored gal that wants one, too. I’m +goin’ all right! This suttenly am th’ most kloslosterous conjunctivity +of combativeness that I ever sagaciated!” and he began to do a sort of +impromptu cake-walk. + + + + + CHAPTER XIII + + DOWN INTO THE EARTH + + +It was now noon, but the adventurers did not think of dinner in the +excitement of approaching the mysterious island. The speed of the ship +was increased that they might the more quickly come to it. As they +approached they could see the masses of vapor more plainly, and it +appeared that some great commotion must be going on inside the big hole, +since clouds of steam arose. + +“I only hope it doesn’t prove too hot for us,” observed the professor. +“However, I provided a water jacket for the ship, and we may need it, as +well as the vacuum chambers to keep the heat from us.” + +It was about three o’clock when the flying ship reached the edge of the +island. From there it was about a mile to the rim of the big hole, over +one side of which the waters of the ocean poured with a roar that could +be heard over half a mile off. + +“I think we had better halt and see that everything is in good shape +before proceeding,” said Mr. Henderson. “Jack, you and Mark make a +thorough inspection of the engine room, and see that all the apparatus +is in working order.” + +The two boys prepared to do as they were told. Mark, who was walking a +little ahead of Jack, entered the apartment from which the storeroom +opened. As he did so he saw, or thought he saw, the door of the place +where the extra supplies were kept, close. Without saying anything to +Jack he hurried forward, and tried the knob. It would not turn. + +“That’s funny,” said Mark to himself. “I could almost swear I saw some +one go into that room. Yet I know the professor did not enter, for I +just left him. And none of the others would dare to. I wonder if I will +ever solve the mystery.” + +But he had too much to do to allow him to dwell on that matter. Several +of the dynamos needed adjusting and for two hours he and Jack had all +they could do. + +In the meanwhile the professor had gone over the other parts of the +ship, and gotten everything in readiness for the descent. The _Mermaid_ +was lowered to within a few hundred feet of the sea, and, through a hose +that was let down, the compartments, provided for this emergency were +filled with water. These compartments were between the outer and inner +hulls of the lower part of the craft, and were designed to prevent the +interior becoming heated in case the travelers found they had to pass +close to fire. There were also vacuum chambers, and from these the air +was exhausted, as of course every schoolboy knows a vacuum is a +non-conductor of either heat or cold. + +“Now I think we are ready,” the professor announced at length. + +“Everything’s all right in the engine room,” announced Jack. + +“Yes, an’ everything’s all right in th’ kitchen,” put in Washington. +“I’ve got a good meal ready as soon as any one wants to eat.” + +“It will have to wait a while,” Mr. Henderson remarked. “We are going to +start to make the descent before we dine.” + +The hose was reeled up, and the ship was sent a few hundred feet higher +into the air, as Mr. Henderson wanted to take a last good observation +before he went down into the hole. + +But having risen some distance above the masses of rolling vapors he +found he was at no advantage, since the strongest telescope he could +bring to bear could not pierce the cloud masses. + +“We’ll just have to trust to luck,” the scientist said. “I judge we’re +about over the centre of the opening. Lower away Mark!” + +The boy, who, under the watchful eye of the professor, was manipulating +the levers and wheels in the conning tower, shifted some handles. The +gas was expelled from the holder, the negative gravity apparatus ceased +to work, and the _Flying Mermaid_ sank lower and lower, toward the +mysterious hole that yawned beneath her. + +The hearts of all beat strangely, if not with fear, at least with +apprehension, for they did not know what they might encounter. Perhaps +death in some terrible form awaited them. But the desire to discover +something new and strange had gripped all of them, and not one would +have voted to turn back. + +Even old Andy, who seldom got excited, was in unusual spirits. He took +down his gun and remarked: + +“Maybe I can kill some new kind of animal, and write a book about its +habits, for surely we will see strange beasts in the under-world.” + +Lower and lower sank the ship. Now it was amid the first thin masses of +vapors, those that floated highest and were more like a light fog, than +anything else. By means of a window in the bottom of the craft, which +window was closed by a thick piece of plate glass, Professor Henderson +could look down and see what was beneath them. + +“The clouds seem to be getting thicker,” he said, as he peered through +the small casement. “If they would only clear away we could see +something.” + +But instead of doing this the vapors accumulated more thickly about the +ship. It was so dark inside the _Mermaid_ now that the electric lights +had to be switched on. In the room with the floor-window the lights were +not used, as had they shone one could not have seen down below. + +The professor maintained his position. The descent was a perilous one, +and he wanted to be on the watch to check it at once if the _Mermaid_ +was liable to dash upon some pointed rock or fall into some fiery pit. +His hand was on the signal levers. + +Suddenly he looked up and glanced at a gage on the wall. The hand of it +was slowly revolving. + +“We are at the earth’s surface,” the scientist said. “Now we are below +it. Now we are fairly within the big hole! Boys, we may be on the verge +of a great discovery!” + +An instant later it seemed as if a hot wave had struck the _Mermaid_, or +as if the craft had been plunged into boiling water. + +“It’s going to be hot!” cried the professor. “Lucky I provided the water +jackets!” + +Then the lights in the interior of the ship went out, leaving the whole +craft in darkness. + +“What has happened?” cried Mark. + + + + + CHAPTER XIV + + MANY MILES BELOW + + +“Don’t be alarmed,” spoke the calm voice of the professor. “I have only +turned off the electrics. I want to switch on the search lights, to see +if we can learn anything about our position.” + +As he spoke he turned a switch, and, the gloom below the ship, as the +boys could see by glimpses from the floor-window, was pierced by a +dazzling glare. In the bottom of the _Mermaid_ were set a number of +powerful electric arc lights with reflectors, constructed to throw the +beams downward. The professor had built them in for just this emergency, +as he thought that at some time they might want to illuminate what was +below the craft. + +Not that it was of much avail on this occasion, for, though the lights +were powerful, they could not pierce the miles of gloom that lay below +them. The beams only served to accentuate the darkness. + +“I guess we’ll have to trust to luck,” the professor said, after a vain +attempt, by means of powerful glasses, to distinguish something. “There +is too much fog and vapor.” + +“What makes it so warm?” asked Mark, removing his coat. + +“Well, you must remember you are approaching the interior of the earth,” +the professor answered. “It has been calculated that the heat increases +one degree for every fifty-five feet you descend. We have come down +several hundred feet and of course it is getting warmer.” + +“Then if we go down very far it will get so hot we will not be able to +stand it,” Jack put in. + +“I do not believe we will suffer any great inconvenience,” Mr. Henderson +went on. “I believe that after we pass a certain point it will become +cooler. I think the inner fires of the earth are more or less heated gas +in a sort of inner chamber between two shells. If we can pass the second +shell, we will be all right.” + +“But aren’t we liable to hit something, going down into the dark this +way?” asked Mark. + +“We will guard ourselves as far as possible,” the scientist answered. + +The _Mermaid_ seemed to be going down on a side of the immense shaft a +good way distant from the strange waterfall. When they had first dropped +into the hole the travelers could hear the rush of waters, but now the +noise was not audible. + +“I think the hole must widen out the farther down we go,” the professor +said. “We are probably many miles from the fall now.” + +“I’m sure I hope so,” put in Jack. “It would be no fun to have to take a +shower bath in this place.” + +After a meal, the boys and the professor took some more observations, +but with all their efforts nothing could be seen below the ship but a +vast black void, into which they were steadily descending. + +“I wonder when we’re going to stop,” asked Mark. “It’s like playing the +game ‘Going to Jerusalem,’ you keep wondering when the music will cease +and you will have a chance to grab a chair. I only hope we have a chair +or something else to sit on, in case we go to smash.” + +“We’re not liable to have any accidents with the professor in charge,” +Jack answered. “Didn’t he bring us safe out of some pretty tight holes +when we went to the north pole in the airship, and again when we found +the south pole in the submarine?” + +“Yes, but this is different,” objected Mark. + +“Well, I’m not worrying,” Jack went on. “It doesn’t do any good, and +only makes you lie awake nights. By the way, I wonder what time it is +getting to be.” + +He looked at his watch and found it was close on to eight o’clock in the +evening. So late had dinner been served, and so varied were the +happenings of the last few hours, that time had passed quickly. + +“Why it’s almost bed-time,” said Jack. “I wonder if we are to go on +dropping into the depths of nowhere all night.” + +At that moment the professor entered the room where the boys were. He +seemed quite pleased over something, and was smiling. + +“Everything is going along famously,” he said. “I have just tested the +air and find it is rich in oxygen. We shall suffer nothing on that +score. The heat too, seems to have decreased. On the whole, everything +favors us.” + +“Are we going on down?” asked Mark. + +“As far as we can,” Mr. Henderson answered. “Let me see how far we are +below now.” + +He went to the gage that indicated the vertical position of the ship. +Because of the changed conditions, the craft now sinking below the +surface of the earth instead of rising above it, as was its wont, some +calculations were necessary. These the scientist made as quickly as he +could. + +“We are now ten miles underground!” he exclaimed. “That is doing very +well. My theories are working out. I think we shall land somewhere +before long.” + +“I hopes so!” exclaimed Washington coming in at this point. “I’m mighty +skeered shootin’ down int’ this dark hole, and no time-table t’ show +when we’s due t’ arrive.” + +“We ought to land in a couple of days more,” the professor answered. +“Never mind about worrying Washington, I’ll take care of you.” + +“I hopes so, Perfesser,” the colored man said. “I got a little girl +waitin’ for me back in Georgia, an’ I’d like t’ see her 'fore I git +burned up.” + +Accompanied by the professor, the boys made a tour of the ship to see +that all the machinery and apparatus were in working order. Owing to the +changed conditions the negative gravity engine had to be worked at +faster speed than usual, since the downward pull of the earth was +greater the farther they descended into the interior and they did not +want to fall too swiftly. But this was easily provided for, since the +professor had made the apparatus capable of standing a great strain. + +The ten miles had become fourteen when the professor, finding that +everything was in good shape, proposed that the boys go to bed. They did +not want to, though they were sleepy, and they feared to miss some +strange sights. + +But when the professor had promised to call them in case anything +unusual developed, they consented to turn in, and Bill and Tom assumed +their duties, which were light enough, now that the ship was merely +falling into the immense shaft. + +When Mark turned into his bunk he could not go to sleep at once. It may +have been the excitement over their new position, or because he had +eaten too hearty a supper, but the fact was he remained awake for some +time. + +While thus tossing restlessly on his bed, wondering what ailed him, he +thought he heard a noise in the main apartment out of which the +storeroom opened. He crawled softly from his bed, and looked from his +stateroom door. + +In the light of a shaded electric Mark saw the figure of some one glide +across the floor and take refuge in the room, which Professor Henderson +always was so particular about. + +“I wonder what or who that was,” reasoned Mark. “There is some mystery +in this. Can the professor have concealed some one on this ship whose +presence he does not want to admit? It certainly looks so.” + +Not wanting to awaken the ship’s crew, and remembering what Mr. +Henderson had said about any one entering the storeroom, Mark went back +to bed, to fall into an uneasy slumber. + +“Breakfast!” called Washington breaking in on a fine dream Jack was +having about being captain of a company of automobile soldiers. “Last +call for breakfast!” + +“Hello! Is it morning?” asked Jack. + +“Not so’s you could notice it,” Washington went on. “It’s as dark as a +stack of black cats and another one throwed in. But breakfast is ready +jest the same.” + +The boys were soon at the table, and learned that nothing of importance +had occurred during the night. The _Mermaid_ had been kept going slowly +down, and about seven o’clock registered more than fifty miles below the +earth’s surface. + +Still there was no change in the outward surroundings. It remained as +black as the interior of Egypt when that country was at its darkest. The +powerful electrics could not pierce the gloom. The ship was working +well, and the travelers were very comfortable. + +Down, down, down, went the _Mermaid_. The temperature, which had risen +to about ninety went back to sixty-nine, and there seemed to be no more +danger from the inner fires. + +They were now a hundred miles under the surface. But still the professor +kept the _Mermaid_ sinking. Every now and again he would take an +observation, but only found the impenetrable darkness surrounded them. + +“We must arrive somewhere, soon,” he muttered. + +It was about six o’clock that night that the alarm bell set up a sudden +ringing. The professor who was making some calculations on a piece of +paper jumped to his feet, and so did a number of the others. + +“We are nearing the bottom!” he cried. “The bell has given us warning!” + + + + + CHAPTER XV + + IN THE STRANGE DRAUGHT + + +The boys ran to attend to the engines and apparatus to which they had +been assigned in view of this emergency. The professor, Washington, +Bill, Tom and Andy, who had kept to themselves since the descent, came +running out of the small cabin where they usually sat, and wanted to +know what it was all about. + +“We may hit something, in spite of all precautions,” Mr. Henderson +remarked. “Slow down the ship.” + +The _Mermaid_ was, accordingly checked in her downward flight, by a +liberal use of the gas and the negative gravity machine. + +The bell continued to ring, and the dials pointed to the mark that +indicated the ship was more than one hundred and fifty miles down. + +Mark, who had run to the engine room to check the descent, came back. + +“Why didn’t you slow her down?” asked the professor. + +“I did,” replied the boy. “The negative gravity and the gas machines are +working at full speed.” + +“Then why are we still descending?” asked the scientist. “For a while +our speed was checked, but now we are falling faster than before.” + +“I attended to the apparatus,” Mark insisted. + +Just then, from without the ship, came a terrible roaring sound, as +though there was a great cyclone in progress. At the same time, those +aboard the craft could feel themselves being pulled downward with +terrific force. + +“We are caught in a draught!” Mr. Henderson cried. “We are being sucked +down into the depths of the earth!” + +He ran to the engine room. With the help of the boys he set in motion an +auxiliary gravity machine, designed to exert a most powerful influence +against the downward pull of the earth. As they watched the great wheels +spin around, and heard the hum and whirr of the dynamos, the boys +watched the pointer which indicated how low they were getting. + +And, as they watched, they saw that the needle of the dial kept moving, +moving, moving. + +“Our efforts are useless! We can’t stop!” the professor cried. + +Grave indeed was the plight of the adventurers. In their ship they were +being sucked down into unknown regions and all their efforts did not +avail to save them. It was an emergency they could not guard against, +and which could not have been foreseen. + +“What are to do?” asked Mark. + +“We can only wait,” Mr. Henderson replied. “The terrible suction may +cease, or it may carry us to some place of safety. Let us hope for the +best.” + +Seeing there was no further use in running the engines in an effort to +check the downward rush the machines were stopped. Then they waited for +whatever might happen. + +Now that they seemed in imminent peril Washington was as cool as any +one. He went about putting his kitchen in order and getting ready for +the next meal as if they were sailing comfortably along on the surface +of the ocean. As for old Andy he was nervous and frightened, and plainly +showed it. With his gun in readiness he paced back and forth as if on +the lookout for strange beasts or birds. + +Bill and Tom were so alarmed that they were of little use in doing +anything, and they were not disturbed in their staterooms where they +went when it became known that the ship was unmanageable. + +The boys and the professor, while greatly frightened at the unexpected +turn of events, decided there was no use in giving way to foolish alarm. +They realized they could do nothing but await developments. + +At the same time they took every precaution. They piled all the bedding +on the floor of the living room, so that the pillows and mattresses +might form a sort of pad in case the ship was dashed down on the bottom +of the big hole. + +“Not that it would save us much,” Jack observed with a grim smile, “but +somehow it sort of makes your mind easier.” + +All this while the ship was being sucked down at a swift pace. The +pointer of the gage, indicating the depth, kept moving around and soon +they were several hundreds of miles below the surface of the earth. + +The professor tried, by means of several instruments, to discover in +which direction they were headed, and whether they were going straight +down or at an angle. But some strange influence seemed to affect the +gages and other pieces of apparatus, for the pointers and hands would +swing in all directions, at one time indicating that they were going +down, and, again, upward. + +“There must be a strong current of electricity here,” Mr. Henderson +said, “or else there is, as many suspect, a powerful magnet at the +center of the earth, which we are nearing.” + +“What will you do if the ship is pulled apart, or falls and is smashed?” +asked Mark with much anxiety. + +“You take a cheerful view of things,” said Jack. + +“Well, it’s a good thing to prepare for emergencies,” Mark added. + +“If the ship was to be separated by the magnetic pull, or if it fell on +sharp rocks and was split in twain, I am afraid none of us could do +anything to save ourselves,” the professor answered. “Still, if we were +given a little warning of the disaster, I have means at hand whereby we +might escape with our lives. But it would be a perilous way of——” + +“I reckon yo’ all better come out an’ have supper,” broke in Washington. +“Leastways we’ll call it supper, though I don’t rightly know whether +it’s night or mornin’. Anyhow I’ve got a meal ready.” + +“I don’t suppose any of us feel much like eating,” observed Mr. +Henderson, “but there is no telling when we will have the chance again, +so, perhaps, we had better take advantage of it.” + +For a while they ate in silence, finding that they had better appetites +than they at first thought. Old Andy in particular did full justice to +the food Washington had prepared. + +“I always found it a good plan to eat as much and as often as you can,” +the hunter remarked. “This is a mighty uncertain world.” + +“You started to tell us a little while ago, Professor,” said Mark, +“about a plan you had for saving out lives if worst came to worst, and +there was a chance to put it into operation. What is it?” + +“I will tell you,” the aged inventor said. “It is something about which +I have kept silent, as I did not want to frighten any of you. It was my +latest invention, and I had only perfected it when we started off on +this voyage. Consequently I had no chance to try it. The machine works +in theory, but whether it does in practice is another question. That is +why I say there is a risk. But we may have to take this risk. I have +placed aboard this ship a——” + +The professor was interrupted in what he was about to say by a curious +tremor that made the whole ship shiver as though it had struck some +obstruction. Yet there was no sudden jolt or jar such as would have been +occasioned by that. + +At the same time Washington, who was out in the kitchen, came running +into the dining room, crying: + +“We’re droppin’ into a ragin’ fire, Perfesser!” + +“What do you mean?” asked Mr. Henderson. + +“I jest took a look down through th’ hole in th’ bottom of the ship!” +cried Washington. “It’s all flames an’ smoke below us!” + +“I wonder if it is the end,” the professor muttered in a low voice. + +Followed by the boys, the inventor hastened to the floor-window. The +lights were turned off to enable a better view to be had of what was +below them. + +Leaning over the glass protected aperture the boys and the professor +saw, far, far down, a bright light shining. It was as if they were miles +above a whole town of blast furnaces, the stacks of which were belching +forth flames and smoke. The rolling clouds of vapor were illuminated by +a peculiar greenish light, which, at times, turned to red, blue, purple +and yellowish hues. + +The effect was weird and beautiful though it was full of terror for the +travelers. It seemed as if they were falling into some terrible pit of +fire, for the reflection of what they feared were flames, could plainly +be seen. + +“I wish I’d never come on this terrible voyage!” wailed Washington. “I’d +rather freeze to death than be burned up.” + +“Washington, be quiet!” commanded the professor sternly. “This is no +time for foolishness. We must work hard to save our lives, for we are in +dire peril. + +“Mark, you and Washington, with Jack, start the engines. Turn on every +bit of power you can. Fill the gas holder as full as it will hold, and +use extra heavy pressure. I will see if I can not work the negative +gravity apparatus to better advantage than we did before. We must escape +if possible!” + +The boys, as was also Washington, were only too glad to have something +to do to take their mind off their troubles. All three were much +frightened, but Mark and Jack tried not to show it. As for Washington he +was almost crying. + +Soon the whirr and hum of the machinery in the _Mermaid_ was heard. The +craft, which was rushing in some direction, either downward, ahead or +backwards within the unknown depths, shivered from the speed of the +dynamos and other apparatus. Soon the boys could hear the professor +starting the negative gravity engine, and then began a struggle between +the forces of nature and those of mankind. + +Once more the adventurers anxiously watched the gages and indicators. +For a while the ship seemed to be holding out against the terrible +influence that was sucking her down. She appeared to hesitate. Then, as +the downward force triumphed over the mechanical energy in the craft, +she began to settle again, and soon was descending, if that was the +direction, as fast as before. + +“It is of no use,” said the professor with a groan. “I must try our last +resort!” + +He started from the engine room where Mark and Jack had gone. As he did +so, he glanced at a thermometer hanging on the wall near the door. + +“Has any one turned on the heat?” he asked. + +“It’s shut off,” replied Mark, looking at the electric stove. + +“Then what makes it so hot?” asked the scientist. + +He pointed to the little silvery column in the tiny tube of the +instrument. It registered close to one hundred degrees, though a few +minutes before it had been but sixty. And the starting of the machinery +could not account for the rise in temperature, since most of the +apparatus was run by electricity and developed little heat save in the +immediate proximity. The thermometer was fully ten feet away from any +machine. + +“It’s the fiery furnace that’s doing it!” cried Washington. “We’re +falling into th’ terrible pit an’ we’re goin’ t’ be roasted alive!” + +“It certainly is getting warmer,” observed Mark, as he took off his +coat. Soon he had to shed his vest, and Jack and the professor followed +his example. The others too, also found all superfluous garments a +burden, and, in a little while they were going about in scanty attire. + +Still the heat increased, until it was almost torture to remain in the +engine room. Nor was it much cooler elsewhere. In vain did the professor +set a score of big electric fans to whirring. He even placed cakes of +ice, from the small ice machine that was carried, in front of the +revolving blades, to cool off the air. But the ice was melted almost as +soon as it was taken from the apparatus. + +“Them flames is gittin worser!” Washington cried a little later. “We’s +comin’ nearer!” + +From the bottom window the professor and the boys looked down. True +enough the curious, changing, vari-colored lights seemed brighter. They +could almost see the tongues of flame shooting upward in anticipation of +what they were soon to devour. + +The heat was increasing every minute. The sides of the ship were hot. +The heads of the travelers were getting dizzy. They could hardly talk or +move about. + +“I must save our lives! I must trust to the——” The professor, who was +muttering to himself started toward the storeroom. As in a dream Mark +watched him. He remembered afterward that he had speculated on what +might be the outcome of the mystery the professor threw about the place. +“I will have to use it,” he heard the scientist say softly. + +Just as Mr. Henderson was about to open the door there came a fiercer +blast of heat than any that had preceded. At the same instant the +conditions in the _Mermaid_ became so fearful that each of the travelers +felt himself fainting away. + +“Go to—storeroom—get cylinder—get in——” the professor murmured, and +then he fell forward in a faint. + + + + + CHAPTER XVI + + THE NEW LAND + + +“What is it? Tell us!” exclaimed Jack, almost in his last breath, for, a +few seconds later he too toppled over senseless. Then Washington went +down, while Andy, Bill and Tom succumbed to the terrible heat. + +Mark felt his head swimming. His eyes were almost bulging from their +sockets. He dimly remembered trying to force himself to go to the +storeroom and see what was there. He started toward it with that +intention, but fell half way to it. + +As he did so he saw something which impressed itself on his mind, half +unconscious as he was. + +The door of the storeroom suddenly opened, and from it came a giant +shape, that seemed to expand until it filled the whole of the apartment +where the stricken ones lay. It was like the form of some monster, half +human, half beast. Mark shuddered, and then, closing his eyes, he felt +himself sinking down into some terrible deep and black pit. A second +later the whole ship was jarred as though it had hit something. + +How long he and the others remained unconscious Mark did not know. He +was the first to revive, and his first sensation was one as though he +had slept hard and long, and did not want to get up. He felt very +comfortable, although he was lying flat on the floor, with his head +jammed against the side of a locker. It was so dark that he could not +distinguish his hand held close to his face. + +“I wonder if I’m dead, and if all the others are dead too,” he thought +to himself. “What has happened? Let’s see, the last I remember was some +horrible shape rushing from the storeroom. I wonder what it could have +been? Surely that was not the secret the professor referred to.” + +Mark shuddered as he recalled the monster that seemed to have grown more +terrible as each second passed. Then the boy raised himself up from his +prostrate position. + +“Well, at any rate, some one has turned off the heat,” he murmured. +“It’s very comfortable in here now. I wish I could strike a light.” + +He listened intently, to learn if any of the others were moving about. +He could hear them breathing, but so faintly as to indicate they were +insensible. Mark stretched out his hand and felt that some one was lying +close to him, but who of the adventurers it was he could not determine. + +“If only the dynamo was working we could have light,” he said. “But it +seems to have stopped,” and, indeed there was a lacking of the familiar +purr and hum of the electrical machine. In fact none of the apparatus in +the ship was working. + +“The storage battery!” exclaimed Mark. “That would give light for a +while, if I can only find the switch in the dark.” + +He began crawling about on his hands and knees. It was so intensely +black that he ran into many things and received severe bruises. At last +he came to a doorway, and as he did so his hand came in contact with an +easy chair. It was the only one aboard, and by that he knew he had +passed into the sitting room. He had his general direction now, and knew +if he kept straight on he would come to the engine room. There he was +familiar enough with the apparatus and levers to be able to turn the +electric switch. + +Crawling slowly and cautiously, he reached the room where all the +engines were. Then he had to feel around the sides to locate the switch. +At length he found it. There was a click, a little flash of greenish +fire, and the copper conductors came together, and the ship was flooded +with the glow from the incandescents. + +Mark hurried back to where the others were lying. They were still +unconscious, but an uneasy movement on the part of Jack told that he was +coming out of the stupor. Mark got some ammonia and held it beneath his +comrade’s nose. The strong fumes completed the work that nature had +started and Jack opened his eyes. + +“Where am I? What has happened? Are any of them dead?” he asked quickly. + +“I hope no one is dead,” Mark replied. “As to the other question, I +can’t answer. I don’t know whether we are a thousand miles underground, +or floating on the ocean, though I’m more inclined to the former theory. +But never mind that now. Help me to bring the others back to their +senses. I’ll work on the professor and you can begin on Bill or Tom. +Washington seems to be all right,” for at that moment the colored man +opened his eyes, stared about him and then got up. + +“I thought I was dead for suah!” he exclaimed. + +“Some of the others may be if we don’t hurry,” said Mark. “Get to work, +Wash!” + +With the colored man to help them the two boys, by the use of the +ammonia, succeeded in reviving Bill, Tom and old Andy. But the +professor, probably on account of his advanced age, did not respond so +readily to the treatment. The boys were getting quite alarmed, as even +some of the diluted ammonia, forced between his lips, did not cause him +to open his eyes, or increase his heart action. + +“If he should die, and leave us all alone with the ship in this terrible +place, what would we do?” asked Jack. + +“He’s not going to die!” exclaimed Mark. “Here I have another plan. +Washington bring that medical electrical battery from the engine room.” +This was a small machine the professor had brought along for +experimental purposes. + +Quickly adjusting it, Mark placed the handles in the nerveless fingers +of Mr. Henderson. Then he started the current. In about a minute the +eyelids of the aged inventor began to quiver, and, in less than five +minutes he had been revived sufficiently to enable him to sit up. He +passed his hand across his forehead. + +“What has happened?” he asked in a faint voice. + +“I don’t know; none of us knows,” Mark answered. “We all lost our senses +when it got so hot, and there seemed to be some peculiar vapor in the +air. The last I remember was seeing some horrible shape rush from the +storeroom, soon after the ship struck. Then I fainted away. When I woke +up I managed to turn the lights on, and then I came back here.” + +“I wonder where we are,” the old man murmured. “I must find out. We must +take every precaution. Washington, go and look at the gage indicating +our depth.” + +The colored man was gone but a few seconds. When he returned his eyes +were bulging in terror. + +“What is it?” asked Mr. Henderson, who, thanks to the battery, had +almost completely recovered. + +“It ain’t possible!” gasped Washington. “I’ll never believe it!” + +“What is it?” asked Mr. Henderson, while the others waited in anxiety +for the answer. + +“We’re five hundred miles down!” declared Washington. + +“Five hundred miles!” muttered the inventor. “It does not seem possible, +but it must be so. We fell very rapidly and the terrible draught sucked +us down with incredible rapidity. But come, we must see what our +situation is, and where we are. We are stationary, and are evidently on +some solid substance.” + +They all felt much recovered now, and, as the terrible fright of being +consumed in a fiery furnace had passed, they all were in better spirits. + +At the suggestion of the professor, the boys and Washington made a tour +of the ship. They found, for some unaccountable reason, that nearly all +the engines and apparatuses were out of gear. In some the parts had +broken, and others were merely stopped, from the failure of some other +machine, on which they were dependent. + +“I’m afraid this is the end of the _Mermaid,”_ said Mark, in a sorrowful +tone. + +“Nonsense!” replied Jack, who was of a more cheerful nature. “Things are +not so bad as they look. The professor can fix everything.” + +“I’m sure I hope so,” Mark went on, not much encouraged, however, by +Jack’s philosophy. “It would be no joke to have to stay five hundred +miles underground the rest of our lives.” + +“You don’t know,” retorted Jack. “Don’t judge of a country you’ve never +seen. This may be as fine a place as it is on the surface of the earth. +I want a chance to see it,” and Jack began to whistle a cheerful tune. + +They completed the tour of the ship, and found, that, aside from the +damage to the machinery, the _Mermaid_ had not sustained any harm. The +hull was in good order, though of course they could not tell about the +gas holder. It was not possible to see this except by going into the +conning tower or out on the small deck, and this they did not venture to +do. The connections between the holder and the main ship seemed to be +all right, and there was still a small quantity of gas in the big tank, +as Mark found on opening a stop-cock. + +They went back to the professor and told him what they had observed. He +seemed somewhat alarmed, the more so as the experience he had just +passed through had weakened him considerably. + +“I hope I shall be able to make the repairs,” he said. “It is our only +hope.” + +As he spoke he looked up at the electric lights that shone overhead from +wall brackets. + +“Who is shutting down the power?” he asked. + +“There is no power on, Professor,” replied Mark. “I am running the +lights from the storage battery. But something is the matter, for they +are growing dim.” + +The filaments were now mere dull red wires, and the ship was being +shrouded in gloom again. + +“The battery is failing!” exclaimed Mr. Henderson. “We shall be left in +darkness, and there is no other way to produce light. I ought to have +brought some lamps or candles along in case of emergency.” + +The next instant the _Mermaid_ became as black as Egypt is popularly +supposed to be, and something like an exclamation of terror came from +the professor. + +For several minutes they all sat there in the blackness and gloom, +waiting for they knew not what. Then, suddenly, there sounded throughout +the ship, a creaking as of metal sliding along metal. Some big lever +creaked, and, a second later the whole place was flooded with light. + +“What has happened?” cried the professor, starting to his feet in alarm. + +“We are going to be burned up!” exclaimed old Andy. + +“It’s all right! It’s all right!” yelled Washington from the engine room +where the boys had left him. “Don’t git skeered! I done it! I opened the +port holes, by yanking on the lever. Golly, but we’s arrived at the new +land! Look out, everybody!” + + + + + CHAPTER XVII + + A STRANGE COUNTRY + + +They all ran to the port holes, which were openings in the side of the +ship. They were fitted with thick, double glass, and covered on the +outside with steel shutters. These shutters were worked by a single +lever from the engine room, so that one person could open or close them +in a second or two. Washington, by accident, it appeared later, had slid +back the protecting pieces of steel, and the rest followed. + +As the adventurers looked from the glass ports they saw that the light +which had flooded the ship came from without. They were in the midst of +a beautiful glow, which seemed to be diffused about them like rays from +a sun. + +Only, in place of being a yellow or white light, such as the sun gives +off at varying times, the glow was of violet hue. And, as they watched, +they saw the light change color, becoming a beautiful red, then blue, +and again green. + +“Well, this is certainly remarkable!” the professor said. “I wonder what +causes that.” + +“We’ve arrived! We’re here, anyhow!” Washington cried, coming into the +room. “See the country!” + +Then, for the first time, the travelers, taking their attention from the +curious light that was all around them, saw that they had indeed +arrived. They were on a vast plain, one, seemingly, boundless in extent, +though off to the left there was a range of lofty mountains, while to +the right there was the glimmer of what might be a big lake or inland +sea. + +“See, we are resting on the ground!” exclaimed Jack. He pointed out of +the window, and the others, looking close at hand, noted that the +_Mermaid_ had settled down in the midst of what seemed to be a field of +flowers. Big red and yellow blossoms were all in front, and some grew so +tall as to almost be up to the edge of the port. + +“I wonder if we can be seeing aright,” the professor muttered. “Is this +really the interior of the earth; such a beautiful place as this?” + +There could be little doubt of it. The ship had descended through the +big shaft, had been sucked down by the terrible air current, and had +really landed in a strange country. + +Of its size, shape and general conditions the adventurers, as yet, could +but guess. They could see it was a pleasant place, and one where there +might be the means to sustain life. For, as the professor said +afterward, he felt that where there were flowers there would be fruits, +and where both of these provisions of nature were to be found there +would likely be animal life, and even, perhaps, human beings. + +But, for the time, they were content to look from the port on the +beautiful scene that lay stretched out before them. The ship rested on +an even keel and had landed so softly that none of the plates were +strained. + +“We have plenty of air, at all events,” said the professor as he took a +deep breath. “I was afraid of that, but it seems there was no need. The +air appears to be as good and fresh as that on the surface of the earth, +only there is a curious property to it. It makes one feel larger. I +imagine it must be thinner than the air of the earth, which is a rather +strange thing, since the higher one goes the more rarefied the air +becomes, and the lower, the more dense. Still we can not apply natural +philosophy to conditions under the earth. All the usual theories may be +upset. However, we should be content to take things as we find them, and +be glad we were not dashed to pieces when the ship was caught in the +terrible current.” + +“What do you suppose caused the awful heat, and then made it go away +again?” asked Jack. + +“I can only make a guess at it,” Mr. Henderson answered. “There are many +strange things we will come across if we stay here long, I believe. As +for the fire I think we must have passed a sort of interior volcano.” + +“But what sort of a place do you think we have come to, Professor?” +asked Mark. + +“It is hard to say,” the scientist replied. “We are certainly somewhere +within the earth. Our gage tells us it is five hundred miles. That may +or may not be correct, but I believe we are several hundred miles under +the crust, at all events. As to what sort of a place it is, you can see +for yourselves.” + +“But how is it we can breathe here, and things can grow?” asked Bill, +who was beginning to lose his fright at the thought of being practically +buried alive. + +“I do not know what makes such things possible,” Mr. Henderson replied, +“but that there is air here is a certainty. I can hardly believe it is +drawn from the surface of the earth, down the big hole, and I am +inclined to think this place of the under-world has an atmosphere of its +own, and one which produces different effects than does our own.” + +“They certainly have larger flowers than we have,” said Mark. “See how +big they grow, and what strong colors they have.” + +He pointed to the port, against which some of the blooms were nodding in +the wind that had sprung up, for, in spite of the many differences, the +under-world was in some respects like the upper one. + +“Probably the difference in the atmosphere accounts for that,” the +professor said. “It enables things to grow larger. And, by the way, +Mark, that reminds me of something you said about seeing some horrible +monster fleeing from the ship. Did you dream that?” + +“I did see something horrible, Professor,” he answered. “I’m not +positive what it was, but I’ll tell you as nearly as I can what it was +like.” + +Thereupon Mark detailed what he had seen. + +“But how could anything, least of all some big monster, be concealed in +the storeroom, and we not know anything about it?” asked Mr. Henderson. + +“I thought you did know something of it,” replied Mark. + +“Who, me? My dear boy, you must be dreaming again. Why should I want to +conceal any being in the storeroom? Come, there is something back of +this. Tell me all you know of it. I can’t imagine why you think I was +hiding something in the apartment.” + +“I thought so because you were always so anxious not to have me go near +it,” answered the boy. “Don’t you remember when you saw me going toward +it, several times, you warned me away?” + +“So I did!” exclaimed Mr. Henderson, a light breaking over his face. +“But, Mark, it was not because I had hidden some human being or animal +there. I can’t tell you what it is yet, save that I can say it is merely +a machine of mine that I have invented. For reasons of my own I don’t +want any one to see it yet. Perhaps it may never be seen. I thought, not +long ago, that we might have to undertake a terrible risk in escaping +from this place. I directed you to go to the storeroom—but there, I +can’t say any more, my friends. Sufficient that I had nothing in the +animal line concealed there.” + +“But I am certain there was some beast or human being in there,” +insisted Mark. “I heard curious noises in there. Besides, how do you +account for the food disappearing and the door being open at times?” + +“It might have been rats,” said Jack. + +“I don’t believe there are rats in the ship,” put in the professor. +“More likely it was one of us who got up hungry and took the victuals.” + +“I’m sorry I can’t agree with you,” Mark added respectfully. “I am sure +some strange being was on board this ship, and I believe it has now +escaped. Who or what it was I can’t say, but you’ll find I’m right, some +day.” + +“All right,” spoke Mr. Henderson with a laugh. “I like to see any one +brave enough to stick up for his opinion, but, at the same time, I can’t +very well imagine any person or thing being concealed in that storeroom +ever since we started. How could it get in?” + +Mark did not answer, but there came to him the recollection of that +night, previous to the sailing of the _Flying Mermaid_, when he had +observed some strange shadow that seemed to glide aboard the craft. + +“Now let’s forget all about such things,” the professor went on. “We are +in a strange country, and there are many things to see and do. Let’s +explore a little. Then we must see what we can do with the ship. We are +dependent on it, and it will not do to allow it to remain in a damaged +state. We expect to travel many miles in the interior of the earth if it +is possible, and we have only our craft to go in.” + +“I reckon we’d all better assimilate into our interior progression some +molecules and atoms of partly disentegrated matter in order to supply +combustion for the carbonaceous elements and assist in the manufacture +of red corpuscles,” said Washington, appearing in the door, with a broad +grin on his good-natured face. + +“Which, being interpreted,” the professor said, “means, I suppose, that +we had better eat something to keep our digestive apparatus in good +working order?” + +“Yo’ done guessed it!” exclaimed the colored man, relapsing into his +ordinary speech. “I’se got a meal all ready.” + +They agreed that they might not have another opportunity soon to partake +of food, so they all gathered about the table, on which Washington had +spread a good meal. + +“Come on, let’s go outside and view this new and strange land at closer +quarters,” the professor said, when they had satisfied their appetites. +“We can’t see much from inside the ship.” + +Accordingly the heavy door in the side of the _Mermaid_ was slid back, +and, for the first time the travelers stepped out on the surface of the +land in the interior of the earth. + +At first it seemed no different than the ordinary land to which they +were accustomed. But they soon found it had many strange attributes. The +queer shifting and changing light, with the myriad of hues was one of +them, but to this the adventurers had, by this time, become accustomed, +though it was, none the less, a marvel to them. It was odd enough to see +the landscape blood red one instant, and a pale green the next, as it +does when you look through differently colored glasses. + +Then, too, they noticed that the grass and flowers grew much more +abundantly than in the outer part of the world. They saw clover six feet +high, and blades of grass even taller. In some places the growth of +grass was so big that they were in danger of getting lost in it. + +“If the grass is like this, what will the trees be?” asked Mark. + +“There are some away over there,” Jack replied. “We’ll have to take a +sail over. They must be several hundred feet high.” + +“Well, at any rate, here’s a little brook, and the water looks good to +drink,” went on Mark. “I’m thirsty, so here goes.” + +He hurried to where a stream was flowing sluggishly between grassy +banks. The water was as clear as crystal, and Mark got down on his face +and prepared to sip some of the liquid up. + +But, no sooner had his lips touched it, than he sprang up with a cry and +stood gazing at the water. + +“What’s the matter?” asked Jack. “Hot?” + +“No, it isn’t hot,” Mark replied, “but it isn’t water. It’s white +molasses!” + +“White molasses?” repeated the professor, coming up at that moment. +“What are you talking about?” + +He stooped down and dipped his finger into the stream. He drew it up +quickly, and there ran from it big drops that flowed as slowly as the +extract of the sugarcane does in cold weather. + +“You’re about right, Mark,” he said. “It’s water but it’s almost as +thick as molasses.” He touched his finger to his tongue. “It’s good to +drink, all right,” he went on, “only it will be a little slow going +down.” + +Then he dipped up a palm full, and let it trickle down his throat. + +“It is the strangest water I ever saw,” he added. “It must be that the +lack of some peculiar property of air, which we have on the surface, has +caused this. I must make some notes on it,” and he drew out pencil and +paper. He was about to jot down some facts when he was interrupted by a +cry from Washington. + +“Come and see what’s the matter with this stone!” he cried. + + + + + CHAPTER XVIII + + CAUGHT BY A STRANGE PLANT + + +“Washington is in trouble!” exclaimed Mr. Henderson. Followed by the two +boys he ran to where the colored man stood in a stooping position over a +small pile of stones. + +“What is it? Has something bit you?” asked the scientist, as he came up +on the run. + +“No, but I can’t git this stone up!” Washington said. “Look at what a +little stone it is, but I can’t lift it. Something must have happened to +me. Maybe some one put th’ evil eye on me! Maybe I’m bewitched!” + +“Nonsense!” exclaimed the professor, “what did you want the stone for?” + +“Nothin’ in particular,” replied Washington, still tugging away at the +stone, which was the size of his head. “I was just goin’ t’ throw it at +a big bird, but when I went to lift it this little stone 'peared t’ be +glued fast.” + +Washington moved aside to give Mr. Henderson a chance to try to pick up +the piece of rock. As the scientist grasped it a look of surprise came +over his features: + +“This is most remarkable!” he exclaimed. “I can’t budge it. I wonder if +a giant magnet is holding it down.” + +He tugged and tugged until he was red in the face. Then he beckoned to +the two boys, and they came to his aid. There was barely room for them +all to each get one hand on the rock, and then, only after a powerful +tug did it come up. Almost instantly it dropped back to the earth. + +“This is remarkable!” the professor said. “I wonder if the other stones +are the same.” + +He tried several others, and one and all resisted his efforts. It was +only the small stones he was able to lift alone, and these, he said, +were so weighty that it would have been a task to throw them any +distance. + +“The water and the stones are strangely heavy in this land,” he said. “I +wonder what other queer things we shall see.” + +“I saw a bird a little while ago, when I went to pick up that stone,” +observed Washington. + +“What kind was it?” asked the inventor. + +“I don’t know, only it was about as big as an eagle.” + +The travelers wandered about a quarter of a mile from the ship. They +avoided the tall grass and the lofty nodding flowers that seemed to grow +in regular groves, and kept to places where they could walk with +comparative freedom. + +“Have you formed any idea, Professor, as to the nature of this country?” +asked Mark, who liked to get at the bottom of things. + +“I have, but it is only a theory,” Mr. Henderson answered. “I believe we +are on a sort of small earth that is inside the larger one we live on. +This sphere floats in space, just as our earth does and we have passed +through the void that lies between our globe and this interior one. I +think this new earth is about a quarter the size of ours and in some +respects the same. In others it is vastly different. + +“But we will not think of those things now. We must see what our +situation is, whether we are in any danger, and must look to repairing +our ship. There will be time enough for other matters later.” + +The travelers were walking slowly along, noting the strange things on +every side. As they advanced the vegetation seemed to become more +luxuriant, as if nature had tried to out-do herself in providing +beautiful flowers and plants. The changing lights added to the beauty +and weirdness of the scene. + +The plain was a rolling one, and here and there were small hills and +hollows. As the travelers topped a rise Jack, who was in advance, called +out: + +“Oh what queer plants! They are giant Jacks-in-the-pulpit!” + +The others hastened forward to see what the boy had discovered. Jack was +too eager to wait, and pressed on. The hill which sloped away from the +top of the little plateau on which he stood, was steeper than he had +counted on. As he leaned forward he lost his balance and toppled, head +foremost, down the declivity, rolling over. + +“Look out!” cried Mark, who had almost reached his comrade’s side. + +The scene that confronted the travelers was a strange one. Before them +in a sort of hollow, were scores of big plants, shaped somewhat like a +Jack-in-the-pulpit, or a big lily, with a curved top or flap to it. + +The plants were about eight feet tall, three feet across the top, and +the flap or covering was raised about two feet. They were nodding and +swaying in the wind on their short stems. + +“He’s headed right for one of them!” Mr. Henderson exclaimed. “I hope +he’ll not fall into one of the openings.” + +“Is there any danger?” asked Mark. + +“I’m afraid there is,” the inventor added. “Those plants are a variety +of the well-known pitcher plant, or fly-trap, as they are sometimes +called. In tropical countries they grow to a large size, but nothing +like these. They are filled, in the cup, with a sort of sticky, sweet +mixture, and this attracts insects. When one enters the cup the top flap +folds over, and the hapless insect is caught there. The plant actually +devours it, nature providing a sort of vegetable digestive apparatus. +These giant plants are the same, and they seem large enough to take in a +man, to say nothing of Jack!” + +With anxious faces the adventurers turned to watch the fate of their +comrade. Jack was slipping, sliding and rolling down the hill. He could +not seem to stop, though he was making desperate efforts to do so. He +was headed straight for one of the largest of the terrible plants. + +In vain, as he saw what was in front of him, did he try to change the +course of his involuntary voyage. Over and over he rolled, until, at +length, he struck a little grassy hummock, bounced into the air, and +right into the opening of a monster pitcher plant. + +“It has him!” cried Mark. “We must save him! Come on everyone!” + +He raced down the hill, while the others came closely after him. They +reached the plant into which Jack had bounced. The flap, or top piece, +had closed down, tightly over the unfortunate boy. + +“Quick! We must save him or he will be smothered to death or drowned in +the liquid the cup contains!” Mr. Henderson exclaimed. “Attack the plant +with anything you can find!” + +“Let’s cut through the side of the flower-cup!” suggested Mark. “That +seems softer than the stem.” + +His idea was quickly put into operation. Andy’s long hunting knife came +in very handy. While the sides of the long natural cup were tough, the +knife made an impression on them, and, soon, a small door or opening had +been cut in the side of the pitcher plant, large enough to enable a +human body to pass through. + +When the last fibre had been severed by Andy, who was chosen to wield +the knife because of his long practice as a hunter, there was a sudden +commotion within the plant. Then a dark object, dripping water, made a +spring and landed almost at the feet of the professor. + +It was Jack, and a sorry sight he presented. He was covered from head to +foot with some sticky substance, which dripped from all over him. + +With hasty movements he cleared the stuff from his eyes and mouth, and +spluttered: + +“It’s a good thing you cut me out when you did. I couldn’t have held on +much longer!” + + + + + CHAPTER XIX + + THE BIG PEACH + + +Jack soon recovered from his remarkable experience. The terrible plant +that had nearly eaten him alive was a mass of cut-up vegetable matter +which attracted a swarm of insects. Most of them were ants, but such +large ones the boys had never seen before, and the professor said they +exceeded in size anything he had read about. Some of them were as large +as big rats. They bit off large pieces of the fallen plant and carried +them to holes in the ground which were big enough for Washington to slip +his foot into, and he wore a No. 11 shoe. + +But the adventurers felt there were more important things for them to +look at than ants, so they started away again, the professor telling +them all to be careful and avoid accidents. + +It was while they were strolling through a little glade, which they came +upon unexpectedly, that Washington, who was in the lead called out: + +“Gracious goodness! It must be Thanksgivin’!” + +“Why so?” asked Jack. + +“'Cause here’s th’ remarkablest extraordinary and expansionist of a +pumpkin that ever I laid eyes on!” the colored man cried. + +They all hurried to where Washington had come to a halt. There, on the +ground in front of him, was a big round object, about the size of a +hogshead. It was yellow in color, and was not unlike the golden +vegetable from which mothers make such delicious pies. + +“I allers was fond of pumpkins,” said Washington, placing his hand on +the thing, which was almost as tall as he was, “but I never thought I’d +come across such a one as this.” + +The professor and the two boys went closer to the monstrosity. Mr. +Henderson passed his hand over it and then, bending closer, smelled of +it. + +“That’s not a pumpkin!” he exclaimed. + +“What is it then?” asked Washington. + +“It’s a giant peach,” the inventor remarked. “Can’t you see the fuzz, +and smell it? Of course it’s a peach.” + +“Well I’ll be horn-swoggled!” cried Washington, leaning against the big +fruit, which easily supported him. + +“Hurrah!” cried Jack, drawing his knife from his pocket and opening the +largest blade. “I always did like peaches. Now I can have all I want,” +and he drove the steel into the object, cutting off a big slice which he +began to eat. + +“It may be poisonous!” exclaimed Mark. + +“Too late now,” responded Jack, the juice running down from his mouth. +“Taste’s good, anyhow.” + +They all watched Jack while he devoured his slice of fruit. Washington +acted as if he expected his friend to topple over unconscious, but Jack +showed no bad symptoms. + +“You’d better all have some,” the boy said. “It’s the best I ever +tasted.” + +Encouraged by Jack’s example, Mark thought he, too, would have some of +the fruit. He opened his knife and was about to take off some of the +peach when suddenly the thing began to roll forward, almost upon him. + +“Hi! Stop your shoving!” he exclaimed. “Do you want to have the thing +roll over me, Jack?” + +“I’m not shoving!” replied Jack. + +“Some one is!” Mark went on. He dodged around the far side of the +immense fruit and what he saw made him cry out in astonishment. + +Two grasshoppers, each one standing about three feet high, were standing +on their hind legs, and with their fore feet were pushing the peach +along the ground. They had been attracted to the fruit by some juice +which escaped from a bruise on that side, which was the ripest, and, +being fond of sweets had, evidently decided to take their find to some +safe place where they could eat it at their leisure. Or perhaps they +wanted to provide for their families if grasshoppers have them. + +“Did you ever see such monsters?” asked Jack. “They’re as big as dogs!” + +At the sound of his voice the two grasshoppers, becoming alarmed, ceased +their endeavors to roll the peach along, and, assuming a crouching +attitude seemed to be waiting. + +“They certainly are remarkable specimens,” Mr. Henderson said. “If the +other animals are in proportion, and if there are persons in this new +world, we are likely to have a hard time of it.” + +This time the immense insects concluded the strangers were not to their +liking. With a snapping of their big muscular legs and a whirr of their +wings that was like the starting of an automobile, the grasshoppers rose +into the air and sailed away over the heads of the adventurers. Their +flight was more than an eighth of a mile in extent, and they came down +in a patch of the very tall grass. + +“Let’s go after them!” exclaimed old Andy. “I was so excited I forgot to +take a shot at them. Come on!” + +“I think we’d better not,” counseled the professor. “In the first place +we don’t need them. They would be no good for food. Then we don’t know +but what they might attack us, and it would be no joke to be bitten by a +grasshopper of that size. Let them alone. We may find other game which +will need your attention, Andy. Better save your ammunition.” + +Somewhat against his will, Andy had to submit to the professor’s ruling. +The old hunter consoled himself with the reflection that if insects grew +to that size he would have some excellent sport hunting even the birds +of the inner world. + +“I wonder what sort of a tree that peach grew on,” Jack remarked, as he +cut off another slice, when the excitement caused by the discovery of +the grasshoppers had subsided. “It must be taller than a church steeple. +I wonder how the fruit got here, for there are no trees around.” + +“I fancy those insects rolled it along for a good distance,” Mr. +Henderson put in. “You can see the marks on the ground, where they +pushed it. They are wonderful creatures.” + +“Are we going any farther?” asked Mark. “Perhaps we can find the peach +tree, and, likely there are other fruit trees near it.” + +At the professor’s suggestion they strolled along for some distance. +They were now about three miles from the airship, and found that what +they had supposed was a rather level plain, was becoming a succession of +hills and hollows. It was while descending into a rather deep valley +that Jack pointed ahead and exclaimed: + +“I guess there’s our peach orchard, but I never saw one like it before.” + +Nor had any of the others. Instead of trees the peaches were attached to +vines growing along the ground. They covered a large part of the valley, +and the peaches, some bigger than the one they first discovered, some +small and green, rose up amid the vines, just as pumpkins do in a corn +field. + +“Stranger and stranger,” the professor murmured. “Peaches grow on vines. +I suppose potatoes will grow on trees. Everything seems to be reversed +here.” + +They made their way down toward the peach “orchard” as Jack called it, +though “patch” would have been a better name. Besides peaches they found +plums, apples, and pears growing in the same way, and all of a size +proportionate to the first-named fruit. + +“Well, one thing is evident,” Mr. Henderson remarked, “we shall not +starve here. There is plenty to eat, even, if we have to turn +vegetarians.” + +“I wonder what time it is getting to be,” Jack remarked. “My watch says +twelve o’clock but whether it’s noon or midnight I can’t tell, with this +colored light coming and going. I wonder if it ever sets as the sun +does.” + +“That is something we’ll have to get used to,” the professor said. “But +I think we had better go back to the ship now. We have many things to do +to get it in order again. Besides, I am a little afraid to leave it +unguarded so long. No telling but what some strange beast—or persons, +for that matter—might injure it.” + +“I’m going to take back some slices of peaches with me, anyhow,” Mark +said, and he and Jack cut off enough to make several meals, while Bill, +Tom and Washington took along all they could carry. + +As they walked back toward the ship the strange lights seemed to be +dying out. At first they hardly noticed this, but as they continued on +it became quite gloomy, and an odd sort of gloom it was too, first +green, then yellow, then red and then blue. + +“I believe whatever serves as a sun down here is setting,” the professor +observed. “We must hurry. I don’t want to be caught out here after +dark.” + +They hurried on, the lights dying out more and more, until, as they came +in sight of their ship, it was so black they could hardly see. + +Mark who was in the rear turned around, glancing behind him. As he did +so he caught sight of a gigantic shadow moving along on top of the +nearest hill. The shadow was not unlike that of a man in shape, but of +such gigantic stature that Mark knew it could be like no human being he +had ever seen. At the same time it bore a curious resemblance to the +weird shadow he had seen slip into the _Mermaid_ that night before they +sailed. + +“I wonder if it can be the same—the same thing—grown larger, just as +the peach grows larger than those in our world,” Mark thought, while a +shiver of fear seemed to go over him. “I wonder if that—that thing +could have been on the ship——” + +Then the last rays of light died away and there was total darkness. + + + + + CHAPTER XX + + OVERHAULING THE SHIP + + +“Keep together!” shouted the professor. “It will not do to become lost +now. We are close to the ship, and will soon be there. Come after me.” + +It was more by following the sound of the scientist’s voice, than by any +sight which the others could get of him, that they managed to trail +along behind. They reached the ship in safety, however, and entered. +There was no sound as of beasts or insects within, and, though Mark felt +a little apprehensive on account of what he had seen, he and the others +as well, were glad to be again in something that seemed like home. + +“I wish we had some candles, or some sort of a light to see by,” the +professor remarked. “We can do nothing in the dark, and there is no +telling how long this night is going to last once it has set in. If I +could have a little illumination, I might be able to fix the dynamo, and +then we could turn on the incandescents. That portable light we had is +broken.” + +“By cracky!” exclaimed Andy. “I believe I have the very thing!” + +“You don’t mean to say you have a torch or a candle with you, do you?” +asked Mr. Henderson. + +“No, but I have my patent pipe lighting apparatus,” the hunter said. “I +always carry it. It gives a little light, but not much, though it may be +enough to work by.” + +Not until after several hours work, handicapped as they were by lack of +light, were the repairs to the ship completed. + +“Now we’ll start the engine and see how we will come out,” the inventor +exclaimed, as he wiped his hands on some waste. + +It did not take long to generate enough power to turn the dynamo. Soon +the familiar hum and whirr was heard, and, a few seconds later the +filaments in the lamps began to glow a dull red, which gradually +brightened until they were shining in all their usual brilliancy. + +“Hurrah!” cried the boys. “Now we can see!” + +They all felt in better spirits with the restoration of the lights, and, +washing off the grease and dirt of their labors in the engine room, they +prepared to sit down to the meal which Washington prepared. + +As soon as the dynamo was working well, care had to be taken not to +speed it too much on account of a mended belt. The professor turned off +part of the lights and switched some of the current into the storage +batteries, to provide for emergencies. For there was no telling how long +the night might last. + +Jack was the first one to finish the meal—they did not know whether to +call it dinner, supper or breakfast. He went into the conning tower, +and, as soon as he reached it he called out: + +“Come on up here, professor! There’s something strange going on!” + +Mr. Henderson, followed by Mark, hurried to the tower. As he reached it +and looked out of the forward window, a beautiful white glow illuminated +the whole scene, and then, from below the horizon, there arose seven +luminous disks. One was in the centre, while about it circled the other +six, like some immense pin-wheel. + +“It’s the moon!” cried Mark. + +“It’s seven moons!” Jack exclaimed. “Why it’s almost as light as day!” + +And so it was, for the seven moons, if that is what they were, gave an +illumination not unlike the sun in brilliancy though it was like the +beams from the pale moon of the earth. + +“I guess we need not have worried about the darkness,” the professor +remarked. “Still it is a good thing I fixed the dynamo.” + +For some time he and the other adventurers watched the odd sight of the +moons, as they rose higher and higher overhead. The scene was a +beautiful, if weird one, for the whole plain was bathed in the soft +light. + +“I guess we can turn off the incandescents, and use all the power for +the storage batteries,” Mr. Henderson went on, as he descended into the +ship, and opened the port shutters which had been closed when they +started off on their exploring tour. The interior of the _Mermaid_ was +almost as light as when the odd colored beams had been playing over the +new earth to which they had come. + +“I think we had better continue with our work of making repairs,” Mr. +Henderson said. “We can’t count on these moons remaining here any length +of time, and I want to take advantage of them. So though some of us +perhaps need sleep, we will forego it and fix up the _Mermaid_. I want +to take a trip and see what other wonders await us.” + +They all agreed that they would rather work than sleep, and soon the +entire force was busy in the engine room. There was much to be done, and +the most important things were attended to first. The motive power was +overhauled and found to be in need of several new parts. These were put +in and then the gas generator, and the negative gravity machine, were +put in shape. + +It would have taken something very substantial to have awakened any one +on board the _Mermaid_ that night. They all slept soundly and awoke to +find the strange colored lights shining in through the glass covered +port holes. + +“Well, the sun, or what corresponds to it, is up,” observed Jack, “and I +guess we had better do as the little boy in the school reader did, and +get up, too, Mark.” + +Soon all the travelers were aroused, and the sound of Washington +bustling about in the kitchen, whence came the smell of coffee, bacon +and eggs, told the hungry ones that breakfast was under way. + +After the meal work was again started on repairing the ship, and by noon +the professor remarked: + +“I think we shall try a little flight after dinner. That is, if one +thing doesn’t prevent us.” + +“What is that?” asked Jack. + +“We may be held down, as were those stones,” was the grave answer. + + + + + CHAPTER XXI + + THE FISH THAT WALKED + + +It was with no little apprehension that the professor prepared to take +his first flight aboard the ship in the realms of the new world. He knew +little or nothing of the conditions he might meet with, the density of +the atmosphere, or how the _Mermaid_ would behave under another +environment than that to which she was accustomed. + +Yet he felt it was necessary to make a start. They would have to attempt +a flight sooner or later, and Mr. Henderson was not the one to delay +matters. So, the last adjustment having been made to the repaired +machinery, they all took their places in the ship. + +The boys and the professor went to the conning tower to direct matters, +while Washington and the others were in the engine room to see that the +machinery worked properly. Mark gave a last look outside as he closed +the big steel cover over the hole through which admission was had to the +craft. He thought he might catch a glimpse of the queer shadow, but +nothing was in sight. It was like a beautiful summer’s day, save for the +strange lights, shifting and changing. But the travelers had become +somewhat used to them by this time. + +The professor turned the valve that allowed the gas to enter the holder. +There was a hissing sound and a sort of trembling throughout the entire +ship. The dynamos were whizzing away and the negative gravity machine +was all ready to start. + +For several minutes the travelers waited until the big lifting tank was +filled with the strong vapor. They watched the gages which indicated the +pressure to be several hundred pounds. + +“I think we can chance it now,” remarked Mr. Henderson, as he threw over +several levers. “We’ll try, at any rate.” + +With a tremor the _Mermaid_ left the surface of the inner earth and went +sailing upward toward the—well it wasn’t exactly the sky, but it was +what corresponded to it in the new world, though there were no clouds +and no blue depths such as the boys were used to. At all events the +_Mermaid_ was flying again, and, as the adventurers felt themselves +being lifted up they gave a spontaneous cheer at the success which had +crowned their efforts. + +The ship went up several hundred feet, and then, the professor, having +brought her to a stop, sent her ahead at a slow pace. He wanted to be +sure all the apparatus was in good working order before he tried any +speed. + +The _Mermaid_ responded readily. Straight as an arrow through the air +she flew. + +“Well, this is almost as good as being on the regular earth!” exclaimed +Jack. + +“It’s better,” put in Mark. “We haven’t seen half the wonders yet. Let’s +open the floor shutter, and see how it looks down below.” + +He and Jack went to the room where there was an opening in the floor of +the ship, covered by heavy glass. They slid back the steel shutter and +there, down below them, was the strange new world they had come to, +stretched out like some big map. + +They could see mountains, forests, plains, and rivers, the water +sparkling in the colored light. Over green fields they flew, then across +some stretches where only sand and rocks were to be seen. Faster and +faster the ship went, as the professor found the machinery was once more +in perfect order. Jack was idly watching the play of tinted lights over +the surface of the ground. + +“I wonder what makes it,” he said. + +“I have tried to account for it in several ways,” said the professor, +who had called Washington to the conning tower and come to join the +boys. “I have had first one theory and then another, but the one I am +almost sure is correct is that hidden volcanic fires cause the +illumination. + +“I think they flare up and die away, and have become so regular that +they produce the same effect as night and day with us. Probably the +fires go out for lack of fuel, and when it is supplied they start up +again. Perhaps it is a sort of gas that they burn.” + +“Well, it’s queer enough, whatever it is,” Jack remarked. “What strikes +me as funny, though, is that we haven’t seen a single person since we +came here. Surely this place must be inhabited.” + +Mark thought of the strange shadow he had seen, but said nothing. + +“I believe it is,” the professor answered. “We will probably come upon +the inhabitants soon. I only hope they are a people who will do us no +harm.” + +“If they tried any of their tricks we could mount up in our ship and +escape them,” said Andy. + +“Provided they gave us the chance,” Mr. Henderson put in. “Well, we’ll +not worry about that now.” + +For several hours the ship traveled on, until it had come to a different +sort of country. It was wilder and not so level, and there were a number +of streams and small lakes to be seen. + +“Are you going to sail all night?” asked Jack. + +“No,” replied the professor. “I think we’ll descend very soon now, and +camp out for a while. That lake just ahead seems to offer a good place,” +and he pointed to a large sheet of water that sparkled in the distance, +for by this time they had all gone back to the conning tower. + +The lake was in the midst of a wood that extended for some distance on +all sides, and was down in a sort of valley. The ship headed toward it, +and in a short time a landing was made close to shore. + +“Maybe we can have some fresh fish for supper,” exclaimed Jack as he ran +from the ship as soon as the sliding door in the side was opened. “Looks +as if that lake had some in it. It is not thick water like in that +stream we stopped at,” he added. + +“I believe you’re right,” old Andy put in, as he turned back to look for +some lines and hooks among his traps. He soon found what he wanted, and +gave them to the boys, taking his trusty gun along for himself. + +While the professor, Washington, Tom and Bill remained behind to make +some adjustments to the machinery, and to get things in shape for the +night, which, they calculated would soon be upon them, Jack, Mark and +Andy went down to the shore of the lake. The boys cut some poles from +the trees, and baiting the hooks with some fat worms found under the +bark, threw in. + +“Let’s see who’ll get the first bite,” spoke Jack. “I’m pretty generally +lucky at fishing.” + +“Well, while you’re waiting to decide that there contest, I think I’ll +take a stroll along shore and see if I can see anything to shoot,” Andy +remarked. + +For several minutes the boys sat in silence on the bank of the lake, +watching the play of the vari-colored lights on the water. Suddenly Jack +felt a quiver on his line, and his pole began to shake. + +“I’ve got something!” he cried. Then his pole bent almost double and he +began to pull for all he was worth. “It’s a whopper!” he cried. “Come +and help me, Mark!” + +Mark ran to his friend’s aid. Whatever was on the other end of the line +was strong enough to tax the muscles of both boys. They could hear the +pole beginning to break. But for the excellent quality of Andy’s line +that would have parted some time before. + +All at once there came a sudden slacking of the pull from whatever was +in the water. And so quickly did it cease that both boys went over +backward in a heap. + +“He’s got away!” cried Jack, getting up and brushing some of the dirt +from his clothes. + +“There’s something that didn’t get away!” cried Mark, who had risen to +his knees, and was pointing at the lake. Jack looked and what he saw +made him almost believe he was dreaming. + +For, emerging from the water, dragging the pole and line the boys had +dropped along with it, was a most curious creature. It was a big fish, +but a fish with four short legs on which it was walking, or rather +waddling along as much as a duck, with a double supply of feet, might +do. + +“Say, do I see that or is there something the matter with my eyes?” sung +out Jack, making ready to run away. + +“It’s there all right!” exclaimed Mark. “Hi! Andy! Here’s something to +shoot!” he yelled, for indeed the creature was big enough to warrant +attack with a gun. It was about five feet long and two feet through. + +On and on it came, straight at the boys, as if to have revenge for the +pain the fish hook must have caused it, for the barb could be seen +dangling from its lip. On and on it came, waddling forward, the water +dripping from it at every step. It had the body and general shape of a +fish, save that the tail was rather large in proportion. As it came +nearer the boys noted that the feet were webbed, like those of a water +fowl. + +“Come on!” cried Jack. “It may attack us!” + +At that moment the creature opened its mouth, showing a triple row of +formidable teeth, and gave utterance to a sort of groan and grunt +combined. + +This was enough to send Jack and Mark off on a run up the bank, and did +they stop until they heard Andy’s voice hailing them. + +“What’s the matter, boys?” + +“Come here! Quick!” answered Jack. + +The fish-animal had halted and seemed to be taking an observation. To do +this, as it could not turn its neck, it had to shift its whole body. Old +Andy came up on the run, his gun held in readiness. + +“Where is it?” he asked, and the boys pointed silently. + +The hunter could not repress a start of astonishment as he saw the +strange creature. But he did not hesitate a second. There was a crack of +the rifle, and the thing, whatever it was, toppled over, dead. + +Andy hurried up to it, to get a closer view. + +“Well, this is the limit!” he exclaimed. “First we have grasshoppers +that can roll peaches as big as hogsheads, and now we come across fish +that walk. I wonder what we will see next.” + +“I don’t want to go fishing in this lake any more,” spoke Jack, as he +looked at the repulsive creature. “I never want to eat fish any more.” + +“Same here,” agreed Mark, and old Andy was of the opinion that the thing +killed would not make a wholesome dish for the table. + +“There don’t seem to be any game in this section,” he remarked. “Not a +sign could I see, nor have I since we have been here, unless you count +those grasshoppers. But the fruit is good, I’ll say that.” + +“Come on, we’d better be getting back,” Mark said, as he noticed it was +getting dark. “I’m hungry.” + + + + + CHAPTER XXII + + THE SNAKE-TREE + + +They managed to make a good meal of the food supplies they had brought +along, and as a dessert Washington made some peach short-cake from the +slices of the giant fruit they had found the day before. Just as they +finished supper it got very dark, but, in about an hour, the moonbeams, +as the travelers called them, came up, and illuminated the lake with a +weird light. + +As the machinery of the _Mermaid_ was now in working order there was no +further alarm because of the darkness. The ship rested on a level keel +about a hundred yards back from the lake, and, seeing that all was snug, +and the fastenings secure, the travelers went to bed. + +Though they had to forego fish for breakfast the travelers made a good +meal. After seeing that the ship was in readiness for a quick start, the +professor suggested they take a walk around and see what sort of country +they might be in now. + +They tramped on for several miles, meeting with no adventures, and +seeing nothing out of the ordinary. It was a pleasant day, just warm +enough to be comfortable, and a little wind was blowing through the +trees. + +“It would be almost like home if it wasn’t for the strange lights, and +the memory of the queer things here,” said Jack. “I feel fine. Let’s see +if you can hit that dead tree over there, Mark.” + +Jack stooped to grab up a stone, but no sooner had his fingers touched +it than he called out: + +“There! I forgot all about the stones here being heavier than lead. +Guess we can’t throw any of ’em. But come on. I’ll race you to the dead +tree!” + +Mark was willing, so the two boys set off at a fast pace. + +“Look out where you’re going!” the professor called after them. “No +telling what may be in those woods,” for the boys were approaching a +little glade, on the edge of which the dead tree stood. + +Jack reached the goal first, and stood leaning against the trunk, +waiting for Mark. + +“You’d better practice sprinting!” exclaimed the victor. + +Mark was about to excuse himself for his poor showing, on the plea of +having eaten too much breakfast, when to his horror he saw what seemed +to be a long thin snake spring out from the branches of a near-by tree +and twine itself about Jack. + +“Help me! Save me!” cried the unfortunate boy, as he was lifted high +into the air and pulled within the shadow of the wood. + +For an instant Mark was too horror-stricken to move. Then with a shout +that alarmed the others, who were coming along more slowly, he made a +dash for the place he had last seen Jack. + +Had old Andy not been on the watch, with those keen eyes of his, there +might have been a double tragedy. He had seen from afar the sudden +snatching up of Jack, and noted Mark’s rush to save his chum. + +“Stand still! Don’t go in there for your life!” yelled the hunter, at +the same time running forward with gun ready. + +His example was followed by the professor, Washington and the other two +men. + +“A snake has Jack!” called Mark, when Andy was at his side. + +“No! It’s not a snake!” replied the hunter. “It’s worse. It’s the +snake-tree!” + +“What’s that?” asked Mr. Henderson, hurrying up. + +“The snake-tree has Jack,” the hunter went on. “It is a plant, half +animal, half-vegetable. It has long branches, not unlike a snake in +shape. They can move about and grab things.” + +“One of them got a grip on Jack as he leaned against the dead tree +trunk. I just caught a glimpse of it, and called to prevent Mark from +running into danger.” + +“Can’t we save him?” asked Mr. Henderson. + +“I’m going to try!” replied Andy. “Quick! Gather up some pieces of dry +wood. I have some paper, and my pipe lighter. We must fight the +snake-tree with fire!” + + + + + CHAPTER XXIII + + THE DESERTED VILLAGE + + +Jack’s cries were growing fainter and fainter. Peering in through the +branches of the dead tree the professor could see the whip-like limbs +winding closer and closer about the boy. + +“I am afraid we will be too late!” he said. + +Andy had twisted some paper into a rude torch. He set fire to it with +his pocket lighter, and, when Bill and Mark brought him some little +pieces of dead wood the old hunter added them to his bundle, which was +now blazing brightly. + +“How are you going to do it?” asked the professor. + +“I’ll show you,” replied Andy. He bound the sticks and paper together +with wisps of grass and then, when it was so hot he could hardly hold it +longer, he ran as close as he dared to the snake-tree and tossed the +torch at the foot of it. + +The blazing bundle fell among some damp leaves and grass, as Andy had +intended it should, and soon a dense smoke arose, pouring straight up +through the branches of the animal-tree, the limbs of which were +gathered in a knot about the half-unconscious form of the boy. + +For a few minutes they all waited anxiously. Would Andy’s trick succeed? +Had the terrible tree not already squeezed the life from Jack? + +But, while they watched, there seemed to come a change over the tree. +The snake-like arms waved less and less. They seemed to straighten out, +as though deprived of power by the smoke which was now so dense as to +hide Jack from sight. Then the arms suddenly relaxed and something +rolled from them and fell to the ground. With a quick movement Andy +darted in, crawling on his hands and knees beneath the limbs, and +brought Jack out. The boy was white and his eyes were closed. + +“Get some water!” cried the old hunter. + +Mark ran toward a stream a little distance away. He brought some of the +curiously thick liquid in his hat, and while Andy held the boy the +professor sprinkled some of the drops on his face, and forced some +between his lips. In a little while Jack’s eyes slowly opened. + +“Don’t let it eat me!” he begged. + +“You’re all right now,” said Andy heartily. “Not a bit harmed, Jack. +But,” he added in a low tone, “it was a close call.” + +A few whiffs from a bottle of ammonia the professor carried soon brought +Jack’s color back. + +“Do you feel better now?” asked Mark. + +“I guess so. Yes, I’m all right,” replied Jack, struggling to his feet. +“What happened? Feels as if I had been tied up with a lot of rope.” + +“That’s about what you were,” Andy replied, “only it was the worst kind +of rope I ever saw. Those snake-trees are terrible things. I’ve read of +’em, but I never saw one before. The book that told of them says they +squeeze their victims to death just as a snake does. The only way to do +is to make some smoke and fire at the bottom. This sort of kills the +branches or makes them stupid and they let go. The trees are half +animal, and awful things. I hope we don’t meet with any more.” + +“Same here,” added Jack fervently, as he grasped Andy’s hand, and +thanked him for saving his life. + +“Do you think you can go on, or shall we return to the ship?” the +professor asked. + +“Oh I can trail along, if you move a little slowly,” Jack replied. “I’m +a bit stiff, that’s all.” + +So they resumed their journey. They had gone, perhaps, three miles when +Washington, who was in the lead, suddenly stopped and called: + +“Sounds like thunder.” + +The others listened. Sure enough there was a dull rumble and roar +audible. It seemed off to the left, but they could see no clouds in the +sky, nor any signs of a storm. + +“Let’s take a walk over that way and see what it is,” Mr. Henderson +suggested. + +As they walked on the noise became louder, until in about half an hour +it was like the sound from a blast furnace. + +“What do you suppose it can be?” asked Mark. + +“Perhaps some new freak of nature,” the professor replied. “We seem to +have a good many of them here.” + +They were all on their guard now, for there was no telling into what +danger they might run. As they went up a little hill the noise became +much louder. The professor and Andy, who had taken the lead, kept a +sharp lookout ahead, that they might not unexpectedly fall into some +hidden stream or lake. As they topped the hill they saw before them a +deep valley, and in the midst of it was that which was causing the +roaring sound. + +From the centre of an immense mound of rock and earth there spouted up a +great column of water, three hundred feet or more, as straight as a flag +staff. It was about ten feet in diameter, and at the top it broke into a +rosette of sparkling liquid, which as the vari-colored lights played on +it, resembled some wonderful flower. + +“It’s a great geyser!” the professor exclaimed. “We have come to a place +like Yellowstone Park. We must be very careful. The crust may be very +thin here, and let us down into some boiling spring.” + +The others gathered around the professor, and, from a safe distance +watched the ever rising and falling shaft of water. + +It was not regular in motion. Sometimes it would shoot up to a great +distance, nearly a thousand feet, the professor estimated. Again it +would sink down, as the power sending it out lessened, until it was only +a few hundred feet above the rounded top of the mound from which it +spurted. But it never fell below this. All the while there was the +constant roaring sound, as though the forces of nature below the surface +were calling to be let out. + +“I hope there are not many of those about,” Mr. Henderson remarked after +a pause. “If the ship should hit one during the night it would be all up +with us. We must keep a careful lookout.” + +The spouting column had a fascination which held them to the spot for +some time. From the hill they had a good view of the surrounding +country, but did not see any more geysers. + +“Do you think it is hot water?” asked Mark. + +“There is no vapor,” the professor answered, “but most of the geysers +are produced by the action of steam in the interior of the earth. +However we’ll not take any chances by investigating. I fear it would not +be safe to go into that valley.” + +“Look there!” cried Andy. “I guess we’re better off here!” He pointed a +little to the right of where the water spouted. The others looked, and +saw, coming from a hole in the ground, some shaggy black object. + +“What is it?” asked Jack. + +“It looks like a bear,” replied the hunter, “but I never saw one like it +before.” + +Nor had any of the others, for the creature was a terrible one. It had +the body of a bear, but the feet and legs were those of an alligator, +while the tail trailed out behind like a snake, and the head had a long +snout, not unlike the trunk of an elephant. The creature was about ten +feet long and five feet in height. + +“Let me try a shot at it!” exclaimed Andy. “That is something worth +shooting,” and he cocked his rifle. + +“Don’t!” exclaimed the professor shortly. “You might only wound it, and +it would pursue us. We are not ready to fight such creatures as that, +and you are the only one armed.” + +“I never missed anything I aimed at yet,” said Andy, a little hurt that +any one should doubt his ability to kill at the first shot. + +“Perhaps not, but how do you know but what this creature has a bullet +proof armor under its hide. This is a strange world, Andy. It is better +to take no chances.” + +“I hate to see him get away,” the hunter said. + +But, as it happened, the beast was not to get away. As they watched they +saw the horrible animal approach the mound from which the water spurted. +Up the sides it climbed. + +“I guess he’s going to get a drink,” said Mark. + +That was evidently the beast’s intention. It went close to the spouting +column of water, and thrust its head out so that its tongue could lap +from the side. It seemed to have been in the habit of doing this. + +For once, and for the last time, however, it made a mistake. The water +seemed to veer to one side. In its eagerness to get a drink the animal +took another step forward. At that moment the direction of the column +changed again, and it tilted over toward the beast. + +Suddenly, as the travelers watched, the full force of the big column +caught the beast just under the fore shoulders. Up into the air the +creature shot, propelled by thousands of pounds pressure. Right up to +the top of the column it went, and this time the water rose a thousand +feet into the air. + +Up and up went the animal, struggling to get away from the remorseless +grip. Then, when the water had reached its height, it shot the beast off +to one side. Then the brute began to fall, twisting, turning, wiggling +and struggling. Down it came with a thud that could be heard above the +noise of the geyser. + +“I reckon that finishes him,” observed Andy. And it had, for there was +not a sign of life from the creature. + +“I guess we have seen enough for one morning,” the professor said. +“Let’s go back to the airship. It must be nearly dinner time.” + +They started away. Mark gave a last look at the queer column of water +and the dead body of the strange animal. As he passed down the hill he +thought he saw the creature move, and stayed to see if this was so. But +a second glance convinced him he was mistaken. + +The others had gone on and were some distance ahead. Mark hurried on to +join them. As he got a last glance at the top of the column, over the +brow of the hill, he happened to look off to the left. There was another +hill, about the size of the one they had been on. + +[Illustration: UP IN THE AIR THE CREATURE SHOT] + +And, as Mark looked he saw something move. At first he thought it was +another beast. But, to his terror he saw that the creature had only two +legs, and that it stood upright like a man, but such a man as Mark had +never seen before, for he was nearly twelve feet tall. + +He was about to cry out and warn the others, when the thing, whatever it +was, sunk down, apparently behind some tall bushes, and disappeared as +if the earth had opened and swallowed it. + +“I wonder if I had better tell them,” thought Mark. “I can’t show them +anything. I wonder if I really saw it, or if it was only a shadow. I +guess I’ll say nothing. But it is very strange.” + +Then he hurried on to join the others. + +“What makes you so pale?” asked Jack of his chum. + +“Nothing,” said Mark, somewhat confused. “I guess I’m a little tired, +that’s all.” + +They reached the ship in safety, and, having dinner started the +machinery and took the _Mermaid_ up into the air. + +“We’ll travel on and see if we can’t find some human beings,” the +professor said. + +All that afternoon they sailed, the country below them unfolding like a +panorama. They passed over big lakes, sailing on the surface of some, +and over rivers, and vast stretches of forest and dreary plains. But +they never saw a sign of human inhabitants. + +It was getting on to five o’clock, the hour when the brilliant lights +usually disappeared, when Mark, who was steering in the conning tower, +gave a cry. + +“What is it?” asked the professor, looking up from a rude map he was +making of the land they had just traversed. + +“It looks like a town before us,” said the boy. + +Mr. Henderson and Jack looked to where Mark pointed. A few miles ahead +and below them were great mounds, not unlike that from which the geyser +had spouted. But they were arranged in regular form, like houses on a +street, row after row of them. And, as they approached nearer, they +could see that the mounds had doors and windows to them. Some of the +mounds were larger than others, and some were of double and triple +formation. + +“It’s a city! The first city of the new world!” cried Jack. + +“It is a deserted village!” said the professor. “We have found where the +people live, but we have not found them.” And he was right, for there +was not a sign of life about the place, over which the airship was now +suspended. + + + + + CHAPTER XXIV + + THE GIANTS + + +“Let’s go down and investigate,” suggested Jack. + +“Better wait,” counseled the professor. “It will soon be dark, and, +though we will have moonlight, we can not see to advantage. I think it +will be best to keep the ship in the air to-night, and descend in the +morning. Then we can look about and decide on what to do.” + +They all agreed this was the best plan, and, after making a circle above +the deserted village, and noting no signs of life, the _Mermaid_ was +brought to a halt over the centre of the town, and about three hundred +feet above it. There the travelers would be comparatively safe. + +It was deemed best to keep watch that night, and so, Mark, Jack, Bill +and Tom took turns, though there was nothing for them to do, as not a +thing happened. With the first appearance of dawn Mr. Henderson gave +orders to have the ship lowered, and it came to rest in the middle of +what corresponded to a street in the queer mound village. + +“Now to see what kind of people have lived here!” cried Jack. “They must +have been a queer lot. Something like the Esquimaux, only they probably +had more trouble keeping cool than the chaps up at the north pole do.” + +Now that they were down among the mound houses, they saw that the +dwellings were much larger than they had supposed. They towered high +above the boys’ heads, and some of them were large enough in area to +have accommodated a company of soldiers. + +“Say, the chaps who lived in these must have been some pumpkins,” said +Jack. “Why the ceilings are about fifteen feet high, and the doors +almost the same! Talk about giants! I guess we’ve struck where they used +to hang out, at any rate.” + +The houses were a curious mixture of clay and soft stone. There were +doors, with big skins from animals as curtains, and the windows were +devoid of glass. Instead of stairs there were rude ladders, and the +furniture in the mound houses was of the roughest kind. + +There were fire-places in some of the houses, and the blackened and +smoked walls showed that they must have been used. In one or two of the +houses clay dishes, most of them broken, were scattered about, and the +size of them, in keeping with everything else, indicated that those who +used them were of no small stature. + +“Some of the bowls would do for bath tubs,” said Jack, as he came across +one or two large ones. + +By this time the professor, Bill and Tom had joined the boys, and the +five went on with the exploring tour, while Washington and Andy remained +in the ship to get breakfast. + +“The inhabitants are evidently of a half-civilized race,” the professor +said. “Their houses, and the manner in which they live, show them to be +allied to the Aztecs, though of course they are much larger than that +race.” + +“What’s bothering me,” Bill said, “is not so much what race they belong +to, as what chance we’d stand in a race with them if they took it into +their heads to chase after us. I’ve read that them there Azhandled +races——” + +“You mean the Aztecs,” interrupted the professor. + +“Well the Aztecs, then. But I’ve read they used to place their enemies +on a stone altar and cut their hearts out. Now I’m not hankerin’ after +anything like that.” + +“Don’t be foolish,” spoke Mr. Henderson. “Wait until you meet some of +the giants, if that is what they are, and then you can decide what to +do.” + +“It may be too late then,” remarked Bill in a low tone, and the boys +were somewhat inclined to agree with him. + +However, there seemed to be no immediate danger, as there was no sign of +any of the big people about the village. The adventurers walked about +for some time, but made no discoveries that would throw any light on the +reason for the place being left uninhabited. It seemed as if there had +been a sudden departure from the place, for in a number of the houses +the remains of half-cooked meals were seen. + +“Well, I think we have noted enough for the time being,” the professor +remarked, after they had traversed almost half the length of what seemed +to be the principal street. “Let’s go back to the ship and have +something to eat. Washington may have become alarmed at our absence.” + +They made a circle in order to take in another part of the town on their +way back. While passing through a sort of alley, though it was only +narrow by comparison with the other thoroughfares that were very wide, +Mark came to a place where there was a circular slab of stone, resting +on the ground. In the centre was a big iron ring. + +“Hello! Here’s something new!” he exclaimed. “Maybe it leads to a secret +passage, or covers some hidden treasure.” + +“I guess it will have to continue to cover it then,” Jack spoke. “That +probably weighs several tons. None of us could move it.” + +They made their way back to the ship, where they found Washington and +Andy discussing the advisability of going off in search of them. + +“Breakfast is mighty near spoiled,” said the colored man with an injured +air. + +But the travelers did full justice to the meal, notwithstanding this. +Deciding there was nothing to be gained by staying in that vicinity, the +professor started the ship off again. + +They traveled several hundred miles in the air, and, as the afternoon +was coming to a close, Jack, who was in charge of the conning tower, +spied, just ahead of them, another village. + +“We will descend there for the night,” the professor said. “Does there +seem to be any sign of life about?” + +“None,” replied Mark, who was observing through a telescope the town +they were approaching. “It’s as dead as the other one.” + +The airship settled down in a field back of some of the mound houses. + +“Now for supper!” cried Jack. “I’m as hungry as——” + +He stopped short, for, seeming to rise from the very ground, all about +the ship, there appeared a throng of men. And such men as they were! For +not one was less than ten feet tall, and some were nearly fifteen! + +“The giants have us!” cried Bill, as he saw the horde of creatures +surrounding the ship. + + + + + CHAPTER XXV + + HELD BY THE ENEMY + + +“Keep the doors closed!” cried the professor. “It is our only hope! I +will send the ship up again!” + +But it was too late. Washington, who had obeyed the signal from the +conning tower to shut off the engines, had disconnected most of them so +they could not be started again save from the main room. At the same +time there came a yell of dismay from the colored man, who had slid back +the steel covering of the main side entrance to the _Mermaid_. + +“I’m caught!” cried Washington. + +As the professor and the boys hurried from the tower, they could hear a +struggle from where Washington was, and his voice calling: + +“Let me go! Let me go!” + +Reaching the engine room, which opened directly on the side entrance, +the professor saw a pair of enormous hands and arms dragging poor +Washington, feet first, out of the ship. Bill and Tom were crouched in +one corner, pale with fright. + +“Wait until I get my gun!” cried Andy, as he ran for his rifle. + +“Hold on!” called the professor in a loud voice. “It will be folly to +shoot them! We must try strategy!” + +Washington’s cries ceased as he was drawn entirely from the ship, the +giant hands disappearing at the same time. + +“Follow me!” yelled Mr. Henderson, running out of the door. + +Hardly knowing what they did, the boys went after him, and their hearts +almost stopped beating in fright as they saw the terrible things, which, +in the glare of the changing lights, were on every side of them. + +For the men were very repulsive looking. They were attired in clothes, +very similar in cut to those worn by the travelers, and which seemed to +be made of some sort of cloth. But they were loose and baggy and only +added to the queer appearance of the giants. Veritable giants they were +too. Their faces seemed as large as kegs, and they were so clumsy in +shape that Mark, even, frightened as he was, exclaimed: + +“They look like men made of putty!” At the same time he saw they bore a +resemblance to the creature he had observed on the hill top. + +“What shall we do?” asked Andy of the professor. “They are really +carrying Washington away!” + +Three of the giants were dragging the colored man along the ground, +while the other terrible beings stood about as if waiting to see the +outcome of the first sally. + +“I will try to speak to them,” Mr. Henderson said. “I know several +languages. They may understand one.” + +But before he could start on his parley a surprising thing happened. +There was a struggle in the little group about Washington. The colored +man seemed to be fighting, though the odds, it would appear, were too +great to enable him to accomplish anything. But, making a desperate +effort to escape, Washington quickly wrenched himself free from the +giants’ hands and then, striking out with his fists, knocked the three +down, one after another. + +“I never knew Washington was so strong!” exclaimed Jack. + +“Nor I,” put in Mark. “Why I should think the men could carry him in one +arm as if he was a baby.” + +The three giants rose slowly to their feet. They uttered strange cries, +and motioned with their hands toward the professor, the boys, and the +others in the crowd. + +“Look out! They’re goin’ t’ grab yo’!” cried Washington. + +Three of the giants approached Mark, and a like number closed in on +Jack. + +“Back to the ship!” cried the professor. “We must defend ourselves!” + +But by this time the big men had grabbed the two boys. Then a strange +thing took place. Mark and Jack, though they felt that the giants must +overcome them in a test of strength, struggled with all their might +against being captured. They fought, as a cornered rat will fight, +though it knows the odds to be overwhelming. But in this case the +unexpected happened. + +Both boys found they could easily break the holds of the giants, and +Mark, by a vigorous effort, pushed the three men away from him, one at a +time violently so that they fell in a heap, one on top of the other. + +“Hurrah! We can fight ’em!” cried Mark. “Don’t be afraid. They’re like +mush! They’re putty men!” + +And, so it seemed, the giants were. Though big in size they were flabby +and had nothing like the muscle they should have had in proportion to +their build. They went down like meal sacks and were slow to rise. + +[Illustration: THE BIG MEN HAD GATHERED IN A COMPACT MASS] + +Jack, seeing how successful his comrade was, attacked the three giants +who were striving to make him a captive. He succeeded in disposing of +them, knocking one down so hard that the man was unable to rise until +his companions helped him. + +“That’s the way!” cried Washington. “They’re soft as snow men!” + +The vanquished giants set up a sort of roar, which was answered by their +fellows, and soon there was a terrible din. + +“All get together!” called the professor. “They are evidently going to +make a rush for us. If we stand by one another we may fight them off, +though they outnumber us a hundred to one. Besides it will soon be dark, +and we may be able to escape!” + +Washington, Jack and Mark retreated toward the ship, in the direction of +which the others had also made their way. The big men had gathered in a +compact mass and were advancing on the adventurers. + +“What do you suppose makes them so soft?” asked Mark. “I believe I could +manage half a dozen.” + +“It must be the effect of the climate and conditions here,” the +professor replied. “Probably they have to be big to stand the pressure +of the thick water, and the increased attraction of gravitation. Then +too, being without the weight of the atmosphere to which we are +accustomed, they have probably expanded. If they were to go up to earth, +they might shrink to our size.” + +“Do you think that possible?” + +“Of course. Why do you ask?” + +“Nothing in particular,” replied Mark. But to himself, he added: “That +would explain it all.” + +It was getting dusk now. The travelers had reached their ship, and +rushed inside and tried to close the doors in the face of the advancing +horde. But, by this time the giants were so close that one or two of +them thrust their big feet in, and prevented this movement. At the same +time they set up a great howling. + +“Quick!” cried the professor. “We must start the ship and get away!” + +“I can’t close the door!” yelled Washington, who had been the last to +enter. + +“Never mind that! _Go_ up with it open! Drag them along if they won’t +let go!” answered Mr. Henderson, as he ran toward the engine room. + +There was a sudden rush among the giants, and a sound as if something +was being thrown over the top and ends of the ship. Mark turned the gas +machine on, while Jack worked the negative gravity apparatus. They +waited for the ship to rise. + +“Why don’t we go up?” asked the professor. + +“'Cause they’ve caught us!” called out Washington. + +“Caught us? How?” + +“They’ve thrown ropes over the top and ends of the ship, and fastened +them to their big houses!” + +Running to a side window the professor saw that the _Mermaid_ was +fastened down by a score of cables, each one six inches thick. They were +held captives by the enemy. + + + + + CHAPTER XXVII + + A FRIEND INDEED + + +Though the giants, man for man, were no match for the travelers, +collectively the horde proved too much. They had swarmed about the ship, +and, by passing the big cables over her, effectively held her down. + +“Let me get out and I’ll cut ’em!” cried Andy. “We must get away from +these savages!” + +“No, no, don’t go out!” exclaimed the professor. “They would eventually +kill you, though you might fight them off for a time. We must wait and +see what develops. They can have no object in harming us, as we have not +injured them.” + +“I’d rather fight ’em,” insisted the old hunter. + +But the professor had his way and Andy was forced to obey. The giants +had withdrawn their big feet from the side door and Washington had +closed it. But nothing else had been accomplished, and the ship could +not rise. The gas and negative gravity machines were stopped, as they +were only under a useless strain. + +Suddenly, the colored lights which had been growing dimmer and dimmer, +with the approach of night, went out altogether. Almost as suddenly, +Mark, who was watching the giants from the conning tower, as they made +fast the loose ends of the cables, saw them make a dash for the mound +houses. + +“They’re afraid of the dark!” he cried. “Come on! We can go out now and +loosen the ropes!“ + +He hurried to tell the professor what he had noticed. + +“Good!” exclaimed Mr. Henderson. “Perhaps we can escape now!” + +They waited a few minutes, listening to the sound of many big feet +running away from the ship, and then, Bill cautiously opened the side +door. The others were behind him, waiting, with knives and hatchets in +their hands, to rush out and cut the restraining cables. + +“All ready!” called Bill. “There doesn’t seem to be a one in sight!” + +He stepped out but no sooner had he set foot on the ground than there +came a thud, and Bill went down as if some one had knocked his feet from +under him. + +“Go back! Go back!” he cried. “They hit me with something. I’m being +smothered!” + +“Bring a light!” cried the professor, for the sally had been started in +the dark. + +Jack brought the portable electric it having been repaired and flashed +it out of the door. In the gleam of it, Bill was seen lying prostrate, +half covered by an orange, about half as big as himself. The fruit was +as soft and mushy as some of the giants themselves, or Bill would not +have fared so easily. + +Then, as the others stood watching, and while Bill arose and wiped some +of the juice from his face, there came a regular shower of the monstrous +oranges. + +“Get inside quick! We’ll be smothered under them!” Mr. Henderson cried. + +Pausing only to rescue Bill, the adventurers retreated inside the ship, +and made fast the door. Outside they could hear the thud as the oranges +were thrown, some hitting the _Flying Mermaid_ and many dropping all +about her. + +“I guess they are going to have things their own way,” observed Bill, as +he gazed down on his clothes, which were covered with juice from the +fruit. + +The night was one of anxiety. The travelers took turns standing guard, +but nothing more occurred. The giants remained in their houses, and the +heavy ropes still held the ship fast. + +“We must hold a council of war,” the professor decided as they gathered +at breakfast, which was far from a cheerful meal. + +With the return of the colored lights the giants again made their +appearance. They came swarming from the mound houses, and a great crowd +they proved to be. Several thousand at least, Jack estimated, and when +he went up into the conning tower and took a survey he could see the +strange and terrible creatures pouring in from the surrounding country. + +“I’m afraid there will be trouble,” he said, as he came down and +reported what he had seen. + +“We must hold a council of war,” repeated the professor. “Has any one +anything to suggest?” + +“Get a lot of powder and blow ’em up!” cried Andy. + +“Arrange electric wires and shock ’em to death!” was Bill’s plan. + +“Can’t we slip the ropes in some way and escape?” asked Jack. “I don’t +believe we can successfully fight the giants. They are too many, even if +they are weak, individually.” + +“I think you’re right there,” Mr. Henderson said. “We must try some sort +of strategy, but what? That is the question.” + +For a few minutes no one spoke. They were all thinking deeply, for their +lives might hang in the balance. + +“I think I have a plan,” said Mark, at length. “Did we bring any diving +suits with us?” + +“There may be one or two,” the professor replied. “But what good will +they do?” + +“Two of us could put them on,” continued Mark, “and, as they afford good +protection from any missiles like fruit, we could crawl out on the deck +of the ship. From there, armed with hatchets or knives we could cut the +ropes. Then the ship could rise.” + +“That’s a good plan!” cried the scientist. “We’ll try it at once!” + +Search revealed that two diving suits were among the stores of the +_Mermaid_. Jack and Mark wanted to be the ones to don them, but as the +suits were rather large, and as the professor thought it would take more +strength than the boys had to do the work, it was decided that Andy and +Washington should make the attempt to cut the ropes. + +The hunter and colored man lost little time in getting into the modern +armor. In the meanwhile Jack, who had been posted as a lookout, reported +that there seemed to be some activity among the giants. They were +running here and there, and some seemed to be going off toward the +woods, that were not far away. + +“Now work quickly,” urged the professor. “We will be on the watch, and +as soon as the last rope is cut we will start the machinery and send the +ship up. We will not wait for you to come back inside, so hold fast as +best you can when the _Mermaid_ rises.” + +“We will,” answered Andy, just before the big copper helmet was fastened +on his head, and Washington nodded to show he understood. + +The two who were to attempt the rescue of their comrades were soon on +deck. In the conning tower Jack and the professor kept anxious watch, +while Mark, Bill and Tom were at the various machines, ready, at the +signal, to start the engines. + +The giants had now become so interested in whatever plan they had afoot, +that they paid little attention to the ship. Consequently Washington and +Andy, crawling along the deck in their diving suits, did not, at first +attract any attention. + +In fact they had cut several of the big ropes, and it began to look as +if the plan would succeed, particularly as they were partly hidden from +view by the upper gas holder. They were working with feverish haste, +sawing away at the big cables with keen knives. + +“I guess we’ll beat ’em yet!” cried Jack. + +“I hope so,” replied the professor. “It looks——” + +He stopped short, for at that moment a cry arose from the midst of the +giants, and one of them pointed toward the ship. An instant later the +air was darkened with a flight of big oranges, which the queer creatures +seemed to favor as missiles. Probably they found stones too heavy. + +“Well, those things can’t hurt ’em much with those heavy suits on,” +observed Mr. Henderson. “There, Washington got one right on the head +that time, and it didn’t bother him a bit.” + +Jack had seen the fruit strike the big copper helmet and observed that +the colored man only moved his head slightly in order to get rid of the +orange. + +In fact the giants, seeing for themselves that this mode of warfare was +not going to answer, since the two men on the ship continued to cut the +restraining cables, gave it up. There was a good deal of shouting among +them, and a number ran here and there, seemingly gathering up long +poles. + +“I wonder if they are going to try the flailing method, and beat poor +Andy and Washington,” said Mr. Henderson. “It looks so.” + +The two rescuers were now about a quarter through their hard task. The +throwing of the oranges had ceased. But the giants were up to a new +trick. They divided into two sections, one taking up a position on one +side of the ship, and the other on the opposite. There were about two +hundred in each crowd, while the others in the horde drew some distance +back. + +“They’re up to some queer dodge,” observed Jack. “What are they placing +those sticks to their mouths for?” + +The professor observed the throng curiously for a few seconds. Then he +exclaimed: + +“They are using blow-guns! They are going to shoot arrows at Washington +and Andy! We must get them in at once!” + +He darted toward a door that opened from the conning tower out on the +deck. + +“Don’t go!” cried Jack. “It’s too late! They are beginning to blow!” + +He pointed to the throng of giants. The professor could see their cheeks +puffed out as the big creatures filled their lungs with air and prepared +to expel it through the hollow tubes. + +Then there came a sound as if a great wind was blowing. It howled and +roared over the ship, not unlike a hurricane in its fury. But there was +no flight of arrows through the air, such as would have come from +regular blow guns. + +“That is strange,” said the professor. He thought for a moment. “I have +it!” he cried, “They are trying to blow Washington and Andy off the ship +by the power of their breaths! They are not blowing arrows at them! My, +but they, must have strong lungs!” + +And, in truth, that was the plan of the giants. The hollow tubes, made +from some sort of big weed, sent a blast of air at the two men on the +ship’s deck, that made them lie flat and cling with both hands to avoid +being sent flying into the midst of the giants, on one side or the +other. But the giants had reckoned without the weight of the diving +suits, and it was those, with the big lead soles of the shoes, that +helped to hold Washington and Andy in place. + +“Come back! Come back!” cried the professor, opening the conning tower +door and calling to the two brave men. “Come back, both of you! Do you +hear?” + +As the portal slid back the rush of air was almost like that of a +cyclone. Then it suddenly ceased, as the giants saw their plan was not +likely to succeed. + +But now there arose from the outer circle of the horde a shout of +triumph. It was caused by the return of those who had, a little while +before, hurried off to the woods. They came back bearing big trees, tall +and slender, stripped of their branches, so that they resembled flag +staffs. It took a dozen giants to carry each one. + +The whole throng was soon busy laying the poles in a row in front of the +ship. + +“What can they be up to now?” asked Jack. + +“It looks as if they were going to slide the ship along on rollers,” the +professor replied. + +Sure enough this was the giant’s plan. A few minutes later those in the +_Mermaid_ felt her moving forward, as the giants, massed behind, shoved. +On to the poles she slid. The ropes were loosened to permit this, but +not enough to enable the boat to rise. + +Then the travelers felt the ship being lifted up. + +“They are going to carry us away, with the poles for a big stretcher!” +cried the professor. + +Looking from the side windows the boys saw that a great crowd of the big +men were on either side of the _Mermaid_, each giant grasping a pole, +and lifting. Farther out were others, holding the ends of the cables +which Washington and Andy had not succeeded in cutting. + +The ship was being carried along by a thousand or more giants, as the +ancient warriors, slain in battle, were carried home on the spears of +their comrades. + +“This is the end of the _Mermaid_!” murmured Mr. Henderson in sorrowful +tones. + +As they looked from the conning tower the professor and the two boys +observed a commotion among the leaders of the giants. They seemed to be +wavering. Suddenly the forward part of the ship sank, as those ahead +laid their poles down on the ground. Then those behind did the same, and +the _Mermaid_, came to a stop, and once more rested on the earth. + +“What does this mean?” asked the scientist in wonder. + +All at once the entire crowd of giants threw themselves down on their +faces, and there, standing at the bow of the ship, was a giant, half +again as large as any of the others. He was clad in a complete suit of +golden armor on which the changing lights played with beautiful effect, +and in his hand he held an immense golden sword. He pointed the weapon +at the ship as if he had raised it in protection, and his hand was +stretched in commanding gesture over the prostrate giants. + +“Perhaps he has come to save us!” cried Mark. + + + + + CHAPTER XXVII + + A GREAT JOURNEY + + +Such indeed, seemed to be the case. The golden-armored giant, after +standing for a few moments in an attitude of command, waved his sword +three times about his head, and uttered a command, in a voice that +sounded like thunder. Then the prostrate ones arose, and, making low +bows hurried away in all directions. + +Watching them disappear, the golden one sheathed his weapon and +approached the ship. He caught sight of the professor and the two boys +in the conning tower, for Mark had gone there when he found the ship +being transported, and held up his two hands, the palms outward. + +“It is the sign of peace in the language all natives employ,” said the +professor. “I think I shall trust him.” + +Followed by the boys he descended from the little platform in the tower, +and to the door that opened on the deck. + +“Shall we go out?” he asked. + +“We can’t be much worse off,” replied Mark. “Let’s chance it.” + +So, not without many misgivings, they slid back the portal and stepped +out to face the strange and terrible being who had so suddenly come to +their rescue. + +The giant in the golden armor did not seem surprised to see them. In +fact he acted as though he rather expected them. He continued to hold up +one hand, with the palm, outward, while, with the other, he removed his +helmet and bowed low. Then he cast his sword on the ground and advanced +toward the ship. When within ten feet he sat down on the ground, and +this brought his head nearer the earth, so that his auditors could both +see and hear him to better advantage. + +As soon as the giant saw the travelers were outside their ship he began +to speak to them in a voice, which, though he might have meant it to be +low and gentle, was like the bellowing of a bull. At the same time he +made many gestures, pointing to the ship, to himself and to Mark. + +“What is he saying, professor?” asked Jack. + +“I can’t understand all he says,” Mr. Henderson replied. “He uses some +words derived from the Latin and some from the Greek. But by piecing it +out here and there, and by interpreting his motions I am able to get at +something.” + +“And what is it all about?” + +“It is a strange story,” the scientist replied. “He has only gone about +half way through it. Wait until he finishes and I will tell you.” + +The golden-armored giant, who had stopped in his narrative while Jack +was speaking, resumed. His gestures became more rapid, and his words +came faster. Several times Mr. Henderson held up his hand for him to +cease, while he puzzled out what was meant. + +At one point, the professor seemed much startled, and motioned for the +strange being to repeat the last part of his discourse. When this had +been done Mr. Henderson shook his head as though in doubt. + +At length the story was finished, and the lone giant, for there were no +others in sight now, folded his arms and seemed to await what the +professor’s answer might be. Mr. Henderson turned to the boys, and to +the others of the _Mermaid’s_ company, who, by this time, had joined +him, and said: + +“Friends, I have just listened to a strange story. It is so strange +that, but for the fact that our own adventures are verging on the +marvelous, I could hardly believe it. In the first place, this man here +is the king of this country. That is why all the other natives obeyed +him. + +“In the second place it seems he has been a passenger in our boat, and +came here from the earth’s surface with us!” + +“What’s that?” cried Jack. + +“That explains the strange happenings!” ejaculated Mark. “No wonder I +could never solve the secret of the storeroom.” + +“You are right, it does,” replied Mr. Henderson. “I will not go into all +the details of how it happened, but it seems the big hole through which +we came is only one of two entrances to this inner world. Rather it is +the entrance, and there is another, close to it, which is the exit. +Through the latter a big stream of water spouts up, just as one pours +down through the opening we used. + +“Hankos, which is the name of the king, was for many years a student of +science. He longed to see where the big stream of upward spurting water +went, and wanted to know whence came the down-pouring one. So he +undertook a daring experiment. + +“He constructed a great cylinder, and, keeping his plans a secret, +conveyed it to the spouting water, entered it, and, by means of pulleys +and levers, after he had shut himself inside, cast himself into the +up-shooting column. He took along compressed air cylinders to supply an +atmosphere he could breathe, and some food to eat, for it appears our +giant friends are something of inventors in their way. The current of +water bore him to the surface of the earth, and he was cast up on the +ocean, in what was probably taken for a waterspout if any one saw it. + +“Then a strange thing happened. No sooner did Hankos open his cylinder, +which served him as a boat, than he lost his gigantic size, owing to the +difference of the two atmospheres. He became almost of the same size as +ourselves, except that his skin hung in great folds on him, and he +seemed like a wrinkled old man. His clothes too, were a world too large. + +“He had a terrible time before he reached shore, and a hard one after +it, for his strange appearance turned almost every one against him. He +was sorry he had ventured to solve the mystery of the up-shooting stream +of water, for he was worse than an outcast. + +“Then he began to plan to get back to his own inner world. But he could +not find the downward stream, and, not knowing the language of the +countries where he landed, he had no means of ascertaining. He traveled +from place to place, always seeking for something that would lead him +back to his own country. + +“Finally he heard of us, and of our ship, though how I do not know, as I +thought I had kept it a great secret. By almost superhuman struggles he +made his way to our island. He says he concealed himself aboard the +_Mermaid_ the night before we sailed, but I hardly believe it possible. +It seems——” + +“He did it, for I saw him!” interrupted Mark. + +“You saw him!” cried Mr. Henderson. + +Then Mark told of the many things that had puzzled him so, how he had +seen the queer figure slinking aboard the boat, of the disappearance of +food from time to time, and of the strange noises in the storeroom. + +“That bears out what he told me,” the professor said. “Hankos says he +used to steal out nights and take what food he could get, and he also +mentions some one, answering to Mark’s description, who nearly +discovered him once as he hurried back into the apartment. + +“However, it seems to be true, since Mark confirms it. At any rate +Hankos stayed in hiding, and made the entire trip with us, and, just as +we all became overcome with the strange gas he escaped, having begun to +expand to his original giant size, and being unable to remain any longer +in his cramped quarters.” + +“That’s so, he did!” cried Mark. “I saw him come out of the place just +before I lost my senses. It was a terrible sight, and none of you would +believe me when I told you some of the occurrences afterward.” + +“You must forgive us for that,” the professor said. “We have learned +much since then.” + +“What did Hankos do after he left the ship when it landed in this +country?” asked Jack. + +“He traveled until he came to this village, which is the chief one of +this country,” replied the professor. “Part of the time he followed us +at a distance, being able to travel very fast.” + +Mark remembered the strange figure of a giant he had seen on the hill +tops several times, and knew that he had been observing the being who +had played such a queer part in their lives. + +“When he came back among his own people,” went on Mr. Henderson, “they +would not receive him at first, believing him to be an impostor. But +Hankos convinced them of his identity and was allowed to don the golden +armor, which is the badge of kingship. He had only been in office for a +little while when he heard of the arrival of the strange thing, which +turned out to be our ship. He recognized it from the description, and, +learning that we were likely to be sacrificed to the fury and ignorance +of the giants, he hurried here and saved our lives. + +“He says he can never thank us enough for being the means whereby he was +able to get back to his own country, and says the freedom of this whole +inner world is ours. He has given orders that we are to go wherever we +like, and none will molest us. He tells me the land is a wonderful one, +compared to our own, and urges us to make a long journey. He would like +to go with us, only, now that he has resumed his natural size, he can +not get inside the ship.” + +“Hurrah for King Hankos!” cried Jack and the others joined him in a +hearty cheer. + +The giant in the golden armor evidently understood the compliment which +was paid him, for he waved his helmet in the air and responded with a +shout of welcome that made the ground tremble. + +Hankos waited until the professor had translated all of the story to the +other travelers. Then the genial giant began to talk some more, and the +professor listened intently. + +“He says,” spoke Mr. Henderson to his friends, “that we will be supplied +with all the fruit we want, and with the best of the houses to sleep in +on our journey. He also tells me he has great stores of shining stones +and piles of the metal of which his armor is made, and that we are +welcome to as much as we want. If this means unlimited gold and +diamonds, we may make our fortunes.” + +“Jest let me git ma’ hand on a few sparklers an’ I’ll quit work!” +exclaimed Washington. + +“I have told him,” the scientist went on, “that we will take advantage +of his kind offer. We will start on our trip in a day or so, after we +have looked over the ship to see if it is not damaged. He tells me the +gold and sparkling stones are several thousand miles away, on top of a +high mountain. We will make that our objective point.” + +The interview between the king and Mr. Henderson having ended, the +former waved his sword in the air and the swarm of big men came back. +They had been hiding back in the woods. Now their manner was very +different. They carefully, removed the rollers and ropes, and soon there +was brought to the adventurers an immense pile of fine fruits. If our +friends had stayed there a year they could not have eaten it all. The +giants were judging the appetites of the travelers by their own. + +That night the adventurers slept more soundly than they had since +entering the strange world. They felt they had nothing to fear from the +giants. In the morning they were not molested, though big crowds +gathered to look at the ship. But they kept back a good distance. The +machinery was found to be in good shape, save for a few repairs, and +when these were made, the professor announced he would start on a long +journey. + +For several weeks after that the travelers swung about in their ship, +sometimes sailing in the air and again on big seas and lakes viewing the +wonders of the inner world. They were many and varied, and the professor +collected enough material for a score of books which he said he would +write when he got back to the outer world once more. + +One afternoon, as they were sailing over a vast stretch of woodland, +which did not seem to be inhabited, Mr. Henderson, looking at one of the +gages on the wall, asked: + +“Boys do you know how far you have traveled underground?” + +“How far?” asked Jack, who hated to guess riddles. + +“More than four thousand miles,” was the answer. + +“But we haven’t come to that mountain of gold and diamonds,” said Mark. +“I am anxious to see that.” + +“Have patience,” replied the professor. “I have not steered toward it +yet. There are other things to see.” + +Just then Washington’s voice could be heard calling from the conning +tower: + +“We’re coming to a big mountain!” + + + + + CHAPTER XXVIII + + THE TEMPLE OF TREASURE + + +“What’s that?” fairly yelled the professor. + +“We am propelling ourselves in a contiguous direction an’ in close +proximity to an elevated portion of th’ earth’s surface which rises in +antiguous proximity t’ th’ forward part of our present means of +locomotion!” said the colored man in a loud voice. + +“Which means there may be a collision,” the professor said, as he and +the boys hurried toward the tower. + +“Jest what I said,” retorted Washington. “What’ll I do?” + +“Send the ship a little higher,” answered Mr. Henderson. “We mustn’t hit +any mountains.” + +Washington forced more gas into the holder, and speeded the negative +gravity machine up some, so that the _Mermaid_, which was flying rather +low, ascended until it was in no danger of colliding with the peak which +reared its lofty height just ahead of them. + +As the ship sailed slowly over the mountain, Mark gazed down and +exclaimed: + +“Doesn’t that look like the ruins of some building?” + +The professor took a pair of field glasses from a rack in the wall and +took a long view. + +“It must be the place,” he said in a low voice. + +“What place?” asked Jack. + +“The temple of treasure,” was the answer. “Hankos told me it was on top +of the highest mountain in the land, and this must be it, for it is the +loftiest place we have seen. But we must be careful, for there is danger +down there.” + +“What kind?” asked Mark. + +“The place was long ago deserted by the giants,” Mr. Henderson went on. +“Ages ago it was one of their storehouses for treasure, but there were +wars among themselves, Hankos said, and this part of the country was +laid waste. Savage beasts took up their abode in the temple, and since +then, in spite of the great size of the giants, they have not dared to +venture here. If we brave the animals we may have all the gold and +diamonds we can take away.” + +“Then for one, I’m willin’ t’ go down an’ begin th’ extermination at +once,” put in Andy. “I’ve always wanted t’ be rich.” + +“We must proceed cautiously,” the professor said. “We are ill prepared +to fight any such beasts as we saw at the big geyser. At the same time +they may have deserted this place. I think we will lower the ship down +over the temple, and spend several hours in observation. Then, if +nothing develops, we can enter and see if the treasure is there.” + +This plan was voted a good one, and the _Mermaid_ after having been +steered directly over the ruined temple, was brought to a halt, and +enough gas let out so that it fell to about fifty feet in the air above +it. + +The adventurers began their watch. The afternoon waned and there were no +signs of any beasts in or about the temple. + +“I reckon we can take a chance,” said Andy, who was anxious to get his +hands on some diamonds. + +“Better wait until morning,” counseled Mr. Henderson. “It will soon be +dark, and it doesn’t look like a nice place to go stumbling about in by +moonlight.” + +So, though all but the scientist were anxious, they had to wait until +the night had passed. Several times Washington got up to see if the +temple had, by any chance, taken wings during the long hours of +darkness, but each time he found it was still in place. + +“Seems laik it’ll never come mornin’,” he said. + +But dawn came at length, and, after a hasty breakfast, preparations to +enter the temple were made. Andy loaded his gun for “bear” as he +expressed it, and the boys each took a revolver. + +The ship was lowered to as level a place as could be found, and then, +seeing that everything was in readiness for a quick departure, the +professor led the way out of the _Mermaid_. + +The entrance to the temple was through a big arched gateway. Some of the +stones had fallen down, and the whole structure looked as if it might +topple over at any moment. + +“Go carefully,” cautioned Mr. Henderson. “Watch on all sides and up +above. Better let Andy and me go ahead.” + +The scientist and the old hunter led the way. Through the arch they +went, and emerged into what must at one time have been a magnificent +courtyard. Before them was the temple proper, a vast structure, with an +opening through which fifty men might have marched abreast. But the +doors were gone, and the portal was but a black hole. + +“I hope there ain’t any ghosts in there,” said Washington, with a +shiver. + +“Nonsense!” exclaimed the professor. “There may be things as bad, but +there are no such things as ghosts. Have your gun ready, Andy.” + +With every sense on the alert, the old hunter advanced. Every one was a +bit nervous, and, as Mark and Jack afterward admitted, they half +expected some terrible beast to rush out at them. But nothing of the +kind happened, and they went into the interior of the temple. + +At first it was so dark they could see nothing. There were vast dim +shapes on every side, and from the hollow echo of their footsteps they +judged the roof must be very high and the structure big in every way. + +Then, as their eyes became used to the darkness, they could make out, up +front, something like an altar or pulpit. + +“Perhaps that’s where they offered up the gold and diamonds as a +sacrifice to their gods,” spoke Mark in a whisper. + +“Sacrifice to their gods!” came back a hundred echoes and the sound made +every one shudder. + +“Oh!” said Washington, in a low voice. + +“Oh! Oh! Oh!” repeated the echoes in voices of thunder. + +“Well, this is pleasant,” spoke Andy, in his natural tones, and, to the +surprise of all there was no echo. It was only when a person whispered +or spoke low that the sound was heard. After that they talked naturally. + +“You stay here, and Andy and I will go up front and see what there is,” +said Mr. Henderson. “Be on your guard, and if you hear us coming back in +a hurry, run!” + +It was with no little feeling of nervousness that the boys, Bill, Tom +and Washington watched the two men move off in the darkness. They could +hear their footsteps on the stone flags and could dimly see them. + +“They must be almost to the altar by this time,” said Mark, after a long +pause. + +Hardly had he spoken than there came a loud sound from where Mr. +Henderson and Andy had gone. It was as if some giant wings were beating +the air. Then came shrill cries and the voice of the old hunter could be +heard calling: + +“Kneel down, Professor! Let me get a shot at the brute!” + +Those waiting in the rear of the temple huddled closer together. What +terrible beast could have been aroused? + +The next instant the place seemed illuminated as if by a lightning +flash, and a sound as of a thousand thunder claps resounded. + +“I think I winged him!” cried Andy’s voice, and the boys knew he had +fired at something. + +Then there came a crash, and from the roof of the old temple a dozen +stones toppled off to one side, letting in a flood of colored light. + +By this illumination could be seen, flapping through the big space +overhead, an enormous bat, as large as three eagles. And, as it flew +about in a circle it gave utterance to shrill cries. + +“Bang!” Andy’s gun spoke again, and the bat with a louder cry than +before, darted through the hole in the roof made by the falling stones, +which had been loosened by the concussion from the rifle. + +“Come on!” cried the old hunter. “That was the guardian of the treasure! +We are safe now!” + +Then, in the light which streamed through the broken roof, the +adventurers could see, heaped up on a great altar, behind which sat a +horrible graven image, piles of yellow metal, and sparkling stones. In +little heaps they were, arranged as if offerings to the terrible god of +the giants. There were bars and rings of gold, dishes of odd shape, and +even weapons. As for the sparkling stones, they were of many colors, but +the white ones were more plentiful than all the others. + +“Gold and diamonds! Diamonds and gold!” murmured the professor. “There +is the ransom of many kings in this ancient temple.” + +“Wish I had a big bag!” exclaimed Washington, as he began filling all +his pockets with the precious metal and gems. “If I had a-thought I’d +have brought a dress-suit case!” + +“A dress-suit case full of diamonds!” exclaimed Mark. + +Then he too, as did all the others, fell to filling his pockets with the +wealth spread so lavishly before them. There was the riches of a whole +world in one place and no one but themselves to take it. + +For several minutes no one spoke. The only sound was the rattle of the +stones and the clink of gold, and when some of the diamonds dropped on +the floor they did not bother to gather them up. There were too many on +the altar. + +“We will be rich for life!” gasped old Andy, who had been poor all his +years. + +“I can’t carry any more!” gasped Washington. “I’m goin’ back for——” + +What he was going back for he never said, for, at that instant, +happening to look up at the hole in the roof, he gave a startled cry: + +“Here come the terrible bats!” + +They all gazed upward. Through the opening they could see a great flock +of the awful birds, headed for the temple, and they were led by one +which seemed to fly with difficulty. It was the guardian of the treasure +that Andy had wounded. + +“Quick! We must get out of here!” shouted the old hunter. “They are big +enough and strong enough to tear us all to pieces. Hurry!” + +Down the centre of the temple they rushed, and not a moment too soon, +for, ere they had passed half way to the entrance, the opening in the +roof was darkened by the coming of the bats, and soon the flapping of +their wings awoke the thundering echoes in the ruined structure, while +their shrill cries struck terror to the hearts of the travelers. + +Up to the altar circled the bats, and then wheeling they flapped down +the dim aisles toward the adventurers. + +“Hurry! Hurry!” shouted Andy, who was in the rear. + +He raised his rifle and fired several shots into the midst of the +terrible creatures. + +A number of the bats were wounded, and the others were so frightened by +the sound of the shots and the flashes of fire that they turned back. +This enabled the fleeing ones to gain the entrance to the temple, and +soon they were outside. + +“To the ship!” yelled Bill. + +“There’s little danger now!” called Andy, panting, for the run had +winded him. “They will hardly attack us in the light!” + +And he was right, for, though they could hear the bats flying about +inside the temple, and uttering their cries, none came outside. + +But no one felt like staying near the uncanny structure, and little time +was lost in reaching the _Mermaid_. Then the doors were fastened, and +the ship was sent high up into the air. + +“Which way?” asked Jack, when Mr. Henderson told him to go to the +conning tower and steer. + +“Back to where we first met the giants,” replied the professor. “We must +prepare to start for our own earth again soon.” + +“I’ve almost forgotten how real sunlight looks,” thought Jack, as he +headed the ship around the other way. As he turned the levers a big +diamond dropped from his pocket and rolled on the floor. + +“This will be a good reminder of our trip though,” he added. + +The travelers, even including Mr. Henderson, were so taken up with their +suddenly acquired riches that they hardly thought of meals. At the +professor’s suggestion they tied their gold and stones up in small +packages convenient to carry. + +“Better place them where you can grab them in a hurry in case of +accident,” the old scientist went on. “Of course if there should be too +bad an accident they would never be of any use to us down here, but +we’ll look on the bright side of things.” + +“Do you anticipate any accident?” asked Jack anxiously. + +“No, Oh no,” replied Mr. Henderson, but Jack thought the aged man had +something weighing on his mind. + + + + + CHAPTER XXIX + + BACK HOME—CONCLUSION + + +On and on sped the _Mermaid_. Now that the travelers felt their journey +accomplished they were anxious to begin the homeward trip. They made a +straight course for the village where they had so nearly met with +disaster, and where the king of the giants had saved them. They went in +a direct line, and did not travel here and there, as they had after they +left the town. Consequently they shortened the route by a great +distance. Yet it was long enough, and when they finally came in sight of +the place the dial registered a trip of five thousand miles underground. + +It was one evening when they landed almost at the spot whence they had +taken flight eventually to reach the temple of the treasure. Most of the +giants had betaken themselves to their mound houses, but Hankos was +walking in the fields, and, when he caught sight of the airship hovering +above him he waved his great sword in welcome. + +He rushed up to shake hands with the travelers when they came out of the +ship, though to greet him it was only possible for the adventurers to +grasp one of his immense fingers. + +As soon as the greetings were over Hankos began to speak rapidly to the +professor, at the same time going through many strange motions. + +“It is as I feared!” suddenly exclaimed the scientist. + +“What is the matter?” asked Mark. + +“The worst has happened!” went on Mr. Henderson. “The great hole by +which we came into this place has been closed by an earthquake shock!” + +“The hole closed?” repeated Jack. + +“An earthquake shock!” murmured Mark. + +“Then how are we going to get back to earth?” asked old Andy. + +A terrible fear entered the hearts of the travelers. The closing of the +opening by which they had come to the strange world meant, in all +probability that they would have to spend the rest of their lives in +this underground place. + +“What good did it do us to get all those diamonds and that gold?” asked +Mark in a sorrowful tone. + +Hankos began to speak again, using his gestures which were almost as +eloquent as words. The professor watched and listened intently. Then +there seemed to come a more hopeful look to his face. He nodded +vigorously as Hankos went on with what seemed to be an explanation. + +“It’s worth trying, at all events!” the scientist exclaimed. “It is our +only hope!” + +“What is?” asked Jack. + +“Friends,” began the professor in solemn tones. “I must admit our plight +is desperate. At the same time there is a bare chance of our getting +back to our own earth. As you remember, Hankos went from this place to +the upper regions through the upward spouting column of water.” + +“If we had our submarine we might also,” interrupted Jack. “But the +_Mermaid_ isn’t built to sail in that fashion.” + +“Nor would the _Porpoise_ have served us in this emergency,” said the +professor. “It would prove too heavy. But, nevertheless, I think I have +a plan. Now, Mark, you are about to learn the secret of the storeroom. +The real one, not the hiding of Hankos in there, which you imagined to +be the cause of my desire to keep something hidden. When we planned a +trip to this underground world I had a dim idea that we might meet with +trouble. So I planned and made a cylinder lifeboat.” + +“A cylinder lifeboat?” repeated Mark. + +“Yes,” replied Mr. Henderson. “I have it in the storeroom. I did not +want any of you to see it for fear you would have faint hearts. I +thought there might be no necessity of using it. But, since there is, we +must do our best. I will admit it may be a fearful ordeal, but we will +have to risk something in order to escape. + +“I have in the storeroom a large cylinder, capable of holding us all. It +will also contain food and drink for a month, but we will all have to +go, packed almost like sardines in a box. My plan is to take the +_Mermaid_ to the place where the column of water shoots up. There we +will get into the cylinder, close it, and trust ourselves to the +terrible force that may bring us back to the upper world. What do you +say? Shall we attempt it?” + +For a few seconds no one spoke. Then Jack said slowly: + +“I don’t see that we can do anything else. I don’t want to stay here all +my life.” + +“I wants a chance t’ wear some of them sparklers,” put in Washington. + +“Then we will make the attempt,” the professor added. “Now all aboard +for the place where the water shoots up!” + +Questioning Hankos, the professor learned how to reach the strange +place. It was in the midst of a desolate country where none of the +giants ever went, so afraid were they of the strange phenomenon. + +It was a week’s journey. Sometimes the _Mermaid_ flew through the air, +and again it sailed on vast lakes or inland seas. On the trip they met +with big waterfalls and terrible geysers that spouted a mile or more +into the air. They traveled by night as well as day, though it was +necessary to keep a sharp watch. + +Sometimes the ship passed through great flocks of birds that surrounded +her and sought to pierce the aluminum hull with their sharp beaks and +talons. Over the mountains and valleys the ship sailed until, one +evening, there sounded through the air a strange rumbling sound. + +“It is thunder,” said Old Andy. + +“It is the water column,” replied the scientist. “We are at the end of +our trip. May the remainder be as successful!” + +The ship was lowered to the surface, as it was deemed best to approach +the column when the lights were shining. No one slept much that night, +for the roaring and rumbling never ceased. + +In the morning the ship was sent forward slowly. Ever and ever the +terrific sound increased, until it was almost deafening. They had to +call to each other to be heard. + +Then, as the _Mermaid_ passed over a mountain, the adventurers saw, in a +valley below them, the up-shooting water. + +It was a vast column, nearly three hundred feet in thickness, and as +solid and white as a shaft _of_ marble. Up, up, up, it went, until it +was lost to sight, but there were no falling drops, and not even a spray +came from the watery shafts. + +“There is a terrible power to it,” the professor said. “May it prove our +salvation!” + +The ship was lowered about a hundred feet away from the waterspout. All +around them the ground was vibrating with the force of the fluid. + +“To think that connects with the world above!” exclaimed Jack. + +“It’s a good thing for us that it does,” Mark answered. + +“We must lose no time,” the professor put in. “If the earthquake +destroyed the downward shaft, it may effect this one in time. We must +escape while we can.” + +Then, for the first time, he opened the storeroom and the big cylinder +was disclosed to view. It was made of aluminum, and shaped like an +immense cigar. The hull was double, and it was strongly braced. Inside +were padded berths for the occupants, and there was just room enough for +the seven adventurers. Once they had entered they could not move about, +but must stay in their little compartment. + +Compressed air in strong cylinders furnished a means of breathing, and +there were tiny electric lights operated by a storage battery. There was +also a chamber to be filled with the lifting gas. The cylinder was so +arranged that it would float on it’s long axis if thrown into the water. +A trap door hermetically sealed gave access to the interior. A small +propellor, worked by compressed air, furnished motive power. + +The food supply consisted of compressed capsules on which a man could +subsist for several days. There was also some water, but not much, since +that can not be compressed and would, therefore, take considerable room. + +“The only thing for us to do,” said the professor, “is to get into the +cylinder, seal it up, and trust to Providence. This is what I intended +to use when we were caught in the draught.” + +“How can we get into the column of water after we shut ourselves into +the cylinder?” asked Mark. + +“The cylinder fits into a sort of improvised cannon,” said Mr. +Henderson. “It is fired by electricity and compressed air. We will aim +it at the column, press the button and be projected into the midst of +the water. Then——” He did not finish the sentence, but the others knew +what he meant. + +“When are we to start?” asked Mark. + +“As soon as possible,” replied the professor. “I must arrange the +cylinder, compress the air and lay out the food supply.” + +It took the rest of the day to do this, as the inventor found it would +be advisable to attach a weight to the end of the cylinder, to hold it +upright in the column of water. The weight could be detached +automatically when they were shot up into the midst of the ocean, where, +as Hankos had told them, the column spurted forth. + +Then some food was stored in the tiny ship that was destined to be their +last hope, and some tanks of water were placed in it. + +“I think we are almost ready,” Mr. Henderson said about noon the next +day. + +“What about our gold and diamonds?” asked Jack suddenly. “Can we take +them with us in the cylinder?” + +“That’s so!” exclaimed Mr. Henderson. “I forgot about them. I’m afraid +we’ll have to leave the riches behind. We will not be able to carry them +and the food we need, for it may be a week or more before we can leave +the cylinder. Gold and diamonds will be a poor substitute for something +to eat.” + +“I’m goin’ t’ take mine!” said Washington with much conviction. “I might +as well starve rich as starve poor!” + +“We may be able to take a few diamonds,” the professor answered. “The +gold will be too heavy. Let each one select the largest of the diamonds +he has and put them in his pockets.” + +Then began a sorting of the wealth. It was strange, as they recalled +afterward, throwing away riches that would have made millionaires +envious, but it had to be done. All the wealth in the world would not +equal a beef capsule when they were starving, and they realized it. So +they only saved a few pieces of gold as souvenirs, and took the best of +the diamonds. But even then they had a vast fortune with them. + +At last all was in readiness. The cylinder had been placed in the tube +from which it was to be shot gently forth by compressed air, so that it +would fall into the upward spouting column of water. The charge of +compressed air was put in and the electric wires arranged. + +“Are we all ready?” asked Mr. Henderson. + +“I think so,” said Jack, in what sounded like a whisper, but which was +loud, only the noise of the water muffled it. + +“Then we had better enter the cylinder,” spoke the inventor. “Take a +last look at the _Flying Mermaid_, boys, for you will never see again +the ship that has borne us many thousand miles. She served us well, and +might again, but for the freak of nature that has placed us in this +position.” + +For the first time the adventurers realized that they must abandon the +craft in which they had reached the new world. So it was with no little +feeling of sadness that they climbed up the ladder that had been +arranged and slid down into the cylinder. One by one they took their +places in the padded berths arranged for them. It was a snug fit, for +the professor knew if there was too much room he and the others might be +so tossed about as to be killed. + +Mr. Henderson was the last to enter. Standing at the manhole he took a +final look at his pet creation, the _Mermaid_. Through the opened +windows the colored lights came, shifting here and there. Outside the +terrible column of water was roaring as if anxious to devour them. + +“Good-bye, _Mermaid_!” said the professor softly. + +Then he closed down the manhole cover and tightened the screws that held +it in place. He touched a button that turned on the electric lights and +the interior of the cylinder was illuminated with a soft glow. + +“Are you all ready?” he asked. + +“Jest as much as I ever will be,” replied Washington, who, as the crisis +approached, seemed more light-hearted than any of the others. + +“Then here we go!” exclaimed Mr. Henderson. + +His fingers touched the button that connected with the electric machine, +which operated the compressed air. + +There sounded a muffled report. Then it seemed to those in the cylinder +that the end of the world had come. They shot upward and outward, +through the top of the conning tower which had been removed. The +cylinder, launched straight at the column of water struck it squarely +and, an instant later was caught in the grasp of the giant force and +hurled toward the upper world. + +Up and up and up the mass of metal with its human freight went. Now it +was spinning like a top, again it shot toward the earth’s crust like an +arrow from the archer’s bow. + +It was moving with the velocity of a meteor, yet because of being +surrounded with water, and traveling with the same velocity as the +column, there was no friction. Had there been, the heat generated would +have melted the case in an instant. + +For the first few seconds those in the cylinder were dazed by the sudden +rush. Then as it became greater and greater there came a curious dull +feeling, and, one after another lost consciousness. The terror of the +water column, and the frightful speed, had made them senseless. + + * * * * * + +It seemed like a month later, though, of course, it could have been only +a few hours or a day at most when Jack opened his eyes. He saw his +companions, white and senseless all around him, and at first thought +they were dead. Then he saw Mark looking at him, and Washington asked: + +“Is any one livin’ 'sides me?” + +“I am,” replied Jack decidedly. + +Then, one after another they regained their senses. But they were in a +strange daze, for they were being carried along like a shooting star, +only, as they went at the same rate as did the element carrying them, +they did not _realize_ this. + +“I think I’m hungry,” said Bill, who had the best appetite of any of the +travelers. + +“You’ll find a beef capsule in the little compartment over your head,” +spoke the professor. + +Bill was about to reach for it, when they were all startled by a sudden +side motion of the cylinder. Then came a violent shock, and a sound as +of splashing water. Next the cylinder seemed to be falling, and, a few +minutes later to be shooting upward. Following this there was another +splash and the cylinder began to bob about like a cork on a mill pond. + +“We have reached the sea! We are afloat on the ocean!” cried the +professor. + +Hurriedly he disengaged himself from the straps that held him to his +bunk. He pushed back the lever that opened the manhole. Into the opening +glowed the glorious sunlight, while to the occupants came the breath of +salt air. + +“Hurrah!” cried Jack. “We are safe at last!” + +“Safe at last!” the professor answered, and then they all gave a cheer. + +For their cylinder, which might now be termed a boat, was floating on +the great Atlantic. The blue sky was overhead and the air of the sea +fanned their cheeks. + +They had shot up from the underground earth, in the column of water, had +been tossed high into the air, had fallen back when the liquid shaft +broke into spray, had descended into the ocean, gone down a hundred feet +or more, and then had shot up like a cork to bob about the surface. + +For a week they were afloat, and then they were picked up by a passing +vessel, rather weak and very much cramped, but otherwise in good shape. +They said nothing of their adventures, save to explain that they were +experimenting in a new kind of boat. About a month later, for the ship +that had rescued them was a slow sailer, they were back on the island +whence that wonderful voyage was begun. + + * * * * * + +“Well, we solved the mystery of the center of the earth,” remarked Jack, +one evening, when they were gathered in the old shack where so many +wonderful adventures had been planned. + +“Yes, we did,” said Mr. Henderson. “And no one else is ever likely to go +there.” + +“Why?” + +“Because the only way of getting there was destroyed by the earthquake, +and no one could ever force his way down through that upward-shooting +column of water.” + +“That’s so. Well, we have the diamonds, anyway,” spoke Mark. “They ought +to make us rich.” + +And the jewels did, for the stones proved to be of great value, even +though the adventurers had saved only a few of the many they found in +the ruined temple. + +But there was money enough so that they all could live in comfort the +rest of their lives. As the professor was getting quite old, and +incapable of making any more wonderful inventions, he closed up his +workshop and settled down to a quiet life. As for Washington, Andy, and +Bill and Tom, they invested their money received from the sale of the +diamonds in different business ventures, and each one did well. + +“I am going in for a good education,” said Jack to Mark. + +“Just what I am going to do,” answered his chum. “And after we’ve got +that——” He paused suggestively. + +“We’ll go in for inventing airships, or something like that, eh?” + +“Yes. We’ve learned a great deal from Mr. Henderson, and in the course +of time we ought to be able to turn out something even more wonderful +than the _Electric Monarch_, the _Porpoise_, or the _Flying Mermaid_.” + +“Yes, and when we’ve invented something better——” + +“We’ll take another trip.” + +“Right you are!” + +And then the two chums shook hands warmly; and here we will say +good-bye. + + THE END. + +------------------------------------------------------------------------ + + NEW ALGER BOOKS + + JOE, THE HOTEL BOY + Or, Winning Out by Pluck + By HORATIO ALGER, Jr. + + Illustrated, 12mo. Cloth, 60 cents + +[Illustration: small image of book cover] + +This is one of the last stories penned by that prince of all juvenile +writers, Horatio Alger, Jr., and is one of his best. It describes the +adventures of a youth brought up in the country by an old hermit. When +the hermit dies the boy obtains work at a nearby hotel, and later on +drifts to the city and obtains a position in another hotel. There is a +mystery concerning the lad’s identity and likewise the disappearance of +a certain blue box, but in the end all terminates satisfactorily. + + BEN LOGAN’S TRIUMPH + Or, The Boys of Boxwood Academy + By HORATIO ALGER, Jr. + + Illustrated, 12mo. Cloth, 60 cents + +[Illustration: small image of book cover] + +This story was penned by Mr. Alger some years before his death, but has +never appeared in book form. Ben was a city newsboy, rather rough, but +with a heart of gold. He did a great service for a good-hearted farmer, +and the latter took Ben home with him. The lad had never been in the +country before, and his eyes were opened to a new world. Then the youth +was sent to a boarding school, where he made his way to the front amid +many difficulties. Mr. Alger’s charm as a juvenile writer is so well +known it is needless to mention it here, and this story is in his best +vein. + + CUPPLES & LEON CO., Publishers, NEW YORK + +------------------------------------------------------------------------ + + THE JACK RANGER SERIES + By Clarence Young + Author of the Motor Boys Series + + Cloth. 12mo. Illustrated, Price per volume, $1.00, postpaid + +[Illustration: small image of book cover] + + JACK RANGER’S SCHOOLDAYS + Or, The Rivals of Washington Hall + +You will love Jack Ranger—you simply can’t help it. He is so bright and +cheery, and so real and lifelike. A typical boarding school tale, +without a dull line in it. + + JACK RANGER’S SCHOOL VICTORIES + Or, Track, Gridiron and Diamond + +In this tale Jack gets back to Washington Hall and goes in for all sorts +of school games. There are numerous contests on the athletic field, and +also a great baseball game and a football game, all dear to a boy’s +heart. The rivalry is bitter at times, and enemies try to put Jack “in a +hole” more than once. + + JACK RANGER’S WESTERN TRIP + Or, From Boarding School to Ranch and Range + +This volume takes the hero and several of his chums to the great West. +Jack is anxious to clear up the mystery surrounding his father’s +disappearance. At the ranch and on the range adventures of the strenuous +sort befall him. + + JACK RANGER’S OCEAN CRUISE + Or, The Wreck of the Polly Ann + +Here is a tale of the bounding sea, with many stirring adventures. How +the ship was wrecked, and Jack was cast away, is told in a style all +boys and girls will find exceedingly interesting. There is plenty of fun +as well as excitement. + + JACK RANGER’S GUN CLUB + Or, From Schoolroom to Camp and Trail + +Jack, with his chums, goes in quest of big game. The boys fall in with a +mysterious body of men, and have a terrific slide down a mountain side. + + CUPPLES & LEON CO., Publishers, NEW YORK + +------------------------------------------------------------------------ + + THE DOROTHY DALE SERIES + By Margaret Penrose + + Cloth, 12mo. Illustrated. Price per volume, 60 cents, postpaid + + DOROTHY DALE: A GIRL OF TO-DAY + +Dorothy is the daughter of an old Civil War veteran who is running a +weekly newspaper in a small Eastern town. When her father falls sick, +and the newspaper property is in danger of going to pieces, the girl +shows what she can do to support the family. + +[Illustration: small image of book cover] + + DOROTHY DALE AT GLENWOOD SCHOOL + +More prosperous times have come to the Dale family, and Major Dale +resolves to send Dorothy to a boarding school to complete her education. +At Glenwood School the girl makes a host of friends and has many good +times. But some girls are jealous of Dorothy’s popularity, and they seek +to get her into trouble in more ways than one. + + DOROTHY DALE’S GREAT SECRET + +A splendid story of one girl’s devotion to another. Dorothy’s chum ran +away to join a theatrical company. What Dorothy did, and how she kept +the secret, makes a tale no girl will care to miss. + + DOROTHY DALE AND HER CHUMS + +A story of school life, and of strange adventures among the gypsies. +Dorothy befriends a little French girl and also a gypsy waif, in a +manner sure to touch the hearts of all readers. + + DOROTHY DALE’S QUEER HOLIDAYS + +Relates the details of a mystery that surrounded Tanglewood Park. There +is a great snowstorm, and the young folks become snowbound, much to +their dismay. + + CUPPLES & LEON CO., Publishers, NEW YORK + +------------------------------------------------------------------------ + + BOYS OF BUSINESS SERIES + By Allen Chapman + + Illustrated, 12mo. Cloth, 60 cents per volume + +[Illustration: small image of book cover] + + THE YOUNG EXPRESS AGENT + Or, Bart Stirling’s Road to Success + +Bart’s father was the express agent in a country town. When an explosion +of fireworks rendered him unfit for work, the boy took it upon himself +to run the express office. The tale gives a good idea of the express +business in general. + + TWO BOY PUBLISHERS + Or, From Typecase to Editor’s Chair + +This tale will appeal strongly to all lads who wish to know how a +newspaper is printed and published. The two boy publishers work their +way up, step by step, from a tiny printing office to the ownership of a +town paper. + + MAIL ORDER FRANK + Or, A Smart Boy and His Chances + +Here we have a story covering an absolutely new field—that of the +mail-order business. How Frank started in a small way and gradually +worked his way tip to a business figure of considerable importance is +told in a fascinating manner. + + A BUSINESS BOY + Or, Winning Success + +This relates the ups and downs of a young storekeeper. He has some keen +rivals, but “wins out” in more ways than one. All youths who wish to go +into business will want this volume. + + CUPPLES & LEON CO., Publishers, NEW YORK + +------------------------------------------------------------------------ + + MOTOR BOYS SERIES + (Trade Mark, Reg. U. S. Pat. Of.) + By Clarence Young + + Cloth. 12mo. Illustrated. Price per volume. 60 cents, postpaid + +[Illustration: small image of book cover] + + THE MOTOR BOYS + Or, Chums Through Thick and Thin + +In this volume is related how the three boys got together and planned to +obtain a touring car and make a trip lasting through the summer. + + THE MOTOR BOYS OVERLAND + Or, A Long Trip for Fun and Fortune + +With the money won at the great motorcycle race the three boys purchase +their touring car and commence their travels. + + THE MOTOR BOYS IN MEXICO + Or, The Secret of the Buried City + +From our own country the scene is shifted to Mexico, where the motor +boys journey in quest of a city said to have been buried centuries ago +by an earthquake. + + THE MOTOR BOYS ACROSS THE PLAINS + Or, The Hermit of Lost Lake + +Unraveling the mystery surrounding an old hermit and a poor boy. + + THE MOTOR BOYS AFLOAT + Or, The Stirring Cruise of the Dartaway + +In this volume the boys take to a motorboat, and have many adventures. + + THE MOTOR BOYS ON THE ATLANTIC + Or, The Mystery of the Lighthouse + +How the lads foiled the bad men who wanted to wreck a steamer by means +of false lights is dramatically related. + + THE MOTOR BOYS IN STRANGE WATERS + Or, Lost in a Floating Forest + +Telling of many adventures in the mysterious Everglades of Florida. + + THE MOTOR BOYS ON THE PACIFIC + Or, The Young Derelict Hunters + +The derelict was of great value, and the hunt for it proved full of +perils. + + THE MOTOR BOYS IN THE CLOUDS + Or, A Trip for Fame and Fortune + +The boys fall in with an inventor and invest in a flying machine. After +a number of stirring adventures in the clouds they enter a big race. + + CUPPLES & LEON CO., Publishers, NEW YORK + +------------------------------------------------------------------------ + + THE BOY HUNTERS SERIES + By Captain Ralph Bonehill + + Cloth. 15mo. Illustrated. Price per volume, 60 cents, postpaid + +[Illustration: small image of book cover] + + FOUR BOY HUNTERS + Or, The Outing of the Gun Club + +A fine, breezy story of the woods and waters, of adventures in search of +game, and of great times around the campfire, told in Captain Bonehill’s +best style. In the book are given full directions for camping out. + + GUNS AND SNOWSHOES + Or, The Winter Outing of the Young Hunters + +In this volume the young-hunters leave home for a winter outing on the +shores of a small lake. They hunt and trap to their heart’s content, and +have adventures in plenty, all calculated to make boys “sit up and take +notice.” A good healthy book; one with the odor of the pine forests and +the glare of the welcome campfire in every chapter. + + YOUNG HUNTERS OF THE LAKE + Or, Out with Rod and Gun + +Another tale of woods and waters, with some strong hunting scenes and a +good deal of mystery. The three volumes make a splendid outdoor series. + + OUT WITH GUN AND CAMERA + Or, The Boy Hunters in the Mountains + +Takes up the new fad of photographing wild animals as well as shooting +them. An escaped circus chimpanzee and an escaped lion add to the +interest of the narrative. + + CUPPLES & LEON CO., Publishers, NEW YORK + +------------------------------------------------------------------------ + + THE DAREWELL CHUMS SERIES + By Allen Chapman + + Cloth. 12mo. Illustrated. 60 cents each, postpaid. + + THE DAREWELL CHUMS + Or, The Heroes of the School + +A bright, lively story for boys, telling of the doings of four chums, at +school and elsewhere. There is a strong holding plot, and several +characters who are highly amusing. Any youth getting this book will +consider it a prize and tell all his friends about it. + + THE DAREWELL CHUMS IN THE CITY + Or, The Disappearance of Ned Wilding + +From a country town the scene is changed to a great city. One of the +chums has disappeared in an extraordinary manner, and the others +institute a hunt for him. The youths befriend a city waif, who in turn +makes a revelation which clears up the mystery. + +[Illustration: small image of book cover] + + DAREWELL CHUMS IN THE WOODS + Or, Frank Roscoe’s Secret + +The boys had planned for a grand outing when something happened of which +none of them had dreamed. They thought one of their number had done a +great wrong—at least, it looked so. But they could not really believe +the accusations made, so they set to work to help Frank all they could. +All went camping some miles from home, and when not hunting and fishing +spent their time in learning the truth of what had occurred. + + THE DAREWELL CHUMS ON A CRUISE + Or, Fenn Masterson’s Odd Discovery + +A tale of the Great Lakes. The boys run across some Canadian smugglers +and stumble on the secret of a valuable mine. Some curious adventures +underground are well told. + + CUPPLES & LEON CO., Publishers, NEW YORK + + + + + +End of Project Gutenberg's Five Thousand Miles Underground, by Roy Rockwood + +*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK FIVE THOUSAND MILES UNDERGROUND *** + +***** This file should be named 4994-0.txt or 4994-0.zip ***** +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: + http://www.gutenberg.org/4/9/9/4994/ + +Produced by Jim Weiler and Roger Frank + +Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed. + +Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no +one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation +(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without +permission and without paying copyright royalties. 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You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + +Title: Five Thousand Miles Underground + The Mystery of the Centre of the Earth + +Author: Roy Rockwood + +Release Date: January 26, 2014 [EBook #4994] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: UTF-8 + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK FIVE THOUSAND MILES UNDERGROUND *** + + + + +Produced by Jim Weiler and Roger Frank + + + + + +</pre> + + +<div class='c000'> +<img src='images/cover.jpg' alt='' class='c001' /> +</div> +<hr class='pb' /> + +<div class='c000'> +<a href='images/illus-fpcf.jpg'><img src='images/illus-fpc.jpg' alt='' class='c002' /></a> +<p class='c003'>THE FLYING MERMAID SANK LOWER AND LOWER TOWARD THE MYSTERIOUS HOLE.</p> +</div> + +<hr class='pb' /> + +<div class='nf-center-c'> + <div class='nf-center'> + <span class='xlarge'>Five Thousand Miles Underground</span><br/> + <br/> + Or<br/> + <br/> + <span class='larger'>The Mystery of the Centre of the Earth</span><br/> + <br/> + BY<br/> + <br/> + <span class='larger'>ROY ROCKWOOD</span><br/> + <br/> + <span class='smaller'>Author of “Through the Air to the North Pole,” “Under<br/> + the Ocean to the South Pole,” “The Rival<br/> + Ocean Divers,” Etc.</span><br/> + <br/> + ILLUSTRATED<br/> + <br/> + NEW YORK<br/> + CUPPLES & LEON COMPANY + </div> +</div> + +<hr class='pb' /> + +<div class='nf-center-c'> + <div class='nf-center'> + GOOD BOOKS FOR BOYS<br/> + <br/> + By Roy Rockwood<br/> + <br/> + THE GREAT MARVEL SERIES + </div> +</div> + +<div class='nf-block-c'> + <div class='nf-block'> + THROUGH THE AIR TO THE NORTH POLE<br/> + Or The Wonderful Cruise of the Electric Monarch<br/> + <br/> + UNDER THE OCEAN TO THE SOUTH POLE<br/> + Or The Strange Cruise of the Submarine Wonder<br/> + <br/> + FIVE THOUSAND MILES UNDERGROUND<br/> + Or The Mystery of the Centre of the Earth + </div> +</div> + +<div class='nf-center-c'> + <div class='nf-center'> + Cloth. Illustrated<br/> + Price per volume, 60 cents + </div> +</div> + +<hr class='pb' /> + +<div class='nf-center-c'> + <div class='nf-center'> + Copyright, 1908, by<br/> + <span class='sc'>Cupples & Leon Company</span><br/> + <br/> + <span class='smaller'>Five Thousand Miles Underground</span> + </div> +</div> + +<hr class='pb' /> + +<div class='nf-center-c'> + <div class='nf-center'> + <span class='larger'>CONTENTS</span> + </div> +</div> + +<div class='container-center'><div class='container-left'> +<table summary=''> +<tr><td class='c004'>I</td><td class='c005'><a href='#ch01'>WASHINGTON BACKS OUT</a></td></tr> +<tr><td class='c004'>II</td><td class='c005'><a href='#ch02'>THE FLYING MERMAID</a></td></tr> +<tr><td class='c004'>III</td><td class='c005'><a href='#ch03'>WASHINGTON DECIDES</a></td></tr> +<tr><td class='c004'>IV</td><td class='c005'><a href='#ch04'>WHAT DID MARK SEE?</a></td></tr> +<tr><td class='c004'>V</td><td class='c005'><a href='#ch05'>ATTACKED BY A WHALE</a></td></tr> +<tr><td class='c004'>VI</td><td class='c005'><a href='#ch06'>THE CYCLONE</a></td></tr> +<tr><td class='c004'>VII</td><td class='c005'><a href='#ch07'>A QUEER SAIL</a></td></tr> +<tr><td class='c004'>VIII</td><td class='c005'><a href='#ch08'>THE FLYING MERMAID DISABLED</a></td></tr> +<tr><td class='c004'>IX</td><td class='c005'><a href='#ch09'>THE MUTINY</a></td></tr> +<tr><td class='c004'>X</td><td class='c005'><a href='#ch10'>FOOLING THEIR ENEMIES</a></td></tr> +<tr><td class='c004'>XI</td><td class='c005'><a href='#ch11'>MYSTERIOUS HAPPENINGS</a></td></tr> +<tr><td class='c004'>XII</td><td class='c005'><a href='#ch12'>THE BIG HOLE</a></td></tr> +<tr><td class='c004'>XIII</td><td class='c005'><a href='#ch13'>DOWN INTO THE EARTH</a></td></tr> +<tr><td class='c004'>XIV</td><td class='c005'><a href='#ch14'>MANY MILES BELOW</a></td></tr> +<tr><td class='c004'>XV</td><td class='c005'><a href='#ch15'>IN THE STRANGE DRAUGHT</a></td></tr> +<tr><td class='c004'>XVI</td><td class='c005'><a href='#ch16'>THE NEW LAND</a></td></tr> +<tr><td class='c004'>XVII</td><td class='c005'><a href='#ch17'>A STRANGE COUNTRY</a></td></tr> +<tr><td class='c004'>XVIII</td><td class='c005'><a href='#ch18'>CAUGHT BY A STRANGE PLANT</a></td></tr> +<tr><td class='c004'>XIX</td><td class='c005'><a href='#ch19'>THE BIG PEACH</a></td></tr> +<tr><td class='c004'>XX</td><td class='c005'><a href='#ch20'>OVERHAULING THE SHIP</a></td></tr> +<tr><td class='c004'>XXI</td><td class='c005'><a href='#ch21'>THE FISH THAT WALKED</a></td></tr> +<tr><td class='c004'>XXII</td><td class='c005'><a href='#ch22'>THE SNAKE-TREE</a></td></tr> +<tr><td class='c004'>XXIII</td><td class='c005'><a href='#ch23'>THE DESERTED VILLAGE</a></td></tr> +<tr><td class='c004'>XXIV</td><td class='c005'><a href='#ch24'>THE GIANTS</a></td></tr> +<tr><td class='c004'>XXV</td><td class='c005'><a href='#ch25'>HELD BY THE ENEMY</a></td></tr> +<tr><td class='c004'>XXVII</td><td class='c005'><a href='#ch26'>A FRIEND INDEED</a></td></tr> +<tr><td class='c004'>XXVII</td><td class='c005'><a href='#ch27'>A GREAT JOURNEY</a></td></tr> +<tr><td class='c004'>XXVIII</td><td class='c005'><a href='#ch28'>THE TEMPLE OF TREASURE</a></td></tr> +<tr><td class='c004'>XXIX</td><td class='c005'><a href='#ch29'>BACK HOME—CONCLUSION</a></td></tr> +</table> +</div></div> + +<hr class='pb' /> + +<h1 class='c006'>FIVE THOUSAND MILES UNDERGROUND</h1> + +<h2 id='ch01' class='c007'>CHAPTER I<br /><br />WASHINGTON BACKS OUT</h2> + +<p>“Washington! I say Washington!”</p> + +<p>Throughout a big shed, filled for the most part +with huge pieces of machinery, echoed the voice +of Professor Amos Henderson. He did not look +up from a small engine over which he was bending.</p> + +<p>“Washington! Where are you? Why don’t +you answer me?”</p> + +<p>From somewhere underneath an immense pile of +iron, steel and aluminum came the voice of a colored +man.</p> + +<p>“Yas sir, Perfesser, I’se goin’ t’ saggasiate my +bodily presence in yo’ contiguous proximity an’ attend +t’ yo’ immediate conglomerated prescriptions +at th’ predistined period. Yas, sir!”</p> + +<p>“Well, Washington, if you had started when +you began that long speech you would have been +at least half way here by this time. Hurry up! +Never mind tightning those bolts now. Find the +boys. I need them to help me with this engine. +They must be around somewhere.”</p> + +<p>“I seen ’em goin’ fishin’ down by th’ brook a +little while ago,” answered the negro, crawling out +from under what seemed to be a combined airship +and watercraft. “Jack says as how yo’ gived him +permission t’ occupy his indisputatious period of +levity in endeavorin’ t’ extract from th’ liquid element +some specimens of swimmin’ creatures.”</p> + +<p>“If you mean I said he and Mark could go fishing +in the brook, you’re right, Washington,” replied +the professor with a smile. “But you waste +a lot of time and breath trying to say it. Why +don’t you give up using big words?”</p> + +<p>“I reckon I was brought up t’ it,” replied the +colored man grinning from ear to ear. He did +not always use big words but when he did they +were generally the wrong ones. Sometimes, he +spoke quite correctly.</p> + +<p>“Well, I suppose you can’t help it,” resumed +Mr. Henderson. “However, never mind that. +Find the boys and send them to me.”</p> + +<p>“With th’ least appreciatableness amount of +postponement,” answered the messenger, and he +went out.</p> + +<p>Washington White, who in color was just the +opposite to his name, a general helper and companion +to Professor Henderson, found Mark +Sampson and Jack Darrow about a quarter of a +mile from the big shed, which was in the center of +a wooded island off the coast of Maine. The lads +were seated on the bank of a small brook, fishing.</p> + +<p>“Perfesser wants yo’ immediate,” said Washington.</p> + +<p>“But we haven’t caught a single fish,” objected +Mark.</p> + +<p>“Them’s the orders from headquarters,” replied +the colored man. “Yo’ both got t’ project +yo’selves in th’ vicinity of th’ machine shop. I +reckon th’ new fangled contraption that th’ perfesser +is goin’ t’ navigate th’ air an’ sail th’ angry +seas in, am about done. He want’s t’ try th’ engine.”</p> + +<p>“Come on then,” said Jack. “We probably +would not catch any fish, anyhow, Mark.”</p> + +<p>Accompanied by Washington, the youths, each +of whom was about eighteen years old, started toward +the big shed.</p> + +<p>While they are on their way opportunity may +be taken to tell a little about them, as well as about +Washington and the professor, and the curious +craft on which the scientist was working.</p> + +<p>A few years before this story opens Mr. Henderson +had invented a wonderful electric airship. +He had it about completed when, one day, he and +the two boys became unexpectedly acquainted, and, +as it developed, friends.</p> + +<p>Mark and Jack were orphans. After having +rather a hard time knocking about the world trying +to make a living, they chanced to meet, and resolved +to cast their lots together. They boarded a freight +train, and, as told in the first volume of this series, +entitled, “Through the Air to the North Pole; or +the Wonderful Cruise of the Electric Monarch,” +the cars were wrecked near where Professor Henderson +was building his strange craft.</p> + +<p>The boys were cared for by the scientist, and, +after their recovery from hurts received in the +collision, they accepted his invitation to make the +trip through the upper regions in the airship, to +search for the north pole. With them went Andy +Sudds, an old hunter, and Tom Smith and Bill +Jones, two farmers, but who were hired as helpers +on the voyage. The party had many adventures +on the trip, having battles with savage animals and +more savage Esquimaux, and were tossed about in +terrible storms. After making some scientific observations, +which the professor was much interested +in, they started back home.</p> + +<p>Having found he could successfully sail in the +air, Mr. Henderson resolved to try what it might +be like under water.</p> + +<p>He moved his machine shop to a lonely spot on +the Maine coast, and there, with the help of the +boys, Washington, Andy and two machinists constructed +a submarine boat, called the <em>Porpoise</em>.</p> + +<p>In this the professor resolved to seek the south +pole, he having a theory that it was surrounded +by an open sea. After much hard work the <em>Porpoise</em> +was made ready for the voyage.</p> + +<p>What occurred on this great trip is described +in the second book of this series, called “Under +the Ocean to the South Pole, or the Strange Cruise +of the Submarine Wonder.” In that is told how +once more Tom and Bill, with Andy, the boys and +Washington, accompanying Professor Henderson, +had many thrilling experiences.</p> + +<p>They were caught in the grip of the grass of +the terrible Sargasso Sea. Monstrous suckers +grasped the boat in their powerful arms, and had +to be fought off. They were caught in a sea of +boiling water and imprisoned between big fields of +ice.</p> + +<p>By means of strong diving suits they were able +to leave the ship and walk about on the bottom +of the sea. They visited a graveyard of sunken +ships, saw many strange monsters as well as many +beautiful fish in the great depths to which they +sunk. Many times they were in dire peril but the +resources of the professor, the bravery and daring +of the boys, no less than the help Washington and +Andy Sudds, the hunter, rendered at times, brought +them through.</p> + +<p>Those of you who read of their adventures will +recall the strange island which they came upon in +the Atlantic Ocean, far from the coast of South +America.</p> + +<p>When they first drew near this island they were +almost sucked into the depths of a great whirlpool, +caused by water pouring down a big hole that +seemed to lead far into the earth. They reversed +their ship just in time.</p> + +<p>But, on going to another side of the island they +were able to approach safely, as at this point the +great hole was farther from the shore. Then they +landed and investigated.</p> + +<p>They found the island was almost circular, and +the hole was also round, but not in the center of +the land. It was an immense cavity, so wide they +could not see across, and as for the depth they +could only guess at it. Looking down they could +only see rolling masses of vapor and clouds caused +by the water which poured down from the ocean +with the force of a Niagara.</p> + +<p>Gazing down into the big hole Mark suggested +it might lead to the centre of the earth, which some +scientists claim is hollow. The professor admitted +that the cavity looked as though it led to China.</p> + +<p>They had no means of investigating further the +mystery of the opening and returned to their submarine, +completing the voyage to the south pole.</p> + +<p>It was now about two years since they had come +back from that eventful trip. One of the first +things the professor did, after docking the <em>Porpoise</em>, +was to shut himself up in his study and begin +to draw plans. To the questions of the boys he +returned no answer for several days. Then he +announced he was working on a craft which could +both sail on top of the water and navigate the air.</p> + +<p>In time the plans were done, and, in order to +keep the work secret, the shop was moved to an island +which the professor owned.</p> + +<p>Parts of the <em>Monarch</em> and the <em>Porpoise</em> were +used in constructing the new craft, so there was no +need to get other help than that which the boys, +Washington and Bill and Tom could give, since +the two latter accepted an offer of the professor to +remain and work for him. The boys, of course, +would not leave their friend.</p> + +<p>The professor realized that he had a more difficult +task in his new venture than he had set himself +on other occasions. For a ship to be light +enough to rise in the air, and, at another time, and +with no change, to be strong enough to navigate +the ocean, was indeed something to tax Mr. Henderson’s +ingenuity.</p> + +<p>However, in the course of a little over a year +the larger part of the work was done. Inside the +big shed was the huge affair which, it was hoped, +would enable its owner to be master of both air +and water.</p> + +<p>“Did the professor say anything special?” +asked Mark of Washington.</p> + +<p>“Nope. I reckon he were too busy problamatin’ +the exact altitude projected in an inverse +direction by th’ square root of th’ new engine when +operated at a million times inside of a few seconds, +but he didn’t say nothin’ t’ me. I were busy +underneath th’ ship, fixin’ bolts when he tole me t’ +find yo’. I wouldn’t be s’prised if he had th’ thing +goin’ soon.”</p> + +<p>“Do you think he’ll be generating the new gas +to-day?” asked Jack eagerly. “That’s the most +troublesome part; to get that gas right.”</p> + +<p>“He didn’t say nothin’ t’ me 'bout it,” Washington +stated, as he walked along beside the two +boys. “He jest seemed anxious like.”</p> + +<p>“We’d better hurry,” advised Mark. “He +may be at an important part in his experiments and +probably needs us. I hope it will work. He has +spent many days on it, and we all have worked +hard. It ought to be a success.”</p> + +<p>“Perfesser allers makes things work,” declared +Washington stoutly.</p> + +<p>“That’s a good way to feel about it, anyway,” +observed Mark. “Well, we’ll soon know.”</p> + +<p>The three hurried to the shed which they could +see as they rounded a turn of the path through +the wood. They noticed an elderly man approaching +with a gun on his shoulder. On one arm he +carried a game bag.</p> + +<p>“Guess Andy got something for dinner,” remarked +Jack.</p> + +<p>“I hopes so, honey,” put in Washington. “I’se +got a sort of gone feelin’ in my stomach!”</p> + +<p>“Any luck, Andy?” called Mark, when he +came within hailing distance.</p> + +<p>“Fine,” replied Andy Sudds. “Rabbits and +quail. We’ll have a good dinner to-morrow.”</p> + +<p>While Andy entered the living part of the big +shed to put away his gun and game, the boys and +Washington kept on to the engine room. They +found the professor, with Bill and Tom, busy fitting +pipes to the small engine which was set up at +one side of the structure.</p> + +<p>“Come, boys, I need your aid,” remarked Mr. +Henderson as they entered. “Take off your coats +and pitch in. Tighten up these bolts, Jack. +Mark, you mix up those chemicals the way I taught +you, and see that the dynamo is in working order +for Washington to attend to.”</p> + +<p>In a little while the shop was a veritable hive of +industry, and it resounded to the sound of hammers, +wrenches and machinery. In the background +was the big ship, which seemed like two immense +cigars, one above the other, the lower one +the larger.</p> + +<p>“Where was you calalatin’ t’ take this here ship +when it gits done, Perfesser?” asked Washington, +during a lull in the operations.</p> + +<p>“Do you remember that big hole in the island +we visited on our trip to the south pole?”</p> + +<p>“I suah does,” answered the colored man.</p> + +<p>“We are going to explore that,” went on the +scientist. “We are going to make a voyage to the +interior of the earth in our <em>Flying Mermaid</em>.”</p> + +<p>“Go down into th’ earth!” exclaimed Washington, +his eyes big with fright.</p> + +<p>“Certainly; why not?”</p> + +<p>“Not for mine!” cried the colored man, dropping +the wrench he was holding. “No sir! I’m +not goin’ t’ project myself int’ a grave while I’se +alive. Time enough when I kicks th’ bucket. No +sir! If yo’ an’ the boys wants t’ risk yo’ se’ves +goin’ down int’ th’ interior of th’ earth, where th’ +Bible says there’s fiery furnaces, yo’ kin go, but +Washington White stays on terra cotta! That’s +where he stays; He ain’t ready t’ be buried, not +jest yet!” and the frightened colored man started +to leave the shed.</p> + +<h2 id='ch02' class='c008'>CHAPTER II<br /><br />THE FLYING MERMAID</h2> + +<p class='c009'>“Here! Stop him!” cried Professor Henderson. +“Don’t let him get away. We still need +his help to get the ship in shape. He needn’t +be frightened. We’re not going to start at once.”</p> + +<p>Mark and Jack ran after Washington, whose +progress was somewhat impeded because he kept +looking back as if he feared the new ship was chasing +him.</p> + +<p>“Come on back!” said Mark. “There’s no +danger, and if there was we’re not going to start +to-day.”</p> + +<p>“Ain’t yo’ foolin’ me?” asked Washington, +pausing and looking doubtfully at the boys.</p> + +<p>“Of course not,” answered Mark. “You +know Professor Henderson would not make you +do anything you didn’t want to do, Wash. He +wishes you to stay and help him get ready, that’s +all.”</p> + +<p>“Well, Washington,” observed the aged scientist. +“I didn’t think you’d go back on me.”</p> + +<p>“I’d do mos’ anything fer yo’, Perfesser,” said +the colored man, “but I got t’ beg off this time,” +and he looked at the <em>Flying Mermaid</em> as if he +thought the metal sides would open and devour +him.</p> + +<p>“Then help me get things in shape to generate +the gas,” the scientist said. “I want to give the +new vapor the first real test in lifting power to-day. +On the success of it depends the future of +the ship.”</p> + +<p>Seeing there was no immediate danger of being +carried to the centre of the earth, Washington resumed +his labors. The professor, the boys, Bill +and Tom were also hurrying matters to enable a +test to be made before night.</p> + +<p>As will readily be seen, even by those not familiar +with the construction of airships and submarines, +the chief problem was to find some agent +strong enough to lift from the earth a weight heavier +than had ever before been put into an apparatus +that was destined to traverse the clouds. For the +<em>Flying Mermaid</em> was not only an airship but an +ocean voyager as well. It had to be made light +enough to be lifted far above the earth, yet the +very nature of it, necessitating it being made heavy +enough to stand the buffeting of the waves and the +pressure of water, was against its flying abilities.</p> + +<p>Professor Henderson realized this and knew +that the chief concern would be to discover a gas +or vapor with five times the lifting power of hydrogen, +one of the lightest gases known, and one +sometimes used to inflate balloons.</p> + +<p>After long study he had been partially successful, +but he knew from experiments made that the +gas he had so far been able to manufacture would +not answer. What he wanted was some element +that could be mixed with the gas, to neutralize the +attraction of gravitation, or downward pull of the +earth.</p> + +<p>While he was seeking this, and experimenting +on many lines, the construction of the air-water +ship went on. In general the outward construction +was two cigar shaped hulls, one above the +other. Aluminum, being the lightest and strongest +metal that could be used for the purpose, formed +the main part of both bodies.</p> + +<p>The upper hull was one hundred feet long and +twenty feet in diameter at the widest part. It +tapered to points at either end. It was attached to +the lower hull by strong braces, at either end, while +from the center there extended a pipe which connected +with the lower section. This pipe was intended +to convey the lifting gas to the part which +corresponded to the bag of the balloon, save that it +was of metal instead of silk, or rubber as is usual.</p> + +<p>There were two reasons for this. One was that +it would not be liable to puncture, particularly in +the proposed underground trip, and the other was +that it did not have to be so large as a cloth bag +would have had to be. It was also a permanent +part of the ship, and on a voyage where part of the +time the travelers would be in the air and part on +the water, and when the change from one to the +other would have to be made quickly, this was necessary. +It would have taken too long to raise the +ship in the air had a cloth bag been used to contain +the gas.</p> + +<p>The lower hull or main part of the craft was one +hundred and fifty feet long, and forty feet +through at the largest part, in the centre.</p> + +<p>It was divided into four sections. The forward +one contained the sleeping quarters of Professor +Henderson and his crew. There was a small stateroom +for each one. Above was a conning or observation +tower, reached by a small flight of steps. +From this tower the ship could be steered, stopped +and started, as could also be done from the engine +room, which was in the after part of the hull.</p> + +<p>As in the <em>Porpoise</em> and <em>Monarch</em>, electricity +formed the motive power and was also used for +many other purposes on board. Engines operated +by gas produced the current which heated, lighted +and moved the ship, as well as played a part in +producing the wonderful gas.</p> + +<p>The ship moved forward or backward by means +of a novel arrangement. This was by the power +of compressed air. From either end of the lower +hull there projected a short pipe working in a ball +and socket joint, so it could be turned in any direction. +By means of strong pumps a current of +compressed air could be sent out from either pipe. +Thus when floating above the earth the ship was +forced forward by the blast of air rushing +from the pipe at the stern. It was the same principle +as that on which a sky rocket is shot heavenward, +save that gases produced by the burning of +powder in the pasteboard rocket form its moving +impulse.</p> + +<p>In the case of the <em>Flying Mermaid</em>, it could be +made to move backward by sending the air out of +the forward tube. Thus, when in the water, the +compressed air rushing from the pipe struck the +fluid and forced the ship forward or backward as +was desired. It floated on the surface, the deck +being about three feet out of water, while the aluminum +gas bag was overhead.</p> + +<p>The engine room was a marvel of machine construction. +It contained pumps for air and water, +motors, dynamos, gas engines, and a maze of +wheels and levers. Yet everything was very compact +and no room was wasted.</p> + +<p>The use of the air method of propulsion did +away with the necessity of a large propellor such +as most airships have to use, a propellor which +must of necessity be very light and which is easily +broken.</p> + +<p>Next to the engine room was the kitchen. It +contained an electric range and all necessary appliances +and utensils for preparing meals. There +were lockers and a large reserve storeroom which +when the time came would be well stocked with +food. Forward of the kitchen was the living and +dining room. It contained comfortable seats, +folding tables and a small library. Here, also +were many instruments designed to show how the +various machines were working. There were +gages, pointers and dials, which told the direction +the ship was traveling, the speed and the distance +above the earth or below the surface. Similar +indicators were in the conning tower, which had +a powerful search light.</p> + +<p>The ship was lighted throughout by incandescent +lamps, and there was even a small automatic piano +worked by the electric current, on which popular +airs could be played.</p> + +<p>If the gas and the gravity neutralizer worked +as Professor Henderson hoped they would, as soon +as the ship was completed, all that would be necessary +to start on the voyage would be to fill the +aluminum bag and set the air compressor in motion.</p> + +<p>The gas was made from common air, chemically +treated and with a secret material added which by +means of a complicated machine in a measure did +away with the downward pull of the earth. Thus +all that was necessary to carry on a long voyage was +a quantity of gasolene to operate the engine which +worked the electric machines, and some of this secret +compound.</p> + +<p>The professor and his helpers had been working +to good advantage. At last all was in readiness +for the gas test.</p> + +<p>It was proposed to try it on an experimental scale. +Some of the fluid was to be generated and forced +into an aluminum cylinder under the same pressure +it would be used in the air ship. To this cylinder +were attached weights in proportion to the weight +of the <em>Flying Mermaid</em> with its load of human +freight, engines and equipment.</p> + +<p>“This cylinder is just one one-hundredth the +size of the cylinder of the ship,” said the professor. +“I am going to fasten to it a hundred pound +weight. If it lifts that our latest contrivance will +be a success.”</p> + +<p>“You mean if the little cylinder pulls a hundred +pounds up the big ship will take us and the machinery +up?” asked Mark.</p> + +<p>“Certainly,” answered the professor. “If this +cylinder lifts a hundred pounds, one a hundred +times as big (as that of the <em>Mermaid</em> is), will lift +a hundred times as much, or ten thousand pounds. +That is five tons, or more than a ton over what I +figure to be the weight of our ship and contents. +The latest war balloon can lift one ton with ease, +and if my machine can not do five times as well I +shall be disappointed.”</p> + +<p>The last adjustments were made, pipes were run +from the gas generator to the cylinder, and the +hundred pound weight was attached.</p> + +<p>“Everybody look out now,” said Mr. Henderson. +“I am going to start the machine and let +the gas enter the cylinder. It is a very powerful +gas and may break the cylinder. If it does you +must all duck.”</p> + +<p>The scientist gave a last look at everything. +The boys got behind some boards whence they +could see without being in danger. Washington, +who had little fear so long as there was no danger +of going under ground, took his place at the dynamo. +Andy Sudds, with Bill and Tom, stationed +themselves in safe places.</p> + +<p>“All ready!” called the professor.</p> + +<p>He pulled a lever toward him, turned a wheel +and signalled to Washington to start the dynamo. +There was a sound of buzzing machinery, which +was followed by a hiss as the gas began to enter +the cylinder under pressure. Would it stand the +strain? That question was uppermost in every +one’s mind save the professor’s. He only cared +to see the cylinder leave the ground, carrying the +weight with it. That would prove his long labors +were crowned with success.</p> + +<p>Faster and faster whirred the dynamo. The +gas was being generated from the air. The secret +chemical made a hissing which could be heard for +some distance. The gage registered a heavy pressure. +Anxiously the professor watched the cylinder.</p> + +<p>“There!” he exclaimed at length. “It has all +the gas it can hold. Now to see if it works!”</p> + +<p>He disconnected the pipe leading from the generator. +This left the cylinder free. It seemed to +tremble slightly. There appeared to be a movement +to the hundred pound weight which rested on +the ground. It was as if it was tugging to get +loose.</p> + +<p>“There it goes! There it goes!” cried Mark, +joyfully.</p> + +<p>“Hurrah!” shouted Jack. “There she rises!”</p> + +<p>“It suttinly am projectin’ itself skyward!” +yelled Washington, coming from the dynamo.</p> + +<p>Sure enough the cylinder was slowly rising in +the air, bearing the weight with it. It had lifted +it clear from the ground and was approaching the +roof of the big shed.</p> + +<p>“It will work! It will work!” exclaimed the +professor, strangely excited.</p> + +<p>The next instant the cylinder, carrying the +weight, sailed right out of an open skylight, and +began drifting outside the shop, and across the +fields.</p> + +<p>“Quick! We must get it back!” cried Mr. +Henderson. “If it gets away my secret may be +discovered and I will lose all! We must secure +it!”</p> + +<p>But the cylinder was now two hundred feet in +the air and being blown to the east, the weight +dangling below it, making it look like a miniature +airship.</p> + +<p>“We can never catch that!” cried Mark.</p> + +<h2 id='ch03' class='c008'>CHAPTER III<br /><br />WASHINGTON DECIDES</h2> + +<p class='c009'>“We must catch that cylinder!” the professor +exclaimed. “Some one may find it when it comes +down and analyze the gas. Then he would discover +how to make it. The cylinder must come +down!”</p> + +<p>“Don’t see how we can proximate ourselves +inter th’ vicinity of it lessen we delegate th’ imperial +functions of ornithological specimens t’ some +member of this here party,” observed Washington.</p> + +<p>“If you mean we can’t catch that there contraption +unless we turn into birds I’ll show you that +you’re mistaken!” cried Andy Sudds. “I guess +I have a trick or two up my sleeve,” and the old +hunter quickly threw open the breech of his gun +and inserted a couple of cartridges.</p> + +<p>He raised the piece to his shoulder and took +quick aim. There was a sliver of flame, a puff of +smoke and a sharp report. The professor and the +boys who were watching the cylinder saw it vibrate +up in the air. Then there came a whistling sound. +An instant later the metal body began to descend, +and it and the weight fell to the earth.</p> + +<p>“I’m sorry I had to put a bullet through it, +Professor,” said old Andy with a queer smile, “but +it was the only way I saw of bringing it down. +Hope it isn’t damaged much.”</p> + +<p>“It doesn’t matter if it is,” the scientist answered. +“I can make more cylinders, but I don’t +want that secret of the gas to become known. +Your bullet served a good turn, Andy, for it let +the compressed vapor out just in time.”</p> + +<p>“Then we may consider the experiment a success,” +said Mark, as Washington went to where +the cylinder had fallen, to detach it from the +weight and bring both to the shed.</p> + +<p>“It seems so,” Mr. Henderson answered. +“True, it was only an experiment. We have yet +to test the ship itself.”</p> + +<p>“When can we do that?” asked Jack.</p> + +<p>“I hope by Monday,” the scientist answered.</p> + +<p>“Will you try it in the water or air first?” +asked Mark.</p> + +<p>“I’m almost certain it will float in the water,” +the aged inventor said. “It does not require much +work to make a ship which will do that. But the +air proposition is another matter. However, since +the cylinder rose, I am pretty sure the <em>Flying Mermaid</em> +will.</p> + +<p>“But we have done enough work to-day. Let’s +rest and have something to eat. Then, with Sunday +to sit around and talk matters over, we will +be ready for Monday’s test.”</p> + +<p>Some of the game Andy had killed was soon on +the table, for Washington, in addition to his other +accomplishments, was an expert cook. During +the evening the boys and their friends sat in the +living room of the big shed and talked over the +events of the day.</p> + +<p>Sunday was spent in discussing what adventures +might lie before them should they be able to descend +into the big hole. Washington did not say +much, but it was easy to see he had no notion of +going. He even began to pack his few belongings +in readiness to leave the service of Mr. Henderson, +for whom he had worked a good many +years.</p> + +<p>No one remained long abed Monday morning. +Even Washington was up early in spite of the interest +he had lost in the professor’s voyage.</p> + +<p>“I jest wants t’ see yo’ start fer that place where +they buries live folks,” he said.</p> + +<p>In order to properly test the <em>Flying Mermaid</em> +it was necessary to move the craft from the shed +from which place it had never been taken since it’s +construction was started. It had been built on big +rollers in anticipation of this need, so that all which +was now necessary was to open the doors at the +end, and roll the craft out.</p> + +<p>This was accomplished with no small amount of +labor, and it was nearly noon before the big ship +was moved into the open. It was shoved along to +a little clearing in front of the shed, where no trees +would interfere with its possible upward movement.</p> + +<p>Everyone was bustling about. The professor +was busiest of all. He went from one machine to +another; from this apparatus to that, testing here, +turning wheels there, adjusting valves and seeing +that all was in readiness for the generating of the +powerful gas.</p> + +<p>As the airship was half round on the bottom and +as it rested in a sort of semi-circular cradle; it +brought the entrance some distance above the +ground. To make it easier to get in and out while +preparations for the trial were going on, Bill and +Tom had made an improvised pair of steps, which +were tied to the side of the ship with ropes.</p> + +<p>Up and down these the professor, the boys and +Andy went, taking in tools and materials, and removing +considerable refuse which had accumulated +during the building of the craft.</p> + +<p>Finally all was in readiness for starting the making +of the gas. The ship was not wholly complete +and no supplies or provisions for the long voyage +had been taken aboard. The <em>Flying Mermaid</em> +was about a ton lighter than it would be when fully +fitted out, but to make up for this the professor +had left in the ship a lot of tools and surplus machinery +so that the craft held as much weight as +it would under normal conditions. If the gas +lifted it now it would at any other time.</p> + +<p>“Start the generator,” said Mr. Henderson, to +Mark. “We’ll soon see whether we are going to +succeed or fail.”</p> + +<p>The boy turned a number of levers and wheels. +The machine which made the powerful vapor was +soon in operation. The professor had already +added enough of the secret compound to the tank +containing the other ingredients, and the big pump +was sucking in air to be transformed into the lifting +gas.</p> + +<p>The boys and the professor were in the engine +room. Andy Sudds, with Bill and Tom, had taken +their places in the living room, to more evenly balance +the ship, since the things in it were not yet all +in their proper places. As for Washington he was +busy running from the shed to the ship with various +tools and bits of machinery the professor desired.</p> + +<p>The gas was being generated rapidly. Throughout +the ship there resounded a hissing noise that +told it was being forced through the pipe into the +aluminum shell above the ship proper.</p> + +<p>“I wonder how soon it will begin to lift us,” +said Mark.</p> + +<p>“It will take about half an hour,” replied Mr. +Henderson. “You see we have first to fill the +holder completely, since there is no gas in it. After +this we will keep some on hand, so that it will +only need the addition of a small quantity to enable +the ship to rise.”</p> + +<p>He was busy watching the pointer on a dial +which indicated the pressure of the gas, and the +lifting force. The boys were kept busy making +adjustments to the machinery and oiling bearings.</p> + +<p>Suddenly, throughout the length of the craft +there was felt a curious trembling. It was as +though the screw of a powerful steamer was revolving +in the water.</p> + +<p>“What is it?” asked Jack.</p> + +<p>“I hope it is the lifting power of the gas making +itself felt,” the professor answered. “Perhaps +the <em>Flying Mermaid</em> is getting ready to try +her wings.”</p> + +<p>The trembling became more pronounced. The +gas was being generated faster than ever. The +whole ship was trembling. Tom and Bill came +from the room, where they were stationed, to +inquire the meaning, but were reassured by the professor.</p> + +<p>“Don’t be alarmed if you find yourselves up in +the air pretty soon,” he remarked with a smile. +“Remember the <em>Electric Monarch</em>, and the flights +she took. We may not go as high as we did in +her, but it will answer the same purpose.”</p> + +<p>The gas was hissing through the big tube as it +rushed into the overhead holder. The gage indicated +a heavy pressure. The ship began to tremble +more violently and to sway slightly from side +to side.</p> + +<p>“I think we shall rise presently,” said Mr. Henderson. +His voice showed the pride he felt at the +seeming success with which his invention was about +to meet.</p> + +<p>Suddenly, with a little jerk, as though some one +with a giant hand had plucked the <em>Flying Mermaid</em> +from the earth, the ship gave a little bound +into the air, and was floating free.</p> + +<p>“Here we go!” cried Mr. Henderson. “The +ship is a success. Now we’re off for the hole in +the earth!”</p> + +<p>The <em>Flying Mermaid</em> was indeed rising in the +air. True it did not go up so swiftly as had the +<em>Monarch</em>, but then it was a much heavier and +stronger vessel, and flying was only one of its accomplishments.</p> + +<p>“It’s a success! It’s a success!” shouted Mark, +capering about in his excitement.</p> + +<p>“Now we’ll see what the centre of the earth +looks like,” went on Jack. “I can hardly wait +for the time to come when we are to start on the +voyage.”</p> + +<p>At that instant, when the ship was but a few +feet from the ground, but slowly rising, the boys +and the professor heard a shouting below them.</p> + +<p>“What’s that?” asked the scientist. “Is any +one hurt?”</p> + +<p>Mark ran to a small window, something like a +port hole in an ocean steamer, and looked out.</p> + +<p>“Quick!” he shouted. “Stop the ship! +Washington will be killed!”</p> + +<p>In fact from the agonized yells which proceeded +from somewhere under the craft it seemed that +the accident was in process of happening.</p> + +<p>“Save me! Save me!” cried the colored man. +“I’m goin’ to fall! Catch me, some one!”</p> + +<p>“What is it?” asked the professor, making +ready to shut off the power and let the ship settle +back to earth, from which it had moved about +fifty feet.</p> + +<p>“It’s Washington,” explained Mark. “He evidently +tried to walk up the steps just as the boat +mounted skyward. He rolled down and managed +to grab the end of the rope which was left over +after the steps were tied. Now he’s swinging +down there.”</p> + +<p>“Are you going to lower the ship?” asked +Jack.</p> + +<p>“Of course!” exclaimed the professor. “I +only hope he hangs on until his feet touch the +earth.”</p> + +<p>“Keep a tight hold!” shouted Mark, from +out of the small window.</p> + +<p>“That’s th’ truest thing yo’ ever said!” exclaimed +Washington. “You bet I’m goin’ to hold +on, and I’m comin’ up too,” which he proceeded +to do, hand over hand, like a sailor.</p> + +<p>The boys and the professor watched the colored +man’s upward progress. The ship had hardly +begun to settle as, in the excitement, not enough +gas had been let out. Closer and closer came +Washington, until he was able to grasp the edge +of the opening, to which the steps were fastened.</p> + +<p>“I thought you weren’t coming with us,” observed +the professor, when he saw that his helper +was safe.</p> + +<p>“I changed my mind,” said the colored man. +“It’s jest luck. Seems like th’ ship done wanted +me t’ go 'long, an’ I’m goin’. I’ll take my chances +on bein’ buried alive. I ain’t never seen th’ centre +of th’ earth, an’ I want’s to 'fore I die. I’m goin’ +'long, Perfessor!”</p> + +<h2 id='ch04' class='c008'>CHAPTER IV<br /><br />WHAT DID MARK SEE?</h2> + +<p class='c009'>“Well, I’m glad you’ve decided at last,” the +professor remarked. “Now come inside and we’ll +see how the ship works.”</p> + +<p>Once over his fright, Washington made himself +at home on the craft he had helped build. +He went from one room to another and observed +the engine.</p> + +<p>“She certainly am workin’” he observed with +pride. “Are we still goin’ up, Perfessor?”</p> + +<p>“Still mounting,” replied Mr. Henderson. +“We are now three hundred feet above the earth,” +he added as he glanced at a registering gage.</p> + +<p>The great air pump was set going and soon +from the after tube, a big stream of the compressed +vapor rushed. It acted on the ship instantly +and sent the craft ahead at a rapid rate. +By elevating or depressing the tube the craft could +be sent obliquely up or down. Then, by forcing +the air from the forward tube, the <em>Mermaid</em> was +reversed and scudded backward.</p> + +<p>But it was more with the ship’s ability to rise +and descend that Professor Henderson was concerned, +since on that depended their safety. So +various tests were made, in generating the gas +and using the negative gravity apparatus.</p> + +<p>All worked to perfection. Obeying the slightest +turn of the wheels and levers the <em>Mermaid</em> rose or +fell. She stood still, suspended herself in the air, +or rushed backward and forward.</p> + +<p>Of course the machinery was new and did not +operate as smoothly as it would later, but the +professor and his friends were very well satisfied.</p> + +<p>“Now we’ll try something new,” said the scientist +to the two boys as they stood beside him +in the tower. “I only hope this part succeeds, +and we shall soon be off on our voyage.”</p> + +<p>He turned several levers. There was a hissing +sound as the gas rushed from the container, and +the ship began to settle down.</p> + +<p>“What’s th’ matter? Are we goin’ t’ hit th’ +earth?” yelled Washington, rushing from the engine +room.</p> + +<p>“Keep quiet,” ordered the professor. “We +are only going down, that’s all.”</p> + +<p>“But good land! Perfesser!” exclaimed the +colored man. “The ocean’s right under us! You +forgot you sailed away from the island! We’ll +be drowned suah!”</p> + +<p>“Leave it to me,” said Mr. Henderson. “The +<em>Flying Mermaid</em> is going to take a bath!”</p> + +<p>“As long as it swims it will be all right,” observed +Mark in a low tone to Jack. “I’m glad +I can take care of myself in the water.”</p> + +<p>Before Jack could reply the <em>Mermaid</em> seemed +to take a sudden dive through the air. The next +instant she struck the water with a splash that +sent the waves rolling all about. The craft rocked +violently to and fro on the surface of the sea. For +a while there were anxious hearts aboard, for there +was no certainty but that the ship might not sink +to the bottom.</p> + +<p>But the old professor had not calculated and +builded in vain. After rocking about like a vessel +newly launched, the strange craft rode safely and +upright on the water. It set down far enough +to bring the propelling tubes well under, but not +so far but that the conning tower was well out +and there was a small deck available.</p> + +<p>“Now to see if we can conquer the water as +we did the air!” cried the professor. “Mark, +start the air pump. Jack, you steer, for I want +to watch the machinery under the additional +strain.”</p> + +<p>From the rear tube rushed such a volume of +air that the ocean near it bubbled and foamed. +The ship trembled from stem to stern, and then, +after hanging for an instant as if undecided what +to do, it began to move forward as easily as +though it had never sailed any other element than +the sea.</p> + +<p>“She fits her name!” the professor cried. +“She is indeed the <em>Flying Mermaid</em>, for she sails +the ocean as easily as she navigates in the clouds!”</p> + +<p>For a mile or two the craft was sent ahead over +the waves. Then it was reversed and run backwards. +Satisfied that his long months of work +had not gone for naught, the professor after trying +several experiments, decided to try and raise the +ship while in motion.</p> + +<p>With Jack and Mark to look after the air +pumps, while Washington, Tom and Bill busied +themselves in the engine room, Mr. Henderson +began to generate the gas and start the negative +gravity apparatus. All the while the craft was +forging ahead.</p> + +<p>There was again the hissing sound that told of +the aluminum holder being filled. For a few minutes +there seemed to be no change, the <em>Mermaid</em> +plowing forward.</p> + +<p>Then like a bird rising from the waves, or +like a flying fish leaping from the sea to escape +some pursuing monster of the deep, the new ship +shot up diagonally from the surface and winged +its way into the upper regions of the air.</p> + +<p>“Success! Success!” cried the professor. “This +proves all I wanted to know. Now we are ready +for our great trip!”</p> + +<p>Great were the rejoicings in the camp that night. +It was like living over again the days when they +were aboard the diving <em>Porpoise</em> or the flying +<em>Monarch</em>. To the recollections were added the +anticipations of what was before them in the trip +to the interior of the earth.</p> + +<p>Busy days followed, for there was still much +to be done to the <em>Flying Mermaid</em>. The machinery, +which was only partly completed, had to be +finished. Besides this the professor was working +on some apparatus, the use of which he did not +disclose to any one. It was stored aboard the +ship at the last minute.</p> + +<p>Plenty of provisions had to be taken aboard, +and many supplies needed to work the <em>Mermaid</em> +and insure that it would go to the end of the +voyage. The materials for generating the gas +and negative gravity, spare parts, records for the +automatic piano and other things were stored +away.</p> + +<p>Some guns and ammunition were taken along as +were a few revolvers, since old Andy had said it +was best to prepare for any thing in the shape +of enemies or wild beasts that might be met with +in the interior regions.</p> + +<p>It was decided to make the start by sailing along +the surface of the sea for several days, as in the +event of any weakness in the machinery being +discovered there would be less danger. If, at +the end of four days, no trouble developed, the +professor said he would send the <em>Mermaid</em> into +the air and make the rest of the voyage through +the sky.</p> + +<p>The night before the start was to be made the +professor, with the boys, Washington and the +other helpers, went about through the various +shops and buildings, locking them up securely. +For they could not tell how long they would be +away, and they had to leave behind much valuable +material.</p> + +<p>As there were several things that needed attention +they divided the work up. Mark had finished +his share and was walking back toward the +living cabin where they were all quartered, when, +down at the shore, near where the boat was +moored, he fancied he saw, in the gathering darkness, +a moving figure.</p> + +<p>“I wonder who that can be,” he thought. “All +the others are near the machine shop, for I just +left them there. Perhaps it’s some one trying to +spy out how the <em>Mermaid</em> is built.”</p> + +<p>Knowing the professor wanted his secret well +guarded, Mark walked softly toward the little +dock that served as a place whence the <em>Mermaid</em> +could be easily boarded. As he approached he +saw the figure moving. Something struck the boy +as peculiar.</p> + +<p>Though the object had some of the characteristics +of a man it did not walk like a human being, +but shuffled along more like a huge ape or monkey. +It seemed bent over, as if it stooped toward the +ground.</p> + +<p>“Who are you?” called Mark suddenly.</p> + +<p>For an instant the figure halted and then hurried +on faster than before, with a curious, shuffling +walk. It was approaching the ship.</p> + +<p>Somehow it struck Mark as if it was an uncanny +being; an inhabitant of some other world. Then +he laughed at his half-fear, and started on a run +toward the dock.</p> + +<p>“If it’s some tramp trying to find a place to +sleep he’d better not go aboard the ship, he might +do some damage,” the boy thought.</p> + +<p>He could hardly see the figure now as it had +passed into the shadow cast by the boat. He was +about to summon the professor to make an investigation, +when Washington started going the +search light which was placed just over the door +of the living cabin. It was kept there as a sort of +beacon light, as, near the island was a dangerous +ledge of rocks.</p> + +<p>Then, in the blinding white glare from the big +lantern as Washington accidentally swung it toward +the <em>Mermaid</em>, Mark beheld a strange sight.</p> + +<p>The figure he had been watching stood out in +bold relief. Though it was shaped like a human +being it was not like any person the boy had ever +seen. It seemed covered with a skin twice too +large for it; a skin, which, in spite of the clothes +that concealed it, hung in folds about the arms +and legs, dropping pendent like from the neck like +a big garment, and flapping in the wind.</p> + +<p>For an instant Mark was so startled he cried +out, and the professor and the others ran to see +what was the matter.</p> + +<p>“There—by the ship! A horrible creature!” +exclaimed Mark.</p> + +<p>Shouting to Washington to keep the light steady +in the direction of the dock, Mr. Henderson ran +toward the moored <em>Mermaid</em>. Jack, Andy, Bill +and Tom, with Mark in the rear followed him.</p> + +<p>“Nothing here,” said the scientist, after a careful +search about. “Are you sure you saw something, +Mark?”</p> + +<p>“Positively,” replied the lad with a shudder. +He described the vision of the darkness.</p> + +<p>“I guess it was a big otter, or maybe an enormous +turtle,” the professor said.</p> + +<h2 id='ch05' class='c008'>CHAPTER V<br /><br />ATTACKED BY A WHALE</h2> + +<p class='c009'>But Mark was certain it was nothing like that, +though a careful search failed to reveal anything +or any person near the ship. It was too dark to +examine for footprints, and even Mark, after taking +a look all about, felt he might have been deceived +by shadows. Still he was a little nervous, +and could hardly sleep for imagining what the +thing he saw could have been.</p> + +<p>The next day every one was so busy that no +one, not even Mark, recalled the little excitement +of the night before. Shortly after noon, final +preparations having been made, they all got +aboard the <em>Mermaid</em> and started off.</p> + +<p>It was a bright sunshiny day, and the craft, +speeding away from the island where it had been +constructed, over the dancing blue waves, must +have presented a strange sight had there been any +spectators. For surely no such ship had ever +before sailed those waters.</p> + +<p>However, there was no other vessel in sight, +and the island, as far as the professor and his +friends knew, had never been inhabited.</p> + +<p>“We will not try for any great speed,” Mr. +Henderson remarked as he, with Mark and Jack, +stood in the conning tower managing the <em>Mermaid</em>. +“We don’t want to strain any joints at +the start or heat any engine bearings. There will +be time enough for speed later.”</p> + +<p>“Yes, and we may need it more when we get +into the centre of the earth than we do now,” +observed Mark.</p> + +<p>“Why so?” asked Jack.</p> + +<p>“No telling what we may run up against underneath +the ground,” went on Mark. “We may +have to fight strange animals and stranger beings. +Besides, the atmosphere and water there can’t be +the same as up here; do you think so, Professor?”</p> + +<p>For a few minutes the scientist was silent. He +seemed to be thinking deeply.</p> + +<p>“I will tell you what I believe,” he said at +length. “I have never spoken of it before, but +now that we are fairly started and may eventually +have a chance to prove my theory, I will say that +I think the centre of this earth on which we live +is hollow. Inside of it, forming a core, so to +speak, I believe there is another earth, similar to +ours in some respects which revolves inside this +larger sphere.”</p> + +<p>They were well out to sea now, as they could +observe when they emerged on the little deck. +Above their heads was the aluminum gas holder, +which served as a sort of protection from the sun +that was quite warm. The <em>Mermaid</em> rode with +an easy motion, being submerged just enough to +make her steady, yet not deep enough to encounter +much resistance from the water. In fact it could +not have been arranged better for speed or comfort.</p> + +<p>“I think we will sail well to the eastward before +making our course south,” Mr. Henderson said. +“I do not care to meet too many ships, as those +aboard will be very curious and I do not want +too much news of this venture to get out. We +will take an unfrequented route and avoid delays +by being hailed by every passing vessel whose +captain will wonder what queer craft he had met +with.”</p> + +<p>The boys enjoyed the sail, for the weather could +not have been better. Even old Andy, who seldom +said much, seemed delighted with the prospect of +having strange adventures. He had his rifle with +him, and, indeed, he seldom went anywhere that he +did not carry it.</p> + +<p>“For there’s no telling when you may see something +you want to shoot or that ought to be shot,” +he used to say, “and it’s always the man without +a gun who needs it most. So I’m taking no +chances.”</p> + +<p>They sailed all that afternoon without meeting +with a craft of any kind. Straight to the east they +went, and when night began to settle down Washington +got supper. It was decided to run slowly +after dark until all hands were more familiar with +the ship.</p> + +<p>Morning found the <em>Mermaid</em> about a hundred +miles from the island where she had been launched. +The night had been uneventful, except that Mark +told Jack he heard some strange noise near his +bunk several times. He was nearest the storeroom +where spare parts, and the curious cylinder +the professor had brought aboard, were kept.</p> + +<p>“I guess it was rats,” said Jack. “They are +always in ships.”</p> + +<p>“Old wooden ships, yes,” admitted Mark. +“But I’ll bet there’s not a rat aboard the <em>Mermaid</em>.”</p> + +<p>“Then you were dreaming,” said Jack, as if +that settled it.</p> + +<p>Mark did not speak further of the noise, but +he did considerable thinking. However, the next +night there was no further disturbance.</p> + +<p>The fourth day out, when everything had +passed off well, the engines doing their best, the +professor decided to speed them up a bit, since +he was satisfied they had “found” themselves as +mechanics term it.</p> + +<p>“We’ll see how fast we can go through the +water,” said Mr. Henderson, “and then I think +we can safely turn our course south. We are well +beyond the ordinary lines of travel now.”</p> + +<p>Having oiled the bearings well, and seen that +everything was in place and properly adjusted, +the professor and the boys took their places in +the conning tower, while Washington, Tom and +Bill remained in the engine room. Andy stayed +on deck with his gun.</p> + +<p>“I might see a big fish, and we could vary our +bill of fare,” he said with a laugh.</p> + +<p>“Here we go!” exclaimed the professor as he +shifted the levers and turned some wheels and +valves. “Now we’ll see how fast we can travel.”</p> + +<p>As he spoke the <em>Mermaid</em> responded to the +added impulse of the compressed air and shot +through the water at a terrific speed. The sudden +increase in momentum almost threw the boys from +their feet, and they would have fallen had they +not grasped some projecting levers.</p> + +<p>“I guess that will do,” said the scientist. “I +think we have speed enough for almost any emergency. +I’ll let her run at this rate for a while, +and then we’ll slack up.”</p> + +<p>Looking ahead, the boys could see the green +waters parting in front of the bow of the <em>Mermaid</em>, +as if to make room for her. Two huge +waves were thrown upon either side.</p> + +<p>Suddenly, dead ahead, there loomed up a big +black object.</p> + +<p>“Look out you’ll hit the rock!” cried Mark +to the professor, who was steering.</p> + +<p>With a turn of his wrist Mr. Henderson moved +the wheel which controlled the tube. It was deflected +and sent the boat to larboard.</p> + +<p>At that instant from the rock two small fountains +of water rose in the air, falling back in a +shower of spray through which the sun gleamed.</p> + +<p>“That’s not a rock! It’s a big whale!” cried +Jack. “And we’re going to hit him!”</p> + +<p>The professor had miscalculated the speed of +the craft, or else had not thrown her far enough +to larboard, for, a second later, the <em>Mermaid</em> was +almost upon the big leviathan.</p> + +<p>With a desperate twirling of the steering wheel +the professor veered the craft as far as possible. +But all he could do did not suffice, for the craft +hit the whale a glancing blow on the side, and the +ship careened as if she would turn turtle.</p> + +<p>At the same time there rang out from upon +deck the sound of a rifle shot. Old Andy had +taken a chance at the enormous creature of the +deep.</p> + +<p>“Hurrah!” the boys heard him shout. “I +give him one plumb in the eye! A fine shot! +And we hit him besides with the boat. I guess +he’s a goner!”</p> + +<p>“I’m afraid not,” muttered the professor. +“That was a bad blow we struck him, but I think +it will only ruffle his temper. We’ll have to look +sharp now, boys.”</p> + +<p>By this time the ship had rushed past the whale, +but the boys, looking through a window in the +rear of the tower could see the huge body. Now +the fountains of water which the whale spouted +were tinged with red.</p> + +<p>“He’s bleeding!” exclaimed the professor. +“I guess Andy hit him in a vital spot.”</p> + +<p>“But not vital enough!” cried Mark. “See! +He’s coming after us!”</p> + +<p>And so it proved. The whale, angered, and, +probably half crazed by the pain of the bullet +and the blow, was coursing after the ship, coming +on with the speed of an express train. Straight +at the <em>Mermaid</em> he lunged his huge bulk.</p> + +<p>“We must escape him!” cried Mr. Henderson. +“If he hits us he’ll send us to the bottom!”</p> + +<p>He had made ready to slow up the <em>Mermaid</em> +to see if it had sustained any damage from the +impact with the whale, but when he saw the monster +coming after the boat he knew the only safety +lay in flight.</p> + +<p>“Let us go up into the air and so escape him!” +cried Jack, with sudden inspiration.</p> + +<p>For an instant neither Mark nor the professor +grasped what Jack meant. Then, with an exclamation, +the professor pulled forward the lever that +generated the gas and set working the gravity +neutralizer, which would enable the ship to rise.</p> + +<p>Faster through the water went the <em>Mermaid</em>, +and faster after her came the whale. Above the +hum of the engines was heard the hiss of the +powerful gas. The ship trembled more violently.</p> + +<p>“We are rising!” exclaimed the professor, as +he looked at a gage.</p> + +<p>The boys could feel the craft lifting from the +waves which clung to her as if they hated to lose +her. The boys knew the gas was beginning to +operate.</p> + +<p>“If it is not too late!” whispered Mark, half +to himself.</p> + +<p>For the monster of the seas was coming on, +lashing the water to foam with his terrible flukes, +and sending aloft a bloody spray. His speed was +awful.</p> + +<p>Now he was but ten feet away from the fleeing +craft—now but eight—now five! Ten seconds +more and the big head, like the blunt stern of a +battle ship, forced forward by the tons of blubber, +flesh, bone and fat behind it would strike the +<em>Mermaid</em> and crush it like an egg shell.</p> + +<p>Now if ever was the need for the <em>Flying Mermaid</em> +to prove herself worthy of the name. Now, +if ever, was the time for her to leave the watery +element and take to the lighter one.</p> + +<p>And she did. With a last tremble, as if to free +herself from the hold of the waves, the gallant +craft soared up into the air, leaving the water, +which dripped from her keel like a fountain’s +spray, and shooting aloft like a bird, escaped her +terrible enemy which passed under her, so close +that the lower part of the <em>Flying Mermaid</em> scraped +the whale’s back.</p> + +<p>“Saved!” exclaimed the professor.</p> + +<div class='c000'> +<a href='images/illus-046f.jpg'><img src='images/illus-046.jpg' alt='' class='c010' /></a> +<p class='c011'>THE LOWER PART OF THE FLYING MERMAID SCRAPED THE WHALE’S BACK.</p> +</div> + +<h2 id='ch06' class='c008'>CHAPTER VI<br /><br />THE CYCLONE</h2> + +<p class='c009'>It was only in the nick of time, for a second +later and the big mammal of the ocean would have +struck the ship and split it from stem to stern.</p> + +<p>Higher and higher into the air mounted the +<em>Flying Mermaid</em>, while in the water below, the +whale, incensed by missing his prey, was lashing +the waves to foam.</p> + +<p>“Well, that was a narrow squeak; as close as +I ever care to come to it!” exclaimed Andy as he +let go of the steel rail to which he was clinging +and entered the conning tower. “I had no idea +of hitting the big fish.”</p> + +<p>“I guess he would have taken after us whether +you had fired at him or not,” said Mr. Henderson. +“He was probably looking for trouble, and took +the first thing that came in his way, which happened +to be us. Some whales are like that, so I +have read; big bull creatures, exiled from the school +to which they once belonged, they get like mad +creatures and know neither friend nor foe. Something +like rogue elephants, I imagine.”</p> + +<p>Now, having thus unexpectedly risen into the +air, the professor decided to continue travel in +that style for a while at least. It would require +less force to propel the ship, and the going would +be more comfortable, since in the upper regions +the <em>Mermaid</em> rode on an even keel, while in the +water there was more or less rolling, due to the +action of the waves.</p> + +<p>Once recovered from their fright caused by the +whale, and having lost sight of the enormous creature, +for they were now far above the ocean, the +adventurers began to think of something to eat.</p> + +<p>Washington lost little time in preparing a meal, +and it was eaten with a relish. The electric cooking +stove worked to perfection, for the colored +man had learned how to use that aboard the <em>Porpoise</em> +and <em>Monarch</em>, and could be depended on to +turn out appetizing dishes.</p> + +<p>“What do you say to traveling through the air +at night?” asked Mr. Henderson, as he arose +from the table.</p> + +<p>“Suits me,” replied Mark. “There’s less +danger than in the water, I think.”</p> + +<p>Bill, Tom and Washington arranged to stand +the night watch, and, when the professor had examined +the engines and given orders about keeping +the ship on her course through the air, he retired +to his bunk. Jack and Mark soon followed.</p> + +<p>It must have been about midnight when Mark +was awakened by a movement that seemed to +come from the storeroom next to where his sleeping +place was located. At first he thought he had +been dreaming, but, as he found he was wide +awake, he knew it was no imagination that had +affected him.</p> + +<p>“I certainly heard something,” he said to himself. +“It sounded just as it did the other night. +I wonder if I ought to investigate.”</p> + +<p>He thought over the matter carefully as he sat +upright in his bunk in the darkness. True the +noise might be a natural one, due to the vibration +of the engine, or to some echo from the machinery. +As Mark listened he heard it again.</p> + +<p>This time he realized it was the slow movement +of some heavy body. He felt a cold shiver run +over him and his hair evinced an uncomfortable +tendency to stand upright. But he conquered his +feelings and resolved to keep cool and see if he +could discover what had awakened him.</p> + +<p>He got up and moved softly about the little +room that contained his bunk. He could hear +better now, and knew it was no echo or vibration +that had come to his ears.</p> + +<p>Once again he heard the strange sound. It was +exactly the same as before; as if some big creature +was pulling itself over the floor.</p> + +<p>“Maybe it’s a snake; a water snake!” thought +Mark. “It may have crawled aboard when we +did not notice it.”</p> + +<p>Then he remembered that the ship had not been +open in any way that would enable a serpent to +come on it, since it had been started on its ocean +trip. Before that, he was sure no snake had +entered the <em>Flying Mermaid</em>. Still it sounded +more like a snake than anything else.</p> + +<p>“I’m going to make a search,” decided the +boy.</p> + +<p>He took a small portable electric light, run by +a storage battery, and, slipping on a pair of shoes +and a bath robe, he left his stateroom.</p> + +<p>He had decided that the noise came from the +storage compartment and so made for that. The +door he knew was not locked, since he had seen +Mr. Henderson go in late that afternoon, and the +professor had used no key.</p> + +<p>Moving softly, Mark left his room and soon +found himself in a corridor, on either side of which +were located the sleeping quarters of the others. +He did not want to awaken them, and, perhaps, +be laughed at for his curiosity.</p> + +<p>To get to the storeroom Mark had to go first +from the corridor into the dining room. He soon +reached the door that guarded what he thought +might be a strange secret. Trying the knob softly +he found it giving under his fingers.</p> + +<p>“I wonder if I had better go in,” he thought. +“Perhaps, after all, it was only rats, as Jack said.”</p> + +<p>But, even as he listened he again heard the odd +sound coming from the room. This determined +him. He would solve the mystery if possible.</p> + +<p>Cautiously he turned the knob. The door was +slowly swinging open when Mark was startled by +a noise from behind him. He turned suddenly +to see Professor Henderson confronting him.</p> + +<p>“What is it, Mark? Is the ship on fire? +What’s the matter? Is any one hurt?”</p> + +<p>“I was just going in this room to——” began Mark.</p> + +<p>“Don’t do it! Don’t do it!” exclaimed the +professor in an excited whisper. “No one must +go in that room. I forgot to tell you and Jack +about it. No one must enter. It contains a +secret!”</p> + +<p>“I heard a strange noise and——” Mark began +again.</p> + +<p>“It could make no noise! It would be impossible +for it to make a noise!” the professor exclaimed.</p> + +<p>“I heard something,” the boy insisted.</p> + +<p>“You were dreaming!” said the professor. +“Now go back to bed, Mark, and don’t let this +happen again. Remember, no one must enter +that room unless I give permission!”</p> + +<p>Somewhat crestfallen at the outcome of his +investigations, but realizing that the professor +could do what he wanted to aboard his own ship, +Mark went back to bed. But he could not sleep. +All the rest of the night he was wondering whether +Mr. Henderson had some strange creature hidden +aboard the <em>Mermaid</em>. He feared lest the old +scientist’s mind might be affected and, in his wildness +he had made some infernal machine that +would, in time, blow the whole ship apart.</p> + +<p>But tired nature asserted itself at last, and, +weary with vain imaginings, Mark fell into a +slumber. The next morning he awoke with a +start from a dream that he was being devoured +by an immense water snake.</p> + +<p>He said nothing to the others about his night’s +adventure, for, as it transpired, no one else had +been awakened by his investigations. The professor +did not refer to his conversation with Mark.</p> + +<p>“There’s something queer going on aboard the +ship this trip,” said Mark to himself. “But I +guess it’s none of my business. Professor Henderson +seems to know what he is doing and I +guess I can trust him.”</p> + +<p>He resolved to think no more of the strange +noises and movements, and, for several nights +thereafter he was not disturbed by them.</p> + +<p>The weather, which, up to this time had been +fair, took a sudden turn for the worse about the +fourth day after Mark’s little night expedition. +One evening the sun sank in a mass of dull lead-colored +clouds and a sharp wind sprang up.</p> + +<p>“We’re going to have a storm,” said Mr. +Henderson. “It’s liable to be a bad one, too, +from the way the barometer is falling.”</p> + +<p>He looked at the glass, and scanned the various +instruments that told how high up the <em>Mermaid</em> +was and how fast she was traveling.</p> + +<p>“We’re pretty high up in the air,” he said, +“and scooting along at about fifty miles an hour. +We are going against the wind, too, but fortunately +it is not blowing hard.”</p> + +<p>At that moment there sounded from without a +peculiar howling sound, as if a siren whistle was +being blown.</p> + +<p>“'Pears like there’s goin’ t’ be a tumultuous +demonstration of sub-maxiliary contortions in th’ +empherial regions contiguous t’ th’ upper atmosphere!” +exclaimed Washington, entering from the +engine room into the conning tower.</p> + +<p>“What’s the trouble?” asked Mr. Henderson.</p> + +<p>“Terrible big black cloud chasin’ us from behind!” +exclaimed the colored man.</p> + +<p>Noting the alarm in Washington’s voice the professor +glanced from the rear window. What he +saw caused him to exclaim:</p> + +<p>“It’s a cyclone! We must drop down to avoid +it!”</p> + +<p>He sprang to a lever controlling the gas and +yanked it toward him. There was a shrill hissing +sound, and a second later the <em>Mermaid</em> began to +sink. The boys watching the gages on the wall +of the tower, saw that the craft was falling rapidly.</p> + +<p>But, with a rush and roar, the terrible wind was +upon them. It caught the craft in its fearful grip +and heeled it over as a ship careens to the ocean +blast.</p> + +<p>“It’s a storm in the upper regions! We’ll find +it calm below!” cried the professor above the +howling of the gale. He opened the gas outlet +wider and the ship fell more rapidly.</p> + +<p>“Are you sure we’re over the ocean?” asked +Mark.</p> + +<p>“Positive!” the professor called back. “We +have been traveling straight south over the Atlantic +for the last week. We will land in the midst +of the waters and float safely.”</p> + +<p>Lower and lower went the <em>Mermaid</em>. The +wind was now blowing with the force of a tornado, +and, as the craft had to slant in order to descend, +it felt the power of the gale more than if it had +scudded before it. But, by skilful use of the +directing tube, the professor was able to keep +the boat from turning over. As they came further +down toward the earth the force of the wind was +felt less and less, until, as they came within two +hundred feet of the water which they saw below +them in the gathering dusk, it died out altogether.</p> + +<p>“Now we are free from it,” said the professor +as the <em>Mermaid</em> came down on the waves like an +immense swan.</p> + +<p>“Are you going ahead or going to stop here?” +asked Mark.</p> + +<p>“We’ll keep right on,” Mr. Henderson answered. +“No telling when the storm may strike +down here. We’ll go as far as we can to-night.”</p> + +<h2 id='ch07' class='c008'>CHAPTER VII<br /><br />A QUEER SAIL</h2> + +<p class='c009'>Now that the fear and worriment was over +they all began to feel hungry, and, while Mark +and Jack took charge of the conning tower Washington +got breakfast. The professor seemed preoccupied +during the meal, and several times, when +Mark spoke to him, he did not reply.</p> + +<p>“I wonder if he is worried about something, +or is thinking of something which seems to be concealed +in the storeroom,” the boy thought.</p> + +<p>But, after a while, the professor seemed to be +more like himself. He was busy over several +maps and charts, and then announced the ship +would try air-sailing again for a while.</p> + +<p>“We can make better time above than we can +on the water,” he said, “and I am anxious to +get to the mysterious island and learn what is in +store for us.”</p> + +<p>Perhaps if the professor had been able to look +ahead, and see what was soon going to happen, +he would not have been so anxious for it to +occur.</p> + +<p>It was shortly after dinner when, the gas container +having been filled, the ship rose in the air, +and began sailing over the ocean, about a mile +up. The day was a fine one, and, as they were +moving south, it was constantly growing warmer. +Down on the water, in fact, it was quite hot, but +in the air it was just right.</p> + +<p>Like some immense bird the <em>Mermaid</em> went +flying through the air. The boys and the professor +sat upon the deck in easy chairs. It was +like being on the top of some tall “sky-scraper” +building which, by some strange power, was being +moved forward. Below them the ocean tumbled +in long, lazy swells.</p> + +<p>Suddenly Mark, who was looking through a +telescope at the expanse of water stretched out +under them, gave a cry.</p> + +<p>“There’s a ship! She’s on fire!”</p> + +<p>“Where?” asked the professor, stretching out +his hand for the glass.</p> + +<p>“Just to the port of the forward tube. See +the smoke!” exclaimed Mark.</p> + +<p>Mr. Henderson looked. Through the lens he +saw a column of black vapor rising skyward. +Mingled with it were red flames.</p> + +<p>“Lower the <em>Mermaid</em>!” he cried. “We must +save those on board if we can!”</p> + +<p>Mark ran to the conning tower, where +Washington was, to give the order. The colored man, +who was looking ahead, intent on guiding the +ship, did not at first hear what Mark called.</p> + +<p>“Lower us! Send the <em>Mermaid</em> down!” Mark +cried again.</p> + +<p>The sudden shout and the excited voice of +Mark so startled Washington, that, fearing some +accident had happened, he pulled the lever, controlling +the gas supply, with more force than necessary.</p> + +<p>There was a loud explosion, followed by a +crackling sound, a flash of light, and the <em>Mermaid</em> +came to a sudden stop.</p> + +<p>“What’s the matter?” cried Mark, feeling that +something was wrong.</p> + +<p>“I don’t know!” Washington replied, as he +dashed toward the engine room.</p> + +<p>The <em>Mermaid</em>, her forward flight checked, hung +in the air, suspended, neither rising or falling.</p> + +<p>“Why don’t we go on down?” the professor +asked, hurrying to the tower.</p> + +<p>“There has been an explosion—an accident!” +exclaimed Mark. “I guess we can’t go down!”</p> + +<p>“But we must!” Mr. Henderson insisted, +seizing the lever which should have produced a +downward motion. The handle swung to and fro. +It was disconnected from the apparatus it operated.</p> + +<p>The ship was now stationary in the air, moving +neither forward nor backward, neither rising nor +falling. Washington had stopped the air pumps +as soon as he learned something was wrong.</p> + +<p>When Mr. Henderson saw the useless lever, +which had controlled the outlet of gas from the +holder, he ran out on deck. One glance told him +what had happened. One of the electric wires +had become short-circuited,—that is, the insulation +had worn off and allowed the current to +escape. This had produced a spark, which had +exploded the gas which was in the pipe leading +from the generator up into the aluminum holder. +Fortunately there was an automatic cut-off for the +supply of vapor, or the whole tank would have +gone up.</p> + +<p>As it was, only a small quantity had blown up, +but this was enough to break the machinery at +the point where the lever in the conning tower +joined the pipe. If it had not been for the automatic +cut-off all the gas in the holder would have +poured out in a great volume, and the ship would +have fallen like a shot.</p> + +<p>“Can we do nothing to save those on the burning +vessel?” asked Mark, pointing to where a +cloud of smoke hung over the ocean.</p> + +<p>“I fear not, now,” answered the professor. +“We are in a bad plight ourselves.”</p> + +<p>“Are we in any danger?” asked Jack.</p> + +<p>“Not specially,” Mr. Henderson replied. +“But we must find a means of lowering ourselves +gradually.”</p> + +<p>“Then it will be too late to save any of those +on the ship,” observed Mark.</p> + +<p>“I’m afraid so,” the scientist made reply.</p> + +<p>The <em>Mermaid</em> rested some distance above the +surface of the waters. She moved slightly to and +fro with the wind, and rocked gently. The professor +was examining the broken machinery.</p> + +<p>“I have a plan!” suddenly cried Mark.</p> + +<p>“What is it?” asked Mr. Henderson.</p> + +<p>“Can’t we bore a hole in the tank, insert a +small faucet or tap, and let the gas out that way +gradually?” asked the boy. “When we get down +we can rescue those in danger of fire, and, later, +can repair the break.”</p> + +<p>“The very thing!” exclaimed Mr. Henderson. +“I never thought of that! Here, Washington! +Bring me a drill, and a small stop-cock!”</p> + +<p>The drill was obtained from the engine room. +Working rapidly Mr. Henderson bored a hole +in the lower part of the holder. As soon as the +metal was penetrated the gas, which was under +considerable pressure, rushed from the tank with +a hissing sound. At once the <em>Mermaid</em> began to +settle rapidly.</p> + +<p>But the professor was prepared for this. He +thrust the end of the stop-cock into the hole. It +was screwed fast and the valve turned. This +stopped the flow of gas and checked the descent +of the ship. Then, by opening the tap the vapor +was allowed to escape gradually, bringing the <em>Flying +Mermaid</em> gently to the water.</p> + +<p>As the adventurers approached they could see +that the vessel was now a mass of flames. The +wind was driving the fire toward the forecastle, +and the crew had sought refuge aft. But this expedient +could not last long, for, already the +tongues of fire were licking the sides of the craft +and coming nearer and nearer the seemingly +doomed men. The vessel was a large one, and +heavily laden.</p> + +<p>As those in peril caught sight of the <em>Mermaid</em> +settling down into the water, apparently from the +clouds, their fears gave place to astonishment. +So great was this that they ceased their cries of +terror. Then, as they saw that the strange craft +navigated the ocean, for the engines were started +aboard the <em>Mermaid</em>, they began to call for help.</p> + +<h2 id='ch08' class='c008'>CHAPTER VIII<br /><br />THE FLYING MERMAID DISABLED</h2> + +<p class='c009'>“We’ll save you!” shouted Mr. Henderson, +who was on the deck, while Mark was steering the +craft. “Hold on a few minutes longer and we’ll +be alongside!”</p> + +<p>“They’re real! They’re real!” some of those +aboard the burning ship could be heard to shout. +Evidently more than one of them had taken the +<em>Mermaid</em> for a delusion of their fear-crazed brain.</p> + +<p>“They are real persons!” they called again +and again. “They are coming to save us!”</p> + +<p>Mr. Henderson ran his ship as near the burning +craft as he dared. Then he called to the crew +to leap into the water and swim to him. He, with +Washington, Jack, Bill and Tom, stood ready to +haul aboard any who were too weak to help themselves.</p> + +<p>In a few minutes all of those left alive on the +sailing vessel—fourteen in all—had come safely +aboard the <em>Mermaid</em>. The ship was now completely +enveloped in flames.</p> + +<p>“Are there any more left on her?” asked Mr. +Henderson of one who appeared to be a mate of +the burning craft.</p> + +<p>“Not a soul!” was the answer. “The captain +and ten men perished in the flames. The fire +broke out a week ago in the lower hold. We +fought it as well as we could but it got the best +of us. Then it suddenly broke through the decks, +almost like an explosion, a little while ago, and +the captain and others were lost, and so were our +small boats. We managed to get aft but were +about to give up when you appeared.”</p> + +<p>“What ship is it and where are you from?”</p> + +<p>“The <em>Good Hope</em>, laden with logwood, hides, +jute and other materials from South America,” +the mate answered. “We were bound for New +York.”</p> + +<p>“It is more like the <em>Last Hope</em> instead of the +<em>Good Hope</em>,” observed Mr. Henderson in a quiet +voice, as he saw the flames mount higher and +higher over the ship. A few seconds later the +craft seemed rent by an internal explosion. It +appeared to break in two parts, and, amid a +shower of sparks and a cloud of black smoke, the +vessel sank under the water and was seen no more.</p> + +<p>The rescued men turned to behold the final +end of their ship. They betrayed no particular +emotion, and some of them even laughed, which +the professor thought, at the time, was rather +strange. But there was little opportunity for speculation. +The men were in a sad plight. Few of +them had more than the clothes they stood in, +though each one wore about his waist a belt, and +all of them seemed to guard the leather circlets +jealously.</p> + +<p>The professor and his crew were soon busy supplying +remedies for burns, since several of the +men were seared by the flames. Then, as it was +learned they had eaten nothing for many hours, +it having been impossible to use the galley, a meal +was prepared and the survivors of the wreck were +well fed.</p> + +<p>The hunger of the newcomers having been +appeased, they showed much curiosity over the +strange craft that had so opportunely come to their +rescue. Most of the sailors were ignorant men, +and the professor had little fear of them learning +anything concerning his secrets. He explained +briefly about the <em>Mermaid</em>, but said nothing of +whither she was bound.</p> + +<p>The addition of fourteen men to the rather +small accommodations of the <em>Mermaid</em> was a serious +matter to consider. The ship was able to hold +them all, and even to sail through the air with +them, since Mr. Henderson had provided an excess +of power. But it was going to be a problem +to feed so many, and still save enough provisions +for the long voyage which lay ahead.</p> + +<p>However, Mr. Henderson felt his first duty to +be toward his fellowmen, even if his voyage must +be delayed, or given up for a time, while he got +more provisions. There would be no sleeping +quarters for the sailors, but when this was explained +to them they cheerfully said they would +sleep on deck if necessary. In fact some of them +had to, but as the weather was warm and clear +this was no hardship. A few found quarters in +the engine room and other apartments of the <em>Mermaid</em>.</p> + +<p>Finding, after an examination, that his ship was +in good order save for the broken gas apparatus, +Mr. Henderson gave orders to proceed along the +surface of the ocean. The sailors wanted to see +how it felt to mount into the air, but Mr. Henderson, +refused to attempt a flight until he had +made complete repairs, and this would take a day +or more.</p> + +<p>At this there appeared to be some discontent +among the survivors, and they muttered to each +other as they stood in a group on deck. But the +professor and his assistants were too busy with +their preparations for fixing the break to notice this.</p> + +<p>While the men were gathered in a knot near the +after part of the small deck, the mate separated +from them, and, coming close to where Mark was +standing, unscrewing some of the broken parts +of the pipe said, in a low voice.</p> + +<p>“Tell the captain to watch out.”</p> + +<p>“What do you mean?” asked Mark quickly.</p> + +<p>“Hush! Not so loud!” the mate exclaimed. +“If the men hear me talking to you, or see me, +they may kill me. Tell the captain to look out; +that’s all. Be on guard, and watch the engine +room carefully.”</p> + +<p>“But why—?” Mark began, when, turning +suddenly, the mate left him. It was well he did +so, for, at that instant, one of the sailors, who +had observed the two conversing, strolled in their +direction.</p> + +<p>Much alarmed, Mark sought Mr. Henderson +and told him what he had heard.</p> + +<p>“I suppose the fire may have turned the poor +man’s head,” the scientist said. “I wonder if he +thinks the men I rescued would mutiny and take +possession of my ship? If they did they would +not know how to work it, so what good would it +do?”</p> + +<p>“Hadn’t we better look out?” asked Mark.</p> + +<p>“I’m not afraid,” replied the professor. “I +will be too busy the next few days, repairing the +break, to think of anything else. Besides, what +would they want to harm us for? Didn’t we save +their lives?”</p> + +<p>Seeing the scientist placed no faith in what the +mate had said, Mark went back to his task.</p> + +<p>It soon became too dark to work, and it was +decided, after supper, to halt the ship until morning +as it would be less risky.</p> + +<p>Mark did not sleep well, his dreams being disturbed +by visions of pirates and black flags. But +morning came and nothing had developed. The +men seemed to recover their spirits with daybreak, +and most of the crew, after breakfast, greeted +Mr. Henderson pleasantly, and asked to be allowed +to help fix the ship.</p> + +<p>It took the skilled labor of the professor, Washington +and the boys to mend the break, and, even +at that, it was four days in the repairing. But +at last the final bolt was in place, and the <em>Mermaid</em> +was able to resume her trips through the air.</p> + +<p>“We will rise the first thing in the morning,” +said the professor to Mark and Jack that night. +“I am anxious to see how the ship behaves with a +big load aboard.”</p> + +<h2 id='ch09' class='c008'>CHAPTER IX<br /><br />THE MUTINY</h2> + +<p class='c009'>Mark was awakened that night by feeling some +one trying to turn him over. At first he thought +it was Jack, and sleepily muttered that he wanted +to be let alone.</p> + +<p>“Sorry I can’t oblige ye, my hearty!” exclaimed +a rough voice in his ear, “but I got particular +orders t’ tie you up!”</p> + +<p>At that Mark tried to sit up, but he found he +could not. He discovered that he was closely +bound with many turns of a rope, while in front +of his bunk stood one of the rescued sailors.</p> + +<p>“There,” said the man, with a final tightening +of the ropes. “I guess you’re safe.”</p> + +<p>“What’s the matter? What does it all +mean?” asked Mark, much bewildered.</p> + +<p>“It means that we have possession of the ship,” +the sailor answered, “and, if you’re wise you’ll +not make a fuss. It wouldn’t do any good, anyhow, +as all your friends are in the same condition.”</p> + +<p>Then, picking Mark up, as if he was a baby, +the man slung him over his shoulder and carried +him to the living room. There Mark saw Jack, +the professor, Washington, and the others similarly +bound.</p> + +<p>“Do you realize what you are doing?” asked +the professor angrily of his captors. “You are +mutinying, and are liable to severe punishment.”</p> + +<p>“If they ever get us,” added one of the men. +“We’ve got the ship now, and we mean to keep +her. You’ll have to run her or show us how.”</p> + +<p>“Never!” cried the professor.</p> + +<p>“I guess he will when he feels this,” said one +of the men, as he dragged from a recess two wires. +“I happen to know something of electricity, and +when he feels these perhaps he’ll change his mind. +I’ll start the dynamo.”</p> + +<p>The sailor showed that he was acquainted with +machinery, for soon the hum of the electric apparatus +was heard.</p> + +<p>“Now to make him tell!” the man with the +wires exclaimed, advancing toward the professor, +who turned pale.</p> + +<p>“Stop! You must not torture the old man!” +cried a voice, and the mate of the <em>Good Hope</em> +stepped in front of the sailor with the electrified +wires.</p> + +<p>“Who’s going to stop me?” asked the man.</p> + +<p>“I will. It’s not necessary,” the mate went +on quickly. “If we make him weak we may kill +him, and he can not tell us what we want to know. +One of the boys can tell us how to run the ship.”</p> + +<p>The mate came quickly over to where Mark +lay, and whispered:</p> + +<p>“Consent to tell. It is the only way of saving +his life. Tell ’em how to raise the craft. Then +leave all to me. I will save you all and the ship, +too, if I can. But consent.”</p> + +<p>Mark nodded his head, and the mate cried:</p> + +<p>“I knew I could fetch ’em. I have hypnotic +power. This boy will raise the ship for us. +Loosen his bonds, some of you.”</p> + +<p>Satisfied that they were now on the way to experiencing +a new sensation, the sailors took the +ropes off Mark’s arms and legs, and he was allowed +to rise. With a reassuring nod toward the +professor he led the way to the engine room, followed +by half the men. He resolved to start +the gas machine slowly, so as to make the upward +trip last longer, thinking before it had gone far, +some way of escape from the mutineers might be +found.</p> + +<p>While a crowd of the sailors stood near him, +Mark operated the machinery in the engine room +that started the gas generating, and set the negative +gravity apparatus working.</p> + +<p>“You’d better not try any tricks on us,” said +one of the men in an ugly tone of voice.</p> + +<p>“I’m not going to,” replied Mark. “If you +go out on deck you will soon see the ship leaving +the water and mounting into the air.”</p> + +<p>“Some of you go,” ordered a man with a big +bushy red beard. “See if the ship rises. When +she begins to go up sing out. I’m going to stay +here and see how the young cub does it so I can +work it myself.”</p> + +<p>Obeying the red-bearded man, who seemed to +be a leader, several of the sailors went out on the +deck. It was quite dark, but there was a phosphorous +glow to the water which made the rolling +waves visible.</p> + +<p>The gas was being generated, as could be told +by the hissing sound. Mark watched the machinery +anxiously, for he knew much depended on +him, and the professor was not at hand to guide +and instruct him. He watched the dial of the +gage which registered the gas pressure and saw +it slowly moving. In a little while it would be at +the point at which the ship ought to rise.</p> + +<p>Presently a quiver seemed to run through the +<em>Mermaid</em>. Now a shout came from the watchers +on deck.</p> + +<p>“She’s going up!”</p> + +<p>The ship was indeed rising. The red-bearded +man, who was addressed as Tony, ran from the +engine room to the deck. He saw that the ship +was now ten feet above the water. Back he came +to where Mark stood by the gas machine.</p> + +<p>“Lucky for you that you didn’t fool us, lad,” +he said with a leer. “See that you mind me +hereafter. Now show me how the shebang +works.”</p> + +<p>When the ship had risen as far as Tony desired +he made Mark send it straight ahead. The boy +adjusted the air tube to carry the craft toward +the south, but Tony, seeing by a compass in which +direction they were headed, ordered Mark to steer +due east.</p> + +<p>“Fix things so they will stay so, too,” added +Tony. “I don’t want to stop until I get a thousand +miles away. Then we’ll come down, sail to +some sunny island, and enjoy life.”</p> + +<p>Mark locked the steering apparatus so as to +keep the <em>Mermaid</em> headed due east.</p> + +<p>“Now you can go back to your friends,” Tony +said. “When I want you I’ll send for you.”</p> + +<p>With a heavy heart Mark rejoined the professor +and others. He found them with their bonds removed. +But to guard against their escape several +men were on watch outside the door.</p> + +<p>“What are they doing?” asked the professor +eagerly as Mark entered, and the boy told him +what had taken place.</p> + +<p>“They will ruin my ship and spoil the whole +trip,” cried the old scientist. “Oh, why did I +ever go to the rescue of the scoundrels?”</p> + +<p>“Never mind,” said Jack. “Perhaps we may +yet outwit them.”</p> + +<p>Morning came at last. The ship was still shooting +forward at fast speed, in an easterly direction. +The sailors had learned, in their short stay aboard, +where the food and stores were kept, and they lost +little time in getting breakfast. They sent some +in to their captives, including a big pot of hot +coffee, and, after partaking of this the professor +and his friends felt better.</p> + +<p>The mate of the <em>Good Hope</em> came in to help +clear away the dishes. As he passed Mark he +slipped into the boy’s hand a note.</p> + +<p>“Don’t read it until you are alone,” he said +in a low voice, as he hurried from the room.</p> + +<p>As soon as the other sailors had left, Mark +glanced at the slip of paper. It bore these words:</p> + +<p>“Open when you hear three raps, then two, +then three, and keep silent.”</p> + +<p>“What is it?” asked Mr. Henderson.</p> + +<p>Mark showed him the paper.</p> + +<p>“I wonder what it means,” the boy said.</p> + +<p>“Do you think he is a friend of ours?” the +professor asked.</p> + +<p>Mark told him of the mate’s conversation the +night previous.</p> + +<p>“I think we can trust him,” the scientist went +on. “He must intend to pay us a visit when the +others are asleep. When we hear the knocks as +he specifies we must open the door and let him in.”</p> + +<p>All that day the captives were kept in the living +room. Once or twice Mark was sent for to make +some adjustment to the machinery, but the apparatus, +for the most part, was automatic, and needed +little attention. The professor, as well as the +others, were all impatience for the promised visit +of the mate. Still they felt he would not come +until night.</p> + +<p>In fact it was long past midnight before Mark, +Jack and the professor, who were anxiously listening, +heard the three raps, then two, then three +more. Mark quickly opened the door, and the +mate stepped inside, holding his finger to his lips +as a sign of caution. Old Andy, Washington, +Bill and Tom had fallen asleep.</p> + +<p>“I have only time for a few words,” the mate +said. “I am closely watched. Tony mistrusts +me. I will save you if I can.”</p> + +<p>“Why have they repaid my kindness with such +actions?” asked Mr. Henderson.</p> + +<p>“Because they are desperate men,” replied the +mate. “They are nothing more than pirates. +They mutinied on the other ship, killed the captain +and those of the crew who would not join them, +and started off to seek their fortunes. I pretended +to join them to save my life, but I have only been +watching for a chance to escape.</p> + +<p>“Because of lax discipline the ship was sent on +fire. We tried to put it out but could not. The +rest you know.</p> + +<p>“I heard them plan to capture this airship, +but could do nothing to stop them. Then I resolved +to pretend to act with them. They fear +pursuit for their other mutiny, and are anxious to +get as far away as possible.”</p> + +<p>“Do you think they will abandon the ship in +a little while?” asked the professor hopefully.</p> + +<p>“I’m afraid not,” answered the mate. “I +think they want to get rid of all of you, so they can +sail about as they please. Tony is a smart man. +He could soon learn to run this ship, he thinks.”</p> + +<p>“I doubt it,” Mr. Henderson answered. “But +how are you going to help us?”</p> + +<p>“I have not fully made up my plans,” the mate +answered. “However I wanted you to know I +would do my best to save you. Now I must go. +Be on the watch and when I can I will let you +know what I have decided on. I will hand Mark +a note when I bring your meals, just as I did to-day. +I think——”</p> + +<p>“Hark! What was that?” asked the professor.</p> + +<p>There was a noise outside the door, as if some +one was listening.</p> + +<p>“Put out the lights!” whispered the mate, and +Jack switched off the electric incandescents.</p> + +<p>A knock sounded on the door and the voice of +Tony called:</p> + +<p>“Mark! Come here! I want you to look at +the gas machine. It has stopped working, and we +are falling!”</p> + +<h2 id='ch10' class='c008'>CHAPTER X<br /><br />FOOLING THEIR ENEMIES</h2> + +<p class='c009'>Mark hurried into the corridor, taking care to +close the door after him, so Tony could get no +glimpse of the mate who had risked so much to +save his friends. But he need not have been +alarmed for the leader of the mutineers was too excited +over the stopping of the gas apparatus to give +any heed to who was in with the captives.</p> + +<p>“Do you think you can fix it?” he asked the +boy.</p> + +<p>“I guess so,” Mark replied confidently. “If +I can’t there is no danger, for we will fall gradually +and land in the water.”</p> + +<p>“But I don’t want to do that,” Tony objected. +“I want to keep on through the air.”</p> + +<p>Mark did not reply. By this time he was at +the gas machine. He soon saw nothing was the +matter save that new material must be placed in +the retort where the vapor was generated. He +refilled it, the gas was manufactured once more, +and the ship began to rise.</p> + +<p>“I will know how to do it next time,” Tony +said with a grin. Mark realized that every time +he showed the leader of the mutineers something +about the ship it was putting the professor and his +friends more and more into the power of the +scoundrels. But there was no help for it.</p> + +<p>The ship was still plunging ahead, and kept +about a mile above the earth. As there was no +further need of Mark, he was told he could go +back to his friends. When he reached the room +where they were held prisoners, he found the mate +had gone away, promising again to do all he +could for them.</p> + +<p>The next night, which it seemed would never +come, for the day, locked as the captives were in +their room, seemed endless, finally closed in. +Mark, Jack and the professor were anxious to +know whether the mate would pay them another +visit. As for Andy, Tom and Bill, while they +were interested in the ship, and wanted to be free +from the power of the mutineers, they did not lose +any sleep over it.</p> + +<p>Shortly after midnight, there came again the +peculiar knock, and the mate entered the room. +He seemed much excited over something, and, as +soon as the portal was securely closed he said to +Professor Henderson:</p> + +<p>“Is there an island any where near here where +men could live for a time?”</p> + +<p>“What do you mean?” asked the scientist. +“Do you want us to desert the ship and leave these +scoundrels in charge?”</p> + +<p>“Nothing of the sort,” replied the mate, who, +had said his name was Jack Rodgers. “But first +answer my question. A great deal may depend on +it.”</p> + +<p>Seeing Rodgers was in earnest, the professor +looked over some maps and charts, and announced +that they were within a few hundred miles of a +group of islands.</p> + +<p>“When would we reach them?” was Rodgers’ +next question.</p> + +<p>Mr. Henderson made a few rapid calculations +on a piece of paper.</p> + +<p>“At the present rate of sailing,” he said, “we +should be there about ten o’clock to-morrow. +That is, provided the ship does not slacken speed +or increase it.”</p> + +<p>“There is no danger of either of those two +things happening,” said the mate. “Tony is too +afraid of the machinery to do anything to it. So +you may safely figure that our speed will continue +the same.”</p> + +<p>“Then I can guarantee, with all reasonable certainty,” +the professor said, “that about ten o’clock +to-morrow we will be less than a mile from the islands. +They are a group where friendly natives +live, and where many tropical fruits abound. One +could scarcely select a better place to be shipwrecked. +But I hope the plans of Tony and his +friends do not include landing us there.”</p> + +<p>“No, nothing like that,” the mate answered. +“Quite the contrary. But I had better be going. +I will try and see Mark some time to-morrow. +Tony does not mind when I speak to him.”</p> + +<p>With this Rodgers left the captives, as he heard +some of the sailors moving about and did not want +to be discovered. The professor and the boys wondered +what the mate’s plan might be, but they had +to be content to wait and see.</p> + +<p>The night passed without incident. About +nine o’clock the next morning the mate came +to the door of the room where the professor and +his friends were prisoners. He made no secret +of his approach, but knocked boldly.</p> + +<p>“Tell Mark I want to see him,” he said, as the +professor answered. “All of you keep quiet,” he +added in a whisper. “There may be good news +soon.”</p> + +<p>Mark slipped from the room. He followed +the mate to the upper deck which, at that time was +deserted as all the sailors were in the dining room +eating, which practice they indulged in as often +as they could.</p> + +<p>“I have a plan to get rid of these rough men,” +the mate said to Mark. “It may work, and, +again it may not. At any rate it is worth trying. +It all depends on you with what help I can give +you.”</p> + +<p>“I’m willing to do my share,” Mark said, and +for the next ten minutes the boy and the mate +were in earnest conversation.</p> + +<p>It was about thirty-five minutes later when +there arose a sudden commotion in the ship. +Mark had returned to his friends and the mate +had disappeared. The confusion seemed to come +from the engine room where Tony had posted some +of his men.</p> + +<p>“We’re falling down! We’ll all be killed!” +shouted the men. “The ship is falling into the +sea!”</p> + +<p>“What is the trouble?” asked the professor as +he heard the commotion.</p> + +<p>“It is part of the mate’s plan,” said Mark. +“He told me to tell you to do nothing. If Tony +or any of the other men come to you just refer +them to me.”</p> + +<p>Two minutes later Tony came rushing into the +apartment where the captives were held prisoners.</p> + +<p>“Here! Come quickly, Mark!” he exclaimed. +“Something has gone wrong with the gas machine +again, and you must come and fix it before we are +all dashed to pieces!”</p> + +<p>With every appearance of haste Mark rushed +from the apartment, following Tony. The latter +led the way to the engine room.</p> + +<p>“Can anything be done?” he asked.</p> + +<p>Mark took a survey of the machinery.</p> + +<p>“It is too late,” he said as though much excited. +“The ship is falling down toward the sea +with terrific force.”</p> + +<p>It needed but a glance at the height gage to +show this. The pointer was revolving rapidly +about the face of the dial.</p> + +<p>“Will the ship stand the blow?” asked Tony.</p> + +<p>“Not at the rate it is falling,” replied Mark. +“She will go all to pieces when she strikes the +water, and she may explode!”</p> + +<p>“What are we to do then?” asked the leader of +the mutineers.</p> + +<p>“We must save ourselves!” cried the mate, +running in at this juncture. “Let our prisoners +shift for themselves as best they can. Let’s all +leap into the sea. There we at least have a chance +for our lives. But if we stay on this ship we will +all be drowned like cats in a bag.”</p> + +<p>“What do you propose?” asked Tony, his face +white with fear.</p> + +<p>“When the ship comes near enough the surface +of the water to make it safe we should all drop +overboard!” the mate exclaimed. “We are near +some islands, I understand, and we can thus save +our lives by swimming ashore.”</p> + +<p>This plan seemed to meet with instant favor, +and a little later there was a rush for the deck, as +each one wished to be the first to escape from the +boat they believed to be doomed.</p> + +<p>Lower and lower fell the <em>Mermaid</em>. She was +like a wounded bird which the shot of the hunter +has crippled. Down and down she fluttered.</p> + +<p>By this time all the sailors, save the mate were +on deck. He and Mark remained in the engine +room.</p> + +<p>“Don’t let her get too low,” the mate whispered.</p> + +<p>“I’ll watch out,” Mark replied. “I want to +give them a good scare while I’m at it.”</p> + +<p>The ship was now within fifty feet of the water. +There was a cry of terror from the sailors. Some +of them leaped over the rail and started to swim +ashore, as the ship was by this time close to a +group of islands.</p> + +<p>Suddenly, from the engine room the mate rushed.</p> + +<p>“Jump! Jump for your lives!” he exclaimed. +“The ship is about to blow up!”</p> + +<h2 id='ch11' class='c008'>CHAPTER XI<br /><br />MYSTERIOUS HAPPENINGS</h2> + +<p class='c009'>The voice of the mate echoed through the <em>Mermaid</em>. +Those on deck heard it, as did Tony in +the engine room, where he was vainly trying to +understand the complicated machinery.</p> + +<p>An instant later there sounded from beneath the +ship a series of splashes. More sailors were leaping +from the deck of the craft to the ocean. The +distance was not great, particularly as they all +landed in water.</p> + +<p>“Quick!” cried the mate to a group of sailors +that hesitated before taking the jump. “The ship +may blow up any minute now.”</p> + +<p>The men needed no second urging. As soon +as they struck the water they began to swim ashore, +as it was not far away. One after another they +jumped over the rail. Tony was the last to go. +He urged the captives to follow him, but they all +refused.</p> + +<p>A minute later the only one of the pirate crew +left on the ship was the mate. The others were all +struggling in the sea. Eventually they all reached +shore in safety.</p> + +<p>The airship was now within about twenty feet +of the water. It was still falling but not so rapidly.</p> + +<p>“Better send her up, now,” said the mate to +Mark, and the boy turned the necessary levers to +accomplish this.</p> + +<p>Dipping into the water as a sea gull does when +searching for food on the wing, for she had come +quite low, the <em>Mermaid</em> mounted once more into +the air, and was soon sailing along over the heads +of Tony and his gang.</p> + +<p>“What’s it all about?” asked Mr. Henderson, +who seemed in a sort of stupor. “I thought the +ship was broken. How, then, can it rise?”</p> + +<p>“It was only a trick of mine,” Rodgers said. +“The gas machine is not broken. I had Mark fix +it so that only a little vapor would be generated. +When the supply in the holder was not enough, +and no more was being made, the ship had to +sink. Mark and I pretended it was worse than it +really was just to scare the scoundrels.”</p> + +<p>“And you evidently succeeded,” observed Mr. +Henderson. “They have all left us. I am glad +you stayed.”</p> + +<p>“So am I,” said Rodgers. “I was just waiting +for a chance to escape from that crowd. This +was the plan I thought of that night. I wanted to +see the men put on some island where they could +manage to live, and which was not too far away.”</p> + +<p>The <em>Mermaid</em> was now mounting upward rapidly, +as Mark had adjusted the machinery properly. +The craft was well rid of the pirate crew, +and was able to proceed on its way, and enable +Mr. Henderson to carry out his plans.</p> + +<p>When the <em>Mermaid</em> had reached a certain +height her prow was turned the other way, and +she was sent back racing over the ground she had +just covered. But now the ship was in the hands +of friends. Fortunately no great damage had +been done by the sailors, and the professor was soon +able to get things in ship-shape. The engines +had not been molested and were working better +than ever.</p> + +<p>“Now to make another attempt to reach the +big hole in the earth,” the professor cried. “We +will be careful next time, who we rescue from ships +at sea.”</p> + +<p>The island was soon left behind, becoming a +mere speck on the ocean. Those aboard the <em>Mermaid</em> +knew no harm could befall the sailors, as +there were no savage tribes on the little spot of +land. Eventually the sailors were picked up by a +passing vessel and taken to their homes. The +story of their first mutiny leaked out and they were +properly punished.</p> + +<p>It required several days travel before the airship +regained the distance she had lost because of +the plans of the pirates. Also, there were a number +of minor repairs to make, and the professor +and his friends were kept busy.</p> + +<p>“How much longer before we come to the big +hole?” asked Jack, one day.</p> + +<p>“I think we ought to be near it in about two +weeks,” the professor replied. “I only hope we +shall not be disappointed, and will be able to explore +it.”</p> + +<p>“'Tain’t goin’ t’ be no fun t’ be decimated an’ +expurgitated inter a conglomerous aggregation of +elements constituting th’ exterior portion of human +anatomy,” said Washington in dubious tones.</p> + +<p>“You mean you’re afraid of being boiled in the +steam from the big hole?” asked Mark.</p> + +<p>“Jest so,” replied the colored man.</p> + +<p>“You don’t need to worry about that,” put in +the professor. “I will not take the ship down if +there is any danger, though of course there will +be some risk.”</p> + +<p>The ship, having been fully repaired, was now +able to be speeded up, and was sent scudding along +toward her destination. Rodgers proved a valuable +acquisition toward the crew, for he had sailed +many years in the waters over which they were +flying, and was able to give the professor many +valuable hints. He had heard vague stories of the +island with the big hole, but had never been near +it. He did not make the trip however, as, at his +request, he was put off at an inhabited island one +night.</p> + +<p>It was about a week after the sailors were frightened +from the ship, that a curious experience befell +Mark. Washington was on duty in the conning +tower, attending to the apparatus as the ship flew +through the air, and all the others had gone to +bed. Mark had remained up, later than the +others as he was interested in reading a book on +science.</p> + +<p>About ten o’clock he became hungry, and going +to the pantry got some bread and cold meat. He +set these on a table, and then, remembering he +would need some water to drink, started after some +in the cooler, which was in a little room near the +tower.</p> + +<p>Washington heard the boy as he turned the faucet +to draw the liquid, and spoke to him, as the +colored man was rather lonesome at his post. +Mark did not linger more than a minute or two, +but when he returned to where he had left the food +he was much surprised.</p> + +<p>There was not a trace of it to be seen. The +dishes were on the table, but every vestige of +bread and meat had disappeared.</p> + +<p>“I wonder if a cat or dog has been here,” was +Mark’s first thought. Then he remembered that +no such animals were aboard the <em>Mermaid</em>.</p> + +<p>Something on the floor caught his eye. He +stooped and picked it up. It was a slice of bread, +but in such shape that the boy stared at it, puzzled +as to how it could have become so.</p> + +<p>It was flattened out quite thin, but the strangest +part of it was that it bore what seemed to be the +marks of thumb and fingers from a very large +hand. So big, in fact, was the print, that Mark’s +hand scarce covered half of it, and, where the +bread had been squeezed into a putty like mass +(for it was quite fresh) the peculiar markings on +the skin of the tips of the fingers were visible.</p> + +<p>“It looks as if a giant grabbed this slice of +bread,” Mark observed. “There are strange happenings +aboard this ship. I wish I knew what they +meant.”</p> + +<p>He looked all around for the food, thinking +perhaps a rat had dragged it off, but there was +no trace of it.</p> + +<p>Suddenly the boy thought he heard a sound from +the big storeroom. He was almost sure he heard +something moving in there. He started toward +the door when he was stopped by hearing the professor’s +voice call:</p> + +<p>“Don’t open that door, Mark. Have I not +told you that place must not be entered?”</p> + +<p>“I thought I heard some one in there,” Mark +replied.</p> + +<p>“There is nothing in there but some apparatus +of mine,” Mr. Henderson said. “I want no one +to see it. What is the matter?”</p> + +<p>Mark explained matters to the scientist, who +had, as he said later, arisen on hearing the boy +moving about.</p> + +<p>“Oh, it was a rat that took your stuff,” Mr. +Henderson said. “I guess there are some pretty +big ones on the ship. Get some more food and +go to sleep.”</p> + +<p>Mark felt it best to obey, though he was by no +means satisfied with the professor’s explanation. +He listened intently to see if any more noises came +from the storeroom, but none did, and he went to +bed.</p> + +<p>Several times after that Mark tried the experiment +of leaving food about. On each occasion it +was taken.</p> + +<p>“It looks as if the ship was haunted,” he said. +“Of course I know it isn’t, but it’s very queer. +They must be strange rats that can get food from +shelves when there is only the smooth side of the +ship to climb up,” for on some occasions Mark +had tried the experiment of putting the food as +nearly out of reach as possible.</p> + +<p>It took several nights to learn all this, and, +as he did not want to take any one into his confidence, +he had to work in secret. But, with all his +efforts he learned nothing, save that there was +something odd about the ship that he could not +fathom.</p> + +<p>At first he believed the professor had some +strange animal concealed in the storeroom, but he +dismissed this idea almost as soon as he thought +of it. For what could the scientist want with an +animal when they were going to the interior of the +earth? That some beast had slipped aboard was +out of the question. Mark was much puzzled, but +finally, deciding the matter did not concern him a +great deal, gave up trying to solve the mystery, +at least for a time.</p> + +<p>The ship was now in the neighborhood of the +equator and the climate had become much warmer. +So hot indeed were some nights that they slept out +on deck, with the <em>Mermaid</em> flying through the air +at a moderate pace, for it was deemed best not to +go at any great speed after dark.</p> + +<p>One night the professor, after consulting various +charts and maps, and making calculations which +covered several sheets of paper announced:</p> + +<p>“We should sight the mysterious island to-morrow.”</p> + +<p>“That’s good news!” exclaimed Jack. “I’m +anxious to see what’s below inside of that big hole.”</p> + +<p>“Everybody git ready for their funerals!” exclaimed +Washington in a deep voice. “I ain’t got many——”</p> + +<p>“Cheer up,” interrupted Jack, poking Washington +in the ribs. The colored man was very +ticklish, and he began to laugh heartily, though, +perhaps, he did not feel like it.</p> + +<p>Suddenly, above the sound of his shouts, there +came a crashing, grinding noise from the engine +room.</p> + +<h2 id='ch12' class='c008'>CHAPTER XII<br /><br />THE BIG HOLE</h2> + +<p class='c009'>“Something has gone wrong!” exclaimed the +professor as he jumped up. He reached the engine +room ahead of any one else, and when the +two boys got there they found him busy twisting +wheels and shifting levers.</p> + +<p>“Anything serious?” asked Jack.</p> + +<p>“It’s the gas machine again,” Mr. Henderson +replied. “It broke where we fixed it. However +it doesn’t matter. I was going to lower the ship +anyhow, as I want to approach the island from the +water. We will go down a little sooner than I +counted on.”</p> + +<p>The disabling of the gas machine caused the vapor +to escape slowly from the tank, and this made +the ship sink gradually. By means of the emergency +stop-cock the descent could be controlled almost +as well as though the machinery was in working +order. Half an hour later the <em>Mermaid</em> rested +on the water.</p> + +<p>It was a little rough, as there was quite a swell +on, and not so pleasant as floating in the air on +an even keel, but they made the best of it.</p> + +<p>On account of the little accident, and not being +certain of its extent, it was deemed best not to send +the ship ahead. So they laid to until morning.</p> + +<p>For the better part of two days all those on +board the <em>Mermaid</em> had their hands full mending +the break and making other repairs found necessary. +In that time they lay to, floating idly with +the currents, or blown by the wind, for the professor +would not start any of the engines or apparatus +until the ship was in good condition.</p> + +<p>In this time Mark had several times recalled +the curious happenings in regard to the disappearing +food, and the mystery of the storeroom. But +there were no further manifestations, and no other +signs that there might be a strange visitor aboard.</p> + +<p>“I couldn’t have imagined it all,” said Mark, +“but I guess what did happen may have been +caused by natural means, only I can’t discover +them.”</p> + +<p>It was about two days after this, the ship having +sailed scores of miles on the surface of the water, +that Mark, who was in the conning tower exclaimed:</p> + +<p>“That looks like a waterspout ahead of us.”</p> + +<p>“That’s what it is!” Jack agreed. “What +shall we do?”</p> + +<p>“Call the professor!” said Mark. “He’ll +know.”</p> + +<p>When Mr. Henderson came, he looked for a +long time at a cloud of black vapor which hung +low in the east.</p> + +<p>“It may be a waterspout,” he said. “We’ll +rise in the air and see if we can avoid it.”</p> + +<p>The ship was sent up into the air. As it rose +higher and higher, the professor, making frequent +observations from his conning tower, cried out:</p> + +<p>“That is no waterspout!”</p> + +<p>“What is it?” asked Mark.</p> + +<p>“It is the steam and vapor rising from the big +hole in the earth! Boys, we are almost there!”</p> + +<p>“Are you sure that’s it?” asked Mark.</p> + +<p>“Almost positive,” Mr. Henderson replied. +“You can see how much warmer it has become +of late, as we approached the equator. We are +almost due at the island, and I have no doubt we +have reached it.”</p> + +<p>As the ship flew forward the mass of dark vapor +became more pronounced. Through the glasses +it could be noticed to consist of rolling masses of +clouds. What lay beneath them no one knew. +The adventurers were going to try to find out.</p> + +<p>Now that they had arrived at the beginning of +the main part of their journey, the travelers felt +their spirits sink a little. It was one thing to plan +to go down into the depths of the earth, but it was +quite another to make the actual attempt. Still, +they were not going to give up the project. The +professor had confidence in his ship and believed +it could safely make the trip. Still it was with no +little apprehension that Mr. Henderson watched +the nearer approach of the craft to that strange island.</p> + +<p>“Perfesser, are yo’ really an’ truly goin’ t’ depress +this elongated spheroid an’ its human consignment +int’ that conglomerous convoluted mass +of gaseous vapor regardless of th’ consequences?” +asked Washington, as he gazed with wide opened +eyes at the sight before him.</p> + +<p>“If you mean am I going to let the <em>Mermaid</em> +go down into that hole you are perfectly correct,” +the scientist answered, “though you could have +said it in fewer words, Washington.”</p> + +<p>“I—I guess I’ll get out an’ walk,” the colored +man made reply.</p> + +<p>“This isn’t any trolley car,” observed Mark. +“Don’t lose your nerve, Wash. Stay with us, and +we’ll discover a gold or diamond mine, maybe.”</p> + +<p>“Is there diamonds down there?” asked the colored +man, his fright seeming to leave him.</p> + +<p>“There are all sorts of things inside the earth,” +the professor answered.</p> + +<p>“Then I’m goin’ along!” Washington +declared. “I always did want a diamond ring, an’ +I knows a little colored gal that wants one, too. +I’m goin’ all right! This suttenly am th’ most +kloslosterous conjunctivity of combativeness that I +ever sagaciated!” and he began to do a sort of +impromptu cake-walk.</p> + +<h2 id='ch13' class='c008'>CHAPTER XIII<br /><br />DOWN INTO THE EARTH</h2> + +<p class='c009'>It was now noon, but the adventurers did not +think of dinner in the excitement of approaching +the mysterious island. The speed of the ship was +increased that they might the more quickly come +to it. As they approached they could see the +masses of vapor more plainly, and it appeared that +some great commotion must be going on inside the +big hole, since clouds of steam arose.</p> + +<p>“I only hope it doesn’t prove too hot for us,” +observed the professor. “However, I provided a +water jacket for the ship, and we may need it, as +well as the vacuum chambers to keep the heat from +us.”</p> + +<p>It was about three o’clock when the flying ship +reached the edge of the island. From there it +was about a mile to the rim of the big hole, over +one side of which the waters of the ocean poured +with a roar that could be heard over half a mile +off.</p> + +<p>“I think we had better halt and see that everything +is in good shape before proceeding,” said +Mr. Henderson. “Jack, you and Mark make a +thorough inspection of the engine room, and see +that all the apparatus is in working order.”</p> + +<p>The two boys prepared to do as they were told. +Mark, who was walking a little ahead of Jack, entered +the apartment from which the storeroom +opened. As he did so he saw, or thought he saw, +the door of the place where the extra supplies were +kept, close. Without saying anything to Jack he +hurried forward, and tried the knob. It would +not turn.</p> + +<p>“That’s funny,” said Mark to himself. “I +could almost swear I saw some one go into that +room. Yet I know the professor did not enter, +for I just left him. And none of the others would +dare to. I wonder if I will ever solve the mystery.”</p> + +<p>But he had too much to do to allow him to +dwell on that matter. Several of the dynamos +needed adjusting and for two hours he and Jack +had all they could do.</p> + +<p>In the meanwhile the professor had gone over +the other parts of the ship, and gotten everything +in readiness for the descent. The <em>Mermaid</em> was +lowered to within a few hundred feet of the sea, +and, through a hose that was let down, the compartments, +provided for this emergency were filled +with water. These compartments were between +the outer and inner hulls of the lower part of the +craft, and were designed to prevent the interior +becoming heated in case the travelers found they +had to pass close to fire. There were also vacuum +chambers, and from these the air was exhausted, as +of course every schoolboy knows a vacuum is a non-conductor +of either heat or cold.</p> + +<p>“Now I think we are ready,” the professor announced +at length.</p> + +<p>“Everything’s all right in the engine room,” +announced Jack.</p> + +<p>“Yes, an’ everything’s all right in th’ kitchen,” +put in Washington. “I’ve got a good meal ready +as soon as any one wants to eat.”</p> + +<p>“It will have to wait a while,” Mr. Henderson +remarked. “We are going to start to make the +descent before we dine.”</p> + +<p>The hose was reeled up, and the ship was sent +a few hundred feet higher into the air, as Mr. +Henderson wanted to take a last good observation +before he went down into the hole.</p> + +<p>But having risen some distance above the masses +of rolling vapors he found he was at no advantage, +since the strongest telescope he could bring to bear +could not pierce the cloud masses.</p> + +<p>“We’ll just have to trust to luck,” the scientist +said. “I judge we’re about over the centre of the +opening. Lower away Mark!”</p> + +<p>The boy, who, under the watchful eye of the +professor, was manipulating the levers and wheels +in the conning tower, shifted some handles. The +gas was expelled from the holder, the negative +gravity apparatus ceased to work, and the <em>Flying +Mermaid</em> sank lower and lower, toward the mysterious +hole that yawned beneath her.</p> + +<p>The hearts of all beat strangely, if not with +fear, at least with apprehension, for they did not +know what they might encounter. Perhaps death +in some terrible form awaited them. But the desire +to discover something new and strange had +gripped all of them, and not one would have +voted to turn back.</p> + +<p>Even old Andy, who seldom got excited, was in +unusual spirits. He took down his gun and remarked:</p> + +<p>“Maybe I can kill some new kind of animal, +and write a book about its habits, for surely we +will see strange beasts in the under-world.”</p> + +<p>Lower and lower sank the ship. Now it was +amid the first thin masses of vapors, those that +floated highest and were more like a light fog, than +anything else. By means of a window in the bottom +of the craft, which window was closed by a +thick piece of plate glass, Professor Henderson +could look down and see what was beneath them.</p> + +<p>“The clouds seem to be getting thicker,” he +said, as he peered through the small casement. +“If they would only clear away we could see something.”</p> + +<p>But instead of doing this the vapors accumulated +more thickly about the ship. It was so dark inside +the <em>Mermaid</em> now that the electric lights had to be +switched on. In the room with the floor-window +the lights were not used, as had they shone one +could not have seen down below.</p> + +<p>The professor maintained his position. The descent +was a perilous one, and he wanted to be on +the watch to check it at once if the <em>Mermaid</em> was +liable to dash upon some pointed rock or fall into +some fiery pit. His hand was on the signal levers.</p> + +<p>Suddenly he looked up and glanced at a gage on +the wall. The hand of it was slowly revolving.</p> + +<p>“We are at the earth’s surface,” the scientist +said. “Now we are below it. Now we are fairly +within the big hole! Boys, we may be on the +verge of a great discovery!”</p> + +<p>An instant later it seemed as if a hot wave had +struck the <em>Mermaid</em>, or as if the craft had been +plunged into boiling water.</p> + +<p>“It’s going to be hot!” cried the professor. +“Lucky I provided the water jackets!”</p> + +<p>Then the lights in the interior of the ship went +out, leaving the whole craft in darkness.</p> + +<p>“What has happened?” cried Mark.</p> + +<h2 id='ch14' class='c008'>CHAPTER XIV<br /><br />MANY MILES BELOW</h2> + +<p class='c009'>“Don’t be alarmed,” spoke the calm voice of +the professor. “I have only turned off the electrics. +I want to switch on the search lights, to +see if we can learn anything about our position.”</p> + +<p>As he spoke he turned a switch, and, the gloom +below the ship, as the boys could see by glimpses +from the floor-window, was pierced by a dazzling +glare. In the bottom of the <em>Mermaid</em> were set a +number of powerful electric arc lights with reflectors, +constructed to throw the beams downward. +The professor had built them in for just this emergency, +as he thought that at some time they might +want to illuminate what was below the craft.</p> + +<p>Not that it was of much avail on this occasion, +for, though the lights were powerful, they could +not pierce the miles of gloom that lay below them. +The beams only served to accentuate the darkness.</p> + +<p>“I guess we’ll have to trust to luck,” the professor +said, after a vain attempt, by means of powerful +glasses, to distinguish something. “There +is too much fog and vapor.”</p> + +<p>“What makes it so warm?” asked Mark, removing +his coat.</p> + +<p>“Well, you must remember you are approaching +the interior of the earth,” the professor answered. +“It has been calculated that the heat increases +one degree for every fifty-five feet you descend. +We have come down several hundred feet +and of course it is getting warmer.”</p> + +<p>“Then if we go down very far it will get so +hot we will not be able to stand it,” Jack put in.</p> + +<p>“I do not believe we will suffer any great inconvenience,” +Mr. Henderson went on. “I believe +that after we pass a certain point it will become +cooler. I think the inner fires of the earth +are more or less heated gas in a sort of inner chamber +between two shells. If we can pass the second +shell, we will be all right.”</p> + +<p>“But aren’t we liable to hit something, going +down into the dark this way?” asked Mark.</p> + +<p>“We will guard ourselves as far as possible,” +the scientist answered.</p> + +<p>The <em>Mermaid</em> seemed to be going down on a +side of the immense shaft a good way distant from +the strange waterfall. When they had first +dropped into the hole the travelers could hear +the rush of waters, but now the noise was not +audible.</p> + +<p>“I think the hole must widen out the farther +down we go,” the professor said. “We are probably +many miles from the fall now.”</p> + +<p>“I’m sure I hope so,” put in Jack. “It would +be no fun to have to take a shower bath in this +place.”</p> + +<p>After a meal, the boys and the professor took +some more observations, but with all their efforts +nothing could be seen below the ship but a vast +black void, into which they were steadily descending.</p> + +<p>“I wonder when we’re going to stop,” asked +Mark. “It’s like playing the game ‘Going to +Jerusalem,’ you keep wondering when the music +will cease and you will have a chance to grab a +chair. I only hope we have a chair or something +else to sit on, in case we go to smash.”</p> + +<p>“We’re not liable to have any accidents with the +professor in charge,” Jack answered. “Didn’t +he bring us safe out of some pretty tight holes when +we went to the north pole in the airship, and again +when we found the south pole in the submarine?”</p> + +<p>“Yes, but this is different,” objected Mark.</p> + +<p>“Well, I’m not worrying,” Jack went on. “It +doesn’t do any good, and only makes you lie +awake nights. By the way, I wonder what time +it is getting to be.”</p> + +<p>He looked at his watch and found it was close +on to eight o’clock in the evening. So late had +dinner been served, and so varied were the happenings +of the last few hours, that time had passed quickly.</p> + +<p>“Why it’s almost bed-time,” said Jack. “I +wonder if we are to go on dropping into the depths +of nowhere all night.”</p> + +<p>At that moment the professor entered the room +where the boys were. He seemed quite pleased +over something, and was smiling.</p> + +<p>“Everything is going along famously,” he said. +“I have just tested the air and find it is rich in +oxygen. We shall suffer nothing on that score. +The heat too, seems to have decreased. On the +whole, everything favors us.”</p> + +<p>“Are we going on down?” asked Mark.</p> + +<p>“As far as we can,” Mr. Henderson answered. +“Let me see how far we are below now.”</p> + +<p>He went to the gage that indicated the vertical +position of the ship. Because of the changed conditions, +the craft now sinking below the surface +of the earth instead of rising above it, as was its +wont, some calculations were necessary. These +the scientist made as quickly as he could.</p> + +<p>“We are now ten miles underground!” he exclaimed. +“That is doing very well. My theories +are working out. I think we shall land somewhere +before long.”</p> + +<p>“I hopes so!” exclaimed Washington coming +in at this point. “I’m mighty skeered shootin’ +down int’ this dark hole, and no time-table t’ show +when we’s due t’ arrive.”</p> + +<p>“We ought to land in a couple of days more,” +the professor answered. “Never mind about +worrying Washington, I’ll take care of you.”</p> + +<p>“I hopes so, Perfesser,” the colored man said. +“I got a little girl waitin’ for me back in Georgia, +an’ I’d like t’ see her 'fore I git burned up.”</p> + +<p>Accompanied by the professor, the boys made a +tour of the ship to see that all the machinery and +apparatus were in working order. Owing to the +changed conditions the negative gravity engine had +to be worked at faster speed than usual, since the +downward pull of the earth was greater the farther +they descended into the interior and they did not +want to fall too swiftly. But this was easily provided +for, since the professor had made the apparatus +capable of standing a great strain.</p> + +<p>The ten miles had become fourteen when the +professor, finding that everything was in good +shape, proposed that the boys go to bed. They +did not want to, though they were sleepy, and they +feared to miss some strange sights.</p> + +<p>But when the professor had promised to call +them in case anything unusual developed, they consented +to turn in, and Bill and Tom assumed their +duties, which were light enough, now that the ship +was merely falling into the immense shaft.</p> + +<p>When Mark turned into his bunk he could not +go to sleep at once. It may have been the excitement +over their new position, or because he had +eaten too hearty a supper, but the fact was he remained +awake for some time.</p> + +<p>While thus tossing restlessly on his bed, wondering +what ailed him, he thought he heard a noise +in the main apartment out of which the storeroom +opened. He crawled softly from his bed, and +looked from his stateroom door.</p> + +<p>In the light of a shaded electric Mark saw the +figure of some one glide across the floor and take +refuge in the room, which Professor Henderson +always was so particular about.</p> + +<p>“I wonder what or who that was,” reasoned +Mark. “There is some mystery in this. Can +the professor have concealed some one on this +ship whose presence he does not want to admit? +It certainly looks so.”</p> + +<p>Not wanting to awaken the ship’s crew, and remembering +what Mr. Henderson had said about +any one entering the storeroom, Mark went back +to bed, to fall into an uneasy slumber.</p> + +<p>“Breakfast!” called Washington breaking in +on a fine dream Jack was having about being captain +of a company of automobile soldiers. “Last +call for breakfast!”</p> + +<p>“Hello! Is it morning?” asked Jack.</p> + +<p>“Not so’s you could notice it,” Washington went +on. “It’s as dark as a stack of black cats and another +one throwed in. But breakfast is ready jest +the same.”</p> + +<p>The boys were soon at the table, and learned +that nothing of importance had occurred during +the night. The <em>Mermaid</em> had been kept going +slowly down, and about seven o’clock registered +more than fifty miles below the earth’s surface.</p> + +<p>Still there was no change in the outward surroundings. +It remained as black as the interior of +Egypt when that country was at its darkest. The +powerful electrics could not pierce the gloom. The +ship was working well, and the travelers were very +comfortable.</p> + +<p>Down, down, down, went the <em>Mermaid</em>. The +temperature, which had risen to about ninety went +back to sixty-nine, and there seemed to be no more +danger from the inner fires.</p> + +<p>They were now a hundred miles under the surface. +But still the professor kept the <em>Mermaid</em> +sinking. Every now and again he would take an +observation, but only found the impenetrable darkness +surrounded them.</p> + +<p>“We must arrive somewhere, soon,” he muttered.</p> + +<p>It was about six o’clock that night that the alarm +bell set up a sudden ringing. The professor who +was making some calculations on a piece of paper +jumped to his feet, and so did a number of the +others.</p> + +<p>“We are nearing the bottom!” he cried. +“The bell has given us warning!”</p> + +<h2 id='ch15' class='c008'>CHAPTER XV<br /><br />IN THE STRANGE DRAUGHT</h2> + +<p class='c009'>The boys ran to attend to the engines and apparatus +to which they had been assigned in view +of this emergency. The professor, Washington, +Bill, Tom and Andy, who had kept to themselves +since the descent, came running out of the small +cabin where they usually sat, and wanted to know +what it was all about.</p> + +<p>“We may hit something, in spite of all +precautions,” Mr. Henderson remarked. “Slow +down the ship.”</p> + +<p>The <em>Mermaid</em> was, accordingly checked in her +downward flight, by a liberal use of the gas and +the negative gravity machine.</p> + +<p>The bell continued to ring, and the dials +pointed to the mark that indicated the ship was +more than one hundred and fifty miles down.</p> + +<p>Mark, who had run to the engine room to check +the descent, came back.</p> + +<p>“Why didn’t you slow her down?” asked the +professor.</p> + +<p>“I did,” replied the boy. “The negative gravity +and the gas machines are working at full +speed.”</p> + +<p>“Then why are we still descending?” asked the +scientist. “For a while our speed was checked, +but now we are falling faster than before.”</p> + +<p>“I attended to the apparatus,” Mark insisted.</p> + +<p>Just then, from without the ship, came a terrible +roaring sound, as though there was a great cyclone +in progress. At the same time, those aboard the +craft could feel themselves being pulled downward +with terrific force.</p> + +<p>“We are caught in a draught!” Mr. Henderson +cried. “We are being sucked down into the +depths of the earth!”</p> + +<p>He ran to the engine room. With the help +of the boys he set in motion an auxiliary gravity +machine, designed to exert a most powerful influence +against the downward pull of the earth. As +they watched the great wheels spin around, and +heard the hum and whirr of the dynamos, the boys +watched the pointer which indicated how low they +were getting.</p> + +<p>And, as they watched, they saw that the needle +of the dial kept moving, moving, moving.</p> + +<p>“Our efforts are useless! We can’t stop!” +the professor cried.</p> + +<p>Grave indeed was the plight of the adventurers. +In their ship they were being sucked down into +unknown regions and all their efforts did not avail +to save them. It was an emergency they could +not guard against, and which could not have been +foreseen.</p> + +<p>“What are to do?” asked Mark.</p> + +<p>“We can only wait,” Mr. Henderson replied. +“The terrible suction may cease, or it may carry +us to some place of safety. Let us hope for the +best.”</p> + +<p>Seeing there was no further use in running the +engines in an effort to check the downward rush the +machines were stopped. Then they waited for +whatever might happen.</p> + +<p>Now that they seemed in imminent peril Washington +was as cool as any one. He went about +putting his kitchen in order and getting ready for +the next meal as if they were sailing comfortably +along on the surface of the ocean. As for old +Andy he was nervous and frightened, and plainly +showed it. With his gun in readiness he paced +back and forth as if on the lookout for strange +beasts or birds.</p> + +<p>Bill and Tom were so alarmed that they were of +little use in doing anything, and they were not +disturbed in their staterooms where they went when +it became known that the ship was unmanageable.</p> + +<p>The boys and the professor, while greatly frightened +at the unexpected turn of events, decided +there was no use in giving way to foolish alarm. +They realized they could do nothing but await developments.</p> + +<p>At the same time they took every precaution. +They piled all the bedding on the floor of the living +room, so that the pillows and mattresses might +form a sort of pad in case the ship was dashed +down on the bottom of the big hole.</p> + +<p>“Not that it would save us much,” Jack observed +with a grim smile, “but somehow it sort +of makes your mind easier.”</p> + +<p>All this while the ship was being sucked down +at a swift pace. The pointer of the gage, indicating +the depth, kept moving around and soon they +were several hundreds of miles below the surface +of the earth.</p> + +<p>The professor tried, by means of several instruments, +to discover in which direction they were +headed, and whether they were going straight +down or at an angle. But some strange influence +seemed to affect the gages and other pieces of apparatus, +for the pointers and hands would swing +in all directions, at one time indicating that they +were going down, and, again, upward.</p> + +<p>“There must be a strong current of electricity +here,” Mr. Henderson said, “or else there is, as +many suspect, a powerful magnet at the center of +the earth, which we are nearing.”</p> + +<p>“What will you do if the ship is pulled apart, +or falls and is smashed?” asked Mark with much +anxiety.</p> + +<p>“You take a cheerful view of things,” said Jack.</p> + +<p>“Well, it’s a good thing to prepare for emergencies,” +Mark added.</p> + +<p>“If the ship was to be separated by the magnetic +pull, or if it fell on sharp rocks and was +split in twain, I am afraid none of us could do anything +to save ourselves,” the professor answered. +“Still, if we were given a little warning of the +disaster, I have means at hand whereby we might +escape with our lives. But it would be a perilous +way of——”</p> + +<p>“I reckon yo’ all better come out an’ have supper,” +broke in Washington. “Leastways we’ll +call it supper, though I don’t rightly know whether +it’s night or mornin’. Anyhow I’ve got a meal +ready.”</p> + +<p>“I don’t suppose any of us feel much like eating,” +observed Mr. Henderson, “but there is no +telling when we will have the chance again, so, perhaps, +we had better take advantage of it.”</p> + +<p>For a while they ate in silence, finding that they +had better appetites than they at first thought. +Old Andy in particular did full justice to the food +Washington had prepared.</p> + +<p>“I always found it a good plan to eat as much +and as often as you can,” the hunter remarked. +“This is a mighty uncertain world.”</p> + +<p>“You started to tell us a little while ago, Professor,” +said Mark, “about a plan you had for +saving out lives if worst came to worst, and there +was a chance to put it into operation. What is +it?”</p> + +<p>“I will tell you,” the aged inventor said. “It +is something about which I have kept silent, as I +did not want to frighten any of you. It was my +latest invention, and I had only perfected it when +we started off on this voyage. Consequently I +had no chance to try it. The machine works in +theory, but whether it does in practice is another +question. That is why I say there is a risk. But +we may have to take this risk. I have placed +aboard this ship a——”</p> + +<p>The professor was interrupted in what he was +about to say by a curious tremor that made the +whole ship shiver as though it had struck some +obstruction. Yet there was no sudden jolt or jar +such as would have been occasioned by that.</p> + +<p>At the same time Washington, who was out in +the kitchen, came running into the dining room, +crying:</p> + +<p>“We’re droppin’ into a ragin’ fire, Perfesser!”</p> + +<p>“What do you mean?” asked Mr. Henderson.</p> + +<p>“I jest took a look down through th’ hole in +th’ bottom of the ship!” cried Washington. “It’s +all flames an’ smoke below us!”</p> + +<p>“I wonder if it is the end,” the professor muttered +in a low voice.</p> + +<p>Followed by the boys, the inventor hastened +to the floor-window. The lights were turned off +to enable a better view to be had of what was +below them.</p> + +<p>Leaning over the glass protected aperture the +boys and the professor saw, far, far down, a +bright light shining. It was as if they were +miles above a whole town of blast furnaces, the +stacks of which were belching forth flames and +smoke. The rolling clouds of vapor were illuminated +by a peculiar greenish light, which, at times, +turned to red, blue, purple and yellowish hues.</p> + +<p>The effect was weird and beautiful though it +was full of terror for the travelers. It seemed +as if they were falling into some terrible pit of +fire, for the reflection of what they feared were +flames, could plainly be seen.</p> + +<p>“I wish I’d never come on this terrible voyage!” +wailed Washington. “I’d rather freeze +to death than be burned up.”</p> + +<p>“Washington, be quiet!” commanded the professor +sternly. “This is no time for foolishness. +We must work hard to save our lives, for we are +in dire peril.</p> + +<p>“Mark, you and Washington, with Jack, start +the engines. Turn on every bit of power you can. +Fill the gas holder as full as it will hold, and +use extra heavy pressure. I will see if I can not +work the negative gravity apparatus to better advantage +than we did before. We must escape +if possible!”</p> + +<p>The boys, as was also Washington, were only +too glad to have something to do to take their +mind off their troubles. All three were much +frightened, but Mark and Jack tried not to show +it. As for Washington he was almost crying.</p> + +<p>Soon the whirr and hum of the machinery in +the <em>Mermaid</em> was heard. The craft, which was +rushing in some direction, either downward, ahead +or backwards within the unknown depths, shivered +from the speed of the dynamos and other apparatus. +Soon the boys could hear the professor +starting the negative gravity engine, and then +began a struggle between the forces of nature and +those of mankind.</p> + +<p>Once more the adventurers anxiously watched +the gages and indicators. For a while the ship +seemed to be holding out against the terrible influence +that was sucking her down. She appeared +to hesitate. Then, as the downward force triumphed +over the mechanical energy in the craft, +she began to settle again, and soon was descending, +if that was the direction, as fast as before.</p> + +<p>“It is of no use,” said the professor with a +groan. “I must try our last resort!”</p> + +<p>He started from the engine room where Mark +and Jack had gone. As he did so, he glanced at +a thermometer hanging on the wall near the door.</p> + +<p>“Has any one turned on the heat?” he asked.</p> + +<p>“It’s shut off,” replied Mark, looking at the +electric stove.</p> + +<p>“Then what makes it so hot?” asked the scientist.</p> + +<p>He pointed to the little silvery column in the +tiny tube of the instrument. It registered close +to one hundred degrees, though a few minutes +before it had been but sixty. And the starting +of the machinery could not account for the rise +in temperature, since most of the apparatus was +run by electricity and developed little heat save +in the immediate proximity. The thermometer +was fully ten feet away from any machine.</p> + +<p>“It’s the fiery furnace that’s doing it!” cried +Washington. “We’re falling into th’ terrible pit +an’ we’re goin’ t’ be roasted alive!”</p> + +<p>“It certainly is getting warmer,” observed +Mark, as he took off his coat. Soon he had to +shed his vest, and Jack and the professor followed +his example. The others too, also found all superfluous +garments a burden, and, in a little while +they were going about in scanty attire.</p> + +<p>Still the heat increased, until it was almost torture +to remain in the engine room. Nor was it +much cooler elsewhere. In vain did the professor +set a score of big electric fans to whirring. He +even placed cakes of ice, from the small ice machine +that was carried, in front of the revolving +blades, to cool off the air. But the ice was melted +almost as soon as it was taken from the apparatus.</p> + +<p>“Them flames is gittin worser!” Washington +cried a little later. “We’s comin’ nearer!”</p> + +<p>From the bottom window the professor and the +boys looked down. True enough the curious, +changing, vari-colored lights seemed brighter. +They could almost see the tongues of flame shooting +upward in anticipation of what they were +soon to devour.</p> + +<p>The heat was increasing every minute. The +sides of the ship were hot. The heads of the +travelers were getting dizzy. They could hardly +talk or move about.</p> + +<p>“I must save our lives! I must trust to +the——” The professor, who was muttering to +himself started toward the storeroom. As in +a dream Mark watched him. He remembered +afterward that he had speculated on what might be +the outcome of the mystery the professor threw +about the place. “I will have to use it,” he heard +the scientist say softly.</p> + +<p>Just as Mr. Henderson was about to open the +door there came a fiercer blast of heat than any +that had preceded. At the same instant the conditions +in the <em>Mermaid</em> became so fearful that +each of the travelers felt himself fainting away.</p> + +<p>“Go to—storeroom—get cylinder—get in——” +the professor murmured, and then he fell +forward in a faint.</p> + +<h2 id='ch16' class='c008'>CHAPTER XVI<br /><br />THE NEW LAND</h2> + +<p class='c009'>“What is it? Tell us!” exclaimed Jack, +almost in his last breath, for, a few seconds later +he too toppled over senseless. Then Washington +went down, while Andy, Bill and Tom succumbed +to the terrible heat.</p> + +<p>Mark felt his head swimming. His eyes were +almost bulging from their sockets. He dimly +remembered trying to force himself to go to the +storeroom and see what was there. He started +toward it with that intention, but fell half way +to it.</p> + +<p>As he did so he saw something which impressed +itself on his mind, half unconscious as he was.</p> + +<p>The door of the storeroom suddenly opened, +and from it came a giant shape, that seemed to +expand until it filled the whole of the apartment +where the stricken ones lay. It was like the form +of some monster, half human, half beast. Mark +shuddered, and then, closing his eyes, he felt himself +sinking down into some terrible deep and +black pit. A second later the whole ship was +jarred as though it had hit something.</p> + +<p>How long he and the others remained unconscious +Mark did not know. He was the first to +revive, and his first sensation was one as though +he had slept hard and long, and did not want +to get up. He felt very comfortable, although +he was lying flat on the floor, with his head jammed +against the side of a locker. It was so dark that +he could not distinguish his hand held close to his +face.</p> + +<p>“I wonder if I’m dead, and if all the others +are dead too,” he thought to himself. “What +has happened? Let’s see, the last I remember +was some horrible shape rushing from the storeroom. +I wonder what it could have been? Surely +that was not the secret the professor referred to.”</p> + +<p>Mark shuddered as he recalled the monster that +seemed to have grown more terrible as each second +passed. Then the boy raised himself up from +his prostrate position.</p> + +<p>“Well, at any rate, some one has turned off +the heat,” he murmured. “It’s very comfortable +in here now. I wish I could strike a light.”</p> + +<p>He listened intently, to learn if any of the +others were moving about. He could hear them +breathing, but so faintly as to indicate they were +insensible. Mark stretched out his hand and felt +that some one was lying close to him, but who +of the adventurers it was he could not determine.</p> + +<p>“If only the dynamo was working we could +have light,” he said. “But it seems to have +stopped,” and, indeed there was a lacking of the +familiar purr and hum of the electrical machine. +In fact none of the apparatus in the ship was +working.</p> + +<p>“The storage battery!” exclaimed Mark. +“That would give light for a while, if I can only +find the switch in the dark.”</p> + +<p>He began crawling about on his hands and +knees. It was so intensely black that he ran into +many things and received severe bruises. At last +he came to a doorway, and as he did so his hand +came in contact with an easy chair. It was the +only one aboard, and by that he knew he had +passed into the sitting room. He had his general +direction now, and knew if he kept straight on +he would come to the engine room. There he +was familiar enough with the apparatus and levers +to be able to turn the electric switch.</p> + +<p>Crawling slowly and cautiously, he reached the +room where all the engines were. Then he had +to feel around the sides to locate the switch. At +length he found it. There was a click, a little +flash of greenish fire, and the copper conductors +came together, and the ship was flooded with the +glow from the incandescents.</p> + +<p>Mark hurried back to where the others were +lying. They were still unconscious, but an uneasy +movement on the part of Jack told that he was +coming out of the stupor. Mark got some ammonia +and held it beneath his comrade’s nose. The +strong fumes completed the work that nature had +started and Jack opened his eyes.</p> + +<p>“Where am I? What has happened? Are +any of them dead?” he asked quickly.</p> + +<p>“I hope no one is dead,” Mark replied. “As +to the other question, I can’t answer. I don’t +know whether we are a thousand miles underground, +or floating on the ocean, though I’m more +inclined to the former theory. But never mind +that now. Help me to bring the others back +to their senses. I’ll work on the professor and +you can begin on Bill or Tom. Washington seems +to be all right,” for at that moment the colored +man opened his eyes, stared about him and then +got up.</p> + +<p>“I thought I was dead for suah!” he exclaimed.</p> + +<p>“Some of the others may be if we don’t hurry,” +said Mark. “Get to work, Wash!”</p> + +<p>With the colored man to help them the two +boys, by the use of the ammonia, succeeded in +reviving Bill, Tom and old Andy. But the professor, +probably on account of his advanced age, +did not respond so readily to the treatment. The +boys were getting quite alarmed, as even some of +the diluted ammonia, forced between his lips, did +not cause him to open his eyes, or increase his +heart action.</p> + +<p>“If he should die, and leave us all alone with +the ship in this terrible place, what would we do?” +asked Jack.</p> + +<p>“He’s not going to die!” exclaimed Mark. +“Here I have another plan. Washington bring +that medical electrical battery from the engine +room.” This was a small machine the professor +had brought along for experimental purposes.</p> + +<p>Quickly adjusting it, Mark placed the handles +in the nerveless fingers of Mr. Henderson. Then +he started the current. In about a minute the +eyelids of the aged inventor began to quiver, and, +in less than five minutes he had been revived sufficiently +to enable him to sit up. He passed his +hand across his forehead.</p> + +<p>“What has happened?” he asked in a faint +voice.</p> + +<p>“I don’t know; none of us knows,” Mark +answered. “We all lost our senses when it got +so hot, and there seemed to be some peculiar vapor +in the air. The last I remember was seeing some +horrible shape rush from the storeroom, soon after +the ship struck. Then I fainted away. When +I woke up I managed to turn the lights on, and +then I came back here.”</p> + +<p>“I wonder where we are,” the old man murmured. +“I must find out. We must take every +precaution. Washington, go and look at the gage +indicating our depth.”</p> + +<p>The colored man was gone but a few seconds. +When he returned his eyes were bulging in terror.</p> + +<p>“What is it?” asked Mr. Henderson, who, +thanks to the battery, had almost completely recovered.</p> + +<p>“It ain’t possible!” gasped Washington. “I’ll +never believe it!”</p> + +<p>“What is it?” asked Mr. Henderson, while +the others waited in anxiety for the answer.</p> + +<p>“We’re five hundred miles down!” declared +Washington.</p> + +<p>“Five hundred miles!” muttered the inventor. +“It does not seem possible, but it must be so. We +fell very rapidly and the terrible draught sucked +us down with incredible rapidity. But come, we +must see what our situation is, and where we are. +We are stationary, and are evidently on some +solid substance.”</p> + +<p>They all felt much recovered now, and, as the +terrible fright of being consumed in a fiery furnace +had passed, they all were in better spirits.</p> + +<p>At the suggestion of the professor, the boys +and Washington made a tour of the ship. They +found, for some unaccountable reason, that nearly +all the engines and apparatuses were out of gear. +In some the parts had broken, and others were +merely stopped, from the failure of some other +machine, on which they were dependent.</p> + +<p>“I’m afraid this is the end of the <em>Mermaid,”</em> +said Mark, in a sorrowful tone.</p> + +<p>“Nonsense!” replied Jack, who was of a more +cheerful nature. “Things are not so bad as they +look. The professor can fix everything.”</p> + +<p>“I’m sure I hope so,” Mark went on, not much +encouraged, however, by Jack’s philosophy. “It +would be no joke to have to stay five hundred +miles underground the rest of our lives.”</p> + +<p>“You don’t know,” retorted Jack. “Don’t +judge of a country you’ve never seen. This may +be as fine a place as it is on the surface of the earth. +I want a chance to see it,” and Jack began to +whistle a cheerful tune.</p> + +<p>They completed the tour of the ship, and found, +that, aside from the damage to the machinery, +the <em>Mermaid</em> had not sustained any harm. The +hull was in good order, though of course they +could not tell about the gas holder. It was not +possible to see this except by going into the conning +tower or out on the small deck, and this they did +not venture to do. The connections between the +holder and the main ship seemed to be all right, +and there was still a small quantity of gas in the +big tank, as Mark found on opening a stop-cock.</p> + +<p>They went back to the professor and told him +what they had observed. He seemed somewhat +alarmed, the more so as the experience he had +just passed through had weakened him considerably.</p> + +<p>“I hope I shall be able to make the repairs,” +he said. “It is our only hope.”</p> + +<p>As he spoke he looked up at the electric lights +that shone overhead from wall brackets.</p> + +<p>“Who is shutting down the power?” he asked.</p> + +<p>“There is no power on, Professor,” replied +Mark. “I am running the lights from the storage +battery. But something is the matter, for they +are growing dim.”</p> + +<p>The filaments were now mere dull red wires, +and the ship was being shrouded in gloom again.</p> + +<p>“The battery is failing!” exclaimed Mr. Henderson. +“We shall be left in darkness, and there +is no other way to produce light. I ought to have +brought some lamps or candles along in case of +emergency.”</p> + +<p>The next instant the <em>Mermaid</em> became as black +as Egypt is popularly supposed to be, and something +like an exclamation of terror came from the +professor.</p> + +<p>For several minutes they all sat there in the +blackness and gloom, waiting for they knew not +what. Then, suddenly, there sounded throughout +the ship, a creaking as of metal sliding along +metal. Some big lever creaked, and, a second +later the whole place was flooded with light.</p> + +<p>“What has happened?” cried the professor, +starting to his feet in alarm.</p> + +<p>“We are going to be burned up!” exclaimed +old Andy.</p> + +<p>“It’s all right! It’s all right!” yelled Washington +from the engine room where the boys had +left him. “Don’t git skeered! I done it! I +opened the port holes, by yanking on the lever. +Golly, but we’s arrived at the new land! Look +out, everybody!”</p> + +<h2 id='ch17' class='c008'>CHAPTER XVII<br /><br />A STRANGE COUNTRY</h2> + +<p class='c009'>They all ran to the port holes, which were +openings in the side of the ship. They were fitted +with thick, double glass, and covered on the outside +with steel shutters. These shutters were +worked by a single lever from the engine room, +so that one person could open or close them in +a second or two. Washington, by accident, it +appeared later, had slid back the protecting pieces +of steel, and the rest followed.</p> + +<p>As the adventurers looked from the glass ports +they saw that the light which had flooded the +ship came from without. They were in the midst +of a beautiful glow, which seemed to be diffused +about them like rays from a sun.</p> + +<p>Only, in place of being a yellow or white light, +such as the sun gives off at varying times, the glow +was of violet hue. And, as they watched, they +saw the light change color, becoming a beautiful +red, then blue, and again green.</p> + +<p>“Well, this is certainly remarkable!” the professor +said. “I wonder what causes that.”</p> + +<p>“We’ve arrived! We’re here, anyhow!” +Washington cried, coming into the room. “See +the country!”</p> + +<p>Then, for the first time, the travelers, taking +their attention from the curious light that was all +around them, saw that they had indeed arrived. +They were on a vast plain, one, seemingly, boundless +in extent, though off to the left there was a +range of lofty mountains, while to the right there +was the glimmer of what might be a big lake or +inland sea.</p> + +<p>“See, we are resting on the ground!” exclaimed +Jack. He pointed out of the window, +and the others, looking close at hand, noted that +the <em>Mermaid</em> had settled down in the midst of +what seemed to be a field of flowers. Big red +and yellow blossoms were all in front, and some +grew so tall as to almost be up to the edge of the +port.</p> + +<p>“I wonder if we can be seeing aright,” the professor +muttered. “Is this really the interior of +the earth; such a beautiful place as this?”</p> + +<p>There could be little doubt of it. The ship +had descended through the big shaft, had been +sucked down by the terrible air current, and had +really landed in a strange country.</p> + +<p>Of its size, shape and general conditions the +adventurers, as yet, could but guess. They could +see it was a pleasant place, and one where there +might be the means to sustain life. For, as the +professor said afterward, he felt that where there +were flowers there would be fruits, and where both +of these provisions of nature were to be found +there would likely be animal life, and even, perhaps, +human beings.</p> + +<p>But, for the time, they were content to look +from the port on the beautiful scene that lay +stretched out before them. The ship rested on +an even keel and had landed so softly that none +of the plates were strained.</p> + +<p>“We have plenty of air, at all events,” said +the professor as he took a deep breath. “I was +afraid of that, but it seems there was no need. +The air appears to be as good and fresh as that +on the surface of the earth, only there is a curious +property to it. It makes one feel larger. I +imagine it must be thinner than the air of the +earth, which is a rather strange thing, since the +higher one goes the more rarefied the air becomes, +and the lower, the more dense. Still we can not +apply natural philosophy to conditions under the +earth. All the usual theories may be upset. However, +we should be content to take things as we +find them, and be glad we were not dashed to +pieces when the ship was caught in the terrible +current.”</p> + +<p>“What do you suppose caused the awful heat, +and then made it go away again?” asked Jack.</p> + +<p>“I can only make a guess at it,” Mr. Henderson +answered. “There are many strange things +we will come across if we stay here long, I believe. +As for the fire I think we must have passed a sort +of interior volcano.”</p> + +<p>“But what sort of a place do you think we have +come to, Professor?” asked Mark.</p> + +<p>“It is hard to say,” the scientist replied. “We +are certainly somewhere within the earth. Our +gage tells us it is five hundred miles. That may +or may not be correct, but I believe we are several +hundred miles under the crust, at all events. As +to what sort of a place it is, you can see for yourselves.”</p> + +<p>“But how is it we can breathe here, and things +can grow?” asked Bill, who was beginning to +lose his fright at the thought of being practically +buried alive.</p> + +<p>“I do not know what makes such things possible,” +Mr. Henderson replied, “but that there is +air here is a certainty. I can hardly believe it is +drawn from the surface of the earth, down the +big hole, and I am inclined to think this place +of the under-world has an atmosphere of its own, +and one which produces different effects than does +our own.”</p> + +<p>“They certainly have larger flowers than we +have,” said Mark. “See how big they grow, +and what strong colors they have.”</p> + +<p>He pointed to the port, against which some +of the blooms were nodding in the wind that had +sprung up, for, in spite of the many differences, +the under-world was in some respects like the +upper one.</p> + +<p>“Probably the difference in the atmosphere accounts +for that,” the professor said. “It enables +things to grow larger. And, by the way, Mark, +that reminds me of something you said about seeing +some horrible monster fleeing from the ship. +Did you dream that?”</p> + +<p>“I did see something horrible, Professor,” he +answered. “I’m not positive what it was, but +I’ll tell you as nearly as I can what it was like.”</p> + +<p>Thereupon Mark detailed what he had seen.</p> + +<p>“But how could anything, least of all some big +monster, be concealed in the storeroom, and we +not know anything about it?” asked Mr. Henderson.</p> + +<p>“I thought you did know something of it,” +replied Mark.</p> + +<p>“Who, me? My dear boy, you must be dreaming +again. Why should I want to conceal any +being in the storeroom? Come, there is something +back of this. Tell me all you know of it. I can’t +imagine why you think I was hiding something +in the apartment.”</p> + +<p>“I thought so because you were always so +anxious not to have me go near it,” answered the +boy. “Don’t you remember when you saw me +going toward it, several times, you warned me +away?”</p> + +<p>“So I did!” exclaimed Mr. Henderson, a light +breaking over his face. “But, Mark, it was not +because I had hidden some human being or animal +there. I can’t tell you what it is yet, save that I +can say it is merely a machine of mine that I have +invented. For reasons of my own I don’t want +any one to see it yet. Perhaps it may never be +seen. I thought, not long ago, that we might have +to undertake a terrible risk in escaping from this +place. I directed you to go to the storeroom—but +there, I can’t say any more, my friends. Sufficient +that I had nothing in the animal line concealed +there.”</p> + +<p>“But I am certain there was some beast or +human being in there,” insisted Mark. “I heard +curious noises in there. Besides, how do you account +for the food disappearing and the door +being open at times?”</p> + +<p>“It might have been rats,” said Jack.</p> + +<p>“I don’t believe there are rats in the ship,” put +in the professor. “More likely it was one of us +who got up hungry and took the victuals.”</p> + +<p>“I’m sorry I can’t agree with you,” Mark +added respectfully. “I am sure some strange +being was on board this ship, and I believe it has +now escaped. Who or what it was I can’t say, +but you’ll find I’m right, some day.”</p> + +<p>“All right,” spoke Mr. Henderson with a +laugh. “I like to see any one brave enough to +stick up for his opinion, but, at the same time, I +can’t very well imagine any person or thing being +concealed in that storeroom ever since we started. +How could it get in?”</p> + +<p>Mark did not answer, but there came to him +the recollection of that night, previous to the sailing +of the <em>Flying Mermaid</em>, when he had observed +some strange shadow that seemed to glide aboard +the craft.</p> + +<p>“Now let’s forget all about such things,” the +professor went on. “We are in a strange country, +and there are many things to see and do. Let’s +explore a little. Then we must see what we can +do with the ship. We are dependent on it, and +it will not do to allow it to remain in a damaged +state. We expect to travel many miles in the +interior of the earth if it is possible, and we have +only our craft to go in.”</p> + +<p>“I reckon we’d all better assimilate into our +interior progression some molecules and atoms of +partly disentegrated matter in order to supply combustion +for the carbonaceous elements and assist +in the manufacture of red corpuscles,” said Washington, +appearing in the door, with a broad grin +on his good-natured face.</p> + +<p>“Which, being interpreted,” the professor said, +“means, I suppose, that we had better eat something +to keep our digestive apparatus in good +working order?”</p> + +<p>“Yo’ done guessed it!” exclaimed the colored +man, relapsing into his ordinary speech. “I’se +got a meal all ready.”</p> + +<p>They agreed that they might not have another +opportunity soon to partake of food, so they all +gathered about the table, on which Washington +had spread a good meal.</p> + +<p>“Come on, let’s go outside and view this new +and strange land at closer quarters,” the professor +said, when they had satisfied their appetites. +“We can’t see much from inside the ship.”</p> + +<p>Accordingly the heavy door in the side of the +<em>Mermaid</em> was slid back, and, for the first time +the travelers stepped out on the surface of the +land in the interior of the earth.</p> + +<p>At first it seemed no different than the ordinary +land to which they were accustomed. But they +soon found it had many strange attributes. The +queer shifting and changing light, with the myriad +of hues was one of them, but to this the adventurers +had, by this time, become accustomed, +though it was, none the less, a marvel to them. +It was odd enough to see the landscape blood +red one instant, and a pale green the next, as it +does when you look through differently colored +glasses.</p> + +<p>Then, too, they noticed that the grass and +flowers grew much more abundantly than in the +outer part of the world. They saw clover six feet +high, and blades of grass even taller. In some +places the growth of grass was so big that they +were in danger of getting lost in it.</p> + +<p>“If the grass is like this, what will the trees +be?” asked Mark.</p> + +<p>“There are some away over there,” Jack replied. +“We’ll have to take a sail over. They +must be several hundred feet high.”</p> + +<p>“Well, at any rate, here’s a little brook, and +the water looks good to drink,” went on Mark. +“I’m thirsty, so here goes.”</p> + +<p>He hurried to where a stream was flowing sluggishly +between grassy banks. The water was as +clear as crystal, and Mark got down on his face +and prepared to sip some of the liquid up.</p> + +<p>But, no sooner had his lips touched it, than he +sprang up with a cry and stood gazing at the +water.</p> + +<p>“What’s the matter?” asked Jack. “Hot?”</p> + +<p>“No, it isn’t hot,” Mark replied, “but it isn’t +water. It’s white molasses!”</p> + +<p>“White molasses?” repeated the professor, +coming up at that moment. “What are you talking +about?”</p> + +<p>He stooped down and dipped his finger into +the stream. He drew it up quickly, and there ran +from it big drops that flowed as slowly as the +extract of the sugarcane does in cold weather.</p> + +<p>“You’re about right, Mark,” he said. “It’s +water but it’s almost as thick as molasses.” He +touched his finger to his tongue. “It’s good to +drink, all right,” he went on, “only it will be a +little slow going down.”</p> + +<p>Then he dipped up a palm full, and let it +trickle down his throat.</p> + +<p>“It is the strangest water I ever saw,” he +added. “It must be that the lack of some peculiar +property of air, which we have on the surface, +has caused this. I must make some notes on it,” +and he drew out pencil and paper. He was about +to jot down some facts when he was interrupted +by a cry from Washington.</p> + +<p>“Come and see what’s the matter with this +stone!” he cried.</p> + +<h2 id='ch18' class='c008'>CHAPTER XVIII<br /><br />CAUGHT BY A STRANGE PLANT</h2> + +<p class='c009'>“Washington is in trouble!” exclaimed Mr. +Henderson. Followed by the two boys he ran +to where the colored man stood in a stooping +position over a small pile of stones.</p> + +<p>“What is it? Has something bit you?” asked +the scientist, as he came up on the run.</p> + +<p>“No, but I can’t git this stone up!” Washington +said. “Look at what a little stone it is, but +I can’t lift it. Something must have happened to +me. Maybe some one put th’ evil eye on me! +Maybe I’m bewitched!”</p> + +<p>“Nonsense!” exclaimed the professor, “what +did you want the stone for?”</p> + +<p>“Nothin’ in particular,” replied Washington, +still tugging away at the stone, which was the size +of his head. “I was just goin’ t’ throw it at a +big bird, but when I went to lift it this little +stone 'peared t’ be glued fast.”</p> + +<p>Washington moved aside to give Mr. Henderson +a chance to try to pick up the piece of rock. +As the scientist grasped it a look of surprise came +over his features:</p> + +<p>“This is most remarkable!” he exclaimed. +“I can’t budge it. I wonder if a giant magnet +is holding it down.”</p> + +<p>He tugged and tugged until he was red in the +face. Then he beckoned to the two boys, and +they came to his aid. There was barely room +for them all to each get one hand on the rock, +and then, only after a powerful tug did it come +up. Almost instantly it dropped back to the earth.</p> + +<p>“This is remarkable!” the professor said. “I +wonder if the other stones are the same.”</p> + +<p>He tried several others, and one and all resisted +his efforts. It was only the small stones he +was able to lift alone, and these, he said, were +so weighty that it would have been a task to +throw them any distance.</p> + +<p>“The water and the stones are strangely heavy +in this land,” he said. “I wonder what other +queer things we shall see.”</p> + +<p>“I saw a bird a little while ago, when I went +to pick up that stone,” observed Washington.</p> + +<p>“What kind was it?” asked the inventor.</p> + +<p>“I don’t know, only it was about as big as an +eagle.”</p> + +<p>The travelers wandered about a quarter of a +mile from the ship. They avoided the tall grass +and the lofty nodding flowers that seemed to grow +in regular groves, and kept to places where they +could walk with comparative freedom.</p> + +<p>“Have you formed any idea, Professor, as to +the nature of this country?” asked Mark, who +liked to get at the bottom of things.</p> + +<p>“I have, but it is only a theory,” Mr. Henderson +answered. “I believe we are on a sort of +small earth that is inside the larger one we live on. +This sphere floats in space, just as our earth does +and we have passed through the void that lies +between our globe and this interior one. I think +this new earth is about a quarter the size of ours +and in some respects the same. In others it is +vastly different.</p> + +<p>“But we will not think of those things now. +We must see what our situation is, whether we +are in any danger, and must look to repairing our +ship. There will be time enough for other matters +later.”</p> + +<p>The travelers were walking slowly along, noting +the strange things on every side. As they advanced +the vegetation seemed to become more +luxuriant, as if nature had tried to out-do herself +in providing beautiful flowers and plants. The +changing lights added to the beauty and weirdness +of the scene.</p> + +<p>The plain was a rolling one, and here and there +were small hills and hollows. As the travelers +topped a rise Jack, who was in advance, called out:</p> + +<p>“Oh what queer plants! They are giant Jacks-in-the-pulpit!”</p> + +<p>The others hastened forward to see what the +boy had discovered. Jack was too eager to wait, +and pressed on. The hill which sloped away from +the top of the little plateau on which he stood, +was steeper than he had counted on. As he leaned +forward he lost his balance and toppled, head +foremost, down the declivity, rolling over.</p> + +<p>“Look out!” cried Mark, who had almost +reached his comrade’s side.</p> + +<p>The scene that confronted the travelers was a +strange one. Before them in a sort of hollow, +were scores of big plants, shaped somewhat like +a Jack-in-the-pulpit, or a big lily, with a curved +top or flap to it.</p> + +<p>The plants were about eight feet tall, three feet +across the top, and the flap or covering was raised +about two feet. They were nodding and swaying +in the wind on their short stems.</p> + +<p>“He’s headed right for one of them!” Mr. +Henderson exclaimed. “I hope he’ll not fall into +one of the openings.”</p> + +<p>“Is there any danger?” asked Mark.</p> + +<p>“I’m afraid there is,” the inventor added. +“Those plants are a variety of the well-known +pitcher plant, or fly-trap, as they are sometimes +called. In tropical countries they grow to a large +size, but nothing like these. They are filled, in +the cup, with a sort of sticky, sweet mixture, and +this attracts insects. When one enters the cup the +top flap folds over, and the hapless insect is caught +there. The plant actually devours it, nature providing +a sort of vegetable digestive apparatus. +These giant plants are the same, and they seem +large enough to take in a man, to say nothing of +Jack!”</p> + +<p>With anxious faces the adventurers turned to +watch the fate of their comrade. Jack was slipping, +sliding and rolling down the hill. He could +not seem to stop, though he was making desperate +efforts to do so. He was headed straight for one +of the largest of the terrible plants.</p> + +<p>In vain, as he saw what was in front of him, +did he try to change the course of his involuntary +voyage. Over and over he rolled, until, at length, +he struck a little grassy hummock, bounced into +the air, and right into the opening of a monster +pitcher plant.</p> + +<p>“It has him!” cried Mark. “We must save +him! Come on everyone!”</p> + +<p>He raced down the hill, while the others came +closely after him. They reached the plant into +which Jack had bounced. The flap, or top piece, +had closed down, tightly over the unfortunate boy.</p> + +<p>“Quick! We must save him or he will be +smothered to death or drowned in the liquid the +cup contains!” Mr. Henderson exclaimed. +“Attack the plant with anything you can find!”</p> + +<p>“Let’s cut through the side of the flower-cup!” +suggested Mark. “That seems softer than the +stem.”</p> + +<p>His idea was quickly put into operation. +Andy’s long hunting knife came in very handy. +While the sides of the long natural cup were +tough, the knife made an impression on them, and, +soon, a small door or opening had been cut in +the side of the pitcher plant, large enough to +enable a human body to pass through.</p> + +<p>When the last fibre had been severed by Andy, +who was chosen to wield the knife because of his +long practice as a hunter, there was a sudden commotion +within the plant. Then a dark object, +dripping water, made a spring and landed almost +at the feet of the professor.</p> + +<p>It was Jack, and a sorry sight he presented. +He was covered from head to foot with some +sticky substance, which dripped from all over him.</p> + +<p>With hasty movements he cleared the stuff from +his eyes and mouth, and spluttered:</p> + +<p>“It’s a good thing you cut me out when you +did. I couldn’t have held on much longer!”</p> + +<h2 id='ch19' class='c008'>CHAPTER XIX<br /><br />THE BIG PEACH</h2> + +<p class='c009'>Jack soon recovered from his remarkable experience. +The terrible plant that had nearly eaten +him alive was a mass of cut-up vegetable matter +which attracted a swarm of insects. Most of +them were ants, but such large ones the boys had +never seen before, and the professor said they exceeded +in size anything he had read about. Some +of them were as large as big rats. They bit off +large pieces of the fallen plant and carried them +to holes in the ground which were big enough for +Washington to slip his foot into, and he wore a No. 11 shoe.</p> + +<p>But the adventurers felt there were more important +things for them to look at than ants, so +they started away again, the professor telling them +all to be careful and avoid accidents.</p> + +<p>It was while they were strolling through a little +glade, which they came upon unexpectedly, that +Washington, who was in the lead called out:</p> + +<p>“Gracious goodness! It must be Thanksgivin’!”</p> + +<p>“Why so?” asked Jack.</p> + +<p>“'Cause here’s th’ remarkablest extraordinary +and expansionist of a pumpkin that ever I laid +eyes on!” the colored man cried.</p> + +<p>They all hurried to where Washington had come +to a halt. There, on the ground in front of him, +was a big round object, about the size of a hogshead. +It was yellow in color, and was not unlike +the golden vegetable from which mothers make +such delicious pies.</p> + +<p>“I allers was fond of pumpkins,” said Washington, +placing his hand on the thing, which was +almost as tall as he was, “but I never thought +I’d come across such a one as this.”</p> + +<p>The professor and the two boys went closer +to the monstrosity. Mr. Henderson passed his +hand over it and then, bending closer, smelled of +it.</p> + +<p>“That’s not a pumpkin!” he exclaimed.</p> + +<p>“What is it then?” asked Washington.</p> + +<p>“It’s a giant peach,” the inventor remarked. +“Can’t you see the fuzz, and smell it? Of course +it’s a peach.”</p> + +<p>“Well I’ll be horn-swoggled!” cried Washington, +leaning against the big fruit, which easily supported +him.</p> + +<p>“Hurrah!” cried Jack, drawing his knife from +his pocket and opening the largest blade. “I +always did like peaches. Now I can have all I +want,” and he drove the steel into the object, cutting +off a big slice which he began to eat.</p> + +<p>“It may be poisonous!” exclaimed Mark.</p> + +<p>“Too late now,” responded Jack, the juice running +down from his mouth. “Taste’s good, anyhow.”</p> + +<p>They all watched Jack while he devoured his +slice of fruit. Washington acted as if he expected +his friend to topple over unconscious, but +Jack showed no bad symptoms.</p> + +<p>“You’d better all have some,” the boy said. +“It’s the best I ever tasted.”</p> + +<p>Encouraged by Jack’s example, Mark thought +he, too, would have some of the fruit. He opened +his knife and was about to take off some of the +peach when suddenly the thing began to roll forward, +almost upon him.</p> + +<p>“Hi! Stop your shoving!” he exclaimed. +“Do you want to have the thing roll over me, +Jack?”</p> + +<p>“I’m not shoving!” replied Jack.</p> + +<p>“Some one is!” Mark went on. He dodged +around the far side of the immense fruit and what +he saw made him cry out in astonishment.</p> + +<p>Two grasshoppers, each one standing about +three feet high, were standing on their hind legs, +and with their fore feet were pushing the peach +along the ground. They had been attracted to +the fruit by some juice which escaped from a bruise +on that side, which was the ripest, and, being fond +of sweets had, evidently decided to take their find +to some safe place where they could eat it at their +leisure. Or perhaps they wanted to provide for +their families if grasshoppers have them.</p> + +<p>“Did you ever see such monsters?” asked Jack. +“They’re as big as dogs!”</p> + +<p>At the sound of his voice the two grasshoppers, +becoming alarmed, ceased their endeavors to roll +the peach along, and, assuming a crouching attitude +seemed to be waiting.</p> + +<p>“They certainly are remarkable specimens,” +Mr. Henderson said. “If the other animals +are in proportion, and if there are persons in +this new world, we are likely to have a hard time +of it.”</p> + +<p>This time the immense insects concluded the +strangers were not to their liking. With a snapping +of their big muscular legs and a whirr of +their wings that was like the starting of an automobile, +the grasshoppers rose into the air and +sailed away over the heads of the adventurers. +Their flight was more than an eighth of a mile in +extent, and they came down in a patch of the very +tall grass.</p> + +<p>“Let’s go after them!” exclaimed old Andy. +“I was so excited I forgot to take a shot at them. +Come on!”</p> + +<p>“I think we’d better not,” counseled the professor. +“In the first place we don’t need them. +They would be no good for food. Then we +don’t know but what they might attack us, and +it would be no joke to be bitten by a grasshopper +of that size. Let them alone. We may find +other game which will need your attention, Andy. +Better save your ammunition.”</p> + +<p>Somewhat against his will, Andy had to submit +to the professor’s ruling. The old hunter consoled +himself with the reflection that if insects +grew to that size he would have some excellent +sport hunting even the birds of the inner world.</p> + +<p>“I wonder what sort of a tree that peach grew +on,” Jack remarked, as he cut off another slice, +when the excitement caused by the discovery of the +grasshoppers had subsided. “It must be taller +than a church steeple. I wonder how the fruit +got here, for there are no trees around.”</p> + +<p>“I fancy those insects rolled it along for a +good distance,” Mr. Henderson put in. “You +can see the marks on the ground, where they pushed +it. They are wonderful creatures.”</p> + +<p>“Are we going any farther?” asked Mark. +“Perhaps we can find the peach tree, and, likely +there are other fruit trees near it.”</p> + +<p>At the professor’s suggestion they strolled along +for some distance. They were now about three +miles from the airship, and found that what they +had supposed was a rather level plain, was becoming +a succession of hills and hollows. It was while +descending into a rather deep valley that Jack +pointed ahead and exclaimed:</p> + +<p>“I guess there’s our peach orchard, but I never +saw one like it before.”</p> + +<p>Nor had any of the others. Instead of trees +the peaches were attached to vines growing along +the ground. They covered a large part of the valley, +and the peaches, some bigger than the one they +first discovered, some small and green, rose up +amid the vines, just as pumpkins do in a corn field.</p> + +<p>“Stranger and stranger,” the professor murmured. +“Peaches grow on vines. I suppose potatoes +will grow on trees. Everything seems to be +reversed here.”</p> + +<p>They made their way down toward the peach +“orchard” as Jack called it, though “patch” +would have been a better name. Besides peaches +they found plums, apples, and pears growing in the +same way, and all of a size proportionate to the +first-named fruit.</p> + +<p>“Well, one thing is evident,” Mr. Henderson +remarked, “we shall not starve here. There is +plenty to eat, even, if we have to turn vegetarians.”</p> + +<p>“I wonder what time it is getting to be,” Jack +remarked. “My watch says twelve o’clock but +whether it’s noon or midnight I can’t tell, with this +colored light coming and going. I wonder if it +ever sets as the sun does.”</p> + +<p>“That is something we’ll have to get used to,” +the professor said. “But I think we had better +go back to the ship now. We have many things +to do to get it in order again. Besides, I am a +little afraid to leave it unguarded so long. No +telling but what some strange beast—or persons, +for that matter—might injure it.”</p> + +<p>“I’m going to take back some slices of peaches +with me, anyhow,” Mark said, and he and Jack +cut off enough to make several meals, while Bill, +Tom and Washington took along all they could +carry.</p> + +<p>As they walked back toward the ship the strange +lights seemed to be dying out. At first they +hardly noticed this, but as they continued on it +became quite gloomy, and an odd sort of gloom +it was too, first green, then yellow, then red and +then blue.</p> + +<p>“I believe whatever serves as a sun down here +is setting,” the professor observed. “We must +hurry. I don’t want to be caught out here after +dark.”</p> + +<p>They hurried on, the lights dying out more and +more, until, as they came in sight of their ship, +it was so black they could hardly see.</p> + +<p>Mark who was in the rear turned around, glancing +behind him. As he did so he caught sight of +a gigantic shadow moving along on top of the nearest +hill. The shadow was not unlike that of a +man in shape, but of such gigantic stature that +Mark knew it could be like no human being he had +ever seen. At the same time it bore a curious resemblance +to the weird shadow he had seen slip +into the <em>Mermaid</em> that night before they sailed.</p> + +<p>“I wonder if it can be the same—the same +thing—grown larger, just as the peach grows +larger than those in our world,” Mark thought, +while a shiver of fear seemed to go over him. “I +wonder if that—that thing could have been on +the ship——”</p> + +<p>Then the last rays of light died away and there +was total darkness.</p> + +<h2 id='ch20' class='c008'>CHAPTER XX<br /><br />OVERHAULING THE SHIP</h2> + +<p class='c009'>“Keep together!” shouted the professor. “It +will not do to become lost now. We are close to +the ship, and will soon be there. Come after +me.”</p> + +<p>It was more by following the sound of the scientist’s +voice, than by any sight which the others +could get of him, that they managed to trail along +behind. They reached the ship in safety, however, +and entered. There was no sound as of +beasts or insects within, and, though Mark felt +a little apprehensive on account of what he had +seen, he and the others as well, were glad to be +again in something that seemed like home.</p> + +<p>“I wish we had some candles, or some sort of +a light to see by,” the professor remarked. “We +can do nothing in the dark, and there is no telling +how long this night is going to last once it has set +in. If I could have a little illumination, I might +be able to fix the dynamo, and then we could turn +on the incandescents. That portable light we had +is broken.”</p> + +<p>“By cracky!” exclaimed Andy. “I believe I +have the very thing!”</p> + +<p>“You don’t mean to say you have a torch or a +candle with you, do you?” asked Mr. Henderson.</p> + +<p>“No, but I have my patent pipe lighting apparatus,” +the hunter said. “I always carry it. It +gives a little light, but not much, though it may +be enough to work by.”</p> + +<p>Not until after several hours work, handicapped +as they were by lack of light, were the repairs +to the ship completed.</p> + +<p>“Now we’ll start the engine and see how we +will come out,” the inventor exclaimed, as he wiped +his hands on some waste.</p> + +<p>It did not take long to generate enough power +to turn the dynamo. Soon the familiar hum and +whirr was heard, and, a few seconds later the filaments +in the lamps began to glow a dull red, which +gradually brightened until they were shining in all +their usual brilliancy.</p> + +<p>“Hurrah!” cried the boys. “Now we can +see!”</p> + +<p>They all felt in better spirits with the restoration +of the lights, and, washing off the grease and +dirt of their labors in the engine room, they prepared +to sit down to the meal which Washington +prepared.</p> + +<p>As soon as the dynamo was working well, care +had to be taken not to speed it too much on account +of a mended belt. The professor turned off part +of the lights and switched some of the current into +the storage batteries, to provide for emergencies. +For there was no telling how long the night might +last.</p> + +<p>Jack was the first one to finish the meal—they +did not know whether to call it dinner, supper or +breakfast. He went into the conning tower, and, +as soon as he reached it he called out:</p> + +<p>“Come on up here, professor! There’s something +strange going on!”</p> + +<p>Mr. Henderson, followed by Mark, hurried to +the tower. As he reached it and looked out of the +forward window, a beautiful white glow illuminated +the whole scene, and then, from below the +horizon, there arose seven luminous disks. One +was in the centre, while about it circled the other +six, like some immense pin-wheel.</p> + +<p>“It’s the moon!” cried Mark.</p> + +<p>“It’s seven moons!” Jack exclaimed. “Why +it’s almost as light as day!”</p> + +<p>And so it was, for the seven moons, if that is +what they were, gave an illumination not unlike +the sun in brilliancy though it was like the beams +from the pale moon of the earth.</p> + +<p>“I guess we need not have worried about the +darkness,” the professor remarked. “Still it is a +good thing I fixed the dynamo.”</p> + +<p>For some time he and the other adventurers +watched the odd sight of the moons, as they rose +higher and higher overhead. The scene was a +beautiful, if weird one, for the whole plain was +bathed in the soft light.</p> + +<p>“I guess we can turn off the incandescents, and +use all the power for the storage batteries,” Mr. +Henderson went on, as he descended into the ship, +and opened the port shutters which had been closed +when they started off on their exploring tour. +The interior of the <em>Mermaid</em> was almost as light +as when the odd colored beams had been playing +over the new earth to which they had come.</p> + +<p>“I think we had better continue with our work +of making repairs,” Mr. Henderson said. “We +can’t count on these moons remaining here any +length of time, and I want to take advantage of +them. So though some of us perhaps need sleep, +we will forego it and fix up the <em>Mermaid</em>. I want +to take a trip and see what other wonders await +us.”</p> + +<p>They all agreed that they would rather work +than sleep, and soon the entire force was busy in +the engine room. There was much to be done, +and the most important things were attended to +first. The motive power was overhauled and +found to be in need of several new parts. These +were put in and then the gas generator, and the +negative gravity machine, were put in shape.</p> + +<p>It would have taken something very substantial +to have awakened any one on board the <em>Mermaid</em> +that night. They all slept soundly and awoke to +find the strange colored lights shining in through +the glass covered port holes.</p> + +<p>“Well, the sun, or what corresponds to it, is +up,” observed Jack, “and I guess we had better +do as the little boy in the school reader did, and +get up, too, Mark.”</p> + +<p>Soon all the travelers were aroused, and the +sound of Washington bustling about in the kitchen, +whence came the smell of coffee, bacon and eggs, +told the hungry ones that breakfast was under way.</p> + +<p>After the meal work was again started on repairing +the ship, and by noon the professor remarked:</p> + +<p>“I think we shall try a little flight after dinner. +That is, if one thing doesn’t prevent us.”</p> + +<p>“What is that?” asked Jack.</p> + +<p>“We may be held down, as were those stones,” was the grave answer.</p> + +<h2 id='ch21' class='c008'>CHAPTER XXI<br /><br />THE FISH THAT WALKED</h2> + +<p class='c009'>It was with no little apprehension that the professor +prepared to take his first flight aboard the +ship in the realms of the new world. He knew +little or nothing of the conditions he might meet +with, the density of the atmosphere, or how the +<em>Mermaid</em> would behave under another environment +than that to which she was accustomed.</p> + +<p>Yet he felt it was necessary to make a start. +They would have to attempt a flight sooner or +later, and Mr. Henderson was not the one to delay +matters. So, the last adjustment having been +made to the repaired machinery, they all took their +places in the ship.</p> + +<p>The boys and the professor went to the conning +tower to direct matters, while Washington +and the others were in the engine room to see that +the machinery worked properly. Mark gave a +last look outside as he closed the big steel cover +over the hole through which admission was had to +the craft. He thought he might catch a glimpse +of the queer shadow, but nothing was in sight. It +was like a beautiful summer’s day, save for the +strange lights, shifting and changing. But the +travelers had become somewhat used to them by +this time.</p> + +<p>The professor turned the valve that allowed the +gas to enter the holder. There was a hissing +sound and a sort of trembling throughout the entire +ship. The dynamos were whizzing away and +the negative gravity machine was all ready to start.</p> + +<p>For several minutes the travelers waited until +the big lifting tank was filled with the strong vapor. +They watched the gages which indicated the +pressure to be several hundred pounds.</p> + +<p>“I think we can chance it now,” remarked Mr. +Henderson, as he threw over several levers. +“We’ll try, at any rate.”</p> + +<p>With a tremor the <em>Mermaid</em> left the surface of +the inner earth and went sailing upward toward +the—well it wasn’t exactly the sky, but it was +what corresponded to it in the new world, though +there were no clouds and no blue depths such as +the boys were used to. At all events the <em>Mermaid</em> +was flying again, and, as the adventurers felt themselves +being lifted up they gave a spontaneous +cheer at the success which had crowned their efforts.</p> + +<p>The ship went up several hundred feet, and +then, the professor, having brought her to a stop, +sent her ahead at a slow pace. He wanted to be +sure all the apparatus was in good working order +before he tried any speed.</p> + +<p>The <em>Mermaid</em> responded readily. Straight as +an arrow through the air she flew.</p> + +<p>“Well, this is almost as good as being on the +regular earth!” exclaimed Jack.</p> + +<p>“It’s better,” put in Mark. “We haven’t seen +half the wonders yet. Let’s open the floor shutter, +and see how it looks down below.”</p> + +<p>He and Jack went to the room where there was +an opening in the floor of the ship, covered by +heavy glass. They slid back the steel shutter and +there, down below them, was the strange new +world they had come to, stretched out like some +big map.</p> + +<p>They could see mountains, forests, plains, and +rivers, the water sparkling in the colored light. +Over green fields they flew, then across some +stretches where only sand and rocks were to be seen. +Faster and faster the ship went, as the professor +found the machinery was once more in perfect +order. Jack was idly watching the play of tinted +lights over the surface of the ground.</p> + +<p>“I wonder what makes it,” he said.</p> + +<p>“I have tried to account for it in several ways,” +said the professor, who had called Washington to +the conning tower and come to join the boys. “I +have had first one theory and then another, but the +one I am almost sure is correct is that hidden volcanic +fires cause the illumination.</p> + +<p>“I think they flare up and die away, and have +become so regular that they produce the same +effect as night and day with us. Probably the +fires go out for lack of fuel, and when it is supplied +they start up again. Perhaps it is a sort of +gas that they burn.”</p> + +<p>“Well, it’s queer enough, whatever it is,” Jack +remarked. “What strikes me as funny, though, +is that we haven’t seen a single person since we +came here. Surely this place must be inhabited.”</p> + +<p>Mark thought of the strange shadow he had +seen, but said nothing.</p> + +<p>“I believe it is,” the professor answered. +“We will probably come upon the inhabitants +soon. I only hope they are a people who will do +us no harm.”</p> + +<p>“If they tried any of their tricks we could +mount up in our ship and escape them,” said Andy.</p> + +<p>“Provided they gave us the chance,” Mr. +Henderson put in. “Well, we’ll not worry about +that now.”</p> + +<p>For several hours the ship traveled on, until it +had come to a different sort of country. It was +wilder and not so level, and there were a number +of streams and small lakes to be seen.</p> + +<p>“Are you going to sail all night?” asked Jack.</p> + +<p>“No,” replied the professor. “I think we’ll +descend very soon now, and camp out for a while. +That lake just ahead seems to offer a good +place,” and he pointed to a large sheet of water +that sparkled in the distance, for by this time they +had all gone back to the conning tower.</p> + +<p>The lake was in the midst of a wood that extended +for some distance on all sides, and was +down in a sort of valley. The ship headed toward +it, and in a short time a landing was made +close to shore.</p> + +<p>“Maybe we can have some fresh fish for supper,” +exclaimed Jack as he ran from the ship as +soon as the sliding door in the side was opened. +“Looks as if that lake had some in it. It is not +thick water like in that stream we stopped at,” he +added.</p> + +<p>“I believe you’re right,” old Andy put in, as +he turned back to look for some lines and hooks +among his traps. He soon found what he wanted, +and gave them to the boys, taking his trusty gun +along for himself.</p> + +<p>While the professor, Washington, Tom and +Bill remained behind to make some adjustments to +the machinery, and to get things in shape for the +night, which, they calculated would soon be upon +them, Jack, Mark and Andy went down to the +shore of the lake. The boys cut some poles from +the trees, and baiting the hooks with some fat +worms found under the bark, threw in.</p> + +<p>“Let’s see who’ll get the first bite,” spoke Jack. +“I’m pretty generally lucky at fishing.”</p> + +<p>“Well, while you’re waiting to decide that there +contest, I think I’ll take a stroll along shore and +see if I can see anything to shoot,” Andy remarked.</p> + +<p>For several minutes the boys sat in silence on +the bank of the lake, watching the play of the +vari-colored lights on the water. Suddenly Jack +felt a quiver on his line, and his pole began to +shake.</p> + +<p>“I’ve got something!” he cried. Then his +pole bent almost double and he began to pull for +all he was worth. “It’s a whopper!” he cried. +“Come and help me, Mark!”</p> + +<p>Mark ran to his friend’s aid. Whatever was +on the other end of the line was strong enough to +tax the muscles of both boys. They could hear +the pole beginning to break. But for the excellent +quality of Andy’s line that would have parted +some time before.</p> + +<p>All at once there came a sudden slacking of the +pull from whatever was in the water. And so +quickly did it cease that both boys went over backward +in a heap.</p> + +<p>“He’s got away!” cried Jack, getting up and +brushing some of the dirt from his clothes.</p> + +<p>“There’s something that didn’t get away!” +cried Mark, who had risen to his knees, and was +pointing at the lake. Jack looked and what he +saw made him almost believe he was dreaming.</p> + +<p>For, emerging from the water, dragging the +pole and line the boys had dropped along with it, +was a most curious creature. It was a big fish, +but a fish with four short legs on which it was +walking, or rather waddling along as much as a +duck, with a double supply of feet, might do.</p> + +<p>“Say, do I see that or is there something the +matter with my eyes?” sung out Jack, making +ready to run away.</p> + +<p>“It’s there all right!” exclaimed Mark. “Hi! +Andy! Here’s something to shoot!” he yelled, +for indeed the creature was big enough to warrant +attack with a gun. It was about five feet long and +two feet through.</p> + +<p>On and on it came, straight at the boys, as if +to have revenge for the pain the fish hook must +have caused it, for the barb could be seen dangling +from its lip. On and on it came, waddling forward, +the water dripping from it at every step. +It had the body and general shape of a fish, save +that the tail was rather large in proportion. As +it came nearer the boys noted that the feet were +webbed, like those of a water fowl.</p> + +<p>“Come on!” cried Jack. “It may attack +us!”</p> + +<p>At that moment the creature opened its mouth, +showing a triple row of formidable teeth, and gave +utterance to a sort of groan and grunt combined.</p> + +<p>This was enough to send Jack and Mark off on +a run up the bank, and did they stop until they +heard Andy’s voice hailing them.</p> + +<p>“What’s the matter, boys?”</p> + +<p>“Come here! Quick!” answered Jack.</p> + +<p>The fish-animal had halted and seemed to be +taking an observation. To do this, as it could +not turn its neck, it had to shift its whole body. +Old Andy came up on the run, his gun held in +readiness.</p> + +<p>“Where is it?” he asked, and the boys pointed +silently.</p> + +<p>The hunter could not repress a start of astonishment +as he saw the strange creature. But he +did not hesitate a second. There was a crack of +the rifle, and the thing, whatever it was, toppled +over, dead.</p> + +<p>Andy hurried up to it, to get a closer view.</p> + +<p>“Well, this is the limit!” he exclaimed. +“First we have grasshoppers that can roll peaches +as big as hogsheads, and now we come across fish +that walk. I wonder what we will see next.”</p> + +<p>“I don’t want to go fishing in this lake any +more,” spoke Jack, as he looked at the repulsive +creature. “I never want to eat fish any more.”</p> + +<p>“Same here,” agreed Mark, and old Andy was +of the opinion that the thing killed would not make +a wholesome dish for the table.</p> + +<p>“There don’t seem to be any game in this section,” +he remarked. “Not a sign could I see, nor +have I since we have been here, unless you count +those grasshoppers. But the fruit is good, I’ll +say that.”</p> + +<p>“Come on, we’d better be getting back,” Mark +said, as he noticed it was getting dark. “I’m +hungry.”</p> + +<h2 id='ch22' class='c008'>CHAPTER XXII<br /><br />THE SNAKE-TREE</h2> + +<p class='c009'>They managed to make a good meal of the +food supplies they had brought along, and as a +dessert Washington made some peach short-cake +from the slices of the giant fruit they had found +the day before. Just as they finished supper it +got very dark, but, in about an hour, the moonbeams, +as the travelers called them, came up, and +illuminated the lake with a weird light.</p> + +<p>As the machinery of the <em>Mermaid</em> was now in +working order there was no further alarm because +of the darkness. The ship rested on a level keel +about a hundred yards back from the lake, and, +seeing that all was snug, and the fastenings secure, +the travelers went to bed.</p> + +<p>Though they had to forego fish for breakfast +the travelers made a good meal. After seeing +that the ship was in readiness for a quick start, the +professor suggested they take a walk around and +see what sort of country they might be in now.</p> + +<p>They tramped on for several miles, meeting +with no adventures, and seeing nothing out of the +ordinary. It was a pleasant day, just warm +enough to be comfortable, and a little wind was +blowing through the trees.</p> + +<p>“It would be almost like home if it wasn’t +for the strange lights, and the memory of the +queer things here,” said Jack. “I feel fine. +Let’s see if you can hit that dead tree over there, +Mark.”</p> + +<p>Jack stooped to grab up a stone, but no sooner +had his fingers touched it than he called out:</p> + +<p>“There! I forgot all about the stones here +being heavier than lead. Guess we can’t throw +any of ’em. But come on. I’ll race you to the +dead tree!”</p> + +<p>Mark was willing, so the two boys set off at a +fast pace.</p> + +<p>“Look out where you’re going!” the professor +called after them. “No telling what may be in +those woods,” for the boys were approaching a +little glade, on the edge of which the dead tree +stood.</p> + +<p>Jack reached the goal first, and stood leaning +against the trunk, waiting for Mark.</p> + +<p>“You’d better practice sprinting!” exclaimed +the victor.</p> + +<p>Mark was about to excuse himself for his poor +showing, on the plea of having eaten too much +breakfast, when to his horror he saw what seemed +to be a long thin snake spring out from the +branches of a near-by tree and twine itself about +Jack.</p> + +<p>“Help me! Save me!” cried the unfortunate +boy, as he was lifted high into the air and pulled +within the shadow of the wood.</p> + +<p>For an instant Mark was too horror-stricken to +move. Then with a shout that alarmed the others, +who were coming along more slowly, he made a +dash for the place he had last seen Jack.</p> + +<p>Had old Andy not been on the watch, with +those keen eyes of his, there might have been a +double tragedy. He had seen from afar the sudden +snatching up of Jack, and noted Mark’s rush +to save his chum.</p> + +<p>“Stand still! Don’t go in there for your life!” +yelled the hunter, at the same time running forward +with gun ready.</p> + +<p>His example was followed by the professor, +Washington and the other two men.</p> + +<p>“A snake has Jack!” called Mark, when Andy +was at his side.</p> + +<p>“No! It’s not a snake!” replied the hunter. +“It’s worse. It’s the snake-tree!”</p> + +<p>“What’s that?” asked Mr. Henderson, hurrying +up.</p> + +<p>“The snake-tree has Jack,” the hunter went on. +“It is a plant, half animal, half-vegetable. It +has long branches, not unlike a snake in shape. +They can move about and grab things.”</p> + +<p>“One of them got a grip on Jack as he leaned +against the dead tree trunk. I just caught a +glimpse of it, and called to prevent Mark from +running into danger.”</p> + +<p>“Can’t we save him?” asked Mr. Henderson.</p> + +<p>“I’m going to try!” replied Andy. “Quick! +Gather up some pieces of dry wood. I have some +paper, and my pipe lighter. We must fight the +snake-tree with fire!”</p> + +<h2 id='ch23' class='c008'>CHAPTER XXIII<br /><br />THE DESERTED VILLAGE</h2> + +<p class='c009'>Jack’s cries were growing fainter and fainter. +Peering in through the branches of the dead tree +the professor could see the whip-like limbs winding +closer and closer about the boy.</p> + +<p>“I am afraid we will be too late!” he said.</p> + +<p>Andy had twisted some paper into a rude torch. +He set fire to it with his pocket lighter, and, when +Bill and Mark brought him some little pieces of +dead wood the old hunter added them to his bundle, +which was now blazing brightly.</p> + +<p>“How are you going to do it?” asked the professor.</p> + +<p>“I’ll show you,” replied Andy. He bound the +sticks and paper together with wisps of grass and +then, when it was so hot he could hardly hold it +longer, he ran as close as he dared to the snake-tree +and tossed the torch at the foot of it.</p> + +<p>The blazing bundle fell among some damp +leaves and grass, as Andy had intended it should, +and soon a dense smoke arose, pouring straight +up through the branches of the animal-tree, the +limbs of which were gathered in a knot about the +half-unconscious form of the boy.</p> + +<p>For a few minutes they all waited anxiously. +Would Andy’s trick succeed? Had the terrible +tree not already squeezed the life from Jack?</p> + +<p>But, while they watched, there seemed to come +a change over the tree. The snake-like arms +waved less and less. They seemed to straighten +out, as though deprived of power by the smoke +which was now so dense as to hide Jack from +sight. Then the arms suddenly relaxed and something +rolled from them and fell to the ground. +With a quick movement Andy darted in, crawling +on his hands and knees beneath the limbs, and +brought Jack out. The boy was white and his +eyes were closed.</p> + +<p>“Get some water!” cried the old hunter.</p> + +<p>Mark ran toward a stream a little distance away. +He brought some of the curiously thick liquid in +his hat, and while Andy held the boy the professor +sprinkled some of the drops on his face, and forced +some between his lips. In a little while Jack’s +eyes slowly opened.</p> + +<p>“Don’t let it eat me!” he begged.</p> + +<p>“You’re all right now,” said Andy heartily. +“Not a bit harmed, Jack. But,” he added in a low +tone, “it was a close call.”</p> + +<p>A few whiffs from a bottle of ammonia the +professor carried soon brought Jack’s color back.</p> + +<p>“Do you feel better now?” asked Mark.</p> + +<p>“I guess so. Yes, I’m all right,” replied Jack, +struggling to his feet. “What happened? Feels +as if I had been tied up with a lot of rope.”</p> + +<p>“That’s about what you were,” Andy replied, +“only it was the worst kind of rope I ever saw. +Those snake-trees are terrible things. I’ve read +of ’em, but I never saw one before. The book +that told of them says they squeeze their victims +to death just as a snake does. The only way to do +is to make some smoke and fire at the bottom. +This sort of kills the branches or makes them +stupid and they let go. The trees are half animal, +and awful things. I hope we don’t meet with +any more.”</p> + +<p>“Same here,” added Jack fervently, as he +grasped Andy’s hand, and thanked him for saving +his life.</p> + +<p>“Do you think you can go on, or shall we return +to the ship?” the professor asked.</p> + +<p>“Oh I can trail along, if you move a little +slowly,” Jack replied. “I’m a bit stiff, that’s all.”</p> + +<p>So they resumed their journey. They had +gone, perhaps, three miles when Washington, who +was in the lead, suddenly stopped and called:</p> + +<p>“Sounds like thunder.”</p> + +<p>The others listened. Sure enough there was a +dull rumble and roar audible. It seemed off to +the left, but they could see no clouds in the sky, +nor any signs of a storm.</p> + +<p>“Let’s take a walk over that way and see what +it is,” Mr. Henderson suggested.</p> + +<p>As they walked on the noise became louder, until +in about half an hour it was like the sound from +a blast furnace.</p> + +<p>“What do you suppose it can be?” asked +Mark.</p> + +<p>“Perhaps some new freak of nature,” the professor +replied. “We seem to have a good many +of them here.”</p> + +<p>They were all on their guard now, for there +was no telling into what danger they might run. +As they went up a little hill the noise became much +louder. The professor and Andy, who had taken +the lead, kept a sharp lookout ahead, that they +might not unexpectedly fall into some hidden +stream or lake. As they topped the hill they saw +before them a deep valley, and in the midst of it +was that which was causing the roaring sound.</p> + +<p>From the centre of an immense mound of rock +and earth there spouted up a great column of +water, three hundred feet or more, as straight as +a flag staff. It was about ten feet in diameter, +and at the top it broke into a rosette of sparkling +liquid, which as the vari-colored lights played on +it, resembled some wonderful flower.</p> + +<p>“It’s a great geyser!” the professor exclaimed. +“We have come to a place like Yellowstone Park. +We must be very careful. The crust may be very +thin here, and let us down into some boiling +spring.”</p> + +<p>The others gathered around the professor, and, +from a safe distance watched the ever rising and +falling shaft of water.</p> + +<p>It was not regular in motion. Sometimes it +would shoot up to a great distance, nearly a thousand +feet, the professor estimated. Again it +would sink down, as the power sending it out lessened, +until it was only a few hundred feet above +the rounded top of the mound from which it +spurted. But it never fell below this. All the +while there was the constant roaring sound, as +though the forces of nature below the surface were +calling to be let out.</p> + +<p>“I hope there are not many of those about,” +Mr. Henderson remarked after a pause. “If +the ship should hit one during the night it would +be all up with us. We must keep a careful lookout.”</p> + +<p>The spouting column had a fascination which +held them to the spot for some time. From the +hill they had a good view of the surrounding country, +but did not see any more geysers.</p> + +<p>“Do you think it is hot water?” asked Mark.</p> + +<p>“There is no vapor,” the professor answered, +“but most of the geysers are produced by the action +of steam in the interior of the earth. However +we’ll not take any chances by investigating. +I fear it would not be safe to go into that valley.”</p> + +<p>“Look there!” cried Andy. “I guess we’re +better off here!” He pointed a little to the right +of where the water spouted. The others looked, +and saw, coming from a hole in the ground, some +shaggy black object.</p> + +<p>“What is it?” asked Jack.</p> + +<p>“It looks like a bear,” replied the hunter, “but +I never saw one like it before.”</p> + +<p>Nor had any of the others, for the creature was +a terrible one. It had the body of a bear, but +the feet and legs were those of an alligator, while +the tail trailed out behind like a snake, and the +head had a long snout, not unlike the trunk of an +elephant. The creature was about ten feet long +and five feet in height.</p> + +<p>“Let me try a shot at it!” exclaimed Andy. +“That is something worth shooting,” and he +cocked his rifle.</p> + +<p>“Don’t!” exclaimed the professor shortly. +“You might only wound it, and it would pursue +us. We are not ready to fight such creatures as +that, and you are the only one armed.”</p> + +<p>“I never missed anything I aimed at yet,” said +Andy, a little hurt that any one should doubt his +ability to kill at the first shot.</p> + +<p>“Perhaps not, but how do you know but what +this creature has a bullet proof armor under its +hide. This is a strange world, Andy. It is better +to take no chances.”</p> + +<p>“I hate to see him get away,” the hunter said.</p> + +<p>But, as it happened, the beast was not to get +away. As they watched they saw the horrible +animal approach the mound from which the water +spurted. Up the sides it climbed.</p> + +<p>“I guess he’s going to get a drink,” said Mark.</p> + +<p>That was evidently the beast’s intention. It +went close to the spouting column of water, and +thrust its head out so that its tongue could lap +from the side. It seemed to have been in the +habit of doing this.</p> + +<p>For once, and for the last time, however, it made +a mistake. The water seemed to veer to one side. +In its eagerness to get a drink the animal took another +step forward. At that moment the direction +of the column changed again, and it tilted over +toward the beast.</p> + +<p>Suddenly, as the travelers watched, the full +force of the big column caught the beast just +under the fore shoulders. Up into the air the creature +shot, propelled by thousands of pounds pressure. +Right up to the top of the column it went, +and this time the water rose a thousand feet into +the air.</p> + +<p>Up and up went the animal, struggling to get +away from the remorseless grip. Then, when the +water had reached its height, it shot the beast off +to one side. Then the brute began to fall, twisting, +turning, wiggling and struggling. Down it +came with a thud that could be heard above the +noise of the geyser.</p> + +<p>“I reckon that finishes him,” observed Andy. +And it had, for there was not a sign of life from +the creature.</p> + +<p>“I guess we have seen enough for one morning,” +the professor said. “Let’s go back to the +airship. It must be nearly dinner time.”</p> + +<p>They started away. Mark gave a last look +at the queer column of water and the dead body +of the strange animal. As he passed down the +hill he thought he saw the creature move, and +stayed to see if this was so. But a second glance +convinced him he was mistaken.</p> + +<p>The others had gone on and were some distance +ahead. Mark hurried on to join them. As he +got a last glance at the top of the column, over +the brow of the hill, he happened to look off to +the left. There was another hill, about the size +of the one they had been on.</p> + +<div class='c000'> +<a href='images/illus-180f.jpg'><img src='images/illus-180.jpg' alt='' class='c012' /></a> +<p class='c013'>UP IN THE AIR THE CREATURE SHOT</p> +</div> + +<p>And, as Mark looked he saw something move. +At first he thought it was another beast. But, to +his terror he saw that the creature had only two +legs, and that it stood upright like a man, but such +a man as Mark had never seen before, for he was +nearly twelve feet tall.</p> + +<p>He was about to cry out and warn the others, +when the thing, whatever it was, sunk down, apparently +behind some tall bushes, and disappeared +as if the earth had opened and swallowed it.</p> + +<p>“I wonder if I had better tell them,” thought +Mark. “I can’t show them anything. I wonder +if I really saw it, or if it was only a shadow. I +guess I’ll say nothing. But it is very strange.”</p> + +<p>Then he hurried on to join the others.</p> + +<p>“What makes you so pale?” asked Jack of his +chum.</p> + +<p>“Nothing,” said Mark, somewhat confused. +“I guess I’m a little tired, that’s all.”</p> + +<p>They reached the ship in safety, and, having +dinner started the machinery and took the <em>Mermaid</em> +up into the air.</p> + +<p>“We’ll travel on and see if we can’t find some +human beings,” the professor said.</p> + +<p>All that afternoon they sailed, the country below +them unfolding like a panorama. They passed +over big lakes, sailing on the surface of some, and +over rivers, and vast stretches of forest and dreary +plains. But they never saw a sign of human inhabitants.</p> + +<p>It was getting on to five o’clock, the hour when +the brilliant lights usually disappeared, when Mark, +who was steering in the conning tower, gave a cry.</p> + +<p>“What is it?” asked the professor, looking up +from a rude map he was making of the land they +had just traversed.</p> + +<p>“It looks like a town before us,” said the boy.</p> + +<p>Mr. Henderson and Jack looked to where Mark +pointed. A few miles ahead and below them were +great mounds, not unlike that from which the geyser +had spouted. But they were arranged in regular +form, like houses on a street, row after row +of them. And, as they approached nearer, they +could see that the mounds had doors and windows +to them. Some of the mounds were larger than +others, and some were of double and triple formation.</p> + +<p>“It’s a city! The first city of the new +world!” cried Jack.</p> + +<p>“It is a deserted village!” said the professor. +“We have found where the people live, but we +have not found them.” And he was right, for +there was not a sign of life about the place, over +which the airship was now suspended.</p> + +<h2 id='ch24' class='c008'>CHAPTER XXIV<br /><br />THE GIANTS</h2> + +<p class='c009'>“Let’s go down and investigate,” suggested +Jack.</p> + +<p>“Better wait,” counseled the professor. “It +will soon be dark, and, though we will have moonlight, +we can not see to advantage. I think it +will be best to keep the ship in the air to-night, +and descend in the morning. Then we can look +about and decide on what to do.”</p> + +<p>They all agreed this was the best plan, and, +after making a circle above the deserted village, +and noting no signs of life, the <em>Mermaid</em> was +brought to a halt over the centre of the town, and +about three hundred feet above it. There the +travelers would be comparatively safe.</p> + +<p>It was deemed best to keep watch that night, and +so, Mark, Jack, Bill and Tom took turns, though +there was nothing for them to do, as not a thing +happened. With the first appearance of dawn Mr. +Henderson gave orders to have the ship lowered, +and it came to rest in the middle of what corresponded +to a street in the queer mound village.</p> + +<p>“Now to see what kind of people have lived +here!” cried Jack. “They must have been a +queer lot. Something like the Esquimaux, only +they probably had more trouble keeping cool than +the chaps up at the north pole do.”</p> + +<p>Now that they were down among the mound +houses, they saw that the dwellings were much +larger than they had supposed. They towered +high above the boys’ heads, and some of them were +large enough in area to have accommodated a company +of soldiers.</p> + +<p>“Say, the chaps who lived in these must have +been some pumpkins,” said Jack. “Why the ceilings +are about fifteen feet high, and the doors almost +the same! Talk about giants! I guess we’ve +struck where they used to hang out, at any rate.”</p> + +<p>The houses were a curious mixture of clay and +soft stone. There were doors, with big skins +from animals as curtains, and the windows were +devoid of glass. Instead of stairs there were rude +ladders, and the furniture in the mound houses +was of the roughest kind.</p> + +<p>There were fire-places in some of the houses, +and the blackened and smoked walls showed that +they must have been used. In one or two of the +houses clay dishes, most of them broken, were +scattered about, and the size of them, in keeping +with everything else, indicated that those who +used them were of no small stature.</p> + +<p>“Some of the bowls would do for bath tubs,” +said Jack, as he came across one or two large +ones.</p> + +<p>By this time the professor, Bill and Tom had +joined the boys, and the five went on with the +exploring tour, while Washington and Andy remained +in the ship to get breakfast.</p> + +<p>“The inhabitants are evidently of a half-civilized +race,” the professor said. “Their houses, +and the manner in which they live, show them to +be allied to the Aztecs, though of course they are +much larger than that race.”</p> + +<p>“What’s bothering me,” Bill said, “is not so +much what race they belong to, as what chance +we’d stand in a race with them if they took it into +their heads to chase after us. I’ve read that them +there Azhandled races——”</p> + +<p>“You mean the Aztecs,” interrupted the professor.</p> + +<p>“Well the Aztecs, then. But I’ve read they +used to place their enemies on a stone altar and +cut their hearts out. Now I’m not hankerin’ after +anything like that.”</p> + +<p>“Don’t be foolish,” spoke Mr. Henderson. +“Wait until you meet some of the giants, if that +is what they are, and then you can decide what to +do.”</p> + +<p>“It may be too late then,” remarked Bill in +a low tone, and the boys were somewhat inclined +to agree with him.</p> + +<p>However, there seemed to be no immediate danger, +as there was no sign of any of the big people +about the village. The adventurers walked about +for some time, but made no discoveries that would +throw any light on the reason for the place being +left uninhabited. It seemed as if there had been +a sudden departure from the place, for in a number +of the houses the remains of half-cooked meals +were seen.</p> + +<p>“Well, I think we have noted enough for the +time being,” the professor remarked, after they +had traversed almost half the length of what +seemed to be the principal street. “Let’s go back +to the ship and have something to eat. Washington +may have become alarmed at our absence.”</p> + +<p>They made a circle in order to take in another +part of the town on their way back. While passing +through a sort of alley, though it was only +narrow by comparison with the other thoroughfares +that were very wide, Mark came to a place +where there was a circular slab of stone, resting +on the ground. In the centre was a big iron ring.</p> + +<p>“Hello! Here’s something new!” he exclaimed. +“Maybe it leads to a secret passage, or covers +some hidden treasure.”</p> + +<p>“I guess it will have to continue to cover it +then,” Jack spoke. “That probably weighs several +tons. None of us could move it.”</p> + +<p>They made their way back to the ship, where +they found Washington and Andy discussing the +advisability of going off in search of them.</p> + +<p>“Breakfast is mighty near spoiled,” said the +colored man with an injured air.</p> + +<p>But the travelers did full justice to the meal, +notwithstanding this. Deciding there was nothing +to be gained by staying in that vicinity, the professor +started the ship off again.</p> + +<p>They traveled several hundred miles in the air, +and, as the afternoon was coming to a close, Jack, +who was in charge of the conning tower, spied, +just ahead of them, another village.</p> + +<p>“We will descend there for the night,” the professor +said. “Does there seem to be any sign of +life about?”</p> + +<p>“None,” replied Mark, who was observing +through a telescope the town they were approaching. +“It’s as dead as the other one.”</p> + +<p>The airship settled down in a field back of +some of the mound houses.</p> + +<p>“Now for supper!” cried Jack. “I’m as +hungry as——”</p> + +<p>He stopped short, for, seeming to rise from the +very ground, all about the ship, there appeared a +throng of men. And such men as they were! +For not one was less than ten feet tall, and some +were nearly fifteen!</p> + +<p>“The giants have us!” cried Bill, as he saw the +horde of creatures surrounding the ship.</p> + +<h2 id='ch25' class='c008'>CHAPTER XXV<br /><br />HELD BY THE ENEMY</h2> + +<p class='c009'>“Keep the doors closed!” cried the professor. +“It is our only hope! I will send the ship up +again!”</p> + +<p>But it was too late. Washington, who had +obeyed the signal from the conning tower to shut +off the engines, had disconnected most of them +so they could not be started again save from the +main room. At the same time there came a yell +of dismay from the colored man, who had slid +back the steel covering of the main side entrance +to the <em>Mermaid</em>.</p> + +<p>“I’m caught!” cried Washington.</p> + +<p>As the professor and the boys hurried from the +tower, they could hear a struggle from where +Washington was, and his voice calling:</p> + +<p>“Let me go! Let me go!”</p> + +<p>Reaching the engine room, which opened directly +on the side entrance, the professor saw a pair of +enormous hands and arms dragging poor Washington, +feet first, out of the ship. Bill and Tom were +crouched in one corner, pale with fright.</p> + +<p>“Wait until I get my gun!” cried Andy, as he +ran for his rifle.</p> + +<p>“Hold on!” called the professor in a loud voice. +“It will be folly to shoot them! We must try +strategy!”</p> + +<p>Washington’s cries ceased as he was drawn entirely +from the ship, the giant hands disappearing +at the same time.</p> + +<p>“Follow me!” yelled Mr. Henderson, running +out of the door.</p> + +<p>Hardly knowing what they did, the boys went +after him, and their hearts almost stopped beating +in fright as they saw the terrible things, which, in +the glare of the changing lights, were on every +side of them.</p> + +<p>For the men were very repulsive looking. They +were attired in clothes, very similar in cut to those +worn by the travelers, and which seemed to be made +of some sort of cloth. But they were loose and +baggy and only added to the queer appearance of +the giants. Veritable giants they were too. +Their faces seemed as large as kegs, and they were +so clumsy in shape that Mark, even, frightened as +he was, exclaimed:</p> + +<p>“They look like men made of putty!” At the +same time he saw they bore a resemblance to the +creature he had observed on the hill top.</p> + +<p>“What shall we do?” asked Andy of the +professor. “They are really carrying Washington +away!”</p> + +<p>Three of the giants were dragging the colored +man along the ground, while the other terrible beings +stood about as if waiting to see the outcome +of the first sally.</p> + +<p>“I will try to speak to them,” Mr. Henderson +said. “I know several languages. They may +understand one.”</p> + +<p>But before he could start on his parley a surprising +thing happened. There was a struggle in +the little group about Washington. The colored +man seemed to be fighting, though the odds, it +would appear, were too great to enable him to accomplish +anything. But, making a desperate effort +to escape, Washington quickly wrenched himself +free from the giants’ hands and then, striking +out with his fists, knocked the three down, one after +another.</p> + +<p>“I never knew Washington was so strong!” exclaimed +Jack.</p> + +<p>“Nor I,” put in Mark. “Why I should think +the men could carry him in one arm as if he was +a baby.”</p> + +<p>The three giants rose slowly to their feet. +They uttered strange cries, and motioned with their +hands toward the professor, the boys, and the +others in the crowd.</p> + +<p>“Look out! They’re goin’ t’ grab yo’!” cried +Washington.</p> + +<p>Three of the giants approached Mark, and a +like number closed in on Jack.</p> + +<p>“Back to the ship!” cried the professor. “We +must defend ourselves!”</p> + +<p>But by this time the big men had grabbed the +two boys. Then a strange thing took place. Mark +and Jack, though they felt that the giants must +overcome them in a test of strength, struggled with +all their might against being captured. They +fought, as a cornered rat will fight, though it knows +the odds to be overwhelming. But in this case the +unexpected happened.</p> + +<p>Both boys found they could easily break the +holds of the giants, and Mark, by a vigorous effort, +pushed the three men away from him, one at +a time violently so that they fell in a heap, one on +top of the other.</p> + +<p>“Hurrah! We can fight ’em!” cried Mark. +“Don’t be afraid. They’re like mush! They’re +putty men!”</p> + +<p>And, so it seemed, the giants were. Though +big in size they were flabby and had nothing like +the muscle they should have had in proportion to +their build. They went down like meal sacks and +were slow to rise.</p> + +<div class='c000'> +<a href='images/illus-193f.jpg'><img src='images/illus-193.jpg' alt='' class='c014' /></a> +<p class='c015'>THE BIG MEN HAD GATHERED IN A COMPACT MASS</p> +</div> + +<p>Jack, seeing how successful his comrade was, +attacked the three giants who were striving to make +him a captive. He succeeded in disposing of +them, knocking one down so hard that the man +was unable to rise until his companions helped him.</p> + +<p>“That’s the way!” cried Washington. +“They’re soft as snow men!”</p> + +<p>The vanquished giants set up a sort of roar, +which was answered by their fellows, and soon +there was a terrible din.</p> + +<p>“All get together!” called the professor. +“They are evidently going to make a rush for us. +If we stand by one another we may fight them off, +though they outnumber us a hundred to one. Besides +it will soon be dark, and we may be able to +escape!”</p> + +<p>Washington, Jack and Mark retreated toward +the ship, in the direction of which the others had +also made their way. The big men had gathered in +a compact mass and were advancing on the adventurers.</p> + +<p>“What do you suppose makes them so soft?” +asked Mark. “I believe I could manage half a dozen.”</p> + +<p>“It must be the effect of the climate and conditions +here,” the professor replied. “Probably +they have to be big to stand the pressure of the +thick water, and the increased attraction of gravitation. +Then too, being without the weight of the +atmosphere to which we are accustomed, they have +probably expanded. If they were to go up to +earth, they might shrink to our size.”</p> + +<p>“Do you think that possible?”</p> + +<p>“Of course. Why do you ask?”</p> + +<p>“Nothing in particular,” replied Mark. But +to himself, he added: “That would explain it +all.”</p> + +<p>It was getting dusk now. The travelers had +reached their ship, and rushed inside and tried to +close the doors in the face of the advancing horde. +But, by this time the giants were so close that one +or two of them thrust their big feet in, and prevented +this movement. At the same time they set +up a great howling.</p> + +<p>“Quick!” cried the professor. “We must +start the ship and get away!”</p> + +<p>“I can’t close the door!” yelled Washington, +who had been the last to enter.</p> + +<p>“Never mind that! <em>Go</em> up with it open! +Drag them along if they won’t let go!” answered +Mr. Henderson, as he ran toward the engine room.</p> + +<p>There was a sudden rush among the giants, and +a sound as if something was being thrown over the +top and ends of the ship. Mark turned the gas +machine on, while Jack worked the negative gravity +apparatus. They waited for the ship to rise.</p> + +<p>“Why don’t we go up?” asked the professor.</p> + +<p>“'Cause they’ve caught us!” called out Washington.</p> + +<p>“Caught us? How?”</p> + +<p>“They’ve thrown ropes over the top and ends +of the ship, and fastened them to their big +houses!”</p> + +<p>Running to a side window the professor saw +that the <em>Mermaid</em> was fastened down by a score +of cables, each one six inches thick. They were +held captives by the enemy.</p> + +<h2 id='ch26' class='c008'>CHAPTER XXVII<br /><br />A FRIEND INDEED</h2> + +<p class='c009'>Though the giants, man for man, were no +match for the travelers, collectively the horde +proved too much. They had swarmed about the +ship, and, by passing the big cables over her, effectively +held her down.</p> + +<p>“Let me get out and I’ll cut ’em!” cried Andy. +“We must get away from these savages!”</p> + +<p>“No, no, don’t go out!” exclaimed the professor. +“They would eventually kill you, though +you might fight them off for a time. We must +wait and see what develops. They can have no +object in harming us, as we have not injured +them.”</p> + +<p>“I’d rather fight ’em,” insisted the old hunter.</p> + +<p>But the professor had his way and Andy was +forced to obey. The giants had withdrawn their +big feet from the side door and Washington had +closed it. But nothing else had been accomplished, +and the ship could not rise. The gas and negative +gravity machines were stopped, as they were +only under a useless strain.</p> + +<p>Suddenly, the colored lights which had been +growing dimmer and dimmer, with the approach +of night, went out altogether. Almost as suddenly, +Mark, who was watching the giants from +the conning tower, as they made fast the loose ends +of the cables, saw them make a dash for the mound +houses.</p> + +<p>“They’re afraid of the dark!” he cried. +“Come on! We can go out now and loosen the +ropes!“</p> + +<p>He hurried to tell the professor what he had +noticed.</p> + +<p>“Good!” exclaimed Mr. Henderson. “Perhaps +we can escape now!”</p> + +<p>They waited a few minutes, listening to the +sound of many big feet running away from the +ship, and then, Bill cautiously opened the side door. +The others were behind him, waiting, with knives +and hatchets in their hands, to rush out and cut the +restraining cables.</p> + +<p>“All ready!” called Bill. “There doesn’t +seem to be a one in sight!”</p> + +<p>He stepped out but no sooner had he set foot +on the ground than there came a thud, and Bill +went down as if some one had knocked his feet +from under him.</p> + +<p>“Go back! Go back!” he cried. “They hit +me with something. I’m being smothered!”</p> + +<p>“Bring a light!” cried the professor, for the +sally had been started in the dark.</p> + +<p>Jack brought the portable electric it having been +repaired and flashed it out of the door. In the +gleam of it, Bill was seen lying prostrate, half covered +by an orange, about half as big as himself. +The fruit was as soft and mushy as some of the +giants themselves, or Bill would not have fared so +easily.</p> + +<p>Then, as the others stood watching, and while +Bill arose and wiped some of the juice from his +face, there came a regular shower of the monstrous +oranges.</p> + +<p>“Get inside quick! We’ll be smothered under +them!” Mr. Henderson cried.</p> + +<p>Pausing only to rescue Bill, the adventurers retreated +inside the ship, and made fast the door. +Outside they could hear the thud as the oranges +were thrown, some hitting the <em>Flying Mermaid</em> and +many dropping all about her.</p> + +<p>“I guess they are going to have things their +own way,” observed Bill, as he gazed down on +his clothes, which were covered with juice from the +fruit.</p> + +<p>The night was one of anxiety. The travelers +took turns standing guard, but nothing more occurred. +The giants remained in their houses, and +the heavy ropes still held the ship fast.</p> + +<p>“We must hold a council of war,” the professor +decided as they gathered at breakfast, which +was far from a cheerful meal.</p> + +<p>With the return of the colored lights the giants +again made their appearance. They came swarming +from the mound houses, and a great crowd +they proved to be. Several thousand at least, Jack +estimated, and when he went up into the conning +tower and took a survey he could see the strange +and terrible creatures pouring in from the surrounding +country.</p> + +<p>“I’m afraid there will be trouble,” he said, +as he came down and reported what he had +seen.</p> + +<p>“We must hold a council of war,” repeated +the professor. “Has any one anything to suggest?”</p> + +<p>“Get a lot of powder and blow ’em up!” cried +Andy.</p> + +<p>“Arrange electric wires and shock ’em to +death!” was Bill’s plan.</p> + +<p>“Can’t we slip the ropes in some way and escape?” asked Jack. +“I don’t believe we can successfully +fight the giants. They are too many, +even if they are weak, individually.”</p> + +<p>“I think you’re right there,” Mr. Henderson +said. “We must try some sort of strategy, but +what? That is the question.”</p> + +<p>For a few minutes no one spoke. They were +all thinking deeply, for their lives might hang in +the balance.</p> + +<p>“I think I have a plan,” said Mark, at length. +“Did we bring any diving suits with us?”</p> + +<p>“There may be one or two,” the professor replied. +“But what good will they do?”</p> + +<p>“Two of us could put them on,” continued +Mark, “and, as they afford good protection from +any missiles like fruit, we could crawl out on the +deck of the ship. From there, armed with +hatchets or knives we could cut the ropes. Then +the ship could rise.”</p> + +<p>“That’s a good plan!” cried the scientist. +“We’ll try it at once!”</p> + +<p>Search revealed that two diving suits were among +the stores of the <em>Mermaid</em>. Jack and Mark +wanted to be the ones to don them, but as the suits +were rather large, and as the professor thought +it would take more strength than the boys had +to do the work, it was decided that Andy and +Washington should make the attempt to cut the +ropes.</p> + +<p>The hunter and colored man lost little time in +getting into the modern armor. In the meanwhile +Jack, who had been posted as a lookout, reported +that there seemed to be some activity among +the giants. They were running here and there, +and some seemed to be going off toward the woods, +that were not far away.</p> + +<p>“Now work quickly,” urged the professor. +“We will be on the watch, and as soon as the last +rope is cut we will start the machinery and send the +ship up. We will not wait for you to come back +inside, so hold fast as best you can when the <em>Mermaid</em> +rises.”</p> + +<p>“We will,” answered Andy, just before the big +copper helmet was fastened on his head, and Washington +nodded to show he understood.</p> + +<p>The two who were to attempt the rescue of their +comrades were soon on deck. In the conning +tower Jack and the professor kept anxious watch, +while Mark, Bill and Tom were at the various +machines, ready, at the signal, to start the engines.</p> + +<p>The giants had now become so interested in +whatever plan they had afoot, that they paid little +attention to the ship. Consequently Washington +and Andy, crawling along the deck in their diving +suits, did not, at first attract any attention.</p> + +<p>In fact they had cut several of the big ropes, and +it began to look as if the plan would succeed, particularly +as they were partly hidden from view by +the upper gas holder. They were working with +feverish haste, sawing away at the big cables with +keen knives.</p> + +<p>“I guess we’ll beat ’em yet!” cried Jack.</p> + +<p>“I hope so,” replied the professor. “It +looks——”</p> + +<p>He stopped short, for at that moment a cry arose +from the midst of the giants, and one of them +pointed toward the ship. An instant later the air +was darkened with a flight of big oranges, which +the queer creatures seemed to favor as missiles. +Probably they found stones too heavy.</p> + +<p>“Well, those things can’t hurt ’em much with +those heavy suits on,” observed Mr. Henderson. +“There, Washington got one right on the head +that time, and it didn’t bother him a bit.”</p> + +<p>Jack had seen the fruit strike the big copper +helmet and observed that the colored man only +moved his head slightly in order to get rid of the +orange.</p> + +<p>In fact the giants, seeing for themselves that +this mode of warfare was not going to answer, +since the two men on the ship continued to cut the +restraining cables, gave it up. There was a good +deal of shouting among them, and a number ran +here and there, seemingly gathering up long poles.</p> + +<p>“I wonder if they are going to try the flailing +method, and beat poor Andy and Washington,” +said Mr. Henderson. “It looks so.”</p> + +<p>The two rescuers were now about a quarter +through their hard task. The throwing of the +oranges had ceased. But the giants were up to a new +trick. They divided into two sections, one taking +up a position on one side of the ship, and the other +on the opposite. There were about two hundred +in each crowd, while the others in the horde drew +some distance back.</p> + +<p>“They’re up to some queer dodge,” observed +Jack. “What are they placing those sticks to +their mouths for?”</p> + +<p>The professor observed the throng curiously for +a few seconds. Then he exclaimed:</p> + +<p>“They are using blow-guns! They are going +to shoot arrows at Washington and Andy! We +must get them in at once!”</p> + +<p>He darted toward a door that opened from the +conning tower out on the deck.</p> + +<p>“Don’t go!” cried Jack. “It’s too late! +They are beginning to blow!”</p> + +<p>He pointed to the throng of giants. The professor +could see their cheeks puffed out as the big +creatures filled their lungs with air and prepared +to expel it through the hollow tubes.</p> + +<p>Then there came a sound as if a great wind was +blowing. It howled and roared over the ship, not +unlike a hurricane in its fury. But there was no +flight of arrows through the air, such as would +have come from regular blow guns.</p> + +<p>“That is strange,” said the professor. He +thought for a moment. “I have it!” he cried, +“They are trying to blow Washington and Andy +off the ship by the power of their breaths! They +are not blowing arrows at them! My, but they, +must have strong lungs!”</p> + +<p>And, in truth, that was the plan of the giants. +The hollow tubes, made from some sort of big +weed, sent a blast of air at the two men on the +ship’s deck, that made them lie flat and cling with +both hands to avoid being sent flying into the midst +of the giants, on one side or the other. But the +giants had reckoned without the weight of the +diving suits, and it was those, with the big lead +soles of the shoes, that helped to hold Washington +and Andy in place.</p> + +<p>“Come back! Come back!” cried the professor, +opening the conning tower door and calling to +the two brave men. “Come back, both of you! +Do you hear?”</p> + +<p>As the portal slid back the rush of air was almost +like that of a cyclone. Then it suddenly +ceased, as the giants saw their plan was not likely +to succeed.</p> + +<p>But now there arose from the outer circle of the +horde a shout of triumph. It was caused by the +return of those who had, a little while before, hurried +off to the woods. They came back bearing +big trees, tall and slender, stripped of their +branches, so that they resembled flag staffs. It +took a dozen giants to carry each one.</p> + +<p>The whole throng was soon busy laying the poles +in a row in front of the ship.</p> + +<p>“What can they be up to now?” asked Jack.</p> + +<p>“It looks as if they were going to slide the ship +along on rollers,” the professor replied.</p> + +<p>Sure enough this was the giant’s plan. A few +minutes later those in the <em>Mermaid</em> felt her moving +forward, as the giants, massed behind, shoved. +On to the poles she slid. The ropes were loosened +to permit this, but not enough to enable the boat +to rise.</p> + +<p>Then the travelers felt the ship being lifted up.</p> + +<p>“They are going to carry us away, with the +poles for a big stretcher!” cried the professor.</p> + +<p>Looking from the side windows the boys saw +that a great crowd of the big men were on either +side of the <em>Mermaid</em>, each giant grasping a pole, +and lifting. Farther out were others, holding the +ends of the cables which Washington and Andy +had not succeeded in cutting.</p> + +<p>The ship was being carried along by a thousand +or more giants, as the ancient warriors, slain in +battle, were carried home on the spears of their +comrades.</p> + +<p>“This is the end of the <em>Mermaid</em>!” murmured +Mr. Henderson in sorrowful tones.</p> + +<p>As they looked from the conning tower the professor +and the two boys observed a commotion +among the leaders of the giants. They seemed +to be wavering. Suddenly the forward part of +the ship sank, as those ahead laid their poles down +on the ground. Then those behind did the same, +and the <em>Mermaid</em>, came to a stop, and once more +rested on the earth.</p> + +<p>“What does this mean?” asked the scientist in +wonder.</p> + +<p>All at once the entire crowd of giants threw +themselves down on their faces, and there, standing +at the bow of the ship, was a giant, half again as +large as any of the others. He was clad in a complete +suit of golden armor on which the changing +lights played with beautiful effect, and in his hand +he held an immense golden sword. He pointed +the weapon at the ship as if he had raised it in protection, +and his hand was stretched in commanding +gesture over the prostrate giants.</p> + +<p>“Perhaps he has come to save us!” cried Mark.</p> + +<h2 id='ch27' class='c008'>CHAPTER XXVII<br /><br />A GREAT JOURNEY</h2> + +<p class='c009'>Such indeed, seemed to be the case. The +golden-armored giant, after standing for a few moments +in an attitude of command, waved his sword +three times about his head, and uttered a command, +in a voice that sounded like thunder. Then the +prostrate ones arose, and, making low bows hurried +away in all directions.</p> + +<p>Watching them disappear, the golden one +sheathed his weapon and approached the ship. +He caught sight of the professor and the two boys +in the conning tower, for Mark had gone there +when he found the ship being transported, and +held up his two hands, the palms outward.</p> + +<p>“It is the sign of peace in the language all natives +employ,” said the professor. “I think I +shall trust him.”</p> + +<p>Followed by the boys he descended from the +little platform in the tower, and to the door that +opened on the deck.</p> + +<p>“Shall we go out?” he asked.</p> + +<p>“We can’t be much worse off,” replied Mark. +“Let’s chance it.”</p> + +<p>So, not without many misgivings, they slid back +the portal and stepped out to face the strange and +terrible being who had so suddenly come to their +rescue.</p> + +<p>The giant in the golden armor did not seem +surprised to see them. In fact he acted as though +he rather expected them. He continued to hold +up one hand, with the palm, outward, while, with +the other, he removed his helmet and bowed low. +Then he cast his sword on the ground and advanced +toward the ship. When within ten feet he +sat down on the ground, and this brought his head +nearer the earth, so that his auditors could both +see and hear him to better advantage.</p> + +<p>As soon as the giant saw the travelers were outside +their ship he began to speak to them in a voice, +which, though he might have meant it to be low +and gentle, was like the bellowing of a bull. At +the same time he made many gestures, pointing to +the ship, to himself and to Mark.</p> + +<p>“What is he saying, professor?” asked Jack.</p> + +<p>“I can’t understand all he says,” Mr. Henderson +replied. “He uses some words derived from +the Latin and some from the Greek. But by +piecing it out here and there, and by interpreting +his motions I am able to get at something.”</p> + +<p>“And what is it all about?”</p> + +<p>“It is a strange story,” the scientist replied. +“He has only gone about half way through it. +Wait until he finishes and I will tell you.”</p> + +<p>The golden-armored giant, who had stopped in +his narrative while Jack was speaking, resumed. +His gestures became more rapid, and his words +came faster. Several times Mr. Henderson held +up his hand for him to cease, while he puzzled out +what was meant.</p> + +<p>At one point, the professor seemed much startled, +and motioned for the strange being to repeat +the last part of his discourse. When this had been +done Mr. Henderson shook his head as though in +doubt.</p> + +<p>At length the story was finished, and the lone +giant, for there were no others in sight now, folded +his arms and seemed to await what the professor’s +answer might be. Mr. Henderson turned to the +boys, and to the others of the <em>Mermaid’s</em> company, +who, by this time, had joined him, and said:</p> + +<p>“Friends, I have just listened to a strange story. +It is so strange that, but for the fact that our own +adventures are verging on the marvelous, I could +hardly believe it. In the first place, this man here +is the king of this country. That is why all the +other natives obeyed him.</p> + +<p>“In the second place it seems he has been a +passenger in our boat, and came here from the +earth’s surface with us!”</p> + +<p>“What’s that?” cried Jack.</p> + +<p>“That explains the strange happenings!” ejaculated +Mark. “No wonder I could never solve +the secret of the storeroom.”</p> + +<p>“You are right, it does,” replied Mr. Henderson. +“I will not go into all the details of how +it happened, but it seems the big hole through +which we came is only one of two entrances to this +inner world. Rather it is the entrance, and there +is another, close to it, which is the exit. Through +the latter a big stream of water spouts up, just as +one pours down through the opening we used.</p> + +<p>“Hankos, which is the name of the king, was +for many years a student of science. He longed +to see where the big stream of upward spurting +water went, and wanted to know whence came the +down-pouring one. So he undertook a daring experiment.</p> + +<p>“He constructed a great cylinder, and, keeping +his plans a secret, conveyed it to the spouting +water, entered it, and, by means of pulleys and +levers, after he had shut himself inside, cast himself +into the up-shooting column. He took along compressed +air cylinders to supply an atmosphere he +could breathe, and some food to eat, for it appears +our giant friends are something of inventors in +their way. The current of water bore him to the +surface of the earth, and he was cast up on the +ocean, in what was probably taken for a waterspout +if any one saw it.</p> + +<p>“Then a strange thing happened. No sooner +did Hankos open his cylinder, which served him +as a boat, than he lost his gigantic size, owing to +the difference of the two atmospheres. He became +almost of the same size as ourselves, except +that his skin hung in great folds on him, and he +seemed like a wrinkled old man. His clothes +too, were a world too large.</p> + +<p>“He had a terrible time before he reached shore, +and a hard one after it, for his strange appearance +turned almost every one against him. He was +sorry he had ventured to solve the mystery of the +up-shooting stream of water, for he was worse than +an outcast.</p> + +<p>“Then he began to plan to get back to his own +inner world. But he could not find the downward +stream, and, not knowing the language of the countries +where he landed, he had no means of ascertaining. +He traveled from place to place, always +seeking for something that would lead him back to +his own country.</p> + +<p>“Finally he heard of us, and of our ship, though +how I do not know, as I thought I had kept it a +great secret. By almost superhuman struggles he +made his way to our island. He says he concealed +himself aboard the <em>Mermaid</em> the night before +we sailed, but I hardly believe it possible. It +seems——”</p> + +<p>“He did it, for I saw him!” interrupted Mark.</p> + +<p>“You saw him!” cried Mr. Henderson.</p> + +<p>Then Mark told of the many things that had +puzzled him so, how he had seen the queer figure +slinking aboard the boat, of the disappearance of +food from time to time, and of the strange noises +in the storeroom.</p> + +<p>“That bears out what he told me,” the professor +said. “Hankos says he used to steal out nights +and take what food he could get, and he also mentions +some one, answering to Mark’s description, +who nearly discovered him once as he hurried back +into the apartment.</p> + +<p>“However, it seems to be true, since Mark +confirms it. At any rate Hankos stayed in hiding, +and made the entire trip with us, and, just as we +all became overcome with the strange gas he escaped, +having begun to expand to his original +giant size, and being unable to remain any longer +in his cramped quarters.”</p> + +<p>“That’s so, he did!” cried Mark. “I saw +him come out of the place just before I lost my +senses. It was a terrible sight, and none of you +would believe me when I told you some of the occurrences +afterward.”</p> + +<p>“You must forgive us for that,” the professor +said. “We have learned much since then.”</p> + +<p>“What did Hankos do after he left the ship +when it landed in this country?” asked Jack.</p> + +<p>“He traveled until he came to this village, +which is the chief one of this country,” replied +the professor. “Part of the time he followed +us at a distance, being able to travel very fast.”</p> + +<p>Mark remembered the strange figure of a giant +he had seen on the hill tops several times, and knew +that he had been observing the being who had +played such a queer part in their lives.</p> + +<p>“When he came back among his own people,” +went on Mr. Henderson, “they would not receive +him at first, believing him to be an impostor. But +Hankos convinced them of his identity and was allowed +to don the golden armor, which is the badge +of kingship. He had only been in office for a +little while when he heard of the arrival of the +strange thing, which turned out to be our ship. +He recognized it from the description, and, learning +that we were likely to be sacrificed to the fury +and ignorance of the giants, he hurried here and +saved our lives.</p> + +<p>“He says he can never thank us enough for +being the means whereby he was able to get back +to his own country, and says the freedom of this +whole inner world is ours. He has given orders +that we are to go wherever we like, and none will +molest us. He tells me the land is a wonderful +one, compared to our own, and urges us to make a +long journey. He would like to go with us, only, +now that he has resumed his natural size, he can +not get inside the ship.”</p> + +<p>“Hurrah for King Hankos!” cried Jack and +the others joined him in a hearty cheer.</p> + +<p>The giant in the golden armor evidently understood +the compliment which was paid him, for he +waved his helmet in the air and responded with +a shout of welcome that made the ground +tremble.</p> + +<p>Hankos waited until the professor had translated +all of the story to the other travelers. Then +the genial giant began to talk some more, and the +professor listened intently.</p> + +<p>“He says,” spoke Mr. Henderson to his friends, +“that we will be supplied with all the fruit we +want, and with the best of the houses to sleep in +on our journey. He also tells me he has great +stores of shining stones and piles of the metal of +which his armor is made, and that we are welcome +to as much as we want. If this means unlimited +gold and diamonds, we may make our fortunes.”</p> + +<p>“Jest let me git ma’ hand on a few sparklers an’ +I’ll quit work!” exclaimed Washington.</p> + +<p>“I have told him,” the scientist went on, “that +we will take advantage of his kind offer. We +will start on our trip in a day or so, after we have +looked over the ship to see if it is not damaged. +He tells me the gold and sparkling stones are several +thousand miles away, on top of a high mountain. +We will make that our objective point.”</p> + +<p>The interview between the king and Mr. Henderson +having ended, the former waved his sword +in the air and the swarm of big men came back. +They had been hiding back in the woods. Now +their manner was very different. They carefully, +removed the rollers and ropes, and soon there was +brought to the adventurers an immense pile of fine +fruits. If our friends had stayed there a year they +could not have eaten it all. The giants were judging +the appetites of the travelers by their own.</p> + +<p>That night the adventurers slept more soundly +than they had since entering the strange world. +They felt they had nothing to fear from the giants. +In the morning they were not molested, though +big crowds gathered to look at the ship. But they +kept back a good distance. The machinery was +found to be in good shape, save for a few repairs, +and when these were made, the professor announced +he would start on a long journey.</p> + +<p>For several weeks after that the travelers swung +about in their ship, sometimes sailing in the air and +again on big seas and lakes viewing the wonders +of the inner world. They were many and varied, +and the professor collected enough material for a +score of books which he said he would write when +he got back to the outer world once more.</p> + +<p>One afternoon, as they were sailing over a vast +stretch of woodland, which did not seem to be inhabited, +Mr. Henderson, looking at one of the +gages on the wall, asked:</p> + +<p>“Boys do you know how far you have traveled +underground?”</p> + +<p>“How far?” asked Jack, who hated to guess +riddles.</p> + +<p>“More than four thousand miles,” was the answer.</p> + +<p>“But we haven’t come to that mountain of gold +and diamonds,” said Mark. “I am anxious to +see that.”</p> + +<p>“Have patience,” replied the professor. “I +have not steered toward it yet. There are other +things to see.”</p> + +<p>Just then Washington’s voice could be heard +calling from the conning tower:</p> + +<p>“We’re coming to a big mountain!”</p> + +<h2 id='ch28' class='c008'>CHAPTER XXVIII<br /><br />THE TEMPLE OF TREASURE</h2> + +<p class='c009'>“What’s that?” fairly yelled the professor.</p> + +<p>“We am propelling ourselves in a contiguous +direction an’ in close proximity to an elevated portion +of th’ earth’s surface which rises in antiguous +proximity t’ th’ forward part of our present means +of locomotion!” said the colored man in a loud +voice.</p> + +<p>“Which means there may be a collision,” the +professor said, as he and the boys hurried toward +the tower.</p> + +<p>“Jest what I said,” retorted Washington. +“What’ll I do?”</p> + +<p>“Send the ship a little higher,” answered Mr. +Henderson. “We mustn’t hit any mountains.”</p> + +<p>Washington forced more gas into the holder, +and speeded the negative gravity machine up some, +so that the <em>Mermaid</em>, which was flying rather low, +ascended until it was in no danger of colliding +with the peak which reared its lofty height just +ahead of them.</p> + +<p>As the ship sailed slowly over the mountain, +Mark gazed down and exclaimed:</p> + +<p>“Doesn’t that look like the ruins of some building?”</p> + +<p>The professor took a pair of field glasses from +a rack in the wall and took a long view.</p> + +<p>“It must be the place,” he said in a low voice.</p> + +<p>“What place?” asked Jack.</p> + +<p>“The temple of treasure,” was the answer. +“Hankos told me it was on top of the highest +mountain in the land, and this must be it, for it is +the loftiest place we have seen. But we must be +careful, for there is danger down there.”</p> + +<p>“What kind?” asked Mark.</p> + +<p>“The place was long ago deserted by the +giants,” Mr. Henderson went on. “Ages ago it +was one of their storehouses for treasure, but there +were wars among themselves, Hankos said, and +this part of the country was laid waste. Savage +beasts took up their abode in the temple, and since +then, in spite of the great size of the giants, they +have not dared to venture here. If we brave the +animals we may have all the gold and diamonds +we can take away.”</p> + +<p>“Then for one, I’m willin’ t’ go down an’ begin +th’ extermination at once,” put in Andy. “I’ve +always wanted t’ be rich.”</p> + +<p>“We must proceed cautiously,” the professor +said. “We are ill prepared to fight any such beasts +as we saw at the big geyser. At the same time they +may have deserted this place. I think we will +lower the ship down over the temple, and spend +several hours in observation. Then, if nothing +develops, we can enter and see if the treasure is +there.”</p> + +<p>This plan was voted a good one, and the <em>Mermaid</em> +after having been steered directly over the +ruined temple, was brought to a halt, and enough +gas let out so that it fell to about fifty feet in the +air above it.</p> + +<p>The adventurers began their watch. The afternoon +waned and there were no signs of any beasts +in or about the temple.</p> + +<p>“I reckon we can take a chance,” said Andy, +who was anxious to get his hands on some diamonds.</p> + +<p>“Better wait until morning,” counseled Mr. +Henderson. “It will soon be dark, and it doesn’t +look like a nice place to go stumbling about in by +moonlight.”</p> + +<p>So, though all but the scientist were anxious, +they had to wait until the night had passed. Several +times Washington got up to see if the temple +had, by any chance, taken wings during the long +hours of darkness, but each time he found it was +still in place.</p> + +<p>“Seems laik it’ll never come mornin’,” he said.</p> + +<p>But dawn came at length, and, after a hasty +breakfast, preparations to enter the temple were +made. Andy loaded his gun for “bear” as he +expressed it, and the boys each took a revolver.</p> + +<p>The ship was lowered to as level a place as could +be found, and then, seeing that everything was in +readiness for a quick departure, the professor led +the way out of the <em>Mermaid</em>.</p> + +<p>The entrance to the temple was through a big +arched gateway. Some of the stones had fallen +down, and the whole structure looked as if it might +topple over at any moment.</p> + +<p>“Go carefully,” cautioned Mr. Henderson. +“Watch on all sides and up above. Better let +Andy and me go ahead.”</p> + +<p>The scientist and the old hunter led the way. +Through the arch they went, and emerged into +what must at one time have been a magnificent +courtyard. Before them was the temple proper, +a vast structure, with an opening through which +fifty men might have marched abreast. But the +doors were gone, and the portal was but a black +hole.</p> + +<p>“I hope there ain’t any ghosts in there,” said +Washington, with a shiver.</p> + +<p>“Nonsense!” exclaimed the professor. “There +may be things as bad, but there are no such things +as ghosts. Have your gun ready, Andy.”</p> + +<p>With every sense on the alert, the old hunter +advanced. Every one was a bit nervous, and, as +Mark and Jack afterward admitted, they half expected +some terrible beast to rush out at them. +But nothing of the kind happened, and they went +into the interior of the temple.</p> + +<p>At first it was so dark they could see nothing. +There were vast dim shapes on every side, and +from the hollow echo of their footsteps they judged +the roof must be very high and the structure big +in every way.</p> + +<p>Then, as their eyes became used to the darkness, +they could make out, up front, something like an +altar or pulpit.</p> + +<p>“Perhaps that’s where they offered up the gold +and diamonds as a sacrifice to their gods,” spoke +Mark in a whisper.</p> + +<p>“Sacrifice to their gods!” came back a hundred +echoes and the sound made every one shudder.</p> + +<p>“Oh!” said Washington, in a low voice.</p> + +<p>“Oh! Oh! Oh!” repeated the echoes in +voices of thunder.</p> + +<p>“Well, this is pleasant,” spoke Andy, in his natural +tones, and, to the surprise of all there was no +echo. It was only when a person whispered or +spoke low that the sound was heard. After that +they talked naturally.</p> + +<p>“You stay here, and Andy and I will go up +front and see what there is,” said Mr. Henderson. +“Be on your guard, and if you hear us coming +back in a hurry, run!”</p> + +<p>It was with no little feeling of nervousness that +the boys, Bill, Tom and Washington watched the +two men move off in the darkness. They could +hear their footsteps on the stone flags and could +dimly see them.</p> + +<p>“They must be almost to the altar by this +time,” said Mark, after a long pause.</p> + +<p>Hardly had he spoken than there came a loud +sound from where Mr. Henderson and Andy had +gone. It was as if some giant wings were beating +the air. Then came shrill cries and the voice of +the old hunter could be heard calling:</p> + +<p>“Kneel down, Professor! Let me get a shot +at the brute!”</p> + +<p>Those waiting in the rear of the temple huddled +closer together. What terrible beast could have +been aroused?</p> + +<p>The next instant the place seemed illuminated +as if by a lightning flash, and a sound as of a thousand +thunder claps resounded.</p> + +<p>“I think I winged him!” cried Andy’s voice, +and the boys knew he had fired at something.</p> + +<p>Then there came a crash, and from the roof of +the old temple a dozen stones toppled off to one +side, letting in a flood of colored light.</p> + +<p>By this illumination could be seen, flapping +through the big space overhead, an enormous bat, +as large as three eagles. And, as it flew about +in a circle it gave utterance to shrill cries.</p> + +<p>“Bang!” Andy’s gun spoke again, and the +bat with a louder cry than before, darted through +the hole in the roof made by the falling stones, +which had been loosened by the concussion from +the rifle.</p> + +<p>“Come on!” cried the old hunter. “That was +the guardian of the treasure! We are safe now!”</p> + +<p>Then, in the light which streamed through the +broken roof, the adventurers could see, heaped up +on a great altar, behind which sat a horrible graven +image, piles of yellow metal, and sparkling stones. +In little heaps they were, arranged as if offerings +to the terrible god of the giants. There were bars +and rings of gold, dishes of odd shape, and even +weapons. As for the sparkling stones, they were +of many colors, but the white ones were more plentiful +than all the others.</p> + +<p>“Gold and diamonds! Diamonds and gold!” +murmured the professor. “There is the ransom +of many kings in this ancient temple.”</p> + +<p>“Wish I had a big bag!” exclaimed Washington, +as he began filling all his pockets with the +precious metal and gems. “If I had a-thought +I’d have brought a dress-suit case!”</p> + +<p>“A dress-suit case full of diamonds!” exclaimed +Mark.</p> + +<p>Then he too, as did all the others, fell to filling +his pockets with the wealth spread so lavishly before +them. There was the riches of a whole world +in one place and no one but themselves to take it.</p> + +<p>For several minutes no one spoke. The only +sound was the rattle of the stones and the clink of +gold, and when some of the diamonds dropped on +the floor they did not bother to gather them up. +There were too many on the altar.</p> + +<p>“We will be rich for life!” gasped old Andy, +who had been poor all his years.</p> + +<p>“I can’t carry any more!” gasped Washington. +“I’m goin’ back for——”</p> + +<p>What he was going back for he never said, for, +at that instant, happening to look up at the hole in +the roof, he gave a startled cry:</p> + +<p>“Here come the terrible bats!”</p> + +<p>They all gazed upward. Through the opening +they could see a great flock of the awful birds, +headed for the temple, and they were led by one +which seemed to fly with difficulty. It was the +guardian of the treasure that Andy had wounded.</p> + +<p>“Quick! We must get out of here!” shouted +the old hunter. “They are big enough and strong +enough to tear us all to pieces. Hurry!”</p> + +<p>Down the centre of the temple they rushed, and +not a moment too soon, for, ere they had passed +half way to the entrance, the opening in the roof +was darkened by the coming of the bats, and soon +the flapping of their wings awoke the thundering +echoes in the ruined structure, while their shrill cries +struck terror to the hearts of the travelers.</p> + +<p>Up to the altar circled the bats, and then wheeling +they flapped down the dim aisles toward the +adventurers.</p> + +<p>“Hurry! Hurry!” shouted Andy, who was in +the rear.</p> + +<p>He raised his rifle and fired several shots into +the midst of the terrible creatures.</p> + +<p>A number of the bats were wounded, and the +others were so frightened by the sound of the +shots and the flashes of fire that they turned back. +This enabled the fleeing ones to gain the entrance +to the temple, and soon they were outside.</p> + +<p>“To the ship!” yelled Bill.</p> + +<p>“There’s little danger now!” called Andy, +panting, for the run had winded him. “They will +hardly attack us in the light!”</p> + +<p>And he was right, for, though they could hear +the bats flying about inside the temple, and uttering +their cries, none came outside.</p> + +<p>But no one felt like staying near the uncanny +structure, and little time was lost in reaching the +<em>Mermaid</em>. Then the doors were fastened, and +the ship was sent high up into the air.</p> + +<p>“Which way?” asked Jack, when Mr. Henderson +told him to go to the conning tower and steer.</p> + +<p>“Back to where we first met the giants,” replied +the professor. “We must prepare to start +for our own earth again soon.”</p> + +<p>“I’ve almost forgotten how real sunlight looks,” +thought Jack, as he headed the ship around the +other way. As he turned the levers a big diamond +dropped from his pocket and rolled on the floor.</p> + +<p>“This will be a good reminder of our trip +though,” he added.</p> + +<p>The travelers, even including Mr. Henderson, +were so taken up with their suddenly acquired riches +that they hardly thought of meals. At the professor’s +suggestion they tied their gold and stones up +in small packages convenient to carry.</p> + +<p>“Better place them where you can grab them +in a hurry in case of accident,” the old scientist +went on. “Of course if there should be too bad +an accident they would never be of any use to us +down here, but we’ll look on the bright side of +things.”</p> + +<p>“Do you anticipate any accident?” asked Jack +anxiously.</p> + +<p>“No, Oh no,” replied Mr. Henderson, but +Jack thought the aged man had something weighing +on his mind.</p> + +<h2 id='ch29' class='c008'>CHAPTER XXIX<br /><br />BACK HOME—CONCLUSION</h2> + +<p class='c009'>On and on sped the <em>Mermaid</em>. Now that the +travelers felt their journey accomplished they were +anxious to begin the homeward trip. They made +a straight course for the village where they had so +nearly met with disaster, and where the king of +the giants had saved them. They went in a direct +line, and did not travel here and there, as they +had after they left the town. Consequently they +shortened the route by a great distance. Yet it +was long enough, and when they finally came in +sight of the place the dial registered a trip of +five thousand miles underground.</p> + +<p>It was one evening when they landed almost at +the spot whence they had taken flight eventually +to reach the temple of the treasure. Most of the +giants had betaken themselves to their mound +houses, but Hankos was walking in the fields, and, +when he caught sight of the airship hovering +above him he waved his great sword in welcome.</p> + +<p>He rushed up to shake hands with the travelers +when they came out of the ship, though to greet +him it was only possible for the adventurers to +grasp one of his immense fingers.</p> + +<p>As soon as the greetings were over Hankos +began to speak rapidly to the professor, at the same +time going through many strange motions.</p> + +<p>“It is as I feared!” suddenly exclaimed the +scientist.</p> + +<p>“What is the matter?” asked Mark.</p> + +<p>“The worst has happened!” went on Mr. Henderson. +“The great hole by which we came into +this place has been closed by an earthquake shock!”</p> + +<p>“The hole closed?” repeated Jack.</p> + +<p>“An earthquake shock!” murmured Mark.</p> + +<p>“Then how are we going to get back to earth?” +asked old Andy.</p> + +<p>A terrible fear entered the hearts of the travelers. +The closing of the opening by which they +had come to the strange world meant, in all probability +that they would have to spend the rest of +their lives in this underground place.</p> + +<p>“What good did it do us to get all those diamonds +and that gold?” asked Mark in a sorrowful +tone.</p> + +<p>Hankos began to speak again, using his gestures +which were almost as eloquent as words. The +professor watched and listened intently. Then +there seemed to come a more hopeful look to his +face. He nodded vigorously as Hankos went on +with what seemed to be an explanation.</p> + +<p>“It’s worth trying, at all events!” the scientist +exclaimed. “It is our only hope!”</p> + +<p>“What is?” asked Jack.</p> + +<p>“Friends,” began the professor in solemn tones. +“I must admit our plight is desperate. At the +same time there is a bare chance of our getting +back to our own earth. As you remember, Hankos +went from this place to the upper regions through +the upward spouting column of water.”</p> + +<p>“If we had our submarine we might also,” interrupted +Jack. “But the <em>Mermaid</em> isn’t built +to sail in that fashion.”</p> + +<p>“Nor would the <em>Porpoise</em> have served us in this +emergency,” said the professor. “It would prove +too heavy. But, nevertheless, I think I have a +plan. Now, Mark, you are about to learn the +secret of the storeroom. The real one, not the +hiding of Hankos in there, which you imagined +to be the cause of my desire to keep something +hidden. When we planned a trip to this underground +world I had a dim idea that we might +meet with trouble. So I planned and made a +cylinder lifeboat.”</p> + +<p>“A cylinder lifeboat?” repeated Mark.</p> + +<p>“Yes,” replied Mr. Henderson. “I have +it in the storeroom. I did not want any of you +to see it for fear you would have faint hearts. +I thought there might be no necessity of using it. +But, since there is, we must do our best. I will +admit it may be a fearful ordeal, but we will have +to risk something in order to escape.</p> + +<p>“I have in the storeroom a large cylinder, +capable of holding us all. It will also contain +food and drink for a month, but we will all have +to go, packed almost like sardines in a box. My +plan is to take the <em>Mermaid</em> to the place where +the column of water shoots up. There we will +get into the cylinder, close it, and trust ourselves +to the terrible force that may bring us back to +the upper world. What do you say? Shall we +attempt it?”</p> + +<p>For a few seconds no one spoke. Then Jack +said slowly:</p> + +<p>“I don’t see that we can do anything else. I +don’t want to stay here all my life.”</p> + +<p>“I wants a chance t’ wear some of them sparklers,” +put in Washington.</p> + +<p>“Then we will make the attempt,” the professor +added. “Now all aboard for the place where +the water shoots up!”</p> + +<p>Questioning Hankos, the professor learned how +to reach the strange place. It was in the midst of +a desolate country where none of the giants ever +went, so afraid were they of the strange phenomenon.</p> + +<p>It was a week’s journey. Sometimes the <em>Mermaid</em> +flew through the air, and again it sailed on +vast lakes or inland seas. On the trip they met +with big waterfalls and terrible geysers that +spouted a mile or more into the air. They traveled +by night as well as day, though it was necessary +to keep a sharp watch.</p> + +<p>Sometimes the ship passed through great flocks +of birds that surrounded her and sought to pierce +the aluminum hull with their sharp beaks and talons. +Over the mountains and valleys the ship +sailed until, one evening, there sounded through +the air a strange rumbling sound.</p> + +<p>“It is thunder,” said Old Andy.</p> + +<p>“It is the water column,” replied the scientist. +“We are at the end of our trip. May the remainder +be as successful!”</p> + +<p>The ship was lowered to the surface, as it was +deemed best to approach the column when the +lights were shining. No one slept much that +night, for the roaring and rumbling never ceased.</p> + +<p>In the morning the ship was sent forward +slowly. Ever and ever the terrific sound increased, +until it was almost deafening. They had +to call to each other to be heard.</p> + +<p>Then, as the <em>Mermaid</em> passed over a mountain, +the adventurers saw, in a valley below them, the +up-shooting water.</p> + +<p>It was a vast column, nearly three hundred feet +in thickness, and as solid and white as a shaft <em>of</em> +marble. Up, up, up, it went, until it was lost to +sight, but there were no falling drops, and not +even a spray came from the watery shafts.</p> + +<p>“There is a terrible power to it,” the professor +said. “May it prove our salvation!”</p> + +<p>The ship was lowered about a hundred feet +away from the waterspout. All around them the +ground was vibrating with the force of the fluid.</p> + +<p>“To think that connects with the world above!” +exclaimed Jack.</p> + +<p>“It’s a good thing for us that it does,” Mark +answered.</p> + +<p>“We must lose no time,” the professor put in. +“If the earthquake destroyed the downward +shaft, it may effect this one in time. We must +escape while we can.”</p> + +<p>Then, for the first time, he opened the storeroom +and the big cylinder was disclosed to view. +It was made of aluminum, and shaped like an immense +cigar. The hull was double, and it was +strongly braced. Inside were padded berths for +the occupants, and there was just room enough for +the seven adventurers. Once they had entered +they could not move about, but must stay in their +little compartment.</p> + +<p>Compressed air in strong cylinders furnished a +means of breathing, and there were tiny electric +lights operated by a storage battery. There was +also a chamber to be filled with the lifting gas. +The cylinder was so arranged that it would float +on it’s long axis if thrown into the water. A trap +door hermetically sealed gave access to the interior. +A small propellor, worked by compressed air, furnished +motive power.</p> + +<p>The food supply consisted of compressed capsules +on which a man could subsist for several days. +There was also some water, but not much, since +that can not be compressed and would, therefore, +take considerable room.</p> + +<p>“The only thing for us to do,” said the professor, +“is to get into the cylinder, seal it up, and +trust to Providence. This is what I intended to +use when we were caught in the draught.”</p> + +<p>“How can we get into the column of water +after we shut ourselves into the cylinder?” asked +Mark.</p> + +<p>“The cylinder fits into a sort of improvised +cannon,” said Mr. Henderson. “It is fired by +electricity and compressed air. We will aim it +at the column, press the button and be projected +into the midst of the water. Then——” He did +not finish the sentence, but the others knew what +he meant.</p> + +<p>“When are we to start?” asked Mark.</p> + +<p>“As soon as possible,” replied the professor. +“I must arrange the cylinder, compress the air and +lay out the food supply.”</p> + +<p>It took the rest of the day to do this, as the +inventor found it would be advisable to attach a +weight to the end of the cylinder, to hold it upright +in the column of water. The weight could +be detached automatically when they were shot +up into the midst of the ocean, where, as Hankos +had told them, the column spurted forth.</p> + +<p>Then some food was stored in the tiny ship that +was destined to be their last hope, and some tanks +of water were placed in it.</p> + +<p>“I think we are almost ready,” Mr. Henderson +said about noon the next day.</p> + +<p>“What about our gold and diamonds?” asked +Jack suddenly. “Can we take them with us in +the cylinder?”</p> + +<p>“That’s so!” exclaimed Mr. Henderson. “I +forgot about them. I’m afraid we’ll have to leave +the riches behind. We will not be able to carry +them and the food we need, for it may be a week +or more before we can leave the cylinder. Gold +and diamonds will be a poor substitute for something +to eat.”</p> + +<p>“I’m goin’ t’ take mine!” said Washington +with much conviction. “I might as well starve +rich as starve poor!”</p> + +<p>“We may be able to take a few diamonds,” +the professor answered. “The gold will be too +heavy. Let each one select the largest of the diamonds +he has and put them in his pockets.”</p> + +<p>Then began a sorting of the wealth. It was +strange, as they recalled afterward, throwing away +riches that would have made millionaires envious, +but it had to be done. All the wealth in the world +would not equal a beef capsule when they were +starving, and they realized it. So they only saved +a few pieces of gold as souvenirs, and took the +best of the diamonds. But even then they had a +vast fortune with them.</p> + +<p>At last all was in readiness. The cylinder had +been placed in the tube from which it was to be +shot gently forth by compressed air, so that it +would fall into the upward spouting column of +water. The charge of compressed air was put in +and the electric wires arranged.</p> + +<p>“Are we all ready?” asked Mr. Henderson.</p> + +<p>“I think so,” said Jack, in what sounded like +a whisper, but which was loud, only the noise of +the water muffled it.</p> + +<p>“Then we had better enter the cylinder,” spoke +the inventor. “Take a last look at +the <em>Flying Mermaid</em>, boys, for you will never +see again the ship that has borne us many thousand miles. +She served us well, and might again, but for the freak +of nature that has placed us in this position.”</p> + +<p>For the first time the adventurers realized that +they must abandon the craft in which they had +reached the new world. So it was with no little +feeling of sadness that they climbed up the ladder +that had been arranged and slid down into the +cylinder. One by one they took their places in +the padded berths arranged for them. It was a +snug fit, for the professor knew if there was too +much room he and the others might be so tossed +about as to be killed.</p> + +<p>Mr. Henderson was the last to enter. Standing +at the manhole he took a final look at his pet +creation, the <em>Mermaid</em>. Through the opened windows +the colored lights came, shifting here and +there. Outside the terrible column of water was +roaring as if anxious to devour them.</p> + +<p>“Good-bye, <em>Mermaid</em>!” said the professor +softly.</p> + +<p>Then he closed down the manhole cover and +tightened the screws that held it in place. He +touched a button that turned on the electric lights +and the interior of the cylinder was illuminated +with a soft glow.</p> + +<p>“Are you all ready?” he asked.</p> + +<p>“Jest as much as I ever will be,” replied Washington, +who, as the crisis approached, seemed more +light-hearted than any of the others.</p> + +<p>“Then here we go!” exclaimed Mr. Henderson.</p> + +<p>His fingers touched the button that connected +with the electric machine, which operated the compressed +air.</p> + +<p>There sounded a muffled report. Then it +seemed to those in the cylinder that the end of the +world had come. They shot upward and outward, +through the top of the conning tower which +had been removed. The cylinder, launched +straight at the column of water struck it squarely +and, an instant later was caught in the grasp of the +giant force and hurled toward the upper world.</p> + +<p>Up and up and up the mass of metal with its human +freight went. Now it was spinning like a top, +again it shot toward the earth’s crust like an arrow +from the archer’s bow.</p> + +<p>It was moving with the velocity of a meteor, +yet because of being surrounded with water, and +traveling with the same velocity as the column, +there was no friction. Had there been, the heat +generated would have melted the case in an instant.</p> + +<p>For the first few seconds those in the cylinder +were dazed by the sudden rush. Then as it became +greater and greater there came a curious dull feeling, +and, one after another lost consciousness. The +terror of the water column, and the frightful speed, +had made them senseless.</p> + +<hr class='c016' /> + +<p>It seemed like a month later, though, of course, +it could have been only a few hours or a day at +most when Jack opened his eyes. He saw his +companions, white and senseless all around him, +and at first thought they were dead. Then he +saw Mark looking at him, and Washington asked:</p> + +<p>“Is any one livin’ 'sides me?”</p> + +<p>“I am,” replied Jack decidedly.</p> + +<p>Then, one after another they regained their +senses. But they were in a strange daze, for they +were being carried along like a shooting star, only, +as they went at the same rate as did the element +carrying them, they did not <em>realize</em> this.</p> + +<p>“I think I’m hungry,” said Bill, who had the +best appetite of any of the travelers.</p> + +<p>“You’ll find a beef capsule in the little compartment +over your head,” spoke the professor.</p> + +<p>Bill was about to reach for it, when they were +all startled by a sudden side motion of the cylinder. +Then came a violent shock, and a sound as of +splashing water. Next the cylinder seemed to be +falling, and, a few minutes later to be shooting +upward. Following this there was another splash +and the cylinder began to bob about like a cork +on a mill pond.</p> + +<p>“We have reached the sea! We are afloat on +the ocean!” cried the professor.</p> + +<p>Hurriedly he disengaged himself from the +straps that held him to his bunk. He pushed back +the lever that opened the manhole. Into the opening +glowed the glorious sunlight, while to the occupants +came the breath of salt air.</p> + +<p>“Hurrah!” cried Jack. “We are safe at +last!”</p> + +<p>“Safe at last!” the professor answered, and +then they all gave a cheer.</p> + +<p>For their cylinder, which might now be termed +a boat, was floating on the great Atlantic. The +blue sky was overhead and the air of the sea fanned +their cheeks.</p> + +<p>They had shot up from the underground earth, +in the column of water, had been tossed high into +the air, had fallen back when the liquid shaft broke +into spray, had descended into the ocean, gone +down a hundred feet or more, and then had shot +up like a cork to bob about the surface.</p> + +<p>For a week they were afloat, and then they were +picked up by a passing vessel, rather weak and +very much cramped, but otherwise in good shape. +They said nothing of their adventures, save to explain +that they were experimenting in a new kind +of boat. About a month later, for the ship that +had rescued them was a slow sailer, they were back +on the island whence that wonderful voyage was +begun.</p> + +<hr class='c016' /> + +<p>“Well, we solved the mystery of the center of +the earth,” remarked Jack, one evening, when they +were gathered in the old shack where so many wonderful +adventures had been planned.</p> + +<p>“Yes, we did,” said Mr. Henderson. “And +no one else is ever likely to go there.”</p> + +<p>“Why?”</p> + +<p>“Because the only way of getting there was destroyed +by the earthquake, and no one could ever +force his way down through that upward-shooting +column of water.”</p> + +<p>“That’s so. Well, we have the diamonds, anyway,” +spoke Mark. “They ought to make us +rich.”</p> + +<p>And the jewels did, for the stones proved to be +of great value, even though the adventurers had +saved only a few of the many they found in the +ruined temple.</p> + +<p>But there was money enough so that they all +could live in comfort the rest of their lives. As +the professor was getting quite old, and incapable +of making any more wonderful inventions, he +closed up his workshop and settled down to a quiet +life. As for Washington, Andy, and Bill and +Tom, they invested their money received from the +sale of the diamonds in different business ventures, +and each one did well.</p> + +<p>“I am going in for a good education,” said +Jack to Mark.</p> + +<p>“Just what I am going to do,” answered his +chum. “And after we’ve got that——” He +paused suggestively.</p> + +<p>“We’ll go in for inventing airships, or something +like that, eh?”</p> + +<p>“Yes. We’ve learned a great deal from Mr. +Henderson, and in the course of time we ought to +be able to turn out something even more wonderful +than the <em>Electric Monarch</em>, the <em>Porpoise</em>, or the +<em>Flying Mermaid</em>.”</p> + +<p>“Yes, and when we’ve invented something better——”</p> + +<p>“We’ll take another trip.”</p> + +<p>“Right you are!”</p> + +<p>And then the two chums shook hands warmly; and here we will say good-bye.</p> + +<div class='nf-center-c'> + <div class='nf-center'> + THE END. + </div> +</div> + +<hr class='pb' /> + +<div class='nf-center-c'> + <div class='nf-center'> + <span class='larger'>NEW ALGER BOOKS</span> + </div> +</div> + +<div class='nf-center-c'> + <div class='nf-center'> + JOE, THE HOTEL BOY<br/> + <i>Or, Winning Out by Pluck</i><br/> + By HORATIO ALGER, Jr.<br/> + <br/> + Illustrated, 12mo. Cloth, 60 cents + </div> +</div> + +<div class='imgleft c017' > +<img src='images/a251a.png' alt='' class='c018' /> +</div> + +<p>This is one of the last stories penned by that prince of all juvenile writers, +Horatio Alger, Jr., and is one of his best. It describes the adventures of a +youth brought up in the country by an old hermit. When the hermit dies the boy +obtains work at a nearby hotel, and later on drifts to the city and obtains a +position in another hotel. There is a mystery concerning the lad’s identity +and likewise the disappearance of a certain blue box, but in the end all +terminates satisfactorily.</p> + +<div class='nf-center-c'> + <div class='nf-center'> + BEN LOGAN’S TRIUMPH<br/> + <i>Or, The Boys of Boxwood Academy</i><br/> + By HORATIO ALGER, Jr.<br/> + <br/> + Illustrated, 12mo. Cloth, 60 cents + </div> +</div> + +<div class='imgright c017' > +<img src='images/a251b.png' alt='' class='c018' /> +</div> + +<p>This story was penned by Mr. Alger some years before his death, but has never +appeared in book form. Ben was a city newsboy, rather rough, but with a heart +of gold. He did a great service for a good-hearted farmer, and the latter took +Ben home with him. The lad had never been in the country before, and his eyes +were opened to a new world. Then the youth was sent to a boarding school, +where he made his way to the front amid many difficulties. Mr. Alger’s charm +as a juvenile writer is so well known it is needless to mention it here, and +this story is in his best vein.</p> + +<div class='nf-center-c'> + <div class='nf-center'> + CUPPLES & LEON CO., Publishers, NEW YORK + </div> +</div> + +<hr class='pb' /> + +<div class='nf-center-c'> + <div class='nf-center'> + <span class='larger'>THE JACK RANGER SERIES</span><br/> + By Clarence Young<br/> + Author of the Motor Boys Series<br/> + <br/> + Cloth. 12mo. Illustrated, Price per volume, $1.00, postpaid + </div> +</div> + +<div class='imgleft c017' > +<img src='images/a252.png' alt='' class='c018' /> +</div> + +<div class='nf-center-c'> + <div class='nf-center'> + JACK RANGER’S SCHOOLDAYS<br/> + Or, The Rivals of Washington Hall + </div> +</div> + +<p>You will love Jack Ranger—you simply can’t help it. He is so bright and +cheery, and so real and lifelike. A typical boarding school tale, without a +dull line in it.</p> + +<div class='nf-center-c'> + <div class='nf-center'> + JACK RANGER’S SCHOOL VICTORIES<br/> + <i>Or, Track, Gridiron and Diamond</i> + </div> +</div> + +<p>In this tale Jack gets back to Washington Hall and goes in for all sorts of +school games. There are numerous contests on the athletic field, and also a +great baseball game and a football game, all dear to a boy’s heart. The +rivalry is bitter at times, and enemies try to put Jack “in a hole” more than +once.</p> + +<div class='nf-center-c'> + <div class='nf-center'> + JACK RANGER’S WESTERN TRIP<br/> + <i>Or, From Boarding School to Ranch and Range</i> + </div> +</div> + +<p>This volume takes the hero and several of his chums to the great West. +Jack is anxious to clear up the mystery surrounding his father’s +disappearance. At the ranch and on the range adventures of the +strenuous sort befall him.</p> + +<div class='nf-center-c'> + <div class='nf-center'> + JACK RANGER’S OCEAN CRUISE<br/> + <i>Or, The Wreck of the Polly Ann</i> + </div> +</div> + +<p>Here is a tale of the bounding sea, with many stirring adventures. +How the ship was wrecked, and Jack was cast away, is told in a +style all boys and girls will find exceedingly interesting. There is +plenty of fun as well as excitement.</p> + +<div class='nf-center-c'> + <div class='nf-center'> + JACK RANGER’S GUN CLUB<br/> + <i>Or, From Schoolroom to Camp and Trail</i> + </div> +</div> + +<p>Jack, with his chums, goes in quest of big game. The boys fall in with +a mysterious body of men, and have a terrific slide down a mountain side.</p> + +<div class='nf-center-c'> + <div class='nf-center'> + CUPPLES & LEON CO., Publishers, NEW YORK + </div> +</div> + +<hr class='pb' /> + +<div class='nf-center-c'> + <div class='nf-center'> + <span class='larger'>THE DOROTHY DALE SERIES</span><br/> + By Margaret Penrose<br/> + <br/> + Cloth, 12mo. Illustrated. Price per volume, 60 cents, postpaid + </div> +</div> + +<div class='nf-center-c'> + <div class='nf-center'> + DOROTHY DALE: A GIRL OF TO-DAY + </div> +</div> + +<p>Dorothy is the daughter of an old Civil War veteran who is running a weekly +newspaper in a small Eastern town. When her father falls sick, and the +newspaper property is in danger of going to pieces, the girl shows what she +can do to support the family.</p> + +<div class='imgleft c017' > +<img src='images/a253.png' alt='' class='c018' /> +</div> + +<div class='nf-center-c'> + <div class='nf-center'> + DOROTHY DALE AT GLENWOOD SCHOOL + </div> +</div> + +<p>More prosperous times have come to the Dale family, and Major Dale resolves to +send Dorothy to a boarding school to complete her education. At Glenwood +School the girl makes a host of friends and has many good times. But some +girls are jealous of Dorothy’s popularity, and they seek to get her into +trouble in more ways than one.</p> + +<div class='nf-center-c'> + <div class='nf-center'> + DOROTHY DALE’S GREAT SECRET + </div> +</div> + +<p>A splendid story of one girl’s devotion to another. Dorothy’s chum +ran away to join a theatrical company. What Dorothy did, and how +she kept the secret, makes a tale no girl will care to miss.</p> + +<div class='nf-center-c'> + <div class='nf-center'> + DOROTHY DALE AND HER CHUMS + </div> +</div> + +<p>A story of school life, and of strange adventures among the gypsies. +Dorothy befriends a little French girl and also a gypsy waif, in +a manner sure to touch the hearts of all readers.</p> + +<div class='nf-center-c'> + <div class='nf-center'> + DOROTHY DALE’S QUEER HOLIDAYS + </div> +</div> + +<p>Relates the details of a mystery that surrounded Tanglewood Park. +There is a great snowstorm, and the young folks become snowbound, +much to their dismay.</p> + +<div class='nf-center-c'> + <div class='nf-center'> + CUPPLES & LEON CO., Publishers, NEW YORK + </div> +</div> + +<hr class='pb' /> + +<div class='nf-center-c'> + <div class='nf-center'> + <span class='larger'>BOYS OF BUSINESS SERIES</span><br/> + By Allen Chapman<br/> + <br/> + Illustrated, 12mo. Cloth, 60 cents per volume + </div> +</div> + +<div class='imgleft c017' > +<img src='images/a254.png' alt='' class='c018' /> +</div> + +<div class='nf-center-c'> + <div class='nf-center'> + THE YOUNG EXPRESS AGENT<br/> + <i>Or, Bart Stirling’s Road to Success</i> + </div> +</div> + +<p>Bart’s father was the express agent in a country town. When an explosion of +fireworks rendered him unfit for work, the boy took it upon himself to run the +express office. The tale gives a good idea of the express business in general.</p> + +<div class='nf-center-c'> + <div class='nf-center'> + TWO BOY PUBLISHERS<br/> + <i>Or, From Typecase to Editor’s Chair</i> + </div> +</div> + +<p>This tale will appeal strongly to all lads who wish to know how a newspaper is +printed and published. The two boy publishers work their way up, step by +step, from a tiny printing office to the ownership of a town paper.</p> + +<div class='nf-center-c'> + <div class='nf-center'> + MAIL ORDER FRANK<br/> + <i>Or, A Smart Boy and His Chances</i> + </div> +</div> + +<p>Here we have a story covering an absolutely new field—that of the +mail-order business. How Frank started in a small way and gradually +worked his way tip to a business figure of considerable importance +is told in a fascinating manner.</p> + +<div class='nf-center-c'> + <div class='nf-center'> + A BUSINESS BOY<br/> + <i>Or, Winning Success</i> + </div> +</div> + +<p>This relates the ups and downs of a young storekeeper. He has some +keen rivals, but “wins out” in more ways than one. All youths who +wish to go into business will want this volume.</p> + +<div class='nf-center-c'> + <div class='nf-center'> + CUPPLES & LEON CO., Publishers, NEW YORK + </div> +</div> + +<hr class='pb' /> + +<div class='nf-center-c'> + <div class='nf-center'> + <span class='larger'>MOTOR BOYS SERIES</span><br/> + <span class='smaller'>(Trade Mark, Reg. U. S. Pat. Of.)</span><br/> + By Clarence Young<br/> + <br/> + Cloth. 12mo. Illustrated. Price per volume. 60 cents, postpaid + </div> +</div> + +<div class='imgleft c017' > +<img src='images/a255.png' alt='' class='c018' /> +</div> + +<div class='nf-center-c'> + <div class='nf-center'> + THE MOTOR BOYS<br/> + <i>Or, Chums Through Thick and Thin</i> + </div> +</div> + +<p>In this volume is related how the three boys got +together and planned to obtain a touring car and +make a trip lasting through the summer.</p> + +<div class='nf-center-c'> + <div class='nf-center'> + THE MOTOR BOYS OVERLAND<br/> + <i>Or, A Long Trip for Fun and Fortune</i> + </div> +</div> + +<p>With the money won at the great motorcycle race the three boys purchase +their touring car and commence their travels.</p> + +<div class='nf-center-c'> + <div class='nf-center'> + THE MOTOR BOYS IN MEXICO<br/> + <i>Or, The Secret of the Buried City</i> + </div> +</div> + +<p>From our own country the scene is shifted to Mexico, where the motor +boys journey in quest of a city said to have been buried centuries ago +by an earthquake.</p> + +<div class='nf-center-c'> + <div class='nf-center'> + THE MOTOR BOYS ACROSS THE PLAINS<br/> + <i>Or, The Hermit of Lost Lake</i> + </div> +</div> + +<p>Unraveling the mystery surrounding an old hermit and a poor boy.</p> + +<div class='nf-center-c'> + <div class='nf-center'> + THE MOTOR BOYS AFLOAT<br/> + <i>Or, The Stirring Cruise of the Dartaway</i> + </div> +</div> + +<p>In this volume the boys take to a motorboat, and have many adventures.</p> + +<div class='nf-center-c'> + <div class='nf-center'> + THE MOTOR BOYS ON THE ATLANTIC<br/> + <i>Or, The Mystery of the Lighthouse</i> + </div> +</div> + +<p>How the lads foiled the bad men who wanted to wreck a steamer by +means of false lights is dramatically related.</p> + +<div class='nf-center-c'> + <div class='nf-center'> + THE MOTOR BOYS IN STRANGE WATERS<br/> + <i>Or, Lost in a Floating Forest</i> + </div> +</div> + +<p>Telling of many adventures in the mysterious Everglades of Florida.</p> + +<div class='nf-center-c'> + <div class='nf-center'> + THE MOTOR BOYS ON THE PACIFIC<br/> + <i>Or, The Young Derelict Hunters</i> + </div> +</div> + +<p>The derelict was of great value, and the hunt for it proved full of +perils.</p> + +<div class='nf-center-c'> + <div class='nf-center'> + THE MOTOR BOYS IN THE CLOUDS<br/> + <i>Or, A Trip for Fame and Fortune</i> + </div> +</div> + +<p>The boys fall in with an inventor and invest in a flying machine. After +a number of stirring adventures in the clouds they enter a big race.</p> + +<div class='nf-center-c'> + <div class='nf-center'> + CUPPLES & LEON CO., Publishers, NEW YORK + </div> +</div> + +<hr class='pb' /> + +<div class='nf-center-c'> + <div class='nf-center'> + <span class='larger'>THE BOY HUNTERS SERIES</span><br/> + By Captain Ralph Bonehill<br/> + <br/> + Cloth. 15mo. Illustrated. Price per volume, 60 cents, postpaid + </div> +</div> + +<div class='imgleft c017' > +<img src='images/a256.png' alt='' class='c018' /> +</div> + +<div class='nf-center-c'> + <div class='nf-center'> + FOUR BOY HUNTERS<br/> + <i>Or, The Outing of the Gun Club</i> + </div> +</div> + +<p>A fine, breezy story of the woods and waters, of adventures in search of game, +and of great times around the campfire, told in Captain Bonehill’s best style. +In the book are given full directions for camping out.</p> + +<div class='nf-center-c'> + <div class='nf-center'> + GUNS AND SNOWSHOES<br/> + <i>Or, The Winter Outing of the Young Hunters</i> + </div> +</div> + +<p>In this volume the young-hunters leave home for a winter outing on the shores +of a small lake. They hunt and trap to their heart’s content, and have +adventures in plenty, all calculated to make boys “sit up and take notice.” A +good healthy book; one with the odor of the pine forests and the glare of the +welcome campfire in every chapter.</p> + +<div class='nf-center-c'> + <div class='nf-center'> + YOUNG HUNTERS OF THE LAKE<br/> + <i>Or, Out with Rod and Gun</i> + </div> +</div> + +<p>Another tale of woods and waters, with some strong hunting scenes and a good +deal of mystery. The three volumes make a splendid outdoor series.</p> + +<div class='nf-center-c'> + <div class='nf-center'> + OUT WITH GUN AND CAMERA<br/> + <i>Or, The Boy Hunters in the Mountains</i> + </div> +</div> + +<p>Takes up the new fad of photographing wild animals as well as shooting them. +An escaped circus chimpanzee and an escaped lion add to the interest of the +narrative.</p> + +<div class='nf-center-c'> + <div class='nf-center'> + CUPPLES & LEON CO., Publishers, NEW YORK + </div> +</div> + +<hr class='pb' /> + +<div class='nf-center-c'> + <div class='nf-center'> + <span class='larger'>THE DAREWELL CHUMS SERIES</span><br/> + By Allen Chapman<br/> + <br/> + Cloth. 12mo. Illustrated. 60 cents each, postpaid. + </div> +</div> + +<div class='nf-center-c'> + <div class='nf-center'> + THE DAREWELL CHUMS<br/> + <i>Or, The Heroes of the School</i> + </div> +</div> + +<p>A bright, lively story for boys, telling of the doings of four chums, at +school and elsewhere. There is a strong holding plot, and several +characters who are highly amusing. Any youth getting this book will +consider it a prize and tell all his friends about it.</p> + +<div class='nf-center-c'> + <div class='nf-center'> + THE DAREWELL CHUMS IN THE CITY<br/> + <i>Or, The Disappearance of Ned Wilding</i> + </div> +</div> + +<p>From a country town the scene is changed to a great city. One of +the chums has disappeared in an extraordinary manner, and the others +institute a hunt for him. The youths befriend a city waif, who in turn +makes a revelation which clears up the mystery.</p> + +<div class='imgleft c017' > +<img src='images/a257.png' alt='' class='c018' /> +</div> + +<div class='nf-center-c'> + <div class='nf-center'> + DAREWELL CHUMS IN THE WOODS<br/> + <i>Or, Frank Roscoe’s Secret</i> + </div> +</div> + +<p>The boys had planned for a grand outing when +something happened of which none of them +had dreamed. They thought one of their +number had done a great wrong—at least, it +looked so. But they could not really believe the +accusations made, so they set to work to help +Frank all they could. All went camping some +miles from home, and when not hunting and +fishing spent their time in learning the truth of +what had occurred.</p> + +<div class='nf-center-c'> + <div class='nf-center'> + THE DAREWELL CHUMS ON A CRUISE<br/> + <i>Or, Fenn Masterson’s Odd Discovery</i> + </div> +</div> + +<p>A tale of the Great Lakes. The boys run across some Canadian +smugglers and stumble on the secret of a valuable mine. Some +curious adventures underground are well told.</p> + +<div class='nf-center-c'> + <div class='nf-center'> + CUPPLES & LEON CO., Publishers, NEW YORK + </div> +</div> + + + + + + + + +<pre> + + + + + +End of Project Gutenberg's Five Thousand Miles Underground, by Roy Rockwood + +*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK FIVE THOUSAND MILES UNDERGROUND *** + +***** This file should be named 4994-h.htm or 4994-h.zip ***** +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: + http://www.gutenberg.org/4/9/9/4994/ + +Produced by Jim Weiler and Roger Frank + +Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed. + +Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no +one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation +(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without +permission and without paying copyright royalties. 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You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + +Title: Five Thousand Miles Underground + The Mystery of the Centre of the Earth + +Author: Roy Rockwood + +Release Date: January 26, 2014 [EBook #4994] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ASCII + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK FIVE THOUSAND MILES UNDERGROUND *** + + + + +Produced by Jim Weiler and Roger Frank + + + + +[Illustration: THE FLYING MERMAID SANK LOWER AND LOWER TOWARD THE +MYSTERIOUS HOLE.] + +------------------------------------------------------------------------ + + Five Thousand Miles Underground + + Or + + The Mystery of the Centre of the Earth + + BY + + ROY ROCKWOOD + + Author of "Through the Air to the North Pole," "Under + the Ocean to the South Pole," "The Rival + Ocean Divers," Etc. + + ILLUSTRATED + + NEW YORK + CUPPLES & LEON COMPANY + +------------------------------------------------------------------------ + + GOOD BOOKS FOR BOYS + + By Roy Rockwood + + THE GREAT MARVEL SERIES + + THROUGH THE AIR TO THE NORTH POLE + Or The Wonderful Cruise of the Electric Monarch + + UNDER THE OCEAN TO THE SOUTH POLE + Or The Strange Cruise of the Submarine Wonder + + FIVE THOUSAND MILES UNDERGROUND + Or The Mystery of the Centre of the Earth + + Cloth. Illustrated + Price per volume, 60 cents + +------------------------------------------------------------------------ + + Copyright, 1908, by + Cupples & Leon Company + + Five Thousand Miles Underground + +------------------------------------------------------------------------ + + CONTENTS + + I WASHINGTON BACKS OUT + II THE FLYING MERMAID + III WASHINGTON DECIDES + IV WHAT DID MARK SEE? + V ATTACKED BY A WHALE + VI THE CYCLONE + VII A QUEER SAIL + VIII THE FLYING MERMAID DISABLED + IX THE MUTINY + X FOOLING THEIR ENEMIES + XI MYSTERIOUS HAPPENINGS + XII THE BIG HOLE + XIII DOWN INTO THE EARTH + XIV MANY MILES BELOW + XV IN THE STRANGE DRAUGHT + XVI THE NEW LAND + XVII A STRANGE COUNTRY + XVIII CAUGHT BY A STRANGE PLANT + XIX THE BIG PEACH + XX OVERHAULING THE SHIP + XXI THE FISH THAT WALKED + XXII THE SNAKE-TREE + XXIII THE DESERTED VILLAGE + XXIV THE GIANTS + XXV HELD BY THE ENEMY + XXVII A FRIEND INDEED + XXVII A GREAT JOURNEY + XXVIII THE TEMPLE OF TREASURE + XXIX BACK HOME--CONCLUSION + +------------------------------------------------------------------------ + + FIVE THOUSAND MILES UNDERGROUND + + + CHAPTER I + + WASHINGTON BACKS OUT + +"Washington! I say Washington!" + +Throughout a big shed, filled for the most part with huge pieces of +machinery, echoed the voice of Professor Amos Henderson. He did not look +up from a small engine over which he was bending. + +"Washington! Where are you? Why don't you answer me?" + +From somewhere underneath an immense pile of iron, steel and aluminum +came the voice of a colored man. + +"Yas sir, Perfesser, I'se goin' t' saggasiate my bodily presence in yo' +contiguous proximity an' attend t' yo' immediate conglomerated +prescriptions at th' predistined period. Yas, sir!" + +"Well, Washington, if you had started when you began that long speech +you would have been at least half way here by this time. Hurry up! Never +mind tightning those bolts now. Find the boys. I need them to help me +with this engine. They must be around somewhere." + +"I seen 'em goin' fishin' down by th' brook a little while ago," +answered the negro, crawling out from under what seemed to be a combined +airship and watercraft. "Jack says as how yo' gived him permission t' +occupy his indisputatious period of levity in endeavorin' t' extract +from th' liquid element some specimens of swimmin' creatures." + +"If you mean I said he and Mark could go fishing in the brook, you're +right, Washington," replied the professor with a smile. "But you waste a +lot of time and breath trying to say it. Why don't you give up using big +words?" + +"I reckon I was brought up t' it," replied the colored man grinning from +ear to ear. He did not always use big words but when he did they were +generally the wrong ones. Sometimes, he spoke quite correctly. + +"Well, I suppose you can't help it," resumed Mr. Henderson. "However, +never mind that. Find the boys and send them to me." + +"With th' least appreciatableness amount of postponement," answered the +messenger, and he went out. + +Washington White, who in color was just the opposite to his name, a +general helper and companion to Professor Henderson, found Mark Sampson +and Jack Darrow about a quarter of a mile from the big shed, which was +in the center of a wooded island off the coast of Maine. The lads were +seated on the bank of a small brook, fishing. + +"Perfesser wants yo' immediate," said Washington. + +"But we haven't caught a single fish," objected Mark. + +"Them's the orders from headquarters," replied the colored man. "Yo' +both got t' project yo'selves in th' vicinity of th' machine shop. I +reckon th' new fangled contraption that th' perfesser is goin' t' +navigate th' air an' sail th' angry seas in, am about done. He want's t' +try th' engine." + +"Come on then," said Jack. "We probably would not catch any fish, +anyhow, Mark." + +Accompanied by Washington, the youths, each of whom was about eighteen +years old, started toward the big shed. + +While they are on their way opportunity may be taken to tell a little +about them, as well as about Washington and the professor, and the +curious craft on which the scientist was working. + +A few years before this story opens Mr. Henderson had invented a +wonderful electric airship. He had it about completed when, one day, he +and the two boys became unexpectedly acquainted, and, as it developed, +friends. + +Mark and Jack were orphans. After having rather a hard time knocking +about the world trying to make a living, they chanced to meet, and +resolved to cast their lots together. They boarded a freight train, and, +as told in the first volume of this series, entitled, "Through the Air +to the North Pole; or the Wonderful Cruise of the Electric Monarch," the +cars were wrecked near where Professor Henderson was building his +strange craft. + +The boys were cared for by the scientist, and, after their recovery from +hurts received in the collision, they accepted his invitation to make +the trip through the upper regions in the airship, to search for the +north pole. With them went Andy Sudds, an old hunter, and Tom Smith and +Bill Jones, two farmers, but who were hired as helpers on the voyage. +The party had many adventures on the trip, having battles with savage +animals and more savage Esquimaux, and were tossed about in terrible +storms. After making some scientific observations, which the professor +was much interested in, they started back home. + +Having found he could successfully sail in the air, Mr. Henderson +resolved to try what it might be like under water. + +He moved his machine shop to a lonely spot on the Maine coast, and +there, with the help of the boys, Washington, Andy and two machinists +constructed a submarine boat, called the _Porpoise_. + +In this the professor resolved to seek the south pole, he having a +theory that it was surrounded by an open sea. After much hard work the +_Porpoise_ was made ready for the voyage. + +What occurred on this great trip is described in the second book of this +series, called "Under the Ocean to the South Pole, or the Strange Cruise +of the Submarine Wonder." In that is told how once more Tom and Bill, +with Andy, the boys and Washington, accompanying Professor Henderson, +had many thrilling experiences. + +They were caught in the grip of the grass of the terrible Sargasso Sea. +Monstrous suckers grasped the boat in their powerful arms, and had to be +fought off. They were caught in a sea of boiling water and imprisoned +between big fields of ice. + +By means of strong diving suits they were able to leave the ship and +walk about on the bottom of the sea. They visited a graveyard of sunken +ships, saw many strange monsters as well as many beautiful fish in the +great depths to which they sunk. Many times they were in dire peril but +the resources of the professor, the bravery and daring of the boys, no +less than the help Washington and Andy Sudds, the hunter, rendered at +times, brought them through. + +Those of you who read of their adventures will recall the strange island +which they came upon in the Atlantic Ocean, far from the coast of South +America. + +When they first drew near this island they were almost sucked into the +depths of a great whirlpool, caused by water pouring down a big hole +that seemed to lead far into the earth. They reversed their ship just in +time. + +But, on going to another side of the island they were able to approach +safely, as at this point the great hole was farther from the shore. Then +they landed and investigated. + +They found the island was almost circular, and the hole was also round, +but not in the center of the land. It was an immense cavity, so wide +they could not see across, and as for the depth they could only guess at +it. Looking down they could only see rolling masses of vapor and clouds +caused by the water which poured down from the ocean with the force of a +Niagara. + +Gazing down into the big hole Mark suggested it might lead to the centre +of the earth, which some scientists claim is hollow. The professor +admitted that the cavity looked as though it led to China. + +They had no means of investigating further the mystery of the opening +and returned to their submarine, completing the voyage to the south +pole. + +It was now about two years since they had come back from that eventful +trip. One of the first things the professor did, after docking the +_Porpoise_, was to shut himself up in his study and begin to draw plans. +To the questions of the boys he returned no answer for several days. +Then he announced he was working on a craft which could both sail on top +of the water and navigate the air. + +In time the plans were done, and, in order to keep the work secret, the +shop was moved to an island which the professor owned. + +Parts of the _Monarch_ and the _Porpoise_ were used in constructing the +new craft, so there was no need to get other help than that which the +boys, Washington and Bill and Tom could give, since the two latter +accepted an offer of the professor to remain and work for him. The boys, +of course, would not leave their friend. + +The professor realized that he had a more difficult task in his new +venture than he had set himself on other occasions. For a ship to be +light enough to rise in the air, and, at another time, and with no +change, to be strong enough to navigate the ocean, was indeed something +to tax Mr. Henderson's ingenuity. + +However, in the course of a little over a year the larger part of the +work was done. Inside the big shed was the huge affair which, it was +hoped, would enable its owner to be master of both air and water. + +"Did the professor say anything special?" asked Mark of Washington. + +"Nope. I reckon he were too busy problamatin' the exact altitude +projected in an inverse direction by th' square root of th' new engine +when operated at a million times inside of a few seconds, but he didn't +say nothin' t' me. I were busy underneath th' ship, fixin' bolts when he +tole me t' find yo'. I wouldn't be s'prised if he had th' thing goin' +soon." + +"Do you think he'll be generating the new gas to-day?" asked Jack +eagerly. "That's the most troublesome part; to get that gas right." + +"He didn't say nothin' t' me 'bout it," Washington stated, as he walked +along beside the two boys. "He jest seemed anxious like." + +"We'd better hurry," advised Mark. "He may be at an important part in +his experiments and probably needs us. I hope it will work. He has spent +many days on it, and we all have worked hard. It ought to be a success." + +"Perfesser allers makes things work," declared Washington stoutly. + +"That's a good way to feel about it, anyway," observed Mark. "Well, +we'll soon know." + +The three hurried to the shed which they could see as they rounded a +turn of the path through the wood. They noticed an elderly man +approaching with a gun on his shoulder. On one arm he carried a game +bag. + +"Guess Andy got something for dinner," remarked Jack. + +"I hopes so, honey," put in Washington. "I'se got a sort of gone feelin' +in my stomach!" + +"Any luck, Andy?" called Mark, when he came within hailing distance. + +"Fine," replied Andy Sudds. "Rabbits and quail. We'll have a good dinner +to-morrow." + +While Andy entered the living part of the big shed to put away his gun +and game, the boys and Washington kept on to the engine room. They found +the professor, with Bill and Tom, busy fitting pipes to the small engine +which was set up at one side of the structure. + +"Come, boys, I need your aid," remarked Mr. Henderson as they entered. +"Take off your coats and pitch in. Tighten up these bolts, Jack. Mark, +you mix up those chemicals the way I taught you, and see that the dynamo +is in working order for Washington to attend to." + +In a little while the shop was a veritable hive of industry, and it +resounded to the sound of hammers, wrenches and machinery. In the +background was the big ship, which seemed like two immense cigars, one +above the other, the lower one the larger. + +"Where was you calalatin' t' take this here ship when it gits done, +Perfesser?" asked Washington, during a lull in the operations. + +"Do you remember that big hole in the island we visited on our trip to +the south pole?" + +"I suah does," answered the colored man. + +"We are going to explore that," went on the scientist. "We are going to +make a voyage to the interior of the earth in our _Flying Mermaid_." + +"Go down into th' earth!" exclaimed Washington, his eyes big with +fright. + +"Certainly; why not?" + +"Not for mine!" cried the colored man, dropping the wrench he was +holding. "No sir! I'm not goin' t' project myself int' a grave while +I'se alive. Time enough when I kicks th' bucket. No sir! If yo' an' the +boys wants t' risk yo' se'ves goin' down int' th' interior of th' earth, +where th' Bible says there's fiery furnaces, yo' kin go, but Washington +White stays on terra cotta! That's where he stays; He ain't ready t' be +buried, not jest yet!" and the frightened colored man started to leave +the shed. + + + + + CHAPTER II + + THE FLYING MERMAID + + +"Here! Stop him!" cried Professor Henderson. "Don't let him get away. We +still need his help to get the ship in shape. He needn't be frightened. +We're not going to start at once." + +Mark and Jack ran after Washington, whose progress was somewhat impeded +because he kept looking back as if he feared the new ship was chasing +him. + +"Come on back!" said Mark. "There's no danger, and if there was we're +not going to start to-day." + +"Ain't yo' foolin' me?" asked Washington, pausing and looking doubtfully +at the boys. + +"Of course not," answered Mark. "You know Professor Henderson would not +make you do anything you didn't want to do, Wash. He wishes you to stay +and help him get ready, that's all." + +"Well, Washington," observed the aged scientist. "I didn't think you'd +go back on me." + +"I'd do mos' anything fer yo', Perfesser," said the colored man, "but I +got t' beg off this time," and he looked at the _Flying Mermaid_ as if +he thought the metal sides would open and devour him. + +"Then help me get things in shape to generate the gas," the scientist +said. "I want to give the new vapor the first real test in lifting power +to-day. On the success of it depends the future of the ship." + +Seeing there was no immediate danger of being carried to the centre of +the earth, Washington resumed his labors. The professor, the boys, Bill +and Tom were also hurrying matters to enable a test to be made before +night. + +As will readily be seen, even by those not familiar with the +construction of airships and submarines, the chief problem was to find +some agent strong enough to lift from the earth a weight heavier than +had ever before been put into an apparatus that was destined to traverse +the clouds. For the _Flying Mermaid_ was not only an airship but an +ocean voyager as well. It had to be made light enough to be lifted far +above the earth, yet the very nature of it, necessitating it being made +heavy enough to stand the buffeting of the waves and the pressure of +water, was against its flying abilities. + +Professor Henderson realized this and knew that the chief concern would +be to discover a gas or vapor with five times the lifting power of +hydrogen, one of the lightest gases known, and one sometimes used to +inflate balloons. + +After long study he had been partially successful, but he knew from +experiments made that the gas he had so far been able to manufacture +would not answer. What he wanted was some element that could be mixed +with the gas, to neutralize the attraction of gravitation, or downward +pull of the earth. + +While he was seeking this, and experimenting on many lines, the +construction of the air-water ship went on. In general the outward +construction was two cigar shaped hulls, one above the other. Aluminum, +being the lightest and strongest metal that could be used for the +purpose, formed the main part of both bodies. + +The upper hull was one hundred feet long and twenty feet in diameter at +the widest part. It tapered to points at either end. It was attached to +the lower hull by strong braces, at either end, while from the center +there extended a pipe which connected with the lower section. This pipe +was intended to convey the lifting gas to the part which corresponded to +the bag of the balloon, save that it was of metal instead of silk, or +rubber as is usual. + +There were two reasons for this. One was that it would not be liable to +puncture, particularly in the proposed underground trip, and the other +was that it did not have to be so large as a cloth bag would have had to +be. It was also a permanent part of the ship, and on a voyage where part +of the time the travelers would be in the air and part on the water, and +when the change from one to the other would have to be made quickly, +this was necessary. It would have taken too long to raise the ship in +the air had a cloth bag been used to contain the gas. + +The lower hull or main part of the craft was one hundred and fifty feet +long, and forty feet through at the largest part, in the centre. + +It was divided into four sections. The forward one contained the +sleeping quarters of Professor Henderson and his crew. There was a small +stateroom for each one. Above was a conning or observation tower, +reached by a small flight of steps. From this tower the ship could be +steered, stopped and started, as could also be done from the engine +room, which was in the after part of the hull. + +As in the _Porpoise_ and _Monarch_, electricity formed the motive power +and was also used for many other purposes on board. Engines operated by +gas produced the current which heated, lighted and moved the ship, as +well as played a part in producing the wonderful gas. + +The ship moved forward or backward by means of a novel arrangement. This +was by the power of compressed air. From either end of the lower hull +there projected a short pipe working in a ball and socket joint, so it +could be turned in any direction. By means of strong pumps a current of +compressed air could be sent out from either pipe. Thus when floating +above the earth the ship was forced forward by the blast of air rushing +from the pipe at the stern. It was the same principle as that on which a +sky rocket is shot heavenward, save that gases produced by the burning +of powder in the pasteboard rocket form its moving impulse. + +In the case of the _Flying Mermaid_, it could be made to move backward +by sending the air out of the forward tube. Thus, when in the water, the +compressed air rushing from the pipe struck the fluid and forced the +ship forward or backward as was desired. It floated on the surface, the +deck being about three feet out of water, while the aluminum gas bag was +overhead. + +The engine room was a marvel of machine construction. It contained pumps +for air and water, motors, dynamos, gas engines, and a maze of wheels +and levers. Yet everything was very compact and no room was wasted. + +The use of the air method of propulsion did away with the necessity of a +large propellor such as most airships have to use, a propellor which +must of necessity be very light and which is easily broken. + +Next to the engine room was the kitchen. It contained an electric range +and all necessary appliances and utensils for preparing meals. There +were lockers and a large reserve storeroom which when the time came +would be well stocked with food. Forward of the kitchen was the living +and dining room. It contained comfortable seats, folding tables and a +small library. Here, also were many instruments designed to show how the +various machines were working. There were gages, pointers and dials, +which told the direction the ship was traveling, the speed and the +distance above the earth or below the surface. Similar indicators were +in the conning tower, which had a powerful search light. + +The ship was lighted throughout by incandescent lamps, and there was +even a small automatic piano worked by the electric current, on which +popular airs could be played. + +If the gas and the gravity neutralizer worked as Professor Henderson +hoped they would, as soon as the ship was completed, all that would be +necessary to start on the voyage would be to fill the aluminum bag and +set the air compressor in motion. + +The gas was made from common air, chemically treated and with a secret +material added which by means of a complicated machine in a measure did +away with the downward pull of the earth. Thus all that was necessary to +carry on a long voyage was a quantity of gasolene to operate the engine +which worked the electric machines, and some of this secret compound. + +The professor and his helpers had been working to good advantage. At +last all was in readiness for the gas test. + +It was proposed to try it on an experimental scale. Some of the fluid +was to be generated and forced into an aluminum cylinder under the same +pressure it would be used in the air ship. To this cylinder were +attached weights in proportion to the weight of the _Flying Mermaid_ +with its load of human freight, engines and equipment. + +"This cylinder is just one one-hundredth the size of the cylinder of the +ship," said the professor. "I am going to fasten to it a hundred pound +weight. If it lifts that our latest contrivance will be a success." + +"You mean if the little cylinder pulls a hundred pounds up the big ship +will take us and the machinery up?" asked Mark. + +"Certainly," answered the professor. "If this cylinder lifts a hundred +pounds, one a hundred times as big (as that of the _Mermaid_ is), will +lift a hundred times as much, or ten thousand pounds. That is five tons, +or more than a ton over what I figure to be the weight of our ship and +contents. The latest war balloon can lift one ton with ease, and if my +machine can not do five times as well I shall be disappointed." + +The last adjustments were made, pipes were run from the gas generator to +the cylinder, and the hundred pound weight was attached. + +"Everybody look out now," said Mr. Henderson. "I am going to start the +machine and let the gas enter the cylinder. It is a very powerful gas +and may break the cylinder. If it does you must all duck." + +The scientist gave a last look at everything. The boys got behind some +boards whence they could see without being in danger. Washington, who +had little fear so long as there was no danger of going under ground, +took his place at the dynamo. Andy Sudds, with Bill and Tom, stationed +themselves in safe places. + +"All ready!" called the professor. + +He pulled a lever toward him, turned a wheel and signalled to Washington +to start the dynamo. There was a sound of buzzing machinery, which was +followed by a hiss as the gas began to enter the cylinder under +pressure. Would it stand the strain? That question was uppermost in +every one's mind save the professor's. He only cared to see the cylinder +leave the ground, carrying the weight with it. That would prove his long +labors were crowned with success. + +Faster and faster whirred the dynamo. The gas was being generated from +the air. The secret chemical made a hissing which could be heard for +some distance. The gage registered a heavy pressure. Anxiously the +professor watched the cylinder. + +"There!" he exclaimed at length. "It has all the gas it can hold. Now to +see if it works!" + +He disconnected the pipe leading from the generator. This left the +cylinder free. It seemed to tremble slightly. There appeared to be a +movement to the hundred pound weight which rested on the ground. It was +as if it was tugging to get loose. + +"There it goes! There it goes!" cried Mark, joyfully. + +"Hurrah!" shouted Jack. "There she rises!" + +"It suttinly am projectin' itself skyward!" yelled Washington, coming +from the dynamo. + +Sure enough the cylinder was slowly rising in the air, bearing the +weight with it. It had lifted it clear from the ground and was +approaching the roof of the big shed. + +"It will work! It will work!" exclaimed the professor, strangely +excited. + +The next instant the cylinder, carrying the weight, sailed right out of +an open skylight, and began drifting outside the shop, and across the +fields. + +"Quick! We must get it back!" cried Mr. Henderson. "If it gets away my +secret may be discovered and I will lose all! We must secure it!" + +But the cylinder was now two hundred feet in the air and being blown to +the east, the weight dangling below it, making it look like a miniature +airship. + +"We can never catch that!" cried Mark. + + + + + CHAPTER III + + WASHINGTON DECIDES + + +"We must catch that cylinder!" the professor exclaimed. "Some one may +find it when it comes down and analyze the gas. Then he would discover +how to make it. The cylinder must come down!" + +"Don't see how we can proximate ourselves inter th' vicinity of it +lessen we delegate th' imperial functions of ornithological specimens t' +some member of this here party," observed Washington. + +"If you mean we can't catch that there contraption unless we turn into +birds I'll show you that you're mistaken!" cried Andy Sudds. "I guess I +have a trick or two up my sleeve," and the old hunter quickly threw open +the breech of his gun and inserted a couple of cartridges. + +He raised the piece to his shoulder and took quick aim. There was a +sliver of flame, a puff of smoke and a sharp report. The professor and +the boys who were watching the cylinder saw it vibrate up in the air. +Then there came a whistling sound. An instant later the metal body began +to descend, and it and the weight fell to the earth. + +"I'm sorry I had to put a bullet through it, Professor," said old Andy +with a queer smile, "but it was the only way I saw of bringing it down. +Hope it isn't damaged much." + +"It doesn't matter if it is," the scientist answered. "I can make more +cylinders, but I don't want that secret of the gas to become known. Your +bullet served a good turn, Andy, for it let the compressed vapor out +just in time." + +"Then we may consider the experiment a success," said Mark, as +Washington went to where the cylinder had fallen, to detach it from the +weight and bring both to the shed. + +"It seems so," Mr. Henderson answered. "True, it was only an experiment. +We have yet to test the ship itself." + +"When can we do that?" asked Jack. + +"I hope by Monday," the scientist answered. + +"Will you try it in the water or air first?" asked Mark. + +"I'm almost certain it will float in the water," the aged inventor said. +"It does not require much work to make a ship which will do that. But +the air proposition is another matter. However, since the cylinder rose, +I am pretty sure the _Flying Mermaid_ will. + +"But we have done enough work to-day. Let's rest and have something to +eat. Then, with Sunday to sit around and talk matters over, we will be +ready for Monday's test." + +Some of the game Andy had killed was soon on the table, for Washington, +in addition to his other accomplishments, was an expert cook. During the +evening the boys and their friends sat in the living room of the big +shed and talked over the events of the day. + +Sunday was spent in discussing what adventures might lie before them +should they be able to descend into the big hole. Washington did not say +much, but it was easy to see he had no notion of going. He even began to +pack his few belongings in readiness to leave the service of Mr. +Henderson, for whom he had worked a good many years. + +No one remained long abed Monday morning. Even Washington was up early +in spite of the interest he had lost in the professor's voyage. + +"I jest wants t' see yo' start fer that place where they buries live +folks," he said. + +In order to properly test the _Flying Mermaid_ it was necessary to move +the craft from the shed from which place it had never been taken since +it's construction was started. It had been built on big rollers in +anticipation of this need, so that all which was now necessary was to +open the doors at the end, and roll the craft out. + +This was accomplished with no small amount of labor, and it was nearly +noon before the big ship was moved into the open. It was shoved along to +a little clearing in front of the shed, where no trees would interfere +with its possible upward movement. + +Everyone was bustling about. The professor was busiest of all. He went +from one machine to another; from this apparatus to that, testing here, +turning wheels there, adjusting valves and seeing that all was in +readiness for the generating of the powerful gas. + +As the airship was half round on the bottom and as it rested in a sort +of semi-circular cradle; it brought the entrance some distance above the +ground. To make it easier to get in and out while preparations for the +trial were going on, Bill and Tom had made an improvised pair of steps, +which were tied to the side of the ship with ropes. + +Up and down these the professor, the boys and Andy went, taking in tools +and materials, and removing considerable refuse which had accumulated +during the building of the craft. + +Finally all was in readiness for starting the making of the gas. The +ship was not wholly complete and no supplies or provisions for the long +voyage had been taken aboard. The _Flying Mermaid_ was about a ton +lighter than it would be when fully fitted out, but to make up for this +the professor had left in the ship a lot of tools and surplus machinery +so that the craft held as much weight as it would under normal +conditions. If the gas lifted it now it would at any other time. + +"Start the generator," said Mr. Henderson, to Mark. "We'll soon see +whether we are going to succeed or fail." + +The boy turned a number of levers and wheels. The machine which made the +powerful vapor was soon in operation. The professor had already added +enough of the secret compound to the tank containing the other +ingredients, and the big pump was sucking in air to be transformed into +the lifting gas. + +The boys and the professor were in the engine room. Andy Sudds, with +Bill and Tom, had taken their places in the living room, to more evenly +balance the ship, since the things in it were not yet all in their +proper places. As for Washington he was busy running from the shed to +the ship with various tools and bits of machinery the professor desired. + +The gas was being generated rapidly. Throughout the ship there resounded +a hissing noise that told it was being forced through the pipe into the +aluminum shell above the ship proper. + +"I wonder how soon it will begin to lift us," said Mark. + +"It will take about half an hour," replied Mr. Henderson. "You see we +have first to fill the holder completely, since there is no gas in it. +After this we will keep some on hand, so that it will only need the +addition of a small quantity to enable the ship to rise." + +He was busy watching the pointer on a dial which indicated the pressure +of the gas, and the lifting force. The boys were kept busy making +adjustments to the machinery and oiling bearings. + +Suddenly, throughout the length of the craft there was felt a curious +trembling. It was as though the screw of a powerful steamer was +revolving in the water. + +"What is it?" asked Jack. + +"I hope it is the lifting power of the gas making itself felt," the +professor answered. "Perhaps the _Flying Mermaid_ is getting ready to +try her wings." + +The trembling became more pronounced. The gas was being generated faster +than ever. The whole ship was trembling. Tom and Bill came from the +room, where they were stationed, to inquire the meaning, but were +reassured by the professor. + +"Don't be alarmed if you find yourselves up in the air pretty soon," he +remarked with a smile. "Remember the _Electric Monarch_, and the flights +she took. We may not go as high as we did in her, but it will answer the +same purpose." + +The gas was hissing through the big tube as it rushed into the overhead +holder. The gage indicated a heavy pressure. The ship began to tremble +more violently and to sway slightly from side to side. + +"I think we shall rise presently," said Mr. Henderson. His voice showed +the pride he felt at the seeming success with which his invention was +about to meet. + +Suddenly, with a little jerk, as though some one with a giant hand had +plucked the _Flying Mermaid_ from the earth, the ship gave a little +bound into the air, and was floating free. + +"Here we go!" cried Mr. Henderson. "The ship is a success. Now we're off +for the hole in the earth!" + +The _Flying Mermaid_ was indeed rising in the air. True it did not go up +so swiftly as had the _Monarch_, but then it was a much heavier and +stronger vessel, and flying was only one of its accomplishments. + +"It's a success! It's a success!" shouted Mark, capering about in his +excitement. + +"Now we'll see what the centre of the earth looks like," went on Jack. +"I can hardly wait for the time to come when we are to start on the +voyage." + +At that instant, when the ship was but a few feet from the ground, but +slowly rising, the boys and the professor heard a shouting below them. + +"What's that?" asked the scientist. "Is any one hurt?" + +Mark ran to a small window, something like a port hole in an ocean +steamer, and looked out. + +"Quick!" he shouted. "Stop the ship! Washington will be killed!" + +In fact from the agonized yells which proceeded from somewhere under the +craft it seemed that the accident was in process of happening. + +"Save me! Save me!" cried the colored man. "I'm goin' to fall! Catch me, +some one!" + +"What is it?" asked the professor, making ready to shut off the power +and let the ship settle back to earth, from which it had moved about +fifty feet. + +"It's Washington," explained Mark. "He evidently tried to walk up the +steps just as the boat mounted skyward. He rolled down and managed to +grab the end of the rope which was left over after the steps were tied. +Now he's swinging down there." + +"Are you going to lower the ship?" asked Jack. + +"Of course!" exclaimed the professor. "I only hope he hangs on until his +feet touch the earth." + +"Keep a tight hold!" shouted Mark, from out of the small window. + +"That's th' truest thing yo' ever said!" exclaimed Washington. "You bet +I'm goin' to hold on, and I'm comin' up too," which he proceeded to do, +hand over hand, like a sailor. + +The boys and the professor watched the colored man's upward progress. +The ship had hardly begun to settle as, in the excitement, not enough +gas had been let out. Closer and closer came Washington, until he was +able to grasp the edge of the opening, to which the steps were fastened. + +"I thought you weren't coming with us," observed the professor, when he +saw that his helper was safe. + +"I changed my mind," said the colored man. "It's jest luck. Seems like +th' ship done wanted me t' go 'long, an' I'm goin'. I'll take my chances +on bein' buried alive. I ain't never seen th' centre of th' earth, an' I +want's to 'fore I die. I'm goin' 'long, Perfessor!" + + + + + CHAPTER IV + + WHAT DID MARK SEE? + + +"Well, I'm glad you've decided at last," the professor remarked. "Now +come inside and we'll see how the ship works." + +Once over his fright, Washington made himself at home on the craft he +had helped build. He went from one room to another and observed the +engine. + +"She certainly am workin'" he observed with pride. "Are we still goin' +up, Perfessor?" + +"Still mounting," replied Mr. Henderson. "We are now three hundred feet +above the earth," he added as he glanced at a registering gage. + +The great air pump was set going and soon from the after tube, a big +stream of the compressed vapor rushed. It acted on the ship instantly +and sent the craft ahead at a rapid rate. By elevating or depressing the +tube the craft could be sent obliquely up or down. Then, by forcing the +air from the forward tube, the _Mermaid_ was reversed and scudded +backward. + +But it was more with the ship's ability to rise and descend that +Professor Henderson was concerned, since on that depended their safety. +So various tests were made, in generating the gas and using the negative +gravity apparatus. + +All worked to perfection. Obeying the slightest turn of the wheels and +levers the _Mermaid_ rose or fell. She stood still, suspended herself in +the air, or rushed backward and forward. + +Of course the machinery was new and did not operate as smoothly as it +would later, but the professor and his friends were very well satisfied. + +"Now we'll try something new," said the scientist to the two boys as +they stood beside him in the tower. "I only hope this part succeeds, and +we shall soon be off on our voyage." + +He turned several levers. There was a hissing sound as the gas rushed +from the container, and the ship began to settle down. + +"What's th' matter? Are we goin' t' hit th' earth?" yelled Washington, +rushing from the engine room. + +"Keep quiet," ordered the professor. "We are only going down, that's +all." + +"But good land! Perfesser!" exclaimed the colored man. "The ocean's +right under us! You forgot you sailed away from the island! We'll be +drowned suah!" + +"Leave it to me," said Mr. Henderson. "The _Flying Mermaid_ is going to +take a bath!" + +"As long as it swims it will be all right," observed Mark in a low tone +to Jack. "I'm glad I can take care of myself in the water." + +Before Jack could reply the _Mermaid_ seemed to take a sudden dive +through the air. The next instant she struck the water with a splash +that sent the waves rolling all about. The craft rocked violently to and +fro on the surface of the sea. For a while there were anxious hearts +aboard, for there was no certainty but that the ship might not sink to +the bottom. + +But the old professor had not calculated and builded in vain. After +rocking about like a vessel newly launched, the strange craft rode +safely and upright on the water. It set down far enough to bring the +propelling tubes well under, but not so far but that the conning tower +was well out and there was a small deck available. + +"Now to see if we can conquer the water as we did the air!" cried the +professor. "Mark, start the air pump. Jack, you steer, for I want to +watch the machinery under the additional strain." + +From the rear tube rushed such a volume of air that the ocean near it +bubbled and foamed. The ship trembled from stem to stern, and then, +after hanging for an instant as if undecided what to do, it began to +move forward as easily as though it had never sailed any other element +than the sea. + +"She fits her name!" the professor cried. "She is indeed the _Flying +Mermaid_, for she sails the ocean as easily as she navigates in the +clouds!" + +For a mile or two the craft was sent ahead over the waves. Then it was +reversed and run backwards. Satisfied that his long months of work had +not gone for naught, the professor after trying several experiments, +decided to try and raise the ship while in motion. + +With Jack and Mark to look after the air pumps, while Washington, Tom +and Bill busied themselves in the engine room, Mr. Henderson began to +generate the gas and start the negative gravity apparatus. All the while +the craft was forging ahead. + +There was again the hissing sound that told of the aluminum holder being +filled. For a few minutes there seemed to be no change, the _Mermaid_ +plowing forward. + +Then like a bird rising from the waves, or like a flying fish leaping +from the sea to escape some pursuing monster of the deep, the new ship +shot up diagonally from the surface and winged its way into the upper +regions of the air. + +"Success! Success!" cried the professor. "This proves all I wanted to +know. Now we are ready for our great trip!" + +Great were the rejoicings in the camp that night. It was like living +over again the days when they were aboard the diving _Porpoise_ or the +flying _Monarch_. To the recollections were added the anticipations of +what was before them in the trip to the interior of the earth. + +Busy days followed, for there was still much to be done to the _Flying +Mermaid_. The machinery, which was only partly completed, had to be +finished. Besides this the professor was working on some apparatus, the +use of which he did not disclose to any one. It was stored aboard the +ship at the last minute. + +Plenty of provisions had to be taken aboard, and many supplies needed to +work the _Mermaid_ and insure that it would go to the end of the voyage. +The materials for generating the gas and negative gravity, spare parts, +records for the automatic piano and other things were stored away. + +Some guns and ammunition were taken along as were a few revolvers, since +old Andy had said it was best to prepare for any thing in the shape of +enemies or wild beasts that might be met with in the interior regions. + +It was decided to make the start by sailing along the surface of the sea +for several days, as in the event of any weakness in the machinery being +discovered there would be less danger. If, at the end of four days, no +trouble developed, the professor said he would send the _Mermaid_ into +the air and make the rest of the voyage through the sky. + +The night before the start was to be made the professor, with the boys, +Washington and the other helpers, went about through the various shops +and buildings, locking them up securely. For they could not tell how +long they would be away, and they had to leave behind much valuable +material. + +As there were several things that needed attention they divided the work +up. Mark had finished his share and was walking back toward the living +cabin where they were all quartered, when, down at the shore, near where +the boat was moored, he fancied he saw, in the gathering darkness, a +moving figure. + +"I wonder who that can be," he thought. "All the others are near the +machine shop, for I just left them there. Perhaps it's some one trying +to spy out how the _Mermaid_ is built." + +Knowing the professor wanted his secret well guarded, Mark walked softly +toward the little dock that served as a place whence the _Mermaid_ could +be easily boarded. As he approached he saw the figure moving. Something +struck the boy as peculiar. + +Though the object had some of the characteristics of a man it did not +walk like a human being, but shuffled along more like a huge ape or +monkey. It seemed bent over, as if it stooped toward the ground. + +"Who are you?" called Mark suddenly. + +For an instant the figure halted and then hurried on faster than before, +with a curious, shuffling walk. It was approaching the ship. + +Somehow it struck Mark as if it was an uncanny being; an inhabitant of +some other world. Then he laughed at his half-fear, and started on a run +toward the dock. + +"If it's some tramp trying to find a place to sleep he'd better not go +aboard the ship, he might do some damage," the boy thought. + +He could hardly see the figure now as it had passed into the shadow cast +by the boat. He was about to summon the professor to make an +investigation, when Washington started going the search light which was +placed just over the door of the living cabin. It was kept there as a +sort of beacon light, as, near the island was a dangerous ledge of +rocks. + +Then, in the blinding white glare from the big lantern as Washington +accidentally swung it toward the _Mermaid_, Mark beheld a strange sight. + +The figure he had been watching stood out in bold relief. Though it was +shaped like a human being it was not like any person the boy had ever +seen. It seemed covered with a skin twice too large for it; a skin, +which, in spite of the clothes that concealed it, hung in folds about +the arms and legs, dropping pendent like from the neck like a big +garment, and flapping in the wind. + +For an instant Mark was so startled he cried out, and the professor and +the others ran to see what was the matter. + +"There--by the ship! A horrible creature!" exclaimed Mark. + +Shouting to Washington to keep the light steady in the direction of the +dock, Mr. Henderson ran toward the moored _Mermaid_. Jack, Andy, Bill +and Tom, with Mark in the rear followed him. + +"Nothing here," said the scientist, after a careful search about. "Are +you sure you saw something, Mark?" + +"Positively," replied the lad with a shudder. He described the vision of +the darkness. + +"I guess it was a big otter, or maybe an enormous turtle," the professor +said. + + + + + CHAPTER V + + ATTACKED BY A WHALE + + +But Mark was certain it was nothing like that, though a careful search +failed to reveal anything or any person near the ship. It was too dark +to examine for footprints, and even Mark, after taking a look all about, +felt he might have been deceived by shadows. Still he was a little +nervous, and could hardly sleep for imagining what the thing he saw +could have been. + +The next day every one was so busy that no one, not even Mark, recalled +the little excitement of the night before. Shortly after noon, final +preparations having been made, they all got aboard the _Mermaid_ and +started off. + +It was a bright sunshiny day, and the craft, speeding away from the +island where it had been constructed, over the dancing blue waves, must +have presented a strange sight had there been any spectators. For surely +no such ship had ever before sailed those waters. + +However, there was no other vessel in sight, and the island, as far as +the professor and his friends knew, had never been inhabited. + +"We will not try for any great speed," Mr. Henderson remarked as he, +with Mark and Jack, stood in the conning tower managing the _Mermaid_. +"We don't want to strain any joints at the start or heat any engine +bearings. There will be time enough for speed later." + +"Yes, and we may need it more when we get into the centre of the earth +than we do now," observed Mark. + +"Why so?" asked Jack. + +"No telling what we may run up against underneath the ground," went on +Mark. "We may have to fight strange animals and stranger beings. +Besides, the atmosphere and water there can't be the same as up here; do +you think so, Professor?" + +For a few minutes the scientist was silent. He seemed to be thinking +deeply. + +"I will tell you what I believe," he said at length. "I have never +spoken of it before, but now that we are fairly started and may +eventually have a chance to prove my theory, I will say that I think the +centre of this earth on which we live is hollow. Inside of it, forming a +core, so to speak, I believe there is another earth, similar to ours in +some respects which revolves inside this larger sphere." + +They were well out to sea now, as they could observe when they emerged +on the little deck. Above their heads was the aluminum gas holder, which +served as a sort of protection from the sun that was quite warm. The +_Mermaid_ rode with an easy motion, being submerged just enough to make +her steady, yet not deep enough to encounter much resistance from the +water. In fact it could not have been arranged better for speed or +comfort. + +"I think we will sail well to the eastward before making our course +south," Mr. Henderson said. "I do not care to meet too many ships, as +those aboard will be very curious and I do not want too much news of +this venture to get out. We will take an unfrequented route and avoid +delays by being hailed by every passing vessel whose captain will wonder +what queer craft he had met with." + +The boys enjoyed the sail, for the weather could not have been better. +Even old Andy, who seldom said much, seemed delighted with the prospect +of having strange adventures. He had his rifle with him, and, indeed, he +seldom went anywhere that he did not carry it. + +"For there's no telling when you may see something you want to shoot or +that ought to be shot," he used to say, "and it's always the man without +a gun who needs it most. So I'm taking no chances." + +They sailed all that afternoon without meeting with a craft of any kind. +Straight to the east they went, and when night began to settle down +Washington got supper. It was decided to run slowly after dark until all +hands were more familiar with the ship. + +Morning found the _Mermaid_ about a hundred miles from the island where +she had been launched. The night had been uneventful, except that Mark +told Jack he heard some strange noise near his bunk several times. He +was nearest the storeroom where spare parts, and the curious cylinder +the professor had brought aboard, were kept. + +"I guess it was rats," said Jack. "They are always in ships." + +"Old wooden ships, yes," admitted Mark. "But I'll bet there's not a rat +aboard the _Mermaid_." + +"Then you were dreaming," said Jack, as if that settled it. + +Mark did not speak further of the noise, but he did considerable +thinking. However, the next night there was no further disturbance. + +The fourth day out, when everything had passed off well, the engines +doing their best, the professor decided to speed them up a bit, since he +was satisfied they had "found" themselves as mechanics term it. + +"We'll see how fast we can go through the water," said Mr. Henderson, +"and then I think we can safely turn our course south. We are well +beyond the ordinary lines of travel now." + +Having oiled the bearings well, and seen that everything was in place +and properly adjusted, the professor and the boys took their places in +the conning tower, while Washington, Tom and Bill remained in the engine +room. Andy stayed on deck with his gun. + +"I might see a big fish, and we could vary our bill of fare," he said +with a laugh. + +"Here we go!" exclaimed the professor as he shifted the levers and +turned some wheels and valves. "Now we'll see how fast we can travel." + +As he spoke the _Mermaid_ responded to the added impulse of the +compressed air and shot through the water at a terrific speed. The +sudden increase in momentum almost threw the boys from their feet, and +they would have fallen had they not grasped some projecting levers. + +"I guess that will do," said the scientist. "I think we have speed +enough for almost any emergency. I'll let her run at this rate for a +while, and then we'll slack up." + +Looking ahead, the boys could see the green waters parting in front of +the bow of the _Mermaid_, as if to make room for her. Two huge waves +were thrown upon either side. + +Suddenly, dead ahead, there loomed up a big black object. + +"Look out you'll hit the rock!" cried Mark to the professor, who was +steering. + +With a turn of his wrist Mr. Henderson moved the wheel which controlled +the tube. It was deflected and sent the boat to larboard. + +At that instant from the rock two small fountains of water rose in the +air, falling back in a shower of spray through which the sun gleamed. + +"That's not a rock! It's a big whale!" cried Jack. "And we're going to +hit him!" + +The professor had miscalculated the speed of the craft, or else had not +thrown her far enough to larboard, for, a second later, the _Mermaid_ +was almost upon the big leviathan. + +With a desperate twirling of the steering wheel the professor veered the +craft as far as possible. But all he could do did not suffice, for the +craft hit the whale a glancing blow on the side, and the ship careened +as if she would turn turtle. + +At the same time there rang out from upon deck the sound of a rifle +shot. Old Andy had taken a chance at the enormous creature of the deep. + +"Hurrah!" the boys heard him shout. "I give him one plumb in the eye! A +fine shot! And we hit him besides with the boat. I guess he's a goner!" + +"I'm afraid not," muttered the professor. "That was a bad blow we struck +him, but I think it will only ruffle his temper. We'll have to look +sharp now, boys." + +By this time the ship had rushed past the whale, but the boys, looking +through a window in the rear of the tower could see the huge body. Now +the fountains of water which the whale spouted were tinged with red. + +"He's bleeding!" exclaimed the professor. "I guess Andy hit him in a +vital spot." + +"But not vital enough!" cried Mark. "See! He's coming after us!" + +And so it proved. The whale, angered, and, probably half crazed by the +pain of the bullet and the blow, was coursing after the ship, coming on +with the speed of an express train. Straight at the _Mermaid_ he lunged +his huge bulk. + +"We must escape him!" cried Mr. Henderson. "If he hits us he'll send us +to the bottom!" + +He had made ready to slow up the _Mermaid_ to see if it had sustained +any damage from the impact with the whale, but when he saw the monster +coming after the boat he knew the only safety lay in flight. + +"Let us go up into the air and so escape him!" cried Jack, with sudden +inspiration. + +For an instant neither Mark nor the professor grasped what Jack meant. +Then, with an exclamation, the professor pulled forward the lever that +generated the gas and set working the gravity neutralizer, which would +enable the ship to rise. + +Faster through the water went the _Mermaid_, and faster after her came +the whale. Above the hum of the engines was heard the hiss of the +powerful gas. The ship trembled more violently. + +"We are rising!" exclaimed the professor, as he looked at a gage. + +The boys could feel the craft lifting from the waves which clung to her +as if they hated to lose her. The boys knew the gas was beginning to +operate. + +"If it is not too late!" whispered Mark, half to himself. + +For the monster of the seas was coming on, lashing the water to foam +with his terrible flukes, and sending aloft a bloody spray. His speed +was awful. + +Now he was but ten feet away from the fleeing craft--now but eight--now +five! Ten seconds more and the big head, like the blunt stern of a +battle ship, forced forward by the tons of blubber, flesh, bone and fat +behind it would strike the _Mermaid_ and crush it like an egg shell. + +Now if ever was the need for the _Flying Mermaid_ to prove herself +worthy of the name. Now, if ever, was the time for her to leave the +watery element and take to the lighter one. + +And she did. With a last tremble, as if to free herself from the hold of +the waves, the gallant craft soared up into the air, leaving the water, +which dripped from her keel like a fountain's spray, and shooting aloft +like a bird, escaped her terrible enemy which passed under her, so close +that the lower part of the _Flying Mermaid_ scraped the whale's back. + +"Saved!" exclaimed the professor. + +[Illustration: THE LOWER PART OF THE FLYING MERMAID SCRAPED THE WHALE'S +BACK.] + + + + + CHAPTER VI + + THE CYCLONE + + +It was only in the nick of time, for a second later and the big mammal +of the ocean would have struck the ship and split it from stem to stern. + +Higher and higher into the air mounted the _Flying Mermaid_, while in +the water below, the whale, incensed by missing his prey, was lashing +the waves to foam. + +"Well, that was a narrow squeak; as close as I ever care to come to it!" +exclaimed Andy as he let go of the steel rail to which he was clinging +and entered the conning tower. "I had no idea of hitting the big fish." + +"I guess he would have taken after us whether you had fired at him or +not," said Mr. Henderson. "He was probably looking for trouble, and took +the first thing that came in his way, which happened to be us. Some +whales are like that, so I have read; big bull creatures, exiled from +the school to which they once belonged, they get like mad creatures and +know neither friend nor foe. Something like rogue elephants, I imagine." + +Now, having thus unexpectedly risen into the air, the professor decided +to continue travel in that style for a while at least. It would require +less force to propel the ship, and the going would be more comfortable, +since in the upper regions the _Mermaid_ rode on an even keel, while in +the water there was more or less rolling, due to the action of the +waves. + +Once recovered from their fright caused by the whale, and having lost +sight of the enormous creature, for they were now far above the ocean, +the adventurers began to think of something to eat. + +Washington lost little time in preparing a meal, and it was eaten with a +relish. The electric cooking stove worked to perfection, for the colored +man had learned how to use that aboard the _Porpoise_ and _Monarch_, and +could be depended on to turn out appetizing dishes. + +"What do you say to traveling through the air at night?" asked Mr. +Henderson, as he arose from the table. + +"Suits me," replied Mark. "There's less danger than in the water, I +think." + +Bill, Tom and Washington arranged to stand the night watch, and, when +the professor had examined the engines and given orders about keeping +the ship on her course through the air, he retired to his bunk. Jack and +Mark soon followed. + +It must have been about midnight when Mark was awakened by a movement +that seemed to come from the storeroom next to where his sleeping place +was located. At first he thought he had been dreaming, but, as he found +he was wide awake, he knew it was no imagination that had affected him. + +"I certainly heard something," he said to himself. "It sounded just as +it did the other night. I wonder if I ought to investigate." + +He thought over the matter carefully as he sat upright in his bunk in +the darkness. True the noise might be a natural one, due to the +vibration of the engine, or to some echo from the machinery. As Mark +listened he heard it again. + +This time he realized it was the slow movement of some heavy body. He +felt a cold shiver run over him and his hair evinced an uncomfortable +tendency to stand upright. But he conquered his feelings and resolved to +keep cool and see if he could discover what had awakened him. + +He got up and moved softly about the little room that contained his +bunk. He could hear better now, and knew it was no echo or vibration +that had come to his ears. + +Once again he heard the strange sound. It was exactly the same as +before; as if some big creature was pulling itself over the floor. + +"Maybe it's a snake; a water snake!" thought Mark. "It may have crawled +aboard when we did not notice it." + +Then he remembered that the ship had not been open in any way that would +enable a serpent to come on it, since it had been started on its ocean +trip. Before that, he was sure no snake had entered the _Flying +Mermaid_. Still it sounded more like a snake than anything else. + +"I'm going to make a search," decided the boy. + +He took a small portable electric light, run by a storage battery, and, +slipping on a pair of shoes and a bath robe, he left his stateroom. + +He had decided that the noise came from the storage compartment and so +made for that. The door he knew was not locked, since he had seen Mr. +Henderson go in late that afternoon, and the professor had used no key. + +Moving softly, Mark left his room and soon found himself in a corridor, +on either side of which were located the sleeping quarters of the +others. He did not want to awaken them, and, perhaps, be laughed at for +his curiosity. + +To get to the storeroom Mark had to go first from the corridor into the +dining room. He soon reached the door that guarded what he thought might +be a strange secret. Trying the knob softly he found it giving under his +fingers. + +"I wonder if I had better go in," he thought. "Perhaps, after all, it +was only rats, as Jack said." + +But, even as he listened he again heard the odd sound coming from the +room. This determined him. He would solve the mystery if possible. + +Cautiously he turned the knob. The door was slowly swinging open when +Mark was startled by a noise from behind him. He turned suddenly to see +Professor Henderson confronting him. + +"What is it, Mark? Is the ship on fire? What's the matter? Is any one +hurt?" + +"I was just going in this room to----" began Mark. + +"Don't do it! Don't do it!" exclaimed the professor in an excited +whisper. "No one must go in that room. I forgot to tell you and Jack +about it. No one must enter. It contains a secret!" + +"I heard a strange noise and----" Mark began again. + +"It could make no noise! It would be impossible for it to make a noise!" +the professor exclaimed. + +"I heard something," the boy insisted. + +"You were dreaming!" said the professor. "Now go back to bed, Mark, and +don't let this happen again. Remember, no one must enter that room +unless I give permission!" + +Somewhat crestfallen at the outcome of his investigations, but realizing +that the professor could do what he wanted to aboard his own ship, Mark +went back to bed. But he could not sleep. All the rest of the night he +was wondering whether Mr. Henderson had some strange creature hidden +aboard the _Mermaid_. He feared lest the old scientist's mind might be +affected and, in his wildness he had made some infernal machine that +would, in time, blow the whole ship apart. + +But tired nature asserted itself at last, and, weary with vain +imaginings, Mark fell into a slumber. The next morning he awoke with a +start from a dream that he was being devoured by an immense water snake. + +He said nothing to the others about his night's adventure, for, as it +transpired, no one else had been awakened by his investigations. The +professor did not refer to his conversation with Mark. + +"There's something queer going on aboard the ship this trip," said Mark +to himself. "But I guess it's none of my business. Professor Henderson +seems to know what he is doing and I guess I can trust him." + +He resolved to think no more of the strange noises and movements, and, +for several nights thereafter he was not disturbed by them. + +The weather, which, up to this time had been fair, took a sudden turn +for the worse about the fourth day after Mark's little night expedition. +One evening the sun sank in a mass of dull lead-colored clouds and a +sharp wind sprang up. + +"We're going to have a storm," said Mr. Henderson. "It's liable to be a +bad one, too, from the way the barometer is falling." + +He looked at the glass, and scanned the various instruments that told +how high up the _Mermaid_ was and how fast she was traveling. + +"We're pretty high up in the air," he said, "and scooting along at about +fifty miles an hour. We are going against the wind, too, but fortunately +it is not blowing hard." + +At that moment there sounded from without a peculiar howling sound, as +if a siren whistle was being blown. + +"'Pears like there's goin' t' be a tumultuous demonstration of +sub-maxiliary contortions in th' empherial regions contiguous t' th' +upper atmosphere!" exclaimed Washington, entering from the engine room +into the conning tower. + +"What's the trouble?" asked Mr. Henderson. + +"Terrible big black cloud chasin' us from behind!" exclaimed the colored +man. + +Noting the alarm in Washington's voice the professor glanced from the +rear window. What he saw caused him to exclaim: + +"It's a cyclone! We must drop down to avoid it!" + +He sprang to a lever controlling the gas and yanked it toward him. There +was a shrill hissing sound, and a second later the _Mermaid_ began to +sink. The boys watching the gages on the wall of the tower, saw that the +craft was falling rapidly. + +But, with a rush and roar, the terrible wind was upon them. It caught +the craft in its fearful grip and heeled it over as a ship careens to +the ocean blast. + +"It's a storm in the upper regions! We'll find it calm below!" cried the +professor above the howling of the gale. He opened the gas outlet wider +and the ship fell more rapidly. + +"Are you sure we're over the ocean?" asked Mark. + +"Positive!" the professor called back. "We have been traveling straight +south over the Atlantic for the last week. We will land in the midst of +the waters and float safely." + +Lower and lower went the _Mermaid_. The wind was now blowing with the +force of a tornado, and, as the craft had to slant in order to descend, +it felt the power of the gale more than if it had scudded before it. +But, by skilful use of the directing tube, the professor was able to +keep the boat from turning over. As they came further down toward the +earth the force of the wind was felt less and less, until, as they came +within two hundred feet of the water which they saw below them in the +gathering dusk, it died out altogether. + +"Now we are free from it," said the professor as the _Mermaid_ came down +on the waves like an immense swan. + +"Are you going ahead or going to stop here?" asked Mark. + +"We'll keep right on," Mr. Henderson answered. "No telling when the +storm may strike down here. We'll go as far as we can to-night." + + + + + CHAPTER VII + + A QUEER SAIL + + +Now that the fear and worriment was over they all began to feel hungry, +and, while Mark and Jack took charge of the conning tower Washington got +breakfast. The professor seemed preoccupied during the meal, and several +times, when Mark spoke to him, he did not reply. + +"I wonder if he is worried about something, or is thinking of something +which seems to be concealed in the storeroom," the boy thought. + +But, after a while, the professor seemed to be more like himself. He was +busy over several maps and charts, and then announced the ship would try +air-sailing again for a while. + +"We can make better time above than we can on the water," he said, "and +I am anxious to get to the mysterious island and learn what is in store +for us." + +Perhaps if the professor had been able to look ahead, and see what was +soon going to happen, he would not have been so anxious for it to occur. + +It was shortly after dinner when, the gas container having been filled, +the ship rose in the air, and began sailing over the ocean, about a mile +up. The day was a fine one, and, as they were moving south, it was +constantly growing warmer. Down on the water, in fact, it was quite hot, +but in the air it was just right. + +Like some immense bird the _Mermaid_ went flying through the air. The +boys and the professor sat upon the deck in easy chairs. It was like +being on the top of some tall "sky-scraper" building which, by some +strange power, was being moved forward. Below them the ocean tumbled in +long, lazy swells. + +Suddenly Mark, who was looking through a telescope at the expanse of +water stretched out under them, gave a cry. + +"There's a ship! She's on fire!" + +"Where?" asked the professor, stretching out his hand for the glass. + +"Just to the port of the forward tube. See the smoke!" exclaimed Mark. + +Mr. Henderson looked. Through the lens he saw a column of black vapor +rising skyward. Mingled with it were red flames. + +"Lower the _Mermaid_!" he cried. "We must save those on board if we +can!" + +Mark ran to the conning tower, where Washington was, to give the order. +The colored man, who was looking ahead, intent on guiding the ship, did +not at first hear what Mark called. + +"Lower us! Send the _Mermaid_ down!" Mark cried again. + +The sudden shout and the excited voice of Mark so startled Washington, +that, fearing some accident had happened, he pulled the lever, +controlling the gas supply, with more force than necessary. + +There was a loud explosion, followed by a crackling sound, a flash of +light, and the _Mermaid_ came to a sudden stop. + +"What's the matter?" cried Mark, feeling that something was wrong. + +"I don't know!" Washington replied, as he dashed toward the engine room. + +The _Mermaid_, her forward flight checked, hung in the air, suspended, +neither rising or falling. + +"Why don't we go on down?" the professor asked, hurrying to the tower. + +"There has been an explosion--an accident!" exclaimed Mark. "I guess we +can't go down!" + +"But we must!" Mr. Henderson insisted, seizing the lever which should +have produced a downward motion. The handle swung to and fro. It was +disconnected from the apparatus it operated. + +The ship was now stationary in the air, moving neither forward nor +backward, neither rising nor falling. Washington had stopped the air +pumps as soon as he learned something was wrong. + +When Mr. Henderson saw the useless lever, which had controlled the +outlet of gas from the holder, he ran out on deck. One glance told him +what had happened. One of the electric wires had become +short-circuited,--that is, the insulation had worn off and allowed the +current to escape. This had produced a spark, which had exploded the gas +which was in the pipe leading from the generator up into the aluminum +holder. Fortunately there was an automatic cut-off for the supply of +vapor, or the whole tank would have gone up. + +As it was, only a small quantity had blown up, but this was enough to +break the machinery at the point where the lever in the conning tower +joined the pipe. If it had not been for the automatic cut-off all the +gas in the holder would have poured out in a great volume, and the ship +would have fallen like a shot. + +"Can we do nothing to save those on the burning vessel?" asked Mark, +pointing to where a cloud of smoke hung over the ocean. + +"I fear not, now," answered the professor. "We are in a bad plight +ourselves." + +"Are we in any danger?" asked Jack. + +"Not specially," Mr. Henderson replied. "But we must find a means of +lowering ourselves gradually." + +"Then it will be too late to save any of those on the ship," observed +Mark. + +"I'm afraid so," the scientist made reply. + +The _Mermaid_ rested some distance above the surface of the waters. She +moved slightly to and fro with the wind, and rocked gently. The +professor was examining the broken machinery. + +"I have a plan!" suddenly cried Mark. + +"What is it?" asked Mr. Henderson. + +"Can't we bore a hole in the tank, insert a small faucet or tap, and let +the gas out that way gradually?" asked the boy. "When we get down we can +rescue those in danger of fire, and, later, can repair the break." + +"The very thing!" exclaimed Mr. Henderson. "I never thought of that! +Here, Washington! Bring me a drill, and a small stop-cock!" + +The drill was obtained from the engine room. Working rapidly Mr. +Henderson bored a hole in the lower part of the holder. As soon as the +metal was penetrated the gas, which was under considerable pressure, +rushed from the tank with a hissing sound. At once the _Mermaid_ began +to settle rapidly. + +But the professor was prepared for this. He thrust the end of the +stop-cock into the hole. It was screwed fast and the valve turned. This +stopped the flow of gas and checked the descent of the ship. Then, by +opening the tap the vapor was allowed to escape gradually, bringing the +_Flying Mermaid_ gently to the water. + +As the adventurers approached they could see that the vessel was now a +mass of flames. The wind was driving the fire toward the forecastle, and +the crew had sought refuge aft. But this expedient could not last long, +for, already the tongues of fire were licking the sides of the craft and +coming nearer and nearer the seemingly doomed men. The vessel was a +large one, and heavily laden. + +As those in peril caught sight of the _Mermaid_ settling down into the +water, apparently from the clouds, their fears gave place to +astonishment. So great was this that they ceased their cries of terror. +Then, as they saw that the strange craft navigated the ocean, for the +engines were started aboard the _Mermaid_, they began to call for help. + + + + + CHAPTER VIII + + THE FLYING MERMAID DISABLED + + +"We'll save you!" shouted Mr. Henderson, who was on the deck, while Mark +was steering the craft. "Hold on a few minutes longer and we'll be +alongside!" + +"They're real! They're real!" some of those aboard the burning ship +could be heard to shout. Evidently more than one of them had taken the +_Mermaid_ for a delusion of their fear-crazed brain. + +"They are real persons!" they called again and again. "They are coming +to save us!" + +Mr. Henderson ran his ship as near the burning craft as he dared. Then +he called to the crew to leap into the water and swim to him. He, with +Washington, Jack, Bill and Tom, stood ready to haul aboard any who were +too weak to help themselves. + +In a few minutes all of those left alive on the sailing vessel--fourteen +in all--had come safely aboard the _Mermaid_. The ship was now +completely enveloped in flames. + +"Are there any more left on her?" asked Mr. Henderson of one who +appeared to be a mate of the burning craft. + +"Not a soul!" was the answer. "The captain and ten men perished in the +flames. The fire broke out a week ago in the lower hold. We fought it as +well as we could but it got the best of us. Then it suddenly broke +through the decks, almost like an explosion, a little while ago, and the +captain and others were lost, and so were our small boats. We managed to +get aft but were about to give up when you appeared." + +"What ship is it and where are you from?" + +"The _Good Hope_, laden with logwood, hides, jute and other materials +from South America," the mate answered. "We were bound for New York." + +"It is more like the _Last Hope_ instead of the _Good Hope_," observed +Mr. Henderson in a quiet voice, as he saw the flames mount higher and +higher over the ship. A few seconds later the craft seemed rent by an +internal explosion. It appeared to break in two parts, and, amid a +shower of sparks and a cloud of black smoke, the vessel sank under the +water and was seen no more. + +The rescued men turned to behold the final end of their ship. They +betrayed no particular emotion, and some of them even laughed, which the +professor thought, at the time, was rather strange. But there was little +opportunity for speculation. The men were in a sad plight. Few of them +had more than the clothes they stood in, though each one wore about his +waist a belt, and all of them seemed to guard the leather circlets +jealously. + +The professor and his crew were soon busy supplying remedies for burns, +since several of the men were seared by the flames. Then, as it was +learned they had eaten nothing for many hours, it having been impossible +to use the galley, a meal was prepared and the survivors of the wreck +were well fed. + +The hunger of the newcomers having been appeased, they showed much +curiosity over the strange craft that had so opportunely come to their +rescue. Most of the sailors were ignorant men, and the professor had +little fear of them learning anything concerning his secrets. He +explained briefly about the _Mermaid_, but said nothing of whither she +was bound. + +The addition of fourteen men to the rather small accommodations of the +_Mermaid_ was a serious matter to consider. The ship was able to hold +them all, and even to sail through the air with them, since Mr. +Henderson had provided an excess of power. But it was going to be a +problem to feed so many, and still save enough provisions for the long +voyage which lay ahead. + +However, Mr. Henderson felt his first duty to be toward his fellowmen, +even if his voyage must be delayed, or given up for a time, while he got +more provisions. There would be no sleeping quarters for the sailors, +but when this was explained to them they cheerfully said they would +sleep on deck if necessary. In fact some of them had to, but as the +weather was warm and clear this was no hardship. A few found quarters in +the engine room and other apartments of the _Mermaid_. + +Finding, after an examination, that his ship was in good order save for +the broken gas apparatus, Mr. Henderson gave orders to proceed along the +surface of the ocean. The sailors wanted to see how it felt to mount +into the air, but Mr. Henderson, refused to attempt a flight until he +had made complete repairs, and this would take a day or more. + +At this there appeared to be some discontent among the survivors, and +they muttered to each other as they stood in a group on deck. But the +professor and his assistants were too busy with their preparations for +fixing the break to notice this. + +While the men were gathered in a knot near the after part of the small +deck, the mate separated from them, and, coming close to where Mark was +standing, unscrewing some of the broken parts of the pipe said, in a low +voice. + +"Tell the captain to watch out." + +"What do you mean?" asked Mark quickly. + +"Hush! Not so loud!" the mate exclaimed. "If the men hear me talking to +you, or see me, they may kill me. Tell the captain to look out; that's +all. Be on guard, and watch the engine room carefully." + +"But why--?" Mark began, when, turning suddenly, the mate left him. It +was well he did so, for, at that instant, one of the sailors, who had +observed the two conversing, strolled in their direction. + +Much alarmed, Mark sought Mr. Henderson and told him what he had heard. + +"I suppose the fire may have turned the poor man's head," the scientist +said. "I wonder if he thinks the men I rescued would mutiny and take +possession of my ship? If they did they would not know how to work it, +so what good would it do?" + +"Hadn't we better look out?" asked Mark. + +"I'm not afraid," replied the professor. "I will be too busy the next +few days, repairing the break, to think of anything else. Besides, what +would they want to harm us for? Didn't we save their lives?" + +Seeing the scientist placed no faith in what the mate had said, Mark +went back to his task. + +It soon became too dark to work, and it was decided, after supper, to +halt the ship until morning as it would be less risky. + +Mark did not sleep well, his dreams being disturbed by visions of +pirates and black flags. But morning came and nothing had developed. The +men seemed to recover their spirits with daybreak, and most of the crew, +after breakfast, greeted Mr. Henderson pleasantly, and asked to be +allowed to help fix the ship. + +It took the skilled labor of the professor, Washington and the boys to +mend the break, and, even at that, it was four days in the repairing. +But at last the final bolt was in place, and the _Mermaid_ was able to +resume her trips through the air. + +"We will rise the first thing in the morning," said the professor to +Mark and Jack that night. "I am anxious to see how the ship behaves with +a big load aboard." + + + + + CHAPTER IX + + THE MUTINY + + +Mark was awakened that night by feeling some one trying to turn him +over. At first he thought it was Jack, and sleepily muttered that he +wanted to be let alone. + +"Sorry I can't oblige ye, my hearty!" exclaimed a rough voice in his +ear, "but I got particular orders t' tie you up!" + +At that Mark tried to sit up, but he found he could not. He discovered +that he was closely bound with many turns of a rope, while in front of +his bunk stood one of the rescued sailors. + +"There," said the man, with a final tightening of the ropes. "I guess +you're safe." + +"What's the matter? What does it all mean?" asked Mark, much bewildered. + +"It means that we have possession of the ship," the sailor answered, +"and, if you're wise you'll not make a fuss. It wouldn't do any good, +anyhow, as all your friends are in the same condition." + +Then, picking Mark up, as if he was a baby, the man slung him over his +shoulder and carried him to the living room. There Mark saw Jack, the +professor, Washington, and the others similarly bound. + +"Do you realize what you are doing?" asked the professor angrily of his +captors. "You are mutinying, and are liable to severe punishment." + +"If they ever get us," added one of the men. "We've got the ship now, +and we mean to keep her. You'll have to run her or show us how." + +"Never!" cried the professor. + +"I guess he will when he feels this," said one of the men, as he dragged +from a recess two wires. "I happen to know something of electricity, and +when he feels these perhaps he'll change his mind. I'll start the +dynamo." + +The sailor showed that he was acquainted with machinery, for soon the +hum of the electric apparatus was heard. + +"Now to make him tell!" the man with the wires exclaimed, advancing +toward the professor, who turned pale. + +"Stop! You must not torture the old man!" cried a voice, and the mate of +the _Good Hope_ stepped in front of the sailor with the electrified +wires. + +"Who's going to stop me?" asked the man. + +"I will. It's not necessary," the mate went on quickly. "If we make him +weak we may kill him, and he can not tell us what we want to know. One +of the boys can tell us how to run the ship." + +The mate came quickly over to where Mark lay, and whispered: + +"Consent to tell. It is the only way of saving his life. Tell 'em how to +raise the craft. Then leave all to me. I will save you all and the ship, +too, if I can. But consent." + +Mark nodded his head, and the mate cried: + +"I knew I could fetch 'em. I have hypnotic power. This boy will raise +the ship for us. Loosen his bonds, some of you." + +Satisfied that they were now on the way to experiencing a new sensation, +the sailors took the ropes off Mark's arms and legs, and he was allowed +to rise. With a reassuring nod toward the professor he led the way to +the engine room, followed by half the men. He resolved to start the gas +machine slowly, so as to make the upward trip last longer, thinking +before it had gone far, some way of escape from the mutineers might be +found. + +While a crowd of the sailors stood near him, Mark operated the machinery +in the engine room that started the gas generating, and set the negative +gravity apparatus working. + +"You'd better not try any tricks on us," said one of the men in an ugly +tone of voice. + +"I'm not going to," replied Mark. "If you go out on deck you will soon +see the ship leaving the water and mounting into the air." + +"Some of you go," ordered a man with a big bushy red beard. "See if the +ship rises. When she begins to go up sing out. I'm going to stay here +and see how the young cub does it so I can work it myself." + +Obeying the red-bearded man, who seemed to be a leader, several of the +sailors went out on the deck. It was quite dark, but there was a +phosphorous glow to the water which made the rolling waves visible. + +The gas was being generated, as could be told by the hissing sound. Mark +watched the machinery anxiously, for he knew much depended on him, and +the professor was not at hand to guide and instruct him. He watched the +dial of the gage which registered the gas pressure and saw it slowly +moving. In a little while it would be at the point at which the ship +ought to rise. + +Presently a quiver seemed to run through the _Mermaid_. Now a shout came +from the watchers on deck. + +"She's going up!" + +The ship was indeed rising. The red-bearded man, who was addressed as +Tony, ran from the engine room to the deck. He saw that the ship was now +ten feet above the water. Back he came to where Mark stood by the gas +machine. + +"Lucky for you that you didn't fool us, lad," he said with a leer. "See +that you mind me hereafter. Now show me how the shebang works." + +When the ship had risen as far as Tony desired he made Mark send it +straight ahead. The boy adjusted the air tube to carry the craft toward +the south, but Tony, seeing by a compass in which direction they were +headed, ordered Mark to steer due east. + +"Fix things so they will stay so, too," added Tony. "I don't want to +stop until I get a thousand miles away. Then we'll come down, sail to +some sunny island, and enjoy life." + +Mark locked the steering apparatus so as to keep the _Mermaid_ headed +due east. + +"Now you can go back to your friends," Tony said. "When I want you I'll +send for you." + +With a heavy heart Mark rejoined the professor and others. He found them +with their bonds removed. But to guard against their escape several men +were on watch outside the door. + +"What are they doing?" asked the professor eagerly as Mark entered, and +the boy told him what had taken place. + +"They will ruin my ship and spoil the whole trip," cried the old +scientist. "Oh, why did I ever go to the rescue of the scoundrels?" + +"Never mind," said Jack. "Perhaps we may yet outwit them." + +Morning came at last. The ship was still shooting forward at fast speed, +in an easterly direction. The sailors had learned, in their short stay +aboard, where the food and stores were kept, and they lost little time +in getting breakfast. They sent some in to their captives, including a +big pot of hot coffee, and, after partaking of this the professor and +his friends felt better. + +The mate of the _Good Hope_ came in to help clear away the dishes. As he +passed Mark he slipped into the boy's hand a note. + +"Don't read it until you are alone," he said in a low voice, as he +hurried from the room. + +As soon as the other sailors had left, Mark glanced at the slip of +paper. It bore these words: + +"Open when you hear three raps, then two, then three, and keep silent." + +"What is it?" asked Mr. Henderson. + +Mark showed him the paper. + +"I wonder what it means," the boy said. + +"Do you think he is a friend of ours?" the professor asked. + +Mark told him of the mate's conversation the night previous. + +"I think we can trust him," the scientist went on. "He must intend to +pay us a visit when the others are asleep. When we hear the knocks as he +specifies we must open the door and let him in." + +All that day the captives were kept in the living room. Once or twice +Mark was sent for to make some adjustment to the machinery, but the +apparatus, for the most part, was automatic, and needed little +attention. The professor, as well as the others, were all impatience for +the promised visit of the mate. Still they felt he would not come until +night. + +In fact it was long past midnight before Mark, Jack and the professor, +who were anxiously listening, heard the three raps, then two, then three +more. Mark quickly opened the door, and the mate stepped inside, holding +his finger to his lips as a sign of caution. Old Andy, Washington, Bill +and Tom had fallen asleep. + +"I have only time for a few words," the mate said. "I am closely +watched. Tony mistrusts me. I will save you if I can." + +"Why have they repaid my kindness with such actions?" asked Mr. +Henderson. + +"Because they are desperate men," replied the mate. "They are nothing +more than pirates. They mutinied on the other ship, killed the captain +and those of the crew who would not join them, and started off to seek +their fortunes. I pretended to join them to save my life, but I have +only been watching for a chance to escape. + +"Because of lax discipline the ship was sent on fire. We tried to put it +out but could not. The rest you know. + +"I heard them plan to capture this airship, but could do nothing to stop +them. Then I resolved to pretend to act with them. They fear pursuit for +their other mutiny, and are anxious to get as far away as possible." + +"Do you think they will abandon the ship in a little while?" asked the +professor hopefully. + +"I'm afraid not," answered the mate. "I think they want to get rid of +all of you, so they can sail about as they please. Tony is a smart man. +He could soon learn to run this ship, he thinks." + +"I doubt it," Mr. Henderson answered. "But how are you going to help +us?" + +"I have not fully made up my plans," the mate answered. "However I +wanted you to know I would do my best to save you. Now I must go. Be on +the watch and when I can I will let you know what I have decided on. I +will hand Mark a note when I bring your meals, just as I did to-day. I +think----" + +"Hark! What was that?" asked the professor. + +There was a noise outside the door, as if some one was listening. + +"Put out the lights!" whispered the mate, and Jack switched off the +electric incandescents. + +A knock sounded on the door and the voice of Tony called: + +"Mark! Come here! I want you to look at the gas machine. It has stopped +working, and we are falling!" + + + + + CHAPTER X + + FOOLING THEIR ENEMIES + + +Mark hurried into the corridor, taking care to close the door after him, +so Tony could get no glimpse of the mate who had risked so much to save +his friends. But he need not have been alarmed for the leader of the +mutineers was too excited over the stopping of the gas apparatus to give +any heed to who was in with the captives. + +"Do you think you can fix it?" he asked the boy. + +"I guess so," Mark replied confidently. "If I can't there is no danger, +for we will fall gradually and land in the water." + +"But I don't want to do that," Tony objected. "I want to keep on through +the air." + +Mark did not reply. By this time he was at the gas machine. He soon saw +nothing was the matter save that new material must be placed in the +retort where the vapor was generated. He refilled it, the gas was +manufactured once more, and the ship began to rise. + +"I will know how to do it next time," Tony said with a grin. Mark +realized that every time he showed the leader of the mutineers something +about the ship it was putting the professor and his friends more and +more into the power of the scoundrels. But there was no help for it. + +The ship was still plunging ahead, and kept about a mile above the +earth. As there was no further need of Mark, he was told he could go +back to his friends. When he reached the room where they were held +prisoners, he found the mate had gone away, promising again to do all he +could for them. + +The next night, which it seemed would never come, for the day, locked as +the captives were in their room, seemed endless, finally closed in. +Mark, Jack and the professor were anxious to know whether the mate would +pay them another visit. As for Andy, Tom and Bill, while they were +interested in the ship, and wanted to be free from the power of the +mutineers, they did not lose any sleep over it. + +Shortly after midnight, there came again the peculiar knock, and the +mate entered the room. He seemed much excited over something, and, as +soon as the portal was securely closed he said to Professor Henderson: + +"Is there an island any where near here where men could live for a +time?" + +"What do you mean?" asked the scientist. "Do you want us to desert the +ship and leave these scoundrels in charge?" + +"Nothing of the sort," replied the mate, who, had said his name was Jack +Rodgers. "But first answer my question. A great deal may depend on it." + +Seeing Rodgers was in earnest, the professor looked over some maps and +charts, and announced that they were within a few hundred miles of a +group of islands. + +"When would we reach them?" was Rodgers' next question. + +Mr. Henderson made a few rapid calculations on a piece of paper. + +"At the present rate of sailing," he said, "we should be there about ten +o'clock to-morrow. That is, provided the ship does not slacken speed or +increase it." + +"There is no danger of either of those two things happening," said the +mate. "Tony is too afraid of the machinery to do anything to it. So you +may safely figure that our speed will continue the same." + +"Then I can guarantee, with all reasonable certainty," the professor +said, "that about ten o'clock to-morrow we will be less than a mile from +the islands. They are a group where friendly natives live, and where +many tropical fruits abound. One could scarcely select a better place to +be shipwrecked. But I hope the plans of Tony and his friends do not +include landing us there." + +"No, nothing like that," the mate answered. "Quite the contrary. But I +had better be going. I will try and see Mark some time to-morrow. Tony +does not mind when I speak to him." + +With this Rodgers left the captives, as he heard some of the sailors +moving about and did not want to be discovered. The professor and the +boys wondered what the mate's plan might be, but they had to be content +to wait and see. + +The night passed without incident. About nine o'clock the next morning +the mate came to the door of the room where the professor and his +friends were prisoners. He made no secret of his approach, but knocked +boldly. + +"Tell Mark I want to see him," he said, as the professor answered. "All +of you keep quiet," he added in a whisper. "There may be good news +soon." + +Mark slipped from the room. He followed the mate to the upper deck +which, at that time was deserted as all the sailors were in the dining +room eating, which practice they indulged in as often as they could. + +"I have a plan to get rid of these rough men," the mate said to Mark. +"It may work, and, again it may not. At any rate it is worth trying. It +all depends on you with what help I can give you." + +"I'm willing to do my share," Mark said, and for the next ten minutes +the boy and the mate were in earnest conversation. + +It was about thirty-five minutes later when there arose a sudden +commotion in the ship. Mark had returned to his friends and the mate had +disappeared. The confusion seemed to come from the engine room where +Tony had posted some of his men. + +"We're falling down! We'll all be killed!" shouted the men. "The ship is +falling into the sea!" + +"What is the trouble?" asked the professor as he heard the commotion. + +"It is part of the mate's plan," said Mark. "He told me to tell you to +do nothing. If Tony or any of the other men come to you just refer them +to me." + +Two minutes later Tony came rushing into the apartment where the +captives were held prisoners. + +"Here! Come quickly, Mark!" he exclaimed. "Something has gone wrong with +the gas machine again, and you must come and fix it before we are all +dashed to pieces!" + +With every appearance of haste Mark rushed from the apartment, following +Tony. The latter led the way to the engine room. + +"Can anything be done?" he asked. + +Mark took a survey of the machinery. + +"It is too late," he said as though much excited. "The ship is falling +down toward the sea with terrific force." + +It needed but a glance at the height gage to show this. The pointer was +revolving rapidly about the face of the dial. + +"Will the ship stand the blow?" asked Tony. + +"Not at the rate it is falling," replied Mark. "She will go all to +pieces when she strikes the water, and she may explode!" + +"What are we to do then?" asked the leader of the mutineers. + +"We must save ourselves!" cried the mate, running in at this juncture. +"Let our prisoners shift for themselves as best they can. Let's all leap +into the sea. There we at least have a chance for our lives. But if we +stay on this ship we will all be drowned like cats in a bag." + +"What do you propose?" asked Tony, his face white with fear. + +"When the ship comes near enough the surface of the water to make it +safe we should all drop overboard!" the mate exclaimed. "We are near +some islands, I understand, and we can thus save our lives by swimming +ashore." + +This plan seemed to meet with instant favor, and a little later there +was a rush for the deck, as each one wished to be the first to escape +from the boat they believed to be doomed. + +Lower and lower fell the _Mermaid_. She was like a wounded bird which +the shot of the hunter has crippled. Down and down she fluttered. + +By this time all the sailors, save the mate were on deck. He and Mark +remained in the engine room. + +"Don't let her get too low," the mate whispered. + +"I'll watch out," Mark replied. "I want to give them a good scare while +I'm at it." + +The ship was now within fifty feet of the water. There was a cry of +terror from the sailors. Some of them leaped over the rail and started +to swim ashore, as the ship was by this time close to a group of +islands. + +Suddenly, from the engine room the mate rushed. + +"Jump! Jump for your lives!" he exclaimed. "The ship is about to blow +up!" + + + + + CHAPTER XI + + MYSTERIOUS HAPPENINGS + + +The voice of the mate echoed through the _Mermaid_. Those on deck heard +it, as did Tony in the engine room, where he was vainly trying to +understand the complicated machinery. + +An instant later there sounded from beneath the ship a series of +splashes. More sailors were leaping from the deck of the craft to the +ocean. The distance was not great, particularly as they all landed in +water. + +"Quick!" cried the mate to a group of sailors that hesitated before +taking the jump. "The ship may blow up any minute now." + +The men needed no second urging. As soon as they struck the water they +began to swim ashore, as it was not far away. One after another they +jumped over the rail. Tony was the last to go. He urged the captives to +follow him, but they all refused. + +A minute later the only one of the pirate crew left on the ship was the +mate. The others were all struggling in the sea. Eventually they all +reached shore in safety. + +The airship was now within about twenty feet of the water. It was still +falling but not so rapidly. + +"Better send her up, now," said the mate to Mark, and the boy turned the +necessary levers to accomplish this. + +Dipping into the water as a sea gull does when searching for food on the +wing, for she had come quite low, the _Mermaid_ mounted once more into +the air, and was soon sailing along over the heads of Tony and his gang. + +"What's it all about?" asked Mr. Henderson, who seemed in a sort of +stupor. "I thought the ship was broken. How, then, can it rise?" + +"It was only a trick of mine," Rodgers said. "The gas machine is not +broken. I had Mark fix it so that only a little vapor would be +generated. When the supply in the holder was not enough, and no more was +being made, the ship had to sink. Mark and I pretended it was worse than +it really was just to scare the scoundrels." + +"And you evidently succeeded," observed Mr. Henderson. "They have all +left us. I am glad you stayed." + +"So am I," said Rodgers. "I was just waiting for a chance to escape from +that crowd. This was the plan I thought of that night. I wanted to see +the men put on some island where they could manage to live, and which +was not too far away." + +The _Mermaid_ was now mounting upward rapidly, as Mark had adjusted the +machinery properly. The craft was well rid of the pirate crew, and was +able to proceed on its way, and enable Mr. Henderson to carry out his +plans. + +When the _Mermaid_ had reached a certain height her prow was turned the +other way, and she was sent back racing over the ground she had just +covered. But now the ship was in the hands of friends. Fortunately no +great damage had been done by the sailors, and the professor was soon +able to get things in ship-shape. The engines had not been molested and +were working better than ever. + +"Now to make another attempt to reach the big hole in the earth," the +professor cried. "We will be careful next time, who we rescue from ships +at sea." + +The island was soon left behind, becoming a mere speck on the ocean. +Those aboard the _Mermaid_ knew no harm could befall the sailors, as +there were no savage tribes on the little spot of land. Eventually the +sailors were picked up by a passing vessel and taken to their homes. The +story of their first mutiny leaked out and they were properly punished. + +It required several days travel before the airship regained the distance +she had lost because of the plans of the pirates. Also, there were a +number of minor repairs to make, and the professor and his friends were +kept busy. + +"How much longer before we come to the big hole?" asked Jack, one day. + +"I think we ought to be near it in about two weeks," the professor +replied. "I only hope we shall not be disappointed, and will be able to +explore it." + +"'Tain't goin' t' be no fun t' be decimated an' expurgitated inter a +conglomerous aggregation of elements constituting th' exterior portion +of human anatomy," said Washington in dubious tones. + +"You mean you're afraid of being boiled in the steam from the big hole?" +asked Mark. + +"Jest so," replied the colored man. + +"You don't need to worry about that," put in the professor. "I will not +take the ship down if there is any danger, though of course there will +be some risk." + +The ship, having been fully repaired, was now able to be speeded up, and +was sent scudding along toward her destination. Rodgers proved a +valuable acquisition toward the crew, for he had sailed many years in +the waters over which they were flying, and was able to give the +professor many valuable hints. He had heard vague stories of the island +with the big hole, but had never been near it. He did not make the trip +however, as, at his request, he was put off at an inhabited island one +night. + +It was about a week after the sailors were frightened from the ship, +that a curious experience befell Mark. Washington was on duty in the +conning tower, attending to the apparatus as the ship flew through the +air, and all the others had gone to bed. Mark had remained up, later +than the others as he was interested in reading a book on science. + +About ten o'clock he became hungry, and going to the pantry got some +bread and cold meat. He set these on a table, and then, remembering he +would need some water to drink, started after some in the cooler, which +was in a little room near the tower. + +Washington heard the boy as he turned the faucet to draw the liquid, and +spoke to him, as the colored man was rather lonesome at his post. Mark +did not linger more than a minute or two, but when he returned to where +he had left the food he was much surprised. + +There was not a trace of it to be seen. The dishes were on the table, +but every vestige of bread and meat had disappeared. + +"I wonder if a cat or dog has been here," was Mark's first thought. Then +he remembered that no such animals were aboard the _Mermaid_. + +Something on the floor caught his eye. He stooped and picked it up. It +was a slice of bread, but in such shape that the boy stared at it, +puzzled as to how it could have become so. + +It was flattened out quite thin, but the strangest part of it was that +it bore what seemed to be the marks of thumb and fingers from a very +large hand. So big, in fact, was the print, that Mark's hand scarce +covered half of it, and, where the bread had been squeezed into a putty +like mass (for it was quite fresh) the peculiar markings on the skin of +the tips of the fingers were visible. + +"It looks as if a giant grabbed this slice of bread," Mark observed. +"There are strange happenings aboard this ship. I wish I knew what they +meant." + +He looked all around for the food, thinking perhaps a rat had dragged it +off, but there was no trace of it. + +Suddenly the boy thought he heard a sound from the big storeroom. He was +almost sure he heard something moving in there. He started toward the +door when he was stopped by hearing the professor's voice call: + +"Don't open that door, Mark. Have I not told you that place must not be +entered?" + +"I thought I heard some one in there," Mark replied. + +"There is nothing in there but some apparatus of mine," Mr. Henderson +said. "I want no one to see it. What is the matter?" + +Mark explained matters to the scientist, who had, as he said later, +arisen on hearing the boy moving about. + +"Oh, it was a rat that took your stuff," Mr. Henderson said. "I guess +there are some pretty big ones on the ship. Get some more food and go to +sleep." + +Mark felt it best to obey, though he was by no means satisfied with the +professor's explanation. He listened intently to see if any more noises +came from the storeroom, but none did, and he went to bed. + +Several times after that Mark tried the experiment of leaving food +about. On each occasion it was taken. + +"It looks as if the ship was haunted," he said. "Of course I know it +isn't, but it's very queer. They must be strange rats that can get food +from shelves when there is only the smooth side of the ship to climb +up," for on some occasions Mark had tried the experiment of putting the +food as nearly out of reach as possible. + +It took several nights to learn all this, and, as he did not want to +take any one into his confidence, he had to work in secret. But, with +all his efforts he learned nothing, save that there was something odd +about the ship that he could not fathom. + +At first he believed the professor had some strange animal concealed in +the storeroom, but he dismissed this idea almost as soon as he thought +of it. For what could the scientist want with an animal when they were +going to the interior of the earth? That some beast had slipped aboard +was out of the question. Mark was much puzzled, but finally, deciding +the matter did not concern him a great deal, gave up trying to solve the +mystery, at least for a time. + +The ship was now in the neighborhood of the equator and the climate had +become much warmer. So hot indeed were some nights that they slept out +on deck, with the _Mermaid_ flying through the air at a moderate pace, +for it was deemed best not to go at any great speed after dark. + +One night the professor, after consulting various charts and maps, and +making calculations which covered several sheets of paper announced: + +"We should sight the mysterious island to-morrow." + +"That's good news!" exclaimed Jack. "I'm anxious to see what's below +inside of that big hole." + +"Everybody git ready for their funerals!" exclaimed Washington in a deep +voice. "I ain't got many----" + +"Cheer up," interrupted Jack, poking Washington in the ribs. The colored +man was very ticklish, and he began to laugh heartily, though, perhaps, +he did not feel like it. + +Suddenly, above the sound of his shouts, there came a crashing, grinding +noise from the engine room. + + + + + CHAPTER XII + + THE BIG HOLE + + +"Something has gone wrong!" exclaimed the professor as he jumped up. He +reached the engine room ahead of any one else, and when the two boys got +there they found him busy twisting wheels and shifting levers. + +"Anything serious?" asked Jack. + +"It's the gas machine again," Mr. Henderson replied. "It broke where we +fixed it. However it doesn't matter. I was going to lower the ship +anyhow, as I want to approach the island from the water. We will go down +a little sooner than I counted on." + +The disabling of the gas machine caused the vapor to escape slowly from +the tank, and this made the ship sink gradually. By means of the +emergency stop-cock the descent could be controlled almost as well as +though the machinery was in working order. Half an hour later the +_Mermaid_ rested on the water. + +It was a little rough, as there was quite a swell on, and not so +pleasant as floating in the air on an even keel, but they made the best +of it. + +On account of the little accident, and not being certain of its extent, +it was deemed best not to send the ship ahead. So they laid to until +morning. + +For the better part of two days all those on board the _Mermaid_ had +their hands full mending the break and making other repairs found +necessary. In that time they lay to, floating idly with the currents, or +blown by the wind, for the professor would not start any of the engines +or apparatus until the ship was in good condition. + +In this time Mark had several times recalled the curious happenings in +regard to the disappearing food, and the mystery of the storeroom. But +there were no further manifestations, and no other signs that there +might be a strange visitor aboard. + +"I couldn't have imagined it all," said Mark, "but I guess what did +happen may have been caused by natural means, only I can't discover +them." + +It was about two days after this, the ship having sailed scores of miles +on the surface of the water, that Mark, who was in the conning tower +exclaimed: + +"That looks like a waterspout ahead of us." + +"That's what it is!" Jack agreed. "What shall we do?" + +"Call the professor!" said Mark. "He'll know." + +When Mr. Henderson came, he looked for a long time at a cloud of black +vapor which hung low in the east. + +"It may be a waterspout," he said. "We'll rise in the air and see if we +can avoid it." + +The ship was sent up into the air. As it rose higher and higher, the +professor, making frequent observations from his conning tower, cried +out: + +"That is no waterspout!" + +"What is it?" asked Mark. + +"It is the steam and vapor rising from the big hole in the earth! Boys, +we are almost there!" + +"Are you sure that's it?" asked Mark. + +"Almost positive," Mr. Henderson replied. "You can see how much warmer +it has become of late, as we approached the equator. We are almost due +at the island, and I have no doubt we have reached it." + +As the ship flew forward the mass of dark vapor became more pronounced. +Through the glasses it could be noticed to consist of rolling masses of +clouds. What lay beneath them no one knew. The adventurers were going to +try to find out. + +Now that they had arrived at the beginning of the main part of their +journey, the travelers felt their spirits sink a little. It was one +thing to plan to go down into the depths of the earth, but it was quite +another to make the actual attempt. Still, they were not going to give +up the project. The professor had confidence in his ship and believed it +could safely make the trip. Still it was with no little apprehension +that Mr. Henderson watched the nearer approach of the craft to that +strange island. + +"Perfesser, are yo' really an' truly goin' t' depress this elongated +spheroid an' its human consignment int' that conglomerous convoluted +mass of gaseous vapor regardless of th' consequences?" asked Washington, +as he gazed with wide opened eyes at the sight before him. + +"If you mean am I going to let the _Mermaid_ go down into that hole you +are perfectly correct," the scientist answered, "though you could have +said it in fewer words, Washington." + +"I--I guess I'll get out an' walk," the colored man made reply. + +"This isn't any trolley car," observed Mark. "Don't lose your nerve, +Wash. Stay with us, and we'll discover a gold or diamond mine, maybe." + +"Is there diamonds down there?" asked the colored man, his fright +seeming to leave him. + +"There are all sorts of things inside the earth," the professor +answered. + +"Then I'm goin' along!" Washington declared. "I always did want a +diamond ring, an' I knows a little colored gal that wants one, too. I'm +goin' all right! This suttenly am th' most kloslosterous conjunctivity +of combativeness that I ever sagaciated!" and he began to do a sort of +impromptu cake-walk. + + + + + CHAPTER XIII + + DOWN INTO THE EARTH + + +It was now noon, but the adventurers did not think of dinner in the +excitement of approaching the mysterious island. The speed of the ship +was increased that they might the more quickly come to it. As they +approached they could see the masses of vapor more plainly, and it +appeared that some great commotion must be going on inside the big hole, +since clouds of steam arose. + +"I only hope it doesn't prove too hot for us," observed the professor. +"However, I provided a water jacket for the ship, and we may need it, as +well as the vacuum chambers to keep the heat from us." + +It was about three o'clock when the flying ship reached the edge of the +island. From there it was about a mile to the rim of the big hole, over +one side of which the waters of the ocean poured with a roar that could +be heard over half a mile off. + +"I think we had better halt and see that everything is in good shape +before proceeding," said Mr. Henderson. "Jack, you and Mark make a +thorough inspection of the engine room, and see that all the apparatus +is in working order." + +The two boys prepared to do as they were told. Mark, who was walking a +little ahead of Jack, entered the apartment from which the storeroom +opened. As he did so he saw, or thought he saw, the door of the place +where the extra supplies were kept, close. Without saying anything to +Jack he hurried forward, and tried the knob. It would not turn. + +"That's funny," said Mark to himself. "I could almost swear I saw some +one go into that room. Yet I know the professor did not enter, for I +just left him. And none of the others would dare to. I wonder if I will +ever solve the mystery." + +But he had too much to do to allow him to dwell on that matter. Several +of the dynamos needed adjusting and for two hours he and Jack had all +they could do. + +In the meanwhile the professor had gone over the other parts of the +ship, and gotten everything in readiness for the descent. The _Mermaid_ +was lowered to within a few hundred feet of the sea, and, through a hose +that was let down, the compartments, provided for this emergency were +filled with water. These compartments were between the outer and inner +hulls of the lower part of the craft, and were designed to prevent the +interior becoming heated in case the travelers found they had to pass +close to fire. There were also vacuum chambers, and from these the air +was exhausted, as of course every schoolboy knows a vacuum is a +non-conductor of either heat or cold. + +"Now I think we are ready," the professor announced at length. + +"Everything's all right in the engine room," announced Jack. + +"Yes, an' everything's all right in th' kitchen," put in Washington. +"I've got a good meal ready as soon as any one wants to eat." + +"It will have to wait a while," Mr. Henderson remarked. "We are going to +start to make the descent before we dine." + +The hose was reeled up, and the ship was sent a few hundred feet higher +into the air, as Mr. Henderson wanted to take a last good observation +before he went down into the hole. + +But having risen some distance above the masses of rolling vapors he +found he was at no advantage, since the strongest telescope he could +bring to bear could not pierce the cloud masses. + +"We'll just have to trust to luck," the scientist said. "I judge we're +about over the centre of the opening. Lower away Mark!" + +The boy, who, under the watchful eye of the professor, was manipulating +the levers and wheels in the conning tower, shifted some handles. The +gas was expelled from the holder, the negative gravity apparatus ceased +to work, and the _Flying Mermaid_ sank lower and lower, toward the +mysterious hole that yawned beneath her. + +The hearts of all beat strangely, if not with fear, at least with +apprehension, for they did not know what they might encounter. Perhaps +death in some terrible form awaited them. But the desire to discover +something new and strange had gripped all of them, and not one would +have voted to turn back. + +Even old Andy, who seldom got excited, was in unusual spirits. He took +down his gun and remarked: + +"Maybe I can kill some new kind of animal, and write a book about its +habits, for surely we will see strange beasts in the under-world." + +Lower and lower sank the ship. Now it was amid the first thin masses of +vapors, those that floated highest and were more like a light fog, than +anything else. By means of a window in the bottom of the craft, which +window was closed by a thick piece of plate glass, Professor Henderson +could look down and see what was beneath them. + +"The clouds seem to be getting thicker," he said, as he peered through +the small casement. "If they would only clear away we could see +something." + +But instead of doing this the vapors accumulated more thickly about the +ship. It was so dark inside the _Mermaid_ now that the electric lights +had to be switched on. In the room with the floor-window the lights were +not used, as had they shone one could not have seen down below. + +The professor maintained his position. The descent was a perilous one, +and he wanted to be on the watch to check it at once if the _Mermaid_ +was liable to dash upon some pointed rock or fall into some fiery pit. +His hand was on the signal levers. + +Suddenly he looked up and glanced at a gage on the wall. The hand of it +was slowly revolving. + +"We are at the earth's surface," the scientist said. "Now we are below +it. Now we are fairly within the big hole! Boys, we may be on the verge +of a great discovery!" + +An instant later it seemed as if a hot wave had struck the _Mermaid_, or +as if the craft had been plunged into boiling water. + +"It's going to be hot!" cried the professor. "Lucky I provided the water +jackets!" + +Then the lights in the interior of the ship went out, leaving the whole +craft in darkness. + +"What has happened?" cried Mark. + + + + + CHAPTER XIV + + MANY MILES BELOW + + +"Don't be alarmed," spoke the calm voice of the professor. "I have only +turned off the electrics. I want to switch on the search lights, to see +if we can learn anything about our position." + +As he spoke he turned a switch, and, the gloom below the ship, as the +boys could see by glimpses from the floor-window, was pierced by a +dazzling glare. In the bottom of the _Mermaid_ were set a number of +powerful electric arc lights with reflectors, constructed to throw the +beams downward. The professor had built them in for just this emergency, +as he thought that at some time they might want to illuminate what was +below the craft. + +Not that it was of much avail on this occasion, for, though the lights +were powerful, they could not pierce the miles of gloom that lay below +them. The beams only served to accentuate the darkness. + +"I guess we'll have to trust to luck," the professor said, after a vain +attempt, by means of powerful glasses, to distinguish something. "There +is too much fog and vapor." + +"What makes it so warm?" asked Mark, removing his coat. + +"Well, you must remember you are approaching the interior of the earth," +the professor answered. "It has been calculated that the heat increases +one degree for every fifty-five feet you descend. We have come down +several hundred feet and of course it is getting warmer." + +"Then if we go down very far it will get so hot we will not be able to +stand it," Jack put in. + +"I do not believe we will suffer any great inconvenience," Mr. Henderson +went on. "I believe that after we pass a certain point it will become +cooler. I think the inner fires of the earth are more or less heated gas +in a sort of inner chamber between two shells. If we can pass the second +shell, we will be all right." + +"But aren't we liable to hit something, going down into the dark this +way?" asked Mark. + +"We will guard ourselves as far as possible," the scientist answered. + +The _Mermaid_ seemed to be going down on a side of the immense shaft a +good way distant from the strange waterfall. When they had first dropped +into the hole the travelers could hear the rush of waters, but now the +noise was not audible. + +"I think the hole must widen out the farther down we go," the professor +said. "We are probably many miles from the fall now." + +"I'm sure I hope so," put in Jack. "It would be no fun to have to take a +shower bath in this place." + +After a meal, the boys and the professor took some more observations, +but with all their efforts nothing could be seen below the ship but a +vast black void, into which they were steadily descending. + +"I wonder when we're going to stop," asked Mark. "It's like playing the +game 'Going to Jerusalem,' you keep wondering when the music will cease +and you will have a chance to grab a chair. I only hope we have a chair +or something else to sit on, in case we go to smash." + +"We're not liable to have any accidents with the professor in charge," +Jack answered. "Didn't he bring us safe out of some pretty tight holes +when we went to the north pole in the airship, and again when we found +the south pole in the submarine?" + +"Yes, but this is different," objected Mark. + +"Well, I'm not worrying," Jack went on. "It doesn't do any good, and +only makes you lie awake nights. By the way, I wonder what time it is +getting to be." + +He looked at his watch and found it was close on to eight o'clock in the +evening. So late had dinner been served, and so varied were the +happenings of the last few hours, that time had passed quickly. + +"Why it's almost bed-time," said Jack. "I wonder if we are to go on +dropping into the depths of nowhere all night." + +At that moment the professor entered the room where the boys were. He +seemed quite pleased over something, and was smiling. + +"Everything is going along famously," he said. "I have just tested the +air and find it is rich in oxygen. We shall suffer nothing on that +score. The heat too, seems to have decreased. On the whole, everything +favors us." + +"Are we going on down?" asked Mark. + +"As far as we can," Mr. Henderson answered. "Let me see how far we are +below now." + +He went to the gage that indicated the vertical position of the ship. +Because of the changed conditions, the craft now sinking below the +surface of the earth instead of rising above it, as was its wont, some +calculations were necessary. These the scientist made as quickly as he +could. + +"We are now ten miles underground!" he exclaimed. "That is doing very +well. My theories are working out. I think we shall land somewhere +before long." + +"I hopes so!" exclaimed Washington coming in at this point. "I'm mighty +skeered shootin' down int' this dark hole, and no time-table t' show +when we's due t' arrive." + +"We ought to land in a couple of days more," the professor answered. +"Never mind about worrying Washington, I'll take care of you." + +"I hopes so, Perfesser," the colored man said. "I got a little girl +waitin' for me back in Georgia, an' I'd like t' see her 'fore I git +burned up." + +Accompanied by the professor, the boys made a tour of the ship to see +that all the machinery and apparatus were in working order. Owing to the +changed conditions the negative gravity engine had to be worked at +faster speed than usual, since the downward pull of the earth was +greater the farther they descended into the interior and they did not +want to fall too swiftly. But this was easily provided for, since the +professor had made the apparatus capable of standing a great strain. + +The ten miles had become fourteen when the professor, finding that +everything was in good shape, proposed that the boys go to bed. They did +not want to, though they were sleepy, and they feared to miss some +strange sights. + +But when the professor had promised to call them in case anything +unusual developed, they consented to turn in, and Bill and Tom assumed +their duties, which were light enough, now that the ship was merely +falling into the immense shaft. + +When Mark turned into his bunk he could not go to sleep at once. It may +have been the excitement over their new position, or because he had +eaten too hearty a supper, but the fact was he remained awake for some +time. + +While thus tossing restlessly on his bed, wondering what ailed him, he +thought he heard a noise in the main apartment out of which the +storeroom opened. He crawled softly from his bed, and looked from his +stateroom door. + +In the light of a shaded electric Mark saw the figure of some one glide +across the floor and take refuge in the room, which Professor Henderson +always was so particular about. + +"I wonder what or who that was," reasoned Mark. "There is some mystery +in this. Can the professor have concealed some one on this ship whose +presence he does not want to admit? It certainly looks so." + +Not wanting to awaken the ship's crew, and remembering what Mr. +Henderson had said about any one entering the storeroom, Mark went back +to bed, to fall into an uneasy slumber. + +"Breakfast!" called Washington breaking in on a fine dream Jack was +having about being captain of a company of automobile soldiers. "Last +call for breakfast!" + +"Hello! Is it morning?" asked Jack. + +"Not so's you could notice it," Washington went on. "It's as dark as a +stack of black cats and another one throwed in. But breakfast is ready +jest the same." + +The boys were soon at the table, and learned that nothing of importance +had occurred during the night. The _Mermaid_ had been kept going slowly +down, and about seven o'clock registered more than fifty miles below the +earth's surface. + +Still there was no change in the outward surroundings. It remained as +black as the interior of Egypt when that country was at its darkest. The +powerful electrics could not pierce the gloom. The ship was working +well, and the travelers were very comfortable. + +Down, down, down, went the _Mermaid_. The temperature, which had risen +to about ninety went back to sixty-nine, and there seemed to be no more +danger from the inner fires. + +They were now a hundred miles under the surface. But still the professor +kept the _Mermaid_ sinking. Every now and again he would take an +observation, but only found the impenetrable darkness surrounded them. + +"We must arrive somewhere, soon," he muttered. + +It was about six o'clock that night that the alarm bell set up a sudden +ringing. The professor who was making some calculations on a piece of +paper jumped to his feet, and so did a number of the others. + +"We are nearing the bottom!" he cried. "The bell has given us warning!" + + + + + CHAPTER XV + + IN THE STRANGE DRAUGHT + + +The boys ran to attend to the engines and apparatus to which they had +been assigned in view of this emergency. The professor, Washington, +Bill, Tom and Andy, who had kept to themselves since the descent, came +running out of the small cabin where they usually sat, and wanted to +know what it was all about. + +"We may hit something, in spite of all precautions," Mr. Henderson +remarked. "Slow down the ship." + +The _Mermaid_ was, accordingly checked in her downward flight, by a +liberal use of the gas and the negative gravity machine. + +The bell continued to ring, and the dials pointed to the mark that +indicated the ship was more than one hundred and fifty miles down. + +Mark, who had run to the engine room to check the descent, came back. + +"Why didn't you slow her down?" asked the professor. + +"I did," replied the boy. "The negative gravity and the gas machines are +working at full speed." + +"Then why are we still descending?" asked the scientist. "For a while +our speed was checked, but now we are falling faster than before." + +"I attended to the apparatus," Mark insisted. + +Just then, from without the ship, came a terrible roaring sound, as +though there was a great cyclone in progress. At the same time, those +aboard the craft could feel themselves being pulled downward with +terrific force. + +"We are caught in a draught!" Mr. Henderson cried. "We are being sucked +down into the depths of the earth!" + +He ran to the engine room. With the help of the boys he set in motion an +auxiliary gravity machine, designed to exert a most powerful influence +against the downward pull of the earth. As they watched the great wheels +spin around, and heard the hum and whirr of the dynamos, the boys +watched the pointer which indicated how low they were getting. + +And, as they watched, they saw that the needle of the dial kept moving, +moving, moving. + +"Our efforts are useless! We can't stop!" the professor cried. + +Grave indeed was the plight of the adventurers. In their ship they were +being sucked down into unknown regions and all their efforts did not +avail to save them. It was an emergency they could not guard against, +and which could not have been foreseen. + +"What are to do?" asked Mark. + +"We can only wait," Mr. Henderson replied. "The terrible suction may +cease, or it may carry us to some place of safety. Let us hope for the +best." + +Seeing there was no further use in running the engines in an effort to +check the downward rush the machines were stopped. Then they waited for +whatever might happen. + +Now that they seemed in imminent peril Washington was as cool as any +one. He went about putting his kitchen in order and getting ready for +the next meal as if they were sailing comfortably along on the surface +of the ocean. As for old Andy he was nervous and frightened, and plainly +showed it. With his gun in readiness he paced back and forth as if on +the lookout for strange beasts or birds. + +Bill and Tom were so alarmed that they were of little use in doing +anything, and they were not disturbed in their staterooms where they +went when it became known that the ship was unmanageable. + +The boys and the professor, while greatly frightened at the unexpected +turn of events, decided there was no use in giving way to foolish alarm. +They realized they could do nothing but await developments. + +At the same time they took every precaution. They piled all the bedding +on the floor of the living room, so that the pillows and mattresses +might form a sort of pad in case the ship was dashed down on the bottom +of the big hole. + +"Not that it would save us much," Jack observed with a grim smile, "but +somehow it sort of makes your mind easier." + +All this while the ship was being sucked down at a swift pace. The +pointer of the gage, indicating the depth, kept moving around and soon +they were several hundreds of miles below the surface of the earth. + +The professor tried, by means of several instruments, to discover in +which direction they were headed, and whether they were going straight +down or at an angle. But some strange influence seemed to affect the +gages and other pieces of apparatus, for the pointers and hands would +swing in all directions, at one time indicating that they were going +down, and, again, upward. + +"There must be a strong current of electricity here," Mr. Henderson +said, "or else there is, as many suspect, a powerful magnet at the +center of the earth, which we are nearing." + +"What will you do if the ship is pulled apart, or falls and is smashed?" +asked Mark with much anxiety. + +"You take a cheerful view of things," said Jack. + +"Well, it's a good thing to prepare for emergencies," Mark added. + +"If the ship was to be separated by the magnetic pull, or if it fell on +sharp rocks and was split in twain, I am afraid none of us could do +anything to save ourselves," the professor answered. "Still, if we were +given a little warning of the disaster, I have means at hand whereby we +might escape with our lives. But it would be a perilous way of----" + +"I reckon yo' all better come out an' have supper," broke in Washington. +"Leastways we'll call it supper, though I don't rightly know whether +it's night or mornin'. Anyhow I've got a meal ready." + +"I don't suppose any of us feel much like eating," observed Mr. +Henderson, "but there is no telling when we will have the chance again, +so, perhaps, we had better take advantage of it." + +For a while they ate in silence, finding that they had better appetites +than they at first thought. Old Andy in particular did full justice to +the food Washington had prepared. + +"I always found it a good plan to eat as much and as often as you can," +the hunter remarked. "This is a mighty uncertain world." + +"You started to tell us a little while ago, Professor," said Mark, +"about a plan you had for saving out lives if worst came to worst, and +there was a chance to put it into operation. What is it?" + +"I will tell you," the aged inventor said. "It is something about which +I have kept silent, as I did not want to frighten any of you. It was my +latest invention, and I had only perfected it when we started off on +this voyage. Consequently I had no chance to try it. The machine works +in theory, but whether it does in practice is another question. That is +why I say there is a risk. But we may have to take this risk. I have +placed aboard this ship a----" + +The professor was interrupted in what he was about to say by a curious +tremor that made the whole ship shiver as though it had struck some +obstruction. Yet there was no sudden jolt or jar such as would have been +occasioned by that. + +At the same time Washington, who was out in the kitchen, came running +into the dining room, crying: + +"We're droppin' into a ragin' fire, Perfesser!" + +"What do you mean?" asked Mr. Henderson. + +"I jest took a look down through th' hole in th' bottom of the ship!" +cried Washington. "It's all flames an' smoke below us!" + +"I wonder if it is the end," the professor muttered in a low voice. + +Followed by the boys, the inventor hastened to the floor-window. The +lights were turned off to enable a better view to be had of what was +below them. + +Leaning over the glass protected aperture the boys and the professor +saw, far, far down, a bright light shining. It was as if they were miles +above a whole town of blast furnaces, the stacks of which were belching +forth flames and smoke. The rolling clouds of vapor were illuminated by +a peculiar greenish light, which, at times, turned to red, blue, purple +and yellowish hues. + +The effect was weird and beautiful though it was full of terror for the +travelers. It seemed as if they were falling into some terrible pit of +fire, for the reflection of what they feared were flames, could plainly +be seen. + +"I wish I'd never come on this terrible voyage!" wailed Washington. "I'd +rather freeze to death than be burned up." + +"Washington, be quiet!" commanded the professor sternly. "This is no +time for foolishness. We must work hard to save our lives, for we are in +dire peril. + +"Mark, you and Washington, with Jack, start the engines. Turn on every +bit of power you can. Fill the gas holder as full as it will hold, and +use extra heavy pressure. I will see if I can not work the negative +gravity apparatus to better advantage than we did before. We must escape +if possible!" + +The boys, as was also Washington, were only too glad to have something +to do to take their mind off their troubles. All three were much +frightened, but Mark and Jack tried not to show it. As for Washington he +was almost crying. + +Soon the whirr and hum of the machinery in the _Mermaid_ was heard. The +craft, which was rushing in some direction, either downward, ahead or +backwards within the unknown depths, shivered from the speed of the +dynamos and other apparatus. Soon the boys could hear the professor +starting the negative gravity engine, and then began a struggle between +the forces of nature and those of mankind. + +Once more the adventurers anxiously watched the gages and indicators. +For a while the ship seemed to be holding out against the terrible +influence that was sucking her down. She appeared to hesitate. Then, as +the downward force triumphed over the mechanical energy in the craft, +she began to settle again, and soon was descending, if that was the +direction, as fast as before. + +"It is of no use," said the professor with a groan. "I must try our last +resort!" + +He started from the engine room where Mark and Jack had gone. As he did +so, he glanced at a thermometer hanging on the wall near the door. + +"Has any one turned on the heat?" he asked. + +"It's shut off," replied Mark, looking at the electric stove. + +"Then what makes it so hot?" asked the scientist. + +He pointed to the little silvery column in the tiny tube of the +instrument. It registered close to one hundred degrees, though a few +minutes before it had been but sixty. And the starting of the machinery +could not account for the rise in temperature, since most of the +apparatus was run by electricity and developed little heat save in the +immediate proximity. The thermometer was fully ten feet away from any +machine. + +"It's the fiery furnace that's doing it!" cried Washington. "We're +falling into th' terrible pit an' we're goin' t' be roasted alive!" + +"It certainly is getting warmer," observed Mark, as he took off his +coat. Soon he had to shed his vest, and Jack and the professor followed +his example. The others too, also found all superfluous garments a +burden, and, in a little while they were going about in scanty attire. + +Still the heat increased, until it was almost torture to remain in the +engine room. Nor was it much cooler elsewhere. In vain did the professor +set a score of big electric fans to whirring. He even placed cakes of +ice, from the small ice machine that was carried, in front of the +revolving blades, to cool off the air. But the ice was melted almost as +soon as it was taken from the apparatus. + +"Them flames is gittin worser!" Washington cried a little later. "We's +comin' nearer!" + +From the bottom window the professor and the boys looked down. True +enough the curious, changing, vari-colored lights seemed brighter. They +could almost see the tongues of flame shooting upward in anticipation of +what they were soon to devour. + +The heat was increasing every minute. The sides of the ship were hot. +The heads of the travelers were getting dizzy. They could hardly talk or +move about. + +"I must save our lives! I must trust to the----" The professor, who was +muttering to himself started toward the storeroom. As in a dream Mark +watched him. He remembered afterward that he had speculated on what +might be the outcome of the mystery the professor threw about the place. +"I will have to use it," he heard the scientist say softly. + +Just as Mr. Henderson was about to open the door there came a fiercer +blast of heat than any that had preceded. At the same instant the +conditions in the _Mermaid_ became so fearful that each of the travelers +felt himself fainting away. + +"Go to--storeroom--get cylinder--get in----" the professor murmured, and +then he fell forward in a faint. + + + + + CHAPTER XVI + + THE NEW LAND + + +"What is it? Tell us!" exclaimed Jack, almost in his last breath, for, a +few seconds later he too toppled over senseless. Then Washington went +down, while Andy, Bill and Tom succumbed to the terrible heat. + +Mark felt his head swimming. His eyes were almost bulging from their +sockets. He dimly remembered trying to force himself to go to the +storeroom and see what was there. He started toward it with that +intention, but fell half way to it. + +As he did so he saw something which impressed itself on his mind, half +unconscious as he was. + +The door of the storeroom suddenly opened, and from it came a giant +shape, that seemed to expand until it filled the whole of the apartment +where the stricken ones lay. It was like the form of some monster, half +human, half beast. Mark shuddered, and then, closing his eyes, he felt +himself sinking down into some terrible deep and black pit. A second +later the whole ship was jarred as though it had hit something. + +How long he and the others remained unconscious Mark did not know. He +was the first to revive, and his first sensation was one as though he +had slept hard and long, and did not want to get up. He felt very +comfortable, although he was lying flat on the floor, with his head +jammed against the side of a locker. It was so dark that he could not +distinguish his hand held close to his face. + +"I wonder if I'm dead, and if all the others are dead too," he thought +to himself. "What has happened? Let's see, the last I remember was some +horrible shape rushing from the storeroom. I wonder what it could have +been? Surely that was not the secret the professor referred to." + +Mark shuddered as he recalled the monster that seemed to have grown more +terrible as each second passed. Then the boy raised himself up from his +prostrate position. + +"Well, at any rate, some one has turned off the heat," he murmured. +"It's very comfortable in here now. I wish I could strike a light." + +He listened intently, to learn if any of the others were moving about. +He could hear them breathing, but so faintly as to indicate they were +insensible. Mark stretched out his hand and felt that some one was lying +close to him, but who of the adventurers it was he could not determine. + +"If only the dynamo was working we could have light," he said. "But it +seems to have stopped," and, indeed there was a lacking of the familiar +purr and hum of the electrical machine. In fact none of the apparatus in +the ship was working. + +"The storage battery!" exclaimed Mark. "That would give light for a +while, if I can only find the switch in the dark." + +He began crawling about on his hands and knees. It was so intensely +black that he ran into many things and received severe bruises. At last +he came to a doorway, and as he did so his hand came in contact with an +easy chair. It was the only one aboard, and by that he knew he had +passed into the sitting room. He had his general direction now, and knew +if he kept straight on he would come to the engine room. There he was +familiar enough with the apparatus and levers to be able to turn the +electric switch. + +Crawling slowly and cautiously, he reached the room where all the +engines were. Then he had to feel around the sides to locate the switch. +At length he found it. There was a click, a little flash of greenish +fire, and the copper conductors came together, and the ship was flooded +with the glow from the incandescents. + +Mark hurried back to where the others were lying. They were still +unconscious, but an uneasy movement on the part of Jack told that he was +coming out of the stupor. Mark got some ammonia and held it beneath his +comrade's nose. The strong fumes completed the work that nature had +started and Jack opened his eyes. + +"Where am I? What has happened? Are any of them dead?" he asked quickly. + +"I hope no one is dead," Mark replied. "As to the other question, I +can't answer. I don't know whether we are a thousand miles underground, +or floating on the ocean, though I'm more inclined to the former theory. +But never mind that now. Help me to bring the others back to their +senses. I'll work on the professor and you can begin on Bill or Tom. +Washington seems to be all right," for at that moment the colored man +opened his eyes, stared about him and then got up. + +"I thought I was dead for suah!" he exclaimed. + +"Some of the others may be if we don't hurry," said Mark. "Get to work, +Wash!" + +With the colored man to help them the two boys, by the use of the +ammonia, succeeded in reviving Bill, Tom and old Andy. But the +professor, probably on account of his advanced age, did not respond so +readily to the treatment. The boys were getting quite alarmed, as even +some of the diluted ammonia, forced between his lips, did not cause him +to open his eyes, or increase his heart action. + +"If he should die, and leave us all alone with the ship in this terrible +place, what would we do?" asked Jack. + +"He's not going to die!" exclaimed Mark. "Here I have another plan. +Washington bring that medical electrical battery from the engine room." +This was a small machine the professor had brought along for +experimental purposes. + +Quickly adjusting it, Mark placed the handles in the nerveless fingers +of Mr. Henderson. Then he started the current. In about a minute the +eyelids of the aged inventor began to quiver, and, in less than five +minutes he had been revived sufficiently to enable him to sit up. He +passed his hand across his forehead. + +"What has happened?" he asked in a faint voice. + +"I don't know; none of us knows," Mark answered. "We all lost our senses +when it got so hot, and there seemed to be some peculiar vapor in the +air. The last I remember was seeing some horrible shape rush from the +storeroom, soon after the ship struck. Then I fainted away. When I woke +up I managed to turn the lights on, and then I came back here." + +"I wonder where we are," the old man murmured. "I must find out. We must +take every precaution. Washington, go and look at the gage indicating +our depth." + +The colored man was gone but a few seconds. When he returned his eyes +were bulging in terror. + +"What is it?" asked Mr. Henderson, who, thanks to the battery, had +almost completely recovered. + +"It ain't possible!" gasped Washington. "I'll never believe it!" + +"What is it?" asked Mr. Henderson, while the others waited in anxiety +for the answer. + +"We're five hundred miles down!" declared Washington. + +"Five hundred miles!" muttered the inventor. "It does not seem possible, +but it must be so. We fell very rapidly and the terrible draught sucked +us down with incredible rapidity. But come, we must see what our +situation is, and where we are. We are stationary, and are evidently on +some solid substance." + +They all felt much recovered now, and, as the terrible fright of being +consumed in a fiery furnace had passed, they all were in better spirits. + +At the suggestion of the professor, the boys and Washington made a tour +of the ship. They found, for some unaccountable reason, that nearly all +the engines and apparatuses were out of gear. In some the parts had +broken, and others were merely stopped, from the failure of some other +machine, on which they were dependent. + +"I'm afraid this is the end of the _Mermaid,"_ said Mark, in a sorrowful +tone. + +"Nonsense!" replied Jack, who was of a more cheerful nature. "Things are +not so bad as they look. The professor can fix everything." + +"I'm sure I hope so," Mark went on, not much encouraged, however, by +Jack's philosophy. "It would be no joke to have to stay five hundred +miles underground the rest of our lives." + +"You don't know," retorted Jack. "Don't judge of a country you've never +seen. This may be as fine a place as it is on the surface of the earth. +I want a chance to see it," and Jack began to whistle a cheerful tune. + +They completed the tour of the ship, and found, that, aside from the +damage to the machinery, the _Mermaid_ had not sustained any harm. The +hull was in good order, though of course they could not tell about the +gas holder. It was not possible to see this except by going into the +conning tower or out on the small deck, and this they did not venture to +do. The connections between the holder and the main ship seemed to be +all right, and there was still a small quantity of gas in the big tank, +as Mark found on opening a stop-cock. + +They went back to the professor and told him what they had observed. He +seemed somewhat alarmed, the more so as the experience he had just +passed through had weakened him considerably. + +"I hope I shall be able to make the repairs," he said. "It is our only +hope." + +As he spoke he looked up at the electric lights that shone overhead from +wall brackets. + +"Who is shutting down the power?" he asked. + +"There is no power on, Professor," replied Mark. "I am running the +lights from the storage battery. But something is the matter, for they +are growing dim." + +The filaments were now mere dull red wires, and the ship was being +shrouded in gloom again. + +"The battery is failing!" exclaimed Mr. Henderson. "We shall be left in +darkness, and there is no other way to produce light. I ought to have +brought some lamps or candles along in case of emergency." + +The next instant the _Mermaid_ became as black as Egypt is popularly +supposed to be, and something like an exclamation of terror came from +the professor. + +For several minutes they all sat there in the blackness and gloom, +waiting for they knew not what. Then, suddenly, there sounded throughout +the ship, a creaking as of metal sliding along metal. Some big lever +creaked, and, a second later the whole place was flooded with light. + +"What has happened?" cried the professor, starting to his feet in alarm. + +"We are going to be burned up!" exclaimed old Andy. + +"It's all right! It's all right!" yelled Washington from the engine room +where the boys had left him. "Don't git skeered! I done it! I opened the +port holes, by yanking on the lever. Golly, but we's arrived at the new +land! Look out, everybody!" + + + + + CHAPTER XVII + + A STRANGE COUNTRY + + +They all ran to the port holes, which were openings in the side of the +ship. They were fitted with thick, double glass, and covered on the +outside with steel shutters. These shutters were worked by a single +lever from the engine room, so that one person could open or close them +in a second or two. Washington, by accident, it appeared later, had slid +back the protecting pieces of steel, and the rest followed. + +As the adventurers looked from the glass ports they saw that the light +which had flooded the ship came from without. They were in the midst of +a beautiful glow, which seemed to be diffused about them like rays from +a sun. + +Only, in place of being a yellow or white light, such as the sun gives +off at varying times, the glow was of violet hue. And, as they watched, +they saw the light change color, becoming a beautiful red, then blue, +and again green. + +"Well, this is certainly remarkable!" the professor said. "I wonder what +causes that." + +"We've arrived! We're here, anyhow!" Washington cried, coming into the +room. "See the country!" + +Then, for the first time, the travelers, taking their attention from the +curious light that was all around them, saw that they had indeed +arrived. They were on a vast plain, one, seemingly, boundless in extent, +though off to the left there was a range of lofty mountains, while to +the right there was the glimmer of what might be a big lake or inland +sea. + +"See, we are resting on the ground!" exclaimed Jack. He pointed out of +the window, and the others, looking close at hand, noted that the +_Mermaid_ had settled down in the midst of what seemed to be a field of +flowers. Big red and yellow blossoms were all in front, and some grew so +tall as to almost be up to the edge of the port. + +"I wonder if we can be seeing aright," the professor muttered. "Is this +really the interior of the earth; such a beautiful place as this?" + +There could be little doubt of it. The ship had descended through the +big shaft, had been sucked down by the terrible air current, and had +really landed in a strange country. + +Of its size, shape and general conditions the adventurers, as yet, could +but guess. They could see it was a pleasant place, and one where there +might be the means to sustain life. For, as the professor said +afterward, he felt that where there were flowers there would be fruits, +and where both of these provisions of nature were to be found there +would likely be animal life, and even, perhaps, human beings. + +But, for the time, they were content to look from the port on the +beautiful scene that lay stretched out before them. The ship rested on +an even keel and had landed so softly that none of the plates were +strained. + +"We have plenty of air, at all events," said the professor as he took a +deep breath. "I was afraid of that, but it seems there was no need. The +air appears to be as good and fresh as that on the surface of the earth, +only there is a curious property to it. It makes one feel larger. I +imagine it must be thinner than the air of the earth, which is a rather +strange thing, since the higher one goes the more rarefied the air +becomes, and the lower, the more dense. Still we can not apply natural +philosophy to conditions under the earth. All the usual theories may be +upset. However, we should be content to take things as we find them, and +be glad we were not dashed to pieces when the ship was caught in the +terrible current." + +"What do you suppose caused the awful heat, and then made it go away +again?" asked Jack. + +"I can only make a guess at it," Mr. Henderson answered. "There are many +strange things we will come across if we stay here long, I believe. As +for the fire I think we must have passed a sort of interior volcano." + +"But what sort of a place do you think we have come to, Professor?" +asked Mark. + +"It is hard to say," the scientist replied. "We are certainly somewhere +within the earth. Our gage tells us it is five hundred miles. That may +or may not be correct, but I believe we are several hundred miles under +the crust, at all events. As to what sort of a place it is, you can see +for yourselves." + +"But how is it we can breathe here, and things can grow?" asked Bill, +who was beginning to lose his fright at the thought of being practically +buried alive. + +"I do not know what makes such things possible," Mr. Henderson replied, +"but that there is air here is a certainty. I can hardly believe it is +drawn from the surface of the earth, down the big hole, and I am +inclined to think this place of the under-world has an atmosphere of its +own, and one which produces different effects than does our own." + +"They certainly have larger flowers than we have," said Mark. "See how +big they grow, and what strong colors they have." + +He pointed to the port, against which some of the blooms were nodding in +the wind that had sprung up, for, in spite of the many differences, the +under-world was in some respects like the upper one. + +"Probably the difference in the atmosphere accounts for that," the +professor said. "It enables things to grow larger. And, by the way, +Mark, that reminds me of something you said about seeing some horrible +monster fleeing from the ship. Did you dream that?" + +"I did see something horrible, Professor," he answered. "I'm not +positive what it was, but I'll tell you as nearly as I can what it was +like." + +Thereupon Mark detailed what he had seen. + +"But how could anything, least of all some big monster, be concealed in +the storeroom, and we not know anything about it?" asked Mr. Henderson. + +"I thought you did know something of it," replied Mark. + +"Who, me? My dear boy, you must be dreaming again. Why should I want to +conceal any being in the storeroom? Come, there is something back of +this. Tell me all you know of it. I can't imagine why you think I was +hiding something in the apartment." + +"I thought so because you were always so anxious not to have me go near +it," answered the boy. "Don't you remember when you saw me going toward +it, several times, you warned me away?" + +"So I did!" exclaimed Mr. Henderson, a light breaking over his face. +"But, Mark, it was not because I had hidden some human being or animal +there. I can't tell you what it is yet, save that I can say it is merely +a machine of mine that I have invented. For reasons of my own I don't +want any one to see it yet. Perhaps it may never be seen. I thought, not +long ago, that we might have to undertake a terrible risk in escaping +from this place. I directed you to go to the storeroom--but there, I +can't say any more, my friends. Sufficient that I had nothing in the +animal line concealed there." + +"But I am certain there was some beast or human being in there," +insisted Mark. "I heard curious noises in there. Besides, how do you +account for the food disappearing and the door being open at times?" + +"It might have been rats," said Jack. + +"I don't believe there are rats in the ship," put in the professor. +"More likely it was one of us who got up hungry and took the victuals." + +"I'm sorry I can't agree with you," Mark added respectfully. "I am sure +some strange being was on board this ship, and I believe it has now +escaped. Who or what it was I can't say, but you'll find I'm right, some +day." + +"All right," spoke Mr. Henderson with a laugh. "I like to see any one +brave enough to stick up for his opinion, but, at the same time, I can't +very well imagine any person or thing being concealed in that storeroom +ever since we started. How could it get in?" + +Mark did not answer, but there came to him the recollection of that +night, previous to the sailing of the _Flying Mermaid_, when he had +observed some strange shadow that seemed to glide aboard the craft. + +"Now let's forget all about such things," the professor went on. "We are +in a strange country, and there are many things to see and do. Let's +explore a little. Then we must see what we can do with the ship. We are +dependent on it, and it will not do to allow it to remain in a damaged +state. We expect to travel many miles in the interior of the earth if it +is possible, and we have only our craft to go in." + +"I reckon we'd all better assimilate into our interior progression some +molecules and atoms of partly disentegrated matter in order to supply +combustion for the carbonaceous elements and assist in the manufacture +of red corpuscles," said Washington, appearing in the door, with a broad +grin on his good-natured face. + +"Which, being interpreted," the professor said, "means, I suppose, that +we had better eat something to keep our digestive apparatus in good +working order?" + +"Yo' done guessed it!" exclaimed the colored man, relapsing into his +ordinary speech. "I'se got a meal all ready." + +They agreed that they might not have another opportunity soon to partake +of food, so they all gathered about the table, on which Washington had +spread a good meal. + +"Come on, let's go outside and view this new and strange land at closer +quarters," the professor said, when they had satisfied their appetites. +"We can't see much from inside the ship." + +Accordingly the heavy door in the side of the _Mermaid_ was slid back, +and, for the first time the travelers stepped out on the surface of the +land in the interior of the earth. + +At first it seemed no different than the ordinary land to which they +were accustomed. But they soon found it had many strange attributes. The +queer shifting and changing light, with the myriad of hues was one of +them, but to this the adventurers had, by this time, become accustomed, +though it was, none the less, a marvel to them. It was odd enough to see +the landscape blood red one instant, and a pale green the next, as it +does when you look through differently colored glasses. + +Then, too, they noticed that the grass and flowers grew much more +abundantly than in the outer part of the world. They saw clover six feet +high, and blades of grass even taller. In some places the growth of +grass was so big that they were in danger of getting lost in it. + +"If the grass is like this, what will the trees be?" asked Mark. + +"There are some away over there," Jack replied. "We'll have to take a +sail over. They must be several hundred feet high." + +"Well, at any rate, here's a little brook, and the water looks good to +drink," went on Mark. "I'm thirsty, so here goes." + +He hurried to where a stream was flowing sluggishly between grassy +banks. The water was as clear as crystal, and Mark got down on his face +and prepared to sip some of the liquid up. + +But, no sooner had his lips touched it, than he sprang up with a cry and +stood gazing at the water. + +"What's the matter?" asked Jack. "Hot?" + +"No, it isn't hot," Mark replied, "but it isn't water. It's white +molasses!" + +"White molasses?" repeated the professor, coming up at that moment. +"What are you talking about?" + +He stooped down and dipped his finger into the stream. He drew it up +quickly, and there ran from it big drops that flowed as slowly as the +extract of the sugarcane does in cold weather. + +"You're about right, Mark," he said. "It's water but it's almost as +thick as molasses." He touched his finger to his tongue. "It's good to +drink, all right," he went on, "only it will be a little slow going +down." + +Then he dipped up a palm full, and let it trickle down his throat. + +"It is the strangest water I ever saw," he added. "It must be that the +lack of some peculiar property of air, which we have on the surface, has +caused this. I must make some notes on it," and he drew out pencil and +paper. He was about to jot down some facts when he was interrupted by a +cry from Washington. + +"Come and see what's the matter with this stone!" he cried. + + + + + CHAPTER XVIII + + CAUGHT BY A STRANGE PLANT + + +"Washington is in trouble!" exclaimed Mr. Henderson. Followed by the two +boys he ran to where the colored man stood in a stooping position over a +small pile of stones. + +"What is it? Has something bit you?" asked the scientist, as he came up +on the run. + +"No, but I can't git this stone up!" Washington said. "Look at what a +little stone it is, but I can't lift it. Something must have happened to +me. Maybe some one put th' evil eye on me! Maybe I'm bewitched!" + +"Nonsense!" exclaimed the professor, "what did you want the stone for?" + +"Nothin' in particular," replied Washington, still tugging away at the +stone, which was the size of his head. "I was just goin' t' throw it at +a big bird, but when I went to lift it this little stone 'peared t' be +glued fast." + +Washington moved aside to give Mr. Henderson a chance to try to pick up +the piece of rock. As the scientist grasped it a look of surprise came +over his features: + +"This is most remarkable!" he exclaimed. "I can't budge it. I wonder if +a giant magnet is holding it down." + +He tugged and tugged until he was red in the face. Then he beckoned to +the two boys, and they came to his aid. There was barely room for them +all to each get one hand on the rock, and then, only after a powerful +tug did it come up. Almost instantly it dropped back to the earth. + +"This is remarkable!" the professor said. "I wonder if the other stones +are the same." + +He tried several others, and one and all resisted his efforts. It was +only the small stones he was able to lift alone, and these, he said, +were so weighty that it would have been a task to throw them any +distance. + +"The water and the stones are strangely heavy in this land," he said. "I +wonder what other queer things we shall see." + +"I saw a bird a little while ago, when I went to pick up that stone," +observed Washington. + +"What kind was it?" asked the inventor. + +"I don't know, only it was about as big as an eagle." + +The travelers wandered about a quarter of a mile from the ship. They +avoided the tall grass and the lofty nodding flowers that seemed to grow +in regular groves, and kept to places where they could walk with +comparative freedom. + +"Have you formed any idea, Professor, as to the nature of this country?" +asked Mark, who liked to get at the bottom of things. + +"I have, but it is only a theory," Mr. Henderson answered. "I believe we +are on a sort of small earth that is inside the larger one we live on. +This sphere floats in space, just as our earth does and we have passed +through the void that lies between our globe and this interior one. I +think this new earth is about a quarter the size of ours and in some +respects the same. In others it is vastly different. + +"But we will not think of those things now. We must see what our +situation is, whether we are in any danger, and must look to repairing +our ship. There will be time enough for other matters later." + +The travelers were walking slowly along, noting the strange things on +every side. As they advanced the vegetation seemed to become more +luxuriant, as if nature had tried to out-do herself in providing +beautiful flowers and plants. The changing lights added to the beauty +and weirdness of the scene. + +The plain was a rolling one, and here and there were small hills and +hollows. As the travelers topped a rise Jack, who was in advance, called +out: + +"Oh what queer plants! They are giant Jacks-in-the-pulpit!" + +The others hastened forward to see what the boy had discovered. Jack was +too eager to wait, and pressed on. The hill which sloped away from the +top of the little plateau on which he stood, was steeper than he had +counted on. As he leaned forward he lost his balance and toppled, head +foremost, down the declivity, rolling over. + +"Look out!" cried Mark, who had almost reached his comrade's side. + +The scene that confronted the travelers was a strange one. Before them +in a sort of hollow, were scores of big plants, shaped somewhat like a +Jack-in-the-pulpit, or a big lily, with a curved top or flap to it. + +The plants were about eight feet tall, three feet across the top, and +the flap or covering was raised about two feet. They were nodding and +swaying in the wind on their short stems. + +"He's headed right for one of them!" Mr. Henderson exclaimed. "I hope +he'll not fall into one of the openings." + +"Is there any danger?" asked Mark. + +"I'm afraid there is," the inventor added. "Those plants are a variety +of the well-known pitcher plant, or fly-trap, as they are sometimes +called. In tropical countries they grow to a large size, but nothing +like these. They are filled, in the cup, with a sort of sticky, sweet +mixture, and this attracts insects. When one enters the cup the top flap +folds over, and the hapless insect is caught there. The plant actually +devours it, nature providing a sort of vegetable digestive apparatus. +These giant plants are the same, and they seem large enough to take in a +man, to say nothing of Jack!" + +With anxious faces the adventurers turned to watch the fate of their +comrade. Jack was slipping, sliding and rolling down the hill. He could +not seem to stop, though he was making desperate efforts to do so. He +was headed straight for one of the largest of the terrible plants. + +In vain, as he saw what was in front of him, did he try to change the +course of his involuntary voyage. Over and over he rolled, until, at +length, he struck a little grassy hummock, bounced into the air, and +right into the opening of a monster pitcher plant. + +"It has him!" cried Mark. "We must save him! Come on everyone!" + +He raced down the hill, while the others came closely after him. They +reached the plant into which Jack had bounced. The flap, or top piece, +had closed down, tightly over the unfortunate boy. + +"Quick! We must save him or he will be smothered to death or drowned in +the liquid the cup contains!" Mr. Henderson exclaimed. "Attack the plant +with anything you can find!" + +"Let's cut through the side of the flower-cup!" suggested Mark. "That +seems softer than the stem." + +His idea was quickly put into operation. Andy's long hunting knife came +in very handy. While the sides of the long natural cup were tough, the +knife made an impression on them, and, soon, a small door or opening had +been cut in the side of the pitcher plant, large enough to enable a +human body to pass through. + +When the last fibre had been severed by Andy, who was chosen to wield +the knife because of his long practice as a hunter, there was a sudden +commotion within the plant. Then a dark object, dripping water, made a +spring and landed almost at the feet of the professor. + +It was Jack, and a sorry sight he presented. He was covered from head to +foot with some sticky substance, which dripped from all over him. + +With hasty movements he cleared the stuff from his eyes and mouth, and +spluttered: + +"It's a good thing you cut me out when you did. I couldn't have held on +much longer!" + + + + + CHAPTER XIX + + THE BIG PEACH + + +Jack soon recovered from his remarkable experience. The terrible plant +that had nearly eaten him alive was a mass of cut-up vegetable matter +which attracted a swarm of insects. Most of them were ants, but such +large ones the boys had never seen before, and the professor said they +exceeded in size anything he had read about. Some of them were as large +as big rats. They bit off large pieces of the fallen plant and carried +them to holes in the ground which were big enough for Washington to slip +his foot into, and he wore a No. 11 shoe. + +But the adventurers felt there were more important things for them to +look at than ants, so they started away again, the professor telling +them all to be careful and avoid accidents. + +It was while they were strolling through a little glade, which they came +upon unexpectedly, that Washington, who was in the lead called out: + +"Gracious goodness! It must be Thanksgivin'!" + +"Why so?" asked Jack. + +"'Cause here's th' remarkablest extraordinary and expansionist of a +pumpkin that ever I laid eyes on!" the colored man cried. + +They all hurried to where Washington had come to a halt. There, on the +ground in front of him, was a big round object, about the size of a +hogshead. It was yellow in color, and was not unlike the golden +vegetable from which mothers make such delicious pies. + +"I allers was fond of pumpkins," said Washington, placing his hand on +the thing, which was almost as tall as he was, "but I never thought I'd +come across such a one as this." + +The professor and the two boys went closer to the monstrosity. Mr. +Henderson passed his hand over it and then, bending closer, smelled of +it. + +"That's not a pumpkin!" he exclaimed. + +"What is it then?" asked Washington. + +"It's a giant peach," the inventor remarked. "Can't you see the fuzz, +and smell it? Of course it's a peach." + +"Well I'll be horn-swoggled!" cried Washington, leaning against the big +fruit, which easily supported him. + +"Hurrah!" cried Jack, drawing his knife from his pocket and opening the +largest blade. "I always did like peaches. Now I can have all I want," +and he drove the steel into the object, cutting off a big slice which he +began to eat. + +"It may be poisonous!" exclaimed Mark. + +"Too late now," responded Jack, the juice running down from his mouth. +"Taste's good, anyhow." + +They all watched Jack while he devoured his slice of fruit. Washington +acted as if he expected his friend to topple over unconscious, but Jack +showed no bad symptoms. + +"You'd better all have some," the boy said. "It's the best I ever +tasted." + +Encouraged by Jack's example, Mark thought he, too, would have some of +the fruit. He opened his knife and was about to take off some of the +peach when suddenly the thing began to roll forward, almost upon him. + +"Hi! Stop your shoving!" he exclaimed. "Do you want to have the thing +roll over me, Jack?" + +"I'm not shoving!" replied Jack. + +"Some one is!" Mark went on. He dodged around the far side of the +immense fruit and what he saw made him cry out in astonishment. + +Two grasshoppers, each one standing about three feet high, were standing +on their hind legs, and with their fore feet were pushing the peach +along the ground. They had been attracted to the fruit by some juice +which escaped from a bruise on that side, which was the ripest, and, +being fond of sweets had, evidently decided to take their find to some +safe place where they could eat it at their leisure. Or perhaps they +wanted to provide for their families if grasshoppers have them. + +"Did you ever see such monsters?" asked Jack. "They're as big as dogs!" + +At the sound of his voice the two grasshoppers, becoming alarmed, ceased +their endeavors to roll the peach along, and, assuming a crouching +attitude seemed to be waiting. + +"They certainly are remarkable specimens," Mr. Henderson said. "If the +other animals are in proportion, and if there are persons in this new +world, we are likely to have a hard time of it." + +This time the immense insects concluded the strangers were not to their +liking. With a snapping of their big muscular legs and a whirr of their +wings that was like the starting of an automobile, the grasshoppers rose +into the air and sailed away over the heads of the adventurers. Their +flight was more than an eighth of a mile in extent, and they came down +in a patch of the very tall grass. + +"Let's go after them!" exclaimed old Andy. "I was so excited I forgot to +take a shot at them. Come on!" + +"I think we'd better not," counseled the professor. "In the first place +we don't need them. They would be no good for food. Then we don't know +but what they might attack us, and it would be no joke to be bitten by a +grasshopper of that size. Let them alone. We may find other game which +will need your attention, Andy. Better save your ammunition." + +Somewhat against his will, Andy had to submit to the professor's ruling. +The old hunter consoled himself with the reflection that if insects grew +to that size he would have some excellent sport hunting even the birds +of the inner world. + +"I wonder what sort of a tree that peach grew on," Jack remarked, as he +cut off another slice, when the excitement caused by the discovery of +the grasshoppers had subsided. "It must be taller than a church steeple. +I wonder how the fruit got here, for there are no trees around." + +"I fancy those insects rolled it along for a good distance," Mr. +Henderson put in. "You can see the marks on the ground, where they +pushed it. They are wonderful creatures." + +"Are we going any farther?" asked Mark. "Perhaps we can find the peach +tree, and, likely there are other fruit trees near it." + +At the professor's suggestion they strolled along for some distance. +They were now about three miles from the airship, and found that what +they had supposed was a rather level plain, was becoming a succession of +hills and hollows. It was while descending into a rather deep valley +that Jack pointed ahead and exclaimed: + +"I guess there's our peach orchard, but I never saw one like it before." + +Nor had any of the others. Instead of trees the peaches were attached to +vines growing along the ground. They covered a large part of the valley, +and the peaches, some bigger than the one they first discovered, some +small and green, rose up amid the vines, just as pumpkins do in a corn +field. + +"Stranger and stranger," the professor murmured. "Peaches grow on vines. +I suppose potatoes will grow on trees. Everything seems to be reversed +here." + +They made their way down toward the peach "orchard" as Jack called it, +though "patch" would have been a better name. Besides peaches they found +plums, apples, and pears growing in the same way, and all of a size +proportionate to the first-named fruit. + +"Well, one thing is evident," Mr. Henderson remarked, "we shall not +starve here. There is plenty to eat, even, if we have to turn +vegetarians." + +"I wonder what time it is getting to be," Jack remarked. "My watch says +twelve o'clock but whether it's noon or midnight I can't tell, with this +colored light coming and going. I wonder if it ever sets as the sun +does." + +"That is something we'll have to get used to," the professor said. "But +I think we had better go back to the ship now. We have many things to do +to get it in order again. Besides, I am a little afraid to leave it +unguarded so long. No telling but what some strange beast--or persons, +for that matter--might injure it." + +"I'm going to take back some slices of peaches with me, anyhow," Mark +said, and he and Jack cut off enough to make several meals, while Bill, +Tom and Washington took along all they could carry. + +As they walked back toward the ship the strange lights seemed to be +dying out. At first they hardly noticed this, but as they continued on +it became quite gloomy, and an odd sort of gloom it was too, first +green, then yellow, then red and then blue. + +"I believe whatever serves as a sun down here is setting," the professor +observed. "We must hurry. I don't want to be caught out here after +dark." + +They hurried on, the lights dying out more and more, until, as they came +in sight of their ship, it was so black they could hardly see. + +Mark who was in the rear turned around, glancing behind him. As he did +so he caught sight of a gigantic shadow moving along on top of the +nearest hill. The shadow was not unlike that of a man in shape, but of +such gigantic stature that Mark knew it could be like no human being he +had ever seen. At the same time it bore a curious resemblance to the +weird shadow he had seen slip into the _Mermaid_ that night before they +sailed. + +"I wonder if it can be the same--the same thing--grown larger, just as +the peach grows larger than those in our world," Mark thought, while a +shiver of fear seemed to go over him. "I wonder if that--that thing +could have been on the ship----" + +Then the last rays of light died away and there was total darkness. + + + + + CHAPTER XX + + OVERHAULING THE SHIP + + +"Keep together!" shouted the professor. "It will not do to become lost +now. We are close to the ship, and will soon be there. Come after me." + +It was more by following the sound of the scientist's voice, than by any +sight which the others could get of him, that they managed to trail +along behind. They reached the ship in safety, however, and entered. +There was no sound as of beasts or insects within, and, though Mark felt +a little apprehensive on account of what he had seen, he and the others +as well, were glad to be again in something that seemed like home. + +"I wish we had some candles, or some sort of a light to see by," the +professor remarked. "We can do nothing in the dark, and there is no +telling how long this night is going to last once it has set in. If I +could have a little illumination, I might be able to fix the dynamo, and +then we could turn on the incandescents. That portable light we had is +broken." + +"By cracky!" exclaimed Andy. "I believe I have the very thing!" + +"You don't mean to say you have a torch or a candle with you, do you?" +asked Mr. Henderson. + +"No, but I have my patent pipe lighting apparatus," the hunter said. "I +always carry it. It gives a little light, but not much, though it may be +enough to work by." + +Not until after several hours work, handicapped as they were by lack of +light, were the repairs to the ship completed. + +"Now we'll start the engine and see how we will come out," the inventor +exclaimed, as he wiped his hands on some waste. + +It did not take long to generate enough power to turn the dynamo. Soon +the familiar hum and whirr was heard, and, a few seconds later the +filaments in the lamps began to glow a dull red, which gradually +brightened until they were shining in all their usual brilliancy. + +"Hurrah!" cried the boys. "Now we can see!" + +They all felt in better spirits with the restoration of the lights, and, +washing off the grease and dirt of their labors in the engine room, they +prepared to sit down to the meal which Washington prepared. + +As soon as the dynamo was working well, care had to be taken not to +speed it too much on account of a mended belt. The professor turned off +part of the lights and switched some of the current into the storage +batteries, to provide for emergencies. For there was no telling how long +the night might last. + +Jack was the first one to finish the meal--they did not know whether to +call it dinner, supper or breakfast. He went into the conning tower, +and, as soon as he reached it he called out: + +"Come on up here, professor! There's something strange going on!" + +Mr. Henderson, followed by Mark, hurried to the tower. As he reached it +and looked out of the forward window, a beautiful white glow illuminated +the whole scene, and then, from below the horizon, there arose seven +luminous disks. One was in the centre, while about it circled the other +six, like some immense pin-wheel. + +"It's the moon!" cried Mark. + +"It's seven moons!" Jack exclaimed. "Why it's almost as light as day!" + +And so it was, for the seven moons, if that is what they were, gave an +illumination not unlike the sun in brilliancy though it was like the +beams from the pale moon of the earth. + +"I guess we need not have worried about the darkness," the professor +remarked. "Still it is a good thing I fixed the dynamo." + +For some time he and the other adventurers watched the odd sight of the +moons, as they rose higher and higher overhead. The scene was a +beautiful, if weird one, for the whole plain was bathed in the soft +light. + +"I guess we can turn off the incandescents, and use all the power for +the storage batteries," Mr. Henderson went on, as he descended into the +ship, and opened the port shutters which had been closed when they +started off on their exploring tour. The interior of the _Mermaid_ was +almost as light as when the odd colored beams had been playing over the +new earth to which they had come. + +"I think we had better continue with our work of making repairs," Mr. +Henderson said. "We can't count on these moons remaining here any length +of time, and I want to take advantage of them. So though some of us +perhaps need sleep, we will forego it and fix up the _Mermaid_. I want +to take a trip and see what other wonders await us." + +They all agreed that they would rather work than sleep, and soon the +entire force was busy in the engine room. There was much to be done, and +the most important things were attended to first. The motive power was +overhauled and found to be in need of several new parts. These were put +in and then the gas generator, and the negative gravity machine, were +put in shape. + +It would have taken something very substantial to have awakened any one +on board the _Mermaid_ that night. They all slept soundly and awoke to +find the strange colored lights shining in through the glass covered +port holes. + +"Well, the sun, or what corresponds to it, is up," observed Jack, "and I +guess we had better do as the little boy in the school reader did, and +get up, too, Mark." + +Soon all the travelers were aroused, and the sound of Washington +bustling about in the kitchen, whence came the smell of coffee, bacon +and eggs, told the hungry ones that breakfast was under way. + +After the meal work was again started on repairing the ship, and by noon +the professor remarked: + +"I think we shall try a little flight after dinner. That is, if one +thing doesn't prevent us." + +"What is that?" asked Jack. + +"We may be held down, as were those stones," was the grave answer. + + + + + CHAPTER XXI + + THE FISH THAT WALKED + + +It was with no little apprehension that the professor prepared to take +his first flight aboard the ship in the realms of the new world. He knew +little or nothing of the conditions he might meet with, the density of +the atmosphere, or how the _Mermaid_ would behave under another +environment than that to which she was accustomed. + +Yet he felt it was necessary to make a start. They would have to attempt +a flight sooner or later, and Mr. Henderson was not the one to delay +matters. So, the last adjustment having been made to the repaired +machinery, they all took their places in the ship. + +The boys and the professor went to the conning tower to direct matters, +while Washington and the others were in the engine room to see that the +machinery worked properly. Mark gave a last look outside as he closed +the big steel cover over the hole through which admission was had to the +craft. He thought he might catch a glimpse of the queer shadow, but +nothing was in sight. It was like a beautiful summer's day, save for the +strange lights, shifting and changing. But the travelers had become +somewhat used to them by this time. + +The professor turned the valve that allowed the gas to enter the holder. +There was a hissing sound and a sort of trembling throughout the entire +ship. The dynamos were whizzing away and the negative gravity machine +was all ready to start. + +For several minutes the travelers waited until the big lifting tank was +filled with the strong vapor. They watched the gages which indicated the +pressure to be several hundred pounds. + +"I think we can chance it now," remarked Mr. Henderson, as he threw over +several levers. "We'll try, at any rate." + +With a tremor the _Mermaid_ left the surface of the inner earth and went +sailing upward toward the--well it wasn't exactly the sky, but it was +what corresponded to it in the new world, though there were no clouds +and no blue depths such as the boys were used to. At all events the +_Mermaid_ was flying again, and, as the adventurers felt themselves +being lifted up they gave a spontaneous cheer at the success which had +crowned their efforts. + +The ship went up several hundred feet, and then, the professor, having +brought her to a stop, sent her ahead at a slow pace. He wanted to be +sure all the apparatus was in good working order before he tried any +speed. + +The _Mermaid_ responded readily. Straight as an arrow through the air +she flew. + +"Well, this is almost as good as being on the regular earth!" exclaimed +Jack. + +"It's better," put in Mark. "We haven't seen half the wonders yet. Let's +open the floor shutter, and see how it looks down below." + +He and Jack went to the room where there was an opening in the floor of +the ship, covered by heavy glass. They slid back the steel shutter and +there, down below them, was the strange new world they had come to, +stretched out like some big map. + +They could see mountains, forests, plains, and rivers, the water +sparkling in the colored light. Over green fields they flew, then across +some stretches where only sand and rocks were to be seen. Faster and +faster the ship went, as the professor found the machinery was once more +in perfect order. Jack was idly watching the play of tinted lights over +the surface of the ground. + +"I wonder what makes it," he said. + +"I have tried to account for it in several ways," said the professor, +who had called Washington to the conning tower and come to join the +boys. "I have had first one theory and then another, but the one I am +almost sure is correct is that hidden volcanic fires cause the +illumination. + +"I think they flare up and die away, and have become so regular that +they produce the same effect as night and day with us. Probably the +fires go out for lack of fuel, and when it is supplied they start up +again. Perhaps it is a sort of gas that they burn." + +"Well, it's queer enough, whatever it is," Jack remarked. "What strikes +me as funny, though, is that we haven't seen a single person since we +came here. Surely this place must be inhabited." + +Mark thought of the strange shadow he had seen, but said nothing. + +"I believe it is," the professor answered. "We will probably come upon +the inhabitants soon. I only hope they are a people who will do us no +harm." + +"If they tried any of their tricks we could mount up in our ship and +escape them," said Andy. + +"Provided they gave us the chance," Mr. Henderson put in. "Well, we'll +not worry about that now." + +For several hours the ship traveled on, until it had come to a different +sort of country. It was wilder and not so level, and there were a number +of streams and small lakes to be seen. + +"Are you going to sail all night?" asked Jack. + +"No," replied the professor. "I think we'll descend very soon now, and +camp out for a while. That lake just ahead seems to offer a good place," +and he pointed to a large sheet of water that sparkled in the distance, +for by this time they had all gone back to the conning tower. + +The lake was in the midst of a wood that extended for some distance on +all sides, and was down in a sort of valley. The ship headed toward it, +and in a short time a landing was made close to shore. + +"Maybe we can have some fresh fish for supper," exclaimed Jack as he ran +from the ship as soon as the sliding door in the side was opened. "Looks +as if that lake had some in it. It is not thick water like in that +stream we stopped at," he added. + +"I believe you're right," old Andy put in, as he turned back to look for +some lines and hooks among his traps. He soon found what he wanted, and +gave them to the boys, taking his trusty gun along for himself. + +While the professor, Washington, Tom and Bill remained behind to make +some adjustments to the machinery, and to get things in shape for the +night, which, they calculated would soon be upon them, Jack, Mark and +Andy went down to the shore of the lake. The boys cut some poles from +the trees, and baiting the hooks with some fat worms found under the +bark, threw in. + +"Let's see who'll get the first bite," spoke Jack. "I'm pretty generally +lucky at fishing." + +"Well, while you're waiting to decide that there contest, I think I'll +take a stroll along shore and see if I can see anything to shoot," Andy +remarked. + +For several minutes the boys sat in silence on the bank of the lake, +watching the play of the vari-colored lights on the water. Suddenly Jack +felt a quiver on his line, and his pole began to shake. + +"I've got something!" he cried. Then his pole bent almost double and he +began to pull for all he was worth. "It's a whopper!" he cried. "Come +and help me, Mark!" + +Mark ran to his friend's aid. Whatever was on the other end of the line +was strong enough to tax the muscles of both boys. They could hear the +pole beginning to break. But for the excellent quality of Andy's line +that would have parted some time before. + +All at once there came a sudden slacking of the pull from whatever was +in the water. And so quickly did it cease that both boys went over +backward in a heap. + +"He's got away!" cried Jack, getting up and brushing some of the dirt +from his clothes. + +"There's something that didn't get away!" cried Mark, who had risen to +his knees, and was pointing at the lake. Jack looked and what he saw +made him almost believe he was dreaming. + +For, emerging from the water, dragging the pole and line the boys had +dropped along with it, was a most curious creature. It was a big fish, +but a fish with four short legs on which it was walking, or rather +waddling along as much as a duck, with a double supply of feet, might +do. + +"Say, do I see that or is there something the matter with my eyes?" sung +out Jack, making ready to run away. + +"It's there all right!" exclaimed Mark. "Hi! Andy! Here's something to +shoot!" he yelled, for indeed the creature was big enough to warrant +attack with a gun. It was about five feet long and two feet through. + +On and on it came, straight at the boys, as if to have revenge for the +pain the fish hook must have caused it, for the barb could be seen +dangling from its lip. On and on it came, waddling forward, the water +dripping from it at every step. It had the body and general shape of a +fish, save that the tail was rather large in proportion. As it came +nearer the boys noted that the feet were webbed, like those of a water +fowl. + +"Come on!" cried Jack. "It may attack us!" + +At that moment the creature opened its mouth, showing a triple row of +formidable teeth, and gave utterance to a sort of groan and grunt +combined. + +This was enough to send Jack and Mark off on a run up the bank, and did +they stop until they heard Andy's voice hailing them. + +"What's the matter, boys?" + +"Come here! Quick!" answered Jack. + +The fish-animal had halted and seemed to be taking an observation. To do +this, as it could not turn its neck, it had to shift its whole body. Old +Andy came up on the run, his gun held in readiness. + +"Where is it?" he asked, and the boys pointed silently. + +The hunter could not repress a start of astonishment as he saw the +strange creature. But he did not hesitate a second. There was a crack of +the rifle, and the thing, whatever it was, toppled over, dead. + +Andy hurried up to it, to get a closer view. + +"Well, this is the limit!" he exclaimed. "First we have grasshoppers +that can roll peaches as big as hogsheads, and now we come across fish +that walk. I wonder what we will see next." + +"I don't want to go fishing in this lake any more," spoke Jack, as he +looked at the repulsive creature. "I never want to eat fish any more." + +"Same here," agreed Mark, and old Andy was of the opinion that the thing +killed would not make a wholesome dish for the table. + +"There don't seem to be any game in this section," he remarked. "Not a +sign could I see, nor have I since we have been here, unless you count +those grasshoppers. But the fruit is good, I'll say that." + +"Come on, we'd better be getting back," Mark said, as he noticed it was +getting dark. "I'm hungry." + + + + + CHAPTER XXII + + THE SNAKE-TREE + + +They managed to make a good meal of the food supplies they had brought +along, and as a dessert Washington made some peach short-cake from the +slices of the giant fruit they had found the day before. Just as they +finished supper it got very dark, but, in about an hour, the moonbeams, +as the travelers called them, came up, and illuminated the lake with a +weird light. + +As the machinery of the _Mermaid_ was now in working order there was no +further alarm because of the darkness. The ship rested on a level keel +about a hundred yards back from the lake, and, seeing that all was snug, +and the fastenings secure, the travelers went to bed. + +Though they had to forego fish for breakfast the travelers made a good +meal. After seeing that the ship was in readiness for a quick start, the +professor suggested they take a walk around and see what sort of country +they might be in now. + +They tramped on for several miles, meeting with no adventures, and +seeing nothing out of the ordinary. It was a pleasant day, just warm +enough to be comfortable, and a little wind was blowing through the +trees. + +"It would be almost like home if it wasn't for the strange lights, and +the memory of the queer things here," said Jack. "I feel fine. Let's see +if you can hit that dead tree over there, Mark." + +Jack stooped to grab up a stone, but no sooner had his fingers touched +it than he called out: + +"There! I forgot all about the stones here being heavier than lead. +Guess we can't throw any of 'em. But come on. I'll race you to the dead +tree!" + +Mark was willing, so the two boys set off at a fast pace. + +"Look out where you're going!" the professor called after them. "No +telling what may be in those woods," for the boys were approaching a +little glade, on the edge of which the dead tree stood. + +Jack reached the goal first, and stood leaning against the trunk, +waiting for Mark. + +"You'd better practice sprinting!" exclaimed the victor. + +Mark was about to excuse himself for his poor showing, on the plea of +having eaten too much breakfast, when to his horror he saw what seemed +to be a long thin snake spring out from the branches of a near-by tree +and twine itself about Jack. + +"Help me! Save me!" cried the unfortunate boy, as he was lifted high +into the air and pulled within the shadow of the wood. + +For an instant Mark was too horror-stricken to move. Then with a shout +that alarmed the others, who were coming along more slowly, he made a +dash for the place he had last seen Jack. + +Had old Andy not been on the watch, with those keen eyes of his, there +might have been a double tragedy. He had seen from afar the sudden +snatching up of Jack, and noted Mark's rush to save his chum. + +"Stand still! Don't go in there for your life!" yelled the hunter, at +the same time running forward with gun ready. + +His example was followed by the professor, Washington and the other two +men. + +"A snake has Jack!" called Mark, when Andy was at his side. + +"No! It's not a snake!" replied the hunter. "It's worse. It's the +snake-tree!" + +"What's that?" asked Mr. Henderson, hurrying up. + +"The snake-tree has Jack," the hunter went on. "It is a plant, half +animal, half-vegetable. It has long branches, not unlike a snake in +shape. They can move about and grab things." + +"One of them got a grip on Jack as he leaned against the dead tree +trunk. I just caught a glimpse of it, and called to prevent Mark from +running into danger." + +"Can't we save him?" asked Mr. Henderson. + +"I'm going to try!" replied Andy. "Quick! Gather up some pieces of dry +wood. I have some paper, and my pipe lighter. We must fight the +snake-tree with fire!" + + + + + CHAPTER XXIII + + THE DESERTED VILLAGE + + +Jack's cries were growing fainter and fainter. Peering in through the +branches of the dead tree the professor could see the whip-like limbs +winding closer and closer about the boy. + +"I am afraid we will be too late!" he said. + +Andy had twisted some paper into a rude torch. He set fire to it with +his pocket lighter, and, when Bill and Mark brought him some little +pieces of dead wood the old hunter added them to his bundle, which was +now blazing brightly. + +"How are you going to do it?" asked the professor. + +"I'll show you," replied Andy. He bound the sticks and paper together +with wisps of grass and then, when it was so hot he could hardly hold it +longer, he ran as close as he dared to the snake-tree and tossed the +torch at the foot of it. + +The blazing bundle fell among some damp leaves and grass, as Andy had +intended it should, and soon a dense smoke arose, pouring straight up +through the branches of the animal-tree, the limbs of which were +gathered in a knot about the half-unconscious form of the boy. + +For a few minutes they all waited anxiously. Would Andy's trick succeed? +Had the terrible tree not already squeezed the life from Jack? + +But, while they watched, there seemed to come a change over the tree. +The snake-like arms waved less and less. They seemed to straighten out, +as though deprived of power by the smoke which was now so dense as to +hide Jack from sight. Then the arms suddenly relaxed and something +rolled from them and fell to the ground. With a quick movement Andy +darted in, crawling on his hands and knees beneath the limbs, and +brought Jack out. The boy was white and his eyes were closed. + +"Get some water!" cried the old hunter. + +Mark ran toward a stream a little distance away. He brought some of the +curiously thick liquid in his hat, and while Andy held the boy the +professor sprinkled some of the drops on his face, and forced some +between his lips. In a little while Jack's eyes slowly opened. + +"Don't let it eat me!" he begged. + +"You're all right now," said Andy heartily. "Not a bit harmed, Jack. +But," he added in a low tone, "it was a close call." + +A few whiffs from a bottle of ammonia the professor carried soon brought +Jack's color back. + +"Do you feel better now?" asked Mark. + +"I guess so. Yes, I'm all right," replied Jack, struggling to his feet. +"What happened? Feels as if I had been tied up with a lot of rope." + +"That's about what you were," Andy replied, "only it was the worst kind +of rope I ever saw. Those snake-trees are terrible things. I've read of +'em, but I never saw one before. The book that told of them says they +squeeze their victims to death just as a snake does. The only way to do +is to make some smoke and fire at the bottom. This sort of kills the +branches or makes them stupid and they let go. The trees are half +animal, and awful things. I hope we don't meet with any more." + +"Same here," added Jack fervently, as he grasped Andy's hand, and +thanked him for saving his life. + +"Do you think you can go on, or shall we return to the ship?" the +professor asked. + +"Oh I can trail along, if you move a little slowly," Jack replied. "I'm +a bit stiff, that's all." + +So they resumed their journey. They had gone, perhaps, three miles when +Washington, who was in the lead, suddenly stopped and called: + +"Sounds like thunder." + +The others listened. Sure enough there was a dull rumble and roar +audible. It seemed off to the left, but they could see no clouds in the +sky, nor any signs of a storm. + +"Let's take a walk over that way and see what it is," Mr. Henderson +suggested. + +As they walked on the noise became louder, until in about half an hour +it was like the sound from a blast furnace. + +"What do you suppose it can be?" asked Mark. + +"Perhaps some new freak of nature," the professor replied. "We seem to +have a good many of them here." + +They were all on their guard now, for there was no telling into what +danger they might run. As they went up a little hill the noise became +much louder. The professor and Andy, who had taken the lead, kept a +sharp lookout ahead, that they might not unexpectedly fall into some +hidden stream or lake. As they topped the hill they saw before them a +deep valley, and in the midst of it was that which was causing the +roaring sound. + +From the centre of an immense mound of rock and earth there spouted up a +great column of water, three hundred feet or more, as straight as a flag +staff. It was about ten feet in diameter, and at the top it broke into a +rosette of sparkling liquid, which as the vari-colored lights played on +it, resembled some wonderful flower. + +"It's a great geyser!" the professor exclaimed. "We have come to a place +like Yellowstone Park. We must be very careful. The crust may be very +thin here, and let us down into some boiling spring." + +The others gathered around the professor, and, from a safe distance +watched the ever rising and falling shaft of water. + +It was not regular in motion. Sometimes it would shoot up to a great +distance, nearly a thousand feet, the professor estimated. Again it +would sink down, as the power sending it out lessened, until it was only +a few hundred feet above the rounded top of the mound from which it +spurted. But it never fell below this. All the while there was the +constant roaring sound, as though the forces of nature below the surface +were calling to be let out. + +"I hope there are not many of those about," Mr. Henderson remarked after +a pause. "If the ship should hit one during the night it would be all up +with us. We must keep a careful lookout." + +The spouting column had a fascination which held them to the spot for +some time. From the hill they had a good view of the surrounding +country, but did not see any more geysers. + +"Do you think it is hot water?" asked Mark. + +"There is no vapor," the professor answered, "but most of the geysers +are produced by the action of steam in the interior of the earth. +However we'll not take any chances by investigating. I fear it would not +be safe to go into that valley." + +"Look there!" cried Andy. "I guess we're better off here!" He pointed a +little to the right of where the water spouted. The others looked, and +saw, coming from a hole in the ground, some shaggy black object. + +"What is it?" asked Jack. + +"It looks like a bear," replied the hunter, "but I never saw one like it +before." + +Nor had any of the others, for the creature was a terrible one. It had +the body of a bear, but the feet and legs were those of an alligator, +while the tail trailed out behind like a snake, and the head had a long +snout, not unlike the trunk of an elephant. The creature was about ten +feet long and five feet in height. + +"Let me try a shot at it!" exclaimed Andy. "That is something worth +shooting," and he cocked his rifle. + +"Don't!" exclaimed the professor shortly. "You might only wound it, and +it would pursue us. We are not ready to fight such creatures as that, +and you are the only one armed." + +"I never missed anything I aimed at yet," said Andy, a little hurt that +any one should doubt his ability to kill at the first shot. + +"Perhaps not, but how do you know but what this creature has a bullet +proof armor under its hide. This is a strange world, Andy. It is better +to take no chances." + +"I hate to see him get away," the hunter said. + +But, as it happened, the beast was not to get away. As they watched they +saw the horrible animal approach the mound from which the water spurted. +Up the sides it climbed. + +"I guess he's going to get a drink," said Mark. + +That was evidently the beast's intention. It went close to the spouting +column of water, and thrust its head out so that its tongue could lap +from the side. It seemed to have been in the habit of doing this. + +For once, and for the last time, however, it made a mistake. The water +seemed to veer to one side. In its eagerness to get a drink the animal +took another step forward. At that moment the direction of the column +changed again, and it tilted over toward the beast. + +Suddenly, as the travelers watched, the full force of the big column +caught the beast just under the fore shoulders. Up into the air the +creature shot, propelled by thousands of pounds pressure. Right up to +the top of the column it went, and this time the water rose a thousand +feet into the air. + +Up and up went the animal, struggling to get away from the remorseless +grip. Then, when the water had reached its height, it shot the beast off +to one side. Then the brute began to fall, twisting, turning, wiggling +and struggling. Down it came with a thud that could be heard above the +noise of the geyser. + +"I reckon that finishes him," observed Andy. And it had, for there was +not a sign of life from the creature. + +"I guess we have seen enough for one morning," the professor said. +"Let's go back to the airship. It must be nearly dinner time." + +They started away. Mark gave a last look at the queer column of water +and the dead body of the strange animal. As he passed down the hill he +thought he saw the creature move, and stayed to see if this was so. But +a second glance convinced him he was mistaken. + +The others had gone on and were some distance ahead. Mark hurried on to +join them. As he got a last glance at the top of the column, over the +brow of the hill, he happened to look off to the left. There was another +hill, about the size of the one they had been on. + +[Illustration: UP IN THE AIR THE CREATURE SHOT] + +And, as Mark looked he saw something move. At first he thought it was +another beast. But, to his terror he saw that the creature had only two +legs, and that it stood upright like a man, but such a man as Mark had +never seen before, for he was nearly twelve feet tall. + +He was about to cry out and warn the others, when the thing, whatever it +was, sunk down, apparently behind some tall bushes, and disappeared as +if the earth had opened and swallowed it. + +"I wonder if I had better tell them," thought Mark. "I can't show them +anything. I wonder if I really saw it, or if it was only a shadow. I +guess I'll say nothing. But it is very strange." + +Then he hurried on to join the others. + +"What makes you so pale?" asked Jack of his chum. + +"Nothing," said Mark, somewhat confused. "I guess I'm a little tired, +that's all." + +They reached the ship in safety, and, having dinner started the +machinery and took the _Mermaid_ up into the air. + +"We'll travel on and see if we can't find some human beings," the +professor said. + +All that afternoon they sailed, the country below them unfolding like a +panorama. They passed over big lakes, sailing on the surface of some, +and over rivers, and vast stretches of forest and dreary plains. But +they never saw a sign of human inhabitants. + +It was getting on to five o'clock, the hour when the brilliant lights +usually disappeared, when Mark, who was steering in the conning tower, +gave a cry. + +"What is it?" asked the professor, looking up from a rude map he was +making of the land they had just traversed. + +"It looks like a town before us," said the boy. + +Mr. Henderson and Jack looked to where Mark pointed. A few miles ahead +and below them were great mounds, not unlike that from which the geyser +had spouted. But they were arranged in regular form, like houses on a +street, row after row of them. And, as they approached nearer, they +could see that the mounds had doors and windows to them. Some of the +mounds were larger than others, and some were of double and triple +formation. + +"It's a city! The first city of the new world!" cried Jack. + +"It is a deserted village!" said the professor. "We have found where the +people live, but we have not found them." And he was right, for there +was not a sign of life about the place, over which the airship was now +suspended. + + + + + CHAPTER XXIV + + THE GIANTS + + +"Let's go down and investigate," suggested Jack. + +"Better wait," counseled the professor. "It will soon be dark, and, +though we will have moonlight, we can not see to advantage. I think it +will be best to keep the ship in the air to-night, and descend in the +morning. Then we can look about and decide on what to do." + +They all agreed this was the best plan, and, after making a circle above +the deserted village, and noting no signs of life, the _Mermaid_ was +brought to a halt over the centre of the town, and about three hundred +feet above it. There the travelers would be comparatively safe. + +It was deemed best to keep watch that night, and so, Mark, Jack, Bill +and Tom took turns, though there was nothing for them to do, as not a +thing happened. With the first appearance of dawn Mr. Henderson gave +orders to have the ship lowered, and it came to rest in the middle of +what corresponded to a street in the queer mound village. + +"Now to see what kind of people have lived here!" cried Jack. "They must +have been a queer lot. Something like the Esquimaux, only they probably +had more trouble keeping cool than the chaps up at the north pole do." + +Now that they were down among the mound houses, they saw that the +dwellings were much larger than they had supposed. They towered high +above the boys' heads, and some of them were large enough in area to +have accommodated a company of soldiers. + +"Say, the chaps who lived in these must have been some pumpkins," said +Jack. "Why the ceilings are about fifteen feet high, and the doors +almost the same! Talk about giants! I guess we've struck where they used +to hang out, at any rate." + +The houses were a curious mixture of clay and soft stone. There were +doors, with big skins from animals as curtains, and the windows were +devoid of glass. Instead of stairs there were rude ladders, and the +furniture in the mound houses was of the roughest kind. + +There were fire-places in some of the houses, and the blackened and +smoked walls showed that they must have been used. In one or two of the +houses clay dishes, most of them broken, were scattered about, and the +size of them, in keeping with everything else, indicated that those who +used them were of no small stature. + +"Some of the bowls would do for bath tubs," said Jack, as he came across +one or two large ones. + +By this time the professor, Bill and Tom had joined the boys, and the +five went on with the exploring tour, while Washington and Andy remained +in the ship to get breakfast. + +"The inhabitants are evidently of a half-civilized race," the professor +said. "Their houses, and the manner in which they live, show them to be +allied to the Aztecs, though of course they are much larger than that +race." + +"What's bothering me," Bill said, "is not so much what race they belong +to, as what chance we'd stand in a race with them if they took it into +their heads to chase after us. I've read that them there Azhandled +races----" + +"You mean the Aztecs," interrupted the professor. + +"Well the Aztecs, then. But I've read they used to place their enemies +on a stone altar and cut their hearts out. Now I'm not hankerin' after +anything like that." + +"Don't be foolish," spoke Mr. Henderson. "Wait until you meet some of +the giants, if that is what they are, and then you can decide what to +do." + +"It may be too late then," remarked Bill in a low tone, and the boys +were somewhat inclined to agree with him. + +However, there seemed to be no immediate danger, as there was no sign of +any of the big people about the village. The adventurers walked about +for some time, but made no discoveries that would throw any light on the +reason for the place being left uninhabited. It seemed as if there had +been a sudden departure from the place, for in a number of the houses +the remains of half-cooked meals were seen. + +"Well, I think we have noted enough for the time being," the professor +remarked, after they had traversed almost half the length of what seemed +to be the principal street. "Let's go back to the ship and have +something to eat. Washington may have become alarmed at our absence." + +They made a circle in order to take in another part of the town on their +way back. While passing through a sort of alley, though it was only +narrow by comparison with the other thoroughfares that were very wide, +Mark came to a place where there was a circular slab of stone, resting +on the ground. In the centre was a big iron ring. + +"Hello! Here's something new!" he exclaimed. "Maybe it leads to a secret +passage, or covers some hidden treasure." + +"I guess it will have to continue to cover it then," Jack spoke. "That +probably weighs several tons. None of us could move it." + +They made their way back to the ship, where they found Washington and +Andy discussing the advisability of going off in search of them. + +"Breakfast is mighty near spoiled," said the colored man with an injured +air. + +But the travelers did full justice to the meal, notwithstanding this. +Deciding there was nothing to be gained by staying in that vicinity, the +professor started the ship off again. + +They traveled several hundred miles in the air, and, as the afternoon +was coming to a close, Jack, who was in charge of the conning tower, +spied, just ahead of them, another village. + +"We will descend there for the night," the professor said. "Does there +seem to be any sign of life about?" + +"None," replied Mark, who was observing through a telescope the town +they were approaching. "It's as dead as the other one." + +The airship settled down in a field back of some of the mound houses. + +"Now for supper!" cried Jack. "I'm as hungry as----" + +He stopped short, for, seeming to rise from the very ground, all about +the ship, there appeared a throng of men. And such men as they were! For +not one was less than ten feet tall, and some were nearly fifteen! + +"The giants have us!" cried Bill, as he saw the horde of creatures +surrounding the ship. + + + + + CHAPTER XXV + + HELD BY THE ENEMY + + +"Keep the doors closed!" cried the professor. "It is our only hope! I +will send the ship up again!" + +But it was too late. Washington, who had obeyed the signal from the +conning tower to shut off the engines, had disconnected most of them so +they could not be started again save from the main room. At the same +time there came a yell of dismay from the colored man, who had slid back +the steel covering of the main side entrance to the _Mermaid_. + +"I'm caught!" cried Washington. + +As the professor and the boys hurried from the tower, they could hear a +struggle from where Washington was, and his voice calling: + +"Let me go! Let me go!" + +Reaching the engine room, which opened directly on the side entrance, +the professor saw a pair of enormous hands and arms dragging poor +Washington, feet first, out of the ship. Bill and Tom were crouched in +one corner, pale with fright. + +"Wait until I get my gun!" cried Andy, as he ran for his rifle. + +"Hold on!" called the professor in a loud voice. "It will be folly to +shoot them! We must try strategy!" + +Washington's cries ceased as he was drawn entirely from the ship, the +giant hands disappearing at the same time. + +"Follow me!" yelled Mr. Henderson, running out of the door. + +Hardly knowing what they did, the boys went after him, and their hearts +almost stopped beating in fright as they saw the terrible things, which, +in the glare of the changing lights, were on every side of them. + +For the men were very repulsive looking. They were attired in clothes, +very similar in cut to those worn by the travelers, and which seemed to +be made of some sort of cloth. But they were loose and baggy and only +added to the queer appearance of the giants. Veritable giants they were +too. Their faces seemed as large as kegs, and they were so clumsy in +shape that Mark, even, frightened as he was, exclaimed: + +"They look like men made of putty!" At the same time he saw they bore a +resemblance to the creature he had observed on the hill top. + +"What shall we do?" asked Andy of the professor. "They are really +carrying Washington away!" + +Three of the giants were dragging the colored man along the ground, +while the other terrible beings stood about as if waiting to see the +outcome of the first sally. + +"I will try to speak to them," Mr. Henderson said. "I know several +languages. They may understand one." + +But before he could start on his parley a surprising thing happened. +There was a struggle in the little group about Washington. The colored +man seemed to be fighting, though the odds, it would appear, were too +great to enable him to accomplish anything. But, making a desperate +effort to escape, Washington quickly wrenched himself free from the +giants' hands and then, striking out with his fists, knocked the three +down, one after another. + +"I never knew Washington was so strong!" exclaimed Jack. + +"Nor I," put in Mark. "Why I should think the men could carry him in one +arm as if he was a baby." + +The three giants rose slowly to their feet. They uttered strange cries, +and motioned with their hands toward the professor, the boys, and the +others in the crowd. + +"Look out! They're goin' t' grab yo'!" cried Washington. + +Three of the giants approached Mark, and a like number closed in on +Jack. + +"Back to the ship!" cried the professor. "We must defend ourselves!" + +But by this time the big men had grabbed the two boys. Then a strange +thing took place. Mark and Jack, though they felt that the giants must +overcome them in a test of strength, struggled with all their might +against being captured. They fought, as a cornered rat will fight, +though it knows the odds to be overwhelming. But in this case the +unexpected happened. + +Both boys found they could easily break the holds of the giants, and +Mark, by a vigorous effort, pushed the three men away from him, one at a +time violently so that they fell in a heap, one on top of the other. + +"Hurrah! We can fight 'em!" cried Mark. "Don't be afraid. They're like +mush! They're putty men!" + +And, so it seemed, the giants were. Though big in size they were flabby +and had nothing like the muscle they should have had in proportion to +their build. They went down like meal sacks and were slow to rise. + +[Illustration: THE BIG MEN HAD GATHERED IN A COMPACT MASS] + +Jack, seeing how successful his comrade was, attacked the three giants +who were striving to make him a captive. He succeeded in disposing of +them, knocking one down so hard that the man was unable to rise until +his companions helped him. + +"That's the way!" cried Washington. "They're soft as snow men!" + +The vanquished giants set up a sort of roar, which was answered by their +fellows, and soon there was a terrible din. + +"All get together!" called the professor. "They are evidently going to +make a rush for us. If we stand by one another we may fight them off, +though they outnumber us a hundred to one. Besides it will soon be dark, +and we may be able to escape!" + +Washington, Jack and Mark retreated toward the ship, in the direction of +which the others had also made their way. The big men had gathered in a +compact mass and were advancing on the adventurers. + +"What do you suppose makes them so soft?" asked Mark. "I believe I could +manage half a dozen." + +"It must be the effect of the climate and conditions here," the +professor replied. "Probably they have to be big to stand the pressure +of the thick water, and the increased attraction of gravitation. Then +too, being without the weight of the atmosphere to which we are +accustomed, they have probably expanded. If they were to go up to earth, +they might shrink to our size." + +"Do you think that possible?" + +"Of course. Why do you ask?" + +"Nothing in particular," replied Mark. But to himself, he added: "That +would explain it all." + +It was getting dusk now. The travelers had reached their ship, and +rushed inside and tried to close the doors in the face of the advancing +horde. But, by this time the giants were so close that one or two of +them thrust their big feet in, and prevented this movement. At the same +time they set up a great howling. + +"Quick!" cried the professor. "We must start the ship and get away!" + +"I can't close the door!" yelled Washington, who had been the last to +enter. + +"Never mind that! _Go_ up with it open! Drag them along if they won't +let go!" answered Mr. Henderson, as he ran toward the engine room. + +There was a sudden rush among the giants, and a sound as if something +was being thrown over the top and ends of the ship. Mark turned the gas +machine on, while Jack worked the negative gravity apparatus. They +waited for the ship to rise. + +"Why don't we go up?" asked the professor. + +"'Cause they've caught us!" called out Washington. + +"Caught us? How?" + +"They've thrown ropes over the top and ends of the ship, and fastened +them to their big houses!" + +Running to a side window the professor saw that the _Mermaid_ was +fastened down by a score of cables, each one six inches thick. They were +held captives by the enemy. + + + + + CHAPTER XXVII + + A FRIEND INDEED + + +Though the giants, man for man, were no match for the travelers, +collectively the horde proved too much. They had swarmed about the ship, +and, by passing the big cables over her, effectively held her down. + +"Let me get out and I'll cut 'em!" cried Andy. "We must get away from +these savages!" + +"No, no, don't go out!" exclaimed the professor. "They would eventually +kill you, though you might fight them off for a time. We must wait and +see what develops. They can have no object in harming us, as we have not +injured them." + +"I'd rather fight 'em," insisted the old hunter. + +But the professor had his way and Andy was forced to obey. The giants +had withdrawn their big feet from the side door and Washington had +closed it. But nothing else had been accomplished, and the ship could +not rise. The gas and negative gravity machines were stopped, as they +were only under a useless strain. + +Suddenly, the colored lights which had been growing dimmer and dimmer, +with the approach of night, went out altogether. Almost as suddenly, +Mark, who was watching the giants from the conning tower, as they made +fast the loose ends of the cables, saw them make a dash for the mound +houses. + +"They're afraid of the dark!" he cried. "Come on! We can go out now and +loosen the ropes!" + +He hurried to tell the professor what he had noticed. + +"Good!" exclaimed Mr. Henderson. "Perhaps we can escape now!" + +They waited a few minutes, listening to the sound of many big feet +running away from the ship, and then, Bill cautiously opened the side +door. The others were behind him, waiting, with knives and hatchets in +their hands, to rush out and cut the restraining cables. + +"All ready!" called Bill. "There doesn't seem to be a one in sight!" + +He stepped out but no sooner had he set foot on the ground than there +came a thud, and Bill went down as if some one had knocked his feet from +under him. + +"Go back! Go back!" he cried. "They hit me with something. I'm being +smothered!" + +"Bring a light!" cried the professor, for the sally had been started in +the dark. + +Jack brought the portable electric it having been repaired and flashed +it out of the door. In the gleam of it, Bill was seen lying prostrate, +half covered by an orange, about half as big as himself. The fruit was +as soft and mushy as some of the giants themselves, or Bill would not +have fared so easily. + +Then, as the others stood watching, and while Bill arose and wiped some +of the juice from his face, there came a regular shower of the monstrous +oranges. + +"Get inside quick! We'll be smothered under them!" Mr. Henderson cried. + +Pausing only to rescue Bill, the adventurers retreated inside the ship, +and made fast the door. Outside they could hear the thud as the oranges +were thrown, some hitting the _Flying Mermaid_ and many dropping all +about her. + +"I guess they are going to have things their own way," observed Bill, as +he gazed down on his clothes, which were covered with juice from the +fruit. + +The night was one of anxiety. The travelers took turns standing guard, +but nothing more occurred. The giants remained in their houses, and the +heavy ropes still held the ship fast. + +"We must hold a council of war," the professor decided as they gathered +at breakfast, which was far from a cheerful meal. + +With the return of the colored lights the giants again made their +appearance. They came swarming from the mound houses, and a great crowd +they proved to be. Several thousand at least, Jack estimated, and when +he went up into the conning tower and took a survey he could see the +strange and terrible creatures pouring in from the surrounding country. + +"I'm afraid there will be trouble," he said, as he came down and +reported what he had seen. + +"We must hold a council of war," repeated the professor. "Has any one +anything to suggest?" + +"Get a lot of powder and blow 'em up!" cried Andy. + +"Arrange electric wires and shock 'em to death!" was Bill's plan. + +"Can't we slip the ropes in some way and escape?" asked Jack. "I don't +believe we can successfully fight the giants. They are too many, even if +they are weak, individually." + +"I think you're right there," Mr. Henderson said. "We must try some sort +of strategy, but what? That is the question." + +For a few minutes no one spoke. They were all thinking deeply, for their +lives might hang in the balance. + +"I think I have a plan," said Mark, at length. "Did we bring any diving +suits with us?" + +"There may be one or two," the professor replied. "But what good will +they do?" + +"Two of us could put them on," continued Mark, "and, as they afford good +protection from any missiles like fruit, we could crawl out on the deck +of the ship. From there, armed with hatchets or knives we could cut the +ropes. Then the ship could rise." + +"That's a good plan!" cried the scientist. "We'll try it at once!" + +Search revealed that two diving suits were among the stores of the +_Mermaid_. Jack and Mark wanted to be the ones to don them, but as the +suits were rather large, and as the professor thought it would take more +strength than the boys had to do the work, it was decided that Andy and +Washington should make the attempt to cut the ropes. + +The hunter and colored man lost little time in getting into the modern +armor. In the meanwhile Jack, who had been posted as a lookout, reported +that there seemed to be some activity among the giants. They were +running here and there, and some seemed to be going off toward the +woods, that were not far away. + +"Now work quickly," urged the professor. "We will be on the watch, and +as soon as the last rope is cut we will start the machinery and send the +ship up. We will not wait for you to come back inside, so hold fast as +best you can when the _Mermaid_ rises." + +"We will," answered Andy, just before the big copper helmet was fastened +on his head, and Washington nodded to show he understood. + +The two who were to attempt the rescue of their comrades were soon on +deck. In the conning tower Jack and the professor kept anxious watch, +while Mark, Bill and Tom were at the various machines, ready, at the +signal, to start the engines. + +The giants had now become so interested in whatever plan they had afoot, +that they paid little attention to the ship. Consequently Washington and +Andy, crawling along the deck in their diving suits, did not, at first +attract any attention. + +In fact they had cut several of the big ropes, and it began to look as +if the plan would succeed, particularly as they were partly hidden from +view by the upper gas holder. They were working with feverish haste, +sawing away at the big cables with keen knives. + +"I guess we'll beat 'em yet!" cried Jack. + +"I hope so," replied the professor. "It looks----" + +He stopped short, for at that moment a cry arose from the midst of the +giants, and one of them pointed toward the ship. An instant later the +air was darkened with a flight of big oranges, which the queer creatures +seemed to favor as missiles. Probably they found stones too heavy. + +"Well, those things can't hurt 'em much with those heavy suits on," +observed Mr. Henderson. "There, Washington got one right on the head +that time, and it didn't bother him a bit." + +Jack had seen the fruit strike the big copper helmet and observed that +the colored man only moved his head slightly in order to get rid of the +orange. + +In fact the giants, seeing for themselves that this mode of warfare was +not going to answer, since the two men on the ship continued to cut the +restraining cables, gave it up. There was a good deal of shouting among +them, and a number ran here and there, seemingly gathering up long +poles. + +"I wonder if they are going to try the flailing method, and beat poor +Andy and Washington," said Mr. Henderson. "It looks so." + +The two rescuers were now about a quarter through their hard task. The +throwing of the oranges had ceased. But the giants were up to a new +trick. They divided into two sections, one taking up a position on one +side of the ship, and the other on the opposite. There were about two +hundred in each crowd, while the others in the horde drew some distance +back. + +"They're up to some queer dodge," observed Jack. "What are they placing +those sticks to their mouths for?" + +The professor observed the throng curiously for a few seconds. Then he +exclaimed: + +"They are using blow-guns! They are going to shoot arrows at Washington +and Andy! We must get them in at once!" + +He darted toward a door that opened from the conning tower out on the +deck. + +"Don't go!" cried Jack. "It's too late! They are beginning to blow!" + +He pointed to the throng of giants. The professor could see their cheeks +puffed out as the big creatures filled their lungs with air and prepared +to expel it through the hollow tubes. + +Then there came a sound as if a great wind was blowing. It howled and +roared over the ship, not unlike a hurricane in its fury. But there was +no flight of arrows through the air, such as would have come from +regular blow guns. + +"That is strange," said the professor. He thought for a moment. "I have +it!" he cried, "They are trying to blow Washington and Andy off the ship +by the power of their breaths! They are not blowing arrows at them! My, +but they, must have strong lungs!" + +And, in truth, that was the plan of the giants. The hollow tubes, made +from some sort of big weed, sent a blast of air at the two men on the +ship's deck, that made them lie flat and cling with both hands to avoid +being sent flying into the midst of the giants, on one side or the +other. But the giants had reckoned without the weight of the diving +suits, and it was those, with the big lead soles of the shoes, that +helped to hold Washington and Andy in place. + +"Come back! Come back!" cried the professor, opening the conning tower +door and calling to the two brave men. "Come back, both of you! Do you +hear?" + +As the portal slid back the rush of air was almost like that of a +cyclone. Then it suddenly ceased, as the giants saw their plan was not +likely to succeed. + +But now there arose from the outer circle of the horde a shout of +triumph. It was caused by the return of those who had, a little while +before, hurried off to the woods. They came back bearing big trees, tall +and slender, stripped of their branches, so that they resembled flag +staffs. It took a dozen giants to carry each one. + +The whole throng was soon busy laying the poles in a row in front of the +ship. + +"What can they be up to now?" asked Jack. + +"It looks as if they were going to slide the ship along on rollers," the +professor replied. + +Sure enough this was the giant's plan. A few minutes later those in the +_Mermaid_ felt her moving forward, as the giants, massed behind, shoved. +On to the poles she slid. The ropes were loosened to permit this, but +not enough to enable the boat to rise. + +Then the travelers felt the ship being lifted up. + +"They are going to carry us away, with the poles for a big stretcher!" +cried the professor. + +Looking from the side windows the boys saw that a great crowd of the big +men were on either side of the _Mermaid_, each giant grasping a pole, +and lifting. Farther out were others, holding the ends of the cables +which Washington and Andy had not succeeded in cutting. + +The ship was being carried along by a thousand or more giants, as the +ancient warriors, slain in battle, were carried home on the spears of +their comrades. + +"This is the end of the _Mermaid_!" murmured Mr. Henderson in sorrowful +tones. + +As they looked from the conning tower the professor and the two boys +observed a commotion among the leaders of the giants. They seemed to be +wavering. Suddenly the forward part of the ship sank, as those ahead +laid their poles down on the ground. Then those behind did the same, and +the _Mermaid_, came to a stop, and once more rested on the earth. + +"What does this mean?" asked the scientist in wonder. + +All at once the entire crowd of giants threw themselves down on their +faces, and there, standing at the bow of the ship, was a giant, half +again as large as any of the others. He was clad in a complete suit of +golden armor on which the changing lights played with beautiful effect, +and in his hand he held an immense golden sword. He pointed the weapon +at the ship as if he had raised it in protection, and his hand was +stretched in commanding gesture over the prostrate giants. + +"Perhaps he has come to save us!" cried Mark. + + + + + CHAPTER XXVII + + A GREAT JOURNEY + + +Such indeed, seemed to be the case. The golden-armored giant, after +standing for a few moments in an attitude of command, waved his sword +three times about his head, and uttered a command, in a voice that +sounded like thunder. Then the prostrate ones arose, and, making low +bows hurried away in all directions. + +Watching them disappear, the golden one sheathed his weapon and +approached the ship. He caught sight of the professor and the two boys +in the conning tower, for Mark had gone there when he found the ship +being transported, and held up his two hands, the palms outward. + +"It is the sign of peace in the language all natives employ," said the +professor. "I think I shall trust him." + +Followed by the boys he descended from the little platform in the tower, +and to the door that opened on the deck. + +"Shall we go out?" he asked. + +"We can't be much worse off," replied Mark. "Let's chance it." + +So, not without many misgivings, they slid back the portal and stepped +out to face the strange and terrible being who had so suddenly come to +their rescue. + +The giant in the golden armor did not seem surprised to see them. In +fact he acted as though he rather expected them. He continued to hold up +one hand, with the palm, outward, while, with the other, he removed his +helmet and bowed low. Then he cast his sword on the ground and advanced +toward the ship. When within ten feet he sat down on the ground, and +this brought his head nearer the earth, so that his auditors could both +see and hear him to better advantage. + +As soon as the giant saw the travelers were outside their ship he began +to speak to them in a voice, which, though he might have meant it to be +low and gentle, was like the bellowing of a bull. At the same time he +made many gestures, pointing to the ship, to himself and to Mark. + +"What is he saying, professor?" asked Jack. + +"I can't understand all he says," Mr. Henderson replied. "He uses some +words derived from the Latin and some from the Greek. But by piecing it +out here and there, and by interpreting his motions I am able to get at +something." + +"And what is it all about?" + +"It is a strange story," the scientist replied. "He has only gone about +half way through it. Wait until he finishes and I will tell you." + +The golden-armored giant, who had stopped in his narrative while Jack +was speaking, resumed. His gestures became more rapid, and his words +came faster. Several times Mr. Henderson held up his hand for him to +cease, while he puzzled out what was meant. + +At one point, the professor seemed much startled, and motioned for the +strange being to repeat the last part of his discourse. When this had +been done Mr. Henderson shook his head as though in doubt. + +At length the story was finished, and the lone giant, for there were no +others in sight now, folded his arms and seemed to await what the +professor's answer might be. Mr. Henderson turned to the boys, and to +the others of the _Mermaid's_ company, who, by this time, had joined +him, and said: + +"Friends, I have just listened to a strange story. It is so strange +that, but for the fact that our own adventures are verging on the +marvelous, I could hardly believe it. In the first place, this man here +is the king of this country. That is why all the other natives obeyed +him. + +"In the second place it seems he has been a passenger in our boat, and +came here from the earth's surface with us!" + +"What's that?" cried Jack. + +"That explains the strange happenings!" ejaculated Mark. "No wonder I +could never solve the secret of the storeroom." + +"You are right, it does," replied Mr. Henderson. "I will not go into all +the details of how it happened, but it seems the big hole through which +we came is only one of two entrances to this inner world. Rather it is +the entrance, and there is another, close to it, which is the exit. +Through the latter a big stream of water spouts up, just as one pours +down through the opening we used. + +"Hankos, which is the name of the king, was for many years a student of +science. He longed to see where the big stream of upward spurting water +went, and wanted to know whence came the down-pouring one. So he +undertook a daring experiment. + +"He constructed a great cylinder, and, keeping his plans a secret, +conveyed it to the spouting water, entered it, and, by means of pulleys +and levers, after he had shut himself inside, cast himself into the +up-shooting column. He took along compressed air cylinders to supply an +atmosphere he could breathe, and some food to eat, for it appears our +giant friends are something of inventors in their way. The current of +water bore him to the surface of the earth, and he was cast up on the +ocean, in what was probably taken for a waterspout if any one saw it. + +"Then a strange thing happened. No sooner did Hankos open his cylinder, +which served him as a boat, than he lost his gigantic size, owing to the +difference of the two atmospheres. He became almost of the same size as +ourselves, except that his skin hung in great folds on him, and he +seemed like a wrinkled old man. His clothes too, were a world too large. + +"He had a terrible time before he reached shore, and a hard one after +it, for his strange appearance turned almost every one against him. He +was sorry he had ventured to solve the mystery of the up-shooting stream +of water, for he was worse than an outcast. + +"Then he began to plan to get back to his own inner world. But he could +not find the downward stream, and, not knowing the language of the +countries where he landed, he had no means of ascertaining. He traveled +from place to place, always seeking for something that would lead him +back to his own country. + +"Finally he heard of us, and of our ship, though how I do not know, as I +thought I had kept it a great secret. By almost superhuman struggles he +made his way to our island. He says he concealed himself aboard the +_Mermaid_ the night before we sailed, but I hardly believe it possible. +It seems----" + +"He did it, for I saw him!" interrupted Mark. + +"You saw him!" cried Mr. Henderson. + +Then Mark told of the many things that had puzzled him so, how he had +seen the queer figure slinking aboard the boat, of the disappearance of +food from time to time, and of the strange noises in the storeroom. + +"That bears out what he told me," the professor said. "Hankos says he +used to steal out nights and take what food he could get, and he also +mentions some one, answering to Mark's description, who nearly +discovered him once as he hurried back into the apartment. + +"However, it seems to be true, since Mark confirms it. At any rate +Hankos stayed in hiding, and made the entire trip with us, and, just as +we all became overcome with the strange gas he escaped, having begun to +expand to his original giant size, and being unable to remain any longer +in his cramped quarters." + +"That's so, he did!" cried Mark. "I saw him come out of the place just +before I lost my senses. It was a terrible sight, and none of you would +believe me when I told you some of the occurrences afterward." + +"You must forgive us for that," the professor said. "We have learned +much since then." + +"What did Hankos do after he left the ship when it landed in this +country?" asked Jack. + +"He traveled until he came to this village, which is the chief one of +this country," replied the professor. "Part of the time he followed us +at a distance, being able to travel very fast." + +Mark remembered the strange figure of a giant he had seen on the hill +tops several times, and knew that he had been observing the being who +had played such a queer part in their lives. + +"When he came back among his own people," went on Mr. Henderson, "they +would not receive him at first, believing him to be an impostor. But +Hankos convinced them of his identity and was allowed to don the golden +armor, which is the badge of kingship. He had only been in office for a +little while when he heard of the arrival of the strange thing, which +turned out to be our ship. He recognized it from the description, and, +learning that we were likely to be sacrificed to the fury and ignorance +of the giants, he hurried here and saved our lives. + +"He says he can never thank us enough for being the means whereby he was +able to get back to his own country, and says the freedom of this whole +inner world is ours. He has given orders that we are to go wherever we +like, and none will molest us. He tells me the land is a wonderful one, +compared to our own, and urges us to make a long journey. He would like +to go with us, only, now that he has resumed his natural size, he can +not get inside the ship." + +"Hurrah for King Hankos!" cried Jack and the others joined him in a +hearty cheer. + +The giant in the golden armor evidently understood the compliment which +was paid him, for he waved his helmet in the air and responded with a +shout of welcome that made the ground tremble. + +Hankos waited until the professor had translated all of the story to the +other travelers. Then the genial giant began to talk some more, and the +professor listened intently. + +"He says," spoke Mr. Henderson to his friends, "that we will be supplied +with all the fruit we want, and with the best of the houses to sleep in +on our journey. He also tells me he has great stores of shining stones +and piles of the metal of which his armor is made, and that we are +welcome to as much as we want. If this means unlimited gold and +diamonds, we may make our fortunes." + +"Jest let me git ma' hand on a few sparklers an' I'll quit work!" +exclaimed Washington. + +"I have told him," the scientist went on, "that we will take advantage +of his kind offer. We will start on our trip in a day or so, after we +have looked over the ship to see if it is not damaged. He tells me the +gold and sparkling stones are several thousand miles away, on top of a +high mountain. We will make that our objective point." + +The interview between the king and Mr. Henderson having ended, the +former waved his sword in the air and the swarm of big men came back. +They had been hiding back in the woods. Now their manner was very +different. They carefully, removed the rollers and ropes, and soon there +was brought to the adventurers an immense pile of fine fruits. If our +friends had stayed there a year they could not have eaten it all. The +giants were judging the appetites of the travelers by their own. + +That night the adventurers slept more soundly than they had since +entering the strange world. They felt they had nothing to fear from the +giants. In the morning they were not molested, though big crowds +gathered to look at the ship. But they kept back a good distance. The +machinery was found to be in good shape, save for a few repairs, and +when these were made, the professor announced he would start on a long +journey. + +For several weeks after that the travelers swung about in their ship, +sometimes sailing in the air and again on big seas and lakes viewing the +wonders of the inner world. They were many and varied, and the professor +collected enough material for a score of books which he said he would +write when he got back to the outer world once more. + +One afternoon, as they were sailing over a vast stretch of woodland, +which did not seem to be inhabited, Mr. Henderson, looking at one of the +gages on the wall, asked: + +"Boys do you know how far you have traveled underground?" + +"How far?" asked Jack, who hated to guess riddles. + +"More than four thousand miles," was the answer. + +"But we haven't come to that mountain of gold and diamonds," said Mark. +"I am anxious to see that." + +"Have patience," replied the professor. "I have not steered toward it +yet. There are other things to see." + +Just then Washington's voice could be heard calling from the conning +tower: + +"We're coming to a big mountain!" + + + + + CHAPTER XXVIII + + THE TEMPLE OF TREASURE + + +"What's that?" fairly yelled the professor. + +"We am propelling ourselves in a contiguous direction an' in close +proximity to an elevated portion of th' earth's surface which rises in +antiguous proximity t' th' forward part of our present means of +locomotion!" said the colored man in a loud voice. + +"Which means there may be a collision," the professor said, as he and +the boys hurried toward the tower. + +"Jest what I said," retorted Washington. "What'll I do?" + +"Send the ship a little higher," answered Mr. Henderson. "We mustn't hit +any mountains." + +Washington forced more gas into the holder, and speeded the negative +gravity machine up some, so that the _Mermaid_, which was flying rather +low, ascended until it was in no danger of colliding with the peak which +reared its lofty height just ahead of them. + +As the ship sailed slowly over the mountain, Mark gazed down and +exclaimed: + +"Doesn't that look like the ruins of some building?" + +The professor took a pair of field glasses from a rack in the wall and +took a long view. + +"It must be the place," he said in a low voice. + +"What place?" asked Jack. + +"The temple of treasure," was the answer. "Hankos told me it was on top +of the highest mountain in the land, and this must be it, for it is the +loftiest place we have seen. But we must be careful, for there is danger +down there." + +"What kind?" asked Mark. + +"The place was long ago deserted by the giants," Mr. Henderson went on. +"Ages ago it was one of their storehouses for treasure, but there were +wars among themselves, Hankos said, and this part of the country was +laid waste. Savage beasts took up their abode in the temple, and since +then, in spite of the great size of the giants, they have not dared to +venture here. If we brave the animals we may have all the gold and +diamonds we can take away." + +"Then for one, I'm willin' t' go down an' begin th' extermination at +once," put in Andy. "I've always wanted t' be rich." + +"We must proceed cautiously," the professor said. "We are ill prepared +to fight any such beasts as we saw at the big geyser. At the same time +they may have deserted this place. I think we will lower the ship down +over the temple, and spend several hours in observation. Then, if +nothing develops, we can enter and see if the treasure is there." + +This plan was voted a good one, and the _Mermaid_ after having been +steered directly over the ruined temple, was brought to a halt, and +enough gas let out so that it fell to about fifty feet in the air above +it. + +The adventurers began their watch. The afternoon waned and there were no +signs of any beasts in or about the temple. + +"I reckon we can take a chance," said Andy, who was anxious to get his +hands on some diamonds. + +"Better wait until morning," counseled Mr. Henderson. "It will soon be +dark, and it doesn't look like a nice place to go stumbling about in by +moonlight." + +So, though all but the scientist were anxious, they had to wait until +the night had passed. Several times Washington got up to see if the +temple had, by any chance, taken wings during the long hours of +darkness, but each time he found it was still in place. + +"Seems laik it'll never come mornin'," he said. + +But dawn came at length, and, after a hasty breakfast, preparations to +enter the temple were made. Andy loaded his gun for "bear" as he +expressed it, and the boys each took a revolver. + +The ship was lowered to as level a place as could be found, and then, +seeing that everything was in readiness for a quick departure, the +professor led the way out of the _Mermaid_. + +The entrance to the temple was through a big arched gateway. Some of the +stones had fallen down, and the whole structure looked as if it might +topple over at any moment. + +"Go carefully," cautioned Mr. Henderson. "Watch on all sides and up +above. Better let Andy and me go ahead." + +The scientist and the old hunter led the way. Through the arch they +went, and emerged into what must at one time have been a magnificent +courtyard. Before them was the temple proper, a vast structure, with an +opening through which fifty men might have marched abreast. But the +doors were gone, and the portal was but a black hole. + +"I hope there ain't any ghosts in there," said Washington, with a +shiver. + +"Nonsense!" exclaimed the professor. "There may be things as bad, but +there are no such things as ghosts. Have your gun ready, Andy." + +With every sense on the alert, the old hunter advanced. Every one was a +bit nervous, and, as Mark and Jack afterward admitted, they half +expected some terrible beast to rush out at them. But nothing of the +kind happened, and they went into the interior of the temple. + +At first it was so dark they could see nothing. There were vast dim +shapes on every side, and from the hollow echo of their footsteps they +judged the roof must be very high and the structure big in every way. + +Then, as their eyes became used to the darkness, they could make out, up +front, something like an altar or pulpit. + +"Perhaps that's where they offered up the gold and diamonds as a +sacrifice to their gods," spoke Mark in a whisper. + +"Sacrifice to their gods!" came back a hundred echoes and the sound made +every one shudder. + +"Oh!" said Washington, in a low voice. + +"Oh! Oh! Oh!" repeated the echoes in voices of thunder. + +"Well, this is pleasant," spoke Andy, in his natural tones, and, to the +surprise of all there was no echo. It was only when a person whispered +or spoke low that the sound was heard. After that they talked naturally. + +"You stay here, and Andy and I will go up front and see what there is," +said Mr. Henderson. "Be on your guard, and if you hear us coming back in +a hurry, run!" + +It was with no little feeling of nervousness that the boys, Bill, Tom +and Washington watched the two men move off in the darkness. They could +hear their footsteps on the stone flags and could dimly see them. + +"They must be almost to the altar by this time," said Mark, after a long +pause. + +Hardly had he spoken than there came a loud sound from where Mr. +Henderson and Andy had gone. It was as if some giant wings were beating +the air. Then came shrill cries and the voice of the old hunter could be +heard calling: + +"Kneel down, Professor! Let me get a shot at the brute!" + +Those waiting in the rear of the temple huddled closer together. What +terrible beast could have been aroused? + +The next instant the place seemed illuminated as if by a lightning +flash, and a sound as of a thousand thunder claps resounded. + +"I think I winged him!" cried Andy's voice, and the boys knew he had +fired at something. + +Then there came a crash, and from the roof of the old temple a dozen +stones toppled off to one side, letting in a flood of colored light. + +By this illumination could be seen, flapping through the big space +overhead, an enormous bat, as large as three eagles. And, as it flew +about in a circle it gave utterance to shrill cries. + +"Bang!" Andy's gun spoke again, and the bat with a louder cry than +before, darted through the hole in the roof made by the falling stones, +which had been loosened by the concussion from the rifle. + +"Come on!" cried the old hunter. "That was the guardian of the treasure! +We are safe now!" + +Then, in the light which streamed through the broken roof, the +adventurers could see, heaped up on a great altar, behind which sat a +horrible graven image, piles of yellow metal, and sparkling stones. In +little heaps they were, arranged as if offerings to the terrible god of +the giants. There were bars and rings of gold, dishes of odd shape, and +even weapons. As for the sparkling stones, they were of many colors, but +the white ones were more plentiful than all the others. + +"Gold and diamonds! Diamonds and gold!" murmured the professor. "There +is the ransom of many kings in this ancient temple." + +"Wish I had a big bag!" exclaimed Washington, as he began filling all +his pockets with the precious metal and gems. "If I had a-thought I'd +have brought a dress-suit case!" + +"A dress-suit case full of diamonds!" exclaimed Mark. + +Then he too, as did all the others, fell to filling his pockets with the +wealth spread so lavishly before them. There was the riches of a whole +world in one place and no one but themselves to take it. + +For several minutes no one spoke. The only sound was the rattle of the +stones and the clink of gold, and when some of the diamonds dropped on +the floor they did not bother to gather them up. There were too many on +the altar. + +"We will be rich for life!" gasped old Andy, who had been poor all his +years. + +"I can't carry any more!" gasped Washington. "I'm goin' back for----" + +What he was going back for he never said, for, at that instant, +happening to look up at the hole in the roof, he gave a startled cry: + +"Here come the terrible bats!" + +They all gazed upward. Through the opening they could see a great flock +of the awful birds, headed for the temple, and they were led by one +which seemed to fly with difficulty. It was the guardian of the treasure +that Andy had wounded. + +"Quick! We must get out of here!" shouted the old hunter. "They are big +enough and strong enough to tear us all to pieces. Hurry!" + +Down the centre of the temple they rushed, and not a moment too soon, +for, ere they had passed half way to the entrance, the opening in the +roof was darkened by the coming of the bats, and soon the flapping of +their wings awoke the thundering echoes in the ruined structure, while +their shrill cries struck terror to the hearts of the travelers. + +Up to the altar circled the bats, and then wheeling they flapped down +the dim aisles toward the adventurers. + +"Hurry! Hurry!" shouted Andy, who was in the rear. + +He raised his rifle and fired several shots into the midst of the +terrible creatures. + +A number of the bats were wounded, and the others were so frightened by +the sound of the shots and the flashes of fire that they turned back. +This enabled the fleeing ones to gain the entrance to the temple, and +soon they were outside. + +"To the ship!" yelled Bill. + +"There's little danger now!" called Andy, panting, for the run had +winded him. "They will hardly attack us in the light!" + +And he was right, for, though they could hear the bats flying about +inside the temple, and uttering their cries, none came outside. + +But no one felt like staying near the uncanny structure, and little time +was lost in reaching the _Mermaid_. Then the doors were fastened, and +the ship was sent high up into the air. + +"Which way?" asked Jack, when Mr. Henderson told him to go to the +conning tower and steer. + +"Back to where we first met the giants," replied the professor. "We must +prepare to start for our own earth again soon." + +"I've almost forgotten how real sunlight looks," thought Jack, as he +headed the ship around the other way. As he turned the levers a big +diamond dropped from his pocket and rolled on the floor. + +"This will be a good reminder of our trip though," he added. + +The travelers, even including Mr. Henderson, were so taken up with their +suddenly acquired riches that they hardly thought of meals. At the +professor's suggestion they tied their gold and stones up in small +packages convenient to carry. + +"Better place them where you can grab them in a hurry in case of +accident," the old scientist went on. "Of course if there should be too +bad an accident they would never be of any use to us down here, but +we'll look on the bright side of things." + +"Do you anticipate any accident?" asked Jack anxiously. + +"No, Oh no," replied Mr. Henderson, but Jack thought the aged man had +something weighing on his mind. + + + + + CHAPTER XXIX + + BACK HOME--CONCLUSION + + +On and on sped the _Mermaid_. Now that the travelers felt their journey +accomplished they were anxious to begin the homeward trip. They made a +straight course for the village where they had so nearly met with +disaster, and where the king of the giants had saved them. They went in +a direct line, and did not travel here and there, as they had after they +left the town. Consequently they shortened the route by a great +distance. Yet it was long enough, and when they finally came in sight of +the place the dial registered a trip of five thousand miles underground. + +It was one evening when they landed almost at the spot whence they had +taken flight eventually to reach the temple of the treasure. Most of the +giants had betaken themselves to their mound houses, but Hankos was +walking in the fields, and, when he caught sight of the airship hovering +above him he waved his great sword in welcome. + +He rushed up to shake hands with the travelers when they came out of the +ship, though to greet him it was only possible for the adventurers to +grasp one of his immense fingers. + +As soon as the greetings were over Hankos began to speak rapidly to the +professor, at the same time going through many strange motions. + +"It is as I feared!" suddenly exclaimed the scientist. + +"What is the matter?" asked Mark. + +"The worst has happened!" went on Mr. Henderson. "The great hole by +which we came into this place has been closed by an earthquake shock!" + +"The hole closed?" repeated Jack. + +"An earthquake shock!" murmured Mark. + +"Then how are we going to get back to earth?" asked old Andy. + +A terrible fear entered the hearts of the travelers. The closing of the +opening by which they had come to the strange world meant, in all +probability that they would have to spend the rest of their lives in +this underground place. + +"What good did it do us to get all those diamonds and that gold?" asked +Mark in a sorrowful tone. + +Hankos began to speak again, using his gestures which were almost as +eloquent as words. The professor watched and listened intently. Then +there seemed to come a more hopeful look to his face. He nodded +vigorously as Hankos went on with what seemed to be an explanation. + +"It's worth trying, at all events!" the scientist exclaimed. "It is our +only hope!" + +"What is?" asked Jack. + +"Friends," began the professor in solemn tones. "I must admit our plight +is desperate. At the same time there is a bare chance of our getting +back to our own earth. As you remember, Hankos went from this place to +the upper regions through the upward spouting column of water." + +"If we had our submarine we might also," interrupted Jack. "But the +_Mermaid_ isn't built to sail in that fashion." + +"Nor would the _Porpoise_ have served us in this emergency," said the +professor. "It would prove too heavy. But, nevertheless, I think I have +a plan. Now, Mark, you are about to learn the secret of the storeroom. +The real one, not the hiding of Hankos in there, which you imagined to +be the cause of my desire to keep something hidden. When we planned a +trip to this underground world I had a dim idea that we might meet with +trouble. So I planned and made a cylinder lifeboat." + +"A cylinder lifeboat?" repeated Mark. + +"Yes," replied Mr. Henderson. "I have it in the storeroom. I did not +want any of you to see it for fear you would have faint hearts. I +thought there might be no necessity of using it. But, since there is, we +must do our best. I will admit it may be a fearful ordeal, but we will +have to risk something in order to escape. + +"I have in the storeroom a large cylinder, capable of holding us all. It +will also contain food and drink for a month, but we will all have to +go, packed almost like sardines in a box. My plan is to take the +_Mermaid_ to the place where the column of water shoots up. There we +will get into the cylinder, close it, and trust ourselves to the +terrible force that may bring us back to the upper world. What do you +say? Shall we attempt it?" + +For a few seconds no one spoke. Then Jack said slowly: + +"I don't see that we can do anything else. I don't want to stay here all +my life." + +"I wants a chance t' wear some of them sparklers," put in Washington. + +"Then we will make the attempt," the professor added. "Now all aboard +for the place where the water shoots up!" + +Questioning Hankos, the professor learned how to reach the strange +place. It was in the midst of a desolate country where none of the +giants ever went, so afraid were they of the strange phenomenon. + +It was a week's journey. Sometimes the _Mermaid_ flew through the air, +and again it sailed on vast lakes or inland seas. On the trip they met +with big waterfalls and terrible geysers that spouted a mile or more +into the air. They traveled by night as well as day, though it was +necessary to keep a sharp watch. + +Sometimes the ship passed through great flocks of birds that surrounded +her and sought to pierce the aluminum hull with their sharp beaks and +talons. Over the mountains and valleys the ship sailed until, one +evening, there sounded through the air a strange rumbling sound. + +"It is thunder," said Old Andy. + +"It is the water column," replied the scientist. "We are at the end of +our trip. May the remainder be as successful!" + +The ship was lowered to the surface, as it was deemed best to approach +the column when the lights were shining. No one slept much that night, +for the roaring and rumbling never ceased. + +In the morning the ship was sent forward slowly. Ever and ever the +terrific sound increased, until it was almost deafening. They had to +call to each other to be heard. + +Then, as the _Mermaid_ passed over a mountain, the adventurers saw, in a +valley below them, the up-shooting water. + +It was a vast column, nearly three hundred feet in thickness, and as +solid and white as a shaft _of_ marble. Up, up, up, it went, until it +was lost to sight, but there were no falling drops, and not even a spray +came from the watery shafts. + +"There is a terrible power to it," the professor said. "May it prove our +salvation!" + +The ship was lowered about a hundred feet away from the waterspout. All +around them the ground was vibrating with the force of the fluid. + +"To think that connects with the world above!" exclaimed Jack. + +"It's a good thing for us that it does," Mark answered. + +"We must lose no time," the professor put in. "If the earthquake +destroyed the downward shaft, it may effect this one in time. We must +escape while we can." + +Then, for the first time, he opened the storeroom and the big cylinder +was disclosed to view. It was made of aluminum, and shaped like an +immense cigar. The hull was double, and it was strongly braced. Inside +were padded berths for the occupants, and there was just room enough for +the seven adventurers. Once they had entered they could not move about, +but must stay in their little compartment. + +Compressed air in strong cylinders furnished a means of breathing, and +there were tiny electric lights operated by a storage battery. There was +also a chamber to be filled with the lifting gas. The cylinder was so +arranged that it would float on it's long axis if thrown into the water. +A trap door hermetically sealed gave access to the interior. A small +propellor, worked by compressed air, furnished motive power. + +The food supply consisted of compressed capsules on which a man could +subsist for several days. There was also some water, but not much, since +that can not be compressed and would, therefore, take considerable room. + +"The only thing for us to do," said the professor, "is to get into the +cylinder, seal it up, and trust to Providence. This is what I intended +to use when we were caught in the draught." + +"How can we get into the column of water after we shut ourselves into +the cylinder?" asked Mark. + +"The cylinder fits into a sort of improvised cannon," said Mr. +Henderson. "It is fired by electricity and compressed air. We will aim +it at the column, press the button and be projected into the midst of +the water. Then----" He did not finish the sentence, but the others knew +what he meant. + +"When are we to start?" asked Mark. + +"As soon as possible," replied the professor. "I must arrange the +cylinder, compress the air and lay out the food supply." + +It took the rest of the day to do this, as the inventor found it would +be advisable to attach a weight to the end of the cylinder, to hold it +upright in the column of water. The weight could be detached +automatically when they were shot up into the midst of the ocean, where, +as Hankos had told them, the column spurted forth. + +Then some food was stored in the tiny ship that was destined to be their +last hope, and some tanks of water were placed in it. + +"I think we are almost ready," Mr. Henderson said about noon the next +day. + +"What about our gold and diamonds?" asked Jack suddenly. "Can we take +them with us in the cylinder?" + +"That's so!" exclaimed Mr. Henderson. "I forgot about them. I'm afraid +we'll have to leave the riches behind. We will not be able to carry them +and the food we need, for it may be a week or more before we can leave +the cylinder. Gold and diamonds will be a poor substitute for something +to eat." + +"I'm goin' t' take mine!" said Washington with much conviction. "I might +as well starve rich as starve poor!" + +"We may be able to take a few diamonds," the professor answered. "The +gold will be too heavy. Let each one select the largest of the diamonds +he has and put them in his pockets." + +Then began a sorting of the wealth. It was strange, as they recalled +afterward, throwing away riches that would have made millionaires +envious, but it had to be done. All the wealth in the world would not +equal a beef capsule when they were starving, and they realized it. So +they only saved a few pieces of gold as souvenirs, and took the best of +the diamonds. But even then they had a vast fortune with them. + +At last all was in readiness. The cylinder had been placed in the tube +from which it was to be shot gently forth by compressed air, so that it +would fall into the upward spouting column of water. The charge of +compressed air was put in and the electric wires arranged. + +"Are we all ready?" asked Mr. Henderson. + +"I think so," said Jack, in what sounded like a whisper, but which was +loud, only the noise of the water muffled it. + +"Then we had better enter the cylinder," spoke the inventor. "Take a +last look at the _Flying Mermaid_, boys, for you will never see again +the ship that has borne us many thousand miles. She served us well, and +might again, but for the freak of nature that has placed us in this +position." + +For the first time the adventurers realized that they must abandon the +craft in which they had reached the new world. So it was with no little +feeling of sadness that they climbed up the ladder that had been +arranged and slid down into the cylinder. One by one they took their +places in the padded berths arranged for them. It was a snug fit, for +the professor knew if there was too much room he and the others might be +so tossed about as to be killed. + +Mr. Henderson was the last to enter. Standing at the manhole he took a +final look at his pet creation, the _Mermaid_. Through the opened +windows the colored lights came, shifting here and there. Outside the +terrible column of water was roaring as if anxious to devour them. + +"Good-bye, _Mermaid_!" said the professor softly. + +Then he closed down the manhole cover and tightened the screws that held +it in place. He touched a button that turned on the electric lights and +the interior of the cylinder was illuminated with a soft glow. + +"Are you all ready?" he asked. + +"Jest as much as I ever will be," replied Washington, who, as the crisis +approached, seemed more light-hearted than any of the others. + +"Then here we go!" exclaimed Mr. Henderson. + +His fingers touched the button that connected with the electric machine, +which operated the compressed air. + +There sounded a muffled report. Then it seemed to those in the cylinder +that the end of the world had come. They shot upward and outward, +through the top of the conning tower which had been removed. The +cylinder, launched straight at the column of water struck it squarely +and, an instant later was caught in the grasp of the giant force and +hurled toward the upper world. + +Up and up and up the mass of metal with its human freight went. Now it +was spinning like a top, again it shot toward the earth's crust like an +arrow from the archer's bow. + +It was moving with the velocity of a meteor, yet because of being +surrounded with water, and traveling with the same velocity as the +column, there was no friction. Had there been, the heat generated would +have melted the case in an instant. + +For the first few seconds those in the cylinder were dazed by the sudden +rush. Then as it became greater and greater there came a curious dull +feeling, and, one after another lost consciousness. The terror of the +water column, and the frightful speed, had made them senseless. + + * * * * * + +It seemed like a month later, though, of course, it could have been only +a few hours or a day at most when Jack opened his eyes. He saw his +companions, white and senseless all around him, and at first thought +they were dead. Then he saw Mark looking at him, and Washington asked: + +"Is any one livin' 'sides me?" + +"I am," replied Jack decidedly. + +Then, one after another they regained their senses. But they were in a +strange daze, for they were being carried along like a shooting star, +only, as they went at the same rate as did the element carrying them, +they did not _realize_ this. + +"I think I'm hungry," said Bill, who had the best appetite of any of the +travelers. + +"You'll find a beef capsule in the little compartment over your head," +spoke the professor. + +Bill was about to reach for it, when they were all startled by a sudden +side motion of the cylinder. Then came a violent shock, and a sound as +of splashing water. Next the cylinder seemed to be falling, and, a few +minutes later to be shooting upward. Following this there was another +splash and the cylinder began to bob about like a cork on a mill pond. + +"We have reached the sea! We are afloat on the ocean!" cried the +professor. + +Hurriedly he disengaged himself from the straps that held him to his +bunk. He pushed back the lever that opened the manhole. Into the opening +glowed the glorious sunlight, while to the occupants came the breath of +salt air. + +"Hurrah!" cried Jack. "We are safe at last!" + +"Safe at last!" the professor answered, and then they all gave a cheer. + +For their cylinder, which might now be termed a boat, was floating on +the great Atlantic. The blue sky was overhead and the air of the sea +fanned their cheeks. + +They had shot up from the underground earth, in the column of water, had +been tossed high into the air, had fallen back when the liquid shaft +broke into spray, had descended into the ocean, gone down a hundred feet +or more, and then had shot up like a cork to bob about the surface. + +For a week they were afloat, and then they were picked up by a passing +vessel, rather weak and very much cramped, but otherwise in good shape. +They said nothing of their adventures, save to explain that they were +experimenting in a new kind of boat. About a month later, for the ship +that had rescued them was a slow sailer, they were back on the island +whence that wonderful voyage was begun. + + * * * * * + +"Well, we solved the mystery of the center of the earth," remarked Jack, +one evening, when they were gathered in the old shack where so many +wonderful adventures had been planned. + +"Yes, we did," said Mr. Henderson. "And no one else is ever likely to go +there." + +"Why?" + +"Because the only way of getting there was destroyed by the earthquake, +and no one could ever force his way down through that upward-shooting +column of water." + +"That's so. Well, we have the diamonds, anyway," spoke Mark. "They ought +to make us rich." + +And the jewels did, for the stones proved to be of great value, even +though the adventurers had saved only a few of the many they found in +the ruined temple. + +But there was money enough so that they all could live in comfort the +rest of their lives. As the professor was getting quite old, and +incapable of making any more wonderful inventions, he closed up his +workshop and settled down to a quiet life. As for Washington, Andy, and +Bill and Tom, they invested their money received from the sale of the +diamonds in different business ventures, and each one did well. + +"I am going in for a good education," said Jack to Mark. + +"Just what I am going to do," answered his chum. "And after we've got +that----" He paused suggestively. + +"We'll go in for inventing airships, or something like that, eh?" + +"Yes. We've learned a great deal from Mr. Henderson, and in the course +of time we ought to be able to turn out something even more wonderful +than the _Electric Monarch_, the _Porpoise_, or the _Flying Mermaid_." + +"Yes, and when we've invented something better----" + +"We'll take another trip." + +"Right you are!" + +And then the two chums shook hands warmly; and here we will say +good-bye. + + THE END. + +------------------------------------------------------------------------ + + NEW ALGER BOOKS + + JOE, THE HOTEL BOY + Or, Winning Out by Pluck + By HORATIO ALGER, Jr. + + Illustrated, 12mo. Cloth, 60 cents + +[Illustration: small image of book cover] + +This is one of the last stories penned by that prince of all juvenile +writers, Horatio Alger, Jr., and is one of his best. It describes the +adventures of a youth brought up in the country by an old hermit. When +the hermit dies the boy obtains work at a nearby hotel, and later on +drifts to the city and obtains a position in another hotel. There is a +mystery concerning the lad's identity and likewise the disappearance of +a certain blue box, but in the end all terminates satisfactorily. + + BEN LOGAN'S TRIUMPH + Or, The Boys of Boxwood Academy + By HORATIO ALGER, Jr. + + Illustrated, 12mo. Cloth, 60 cents + +[Illustration: small image of book cover] + +This story was penned by Mr. Alger some years before his death, but has +never appeared in book form. Ben was a city newsboy, rather rough, but +with a heart of gold. He did a great service for a good-hearted farmer, +and the latter took Ben home with him. The lad had never been in the +country before, and his eyes were opened to a new world. Then the youth +was sent to a boarding school, where he made his way to the front amid +many difficulties. Mr. Alger's charm as a juvenile writer is so well +known it is needless to mention it here, and this story is in his best +vein. + + CUPPLES & LEON CO., Publishers, NEW YORK + +------------------------------------------------------------------------ + + THE JACK RANGER SERIES + By Clarence Young + Author of the Motor Boys Series + + Cloth. 12mo. Illustrated, Price per volume, $1.00, postpaid + +[Illustration: small image of book cover] + + JACK RANGER'S SCHOOLDAYS + Or, The Rivals of Washington Hall + +You will love Jack Ranger--you simply can't help it. He is so bright and +cheery, and so real and lifelike. A typical boarding school tale, +without a dull line in it. + + JACK RANGER'S SCHOOL VICTORIES + Or, Track, Gridiron and Diamond + +In this tale Jack gets back to Washington Hall and goes in for all sorts +of school games. There are numerous contests on the athletic field, and +also a great baseball game and a football game, all dear to a boy's +heart. The rivalry is bitter at times, and enemies try to put Jack "in a +hole" more than once. + + JACK RANGER'S WESTERN TRIP + Or, From Boarding School to Ranch and Range + +This volume takes the hero and several of his chums to the great West. +Jack is anxious to clear up the mystery surrounding his father's +disappearance. At the ranch and on the range adventures of the strenuous +sort befall him. + + JACK RANGER'S OCEAN CRUISE + Or, The Wreck of the Polly Ann + +Here is a tale of the bounding sea, with many stirring adventures. How +the ship was wrecked, and Jack was cast away, is told in a style all +boys and girls will find exceedingly interesting. There is plenty of fun +as well as excitement. + + JACK RANGER'S GUN CLUB + Or, From Schoolroom to Camp and Trail + +Jack, with his chums, goes in quest of big game. The boys fall in with a +mysterious body of men, and have a terrific slide down a mountain side. + + CUPPLES & LEON CO., Publishers, NEW YORK + +------------------------------------------------------------------------ + + THE DOROTHY DALE SERIES + By Margaret Penrose + + Cloth, 12mo. Illustrated. Price per volume, 60 cents, postpaid + + DOROTHY DALE: A GIRL OF TO-DAY + +Dorothy is the daughter of an old Civil War veteran who is running a +weekly newspaper in a small Eastern town. When her father falls sick, +and the newspaper property is in danger of going to pieces, the girl +shows what she can do to support the family. + +[Illustration: small image of book cover] + + DOROTHY DALE AT GLENWOOD SCHOOL + +More prosperous times have come to the Dale family, and Major Dale +resolves to send Dorothy to a boarding school to complete her education. +At Glenwood School the girl makes a host of friends and has many good +times. But some girls are jealous of Dorothy's popularity, and they seek +to get her into trouble in more ways than one. + + DOROTHY DALE'S GREAT SECRET + +A splendid story of one girl's devotion to another. Dorothy's chum ran +away to join a theatrical company. What Dorothy did, and how she kept +the secret, makes a tale no girl will care to miss. + + DOROTHY DALE AND HER CHUMS + +A story of school life, and of strange adventures among the gypsies. +Dorothy befriends a little French girl and also a gypsy waif, in a +manner sure to touch the hearts of all readers. + + DOROTHY DALE'S QUEER HOLIDAYS + +Relates the details of a mystery that surrounded Tanglewood Park. There +is a great snowstorm, and the young folks become snowbound, much to +their dismay. + + CUPPLES & LEON CO., Publishers, NEW YORK + +------------------------------------------------------------------------ + + BOYS OF BUSINESS SERIES + By Allen Chapman + + Illustrated, 12mo. Cloth, 60 cents per volume + +[Illustration: small image of book cover] + + THE YOUNG EXPRESS AGENT + Or, Bart Stirling's Road to Success + +Bart's father was the express agent in a country town. When an explosion +of fireworks rendered him unfit for work, the boy took it upon himself +to run the express office. The tale gives a good idea of the express +business in general. + + TWO BOY PUBLISHERS + Or, From Typecase to Editor's Chair + +This tale will appeal strongly to all lads who wish to know how a +newspaper is printed and published. The two boy publishers work their +way up, step by step, from a tiny printing office to the ownership of a +town paper. + + MAIL ORDER FRANK + Or, A Smart Boy and His Chances + +Here we have a story covering an absolutely new field--that of the +mail-order business. How Frank started in a small way and gradually +worked his way tip to a business figure of considerable importance is +told in a fascinating manner. + + A BUSINESS BOY + Or, Winning Success + +This relates the ups and downs of a young storekeeper. He has some keen +rivals, but "wins out" in more ways than one. All youths who wish to go +into business will want this volume. + + CUPPLES & LEON CO., Publishers, NEW YORK + +------------------------------------------------------------------------ + + MOTOR BOYS SERIES + (Trade Mark, Reg. U. S. Pat. Of.) + By Clarence Young + + Cloth. 12mo. Illustrated. Price per volume. 60 cents, postpaid + +[Illustration: small image of book cover] + + THE MOTOR BOYS + Or, Chums Through Thick and Thin + +In this volume is related how the three boys got together and planned to +obtain a touring car and make a trip lasting through the summer. + + THE MOTOR BOYS OVERLAND + Or, A Long Trip for Fun and Fortune + +With the money won at the great motorcycle race the three boys purchase +their touring car and commence their travels. + + THE MOTOR BOYS IN MEXICO + Or, The Secret of the Buried City + +From our own country the scene is shifted to Mexico, where the motor +boys journey in quest of a city said to have been buried centuries ago +by an earthquake. + + THE MOTOR BOYS ACROSS THE PLAINS + Or, The Hermit of Lost Lake + +Unraveling the mystery surrounding an old hermit and a poor boy. + + THE MOTOR BOYS AFLOAT + Or, The Stirring Cruise of the Dartaway + +In this volume the boys take to a motorboat, and have many adventures. + + THE MOTOR BOYS ON THE ATLANTIC + Or, The Mystery of the Lighthouse + +How the lads foiled the bad men who wanted to wreck a steamer by means +of false lights is dramatically related. + + THE MOTOR BOYS IN STRANGE WATERS + Or, Lost in a Floating Forest + +Telling of many adventures in the mysterious Everglades of Florida. + + THE MOTOR BOYS ON THE PACIFIC + Or, The Young Derelict Hunters + +The derelict was of great value, and the hunt for it proved full of +perils. + + THE MOTOR BOYS IN THE CLOUDS + Or, A Trip for Fame and Fortune + +The boys fall in with an inventor and invest in a flying machine. After +a number of stirring adventures in the clouds they enter a big race. + + CUPPLES & LEON CO., Publishers, NEW YORK + +------------------------------------------------------------------------ + + THE BOY HUNTERS SERIES + By Captain Ralph Bonehill + + Cloth. 15mo. Illustrated. Price per volume, 60 cents, postpaid + +[Illustration: small image of book cover] + + FOUR BOY HUNTERS + Or, The Outing of the Gun Club + +A fine, breezy story of the woods and waters, of adventures in search of +game, and of great times around the campfire, told in Captain Bonehill's +best style. In the book are given full directions for camping out. + + GUNS AND SNOWSHOES + Or, The Winter Outing of the Young Hunters + +In this volume the young-hunters leave home for a winter outing on the +shores of a small lake. They hunt and trap to their heart's content, and +have adventures in plenty, all calculated to make boys "sit up and take +notice." A good healthy book; one with the odor of the pine forests and +the glare of the welcome campfire in every chapter. + + YOUNG HUNTERS OF THE LAKE + Or, Out with Rod and Gun + +Another tale of woods and waters, with some strong hunting scenes and a +good deal of mystery. The three volumes make a splendid outdoor series. + + OUT WITH GUN AND CAMERA + Or, The Boy Hunters in the Mountains + +Takes up the new fad of photographing wild animals as well as shooting +them. An escaped circus chimpanzee and an escaped lion add to the +interest of the narrative. + + CUPPLES & LEON CO., Publishers, NEW YORK + +------------------------------------------------------------------------ + + THE DAREWELL CHUMS SERIES + By Allen Chapman + + Cloth. 12mo. Illustrated. 60 cents each, postpaid. + + THE DAREWELL CHUMS + Or, The Heroes of the School + +A bright, lively story for boys, telling of the doings of four chums, at +school and elsewhere. There is a strong holding plot, and several +characters who are highly amusing. Any youth getting this book will +consider it a prize and tell all his friends about it. + + THE DAREWELL CHUMS IN THE CITY + Or, The Disappearance of Ned Wilding + +From a country town the scene is changed to a great city. One of the +chums has disappeared in an extraordinary manner, and the others +institute a hunt for him. The youths befriend a city waif, who in turn +makes a revelation which clears up the mystery. + +[Illustration: small image of book cover] + + DAREWELL CHUMS IN THE WOODS + Or, Frank Roscoe's Secret + +The boys had planned for a grand outing when something happened of which +none of them had dreamed. They thought one of their number had done a +great wrong--at least, it looked so. But they could not really believe +the accusations made, so they set to work to help Frank all they could. +All went camping some miles from home, and when not hunting and fishing +spent their time in learning the truth of what had occurred. + + THE DAREWELL CHUMS ON A CRUISE + Or, Fenn Masterson's Odd Discovery + +A tale of the Great Lakes. The boys run across some Canadian smugglers +and stumble on the secret of a valuable mine. Some curious adventures +underground are well told. + + CUPPLES & LEON CO., Publishers, NEW YORK + + + + + + +End of Project Gutenberg's Five Thousand Miles Underground, by Roy Rockwood + +*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK FIVE THOUSAND MILES UNDERGROUND *** + +***** This file should be named 4994.txt or 4994.zip ***** +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: + http://www.gutenberg.org/4/9/9/4994/ + +Produced by Jim Weiler and Roger Frank + +Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed. + +Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no +one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation +(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without +permission and without paying copyright royalties. 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Anyone seeking to utilize +this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright +status under the laws that apply to them. diff --git a/README.md b/README.md new file mode 100644 index 0000000..a211a79 --- /dev/null +++ b/README.md @@ -0,0 +1,2 @@ +Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for +eBook #4994 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/4994) diff --git a/old/20120829-4994-h.htm b/old/20120829-4994-h.htm new file mode 100644 index 0000000..fc3fdb0 --- /dev/null +++ b/old/20120829-4994-h.htm @@ -0,0 +1,6188 @@ +<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN"> +<html> +<head> +<title>Five Thousand Miles Underground</title> +<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=iso-8859-1"> +<style type="text/css"> +<!-- +body {margin:10%; text-align:justify} +blockquote {font-size:14pt} +P {font-size:14pt} +--> +</style> +</head> +<body> + + +<pre> + +Project Gutenberg's Five Thousand Miles Underground, by Roy Rockwood + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with +almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + +Title: Five Thousand Miles Underground + +Author: Roy Rockwood + +Posting Date: August 29, 2012 [EBook #4994] +Release Date: January, 2004 +First Posted: April 7, 2002 + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK FIVE THOUSAND MILES UNDERGROUND *** + + + + +Produced by Jim Weiler + + + + + +</pre> + + + +<h1> +Five Thousand Miles Underground</h1> +<h4>Or</h4> +<h2>The Mystery of the Centre of the Earth</h2> +<h2> +by Roy Rockwood, 1908</h2> +<HR> +<h3>CHAPTER I</h3> +<h4>WASHINGTON BACKS OUT</h4> +<P> +"WASHINGTON! I say Washington!" +<P> +Throughout a big shed, filled for the most part with huge pieces of machinery, +echoed the voice of Professor Amos Henderson. He did not look up from a small +engine over which he was bending. +<P> +"Washington! Where are you? Why don't you answer me?" +<P> +From somewhere underneath an immense pile of iron, steel and aluminum came +the voice of a colored man. +<P> +"Yas sir, Perfesser, I'se goin' t' saggasiate my bodily presence in yo' +contiguous proximity an' attend t' yo' immediate conglomerated prescriptions +at th' predistined period. Yas, sir!" +<P> +"Well, Washington, if you had started when you began that long speech you +would have been at least half way here by this time. Hurry up! Never mind +tightning those bolts now. Find the boys. I need them to help me with this +engine. They must be around somewhere." +<P> +"I seen 'em goin' fishin' down by th' brook a little while ago," answered +the negro, crawling out from under what seemed to be a combined airship and +watercraft. "Jack says as how yo' gived him permission t' occupy his +indisputatious period of levity in endeavorin' t' extract from th' liquid +element some specimens of swimmin' creatures." +<P> +"If you mean I said he and Mark could go fishing in the brook, you're right, +Washington," replied the professor with a smile. "But you waste a lot of +time and breath trying to say it. Why, don't you give up using big words?" +<P> +"I reckon I was brought up t' it," replied the colored man grinning from +ear to ear. He did not always use big words but when he did they were generally +the wrong ones. Sometimes, he spoke quite correctly. +<P> +"Well, I suppose you can't help it," resumed Mr. Henderson. "However, never +mind that. Find the boys and send them to me." +<P> +"With th' least appreciatableness amount of postponement," answered the +messenger, and he went out. +<P> +Washington White, who in color was just the opposite to his name, a general +helper and companion to Professor Henderson, found Mark Sampson and Jack +Darrow about a quarter of a mile from the big shed, which was in the center +of a wooded island off the coast of Maine. The lads were seated on the bank +of a small brook, fishing. +<P> +"Perfesser wants yo' immediate," said Washington. +<P> +"But we haven't caught a single fish," objected Mark. +<P> +"Them's the orders from headquarters," replied the colored man. "Yo' both +got t' project yo'selves in th' vicinity of th' machine shop. I reckon th' +new fangled contraption that th' perfesser is goin' t' navigate th' air an' +sail th' angry seas in, am about done. He want's t' try th' engine." +<P> +"Come on then," said Jack. "We probably would not catch any fish, anyhow, +Mark." +<P> +Accompanied by Washington, the youths, each of whom was about eighteen years +old, started toward the big shed. +<P> +While they are on their way opportunity may be taken to tell a little about +them, as well as about Washington and the professor, and the curious craft +on which the scientist was working. +<P> +A few years before this story opens Mr. Henderson had invented a wonderful +electric airship. He had it about completed when, one day, he and the two +boys became unexpectedly acquainted, and, as it developed, friends. +<P> +Mark and Jack were orphans. After having rather a hard time knocking about +the world trying to make a living, they chanced to meet, and resolved to +cast their lots together. They boarded a freight train, and, as told in the +first volume of this series, entitled, "Through the Air to the North Pole; +or the Wonderful Cruise of the Electric Monarch," the cars were wrecked near +where Professor Henderson was building his strange craft. +<P> +The boys were cared for by the scientist, and, after their recovery from +hurts received in the collision, they accepted his invitation to make the +trip through the upper regions in the airship, to search for the north pole. +With them went Andy Sudds, an old hunter, and Tom Smith and Bill Jones, two +farmers, but who were hired as helpers on the voyage. The party had many +adventures on the trip, having battles with savage animals and more savage +Esquimaux, and were tossed about in terrible storms. After making some scientific +observations, which the professor was much interested in, they started back +home. +<P> +Having found he could successfully sail in the air, Mr. Henderson resolved +to try what it might be like under water. +<P> +He moved his machine shop to a lonely spot on the Maine coast, and there, +with the help of the boys, Washington, Andy and two machinists constructed +a submarine boat, called the <I>Porpoise.</I> +<P> +In this the professor resolved to seek the south pole, he having a theory +that it was surrounded by an open sea. After much hard work the <I>Porpoise +</I>was made ready for the voyage. +<P> +What occurred on this great trip is described in the second book of this +series, called "Under the Ocean to the South Pole, or the Strange Cruise +of the Submarine Wonder." In that is told how once more Tom and Bill, with +Andy, the boys and Washington, accompanying Professor Henderson, had many +thrilling experiences. +<P> +They were caught in the grip of the grass of the terrible Sargasso Sea. Monstrous +suckers grasped the boat in their powerful arms, and had to be fought off. +They were caught in a sea of boiling water and imprisoned between big fields +of ice. +<P> +By means of strong diving suits they were able to leave the ship and walk +about on the bottom of the sea. They visited a graveyard of sunken ships, +saw many strange monsters as well as many beautiful fish in the great depths +to which they sunk. Many times they were in dire peril but the resources +of the professor, the bravery and daring of the boys, no less than the help +Washington and Andy Sudds, the hunter, rendered at times, brought them through. +<P> +Those of you who read of their adventures will recall the strange island +which they came upon in the Atlantic Ocean, far from the coast of South America. +<P> +When they first drew near this island they were almost sucked into the depths +of a great whirlpool, caused by water pouring down a big hole that seemed +to lead far into the earth. They reversed their ship just in time. +<P> +But, on going to another side of the island they were able to approach safely, +as at this point the great hole was farther from the shore. Then they landed +and investigated. +<P> +They found the island was almost circular, and the hole was also round, but +not in the center of the land. It was an immense cavity, so wide they could +not see across, and as for the depth they could only guess at it. Looking +down they could only see rolling masses of vapor and clouds caused by the +water which poured down from the ocean with the force of a Niagara. +<P> +Gazing down into the big hole Mark suggested it might lead to the centre +of the earth, which some scientists claim is hollow. The professor admitted +that the cavity looked as though it led to China. +<P> +They had no means of investigating further the mystery of the opening and +returned to their submarine, completing the voyage to the south pole. +<P> +It was now about two years since they had come back from that eventful trip. +One of the first things the professor did, after docking the <I>Porpoise, +</I>was to shut himself up in his study and begin to draw plans. To the questions +of the boys he returned no answer for several days. Then he announced he +was working on a craft which could both sail on top of the water and navigate +the air. +<P> +In time the plans were done, and, in order to keep the work secret, the shop +was moved to an island which the professor owned. +<P> +Parts of the <I>Monarch </I>and the <I>Porpoise </I>were used in constructing +the new craft, so there was no need to get other help than that which the +boys, Washington and Bill and Tom could give, since the two latter accepted +an offer of the professor to remain and work for him. The boys, of course, +would not leave their friend. +<P> +The professor realized that he had a more difficult task in his new venture +than he had set himself on other occasions. For a ship to be light enough +to rise in the air, and, at another time, and with no change, to be strong +enough to navigate the ocean, was indeed something to tax Mr. Henderson's +ingenuity. +<P> +However, in the course of a little over a year the larger part of the work +was done. Inside the big shed was the huge affair which, it was hoped, would +enable its owner to be master of both air and water. +<P> +"Did the professor say anything special?" asked Mark of Washington. +<P> +"Nope. I reckon he were too busy problamatin' the exact altitude projected +in an inverse direction by th' square root of th' new engine when operated +at a million times inside of a few seconds, but he didn't say nothin' t' +me. I were busy underneath th' ship, fixin' bolts when he tole me t' find +yo'. I wouldn't be s'prised if he had th' thing goin' soon." +<P> +"Do you think he'll be generating the new gas to-day?" asked Jack eagerly. +"That's the most troublesome part; to get that gas right." +<P> +"He didn't say nothin' t' me 'bout it," Washington stated, as he walked along +beside the two boys. "He jest seemed anxious like." +<P> +"We'd better hurry," advised Mark. "He may be at an important part in his +experiments and probably needs us. I hope it will work. He has spent many +days on it, and we all have worked hard. It ought to be a success." +<P> +"Perfesser allers makes things work," declared Washington stoutly. +<P> +"That's a good way to feel about it, anyway," observed Mark. "Well, we'll +soon know." +<P> +The three hurried to the shed which they could see as they rounded a turn +of the path through the wood. They noticed an elderly man approaching with +a gun on his shoulder. On one arm he carried a game bag. +<P> +"Guess Andy got something for dinner," remarked Jack. +<P> +"I hopes so, honey," put in Washington. "I'se got a sort of gone feelin' +in my stomach!" +<P> +"Any luck, Andy?" called Mark, when he came within hailing distance. +<P> +"Fine," replied Andy Sudds. "Rabbits and quail. We'll have a good dinner +to-morrow." +<P> +While Andy entered the living part of the big shed to put away his gun and +game, the boys and Washington kept on to the engine room. They found the +professor, with Bill and Tom, busy fitting pipes to the small engine which +was set up at one side of the structure. +<P> +"Come, boys, I need your aid," remarked Mr. Henderson as they entered. "Take +off your coats and pitch in. Tighten up these bolts, Jack. Mark, you mix +up those chemicals the way I taught you, and see that the dynamo is in working +order for Washington to attend to." +<P> +In a little while the shop was a veritable hive of industry, and it resounded +to the sound of hammers, wrenches and machinery. In the background was the +big ship, which seemed like two immense cigars, one above the other, the +lower one the larger. +<P> +"Where was you calalatin' t' take this here ship when it gits done, Perfesser?" +asked Washington, during a lull in the operations. +<P> +"Do you remember that big hole in the island we visited on our trip to the +south pole?" +<P> +"I suah does," answered the colored man. +<P> +"We are going to explore that," went on the scientist. "We are going to make +a voyage to the interior of the earth in our <I>Flying Mermaid."</I> +<P> +"Go down into th' earth!" exclaimed Washington, his eyes big with fright. +<P> +"Certainly; why not?" +<P> +"Not for mine!" cried the colored man, dropping the wrench he was holding. +"No sire I'm not goin' t' project myself int' a grave while I'se alive. Time +enough when I kicks th' bucket. No sir! If yo' an' the boys wants t' risk +yo' se'ves goin' down int' th' interior of th' earth, where th' Bible says +there's fiery furnaces, yo' kin go, but Washington White stays on terra cotta! +That's where he stays; He ain't ready t' be buried, not jest yet!" and the +frightened colored man started to leave the shed. +<h3>CHAPTER II</h3> +<h4>THE FLYING MERMAID</h4> +<P> +"HERE! Stop him!" cried Professor Henderson. "Don't let him get away. We +still need his help to get the ship in shape. He needn't be frightened. We're +not going to start at once." +<P> +Mark and Jack ran after Washington, whose progress was somewhat impeded because +he kept looking back as if he feared the new ship was chasing him. +<P> +"Come on back!" said Mark. "There's no danger, and if there was we're not +going to start to-day." +<P> +"Ain't yo' foolin' me?" asked Washington, pausing and looking doubtfully +at the boys. +<P> +"Of course not," answered Mark. "You know Professor Henderson would not make +you do anything you didn't want to do, Wash. He wishes you to stay and help +him get ready, that's all." +<P> +"Well, Washington," observed the aged scientist. "I didn't think you'd go +back on me." +<P> +"I'd do mos' anything fer yo', Perfesser," said the colored man, "but I got +t' beg off this time," and he looked at the <I>Flying Mermaid </I>as if he +thought the metal sides would open and devour him. +<P> +"Then help me get things in shape to generate the gas," the scientist said. +"I want to give the new vapor the first real test in lifting power to-day. +On the success of it depends the future of the ship." +<P> +Seeing there was no immediate danger of being carried to the centre of the +earth, Washington resumed his labors. The professor, the boys, Bill and Tom +were also hurrying matters to enable a test to be made before night. +<P> +As will readily be seen, even by those not familiar with the construction +of airships and submarines, the chief problem was to find some agent strong +enough to lift from the earth a weight heavier than had ever before been +put into an apparatus that was destined to traverse the clouds. For the +<I>Flying Mermaid </I>was not only an airship but an ocean voyager as well. +It had to be made light enough to be lifted far above the earth, yet the +very nature of it, necessitating it being made heavy enough to stand the +buffeting of the waves and the pressure of water, was against its flying +abilities. +<P> +Professor Henderson realized this and knew that the chief concern would be +to discover a gas or vapor with five times the lifting power of hydrogen, +one of the lightest gases known, and one sometimes used to inflate balloons. +<P> +After long study he had been partially successful, but he knew from experiments +made that the gas he had so far been able to manufacture would not answer. +What he wanted was some element that could be mixed with the gas, to neutralize +the attraction of gravitation, or downward pull of the earth. +<P> +While he was seeking this, and experimenting on many lines, the construction +of the air-water ship went on. In general the outward construction was two +cigar shaped hulls, one above the other. Aluminum, being the lightest and +strongest metal that could be used for the purpose, formed the main part +of both bodies. +<P> +The upper hull was one hundred feet long and twenty feet in diameter at the +widest part. It tapered to points at either end. It was attached to the lower +hull by strong braces, at either end, while from the center there extended +a pipe which connected with the lower section. This pipe was intended to +convey the lifting gas to the part which corresponded to the bag of the balloon, +save that it was of metal instead of silk, or rubber as is usual. +<P> +There were two reasons for this. One was that it would not be liable to puncture, +particularly in the proposed underground trip, and the other was that it +did not have to be so large as a cloth bag would have had to be. It was also +a permanent part of the ship, and on a voyage where part of the time the +travelers would be in the air and part on the water, and when the change +from one to the other would have to be made quickly, this was necessary. +It would have taken too long to raise the ship in the air had a cloth bag +been used to contain the gas. +<P> +The lower hull or main part of the craft was one hundred and fifty feet long, +and forty feet through at the largest part, in the centre. +<P> +It was divided into four sections. The forward one contained the sleeping +quarters of Professor Henderson and his crew. There was a small stateroom +for each one. Above was a conning or observation tower, reached by a small +flight of steps. From this tower the ship could be steered, stopped and started, +as could also be done from the engine room, which was in the after part of +the hull. +<P> +As in the <I>Porpoise </I>and <I>Monarch, </I>electricity formed the motive +power and was also used for many other purposes on board. Engines operated +by gas produced the current which heated, lighted and moved the ship, as +well as played a part in producing the wonderful gas. +<P> +The ship moved forward or backward by means of a novel arrangement. This +was by the power of compressed air. From either end of the lower hull there +projected a short pipe working in a ball and socket joint, so it could be +turned in any direction. By means of strong pumps a current of compressed +air could be sent out from either pipe. Thus when floating above the earth +the ship was forced forward by the blast of air rushing from the pipe at +the stern. It was the same principle as that on which a sky rocket is shot +heavenward, save that gases produced by the burning of powder in the pasteboard +rocket form its moving impulse. +<P> +In the case of the <I>Flying Mermaid, </I>it could be made to move backward +by sending the air out of the forward tube. Thus, when in the water, the +compressed air rushing from the pipe struck the fluid and forced the ship +forward or backward as was desired. It floated on the surface, the deck being +about three feet out of water, while the aluminum gas bag was overhead. +<P> +The engine room was a marvel of machine construction. It contained pumps +for air and water, motors, dynamos, gas engines, and a maze of wheels and +levers. Yet everything was very compact and no room was wasted. +<P> +The use of the air method of propulsion did away with the necessity of a +large propellor such as most airships have to use, a propellor which must +of necessity be very light and which is easily broken. +<P> +Next to the engine room was the kitchen. It contained an electric range and +all necessary appliances and utensils for preparing meals. There were lockers +and a large reserve storeroom which when the time came would be well stocked +with food. Forward of the kitchen was the living and dining room. It contained +comfortable seats, folding tables and a small library. Here, also were many +instruments designed to show how the various machines were working. There +were gages, pointers and dials, which told the direction the ship was traveling, +the speed and the distance above the earth or below the surface. Similar +indicators were in the conning tower, which had a powerful search light. +<P> +The ship was lighted throughout by incandescent lamps, and there was even +a small automatic piano worked by the electric current, on which popular +airs could be played. +<P> +If the gas and the gravity neutralizer worked as Professor Henderson hoped +they would, as soon as the ship was completed, all that would be necessary +to start on the voyage would be to fill the aluminum bag and set the air +compressor in motion. +<P> +The gas was made from common air, chemically treated and with a secret material +added which by means of a complicated machine in a measure did away with +the downward pull of the earth. Thus all that was necessary to carry on a +long voyage was a quantity of gasolene to operate the engine which worked +the electric machines, and some of this secret compound. +<P> +The professor and his helpers had been working to good advantage. At last +all was in readiness for the gas test. +<P> +It was proposed to try it on an experimental scale. Some of the fluid was +to be generated and forced into an aluminum cylinder under the same pressure +it would be used in the air ship. To this cylinder were attached weights +in proportion to the weight of the <I>Flying Mermaid </I>with its load of +human freight, engines and equipment. +<P> +"This cylinder is just one one-hundredth the size of the cylinder of the +ship," said the professor. "I am going to fasten to it a hundred pound weight. +If it lifts that our latest contrivance will be a success." +<P> +"You mean if the little cylinder pulls a hundred pounds up the big ship will +take us and the machinery up?" asked Mark. +<P> +"Certainly," answered the professor. "If this cylinder lifts a hundred pounds, +one a hundred times as big (as that of the <I>Mermaid </I>is), will lift +a hundred times as much, or ten thousand pounds. That is five tons, or more +than a ton over what I figure to be the weight of our ship and contents. +The latest war balloon can lift one ton with ease, and if my machine can +not do five times as well I shall be disappointed." +<P> +The last adjustments were made, pipes were run from the gas generator to +the cylinder, and the hundred pound weight was attached. +<P> +"Everybody look out now," said Mr. Henderson. "I am going to start the machine +and let the gas enter the cylinder. It is a very powerful gas and may break +the cylinder. If it does you must all duck." +<P> +The scientist gave a last look at everything. The boys got behind some boards +whence they could see without being in danger. Washington, who had little +fear so long as there was no danger of going under ground, took his place +at the dynamo. Andy Sudds, with Bill and Tom, stationed themselves in safe +places. +<P> +"All ready!" called the professor. +<P> +He pulled a lever toward him, turned a wheel and signalled to Washington +to start the dynamo. There was a sound of buzzing machinery, which was followed +by a hiss as the gas began to enter the cylinder under pressure. Would it +stand the strain? That question was uppermost in every one's mind save the +professor's. He only cared to see the cylinder leave the ground, carrying +the weight with it. That would prove his long labors were crowned with success. +<P> +Faster and faster whirred the dynamo. The gas was being generated from the +air. The secret chemical made a hissing which could be heard for some distance. +The gage registered a heavy pressure. Anxiously the professor watched the +cylinder. +<P> +"There!" he exclaimed at length. "It has all the gas it can hold. Now to +see if it works!" +<P> +He disconnected the pipe leading from the generator. This left the cylinder +free. It seemed to tremble slightly. There appeared to be a movement to the +hundred pound weight which rested on the ground. It was as if it was tugging +to get loose. +<P> +"There it goes! There it goes!" cried Mark, joyfully. +<P> +"Hurrah!" shouted Jack. "There she rises!" +<P> +"It suttinly am projectin' itself skyward!" yelled Washington, coming from +the dynamo. +<P> +Sure enough the cylinder was slowly rising in the air, bearing the weight +with it. It had lifted it clear from the ground and was approaching the roof +of the big shed. +<P> +"It will work! It will work!" exclaimed the professor, strangely excited. +<P> +The next instant the cylinder, carrying the weight, sailed right out of an +open skylight, and began drifting outside the shop, and across the fields. +<P> +"Quick! We must get it back!" cried Mr. Henderson. "If it gets away my secret +may be discovered and I will lose all! We must secure it!" +<P> +But the cylinder was now two hundred feet in the air and being blown to the +east, the weight dangling below it, making it look like a miniature airship. +<P> +"We can never catch that!" cried Mark. +<h3>CHAPTER III</h3> +<h4>WASHINGTON DECIDES</h4> +<P> +"WE must catch that cylinder!" the professor exclaimed. "Some one may find +it when it comes down and analyze the gas. Then he would discover how to +make it. The cylinder must come down!" +<P> +"Don't see how we can proximate ourselves inter th' vicinity of it lessen +we delegate th' imperial functions of orinthological specimens t' some member +of this here party," observed Washington. +<P> +"If you mean we can't catch that there contraption unless we turn into birds +I'll show you that you're mistaken!" cried Andy Sudds. "I guess I have a +trick or two up my sleeve," and the old hunter quickly threw open the breech +of his gun and inserted a couple of cartridges. +<P> +He raised the piece to his shoulder and took quick aim. There was a sliver +of flame, a puff of smoke and a sharp report. The professor and the boys +who were watching the cylinder saw it vibrate up in the air. Then there came +a whistling sound. An instant later the metal body began to descend, and +it and the weight fell to the earth. +<P> +"I'm sorry I had to put a bullet through it, Professor," said old Andy with +a queer smile, "but it was the only way I saw of bringing it down. Hope it +isn't damaged much." +<P> +"It doesn't matter if it is," the scientist answered. "I can make more cylinders, +but I don't want that secret of the gas to become known. Your bullet served +a good turn, Andy, for it let the compressed vapor out just in time." +<P> +"Then we may consider the experiment a success," said Mark, as Washington +went to where the cylinder had fallen, to detach it from the weight and bring +both to the shed. +<P> +"It seems so," Mr. Henderson answered. "True, it was only an experiment. +We have yet to test the ship itself." +<P> +"When can we do that?" asked Jack. +<P> +"I hope by Monday," the scientist answered. +<P> +"Will you try it in the water or air first?" asked Mark. +<P> +"I'm almost certain it will float in the water," the aged inventor said. +"It does not require much work to make a ship which will do that. But the +air proposition is another matter. However, since the cylinder rose, I am +pretty sure the <I>Flying Mermaid </I>will. +<P> +"But we have done enough work to-day. Let's rest and have something to eat. +Then, with Sunday to sit around and talk matters over, we will be ready for +Monday's test." +<P> +Some of the game Andy had killed was soon on the table, for Washington, in +addition to his other accomplishments, was an expert cook. During the evening +the boys and their friends sat in the living room of the big shed and talked +over the events of the day. +<P> +Sunday was spent in discussing what adventures might lie before them should +they be able to descend into the big hole. Washington did not say, much, +but it was easy to see he had no notion of going. He even began to pack his +few belongings in readiness to leave the service of Mr. Henderson, for whom +he had worked a good many years. +<P> +No one remained long abed Monday morning. Even Washington was up early in +spite of the interest he had lost in the professor's voyage. +<P> +"I jest wants t' see yo' start fer that place where they buries live folks," +he said. +<P> +In order to properly test the <I>Flying Mermaid </I>it was necessary to move +the craft from the shed from which place it had never been taken since it's +construction was started. It had been built on big rollers in anticipation +of this need, so that all which was now necessary was to open the doors at +the end, and roll the craft out. +<P> +This was accomplished with no small amount of labor, and it was nearly noon +before the big ship was moved into the open. It was shoved along to a little +clearing in front of the shed, where no trees would interfere with its possible +upward movement. +<P> +Everyone was bustling about. The professor was busiest of all. He went from +one machine to another; from this apparatus to that, testing here, turning +wheels there, adjusting valves and seeing that all was in readiness for the +generating of the powerful gas. +<P> +As the airship was half round on the bottom and as it rested in a sort of +semi-circular cradle; it brought the entrance some distance above the ground. +To make it easier to get in and out while preparations for the trial were +going on, Bill and Tom had made an improvised pair of steps, which were tied +to the side of the ship with ropes. +<P> +Up and down these the professor, the boys and Andy went, taking in tools +and materials, and removing considerable refuse which had accumulated during +the building of the craft. +<P> +Finally all was in readiness for starting the making of the gas. The ship +was not wholly complete and no supplies or provisions for the long voyage +had been taken aboard. The <I>Flying Mermaid </I>was about a ton lighter +than it would be when fully fitted out, but to make up for this the professor +had left in the ship a lot of tools and surplus machinery so that the craft +held as much weight as it would under normal conditions. If the gas lifted +it now it would at any other time. +<P> +"Start the generator," said Mr. Henderson, to Mark. "We'll soon see whether +we are going to succeed or fail." +<P> +The boy turned a number of levers and wheels. The machine which made the +powerful vapor was soon in operation. The professor had already added enough +of the secret compound to the tank containing the other ingredients, and +the big pump was sucking in air to be transformed into the lifting gas. +<P> +The boys and the professor were in the engine room. Andy Sudds, with Bill +and Tom, had taken their places in the living room, to more evenly balance +the ship, since the things in it were not yet all in their proper places. +As for Washington he was busy running from the shed to the ship with various +tools and bits of machinery the professor desired. +<P> +The gas was being generated rapidly. Throughout the ship there resounded +a hissing noise that told it was being forced through the pipe into the aluminum +shell above the ship proper. +<P> +"I wonder how soon it will begin to lift us," said Mark. +<P> +"It will take about half an hour," replied Mr. Henderson. "You see we have +first to fill the holder completely, since there is no gas in it. After this +we will keep some on hand, so that it will only need the addition of a small +quantity to enable the ship to rise." +<P> +He was busy watching the pointer on a dial which indicated the pressure of +the gas, and the lifting force. The boys were kept busy making adjustments +to the machinery and oiling bearings. +<P> +Suddenly, throughout the length of the craft there was felt a curious trembling. +It was as though the screw of a powerful steamer was revolving in the water. +<P> +"What is it?" asked Jack. +<P> +"I hope it is the lifting power of the gas making itself felt," the professor +answered. "Perhaps the <I>Flying Mermaid is </I>getting ready to try her +wings." +<P> +The trembling became more pronounced. The gas was being generated faster +than ever. The whole ship was trembling. Tom and Bill came from the room, +where they were stationed, to inquire the meaning, but were reassured by +the professor. +<P> +"Don't be alarmed if you find yourselves up in the air pretty soon," he remarked +with a smile. "Remember the <I>Electric Monarch, </I>and the flights she +took. We may not go as high as we did in her, but it will answer the same +purpose." +<P> +The gas was hissing through the big tube as it rushed into the overhead holder. +The gage indicated a heavy pressure. The ship began to tremble more violently +and to sway slightly from side to side. +<P> +"I think we shall rise presently," said Mr. Henderson. His voice showed the +pride he felt at the seeming success with which his invention was about to +meet. +<P> +Suddenly, with a little jerk, as though some one with a giant hand had plucked +the <I>Flying Mermaid </I>from the earth, the ship gave a little bound into +the air, and was floating free. +<P> +"Here we go!" cried Mr. Henderson. "The ship is a success. Now we're off +for the hole in the earth!" +<P> +The <I>Flying Mermaid </I>was indeed rising in the air. True it did not go +up so swiftly as had the <I>Monarch, </I>but then it was a much heavier and +stronger vessel, and flying was only one of its accomplishments. +<P> +"It's a success! It's a success!" shouted Mark, capering about in his excitement. +<P> +"Now we'll see what the centre of the earth looks like," went on Jack. "I +can hardly wait for the time to come when we are to start on the voyage." +<P> +At that instant, when the ship was but a few feet from the ground, but slowly +rising, the boys and the professor heard a shouting below them. +<P> +"What's that?" asked the scientist. "Is any one hurt?" +<P> +Mark ran to a small window, something like a port hole in an ocean steamer, +and looked out. +<P> +"Quick!" he shouted. "Stop the ship! Washington will be killed!" +<P> +In fact from the agonized yells which proceeded from somewhere under the +craft it seemed that the accident was in process of happening. +<P> +"Save me! Save me!" cried the colored man. "I'm goin' to fall! Catch me, +some one!" +<P> +"What is it?" asked the professor, making ready to shut off the power and +let the ship settle back to earth, from which it had moved about fifty feet. +<P> +"It's Washington," explained Mark. "He evidently tried to walk up the steps +just as the boat mounted skyward. He rolled down and managed to grab the +end of the rope which was left over after the steps were tied. Now he's swinging +down there." +<P> +"Are you going to lower the ship?" asked Jack. +<P> +"Of course!" exclaimed the professor. "I only hope he hangs on until his +feet touch the earth." +<P> +"Keep a tight hold!" shouted Mark, from out of the small window. +<P> +"That's th' truest thing yo' ever said!" exclaimed Washington. "You bet I'm +goin' to hold on, and I'm comin' up too," which he proceeded to do, hand +over hand, like a sailor. +<P> +The boys and the professor watched the colored man's upward progress. The +ship had hardly begun to settle as, in the excitement, not enough gas had +been let out. Closer and closer came Washington, until he was able to grasp +the edge of the opening, to which the steps were fastened. +<P> +"I thought you weren't coming with us," observed the professor, when he saw +that his helper was safe. +<P> +"I changed my mind," said the colored man. "It's jest luck. Seems like th' +ship done wanted me t' go 'long, an' I'm goin'. I'll take my chances on bein' +buried alive. I ain't never seen th' centre of th' earth, an' I want's to +'fore I die. I'm goin' 'long, Perfessor!" +<h3>CHAPTER IV</h3> +<h4>WHAT DID MARK SEE?</h4> +<P> +"WELL, I'm glad you've decided at last," the professor remarked. "Now come +inside and we'll see how the ship works." +<P> +Once over his fright, Washington made himself at home on the craft he had +helped build. He went from one room to another and observed the engine. +<P> +"She certainly am workin'" he observed with pride. "Are we still goin' up, +Perfessor?" +<P> +"Still mounting," replied Mr. Henderson, "We are now three hundred feet above +the earth," he added as he glanced at a registering gage. +<P> +The great air pump was set going and soon from the after tube, a big stream +of the compressed vapor rushed. It acted on the ship instantly and sent the +craft ahead at a rapid rate. By elevating or depressing the tube the craft +could be sent obliquely up or down. Then, by forcing the air from the forward +tube, the <I>Mermaid </I>was reversed and scudded backward. +<P> +But it was more with the ship's ability to rise and descend that Professor +Henderson was concerned, since on that depended their safety. So various +tests were made, in generating the gas and using the negative gravity apparatus. +<P> +All worked to perfection. Obeying the slightest turn of the wheels and levers +the <I>Mermaid </I>rose or fell. She stood still, suspended herself in the +air, or rushed backward and forward. +<P> +Of course the machinery was new and did not operate as smoothly as it would +later, but the professor and his friends were very well satisfied. +<P> +"Now we'll try something new," said the scientist to the two boys as they +stood beside him in the tower. "I only hope this part succeeds, and we shall +soon be off on our voyage." +<P> +He turned several levers. There was a hissing sound as the gas rushed from +the container, and the ship began to settle down. +<P> +"What's th' matter? Are we goin' t' hit th' earth?" yelled Washington, rushing +from the engine room. +<P> +"Keep quiet," ordered the professor. "We are only going down, that's all." +<P> +"But good land! Perfesser!" exclaimed the colored man. "The ocean's right +under us! You forgot you sailed sway from the island! We'll be drowned suah!" +<P> +"Leave it to me," said Mr. Henderson. "The <I>Flying Mermaid </I>is going +to take a bath!" +<P> +"As long as it swims it will be all right," observed Mark in a low tone to +Jack. "I'm glad I can take care of myself in the water." +<P> +Before Jack could reply the <I>Mermaid </I>seemed to take a sudden dive through +the air. The next instant she struck the water with a splash that sent the +waves rolling all about. The craft rocked violently to and fro on the surface +of the sea. For a while there were anxious hearts aboard, for there was no +certainty but that the ship might not sink to the bottom. +<P> +But the old professor had not calculated and builded in vain. After rocking +about like a vessel newly launched, the strange craft rode safely and upright +on the water. It set down far enough to bring the propelling tubes well under, +but not so far but that the conning tower was well out and there was a small +deck available. +<P> +"Now to see if we can conquer the water as we did the air!" cried the professor. +"Mark, start the air pump. Jack, you steer, for I want to watch the machinery +under the additional strain." +<P> +From the rear tube rushed such a volume of air that the ocean near it bubbled +and foamed. The ship trembled from stem to stern, and then, after hanging +for an instant as if undecided what to do, it began to move forward as easily +as though it had never sailed any other element than the sea. +<P> +"She fits her name!" the professor cried. "She is indeed the <I>Flying Mermaid, +</I>for she sails the ocean as easily as she navigates in the clouds!" +<P> +For a mile or two the craft was sent ahead over the waves. Then it was reversed +and run backwards. Satisfied that his long months of work had not gone for +naught, the professor after trying several experiments, decided to try and +raise the ship while in motion. +<P> +With Jack and Mark to look after the air pumps, while Washington, Tom and +Bill busied themselves in the engine room, Mr. Henderson began to generate +the gas and start the negative gravity apparatus. All the while the craft +was forging ahead. +<P> +There was again the hissing sound that told of the aluminum holder being +filled. For a few minutes there seemed to be no change, the <I>Mermaid +</I>plowing forward. +<P> +Then like a bird rising from the waves, or like a flying fish leaping from +the sea to escape some pursuing monster of the deep, the new ship shot up +diagonally from the surface and winged its way into the upper regions of +the air. +<P> +"Success! Success!" cried the professor. "This proves all I wanted to know. +Now we are ready for our great trip!" +<P> +Great were the rejoicings in the camp that night. It was like living over +again the days when they were aboard the diving <I>Porpoise </I>or the flying +<I>Monarch. </I>To the recollections were added the anticipations of what +was before them in the trip to the interior of the earth. +<P> +Busy days followed, for there was still much to be done to the <I>Flying +Mermaid. </I>The machinery, which was only partly completed, had to be finished. +Besides this the professor was working on some apparatus, the use of which +he did not disclose to any one. It was stored aboard the ship at the last +minute. +<P> +Plenty of provisions had to be taken aboard, and many supplies needed to +work the <I>Mermaid </I>and insure that it would go to the end of the voyage. +The materials for generating the gas and negative gravity, spare parts, records +for the automatic piano and other things were stored away. +<P> +Some guns and ammunition were taken along as were a few revolvers, since +old Andy had said it was best to prepare for any thing in the shape of enemies +or wild beasts that might be met with in the interior regions. +<P> +It was decided to make the start by sailing along the surface of the sea +for several days, as in the event of any weakness in the machinery being +discovered there would be less danger. If, at the end of four days, no trouble +developed, the professor said he would send the <I>Mermaid </I>into the air +and make the rest of the voyage through the sky. +<P> +The night before the start was to be made the professor, with the boys, +Washington and the other helpers, went about through the various shops and +buildings, locking them up securely. For they could not tell how long they +would be away, and they had to leave behind much valuable material. +<P> +As there were several things that needed attention they divided the work +up. Mark had finished his share and was walking back toward the living cabin +where they were all quartered, when, down at the shore, near where the boat +was moored, he fancied he saw, in the gathering darkness, a moving figure. +<P> +"I wonder who that can be," he thought. "All the others are near the machine +shop, for I just left them there. Perhaps it's some one trying to spy out +how the <I>Mermaid </I>is built." +<P> +Knowing the professor wanted his secret well guarded, Mark walked softly +toward the little dock that served as a place whence the <I>Mermaid </I>could +be easily boarded. As he approached he saw the figure moving. Something struck +the boy as peculiar. +<P> +Though the object had some of the characteristics of a man it did not walk +like a human being, but shuffled along more like a huge ape or monkey. It +seemed bent over, as if it stooped toward the ground. +<P> +"Who are you?" called Mark suddenly. +<P> +For an instant the figure halted and then hurried on faster than before, +with a curious, shuffling walk. It was approaching the ship. +<P> +Somehow it struck Mark as if it was an uncanny being; an inhabitant of some +other world. Then he laughed at his half-fear, and started on a run toward +the dock. +<P> +"If it's some tramp trying to find a place to sleep he'd better not go aboard +the ship, he might do some damage," the boy thought. +<P> +He could hardly see the figure now as it had passed into the shadow cast +by the boat. He was about to summon the professor to make an investigation, +when Washington started going the search light which was placed just over +the door of the living cabin. It was kept there as a sort of beacon light, +as, near the island was a dangerous ledge of rocks. +<P> +Then, in the blinding white glare from the big lantern as Washington accidentally +swung it toward the <I>Mermaid, </I>Mark beheld a strange sight. +<P> +The figure he had been watching stood out in bold relief. Though it was shaped +like a human being it was not like any person the boy had ever seen. It seemed +covered with a skin twice too large for it; a skin, which, in spite of the +clothes that concealed it, hung in folds about the arms and legs, dropping +pendent like from the neck like a big garment, and flapping in the wind. +<P> +For an instant Mark was so startled he cried out, and the professor and the +others ran to see what was the matter. +<P> +"There—by the ship! A horrible creature!" exclaimed Mark. +<P> +Shouting to Washington to keep the light steady in the direction of the dock, +Mr. Henderson ran toward the moored <I>Mermaid. </I>Jack, Andy, Bill and +Tom, with Mark in the rear followed him. +<P> +"Nothing here," said the scientist, after a careful search about. "Are you +sure you saw something, Mark?" +<P> +"Positively," replied the lad with a shudder. He described the vision of +the darkness. +<P> +"I guess it was a big otter, or maybe an enormous turtle," the professor +said. +<h3>CHAPTER V</h3> +<h4>ATTACKED BY A WHALE</h4> +<P> +BUT Mark was certain it was nothing like that, though a careful search failed +to reveal anything or any person near the ship. It was too dark to examine +for footprints, and even Mark, after taking a look all about, felt he might +have been deceived by shadows. Still he was a little nervous, and could hardly +sleep for imagining what the thing he saw could have been. +<P> +The next day every one was so busy that no one, not even Mark, recalled the +little excitement of the night before. Shortly after noon, final preparations +having been made, they all got aboard the <I>Mermaid </I>and started off. +<P> +It was a bright sunshiny day, and the craft, speeding away from the island +where it had been constructed, over the dancing blue waves, must have presented +a strange sight had there been any spectators. For surely no such ship had +ever before sailed those waters. +<P> +However, there was no other vessel in sight, and the island, as far as the +professor and his friends knew, had never been inhabited. +<P> +"We will not try for any great speed," Mr. Henderson remarked as he, with +Mark and Jack, stood in the conning tower managing the <I>Mermaid. </I>"We +don't want to strain any joints at the start or heat any engine bearings. +There will be time enough for speed later." +<P> +"Yes, and we may need it more when we get into the centre of the earth than +we do now," observed Mark. +<P> +"Why so?" asked Jack. +<P> +"No telling what we may run up against underneath the ground," went on Mark. +"We may have to fight strange animals and stranger beings. Besides, the +atmosphere and water there can't be the same as up here; do you think so, +Professor?" +<P> +For a few minutes the scientist was silent. He seemed to be thinking deeply. +<P> +"I will tell you what I believe," he said at length. "I have never spoken +of it before, but now that we are fairly started and may eventually have +a chance to prove my theory, I will say that I think the centre of this earth +on which we live is hollow. Inside of it, forming a core, so to speak, I +believe there is another earth, similar to ours in some respects which revolves +inside this larger sphere." +<P> +They were well out to sea now, as they could observe when they emerged on +the little deck. Above their heads was the aluminum gas holder, which served +as a sort of protection from the sun that was quite warm. The <I>Mermaid +</I>rode with an easy motion, being submerged just enough to make her steady, +yet not deep enough to encounter much resistance from the water. In fact +it could not have been arranged better for speed or comfort. +<P> +"I think we will sail well to the eastward before making our course south," +Mr. Henderson said. "I do not care to meet too many ships, as those aboard +will be very curious and I do not want too much news of this venture to get +out. We will take an unfrequented route and avoid delays by being hailed +by every passing vessel whose captain will wonder what queer craft he had +met with." +<P> +The boys enjoyed the sail, for the weather could not have been better. Even +old Andy, who seldom said much, seemed delighted with the prospect of having +strange adventures. He had his rifle with him, and, indeed, he seldom went +anywhere that he did not carry it. +<P> +"For there's no telling when you may see something you want to shoot or that +ought to be shot," he used to say, "and it's always the man without a gun +who needs it most. So I'm taking no chances." +<P> +They sailed all that afternoon without meeting with a craft of any kind. +Straight to the east they went, and when night began to settle down Washington +got supper. It was decided to run slowly after dark until all hands were +more familiar with the ship. +<P> +Morning found the <I>Mermaid </I>about a hundred miles from the island where +she had been launched. The night had been uneventful, except that Mark told +Jack he heard some strange noise near his bunk several times. He was nearest +the storeroom where spare parts, and the curious cylinder the professor had +brought aboard, were kept. +<P> +"I guess it was rats," said Jack. "They are always in ships." +<P> +"Old wooden ships, yes," admitted Mark. "But I'll bet there's not a rat aboard +the <I>Mermaid."</I> +<P> +"Then you were dreaming," said Jack, as if that settled it. +<P> +Mark did not speak further of the noise, but he did considerable thinking. +However, the next night there was no further disturbance. +<P> +The fourth day out, when everything had passed off well, the engines doing +their best, the professor decided to speed them up a bit, since he was satisfied +they had "found" themselves as mechanics term it. +<P> +"We'll see how fast we can go through the water," said Mr. Henderson, "and +then I think we can safely turn our course south. We are well beyond the +ordinary lines of travel now." +<P> +Having oiled the bearings well, and seen that everything was in place and +properly adjusted, the professor and the boys took their places in the conning +tower, while Washington, Tom and Bill remained in the engine room. Andy stayed +on deck with his gun. +<P> +"I might see a big fish, and we could vary our bill of fare," he said with +a laugh. +<P> +"Here we go!" exclaimed the professor as he shifted the levers and turned +some wheels and valves. "Now we'll see how fast we can travel." +<P> +As he spoke the <I>Mermaid </I>responded to the added impulse of the compressed +air and shot through the water at a terrific speed. The sudden increase in +momentum almost threw the boys from their feet, and they would have fallen +had they not grasped some projecting levers. +<P> +"I guess that will do," Said the scientist. "I think we have speed enough +for almost any emergency. I'll let her run at this rate for a while, and +then we'll slack up." +<P> +Looking ahead, the boys could see the green waters parting in front of the +bow of the <I>Mermaid, </I>as if to make room for her. Two huge waves were +thrown upon either side. +<P> +Suddenly, dead ahead, there loomed up a big black object. +<P> +"Look out you'll hit the rock!" cried Mark to the professor, who was steering. +<P> +With a turn of his wrist Mr. Henderson moved the wheel which controlled the +tube. It was deflected and sent the boat to larboard. +<P> +At that instant from the rock two small fountains of water rose in the air, +falling back in a shower of spray through which the sun gleamed. +<P> +"That's not a rock! It's a big whale!" cried Jack. "And we're going to hit +him!" +<P> +The professor had miscalculated the speed of the craft, or else had not thrown +her far enough to larboard, for, a second later, the <I>Mermaid </I>was almost +upon the big leviathan. +<P> +With a desperate twirling of the steering wheel the professor veered the +craft as far as possible. But all he could do did not suffice, for the craft +hit the whale a glancing blow on the side, and the ship careened as if she +would turn turtle. +<P> +At the same time there rang out from upon deck the sound of a rifle shot. +Old Andy had taken a chance at the enormous creature of the deep. +<P> +"Hurrah!" the bays heard him shout. "I give him one plumb in the eye! A fine +shot! And we hit him besides with the boat. I guess he's a goner!" +<P> +"I'm afraid not," muttered the professor. "That was a bad blow we struck +him, but I think it will only ruffle his temper. We'll have to look sharp +now, boys." +<P> +By this time the ship had rushed past the whale, but the boys, looking through +a window in the rear of the tower could see the huge body. Now the fountains +of water which the whale spouted were tinged with red. +<P> +"He's bleeding!" exclaimed the professor. "I guess Andy hit him in a vital +spot." +<P> +"But not vital enough!" cried Mark. "See! He's coming after us!" +<P> +And so it proved. The whale, angered, and, probably half crazed by the pain +of the bullet and the blow, was coursing after the ship, coming on with the +speed of an express train. Straight at the <I>Mermaid </I>he lunged his huge +bulk. +<P> +"We must escape him!" cried Mr. Henderson. "If he hits us he'll send us to +the bottom!" +<P> +He had made ready to slow up the <I>Mermaid </I>to see if it had sustained +any damage from the impact with the whale, but when he saw the monster coming +after the boat he knew the only safety lay in flight. +<P> +"Let us go up into the air and so escape him!" cried Jack, with sudden +inspiration. +<P> +For an instant neither Mark nor the professor grasped what Jack meant. Then, +with an exclamation, the professor pulled forward the lever that generated +the gas and set working the gravity neutralizer, which would enable the ship +to rise. +<P> +Faster through the water went the <I>Mermaid, </I>and faster after her came +the whale. Above the hum of the engines was heard the hiss of the powerful +gas. The ship trembled more violently. +<P> +"We are rising!" exclaimed the professor, as he looked at a gage. +<P> +The boys could feel the craft lifting from the waves which clung to her as +if they hated to lose her. The boys knew the gas was beginning to operate. +<P> +"If it is not too late!" whispered Mark, half to himself. +<P> +For the monster of the seas was coming on, lashing the water to foam with +his terrible flukes, and sending aloft a bloody spray. His speed was awful. +<P> +Now he was but ten feet away from the fleeing craft—now but eight—now five! +Ten seconds more and the big head, like the blunt stern of a battle ship, +forced forward by the tons of blubber, flesh, bone and fat behind it would +strike the <I>Mermaid </I>and crush it like an egg shell. +<P> +Now if ever was the need for the <I>Flying Mermaid </I>to prove herself worthy +of the name. Now, if ever, was the time for her to leave the watery element +and take to the lighter one. +<P> +And she did. With a last tremble, as if to free herself from the hold of +the waves, the gallant craft soared up into the air, leaving the water, which +dripped from her keel like a fountain's spray, and shooting aloft like a +bird, escaped her terrible enemy which passed under her, so close that the +lower part of the <I>Flying Mermaid </I>scraped the whale's back. +<P> +"Saved!" exclaimed the professor. +<h3>CHAPTER VI</h3> +<h4>THE CYCLONE</h4> +<P> +IT was only in the nick of time, for a second later and the big mammal of +the ocean would have struck the ship and split it from stem to stern. +<P> +Higher and higher into the air mounted the <I>Flying Mermaid, </I>while in +the water below, the whale, incensed by missing his prey, was lashing the +waves to foam. +<P> +"Well, that was a narrow squeak; as close as I ever care to come to it!" +exclaimed Andy as he let go of the steel rail to which he was clinging and +entered the conning tower. "I had no idea of hitting the big fish." +<P> +"I guess he would have taken after us whether you had fired at him or not," +said Mr. Henderson. "He was probably looking for trouble, and took the first +thing that came in his way, which happened to be us. Some whales are like +that, so I have read; big bull creatures, exiled from the school to which +they once belonged, they get like mad creatures and know neither friend nor +foe. Something like rogue elephants, I imagine." +<P> +Now, having thus unexpectedly risen into the air, the professor decided to +continue travel in that style for a while at least. It would require less +force to propel the ship, and the going would be more comfortable, since +in the upper regions the <I>Mermaid </I>rode on an even keel, while in the +water there was more or less rolling, due to the action of the waves. +<P> +Once recovered from their fright caused by the whale, and having lost sight +of the enormous creature, for they were now far above the ocean, the adventurers +began to think of something to eat. +<P> +Washington lost little time in preparing a meal, and it was eaten with a +relish. The electric cooking stove worked to perfection, for the colored +man had learned how to use that aboard the <I>Porpoise </I>and <I>Monarch, +</I>and could be depended on to turn out appetizing dishes. +<P> +"What do you say to traveling through the air at night?" asked Mr. Henderson, +as he arose from the table. +<P> +"Suits me," replied Mark. "There's less danger than in the water, I think." +<P> +Bill, Tom and Washington arranged to stand the night watch, and, when the +professor had examined the engines and given orders about keeping the ship +on her course through the air, he retired to his bunk. Jack and Mark soon +followed. +<P> +It must have been about midnight when Mark was awakened by a movement that +seemed to come from the storeroom next to where his sleeping place was located. +At first he thought he had been dreaming, but, as he found he was wide awake, +he knew it was no imagination that had affected him. +<P> +"I certainly heard something," he said to himself. "It sounded just as it +did the other night. I wonder if I ought to investigate." +<P> +He thought over the matter carefully as he sat upright in his bunk in the +darkness. True the noise might be a natural one, due to the vibration of +the engine, or to some echo from the machinery. As Mark listened he heard +it again. +<P> +This time he realized it was the slow movement of some heavy body. He felt +a cold shiver run over him and his hair evinced an uncomfortable tendency +to stand upright. But he conquered his feelings and resolved to keep cool +and see if he could discover what had awakened him. +<P> +He got up and moved softly about the little room that contained his bunk. +He could hear better now, and knew it was no echo or vibration that had come +to his ears. +<P> +Once again he heard the strange sound. It was exactly the same as before; +as if some big creature was pulling itself over the floor. +<P> +"Maybe it's a snake; a water snake!" thought Mark. "It may have crawled aboard +when we did not notice it." +<P> +Then he remembered that the ship had not been open in any way that would +enable a serpent to come on it, since it had been started on its ocean trip. +Before that, he was sure no snake had entered the <I>Flying Mermaid. </I>Still +it sounded more like a snake than anything else. +<P> +"I'm going to make a search," decided the boy. +<P> +He took a small portable electric light, run by a storage battery, and, slipping +on a pair of shoes and a bath robe, he left his stateroom. +<P> +He had decided that the noise came from the storage compartment and so made +for that. The door he knew was not locked, since he had seen Mr. Henderson +go in late that afternoon, and the professor had used no key. +<P> +Moving softly, Mark left his room and soon found himself in a corridor, on +either side of which were located the sleeping quarters of the others. He +did not want to awaken them, and, perhaps, be laughed at for his curiosity. +<P> +To get to the storeroom Mark had to go first from the corridor into the dining +room. He soon reached the door that guarded what he thought might be a strange +secret. Trying the knob softly he found it giving under his fingers. +<P> +"I wonder if I had better go in," he thought. "Perhaps, after all, it was +only rats, as Jack said." +<P> +But, even as he listened he again heard the odd sound coming from the room. +This determined him. He would solve the mystery if possible. +<P> +Cautiously he turned the knob. The door was slowly swinging open when Mark +was startled by a noise from behind him. He turned suddenly to see Professor +Henderson confronting him. +<P> +"What is it, Mark? Is the ship on fire? What's the matter? Is any one hurt?" +<P> +"I was just going in this room to——" began Mark. +<P> +"Don't do it! Don't do it!" exclaimed the professor in an excited whisper. +"No one must go in that room. I forgot to tell you and Jack about it. No +one must enter. It contains a secret!" +<P> +"I heard a strange noise and——" Mark began again. +<P> +"It could make no noise! It would be impossible for it to make a noise!" +the professor exclaimed. +<P> +"I heard something," the boy insisted. +<P> +"You were dreaming!" said the professor. "Now go back to bed, Mark, and don't +let this happen again. Remember, no one must enter that room unless I give +permission!" +<P> +Somewhat crestfallen at the outcome of his investigations, but realizing +that the professor could do what he wanted to aboard his own ship, Mark went +back to bed. But he could not sleep. All the rest of the night he was wondering +whether Mr. Henderson had some strange creature hidden aboard the <I>Mermaid. +</I>He feared lest the old scientist's mind might be affected and, in his +wildness he had made some infernal machine that would, in time, blow the +whole ship apart. +<P> +But tired nature asserted itself at last, and, weary with vain imaginings, +Mark fell into a slumber. The next morning he awoke with a start from a dream +that he was being devoured by an immense water snake. +<P> +He said nothing to the others about his night's adventure, for, as it transpired, +no one else had been awakened by his investigations. The professor did not +refer to his conversation with Mark. +<P> +"There's something queer going on aboard the ship this trip," said Mark to +himself. "But I guess it's none of my business. Professor Henderson seems +to know what he is doing and I guess I can trust him." +<P> +He resolved to think no more of the strange noises and movements, and, for +several nights thereafter he was not disturbed by them. +<P> +The weather, which, up to this time had been fair, took a sudden turn for +the worse about the fourth day after Mark's little night expedition. One +evening the sun sank in a mass of dull lead-colored clouds and a sharp wind +sprang up. +<P> +"We're going to have a storm," said Mr. Henderson. "It's liable to be a bad +one, too, from the way the barometer is falling." +<P> +He looked at the glass, and scanned the various instruments that told how +high up the <I>Mermaid </I>was and how fast she was traveling. +<P> +"We're pretty high up in the air," he said, "and scooting along at about +fifty miles an hour. We are going against the wind, too, but fortunately +it is not blowing hard." +<P> +At that moment there sounded from without a peculiar howling sound, as if +a siren whistle was being blown. +<P> +"'Pears like there's goin' t' be a tumultuous demonstration of sub-maxiliary +contortions in th' empherial regions contiguous t' th' upper atmosphere!" +exclaimed Washington, entering from the engine room into the conning tower. +<P> +"What's the trouble?" asked Mr. Henderson. +<P> +"Terrible big black cloud chasin' us from behind!" exclaimed the colored +man. +<P> +Noting the alarm in Washington's voice the professor glanced from the rear +window. What he saw caused him to exclaim: +<P> +"It's a cyclone! We must drop down to avoid it!" +<P> +He sprang to a lever controlling the gas and yanked it toward him. There +was a shrill hissing sound, and a second later the <I>Mermaid </I>began to +sink. The boys watching the gages on the wall of the tower, saw that the +craft was falling rapidly. +<P> +But, with a rush and roar, the terrible wind was upon them. It caught the +craft in its fearful grip and heeled it over as a ship careens to the ocean +blast. +<P> +"It's a storm in the upper regions! We'll find it calm below!" cried the +professor above the howling of the gale. He opened the gas outlet wider and +the ship fell more rapidly. +<P> +"Are you sure we're over the ocean?" asked Mark. +<P> +"Positive!" the professor called back. "We have been traveling straight south +over the Atlantic for the last week. We will land in the midst of the waters +and float safely." +<P> +Lower and lower went the <I>Mermaid. </I>The wind was now blowing with the +force of a tornado, and, as the craft had to slant in order to descend, it +felt the power of the gale more than if it had scudded before it. But, by +skilful use of the directing tube, the professor was able to keep the boat +from turning over. As they came further down toward the earth the force of +the wind was felt less and less, until, as they came within two hundred feet +of the water which they saw below them in the gathering dusk, it died out +altogether. +<P> +"Now we are free from it," said the professor as the <I>Mermaid </I>came +down on the waves like an immense swan. +<P> +"Are you going ahead or going to stop here?" asked Mark +<P> +"We'll keep right on," Mr. Henderson answered. "No telling when the storm +may strike down here. We'll go as far as we can to-night." +<h3>CHAPTER VII</h3> +<h4>A QUEER SAIL</h4> +<P> +NOW that the fear and worriment was over they all began to feel hungry, and, +while Mark and Jack took charge of the conning tower Washington got breakfast. +The professor seemed preoccupied during the meal, and several times, when +Mark spoke to him, he did not reply. +<P> +"I wonder if he is worried about something, or is thinking of something which +seems to be concealed in the storeroom," the boy thought. +<P> +But, after a while, the professor seemed to be more like himself. He was +busy over several maps and charts, and then announced the ship would try +air-sailing again for a while. +<P> +"We can make better time above than we can on the water," he said, "and I +am anxious to get to the mysterious island and learn what is in store for +us." +<P> +Perhaps if the professor had been able to look ahead, and see what was soon +going to happen, he would not have been so anxious for it to occur. +<P> +It was shortly after dinner when, the gas container having been filled, the +ship rose in the air, and began sailing over the ocean, about a mile up. +The day was a fine one, and, as they were moving south, it was constantly +growing warmer. Down on the water, in fact, it was quite hot, but in the +air it was just right. +<P> +Like some immense bird the <I>Mermaid </I>went flying through the air. The +boys and the professor sat upon the deck in easy chairs. It was like being +on the top of some tall "sky-scraper" building which, by some strange power, +was being moved forward. Below them the ocean tumbled in long, lazy swells. +<P> +Suddenly Mark, who was looking through a telescope at the expanse of water +stretched out under them, gave a cry. +<P> +"There's a ship! She's on fire!" +<P> +"Where?" asked the professor, stretching out his hand for the glass. +<P> +"Just to the port of the forward tube. See the smoke!" exclaimed Mark. +<P> +Mr. Henderson looked. Through the lens he saw a column of black vapor rising +skyward. Mingled with it were red flames. +<P> +"Lower the <I>Mermaid!" </I>he cried. "We must save those on board if we +can!" +<P> +Mark ran to the conning tower, where Washington was, to give the order. The +colored man, who was looking ahead, intent on guiding the ship, did not at +first hear what Mark called. +<P> +"Lower us! Send the <I>Mermaid </I>down!" Mark cried again. +<P> +The sudden shout, and the excited voice of Mark so startled Washington, that, +fearing some accident had happened, he pulled the lever, controlling the +gas supply, with more force than necessary. +<P> +There was a loud explosion, followed by a crackling sound, a flash of light, +and the <I>Mermaid </I>came to a sudden stop. +<P> +"What's the matter?" cried Mark, feeling that something was wrong. +<P> +"I don't know!" Washington replied, as he dashed toward the engine room. +<P> +The <I>Mermaid, </I>her forward flight checked, hung in the air, suspended, +neither rising or falling. +<P> +"Why don't we go on down?" the professor asked, hurrying to the tower. +<P> +"There has been an explosion—an accident!" exclaimed Mark. "I guess we can't +go down!" +<P> +"But we must!" Mr. Henderson insisted, seizing the lever which should have +produced a downward motion. The handle swung to and fro. It was disconnected +from the apparatus it operated. +<P> +The ship was now stationary in the air, moving neither forward nor backward, +neither rising nor falling. Washington had stopped the air pumps as soon +as he learned something was wrong. +<P> +When Mr. Henderson saw the useless lever, which had controlled the outlet +of gas from the holder, he ran out on deck. One glance told him what had +happened. One of the electric wires had become short-circuited,—that is, +the insulation had worn off and allowed the current to escape. This had produced +a spark, which had exploded the gas which was in the pipe leading from the +generator up into the aluminum holder. Fortunately there was an automatic +cut-off for the supply of vapor, or the whole tank would have gone up. +<P> +As it was, only a small quantity had blown up, but this was enough to break +the machinery at the point where the lever in the conning tower joined the +pipe. If it had not been for the automatic cut-off all the gas in the holder +would have poured out in a great volume, and the ship would have fallen like +a shot. +<P> +"Can we do nothing to save those on the burning vessel?" asked Mark, pointing +to where a cloud of smoke hung over the ocean. +<P> +"I fear not, now," answered the professor. "We are in a bad plight ourselves." +<P> +"Are we in any danger?" asked Jack. +<P> +"Not specially," Mr. Henderson replied. "But we must find a means of lowering +ourselves gradually." +<P> +"Then it will be too late to save any of those on the ship," observed Mark. +<P> +"I'm afraid so," the scientist made reply. +<P> +The <I>Mermaid </I>rested some distance above the surface of the waters. +She moved slightly to and fro with the wind, and rocked gently. The professor +was examining the broken machinery. +<P> +"I have a plan!" suddenly cried Mark. +<P> +"What is it?" asked Mr. Henderson. +<P> +"Can't we bore a hole in the tank, insert a small faucet or tap, and let +the gas out that way gradually?" asked the boy. "When we get down we can +rescue those in danger of fire, and, later, can repair the break." +<P> +"The very thing!" exclaimed Mr. Henderson. "I never thought of that! Here, +Washington! Bring me a drill, and a small stop-cock!" +<P> +The drill was obtained from the engine room. Working rapidly Mr. Henderson +bored a hole in the lower part of the holder. As soon as the metal was penetrated +the gas, which was under considerable pressure, rushed from the tank with +a hissing sound. At once the <I>Mermaid </I>began to settle rapidly. +<P> +But the professor was prepared for this. He thrust the end of the stop-cock +into the hole. It was screwed fast and the valve turned. This stopped the +flow of gas and checked the descent of the ship. Then, by opening the tap +the vapor was allowed to escape gradually, bringing the <I>Flying Mermaid +</I>gently to the water. +<P> +As the adventurers approached they could see that the vessel was now a mass +of flames. The wind was driving the fire toward the forecastle, and the crew +had sought refuge aft. But this expedient could not last long, for, already +the tongues of fire were licking the sides of the craft and coming nearer +and nearer the seemingly doomed men. The vessel was a large one, and heavily +laden. +<P> +As those in peril caught sight of the <I>Mermaid </I>settling down into the +water, apparently from the clouds, their fears gave place to astonishment. +So great was this that they ceased their cries of terror. Then, as they saw +that the strange craft navigated the ocean, for the engines were started +aboard the <I>Mermaid, </I>they began to call for help. +<h3>CHAPTER VIII</h3> +<h4>THE FLYING MERMAID DISABLED</h4> +<P> +"WE'LL save you!" shouted Mr. Henderson, who was on the deck, while Mark +was steering the craft. "Hold on a few minutes longer and we'll be alongside!" +<P> +"They're real! They're real!" some of those aboard the burning ship could +be heard to shout. Evidently more than one of them had taken the <I>Mermaid +</I>for a delusion of their fear-crazed brain. +<P> +"They are real persons!" they called again and again. "They are coming to +save us!" +<P> +Mr. Henderson ran his ship as near the burning craft as he dared. Then he +called to the crew to leap into the water and swim to him. He, with Washington, +Jack, Bill and Tom, stood ready to haul aboard any who were too weak to help +themselves. +<P> +In a few minutes all of those left alive on the sailing vessel—fourteen +in all—had come safely aboard the <I>Mermaid. </I>The ship was now completely +enveloped in flames. +<P> +"Are there any more left on her?" asked Mr. Henderson of one who appeared +to be a mate of the burning craft. +<P> +"Not a soul!" was the answer. "The captain and ten men perished in the flames. +The fire broke out a week ago in the lower hold. We fought it as well as +we could but it got the best of us. Then it suddenly broke through the decks, +almost like an explosion, a little while ago, and the captain and others +were lost, and so were our small boats. We managed to get aft but were about +to give up when you appeared." +<P> +"What ship is it and where are you from?" +<P> +"The <I>Good Hope, </I>laden with logwood, hides, jute and other materials +from South America," the mate answered. "We were bound for New York." +<P> +"It is more like the <I>Last Hope </I>instead of the <I>Good Hope," +</I>observed Mr. Henderson in a quiet voice, as he saw the flames mount higher +and higher over the ship. A few seconds later the craft seemed rent by an +internal explosion. It appeared to break in two parts, and, amid a shower +of sparks and a cloud of black smoke, the vessel sank under the water and +was seen no more. +<P> +The rescued men turned to behold the final end of their ship. They betrayed +no particular emotion, and some of them even laughed, which the professor +thought, at the time, was rather strange. But there was little opportunity +for speculation. The men were in a sad plight. Few of them had more than +the clothes they stood in, though each one wore about his waist a belt, and +all of them seemed to guard the leather circlets jealously. +<P> +The professor and his crew were soon busy supplying remedies for burns, since +several of the men were seared by the flames. Then, as it was learned they +had eaten nothing for many hours, it having been impossible to use the galley, +a meal was prepared and the survivors of the wreck were well fed. +<P> +The hunger of the newcomers having been appeased, they showed much curiosity +over the strange craft that had so opportunely come to their rescue. Most +of the sailors were ignorant men, and the professor had little fear of them +learning anything concerning his secrets. He explained briefly about the +<I>Mermaid, </I>but said nothing of whither she was bound. +<P> +The addition of fourteen men to the rather small accommodations of the +<I>Mermaid </I>was a serious matter to consider. The ship was able to hold +them all, and even to sail through the air with them, since Mr. Henderson +had provided an excess of power. But it was going to be a problem to feed +so many, and still save enough provisions, for the long voyage which lay +ahead. +<P> +However, Mr. Henderson felt his first duty to be toward his fellowmen, even +if his voyage must be delayed, or given up for a time, while he got more +provisions. There would be no sleeping quarters for the sailors, but when +this was explained to them they cheerfully said they would sleep on deck +if necessary. In fact some of them had to, but as the weather was warm and +clear this was no hardship. A few found quarters in the engine room and other +apartments of the <I>Mermaid.</I> +<P> +Finding, after an examination, that his ship was in good order save for the +broken gas apparatus, Mr. Henderson gave orders to proceed along the surface +of the ocean. The sailors wanted to see how it felt to mount into the air, +but Mr. Henderson, refused to attempt a flight until he had made complete +repairs, and this would take a day or more. +<P> +At this there appeared to be some discontent among the survivors, and they +muttered to each other as they stood in a group on deck. But the professor +and his assistants were too busy with their preparations for fixing the break +to notice this. +<P> +While the men were gathered in a knot near the after part of the small deck, +the mate separated from them, and, coming close to where Mark was standing, +unscrewing some of the broken parts of the pipe said, in a low voice. +<P> +"Tell the captain to watch out." +<P> +"What do you mean?" asked Mark quickly. +<P> +"Hush! Not so loud!" the mate exclaimed. "If the men hear me talking to you, +or see me, they may kill me. Tell the captain to look out; that's all. Be +on guard, and watch the engine room carefully." +<P> +"But why—?" Mark began, when, turning suddenly, the mate left him. It was +well he did so, for, at that instant, one of the sailors, who had observed +the two conversing, strolled in their direction. +<P> +Much alarmed, Mark sought Mr. Henderson and told him what he had heard. +<P> +"I suppose the fire may have turned the poor man's head," the scientist said. +"I wonder if he thinks the men I rescued would mutiny and take possession +of my ship? If they did they would not know how to work it, so what good +would it do?" +<P> +"Hadn't we better look out?" asked Mark. +<P> +"I'm not afraid," replied the professor. "I will be too busy the next few +days, repairing the break, to think of anything else. Besides, what would +they want to harm us for? Didn't we save their lives?" +<P> +Seeing the scientist placed no faith in what the mate had said, Mark went +back to his task. +<P> +It soon became too dark to work, and it was decided, after supper, to halt +the ship until morning as it would be less risky. +<P> +Mark did not sleep well, his dreams being disturbed by visions of pirates +and black flags. But morning came and nothing had developed. The men seemed +to recover their spirits with daybreak, and mast of the crew, after breakfast, +greeted Mr. Henderson pleasantly, and asked to be allowed to help fix the +ship. +<P> +It took the skilled labor of the professor, Washington and the boys to mend +the break, and, even at that, it was four days in the repairing. But at last +the final bolt was in place, and the <I>Mermaid </I>was able to resume her +trips through the air. +<P> +"We will rise the first thing in the morning," said the professor to Mark +and Jack that night. "I am anxious to see how the ship behaves with a big +load aboard." +<h3>CHAPTER IX</h3> +<h4>THE MUTINY</h4> +<P> +MARK was awakened that night by feeling some one trying to turn him over. +At first he thought it was Jack, and sleepily muttered that he wanted to +be let alone. +<P> +"Sorry I can't oblige ye, my hearty!" exclaimed a rough voice in his ear, +"but I got particular orders t' tie you up!" +<P> +At that Mark tried to sit up, but he found he could not. He discovered that +he was closely bound with many turns of a rope, while in front of his bunk +stood one of the rescued sailors. +<P> +"There," said the man, with a final tightening of the ropes. "I guess you're +safe." +<P> +"What's the matter? What does it all mean?" asked Mark, much bewildered. +<P> +"It means that we have possession of the ship," the sailor answered, "and, +if you're wise you'll not make a fuss. It wouldn't do any good, anyhow, as +all your friends are in the same condition." +<P> +Then, picking Mark up, as if he was a baby, the man slung him over his shoulder +and carried him to the living room. There Mark saw Jack, the professor, +Washington, and the others similarly bound. +<P> +"Do you realize what you are doing?" asked the professor angrily of his captors. +"You are mutinying, and are liable to severe punishment." +<P> +"If they ever get us," added one of the men. "We've got the ship now, and +we mean to keep her. You'll have to run her or show us how." +<P> +"Never!" cried the professor. +<P> +"I guess he will when he feels this," said one of the men, as he dragged +from a recess two wires. "I happen to know something of electricity, and +when he feels these perhaps he'll change his mind. I'll start the dynamo." +<P> +The sailor showed that he was acquainted with machinery, for soon the hum +of the electric apparatus was heard. +<P> +"Now to make him tell!" the man with the wires exclaimed, advancing toward +the professor, who turned pale. +<P> +"Stop! You must not torture the old man!" cried a voice, and the mate of +the <I>Good Hope </I>stepped in front of the sailor with the electrified +wires. +<P> +"Who's going to stop me?" asked the man. +<P> +"I will. It's not necessary," the mate went on quickly. "If we make him weak +we may kill him, and he can not tell us what we want to know. One of the +boys can tell us how to run the ship." +<P> +The mate came quickly over to where Mark lay, and whispered: +<P> +"Consent to tell. It is the only way of saving his life. Tell 'em how to +raise the craft. Then leave all to me. I will save you all and the ship, +too, if I can. But consent." +<P> +Mark nodded his head, and the mate cried: +<P> +"I knew I could fetch 'em. I have hypnotic power. This boy will raise the +ship for us. Loosen his bonds, some of you." +<P> +Satisfied that they were now on the way to experiencing a new sensation, +the sailors took the ropes off Mark's arms and legs, and he was allowed to +rise. With a reassuring nod toward the professor he led the way to the engine +room, followed by half the men. He resolved to start the gas machine slowly, +so as to make the upward trip last longer, thinking before it had gone far, +some way of escape from the mutineers might be found. +<P> +While a crowd of the sailors stood near him, Mark operated the machinery +in the engine room that started the gas generating, and set the negative +gravity apparatus working. +<P> +"You'd better not try any tricks on us," said one of the men in an ugly tone +of voice. +<P> +"I'm not going to," replied Mark. "If you go out on deck you will soon see +the ship leaving the water and mounting into the air." +<P> +"Some of you go," ordered a man with a big bushy red beard. "See if the ship +rises. When she begins to go up sing out. I'm going to stay here and see +how the young cub does it so I can work it myself." +<P> +Obeying the red-bearded man, who seemed to be a leader, several of the sailors +went out on the deck. It was quite dark, but there was a phosphorous glow +to the water which made the rolling waves visible. +<P> +The gas was being generated, as could be told by the hissing sound. Mark +watched the machinery anxiously, for he knew much depended on him, and the +professor was not at hand to guide and instruct him. He watched the dial +of the gage which registered the gas pressure and saw it slowly moving. In +a little while it would be at the point at which the ship ought to rise. +<P> +Presently a quiver seemed to run through the <I>Mermaid. </I>Now a shout +came from the watchers on deck. +<P> +"She's going up!" +<P> +The ship was indeed rising. The red-bearded man, who was addressed as Tony, +ran from the engine room to the deck. He saw that the ship was now ten feet +above the water. Back he came to where Mark stood by the gas machine. +<P> +"Lucky for you that you didn't fool us, lad," he said with a leer. "See that +you mind me hereafter. Now show me how the shebang works." +<P> +When the ship had risen as far as Tony desired he made Mark send it straight +ahead. The boy adjusted the air tube to carry the craft toward the south, +but Tony, seeing by a compass in which direction they were headed, ordered +Mark to steer due east. +<P> +"Fix things so they will stay so, too," added Tony. "I don't want to stop +until I get a thousand miles away. Then we'll come down, sail to some sunny +island, and enjoy life." +<P> +Mark locked the steering apparatus so as to keep the <I>Mermaid </I>headed +due east. +<P> +"Now you can go back to your friends," Tony said. "When I want you I'll send +for you." +<P> +With a heavy heart Mark rejoined the professor and others. He found them +with their bonds removed. But to guard against their escape several men were +on watch outside the door. +<P> +"What are they doing?" asked the professor eagerly as Mark entered, and the +boy told him what had taken place. +<P> +"They will ruin my ship and spoil the whole trip," cried the old scientist. +"Oh, why did I ever go to the rescue of the scoundrels?" +<P> +"Never mind," said Jack. "Perhaps we may yet outwit them." +<P> +Morning came at last. The ship was still shooting forward at fast speed, +in an easterly direction. The sailors had learned, in their short stay aboard, +where the food and stores were kept, and they lost little time in getting +breakfast. They sent same in to their captives, including a big pot of hot +coffee, and, after partaking of this the professor and his friends felt better. +<P> +The mate of the <I>Good Hope </I>came in to help clear away the dishes. As +he passed Mark he slipped into the boy's hand a note. +<P> +"Don't read it until you are alone," he said in a low voice, as he hurried +from the room. +<P> +As soon as the other sailors had left, Mark glanced at the slip of paper. +It bore these words: + +<BLOCKQUOTE> + "Open when you hear three raps, then two, then three, and keep silent." +</BLOCKQUOTE> +<P> +"What is it?" asked Mr. Henderson. +<P> +Mark showed him the paper. +<P> +"I wonder what it means," the boy said. +<P> +"Do you think he is a friend of ours?" the professor asked. +<P> +Mark told him of the mate's conversation the night previous. +<P> +"I think we can trust him," the scientist went on. "He must intend to pay +us a visit when the others are asleep. When we hear the knocks as he specifies +we must open the door and let him in." +<P> +All that day the captives were kept in the living room. Once or twice Mark +was sent for to make some adjustment to the machinery, but the apparatus, +for the most part, was automatic, and needed little attention. The professor, +as well as the others, were all impatience for the promised visit of the +mate. Still they felt he would not come until night. +<P> +In fact it was long past midnight before Mark, Jack and the professor, who +were anxiously listening, heard the three raps, then two, then three more. +Mark quickly opened the door, and the mate stepped inside, holding his finger +to his lips as a sign of caution. Old Andy, Washington, Bill and Tom had +fallen asleep. +<P> +"I have only time for a few words," the mate said. "I am closely watched. +Tony mistrusts me. I will save you if I can." +<P> +"Why have they repaid my kindness with such actions?" asked Mr. Henderson. +<P> +"Because they are desperate men," replied the mate. "They are nothing more +than pirates. They mutinied on the other ship, killed the captain and those +of the crew who would not join them, and started off to seek their fortunes. +I pretended to join them to save my life, but I have only been watching for +a chance to escape. +<P> +"Because of lax discipline the ship was sent on fire. We tried to put it +out but could not. The rest you know." +<P> +"I heard them plan to capture this airship, but could do nothing to stop +them. Then I resolved to pretend to act with them. They fear pursuit for +their other mutiny, and are anxious to get as far away as possible." +<P> +"Do you think they will abandon the ship in a little while?" asked the professor +hopefully. +<P> +"I'm afraid not," answered the mate. "I think they want to get rid of all +of you, so they can sail about as they please. Tony is a smart man. He could +soon learn to run this ship, he thinks." +<P> +"I doubt it," Mr. Henderson answered. "But how are you going to help us?" +<P> +"I have not fully made up my plans," the mate answered. "However I wanted +you to know I would do my best to save you. Now I must go. Be on the watch +and when I can I will let you know what I have decided on. I will hand Mark +a note when I bring your meals, just as I did to-day. I think——" +<P> +"Hark! What was that?" asked the professor. +<P> +There was a noise outside the door, as if some one was listening. +<P> +"Put out the lights!" whispered the mate, and Jack switched off the electric +incandescents. +<P> +A knock sounded on the door and the voice of Tony called: +<P> +"Mark! Come here! I want you to look at the gas machine. It has stopped working, +and we are falling!" +<h3>CHAPTER X</h3> +<h4>FOOLING THEIR ENEMIES</h4> +<P> +MARK hurried into the corridor, taking care to close the door after him, +so Tony could get no glimpse of the mate who had risked so much to save his +friends. But he need not have been alarmed for the leader of the mutineers +was too excited over the stopping of the gas apparatus to give any heed to +who was in with the captives. +<P> +"Do you think you can fix it?" he asked the boy. +<P> +"I guess so," Mark replied confidently. "If I can't there is no danger, for +we will fall gradually and land in the water." +<P> +"But I don't want to do that," Tony objected. "I want to keep on through +the air." +<P> +Mark did not reply. By this time he was at the gas machine. He soon saw nothing +was the matter save that new material must be placed in the retort where +the vapor was generated. He refilled it, the gas was manufactured once more, +and the ship began to rise. +<P> +"I will know how to do it next time," Tony said with a grin. Mark realized +that every time he showed the leader of the mutineers something about the +ship it was putting the professor and his friends more and more into the +power of the scoundrels. But there was no help for it. +<P> +The ship was still plunging ahead, and kept about a mile above the earth. +As there was no further need of Mark, he was told he could go back to his +friends. When he reached the room where they were held prisoners, he found +the mate had gone away, promising again to do all he could for them. +<P> +The next night, which it seemed would never come, for the day, locked as +the captives were in their room, seemed endless, finally closed in. Mark, +Jack and the professor were anxious to know whether the mate would pay them +another visit. As for Andy, Tom and Bill, while they were interested in the +ship, and wanted to be free from the power of the mutineers, they did not +lose any sleep over it. +<P> +Shortly after midnight, there came again the peculiar knock, and the mate +entered the room. He seemed much excited over something, and, as soon as +the portal was securely closed he said to Professor Henderson: +<P> +"Is there an island any where near here where men could live for a time?" +<P> +"What do you mean?" asked the scientist. "Do you want us to desert the ship +and leave these scoundrels in charge?" +<P> +"Nothing of the sort," replied the mate, who, had said his name was Jack +Rodgers. "But first answer my question. A great deal may depend on it." +<P> +Seeing Rodgers was in earnest, the professor looked over some maps and charts, +and announced that they were within a few hundred miles of a group of islands. +<P> +"When would we reach them?" was Rodgers's next question. +<P> +Mr. Henderson made a few rapid calculations on a piece of paper. +<P> +"At the present rate of sailing," he said, "we should be there about ten +o'clock to-morrow. That is, provided the ship does not slacken speed or increase +it." +<P> +"There is no danger of either of those two things happening," said the mate. +"Tony is too afraid of the machinery to do anything to it. So you may safely +figure that our speed will continue the same." +<P> +"Then I can guarantee, with all reasonable certainty," the professor said, +"that about ten o'clock to-morrow we will be less than a mile from the islands. +They are a group where friendly natives live, and where many tropical fruits +abound. One could scarcely select a better place to be shipwrecked. But I +hope the plans of Tony and his friends do not include landing us there." +<P> +"No, nothing like that," the mate answered. "Quite the contrary. But I had +better be going. I will try and see Mark some time to-morrow. Tony does not +mind when I speak to him." +<P> +With this Rodgers left the captives, as he heard some of the sailors moving +about and did not want to be discovered. The professor and the boys wondered +what the mate's plan might be, but they had to be content to wait and see. +<P> +The night passed without incident. About nine o'clock the next morning the +mate came to the door of the room where the professor and his friends were +prisoners. He made no secret of his approach, but knocked boldly. +<P> +"Tell Mark I want to see him," he said, as the professor answered. "All of +you keep quiet," he added in a whisper. "There may be good news soon." +<P> +Mark slipped from the room. He followed the mate to the upper deck which, +at that time was deserted as all the sailors were in the dining room eating, +which practice they indulged in as often as they could. +<P> +"I have a plan to get rid of these rough men," the mate said to Mark. "It +may work, and, again it may not. At any rate it is worth trying, It all depends +on you with what help I can give you." +<P> +"I'm willing to do my share," Mark said, and for the next ten minutes the +boy and the mate were in earnest conversation. +<P> +It was about thirty-five minutes later when there arose a sudden commotion +in the ship. Mark had returned to his friends and the mate had disappeared. +The confusion seemed to come from the engine room where Tony had posted some +of his men. +<P> +"We're falling down! We'll all be killed!" shouted the men. "The ship is +falling into the sea!" +<P> +"What is the trouble?" asked the professor as he heard the commotion. +<P> +"It is part of the mate's plan," said Mark. "He told me to tell you to do +nothing. If Tony or any of the other men come to you just refer them to me." +<P> +Two minutes later Tony came rushing into the apartment where the captives +were held prisoners. +<P> +"Here! Come quickly, Mark!" he exclaimed. "Something has gone wrong with +the gas machine again, and you must come and fix it before we are all dashed +to pieces!" +<P> +With every appearance of haste Mark rushed from the apartment, following +Tony. The latter led the way to the engine room. +<P> +"Can anything be done?" he asked. +<P> +Mark took a survey of the machinery. +<P> +"It is too late," he said as though much excited. "The ship is falling down +toward the sea with terrific force." +<P> +It needed but a glance at the height gage to show this. The pointer was revolving +rapidly about the face of the dial. +<P> +"Will the ship stand the blow?" asked Tony. +<P> +"Not at the rate it is falling," replied Mark. "She will go all to pieces +when she strikes the water, and she may explode!" +<P> +"What are we to do then?" asked the leader of the mutineers. +<P> +"We must save ourselves!" cried the mate, running in at this juncture. "Let +our prisoners shift for themselves as best they can. Let's all leap into +the sea. There we at least have a chance for our lives. But if we stay on +this ship we will all be drowned like cats in a bag." +<P> +"What do you propose?" asked Tony, his face white with fear. +<P> +"When the ship comes near enough the surface of the water to make it safe +we should all drop overboard!" the mate exclaimed. "We are near some islands, +I understand, and we can thus save our lives by swimming ashore." +<P> +This plan seemed to meet with instant favor, and a little later there was +a rush for the deck, as each one wished to be the first to escape from the +boat they believed to be doomed. +<P> +Lower and lower fell the <I>Mermaid. </I>She was like a wounded bird which +the shot of the hunter has crippled. Down and down she fluttered. +<P> +By this time all the sailors, save the mate were on deck. He and Mark remained +in the engine room. +<P> +"Don't let her get too low," the mate whispered. +<P> +"I'll watch out," Mark replied. "I want to give them a good scare while I'm +at it." +<P> +The ship was now within fifty feet of the water. There was a cry of terror +from the sailors. Some of them leaped over the rail and started to swim ashore, +as the ship was by this time close to a group of islands. +<P> +Suddenly, from the engine room the mate rushed. +<P> +"Jump! Jump for your lives!" he exclaimed. "The ship is about to blow up!" +<h3>CHAPTER XI</h3> +<h4>MYSTERIOUS HAPPENINGS</h4> +<P> +THE voice of the mate echoed through the <I>Mermaid. </I>Those on deck heard +it, as did Tony in the engine room, where he was vainly trying to understand +the complicated machinery. +<P> +An instant later there sounded from beneath the ship a series of splashes. +More sailors were leaping from the deck of the craft to the ocean. The distance +was not great, particularly as they all landed in water. +<P> +"Quick!" cried the mate to a group of sailors that hesitated before taking +the jump. "The ship may blow up any minute now." +<P> +The men needed no second urging. As soon as they struck the water they began +to swim ashore, as it was not far away. One after another they jumped over +the rail. Tony was the last to go. He urged the captives to follow him, but +they all refused. +<P> +A minute later the only one of the pirate crew left on the ship was the mate. +The others were all struggling in the sea. Eventually they all reached shore +in safety. +<P> +The airship was now within about twenty feet of the water. It was still falling +but not so rapidly. +<P> +"Better send her up, now," said the mate to Mark, and the boy turned the +necessary levers to accomplish this. +<P> +Dipping into the water as a sea gull does when searching for food on the +wing, for she had come quite low, the <I>Mermaid </I>mounted once more into +the air, and was soon sailing along over the heads of Tony and his gang. +<P> +"What's it all about?" asked Mr. Henderson, who seemed in a sort of stupor. +"I thought the ship was broken. How, then, can it rise?" +<P> +"It was only a trick of mine," Rodgers said. "The gas machine is not broken. +I had Mark fix it so that only a little vapor would be generated. When the +supply in the holder was not enough, and no more was being made, the ship +had to sink. Mark and I pretended it was worse than it really was just to +scare the scoundrels." +<P> +"And you evidently succeeded," observed Mr. Henderson. "They have all left +us. I am glad you stayed." +<P> +"So am I," said Rodgers. "I was just waiting for a chance to escape from +that crowd. This was the plan I thought of that night. I wanted to see the +men put on some island where they could manage to live, and which was not +too far away." +<P> +The <I>Mermaid </I>was now mounting upward rapidly, as Mark had adjusted +the machinery properly. The craft was well rid of the pirate crew, and was +able to proceed on its way, and enable Mr. Henderson to carry out his plans. +<P> +When the <I>Mermaid </I>had reached a certain height her prow was turned +the other way, and she was sent back racing over the ground she had just +covered. But now the ship was in the hands of friends. Fortunately no great +damage had been done by the sailors, and the professor was soon able to get +things in ship-shape. The engines had not been molested and were working +better than ever. +<P> +"Now to make another attempt to reach the big hole in the earth," the professor +cried. "We will be careful next time, who we rescue from ships at sea." +<P> +The island was soon left behind, becoming a mere speck on the ocean. Those +aboard the <I>Mermaid </I>knew no harm could befall the sailors, as there +were no savage tribes on the little spot of land. Eventually the sailors +were picked up by a passing vessel and taken to their homes. The story of +their first mutiny leaked out and they were properly punished. +<P> +It required several days travel before the airship regained the distance +she had lost because of the plans of the pirates. Also, there were a number +of minor repairs to make, and the professor and his friends were kept busy. +<P> +"How much longer before we come to the big hole?" asked Jack, one day. +<P> +"I think we ought to be near it in about two weeks," the professor replied. +"I only hope we shall not be disappointed, and will be able to explore it." +<P> +"'Tain't goin' t' be no fun t' be decimated an' expurgitated inter a conglomerous +aggregation of elements constituting th' exterior portion of human anatomy," +said Washington in dubious tones. +<P> +"You mean you're afraid of being boiled in the steam from the big hole?" +asked Mark. +<P> +"Jest so," replied the colored man. +<P> +"You don't need to worry about that," put in the professor. "I will not take +the ship down if there is any danger, though of course there will be some +risk." +<P> +The ship, having been fully repaired, was now able to be speeded up, and +was sent scudding along toward her destination. Rodgers proved a valuable +acquisition toward the crew, for he had sailed many years in the waters over +which they were flying, and was able to give the professor many valuable +hints. He had heard vague stories of the island with the big hole, but had +never been near it. He did not make the trip however, as, at his request, +he was put off at an inhabited island one night. +<P> +It was about a week after the sailors were frightened from the ship, that +a curious experience befell Mark. Washington was on duty in the conning tower, +attending to the apparatus as the ship flew through the air, and all the +others had gone to bed. Mark had remained up, later than the others as he +was interested in reading a book on science. +<P> +About ten o'clock he became hungry, and going to the pantry got some bread +and cold meat. He set these on a table, and then, remembering he would need +some water to drink, started after some in the cooler, which was in a little +room near the tower. +<P> +Washington heard the boy as he turned the faucet to draw the liquid, and +spoke to him, as the colored man was rather lonesome at his post. Mark did +not linger more than a minute or two, but when he returned to where he had +left the food he was much surprised. +<P> +There was not a trace of it to be seen. The dishes were on the table, but +every vestige of bread and meat had disappeared. +<P> +"I wonder if a cat or dog has been here," was Mark's first thought. Then +he remembered that no such animals were aboard the <I>Mermaid.</I> +<P> +Something on the floor caught his eye. He stooped and picked it up. It was +a slice of bread, but in such shape that the boy stared at it, puzzled as +to how it could have become so. +<P> +It was flattened out quite thin, but the strangest part of it was that it +bore what seemed to be the marks of thumb and fingers from a very large hand. +So big, in fact, was the print, that Mark's hand scarce covered half of it, +and, where the bread had been squeezed into a putty like mass (for it was +quite fresh) the peculiar markings on the skin of the tips of the fingers +were visible. +<P> +"It looks as if a giant grabbed this slice of bread," Mark observed. "There +are strange happenings aboard this ship. I wish I knew what they meant." +<P> +He looked all around for the food, thinking perhaps a rat had dragged it +off, but there was no trace of it. +<P> +Suddenly the boy thought he heard a sound from the big storeroom. He was +almost sure he heard something moving in there. He started toward the door +when he was stopped by hearing the professor's voice call: +<P> +"Don't open that door, Mark. Have I not told you that place must not be entered?" +<P> +"I thought I heard some one in there," Mark replied. +<P> +"There is nothing in there but some apparatus of mine," Mr. Henderson said. +"I want no one to see it. What is the matter?" +<P> +Mark explained matters to the scientist, who had, as he said later, arisen +on hearing the boy, moving about. +<P> +"Oh, it was a rat that took your stuff," Mr. Henderson said. "I guess there +are some pretty big ones on the ship. Get some more food and go to sleep." +<P> +Mark felt it best to obey, though he was by no means satisfied with the +professor's explanation. He listened intently to see if any more noises came +from the storeroom, but none did, and he went to bed. +<P> +Several times after that Mark tried the experiment of leaving food about. +On each occasion it was taken. +<P> +"It looks as if the ship was haunted," he said. "Of course I know it isn't, +but it's very queer. They must be strange rats that can get food from shelves +when there is only the smooth side of the ship to climb up," for on some +occasions Mark had tried the experiment of putting the food as nearly out +of reach as possible. +<P> +It took several nights to learn all this, and, as he did not want to take +any one into his confidence, he had to work in secret. But, with all his +efforts he learned nothing, save that there was something odd about the ship +that he could not fathom. +<P> +At first he believed the professor had some strange animal concealed in the +storeroom, but he dismissed this idea almost as soon as he thought of it. +For what could the scientist want with an animal when they were going to +the interior of the earth? That some beast had slipped aboard was out of +the question. Mark was much puzzled, but finally, deciding the matter did +not concern him a great deal, gave up trying to solve the mystery, at least +for a time. +<P> +The ship was now in the neighborhood of the equator and the climate had become +much warmer. So hot indeed were some nights that they slept out on deck, +with the <I>Mermaid </I>flying through the air at a moderate pace, for it +was deemed best not to go at any great speed after dark. +<P> +One night the professor, after consulting various charts and maps, and making +calculations which covered several sheets of paper announced: +<P> +"We should sight the mysterious island to-morrow." +<P> +"That's good news!" exclaimed Jack. "I'm anxious to see what's below inside +of that big hole." +<P> +"Everybody git ready for their funerals!" exclaimed Washington in a deep +voice. "I ain't got many——" +<P> +"Cheer up," interrupted Jack, poking Washington in the ribs. The colored +man was very ticklish, and he began to laugh heartily, though, perhaps, he +did not feel like it. +<P> +Suddenly, above the sound of his shouts, there came a crashing, grinding +noise from the engine room. +<h3>CHAPTER XII</h3> +<h4>THE BIG HOLE</h4> +<P> +"SOMETHING has gone wrong!" exclaimed the professor as he jumped up. He reached +the engine room ahead of any one else, and when the two boys got there they +found him busy twisting wheels and shifting levers. +<P> +"Anything serious?" asked Jack. +<P> +"It's the gas machine again," Mr. Henderson replied. "It broke where we fixed +it. However it doesn't matter. I was going to lower the ship anyhow, as I +want to approach the island from the water. We will go down a little sooner +than I counted on." +<P> +The disabling of the gas machine caused the vapor to escape slowly from the +tank, and this made the ship sink gradually. By means of the emergency stop-cock +the descent could be controlled almost as well as though the machinery was +in working order. Half an hour later the <I>Mermaid </I>rested on the water. +<P> +It was a little rough, as there was quite a swell on, and not so pleasant +as floating in the air on an even keel, but they made the best of it. +<P> +On account of the little accident, and not being certain of its extent, it +was deemed best not to send the ship ahead. So they laid to until morning. +<P> +For the better part of two days all those on board the <I>Mermaid </I>had +their hands full mending the break and making other repairs found necessary. +In that time they lay to, floating idly with the currents, or blown by the +wind, for the professor would not start any of the engines or apparatus until +the ship was in good condition. +<P> +In this time Mark had several times recalled the curious happenings in regard +to the disappearing food, and the mystery of the storeroom. But there were +no further manifestations, and no other signs that there might be a strange +visitor aboard. +<P> +"I couldn't have imagined it all," said Mark, "but I guess what did happen +may have been caused by natural means, only I can't discover them." +<P> +It was about two days after this, the ship having sailed scores of miles +on the surface of the water, that Mark, who was in the conning tower exclaimed: +<P> +"That looks like a waterspout ahead of us." +<P> +"That's what it is!" Jack agreed. "What shall we do?" +<P> +"Call the professor!" said Mark. "He'll know." +<P> +When Mr. Henderson came, he looked for a long time at a cloud of black vapor +which hung low in the east. +<P> +"It may be a waterspout," he said. "We'll rise in the air and see if we can +avoid it." +<P> +The ship was sent up into the air. As it rose higher and higher, the professor, +making frequent observations from his conning tower, cried out: +<P> +"That is no waterspout!" +<P> +"What is it?" asked Mark. +<P> +"It is the steam and vapor rising from the big hole in the earth! Boys, we +are almost there!" +<P> +"Are you sure that's it?" asked Mark. +<P> +"Almost positive," Mr. Henderson replied. "You can see how much warmer it +has become of late, as we approached the equator. We are almost due at the +island, and I have no doubt we have reached it." +<P> +As the ship flew forward the mass of dark vapor became more pronounced. Through +the glasses it could be noticed to consist of rolling masses of clouds. What +lay beneath them no one knew. The adventurers were going to try to find out. +<P> +Now that they had arrived at the beginning of the main part of their journey, +the travelers felt their spirits sink a little. It was one thing to plan +to go down into the depths of the earth, but it was quite another to make +the actual attempt. Still, they were not going to give up the project. The +professor had confidence in his ship and believed it could safely make the +trip. Still it was with no little apprehension that Mr. Henderson watched +the nearer approach of the craft to that strange island. +<P> +"Perfesser, are yo' really an' truly goin' t' depress this elongated spheroid +an' its human consignment int' that conglomerous convoluted mass of gaseous +vapor regardless of th' consequences?" asked Washington, as he gazed with +wide opened eyes at the sight before him. +<P> +"If you mean am I going to let the <I>Mermaid </I>go down into that hole +you are perfectly correct," the scientist answered, "though you could have +said it in fewer words, Washington." +<P> +"I—I guess I'll get out an' walk," the colored man made reply. +<P> +"This isn't any trolley car," observed Mark. "Don't lose your nerve, Wash. +Stay with us, and we'll discover a gold or diamond mine, maybe." +<P> +"Is there diamonds down there?" asked the colored man, his fright seeming +to leave him. +<P> +"There are all sorts of things inside the earth," the professor answered. +<P> +"Then I'm goin' along!" Washington declared. "I always did want a diamond +ring, an' I knows a little colored gal that wants one, too. I'm goin' all +right! This suttenly am th' most kloslosterous conjunctivity of combativeness +that I ever sagaciated!" and he began to do a sort of impromptu cake-walk. +<h3>CHAPTER XIII</h3> +<h4>DOWN INTO THE EARTH</h4> +<P> +IT was now noon, but the adventurers did not think of dinner in the excitement +of approaching the mysterious island. The speed of the ship was increased +that they might the more quickly come to it. As they approached they could +see the masses of vapor more plainly, and it appeared that some great commotion +must be going on inside the big hole, since clouds of steam arose. +<P> +"I only hope it doesn't prove too hot for us," observed the professor. "However, +I provided a water jacket for the ship, and we may need it, as well as the +vacuum chambers to keep the heat from us." +<P> +It was about three o'clock when the flying ship reached the edge of the island. +From there it was about a mile to the rim of the big hole, over one side +of which the waters of the ocean poured with a roar that could be heard over +half a mile off. +<P> +"I think we had better halt and see that everything is in good shape before +proceeding," said Mr. Henderson. "Jack, you and Mark make a thorough inspection +of the engine room, and see that all the apparatus is in working order." +<P> +The two boys prepared to do as they were told. Mark, who was walking a little +ahead of Jack, entered the apartment from which the storeroom opened. As +he did so he saw, or thought he saw, the door of the place where the extra +supplies were kept, close. Without saying anything to Jack he hurried forward, +and tried the knob. It would not turn. +<P> +"That's funny," said Mark to himself. "I could almost swear I saw some one +go into that room. Yet I know the professor did not enter, for I just left +him. And none of the others would dare to. I wonder if I will ever solve +the mystery." +<P> +But he had too much to do to allow him to dwell on that matter. Several of +the dynamos needed adjusting and for two hours he and Jack had all they could +do. +<P> +In the meanwhile the professor had gone over the other parts of the ship, +and gotten everything in readiness for the descent. The <I>Mermaid </I>was +lowered to within a few hundred feet of the sea, and, through a hose that +was let down, the compartments, provided for this emergency were filled with +water. These compartments were between the outer and inner hulls of the lower +part of the craft, and were designed to prevent the interior becoming heated +in case the travelers found they had to pass close to fire. There were also +vacuum chambers, and from these the air was exhausted, as of course every +schoolboy knows a vacuum is a non-conductor of either heat or cold. +<P> +"Now I think we are ready," the professor announced at length. +<P> +"Everything's all right in the engine room," announced Jack. +<P> +"Yes, an' everything's all right in th' kitchen," put in Washington. "I've +got a good meal ready as soon as any one wants to eat." +<P> +"It will have to wait a while," Mr. Henderson remarked. "We are going to +start to make the descent before we dine." +<P> +The hose was reeled up, and the ship was sent a few hundred feet higher into +the air, as Mr. Henderson wanted to take a last good observation before he +went down into the hole. +<P> +But having risen some distance above the masses of rolling vapors he found +he was at no advantage, since the strongest telescope he could bring to bear +could not pierce the cloud masses. +<P> +"We'll just have to trust to luck," the scientist said. "I judge we're about +over the centre of the opening. Lower away Mark!" +<P> +The boy, who, under the watchful eye of the professor, was manipulating the +levers and wheels in the conning tower, shifted some handles. The gas was +expelled from the holder, the negative gravity apparatus ceased to work, +and the <I>Flying Mermaid </I>sank lower and lower, toward the mysterious +hole that yawned beneath her. +<P> +The hearts of all beat strangely, if not with fear, at least with apprehension, +for they did not know what they might encounter. Perhaps death in some terrible +form awaited them. But the desire to discover something new and strange had +gripped all of them, and not one would have voted to turn back. +<P> +Even old Andy, who seldom got excited, was in unusual spirits. He took down +his gun and remarked: +<P> +"Maybe I can kill some new kind of animal, and write a book about its habits, +for surely we will see strange beasts in the under-world." +<P> +Lower and lower sank the ship. Now it was amid the first thin masses of vapors, +those that floated highest and were more like a light fog, than anything +else. By means of a window in the bottom of the craft, which window was closed +by a thick piece of plate glass, Professor Henderson could look down and +see what was beneath them. +<P> +"The clouds seem to be getting thicker," he said, as he peered through the +small casement. "If they would only clear away we could see something." +<P> +But instead of doing this the vapors accumulated more thickly about the ship. +It was so dark inside the <I>Mermaid </I>now that the electric lights had +to be switched on. In the room with the floor-window the lights were not +used, as had they shone one could not have seen down below. +<P> +The professor maintained his position. The descent was a perilous one, and +he wanted to be on the watch to check it at once if the <I>Mermaid </I>was +liable to dash upon some pointed rock or fall into some fiery pit. His hand +was on the signal levers. +<P> +Suddenly he looked up and glanced at a gage on the wall. The hand of it was +slowly revolving. +<P> +"We are at the earth's surface," the scientist said. "Now we are below it. +Now we are fairly within the big hole! Boys, we may be on the verge of a +great discovery!" +<P> +An instant later it seemed as if a hot wave had struck the <I>Mermaid, </I>or +as if the craft had been plunged into boiling water. +<P> +"It's going to be hot!" cried the professor. "Lucky I provided the water +jackets!" +<P> +Then the lights in the interior of the ship went out, leaving the whole craft +in darkness. +<P> +"What has happened?" cried Mark. +<h3>CHAPTER XIV</h3> +<h4>MANY MILES BELOW</h4> +<P> +"DON'T be alarmed," spoke the calm voice of the professor. "I have only turned +off the electrics. I want to switch on the search lights, to see if we can +learn anything about our position." +<P> +As he spoke he turned a switch, and, the gloom below the ship, as the boys +could see by glimpses from the floor-window, was pierced by a dazzling glare. +In the bottom of the <I>Mermaid </I>were set a number of powerful electric +arc lights with reflectors, constructed to throw the beams downward. The +professor had built them in for just this emergency, as he thought that at +some time they might want to illuminate what was below the craft. +<P> +Not that it was of much avail on this occasion, for, though the lights were +powerful, they could not pierce the miles of gloom that lay below them. The +beams only served to accentuate the darkness. +<P> +"I guess we'll have to trust to luck," the professor said, after a vain attempt, +by means of powerful glasses, to distinguish something. "There is too much +fog and vapor." +<P> +"What makes it so warm?" asked Mark, removing his coat. +<P> +"Well, you must remember you are approaching the interior of the earth," +the professor answered. "It has been calculated that the heat increases one +degree for every fifty-five feet you descend. We have come down several hundred +feet and of course it is getting warmer." +<P> +"Then if we go down very far it will get so hot we will not be able to stand +it," Jack put in. +<P> +"I do not believe we will suffer any great inconvenience," Mr. Henderson +went on. "I believe that after we pass a certain point it will become cooler. +I think the inner fires of the earth are more or less heated gas in a sort +of inner chamber between two shells. If we can pass the second shell, we +will be all right." +<P> +"But aren't we liable to hit something, going down into the dark this way?" +asked Mark. +<P> +"We will guard ourselves as far as possible," the scientist answered. +<P> +The <I>Mermaid </I>seemed to be going down on a side of the immense shaft +a good way distant from the strange waterfall. When they had first dropped +into the hole the travelers could hear the rush of waters, but now the noise +was not audible. +<P> +"I think the hole must widen out the farther down we go," the professor said. +"We are probably many miles from the fall now." +<P> +"I'm sure I hope so," put in Jack. "It would be no fun to have to take a +shower bath in this place." +<P> +After a meal, the boys and the professor took some more observations, but +with all their efforts nothing could be seen below the ship but a vast black +void, into which they were steadily descending. +<P> +"I wonder when we're going to stop," asked Mark. "It's like playing the game +'Going to Jerusalem,' you keep wondering when the music will cease and you +will have a chance to grab a chair. I only hope we have a chair or something +else to sit on, in case we go to smash." +<P> +"We're not liable to have any accidents with the professor in charge," Jack +answered. "Didn't he bring us safe out of some pretty tight holes when we +went to the north pole in the airship, and again when we found the south +pole in the submarine?" +<P> +"Yes, but this is different," objected Mark. +<P> +"Well, I'm not worrying," Jack went on. "It doesn't do any good, and only +makes you lie awake nights. By the way, I wonder what time it is getting +to be." +<P> +He looked at his watch and found it was close on to eight o'clock in the +evening. So late had dinner been served, and so varied were the happenings +of the last few hours, that time had passed quickly. +<P> +"Why it's almost bed-time," said Jack. "I wonder if we are to go on dropping +into the depths of nowhere all night." +<P> +At that moment the professor entered the room where the boys were. He seemed +quite pleased over something, and was smiling. +<P> +"Everything is going along famously," he said. "I have just tested the air +and find it is rich in oxygen. We shall suffer nothing on that score. The +heat too, seems to have decreased. On the whole, everything favors us." +<P> +"Are we going on down?" asked Mark. +<P> +"As far as we can," Mr. Henderson answered. "Let me see how far we are below +now." +<P> +He went to the gage that indicated the vertical position of the ship. Because +of the changed conditions, the craft now sinking below the surface of the +earth instead of rising above it, as was its wont, some calculations were +necessary. These the scientist made as quickly as he could. +<P> +"We are now ten miles underground!" he exclaimed. "That is doing very well. +My theories are working out. I think we shall land somewhere before long." +<P> +"I hopes so!" exclaimed Washington coming in at this point. "I'm mighty skeered +shootin' down int' this dark hole, and no time-table t' show when we's due +t' arrive." +<P> +"We ought to land in a couple of days more," the professor answered. "Never +mind about worrying Washington, I'll take care of you." +<P> +"I hopes so, Perfesser," the colored man said. "I got a little girl waitin' +for me back in Georgia, an' I'd like t' see her 'fore I git burned up." +<P> +Accompanied by the professor, the boys made a tour of the ship to see that +all the machinery and apparatus were in working order. Owing to the changed +conditions the negative gravity engine had to be worked at faster speed than +usual, since the downward pull of the earth was greater the farther they +descended into the interior and they did not want to fall too swiftly. But +this was easily provided for, since the professor had made the apparatus +capable of standing a great strain. +<P> +The ten miles had become fourteen when the professor, finding that everything +was in good shape, proposed that the boys go to bed. They, did not want to, +though they were sleepy, and they feared to miss some strange sights. +<P> +But when the professor had promised to call them in case anything unusual +developed, they consented to turn in, and Bill and Tom assumed their duties, +which were light enough, now that the ship was merely falling into the immense +shaft. +<P> +When Mark turned into his bunk he could not go to sleep at once. It may have +been the excitement over their new position, or because he had eaten too +hearty a supper, but the fact was he remained awake for some time. +<P> +While thus tossing restlessly on his bed, wondering what ailed him, he thought +he heard a noise in the main apartment out of which the storeroom opened. +He crawled softly from his bed, and looked from his stateroom door. +<P> +In the light of a shaded electric Mark saw the figure of some one glide across +the floor and take refuge in the room, which Professor Henderson always was +so particular about. +<P> +"I wonder what or who that was," reasoned Mark. "There is some mystery in +this. Can the professor have concealed some one on this ship whose presence +he does not want to admit? It certainly looks so." +<P> +Not wanting to awaken the ship's crew, and remembering what Mr. Henderson +had said about any one entering the storeroom, Mark went back to bed, to +fall into an uneasy slumber. +<P> +"Breakfast!" called Washington breaking in on a fine dream Jack was having +about being captain of a company of automobile soldiers. "Last call for +breakfast!" +<P> +"Hello! Is it morning?" asked Jack. +<P> +"Not so's you could notice it," Washington went on. "It's as dark as a stack +of black cats and another one throwed in. But breakfast is ready jest the +same." +<P> +The boys were soon at the table, and learned that nothing of importance had +occurred during the night. The <I>Mermaid </I>had been kept going slowly +down, and about seven o'clock registered more than fifty miles below the +earth's surface. +<P> +Still there was no change in the outward surroundings. It remained as black +as the interior of Egypt when that country was at its darkest. The powerful +electrics could not pierce the gloom. The ship was working well, and the +travelers were very comfortable. +<P> +Down, down, down, went the <I>Mermaid. </I>The temperature, which had risen +to about ninety went back to sixty-nine, and there seemed to be no more danger +from the inner fires. +<P> +They were now a hundred miles under the surface. But still the professor +kept the <I>Mermaid </I>sinking. Every now and again he would take an +observation, but only found the impenetrable darkness surrounded them. +<P> +"We must arrive somewhere, soon," he muttered. +<P> +It was about six o'clock that night that the alarm bell set up a sudden ringing. +The professor who was making some calculations on a piece of paper jumped +to his feet, and so did a number of the others. +<P> +"We are nearing the bottom!" he cried. "The bell has given us warning!" +<h3>CHAPTER XV</h3> +<h4>IN THE STRANGE DRAUGHT</h4> +<P> +THE boys ran to attend to the engines and apparatus to which they had been +assigned in view of this emergency. The professor, Washington, Bill, Tom +and Andy, who had kept to themselves since the descent, came running out +of the small cabin where they usually sat, and wanted to know what it was +all about. +<P> +"We may hit something, in spite of all precautions," Mr. Henderson remarked. +"Slow down the ship." +<P> +The <I>Mermaid </I>was, accordingly checked in her downward flight, by a +liberal use of the gas and the negative gravity machine. +<P> +The bell continued to ring, and the dials pointed to the mark that indicated +the ship was more than one hundred and fifty miles down. +<P> +Mark, who had run to the engine room to check the descent, came back. +<P> +"Why didn't you slow her down?" asked the professor. +<P> +"I did," replied the boy. "The negative gravity and the gas machines are +working at full speed." +<P> +"Then why are we still descending?" asked the scientist. "For a while our +speed was checked, but now we are falling faster than before." +<P> +"I attended to the apparatus," Mark insisted. +<P> +Just then, from without the ship, came a terrible roaring sound, as though +there was a great cyclone in progress. At the same time, those aboard the +craft could feel themselves being pulled downward with terrific force. +<P> +"We are caught in a draught!" Mr. Henderson cried. "We are being sucked down +into the depths of the earth!" +<P> +He ran to the engine room. With the help of the boys he set in motion an +auxiliary gravity machine, designed to exert a most powerful influence against +the downward pull of the earth. As they watched the great wheels spin around, +and heard the hum and whirr of the dynamos, the boys watched the pointer +which indicated how low they were getting. +<P> +And, as they watched, they saw that the needle of the dial kept moving, moving, +moving. +<P> +"Our efforts are useless! We can't stop!" the professor cried. +<P> +Grave indeed was the plight of the adventurers. In their ship they were being +sucked down into unknown regions and all their efforts did not avail to save +them. It was an emergency they could not guard against, and which could not +have been foreseen. +<P> +"What are to do?" asked Mark. +<P> +"We can only wait," Mr. Henderson replied. "The terrible suction may cease, +or it may carry us to some place of safety. Let us hope for the best." +<P> +Seeing there was no further use in running the engines in an effort to check +the downward rush the machines were stopped. Then they waited for whatever +might happen. +<P> +Now that they seemed in imminent peril Washington was as cool as any one. +He went about putting his kitchen in order and getting ready for the next +meal as if they were sailing comfortably along on the surface of the ocean. +As for old Andy he was nervous and frightened, and plainly showed it. With +his gun in readiness he paced back and forth as if on the lookout for strange +beasts or birds. +<P> +Bill and Tom were so alarmed that they were of little use in doing anything, +and they were not disturbed in their staterooms where they went when it became +known that the ship was unmanageable. +<P> +The boys and the professor, while greatly frightened at the unexpected turn +of events, decided there was no use in giving way to foolish alarm. They +realized they could do nothing but await developments. +<P> +At the same time they took every precaution. They piled all the bedding on +the floor of the living room, so that the pillows and mattresses might form +a sort of pad in case the ship was dashed down on the bottom of the big hole. +<P> +"Not that it would save us much," Jack observed with a grim smile, "but somehow +it sort of makes your mind easier." +<P> +All this while the ship was being sucked down at a swift pace. The pointer +of the gage, indicating the depth, kept moving around and soon they were +several hundreds of miles below the surface of the earth. +<P> +The professor tried, by means of several instruments, to discover in which +direction they were headed, and whether they were going straight down or +at an angle. But some strange influence seemed to affect the gages and other +pieces of apparatus, for the pointers and hands would swing in all directions, +at one time indicating that they were going down, and, again, upward. +<P> +"There must be a strong current of electricity here," Mr. Henderson said, +"or else there is, as many suspect, a powerful magnet at the center of the +earth, which we are nearing." +<P> +"What will you do if the ship is pulled apart, or falls and is smashed?" +asked Mark with much anxiety. +<P> +"You take a cheerful view of things," said Jack. +<P> +"Well, it's a good thing to prepare for emergencies," Mark added. +<P> +"If the ship was to be separated by the magnetic pull, or if it fell on sharp +rocks and was split in twain, I am afraid none of us could do anything to +save ourselves," the professor answered. "Still, if we were given a little +warning of the disaster, I have means at hand whereby we might escape with +our lives. But it would be a perilous way of——" +<P> +"I reckon yo' all better come out an' have supper," broke in Washington. +"Leastways we'll call it supper, though I don't rightly know whether it's +night or mornin'. Anyhow I've got a meal ready." +<P> +"I don't suppose any of us feel much like eating," observed Mr. Henderson, +"but there is no telling when we will have the chance again, so, perhaps, +we had better take advantage of it." +<P> +For a while they ate in silence, finding that they had better appetites than +they at first thought. Old Andy in particular did full justice to the food +Washington had prepared. +<P> +"I always found it a good plan to eat as much and as often as you can," the +hunter remarked. "This is a mighty uncertain world." +<P> +"You started to tell us a little while ago, Professor," said Mark, "about +a plan you had for saving out lives if worst came to worst, and there was +a chance to put it into operation. What is it?" +<P> +"I will tell you," the aged inventor said. "It is something about which I +have kept silent, as I did not want to frighten any of you. It was my latest +invention, and I had only perfected it when we started off on this voyage. +Consequently I had no chance to try it. The machine works in theory, but +whether it does in practice is another question. That is why I say there +is a risk. But we may have to take this risk. I have placed aboard this ship +a——" +<P> +The professor was interrupted in what he was about to say by a curious tremor +that made the whole ship shiver as though it had struck some obstruction. +Yet there was no sudden jolt or jar such as would have been occasioned by +that. +<P> +At the same time Washington, who was out in the kitchen, came running into +the dining room, crying: +<P> +"We're droppin' into a ragin' fire, Perfesser!" +<P> +"What do you mean?" asked Mr. Henderson. +<P> +"I jest took a look down through th' hole in th' bottom of the ship!" cried +Washington. "It's all flames an' smoke below us!" +<P> +"I wonder if it is the end," the professor muttered in a low voice. +<P> +Followed by the boys, the inventor hastened to the floor-window. The lights +were turned off to enable a better view to be had of what was below them. +<P> +Leaning over the glass protected aperture the boys and the professor saw, +far, far down, a bright light shining. It was as if they were miles above +a whole town of blast furnaces, the stacks of which were belching forth flames +and smoke. The rolling clouds of vapor were illuminated by a peculiar greenish +light, which, at times, turned to red, blue, purple and yellowish hues. +<P> +The effect was weird and beautiful though it was full of terror for the +travelers. It seemed as if they were falling into some terrible pit of fire, +for the reflection of what they feared were flames, could plainly be seen. +<P> +"I wish I'd never come on this terrible voyage!" wailed Washington. "I'd +rather freeze to death than be burned up." +<P> +"Washington, be quiet!" commanded the professor sternly. "This is no time +for foolishness. We must work hard to save our lives, for we are in dire +peril. +<P> +"Mark, you and Washington, with Jack, start the engines. Turn on every bit +of power you can. Fill the gas holder as full as it will hold, and use extra +heavy pressure. I will see if I can not work the negative gravity apparatus +to better advantage than we did before. We must escape if possible!" +<P> +The boys, as was also Washington, were only too glad to have something to +do to take their mind off their troubles. All three were much frightened, +but Mark and Jack tried not to show it. As for Washington he was almost crying. +<P> +Soon the whirr and hum of the machinery in the <I>Mermaid </I>was heard. +The craft, which was rushing in some direction, either downward, ahead or +backwards within the unknown depths, shivered from the speed of the dynamos +and other apparatus. Soon the boys could hear the professor starting the +negative gravity engine, and then began a struggle between the forces of +nature and those of mankind. +<P> +Once more the adventurers anxiously watched the gages and indicators. For +a while the ship seemed to be holding out against the terrible influence +that was sucking her down. She appeared to hesitate. Then, as the downward +force triumphed over the mechanical energy in the craft, she began to settle +again, and soon was descending, if that was the direction, as fast as before. +<P> +"It is of no use," said the professor with a groan. "I must try our last +resort!" +<P> +He started from the engine room where Mark and Jack had gone. As he did so, +he glanced at a thermometer hanging on the wall near the door. +<P> +"Has any one turned on the heat?" he asked. +<P> +"It's shut off," replied Mark, looking at the electric stove. +<P> +"Then what makes it so hot?" asked the scientist. +<P> +He pointed to the little silvery column in the tiny tube of the instrument. +It registered close to one hundred degrees, though a few minutes before it +had been but sixty. And the starting of the machinery could not account for +the rise in temperature, since most of the apparatus was run by electricity +and developed little heat save in the immediate proximity. The thermometer +was fully ten feet away from any machine. +<P> +"It's the fiery furnace that's doing it!" cried Washington. "We're falling +into th' terrible pit an' we're goin' t' be roasted alive!" +<P> +"It certainly is getting warmer," observed Mark, as he took off his coat. +Soon he had to shed his vest, and Jack and the professor followed his example. +The others too, also found all superfluous garments a burden, and, in a little +while they were going about in scanty attire. +<P> +Still the heat increased, until it was almost torture to remain in the engine +room. Nor was it much cooler elsewhere. In vain did the professor set a score +of big electric fans to whirring. He even placed cakes of ice, from the small +ice machine that was carried, in front of the revolving blades, to cool off +the air. But the ice was melted almost as soon as it was taken from the +apparatus. +<P> +"Them flames is gittin' worser!" Washington cried a little later. "We's comin' +nearer!" +<P> +From the bottom window the professor and the boys looked down. True enough +the curious, changing, vari-colored lights seemed brighter. They could almost +see the tongues of flame shooting upward in anticipation of what they were +soon to devour. +<P> +The heat was increasing every minute. The sides of the ship were hot. The +heads of the travelers were getting dizzy. They could hardly talk or move +about. +<P> +"I must save our lives! I must trust to the——" The professor, who was muttering +to himself started toward the storeroom. As in a dream Mark watched him. +He remembered afterward that he had speculated on what might be the outcome +of the mystery the professor threw about the place. "I will have to use it," +he heard the scientist say softly. +<P> +Just as Mr. Henderson was about to open the door there came a fiercer blast +of heat than any that had preceded. At the same instant the conditions in +the <I>Mermaid </I>became so fearful that each of the travelers felt himself +fainting away. +<P> +"Go to—storeroom—get cylinder—get in——" the professor murmured, and then +he fell forward in a faint. +<h3>CHAPTER XVI</h3> +<h4>THE NEW LAND</h4> +<P> +"WHAT is it? Tell us!" exclaimed Jack, almost in his last breath, for, a +few seconds later he too toppled over senseless. Then Washington went down, +while Andy, Bill and Tom succumbed to the terrible heat. +<P> +Mark felt his head swimming. His eyes were almost bulging from their sockets. +He dimly remembered trying to force himself to go to the storeroom and see +what was there. He started toward it with that intention, but fell half way +to it. +<P> +As he did so he saw something which impressed itself on his mind, half +unconscious as he was. +<P> +The door of the storeroom suddenly opened, and from it came a giant shape, +that seemed to expand until it filled the whole of the apartment where the +stricken ones lay. It was like the form of some monster, half human, half +beast. Mark shuddered, and then, closing his eyes, he felt himself sinking +down into some terrible deep and black pit. A second later the whole ship +was jarred as though it had hit something. +<P> +How long he and the others remained unconscious Mark did not know. He was +the first to revive, and his first sensation was one as though he had slept +hard and long, and did not want to get up. He felt very comfortable, although +he was lying flat on the floor, with his head jammed against the side of +a locker. It was so dark that he could not distinguish his hand held close +to his face. +<P> +"I wonder if I'm dead, and if all the others are dead too," he thought to +himself. "What has happened? Let's see, the last I remember was some horrible +shape rushing from the storeroom. I wonder what it could have been? Surely +that was not the secret the professor referred to." +<P> +Mark shuddered as he recalled the monster that seemed to have grown more +terrible as each second passed. Then the boy raised himself up from his prostrate +position. +<P> +"Well, at any rate, some one has turned off the heat," he murmured. "It's +very comfortable in here now. I wish I could strike a light." +<P> +He listened intently, to learn if any of the others were moving about. He +could hear them breathing, but so faintly as to indicate they were insensible. +Mark stretched out his hand and felt that some one was lying close to him, +but who of the adventurers it was he could not determine. +<P> +"If only the dynamo was working we could have light," he said. "But it seems +to have stopped," and, indeed there was a lacking of the familiar purr and +hum of the electrical machine. In fact none of the apparatus in the ship +was working. +<P> +"The storage battery!" exclaimed Mark. "That would give light for a while, +if I can only find the switch in the dark." +<P> +He began crawling about on his hands and knees. It was so intensely black +that he ran into many things and received severe bruises. At last he came +to a doorway, and as he did so his hand came in contact with an easy chair. +It was the only one aboard, and by that he knew he had passed into the sitting +room. He had his general direction now, and knew if he kept straight on he +would come to the engine room. There he was familiar enough with the apparatus +and levers to be able to turn the electric switch. +<P> +Crawling slowly and cautiously, he reached the room where all the engines +were. Then he had to feel around the sides to locate the switch. At length +he found it. There was a click, a little flash of greenish fire, and the +copper conductors came together, and the ship was flooded with the glow from +the incandescents. +<P> +Mark hurried back to where the others were lying. They were still unconscious, +but an uneasy, movement on the part of Jack told that he was coming out of +the stupor. Mark got some ammonia and held it beneath his comrade's nose. +The strong fumes completed the work that nature had started and Jack opened +his eyes. +<P> +"Where am I? What has happened? Are any of them dead?" he asked quickly. +<P> +"I hope no one is dead," Mark replied. "As to the other question, I can't +answer. I don't know whether we are a thousand miles underground, or floating +on the ocean, though I'm more inclined to the former theory. But never mind +that now. Help me to bring the others back to their senses. I'll work on +the professor and you can begin on Bill or Tom. Washington seems to be all +right," for at that moment the colored man opened his eyes, stared about +him and then got up. +<P> +"I thought I was dead for suah!" he exclaimed. +<P> +"Some of the others may be if we don't hurry," said Mark. "Get to work, Wash!" +<P> +With the colored man to help them the two boys, by the use of the ammonia, +succeeded in reviving Bill, Tom and old Andy. But the professor, probably +on account of his advanced age, did not respond so readily to the treatment. +The boys were getting quite alarmed, as even some of the diluted ammonia, +forced between his lips, did not cause him to open his eyes, or increase +his heart action. +<P> +"If he should die, and leave us all alone with the ship in this terrible +place, what would we do?" asked Jack. +<P> +"He's not going to die!" exclaimed Mark. "Here I have another plan. Washington +bring that medical electrical battery from the engine room." This was a small +machine the professor had brought along for experimental purposes. +<P> +Quickly adjusting it, Mark placed the handles in the nerveless fingers of +Mr. Henderson. Then he started the current. In about a minute the eyelids +of the aged inventor began to quiver, and, in less than five minutes he had +been revived sufficiently to enable him to sit up. He passed his hand across +his forehead. +<P> +"What has happened?" he asked in a faint voice. +<P> +"I don't know; none of us knows," Mark answered. "We all lost our senses +when it got so hot, and there seemed to be some peculiar vapor in the air. +The last I remember was seeing some horrible shape rush from the storeroom, +soon after the ship struck. Then I fainted away. When I woke up I managed +to turn the lights on, and then I came back here." +<P> +"I wonder where we are," the old man murmured. "I must find out. We must +take every precaution. Washington, go and look at the gage indicating our +depth." +<P> +The colored man was gone but a few seconds. When he returned his eyes were +bulging in terror. +<P> +"What is it?" asked Mr. Henderson, who, thanks to the battery, had almost +completely recovered. +<P> +"It ain't possible!" gasped Washington. "I'll never believe it!" +<P> +"What is it?" asked Mr. Henderson, while the others waited in anxiety for +the answer. +<P> +"We're five hundred miles down!" declared Washington. +<P> +"Five hundred miles!" muttered the inventor. "It does not seem possible, +but it must be so. We fell very rapidly and the terrible draught sucked us +down with incredible rapidity. But come, we must see what our situation is, +and where we are. We are stationary, and are evidently on some solid substance." +<P> +They all felt much recovered now, and, as the terrible fright of being consumed +in a fiery furnace had passed, they all were in better spirits. +<P> +At the suggestion of the professor, the boys and Washington made a tour of +the ship. They found, for some unaccountable reason, that nearly all the +engines and apparatuses were out of gear. In some the parts had broken, and +others were merely stopped, from the failure of some other machine, on which +they were dependent. +<P> +"I'm afraid this is the end of the <I>Mermaid," </I>said Mark, in a sorrowful +tone. +<P> +"Nonsense!" replied Jack, who was of a more cheerful nature. "Things are +not so bad as they look. The professor can fix everything." +<P> +"I'm sure I hope so," Mark went on, not much encouraged, however, by Jack's +philosophy. "It would be no joke to have to stay five hundred miles underground +the rest of our lives." +<P> +"You don't know," retorted Jack. "Don't judge of a country you've never seen. +This may be as fine a place as it is on the surface of the earth. I want +a chance to see it," and Jack began to whistle a cheerful tune. +<P> +They completed the tour of the ship, and found, that, aside from the damage +to the machinery, the <I>Mermaid </I>had not sustained any harm. The hull +was in good order, though of course they could not tell about the gas holder. +It was not possible to see this except by going into the conning tower or +out on the small deck, and this they did not venture to do. The connections +between the holder and the main ship seemed to be all right, and there was +still a small quantity of gas in the big tank, as Mark found on opening a +stop-cock. +<P> +They went back to the professor and told him what they had observed. He seemed +somewhat alarmed, the more so as the experience he had just passed through +had weakened him considerably. +<P> +"I hope I shall be able to make the repairs," he said. "It is our only hope." +<P> +As he spoke he looked up at the electric lights that shone overhead from +wall brackets. +<P> +"Who is shutting down the power?" he asked. +<P> +"There is no power on, Professor," replied Mark. "I am running the lights +from the storage battery. But something is the matter, for they are growing +dim." +<P> +The filaments were now mere dull red wires, and the ship was being shrouded +in gloom again. +<P> +"The battery is failing!" exclaimed Mr. Henderson. "We shall be left in darkness, +and there is no other way to produce light. I ought to have brought some +lamps or candles along in case of emergency." +<P> +The next instant the <I>Mermaid </I>became as black as Egypt is popularly +supposed to be, and something like an exclamation of terror came from the +professor. +<P> +For several minutes they all sat there in the blackness and gloom, waiting +for they knew not what. Then, suddenly, there sounded throughout the ship, +a creaking as of metal sliding along metal. Some big lever creaked, and, +a second later the whole place was flooded with light. +<P> +"What has happened?" cried the professor, starting to his feet in alarm. +<P> +"We are going to be burned up!" exclaimed old Andy. +<P> +"It's all right! It's all right!" yelled Washington from the engine room +where the boys had left him. "Don't git skeered! I done it! I opened the +port holes, by yanking on the lever. Golly, but we's arrived at the new land! +Look out, everybody!" +<h3>CHAPTER XVII</h3> +<h4>A STRANGE COUNTRY</h4> +<P> +THEY all ran to the port holes, which were openings in the side of the ship. +They were fitted with thick, double glass, and covered on the outside with +steel shutters. These shutters were worked by a single lever from the engine +room, so that one person could open or close them in a second or two. Washington, +by accident, it appeared later, had slid back the protecting pieces of steel, +and the rest followed. +<P> +As the adventurers looked from the glass ports they saw that the light which +had flooded the ship came from without. They were in the midst of a beautiful +glow, which seemed to be diffused about them like rays from a sun. +<P> +Only, in place of being a yellow or white light, such as the sun gives off +at varying times, the glow was of violet hue. And, as they watched, they +saw the light change color, becoming a beautiful red, then blue, and again +green. +<P> +"Well, this is certainly remarkable!" the professor said. "I wonder what +causes that." +<P> +"We've arrived! We're here, anyhow!" Washington cried, coming into the room. +"See the country!" +<P> +Then, for the first time, the travelers, taking their attention from the +curious light that was all around them, saw that they had indeed arrived. +They were on a vast plain, one, seemingly, boundless in extent, though off +to the left there was a range of lofty mountains, while to the right there +was the glimmer of what might be a big lake or inland sea. +<P> +"See, we are resting on the ground!" exclaimed Jack. He pointed out of the +window, and the others, looking close at hand, noted that the <I>Mermaid +</I>had settled down in the midst of what seemed to be a field of flowers. +Big red and yellow blossoms were all in front, and some grew so tall as to +almost be up to the edge of the port. +<P> +"I wonder if we can be seeing aright," the professor muttered. "Is this really +the interior of the earth; such a beautiful place as this?" +<P> +There could be little doubt of it. The ship had descended through the big +shaft, had been sucked down by the terrible air current, and had really landed +in a strange country. +<P> +Of its size, shape and general conditions the adventurers, as yet, could +but guess. They could see it was a pleasant place, and one where there might +be the means to sustain life. For, as the professor said afterward, he felt +that where there were flowers there would be fruits, and where both of these +provisions of nature were to be found there would likely be animal life, +and even, perhaps, human beings. +<P> +But, for the time, they were content to look from the port on the beautiful +scene that lay stretched out before them. The ship rested on an even keel +and had landed so softly that none of the plates were strained. +<P> +"We have plenty of air, at all events," said the professor as he took a deep +breath. "I was afraid of that, but it seems there was no need. The air appears +to be as good and fresh as that on the surface of the earth, only there is +a curious property to it. It makes one feel larger. I imagine it must be +thinner than the air of the earth, which is a rather strange thing, since +the higher one goes the more rarefied the air becomes, and the lower, the +more dense. Still we can not apply natural philosophy to conditions under +the earth. All the usual theories may be upset. However, we should be content +to take things as we find them, and be glad we were not dashed to pieces +when the ship was caught in the terrible current." +<P> +"What do you suppose caused the awful heat, and then made it go away again?" +asked Jack. +<P> +"I can only make a guess at it," Mr. Henderson answered. "There are many +strange things we will come across if we stay here long, I believe. As for +the fire I think we must have passed a sort of interior volcano." +<P> +"But what sort of a place do you think we have come to, Professor?" asked +Mark. +<P> +"It is hard to say," the scientist replied. "We are certainly somewhere within +the earth. Our gage tells us it is five hundred miles. That may or may not +be correct, but I believe we are several hundred miles under the crust, at +all events. As to what sort of a place it is, you can see for yourselves." +<P> +"But how is it we can breathe here, and things can grow?" asked Bill, who +was beginning to lose his fright at the thought of being practically buried +alive. +<P> +"I do not know what makes such things possible," Mr. Henderson replied, "but +that there is air here is a certainty. I can hardly believe it is drawn from +the surface of the earth, down the big hole, and I am inclined to think this +place of the under-world has an atmosphere of its own, and one which produces +different effects than does our own." +<P> +"They certainly have larger flowers than we have," said Mark. "See how big +they grow, and what strong colors they have." +<P> +He pointed to the port, against which some of the blooms were nodding in +the wind that had sprung up, for, in spite of the many differences, the +under-world was in some respects like the upper one. +<P> +"Probably the difference in the atmosphere accounts for that," the professor +said. "It enables things to grow larger. And, by the way, Mark, that reminds +me of something you said about seeing some horrible monster fleeing from +the ship. Did you dream that?" +<P> +"I did see something horrible, Professor," he answered. "I'm not positive +what it was, but I'll tell you as nearly as I can what it was like." +<P> +Thereupon Mark detailed what he had seen. +<P> +"But how could anything, least of all some big monster, be concealed in the +storeroom, and we not know anything about it?" asked Mr. Henderson. +<P> +"I thought you did know something of it," replied Mark. +<P> +"Who, me? My dear boy, you must be dreaming again. Why should I want to conceal +any being in the storeroom? Come, there is something back of this. Tell me +all you know of it. I can't imagine why you think I was hiding something +in the apartment." +<P> +"I thought so because you were always so anxious not to have me go near it," +answered the boy. "Don't you remember when you saw me going toward it, several +times, you warned me away?" +<P> +"So I did!" exclaimed Mr. Henderson, a light breaking over his face. "But, +Mark, it was not because I had hidden some human being or animal there. I +can't tell you what it is yet, save that I can say it is merely a machine +of mine that I have invented. For reasons of my own I don't want any one +to see it yet. Perhaps it may never be seen. I thought, not long ago, that +we might have to undertake a terrible risk in escaping from this place. I +directed you to go to the storeroom—but there, I can't say any more, my +friends. Sufficient that I had nothing in the animal line concealed there." +<P> +"But I am certain there was some beast or human being in there," insisted +Mark. "I heard curious noises in there. Besides, how do you account for the +food disappearing and the door being open at times?" +<P> +"It might have been rats," said Jack. +<P> +"I don't believe there are rats in the ship," put in the professor. "More +likely it was one of us who got up hungry and took the victuals." +<P> +"I'm sorry I can't agree with you," Mark added respectfully. "I am sure some +strange being was on board this ship, and I believe it has now escaped. Who +or what it was I can't say, but you'll find I'm right, some day." +<P> +"All right," spoke Mr. Henderson with a laugh. "I like to see any one brave +enough to stick up for his opinion, but, at the same time, I can't very well +imagine any person or thing being concealed in that storeroom ever since +we started. How could it get in?" +<P> +Mark did not; answer, but there came to him the recollection of that night, +previous to the sailing of the <I>Flying Mermaid, </I>when he had observed +some strange shadow that seemed to glide aboard the craft. +<P> +"Now let's forget all about such things," the professor went on. "We are +in a strange country, and there are many things to see and do. Let's explore +a little. Then we must see what we can do with the ship. We are dependent +on it, and it will not do to allow it to remain in a damaged state. We expect +to travel many miles in the interior of the earth if it is possible, and +we have only our craft to go in." +<P> +"I reckon we'd all better assimilate into our interior progression some molecules +and atoms of partly disentegrated matter in order to supply combustion for +the carbonaceous elements and assist in the manufacture of red corpuscles," +said Washington, appearing in the door, with a broad grin on his good-natured +face. +<P> +"Which, being interpreted," the professor said, "means, I suppose, that we +had better eat something to keep our digestive apparatus in good working +order?" +<P> +"Yo' done guessed it!" exclaimed the colored man, relapsing into his ordinary +speech. "I'se got a meal all ready." +<P> +They agreed that they might not have another opportunity soon to partake +of food, so they all gathered about the table, on which Washington had spread +a good meal. +<P> +"Come on, let's go outside and view this new and strange land at closer +quarters," the professor said, when they had satisfied their appetites. "We +can't see much from inside the ship." +<P> +Accordingly the heavy door in the side of the <I>Mermaid </I>was slid back, +and, for the first time the travelers stepped out on the surface of the land +in the interior of the earth. +<P> +At first it seemed no different than the ordinary land to which they were +accustomed. But they soon found it had many strange attributes. The queer +shifting and changing light, with the myriad of hues was one of them, but +to this the adventurers had, by this time, become accustomed, though it was, +none the less, a marvel to them. It was odd enough to see the landscape blood +red one instant, and a pale green the next, as it does when you look through +differently colored glasses. +<P> +Then, too, they noticed that the grass and flowers grew much more abundantly +than in the outer part of the world. They saw clover six feet high, and blades +of grass even taller. In some places the growth of grass was so big that +they were in danger of getting lost in it. +<P> +"If the grass is like this, what will the trees be?" asked Mark. +<P> +"There are some away over there," Jack replied. "We'll have to take a sail +over. They must be several hundred feet high." +<P> +"Well, at any rate, here's a little brook, and the water looks good to drink," +went on Mark. "I'm thirsty, so here goes." +<P> +He hurried to where a stream was flowing sluggishly between grassy banks. +The water was as clear as crystal, and Mark got down on his face and prepared +to sip some of the liquid up. +<P> +But, no sooner had his lips touched it, than he sprang up with a cry and +stood gazing at the water. +<P> +"What's the matter?" asked Jack. "Hot?" +<P> +"No, it isn't hot," Mark replied, "but it isn't water. It's white molasses!" +<P> +"White molasses?" repeated the professor, coming up at that moment. "What +are you talking about?" +<P> +He stooped down and dipped his finger into the stream. He drew it up quickly, +and there ran from it big drops that flowed as slowly as the extract of the +sugarcane does in cold weather. +<P> +"You're about right, Mark," he said. "It's water but it's almost as thick +as molasses." He touched his finger to his tongue. "It's good to drink, all +right," he went on, "only it will be a little slow going down." +<P> +Then he dipped up a palm full, and let it trickle down his throat. +<P> +"It is the strangest water I ever saw," he added. "It must be that the lack +of some peculiar property of air, which we have on the surface, has caused +this. I must make some notes on it," and he drew out pencil and paper. He +was about to jot down some facts when he was interrupted by a cry from +Washington. +<P> +"Come and see what's the matter with this stone!" he cried. +<h3>CHAPTER XVIII</h3> +<h4>CAUGHT BY A STRANGE PLANT</h4> +<P> +"WASHINGTON is in trouble!" exclaimed Mr. Henderson. Followed by the two +boys he ran to where the colored man stood in a stooping position over a +small pile of stones. +<P> +"What is it? Has something bit you?" asked the scientist, as he came up on +the run. +<P> +"No, but I can't git this stone up!" Washington said. "Look at what a little +stone it is, but I can't lift it. Something must have happened to me. Maybe +some one put th' evil eye on me! Maybe I'm bewitched!" +<P> +"Nonsense!" exclaimed the professor, "what did you want the stone for?" +<P> +"Nothin' in particular," replied Washington, still tugging away at the stone, +which was the size of his head. "I was just goin' t' throw it at a big bird, +but when I went to lift it this little stone 'peared t' be glued fast." +<P> +Washington moved aside to give Mr. Henderson a chance to try to pick up the +piece of rock. As the scientist grasped it a look of surprise came over his +features: +<P> +"This is most remarkable!" he exclaimed. "I can't budge it. I wonder if a +giant magnet is holding it down." +<P> +He tugged and tugged until he was red in the face. Then he beckoned to the +two boys, and they came to his aid. There was barely room for them all to +each get one hand on the rock, and then, only after a powerful tug did it +come up. Almost instantly it dropped back to the earth. +<P> +"This is remarkable!" the professor said. "I wonder if the other stones are +the same." +<P> +He tried several others, and one and all resisted his efforts. It was only +the small stones he was able to lift alone, and these, he said, were so weighty +that it would have been a task to throw them any distance. +<P> +"The water and the stones are strangely heavy in this land," he said. "I +wonder what other queer things we shall see." +<P> +"I saw a bird a little while ago, when I went to pick up that stone," observed +Washington. +<P> +"What kind was it?" asked the inventor. +<P> +"I don't know, only it was about as big as an eagle." +<P> +The travelers wandered about a quarter of a mile from the ship. They avoided +the tall grass and the lofty nodding flowers that seemed to grow in regular +groves, and kept to places where they could walk with comparative freedom. +<P> +"Have you formed any idea, Professor, as to the nature of this country?" +asked Mark, who liked to get at the bottom of things. +<P> +"I have, but it is only a theory," Mr. Henderson answered. "I believe we +are on a sort of small earth that is inside the larger one we live on. This +sphere floats in space, just as our earth does, and we have passed through +the void that lies between our globe and this interior one. I think this +new earth is about a quarter the size of ours and in some respects the same. +In others it is vastly different. +<P> +"But we will not think of those things now. We must see what our situation +is, whether we are in any danger, and must look to repairing our ship. There +will be time enough for other matters later." +<P> +The travelers were walking slowly along, noting the strange things on every +side. As they advanced the vegetation seemed to become more luxuriant, as +if nature had tried to out-do herself in providing beautiful flowers and +plants. The changing lights added to the beauty and weirdness of the scene. +<P> +The plain was a rolling one, and here and there were small hills and hollows. +As the travelers topped a rise Jack, who was in advance, called out: +<P> +"Oh what queer plants! They are giant Jacks-in-the-pulpit!" +<P> +The others hastened forward to see what the boy had discovered. Jack was +too eager to wait, and pressed on. The hill which sloped away from the top +of the little plateau on which he stood, was steeper than he had counted +on. As he leaned forward he lost his balance and toppled, head foremost, +down the declivity, rolling over. +<P> +"Look out!" cried Mark, who had almost reached his comrade's side. +<P> +The scene that confronted the travelers was a strange one. Before them in +a sort of hollow, were scores of big plants, shaped somewhat like a +Jack-in-the-pulpit, or a big lily, with a curved top or flap to it. +<P> +The plants were about eight feet tall, three feet across the top, and the +flap or covering was raised about two feet. They were nodding and swaying +in the wind on their short stems. +<P> +"He's headed right for one of them!" Mr. Henderson exclaimed. "I hope he'll +not fall into one of the openings." +<P> +"Is there any danger?" asked Mark. +<P> +"I'm afraid there is," the inventor added. "Those plants are a variety of +the well-known pitcher plant, or fly-trap, as they are sometimes called. +In tropical countries they grow to a large size, but nothing like these. +They are filled, in the cup, with a sort of sticky, sweet mixture, and this +attracts insects. When one enters the cup the top flap folds over, and the +hapless insect is caught there. The plant actually devours it, nature providing +a sort of vegetable digestive apparatus. These giant plants are the same, +and they seem large enough to take in a man, to say nothing of Jack!" +<P> +With anxious faces the adventurers turned to watch the fate of their comrade. +Jack was slipping, sliding and rolling down the hill. He could not seem to +stop, though he was making desperate efforts to do so. He was headed straight +for one of the largest of the terrible plants. +<P> +In vain, as he saw what was in front of him, did he try to change the course +of his involuntary voyage. Over and over he rolled, until, at length, he +struck a little grassy hummock, bounced into the air, and right into the +opening of a monster pitcher plant. +<P> +"It has him!" cried Mark. "We must save him! Come on everyone!" +<P> +He raced down the hill, while the others came closely after him. They reached +the plant into which Jack had bounced. The flap, or top piece, had closed +down, tightly over the unfortunate boy. +<P> +"Quick! We must save him or he will be smothered to death or drowned in the +liquid the cup contains!" Mr. Henderson exclaimed. "Attack the plant with +anything you can find!" +<P> +"Let's cut through the side of the flower-cup!" suggested Mark. "That seems +softer than the stem." +<P> +His idea was quickly put into operation. Andy's long hunting knife came in +very handy. While the sides of the long natural cup were tough, the knife +made an impression on them, and, soon, a small door or opening had been cut +in the side of the pitcher plant, large enough to enable a human body to +pass through. +<P> +When the last fibre had been severed by Andy, who was chosen to wield the +knife because of his long practice as a hunter, there was a sudden commotion +within the plant. Then a dark object, dripping water, made a spring and landed +almost at the feet of the professor. +<P> +It was Jack, and a sorry sight he presented. He was covered from head to +foot with some sticky substance, which dripped from all over him. +<P> +With hasty movements he cleared the stuff from his eyes and mouth, and +spluttered: +<P> +"It's a good thing you cut me out when you did. I couldn't have held on much +longer!" +<h3>CHAPTER XIX</h3> +<h4>THE BIG PEACH</h4> +<P> +JACK soon recovered from his remarkable experience. The terrible plant that +had nearly eaten him alive was a mass of cut-up vegetable matter which attracted +a swarm of insects. Most of them were ants, but such large ones the boys +had never seen before, and the professor said they exceeded in size anything +he had read about. Some of them were as large as big rats. They bit off large +pieces of the fallen plant and carried them to holes in the ground which +were big enough for Washington to slip his foot into, and he wore a No. 11 +shoe. +<P> +But the adventurers felt there were more important things for them to look +at than ants, so they started away again, the professor telling them all +to be careful and avoid accidents. +<P> +It was while they were strolling through a little glade, which they came +upon unexpectedly, that Washington, who was in the lead called out: +<P> +"Gracious goodness! It must be Thanksgivin'!" +<P> +"Why so?" asked Jack. +<P> +"'Cause here's th' remarkablest extraordinary and expansionist of a pumpkin +that ever I laid eyes on!" the colored man cried. +<P> +They all hurried to where Washington had come to a halt. There, on the ground +in front of him, was a big round object, about the size of a hogshead. It +was yellow in color, and was not unlike the golden vegetable from which mothers +make such delicious pies. +<P> +"I allers was fond of pumpkins," said Washington, placing his hand on the +thing, which was almost as tall as he was, "but I never thought I'd come +across such a one as this." +<P> +The professor and the two boys went closer to the monstrosity. Mr. Henderson +passed his hand over it and then, bending closer, smelled of it. +<P> +"That's not a pumpkin!" he exclaimed. +<P> +"What is it then?" asked Washington. +<P> +"It's a giant peach," the inventor remarked. "Can't you see the fuzz, and +smell it? Of course it's a peach." +<P> +"Well I'll be horn-swoggled!" cried Washington, leaning against the big fruit, +which easily, supported him. +<P> +"Hurrah!" cried Jack, drawing his knife from his pocket and opening the largest +blade. "I always did like peaches. Now I can have all I want," and he drove +the steel into the object, cutting off a big slice which he began to eat. +<P> +"It may be poisonous!" exclaimed Mark. +<P> +"Too late now," responded Jack, the juice running down from his mouth. "Taste's +good, anyhow." +<P> +They all watched Jack while he devoured his slice of fruit. Washington acted +as if he expected his friend to topple over unconscious, but Jack showed +no bad symptoms. +<P> +"You'd better all have some," the boy said. "It's the best I ever tasted." +<P> +Encouraged by Jack's example, Mark thought he, too, would have some of the +fruit. He opened his knife and was about to take off some of the peach when +suddenly the thing began to roll forward, almost upon him. +<P> +"Hi! Stop your shoving!" he exclaimed. "Do you want to have the thing roll +over me, Jack?" +<P> +"I'm not shoving!" replied Jack. +<P> +"Some one is!" Mark went on. He dodged around the far side of the immense +fruit and what he saw made him cry out in astonishment. +<P> +Two grasshoppers, each one standing about three feet high, were standing +on their hind legs, and with their fore feet were pushing the peach along +the ground. They had been attracted to the fruit by some juice which escaped +from a bruise on that side, which was the ripest, and, being fond of sweets +had, evidently decided to take their find to some safe place where they could +eat it at their leisure. Or perhaps they wanted to provide for their families +if grasshoppers have them. +<P> +"Did you ever see such monsters?" asked Jack. "They're as big as dogs!" +<P> +At the sound of his voice the two grasshoppers, becoming alarmed, ceased +their endeavors to roll the peach along, and, assuming a crouching attitude +seemed to be waiting. +<P> +"They certainly are remarkable specimens," Mr. Henderson said. "If the other +animals are in proportion, and if there are persons in this new world, we +are likely to have a hard time of it." +<P> +This time the immense insects concluded the strangers were not to their liking. +With a snapping of their big muscular legs and a whirr of their wings that +was like the starting of an automobile, the grasshoppers rose into the air +and sailed away over the heads of the adventurers. Their flight was more +than an eighth of a mile in extent, and they came down in a patch of the +very tall grass. +<P> +"Let's go after them!" exclaimed old Andy. "I was so excited I forgot to +take a shot at them. Come on!" +<P> +"I think we'd better not," counseled the professor. "In the first place we +don't need them. They would be no good for food. Then we don't know but what +they might attack us, and it would be no joke to be bitten by a grasshopper +of that size. Let them alone. We may find other game which will need your +attention, Andy. Better save your ammunition." +<P> +Somewhat against his will, Andy had to submit to the professor's ruling. +The old hunter consoled himself with the reflection that if insects grew +to that size he would have some excellent sport hunting even the birds of +the inner world. +<P> +"I wonder what sort of a tree that peach grew on," Jack remarked, as he cut +off another slice, when the excitement caused by the discovery of the +grasshoppers had subsided. "It must be taller than a church steeple. I wonder +how the fruit got here, for there are no trees around." +<P> +"I fancy those insects rolled it along for a good distance," Mr. Henderson +put in. "You can see the marks on the ground, where they pushed it. They +are wonderful creatures." +<P> +"Are we going any farther?" asked Mark. "Perhaps we can find the peach tree, +and, likely there are other fruit trees near it." +<P> +At the professor's suggestion they strolled along for some distance. They +were now about three miles from the airship, and found that what they had +supposed was a rather level plain, was becoming a succession of hills and +hollows. It was while descending into a rather deep valley that Jack pointed +ahead and exclaimed: +<P> +"I guess there's our peach orchard, but I never saw one like it before." +<P> +Nor had any of the others. Instead of trees the peaches were attached to +vines growing along the ground. They covered a large part of the valley, +and the peaches, some bigger than the one they first discovered, some small +and green, rose up amid the vines, just as pumpkins do in a corn field. +<P> +"Stranger and stranger," the professor murmured. "Peaches grow on vines. +I suppose potatoes will grow on trees. Everything seems to be reversed here." +<P> +They made their way down toward the peach "orchard" as Jack called it, though +"patch" would have been a better name. Besides peaches they found plums, +apples, and pears growing in the same way, and all of a size proportionate +to the first-named fruit. +<P> +"Well, one thing is evident," Mr. Henderson remarked, "we shall not starve +here. There is plenty to eat, even if we have to turn vegetarians." +<P> +"I wonder what time it is getting to be," Jack remarked. "My watch says twelve +o'clock but whether it's noon or midnight I can't tell, with this colored +light coming and going. I wonder if it ever sets as the sun does." +<P> +"That is something we'll have to get used to," the professor said. "But I +think we had better go back to the ship now. We have many things to do to +get it in order again. Besides, I am a little afraid to leave it unguarded +so long. No telling but what some strange beast—or persons, for that +matter—might injure it." +<P> +"I'm going to take back some slices of peaches with me, anyhow," Mark said, +and he and Jack cut off enough to make several meals, while Bill, Tom and +Washington took along all they could carry. +<P> +As they walked back toward the ship the strange lights seemed to be dying +out. At first they hardly noticed this, but as they continued on it became +quite gloomy, and an odd sort of gloom it was too, first green, then yellow, +then red and then blue. +<P> +"I believe whatever serves as a sun down here is setting," the professor +observed. "We must hurry. I don't want to be caught out here after dark." +<P> +They hurried on, the lights dying out more and more, until, as they came +in sight of their ship, it was so black they could hardly see. +<P> +Mark who was in the rear turned around, glancing behind him. As he did so +he caught sight of a gigantic shadow moving along on top of the nearest hill. +The shadow was not unlike that of a man in shape, but of such gigantic stature +that Mark knew it could be like no human being he had ever seen. At the same +time it bore a curious resemblance to the weird shadow he had seen slip into +the <I>Mermaid </I>that night before they sailed. +<P> +"I wonder if it can be the same—the same thing—grown larger, just as the +peach grows larger than those in our world," Mark thought, while a shiver +of fear seemed to go over him. "I wonder if that—that thing could have been +on the ship——" +<P> +Then the last rays of light died away and there was total darkness. +<h3>CHAPTER XX</h3> +<h4>OVERHAULING THE SHIP</h4> +<P> +"KEEP together!" shouted the professor. "It will not do to become lost now. +We are close to the ship, and will soon be there. Come after me." +<P> +It was more by following the sound of the scientist's voice, than by any +sight which the others could get of him, that they managed to trail along +behind. They reached the ship in safety, however, and entered. There was +no sound as of beasts or insects within, and, though Mark felt a little +apprehensive on account of what he had seen, he and the others as well, were +glad to be again in something that seemed like home. +<P> +"I wish we had some candles, or some sort of a light to see by," the professor +remarked. "We can do nothing in the dark, and there is no telling how long +this night is going to last once it has set in. If I could have a little +illumination, I might be able to fix the dynamo, and then we could turn on +the incandescents. That portable light we had is broken. +<P> +"By cracky!" exclaimed Andy. "I believe I have the very thing!" +<P> +"You don't mean to say you have a torch or a candle with you, do you?" asked +Mr. Henderson. +<P> +"No, but I have my patent pipe lighting apparatus," the hunter said. "I always +carry it. It gives a little light, but not much, though it may be enough +to work by." +<P> +Not until after several hours work, handicapped as they were by lack of light, +were the repairs to the ship completed. +<P> +"Now we'll start the engine and see how we will come out," the inventor +exclaimed, as he wiped his hands on some waste. +<P> +It did not take long to generate enough power to turn the dynamo. Soon the +familiar hum and whirr was heard, and, a few seconds later the filaments +in the lamps began to glow a dull red, which gradually brightened until they +were shining in all their usual brilliancy. +<P> +"Hurrah!" cried the boys. "Now we can see!" +<P> +They all felt in better spirits with the restoration of the lights, and, +washing off the grease and dirt of their labors in the engine room, they +prepared to sit down to the meal which Washington prepared. +<P> +As soon as the dynamo was working well, care had to be taken not to speed +it too much on account of a mended belt. The professor turned off part of +the lights and switched some of the current into the storage batteries, to +provide for emergencies. For there was no telling how long the night might +last. +<P> +Jack was the first one to finish the meal—they did not know whether to call +it dinner, supper or breakfast. He went into the conning tower, and, as soon +as he reached it he called out: +<P> +"Come on up here, professor! There's something strange going on!" +<P> +Mr. Henderson, followed by Mark, hurried to the tower. As he reached it and +looked out of the forward window, a beautiful white glow illuminated the +whole scene, and then, from below the horizon, there arose seven luminous +disks. One was in the centre, while about it circled the other six, like +some immense pin-wheel. +<P> +"It's the moon!" cried Mark. +<P> +"It's seven moons!" Jack exclaimed. "Why it's almost as light as day!" +<P> +And so it was, for the seven moons, if that is what they were, gave an +illumination not unlike the sun in brilliancy though it was like the beams +from the pale moon of the earth. +<P> +"I guess we need not have worried about the darkness," the professor remarked. +"Still it is a good thing I fixed the dynamo." +<P> +For some time he and the other adventurers watched the odd sight of the moons, +as they rose higher and higher overhead. The scene was a beautiful, if weird +one, for the whole plain was bathed in the soft light. +<P> +"I guess we can turn off the incandescents, and use all the power for the +storage batteries," Mr. Henderson went on, as he descended into the ship, +and opened the port shutters which had been closed when they started off +on their exploring tour. The interior of the <I>Mermaid </I>was almost as +light as when the odd colored beams had been playing over the new earth to +which they had come. +<P> +"I think we had better continue with our work of making repairs," Mr. Henderson +said. "We can't count on these moons remaining here any length of time, and +I want to take advantage of them. So though some of us perhaps need sleep, +we will forego it and fix up the <I>Mermaid. </I>I want to take a trip and +see what other wonders await us." +<P> +They all agreed that they would rather work than sleep, and soon the entire +force was busy in the engine room. There was much to be done, and the most +important things were attended to first. The motive power was overhauled +and found to be in need of several new parts. These were put in and then +the gas generator, and the negative gravity machine, were put in shape. +<P> +It would have taken something very substantial to have awakened any one on +board the <I>Mermaid </I>that night. They all slept soundly and awoke to +find the strange colored lights shining in through the glass covered port +holes. +<P> +"Well, the sun, or what corresponds to it, is up," observed Jack, "and I +guess we had better do as the little boy in the school reader did, and get +up, too, Mark." +<P> +Soon all the travelers were aroused, and the sound of Washington bustling +about in the kitchen, whence came the smell of coffee, bacon and eggs, told +the hungry ones that breakfast was under way. +<P> +After the meal work was again started on repairing the ship, and by noon +the professor remarked: +<P> +"I think we shall try a little flight after dinner. That is, if one thing +doesn't prevent us." +<P> +"What is that?" asked Jack. +<P> +"We may be held down, as were those stones," was the grave answer. +<h3>CHAPTER XXI</h3> +<h4>THE FISH THAT WALKED</h4> +<P> +IT was with no little apprehension that the professor prepared to take his +first flight aboard the ship in the realms of the new world. He knew little +or nothing of the conditions he might meet with, the density of the atmosphere, +or how the <I>Mermaid </I>would behave under another environment than that +to which she was accustomed. +<P> +Yet he felt it was necessary to make a start. They would have to attempt +a flight sooner or later, and Mr. Henderson was not the one to delay matters. +So, the last adjustment having been made to the repaired machinery, they +all took their places in the ship. +<P> +The boys and the professor went to the conning tower to direct matters, while +Washington and the others were in the engine room to see that the machinery +worked properly. Mark gave a last look outside as he closed the big steel +cover over the hole through which admission was had to the craft. He thought +he might catch a glimpse of the queer shadow, but nothing was in sight. It +was like a beautiful summer's day, save for the strange lights, shifting +and changing. But the travelers had become somewhat used to them by this +time. +<P> +The professor turned the valve that allowed the gas to enter the holder. +There was a hissing sound and a sort of trembling throughout the entire ship. +The dynamos were whizzing away and the negative gravity machine was all ready +to start. +<P> +For several minutes the travelers waited until the big lifting tank was filled +with the strong vapor. They watched the gages which indicated the pressure +to be several hundred pounds. +<P> +"I think we can chance it now," remarked Mr. Henderson, as he threw over +several levers. "We'll try, at any rate." +<P> +With a tremor the <I>Mermaid </I>left the surface of the inner earth and +went sailing upward toward the—well it wasn't exactly the sky, but it was +what corresponded to it in the new world, though there were no clouds and +no blue depths such as the boys were used to. At all events the <I>Mermaid +</I>was flying again, and, as the adventurers felt themselves being lifted +up they gave a spontaneous cheer at the success which had crowned their efforts. +<P> +The ship went up several hundred feet, and then, the professor, having brought +her to a stop, sent her ahead at a slow pace. He wanted to be sure all the +apparatus was in good working order before he tried any speed. +<P> +The <I>Mermaid </I>responded readily. Straight as an arrow through the air +she flew. +<P> +"Well, this is almost as good as being on the regular earth!" exclaimed Jack. +<P> +"It's better," put in Mark. "We haven't seen half the wonders yet. Let's +open the floor shutter, and see how it looks down below." +<P> +He and Jack went to the room where there was an opening in the floor of the +ship, covered by heavy glass. They slid back the steel shutter and there, +down below them, was the strange new, world they had come to, stretched out +like some big map. +<P> +They could see mountains, forests, plains, and rivers, the water sparkling +in the colored light. Over green fields they flew, then across some stretches +where only sand and rocks were to be seen. Faster and faster the ship went, +as the professor found the machinery was once more in perfect order. Jack +was idly watching the play of tinted lights over the surface of the ground. +<P> +"I wonder what makes it," he said. +<P> +"I have tried to account for it in several ways," said the professor, who +had called Washington to the conning tower and come to join the boys. "I +have had first one theory and then another, but the one I am almost sure +is correct is that hidden volcanic fires cause the illumination. +<P> +"I think they flare up and die away, and have become so regular that they +produce the same effect as night and day with us. Probably the fires go out +for lack of fuel, and when it is supplied they start up again. Perhaps it +is a sort of gas that they burn." +<P> +"Well, it's queer enough, whatever it is," Jack remarked. "What strikes me +as funny, though, is that we haven't seen a single person since we came here. +Surely this place must be inhabited." +<P> +Mark thought of the strange shadow he had seen, but said nothing. +<P> +"I believe it is," the professor answered. "We will probably come upon the +inhabitants soon. I only hope they are a people who will do us no harm." +<P> +"If they tried any of their tricks we could mount up in our ship and escape +them," said Andy. +<P> +"Provided they gave us the chance," Mr. Henderson put in. "Well, we'll not +worry about that now." +<P> +For several hours the ship traveled on, until it had come to a different +sort of country. It was wilder and not so level, and there were a number +of streams and small lakes to be seen. +<P> +"Are you going to sail all night?" asked Jack. +<P> +"No," replied the professor. "I think we'll descend very soon now, and camp +out for a while. That lake just ahead seems to offer a good place," and he +pointed to a large sheet of water that sparkled in the distance, for by this +time they had all gone back to the conning tower. +<P> +The lake was in the midst of a wood that extended for some distance on all +sides, and was down in a sort of valley. The ship headed toward it, and in +a short time a landing was made close to shore. +<P> +"Maybe we can have some fresh fish for supper," exclaimed Jack as he ran +from the ship as soon as the sliding door in the side was opened. "Looks +as if that lake had some in it. It is not thick water like in that stream +we stopped at," he added. +<P> +"I believe you're right," old Andy put in, as he turned back to look for +some lines and hooks among his traps. He soon found what he wanted, and gave +them to the boys, taking his trusty gun along for himself. +<P> +While the professor, Washington, Tom and Bill remained behind to make some +adjustments to the machinery, and to get things in shape for the night, which, +they calculated would soon be upon them, Jack, Mark and Andy went down to +the shore of the lake. The boys cut some poles from the trees, and baiting +the hooks with some fat worms found under the bark, threw in. +<P> +"Let's see who'll get the first bite," spoke Jack. "I'm pretty generally +lucky at fishing." +<P> +"Well, while you're waiting to decide that there contest, I think I'll take +a stroll along shore and see if I can see anything to shoot," Andy remarked. +<P> +For several minutes the boys sat in silence on the bank of the lake, watching +the play of the vari-colored lights on the water. Suddenly Jack felt a quiver +on his line, and his pole began to shake. +<P> +"I've got something!" he cried. Then his pole bent almost double and he began +to pull for all he was worth. "It's a whopper!" he cried. "Come and help +me, Mark!" +<P> +Mark ran to his friend's aid. Whatever was on the other end of the line was +strong enough to tax the muscles of both boys. They could hear the pole beginning +to break. But for the excellent quality of Andy's line that would have parted +some time before. +<P> +All at once there came a sudden slacking of the pull from whatever was in +the water. And so quickly did it cease that both boys went over backward +in a heap. +<P> +"He's got away!" cried Jack, getting up and brushing some of the dirt from +his clothes. +<P> +"There's something that didn't get away!" cried Mark, who had risen to his +knees, and was pointing at the lake. Jack looked and what he saw made him +almost believe he was dreaming. +<P> +For, emerging from the water, dragging the pole and line the boys had dropped +along with it, was a most curious creature. It was a big fish, but a fish +with four short legs on which it was walking, or rather waddling along as +much as a duck, with a double supply of feet, might do. +<P> +"Say, do I see that or is there something the matter with my eyes?" sung +out Jack, making ready to run away. +<P> +"It's there all right!" exclaimed Mark. "Hi! Andy! Here's something to shoot!" +he yelled, for indeed the creature was big enough to warrant attack with +a gun. It was about five feet long and two feet through. +<P> +On and on it came, straight at the boys, as if to have revenge for the pain +the fish hook must have caused it, for the barb could be seen dangling from +its lip. On and on it came, waddling forward, the water dripping from it +at every step. It had the body and general shape of a fish, save that the +tail was rather large in proportion. As it came nearer the boys noted that +the feet were webbed, like those of a water fowl. +<P> +"Come on!" cried Jack. "It may attack us!" +<P> +At that moment the creature opened its mouth, showing a triple row of formidable +teeth, and gave utterance to a sort of groan and grunt combined. +<P> +This was enough to send Jack and Mark off on a run up the bank, and did they +stop until they heard Andy's voice hailing them. +<P> +"What's the matter, boys?" +<P> +"Come here! Quick!" answered Jack. +<P> +The fish-animal had halted and seemed to be taking an observation. To do +this, as it could not turn its neck, it had to shift its whole body. Old +Andy came up on the run, his gun held in readiness. +<P> +"Where is it?" he asked, and the boys pointed silently. +<P> +The hunter could not repress a start of astonishment as he saw the strange +creature. But he did not hesitate a second. There was a crack of the rifle, +and the thing, whatever it was, toppled over, dead. +<P> +Andy hurried up to it, to get a closer view. +<P> +"Well, this is the limit!" he exclaimed. "First we have grasshoppers that +can roll peaches as big as hogsheads, and now we come across fish that walk. +I wonder what we will see next." +<P> +"I don't want to go fishing in this lake any more," spoke Jack, as he looked +at the repulsive creature. "I never want to eat fish any more." +<P> +"Same here," agreed Mark, and old Andy was of the opinion that the thing +killed would not make a wholesome dish for the table. +<P> +"There don't seem to be any game in this section," he remarked. "Not a sign +could I see, nor have I since we have been here, unless you count those +grasshoppers. But the fruit is good, I'll say that." +<P> +"Come on, we'd better be getting back," Mark said, as he noticed it was getting +dark. "I'm hungry." +<h3>CHAPTER XXII</h3> +<h4>THE SNAKE-TREE</h4> +<P> +THEY managed to make a good meal of the food supplies they had brought along, +and as a dessert Washington made some peach short-cake from the slices of +the giant fruit they had found, the day before. Just as they finished supper +it got very dark, but, in about an hour, the moon-beams, as the travelers +called them, came up, and illuminated the lake with a weird light. +<P> +As the machinery of the <I>Mermaid </I>was now in working order there was +no further alarm because of the darkness. The ship rested on a level keel +about a hundred yards back from the lake, and, seeing that all was snug, +and the fastenings secure, the travelers went to bed. +<P> +Though they had to forego fish for breakfast the travelers made a good meal. +After seeing that the ship was in readiness for a quick start, the professor +suggested they take a walk around and see what sort of country they might +be in now. +<P> +They tramped on for several miles, meeting with no adventures, and seeing +nothing out of the ordinary. It was a pleasant day, just warm enough to be +comfortable, and a little wind was blowing through the trees. +<P> +"It would be almost like home if it wasn't for the strange lights, and the +memory of the queer things here," said Jack. "I feel fine. Let's see if you +can hit that dead tree over there, Mark." +<P> +Jack stooped to grab up a stone, but no sooner had his fingers touched it +than he called out: +<P> +"There! I forgot all about the stones here being heavier than lead. Guess +we can't throw any of 'em. But come on. I'll race you to the dead tree!" +<P> +Mark was willing, so the two boys set off at a fast pace. +<P> +"Look out where you're going!" the professor called after them. "No telling +what may be in those woods," for the boys were approaching a little glade, +on the edge of which the dead tree stood. +<P> +Jack reached the goal first, and stood leaning against the trunk, waiting +for Mark. +<P> +"You'd better practice sprinting!" exclaimed the victor. +<P> +Mark was about to excuse himself for his poor showing, on the plea of having +eaten too much breakfast, when to his horror he saw what seemed to be a long +thin snake spring out from the branches of a nearby tree and twine itself +about Jack. +<P> +"Help me! Save me!" cried the unfortunate boy, as he was lifted high into +the air and pulled within the shadow of the wood. +<P> +For an instant Mark was too horror-stricken to move. Then with a shout that +alarmed the others, who were coming along more slowly, he made a dash for +the place he had last seen Jack. +<P> +Had old Andy not been on the watch, with those keen eyes of his, there might +have been a double tragedy. He had seen from afar the sudden snatching up +of Jack, and noted Mark's rush to save his chum. +<P> +"Stand still! Don't go in there for your life!" yelled the hunter, at the +same time running forward with gun ready. +<P> +His example was followed by the professor, Washington and the other two men. +<P> +"A snake has Jack!" called Mark, when Andy was at his side. +<P> +"No! It's not a snake!" replied the hunter. "It's worse. It's the snake-tree!" +<P> +"What's that?" asked Mr. Henderson, hurrying up. +<P> +"The snake-tree has Jack," the hunter went on. "It is a plant, half animal, +half-vegetable. It has long branches, not unlike a snake in shape. They can +move about and grab things." +<P> +"One of them got a grip on Jack as he leaned against the dead tree trunk. +I just caught a glimpse of it, and called to prevent Mark from running into +danger." +<P> +"Can't we save him?" asked Mr. Henderson. +<P> +"I'm going to try!" replied Andy. "Quick! Gather up some pieces of dry wood. +I have some paper, and my pipe lighter. We must fight the snake-tree with +fire!" +<h3>CHAPTER XXIII</h3> +<h4>THE DESERTED VILLAGE</h4> +<P> +JACK'S Cries were growing fainter and fainter. Peering in through the branches +of the dead tree the professor could see the whip-like limbs winding closer +and closer about the boy. +<P> +"I am afraid we will be too late!" he said. +<P> +Andy had twisted some paper into a rude torch. He set fire to it with his +pocket lighter, and, when Bill and Mark brought him some little pieces of +dead wood the old hunter added them to his bundle, which was now blazing +brightly. +<P> +"How are you going to do it?" asked the professor. +<P> +"I'll show you," replied Andy. He bound the sticks and paper together with +wisps of grass and then, when it was so hot he could hardly hold it longer, +he ran as close as he dared to the snake-tree and tossed the torch at the +foot of it. +<P> +The blazing bundle fell among some damp leaves and grass, as Andy had intended +it should, and soon a dense smoke arose, pouring straight up through the +branches of the animal-tree, the limbs of which were gathered in a knot about +the half-unconscious form of the boy. +<P> +For a few minutes they all waited anxiously. Would Andy's trick succeed? +Had the terrible tree not already squeezed the life from Jack? +<P> +But, while they watched, there seemed to come a change over the tree. The +snake-like arms waved less and less. They seemed to straighten out, as though +deprived of power by the smoke which was now so dense as to hide Jack from +sight. Then the arms suddenly relaxed and something rolled from them and +fell to the ground. With a quick movement Andy darted in, crawling on his +hands and knees beneath the limbs, and brought Jack out. The boy was white +and his eyes were closed. +<P> +"Get some water!" cried the old hunter. +<P> +Mark ran toward a stream a little distance away. He brought some of the curiously +thick liquid in his hat, and while Andy held the boy the professor sprinkled +some of the drops on his face, and forced some between his lips. In a little +while Jack's eyes slowly opened. +<P> +"Don't let it eat me!" he begged. +<P> +"You're all right now," said Andy heartily. "Not a bit harmed, Jack. But," +he added in a low tone, "it was a close call." +<P> +A few whiffs from a bottle of ammonia the professor carried soon brought +Jack's color back. +<P> +"Do you feel better now?" asked Mark. +<P> +"I guess so. Yes, I'm all right," replied Jack, struggling to his feet. "What +happened? Feels as if I had been tied up with a lot of rope." +<P> +"That's about what you were," Andy replied, "only it was the worst kind of +rope I ever saw. Those snake-trees are terrible things. I've read of 'em, +but I never saw one before. The book that told of them says they squeeze +their victims to death just as a snake does. The only way to do is to make +some smoke and fire at the bottom. This sort of kills the branches or makes +them stupid and they let go. The trees are half animal, and awful things. +I hope we don't meet with any more." +<P> +"Same here," added Jack fervently, as he grasped Andy's hand, and thanked +him for saving his life. +<P> +"Do you think you can go on, or shall we return to the ship'?" the professor +asked. +<P> +"Oh I can trail along, if you move a little slowly," Jack replied. "I'm a +bit stiff, that's all." +<P> +So they resumed their journey. They had gone, perhaps, three miles when +Washington, who was in the lead, suddenly stopped and called: +<P> +"Sounds like thunder." +<P> +The others listened. Sure enough there was a dull rumble and roar audible. +It seemed off to the left, but they could see no clouds in the sky, nor any +signs of a storm. +<P> +"Let's take a walk over that way and see what it is," Mr. Henderson suggested. +<P> +As they walked on the noise became louder, until in about half an hour it +was like the sound from a blast furnace. +<P> +"What do you suppose it can be?" asked Mark. +<P> +"Perhaps some new freak of nature," the professor replied. "We seem to have +a good many of them here." +<P> +They were all on their guard now, for there was no telling into what danger +they might run. As they went up a little hill the noise became much louder. +The professor and Andy, who had taken the lead, kept a sharp lookout ahead, +that they might not unexpectedly fall into some hidden stream or lake. As +they topped the hill they saw before them a deep valley, and in the midst +of it was that which was causing the roaring sound. +<P> +From the centre of an immense mound of rock and earth there spouted up a +great column of water, three hundred feet or more, as straight as a flag +staff. It was about ten feet in diameter, and at the top it broke into a +rosette of sparkling liquid, which as the vari-colored lights played on it, +resembled some wonderful flower. +<P> +"It's a great geyser!" the professor exclaimed. "We have come to a place +like Yellowstone Park. We must be very careful. The crust may be very thin +here, and let us down into some boiling spring." +<P> +The others gathered around the professor, and, from a safe distance watched +the ever rising and falling shaft of water. +<P> +It was not regular in motion. Sometimes it would shoot up to a great distance, +nearly a thousand feet, the professor estimated. Again it would sink down, +as the power sending it out lessened, until it was only a few hundred feet +above the rounded top of the mound from which it spurted. But it never fell +below this. All the while there was the constant roaring sound, as though +the forces of nature below the surface were calling to be let out. +<P> +"I hope there are not many of those about," Mr. Henderson remarked after +a pause. "If the ship should hit one during the night it would be all up +with us. We must keep a careful look-out." +<P> +The spouting column had a fascination which held them to the spot for some +time. From the hill they had a good view of the surrounding country, but +did not see any more geysers. +<P> +"Do you think it is hot water?" asked Mark. +<P> +"There is no vapor," the professor answered, "but most of the geysers are +produced by the action of steam in the interior of the earth. However we'll +not take any chances by investigating. I fear it would not be safe to go +into that valley." +<P> +"Look there!" cried Andy. "I guess we're better off here!" He pointed a little +to the right of where the water spouted. The others looked, and saw, coming +from a hole in the ground, some shaggy black object. +<P> +"What is it?" asked Jack. +<P> +"It looks like a bear," replied the hunter, "but I never saw one like it +before." +<P> +Nor had any of the others, for the creature was a terrible one. It had the +body of a bear, but the feet and legs were those of an alligator, while the +tail trailed out behind like a snake, and the head had a long snout, not +unlike the trunk of an elephant. The creature was about ten feet long and +five feet in height. +<P> +"Let me try a shot at it!" exclaimed Andy. "That is something worth shooting," +and he cocked his rifle. +<P> +"Don't!" exclaimed the professor shortly. "You might only wound it, and it +would pursue us. We are not ready to fight such creatures as that, and you +are the only one armed." +<P> +"I never missed anything I aimed at yet," said Andy, a little hurt that any +one should doubt his ability to kill at the first shot. +<P> +"Perhaps not, but how do you know but what this creature has a bullet proof +armor under its hide. This is a strange world, Andy. It is better to take +no chances." +<P> +"I hate to see him get away," the hunter said. +<P> +But, as it happened, the beast was not to get away. As they watched they +saw the horrible animal approach the mound from which the water spurted. +Up the sides it climbed. +<P> +"I guess he's going to get a drink," said Mark. +<P> +That was evidently the beast's intention. It went close to the spouting column +of water, and thrust its head out so that its tongue could lap from the side. +It seemed to have been in the habit of doing this. +<P> +For once, and for the last time, however, it made a mistake. The water seemed +to veer to one side. In its eagerness to get a drink the animal took another +step forward. At that moment the direction of the column changed again, and +it tilted over toward the beast. +<P> +Suddenly, as the travelers watched, the full force of the big column caught +the beast just under the fore shoulders. Up into the air the creature shot, +propelled by thousands of pounds pressure. Right up to the top of the column +it went, and this time the water rose a thousand feet into the air. +<P> +Up and up went the animal, struggling to get away from the remorseless grip. +Then, when the water had reached its height, it shot the beast off to one +side. Then the brute began to fall, twisting, turning, wiggling and struggling. +Down it came with a thud that could be heard above the noise of the geyser. +<P> +"I reckon that finishes him," observed Andy. And it had, for there was not +a sign of life from the creature. +<P> +"I guess we have seen enough for one morning," the professor said, "Let's +go back to the airship. It must be nearly dinner time." +<P> +They started away. Mark gave a last look at the queer column of water and +the dead body of the strange animal. As he passed down the hill he thought +he saw the creature move, and stayed to see if this was so. But a second +glance convinced him he was mistaken. +<P> +The others had gone on and were some distance ahead. Mark hurried on to join +them. As he got a last glance at the top of the column, over the brow of +the hill, he happened to look off to the left. There was another hill, about +the size of the one they had been on. +<P> +And, as Mark looked he saw something move. At first he thought it was another +beast. But, to his terror he saw that the creature had only two legs, and +that it stood upright like a man, but such a man as Mark had never seen before, +for he was nearly twelve feet tall. +<P> +He was about to cry out and warn the others, when the thing, whatever it +was, sunk down, apparently behind some tall bushes, and disappeared as if +the earth had opened and swallowed it. +<P> +"I wonder if I had better tell them," thought Mark. "I can't show them anything. +I wonder if I really saw it, or if it was only a shadow. I guess I'll say +nothing. But it is very strange." +<P> +Then he hurried on to join the others. +<P> +"What makes you so pale?" asked Jack of his chum. +<P> +"Nothing," said Mark, somewhat confused. "I guess I'm a little tired, that's +all." +<P> +They reached the ship in safety, and, having dinner started the machinery +and took the <I>Mermaid </I>up into the air. +<P> +"We'll travel on and see if we can't find some human beings," the professor +said. +<P> +All that afternoon they sailed, the country below them unfolding like a panorama. +They passed over big lakes, sailing on the surface of some, and over rivers, +and vast stretches of forest and dreary plains. But they never saw a sign +of human inhabitants. +<P> +It was getting on to five o'clock, the hour when the brilliant lights usually +disappeared, when Mark, who was steering in the conning tower, gave a cry. +<P> +"What is it?" asked the professor, looking up from a rude map he was making +of the land they had just traversed. +<P> +"It looks like a town before us," said the boy. +<P> +Mr. Henderson and Jack looked to where Mark pointed. A few miles ahead and +below them were great mounds, not unlike that from which the geyser had spouted. +But they were arranged in regular form, like houses on a street, row after +row of them. And, as they approached nearer, they could see that the mounds +had doors and windows to them. Some of the mounds wer rger than others, +and some were of double and triple formation. +<P> +"It's a city! The first city of the new world!" cried Jack. +<P> +"It is a deserted village!" said the professor. "We have found where the +people live, but we have not found them." And he was right, for there was +not a sign of life about the place, over which the airship was now suspended. +<h3>CHAPTER XXIV</h3> +<h4>THE GIANTS</h4> +<P> +"LET'S go down and investigate," suggested Jack. +<P> +"Better wait," counseled the professor. "It will soon be dark, and, though +we will have moonlight, we can not see to advantage. I think it will be best +to keep the ship in the air to-night, and descend in the morning. Then we +can look about and decide on what to do." +<P> +They all agreed this was the best plan, and, after making a circle above +the deserted village, and noting no signs of life, the <I>Mermaid </I>was +brought to a halt over the centre of the town, and about three hundred feet +above it. There the travelers would be comparatively safe. +<P> +It was deemed best to keep watch that night, and so, Mark, Jack, Bill and +Tom took turns, though there was nothing for them to do, as not a thing happened. +With the first appearance of dawn Mr. Henderson gave orders to have the ship +lowered, and it came to rest in the middle of what corresponded to a street +in the queer mound village. +<P> +"Now to see what kind of people have lived here!" cried Jack. "They must +have been a queer lot. Something like the Esquimaux, only they probably had +more trouble keeping cool than the chaps up at the north pole do." +<P> +Now that they were down among the mound houses, they saw that the dwellings +were much larger than they had supposed. They towered high above the boys' +heads, and some of them were large enough in area to have accomodated a company +of soldiers. +<P> +"Say, the chaps who lived in these must have been some pumpkins," said Jack. +"Why the ceilings are about fifteen feet high, and the doors almost the same! +Talk about giants! I guess we've struck where they used to hang out, at any +rate." +<P> +The houses were a curious mixture of clay and soft stone. There were doors, +with big skins from animals as curtains, and the windows were devoid of glass. +Instead of stairs there were rude ladders, and the furniture in the mound +houses was of the roughest kind. +<P> +There were fire-places in some of the houses, and the blackened and smoked +walls showed that they must have been used. In one or two of the houses clay +dishes, most of them broken, were scattered about, and the size of them, +in keeping with everything else, indicated that those who used them were +of no small stature. +<P> +"Some of the bowls would do for bath tubs," said Jack, as he came across +one or two large ones. +<P> +By this time the professor, Bill and Tom had joined the boys, and the five +went on with the exploring tour, while Washington and Andy remained in the +ship to get breakfast. +<P> +"The inhabitants are evidently of a half-civilized race," the professor said. +"Their houses, and the manner in which they live, show them to be allied +to the Aztecs, though of course they are much larger than that race." +<P> +"What's bothering me," Bill said, "is not so much what race they belong to, +as what chance we'd stand in a race with them if they took it into their +heads to chase after us. I've read that them there Azhandled races——" +<P> +"You mean the Aztecs," interrupted the professor. +<P> +"Well the Aztecs, then. But I've read they used to place their enemies on +a stone altar and cut their hearts out. Now I'm not hankerin' after anything +like that." +<P> +"Don't be foolish," spoke Mr. Henderson. "Wait until you meet some of the +giants, if that is what they are, and then you can decide what to do." +<P> +"It may be too late then," remarked Bill in a low tone, and the boys were +somewhat inclined to agree with him. +<P> +However, there seemed to be no immediate danger, as there was no sign of +any of the big people about the village. The adventurers walked about for +some time, but made no discoveries that would throw any light on the reason +for the place being left uninhabited. It seemed as if there had been a sudden +departure from the place, for in a number of the houses the remains of +half-cooked meals were seen. +<P> +"Well, I think we have noted enough for the time being," the professor remarked, +after they had traversed almost half the length of what seemed to be the +principal street. "Let's go back to the ship and have something to eat. +Washington may have become alarmed at our absence." +<P> +They made a circle in order to take in another part of the town on their +way back. While passing through a sort of alley, though it was only narrow +by comparison with the other thoroughfares that were very wide, Mark came +to a place where there was a circular slab of stone, resting on the ground. +In the centre was a big iron ring. +<P> +"Hello! Here's something new!" he exclaimed. "Maybe it leads to a secret +passage, or covers some hidden treasure." +<P> +"I guess it will have to continue to cover it then," Jack spoke. "That probably +weighs several tons. None of us could move it." +<P> +They made their way back to the ship, where they found Washington and Andy +discussing the advisability of going off in search of them. +<P> +"Breakfast is mighty near spoiled," said the colored man with an injured +air. +<P> +But the travelers did full justice to the meal, notwithstanding this. Deciding +there was nothing to be gained by staying in that vicinity, the professor +started the ship off again. +<P> +They traveled several hundred miles in the air, and, as the afternoon was +coming to a close, Jack, who was in charge of the conning tower, spied, just +ahead of them, another village. +<P> +"We will descend there for the night," the professor said. "Does there seem +to be any sign of life about?" +<P> +"None," replied Mark, who was observing through a telescope the town they +were approaching. "It's as dead as the other one." +<P> +The airship settled down in a field back of some of the mound houses. +<P> +"Now for supper!" cried Jack. "I'm as hungry as——" +<P> +He stopped short, for, seeming to rise from the very ground, all about the +ship, there appeared a throng of men. And such men as they were! For not +one was less than ten feet tall, and some were nearly fifteen! +<P> +"The giants have us!" cried Bill, as he saw the horde of creatures surrounding +the ship. +<h3>CHAPTER XXV</h3> +<h4>HELD BY THE ENEMY</h4> +<P> +"KEEP the doors closed!" cried the professor. "It is our only hope! I will +send the ship up again!" +<P> +But it was too late. Washington, who had obeyed the signal from the conning +tower to shut off the engines, had disconnected most of them so they could +not be started again save from the main room. At the same time there came +a yell of dismay from the colored man, who had slid back the steel covering +of the main side entrance to the <I>Mermaid.</I> +<P> +"I'm caught!" cried Washington. +<P> +As the professor and the boys hurried from the tower, they could hear a struggle +from where Washington was, and his voice calling: +<P> +"Let me go! Let me go!" +<P> +Reaching the engine room, which opened directly on the side entrance, the +professor saw a pair of enormous hands and arms dragging poor Washington, +feet first, out of the ship. Bill and Tom were crouched in one corner, pale +with fright. +<P> +"Wait until I get my gun!" cried Andy, as he ran for his rifle. +<P> +"Hold on!" called the professor in a loud voice. "It will be folly to shoot +them! We must try strategy!" +<P> +Washington's cries ceased as he was drawn entirely from the ship, the giant +hands disappearing at the same time. +<P> +"Follow me!" yelled Mr. Henderson, running out of the door. +<P> +Hardly knowing what they did, the boys went after him, and their hearts almost +stopped beating in fright as they saw the terrible things, which, in the +glare of the changing lights, were on every side of them. +<P> +For the men were very repulsive looking. They there attired in clothes, very +similar in cut to those worn by the travelers, and which seemed to be made +of some sort of cloth. But they were loose and baggy and only added to the +queer appearance of the giants. Veritable giants they were too. Their faces +seemed as large as kegs, and they were so clumsy in shape that Mark, even, +frightened as he was, exclaimed: +<P> +"They look like men made of putty!" At the same time he saw they bore a +resemblance to the creature he had observed on the hill top. +<P> +"What shall we do?" asked Andy of the professor. "They are really carrying +Washington away!" +<P> +Three of the giants were dragging the colored man along the ground, while +the other terrible beings stood about as if waiting to see the outcome of +the first sally. +<P> +"I will try to speak to them," Mr. Henderson said. "I know several languages. +They may understand one." +<P> +But before he could start on his parley a surprising thing happened. There +was a struggle in the little group about Washington. The colored man seemed +to be fighting, though the odds, it would appear, were too great to enable +him to accomplish anything. But, making a desperate effort to escape, Washington +quickly wrenched himself free from the giants' hands and then, striking out +with his fists, knocked the three down, one after another. +<P> +"I never knew Washington was so strong!" exclaimed Jack. +<P> +"Nor I," put in Mark. "Why I should think the men could carry him in one +arm as if he was a baby." +<P> +The three giants rose slowly to their feet. They uttered strange cries, and +motioned with their hands toward the professor, the boys, and the others +in the crowd. +<P> +"Look out! They're goin' t' grab yo'!" cried Washington. +<P> +Three of the giants approached Mark, and a like number closed in on Jack. +<P> +"Back to the ship!" cried the professor. "We must defend ourselves!" +<P> +But by this time the big men had grabbed the two boys. Then a strange thing +took place. Mark and Jack, though they felt that the giants must overcome +them in a test of strength, struggled with all their might against being +captured. They fought, as a cornered rat will fight, though it knows the +odds to be overwhelming. But in this case the unexpected happened. +<P> +Both boys found they could easily break the holds of the giants, and Mark, +by a vigorous effort, pushed the three men away from him, one at a time violently +so that they fell in a heap, one on top of the other. +<P> +"Hurrah! We can fight 'em!" cried Mark. "Don't be afraid. They're like mush! +They're putty men!" +<P> +And, so it seemed, the giants were. Though big in size they were flabby and +had nothing like the muscle they should have had in proportion to their build. +They went down like meal sacks and were slow to rise. +<P> +Jack, seeing how successful his comrade was, attacked the three giants who +were striving to make him a captive. He succeeded in disposing of them, knocking +one down so hard that the man was unable to rise until his companions helped +him. +<P> +"That's the way!" cried Washington. "They're soft as snow men!" +<P> +The vanquished giants set up a sort of roar, which was answered by their +fellows, and soon there was a terrible din. +<P> +"All get together!" called the professor. "They are evidently going to make +a rush for us. If we stand by one another we may fight them off, though they +outnumber us a hundred to one. Besides it will soon be dark, and we may be +able to escape!" +<P> +Washington, Jack and Mark retreated toward the ship, in the direction of +which the others had also made their way. The big men had gathered in a compact +mass and were advancing on the adventurers. +<P> +"What do you suppose makes them so soft?" asked Mark. "I believe I could +manage half a dozen." +<P> +"It must be the effect of the climate and conditions here," the professor +replied. "Probably they have to be big to stand the pressure of the thick +water, and the increased attraction of gravitation. Then too, being without +the weight of the atmosphere to which we are accustomed, they have probably +expanded. If they were to go up to earth, they might shrink to our size." +<P> +"Do you think that possible?" +<P> +"Of course. Why do you ask?" +<P> +"Nothing in particular," replied Mark. But to himself, he added: "That would +explain it all." +<P> +It was getting dusk now. The travelers had reached their ship, and rushed +inside and tried to close the doors in the face of the advancing horde. But, +by this time the giants were so close that one or two of them thrust their +big feet in, and prevented this movement. At the same time they set up a +great howling. +<P> +"Quick!" cried the professor. "We must start the ship and get away!" +<P> +"I can't close the door!" yelled Washington, who had been the last to enter. +<P> +"Never mind that! Go up with it open! Drag them along if they won't let go!" +answered Mr. Henderson, as he ran toward the engine room. +<P> +There was a sudden rush among the giants, and a sound as if something was +being thrown over the top and ends of the ship. Mark turned the gas machine +on, while Jack worked the negative gravity apparatus. They waited for the +ship to rise. +<P> +"Why don't we go up?" asked the professor. +<P> +"'Cause they've caught us!" called out Washington. +<P> +"Caught us? How?" +<P> +"They've thrown ropes over the top and ends of the ship, and fastened them +to their big houses!" +<P> +Running to a side window the professor saw that the <I>Mermaid </I>was fastened +down by a score of cables, each one six inches thick. They were held captives +by the enemy. +<h3>CHAPTER XXVI</h3> +<h4>A FRIEND INDEED</h4> +<P> +THOUGH the giants, man for man, were no match for the travelers, collectively +the horde proved too much. They had swarmed about the ship, and, by passing +the big cables over her, effectively held her down. +<P> +"Let me get out and I'll cut 'em!" cried Andy. "We must get away from these +savages!" +<P> +"No, no, don't go out!" exclaimed the professor. "They would eventually kill +you, though you might fight them off for a time. We must wait and see what +develops. They can have no object in harming us, as we have not injured them." +<P> +"I'd rather fight 'em," insisted the old hunter. +<P> +But the professor had his way and Andy was forced to obey. The giants had +withdrawn their big feet from the side door and Washington had closed it. +But nothing else had been accomplished, and the ship could not rise. The +gas and negative gravity machines were stopped, as they were only under a +useless strain. +<P> +Suddenly, the colored lights which had been growing dimmer and dimmer, with +the approach of night, went out altogether. Almost as suddenly, Mark, who +was watching the giants from the conning tower, as they made fast the loose +ends of the cables, saw them make a dash for the mound houses. +<P> +"They're afraid of the dark!" he cried. "Come on! We can go out now and loosen +the ropes!" +<P> +He hurried to tell the professor what he had noticed. +<P> +"Good!" exclaimed Mr. Henderson. "Perhaps we can escape now!" +<P> +They waited a few minutes, listening to the sound of many big feet running +away from the ship, and then, Bill cautiously opened the side door. The others +were behind him, waiting, with knives and hatchets in their hands, to rush +out and cut the restraining cables. +<P> +"All ready!" called Bill. "There doesn't seem to be a one in sight!" +<P> +He stepped out but no sooner had he set foot on the ground than there came +a thud, and Bill went down as if some one had knocked his feet from under +him. +<P> +"Go back! Go back!" he cried. "They hit me with something. I'm being smothered!" +<P> +"Bring a light!" cried the professor, for the sally had been started in the +dark. +<P> +Jack brought the portable electric it having been repaired and flashed it +out of the door. In the gleam of it, Bill was seen lying prostrate, half +covered by an orange, about half as big as himself. The fruit was as soft +and mushy as some of the giants themselves, or Bill would not have fared +so easily. +<P> +Then, as the others stood watching, and while Bill arose and wiped some of +the juice from his face, there came a regular shower of the monstrous oranges. +<P> +"Get inside quick! We'll be smothered under them!" Mr. Henderson cried. +<P> +Pausing only to rescue Bill, the adventurers retreated inside the ship, and +made fast the door. Outside they could hear the thud as the oranges were +thrown, some hitting the <I>Flying Mermaid </I>and many dropping all about +her. +<P> +"I guess they are going to have things their own way," observed Bill, as +he gazed down on his clothes, which were covered with juice from the fruit. +<P> +The night was one of anxiety. The travelers took turns standing guard, but +nothing more occurred. The giants remained in their houses, and the heavy +ropes still held the ship fast. +<P> +"We must hold a council of war," the professor decided as they gathered at +breakfast, which was far from a cheerful meal. +<P> +With the return of the colored lights the giants again made their appearance. +They came swarming from the mound houses, and a great crowd they proved to +be. Several thousand at least, Jack estimated, and when he went up into the +conning tower and took a survey he could see the strange and terrible creatures +pouring in from the surrounding country. +<P> +"I'm afraid there will be trouble," he said, as he came down and reported +what he had seen. +<P> +"We must hold a council of war," repeated the professor. "Has any one anything +to suggest?" +<P> +"Get a lot of powder and blow 'em up!" cried Andy. +<P> +"Arrange electric wires and shock 'em to death!" was Bill's plan. +<P> +"Can't we slip the ropes in some way and escape?" asked Jack. "I don't believe +we can successfully fight the giants. They are too many, even if they are +weak, individually." +<P> +"I think you're right there," Mr. Henderson said. "We must try some sort +of strategy, but what? That is the question." +<P> +For a few minutes no one spoke. They were all thinking deeply, for their +lives might hang in the balance. +<P> +"I think I have a plan," said Mark, at length. "Did we bring any diving suits +with us?" +<P> +"There may be one or two," the professor replied. "But what good will they +do?" +<P> +"Two of us could put them on," continued Mark, "and, as they afford good +protection from any missiles like fruit, we could crawl out on the deck of +the ship. From there, armed with hatchets or knives we could cut the ropes. +Then the ship could rise." +<P> +"That's a good plan!" cried the scientist. "We'll try it at once." +<P> +Search revealed that two diving suits were among the stores of the <I>Mermaid. +</I>Jack and Mark wanted to be the ones to don them, but as the suits were +rather large, and as the professor thought it would take more strength than +the boys had to do the work, it was decided that Andy and Washington should +make the attempt to cut the ropes. +<P> +The hunter and colored man lost little time in getting into the modern armor. +In the meanwhile Jack, who had been posted as a lookout, reported that there +seemed to be some activity among the giants. They were running here and there, +and some seemed to be going off toward the woods, that were not far away. +<P> +"Now work quickly," urged the professor. "We will be on the watch, and as +soon as the last rope is cut we will start the machinery and send the ship +up. We will not wait for you to come back inside, so hold fast as best you +can when the <I>Mermaid </I>rises." +<P> +"We will," answered Andy, just before the big copper helmet was fastened +on his head, and Washington nodded to show he understood. +<P> +The two who were to attempt the rescue of their comrades were soon on deck. +In the conning tower Jack and the professor kept anxious watch, while Mark, +Bill and Tom were at the various machines, ready, at the signal, to start +the engines. +<P> +The giants had now become so interested in whatever plan they had afoot, +that they paid little attention to the ship. Consequently Washington and +Andy, crawling along the deck in their diving suits, did not, at first attract +any attention. +<P> +In fact they had cut several of the big ropes, and it began to look as if +the plan would succeed, particularly as they were partly hidden from view +by the upper gas holder. They were working with feverish haste, sawing away +at the big cables with keen knives. +<P> +"I guess we'll beat 'em yet!" cried Jack. +<P> +"I hope so," replied the professor. "It looks——" +<P> +He stopped short, for at that moment a cry arose from the midst of the giants, +and one of them pointed toward the ship. An instant later the air was darkened +with a flight of big oranges, which the queer creatures seemed to favor as +missiles. Probably they found stones too heavy. +<P> +"Well, those things can't hurt 'em much with those heavy suits on," observed +Mr. Henderson. "There, Washington got one right on the head that time, and +it didn't bother him a bit." +<P> +Jack had seen the fruit strike the big copper helmet and observed that the +colored man only moved his head slightly in order to get rid of the orange. +<P> +In fact the giants, seeing for themselves that this mode of warfare was not +going to answer, since the two men on the ship continued to cut the restraining +cables, gave it up. There was a good deal of shouting among them, and a number +ran here and there, seemingly gathering up long poles. +<P> +"I wonder if they are going to try the flailing method, and beat poor Andy +and Washington," said Mr. Henderson. "It looks so." +<P> +The two rescuers were now about a quarter through their hard task. The throwing +of the oranges had ceased. But the giants were up to a new trick. They divided +into two sections, one taking up a position on one side of the ship, and +the other on the opposite. There were about two hundred in each crowd, while +the others in the horde drew some distance back. +<P> +"They're up to some queer dodge," observed Jack. "What are they placing those +sticks to their mouths for?" +<P> +The professor observed the throng curiously for a few seconds. Then he exclaimed: +<P> +"They are using blow-guns! They are going to shoot arrows at Washington and +Andy! We must get them in at once!" +<P> +He darted toward a door that opened from the conning tower out on the deck. +<P> +"Don't go!" cried Jack. "It's too late! They are beginning to blow!" +<P> +He pointed to the throng of giants. The professor could see their cheeks +puffed out as the big creatures filled their lungs with air and prepared +to expel it through the hollow tubes. +<P> +Then there came a sound as if a great wind was blowing. It howled and roared +over the ship, not unlike a hurricane in its fury. But there was no flight +of arrows through the air, such as would have come from regular blow guns. +<P> +"That is strange," said the professor. He thought for a moment. "I have it!" +he cried. "They are trying to blow Washington and Andy, off the ship by the +power of their breaths! They are not blowing arrows at them! My, but they +must have strong lungs!" +<P> +And, in truth, that was the plan of the giants. The hollow tubes, made from +some sort of big weed, sent a blast of air at the two men on the ship's deck, +that made them lie flat and cling with both hands to avoid being sent flying +into the midst of the giants, on one side or the other. But the giants had +reckoned without the weight of the diving suits, and it was those, with the +big lead soles of the shoes, that helped to hold Washington and Andy in place. +<P> +"Come back! Came back!" cried the professor, opening the conning tower door +and calling to the two brave men. "Come back, both of you! Do you hear?" +<P> +As the portal slid back the rush of air was almost like that of a cyclone. +Then it suddenly ceased, as the giants saw their plan was not likely to succeed. +<P> +But now there arose from the outer circle of the horde a shout of triumph. +It was caused by the return of those who had, a little while before, hurried +off to the woods. They came back bearing big trees, tall and slender, stripped +of their branches, so that they resembled flag staffs. It took a dozen giants +to carry each one. +<P> +The whole throng was soon busy laying the poles in a row in front of the +ship. +<P> +"What can they be up to now?" asked Jack. +<P> +"It looks as if they were going to slide the ship along on rollers," the +professor replied. +<P> +Sure enough this was the giant's plan. A few minutes later those in the +<I>Mermaid </I>felt her moving forward, as the giants, massed behind, shoved. +On to the poles she slid. The ropes were loosened to permit this, but not +enough to enable the boat to rise. +<P> +Then the travelers felt the ship being lifted up. +<P> +"They are going to carry us away, with the poles for a big stretcher!" cried +the professor. +<P> +Looking from the side windows the boys saw that a great crowd of the big +men were on either side of the <I>Mermaid, </I>each giant grasping a pole, +and lifting. Farther out were others, holding the ends of the cables which +Washington and Andy had not succeeded in cutting. +<P> +The ship was being carried along by a thousand or more giants, as the ancient +warriors, slain in battle, were carried home on the spears of their comrades. +<P> +"This is the end of the <I>Mermaid!" </I>murmured Mr. Henderson in sorrowful +tones. +<P> +As they looked from the conning tower the professor and the two boys observed +a commotion among the leaders of the giants. They seemed to be wavering. +Suddenly the forward part of the ship sank, as those ahead laid their poles +down on the ground. Then those behind did the same, and the <I>Mermaid, +</I>came to a stop, and once more rested on the earth. +<P> +"What does this mean?" asked the scientist in wonder. +<P> +All at once the entire crowd of giants threw themselves down on their faces, +and there, standing at the bow of the ship, was a giant, half again as large +as any of the others. He was clad in a complete suit of golden armor on which +the changing lights played with beautiful effect, and in his hand he held +an immense golden sword. He pointed the weapon at the ship as if he had raised +it in protection, and his hand was stretched in commanding gesture over the +prostrate giants. +<P> +"Perhaps he has come to save us!" cried Mark. +<h3>CHAPTER XXVII</h3> +<h4>A GREAT JOURNEY</h4> +<P> +SUCH indeed, seemed to be the case. The golden-armored giant, after standing +for a few moments in an attitude of command, waved his sword three times +about his head, and uttered a command, in a voice that sounded like thunder. +Then the prostrate ones arose, and, making low bows hurried away in all +directions. +<P> +Watching them disappear, the golden one sheathed his weapon and approached +the ship. He caught sight of the professor and the two boys in the conning +tower, for Mark had gone there when he found the ship being transported, +and held up his two hands, the palms outward. +<P> +"It is the sign of peace in the language all natives employ," said the professor. +"I think I shall trust him." +<P> +Followed by the boys he descended from the little platform in the tower, +and to the door that opened on the deck. +<P> +"Shall we go out?" he asked. +<P> +"We can't be much worse off," replied Mark. "Let's chance it." +<P> +So, not without many misgivings, they slid back the portal and stepped out +to face the strange and terrible being who had so suddenly come to their +rescue. +<P> +The giant in the golden armor did not seem surprised to see them. In fact +he acted as though he rather expected them. He continued to hold up one hand, +with the palm, outward, while, with the other, he removed his helmet and +bowed low. Then he cast his sword on the ground and advanced toward the ship. +When within ten feet he sat down on the ground, and this brought his head +nearer the earth, so that his auditors could both see and hear him to better +advantage. +<P> +As soon as the giant saw the travelers were outside their ship he began to +speak to them in a voice, which, though he might have meant it to be low +and gentle, was like the bellowing of a bull. At the same time he made many +gestures, pointing to the ship, to himself and to Mark. +<P> +"What is he saying, professor?" asked Jack. +<P> +"I can't understand all he says," Mr. Henderson replied. "He uses some words +derived from the Latin and some from the Greek. But by piecing it out here +and there, and by interpreting his motions I am able to get at something." +<P> +"And what is it all about?" +<P> +"It is a strange story," the scientist replied. "He has only gone about half +way through it. Wait until he finishes and I will tell you." +<P> +The golden-armored giant, who had stopped in his narrative while Jack was +speaking, resumed. His gestures became more rapid, and his words came faster. +Several times Mr. Henderson held up his hand for him to cease, while he puzzled +out what was meant. +<P> +At one point, the professor seemed much startled, and motioned for the strange +being to repeat the last part of his discourse. When this had been done Mr. +Henderson shook his head as though in doubt. +<P> +At length the story was finished, and the lone giant, for there were no others +in sight now, folded his arms and seemed to await what the professor's answer +might be. Mr. Henderson turned to the boys, and to the others of the +<I>Mermaid's </I>company, who, by this time, had joined him, and said: +<P> +"Friends, I have just listened to a strange story. It is so strange that, +but for the fact that our own adventures are verging on the marvelous, I +could hardly believe it. In the first place, this man here is the king of +this country. That is why all the other natives obeyed him. +<P> +"In the second place it seems he has been a passenger in our boat, and came +here from the earth's surface with us!" +<P> +"What's that?" cried Jack. +<P> +"That explains the strange happenings!" ejaculated Mark. "No wonder I could +never solve the secret of the storeroom." +<P> +"You are right, it does," replied Mr. Henderson. "I will not go into all +the details of how it happened, but it seems the big hole through which we +came is only one of two entrances to this inner world. Rather it is the entrance, +and there is another, close to it, which is the exit. Through the latter +a big stream of water spouts up, just as one pours down through the opening +we used. +<P> +"Hankos, which is the name of the king, was for many years a student of science. +He longed to see where the big stream of upward spurting water went, and +wanted to know whence came the down-pouring one. So he undertook a daring +experiment. +<P> +"He constructed a great cylinder, and, keeping his plans a secret, conveyed +it to the spouting water, entered it, and, by means of pulleys and levers, +after he had shut himself inside, cast himself into the up-shooting column. +He took along compressed air cylinders to supply an atmosphere he could breathe, +and some food to eat, for it appears our giant friends are something of inventors +in their way. The current of water bore him to the surface of the earth, +and he was cast up on the ocean, in what was probably taken for a waterspout +if any one saw it. +<P> +"Then a strange thing happened. No sooner did Hankos open his cylinder, which +served him as a boat, than he lost his gigantic size, owing to the difference +of the two atmospheres. He became almost of the same size as ourselves, except +that his skin hung in great folds on him, and he seemed like a wrinkled old +man. His clothes too, were a world too large. +<P> +"He had a terrible time before he reached shore, and a hard one after it, +for his strange appearance turned almost every one against him. He was sorry +he had ventured to solve the mystery of the up-shooting stream of water, +for he was worse than an outcast. +<P> +"Then he began to plan to get back to his own inner world. But he could not +find the downward stream, and, not knowing the language of the countries +where he landed, he had no means of ascertaining. He traveled from place +to place, always seeking for something that would lead him back to his own +country. +<P> +"Finally he heard of us, and of our ship, though how I do not know, as I +thought I had kept it a great secret. By almost superhuman struggles he made +his way to our island. He says he concealed himself aboard the <I>Mermaid +</I>the night before we sailed, but I hardly believe it possible. It seems——" +<P> +"He did it, for I saw him!" interrupted Mark. +<P> +"You saw him!" cried Mr. Henderson. +<P> +Then Mark told of the many things that had puzzled him so, how he had seen +the queer figure slinking aboard the boat, of the disappearance of food from +time to time, and of the strange noises in the storeroom. +<P> +"That bears out what he told me," the professor said. "Hankos says he used +to steal out nights and take what food he could get, and he also mentions +some one, answering to Mark's description, who nearly discovered him once +as he hurried back into the apartment. +<P> +"However, it seems to be true, since Mark confirms it. At any rate Hankos +stayed in hiding, and made the entire trip with us, and, just as we all became +overcome with the strange gas he escaped, having begun to expand to his original +giant size, and being unable to remain any longer in his cramped quarters." +<P> +"That's so, he did!" cried Mark. "I saw him come out of the place just before +I lost my senses. It was a terrible sight, and none of you would believe +me when I told you some of the occurrences afterward." +<P> +"You must forgive us for that," the professor said. "We have learned much +since then." +<P> +"What did Hankos do after he left the ship when it landed in this country?" +asked Jack. +<P> +"He traveled until he came to this village, which is the chief one of this +country," replied the professor. "Part of the time he followed us at a distance, +being able to travel very fast." +<P> +Mark remembered the strange figure of a giant he had seen on the hill tops +several times, and knew that he had been observing the being who had played +such a queer part in their lives. +<P> +"When he came back among his own people," went on Mr. Henderson, "they would +not receive him at first, believing him to be an impostor. But Hankos convinced +them of his identity and was allowed to don the golden armor, which is the +badge of kingship. He had only been in office for a little while when he +heard of the arrival of the strange thing, which turned out to be our ship. +He recognized it from the description, and, learning that we were likely +to be sacrificed to the fury and ignorance of the giants, he hurried here +and saved our lives. +<P> +"He says he can never thank us enough for being the means whereby he was +able to get back to his own country, and says the freedom of this whole inner +world is ours. He has given orders that we are to go wherever we like, and +none will molest us. He tells me the land is a wonderful one, compared to +our own, and urges us to make a long journey. He would like to go with us, +only, now that he has resumed his natural size, he can not get inside the +ship." +<P> +"Hurrah for King Hankos!" cried Jack and the others joined him in a hearty +cheer. +<P> +The giant in the golden armor evidently understood the compliment which was +paid him, for he waved his helmet in the air and responded with a shout of +welcome that made the ground tremble. +<P> +Hankos waited until the professor had translated all of the story to the +other travelers. Then the genial giant began to talk some more, and the professor +listened intently. +<P> +"He says," spoke Mr. Henderson to his friends, "that we will be supplied +with all the fruit we want, and with the best of the houses to sleep in on +our journey. He also tells me he has great stores of shining stones and piles +of the metal of which his armor is made, and that we are welcome to as much +as we want. If this means unlimited gold and diamonds, we may make our fortunes." +<P> +"Jest let me git ma' hand on a few sparklers an' I'll quit work!" exclaimed +Washington. +<P> +"I have told him," the scientist went on, "that we will take advantage of +his kind offer. We will start on our trip in a day or so, after we have looked +over the ship to see if it is not damaged. He tells me the gold and sparkling +stones are several thousand miles away, on top of a high mountain. We will +make that our objective point." +<P> +The interview between the king and Mr. Henderson having ended, the former +waved his sword in the air and the swarm of big men came back. They had been +hiding back in the woods. Now their manner was very different. They carefully +removed the rollers and ropes, and soon there was brought to the adventurers +an immense pile of fine fruits. If our friends had stayed there a year they +could not have eaten it all. The giants were judging the appetites of the +travelers by their own. +<P> +That night the adventurers slept more soundly than they had since entering +the strange world. They felt they had nothing to fear from the giants. In +the morning they were not molested, though big crowds gathered to look at +the ship. But they kept back a good distance. The machinery was found to +be in good shape, save for a few repairs, and when these were made, the professor +announced he would start on a long journey. +<P> +For several weeks after that the travelers swung about in their ship, sometimes +sailing in the air and again on big seas and lakes viewing the wonders of +the inner world. They were many and varied, and the professor collected enough +material for a score of books which he said he would write when he got back +to the outer world once more. +<P> +One afternoon, as they were sailing over a vast stretch of woodland, which +did not seem to be inhabited, Mr. Henderson, looking at one of the gages +on the wall, asked: +<P> +"Boys do you know how far you have traveled underground?" +<P> +"How far?" asked Jack, who hated to guess riddles. +<P> +"More than four thousand miles," was the answer. +<P> +"But we haven't come to that mountain of gold and diamonds," said Mark. "I +am anxious to see that." +<P> +"Have patience," replied the professor. "I have not steered toward it yet. +There are other things to see." +<P> +Just then Washington's voice could be heard calling from the conning tower: +<P> +"We're coming to a big mountain!" +<h3>CHAPTER XXVIII</h3> +<h4>THE TEMPLE OF TREASURE</h4> +<P> +"WHAT'S that?" fairly yelled the professor. +<P> +"We am propelling ourselves in a contiguous direction an' in close proximity +to an elevated portion of th' earth's surface which rises in antiguous proximity +t' th' forward part of our present means of locomotion!" said the colored +man in a loud voice. +<P> +"Which means there may be a collision," the professor said, as he and the +boys hurried toward the tower. +<P> +"Jest what I said," retorted Washington. "What'll I do?" +<P> +"Send the ship a little higher," answered Mr. Henderson. "We mustn't hit +any mountains." +<P> +Washington forced more gas into the holder, and speeded the negative gravity +machine up some, so that the <I>Mermaid, </I>which was flying rather low, +ascended until it was in no danger of colliding with the peak which reared +its lofty height just ahead of them. +<P> +As the ship sailed slowly over the mountain, Mark gazed down and exclaimed: +<P> +"Doesn't that look like the ruins of some building?" +<P> +The professor took a pair of field glasses from a rack in the wall and took +a long view. +<P> +"It must be the place," he said in a low voice. +<P> +"What place?" asked Jack. +<P> +"The temple of treasure," was the answer. "Hankos told me it was on top of +the highest mountain in the land, and this must be it, for it is the loftiest +place we have seen. But we must be careful, for there is danger down there." +<P> +"What kind?" asked Mark. +<P> +"The place was long ago deserted by the giants," Mr. Henderson went on. "Ages +ago it was one of their storehouses for treasure, but there were wars among +themselves, Hankos said, and this part of the country was laid waste. Savage +beasts took up their abode in the temple, and since then, in spite of the +great size of the giants, they have not dared to venture here. If we brave +the animals we may have all the gold and diamonds we can take away." +<P> +"Then for one, I'm willin' t' go down an' begin th' extermination at once," +put in Andy. "I've always wanted t' be rich." +<P> +"We must proceed cautiously," the professor said. "We are ill prepared to +fight any such beasts as we saw at the big geyser. At the same time they +may have deserted this place. I think we will lower the ship down over the +temple, and spend several hours in observation. Then, if nothing develops, +we can enter and see if the treasure is there." +<P> +This plan was voted a good one, and the <I>Mermaid </I>after having been +steered directly over the ruined temple, was brought to a halt, and enough +gas let out so that it fell to about fifty feet in the air above it. +<P> +The adventurers began their watch. The afternoon waned and there were no +signs of any beasts in or about the temple. +<P> +"I reckon we can take a chance," said Andy, who was anxious to get his hands +on some diamonds. +<P> +"Better wait until morning," counseled Mr. Henderson. "It will soon be dark, +and it doesn't look like a nice place to go stumbling about in by moonlight." +<P> +So, though all but the scientist were anxious, they had to wait until the +night had passed. Several times Washington got up to see if the temple had, +by any chance, taken wings during the long hours of darkness, but each time +he found it was still in place. +<P> +"Seems laik it'll never come mornin'." he said. +<P> +But dawn came at length, and, after a hasty breakfast, preparations to enter +the temple were made. Andy loaded his gun for "bear" as he expressed it, +and the boys each took a revolver. +<P> +The ship was lowered to as level a place as could be found, and then, seeing +that everything was in readiness for a quick departure, the professor led +the way out of the <I>Mermaid.</I> +<P> +The entrance to the temple was through a big arched gateway. Some of the +stones had fallen down, and the whole structure looked as if it might topple +over at any moment. +<P> +"Go carefully," cautioned Mr. Henderson, "Watch on all sides and up above. +Better let Andy and me go ahead." +<P> +The scientist and the old hunter led the way. Through the arch they went, +and emerged into what must at one time have been a magnificent courtyard. +Before them was the temple proper, a vast structure, with an opening through +which fifty men might have marched abreast. But the doors were gone, and +the portal was but a black hole. +<P> +"I hope there ain't any ghosts in there," said Washington, with a shiver. +<P> +"Nonsense!" exclaimed the professor. "There may be things as bad, but there +are no such things as ghosts. Have your gun ready, Andy." +<P> +With every sense on the alert, the old hunter advanced. Every one was a bit +nervous, and, as Mark and Jack afterward admitted, they half expected some +terrible beast to rush out at them. But nothing of the kind happened, and +they went into the interior of the temple. +<P> +At first it was so dark they could see nothing. There were vast dim shapes +on every side, and from the hollow echo of their footsteps they judged the +roof must be very high and the structure big in every way. +<P> +Then, as their eyes became used to the darkness, they could make out, up +front, something like an altar or pulpit. +<P> +"Perhaps that's where they offered up the gold and diamonds as a sacrifice +to their gods," spoke Mark in a whisper. +<P> +"Sacrifice to their gods!" came back a hundred echoes and the sound made +every one shudder. +<P> +"Oh!" said Washington, in a low voice. +<P> +"Oh! Oh! Oh!" repeated the echoes in voices of thunder. +<P> +"Well, this is pleasant," spoke Andy, in his natural tones, and, to the surprise +of all there was no echo. It was only when a person whispered or spoke low +that the sound was heard. After that they talked naturally. +<P> +"You stay here, and Andy and I will go up front and see what there is," said +Mr. Henderson. "Be on your guard, and if you hear us coming back in a hurry, +run!" +<P> +It was with no little feeling of nervousness that the boys, Bill, Tom and +Washington watched the two men move off in the darkness. They could hear +their footsteps on the stone flags and could dimly see them. +<P> +"They must be almost to the altar by this time," said Mark, after a long +pause. +<P> +Hardly had he spoken than there came a loud, sound from where Mr. Henderson +and Andy had gone. It was as if some giant wings were beating the air. Then +came shrill cries and the voice of the old hunter could be heard calling: +<P> +"Kneel down, Professor! Let me get a shot at the brute!" +<P> +Those waiting in the rear of the temple huddled closer together. What terrible +beast could have been aroused? +<P> +The next instant the place seemed illuminated as if by a lightning flash, +and a sound as of a thousand thunder claps resounded. +<P> +"I think I winged him!" cried Andy's voice, and the boys knew he had fired +at something. +<P> +Then there came a crash, and from the roof of the old temple a dozen stones +toppled off to one side, letting in a flood of colored light. +<P> +By this illumination could be seen, flapping through the big space overhead, +an enormous bat, as large as three eagles. And, as it flew about in a circle +it gave utterance to shrill cries. +<P> +"Bang!" Andy's gun spoke again, and the bat with a louder cry than before, +darted through the hole in the roof made by the falling stones, which had +been loosened by the concussion from the rifle. +<P> +"Come on!" cried the old hunter. "That was the guardian of the treasure! +We are safe now!" +<P> +Then, in the light which streamed through the broken roof, the adventurers +could see, heaped up on a great altar, behind which sat a horrible graven +image, piles of yellow metal, and sparkling stones. In little heaps they +were, arranged as if offerings to the terrible god of the giants. There were +bars and rings of gold, dishes of odd shape, and even weapons. As for the +sparkling stones, they were of many colors, but the white ones were more +plentiful than all the others. +<P> +"Gold and diamonds! Diamonds and gold!" murmured the professor. "There is +the ransom of many kings in this ancient temple." +<P> +"Wish I had a big bag!" exclaimed Washington, as he began filling all his +pockets with the precious metal and gems. "If I had a-thought I'd have brought +a dress-suit case!" +<P> +"A dress-suit case full of diamonds!" exclaimed Mark. +<P> +Then he too, as did all the others, fell to filling his pockets with the +wealth spread so lavishly before them. There was the riches of a whole world +in one place and no one but themselves to take it. +<P> +For several minutes no one spoke. The only sound was the rattle of the stones +and the clink of gold, and when some of the diamonds dropped on the floor +they did not bother to gather them up. There were too many on the altar. +<P> +"We will be rich for life!" gasped old Andy, who had been poor all his years. +<P> +"I can't carry any more!" gasped Washington. "I'm goin' back for——" +<P> +What he was going back for he never said, for, at that instant, happening +to look up at the hole in the roof, he gave a startled try: +<P> +"Here come the terrible bats!" +<P> +They all gazed upward. Through the opening they could see a great flock of +the awful birds, headed for the temple, and they were led by one which seemed +to fly with difficulty. It was the guardian of the treasure that Andy had +wounded. +<P> +"Quick! We must get out of here!" shouted the old hunter. "They are big enough +and strong enough to tear us all to pieces. Hurry!" +<P> +Down the centre of the temple they rushed, and not a moment too soon, for, +ere they had passed half way to the entrance, the opening in the roof was +darkened by the coming of the bats, and soon the flapping of their wings +awoke the thundering echoes in the ruined structure, while their shrill cries +struck terror to the hearts of the travelers. +<P> +Up to the altar circled the bats, and then wheeling they flapped down the +dim aisles toward the adventurers. +<P> +"Hurry! Hurry!" shouted Andy, who was in the rear. +<P> +He raised his rifle and fired several shots into the midst of the terrible +creatures. +<P> +A number of the bats were wounded, and the others were so frightened by the +sound of the shots and the flashes of fire that they turned back. This enabled +the fleeing ones to gain the entrance to the temple, and soon they were outside. +<P> +"To the ship!" yelled Bill. +<P> +"There's little danger now!" called Andy, panting, for the run had winded +him. "They will hardly attack us in the light!" +<P> +And he was right, for, though they could hear the bats flying about inside +the temple, and uttering their cries, none came outside. +<P> +But no one felt like staying near the uncanny structure, and little time +was lost in reaching the <I>Mermaid. </I>Then the doors were fastened, and +the ship was sent high up into the air. +<P> +"Which way?" asked Jack, when Mr. Henderson told him to go to the conning +tower and steer. +<P> +"Back to where we first met the giants," replied the professor. "We must +prepare to start for our own earth again soon." +<P> +"I've almost forgotten how real sunlight looks," thought Jack, as he headed +the ship around the other way. As he turned the levers a big diamond dropped +from his pocket and rolled on the floor. +<P> +"This will be a good reminder of our trip though," he added. +<P> +The travelers, even including Mr. Henderson, were so taken up with their +suddenly acquired riches that they hardly thought of meals. At the professor's +suggestion they tied their gold and stones up in small packages convenient +to carry. +<P> +"Better place them where you can grab them in a hurry in case of accident," +the old scientist went on. "Of course if there should be too bad an accident +they would never be of any use to us down here, but we'll look on the bright +side of things." +<P> +"Do you anticipate any accident?" asked Jack anxiously. +<P> +"No, Oh no," replied Mr. Henderson, but Jack thought the aged man had something +weighing on his mind. +<h3>CHAPTER XXIX</h3> +<h4>BACK HOME—CONCLUSION</h4> +<P> +ON and on sped the <I>Mermaid. </I>Now that the travelers felt their journey +accomplished they were anxious to begin the homeward trip. They made a straight +course for the village where they had so nearly met with disaster, and where +the king of the giants had saved them. They went in a direct line, and did +not travel here and there, as they had after they left the town. Consequently +they shortened the route by a great distance. Yet it was long enough, and +when they finally came in sight of the place the dial registered a trip of +five thousand miles underground. +<P> +It was one evening when they landed almost at the spot whence they had taken +flight eventually to reach the temple of the treasure. Most of the giants +had betaken themselves to their mound houses, but Hankos was walking in the +fields, and, when he caught sight of the airship hovering above him he waved +his great sword in welcome. +<P> +He rushed up to shake hands with the travelers when they came out of the +ship, though to greet him it was only possible for the adventurers to grasp +one of his immense fingers. +<P> +As soon as the greetings were over Hankos began to speak rapidly to the +professor, at the same time going through many strange motions. +<P> +"It is as I feared!" suddenly exclaimed the scientist. +<P> +"What is the matter?" asked Mark. +<P> +"The worst has happened!" went on Mr. Henderson. "The great hole by which +we came into this place has been closed by an earthquake shock!" +<P> +"The hole closed?" repeated Jack. +<P> +"An earthquake shock!" murmured Mark. +<P> +"Then how are we going to get back to earth?" asked old Andy. +<P> +A terrible fear entered the hearts of the travelers. The closing of the opening +by which they had come to the strange world meant, in all probability that +they would have to spend the rest of their lives in this underground place. +<P> +"What good did it do us to get all those diamonds and that gold?" asked Mark +in a sorrowful tone. +<P> +Hankos began to speak again, using his gestures which were almost as eloquent +as words. The professor watched and listened intently. Then there seemed +to come a more hopeful look to his face. He nodded vigorously as Hankos went +on with what seemed to be an explanation. +<P> +"It's worth trying, at all events!" the scientist exclaimed. "It is our only +hope!" +<P> +"What is?" asked Jack. +<P> +"Friends," began the professor in solemn tones. "I must admit our plight +is desperate. At the same time there is a bare chance of our getting back +to our own earth. As you remember, Hankos went from this place to the upper +regions through the upward spouting column of water." +<P> +"If we had our submarine we might also," interrupted Jack. "But the <I>Mermaid +</I>isn't built to sail in that fashion." +<P> +"Nor would the <I>Porpoise </I>have served us in this emergency," said the +professor. "It would prove too heavy. But, nevertheless, I think I have a +plan. Now, Mark, you are about to learn the secret of the storeroom. The +real one, not the hiding of Hankos in there, which you imagined to be the +cause of my desire to keep something hidden. When we planned a trip to this +underground world I had a dim idea that we might meet with trouble. So I +planned and made a cylinder lifeboat." +<P> +"A cylinder lifeboat?" repeated Mark. +<P> +"Yes," replied Mr. Henderson. "I have it in the storeroom. I did not want +any of you to see it for fear you would have faint hearts. I thought there +might be no necessity of using it. But, since there is, we must do our best. +I will admit it may be a fearful ordeal, but we will have to risk something +in order to escape. +<P> +"I have in the storeroom a large cylinder, capable of holding us all. It +will also contain food and drink for a month, but we will all have to go, +packed almost like sardines in a box. My plan is to take the <I>Mermaid </I>to +the place where the column of water shoots up. There we will get into the +cylinder, close it, and trust ourselves to the terrible force that may bring +us back to the upper world. What do you say? Shall we attempt it?" +<P> +For a few seconds no one spoke. Then Jack said slowly: +<P> +"I don't see that we can do anything else. I don't want to stay here all +my life." +<P> +"I wants a chance t' wear some of them sparklers," put in Washington. +<P> +"Then we will make the attempt," the professor added. "Now all aboard for +the place where the water shoots up!" +<P> +Questioning Hankos, the professor learned how to reach the strange place. +It was in the midst of a desolate country where none of the giants ever went, +so afraid were they of the strange phenomenon. +<P> +It was a week's journey. Sometimes the <I>Mermaid </I>flew through the air, +and again it sailed on vast lakes or inland seas. On the trip they met with +big waterfalls and terrible geysers that spouted a mile or more into the +air. They traveled by night as well as day, though it was necessary to keep +a sharp watch. +<P> +Sometimes the ship passed through great flocks of birds that surrounded her +and sought to pierce the aluminum hull with their sharp beaks and talons. +Over the mountains and valleys the ship sailed until, one evening, there +sounded through the air a strange rumbling sound. +<P> +"It is thunder," said Old Andy. +<P> +"It is the water column," replied the scientist. "We are at the end of our +trip. May the remainder be as successful!" +<P> +The ship was lowered to the surface, as it was deemed best to approach the +column when the lights were shining. No one slept much that night, for the +roaring and rumbling never ceased. +<P> +In the morning the ship was sent forward slowly. Ever and ever the terrific +sound increased, until it was almost deafening. They had to call to each +other to be heard. +<P> +Then, as the <I>Mermaid </I>passed over a mountain, the adventurers saw, +in a valley below them, the up-shooting water. +<P> +It was a vast column, nearly three hundred feet in thickness, and as solid +and white as a shaft of marble. Up, up, up, it went, until it was lost to +sight, but there were no falling drops, and not even a spray came from the +watery shafts. +<P> +"There is a terrible power to it," the professor said. "May it prove our +salvation!" +<P> +The ship was lowered about a hundred feet away from the waterspout. All around +them the ground was vibrating with the force of the fluid. +<P> +"To think that connects with the world above!" exclaimed Jack. +<P> +"It's a good thing for us that it does," Mark answered. +<P> +"We must lose no time," the professor put in. "If the earthquake destroyed +the downward shaft, it may effect this one in time. We must escape while +we can." +<P> +Then, for the first time, he opened the storeroom and the big cylinder was +disclosed to view. It was made of aluminum, and shaped like an immense cigar. +The hull was double, and it was strongly braced. Inside were padded berths +for the occupants, and there was just room enough for the seven adventurers. +Once they had entered they could not move about, but must stay in their little +compartment. +<P> +Compressed air in strong cylinders furnished a means of breathing, and there +were tiny electric lights operated by a storage battery. There was also a +chamber to be filled with the lifting gas. The cylinder was so arranged that +it would float on it's long axis if thrown into the water. A trap door +hermetically sealed gave access to the interior. A small propeller, worked +by compressed air, furnished motive power. +<P> +The food supply consisted of compressed capsules on which a man could subsist +for several days. There was also some water, but not much, since that can +not be compressed and would, therefore, take considerable room. +<P> +"The only thing for us to do," said the professor, "is to get into the cylinder, +seal it up, and trust to Providence. This is what I intended to use when +we were caught in the draught." +<P> +"How can we get into the column of water after we shut ourselves into the +cylinder?" asked Mark. +<P> +"The cylinder fits into a sort of improvised cannon," said Mr. Henderson. +"It is fired by electricity and compressed air. We will aim it at the column, +press the button and be projected into the midst of the water. Then——" He +did not finish the sentence, but the others knew what he meant. +<P> +"When are we to start?" asked Mark. +<P> +"As soon as possible," replied the professor. "I must arrange the cylinder, +compress the air and lay out the food supply." +<P> +It took the rest of the day to do this, as the inventor found it would be +advisable to attach a weight to the end of the cylinder, to hold it upright +in the column of water. The weight could be detached automatically when they +were shot up into the midst of the ocean, where, as Hankos had told them, +the column spurted forth. +<P> +Then some food was stored in the tiny ship that was destined to be their +last hope, and some tanks of water were placed in it. +<P> +"I think we are almost ready," Mr. Henderson said about noon the next day. +<P> +"What about our gold and diamonds?" asked Jack suddenly. "Can we take them +with us in the cylinder?" +<P> +"That's so!" exclaimed Mr. Henderson. "I forgot about them. I'm afraid we'll +have to leave the riches behind. We will not be able to carry them and the +food we need, for it may be a week or more before we can leave the cylinder. +Gold and diamonds will be a poor substitute for something to eat." +<P> +"I'm goin' t' take mine!" said Washington with much conviction. "I might +as well starve rich as starve poor!" +<P> +"We may be able to take a few diamonds," the professor answered. "The gold +will be too heavy. Let each one select the largest of the diamonds he has +and put them in his pockets." +<P> +Then began a sorting of the wealth. It was strange, as they recalled afterward, +throwing away riches that would have made millionaires envious, but it had +to be done. All the wealth in the world would not equal a beef capsule when +they were starving, and they realized it. So they only saved a few pieces +of gold as souvenirs, and took the best of the diamonds. But even then they +had a vast fortune with them. +<P> +At last all was in readiness. The cylinder had been placed in the tube from +which it was to be shot gently forth by compressed air, so that it would +fall into the upward spouting column of water. The charge of compressed air +was put in and the electric wires arranged. +<P> +"Are we all ready?" asked Mr. Henderson. +<P> +"I think so," said Jack, in what sounded like a whisper, but which was loud, +only the noise of the water muffled it. +<P> +"Then we had better enter the cylinder," spoke the inventor. "Take a last +look at the <I>Flying Mermaid, </I>boys, for you will never see again the +ship that has borne us many thousand miles. She served us well, and might +again, but for the freak of nature that has placed us in this position." +<P> +For the first time the adventurers realized that they must abandon the craft +in which they had reached the new world. So it was with no little feeling +of sadness that they climbed up the ladder that had been arranged and slid +down into the cylinder. One by one they took their places in the padded berths +arranged for them. It was a snug fit, for the professor knew if there was +too much room he and the others might be so tossed about as to be killed. +<P> +Mr. Henderson was the last to enter. Standing at the manhole he took a final +look at his pet creation, the <I>Mermaid. </I>Through the opened windows +the colored lights came, shifting here and there. Outside the terrible column +of water was roaring as if anxious to devour them. +<P> +"Good-bye, <I>Mermaid!" </I>said the professor softly. +<P> +Then he closed down the manhole cover and tightened the screws that held +it in place. He touched a button that turned on the electric lights and the +interior of the cylinder was illuminated with a soft glow. +<P> +"Are you all ready?" he asked. +<P> +"Jest as much as I ever will be," replied Washington, who, as the crisis +approached, seemed more light-hearted than any of the others. +<P> +"Then here we go!" exclaimed Mr. Henderson. +<P> +His fingers touched the button that connected with the electric machine, +which operated the compressed air. +<P> +There sounded a muffled report. Then it seemed to those in the cylinder that +the end of the world had come. They shot upward and outward, through the +top of the conning tower which had been removed. The cylinder, launched straight +at the column of water struck it squarely and, an instant later was caught +in the grasp of the giant force and hurled toward the upper world. +<P> +Up and up and up the mass of metal with its human freight went. Now it was +spinning like a top, again it shot toward the earth's crust like an arrow +from the archer's bow. +<P> +It was moving with the velocity of a meteor, yet because of being surrounded +with water, and traveling with the same velocity as the column, there was +no friction. Had there been, the heat generated would have melted the case +in an instant. +<P> +For the first few seconds those in the cylinder were dazed by the sudden +rush. Then as it became greater and greater there came a curious dull feeling, +and, one after another lost consciousness. The terror of the water column, +and the frightful speed, had made them senseless. +<P> + <HR> +<P> +It seemed like a month later, though, of course, it could have been only +a few hours or a day at most when Jack opened his eyes. He saw his companions, +white and senseless all around him, and at first thought they were dead. +Then he saw Mark looking at him, and Washington asked: +<P> +"Is any one livin' 'sides me?" +<P> +"I am," replied Jack decidedly. +<P> +Then, one after another they regained their senses. But they were in a strange +daze, for they were being carried along like a shooting star, only, as they +went at the same rate as did the element carrying them, they did not realize +this. +<P> +"I think I'm hungry," said Bill, who had the best appetite of any of the +travelers. +<P> +"You'll find a beef capsule in the little compartment over your head," spoke +the professor. +<P> +Bill was about to reach for it, when they were all startled by a sudden side +motion of the cylinder. Then came a violent shock, and a sound as of splashing +water. Next the cylinder seemed to be falling, and, a few minutes later to +be shooting upward. Following this there was another splash and the cylinder +began to bob about like a cork on a mill pond. +<P> +"We have reached the sea! We are afloat on the ocean!" cried the professor. +<P> +Hurriedly he disengaged himself from the straps that held him to his bunk. +He pushed back the lever that opened the manhole. Into the opening glowed +the glorious sunlight, while to the occupants came the breath of salt air. +<P> +"Hurrah!" cried Jack. "We are safe at last!" +<P> +"Safe at last!" the professor answered, and then they all gave a cheer. +<P> +For their cylinder, which might now be termed a boat, was floating on the +great Atlantic. The blue sky was overhead and the air of the sea fanned their +cheeks. +<P> +They had shot up from the underground earth, in the column of water, had +been tossed high into the air, had fallen back when the liquid shaft broke +into spray, had descended into the ocean, gone down a hundred feet or more, +and then had shot up like a cork to bob about the surface. +<P> +For a week they were afloat, and then they were picked up by a passing vessel, +rather weak and very much cramped, but otherwise in good shape. They said +nothing of their adventures, save to explain that they were experimenting +in a new kind of boat. About a month later, for the ship that had rescued +them was a slow sailer, they were back on the island whence that wonderful +voyage was begun. +<P> + <HR> +<P> +"Well, we solved the mystery of the center of the earth," remarked Jack, +one evening, when they were gathered in the old shack where so many wonderful +adventures had been planned. +<P> +"Yes, we did," said Mr. Henderson. "And no one else is ever likely to go +there." +<P> +"Why?" +<P> +"Because the only way of getting there was destroyed by the earthquake, and +no one could ever force his way down through that upward-shooting column +of water." +<P> +"That's so. Well, we have the diamonds, anyway," spoke Mark. "They ought +to make us rich." +<P> +And the jewels did, for the stones proved to be of great value, even though +the adventurers had saved only a few of the many they found in the ruined +temple. +<P> +But there was money enough so that they all could live in comfort; the rest +of their lives. As the professor was getting quite old, and incapable of +making any more wonderful inventions, he closed up his workshop and settled +down to a quiet life. As for Washington, Andy, and Bill and Tom, they invested +their money received from the sale of the diamonds in different business +ventures, and each one did well. +<P> +"I am going in for a good education," said Jack to Mark. +<P> +"Just what I am going to do," answered his chum. "And after we've got that——" +He paused suggestively. +<P> +"We'll go in for inventing airships, or something like that, eh?" +<P> +"Yes. We've learned a great deal from Mr. Henderson, and in the course of +time we ought to be able to turn out something even more wonderful than the +<I>Electric Monarch, </I>the <I>Porpoise, </I>or the <I>Flying Mermaid."</I> +<P> +"Yes, and when we've invented something better——" +<P> +"We'll take another trip." +<P> +"Right you are!" +<P> +And then the two chums shook hands warmly; and here we will say good-bye. +<h4>THE END.</h4> + + + + + + + + +<pre> + + + + + +End of Project Gutenberg's Five Thousand Miles Underground, by Roy Rockwood + +*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK FIVE THOUSAND MILES UNDERGROUND *** + +***** This file should be named 4994-h.htm or 4994-h.zip ***** +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: + http://www.gutenberg.org/4/9/9/4994/ + +Produced by Jim Weiler + +Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed. + +Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no +one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation +(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without +permission and without paying copyright royalties. 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You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + +Title: Five Thousand Miles Underground + +Author: Roy Rockwood + +Posting Date: August 29, 2012 [EBook #4994] +Release Date: January, 2004 +First Posted: April 7, 2002 + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ASCII + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK FIVE THOUSAND MILES UNDERGROUND *** + + + + +Produced by Jim Weiler + + + + + + + + + +Five Thousand Miles Underground + +Or + +The Mystery of the Centre of the Earth + +by Roy Rockwood, 1908 + + + + +CHAPTER I + +WASHINGTON BACKS OUT + + +"WASHINGTON! I say Washington!" + +Throughout a big shed, filled for the most part with huge pieces of +machinery, echoed the voice of Professor Amos Henderson. He did not +look up from a small engine over which he was bending. + +"Washington! Where are you? Why don't you answer me?" + +From somewhere underneath an immense pile of iron, steel and aluminum +came the voice of a colored man. + +"Yas sir, Perfesser, I'se goin' t' saggasiate my bodily presence in +yo' contiguous proximity an' attend t' yo' immediate conglomerated +prescriptions at th' predistined period. Yas, sir!" + +"Well, Washington, if you had started when you began that long speech +you would have been at least half way here by this time. Hurry up! +Never mind tightning those bolts now. Find the boys. I need them to +help me with this engine. They must be around somewhere." + +"I seen 'em goin' fishin' down by th' brook a little while ago," +answered the negro, crawling out from under what seemed to be a +combined airship and watercraft. "Jack says as how yo' gived him +permission t' occupy his indisputatious period of levity in +endeavorin' t' extract from th' liquid element some specimens of +swimmin' creatures." + +"If you mean I said he and Mark could go fishing in the brook, you're +right, Washington," replied the professor with a smile. "But you waste +a lot of time and breath trying to say it. Why, don't you give up +using big words?" + +"I reckon I was brought up t' it," replied the colored man grinning +from ear to ear. He did not always use big words but when he did they +were generally the wrong ones. Sometimes, he spoke quite correctly. + +"Well, I suppose you can't help it," resumed Mr. Henderson. "However, +never mind that. Find the boys and send them to me." + +"With th' least appreciatableness amount of postponement," answered +the messenger, and he went out. + +Washington White, who in color was just the opposite to his name, a +general helper and companion to Professor Henderson, found Mark +Sampson and Jack Darrow about a quarter of a mile from the big shed, +which was in the center of a wooded island off the coast of Maine. The +lads were seated on the bank of a small brook, fishing. + +"Perfesser wants yo' immediate," said Washington. + +"But we haven't caught a single fish," objected Mark. + +"Them's the orders from headquarters," replied the colored man. "Yo' +both got t' project yo'selves in th' vicinity of th' machine shop. I +reckon th' new fangled contraption that th' perfesser is goin' t' +navigate th' air an' sail th' angry seas in, am about done. He want's +t' try th' engine." + +"Come on then," said Jack. "We probably would not catch any fish, +anyhow, Mark." + +Accompanied by Washington, the youths, each of whom was about eighteen +years old, started toward the big shed. + +While they are on their way opportunity may be taken to tell a little +about them, as well as about Washington and the professor, and the +curious craft on which the scientist was working. + +A few years before this story opens Mr. Henderson had invented a +wonderful electric airship. He had it about completed when, one day, +he and the two boys became unexpectedly acquainted, and, as it +developed, friends. + +Mark and Jack were orphans. After having rather a hard time knocking +about the world trying to make a living, they chanced to meet, and +resolved to cast their lots together. They boarded a freight train, +and, as told in the first volume of this series, entitled, "Through +the Air to the North Pole; or the Wonderful Cruise of the Electric +Monarch," the cars were wrecked near where Professor Henderson was +building his strange craft. + +The boys were cared for by the scientist, and, after their recovery +from hurts received in the collision, they accepted his invitation to +make the trip through the upper regions in the airship, to search for +the north pole. With them went Andy Sudds, an old hunter, and Tom +Smith and Bill Jones, two farmers, but who were hired as helpers on +the voyage. The party had many adventures on the trip, having battles +with savage animals and more savage Esquimaux, and were tossed about +in terrible storms. After making some scientific observations, which +the professor was much interested in, they started back home. + +Having found he could successfully sail in the air, Mr. Henderson +resolved to try what it might be like under water. + +He moved his machine shop to a lonely spot on the Maine coast, and +there, with the help of the boys, Washington, Andy and two machinists +constructed a submarine boat, called the Porpoise. + +In this the professor resolved to seek the south pole, he having a +theory that it was surrounded by an open sea. After much hard work the +Porpoise was made ready for the voyage. + +What occurred on this great trip is described in the second book of +this series, called "Under the Ocean to the South Pole, or the Strange +Cruise of the Submarine Wonder." In that is told how once more Tom and +Bill, with Andy, the boys and Washington, accompanying Professor +Henderson, had many thrilling experiences. + +They were caught in the grip of the grass of the terrible Sargasso +Sea. Monstrous suckers grasped the boat in their powerful arms, and +had to be fought off. They were caught in a sea of boiling water and +imprisoned between big fields of ice. + +By means of strong diving suits they were able to leave the ship and +walk about on the bottom of the sea. They visited a graveyard of +sunken ships, saw many strange monsters as well as many beautiful fish +in the great depths to which they sunk. Many times they were in dire +peril but the resources of the professor, the bravery and daring of +the boys, no less than the help Washington and Andy Sudds, the hunter, +rendered at times, brought them through. + +Those of you who read of their adventures will recall the strange +island which they came upon in the Atlantic Ocean, far from the coast +of South America. + +When they first drew near this island they were almost sucked into the +depths of a great whirlpool, caused by water pouring down a big hole +that seemed to lead far into the earth. They reversed their ship just +in time. + +But, on going to another side of the island they were able to approach +safely, as at this point the great hole was farther from the shore. +Then they landed and investigated. + +They found the island was almost circular, and the hole was also +round, but not in the center of the land. It was an immense cavity, so +wide they could not see across, and as for the depth they could only +guess at it. Looking down they could only see rolling masses of vapor +and clouds caused by the water which poured down from the ocean with +the force of a Niagara. + +Gazing down into the big hole Mark suggested it might lead to the +centre of the earth, which some scientists claim is hollow. The +professor admitted that the cavity looked as though it led to China. + +They had no means of investigating further the mystery of the opening +and returned to their submarine, completing the voyage to the south +pole. + +It was now about two years since they had come back from that eventful +trip. One of the first things the professor did, after docking the +Porpoise, was to shut himself up in his study and begin to draw plans. +To the questions of the boys he returned no answer for several days. +Then he announced he was working on a craft which could both sail on +top of the water and navigate the air. + +In time the plans were done, and, in order to keep the work secret, +the shop was moved to an island which the professor owned. + +Parts of the Monarch and the Porpoise were used in constructing the +new craft, so there was no need to get other help than that which the +boys, Washington and Bill and Tom could give, since the two latter +accepted an offer of the professor to remain and work for him. The +boys, of course, would not leave their friend. + +The professor realized that he had a more difficult task in his new +venture than he had set himself on other occasions. For a ship to be +light enough to rise in the air, and, at another time, and with no +change, to be strong enough to navigate the ocean, was indeed +something to tax Mr. Henderson's ingenuity. + +However, in the course of a little over a year the larger part of the +work was done. Inside the big shed was the huge affair which, it was +hoped, would enable its owner to be master of both air and water. + +"Did the professor say anything special?" asked Mark of Washington. + +"Nope. I reckon he were too busy problamatin' the exact altitude +projected in an inverse direction by th' square root of th' new engine +when operated at a million times inside of a few seconds, but he +didn't say nothin' t' me. I were busy underneath th' ship, fixin' +bolts when he tole me t' find yo'. I wouldn't be s'prised if he had +th' thing goin' soon." + +"Do you think he'll be generating the new gas to-day?" asked Jack +eagerly. "That's the most troublesome part; to get that gas right." + +"He didn't say nothin' t' me 'bout it," Washington stated, as he +walked along beside the two boys. "He jest seemed anxious like." + +"We'd better hurry," advised Mark. "He may be at an important part in +his experiments and probably needs us. I hope it will work. He has +spent many days on it, and we all have worked hard. It ought to be a +success." + +"Perfesser allers makes things work," declared Washington stoutly. + +"That's a good way to feel about it, anyway," observed Mark. "Well, +we'll soon know." + +The three hurried to the shed which they could see as they rounded a +turn of the path through the wood. They noticed an elderly man +approaching with a gun on his shoulder. On one arm he carried a game +bag. + +"Guess Andy got something for dinner," remarked Jack. + +"I hopes so, honey," put in Washington. "I'se got a sort of gone +feelin' in my stomach!" + +"Any luck, Andy?" called Mark, when he came within hailing distance. + +"Fine," replied Andy Sudds. "Rabbits and quail. We'll have a good +dinner to-morrow." + +While Andy entered the living part of the big shed to put away his gun +and game, the boys and Washington kept on to the engine room. They +found the professor, with Bill and Tom, busy fitting pipes to the +small engine which was set up at one side of the structure. + +"Come, boys, I need your aid," remarked Mr. Henderson as they entered. +"Take off your coats and pitch in. Tighten up these bolts, Jack. Mark, +you mix up those chemicals the way I taught you, and see that the +dynamo is in working order for Washington to attend to." + +In a little while the shop was a veritable hive of industry, and it +resounded to the sound of hammers, wrenches and machinery. In the +background was the big ship, which seemed like two immense cigars, one +above the other, the lower one the larger. + +"Where was you calalatin' t' take this here ship when it gits done, +Perfesser?" asked Washington, during a lull in the operations. + +"Do you remember that big hole in the island we visited on our trip to +the south pole?" + +"I suah does," answered the colored man. + +"We are going to explore that," went on the scientist. "We are going +to make a voyage to the interior of the earth in our Flying Mermaid." + +"Go down into th' earth!" exclaimed Washington, his eyes big with +fright. + +"Certainly; why not?" + +"Not for mine!" cried the colored man, dropping the wrench he was +holding. "No sire I'm not goin' t' project myself int' a grave while +I'se alive. Time enough when I kicks th' bucket. No sir! If yo' an' +the boys wants t' risk yo' se'ves goin' down int' th' interior of th' +earth, where th' Bible says there's fiery furnaces, yo' kin go, but +Washington White stays on terra cotta! That's where he stays; He ain't +ready t' be buried, not jest yet!" and the frightened colored man +started to leave the shed. + + + + +CHAPTER II + +THE FLYING MERMAID + + +"HERE! Stop him!" cried Professor Henderson. "Don't let him get away. +We still need his help to get the ship in shape. He needn't be +frightened. We're not going to start at once." + +Mark and Jack ran after Washington, whose progress was somewhat +impeded because he kept looking back as if he feared the new ship was +chasing him. + +"Come on back!" said Mark. "There's no danger, and if there was we're +not going to start to-day." + +"Ain't yo' foolin' me?" asked Washington, pausing and looking +doubtfully at the boys. + +"Of course not," answered Mark. "You know Professor Henderson would +not make you do anything you didn't want to do, Wash. He wishes you to +stay and help him get ready, that's all." + +"Well, Washington," observed the aged scientist. "I didn't think you'd +go back on me." + +"I'd do mos' anything fer yo', Perfesser," said the colored man, "but +I got t' beg off this time," and he looked at the Flying Mermaid as if +he thought the metal sides would open and devour him. + +"Then help me get things in shape to generate the gas," the scientist +said. "I want to give the new vapor the first real test in lifting +power to-day. On the success of it depends the future of the ship." + +Seeing there was no immediate danger of being carried to the centre of +the earth, Washington resumed his labors. The professor, the boys, +Bill and Tom were also hurrying matters to enable a test to be made +before night. + +As will readily be seen, even by those not familiar with the +construction of airships and submarines, the chief problem was to find +some agent strong enough to lift from the earth a weight heavier than +had ever before been put into an apparatus that was destined to +traverse the clouds. For the Flying Mermaid was not only an airship +but an ocean voyager as well. It had to be made light enough to be +lifted far above the earth, yet the very nature of it, necessitating +it being made heavy enough to stand the buffeting of the waves and the +pressure of water, was against its flying abilities. + +Professor Henderson realized this and knew that the chief concern +would be to discover a gas or vapor with five times the lifting power +of hydrogen, one of the lightest gases known, and one sometimes used +to inflate balloons. + +After long study he had been partially successful, but he knew from +experiments made that the gas he had so far been able to manufacture +would not answer. What he wanted was some element that could be mixed +with the gas, to neutralize the attraction of gravitation, or downward +pull of the earth. + +While he was seeking this, and experimenting on many lines, the +construction of the air-water ship went on. In general the outward +construction was two cigar shaped hulls, one above the other. +Aluminum, being the lightest and strongest metal that could be used +for the purpose, formed the main part of both bodies. + +The upper hull was one hundred feet long and twenty feet in diameter +at the widest part. It tapered to points at either end. It was +attached to the lower hull by strong braces, at either end, while from +the center there extended a pipe which connected with the lower +section. This pipe was intended to convey the lifting gas to the part +which corresponded to the bag of the balloon, save that it was of +metal instead of silk, or rubber as is usual. + +There were two reasons for this. One was that it would not be liable +to puncture, particularly in the proposed underground trip, and the +other was that it did not have to be so large as a cloth bag would +have had to be. It was also a permanent part of the ship, and on a +voyage where part of the time the travelers would be in the air and +part on the water, and when the change from one to the other would +have to be made quickly, this was necessary. It would have taken too +long to raise the ship in the air had a cloth bag been used to contain +the gas. + +The lower hull or main part of the craft was one hundred and fifty +feet long, and forty feet through at the largest part, in the centre. + +It was divided into four sections. The forward one contained the +sleeping quarters of Professor Henderson and his crew. There was a +small stateroom for each one. Above was a conning or observation +tower, reached by a small flight of steps. From this tower the ship +could be steered, stopped and started, as could also be done from the +engine room, which was in the after part of the hull. + +As in the Porpoise and Monarch, electricity formed the motive power +and was also used for many other purposes on board. Engines operated +by gas produced the current which heated, lighted and moved the ship, +as well as played a part in producing the wonderful gas. + +The ship moved forward or backward by means of a novel arrangement. +This was by the power of compressed air. From either end of the lower +hull there projected a short pipe working in a ball and socket joint, +so it could be turned in any direction. By means of strong pumps a +current of compressed air could be sent out from either pipe. Thus +when floating above the earth the ship was forced forward by the blast +of air rushing from the pipe at the stern. It was the same principle +as that on which a sky rocket is shot heavenward, save that gases +produced by the burning of powder in the pasteboard rocket form its +moving impulse. + +In the case of the Flying Mermaid, it could be made to move backward +by sending the air out of the forward tube. Thus, when in the water, +the compressed air rushing from the pipe struck the fluid and forced +the ship forward or backward as was desired. It floated on the +surface, the deck being about three feet out of water, while the +aluminum gas bag was overhead. + +The engine room was a marvel of machine construction. It contained +pumps for air and water, motors, dynamos, gas engines, and a maze of +wheels and levers. Yet everything was very compact and no room was +wasted. + +The use of the air method of propulsion did away with the necessity of +a large propellor such as most airships have to use, a propellor which +must of necessity be very light and which is easily broken. + +Next to the engine room was the kitchen. It contained an electric +range and all necessary appliances and utensils for preparing meals. +There were lockers and a large reserve storeroom which when the time +came would be well stocked with food. Forward of the kitchen was the +living and dining room. It contained comfortable seats, folding tables +and a small library. Here, also were many instruments designed to show +how the various machines were working. There were gages, pointers and +dials, which told the direction the ship was traveling, the speed and +the distance above the earth or below the surface. Similar indicators +were in the conning tower, which had a powerful search light. + +The ship was lighted throughout by incandescent lamps, and there was +even a small automatic piano worked by the electric current, on which +popular airs could be played. + +If the gas and the gravity neutralizer worked as Professor Henderson +hoped they would, as soon as the ship was completed, all that would be +necessary to start on the voyage would be to fill the aluminum bag and +set the air compressor in motion. + +The gas was made from common air, chemically treated and with a secret +material added which by means of a complicated machine in a measure +did away with the downward pull of the earth. Thus all that was +necessary to carry on a long voyage was a quantity of gasolene to +operate the engine which worked the electric machines, and some of +this secret compound. + +The professor and his helpers had been working to good advantage. At +last all was in readiness for the gas test. + +It was proposed to try it on an experimental scale. Some of the fluid +was to be generated and forced into an aluminum cylinder under the +same pressure it would be used in the air ship. To this cylinder were +attached weights in proportion to the weight of the Flying Mermaid +with its load of human freight, engines and equipment. + +"This cylinder is just one one-hundredth the size of the cylinder of +the ship," said the professor. "I am going to fasten to it a hundred +pound weight. If it lifts that our latest contrivance will be a +success." + +"You mean if the little cylinder pulls a hundred pounds up the big +ship will take us and the machinery up?" asked Mark. + +"Certainly," answered the professor. "If this cylinder lifts a hundred +pounds, one a hundred times as big (as that of the Mermaid is), will +lift a hundred times as much, or ten thousand pounds. That is five +tons, or more than a ton over what I figure to be the weight of our +ship and contents. The latest war balloon can lift one ton with ease, +and if my machine can not do five times as well I shall be +disappointed." + +The last adjustments were made, pipes were run from the gas generator +to the cylinder, and the hundred pound weight was attached. + +"Everybody look out now," said Mr. Henderson. "I am going to start the +machine and let the gas enter the cylinder. It is a very powerful gas +and may break the cylinder. If it does you must all duck." + +The scientist gave a last look at everything. The boys got behind some +boards whence they could see without being in danger. Washington, who +had little fear so long as there was no danger of going under ground, +took his place at the dynamo. Andy Sudds, with Bill and Tom, stationed +themselves in safe places. + +"All ready!" called the professor. + +He pulled a lever toward him, turned a wheel and signalled to +Washington to start the dynamo. There was a sound of buzzing +machinery, which was followed by a hiss as the gas began to enter the +cylinder under pressure. Would it stand the strain? That question was +uppermost in every one's mind save the professor's. He only cared to +see the cylinder leave the ground, carrying the weight with it. That +would prove his long labors were crowned with success. + +Faster and faster whirred the dynamo. The gas was being generated from +the air. The secret chemical made a hissing which could be heard for +some distance. The gage registered a heavy pressure. Anxiously the +professor watched the cylinder. + +"There!" he exclaimed at length. "It has all the gas it can hold. Now +to see if it works!" + +He disconnected the pipe leading from the generator. This left the +cylinder free. It seemed to tremble slightly. There appeared to be a +movement to the hundred pound weight which rested on the ground. It +was as if it was tugging to get loose. + +"There it goes! There it goes!" cried Mark, joyfully. + +"Hurrah!" shouted Jack. "There she rises!" + +"It suttinly am projectin' itself skyward!" yelled Washington, coming +from the dynamo. + +Sure enough the cylinder was slowly rising in the air, bearing the +weight with it. It had lifted it clear from the ground and was +approaching the roof of the big shed. + +"It will work! It will work!" exclaimed the professor, strangely +excited. + +The next instant the cylinder, carrying the weight, sailed right out +of an open skylight, and began drifting outside the shop, and across +the fields. + +"Quick! We must get it back!" cried Mr. Henderson. "If it gets away my +secret may be discovered and I will lose all! We must secure it!" + +But the cylinder was now two hundred feet in the air and being blown +to the east, the weight dangling below it, making it look like a +miniature airship. + +"We can never catch that!" cried Mark. + + + + +CHAPTER III + +WASHINGTON DECIDES + + +"WE must catch that cylinder!" the professor exclaimed. "Some one may +find it when it comes down and analyze the gas. Then he would discover +how to make it. The cylinder must come down!" + +"Don't see how we can proximate ourselves inter th' vicinity of it +lessen we delegate th' imperial functions of orinthological specimens +t' some member of this here party," observed Washington. + +"If you mean we can't catch that there contraption unless we turn into +birds I'll show you that you're mistaken!" cried Andy Sudds. "I guess +I have a trick or two up my sleeve," and the old hunter quickly threw +open the breech of his gun and inserted a couple of cartridges. + +He raised the piece to his shoulder and took quick aim. There was a +sliver of flame, a puff of smoke and a sharp report. The professor and +the boys who were watching the cylinder saw it vibrate up in the air. +Then there came a whistling sound. An instant later the metal body +began to descend, and it and the weight fell to the earth. + +"I'm sorry I had to put a bullet through it, Professor," said old Andy +with a queer smile, "but it was the only way I saw of bringing it +down. Hope it isn't damaged much." + +"It doesn't matter if it is," the scientist answered. "I can make more +cylinders, but I don't want that secret of the gas to become known. +Your bullet served a good turn, Andy, for it let the compressed vapor +out just in time." + +"Then we may consider the experiment a success," said Mark, as +Washington went to where the cylinder had fallen, to detach it from +the weight and bring both to the shed. + +"It seems so," Mr. Henderson answered. "True, it was only an +experiment. We have yet to test the ship itself." + +"When can we do that?" asked Jack. + +"I hope by Monday," the scientist answered. + +"Will you try it in the water or air first?" asked Mark. + +"I'm almost certain it will float in the water," the aged inventor +said. "It does not require much work to make a ship which will do +that. But the air proposition is another matter. However, since the +cylinder rose, I am pretty sure the Flying Mermaid will. + +"But we have done enough work to-day. Let's rest and have something to +eat. Then, with Sunday to sit around and talk matters over, we will be +ready for Monday's test." + +Some of the game Andy had killed was soon on the table, for +Washington, in addition to his other accomplishments, was an expert +cook. During the evening the boys and their friends sat in the living +room of the big shed and talked over the events of the day. + +Sunday was spent in discussing what adventures might lie before them +should they be able to descend into the big hole. Washington did not +say, much, but it was easy to see he had no notion of going. He even +began to pack his few belongings in readiness to leave the service of +Mr. Henderson, for whom he had worked a good many years. + +No one remained long abed Monday morning. Even Washington was up early +in spite of the interest he had lost in the professor's voyage. + +"I jest wants t' see yo' start fer that place where they buries live +folks," he said. + +In order to properly test the Flying Mermaid it was necessary to move +the craft from the shed from which place it had never been taken since +it's construction was started. It had been built on big rollers in +anticipation of this need, so that all which was now necessary was to +open the doors at the end, and roll the craft out. + +This was accomplished with no small amount of labor, and it was nearly +noon before the big ship was moved into the open. It was shoved along +to a little clearing in front of the shed, where no trees would +interfere with its possible upward movement. + +Everyone was bustling about. The professor was busiest of all. He went +from one machine to another; from this apparatus to that, testing +here, turning wheels there, adjusting valves and seeing that all was +in readiness for the generating of the powerful gas. + +As the airship was half round on the bottom and as it rested in a sort +of semi-circular cradle; it brought the entrance some distance above +the ground. To make it easier to get in and out while preparations for +the trial were going on, Bill and Tom had made an improvised pair of +steps, which were tied to the side of the ship with ropes. + +Up and down these the professor, the boys and Andy went, taking in +tools and materials, and removing considerable refuse which had +accumulated during the building of the craft. + +Finally all was in readiness for starting the making of the gas. The +ship was not wholly complete and no supplies or provisions for the +long voyage had been taken aboard. The Flying Mermaid was about a ton +lighter than it would be when fully fitted out, but to make up for +this the professor had left in the ship a lot of tools and surplus +machinery so that the craft held as much weight as it would under +normal conditions. If the gas lifted it now it would at any other +time. + +"Start the generator," said Mr. Henderson, to Mark. "We'll soon see +whether we are going to succeed or fail." + +The boy turned a number of levers and wheels. The machine which made +the powerful vapor was soon in operation. The professor had already +added enough of the secret compound to the tank containing the other +ingredients, and the big pump was sucking in air to be transformed +into the lifting gas. + +The boys and the professor were in the engine room. Andy Sudds, with +Bill and Tom, had taken their places in the living room, to more +evenly balance the ship, since the things in it were not yet all in +their proper places. As for Washington he was busy running from the +shed to the ship with various tools and bits of machinery the +professor desired. + +The gas was being generated rapidly. Throughout the ship there +resounded a hissing noise that told it was being forced through the +pipe into the aluminum shell above the ship proper. + +"I wonder how soon it will begin to lift us," said Mark. + +"It will take about half an hour," replied Mr. Henderson. "You see we +have first to fill the holder completely, since there is no gas in it. +After this we will keep some on hand, so that it will only need the +addition of a small quantity to enable the ship to rise." + +He was busy watching the pointer on a dial which indicated the +pressure of the gas, and the lifting force. The boys were kept busy +making adjustments to the machinery and oiling bearings. + +Suddenly, throughout the length of the craft there was felt a curious +trembling. It was as though the screw of a powerful steamer was +revolving in the water. + +"What is it?" asked Jack. + +"I hope it is the lifting power of the gas making itself felt," the +professor answered. "Perhaps the Flying Mermaid is getting ready to +try her wings." + +The trembling became more pronounced. The gas was being generated +faster than ever. The whole ship was trembling. Tom and Bill came from +the room, where they were stationed, to inquire the meaning, but were +reassured by the professor. + +"Don't be alarmed if you find yourselves up in the air pretty soon," +he remarked with a smile. "Remember the Electric Monarch, and the +flights she took. We may not go as high as we did in her, but it will +answer the same purpose." + +The gas was hissing through the big tube as it rushed into the +overhead holder. The gage indicated a heavy pressure. The ship began +to tremble more violently and to sway slightly from side to side. + +"I think we shall rise presently," said Mr. Henderson. His voice +showed the pride he felt at the seeming success with which his +invention was about to meet. + +Suddenly, with a little jerk, as though some one with a giant hand had +plucked the Flying Mermaid from the earth, the ship gave a little +bound into the air, and was floating free. + +"Here we go!" cried Mr. Henderson. "The ship is a success. Now we're +off for the hole in the earth!" + +The Flying Mermaid was indeed rising in the air. True it did not go up +so swiftly as had the Monarch, but then it was a much heavier and +stronger vessel, and flying was only one of its accomplishments. + +"It's a success! It's a success!" shouted Mark, capering about in his +excitement. + +"Now we'll see what the centre of the earth looks like," went on Jack. +"I can hardly wait for the time to come when we are to start on the +voyage." + +At that instant, when the ship was but a few feet from the ground, but +slowly rising, the boys and the professor heard a shouting below them. + +"What's that?" asked the scientist. "Is any one hurt?" + +Mark ran to a small window, something like a port hole in an ocean +steamer, and looked out. + +"Quick!" he shouted. "Stop the ship! Washington will be killed!" + +In fact from the agonized yells which proceeded from somewhere under +the craft it seemed that the accident was in process of happening. + +"Save me! Save me!" cried the colored man. "I'm goin' to fall! Catch +me, some one!" + +"What is it?" asked the professor, making ready to shut off the power +and let the ship settle back to earth, from which it had moved about +fifty feet. + +"It's Washington," explained Mark. "He evidently tried to walk up the +steps just as the boat mounted skyward. He rolled down and managed to +grab the end of the rope which was left over after the steps were +tied. Now he's swinging down there." + +"Are you going to lower the ship?" asked Jack. + +"Of course!" exclaimed the professor. "I only hope he hangs on until +his feet touch the earth." + +"Keep a tight hold!" shouted Mark, from out of the small window. + +"That's th' truest thing yo' ever said!" exclaimed Washington. "You +bet I'm goin' to hold on, and I'm comin' up too," which he proceeded +to do, hand over hand, like a sailor. + +The boys and the professor watched the colored man's upward progress. +The ship had hardly begun to settle as, in the excitement, not enough +gas had been let out. Closer and closer came Washington, until he was +able to grasp the edge of the opening, to which the steps were +fastened. + +"I thought you weren't coming with us," observed the professor, when +he saw that his helper was safe. + +"I changed my mind," said the colored man. "It's jest luck. Seems like +th' ship done wanted me t' go 'long, an' I'm goin'. I'll take my +chances on bein' buried alive. I ain't never seen th' centre of th' +earth, an' I want's to 'fore I die. I'm goin' 'long, Perfessor!" + + + + +CHAPTER IV + +WHAT DID MARK SEE? + + +"WELL, I'm glad you've decided at last," the professor remarked. "Now +come inside and we'll see how the ship works." + +Once over his fright, Washington made himself at home on the craft he +had helped build. He went from one room to another and observed the +engine. + +"She certainly am workin'" he observed with pride. "Are we still goin' +up, Perfessor?" + +"Still mounting," replied Mr. Henderson, "We are now three hundred +feet above the earth," he added as he glanced at a registering gage. + +The great air pump was set going and soon from the after tube, a big +stream of the compressed vapor rushed. It acted on the ship instantly +and sent the craft ahead at a rapid rate. By elevating or depressing +the tube the craft could be sent obliquely up or down. Then, by +forcing the air from the forward tube, the Mermaid was reversed and +scudded backward. + +But it was more with the ship's ability to rise and descend that +Professor Henderson was concerned, since on that depended their +safety. So various tests were made, in generating the gas and using +the negative gravity apparatus. + +All worked to perfection. Obeying the slightest turn of the wheels and +levers the Mermaid rose or fell. She stood still, suspended herself in +the air, or rushed backward and forward. + +Of course the machinery was new and did not operate as smoothly as it +would later, but the professor and his friends were very well +satisfied. + +"Now we'll try something new," said the scientist to the two boys as +they stood beside him in the tower. "I only hope this part succeeds, +and we shall soon be off on our voyage." + +He turned several levers. There was a hissing sound as the gas rushed +from the container, and the ship began to settle down. + +"What's th' matter? Are we goin' t' hit th' earth?" yelled Washington, +rushing from the engine room. + +"Keep quiet," ordered the professor. "We are only going down, that's +all." + +"But good land! Perfesser!" exclaimed the colored man. "The ocean's +right under us! You forgot you sailed sway from the island! We'll be +drowned suah!" + +"Leave it to me," said Mr. Henderson. "The Flying Mermaid is going to +take a bath!" + +"As long as it swims it will be all right," observed Mark in a low +tone to Jack. "I'm glad I can take care of myself in the water." + +Before Jack could reply the Mermaid seemed to take a sudden dive +through the air. The next instant she struck the water with a splash +that sent the waves rolling all about. The craft rocked violently to +and fro on the surface of the sea. For a while there were anxious +hearts aboard, for there was no certainty but that the ship might not +sink to the bottom. + +But the old professor had not calculated and builded in vain. After +rocking about like a vessel newly launched, the strange craft rode +safely and upright on the water. It set down far enough to bring the +propelling tubes well under, but not so far but that the conning tower +was well out and there was a small deck available. + +"Now to see if we can conquer the water as we did the air!" cried the +professor. "Mark, start the air pump. Jack, you steer, for I want to +watch the machinery under the additional strain." + +From the rear tube rushed such a volume of air that the ocean near it +bubbled and foamed. The ship trembled from stem to stern, and then, +after hanging for an instant as if undecided what to do, it began to +move forward as easily as though it had never sailed any other element +than the sea. + +"She fits her name!" the professor cried. "She is indeed the Flying +Mermaid, for she sails the ocean as easily as she navigates in the +clouds!" + +For a mile or two the craft was sent ahead over the waves. Then it was +reversed and run backwards. Satisfied that his long months of work had +not gone for naught, the professor after trying several experiments, +decided to try and raise the ship while in motion. + +With Jack and Mark to look after the air pumps, while Washington, Tom +and Bill busied themselves in the engine room, Mr. Henderson began to +generate the gas and start the negative gravity apparatus. All the +while the craft was forging ahead. + +There was again the hissing sound that told of the aluminum holder +being filled. For a few minutes there seemed to be no change, the +Mermaid plowing forward. + +Then like a bird rising from the waves, or like a flying fish leaping +from the sea to escape some pursuing monster of the deep, the new ship +shot up diagonally from the surface and winged its way into the upper +regions of the air. + +"Success! Success!" cried the professor. "This proves all I wanted to +know. Now we are ready for our great trip!" + +Great were the rejoicings in the camp that night. It was like living +over again the days when they were aboard the diving Porpoise or the +flying Monarch. To the recollections were added the anticipations of +what was before them in the trip to the interior of the earth. + +Busy days followed, for there was still much to be done to the Flying +Mermaid. The machinery, which was only partly completed, had to be +finished. Besides this the professor was working on some apparatus, +the use of which he did not disclose to any one. It was stored aboard +the ship at the last minute. + +Plenty of provisions had to be taken aboard, and many supplies needed +to work the Mermaid and insure that it would go to the end of the +voyage. The materials for generating the gas and negative gravity, +spare parts, records for the automatic piano and other things were +stored away. + +Some guns and ammunition were taken along as were a few revolvers, +since old Andy had said it was best to prepare for any thing in the +shape of enemies or wild beasts that might be met with in the interior +regions. + +It was decided to make the start by sailing along the surface of the +sea for several days, as in the event of any weakness in the machinery +being discovered there would be less danger. If, at the end of four +days, no trouble developed, the professor said he would send the +Mermaid into the air and make the rest of the voyage through the sky. + +The night before the start was to be made the professor, with the +boys, Washington and the other helpers, went about through the various +shops and buildings, locking them up securely. For they could not tell +how long they would be away, and they had to leave behind much +valuable material. + +As there were several things that needed attention they divided the +work up. Mark had finished his share and was walking back toward the +living cabin where they were all quartered, when, down at the shore, +near where the boat was moored, he fancied he saw, in the gathering +darkness, a moving figure. + +"I wonder who that can be," he thought. "All the others are near the +machine shop, for I just left them there. Perhaps it's some one trying +to spy out how the Mermaid is built." + +Knowing the professor wanted his secret well guarded, Mark walked +softly toward the little dock that served as a place whence the +Mermaid could be easily boarded. As he approached he saw the figure +moving. Something struck the boy as peculiar. + +Though the object had some of the characteristics of a man it did not +walk like a human being, but shuffled along more like a huge ape or +monkey. It seemed bent over, as if it stooped toward the ground. + +"Who are you?" called Mark suddenly. + +For an instant the figure halted and then hurried on faster than +before, with a curious, shuffling walk. It was approaching the ship. + +Somehow it struck Mark as if it was an uncanny being; an inhabitant of +some other world. Then he laughed at his half-fear, and started on a +run toward the dock. + +"If it's some tramp trying to find a place to sleep he'd better not go +aboard the ship, he might do some damage," the boy thought. + +He could hardly see the figure now as it had passed into the shadow +cast by the boat. He was about to summon the professor to make an +investigation, when Washington started going the search light which +was placed just over the door of the living cabin. It was kept there +as a sort of beacon light, as, near the island was a dangerous ledge +of rocks. + +Then, in the blinding white glare from the big lantern as Washington +accidentally swung it toward the Mermaid, Mark beheld a strange sight. + +The figure he had been watching stood out in bold relief. Though it +was shaped like a human being it was not like any person the boy had +ever seen. It seemed covered with a skin twice too large for it; a +skin, which, in spite of the clothes that concealed it, hung in folds +about the arms and legs, dropping pendent like from the neck like a +big garment, and flapping in the wind. + +For an instant Mark was so startled he cried out, and the professor +and the others ran to see what was the matter. + +"There--by the ship! A horrible creature!" exclaimed Mark. + +Shouting to Washington to keep the light steady in the direction of +the dock, Mr. Henderson ran toward the moored Mermaid. Jack, Andy, +Bill and Tom, with Mark in the rear followed him. + +"Nothing here," said the scientist, after a careful search about. "Are +you sure you saw something, Mark?" + +"Positively," replied the lad with a shudder. He described the vision +of the darkness. + +"I guess it was a big otter, or maybe an enormous turtle," the +professor said. + + + + +CHAPTER V + +ATTACKED BY A WHALE + + +BUT Mark was certain it was nothing like that, though a careful search +failed to reveal anything or any person near the ship. It was too dark +to examine for footprints, and even Mark, after taking a look all +about, felt he might have been deceived by shadows. Still he was a +little nervous, and could hardly sleep for imagining what the thing he +saw could have been. + +The next day every one was so busy that no one, not even Mark, +recalled the little excitement of the night before. Shortly after +noon, final preparations having been made, they all got aboard the +Mermaid and started off. + +It was a bright sunshiny day, and the craft, speeding away from the +island where it had been constructed, over the dancing blue waves, +must have presented a strange sight had there been any spectators. For +surely no such ship had ever before sailed those waters. + +However, there was no other vessel in sight, and the island, as far as +the professor and his friends knew, had never been inhabited. + +"We will not try for any great speed," Mr. Henderson remarked as he, +with Mark and Jack, stood in the conning tower managing the Mermaid. +"We don't want to strain any joints at the start or heat any engine +bearings. There will be time enough for speed later." + +"Yes, and we may need it more when we get into the centre of the earth +than we do now," observed Mark. + +"Why so?" asked Jack. + +"No telling what we may run up against underneath the ground," went on +Mark. "We may have to fight strange animals and stranger beings. +Besides, the atmosphere and water there can't be the same as up here; +do you think so, Professor?" + +For a few minutes the scientist was silent. He seemed to be thinking +deeply. + +"I will tell you what I believe," he said at length. "I have never +spoken of it before, but now that we are fairly started and may +eventually have a chance to prove my theory, I will say that I think +the centre of this earth on which we live is hollow. Inside of it, +forming a core, so to speak, I believe there is another earth, similar +to ours in some respects which revolves inside this larger sphere." + +They were well out to sea now, as they could observe when they emerged +on the little deck. Above their heads was the aluminum gas holder, +which served as a sort of protection from the sun that was quite warm. +The Mermaid rode with an easy motion, being submerged just enough to +make her steady, yet not deep enough to encounter much resistance from +the water. In fact it could not have been arranged better for speed or +comfort. + +"I think we will sail well to the eastward before making our course +south," Mr. Henderson said. "I do not care to meet too many ships, as +those aboard will be very curious and I do not want too much news of +this venture to get out. We will take an unfrequented route and avoid +delays by being hailed by every passing vessel whose captain will +wonder what queer craft he had met with." + +The boys enjoyed the sail, for the weather could not have been better. +Even old Andy, who seldom said much, seemed delighted with the +prospect of having strange adventures. He had his rifle with him, and, +indeed, he seldom went anywhere that he did not carry it. + +"For there's no telling when you may see something you want to shoot +or that ought to be shot," he used to say, "and it's always the man +without a gun who needs it most. So I'm taking no chances." + +They sailed all that afternoon without meeting with a craft of any +kind. Straight to the east they went, and when night began to settle +down Washington got supper. It was decided to run slowly after dark +until all hands were more familiar with the ship. + +Morning found the Mermaid about a hundred miles from the island where +she had been launched. The night had been uneventful, except that Mark +told Jack he heard some strange noise near his bunk several times. He +was nearest the storeroom where spare parts, and the curious cylinder +the professor had brought aboard, were kept. + +"I guess it was rats," said Jack. "They are always in ships." + +"Old wooden ships, yes," admitted Mark. "But I'll bet there's not a +rat aboard the Mermaid." + +"Then you were dreaming," said Jack, as if that settled it. + +Mark did not speak further of the noise, but he did considerable +thinking. However, the next night there was no further disturbance. + +The fourth day out, when everything had passed off well, the engines +doing their best, the professor decided to speed them up a bit, since +he was satisfied they had "found" themselves as mechanics term it. + +"We'll see how fast we can go through the water," said Mr. Henderson, +"and then I think we can safely turn our course south. We are well +beyond the ordinary lines of travel now." + +Having oiled the bearings well, and seen that everything was in place +and properly adjusted, the professor and the boys took their places in +the conning tower, while Washington, Tom and Bill remained in the +engine room. Andy stayed on deck with his gun. + +"I might see a big fish, and we could vary our bill of fare," he said +with a laugh. + +"Here we go!" exclaimed the professor as he shifted the levers and +turned some wheels and valves. "Now we'll see how fast we can travel." + +As he spoke the Mermaid responded to the added impulse of the +compressed air and shot through the water at a terrific speed. The +sudden increase in momentum almost threw the boys from their feet, and +they would have fallen had they not grasped some projecting levers. + +"I guess that will do," Said the scientist. "I think we have speed +enough for almost any emergency. I'll let her run at this rate for a +while, and then we'll slack up." + +Looking ahead, the boys could see the green waters parting in front of +the bow of the Mermaid, as if to make room for her. Two huge waves +were thrown upon either side. + +Suddenly, dead ahead, there loomed up a big black object. + +"Look out you'll hit the rock!" cried Mark to the professor, who was +steering. + +With a turn of his wrist Mr. Henderson moved the wheel which +controlled the tube. It was deflected and sent the boat to larboard. + +At that instant from the rock two small fountains of water rose in the +air, falling back in a shower of spray through which the sun gleamed. + +"That's not a rock! It's a big whale!" cried Jack. "And we're going to +hit him!" + +The professor had miscalculated the speed of the craft, or else had +not thrown her far enough to larboard, for, a second later, the +Mermaid was almost upon the big leviathan. + +With a desperate twirling of the steering wheel the professor veered +the craft as far as possible. But all he could do did not suffice, for +the craft hit the whale a glancing blow on the side, and the ship +careened as if she would turn turtle. + +At the same time there rang out from upon deck the sound of a rifle +shot. Old Andy had taken a chance at the enormous creature of the +deep. + +"Hurrah!" the bays heard him shout. "I give him one plumb in the eye! +A fine shot! And we hit him besides with the boat. I guess he's a +goner!" + +"I'm afraid not," muttered the professor. "That was a bad blow we +struck him, but I think it will only ruffle his temper. We'll have to +look sharp now, boys." + +By this time the ship had rushed past the whale, but the boys, looking +through a window in the rear of the tower could see the huge body. Now +the fountains of water which the whale spouted were tinged with red. + +"He's bleeding!" exclaimed the professor. "I guess Andy hit him in a +vital spot." + +"But not vital enough!" cried Mark. "See! He's coming after us!" + +And so it proved. The whale, angered, and, probably half crazed by the +pain of the bullet and the blow, was coursing after the ship, coming +on with the speed of an express train. Straight at the Mermaid he +lunged his huge bulk. + +"We must escape him!" cried Mr. Henderson. "If he hits us he'll send +us to the bottom!" + +He had made ready to slow up the Mermaid to see if it had sustained +any damage from the impact with the whale, but when he saw the monster +coming after the boat he knew the only safety lay in flight. + +"Let us go up into the air and so escape him!" cried Jack, with sudden +inspiration. + +For an instant neither Mark nor the professor grasped what Jack meant. +Then, with an exclamation, the professor pulled forward the lever that +generated the gas and set working the gravity neutralizer, which would +enable the ship to rise. + +Faster through the water went the Mermaid, and faster after her came +the whale. Above the hum of the engines was heard the hiss of the +powerful gas. The ship trembled more violently. + +"We are rising!" exclaimed the professor, as he looked at a gage. + +The boys could feel the craft lifting from the waves which clung to +her as if they hated to lose her. The boys knew the gas was beginning +to operate. + +"If it is not too late!" whispered Mark, half to himself. + +For the monster of the seas was coming on, lashing the water to foam +with his terrible flukes, and sending aloft a bloody spray. His speed +was awful. + +Now he was but ten feet away from the fleeing craft--now but eight--now +five! Ten seconds more and the big head, like the blunt stern of a +battle ship, forced forward by the tons of blubber, flesh, bone and +fat behind it would strike the Mermaid and crush it like an egg shell. + +Now if ever was the need for the Flying Mermaid to prove herself +worthy of the name. Now, if ever, was the time for her to leave the +watery element and take to the lighter one. + +And she did. With a last tremble, as if to free herself from the hold +of the waves, the gallant craft soared up into the air, leaving the +water, which dripped from her keel like a fountain's spray, and +shooting aloft like a bird, escaped her terrible enemy which passed +under her, so close that the lower part of the Flying Mermaid scraped +the whale's back. + +"Saved!" exclaimed the professor. + + + + +CHAPTER VI + +THE CYCLONE + + +IT was only in the nick of time, for a second later and the big mammal +of the ocean would have struck the ship and split it from stem to +stern. + +Higher and higher into the air mounted the Flying Mermaid, while in +the water below, the whale, incensed by missing his prey, was lashing +the waves to foam. + +"Well, that was a narrow squeak; as close as I ever care to come to +it!" exclaimed Andy as he let go of the steel rail to which he was +clinging and entered the conning tower. "I had no idea of hitting the +big fish." + +"I guess he would have taken after us whether you had fired at him or +not," said Mr. Henderson. "He was probably looking for trouble, and +took the first thing that came in his way, which happened to be us. +Some whales are like that, so I have read; big bull creatures, exiled +from the school to which they once belonged, they get like mad +creatures and know neither friend nor foe. Something like rogue +elephants, I imagine." + +Now, having thus unexpectedly risen into the air, the professor +decided to continue travel in that style for a while at least. It +would require less force to propel the ship, and the going would be +more comfortable, since in the upper regions the Mermaid rode on an +even keel, while in the water there was more or less rolling, due to +the action of the waves. + +Once recovered from their fright caused by the whale, and having lost +sight of the enormous creature, for they were now far above the ocean, +the adventurers began to think of something to eat. + +Washington lost little time in preparing a meal, and it was eaten with +a relish. The electric cooking stove worked to perfection, for the +colored man had learned how to use that aboard the Porpoise and +Monarch, and could be depended on to turn out appetizing dishes. + +"What do you say to traveling through the air at night?" asked Mr. +Henderson, as he arose from the table. + +"Suits me," replied Mark. "There's less danger than in the water, I +think." + +Bill, Tom and Washington arranged to stand the night watch, and, when +the professor had examined the engines and given orders about keeping +the ship on her course through the air, he retired to his bunk. Jack +and Mark soon followed. + +It must have been about midnight when Mark was awakened by a movement +that seemed to come from the storeroom next to where his sleeping +place was located. At first he thought he had been dreaming, but, as +he found he was wide awake, he knew it was no imagination that had +affected him. + +"I certainly heard something," he said to himself. "It sounded just as +it did the other night. I wonder if I ought to investigate." + +He thought over the matter carefully as he sat upright in his bunk in +the darkness. True the noise might be a natural one, due to the +vibration of the engine, or to some echo from the machinery. As Mark +listened he heard it again. + +This time he realized it was the slow movement of some heavy body. He +felt a cold shiver run over him and his hair evinced an uncomfortable +tendency to stand upright. But he conquered his feelings and resolved +to keep cool and see if he could discover what had awakened him. + +He got up and moved softly about the little room that contained his +bunk. He could hear better now, and knew it was no echo or vibration +that had come to his ears. + +Once again he heard the strange sound. It was exactly the same as +before; as if some big creature was pulling itself over the floor. + +"Maybe it's a snake; a water snake!" thought Mark. "It may have +crawled aboard when we did not notice it." + +Then he remembered that the ship had not been open in any way that +would enable a serpent to come on it, since it had been started on its +ocean trip. Before that, he was sure no snake had entered the Flying +Mermaid. Still it sounded more like a snake than anything else. + +"I'm going to make a search," decided the boy. + +He took a small portable electric light, run by a storage battery, +and, slipping on a pair of shoes and a bath robe, he left his +stateroom. + +He had decided that the noise came from the storage compartment and so +made for that. The door he knew was not locked, since he had seen Mr. +Henderson go in late that afternoon, and the professor had used no +key. + +Moving softly, Mark left his room and soon found himself in a +corridor, on either side of which were located the sleeping quarters +of the others. He did not want to awaken them, and, perhaps, be +laughed at for his curiosity. + +To get to the storeroom Mark had to go first from the corridor into +the dining room. He soon reached the door that guarded what he thought +might be a strange secret. Trying the knob softly he found it giving +under his fingers. + +"I wonder if I had better go in," he thought. "Perhaps, after all, it +was only rats, as Jack said." + +But, even as he listened he again heard the odd sound coming from the +room. This determined him. He would solve the mystery if possible. + +Cautiously he turned the knob. The door was slowly swinging open when +Mark was startled by a noise from behind him. He turned suddenly to +see Professor Henderson confronting him. + +"What is it, Mark? Is the ship on fire? What's the matter? Is any one +hurt?" + +"I was just going in this room to----" began Mark. + +"Don't do it! Don't do it!" exclaimed the professor in an excited +whisper. "No one must go in that room. I forgot to tell you and Jack +about it. No one must enter. It contains a secret!" + +"I heard a strange noise and----" Mark began again. + +"It could make no noise! It would be impossible for it to make a +noise!" the professor exclaimed. + +"I heard something," the boy insisted. + +"You were dreaming!" said the professor. "Now go back to bed, Mark, +and don't let this happen again. Remember, no one must enter that room +unless I give permission!" + +Somewhat crestfallen at the outcome of his investigations, but +realizing that the professor could do what he wanted to aboard his own +ship, Mark went back to bed. But he could not sleep. All the rest of +the night he was wondering whether Mr. Henderson had some strange +creature hidden aboard the Mermaid. He feared lest the old scientist's +mind might be affected and, in his wildness he had made some infernal +machine that would, in time, blow the whole ship apart. + +But tired nature asserted itself at last, and, weary with vain +imaginings, Mark fell into a slumber. The next morning he awoke with a +start from a dream that he was being devoured by an immense water +snake. + +He said nothing to the others about his night's adventure, for, as it +transpired, no one else had been awakened by his investigations. The +professor did not refer to his conversation with Mark. + +"There's something queer going on aboard the ship this trip," said +Mark to himself. "But I guess it's none of my business. Professor +Henderson seems to know what he is doing and I guess I can trust him." + +He resolved to think no more of the strange noises and movements, and, +for several nights thereafter he was not disturbed by them. + +The weather, which, up to this time had been fair, took a sudden turn +for the worse about the fourth day after Mark's little night +expedition. One evening the sun sank in a mass of dull lead-colored +clouds and a sharp wind sprang up. + +"We're going to have a storm," said Mr. Henderson. "It's liable to be +a bad one, too, from the way the barometer is falling." + +He looked at the glass, and scanned the various instruments that told +how high up the Mermaid was and how fast she was traveling. + +"We're pretty high up in the air," he said, "and scooting along at +about fifty miles an hour. We are going against the wind, too, but +fortunately it is not blowing hard." + +At that moment there sounded from without a peculiar howling sound, as +if a siren whistle was being blown. + +"'Pears like there's goin' t' be a tumultuous demonstration of +sub-maxiliary contortions in th' empherial regions contiguous t' th' +upper atmosphere!" exclaimed Washington, entering from the engine room +into the conning tower. + +"What's the trouble?" asked Mr. Henderson. + +"Terrible big black cloud chasin' us from behind!" exclaimed the +colored man. + +Noting the alarm in Washington's voice the professor glanced from the +rear window. What he saw caused him to exclaim: + +"It's a cyclone! We must drop down to avoid it!" + +He sprang to a lever controlling the gas and yanked it toward him. +There was a shrill hissing sound, and a second later the Mermaid began +to sink. The boys watching the gages on the wall of the tower, saw +that the craft was falling rapidly. + +But, with a rush and roar, the terrible wind was upon them. It caught +the craft in its fearful grip and heeled it over as a ship careens to +the ocean blast. + +"It's a storm in the upper regions! We'll find it calm below!" cried +the professor above the howling of the gale. He opened the gas outlet +wider and the ship fell more rapidly. + +"Are you sure we're over the ocean?" asked Mark. + +"Positive!" the professor called back. "We have been traveling +straight south over the Atlantic for the last week. We will land in +the midst of the waters and float safely." + +Lower and lower went the Mermaid. The wind was now blowing with the +force of a tornado, and, as the craft had to slant in order to +descend, it felt the power of the gale more than if it had scudded +before it. But, by skilful use of the directing tube, the professor +was able to keep the boat from turning over. As they came further down +toward the earth the force of the wind was felt less and less, until, +as they came within two hundred feet of the water which they saw below +them in the gathering dusk, it died out altogether. + +"Now we are free from it," said the professor as the Mermaid came down +on the waves like an immense swan. + +"Are you going ahead or going to stop here?" asked Mark + +"We'll keep right on," Mr. Henderson answered. "No telling when the +storm may strike down here. We'll go as far as we can to-night." + + + + +CHAPTER VII + +A QUEER SAIL + + +NOW that the fear and worriment was over they all began to feel +hungry, and, while Mark and Jack took charge of the conning tower +Washington got breakfast. The professor seemed preoccupied during the +meal, and several times, when Mark spoke to him, he did not reply. + +"I wonder if he is worried about something, or is thinking of +something which seems to be concealed in the storeroom," the boy +thought. + +But, after a while, the professor seemed to be more like himself. He +was busy over several maps and charts, and then announced the ship +would try air-sailing again for a while. + +"We can make better time above than we can on the water," he said, +"and I am anxious to get to the mysterious island and learn what is in +store for us." + +Perhaps if the professor had been able to look ahead, and see what was +soon going to happen, he would not have been so anxious for it to +occur. + +It was shortly after dinner when, the gas container having been +filled, the ship rose in the air, and began sailing over the ocean, +about a mile up. The day was a fine one, and, as they were moving +south, it was constantly growing warmer. Down on the water, in fact, +it was quite hot, but in the air it was just right. + +Like some immense bird the Mermaid went flying through the air. The +boys and the professor sat upon the deck in easy chairs. It was like +being on the top of some tall "sky-scraper" building which, by some +strange power, was being moved forward. Below them the ocean tumbled +in long, lazy swells. + +Suddenly Mark, who was looking through a telescope at the expanse of +water stretched out under them, gave a cry. + +"There's a ship! She's on fire!" + +"Where?" asked the professor, stretching out his hand for the glass. + +"Just to the port of the forward tube. See the smoke!" exclaimed Mark. + +Mr. Henderson looked. Through the lens he saw a column of black vapor +rising skyward. Mingled with it were red flames. + +"Lower the Mermaid!" he cried. "We must save those on board if we +can!" + +Mark ran to the conning tower, where Washington was, to give the +order. The colored man, who was looking ahead, intent on guiding the +ship, did not at first hear what Mark called. + +"Lower us! Send the Mermaid down!" Mark cried again. + +The sudden shout, and the excited voice of Mark so startled +Washington, that, fearing some accident had happened, he pulled the +lever, controlling the gas supply, with more force than necessary. + +There was a loud explosion, followed by a crackling sound, a flash of +light, and the Mermaid came to a sudden stop. + +"What's the matter?" cried Mark, feeling that something was wrong. + +"I don't know!" Washington replied, as he dashed toward the engine +room. + +The Mermaid, her forward flight checked, hung in the air, suspended, +neither rising or falling. + +"Why don't we go on down?" the professor asked, hurrying to the tower. + +"There has been an explosion--an accident!" exclaimed Mark. "I guess +we can't go down!" + +"But we must!" Mr. Henderson insisted, seizing the lever which should +have produced a downward motion. The handle swung to and fro. It was +disconnected from the apparatus it operated. + +The ship was now stationary in the air, moving neither forward nor +backward, neither rising nor falling. Washington had stopped the air +pumps as soon as he learned something was wrong. + +When Mr. Henderson saw the useless lever, which had controlled the +outlet of gas from the holder, he ran out on deck. One glance told him +what had happened. One of the electric wires had become +short-circuited,--that is, the insulation had worn off and allowed +the current to escape. This had produced a spark, which had exploded +the gas which was in the pipe leading from the generator up into the +aluminum holder. Fortunately there was an automatic cut-off for the +supply of vapor, or the whole tank would have gone up. + +As it was, only a small quantity had blown up, but this was enough to +break the machinery at the point where the lever in the conning tower +joined the pipe. If it had not been for the automatic cut-off all the +gas in the holder would have poured out in a great volume, and the +ship would have fallen like a shot. + +"Can we do nothing to save those on the burning vessel?" asked Mark, +pointing to where a cloud of smoke hung over the ocean. + +"I fear not, now," answered the professor. "We are in a bad plight +ourselves." + +"Are we in any danger?" asked Jack. + +"Not specially," Mr. Henderson replied. "But we must find a means of +lowering ourselves gradually." + +"Then it will be too late to save any of those on the ship," observed +Mark. + +"I'm afraid so," the scientist made reply. + +The Mermaid rested some distance above the surface of the waters. She +moved slightly to and fro with the wind, and rocked gently. The +professor was examining the broken machinery. + +"I have a plan!" suddenly cried Mark. + +"What is it?" asked Mr. Henderson. + +"Can't we bore a hole in the tank, insert a small faucet or tap, and +let the gas out that way gradually?" asked the boy. "When we get down +we can rescue those in danger of fire, and, later, can repair the +break." + +"The very thing!" exclaimed Mr. Henderson. "I never thought of that! +Here, Washington! Bring me a drill, and a small stop-cock!" + +The drill was obtained from the engine room. Working rapidly Mr. +Henderson bored a hole in the lower part of the holder. As soon as the +metal was penetrated the gas, which was under considerable pressure, +rushed from the tank with a hissing sound. At once the Mermaid began +to settle rapidly. + +But the professor was prepared for this. He thrust the end of the +stop-cock into the hole. It was screwed fast and the valve turned. +This stopped the flow of gas and checked the descent of the ship. +Then, by opening the tap the vapor was allowed to escape gradually, +bringing the Flying Mermaid gently to the water. + +As the adventurers approached they could see that the vessel was now a +mass of flames. The wind was driving the fire toward the forecastle, +and the crew had sought refuge aft. But this expedient could not last +long, for, already the tongues of fire were licking the sides of the +craft and coming nearer and nearer the seemingly doomed men. The +vessel was a large one, and heavily laden. + +As those in peril caught sight of the Mermaid settling down into the +water, apparently from the clouds, their fears gave place to +astonishment. So great was this that they ceased their cries of +terror. Then, as they saw that the strange craft navigated the ocean, +for the engines were started aboard the Mermaid, they began to call +for help. + + + + +CHAPTER VIII + +THE FLYING MERMAID DISABLED + + +"WE'LL save you!" shouted Mr. Henderson, who was on the deck, while +Mark was steering the craft. "Hold on a few minutes longer and we'll +be alongside!" + +"They're real! They're real!" some of those aboard the burning ship +could be heard to shout. Evidently more than one of them had taken the +Mermaid for a delusion of their fear-crazed brain. + +"They are real persons!" they called again and again. "They are coming +to save us!" + +Mr. Henderson ran his ship as near the burning craft as he dared. Then +he called to the crew to leap into the water and swim to him. He, with +Washington, Jack, Bill and Tom, stood ready to haul aboard any who +were too weak to help themselves. + +In a few minutes all of those left alive on the sailing vessel--fourteen +in all--had come safely aboard the Mermaid. The ship was now +completely enveloped in flames. + +"Are there any more left on her?" asked Mr. Henderson of one who +appeared to be a mate of the burning craft. + +"Not a soul!" was the answer. "The captain and ten men perished in the +flames. The fire broke out a week ago in the lower hold. We fought it +as well as we could but it got the best of us. Then it suddenly broke +through the decks, almost like an explosion, a little while ago, and +the captain and others were lost, and so were our small boats. We +managed to get aft but were about to give up when you appeared." + +"What ship is it and where are you from?" + +"The Good Hope, laden with logwood, hides, jute and other materials +from South America," the mate answered. "We were bound for New York." + +"It is more like the Last Hope instead of the Good Hope," observed Mr. +Henderson in a quiet voice, as he saw the flames mount higher and +higher over the ship. A few seconds later the craft seemed rent by an +internal explosion. It appeared to break in two parts, and, amid a +shower of sparks and a cloud of black smoke, the vessel sank under the +water and was seen no more. + +The rescued men turned to behold the final end of their ship. They +betrayed no particular emotion, and some of them even laughed, which +the professor thought, at the time, was rather strange. But there was +little opportunity for speculation. The men were in a sad plight. Few +of them had more than the clothes they stood in, though each one wore +about his waist a belt, and all of them seemed to guard the leather +circlets jealously. + +The professor and his crew were soon busy supplying remedies for +burns, since several of the men were seared by the flames. Then, as it +was learned they had eaten nothing for many hours, it having been +impossible to use the galley, a meal was prepared and the survivors of +the wreck were well fed. + +The hunger of the newcomers having been appeased, they showed much +curiosity over the strange craft that had so opportunely come to their +rescue. Most of the sailors were ignorant men, and the professor had +little fear of them learning anything concerning his secrets. He +explained briefly about the Mermaid, but said nothing of whither she +was bound. + +The addition of fourteen men to the rather small accommodations of the +Mermaid was a serious matter to consider. The ship was able to hold +them all, and even to sail through the air with them, since Mr. +Henderson had provided an excess of power. But it was going to be a +problem to feed so many, and still save enough provisions, for the +long voyage which lay ahead. + +However, Mr. Henderson felt his first duty to be toward his fellowmen, +even if his voyage must be delayed, or given up for a time, while he +got more provisions. There would be no sleeping quarters for the +sailors, but when this was explained to them they cheerfully said they +would sleep on deck if necessary. In fact some of them had to, but as +the weather was warm and clear this was no hardship. A few found +quarters in the engine room and other apartments of the Mermaid. + +Finding, after an examination, that his ship was in good order save +for the broken gas apparatus, Mr. Henderson gave orders to proceed +along the surface of the ocean. The sailors wanted to see how it felt +to mount into the air, but Mr. Henderson, refused to attempt a flight +until he had made complete repairs, and this would take a day or more. + +At this there appeared to be some discontent among the survivors, and +they muttered to each other as they stood in a group on deck. But the +professor and his assistants were too busy with their preparations for +fixing the break to notice this. + +While the men were gathered in a knot near the after part of the small +deck, the mate separated from them, and, coming close to where Mark +was standing, unscrewing some of the broken parts of the pipe said, in +a low voice. + +"Tell the captain to watch out." + +"What do you mean?" asked Mark quickly. + +"Hush! Not so loud!" the mate exclaimed. "If the men hear me talking +to you, or see me, they may kill me. Tell the captain to look out; +that's all. Be on guard, and watch the engine room carefully." + +"But why--?" Mark began, when, turning suddenly, the mate left him. +It was well he did so, for, at that instant, one of the sailors, who +had observed the two conversing, strolled in their direction. + +Much alarmed, Mark sought Mr. Henderson and told him what he had +heard. + +"I suppose the fire may have turned the poor man's head," the +scientist said. "I wonder if he thinks the men I rescued would mutiny +and take possession of my ship? If they did they would not know how to +work it, so what good would it do?" + +"Hadn't we better look out?" asked Mark. + +"I'm not afraid," replied the professor. "I will be too busy the next +few days, repairing the break, to think of anything else. Besides, +what would they want to harm us for? Didn't we save their lives?" + +Seeing the scientist placed no faith in what the mate had said, Mark +went back to his task. + +It soon became too dark to work, and it was decided, after supper, to +halt the ship until morning as it would be less risky. + +Mark did not sleep well, his dreams being disturbed by visions of +pirates and black flags. But morning came and nothing had developed. +The men seemed to recover their spirits with daybreak, and mast of the +crew, after breakfast, greeted Mr. Henderson pleasantly, and asked to +be allowed to help fix the ship. + +It took the skilled labor of the professor, Washington and the boys to +mend the break, and, even at that, it was four days in the repairing. +But at last the final bolt was in place, and the Mermaid was able to +resume her trips through the air. + +"We will rise the first thing in the morning," said the professor to +Mark and Jack that night. "I am anxious to see how the ship behaves +with a big load aboard." + + + + +CHAPTER IX + +THE MUTINY + + +MARK was awakened that night by feeling some one trying to turn him +over. At first he thought it was Jack, and sleepily muttered that he +wanted to be let alone. + +"Sorry I can't oblige ye, my hearty!" exclaimed a rough voice in his +ear, "but I got particular orders t' tie you up!" + +At that Mark tried to sit up, but he found he could not. He discovered +that he was closely bound with many turns of a rope, while in front of +his bunk stood one of the rescued sailors. + +"There," said the man, with a final tightening of the ropes. "I guess +you're safe." + +"What's the matter? What does it all mean?" asked Mark, much +bewildered. + +"It means that we have possession of the ship," the sailor answered, +"and, if you're wise you'll not make a fuss. It wouldn't do any good, +anyhow, as all your friends are in the same condition." + +Then, picking Mark up, as if he was a baby, the man slung him over his +shoulder and carried him to the living room. There Mark saw Jack, the +professor, Washington, and the others similarly bound. + +"Do you realize what you are doing?" asked the professor angrily of +his captors. "You are mutinying, and are liable to severe punishment." + +"If they ever get us," added one of the men. "We've got the ship now, +and we mean to keep her. You'll have to run her or show us how." + +"Never!" cried the professor. + +"I guess he will when he feels this," said one of the men, as he +dragged from a recess two wires. "I happen to know something of +electricity, and when he feels these perhaps he'll change his mind. +I'll start the dynamo." + +The sailor showed that he was acquainted with machinery, for soon the +hum of the electric apparatus was heard. + +"Now to make him tell!" the man with the wires exclaimed, advancing +toward the professor, who turned pale. + +"Stop! You must not torture the old man!" cried a voice, and the mate +of the Good Hope stepped in front of the sailor with the electrified +wires. + +"Who's going to stop me?" asked the man. + +"I will. It's not necessary," the mate went on quickly. "If we make +him weak we may kill him, and he can not tell us what we want to know. +One of the boys can tell us how to run the ship." + +The mate came quickly over to where Mark lay, and whispered: + +"Consent to tell. It is the only way of saving his life. Tell 'em how +to raise the craft. Then leave all to me. I will save you all and the +ship, too, if I can. But consent." + +Mark nodded his head, and the mate cried: + +"I knew I could fetch 'em. I have hypnotic power. This boy will raise +the ship for us. Loosen his bonds, some of you." + +Satisfied that they were now on the way to experiencing a new +sensation, the sailors took the ropes off Mark's arms and legs, and he +was allowed to rise. With a reassuring nod toward the professor he led +the way to the engine room, followed by half the men. He resolved to +start the gas machine slowly, so as to make the upward trip last +longer, thinking before it had gone far, some way of escape from the +mutineers might be found. + +While a crowd of the sailors stood near him, Mark operated the +machinery in the engine room that started the gas generating, and set +the negative gravity apparatus working. + +"You'd better not try any tricks on us," said one of the men in an +ugly tone of voice. + +"I'm not going to," replied Mark. "If you go out on deck you will soon +see the ship leaving the water and mounting into the air." + +"Some of you go," ordered a man with a big bushy red beard. "See if +the ship rises. When she begins to go up sing out. I'm going to stay +here and see how the young cub does it so I can work it myself." + +Obeying the red-bearded man, who seemed to be a leader, several of the +sailors went out on the deck. It was quite dark, but there was a +phosphorous glow to the water which made the rolling waves visible. + +The gas was being generated, as could be told by the hissing sound. +Mark watched the machinery anxiously, for he knew much depended on +him, and the professor was not at hand to guide and instruct him. He +watched the dial of the gage which registered the gas pressure and saw +it slowly moving. In a little while it would be at the point at which +the ship ought to rise. + +Presently a quiver seemed to run through the Mermaid. Now a shout came +from the watchers on deck. + +"She's going up!" + +The ship was indeed rising. The red-bearded man, who was addressed as +Tony, ran from the engine room to the deck. He saw that the ship was +now ten feet above the water. Back he came to where Mark stood by the +gas machine. + +"Lucky for you that you didn't fool us, lad," he said with a leer. +"See that you mind me hereafter. Now show me how the shebang works." + +When the ship had risen as far as Tony desired he made Mark send it +straight ahead. The boy adjusted the air tube to carry the craft +toward the south, but Tony, seeing by a compass in which direction +they were headed, ordered Mark to steer due east. + +"Fix things so they will stay so, too," added Tony. "I don't want to +stop until I get a thousand miles away. Then we'll come down, sail to +some sunny island, and enjoy life." + +Mark locked the steering apparatus so as to keep the Mermaid headed +due east. + +"Now you can go back to your friends," Tony said. "When I want you +I'll send for you." + +With a heavy heart Mark rejoined the professor and others. He found +them with their bonds removed. But to guard against their escape +several men were on watch outside the door. + +"What are they doing?" asked the professor eagerly as Mark entered, +and the boy told him what had taken place. + +"They will ruin my ship and spoil the whole trip," cried the old +scientist. "Oh, why did I ever go to the rescue of the scoundrels?" + +"Never mind," said Jack. "Perhaps we may yet outwit them." + +Morning came at last. The ship was still shooting forward at fast +speed, in an easterly direction. The sailors had learned, in their +short stay aboard, where the food and stores were kept, and they lost +little time in getting breakfast. They sent same in to their captives, +including a big pot of hot coffee, and, after partaking of this the +professor and his friends felt better. + +The mate of the Good Hope came in to help clear away the dishes. As he +passed Mark he slipped into the boy's hand a note. + +"Don't read it until you are alone," he said in a low voice, as he +hurried from the room. + +As soon as the other sailors had left, Mark glanced at the slip of +paper. It bore these words: + + "Open when you hear three raps, then two, then three, and keep + silent." + +"What is it?" asked Mr. Henderson. + +Mark showed him the paper. + +"I wonder what it means," the boy said. + +"Do you think he is a friend of ours?" the professor asked. + +Mark told him of the mate's conversation the night previous. + +"I think we can trust him," the scientist went on. "He must intend to +pay us a visit when the others are asleep. When we hear the knocks as +he specifies we must open the door and let him in." + +All that day the captives were kept in the living room. Once or twice +Mark was sent for to make some adjustment to the machinery, but the +apparatus, for the most part, was automatic, and needed little +attention. The professor, as well as the others, were all impatience +for the promised visit of the mate. Still they felt he would not come +until night. + +In fact it was long past midnight before Mark, Jack and the professor, +who were anxiously listening, heard the three raps, then two, then +three more. Mark quickly opened the door, and the mate stepped inside, +holding his finger to his lips as a sign of caution. Old Andy, +Washington, Bill and Tom had fallen asleep. + +"I have only time for a few words," the mate said. "I am closely +watched. Tony mistrusts me. I will save you if I can." + +"Why have they repaid my kindness with such actions?" asked Mr. +Henderson. + +"Because they are desperate men," replied the mate. "They are nothing +more than pirates. They mutinied on the other ship, killed the captain +and those of the crew who would not join them, and started off to seek +their fortunes. I pretended to join them to save my life, but I have +only been watching for a chance to escape. + +"Because of lax discipline the ship was sent on fire. We tried to put +it out but could not. The rest you know." + +"I heard them plan to capture this airship, but could do nothing to +stop them. Then I resolved to pretend to act with them. They fear +pursuit for their other mutiny, and are anxious to get as far away as +possible." + +"Do you think they will abandon the ship in a little while?" asked the +professor hopefully. + +"I'm afraid not," answered the mate. "I think they want to get rid of +all of you, so they can sail about as they please. Tony is a smart +man. He could soon learn to run this ship, he thinks." + +"I doubt it," Mr. Henderson answered. "But how are you going to help +us?" + +"I have not fully made up my plans," the mate answered. "However I +wanted you to know I would do my best to save you. Now I must go. Be +on the watch and when I can I will let you know what I have decided +on. I will hand Mark a note when I bring your meals, just as I did +to-day. I think----" + +"Hark! What was that?" asked the professor. + +There was a noise outside the door, as if some one was listening. + +"Put out the lights!" whispered the mate, and Jack switched off the +electric incandescents. + +A knock sounded on the door and the voice of Tony called: + +"Mark! Come here! I want you to look at the gas machine. It has +stopped working, and we are falling!" + + + + +CHAPTER X + +FOOLING THEIR ENEMIES + + +MARK hurried into the corridor, taking care to close the door after +him, so Tony could get no glimpse of the mate who had risked so much +to save his friends. But he need not have been alarmed for the leader +of the mutineers was too excited over the stopping of the gas +apparatus to give any heed to who was in with the captives. + +"Do you think you can fix it?" he asked the boy. + +"I guess so," Mark replied confidently. "If I can't there is no +danger, for we will fall gradually and land in the water." + +"But I don't want to do that," Tony objected. "I want to keep on +through the air." + +Mark did not reply. By this time he was at the gas machine. He soon +saw nothing was the matter save that new material must be placed in +the retort where the vapor was generated. He refilled it, the gas was +manufactured once more, and the ship began to rise. + +"I will know how to do it next time," Tony said with a grin. Mark +realized that every time he showed the leader of the mutineers +something about the ship it was putting the professor and his friends +more and more into the power of the scoundrels. But there was no help +for it. + +The ship was still plunging ahead, and kept about a mile above the +earth. As there was no further need of Mark, he was told he could go +back to his friends. When he reached the room where they were held +prisoners, he found the mate had gone away, promising again to do all +he could for them. + +The next night, which it seemed would never come, for the day, locked +as the captives were in their room, seemed endless, finally closed in. +Mark, Jack and the professor were anxious to know whether the mate +would pay them another visit. As for Andy, Tom and Bill, while they +were interested in the ship, and wanted to be free from the power of +the mutineers, they did not lose any sleep over it. + +Shortly after midnight, there came again the peculiar knock, and the +mate entered the room. He seemed much excited over something, and, as +soon as the portal was securely closed he said to Professor Henderson: + +"Is there an island any where near here where men could live for a +time?" + +"What do you mean?" asked the scientist. "Do you want us to desert the +ship and leave these scoundrels in charge?" + +"Nothing of the sort," replied the mate, who, had said his name was +Jack Rodgers. "But first answer my question. A great deal may depend +on it." + +Seeing Rodgers was in earnest, the professor looked over some maps and +charts, and announced that they were within a few hundred miles of a +group of islands. + +"When would we reach them?" was Rodgers's next question. + +Mr. Henderson made a few rapid calculations on a piece of paper. + +"At the present rate of sailing," he said, "we should be there about +ten o'clock to-morrow. That is, provided the ship does not slacken +speed or increase it." + +"There is no danger of either of those two things happening," said the +mate. "Tony is too afraid of the machinery to do anything to it. So +you may safely figure that our speed will continue the same." + +"Then I can guarantee, with all reasonable certainty," the professor +said, "that about ten o'clock to-morrow we will be less than a mile +from the islands. They are a group where friendly natives live, and +where many tropical fruits abound. One could scarcely select a better +place to be shipwrecked. But I hope the plans of Tony and his friends +do not include landing us there." + +"No, nothing like that," the mate answered. "Quite the contrary. But I +had better be going. I will try and see Mark some time to-morrow. Tony +does not mind when I speak to him." + +With this Rodgers left the captives, as he heard some of the sailors +moving about and did not want to be discovered. The professor and the +boys wondered what the mate's plan might be, but they had to be +content to wait and see. + +The night passed without incident. About nine o'clock the next morning +the mate came to the door of the room where the professor and his +friends were prisoners. He made no secret of his approach, but knocked +boldly. + +"Tell Mark I want to see him," he said, as the professor answered. +"All of you keep quiet," he added in a whisper. "There may be good +news soon." + +Mark slipped from the room. He followed the mate to the upper deck +which, at that time was deserted as all the sailors were in the dining +room eating, which practice they indulged in as often as they could. + +"I have a plan to get rid of these rough men," the mate said to Mark. +"It may work, and, again it may not. At any rate it is worth trying, +It all depends on you with what help I can give you." + +"I'm willing to do my share," Mark said, and for the next ten minutes +the boy and the mate were in earnest conversation. + +It was about thirty-five minutes later when there arose a sudden +commotion in the ship. Mark had returned to his friends and the mate +had disappeared. The confusion seemed to come from the engine room +where Tony had posted some of his men. + +"We're falling down! We'll all be killed!" shouted the men. "The ship +is falling into the sea!" + +"What is the trouble?" asked the professor as he heard the commotion. + +"It is part of the mate's plan," said Mark. "He told me to tell you to +do nothing. If Tony or any of the other men come to you just refer +them to me." + +Two minutes later Tony came rushing into the apartment where the +captives were held prisoners. + +"Here! Come quickly, Mark!" he exclaimed. "Something has gone wrong +with the gas machine again, and you must come and fix it before we are +all dashed to pieces!" + +With every appearance of haste Mark rushed from the apartment, +following Tony. The latter led the way to the engine room. + +"Can anything be done?" he asked. + +Mark took a survey of the machinery. + +"It is too late," he said as though much excited. "The ship is falling +down toward the sea with terrific force." + +It needed but a glance at the height gage to show this. The pointer +was revolving rapidly about the face of the dial. + +"Will the ship stand the blow?" asked Tony. + +"Not at the rate it is falling," replied Mark. "She will go all to +pieces when she strikes the water, and she may explode!" + +"What are we to do then?" asked the leader of the mutineers. + +"We must save ourselves!" cried the mate, running in at this juncture. +"Let our prisoners shift for themselves as best they can. Let's all +leap into the sea. There we at least have a chance for our lives. But +if we stay on this ship we will all be drowned like cats in a bag." + +"What do you propose?" asked Tony, his face white with fear. + +"When the ship comes near enough the surface of the water to make it +safe we should all drop overboard!" the mate exclaimed. "We are near +some islands, I understand, and we can thus save our lives by swimming +ashore." + +This plan seemed to meet with instant favor, and a little later there +was a rush for the deck, as each one wished to be the first to escape +from the boat they believed to be doomed. + +Lower and lower fell the Mermaid. She was like a wounded bird which +the shot of the hunter has crippled. Down and down she fluttered. + +By this time all the sailors, save the mate were on deck. He and Mark +remained in the engine room. + +"Don't let her get too low," the mate whispered. + +"I'll watch out," Mark replied. "I want to give them a good scare +while I'm at it." + +The ship was now within fifty feet of the water. There was a cry of +terror from the sailors. Some of them leaped over the rail and started +to swim ashore, as the ship was by this time close to a group of +islands. + +Suddenly, from the engine room the mate rushed. + +"Jump! Jump for your lives!" he exclaimed. "The ship is about to blow +up!" + + + + +CHAPTER XI + +MYSTERIOUS HAPPENINGS + + +THE voice of the mate echoed through the Mermaid. Those on deck heard +it, as did Tony in the engine room, where he was vainly trying to +understand the complicated machinery. + +An instant later there sounded from beneath the ship a series of +splashes. More sailors were leaping from the deck of the craft to the +ocean. The distance was not great, particularly as they all landed in +water. + +"Quick!" cried the mate to a group of sailors that hesitated before +taking the jump. "The ship may blow up any minute now." + +The men needed no second urging. As soon as they struck the water they +began to swim ashore, as it was not far away. One after another they +jumped over the rail. Tony was the last to go. He urged the captives +to follow him, but they all refused. + +A minute later the only one of the pirate crew left on the ship was +the mate. The others were all struggling in the sea. Eventually they +all reached shore in safety. + +The airship was now within about twenty feet of the water. It was +still falling but not so rapidly. + +"Better send her up, now," said the mate to Mark, and the boy turned +the necessary levers to accomplish this. + +Dipping into the water as a sea gull does when searching for food on +the wing, for she had come quite low, the Mermaid mounted once more +into the air, and was soon sailing along over the heads of Tony and +his gang. + +"What's it all about?" asked Mr. Henderson, who seemed in a sort of +stupor. "I thought the ship was broken. How, then, can it rise?" + +"It was only a trick of mine," Rodgers said. "The gas machine is not +broken. I had Mark fix it so that only a little vapor would be +generated. When the supply in the holder was not enough, and no more +was being made, the ship had to sink. Mark and I pretended it was +worse than it really was just to scare the scoundrels." + +"And you evidently succeeded," observed Mr. Henderson. "They have all +left us. I am glad you stayed." + +"So am I," said Rodgers. "I was just waiting for a chance to escape +from that crowd. This was the plan I thought of that night. I wanted +to see the men put on some island where they could manage to live, and +which was not too far away." + +The Mermaid was now mounting upward rapidly, as Mark had adjusted the +machinery properly. The craft was well rid of the pirate crew, and was +able to proceed on its way, and enable Mr. Henderson to carry out his +plans. + +When the Mermaid had reached a certain height her prow was turned the +other way, and she was sent back racing over the ground she had just +covered. But now the ship was in the hands of friends. Fortunately no +great damage had been done by the sailors, and the professor was soon +able to get things in ship-shape. The engines had not been molested +and were working better than ever. + +"Now to make another attempt to reach the big hole in the earth," the +professor cried. "We will be careful next time, who we rescue from +ships at sea." + +The island was soon left behind, becoming a mere speck on the ocean. +Those aboard the Mermaid knew no harm could befall the sailors, as +there were no savage tribes on the little spot of land. Eventually the +sailors were picked up by a passing vessel and taken to their homes. +The story of their first mutiny leaked out and they were properly +punished. + +It required several days travel before the airship regained the +distance she had lost because of the plans of the pirates. Also, there +were a number of minor repairs to make, and the professor and his +friends were kept busy. + +"How much longer before we come to the big hole?" asked Jack, one day. + +"I think we ought to be near it in about two weeks," the professor +replied. "I only hope we shall not be disappointed, and will be able +to explore it." + +"'Tain't goin' t' be no fun t' be decimated an' expurgitated inter a +conglomerous aggregation of elements constituting th' exterior portion +of human anatomy," said Washington in dubious tones. + +"You mean you're afraid of being boiled in the steam from the big +hole?" asked Mark. + +"Jest so," replied the colored man. + +"You don't need to worry about that," put in the professor. "I will +not take the ship down if there is any danger, though of course there +will be some risk." + +The ship, having been fully repaired, was now able to be speeded up, +and was sent scudding along toward her destination. Rodgers proved a +valuable acquisition toward the crew, for he had sailed many years in +the waters over which they were flying, and was able to give the +professor many valuable hints. He had heard vague stories of the +island with the big hole, but had never been near it. He did not make +the trip however, as, at his request, he was put off at an inhabited +island one night. + +It was about a week after the sailors were frightened from the ship, +that a curious experience befell Mark. Washington was on duty in the +conning tower, attending to the apparatus as the ship flew through the +air, and all the others had gone to bed. Mark had remained up, later +than the others as he was interested in reading a book on science. + +About ten o'clock he became hungry, and going to the pantry got some +bread and cold meat. He set these on a table, and then, remembering he +would need some water to drink, started after some in the cooler, +which was in a little room near the tower. + +Washington heard the boy as he turned the faucet to draw the liquid, +and spoke to him, as the colored man was rather lonesome at his post. +Mark did not linger more than a minute or two, but when he returned to +where he had left the food he was much surprised. + +There was not a trace of it to be seen. The dishes were on the table, +but every vestige of bread and meat had disappeared. + +"I wonder if a cat or dog has been here," was Mark's first thought. +Then he remembered that no such animals were aboard the Mermaid. + +Something on the floor caught his eye. He stooped and picked it up. It +was a slice of bread, but in such shape that the boy stared at it, +puzzled as to how it could have become so. + +It was flattened out quite thin, but the strangest part of it was that +it bore what seemed to be the marks of thumb and fingers from a very +large hand. So big, in fact, was the print, that Mark's hand scarce +covered half of it, and, where the bread had been squeezed into a +putty like mass (for it was quite fresh) the peculiar markings on the +skin of the tips of the fingers were visible. + +"It looks as if a giant grabbed this slice of bread," Mark observed. +"There are strange happenings aboard this ship. I wish I knew what +they meant." + +He looked all around for the food, thinking perhaps a rat had dragged +it off, but there was no trace of it. + +Suddenly the boy thought he heard a sound from the big storeroom. He +was almost sure he heard something moving in there. He started toward +the door when he was stopped by hearing the professor's voice call: + +"Don't open that door, Mark. Have I not told you that place must not +be entered?" + +"I thought I heard some one in there," Mark replied. + +"There is nothing in there but some apparatus of mine," Mr. Henderson +said. "I want no one to see it. What is the matter?" + +Mark explained matters to the scientist, who had, as he said later, +arisen on hearing the boy, moving about. + +"Oh, it was a rat that took your stuff," Mr. Henderson said. "I guess +there are some pretty big ones on the ship. Get some more food and go +to sleep." + +Mark felt it best to obey, though he was by no means satisfied with +the professor's explanation. He listened intently to see if any more +noises came from the storeroom, but none did, and he went to bed. + +Several times after that Mark tried the experiment of leaving food +about. On each occasion it was taken. + +"It looks as if the ship was haunted," he said. "Of course I know it +isn't, but it's very queer. They must be strange rats that can get +food from shelves when there is only the smooth side of the ship to +climb up," for on some occasions Mark had tried the experiment of +putting the food as nearly out of reach as possible. + +It took several nights to learn all this, and, as he did not want to +take any one into his confidence, he had to work in secret. But, with +all his efforts he learned nothing, save that there was something odd +about the ship that he could not fathom. + +At first he believed the professor had some strange animal concealed +in the storeroom, but he dismissed this idea almost as soon as he +thought of it. For what could the scientist want with an animal when +they were going to the interior of the earth? That some beast had +slipped aboard was out of the question. Mark was much puzzled, but +finally, deciding the matter did not concern him a great deal, gave up +trying to solve the mystery, at least for a time. + +The ship was now in the neighborhood of the equator and the climate +had become much warmer. So hot indeed were some nights that they slept +out on deck, with the Mermaid flying through the air at a moderate +pace, for it was deemed best not to go at any great speed after dark. + +One night the professor, after consulting various charts and maps, and +making calculations which covered several sheets of paper announced: + +"We should sight the mysterious island to-morrow." + +"That's good news!" exclaimed Jack. "I'm anxious to see what's below +inside of that big hole." + +"Everybody git ready for their funerals!" exclaimed Washington in a +deep voice. "I ain't got many----" + +"Cheer up," interrupted Jack, poking Washington in the ribs. The +colored man was very ticklish, and he began to laugh heartily, though, +perhaps, he did not feel like it. + +Suddenly, above the sound of his shouts, there came a crashing, +grinding noise from the engine room. + + + + +CHAPTER XII + +THE BIG HOLE + + +"SOMETHING has gone wrong!" exclaimed the professor as he jumped up. +He reached the engine room ahead of any one else, and when the two +boys got there they found him busy twisting wheels and shifting +levers. + +"Anything serious?" asked Jack. + +"It's the gas machine again," Mr. Henderson replied. "It broke where +we fixed it. However it doesn't matter. I was going to lower the ship +anyhow, as I want to approach the island from the water. We will go +down a little sooner than I counted on." + +The disabling of the gas machine caused the vapor to escape slowly +from the tank, and this made the ship sink gradually. By means of the +emergency stop-cock the descent could be controlled almost as well as +though the machinery was in working order. Half an hour later the +Mermaid rested on the water. + +It was a little rough, as there was quite a swell on, and not so +pleasant as floating in the air on an even keel, but they made the +best of it. + +On account of the little accident, and not being certain of its +extent, it was deemed best not to send the ship ahead. So they laid to +until morning. + +For the better part of two days all those on board the Mermaid had +their hands full mending the break and making other repairs found +necessary. In that time they lay to, floating idly with the currents, +or blown by the wind, for the professor would not start any of the +engines or apparatus until the ship was in good condition. + +In this time Mark had several times recalled the curious happenings in +regard to the disappearing food, and the mystery of the storeroom. But +there were no further manifestations, and no other signs that there +might be a strange visitor aboard. + +"I couldn't have imagined it all," said Mark, "but I guess what did +happen may have been caused by natural means, only I can't discover +them." + +It was about two days after this, the ship having sailed scores of +miles on the surface of the water, that Mark, who was in the conning +tower exclaimed: + +"That looks like a waterspout ahead of us." + +"That's what it is!" Jack agreed. "What shall we do?" + +"Call the professor!" said Mark. "He'll know." + +When Mr. Henderson came, he looked for a long time at a cloud of black +vapor which hung low in the east. + +"It may be a waterspout," he said. "We'll rise in the air and see if +we can avoid it." + +The ship was sent up into the air. As it rose higher and higher, the +professor, making frequent observations from his conning tower, cried +out: + +"That is no waterspout!" + +"What is it?" asked Mark. + +"It is the steam and vapor rising from the big hole in the earth! +Boys, we are almost there!" + +"Are you sure that's it?" asked Mark. + +"Almost positive," Mr. Henderson replied. "You can see how much warmer +it has become of late, as we approached the equator. We are almost due +at the island, and I have no doubt we have reached it." + +As the ship flew forward the mass of dark vapor became more +pronounced. Through the glasses it could be noticed to consist of +rolling masses of clouds. What lay beneath them no one knew. The +adventurers were going to try to find out. + +Now that they had arrived at the beginning of the main part of their +journey, the travelers felt their spirits sink a little. It was one +thing to plan to go down into the depths of the earth, but it was +quite another to make the actual attempt. Still, they were not going +to give up the project. The professor had confidence in his ship and +believed it could safely make the trip. Still it was with no little +apprehension that Mr. Henderson watched the nearer approach of the +craft to that strange island. + +"Perfesser, are yo' really an' truly goin' t' depress this elongated +spheroid an' its human consignment int' that conglomerous convoluted +mass of gaseous vapor regardless of th' consequences?" asked +Washington, as he gazed with wide opened eyes at the sight before him. + +"If you mean am I going to let the Mermaid go down into that hole you +are perfectly correct," the scientist answered, "though you could have +said it in fewer words, Washington." + +"I--I guess I'll get out an' walk," the colored man made reply. + +"This isn't any trolley car," observed Mark. "Don't lose your nerve, +Wash. Stay with us, and we'll discover a gold or diamond mine, maybe." + +"Is there diamonds down there?" asked the colored man, his fright +seeming to leave him. + +"There are all sorts of things inside the earth," the professor +answered. + +"Then I'm goin' along!" Washington declared. "I always did want a +diamond ring, an' I knows a little colored gal that wants one, too. +I'm goin' all right! This suttenly am th' most kloslosterous +conjunctivity of combativeness that I ever sagaciated!" and he began +to do a sort of impromptu cake-walk. + + + + +CHAPTER XIII + +DOWN INTO THE EARTH + + +IT was now noon, but the adventurers did not think of dinner in the +excitement of approaching the mysterious island. The speed of the ship +was increased that they might the more quickly come to it. As they +approached they could see the masses of vapor more plainly, and it +appeared that some great commotion must be going on inside the big +hole, since clouds of steam arose. + +"I only hope it doesn't prove too hot for us," observed the professor. +"However, I provided a water jacket for the ship, and we may need it, +as well as the vacuum chambers to keep the heat from us." + +It was about three o'clock when the flying ship reached the edge of +the island. From there it was about a mile to the rim of the big hole, +over one side of which the waters of the ocean poured with a roar that +could be heard over half a mile off. + +"I think we had better halt and see that everything is in good shape +before proceeding," said Mr. Henderson. "Jack, you and Mark make a +thorough inspection of the engine room, and see that all the apparatus +is in working order." + +The two boys prepared to do as they were told. Mark, who was walking a +little ahead of Jack, entered the apartment from which the storeroom +opened. As he did so he saw, or thought he saw, the door of the place +where the extra supplies were kept, close. Without saying anything to +Jack he hurried forward, and tried the knob. It would not turn. + +"That's funny," said Mark to himself. "I could almost swear I saw some +one go into that room. Yet I know the professor did not enter, for I +just left him. And none of the others would dare to. I wonder if I +will ever solve the mystery." + +But he had too much to do to allow him to dwell on that matter. +Several of the dynamos needed adjusting and for two hours he and Jack +had all they could do. + +In the meanwhile the professor had gone over the other parts of the +ship, and gotten everything in readiness for the descent. The Mermaid +was lowered to within a few hundred feet of the sea, and, through a +hose that was let down, the compartments, provided for this emergency +were filled with water. These compartments were between the outer and +inner hulls of the lower part of the craft, and were designed to +prevent the interior becoming heated in case the travelers found they +had to pass close to fire. There were also vacuum chambers, and from +these the air was exhausted, as of course every schoolboy knows a +vacuum is a non-conductor of either heat or cold. + +"Now I think we are ready," the professor announced at length. + +"Everything's all right in the engine room," announced Jack. + +"Yes, an' everything's all right in th' kitchen," put in Washington. +"I've got a good meal ready as soon as any one wants to eat." + +"It will have to wait a while," Mr. Henderson remarked. "We are going +to start to make the descent before we dine." + +The hose was reeled up, and the ship was sent a few hundred feet +higher into the air, as Mr. Henderson wanted to take a last good +observation before he went down into the hole. + +But having risen some distance above the masses of rolling vapors he +found he was at no advantage, since the strongest telescope he could +bring to bear could not pierce the cloud masses. + +"We'll just have to trust to luck," the scientist said. "I judge we're +about over the centre of the opening. Lower away Mark!" + +The boy, who, under the watchful eye of the professor, was +manipulating the levers and wheels in the conning tower, shifted some +handles. The gas was expelled from the holder, the negative gravity +apparatus ceased to work, and the Flying Mermaid sank lower and lower, +toward the mysterious hole that yawned beneath her. + +The hearts of all beat strangely, if not with fear, at least with +apprehension, for they did not know what they might encounter. Perhaps +death in some terrible form awaited them. But the desire to discover +something new and strange had gripped all of them, and not one would +have voted to turn back. + +Even old Andy, who seldom got excited, was in unusual spirits. He took +down his gun and remarked: + +"Maybe I can kill some new kind of animal, and write a book about its +habits, for surely we will see strange beasts in the under-world." + +Lower and lower sank the ship. Now it was amid the first thin masses +of vapors, those that floated highest and were more like a light fog, +than anything else. By means of a window in the bottom of the craft, +which window was closed by a thick piece of plate glass, Professor +Henderson could look down and see what was beneath them. + +"The clouds seem to be getting thicker," he said, as he peered through +the small casement. "If they would only clear away we could see +something." + +But instead of doing this the vapors accumulated more thickly about +the ship. It was so dark inside the Mermaid now that the electric +lights had to be switched on. In the room with the floor-window the +lights were not used, as had they shone one could not have seen down +below. + +The professor maintained his position. The descent was a perilous one, +and he wanted to be on the watch to check it at once if the Mermaid +was liable to dash upon some pointed rock or fall into some fiery pit. +His hand was on the signal levers. + +Suddenly he looked up and glanced at a gage on the wall. The hand of +it was slowly revolving. + +"We are at the earth's surface," the scientist said. "Now we are below +it. Now we are fairly within the big hole! Boys, we may be on the +verge of a great discovery!" + +An instant later it seemed as if a hot wave had struck the Mermaid, or +as if the craft had been plunged into boiling water. + +"It's going to be hot!" cried the professor. "Lucky I provided the +water jackets!" + +Then the lights in the interior of the ship went out, leaving the +whole craft in darkness. + +"What has happened?" cried Mark. + + + + +CHAPTER XIV + +MANY MILES BELOW + + +"DON'T be alarmed," spoke the calm voice of the professor. "I have +only turned off the electrics. I want to switch on the search lights, +to see if we can learn anything about our position." + +As he spoke he turned a switch, and, the gloom below the ship, as the +boys could see by glimpses from the floor-window, was pierced by a +dazzling glare. In the bottom of the Mermaid were set a number of +powerful electric arc lights with reflectors, constructed to throw the +beams downward. The professor had built them in for just this +emergency, as he thought that at some time they might want to +illuminate what was below the craft. + +Not that it was of much avail on this occasion, for, though the lights +were powerful, they could not pierce the miles of gloom that lay below +them. The beams only served to accentuate the darkness. + +"I guess we'll have to trust to luck," the professor said, after a +vain attempt, by means of powerful glasses, to distinguish something. +"There is too much fog and vapor." + +"What makes it so warm?" asked Mark, removing his coat. + +"Well, you must remember you are approaching the interior of the +earth," the professor answered. "It has been calculated that the heat +increases one degree for every fifty-five feet you descend. We have +come down several hundred feet and of course it is getting warmer." + +"Then if we go down very far it will get so hot we will not be able to +stand it," Jack put in. + +"I do not believe we will suffer any great inconvenience," Mr. +Henderson went on. "I believe that after we pass a certain point it +will become cooler. I think the inner fires of the earth are more or +less heated gas in a sort of inner chamber between two shells. If we +can pass the second shell, we will be all right." + +"But aren't we liable to hit something, going down into the dark this +way?" asked Mark. + +"We will guard ourselves as far as possible," the scientist answered. + +The Mermaid seemed to be going down on a side of the immense shaft a +good way distant from the strange waterfall. When they had first +dropped into the hole the travelers could hear the rush of waters, but +now the noise was not audible. + +"I think the hole must widen out the farther down we go," the +professor said. "We are probably many miles from the fall now." + +"I'm sure I hope so," put in Jack. "It would be no fun to have to take +a shower bath in this place." + +After a meal, the boys and the professor took some more observations, +but with all their efforts nothing could be seen below the ship but a +vast black void, into which they were steadily descending. + +"I wonder when we're going to stop," asked Mark. "It's like playing +the game 'Going to Jerusalem,' you keep wondering when the music will +cease and you will have a chance to grab a chair. I only hope we have +a chair or something else to sit on, in case we go to smash." + +"We're not liable to have any accidents with the professor in charge," +Jack answered. "Didn't he bring us safe out of some pretty tight holes +when we went to the north pole in the airship, and again when we found +the south pole in the submarine?" + +"Yes, but this is different," objected Mark. + +"Well, I'm not worrying," Jack went on. "It doesn't do any good, and +only makes you lie awake nights. By the way, I wonder what time it is +getting to be." + +He looked at his watch and found it was close on to eight o'clock in +the evening. So late had dinner been served, and so varied were the +happenings of the last few hours, that time had passed quickly. + +"Why it's almost bed-time," said Jack. "I wonder if we are to go on +dropping into the depths of nowhere all night." + +At that moment the professor entered the room where the boys were. He +seemed quite pleased over something, and was smiling. + +"Everything is going along famously," he said. "I have just tested the +air and find it is rich in oxygen. We shall suffer nothing on that +score. The heat too, seems to have decreased. On the whole, everything +favors us." + +"Are we going on down?" asked Mark. + +"As far as we can," Mr. Henderson answered. "Let me see how far we are +below now." + +He went to the gage that indicated the vertical position of the ship. +Because of the changed conditions, the craft now sinking below the +surface of the earth instead of rising above it, as was its wont, some +calculations were necessary. These the scientist made as quickly as he +could. + +"We are now ten miles underground!" he exclaimed. "That is doing very +well. My theories are working out. I think we shall land somewhere +before long." + +"I hopes so!" exclaimed Washington coming in at this point. "I'm +mighty skeered shootin' down int' this dark hole, and no time-table t' +show when we's due t' arrive." + +"We ought to land in a couple of days more," the professor answered. +"Never mind about worrying Washington, I'll take care of you." + +"I hopes so, Perfesser," the colored man said. "I got a little girl +waitin' for me back in Georgia, an' I'd like t' see her 'fore I git +burned up." + +Accompanied by the professor, the boys made a tour of the ship to see +that all the machinery and apparatus were in working order. Owing to +the changed conditions the negative gravity engine had to be worked at +faster speed than usual, since the downward pull of the earth was +greater the farther they descended into the interior and they did not +want to fall too swiftly. But this was easily provided for, since the +professor had made the apparatus capable of standing a great strain. + +The ten miles had become fourteen when the professor, finding that +everything was in good shape, proposed that the boys go to bed. They, +did not want to, though they were sleepy, and they feared to miss some +strange sights. + +But when the professor had promised to call them in case anything +unusual developed, they consented to turn in, and Bill and Tom assumed +their duties, which were light enough, now that the ship was merely +falling into the immense shaft. + +When Mark turned into his bunk he could not go to sleep at once. It +may have been the excitement over their new position, or because he +had eaten too hearty a supper, but the fact was he remained awake for +some time. + +While thus tossing restlessly on his bed, wondering what ailed him, he +thought he heard a noise in the main apartment out of which the +storeroom opened. He crawled softly from his bed, and looked from his +stateroom door. + +In the light of a shaded electric Mark saw the figure of some one +glide across the floor and take refuge in the room, which Professor +Henderson always was so particular about. + +"I wonder what or who that was," reasoned Mark. "There is some mystery +in this. Can the professor have concealed some one on this ship whose +presence he does not want to admit? It certainly looks so." + +Not wanting to awaken the ship's crew, and remembering what Mr. +Henderson had said about any one entering the storeroom, Mark went +back to bed, to fall into an uneasy slumber. + +"Breakfast!" called Washington breaking in on a fine dream Jack was +having about being captain of a company of automobile soldiers. "Last +call for breakfast!" + +"Hello! Is it morning?" asked Jack. + +"Not so's you could notice it," Washington went on. "It's as dark as a +stack of black cats and another one throwed in. But breakfast is ready +jest the same." + +The boys were soon at the table, and learned that nothing of +importance had occurred during the night. The Mermaid had been kept +going slowly down, and about seven o'clock registered more than fifty +miles below the earth's surface. + +Still there was no change in the outward surroundings. It remained as +black as the interior of Egypt when that country was at its darkest. +The powerful electrics could not pierce the gloom. The ship was +working well, and the travelers were very comfortable. + +Down, down, down, went the Mermaid. The temperature, which had risen +to about ninety went back to sixty-nine, and there seemed to be no +more danger from the inner fires. + +They were now a hundred miles under the surface. But still the +professor kept the Mermaid sinking. Every now and again he would take +an observation, but only found the impenetrable darkness surrounded +them. + +"We must arrive somewhere, soon," he muttered. + +It was about six o'clock that night that the alarm bell set up a +sudden ringing. The professor who was making some calculations on a +piece of paper jumped to his feet, and so did a number of the others. + +"We are nearing the bottom!" he cried. "The bell has given us +warning!" + + + + +CHAPTER XV + +IN THE STRANGE DRAUGHT + + +THE boys ran to attend to the engines and apparatus to which they had +been assigned in view of this emergency. The professor, Washington, +Bill, Tom and Andy, who had kept to themselves since the descent, came +running out of the small cabin where they usually sat, and wanted to +know what it was all about. + +"We may hit something, in spite of all precautions," Mr. Henderson +remarked. "Slow down the ship." + +The Mermaid was, accordingly checked in her downward flight, by a +liberal use of the gas and the negative gravity machine. + +The bell continued to ring, and the dials pointed to the mark that +indicated the ship was more than one hundred and fifty miles down. + +Mark, who had run to the engine room to check the descent, came back. + +"Why didn't you slow her down?" asked the professor. + +"I did," replied the boy. "The negative gravity and the gas machines +are working at full speed." + +"Then why are we still descending?" asked the scientist. "For a while +our speed was checked, but now we are falling faster than before." + +"I attended to the apparatus," Mark insisted. + +Just then, from without the ship, came a terrible roaring sound, as +though there was a great cyclone in progress. At the same time, those +aboard the craft could feel themselves being pulled downward with +terrific force. + +"We are caught in a draught!" Mr. Henderson cried. "We are being +sucked down into the depths of the earth!" + +He ran to the engine room. With the help of the boys he set in motion +an auxiliary gravity machine, designed to exert a most powerful +influence against the downward pull of the earth. As they watched the +great wheels spin around, and heard the hum and whirr of the dynamos, +the boys watched the pointer which indicated how low they were +getting. + +And, as they watched, they saw that the needle of the dial kept +moving, moving, moving. + +"Our efforts are useless! We can't stop!" the professor cried. + +Grave indeed was the plight of the adventurers. In their ship they +were being sucked down into unknown regions and all their efforts did +not avail to save them. It was an emergency they could not guard +against, and which could not have been foreseen. + +"What are to do?" asked Mark. + +"We can only wait," Mr. Henderson replied. "The terrible suction may +cease, or it may carry us to some place of safety. Let us hope for the +best." + +Seeing there was no further use in running the engines in an effort to +check the downward rush the machines were stopped. Then they waited +for whatever might happen. + +Now that they seemed in imminent peril Washington was as cool as any +one. He went about putting his kitchen in order and getting ready for +the next meal as if they were sailing comfortably along on the surface +of the ocean. As for old Andy he was nervous and frightened, and +plainly showed it. With his gun in readiness he paced back and forth +as if on the lookout for strange beasts or birds. + +Bill and Tom were so alarmed that they were of little use in doing +anything, and they were not disturbed in their staterooms where they +went when it became known that the ship was unmanageable. + +The boys and the professor, while greatly frightened at the unexpected +turn of events, decided there was no use in giving way to foolish +alarm. They realized they could do nothing but await developments. + +At the same time they took every precaution. They piled all the +bedding on the floor of the living room, so that the pillows and +mattresses might form a sort of pad in case the ship was dashed down +on the bottom of the big hole. + +"Not that it would save us much," Jack observed with a grim smile, +"but somehow it sort of makes your mind easier." + +All this while the ship was being sucked down at a swift pace. The +pointer of the gage, indicating the depth, kept moving around and soon +they were several hundreds of miles below the surface of the earth. + +The professor tried, by means of several instruments, to discover in +which direction they were headed, and whether they were going straight +down or at an angle. But some strange influence seemed to affect the +gages and other pieces of apparatus, for the pointers and hands would +swing in all directions, at one time indicating that they were going +down, and, again, upward. + +"There must be a strong current of electricity here," Mr. Henderson +said, "or else there is, as many suspect, a powerful magnet at the +center of the earth, which we are nearing." + +"What will you do if the ship is pulled apart, or falls and is +smashed?" asked Mark with much anxiety. + +"You take a cheerful view of things," said Jack. + +"Well, it's a good thing to prepare for emergencies," Mark added. + +"If the ship was to be separated by the magnetic pull, or if it fell +on sharp rocks and was split in twain, I am afraid none of us could do +anything to save ourselves," the professor answered. "Still, if we +were given a little warning of the disaster, I have means at hand +whereby we might escape with our lives. But it would be a perilous way +of----" + +"I reckon yo' all better come out an' have supper," broke in +Washington. "Leastways we'll call it supper, though I don't rightly +know whether it's night or mornin'. Anyhow I've got a meal ready." + +"I don't suppose any of us feel much like eating," observed Mr. +Henderson, "but there is no telling when we will have the chance +again, so, perhaps, we had better take advantage of it." + +For a while they ate in silence, finding that they had better +appetites than they at first thought. Old Andy in particular did full +justice to the food Washington had prepared. + +"I always found it a good plan to eat as much and as often as you +can," the hunter remarked. "This is a mighty uncertain world." + +"You started to tell us a little while ago, Professor," said Mark, +"about a plan you had for saving out lives if worst came to worst, and +there was a chance to put it into operation. What is it?" + +"I will tell you," the aged inventor said. "It is something about +which I have kept silent, as I did not want to frighten any of you. It +was my latest invention, and I had only perfected it when we started +off on this voyage. Consequently I had no chance to try it. The +machine works in theory, but whether it does in practice is another +question. That is why I say there is a risk. But we may have to take +this risk. I have placed aboard this ship a----" + +The professor was interrupted in what he was about to say by a curious +tremor that made the whole ship shiver as though it had struck some +obstruction. Yet there was no sudden jolt or jar such as would have +been occasioned by that. + +At the same time Washington, who was out in the kitchen, came running +into the dining room, crying: + +"We're droppin' into a ragin' fire, Perfesser!" + +"What do you mean?" asked Mr. Henderson. + +"I jest took a look down through th' hole in th' bottom of the ship!" +cried Washington. "It's all flames an' smoke below us!" + +"I wonder if it is the end," the professor muttered in a low voice. + +Followed by the boys, the inventor hastened to the floor-window. The +lights were turned off to enable a better view to be had of what was +below them. + +Leaning over the glass protected aperture the boys and the professor +saw, far, far down, a bright light shining. It was as if they were +miles above a whole town of blast furnaces, the stacks of which were +belching forth flames and smoke. The rolling clouds of vapor were +illuminated by a peculiar greenish light, which, at times, turned to +red, blue, purple and yellowish hues. + +The effect was weird and beautiful though it was full of terror for +the travelers. It seemed as if they were falling into some terrible +pit of fire, for the reflection of what they feared were flames, could +plainly be seen. + +"I wish I'd never come on this terrible voyage!" wailed Washington. +"I'd rather freeze to death than be burned up." + +"Washington, be quiet!" commanded the professor sternly. "This is no +time for foolishness. We must work hard to save our lives, for we are +in dire peril. + +"Mark, you and Washington, with Jack, start the engines. Turn on every +bit of power you can. Fill the gas holder as full as it will hold, and +use extra heavy pressure. I will see if I can not work the negative +gravity apparatus to better advantage than we did before. We must +escape if possible!" + +The boys, as was also Washington, were only too glad to have something +to do to take their mind off their troubles. All three were much +frightened, but Mark and Jack tried not to show it. As for Washington +he was almost crying. + +Soon the whirr and hum of the machinery in the Mermaid was heard. The +craft, which was rushing in some direction, either downward, ahead or +backwards within the unknown depths, shivered from the speed of the +dynamos and other apparatus. Soon the boys could hear the professor +starting the negative gravity engine, and then began a struggle +between the forces of nature and those of mankind. + +Once more the adventurers anxiously watched the gages and indicators. +For a while the ship seemed to be holding out against the terrible +influence that was sucking her down. She appeared to hesitate. Then, +as the downward force triumphed over the mechanical energy in the +craft, she began to settle again, and soon was descending, if that was +the direction, as fast as before. + +"It is of no use," said the professor with a groan. "I must try our +last resort!" + +He started from the engine room where Mark and Jack had gone. As he +did so, he glanced at a thermometer hanging on the wall near the door. + +"Has any one turned on the heat?" he asked. + +"It's shut off," replied Mark, looking at the electric stove. + +"Then what makes it so hot?" asked the scientist. + +He pointed to the little silvery column in the tiny tube of the +instrument. It registered close to one hundred degrees, though a few +minutes before it had been but sixty. And the starting of the +machinery could not account for the rise in temperature, since most of +the apparatus was run by electricity and developed little heat save in +the immediate proximity. The thermometer was fully ten feet away from +any machine. + +"It's the fiery furnace that's doing it!" cried Washington. "We're +falling into th' terrible pit an' we're goin' t' be roasted alive!" + +"It certainly is getting warmer," observed Mark, as he took off his +coat. Soon he had to shed his vest, and Jack and the professor +followed his example. The others too, also found all superfluous +garments a burden, and, in a little while they were going about in +scanty attire. + +Still the heat increased, until it was almost torture to remain in the +engine room. Nor was it much cooler elsewhere. In vain did the +professor set a score of big electric fans to whirring. He even placed +cakes of ice, from the small ice machine that was carried, in front of +the revolving blades, to cool off the air. But the ice was melted +almost as soon as it was taken from the apparatus. + +"Them flames is gittin' worser!" Washington cried a little later. +"We's comin' nearer!" + +From the bottom window the professor and the boys looked down. True +enough the curious, changing, vari-colored lights seemed brighter. +They could almost see the tongues of flame shooting upward in +anticipation of what they were soon to devour. + +The heat was increasing every minute. The sides of the ship were hot. +The heads of the travelers were getting dizzy. They could hardly talk +or move about. + +"I must save our lives! I must trust to the----" The professor, who +was muttering to himself started toward the storeroom. As in a dream +Mark watched him. He remembered afterward that he had speculated on +what might be the outcome of the mystery the professor threw about the +place. "I will have to use it," he heard the scientist say softly. + +Just as Mr. Henderson was about to open the door there came a fiercer +blast of heat than any that had preceded. At the same instant the +conditions in the Mermaid became so fearful that each of the travelers +felt himself fainting away. + +"Go to--storeroom--get cylinder--get in----" the professor +murmured, and then he fell forward in a faint. + + + + +CHAPTER XVI + +THE NEW LAND + + +"WHAT is it? Tell us!" exclaimed Jack, almost in his last breath, for, +a few seconds later he too toppled over senseless. Then Washington +went down, while Andy, Bill and Tom succumbed to the terrible heat. + +Mark felt his head swimming. His eyes were almost bulging from their +sockets. He dimly remembered trying to force himself to go to the +storeroom and see what was there. He started toward it with that +intention, but fell half way to it. + +As he did so he saw something which impressed itself on his mind, half +unconscious as he was. + +The door of the storeroom suddenly opened, and from it came a giant +shape, that seemed to expand until it filled the whole of the +apartment where the stricken ones lay. It was like the form of some +monster, half human, half beast. Mark shuddered, and then, closing his +eyes, he felt himself sinking down into some terrible deep and black +pit. A second later the whole ship was jarred as though it had hit +something. + +How long he and the others remained unconscious Mark did not know. He +was the first to revive, and his first sensation was one as though he +had slept hard and long, and did not want to get up. He felt very +comfortable, although he was lying flat on the floor, with his head +jammed against the side of a locker. It was so dark that he could not +distinguish his hand held close to his face. + +"I wonder if I'm dead, and if all the others are dead too," he thought +to himself. "What has happened? Let's see, the last I remember was +some horrible shape rushing from the storeroom. I wonder what it could +have been? Surely that was not the secret the professor referred to." + +Mark shuddered as he recalled the monster that seemed to have grown +more terrible as each second passed. Then the boy raised himself up +from his prostrate position. + +"Well, at any rate, some one has turned off the heat," he murmured. +"It's very comfortable in here now. I wish I could strike a light." + +He listened intently, to learn if any of the others were moving about. +He could hear them breathing, but so faintly as to indicate they were +insensible. Mark stretched out his hand and felt that some one was +lying close to him, but who of the adventurers it was he could not +determine. + +"If only the dynamo was working we could have light," he said. "But it +seems to have stopped," and, indeed there was a lacking of the +familiar purr and hum of the electrical machine. In fact none of the +apparatus in the ship was working. + +"The storage battery!" exclaimed Mark. "That would give light for a +while, if I can only find the switch in the dark." + +He began crawling about on his hands and knees. It was so intensely +black that he ran into many things and received severe bruises. At +last he came to a doorway, and as he did so his hand came in contact +with an easy chair. It was the only one aboard, and by that he knew he +had passed into the sitting room. He had his general direction now, +and knew if he kept straight on he would come to the engine room. +There he was familiar enough with the apparatus and levers to be able +to turn the electric switch. + +Crawling slowly and cautiously, he reached the room where all the +engines were. Then he had to feel around the sides to locate the +switch. At length he found it. There was a click, a little flash of +greenish fire, and the copper conductors came together, and the ship +was flooded with the glow from the incandescents. + +Mark hurried back to where the others were lying. They were still +unconscious, but an uneasy, movement on the part of Jack told that he +was coming out of the stupor. Mark got some ammonia and held it +beneath his comrade's nose. The strong fumes completed the work that +nature had started and Jack opened his eyes. + +"Where am I? What has happened? Are any of them dead?" he asked +quickly. + +"I hope no one is dead," Mark replied. "As to the other question, I +can't answer. I don't know whether we are a thousand miles +underground, or floating on the ocean, though I'm more inclined to the +former theory. But never mind that now. Help me to bring the others +back to their senses. I'll work on the professor and you can begin on +Bill or Tom. Washington seems to be all right," for at that moment the +colored man opened his eyes, stared about him and then got up. + +"I thought I was dead for suah!" he exclaimed. + +"Some of the others may be if we don't hurry," said Mark. "Get to +work, Wash!" + +With the colored man to help them the two boys, by the use of the +ammonia, succeeded in reviving Bill, Tom and old Andy. But the +professor, probably on account of his advanced age, did not respond so +readily to the treatment. The boys were getting quite alarmed, as even +some of the diluted ammonia, forced between his lips, did not cause +him to open his eyes, or increase his heart action. + +"If he should die, and leave us all alone with the ship in this +terrible place, what would we do?" asked Jack. + +"He's not going to die!" exclaimed Mark. "Here I have another plan. +Washington bring that medical electrical battery from the engine +room." This was a small machine the professor had brought along for +experimental purposes. + +Quickly adjusting it, Mark placed the handles in the nerveless fingers +of Mr. Henderson. Then he started the current. In about a minute the +eyelids of the aged inventor began to quiver, and, in less than five +minutes he had been revived sufficiently to enable him to sit up. He +passed his hand across his forehead. + +"What has happened?" he asked in a faint voice. + +"I don't know; none of us knows," Mark answered. "We all lost our +senses when it got so hot, and there seemed to be some peculiar vapor +in the air. The last I remember was seeing some horrible shape rush +from the storeroom, soon after the ship struck. Then I fainted away. +When I woke up I managed to turn the lights on, and then I came back +here." + +"I wonder where we are," the old man murmured. "I must find out. We +must take every precaution. Washington, go and look at the gage +indicating our depth." + +The colored man was gone but a few seconds. When he returned his eyes +were bulging in terror. + +"What is it?" asked Mr. Henderson, who, thanks to the battery, had +almost completely recovered. + +"It ain't possible!" gasped Washington. "I'll never believe it!" + +"What is it?" asked Mr. Henderson, while the others waited in anxiety +for the answer. + +"We're five hundred miles down!" declared Washington. + +"Five hundred miles!" muttered the inventor. "It does not seem +possible, but it must be so. We fell very rapidly and the terrible +draught sucked us down with incredible rapidity. But come, we must see +what our situation is, and where we are. We are stationary, and are +evidently on some solid substance." + +They all felt much recovered now, and, as the terrible fright of being +consumed in a fiery furnace had passed, they all were in better +spirits. + +At the suggestion of the professor, the boys and Washington made a +tour of the ship. They found, for some unaccountable reason, that +nearly all the engines and apparatuses were out of gear. In some the +parts had broken, and others were merely stopped, from the failure of +some other machine, on which they were dependent. + +"I'm afraid this is the end of the Mermaid," said Mark, in a sorrowful +tone. + +"Nonsense!" replied Jack, who was of a more cheerful nature. "Things +are not so bad as they look. The professor can fix everything." + +"I'm sure I hope so," Mark went on, not much encouraged, however, by +Jack's philosophy. "It would be no joke to have to stay five hundred +miles underground the rest of our lives." + +"You don't know," retorted Jack. "Don't judge of a country you've +never seen. This may be as fine a place as it is on the surface of the +earth. I want a chance to see it," and Jack began to whistle a +cheerful tune. + +They completed the tour of the ship, and found, that, aside from the +damage to the machinery, the Mermaid had not sustained any harm. The +hull was in good order, though of course they could not tell about the +gas holder. It was not possible to see this except by going into the +conning tower or out on the small deck, and this they did not venture +to do. The connections between the holder and the main ship seemed to +be all right, and there was still a small quantity of gas in the big +tank, as Mark found on opening a stop-cock. + +They went back to the professor and told him what they had observed. +He seemed somewhat alarmed, the more so as the experience he had just +passed through had weakened him considerably. + +"I hope I shall be able to make the repairs," he said. "It is our only +hope." + +As he spoke he looked up at the electric lights that shone overhead +from wall brackets. + +"Who is shutting down the power?" he asked. + +"There is no power on, Professor," replied Mark. "I am running the +lights from the storage battery. But something is the matter, for they +are growing dim." + +The filaments were now mere dull red wires, and the ship was being +shrouded in gloom again. + +"The battery is failing!" exclaimed Mr. Henderson. "We shall be left +in darkness, and there is no other way to produce light. I ought to +have brought some lamps or candles along in case of emergency." + +The next instant the Mermaid became as black as Egypt is popularly +supposed to be, and something like an exclamation of terror came from +the professor. + +For several minutes they all sat there in the blackness and gloom, +waiting for they knew not what. Then, suddenly, there sounded +throughout the ship, a creaking as of metal sliding along metal. Some +big lever creaked, and, a second later the whole place was flooded +with light. + +"What has happened?" cried the professor, starting to his feet in +alarm. + +"We are going to be burned up!" exclaimed old Andy. + +"It's all right! It's all right!" yelled Washington from the engine +room where the boys had left him. "Don't git skeered! I done it! I +opened the port holes, by yanking on the lever. Golly, but we's +arrived at the new land! Look out, everybody!" + + + + +CHAPTER XVII + +A STRANGE COUNTRY + + +THEY all ran to the port holes, which were openings in the side of the +ship. They were fitted with thick, double glass, and covered on the +outside with steel shutters. These shutters were worked by a single +lever from the engine room, so that one person could open or close +them in a second or two. Washington, by accident, it appeared later, +had slid back the protecting pieces of steel, and the rest followed. + +As the adventurers looked from the glass ports they saw that the light +which had flooded the ship came from without. They were in the midst +of a beautiful glow, which seemed to be diffused about them like rays +from a sun. + +Only, in place of being a yellow or white light, such as the sun gives +off at varying times, the glow was of violet hue. And, as they +watched, they saw the light change color, becoming a beautiful red, +then blue, and again green. + +"Well, this is certainly remarkable!" the professor said. "I wonder +what causes that." + +"We've arrived! We're here, anyhow!" Washington cried, coming into the +room. "See the country!" + +Then, for the first time, the travelers, taking their attention from +the curious light that was all around them, saw that they had indeed +arrived. They were on a vast plain, one, seemingly, boundless in +extent, though off to the left there was a range of lofty mountains, +while to the right there was the glimmer of what might be a big lake +or inland sea. + +"See, we are resting on the ground!" exclaimed Jack. He pointed out of +the window, and the others, looking close at hand, noted that the +Mermaid had settled down in the midst of what seemed to be a field of +flowers. Big red and yellow blossoms were all in front, and some grew +so tall as to almost be up to the edge of the port. + +"I wonder if we can be seeing aright," the professor muttered. "Is +this really the interior of the earth; such a beautiful place as +this?" + +There could be little doubt of it. The ship had descended through the +big shaft, had been sucked down by the terrible air current, and had +really landed in a strange country. + +Of its size, shape and general conditions the adventurers, as yet, +could but guess. They could see it was a pleasant place, and one where +there might be the means to sustain life. For, as the professor said +afterward, he felt that where there were flowers there would be +fruits, and where both of these provisions of nature were to be found +there would likely be animal life, and even, perhaps, human beings. + +But, for the time, they were content to look from the port on the +beautiful scene that lay stretched out before them. The ship rested on +an even keel and had landed so softly that none of the plates were +strained. + +"We have plenty of air, at all events," said the professor as he took +a deep breath. "I was afraid of that, but it seems there was no need. +The air appears to be as good and fresh as that on the surface of the +earth, only there is a curious property to it. It makes one feel +larger. I imagine it must be thinner than the air of the earth, which +is a rather strange thing, since the higher one goes the more rarefied +the air becomes, and the lower, the more dense. Still we can not apply +natural philosophy to conditions under the earth. All the usual +theories may be upset. However, we should be content to take things as +we find them, and be glad we were not dashed to pieces when the ship +was caught in the terrible current." + +"What do you suppose caused the awful heat, and then made it go away +again?" asked Jack. + +"I can only make a guess at it," Mr. Henderson answered. "There are +many strange things we will come across if we stay here long, I +believe. As for the fire I think we must have passed a sort of +interior volcano." + +"But what sort of a place do you think we have come to, Professor?" +asked Mark. + +"It is hard to say," the scientist replied. "We are certainly +somewhere within the earth. Our gage tells us it is five hundred +miles. That may or may not be correct, but I believe we are several +hundred miles under the crust, at all events. As to what sort of a +place it is, you can see for yourselves." + +"But how is it we can breathe here, and things can grow?" asked Bill, +who was beginning to lose his fright at the thought of being +practically buried alive. + +"I do not know what makes such things possible," Mr. Henderson +replied, "but that there is air here is a certainty. I can hardly +believe it is drawn from the surface of the earth, down the big hole, +and I am inclined to think this place of the under-world has an +atmosphere of its own, and one which produces different effects than +does our own." + +"They certainly have larger flowers than we have," said Mark. "See how +big they grow, and what strong colors they have." + +He pointed to the port, against which some of the blooms were nodding +in the wind that had sprung up, for, in spite of the many differences, +the under-world was in some respects like the upper one. + +"Probably the difference in the atmosphere accounts for that," the +professor said. "It enables things to grow larger. And, by the way, +Mark, that reminds me of something you said about seeing some horrible +monster fleeing from the ship. Did you dream that?" + +"I did see something horrible, Professor," he answered. "I'm not +positive what it was, but I'll tell you as nearly as I can what it was +like." + +Thereupon Mark detailed what he had seen. + +"But how could anything, least of all some big monster, be concealed +in the storeroom, and we not know anything about it?" asked Mr. +Henderson. + +"I thought you did know something of it," replied Mark. + +"Who, me? My dear boy, you must be dreaming again. Why should I want +to conceal any being in the storeroom? Come, there is something back +of this. Tell me all you know of it. I can't imagine why you think I +was hiding something in the apartment." + +"I thought so because you were always so anxious not to have me go +near it," answered the boy. "Don't you remember when you saw me going +toward it, several times, you warned me away?" + +"So I did!" exclaimed Mr. Henderson, a light breaking over his face. +"But, Mark, it was not because I had hidden some human being or animal +there. I can't tell you what it is yet, save that I can say it is +merely a machine of mine that I have invented. For reasons of my own I +don't want any one to see it yet. Perhaps it may never be seen. I +thought, not long ago, that we might have to undertake a terrible risk +in escaping from this place. I directed you to go to the storeroom--but +there, I can't say any more, my friends. Sufficient that I had +nothing in the animal line concealed there." + +"But I am certain there was some beast or human being in there," +insisted Mark. "I heard curious noises in there. Besides, how do you +account for the food disappearing and the door being open at times?" + +"It might have been rats," said Jack. + +"I don't believe there are rats in the ship," put in the professor. +"More likely it was one of us who got up hungry and took the +victuals." + +"I'm sorry I can't agree with you," Mark added respectfully. "I am +sure some strange being was on board this ship, and I believe it has +now escaped. Who or what it was I can't say, but you'll find I'm +right, some day." + +"All right," spoke Mr. Henderson with a laugh. "I like to see any one +brave enough to stick up for his opinion, but, at the same time, I +can't very well imagine any person or thing being concealed in that +storeroom ever since we started. How could it get in?" + +Mark did not; answer, but there came to him the recollection of that +night, previous to the sailing of the Flying Mermaid, when he had +observed some strange shadow that seemed to glide aboard the craft. + +"Now let's forget all about such things," the professor went on. "We +are in a strange country, and there are many things to see and do. +Let's explore a little. Then we must see what we can do with the ship. +We are dependent on it, and it will not do to allow it to remain in a +damaged state. We expect to travel many miles in the interior of the +earth if it is possible, and we have only our craft to go in." + +"I reckon we'd all better assimilate into our interior progression +some molecules and atoms of partly disentegrated matter in order to +supply combustion for the carbonaceous elements and assist in the +manufacture of red corpuscles," said Washington, appearing in the +door, with a broad grin on his good-natured face. + +"Which, being interpreted," the professor said, "means, I suppose, +that we had better eat something to keep our digestive apparatus in +good working order?" + +"Yo' done guessed it!" exclaimed the colored man, relapsing into his +ordinary speech. "I'se got a meal all ready." + +They agreed that they might not have another opportunity soon to +partake of food, so they all gathered about the table, on which +Washington had spread a good meal. + +"Come on, let's go outside and view this new and strange land at +closer quarters," the professor said, when they had satisfied their +appetites. "We can't see much from inside the ship." + +Accordingly the heavy door in the side of the Mermaid was slid back, +and, for the first time the travelers stepped out on the surface of +the land in the interior of the earth. + +At first it seemed no different than the ordinary land to which they +were accustomed. But they soon found it had many strange attributes. +The queer shifting and changing light, with the myriad of hues was one +of them, but to this the adventurers had, by this time, become +accustomed, though it was, none the less, a marvel to them. It was odd +enough to see the landscape blood red one instant, and a pale green +the next, as it does when you look through differently colored +glasses. + +Then, too, they noticed that the grass and flowers grew much more +abundantly than in the outer part of the world. They saw clover six +feet high, and blades of grass even taller. In some places the growth +of grass was so big that they were in danger of getting lost in it. + +"If the grass is like this, what will the trees be?" asked Mark. + +"There are some away over there," Jack replied. "We'll have to take a +sail over. They must be several hundred feet high." + +"Well, at any rate, here's a little brook, and the water looks good to +drink," went on Mark. "I'm thirsty, so here goes." + +He hurried to where a stream was flowing sluggishly between grassy +banks. The water was as clear as crystal, and Mark got down on his +face and prepared to sip some of the liquid up. + +But, no sooner had his lips touched it, than he sprang up with a cry +and stood gazing at the water. + +"What's the matter?" asked Jack. "Hot?" + +"No, it isn't hot," Mark replied, "but it isn't water. It's white +molasses!" + +"White molasses?" repeated the professor, coming up at that moment. +"What are you talking about?" + +He stooped down and dipped his finger into the stream. He drew it up +quickly, and there ran from it big drops that flowed as slowly as the +extract of the sugarcane does in cold weather. + +"You're about right, Mark," he said. "It's water but it's almost as +thick as molasses." He touched his finger to his tongue. "It's good to +drink, all right," he went on, "only it will be a little slow going +down." + +Then he dipped up a palm full, and let it trickle down his throat. + +"It is the strangest water I ever saw," he added. "It must be that the +lack of some peculiar property of air, which we have on the surface, +has caused this. I must make some notes on it," and he drew out pencil +and paper. He was about to jot down some facts when he was interrupted +by a cry from Washington. + +"Come and see what's the matter with this stone!" he cried. + + + + +CHAPTER XVIII + +CAUGHT BY A STRANGE PLANT + + +"WASHINGTON is in trouble!" exclaimed Mr. Henderson. Followed by the +two boys he ran to where the colored man stood in a stooping position +over a small pile of stones. + +"What is it? Has something bit you?" asked the scientist, as he came +up on the run. + +"No, but I can't git this stone up!" Washington said. "Look at what a +little stone it is, but I can't lift it. Something must have happened +to me. Maybe some one put th' evil eye on me! Maybe I'm bewitched!" + +"Nonsense!" exclaimed the professor, "what did you want the stone +for?" + +"Nothin' in particular," replied Washington, still tugging away at the +stone, which was the size of his head. "I was just goin' t' throw it +at a big bird, but when I went to lift it this little stone 'peared t' +be glued fast." + +Washington moved aside to give Mr. Henderson a chance to try to pick +up the piece of rock. As the scientist grasped it a look of surprise +came over his features: + +"This is most remarkable!" he exclaimed. "I can't budge it. I wonder +if a giant magnet is holding it down." + +He tugged and tugged until he was red in the face. Then he beckoned to +the two boys, and they came to his aid. There was barely room for them +all to each get one hand on the rock, and then, only after a powerful +tug did it come up. Almost instantly it dropped back to the earth. + +"This is remarkable!" the professor said. "I wonder if the other +stones are the same." + +He tried several others, and one and all resisted his efforts. It was +only the small stones he was able to lift alone, and these, he said, +were so weighty that it would have been a task to throw them any +distance. + +"The water and the stones are strangely heavy in this land," he said. +"I wonder what other queer things we shall see." + +"I saw a bird a little while ago, when I went to pick up that stone," +observed Washington. + +"What kind was it?" asked the inventor. + +"I don't know, only it was about as big as an eagle." + +The travelers wandered about a quarter of a mile from the ship. They +avoided the tall grass and the lofty nodding flowers that seemed to +grow in regular groves, and kept to places where they could walk with +comparative freedom. + +"Have you formed any idea, Professor, as to the nature of this +country?" asked Mark, who liked to get at the bottom of things. + +"I have, but it is only a theory," Mr. Henderson answered. "I believe +we are on a sort of small earth that is inside the larger one we live +on. This sphere floats in space, just as our earth does, and we have +passed through the void that lies between our globe and this interior +one. I think this new earth is about a quarter the size of ours and in +some respects the same. In others it is vastly different. + +"But we will not think of those things now. We must see what our +situation is, whether we are in any danger, and must look to repairing +our ship. There will be time enough for other matters later." + +The travelers were walking slowly along, noting the strange things on +every side. As they advanced the vegetation seemed to become more +luxuriant, as if nature had tried to out-do herself in providing +beautiful flowers and plants. The changing lights added to the beauty +and weirdness of the scene. + +The plain was a rolling one, and here and there were small hills and +hollows. As the travelers topped a rise Jack, who was in advance, +called out: + +"Oh what queer plants! They are giant Jacks-in-the-pulpit!" + +The others hastened forward to see what the boy had discovered. Jack +was too eager to wait, and pressed on. The hill which sloped away from +the top of the little plateau on which he stood, was steeper than he +had counted on. As he leaned forward he lost his balance and toppled, +head foremost, down the declivity, rolling over. + +"Look out!" cried Mark, who had almost reached his comrade's side. + +The scene that confronted the travelers was a strange one. Before them +in a sort of hollow, were scores of big plants, shaped somewhat like a +Jack-in-the-pulpit, or a big lily, with a curved top or flap to it. + +The plants were about eight feet tall, three feet across the top, and +the flap or covering was raised about two feet. They were nodding and +swaying in the wind on their short stems. + +"He's headed right for one of them!" Mr. Henderson exclaimed. "I hope +he'll not fall into one of the openings." + +"Is there any danger?" asked Mark. + +"I'm afraid there is," the inventor added. "Those plants are a variety +of the well-known pitcher plant, or fly-trap, as they are sometimes +called. In tropical countries they grow to a large size, but nothing +like these. They are filled, in the cup, with a sort of sticky, sweet +mixture, and this attracts insects. When one enters the cup the top +flap folds over, and the hapless insect is caught there. The plant +actually devours it, nature providing a sort of vegetable digestive +apparatus. These giant plants are the same, and they seem large enough +to take in a man, to say nothing of Jack!" + +With anxious faces the adventurers turned to watch the fate of their +comrade. Jack was slipping, sliding and rolling down the hill. He +could not seem to stop, though he was making desperate efforts to do +so. He was headed straight for one of the largest of the terrible +plants. + +In vain, as he saw what was in front of him, did he try to change the +course of his involuntary voyage. Over and over he rolled, until, at +length, he struck a little grassy hummock, bounced into the air, and +right into the opening of a monster pitcher plant. + +"It has him!" cried Mark. "We must save him! Come on everyone!" + +He raced down the hill, while the others came closely after him. They +reached the plant into which Jack had bounced. The flap, or top piece, +had closed down, tightly over the unfortunate boy. + +"Quick! We must save him or he will be smothered to death or drowned +in the liquid the cup contains!" Mr. Henderson exclaimed. "Attack the +plant with anything you can find!" + +"Let's cut through the side of the flower-cup!" suggested Mark. "That +seems softer than the stem." + +His idea was quickly put into operation. Andy's long hunting knife +came in very handy. While the sides of the long natural cup were +tough, the knife made an impression on them, and, soon, a small door +or opening had been cut in the side of the pitcher plant, large enough +to enable a human body to pass through. + +When the last fibre had been severed by Andy, who was chosen to wield +the knife because of his long practice as a hunter, there was a sudden +commotion within the plant. Then a dark object, dripping water, made a +spring and landed almost at the feet of the professor. + +It was Jack, and a sorry sight he presented. He was covered from head +to foot with some sticky substance, which dripped from all over him. + +With hasty movements he cleared the stuff from his eyes and mouth, and +spluttered: + +"It's a good thing you cut me out when you did. I couldn't have held +on much longer!" + + + + +CHAPTER XIX + +THE BIG PEACH + + +JACK soon recovered from his remarkable experience. The terrible plant +that had nearly eaten him alive was a mass of cut-up vegetable matter +which attracted a swarm of insects. Most of them were ants, but such +large ones the boys had never seen before, and the professor said they +exceeded in size anything he had read about. Some of them were as +large as big rats. They bit off large pieces of the fallen plant and +carried them to holes in the ground which were big enough for +Washington to slip his foot into, and he wore a No. 11 shoe. + +But the adventurers felt there were more important things for them to +look at than ants, so they started away again, the professor telling +them all to be careful and avoid accidents. + +It was while they were strolling through a little glade, which they +came upon unexpectedly, that Washington, who was in the lead called +out: + +"Gracious goodness! It must be Thanksgivin'!" + +"Why so?" asked Jack. + +"'Cause here's th' remarkablest extraordinary and expansionist of a +pumpkin that ever I laid eyes on!" the colored man cried. + +They all hurried to where Washington had come to a halt. There, on the +ground in front of him, was a big round object, about the size of a +hogshead. It was yellow in color, and was not unlike the golden +vegetable from which mothers make such delicious pies. + +"I allers was fond of pumpkins," said Washington, placing his hand on +the thing, which was almost as tall as he was, "but I never thought +I'd come across such a one as this." + +The professor and the two boys went closer to the monstrosity. Mr. +Henderson passed his hand over it and then, bending closer, smelled of +it. + +"That's not a pumpkin!" he exclaimed. + +"What is it then?" asked Washington. + +"It's a giant peach," the inventor remarked. "Can't you see the fuzz, +and smell it? Of course it's a peach." + +"Well I'll be horn-swoggled!" cried Washington, leaning against the +big fruit, which easily, supported him. + +"Hurrah!" cried Jack, drawing his knife from his pocket and opening +the largest blade. "I always did like peaches. Now I can have all I +want," and he drove the steel into the object, cutting off a big slice +which he began to eat. + +"It may be poisonous!" exclaimed Mark. + +"Too late now," responded Jack, the juice running down from his mouth. +"Taste's good, anyhow." + +They all watched Jack while he devoured his slice of fruit. Washington +acted as if he expected his friend to topple over unconscious, but +Jack showed no bad symptoms. + +"You'd better all have some," the boy said. "It's the best I ever +tasted." + +Encouraged by Jack's example, Mark thought he, too, would have some of +the fruit. He opened his knife and was about to take off some of the +peach when suddenly the thing began to roll forward, almost upon him. + +"Hi! Stop your shoving!" he exclaimed. "Do you want to have the thing +roll over me, Jack?" + +"I'm not shoving!" replied Jack. + +"Some one is!" Mark went on. He dodged around the far side of the +immense fruit and what he saw made him cry out in astonishment. + +Two grasshoppers, each one standing about three feet high, were +standing on their hind legs, and with their fore feet were pushing the +peach along the ground. They had been attracted to the fruit by some +juice which escaped from a bruise on that side, which was the ripest, +and, being fond of sweets had, evidently decided to take their find to +some safe place where they could eat it at their leisure. Or perhaps +they wanted to provide for their families if grasshoppers have them. + +"Did you ever see such monsters?" asked Jack. "They're as big as +dogs!" + +At the sound of his voice the two grasshoppers, becoming alarmed, +ceased their endeavors to roll the peach along, and, assuming a +crouching attitude seemed to be waiting. + +"They certainly are remarkable specimens," Mr. Henderson said. "If the +other animals are in proportion, and if there are persons in this new +world, we are likely to have a hard time of it." + +This time the immense insects concluded the strangers were not to +their liking. With a snapping of their big muscular legs and a whirr +of their wings that was like the starting of an automobile, the +grasshoppers rose into the air and sailed away over the heads of the +adventurers. Their flight was more than an eighth of a mile in extent, +and they came down in a patch of the very tall grass. + +"Let's go after them!" exclaimed old Andy. "I was so excited I forgot +to take a shot at them. Come on!" + +"I think we'd better not," counseled the professor. "In the first +place we don't need them. They would be no good for food. Then we +don't know but what they might attack us, and it would be no joke to +be bitten by a grasshopper of that size. Let them alone. We may find +other game which will need your attention, Andy. Better save your +ammunition." + +Somewhat against his will, Andy had to submit to the professor's +ruling. The old hunter consoled himself with the reflection that if +insects grew to that size he would have some excellent sport hunting +even the birds of the inner world. + +"I wonder what sort of a tree that peach grew on," Jack remarked, as +he cut off another slice, when the excitement caused by the discovery +of the grasshoppers had subsided. "It must be taller than a church +steeple. I wonder how the fruit got here, for there are no trees +around." + +"I fancy those insects rolled it along for a good distance," Mr. +Henderson put in. "You can see the marks on the ground, where they +pushed it. They are wonderful creatures." + +"Are we going any farther?" asked Mark. "Perhaps we can find the peach +tree, and, likely there are other fruit trees near it." + +At the professor's suggestion they strolled along for some distance. +They were now about three miles from the airship, and found that what +they had supposed was a rather level plain, was becoming a succession +of hills and hollows. It was while descending into a rather deep +valley that Jack pointed ahead and exclaimed: + +"I guess there's our peach orchard, but I never saw one like it +before." + +Nor had any of the others. Instead of trees the peaches were attached +to vines growing along the ground. They covered a large part of the +valley, and the peaches, some bigger than the one they first +discovered, some small and green, rose up amid the vines, just as +pumpkins do in a corn field. + +"Stranger and stranger," the professor murmured. "Peaches grow on +vines. I suppose potatoes will grow on trees. Everything seems to be +reversed here." + +They made their way down toward the peach "orchard" as Jack called it, +though "patch" would have been a better name. Besides peaches they +found plums, apples, and pears growing in the same way, and all of a +size proportionate to the first-named fruit. + +"Well, one thing is evident," Mr. Henderson remarked, "we shall not +starve here. There is plenty to eat, even if we have to turn +vegetarians." + +"I wonder what time it is getting to be," Jack remarked. "My watch +says twelve o'clock but whether it's noon or midnight I can't tell, +with this colored light coming and going. I wonder if it ever sets as +the sun does." + +"That is something we'll have to get used to," the professor said. +"But I think we had better go back to the ship now. We have many +things to do to get it in order again. Besides, I am a little afraid +to leave it unguarded so long. No telling but what some strange +beast--or persons, for that matter--might injure it." + +"I'm going to take back some slices of peaches with me, anyhow," Mark +said, and he and Jack cut off enough to make several meals, while +Bill, Tom and Washington took along all they could carry. + +As they walked back toward the ship the strange lights seemed to be +dying out. At first they hardly noticed this, but as they continued on +it became quite gloomy, and an odd sort of gloom it was too, first +green, then yellow, then red and then blue. + +"I believe whatever serves as a sun down here is setting," the +professor observed. "We must hurry. I don't want to be caught out here +after dark." + +They hurried on, the lights dying out more and more, until, as they +came in sight of their ship, it was so black they could hardly see. + +Mark who was in the rear turned around, glancing behind him. As he did +so he caught sight of a gigantic shadow moving along on top of the +nearest hill. The shadow was not unlike that of a man in shape, but of +such gigantic stature that Mark knew it could be like no human being +he had ever seen. At the same time it bore a curious resemblance to +the weird shadow he had seen slip into the Mermaid that night before +they sailed. + +"I wonder if it can be the same--the same thing--grown larger, just +as the peach grows larger than those in our world," Mark thought, +while a shiver of fear seemed to go over him. "I wonder if that--that +thing could have been on the ship----" + +Then the last rays of light died away and there was total darkness. + + + + +CHAPTER XX + +OVERHAULING THE SHIP + + +"KEEP together!" shouted the professor. "It will not do to become lost +now. We are close to the ship, and will soon be there. Come after me." + +It was more by following the sound of the scientist's voice, than by +any sight which the others could get of him, that they managed to +trail along behind. They reached the ship in safety, however, and +entered. There was no sound as of beasts or insects within, and, +though Mark felt a little apprehensive on account of what he had seen, +he and the others as well, were glad to be again in something that +seemed like home. + +"I wish we had some candles, or some sort of a light to see by," the +professor remarked. "We can do nothing in the dark, and there is no +telling how long this night is going to last once it has set in. If I +could have a little illumination, I might be able to fix the dynamo, +and then we could turn on the incandescents. That portable light we +had is broken. + +"By cracky!" exclaimed Andy. "I believe I have the very thing!" + +"You don't mean to say you have a torch or a candle with you, do you?" +asked Mr. Henderson. + +"No, but I have my patent pipe lighting apparatus," the hunter said. +"I always carry it. It gives a little light, but not much, though it +may be enough to work by." + +Not until after several hours work, handicapped as they were by lack +of light, were the repairs to the ship completed. + +"Now we'll start the engine and see how we will come out," the +inventor exclaimed, as he wiped his hands on some waste. + +It did not take long to generate enough power to turn the dynamo. Soon +the familiar hum and whirr was heard, and, a few seconds later the +filaments in the lamps began to glow a dull red, which gradually +brightened until they were shining in all their usual brilliancy. + +"Hurrah!" cried the boys. "Now we can see!" + +They all felt in better spirits with the restoration of the lights, +and, washing off the grease and dirt of their labors in the engine +room, they prepared to sit down to the meal which Washington prepared. + +As soon as the dynamo was working well, care had to be taken not to +speed it too much on account of a mended belt. The professor turned +off part of the lights and switched some of the current into the +storage batteries, to provide for emergencies. For there was no +telling how long the night might last. + +Jack was the first one to finish the meal--they did not know whether +to call it dinner, supper or breakfast. He went into the conning +tower, and, as soon as he reached it he called out: + +"Come on up here, professor! There's something strange going on!" + +Mr. Henderson, followed by Mark, hurried to the tower. As he reached +it and looked out of the forward window, a beautiful white glow +illuminated the whole scene, and then, from below the horizon, there +arose seven luminous disks. One was in the centre, while about it +circled the other six, like some immense pin-wheel. + +"It's the moon!" cried Mark. + +"It's seven moons!" Jack exclaimed. "Why it's almost as light as day!" + +And so it was, for the seven moons, if that is what they were, gave an +illumination not unlike the sun in brilliancy though it was like the +beams from the pale moon of the earth. + +"I guess we need not have worried about the darkness," the professor +remarked. "Still it is a good thing I fixed the dynamo." + +For some time he and the other adventurers watched the odd sight of +the moons, as they rose higher and higher overhead. The scene was a +beautiful, if weird one, for the whole plain was bathed in the soft +light. + +"I guess we can turn off the incandescents, and use all the power for +the storage batteries," Mr. Henderson went on, as he descended into +the ship, and opened the port shutters which had been closed when they +started off on their exploring tour. The interior of the Mermaid was +almost as light as when the odd colored beams had been playing over +the new earth to which they had come. + +"I think we had better continue with our work of making repairs," Mr. +Henderson said. "We can't count on these moons remaining here any +length of time, and I want to take advantage of them. So though some +of us perhaps need sleep, we will forego it and fix up the Mermaid. I +want to take a trip and see what other wonders await us." + +They all agreed that they would rather work than sleep, and soon the +entire force was busy in the engine room. There was much to be done, +and the most important things were attended to first. The motive power +was overhauled and found to be in need of several new parts. These +were put in and then the gas generator, and the negative gravity +machine, were put in shape. + +It would have taken something very substantial to have awakened any +one on board the Mermaid that night. They all slept soundly and awoke +to find the strange colored lights shining in through the glass +covered port holes. + +"Well, the sun, or what corresponds to it, is up," observed Jack, "and +I guess we had better do as the little boy in the school reader did, +and get up, too, Mark." + +Soon all the travelers were aroused, and the sound of Washington +bustling about in the kitchen, whence came the smell of coffee, bacon +and eggs, told the hungry ones that breakfast was under way. + +After the meal work was again started on repairing the ship, and by +noon the professor remarked: + +"I think we shall try a little flight after dinner. That is, if one +thing doesn't prevent us." + +"What is that?" asked Jack. + +"We may be held down, as were those stones," was the grave answer. + + + + +CHAPTER XXI + +THE FISH THAT WALKED + + +IT was with no little apprehension that the professor prepared to take +his first flight aboard the ship in the realms of the new world. He +knew little or nothing of the conditions he might meet with, the +density of the atmosphere, or how the Mermaid would behave under +another environment than that to which she was accustomed. + +Yet he felt it was necessary to make a start. They would have to +attempt a flight sooner or later, and Mr. Henderson was not the one to +delay matters. So, the last adjustment having been made to the +repaired machinery, they all took their places in the ship. + +The boys and the professor went to the conning tower to direct +matters, while Washington and the others were in the engine room to +see that the machinery worked properly. Mark gave a last look outside +as he closed the big steel cover over the hole through which admission +was had to the craft. He thought he might catch a glimpse of the queer +shadow, but nothing was in sight. It was like a beautiful summer's +day, save for the strange lights, shifting and changing. But the +travelers had become somewhat used to them by this time. + +The professor turned the valve that allowed the gas to enter the +holder. There was a hissing sound and a sort of trembling throughout +the entire ship. The dynamos were whizzing away and the negative +gravity machine was all ready to start. + +For several minutes the travelers waited until the big lifting tank +was filled with the strong vapor. They watched the gages which +indicated the pressure to be several hundred pounds. + +"I think we can chance it now," remarked Mr. Henderson, as he threw +over several levers. "We'll try, at any rate." + +With a tremor the Mermaid left the surface of the inner earth and went +sailing upward toward the--well it wasn't exactly the sky, but it was +what corresponded to it in the new world, though there were no clouds +and no blue depths such as the boys were used to. At all events the +Mermaid was flying again, and, as the adventurers felt themselves +being lifted up they gave a spontaneous cheer at the success which had +crowned their efforts. + +The ship went up several hundred feet, and then, the professor, having +brought her to a stop, sent her ahead at a slow pace. He wanted to be +sure all the apparatus was in good working order before he tried any +speed. + +The Mermaid responded readily. Straight as an arrow through the air +she flew. + +"Well, this is almost as good as being on the regular earth!" +exclaimed Jack. + +"It's better," put in Mark. "We haven't seen half the wonders yet. +Let's open the floor shutter, and see how it looks down below." + +He and Jack went to the room where there was an opening in the floor +of the ship, covered by heavy glass. They slid back the steel shutter +and there, down below them, was the strange new, world they had come +to, stretched out like some big map. + +They could see mountains, forests, plains, and rivers, the water +sparkling in the colored light. Over green fields they flew, then +across some stretches where only sand and rocks were to be seen. +Faster and faster the ship went, as the professor found the machinery +was once more in perfect order. Jack was idly watching the play of +tinted lights over the surface of the ground. + +"I wonder what makes it," he said. + +"I have tried to account for it in several ways," said the professor, +who had called Washington to the conning tower and come to join the +boys. "I have had first one theory and then another, but the one I am +almost sure is correct is that hidden volcanic fires cause the +illumination. + +"I think they flare up and die away, and have become so regular that +they produce the same effect as night and day with us. Probably the +fires go out for lack of fuel, and when it is supplied they start up +again. Perhaps it is a sort of gas that they burn." + +"Well, it's queer enough, whatever it is," Jack remarked. "What +strikes me as funny, though, is that we haven't seen a single person +since we came here. Surely this place must be inhabited." + +Mark thought of the strange shadow he had seen, but said nothing. + +"I believe it is," the professor answered. "We will probably come upon +the inhabitants soon. I only hope they are a people who will do us no +harm." + +"If they tried any of their tricks we could mount up in our ship and +escape them," said Andy. + +"Provided they gave us the chance," Mr. Henderson put in. "Well, we'll +not worry about that now." + +For several hours the ship traveled on, until it had come to a +different sort of country. It was wilder and not so level, and there +were a number of streams and small lakes to be seen. + +"Are you going to sail all night?" asked Jack. + +"No," replied the professor. "I think we'll descend very soon now, and +camp out for a while. That lake just ahead seems to offer a good +place," and he pointed to a large sheet of water that sparkled in the +distance, for by this time they had all gone back to the conning +tower. + +The lake was in the midst of a wood that extended for some distance on +all sides, and was down in a sort of valley. The ship headed toward +it, and in a short time a landing was made close to shore. + +"Maybe we can have some fresh fish for supper," exclaimed Jack as he +ran from the ship as soon as the sliding door in the side was opened. +"Looks as if that lake had some in it. It is not thick water like in +that stream we stopped at," he added. + +"I believe you're right," old Andy put in, as he turned back to look +for some lines and hooks among his traps. He soon found what he +wanted, and gave them to the boys, taking his trusty gun along for +himself. + +While the professor, Washington, Tom and Bill remained behind to make +some adjustments to the machinery, and to get things in shape for the +night, which, they calculated would soon be upon them, Jack, Mark and +Andy went down to the shore of the lake. The boys cut some poles from +the trees, and baiting the hooks with some fat worms found under the +bark, threw in. + +"Let's see who'll get the first bite," spoke Jack. "I'm pretty +generally lucky at fishing." + +"Well, while you're waiting to decide that there contest, I think I'll +take a stroll along shore and see if I can see anything to shoot," +Andy remarked. + +For several minutes the boys sat in silence on the bank of the lake, +watching the play of the vari-colored lights on the water. Suddenly +Jack felt a quiver on his line, and his pole began to shake. + +"I've got something!" he cried. Then his pole bent almost double and +he began to pull for all he was worth. "It's a whopper!" he cried. +"Come and help me, Mark!" + +Mark ran to his friend's aid. Whatever was on the other end of the +line was strong enough to tax the muscles of both boys. They could +hear the pole beginning to break. But for the excellent quality of +Andy's line that would have parted some time before. + +All at once there came a sudden slacking of the pull from whatever was +in the water. And so quickly did it cease that both boys went over +backward in a heap. + +"He's got away!" cried Jack, getting up and brushing some of the dirt +from his clothes. + +"There's something that didn't get away!" cried Mark, who had risen to +his knees, and was pointing at the lake. Jack looked and what he saw +made him almost believe he was dreaming. + +For, emerging from the water, dragging the pole and line the boys had +dropped along with it, was a most curious creature. It was a big fish, +but a fish with four short legs on which it was walking, or rather +waddling along as much as a duck, with a double supply of feet, might +do. + +"Say, do I see that or is there something the matter with my eyes?" +sung out Jack, making ready to run away. + +"It's there all right!" exclaimed Mark. "Hi! Andy! Here's something to +shoot!" he yelled, for indeed the creature was big enough to warrant +attack with a gun. It was about five feet long and two feet through. + +On and on it came, straight at the boys, as if to have revenge for the +pain the fish hook must have caused it, for the barb could be seen +dangling from its lip. On and on it came, waddling forward, the water +dripping from it at every step. It had the body and general shape of a +fish, save that the tail was rather large in proportion. As it came +nearer the boys noted that the feet were webbed, like those of a water +fowl. + +"Come on!" cried Jack. "It may attack us!" + +At that moment the creature opened its mouth, showing a triple row of +formidable teeth, and gave utterance to a sort of groan and grunt +combined. + +This was enough to send Jack and Mark off on a run up the bank, and +did they stop until they heard Andy's voice hailing them. + +"What's the matter, boys?" + +"Come here! Quick!" answered Jack. + +The fish-animal had halted and seemed to be taking an observation. To +do this, as it could not turn its neck, it had to shift its whole +body. Old Andy came up on the run, his gun held in readiness. + +"Where is it?" he asked, and the boys pointed silently. + +The hunter could not repress a start of astonishment as he saw the +strange creature. But he did not hesitate a second. There was a crack +of the rifle, and the thing, whatever it was, toppled over, dead. + +Andy hurried up to it, to get a closer view. + +"Well, this is the limit!" he exclaimed. "First we have grasshoppers +that can roll peaches as big as hogsheads, and now we come across fish +that walk. I wonder what we will see next." + +"I don't want to go fishing in this lake any more," spoke Jack, as he +looked at the repulsive creature. "I never want to eat fish any more." + +"Same here," agreed Mark, and old Andy was of the opinion that the +thing killed would not make a wholesome dish for the table. + +"There don't seem to be any game in this section," he remarked. "Not a +sign could I see, nor have I since we have been here, unless you count +those grasshoppers. But the fruit is good, I'll say that." + +"Come on, we'd better be getting back," Mark said, as he noticed it +was getting dark. "I'm hungry." + + + + +CHAPTER XXII + +THE SNAKE-TREE + + +THEY managed to make a good meal of the food supplies they had brought +along, and as a dessert Washington made some peach short-cake from the +slices of the giant fruit they had found, the day before. Just as they +finished supper it got very dark, but, in about an hour, the +moon-beams, as the travelers called them, came up, and illuminated the +lake with a weird light. + +As the machinery of the Mermaid was now in working order there was no +further alarm because of the darkness. The ship rested on a level keel +about a hundred yards back from the lake, and, seeing that all was +snug, and the fastenings secure, the travelers went to bed. + +Though they had to forego fish for breakfast the travelers made a good +meal. After seeing that the ship was in readiness for a quick start, +the professor suggested they take a walk around and see what sort of +country they might be in now. + +They tramped on for several miles, meeting with no adventures, and +seeing nothing out of the ordinary. It was a pleasant day, just warm +enough to be comfortable, and a little wind was blowing through the +trees. + +"It would be almost like home if it wasn't for the strange lights, and +the memory of the queer things here," said Jack. "I feel fine. Let's +see if you can hit that dead tree over there, Mark." + +Jack stooped to grab up a stone, but no sooner had his fingers touched +it than he called out: + +"There! I forgot all about the stones here being heavier than lead. +Guess we can't throw any of 'em. But come on. I'll race you to the +dead tree!" + +Mark was willing, so the two boys set off at a fast pace. + +"Look out where you're going!" the professor called after them. "No +telling what may be in those woods," for the boys were approaching a +little glade, on the edge of which the dead tree stood. + +Jack reached the goal first, and stood leaning against the trunk, +waiting for Mark. + +"You'd better practice sprinting!" exclaimed the victor. + +Mark was about to excuse himself for his poor showing, on the plea of +having eaten too much breakfast, when to his horror he saw what seemed +to be a long thin snake spring out from the branches of a nearby tree +and twine itself about Jack. + +"Help me! Save me!" cried the unfortunate boy, as he was lifted high +into the air and pulled within the shadow of the wood. + +For an instant Mark was too horror-stricken to move. Then with a shout +that alarmed the others, who were coming along more slowly, he made a +dash for the place he had last seen Jack. + +Had old Andy not been on the watch, with those keen eyes of his, there +might have been a double tragedy. He had seen from afar the sudden +snatching up of Jack, and noted Mark's rush to save his chum. + +"Stand still! Don't go in there for your life!" yelled the hunter, at +the same time running forward with gun ready. + +His example was followed by the professor, Washington and the other +two men. + +"A snake has Jack!" called Mark, when Andy was at his side. + +"No! It's not a snake!" replied the hunter. "It's worse. It's the +snake-tree!" + +"What's that?" asked Mr. Henderson, hurrying up. + +"The snake-tree has Jack," the hunter went on. "It is a plant, half +animal, half-vegetable. It has long branches, not unlike a snake in +shape. They can move about and grab things." + +"One of them got a grip on Jack as he leaned against the dead tree +trunk. I just caught a glimpse of it, and called to prevent Mark from +running into danger." + +"Can't we save him?" asked Mr. Henderson. + +"I'm going to try!" replied Andy. "Quick! Gather up some pieces of dry +wood. I have some paper, and my pipe lighter. We must fight the +snake-tree with fire!" + + + + +CHAPTER XXIII + +THE DESERTED VILLAGE + + +JACK'S Cries were growing fainter and fainter. Peering in through the +branches of the dead tree the professor could see the whip-like limbs +winding closer and closer about the boy. + +"I am afraid we will be too late!" he said. + +Andy had twisted some paper into a rude torch. He set fire to it with +his pocket lighter, and, when Bill and Mark brought him some little +pieces of dead wood the old hunter added them to his bundle, which was +now blazing brightly. + +"How are you going to do it?" asked the professor. + +"I'll show you," replied Andy. He bound the sticks and paper together +with wisps of grass and then, when it was so hot he could hardly hold +it longer, he ran as close as he dared to the snake-tree and tossed +the torch at the foot of it. + +The blazing bundle fell among some damp leaves and grass, as Andy had +intended it should, and soon a dense smoke arose, pouring straight up +through the branches of the animal-tree, the limbs of which were +gathered in a knot about the half-unconscious form of the boy. + +For a few minutes they all waited anxiously. Would Andy's trick +succeed? Had the terrible tree not already squeezed the life from +Jack? + +But, while they watched, there seemed to come a change over the tree. +The snake-like arms waved less and less. They seemed to straighten +out, as though deprived of power by the smoke which was now so dense +as to hide Jack from sight. Then the arms suddenly relaxed and +something rolled from them and fell to the ground. With a quick +movement Andy darted in, crawling on his hands and knees beneath the +limbs, and brought Jack out. The boy was white and his eyes were +closed. + +"Get some water!" cried the old hunter. + +Mark ran toward a stream a little distance away. He brought some of +the curiously thick liquid in his hat, and while Andy held the boy the +professor sprinkled some of the drops on his face, and forced some +between his lips. In a little while Jack's eyes slowly opened. + +"Don't let it eat me!" he begged. + +"You're all right now," said Andy heartily. "Not a bit harmed, Jack. +But," he added in a low tone, "it was a close call." + +A few whiffs from a bottle of ammonia the professor carried soon +brought Jack's color back. + +"Do you feel better now?" asked Mark. + +"I guess so. Yes, I'm all right," replied Jack, struggling to his +feet. "What happened? Feels as if I had been tied up with a lot of +rope." + +"That's about what you were," Andy replied, "only it was the worst +kind of rope I ever saw. Those snake-trees are terrible things. I've +read of 'em, but I never saw one before. The book that told of them +says they squeeze their victims to death just as a snake does. The +only way to do is to make some smoke and fire at the bottom. This sort +of kills the branches or makes them stupid and they let go. The trees +are half animal, and awful things. I hope we don't meet with any +more." + +"Same here," added Jack fervently, as he grasped Andy's hand, and +thanked him for saving his life. + +"Do you think you can go on, or shall we return to the ship'?" the +professor asked. + +"Oh I can trail along, if you move a little slowly," Jack replied. +"I'm a bit stiff, that's all." + +So they resumed their journey. They had gone, perhaps, three miles +when Washington, who was in the lead, suddenly stopped and called: + +"Sounds like thunder." + +The others listened. Sure enough there was a dull rumble and roar +audible. It seemed off to the left, but they could see no clouds in +the sky, nor any signs of a storm. + +"Let's take a walk over that way and see what it is," Mr. Henderson +suggested. + +As they walked on the noise became louder, until in about half an hour +it was like the sound from a blast furnace. + +"What do you suppose it can be?" asked Mark. + +"Perhaps some new freak of nature," the professor replied. "We seem to +have a good many of them here." + +They were all on their guard now, for there was no telling into what +danger they might run. As they went up a little hill the noise became +much louder. The professor and Andy, who had taken the lead, kept a +sharp lookout ahead, that they might not unexpectedly fall into some +hidden stream or lake. As they topped the hill they saw before them a +deep valley, and in the midst of it was that which was causing the +roaring sound. + +From the centre of an immense mound of rock and earth there spouted up +a great column of water, three hundred feet or more, as straight as a +flag staff. It was about ten feet in diameter, and at the top it broke +into a rosette of sparkling liquid, which as the vari-colored lights +played on it, resembled some wonderful flower. + +"It's a great geyser!" the professor exclaimed. "We have come to a +place like Yellowstone Park. We must be very careful. The crust may be +very thin here, and let us down into some boiling spring." + +The others gathered around the professor, and, from a safe distance +watched the ever rising and falling shaft of water. + +It was not regular in motion. Sometimes it would shoot up to a great +distance, nearly a thousand feet, the professor estimated. Again it +would sink down, as the power sending it out lessened, until it was +only a few hundred feet above the rounded top of the mound from which +it spurted. But it never fell below this. All the while there was the +constant roaring sound, as though the forces of nature below the +surface were calling to be let out. + +"I hope there are not many of those about," Mr. Henderson remarked +after a pause. "If the ship should hit one during the night it would +be all up with us. We must keep a careful look-out." + +The spouting column had a fascination which held them to the spot for +some time. From the hill they had a good view of the surrounding +country, but did not see any more geysers. + +"Do you think it is hot water?" asked Mark. + +"There is no vapor," the professor answered, "but most of the geysers +are produced by the action of steam in the interior of the earth. +However we'll not take any chances by investigating. I fear it would +not be safe to go into that valley." + +"Look there!" cried Andy. "I guess we're better off here!" He pointed +a little to the right of where the water spouted. The others looked, +and saw, coming from a hole in the ground, some shaggy black object. + +"What is it?" asked Jack. + +"It looks like a bear," replied the hunter, "but I never saw one like +it before." + +Nor had any of the others, for the creature was a terrible one. It had +the body of a bear, but the feet and legs were those of an alligator, +while the tail trailed out behind like a snake, and the head had a +long snout, not unlike the trunk of an elephant. The creature was +about ten feet long and five feet in height. + +"Let me try a shot at it!" exclaimed Andy. "That is something worth +shooting," and he cocked his rifle. + +"Don't!" exclaimed the professor shortly. "You might only wound it, +and it would pursue us. We are not ready to fight such creatures as +that, and you are the only one armed." + +"I never missed anything I aimed at yet," said Andy, a little hurt +that any one should doubt his ability to kill at the first shot. + +"Perhaps not, but how do you know but what this creature has a bullet +proof armor under its hide. This is a strange world, Andy. It is +better to take no chances." + +"I hate to see him get away," the hunter said. + +But, as it happened, the beast was not to get away. As they watched +they saw the horrible animal approach the mound from which the water +spurted. Up the sides it climbed. + +"I guess he's going to get a drink," said Mark. + +That was evidently the beast's intention. It went close to the +spouting column of water, and thrust its head out so that its tongue +could lap from the side. It seemed to have been in the habit of doing +this. + +For once, and for the last time, however, it made a mistake. The water +seemed to veer to one side. In its eagerness to get a drink the animal +took another step forward. At that moment the direction of the column +changed again, and it tilted over toward the beast. + +Suddenly, as the travelers watched, the full force of the big column +caught the beast just under the fore shoulders. Up into the air the +creature shot, propelled by thousands of pounds pressure. Right up to +the top of the column it went, and this time the water rose a thousand +feet into the air. + +Up and up went the animal, struggling to get away from the remorseless +grip. Then, when the water had reached its height, it shot the beast +off to one side. Then the brute began to fall, twisting, turning, +wiggling and struggling. Down it came with a thud that could be heard +above the noise of the geyser. + +"I reckon that finishes him," observed Andy. And it had, for there was +not a sign of life from the creature. + +"I guess we have seen enough for one morning," the professor said, +"Let's go back to the airship. It must be nearly dinner time." + +They started away. Mark gave a last look at the queer column of water +and the dead body of the strange animal. As he passed down the hill he +thought he saw the creature move, and stayed to see if this was so. +But a second glance convinced him he was mistaken. + +The others had gone on and were some distance ahead. Mark hurried on +to join them. As he got a last glance at the top of the column, over +the brow of the hill, he happened to look off to the left. There was +another hill, about the size of the one they had been on. + +And, as Mark looked he saw something move. At first he thought it was +another beast. But, to his terror he saw that the creature had only +two legs, and that it stood upright like a man, but such a man as Mark +had never seen before, for he was nearly twelve feet tall. + +He was about to cry out and warn the others, when the thing, whatever +it was, sunk down, apparently behind some tall bushes, and disappeared +as if the earth had opened and swallowed it. + +"I wonder if I had better tell them," thought Mark. "I can't show them +anything. I wonder if I really saw it, or if it was only a shadow. I +guess I'll say nothing. But it is very strange." + +Then he hurried on to join the others. + +"What makes you so pale?" asked Jack of his chum. + +"Nothing," said Mark, somewhat confused. "I guess I'm a little tired, +that's all." + +They reached the ship in safety, and, having dinner started the +machinery and took the Mermaid up into the air. + +"We'll travel on and see if we can't find some human beings," the +professor said. + +All that afternoon they sailed, the country below them unfolding like +a panorama. They passed over big lakes, sailing on the surface of +some, and over rivers, and vast stretches of forest and dreary plains. +But they never saw a sign of human inhabitants. + +It was getting on to five o'clock, the hour when the brilliant lights +usually disappeared, when Mark, who was steering in the conning tower, +gave a cry. + +"What is it?" asked the professor, looking up from a rude map he was +making of the land they had just traversed. + +"It looks like a town before us," said the boy. + +Mr. Henderson and Jack looked to where Mark pointed. A few miles ahead +and below them were great mounds, not unlike that from which the +geyser had spouted. But they were arranged in regular form, like +houses on a street, row after row of them. And, as they approached +nearer, they could see that the mounds had doors and windows to them. +Some of the mounds wer rger than others, and some were of double and +triple formation. + +"It's a city! The first city of the new world!" cried Jack. + +"It is a deserted village!" said the professor. "We have found where +the people live, but we have not found them." And he was right, for +there was not a sign of life about the place, over which the airship +was now suspended. + + + + +CHAPTER XXIV + +THE GIANTS + + +"LET'S go down and investigate," suggested Jack. + +"Better wait," counseled the professor. "It will soon be dark, and, +though we will have moonlight, we can not see to advantage. I think it +will be best to keep the ship in the air to-night, and descend in the +morning. Then we can look about and decide on what to do." + +They all agreed this was the best plan, and, after making a circle +above the deserted village, and noting no signs of life, the Mermaid +was brought to a halt over the centre of the town, and about three +hundred feet above it. There the travelers would be comparatively +safe. + +It was deemed best to keep watch that night, and so, Mark, Jack, Bill +and Tom took turns, though there was nothing for them to do, as not a +thing happened. With the first appearance of dawn Mr. Henderson gave +orders to have the ship lowered, and it came to rest in the middle of +what corresponded to a street in the queer mound village. + +"Now to see what kind of people have lived here!" cried Jack. "They +must have been a queer lot. Something like the Esquimaux, only they +probably had more trouble keeping cool than the chaps up at the north +pole do." + +Now that they were down among the mound houses, they saw that the +dwellings were much larger than they had supposed. They towered high +above the boys' heads, and some of them were large enough in area to +have accomodated a company of soldiers. + +"Say, the chaps who lived in these must have been some pumpkins," said +Jack. "Why the ceilings are about fifteen feet high, and the doors +almost the same! Talk about giants! I guess we've struck where they +used to hang out, at any rate." + +The houses were a curious mixture of clay and soft stone. There were +doors, with big skins from animals as curtains, and the windows were +devoid of glass. Instead of stairs there were rude ladders, and the +furniture in the mound houses was of the roughest kind. + +There were fire-places in some of the houses, and the blackened and +smoked walls showed that they must have been used. In one or two of +the houses clay dishes, most of them broken, were scattered about, and +the size of them, in keeping with everything else, indicated that +those who used them were of no small stature. + +"Some of the bowls would do for bath tubs," said Jack, as he came +across one or two large ones. + +By this time the professor, Bill and Tom had joined the boys, and the +five went on with the exploring tour, while Washington and Andy +remained in the ship to get breakfast. + +"The inhabitants are evidently of a half-civilized race," the +professor said. "Their houses, and the manner in which they live, show +them to be allied to the Aztecs, though of course they are much larger +than that race." + +"What's bothering me," Bill said, "is not so much what race they +belong to, as what chance we'd stand in a race with them if they took +it into their heads to chase after us. I've read that them there +Azhandled races----" + +"You mean the Aztecs," interrupted the professor. + +"Well the Aztecs, then. But I've read they used to place their enemies +on a stone altar and cut their hearts out. Now I'm not hankerin' after +anything like that." + +"Don't be foolish," spoke Mr. Henderson. "Wait until you meet some of +the giants, if that is what they are, and then you can decide what to +do." + +"It may be too late then," remarked Bill in a low tone, and the boys +were somewhat inclined to agree with him. + +However, there seemed to be no immediate danger, as there was no sign +of any of the big people about the village. The adventurers walked +about for some time, but made no discoveries that would throw any +light on the reason for the place being left uninhabited. It seemed as +if there had been a sudden departure from the place, for in a number +of the houses the remains of half-cooked meals were seen. + +"Well, I think we have noted enough for the time being," the professor +remarked, after they had traversed almost half the length of what +seemed to be the principal street. "Let's go back to the ship and have +something to eat. Washington may have become alarmed at our absence." + +They made a circle in order to take in another part of the town on +their way back. While passing through a sort of alley, though it was +only narrow by comparison with the other thoroughfares that were very +wide, Mark came to a place where there was a circular slab of stone, +resting on the ground. In the centre was a big iron ring. + +"Hello! Here's something new!" he exclaimed. "Maybe it leads to a +secret passage, or covers some hidden treasure." + +"I guess it will have to continue to cover it then," Jack spoke. "That +probably weighs several tons. None of us could move it." + +They made their way back to the ship, where they found Washington and +Andy discussing the advisability of going off in search of them. + +"Breakfast is mighty near spoiled," said the colored man with an +injured air. + +But the travelers did full justice to the meal, notwithstanding this. +Deciding there was nothing to be gained by staying in that vicinity, +the professor started the ship off again. + +They traveled several hundred miles in the air, and, as the afternoon +was coming to a close, Jack, who was in charge of the conning tower, +spied, just ahead of them, another village. + +"We will descend there for the night," the professor said. "Does there +seem to be any sign of life about?" + +"None," replied Mark, who was observing through a telescope the town +they were approaching. "It's as dead as the other one." + +The airship settled down in a field back of some of the mound houses. + +"Now for supper!" cried Jack. "I'm as hungry as----" + +He stopped short, for, seeming to rise from the very ground, all about +the ship, there appeared a throng of men. And such men as they were! +For not one was less than ten feet tall, and some were nearly fifteen! + +"The giants have us!" cried Bill, as he saw the horde of creatures +surrounding the ship. + + + + +CHAPTER XXV + +HELD BY THE ENEMY + + +"KEEP the doors closed!" cried the professor. "It is our only hope! I +will send the ship up again!" + +But it was too late. Washington, who had obeyed the signal from the +conning tower to shut off the engines, had disconnected most of them +so they could not be started again save from the main room. At the +same time there came a yell of dismay from the colored man, who had +slid back the steel covering of the main side entrance to the Mermaid. + +"I'm caught!" cried Washington. + +As the professor and the boys hurried from the tower, they could hear +a struggle from where Washington was, and his voice calling: + +"Let me go! Let me go!" + +Reaching the engine room, which opened directly on the side entrance, +the professor saw a pair of enormous hands and arms dragging poor +Washington, feet first, out of the ship. Bill and Tom were crouched in +one corner, pale with fright. + +"Wait until I get my gun!" cried Andy, as he ran for his rifle. + +"Hold on!" called the professor in a loud voice. "It will be folly to +shoot them! We must try strategy!" + +Washington's cries ceased as he was drawn entirely from the ship, the +giant hands disappearing at the same time. + +"Follow me!" yelled Mr. Henderson, running out of the door. + +Hardly knowing what they did, the boys went after him, and their +hearts almost stopped beating in fright as they saw the terrible +things, which, in the glare of the changing lights, were on every side +of them. + +For the men were very repulsive looking. They there attired in +clothes, very similar in cut to those worn by the travelers, and which +seemed to be made of some sort of cloth. But they were loose and baggy +and only added to the queer appearance of the giants. Veritable giants +they were too. Their faces seemed as large as kegs, and they were so +clumsy in shape that Mark, even, frightened as he was, exclaimed: + +"They look like men made of putty!" At the same time he saw they bore +a resemblance to the creature he had observed on the hill top. + +"What shall we do?" asked Andy of the professor. "They are really +carrying Washington away!" + +Three of the giants were dragging the colored man along the ground, +while the other terrible beings stood about as if waiting to see the +outcome of the first sally. + +"I will try to speak to them," Mr. Henderson said. "I know several +languages. They may understand one." + +But before he could start on his parley a surprising thing happened. +There was a struggle in the little group about Washington. The colored +man seemed to be fighting, though the odds, it would appear, were too +great to enable him to accomplish anything. But, making a desperate +effort to escape, Washington quickly wrenched himself free from the +giants' hands and then, striking out with his fists, knocked the three +down, one after another. + +"I never knew Washington was so strong!" exclaimed Jack. + +"Nor I," put in Mark. "Why I should think the men could carry him in +one arm as if he was a baby." + +The three giants rose slowly to their feet. They uttered strange +cries, and motioned with their hands toward the professor, the boys, +and the others in the crowd. + +"Look out! They're goin' t' grab yo'!" cried Washington. + +Three of the giants approached Mark, and a like number closed in on +Jack. + +"Back to the ship!" cried the professor. "We must defend ourselves!" + +But by this time the big men had grabbed the two boys. Then a strange +thing took place. Mark and Jack, though they felt that the giants must +overcome them in a test of strength, struggled with all their might +against being captured. They fought, as a cornered rat will fight, +though it knows the odds to be overwhelming. But in this case the +unexpected happened. + +Both boys found they could easily break the holds of the giants, and +Mark, by a vigorous effort, pushed the three men away from him, one at +a time violently so that they fell in a heap, one on top of the other. + +"Hurrah! We can fight 'em!" cried Mark. "Don't be afraid. They're like +mush! They're putty men!" + +And, so it seemed, the giants were. Though big in size they were +flabby and had nothing like the muscle they should have had in +proportion to their build. They went down like meal sacks and were +slow to rise. + +Jack, seeing how successful his comrade was, attacked the three giants +who were striving to make him a captive. He succeeded in disposing of +them, knocking one down so hard that the man was unable to rise until +his companions helped him. + +"That's the way!" cried Washington. "They're soft as snow men!" + +The vanquished giants set up a sort of roar, which was answered by +their fellows, and soon there was a terrible din. + +"All get together!" called the professor. "They are evidently going to +make a rush for us. If we stand by one another we may fight them off, +though they outnumber us a hundred to one. Besides it will soon be +dark, and we may be able to escape!" + +Washington, Jack and Mark retreated toward the ship, in the direction +of which the others had also made their way. The big men had gathered +in a compact mass and were advancing on the adventurers. + +"What do you suppose makes them so soft?" asked Mark. "I believe I +could manage half a dozen." + +"It must be the effect of the climate and conditions here," the +professor replied. "Probably they have to be big to stand the pressure +of the thick water, and the increased attraction of gravitation. Then +too, being without the weight of the atmosphere to which we are +accustomed, they have probably expanded. If they were to go up to +earth, they might shrink to our size." + +"Do you think that possible?" + +"Of course. Why do you ask?" + +"Nothing in particular," replied Mark. But to himself, he added: "That +would explain it all." + +It was getting dusk now. The travelers had reached their ship, and +rushed inside and tried to close the doors in the face of the +advancing horde. But, by this time the giants were so close that one +or two of them thrust their big feet in, and prevented this movement. +At the same time they set up a great howling. + +"Quick!" cried the professor. "We must start the ship and get away!" + +"I can't close the door!" yelled Washington, who had been the last to +enter. + +"Never mind that! Go up with it open! Drag them along if they won't +let go!" answered Mr. Henderson, as he ran toward the engine room. + +There was a sudden rush among the giants, and a sound as if something +was being thrown over the top and ends of the ship. Mark turned the +gas machine on, while Jack worked the negative gravity apparatus. They +waited for the ship to rise. + +"Why don't we go up?" asked the professor. + +"'Cause they've caught us!" called out Washington. + +"Caught us? How?" + +"They've thrown ropes over the top and ends of the ship, and fastened +them to their big houses!" + +Running to a side window the professor saw that the Mermaid was +fastened down by a score of cables, each one six inches thick. They +were held captives by the enemy. + + + + +CHAPTER XXVI + +A FRIEND INDEED + + +THOUGH the giants, man for man, were no match for the travelers, +collectively the horde proved too much. They had swarmed about the +ship, and, by passing the big cables over her, effectively held her +down. + +"Let me get out and I'll cut 'em!" cried Andy. "We must get away from +these savages!" + +"No, no, don't go out!" exclaimed the professor. "They would +eventually kill you, though you might fight them off for a time. We +must wait and see what develops. They can have no object in harming +us, as we have not injured them." + +"I'd rather fight 'em," insisted the old hunter. + +But the professor had his way and Andy was forced to obey. The giants +had withdrawn their big feet from the side door and Washington had +closed it. But nothing else had been accomplished, and the ship could +not rise. The gas and negative gravity machines were stopped, as they +were only under a useless strain. + +Suddenly, the colored lights which had been growing dimmer and dimmer, +with the approach of night, went out altogether. Almost as suddenly, +Mark, who was watching the giants from the conning tower, as they made +fast the loose ends of the cables, saw them make a dash for the mound +houses. + +"They're afraid of the dark!" he cried. "Come on! We can go out now +and loosen the ropes!" + +He hurried to tell the professor what he had noticed. + +"Good!" exclaimed Mr. Henderson. "Perhaps we can escape now!" + +They waited a few minutes, listening to the sound of many big feet +running away from the ship, and then, Bill cautiously opened the side +door. The others were behind him, waiting, with knives and hatchets in +their hands, to rush out and cut the restraining cables. + +"All ready!" called Bill. "There doesn't seem to be a one in sight!" + +He stepped out but no sooner had he set foot on the ground than there +came a thud, and Bill went down as if some one had knocked his feet +from under him. + +"Go back! Go back!" he cried. "They hit me with something. I'm being +smothered!" + +"Bring a light!" cried the professor, for the sally had been started +in the dark. + +Jack brought the portable electric it having been repaired and flashed +it out of the door. In the gleam of it, Bill was seen lying prostrate, +half covered by an orange, about half as big as himself. The fruit was +as soft and mushy as some of the giants themselves, or Bill would not +have fared so easily. + +Then, as the others stood watching, and while Bill arose and wiped +some of the juice from his face, there came a regular shower of the +monstrous oranges. + +"Get inside quick! We'll be smothered under them!" Mr. Henderson +cried. + +Pausing only to rescue Bill, the adventurers retreated inside the +ship, and made fast the door. Outside they could hear the thud as the +oranges were thrown, some hitting the Flying Mermaid and many dropping +all about her. + +"I guess they are going to have things their own way," observed Bill, +as he gazed down on his clothes, which were covered with juice from +the fruit. + +The night was one of anxiety. The travelers took turns standing guard, +but nothing more occurred. The giants remained in their houses, and +the heavy ropes still held the ship fast. + +"We must hold a council of war," the professor decided as they +gathered at breakfast, which was far from a cheerful meal. + +With the return of the colored lights the giants again made their +appearance. They came swarming from the mound houses, and a great +crowd they proved to be. Several thousand at least, Jack estimated, +and when he went up into the conning tower and took a survey he could +see the strange and terrible creatures pouring in from the surrounding +country. + +"I'm afraid there will be trouble," he said, as he came down and +reported what he had seen. + +"We must hold a council of war," repeated the professor. "Has any one +anything to suggest?" + +"Get a lot of powder and blow 'em up!" cried Andy. + +"Arrange electric wires and shock 'em to death!" was Bill's plan. + +"Can't we slip the ropes in some way and escape?" asked Jack. "I don't +believe we can successfully fight the giants. They are too many, even +if they are weak, individually." + +"I think you're right there," Mr. Henderson said. "We must try some +sort of strategy, but what? That is the question." + +For a few minutes no one spoke. They were all thinking deeply, for +their lives might hang in the balance. + +"I think I have a plan," said Mark, at length. "Did we bring any +diving suits with us?" + +"There may be one or two," the professor replied. "But what good will +they do?" + +"Two of us could put them on," continued Mark, "and, as they afford +good protection from any missiles like fruit, we could crawl out on +the deck of the ship. From there, armed with hatchets or knives we +could cut the ropes. Then the ship could rise." + +"That's a good plan!" cried the scientist. "We'll try it at once." + +Search revealed that two diving suits were among the stores of the +Mermaid. Jack and Mark wanted to be the ones to don them, but as the +suits were rather large, and as the professor thought it would take +more strength than the boys had to do the work, it was decided that +Andy and Washington should make the attempt to cut the ropes. + +The hunter and colored man lost little time in getting into the modern +armor. In the meanwhile Jack, who had been posted as a lookout, +reported that there seemed to be some activity among the giants. They +were running here and there, and some seemed to be going off toward +the woods, that were not far away. + +"Now work quickly," urged the professor. "We will be on the watch, and +as soon as the last rope is cut we will start the machinery and send +the ship up. We will not wait for you to come back inside, so hold +fast as best you can when the Mermaid rises." + +"We will," answered Andy, just before the big copper helmet was +fastened on his head, and Washington nodded to show he understood. + +The two who were to attempt the rescue of their comrades were soon on +deck. In the conning tower Jack and the professor kept anxious watch, +while Mark, Bill and Tom were at the various machines, ready, at the +signal, to start the engines. + +The giants had now become so interested in whatever plan they had +afoot, that they paid little attention to the ship. Consequently +Washington and Andy, crawling along the deck in their diving suits, +did not, at first attract any attention. + +In fact they had cut several of the big ropes, and it began to look as +if the plan would succeed, particularly as they were partly hidden +from view by the upper gas holder. They were working with feverish +haste, sawing away at the big cables with keen knives. + +"I guess we'll beat 'em yet!" cried Jack. + +"I hope so," replied the professor. "It looks----" + +He stopped short, for at that moment a cry arose from the midst of the +giants, and one of them pointed toward the ship. An instant later the +air was darkened with a flight of big oranges, which the queer +creatures seemed to favor as missiles. Probably they found stones too +heavy. + +"Well, those things can't hurt 'em much with those heavy suits on," +observed Mr. Henderson. "There, Washington got one right on the head +that time, and it didn't bother him a bit." + +Jack had seen the fruit strike the big copper helmet and observed that +the colored man only moved his head slightly in order to get rid of +the orange. + +In fact the giants, seeing for themselves that this mode of warfare +was not going to answer, since the two men on the ship continued to +cut the restraining cables, gave it up. There was a good deal of +shouting among them, and a number ran here and there, seemingly +gathering up long poles. + +"I wonder if they are going to try the flailing method, and beat poor +Andy and Washington," said Mr. Henderson. "It looks so." + +The two rescuers were now about a quarter through their hard task. The +throwing of the oranges had ceased. But the giants were up to a new +trick. They divided into two sections, one taking up a position on one +side of the ship, and the other on the opposite. There were about two +hundred in each crowd, while the others in the horde drew some +distance back. + +"They're up to some queer dodge," observed Jack. "What are they +placing those sticks to their mouths for?" + +The professor observed the throng curiously for a few seconds. Then he +exclaimed: + +"They are using blow-guns! They are going to shoot arrows at +Washington and Andy! We must get them in at once!" + +He darted toward a door that opened from the conning tower out on the +deck. + +"Don't go!" cried Jack. "It's too late! They are beginning to blow!" + +He pointed to the throng of giants. The professor could see their +cheeks puffed out as the big creatures filled their lungs with air and +prepared to expel it through the hollow tubes. + +Then there came a sound as if a great wind was blowing. It howled and +roared over the ship, not unlike a hurricane in its fury. But there +was no flight of arrows through the air, such as would have come from +regular blow guns. + +"That is strange," said the professor. He thought for a moment. "I +have it!" he cried. "They are trying to blow Washington and Andy, off +the ship by the power of their breaths! They are not blowing arrows at +them! My, but they must have strong lungs!" + +And, in truth, that was the plan of the giants. The hollow tubes, made +from some sort of big weed, sent a blast of air at the two men on the +ship's deck, that made them lie flat and cling with both hands to +avoid being sent flying into the midst of the giants, on one side or +the other. But the giants had reckoned without the weight of the +diving suits, and it was those, with the big lead soles of the shoes, +that helped to hold Washington and Andy in place. + +"Come back! Came back!" cried the professor, opening the conning tower +door and calling to the two brave men. "Come back, both of you! Do you +hear?" + +As the portal slid back the rush of air was almost like that of a +cyclone. Then it suddenly ceased, as the giants saw their plan was not +likely to succeed. + +But now there arose from the outer circle of the horde a shout of +triumph. It was caused by the return of those who had, a little while +before, hurried off to the woods. They came back bearing big trees, +tall and slender, stripped of their branches, so that they resembled +flag staffs. It took a dozen giants to carry each one. + +The whole throng was soon busy laying the poles in a row in front of +the ship. + +"What can they be up to now?" asked Jack. + +"It looks as if they were going to slide the ship along on rollers," +the professor replied. + +Sure enough this was the giant's plan. A few minutes later those in +the Mermaid felt her moving forward, as the giants, massed behind, +shoved. On to the poles she slid. The ropes were loosened to permit +this, but not enough to enable the boat to rise. + +Then the travelers felt the ship being lifted up. + +"They are going to carry us away, with the poles for a big stretcher!" +cried the professor. + +Looking from the side windows the boys saw that a great crowd of the +big men were on either side of the Mermaid, each giant grasping a +pole, and lifting. Farther out were others, holding the ends of the +cables which Washington and Andy had not succeeded in cutting. + +The ship was being carried along by a thousand or more giants, as the +ancient warriors, slain in battle, were carried home on the spears of +their comrades. + +"This is the end of the Mermaid!" murmured Mr. Henderson in sorrowful +tones. + +As they looked from the conning tower the professor and the two boys +observed a commotion among the leaders of the giants. They seemed to +be wavering. Suddenly the forward part of the ship sank, as those +ahead laid their poles down on the ground. Then those behind did the +same, and the Mermaid, came to a stop, and once more rested on the +earth. + +"What does this mean?" asked the scientist in wonder. + +All at once the entire crowd of giants threw themselves down on their +faces, and there, standing at the bow of the ship, was a giant, half +again as large as any of the others. He was clad in a complete suit of +golden armor on which the changing lights played with beautiful +effect, and in his hand he held an immense golden sword. He pointed +the weapon at the ship as if he had raised it in protection, and his +hand was stretched in commanding gesture over the prostrate giants. + +"Perhaps he has come to save us!" cried Mark. + + + + +CHAPTER XXVII + +A GREAT JOURNEY + + +SUCH indeed, seemed to be the case. The golden-armored giant, after +standing for a few moments in an attitude of command, waved his sword +three times about his head, and uttered a command, in a voice that +sounded like thunder. Then the prostrate ones arose, and, making low +bows hurried away in all directions. + +Watching them disappear, the golden one sheathed his weapon and +approached the ship. He caught sight of the professor and the two boys +in the conning tower, for Mark had gone there when he found the ship +being transported, and held up his two hands, the palms outward. + +"It is the sign of peace in the language all natives employ," said the +professor. "I think I shall trust him." + +Followed by the boys he descended from the little platform in the +tower, and to the door that opened on the deck. + +"Shall we go out?" he asked. + +"We can't be much worse off," replied Mark. "Let's chance it." + +So, not without many misgivings, they slid back the portal and stepped +out to face the strange and terrible being who had so suddenly come to +their rescue. + +The giant in the golden armor did not seem surprised to see them. In +fact he acted as though he rather expected them. He continued to hold +up one hand, with the palm, outward, while, with the other, he removed +his helmet and bowed low. Then he cast his sword on the ground and +advanced toward the ship. When within ten feet he sat down on the +ground, and this brought his head nearer the earth, so that his +auditors could both see and hear him to better advantage. + +As soon as the giant saw the travelers were outside their ship he +began to speak to them in a voice, which, though he might have meant +it to be low and gentle, was like the bellowing of a bull. At the same +time he made many gestures, pointing to the ship, to himself and to +Mark. + +"What is he saying, professor?" asked Jack. + +"I can't understand all he says," Mr. Henderson replied. "He uses some +words derived from the Latin and some from the Greek. But by piecing +it out here and there, and by interpreting his motions I am able to +get at something." + +"And what is it all about?" + +"It is a strange story," the scientist replied. "He has only gone +about half way through it. Wait until he finishes and I will tell +you." + +The golden-armored giant, who had stopped in his narrative while Jack +was speaking, resumed. His gestures became more rapid, and his words +came faster. Several times Mr. Henderson held up his hand for him to +cease, while he puzzled out what was meant. + +At one point, the professor seemed much startled, and motioned for the +strange being to repeat the last part of his discourse. When this had +been done Mr. Henderson shook his head as though in doubt. + +At length the story was finished, and the lone giant, for there were +no others in sight now, folded his arms and seemed to await what the +professor's answer might be. Mr. Henderson turned to the boys, and to +the others of the Mermaid's company, who, by this time, had joined +him, and said: + +"Friends, I have just listened to a strange story. It is so strange +that, but for the fact that our own adventures are verging on the +marvelous, I could hardly believe it. In the first place, this man +here is the king of this country. That is why all the other natives +obeyed him. + +"In the second place it seems he has been a passenger in our boat, and +came here from the earth's surface with us!" + +"What's that?" cried Jack. + +"That explains the strange happenings!" ejaculated Mark. "No wonder I +could never solve the secret of the storeroom." + +"You are right, it does," replied Mr. Henderson. "I will not go into +all the details of how it happened, but it seems the big hole through +which we came is only one of two entrances to this inner world. Rather +it is the entrance, and there is another, close to it, which is the +exit. Through the latter a big stream of water spouts up, just as one +pours down through the opening we used. + +"Hankos, which is the name of the king, was for many years a student +of science. He longed to see where the big stream of upward spurting +water went, and wanted to know whence came the down-pouring one. So he +undertook a daring experiment. + +"He constructed a great cylinder, and, keeping his plans a secret, +conveyed it to the spouting water, entered it, and, by means of +pulleys and levers, after he had shut himself inside, cast himself +into the up-shooting column. He took along compressed air cylinders to +supply an atmosphere he could breathe, and some food to eat, for it +appears our giant friends are something of inventors in their way. The +current of water bore him to the surface of the earth, and he was cast +up on the ocean, in what was probably taken for a waterspout if any +one saw it. + +"Then a strange thing happened. No sooner did Hankos open his +cylinder, which served him as a boat, than he lost his gigantic size, +owing to the difference of the two atmospheres. He became almost of +the same size as ourselves, except that his skin hung in great folds +on him, and he seemed like a wrinkled old man. His clothes too, were a +world too large. + +"He had a terrible time before he reached shore, and a hard one after +it, for his strange appearance turned almost every one against him. He +was sorry he had ventured to solve the mystery of the up-shooting +stream of water, for he was worse than an outcast. + +"Then he began to plan to get back to his own inner world. But he +could not find the downward stream, and, not knowing the language of +the countries where he landed, he had no means of ascertaining. He +traveled from place to place, always seeking for something that would +lead him back to his own country. + +"Finally he heard of us, and of our ship, though how I do not know, as +I thought I had kept it a great secret. By almost superhuman struggles +he made his way to our island. He says he concealed himself aboard the +Mermaid the night before we sailed, but I hardly believe it possible. +It seems----" + +"He did it, for I saw him!" interrupted Mark. + +"You saw him!" cried Mr. Henderson. + +Then Mark told of the many things that had puzzled him so, how he had +seen the queer figure slinking aboard the boat, of the disappearance +of food from time to time, and of the strange noises in the storeroom. + +"That bears out what he told me," the professor said. "Hankos says he +used to steal out nights and take what food he could get, and he also +mentions some one, answering to Mark's description, who nearly +discovered him once as he hurried back into the apartment. + +"However, it seems to be true, since Mark confirms it. At any rate +Hankos stayed in hiding, and made the entire trip with us, and, just +as we all became overcome with the strange gas he escaped, having +begun to expand to his original giant size, and being unable to remain +any longer in his cramped quarters." + +"That's so, he did!" cried Mark. "I saw him come out of the place just +before I lost my senses. It was a terrible sight, and none of you +would believe me when I told you some of the occurrences afterward." + +"You must forgive us for that," the professor said. "We have learned +much since then." + +"What did Hankos do after he left the ship when it landed in this +country?" asked Jack. + +"He traveled until he came to this village, which is the chief one of +this country," replied the professor. "Part of the time he followed us +at a distance, being able to travel very fast." + +Mark remembered the strange figure of a giant he had seen on the hill +tops several times, and knew that he had been observing the being who +had played such a queer part in their lives. + +"When he came back among his own people," went on Mr. Henderson, "they +would not receive him at first, believing him to be an impostor. But +Hankos convinced them of his identity and was allowed to don the +golden armor, which is the badge of kingship. He had only been in +office for a little while when he heard of the arrival of the strange +thing, which turned out to be our ship. He recognized it from the +description, and, learning that we were likely to be sacrificed to the +fury and ignorance of the giants, he hurried here and saved our lives. + +"He says he can never thank us enough for being the means whereby he +was able to get back to his own country, and says the freedom of this +whole inner world is ours. He has given orders that we are to go +wherever we like, and none will molest us. He tells me the land is a +wonderful one, compared to our own, and urges us to make a long +journey. He would like to go with us, only, now that he has resumed +his natural size, he can not get inside the ship." + +"Hurrah for King Hankos!" cried Jack and the others joined him in a +hearty cheer. + +The giant in the golden armor evidently understood the compliment +which was paid him, for he waved his helmet in the air and responded +with a shout of welcome that made the ground tremble. + +Hankos waited until the professor had translated all of the story to +the other travelers. Then the genial giant began to talk some more, +and the professor listened intently. + +"He says," spoke Mr. Henderson to his friends, "that we will be +supplied with all the fruit we want, and with the best of the houses +to sleep in on our journey. He also tells me he has great stores of +shining stones and piles of the metal of which his armor is made, and +that we are welcome to as much as we want. If this means unlimited +gold and diamonds, we may make our fortunes." + +"Jest let me git ma' hand on a few sparklers an' I'll quit work!" +exclaimed Washington. + +"I have told him," the scientist went on, "that we will take advantage +of his kind offer. We will start on our trip in a day or so, after we +have looked over the ship to see if it is not damaged. He tells me the +gold and sparkling stones are several thousand miles away, on top of a +high mountain. We will make that our objective point." + +The interview between the king and Mr. Henderson having ended, the +former waved his sword in the air and the swarm of big men came back. +They had been hiding back in the woods. Now their manner was very +different. They carefully removed the rollers and ropes, and soon +there was brought to the adventurers an immense pile of fine fruits. +If our friends had stayed there a year they could not have eaten it +all. The giants were judging the appetites of the travelers by their +own. + +That night the adventurers slept more soundly than they had since +entering the strange world. They felt they had nothing to fear from +the giants. In the morning they were not molested, though big crowds +gathered to look at the ship. But they kept back a good distance. The +machinery was found to be in good shape, save for a few repairs, and +when these were made, the professor announced he would start on a long +journey. + +For several weeks after that the travelers swung about in their ship, +sometimes sailing in the air and again on big seas and lakes viewing +the wonders of the inner world. They were many and varied, and the +professor collected enough material for a score of books which he said +he would write when he got back to the outer world once more. + +One afternoon, as they were sailing over a vast stretch of woodland, +which did not seem to be inhabited, Mr. Henderson, looking at one of +the gages on the wall, asked: + +"Boys do you know how far you have traveled underground?" + +"How far?" asked Jack, who hated to guess riddles. + +"More than four thousand miles," was the answer. + +"But we haven't come to that mountain of gold and diamonds," said +Mark. "I am anxious to see that." + +"Have patience," replied the professor. "I have not steered toward it +yet. There are other things to see." + +Just then Washington's voice could be heard calling from the conning +tower: + +"We're coming to a big mountain!" + + + + +CHAPTER XXVIII + +THE TEMPLE OF TREASURE + + +"WHAT'S that?" fairly yelled the professor. + +"We am propelling ourselves in a contiguous direction an' in close +proximity to an elevated portion of th' earth's surface which rises in +antiguous proximity t' th' forward part of our present means of +locomotion!" said the colored man in a loud voice. + +"Which means there may be a collision," the professor said, as he and +the boys hurried toward the tower. + +"Jest what I said," retorted Washington. "What'll I do?" + +"Send the ship a little higher," answered Mr. Henderson. "We mustn't +hit any mountains." + +Washington forced more gas into the holder, and speeded the negative +gravity machine up some, so that the Mermaid, which was flying rather +low, ascended until it was in no danger of colliding with the peak +which reared its lofty height just ahead of them. + +As the ship sailed slowly over the mountain, Mark gazed down and +exclaimed: + +"Doesn't that look like the ruins of some building?" + +The professor took a pair of field glasses from a rack in the wall and +took a long view. + +"It must be the place," he said in a low voice. + +"What place?" asked Jack. + +"The temple of treasure," was the answer. "Hankos told me it was on +top of the highest mountain in the land, and this must be it, for it +is the loftiest place we have seen. But we must be careful, for there +is danger down there." + +"What kind?" asked Mark. + +"The place was long ago deserted by the giants," Mr. Henderson went +on. "Ages ago it was one of their storehouses for treasure, but there +were wars among themselves, Hankos said, and this part of the country +was laid waste. Savage beasts took up their abode in the temple, and +since then, in spite of the great size of the giants, they have not +dared to venture here. If we brave the animals we may have all the +gold and diamonds we can take away." + +"Then for one, I'm willin' t' go down an' begin th' extermination at +once," put in Andy. "I've always wanted t' be rich." + +"We must proceed cautiously," the professor said. "We are ill prepared +to fight any such beasts as we saw at the big geyser. At the same time +they may have deserted this place. I think we will lower the ship down +over the temple, and spend several hours in observation. Then, if +nothing develops, we can enter and see if the treasure is there." + +This plan was voted a good one, and the Mermaid after having been +steered directly over the ruined temple, was brought to a halt, and +enough gas let out so that it fell to about fifty feet in the air +above it. + +The adventurers began their watch. The afternoon waned and there were +no signs of any beasts in or about the temple. + +"I reckon we can take a chance," said Andy, who was anxious to get his +hands on some diamonds. + +"Better wait until morning," counseled Mr. Henderson. "It will soon be +dark, and it doesn't look like a nice place to go stumbling about in +by moonlight." + +So, though all but the scientist were anxious, they had to wait until +the night had passed. Several times Washington got up to see if the +temple had, by any chance, taken wings during the long hours of +darkness, but each time he found it was still in place. + +"Seems laik it'll never come mornin'." he said. + +But dawn came at length, and, after a hasty breakfast, preparations to +enter the temple were made. Andy loaded his gun for "bear" as he +expressed it, and the boys each took a revolver. + +The ship was lowered to as level a place as could be found, and then, +seeing that everything was in readiness for a quick departure, the +professor led the way out of the Mermaid. + +The entrance to the temple was through a big arched gateway. Some of +the stones had fallen down, and the whole structure looked as if it +might topple over at any moment. + +"Go carefully," cautioned Mr. Henderson, "Watch on all sides and up +above. Better let Andy and me go ahead." + +The scientist and the old hunter led the way. Through the arch they +went, and emerged into what must at one time have been a magnificent +courtyard. Before them was the temple proper, a vast structure, with +an opening through which fifty men might have marched abreast. But the +doors were gone, and the portal was but a black hole. + +"I hope there ain't any ghosts in there," said Washington, with a +shiver. + +"Nonsense!" exclaimed the professor. "There may be things as bad, but +there are no such things as ghosts. Have your gun ready, Andy." + +With every sense on the alert, the old hunter advanced. Every one was +a bit nervous, and, as Mark and Jack afterward admitted, they half +expected some terrible beast to rush out at them. But nothing of the +kind happened, and they went into the interior of the temple. + +At first it was so dark they could see nothing. There were vast dim +shapes on every side, and from the hollow echo of their footsteps they +judged the roof must be very high and the structure big in every way. + +Then, as their eyes became used to the darkness, they could make out, +up front, something like an altar or pulpit. + +"Perhaps that's where they offered up the gold and diamonds as a +sacrifice to their gods," spoke Mark in a whisper. + +"Sacrifice to their gods!" came back a hundred echoes and the sound +made every one shudder. + +"Oh!" said Washington, in a low voice. + +"Oh! Oh! Oh!" repeated the echoes in voices of thunder. + +"Well, this is pleasant," spoke Andy, in his natural tones, and, to +the surprise of all there was no echo. It was only when a person +whispered or spoke low that the sound was heard. After that they +talked naturally. + +"You stay here, and Andy and I will go up front and see what there +is," said Mr. Henderson. "Be on your guard, and if you hear us coming +back in a hurry, run!" + +It was with no little feeling of nervousness that the boys, Bill, Tom +and Washington watched the two men move off in the darkness. They +could hear their footsteps on the stone flags and could dimly see +them. + +"They must be almost to the altar by this time," said Mark, after a +long pause. + +Hardly had he spoken than there came a loud, sound from where Mr. +Henderson and Andy had gone. It was as if some giant wings were +beating the air. Then came shrill cries and the voice of the old +hunter could be heard calling: + +"Kneel down, Professor! Let me get a shot at the brute!" + +Those waiting in the rear of the temple huddled closer together. What +terrible beast could have been aroused? + +The next instant the place seemed illuminated as if by a lightning +flash, and a sound as of a thousand thunder claps resounded. + +"I think I winged him!" cried Andy's voice, and the boys knew he had +fired at something. + +Then there came a crash, and from the roof of the old temple a dozen +stones toppled off to one side, letting in a flood of colored light. + +By this illumination could be seen, flapping through the big space +overhead, an enormous bat, as large as three eagles. And, as it flew +about in a circle it gave utterance to shrill cries. + +"Bang!" Andy's gun spoke again, and the bat with a louder cry than +before, darted through the hole in the roof made by the falling +stones, which had been loosened by the concussion from the rifle. + +"Come on!" cried the old hunter. "That was the guardian of the +treasure! We are safe now!" + +Then, in the light which streamed through the broken roof, the +adventurers could see, heaped up on a great altar, behind which sat a +horrible graven image, piles of yellow metal, and sparkling stones. In +little heaps they were, arranged as if offerings to the terrible god +of the giants. There were bars and rings of gold, dishes of odd shape, +and even weapons. As for the sparkling stones, they were of many +colors, but the white ones were more plentiful than all the others. + +"Gold and diamonds! Diamonds and gold!" murmured the professor. "There +is the ransom of many kings in this ancient temple." + +"Wish I had a big bag!" exclaimed Washington, as he began filling all +his pockets with the precious metal and gems. "If I had a-thought I'd +have brought a dress-suit case!" + +"A dress-suit case full of diamonds!" exclaimed Mark. + +Then he too, as did all the others, fell to filling his pockets with +the wealth spread so lavishly before them. There was the riches of a +whole world in one place and no one but themselves to take it. + +For several minutes no one spoke. The only sound was the rattle of the +stones and the clink of gold, and when some of the diamonds dropped on +the floor they did not bother to gather them up. There were too many +on the altar. + +"We will be rich for life!" gasped old Andy, who had been poor all his +years. + +"I can't carry any more!" gasped Washington. "I'm goin' back for----" + +What he was going back for he never said, for, at that instant, +happening to look up at the hole in the roof, he gave a startled try: + +"Here come the terrible bats!" + +They all gazed upward. Through the opening they could see a great +flock of the awful birds, headed for the temple, and they were led by +one which seemed to fly with difficulty. It was the guardian of the +treasure that Andy had wounded. + +"Quick! We must get out of here!" shouted the old hunter. "They are +big enough and strong enough to tear us all to pieces. Hurry!" + +Down the centre of the temple they rushed, and not a moment too soon, +for, ere they had passed half way to the entrance, the opening in the +roof was darkened by the coming of the bats, and soon the flapping of +their wings awoke the thundering echoes in the ruined structure, while +their shrill cries struck terror to the hearts of the travelers. + +Up to the altar circled the bats, and then wheeling they flapped down +the dim aisles toward the adventurers. + +"Hurry! Hurry!" shouted Andy, who was in the rear. + +He raised his rifle and fired several shots into the midst of the +terrible creatures. + +A number of the bats were wounded, and the others were so frightened +by the sound of the shots and the flashes of fire that they turned +back. This enabled the fleeing ones to gain the entrance to the +temple, and soon they were outside. + +"To the ship!" yelled Bill. + +"There's little danger now!" called Andy, panting, for the run had +winded him. "They will hardly attack us in the light!" + +And he was right, for, though they could hear the bats flying about +inside the temple, and uttering their cries, none came outside. + +But no one felt like staying near the uncanny structure, and little +time was lost in reaching the Mermaid. Then the doors were fastened, +and the ship was sent high up into the air. + +"Which way?" asked Jack, when Mr. Henderson told him to go to the +conning tower and steer. + +"Back to where we first met the giants," replied the professor. "We +must prepare to start for our own earth again soon." + +"I've almost forgotten how real sunlight looks," thought Jack, as he +headed the ship around the other way. As he turned the levers a big +diamond dropped from his pocket and rolled on the floor. + +"This will be a good reminder of our trip though," he added. + +The travelers, even including Mr. Henderson, were so taken up with +their suddenly acquired riches that they hardly thought of meals. At +the professor's suggestion they tied their gold and stones up in small +packages convenient to carry. + +"Better place them where you can grab them in a hurry in case of +accident," the old scientist went on. "Of course if there should be +too bad an accident they would never be of any use to us down here, +but we'll look on the bright side of things." + +"Do you anticipate any accident?" asked Jack anxiously. + +"No, Oh no," replied Mr. Henderson, but Jack thought the aged man had +something weighing on his mind. + + + + +CHAPTER XXIX + +BACK HOME--CONCLUSION + + +ON and on sped the Mermaid. Now that the travelers felt their journey +accomplished they were anxious to begin the homeward trip. They made a +straight course for the village where they had so nearly met with +disaster, and where the king of the giants had saved them. They went +in a direct line, and did not travel here and there, as they had after +they left the town. Consequently they shortened the route by a great +distance. Yet it was long enough, and when they finally came in sight +of the place the dial registered a trip of five thousand miles +underground. + +It was one evening when they landed almost at the spot whence they had +taken flight eventually to reach the temple of the treasure. Most of +the giants had betaken themselves to their mound houses, but Hankos +was walking in the fields, and, when he caught sight of the airship +hovering above him he waved his great sword in welcome. + +He rushed up to shake hands with the travelers when they came out of +the ship, though to greet him it was only possible for the adventurers +to grasp one of his immense fingers. + +As soon as the greetings were over Hankos began to speak rapidly to +the professor, at the same time going through many strange motions. + +"It is as I feared!" suddenly exclaimed the scientist. + +"What is the matter?" asked Mark. + +"The worst has happened!" went on Mr. Henderson. "The great hole by +which we came into this place has been closed by an earthquake shock!" + +"The hole closed?" repeated Jack. + +"An earthquake shock!" murmured Mark. + +"Then how are we going to get back to earth?" asked old Andy. + +A terrible fear entered the hearts of the travelers. The closing of +the opening by which they had come to the strange world meant, in all +probability that they would have to spend the rest of their lives in +this underground place. + +"What good did it do us to get all those diamonds and that gold?" +asked Mark in a sorrowful tone. + +Hankos began to speak again, using his gestures which were almost as +eloquent as words. The professor watched and listened intently. Then +there seemed to come a more hopeful look to his face. He nodded +vigorously as Hankos went on with what seemed to be an explanation. + +"It's worth trying, at all events!" the scientist exclaimed. "It is +our only hope!" + +"What is?" asked Jack. + +"Friends," began the professor in solemn tones. "I must admit our +plight is desperate. At the same time there is a bare chance of our +getting back to our own earth. As you remember, Hankos went from this +place to the upper regions through the upward spouting column of +water." + +"If we had our submarine we might also," interrupted Jack. "But the +Mermaid isn't built to sail in that fashion." + +"Nor would the Porpoise have served us in this emergency," said the +professor. "It would prove too heavy. But, nevertheless, I think I +have a plan. Now, Mark, you are about to learn the secret of the +storeroom. The real one, not the hiding of Hankos in there, which you +imagined to be the cause of my desire to keep something hidden. When +we planned a trip to this underground world I had a dim idea that we +might meet with trouble. So I planned and made a cylinder lifeboat." + +"A cylinder lifeboat?" repeated Mark. + +"Yes," replied Mr. Henderson. "I have it in the storeroom. I did not +want any of you to see it for fear you would have faint hearts. I +thought there might be no necessity of using it. But, since there is, +we must do our best. I will admit it may be a fearful ordeal, but we +will have to risk something in order to escape. + +"I have in the storeroom a large cylinder, capable of holding us all. +It will also contain food and drink for a month, but we will all have +to go, packed almost like sardines in a box. My plan is to take the +Mermaid to the place where the column of water shoots up. There we +will get into the cylinder, close it, and trust ourselves to the +terrible force that may bring us back to the upper world. What do you +say? Shall we attempt it?" + +For a few seconds no one spoke. Then Jack said slowly: + +"I don't see that we can do anything else. I don't want to stay here +all my life." + +"I wants a chance t' wear some of them sparklers," put in Washington. + +"Then we will make the attempt," the professor added. "Now all aboard +for the place where the water shoots up!" + +Questioning Hankos, the professor learned how to reach the strange +place. It was in the midst of a desolate country where none of the +giants ever went, so afraid were they of the strange phenomenon. + +It was a week's journey. Sometimes the Mermaid flew through the air, +and again it sailed on vast lakes or inland seas. On the trip they met +with big waterfalls and terrible geysers that spouted a mile or more +into the air. They traveled by night as well as day, though it was +necessary to keep a sharp watch. + +Sometimes the ship passed through great flocks of birds that +surrounded her and sought to pierce the aluminum hull with their sharp +beaks and talons. Over the mountains and valleys the ship sailed +until, one evening, there sounded through the air a strange rumbling +sound. + +"It is thunder," said Old Andy. + +"It is the water column," replied the scientist. "We are at the end of +our trip. May the remainder be as successful!" + +The ship was lowered to the surface, as it was deemed best to approach +the column when the lights were shining. No one slept much that night, +for the roaring and rumbling never ceased. + +In the morning the ship was sent forward slowly. Ever and ever the +terrific sound increased, until it was almost deafening. They had to +call to each other to be heard. + +Then, as the Mermaid passed over a mountain, the adventurers saw, in a +valley below them, the up-shooting water. + +It was a vast column, nearly three hundred feet in thickness, and as +solid and white as a shaft of marble. Up, up, up, it went, until it +was lost to sight, but there were no falling drops, and not even a +spray came from the watery shafts. + +"There is a terrible power to it," the professor said. "May it prove +our salvation!" + +The ship was lowered about a hundred feet away from the waterspout. +All around them the ground was vibrating with the force of the fluid. + +"To think that connects with the world above!" exclaimed Jack. + +"It's a good thing for us that it does," Mark answered. + +"We must lose no time," the professor put in. "If the earthquake +destroyed the downward shaft, it may effect this one in time. We must +escape while we can." + +Then, for the first time, he opened the storeroom and the big cylinder +was disclosed to view. It was made of aluminum, and shaped like an +immense cigar. The hull was double, and it was strongly braced. Inside +were padded berths for the occupants, and there was just room enough +for the seven adventurers. Once they had entered they could not move +about, but must stay in their little compartment. + +Compressed air in strong cylinders furnished a means of breathing, and +there were tiny electric lights operated by a storage battery. There +was also a chamber to be filled with the lifting gas. The cylinder was +so arranged that it would float on it's long axis if thrown into the +water. A trap door hermetically sealed gave access to the interior. A +small propeller, worked by compressed air, furnished motive power. + +The food supply consisted of compressed capsules on which a man could +subsist for several days. There was also some water, but not much, +since that can not be compressed and would, therefore, take +considerable room. + +"The only thing for us to do," said the professor, "is to get into the +cylinder, seal it up, and trust to Providence. This is what I intended +to use when we were caught in the draught." + +"How can we get into the column of water after we shut ourselves into +the cylinder?" asked Mark. + +"The cylinder fits into a sort of improvised cannon," said Mr. +Henderson. "It is fired by electricity and compressed air. We will +aim it at the column, press the button and be projected into the midst +of the water. Then----" He did not finish the sentence, but the others +knew what he meant. + +"When are we to start?" asked Mark. + +"As soon as possible," replied the professor. "I must arrange the +cylinder, compress the air and lay out the food supply." + +It took the rest of the day to do this, as the inventor found it would +be advisable to attach a weight to the end of the cylinder, to hold it +upright in the column of water. The weight could be detached +automatically when they were shot up into the midst of the ocean, +where, as Hankos had told them, the column spurted forth. + +Then some food was stored in the tiny ship that was destined to be +their last hope, and some tanks of water were placed in it. + +"I think we are almost ready," Mr. Henderson said about noon the next +day. + +"What about our gold and diamonds?" asked Jack suddenly. "Can we take +them with us in the cylinder?" + +"That's so!" exclaimed Mr. Henderson. "I forgot about them. I'm afraid +we'll have to leave the riches behind. We will not be able to carry +them and the food we need, for it may be a week or more before we can +leave the cylinder. Gold and diamonds will be a poor substitute for +something to eat." + +"I'm goin' t' take mine!" said Washington with much conviction. "I +might as well starve rich as starve poor!" + +"We may be able to take a few diamonds," the professor answered. "The +gold will be too heavy. Let each one select the largest of the +diamonds he has and put them in his pockets." + +Then began a sorting of the wealth. It was strange, as they recalled +afterward, throwing away riches that would have made millionaires +envious, but it had to be done. All the wealth in the world would not +equal a beef capsule when they were starving, and they realized it. So +they only saved a few pieces of gold as souvenirs, and took the best +of the diamonds. But even then they had a vast fortune with them. + +At last all was in readiness. The cylinder had been placed in the tube +from which it was to be shot gently forth by compressed air, so that +it would fall into the upward spouting column of water. The charge of +compressed air was put in and the electric wires arranged. + +"Are we all ready?" asked Mr. Henderson. + +"I think so," said Jack, in what sounded like a whisper, but which was +loud, only the noise of the water muffled it. + +"Then we had better enter the cylinder," spoke the inventor. "Take a +last look at the Flying Mermaid, boys, for you will never see again +the ship that has borne us many thousand miles. She served us well, +and might again, but for the freak of nature that has placed us in +this position." + +For the first time the adventurers realized that they must abandon the +craft in which they had reached the new world. So it was with no +little feeling of sadness that they climbed up the ladder that had +been arranged and slid down into the cylinder. One by one they took +their places in the padded berths arranged for them. It was a snug +fit, for the professor knew if there was too much room he and the +others might be so tossed about as to be killed. + +Mr. Henderson was the last to enter. Standing at the manhole he took a +final look at his pet creation, the Mermaid. Through the opened +windows the colored lights came, shifting here and there. Outside the +terrible column of water was roaring as if anxious to devour them. + +"Good-bye, Mermaid!" said the professor softly. + +Then he closed down the manhole cover and tightened the screws that +held it in place. He touched a button that turned on the electric +lights and the interior of the cylinder was illuminated with a soft +glow. + +"Are you all ready?" he asked. + +"Jest as much as I ever will be," replied Washington, who, as the +crisis approached, seemed more light-hearted than any of the others. + +"Then here we go!" exclaimed Mr. Henderson. + +His fingers touched the button that connected with the electric +machine, which operated the compressed air. + +There sounded a muffled report. Then it seemed to those in the +cylinder that the end of the world had come. They shot upward and +outward, through the top of the conning tower which had been removed. +The cylinder, launched straight at the column of water struck it +squarely and, an instant later was caught in the grasp of the giant +force and hurled toward the upper world. + +Up and up and up the mass of metal with its human freight went. Now it +was spinning like a top, again it shot toward the earth's crust like +an arrow from the archer's bow. + +It was moving with the velocity of a meteor, yet because of being +surrounded with water, and traveling with the same velocity as the +column, there was no friction. Had there been, the heat generated +would have melted the case in an instant. + +For the first few seconds those in the cylinder were dazed by the +sudden rush. Then as it became greater and greater there came a +curious dull feeling, and, one after another lost consciousness. The +terror of the water column, and the frightful speed, had made them +senseless. + + -------- + +It seemed like a month later, though, of course, it could have been +only a few hours or a day at most when Jack opened his eyes. He saw +his companions, white and senseless all around him, and at first +thought they were dead. Then he saw Mark looking at him, and +Washington asked: + +"Is any one livin' 'sides me?" + +"I am," replied Jack decidedly. + +Then, one after another they regained their senses. But they were in a +strange daze, for they were being carried along like a shooting star, +only, as they went at the same rate as did the element carrying them, +they did not realize this. + +"I think I'm hungry," said Bill, who had the best appetite of any of +the travelers. + +"You'll find a beef capsule in the little compartment over your head," +spoke the professor. + +Bill was about to reach for it, when they were all startled by a +sudden side motion of the cylinder. Then came a violent shock, and a +sound as of splashing water. Next the cylinder seemed to be falling, +and, a few minutes later to be shooting upward. Following this there +was another splash and the cylinder began to bob about like a cork on +a mill pond. + +"We have reached the sea! We are afloat on the ocean!" cried the +professor. + +Hurriedly he disengaged himself from the straps that held him to his +bunk. He pushed back the lever that opened the manhole. Into the +opening glowed the glorious sunlight, while to the occupants came the +breath of salt air. + +"Hurrah!" cried Jack. "We are safe at last!" + +"Safe at last!" the professor answered, and then they all gave a +cheer. + +For their cylinder, which might now be termed a boat, was floating on +the great Atlantic. The blue sky was overhead and the air of the sea +fanned their cheeks. + +They had shot up from the underground earth, in the column of water, +had been tossed high into the air, had fallen back when the liquid +shaft broke into spray, had descended into the ocean, gone down a +hundred feet or more, and then had shot up like a cork to bob about +the surface. + +For a week they were afloat, and then they were picked up by a passing +vessel, rather weak and very much cramped, but otherwise in good +shape. They said nothing of their adventures, save to explain that +they were experimenting in a new kind of boat. About a month later, +for the ship that had rescued them was a slow sailer, they were back +on the island whence that wonderful voyage was begun. + + -------- + +"Well, we solved the mystery of the center of the earth," remarked +Jack, one evening, when they were gathered in the old shack where so +many wonderful adventures had been planned. + +"Yes, we did," said Mr. Henderson. "And no one else is ever likely to +go there." + +"Why?" + +"Because the only way of getting there was destroyed by the +earthquake, and no one could ever force his way down through that +upward-shooting column of water." + +"That's so. Well, we have the diamonds, anyway," spoke Mark. "They +ought to make us rich." + +And the jewels did, for the stones proved to be of great value, even +though the adventurers had saved only a few of the many they found in +the ruined temple. + +But there was money enough so that they all could live in comfort; the +rest of their lives. As the professor was getting quite old, and +incapable of making any more wonderful inventions, he closed up his +workshop and settled down to a quiet life. As for Washington, Andy, +and Bill and Tom, they invested their money received from the sale of +the diamonds in different business ventures, and each one did well. + +"I am going in for a good education," said Jack to Mark. + +"Just what I am going to do," answered his chum. "And after we've got +that----" He paused suggestively. + +"We'll go in for inventing airships, or something like that, eh?" + +"Yes. We've learned a great deal from Mr. Henderson, and in the course +of time we ought to be able to turn out something even more wonderful +than the Electric Monarch, the Porpoise, or the Flying Mermaid." + +"Yes, and when we've invented something better----" + +"We'll take another trip." + +"Right you are!" + +And then the two chums shook hands warmly; and here we will say +good-bye. + + + + +THE END. + + + + + + + + + +End of Project Gutenberg's Five Thousand Miles Underground, by Roy Rockwood + +*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK FIVE THOUSAND MILES UNDERGROUND *** + +***** This file should be named 4994.txt or 4994.zip ***** +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: + http://www.gutenberg.org/4/9/9/4994/ + +Produced by Jim Weiler + +Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed. + +Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no +one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation +(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without +permission and without paying copyright royalties. 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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: Five Thousand Miles Underground + +Author: Roy Rockwood + +Release Date: January, 2004 [EBook #4994] +[Yes, we are more than one year ahead of schedule] +[This file was first posted on April 7, 2002] + +Edition: 10 + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ASCII + +*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK, FIVE THOUSAND MILES UNDERGROUND *** + + + + +This eBook was produced by Jim Weiler, xooqi.com + + + + Five Thousand Miles Underground + + Or + +The Mystery of the Centre of the Earth + +by Roy Rockwood, 1908 + + CHAPTER I + + WASHINGTON BACKS OUT + +"WASHINGTON! I say Washington!" + +Throughout a big shed, filled for the most part with huge pieces of +machinery, echoed the voice of Professor Amos Henderson. He did not +look up from a small engine over which he was bending. + +"Washington! Where are you? Why don't you answer me?" + +From somewhere underneath an immense pile of iron, steel and aluminum +came the voice of a colored man. + +"Yas sir, Perfesser, I'se goin' t' saggasiate my bodily presence in +yo' contiguous proximity an' attend t' yo' immediate conglomerated +prescriptions at th' predistined period. Yas, sir!" + +"Well, Washington, if you had started when you began that long speech +you would have been at least half way here by this time. Hurry up! +Never mind tightning those bolts now. Find the boys. I need them to +help me with this engine. They must be around somewhere." + +"I seen 'em goin' fishin' down by th' brook a little while ago," +answered the negro, crawling out from under what seemed to be a +combined airship and watercraft. "Jack says as how yo' gived him +permission t' occupy his indisputatious period of levity in +endeavorin' t' extract from th' liquid element some specimens of +swimmin' creatures." + +"If you mean I said he and Mark could go fishing in the brook, you're +right, Washington," replied the professor with a smile. "But you waste +a lot of time and breath trying to say it. Why, don't you give up +using big words?" + +"I reckon I was brought up t' it," replied the colored man grinning +from ear to ear. He did not always use big words but when he did they +were generally the wrong ones. Sometimes, he spoke quite correctly. + +"Well, I suppose you can't help it," resumed Mr. Henderson. "However, +never mind that. Find the boys and send them to me." + +"With th' least appreciatableness amount of postponement," answered +the messenger, and he went out. + +Washington White, who in color was just the opposite to his name, a +general helper and companion to Professor Henderson, found Mark +Sampson and Jack Darrow about a quarter of a mile from the big shed, +which was in the center of a wooded island off the coast of Maine. The +lads were seated on the bank of a small brook, fishing. + +"Perfesser wants yo' immediate," said Washington. + +"But we haven't caught a single fish," objected Mark. + +"Them's the orders from headquarters," replied the colored man. "Yo' +both got t' project yo'selves in th' vicinity of th' machine shop. I +reckon th' new fangled contraption that th' perfesser is goin' t' +navigate th' air an' sail th' angry seas in, am about done. He want's +t' try th' engine." + +"Come on then," said Jack. "We probably would not catch any fish, +anyhow, Mark." + +Accompanied by Washington, the youths, each of whom was about eighteen +years old, started toward the big shed. + +While they are on their way opportunity may be taken to tell a little +about them, as well as about Washington and the professor, and the +curious craft on which the scientist was working. + +A few years before this story opens Mr. Henderson had invented a +wonderful electric airship. He had it about completed when, one day, +he and the two boys became unexpectedly acquainted, and, as it +developed, friends. + +Mark and Jack were orphans. After having rather a hard time knocking +about the world trying to make a living, they chanced to meet, and +resolved to cast their lots together. They boarded a freight train, +and, as told in the first volume of this series, entitled, "Through +the Air to the North Pole; or the Wonderful Cruise of the Electric +Monarch," the cars were wrecked near where Professor Henderson was +building his strange craft. + +The boys were cared for by the scientist, and, after their recovery +from hurts received in the collision, they accepted his invitation to +make the trip through the upper regions in the airship, to search for +the north pole. With them went Andy Sudds, an old hunter, and Tom +Smith and Bill Jones, two farmers, but who were hired as helpers on +the voyage. The party had many adventures on the trip, having battles +with savage animals and more savage Esquimaux, and were tossed about +in terrible storms. After making some scientific observations, which +the professor was much interested in, they started back home. + +Having found he could successfully sail in the air, Mr. Henderson +resolved to try what it might be like under water. + +He moved his machine shop to a lonely spot on the Maine coast, and +there, with the help of the boys, Washington, Andy and two machinists +constructed a submarine boat, called the Porpoise. + +In this the professor resolved to seek the south pole, he having a +theory that it was surrounded by an open sea. After much hard work the +Porpoise was made ready for the voyage. + +What occurred on this great trip is described in the second book of +this series, called "Under the Ocean to the South Pole, or the Strange +Cruise of the Submarine Wonder." In that is told how once more Tom and +Bill, with Andy, the boys and Washington, accompanying Professor +Henderson, had many thrilling experiences. + +They were caught in the grip of the grass of the terrible Sargasso +Sea. Monstrous suckers grasped the boat in their powerful arms, and +had to be fought off. They were caught in a sea of boiling water and +imprisoned between big fields of ice. + +By means of strong diving suits they were able to leave the ship and +walk about on the bottom of the sea. They visited a graveyard of +sunken ships, saw many strange monsters as well as many beautiful fish +in the great depths to which they sunk. Many times they were in dire +peril but the resources of the professor, the bravery and daring of +the boys, no less than the help Washington and Andy Sudds, the hunter, +rendered at times, brought them through. + +Those of you who read of their adventures will recall the strange +island which they came upon in the Atlantic Ocean, far from the coast +of South America. + +When they first drew near this island they were almost sucked into the +depths of a great whirlpool, caused by water pouring down a big hole +that seemed to lead far into the earth. They reversed their ship just +in time. + +But, on going to another side of the island they were able to approach +safely, as at this point the great hole was farther from the shore. +Then they landed and investigated. + +They found the island was almost circular, and the hole was also +round, but not in the center of the land. It was an immense cavity, so +wide they could not see across, and as for the depth they could only +guess at it. Looking down they could only see rolling masses of vapor +and clouds caused by the water which poured down from the ocean with +the force of a Niagara. + +Gazing down into the big hole Mark suggested it might lead to the +centre of the earth, which some scientists claim is hollow. The +professor admitted that the cavity looked as though it led to China. + +They had no means of investigating further the mystery of the opening +and returned to their submarine, completing the voyage to the south +pole. + +It was now about two years since they had come back from that eventful +trip. One of the first things the professor did, after docking the +Porpoise, was to shut himself up in his study and begin to draw plans. +To the questions of the boys he returned no answer for several days. +Then he announced he was working on a craft which could both sail on +top of the water and navigate the air. + +In time the plans were done, and, in order to keep the work secret, +the shop was moved to an island which the professor owned. + +Parts of the Monarch and the Porpoise were used in constructing the +new craft, so there was no need to get other help than that which the +boys, Washington and Bill and Tom could give, since the two latter +accepted an offer of the professor to remain and work for him. The +boys, of course, would not leave their friend. + +The professor realized that he had a more difficult task in his new +venture than he had set himself on other occasions. For a ship to be +light enough to rise in the air, and, at another time, and with no +change, to be strong enough to navigate the ocean, was indeed +something to tax Mr. Henderson's ingenuity. + +However, in the course of a little over a year the larger part of the +work was done. Inside the big shed was the huge affair which, it was +hoped, would enable its owner to be master of both air and water. + +"Did the professor say anything special?" asked Mark of Washington. + +"Nope. I reckon he were too busy problamatin' the exact altitude +projected in an inverse direction by th' square root of th' new engine +when operated at a million times inside of a few seconds, but he +didn't say nothin' t' me. I were busy underneath th' ship, fixin' +bolts when he tole me t' find yo'. I wouldn't be s'prised if he had +th' thing goin' soon." + +"Do you think he'll be generating the new gas to-day?" asked Jack +eagerly. "That's the most troublesome part; to get that gas right." + +"He didn't say nothin' t' me 'bout it," Washington stated, as he +walked along beside the two boys. "He jest seemed anxious like." + +"We'd better hurry," advised Mark. "He may be at an important part in +his experiments and probably needs us. I hope it will work. He has +spent many days on it, and we all have worked hard. It ought to be a +success." + +"Perfesser allers makes things work," declared Washington stoutly. + +"That's a good way to feel about it, anyway," observed Mark. "Well, +we'll soon know." + +The three hurried to the shed which they could see as they rounded a +turn of the path through the wood. They noticed an elderly man +approaching with a gun on his shoulder. On one arm he carried a game +bag. + +"Guess Andy got something for dinner," remarked Jack. + +"I hopes so, honey," put in Washington. "I'se got a sort of gone +feelin' in my stomach!" + +"Any luck, Andy?" called Mark, when he came within hailing distance. + +"Fine," replied Andy Sudds. "Rabbits and quail. We'll have a good +dinner to-morrow." + +While Andy entered the living part of the big shed to put away his gun +and game, the boys and Washington kept on to the engine room. They +found the professor, with Bill and Tom, busy fitting pipes to the +small engine which was set up at one side of the structure. + +"Come, boys, I need your aid," remarked Mr. Henderson as they entered. +"Take off your coats and pitch in. Tighten up these bolts, Jack. Mark, +you mix up those chemicals the way I taught you, and see that the +dynamo is in working order for Washington to attend to." + +In a little while the shop was a veritable hive of industry, and it +resounded to the sound of hammers, wrenches and machinery. In the +background was the big ship, which seemed like two immense cigars, one +above the other, the lower one the larger. + +"Where was you calalatin' t' take this here ship when it gits done, +Perfesser?" asked Washington, during a lull in the operations. + +"Do you remember that big hole in the island we visited on our trip to +the south pole?" + +"I suah does," answered the colored man. + +"We are going to explore that," went on the scientist. "We are going +to make a voyage to the interior of the earth in our Flying Mermaid." + +"Go down into th' earth!" exclaimed Washington, his eyes big with +fright. + +"Certainly; why not?" + +"Not for mine!" cried the colored man, dropping the wrench he was +holding. "No sire I'm not goin' t' project myself int' a grave while +I'se alive. Time enough when I kicks th' bucket. No sir! If yo' an' +the boys wants t' risk yo' se'ves goin' down int' th' interior of th' +earth, where th' Bible says there's fiery furnaces, yo' kin go, but +Washington White stays on terra cotta! That's where he stays; He ain't +ready t' be buried, not jest yet!" and the frightened colored man +started to leave the shed. + + CHAPTER II + + THE FLYING MERMAID + +"HERE! Stop him!" cried Professor Henderson. "Don't let him get away. +We still need his help to get the ship in shape. He needn't be +frightened. We're not going to start at once." + +Mark and Jack ran after Washington, whose progress was somewhat +impeded because he kept looking back as if he feared the new ship was +chasing him. + +"Come on back!" said Mark. "There's no danger, and if there was we're +not going to start to-day." + +"Ain't yo' foolin' me?" asked Washington, pausing and looking +doubtfully at the boys. + +"Of course not," answered Mark. "You know Professor Henderson would +not make you do anything you didn't want to do, Wash. He wishes you to +stay and help him get ready, that's all." + +"Well, Washington," observed the aged scientist. "I didn't think you'd +go back on me." + +"I'd do mos' anything fer yo', Perfesser," said the colored man, "but +I got t' beg off this time," and he looked at the Flying Mermaid as if +he thought the metal sides would open and devour him. + +Then help me get things in shape to generate the gas," the scientist +said. "I want to give the new vapor the first real test in lifting +power to-day. On the success of it depends the future of the ship." + +Seeing there was no immediate danger of being carried to the centre of +the earth, Washington resumed his labors. The professor, the boys, +Bill and Tom were also hurrying matters to enable a test to be made +before night. + +As will readily be seen, even by those not familiar with the +construction of airships and submarines, the chief problem was to find +some agent strong enough to lift from the earth a weight heavier than +had ever before been put into an apparatus that was destined to +traverse the clouds. For the Flying Mermaid was not only an airship +but an ocean voyager as well. It had to be made light enough to be +lifted far above the earth, yet the very nature of it, necessitating +it being made heavy enough to stand the buffeting of the waves and the +pressure of water, was against its flying abilities. + +Professor Henderson realized this and knew that the chief concern +would be to discover a gas or vapor with five times the lifting power +of hydrogen, one of the lightest gases known, and one sometimes used +to inflate balloons. + +After long study he had been partially successful, but he knew from +experiments made that the gas he had so far been able to manufacture +would not answer. What he wanted was some element that could be mixed +with the gas, to neutralize the attraction of gravitation, or downward +pull of the earth. + +While he was seeking this, and experimenting on many lines, the +construction of the air-water ship went on. In general the outward +construction was two cigar shaped hulls, one above the other. +Aluminum, being the lightest and strongest metal that could be used +for the purpose, formed the main part of both bodies. + +The upper hull was one hundred feet long and twenty feet in diameter +at the widest part. It tapered to points at either end. It was +attached to the lower hull by strong braces, at either end, while from +the center there extended a pipe which connected with the lower +section. This pipe was intended to convey the lifting gas to the part +which corresponded to the bag of the balloon, save that it was of +metal instead of silk, or rubber as is usual. + +There were two reasons for this. One was that it would not be liable +to puncture, particularly in the proposed underground trip, and the +other was that it did not have to be so large as a cloth bag would +have had to be. It was also a permanent part of the ship, and on a +voyage where part of the time the travelers would be in the air and +part on the water, and when the change from one to the other would +have to be made quickly, this was necessary. It would have taken too +long to raise the ship in the air had a cloth bag been used to contain +the gas. + +The lower hull or main part of the craft was one hundred and fifty +feet long, and forty feet through at the largest part, in the centre. + +It was divided into four sections. The forward one contained the +sleeping quarters of Professor Henderson and his crew. There was a +small stateroom for each one. Above was a conning or observation +tower, reached by a small flight of steps. From this tower the ship +could be steered, stopped and started, as could also be done from the +engine room, which was in the after part of the hull. + +As in the Porpoise and Monarch, electricity formed the motive power +and was also used for many other purposes on board. Engines operated +by gas produced the current which heated, lighted and moved the ship, +as well as played a part in producing the wonderful gas. + +The ship moved forward or backward by means of a novel arrangement. +This was by the power of compressed air. From either end of the lower +hull there projected a short pipe working in a ball and socket joint, +so it could be turned in any direction. By means of strong pumps a +current of compressed air could be sent out from either pipe. Thus +when floating above the earth the ship was forced forward by the blast +of air rushing from the pipe at the stern. It was the same principle +as that on which a sky rocket is shot heavenward, save that gases +produced by the burning of powder in the pasteboard rocket form its +moving impulse. + +In the case of the Flying Mermaid, it could be made to move backward +by sending the air out of the forward tube. Thus, when in the water, +the compressed air rushing from the pipe struck the fluid and forced +the ship forward or backward as was desired. It floated on the +surface, the deck being about three feet out of water, while the +aluminum gas bag was overhead. + +The engine room was a marvel of machine construction. It contained +pumps for air and water, motors, dynamos, gas engines, and a maze of +wheels and levers. Yet everything was very compact and no room was +wasted. + +The use of the air method of propulsion did away with the necessity of +a large propellor such as most airships have to use, a propellor which +must of necessity be very light and which is easily broken. + +Next to the engine room was the kitchen. It contained an electric +range and all necessary appliances and utensils for preparing meals. +There were lockers and a large reserve storeroom which when the time +came would be well stocked with food. Forward of the kitchen was the +living and dining room. It contained comfortable seats, folding tables +and a small library. Here, also were many instruments designed to show +how the various machines were working. There were gages, pointers and +dials, which told the direction the ship was traveling, the speed and +the distance above the earth or below the surface. Similar indicators +were in the conning tower, which had a powerful search light. + +The ship was lighted throughout by incandescent lamps, and there was +even a small automatic piano worked by the electric current, on which +popular airs could be played. + +If the gas and the gravity neutralizer worked as Professor Henderson +hoped they would, as soon as the ship was completed, all that would be +necessary to start on the voyage would be to fill the aluminum bag and +set the air compressor in motion. + +The gas was made from common air, chemically treated and with a secret +material added which by means of a complicated machine in a measure +did away with the downward pull of the earth. Thus all that was +necessary to carry on a long voyage was a quantity of gasolene to +operate the engine which worked the electric machines, and some of +this secret compound. + +The professor and his helpers had been working to good advantage. At +last all was in readiness for the gas test. + +It was proposed to try it on an experimental scale. Some of the fluid +was to be generated and forced into an aluminum cylinder under the +same pressure it would be used in the air ship. To this cylinder were +attached weights in proportion to the weight of the Flying Mermaid +with its load of human freight, engines and equipment. + +"This cylinder is just one one-hundredth the size of the cylinder of +the ship," said the professor. "I am going to fasten to it a hundred +pound weight. If it lifts that our latest contrivance will be a +success." + +"You mean if the little cylinder pulls a hundred pounds up the big +ship will take us and the machinery up?" asked Mark. + +"Certainly," answered the professor. "If this cylinder lifts a hundred +pounds, one a hundred times as big (as that of the Mermaid is), will +lift a hundred times as much, or ten thousand pounds. That is five +tons, or more than a ton over what I figure to be the weight of our +ship and contents. The latest war balloon can lift one ton with ease, +and if my machine can not do five times as well I shall be +disappointed." + +The last adjustments were made, pipes were run from the gas generator +to the cylinder, and the hundred pound weight was attached. + +"Everybody look out now," said Mr. Henderson. "I am going to start the +machine and let the gas enter the cylinder. It is a very powerful gas +and may break the cylinder. If it does you must all duck." + +The scientist gave a last look at everything. The boys got behind some +boards whence they could see without being in danger. Washington, who +had little fear so long as there was no danger of going under ground, +took his place at the dynamo. Andy Sudds, with Bill and Tom, stationed +themselves in safe places. + +"All ready!" called the professor. + +He pulled a lever toward him, turned a wheel and signalled to +Washington to start the dynamo. There was a sound of buzzing +machinery, which was followed by a hiss as the gas began to enter the +cylinder under pressure. Would it stand the strain? That question was +uppermost in every one's mind save the professor's. He only cared to +see the cylinder leave the ground, carrying the weight with it. That +would prove his long labors were crowned with success. + +Faster and faster whirred the dynamo. The gas was being generated from +the air. The secret chemical made a hissing which could be heard for +some distance. The gage registered a heavy pressure. Anxiously the +professor watched the cylinder. + +"There!" he exclaimed at length. "It has all the gas it can hold. Now +to see if it works!" + +He disconnected the pipe leading from the generator. This left the +cylinder free. It seemed to tremble slightly. There appeared to be a +movement to the hundred pound weight which rested on the ground. It +was as if it was tugging to get loose. + +"There it goes! There it goes!" cried Mark, joyfully. + +"Hurrah!" shouted Jack. "There she rises!" + +"It suttinly am projectin' itself skyward!" yelled Washington, coming +from the dynamo. + +Sure enough the cylinder was slowly rising in the air, bearing the +weight with it. It had lifted it clear from the ground and was +approaching the roof of the big shed. + +"It will work! It will work!" exclaimed the professor, strangely +excited. + +The next instant the cylinder, carrying the weight, sailed right out +of an open skylight, and began drifting outside the shop, and across +the fields. + +"Quick! We must get it back!" cried Mr. Henderson. "If it gets away my +secret may be discovered and I will lose all! We must secure it!" + +But the cylinder was now two hundred feet in the air and being blown +to the east, the weight dangling below it, making it look like a +miniature airship. + +"We can never catch that!" cried Mark. + + CHAPTER III + + WASHINGTON DECIDES + +"WE must catch that cylinder!" the professor exclaimed. "Some one may +find it when it comes down and analyze the gas. Then he would discover +how to make it. The cylinder must come down!" + +"Don't see how we can proximate ourselves inter th' vicinity of it +lessen we delegate th' imperial functions of orinthological specimens +t' some member of this here party," observed Washington. + +"If you mean we can't catch that there contraption unless we turn into +birds I'll show you that you're mistaken!" cried Andy Sudds. "I guess +I have a trick or two up my sleeve," and the old hunter quickly threw +open the breech of his gun and inserted a couple of cartridges. + +He raised the piece to his shoulder and took quick aim. There was a +sliver of flame, a puff of smoke and a sharp report. The professor and +the boys who were watching the cylinder saw it vibrate up in the air. +Then there came a whistling sound. An instant later the metal body +began to descend, and it and the weight fell to the earth. + +"I'm sorry I had to put a bullet through it, Professor," said old Andy +with a queer smile, "but it was the only way I saw of bringing it +down. Hope it isn't damaged much." + +"It doesn't matter if it is," the scientist answered. "I can make more +cylinders, but I don't want that secret of the gas to become known. +Your bullet served a good turn, Andy, for it let the compressed vapor +out just in time." + +"Then we may consider the experiment a success," said Mark, as +Washington went to where the cylinder had fallen, to detach it from +the weight and bring both to the shed. + +"It seems so," Mr. Henderson answered. "True, it was only an +experiment. We have yet to test the ship itself." + +"When can we do that?" asked Jack. + +"I hope by Monday," the scientist answered. + +"Will you try it in the water or air first?" asked Mark. + +"I'm almost certain it will float in the water," the aged inventor +said. "It does not require much work to make a ship which will do +that. But the air proposition is another matter. However, since the +cylinder rose, I am pretty sure the Flying Mermaid will. + +"But we have done enough work to-day. Let's rest and have something to +eat. Then, with Sunday to sit around and talk matters over, we will be +ready for Monday's test." + +Some of the game Andy had killed was soon on the table, for +Washington, in addition to his other accomplishments, was an expert +cook. During the evening the boys and their friends sat in the living +room of the big shed and talked over the events of the day. + +Sunday was spent in discussing what adventures might lie before them +should they be able to descend into the big hole. Washington did not +say, much, but it was easy to see he had no notion of going. He even +began to pack his few belongings in readiness to leave the service of +Mr. Henderson, for whom he had worked a good many years. + +No one remained long abed Monday morning. Even Washington was up early +in spite of the interest he had lost in the professor's voyage. + +"I jest wants t' see yo' start fer that place where they buries live +folks," he said. + +In order to properly test the Flying Mermaid it was necessary to move +the craft from the shed from which place it had never been taken since +it's construction was started. It had been built on big rollers in +anticipation of this need, so that all which was now necessary was to +open the doors at the end, and roll the craft out. + +This was accomplished with no small amount of labor, and it was nearly +noon before the big ship was moved into the open. It was shoved along +to a little clearing in front of the shed, where no trees would +interfere with its possible upward movement. + +Everyone was bustling about. The professor was busiest of all. He went +from one machine to another; from this apparatus to that, testing +here, turning wheels there, adjusting valves and seeing that all was +in readiness for the generating of the powerful gas. + +As the airship was half round on the bottom and as it rested in a sort +of semi-circular cradle; it brought the entrance some distance above +the ground. To make it easier to get in and out while preparations for +the trial were going on, Bill and Tom had made an improvised pair of +steps, which were tied to the side of the ship with ropes. + +Up and down these the professor, the boys and Andy went, taking in +tools and materials, and removing considerable refuse which had +accumulated during the building of the craft. + +Finally all was in readiness for starting the making of the gas. The +ship was not wholly complete and no supplies or provisions for the +long voyage had been taken aboard. The Flying Mermaid was about a ton +lighter than it would be when fully fitted out, but to make up for +this the professor had left in the ship a lot of tools and surplus +machinery so that the craft held as much weight as it would under +normal conditions. If the gas lifted it now it would at any other +time. + +"Start the generator," said Mr. Henderson, to Mark. "We'll soon see +whether we are going to succeed or fail." + +The boy turned a number of levers and wheels. The machine which made +the powerful vapor was soon in operation. The professor had already +added enough of the secret compound to the tank containing the other +ingredients, and the big pump was sucking in air to be transformed +into the lifting gas. + +The boys and the professor were in the engine room. Andy Sudds, with +Bill and Tom, had taken their places in the living room, to more +evenly balance the ship, since the things in it were not yet all in +their proper places. As for Washington he was busy running from the +shed to the ship with various tools and bits of machinery the +professor desired. + +The gas was being generated rapidly. Throughout the ship there +resounded a hissing noise that told it was being forced through the +pipe into the aluminum shell above the ship proper. + +"I wonder how soon it will begin to lift us," said Mark. + +"It will take about half an hour," replied Mr. Henderson. "You see we +have first to fill the holder completely, since there is no gas in it. +After this we will keep some on hand, so that it will only need the +addition of a small quantity to enable the ship to rise." + +He was busy watching the pointer on a dial which indicated the +pressure of the gas, and the lifting force. The boys were kept busy +making adjustments to the machinery and oiling bearings. + +Suddenly, throughout the length of the craft there was felt a curious +trembling. It was as though the screw of a powerful steamer was +revolving in the water. + +"What is it?" asked Jack. + +"I hope it is the lifting power of the gas making itself felt," the +professor answered. "Perhaps the Flying Mermaid is getting ready to +try her wings." + +The trembling became more pronounced. The gas was being generated +faster than ever. The whole ship was trembling. Tom and Bill came from +the room, where they were stationed, to inquire the meaning, but were +reassured by the professor. + +"Don't be alarmed if you find yourselves up in the air pretty soon," +he remarked with a smile. "Remember the Electric Monarch, and the +flights she took. We may not go as high as we did in her, but it will +answer the same purpose." + +The gas was hissing through the big tube as it rushed into the +overhead holder. The gage indicated a heavy pressure. The ship began +to tremble more violently and to sway slightly from side to side. + +"I think we shall rise presently," said Mr. Henderson. His voice +showed the pride he felt at the seeming success with which his +invention was about to meet. + +Suddenly, with a little jerk, as though some one with a giant hand had +plucked the Flying Mermaid from the earth, the ship gave a little +bound into the air, and was floating free. + +"Here we go!" cried Mr. Henderson. "The ship is a success. Now we're +off for the hole in the earth!" + +The Flying Mermaid was indeed rising in the air. True it did not go up +so swiftly as had the Monarch, but then it was a much heavier and +stronger vessel, and flying was only one of its accomplishments. + +"It's a success! It's a success!" shouted Mark, capering about in his +excitement. + +"Now we'll see what the centre of the earth looks like," went on Jack. +"I can hardly wait for the time to come when we are to start on the +voyage." + +At that instant, when the ship was but a few feet from the ground, but +slowly rising, the boys and the professor heard a shouting below them. + +"What's that?" asked the scientist. "Is any one hurt?" + +Mark ran to a small window, something like a port hole in an ocean +steamer, and looked out. + +"Quick!" he shouted. "Stop the ship! Washington will be killed!" + +In fact from the agonized yells which proceeded from somewhere under +the craft it seemed that the accident was in process of happening. + +"Save me! Save me!" cried the colored man. "I'm goin' to fall! Catch +me, some one!" + +"What is it?" asked the professor, making ready to shut off the power +and let the ship settle back to earth, from which it had moved about +fifty feet. + +"It's Washington," explained Mark. "He evidently tried to walk up the +steps just as the boat mounted skyward. He rolled down and managed to +grab the end of the rope which was left over after the steps were +tied. Now he's swinging down there." + +"Are you going to lower the ship?" asked Jack. + +"Of course!" exclaimed the professor. "I only hope he hangs on until +his feet touch the earth." + +"Keep a tight hold!" shouted Mark, from out of the small window. + +"That's th' truest thing yo' ever said!" exclaimed Washington. "You +bet I'm goin' to hold on, and I'm comin' up too," which he proceeded +to do, hand over hand, like a sailor. + +The boys and the professor watched the colored man's upward progress. +The ship had hardly begun to settle as, in the excitement, not enough +gas had been let out. Closer and closer came Washington, until he was +able to grasp the edge of the opening, to which the steps were +fastened. + +"I thought you weren't coming with us," observed the professor, when +he saw that his helper was safe. + +"I changed my mind," said the colored man. "It's jest luck. Seems like +th' ship done wanted me t' go 'long, an' I'm goin'. I'll take my +chances on bein' buried alive. I ain't never seen th' centre of th' +earth, an' I want's to 'fore I die. I'm goin' 'long, Perfessor!" + + CHAPTER IV + + WHAT DID MARK SEE? + +"WELL, I'm glad you've decided at last," the professor remarked. "Now +come inside and we'll see how the ship works." + +Once over his fright, Washington made himself at home on the craft he +had helped build. He went from one room to another and observed the +engine. + +"She certainly am workin'" he observed with pride. "Are we still goin' +up, Perfessor?" + +"Still mounting," replied Mr. Henderson, "We are now three hundred +feet above the earth," he added as he glanced at a registering gage. + +The great air pump was set going and soon from the after tube, a big +stream of the compressed vapor rushed. It acted on the ship instantly +and sent the craft ahead at a rapid rate. By elevating or depressing +the tube the craft could be sent obliquely up or down. Then, by +forcing the air from the forward tube, the Mermaid was reversed and +scudded backward. + +But it was more with the ship's ability to rise and descend that +Professor Henderson was concerned, since on that depended their +safety. So various tests were made, in generating the gas and using +the negative gravity apparatus. + +All worked to perfection. Obeying the slightest turn of the wheels and +levers the Mermaid rose or fell. She stood still, suspended herself in +the air, or rushed backward and forward. + +Of course the machinery was new and did not operate as smoothly as it +would later, but the professor and his friends were very well +satisfied. + +"Now we'll try something new," said the scientist to the two boys as +they stood beside him in the tower. "I only hope this part succeeds, +and we shall soon be off on our voyage." + +He turned several levers. There was a hissing sound as the gas rushed +from the container, and the ship began to settle down. + +"What's th' matter? Are we goin' t' hit th' earth?" yelled Washington, +rushing from the engine room. + +"Keep quiet," ordered the professor. "We are only going down, that's +all." + +"But good land! Perfesser!" exclaimed the colored man. "The ocean's +right under us! You forgot you sailed sway from the island! We'll be +drowned suah!" + +"Leave it to me," said Mr. Henderson. "The Flying Mermaid is going to +take a bath!" + +"As long as it swims it will be all right," observed Mark in a low +tone to Jack. "I'm glad I can take care of myself in the water." + +Before Jack could reply the Mermaid seemed to take a sudden dive +through the air. The next instant she struck the water with a splash +that sent the waves rolling all about. The craft rocked violently to +and fro on the surface of the sea. For a while there were anxious +hearts aboard, for there was no certainty but that the ship might not +sink to the bottom. + +But the old professor had not calculated and builded in vain. After +rocking about like a vessel newly launched, the strange craft rode +safely and upright on the water. It set down far enough to bring the +propelling tubes well under, but not so far but that the conning tower +was well out and there was a small deck available. + +"Now to see if we can conquer the water as we did the air!" cried the +professor. "Mark, start the air pump. Jack, you steer, for I want to +watch the machinery under the additional strain." + +From the rear tube rushed such a volume of air that the ocean near it +bubbled and foamed. The ship trembled from stem to stern, and then, +after hanging for an instant as if undecided what to do, it began to +move forward as easily as though it had never sailed any other element +than the sea. + +"She fits her name!" the professor cried. "She is indeed the Flying +Mermaid, for she sails the ocean as easily as she navigates in the +clouds!" + +For a mile or two the craft was sent ahead over the waves. Then it was +reversed and run backwards. Satisfied that his long months of work had +not gone for naught, the professor after trying several experiments, +decided to try and raise the ship while in motion. + +With Jack and Mark to look after the air pumps, while Washington, Tom +and Bill busied themselves in the engine room, Mr. Henderson began to +generate the gas and start the negative gravity apparatus. All the +while the craft was forging ahead. + +There was again the hissing sound that told of the aluminum holder +being filled. For a few minutes there seemed to be no change, the +Mermaid plowing forward. + +Then like a bird rising from the waves, or like a flying fish leaping +from the sea to escape some pursuing monster of the deep, the new ship +shot up diagonally from the surface and winged its way into the upper +regions of the air. + +"Success! Success!" cried the professor. "This proves all I wanted to +know. Now. we are ready for our great trip!" + +Great were the rejoicings in the camp that night. It was like living +over again the days when they were aboard the diving Porpoise or the +flying Monarch. To the recollections were added the anticipations of +what was before them in the trip to the interior of the earth. + +Busy days followed, for there was still much to be done to the Flying +Mermaid. The machinery, which was only partly completed, had to be +finished. Besides this the professor was working on some apparatus, +the use of which he did not disclose to any one. It was stored aboard +the ship at the last minute. + +Plenty of provisions had to be taken aboard, and many supplies needed +to work the Mermaid and insure that it would go to the end of the +voyage. The materials for generating the gas and negative gravity, +spare parts, records for the automatic piano and other things were +stored away. + +Some guns and ammunition were taken along as were a few revolvers, +since old Andy had said it was best to prepare for any thing in the +shape of enemies or wild beasts that might be met with in the interior +regions. + +It was decided to make the start by sailing along the surface of the +sea for several days, as in the event of any weakness in the machinery +being discovered there would be less danger. If, at the end of four +days, no trouble developed, the professor said he would send the +Mermaid into the air and make the rest of the voyage through the sky. + +The night before the start was to be made the professor, with the +boys, Washington and the other helpers, went about through the various +shops and buildings, locking them up securely. For they could not tell +how long they would be away, and they had to leave behind much +valuable material. + +As there were several things that needed attention they divided the +work up. Mark had finished his share and was walking back toward the +living cabin where they were all quartered, when, down at the shore, +near where the boat was moored, he fancied he saw, in the gathering +darkness, a moving figure. + +"I wonder who that can be," he thought. "All the others are near the +machine shop, for I just left them there. Perhaps it's some one trying +to spy out how the Mermaid is built." + +Knowing the professor wanted his secret well guarded, Mark walked +softly toward the little dock that served as a place whence the +Mermaid could be easily boarded. As he approached he saw the figure +moving. Something struck the boy as peculiar. + +Though the object had some of the characteristics of a man it did not +walk like a human being, but shuffled along more like a huge ape or +monkey. It seemed bent over, as if it stooped toward the ground. + +"Who are you?" called Mark suddenly. + +For an instant the figure halted and then hurried on faster than +before, with a curious, shuffling walk. It was approaching the ship. + +Somehow it struck Mark as if it was an uncanny being; an inhabitant of +some other world. Then he laughed at his half-fear, and started on a +run toward the dock. + +"If it's some tramp trying to find a place to sleep he'd better not go +aboard the ship, he might do some damage," the boy thought. + +He could hardly see the figure now as it had passed into the shadow +cast by the boat. He was about to summon the professor to make an +investigation, when Washington started going the search light which +was placed just over the door of the living cabin. It was kept there +as a sort of beacon light, as, near the island was a dangerous ledge +of rocks. + +Then, in the blinding white glare from the big lantern as Washington +accidentally swung it toward the Mermaid, Mark beheld a strange sight. + +The figure he had been watching stood out in bold relief. Though it +was shaped like a human being it was not like any person the boy had +ever seen. It seemed covered with a skin twice too large for it; a +skin, which, in spite of the clothes that concealed it, hung in folds +about the arms and legs, dropping pendent like from the neck like a +big garment, and flapping in the wind. + +For an instant Mark was so startled he cried out, and the professor +and the others ran to see what was the matter. + +"There-- by the ship! A horrible creature!" exclaimed Mark. + +Shouting to Washington to keep the light steady in the direction of +the dock, Mr. Henderson ran toward the moored Mermaid. Jack, Andy, +Bill and Tom, with Mark in the rear followed him. + +"Nothing here," said the scientist, after a careful search about. "Are +you sure you saw something, Mark?" + +"Positively," replied the lad with a shudder. He described the vision +of the darkness. + +"I guess it was a big otter, or maybe an enormous turtle," the +professor said. + + CHAPTER V + + ATTACKED BY A WHALE + +BUT Mark was certain it was nothing like that, though a careful search +failed to reveal anything or any person near the ship. It was too dark +to examine for footprints, and even Mark, after taking a look all +about, felt he might have been deceived by shadows. Still he was a +little nervous, and could hardly sleep for imagining what the thing he +saw could have been. + +The next day every one was so busy that no one, not even Mark, +recalled the little excitement of the night before. Shortly after +noon, final preparations having been made, they all got aboard the +Mermaid and started off. + +It was a bright sunshiny day, and the craft, speeding away from the +island where it had been constructed, over the dancing blue waves, +must have presented a strange sight had there been any spectators. For +surely no such ship had ever before sailed those waters. + +However, there was no other vessel in sight, and the island, as far as +the professor and his friends knew, had never been inhabited. + +"We will not try for any great speed," Mr. Henderson remarked as he, +with Mark and Jack, stood in the conning tower managing the Mermaid. +"We don't want to strain any joints at the start or heat any engine +bearings. There will be time enough for speed later." + +"Yes, and we may need it more when we get into the centre of the earth +than we do now," observed Mark. + +"Why so?" asked Jack. + +"No telling what we may run up against underneath the ground," went on +Mark. "We may have to fight strange animals and stranger beings. +Besides, the atmosphere and water there can't be the same as up here; +do you think so, Professor?" + +For a few minutes the scientist was silent. He seemed to be thinking +deeply. + +"I will tell you what I believe," he said at length. "I have never +spoken of it before, but now that we are fairly started and may +eventually have a chance to prove my theory, I will say that I think +the centre of this earth on which we live is hollow. Inside of it, +forming a core, so to speak, I believe there is another earth, similar +to ours in some respects which revolves inside this larger sphere." + +They were well out to sea now, as they could observe when they emerged +on the little deck. Above their heads was the aluminum gas holder, +which served as a sort of protection from the sun that was quite warm. +The Mermaid rode with an easy motion, being submerged just enough to +make her steady, yet not deep enough to encounter much resistance from +the water. In fact it could not have been arranged better for speed or +comfort. + +"I think we will sail well to the eastward before making our course +south," Mr. Henderson said. "I do not care to meet too many ships, as +those aboard will be very curious and I do not want too much news of +this venture to get out. We will take an unfrequented route and avoid +delays by being hailed by every passing vessel whose captain will +wonder what queer craft he had met with." + +The boys enjoyed the sail, for the weather could not have been better. +Even old Andy, who seldom said much, seemed delighted with the +prospect of having strange adventures. He had his rifle with him, and, +indeed, he seldom went anywhere that he did not carry it. + +"For there's no telling when you may see something you want to shoot +or that ought to be shot," he used to say, "and it's always the man +without a gun who needs it most. So I'm taking no chances." + +They sailed all that afternoon without meeting with a craft of any +kind. Straight to the east they went, and when night began to settle +down Washington got supper. It was decided to run slowly after dark +until all hands were more familiar with the ship. + +Morning found the Mermaid about a hundred miles from the island where +she had been launched. The night had been uneventful, except that Mark +told Jack he heard some strange noise near his bunk several times. He +was nearest the storeroom where spare parts, and the curious cylinder +the professor had brought aboard, were kept. + +"I guess it was rats," said Jack. "They are always in ships." + +"Old wooden ships, yes," admitted Mark. "But I'll bet there's not a +rat aboard the Mermaid." + +"Then you were dreaming," said Jack, as if that settled it. + +Mark did not speak further of the noise, but he did considerable +thinking. However, the next night there was no further disturbance. + +The fourth day out, when everything had passed off well, the engines +doing their best, the professor decided to speed them up a bit, since +he was satisfied they had "found" themselves as mechanics term it. + +"We'll see how fast we can go through the water," said Mr. Henderson, +"and then I think we can safely turn our course south. We are well +beyond the ordinary lines of travel now." + +Having oiled the bearings well, and seen that everything was in place +and properly adjusted, the professor and the boys took their places in +the conning tower, while Washington, Tom and Bill remained in the +engine room. Andy stayed on deck with his gun. + +"I might see a big fish, and we could vary our bill of fare," he said +with a laugh. + +"Here we go!" exclaimed the professor as he shifted the levers and +turned some wheels and valves. "Now we'll see how fast we can travel." + +As he spoke the Mermaid responded to the added impulse of the +compressed air and shot through the water at a terrific speed. The +sudden increase in momentum almost threw the boys from their feet, and +they would have fallen had they not grasped some projecting levers. + +"I guess that will do," Said the scientist. "I think we have speed +enough for almost any emergency. I'll let her run at this rate for a +while, and then we'll slack up." + +Looking ahead, the boys could see the green waters parting in front of +the bow of the Mermaid, as if to make room for her. Two huge waves +were thrown upon either side. + +Suddenly, dead ahead, there loomed up a big black object. + +"Look out you'll hit the rock!" cried Mark to the professor, who was +steering. + +With a turn of his wrist Mr. Henderson moved the wheel which +controlled the tube. It was deflected and sent the boat to larboard. + +At that instant from the rock two small fountains of water rose in the +air, falling back in a shower of spray through which the sun gleamed. + +"That's not a rock! It's a big whale!" cried Jack. "And we're going to +hit him!" + +The professor had miscalculated the speed of the craft, or else had +not thrown her far enough to larboard, for, a second later, the +Mermaid was almost upon the big leviathan. + +With a desperate twirling of the steering wheel the professor veered +the craft as far as possible. But all he could do did not suffice, for +the craft hit the whale a glancing blow on the side, and the ship +careened as if she would turn turtle. + +At the same time there rang out from upon deck the sound of a rifle +shot. Old Andy had taken a chance at the enormous creature of the +deep. + +"Hurrah!" the bays heard him shout. "I give him one plumb in the eye! +A fine shot! And we hit him besides with the boat. I guess he's a +goner!" + +"I'm afraid not," muttered the professor. "That was a bad blow we +struck him, but I think it will only ruffle his temper. We'll have to +look sharp now, boys." + +By this time the ship had rushed past the whale, but the boys, looking +through a window in the rear of the tower could see the huge body. Now +the fountains of water which the whale spouted were tinged with red. + +"He's bleeding!" exclaimed the professor. "I guess Andy hit him in a +vital spot." + +"But not vital enough!" cried Mark. "See! He's coming after us!" + +And so it proved. The whale, angered, and, probably half crazed by the +pain of the bullet and the blow, was coursing after the ship, coming +on with the speed of an express train. Straight at the Mermaid he +lunged his huge bulk. + +"We must escape him!" cried Mr. Henderson. "If he hits us he'll send +us to the bottom!" + +He had made ready to slow up the Mermaid to see if it had sustained +any damage from the impact with the whale, but when he saw the monster +coming after the boat he knew the only safety lay in flight. + +"Let us go up into the air and so escape him!" cried Jack, with sudden +inspiration. + +For an instant neither Mark nor the professor grasped what Jack meant. +Then, with an exclamation, the professor pulled forward the lever that +generated the gas and set working the gravity neutralizer, which would +enable the ship to rise. + +Faster through the water went the Mermaid, and faster after her came +the whale. Above the hum of the engines was heard the hiss of the +powerful gas. The ship trembled more violently. + +"We are rising!" exclaimed the professor, as he looked at a gage. + +The boys could feel the craft lifting from the waves which clung to +her as if they hated to lose her. The boys knew the gas was beginning +to operate. + +"If it is not too late!" whispered Mark, half to himself. + +For the monster of the seas was coming on, lashing the water to foam +with his terrible flukes, and sending aloft a bloody spray. His speed +was awful. + +Now he was but ten feet away from the fleeing craft-- now but eight-- +now five! Ten seconds more and the big head, like the blunt stern of a +battle ship, forced forward by the tons of blubber, flesh, bone and +fat behind it would strike the Mermaid and crush it like an egg shell. + +Now if ever was the need for the Flying Mermaid to prove herself +worthy of the name. Now, if ever, was the time for her to leave the +watery element and take to the lighter one. + +And she did. With a last tremble, as if to free herself from the hold +of the waves, the gallant craft soared up into the air, leaving the +water, which dripped from her keel like a fountain's spray, and +shooting aloft like a bird, escaped her terrible enemy which passed +under her, so close that the lower part of the Flying Mermaid scraped +the whale's back. + +"Saved!" exclaimed the professor. + + CHAPTER VI + + THE CYCLONE + +IT was only in the nick of time, for a second later and the big mammal +of the ocean would have struck the ship and split it from stem to +stern. + +Higher and higher into the air mounted the Flying Mermaid, while in +the water below, the whale, incensed by missing his prey, was lashing +the waves to foam. + +"Well, that was a narrow squeak; as close as I ever care to come to +it!" exclaimed Andy as he let go of the steel rail to which he was +clinging and entered the conning tower. "I had no idea of hitting the +big fish." + +"I guess he would have taken after us whether you had fired at him or +not," said Mr. Henderson. "He was probably looking for trouble, and +took the first thing that came in his way, which happened to be us. +Some whales are like that, so I have read; big bull creatures, exiled +from the school to which they once belonged, they get like mad +creatures and know neither friend nor foe. Something like rogue +elephants, I imagine." + +Now, having thus unexpectedly risen into the air, the professor +decided to continue travel in that style for a while at least. It +would require less force to propel the ship, and the going would be +more comfortable, since in the upper regions the Mermaid rode on an +even keel, while in the water there was more or less rolling, due to +the action of the waves. + +Once recovered from their fright caused by the whale, and having lost +sight of the enormous creature, for they were now far above the ocean, +the adventurers began to think of something to eat. + +Washington lost little time in preparing a meal, and it was eaten with +a relish. The electric cooking stove worked to perfection, for the +colored man had learned how to use that aboard the Porpoise and +Monarch, and could be depended on to turn out appetizing dishes. + +"What do you say to traveling through the air at night?" asked Mr. +Henderson, as he arose from the table. + +"Suits me," replied Mark. "There's less danger than in the water, I +think," + +Bill, Tom and Washington arranged to stand the night watch, and, when +the professor had examined the engines and given orders about keeping +the ship on her course through the air, he retired to his bunk. Jack +and Mark soon followed. + +It must have been about midnight when Mark was awakened by a movement +that seemed to come from the storeroom next to where his sleeping +place was located. At first he thought he had been dreaming, but, as +he found he was wide awake, he knew it was no imagination that had +affected him. + +"I certainly heard something," he said to himself. "It sounded just as +it did the other night. I wonder if I ought to investigate." + +He thought over the matter carefully as he sat upright in his bunk in +the darkness. True the noise might be a natural one, due to the +vibration of the engine, or to some echo from the machinery. As Mark +listened he heard it again. + +This time he realized it was the slow movement of some heavy body. He +felt a cold shiver run over him and his hair evinced an uncomfortable +tendency to stand upright. But he conquered his feelings and resolved +to keep cool and see if he could discover what had awakened him. + +He got up and moved softly about the little room that contained his +bunk. He could hear better now, and knew it was no echo or vibration +that had come to his ears. + +Once again he heard the strange sound. It was exactly the same as +before; as if some big creature was pulling itself over the floor. + +"Maybe it's a snake; a water snake!" thought Mark. "It may have +crawled aboard when we did not notice it." + +Then he remembered that the ship had not been open in any way that +would enable a serpent to come on it, since it had been started on its +ocean trip. Before that, he was sure no snake had entered the Flying +Mermaid. Still it sounded more like a snake than anything else. + +"I'm going to make a search," decided the boy. + +He took a small portable electric light, run by a storage battery, +and, slipping on a pair of shoes and a bath robe, he left his +stateroom. + +He had decided that the noise came from the storage compartment and so +made for that. The door he knew was not locked, since he had seen Mr. +Henderson go in late that afternoon, and the professor had used no +key. + +Moving softly, Mark left his room and soon found himself in a +corridor, on either side of which were located the sleeping quarters +of the others. He did not want to awaken them, and, perhaps, be +laughed at for his curiosity. + +To get to the storeroom Mark had to go first from the corridor into +the dining room. He soon reached the door that guarded what he thought +might be a strange secret. Trying the knob softly he found it giving +under his fingers. + +"I wonder if I had better go in," he thought. "Perhaps, after all, it +was only rats, as Jack said." + +But, even as he listened he again heard the odd sound coming from the +room. This determined him. He would solve the mystery if possible. + +Cautiously he turned the knob. The door was slowly swinging open when +Mark was startled by a noise from behind him. He turned suddenly to +see Professor Henderson confronting him. + +"What is it, Mark? Is the ship on fire? What's the matter? Is any one +hurt?" + +"I was just going in this room to----" began Mark. + +"Don't do it! Don't do it!" exclaimed the professor in an excited +whisper. "No one must go in that room. I forgot to tell you and Jack +about it. No one must enter. It contains a secret!" + +"I heard a strange noise and----" Mark began again. + +"It could make no noise! It would be impossible for it to make a +noise!" the professor exclaimed. + +"I heard something," the boy insisted. + +"You were dreaming!" said the professor. "Now go back to bed, Mark, +and don't let this happen again. Remember, no one must enter that room +unless I give permission!" + +Somewhat crestfallen at the outcome of his investigations, but +realizing that the professor could do what he wanted to aboard his own +ship, Mark went back to bed. But he could not sleep. All the rest of +the night he was wondering whether Mr. Henderson had some strange +creature hidden aboard the Mermaid. He feared lest the old scientist's +mind might be affected and, in his wildness he had made some infernal +machine that would, in time, blow the whole ship apart. + +But tired nature asserted itself at last, and, weary with vain +imaginings, Mark fell into a slumber. The next morning he awoke with a +start from a dream that he was being devoured by an immense water +snake. + +He said nothing to the others about his night's adventure, for, as it +transpired, no one else had been awakened by his investigations. The +professor did not refer to his conversation with Mark. + +"There's something queer going on aboard the ship this trip," said +Mark to himself. "But I guess it's none of my business. Professor +Henderson seems to know what he is doing and I guess I can trust him." + +He resolved to think no more of the strange noises and movements, and, +for several nights thereafter he was not disturbed by them. + +The weather, which, up to this time had been fair, took a sudden turn +for the worse about the fourth day after Mark's little night +expedition. One evening the sun sank in a mass of dull lead-colored +clouds and a sharp wind sprang up. + +"We're going to have a storm," said Mr. Henderson. "It's liable to be +a bad one, too, from the way the barometer is falling." + +He looked at the glass, and scanned the various instruments that told +how high up the Mermaid was and how fast she was traveling. + +"We're pretty high up in the air," he said, "and scooting along at +about fifty miles an hour. We are going against the wind, too, but +fortunately it is not blowing hard." + +At that moment there sounded from without a peculiar howling sound, as +if a siren whistle was being blown. + +"'Pears like there's goin' t' be a tumultuous demonstration of +sub-maxiliary contortions in th' empherial regions contiguous t' th' +upper atmosphere!" exclaimed Washington, entering from the engine room +into the conning tower. + +"What's the trouble?" asked Mr. Henderson. + +"Terrible big black cloud chasin' us from behind!" exclaimed the +colored man. + +Noting the alarm in Washington's voice the professor glanced from the +rear window. What he saw caused him to exclaim: + +"It's a cyclone! We must drop down to avoid it!" + +He sprang to a lever controlling the gas and yanked it toward him. +There was a shrill hissing sound, and a second later the Mermaid began +to sink. The boys watching the gages on the wall of the tower, saw +that the craft was falling rapidly. + +But, with a rush and roar, the terrible wind was upon them. It caught +the craft in its fearful grip and heeled it over as a ship careens to +the ocean blast. + +"It's a storm in the upper regions! We'll find it calm below!" cried +the professor above the howling of the gale. He opened the gas outlet +wider and the ship fell more rapidly. + +"Are you sure we're over the ocean?" asked Mark. + +"Positive!" the professor called back. "We have been traveling +straight south over the Atlantic for the last week. We will land in +the midst of the waters and float safely." + +Lower and lower went the Mermaid. The wind was now blowing with the +force of a tornado, and, as the craft had to slant in order to +descend, it felt the power of the gale more than if it had scudded +before it. But, by skilful use of the directing tube, the professor +was able to keep the boat from turning over. As they came further down +toward the earth the force of the wind was felt less and less, until, +as they came within two hundred feet of the water which they saw below +them in the gathering dusk, it died out altogether. + +"Now we are free from it," said the professor as the Mermaid came down +on the waves like an immense swan. + +"Are you going ahead or going to stop here?" asked Mark + +"We'll keep right on," Mr. Henderson answered. "No telling when the +storm may strike down here. We'll go as far as we can to-night." + + CHAPTER VII + + A QUEER SAIL + +NOW that the fear and worriment was over they all began to feel +hungry, and, while Mark and Jack took charge of the conning tower +Washington got breakfast. The professor seemed preoccupied during the +meal, and several times, when Mark spoke to him, he did not reply. + +"I wonder if he is worried about something, or is thinking of +something which seems to be concealed in the storeroom," the boy +thought. + +But, after a while, the professor seemed to be more like himself. He +was busy over several maps and charts, and then announced the ship +would try air-sailing again for a while. + +"We can make better time above than we can on the water," he said, +"and I am anxious to get to the mysterious island and learn what is in +store for us." + +Perhaps if the professor had been able to look ahead, and see what was +soon going to happen, he would not have been so anxious for it to +occur. + +It was shortly after dinner when, the gas container having been +filled, the ship rose in the air, and began sailing over the ocean, +about a mile up. The day was a fine one, and, as they were moving +south, it was constantly growing warmer. Down on the water, in fact, +it was quite hot, but in the air it was just right. + +Like some immense bird the Mermaid went flying through the air. The +boys and the professor sat upon the deck in easy chairs. It was like +being on the top of some tall "sky-scraper" building which, by some +strange power, was being moved forward. Below them the ocean tumbled +in long, lazy swells. + +Suddenly Mark, who was looking through a telescope at the expanse of +water stretched out under them, gave a cry. + +"There's a ship! She's on fire!" + +"Where?" asked the professor, stretching out his hand for the glass. + +"Just to the port of the forward tube. See the smoke!" exclaimed Mark. + +Mr. Henderson looked. Through the lens he saw a column of black vapor +rising skyward. Mingled with it were red flames. + +"Lower the Mermaid!" he cried. "We must save those on board if we +can!" + +Mark ran to the conning tower, where Washington was, to give the +order. The colored man, who was looking ahead, intent on guiding the +ship, did not at first hear what Mark called. + +"Lower us! Send the Mermaid down!" Mark cried again. + +The sudden shout, and the excited voice of Mark so startled +Washington, that, fearing some accident had happened, he pulled the +lever, controlling the gas supply, with more force than necessary. + +There was a loud explosion, followed by a crackling sound, a flash of +light, and the Mermaid came to a sudden stop. + +"What's the matter?" cried Mark, feeling that something was wrong. + +"I don't know!" Washington replied, as he dashed toward the engine +room. + +The Mermaid, her forward flight checked, hung in the air, suspended, +neither rising or falling. + +"Why don't we go on down?" the professor asked, hurrying to the tower. + +"There has been an explosion-- an accident!" exclaimed Mark. "I guess +we can't go down!" + +"But we must!" Mr. Henderson insisted, seizing the lever which should +have produced a downward motion. The handle swung to and fro. It was +disconnected from the apparatus it operated. + +The ship was now stationary in the air, moving neither forward nor +backward, neither rising nor falling. Washington had stopped the air +pumps as soon as he learned something was wrong. + +When Mr. Henderson saw the useless lever, which had controlled the +outlet of gas from the holder, he ran out on deck. One glance told him +what had happened. One of the electric wires had become +short-circuited,-- that is, the insulation had worn off and allowed +the current to escape. This had produced a spark, which had exploded +the gas which was in the pipe leading from the generator up into the +aluminum holder. Fortunately there was an automatic cut-off for the +supply of vapor, or the whole tank would have gone up. + +As it was, only a small quantity had blown up, but this was enough to +break the machinery at the point where the lever in the conning tower +joined the pipe. If it had not been for the automatic cut-off all the +gas in the holder would have poured out in a great volume, and the +ship would have fallen like a shot. + +"Can we do nothing to save those on the burning vessel?" asked Mark, +pointing to where a cloud of smoke hung over the ocean. + +"I fear not, now," answered the professor. "We are in a bad plight +ourselves." + +"Are we in any danger?" asked Jack. + +"Not specially," Mr. Henderson replied. "But we must find a means of +lowering ourselves gradually." + +"Then it will be too late to save any of those on the ship," observed +Mark. + +"I'm afraid so," the scientist made reply. + +The Mermaid rested some distance above the surface of the waters. She +moved slightly to and fro with the wind, and rocked gently. The +professor was examining the broken machinery. + +"I have a plan!" suddenly cried Mark. + +"What is it?" asked Mr. Henderson. + +"Can't we bore a hole in the tank, insert a small faucet or tap, and +let the gas out that way gradually?" asked the boy. "When we get down +we can rescue those in danger of fire, and, later, can repair the +break." + +"The very thing!" exclaimed Mr. Henderson. "I never thought of that! +Here, Washington! Bring me a drill, and a small stop-cock!" + +The drill was obtained from the engine room. Working rapidly Mr. +Henderson bored a hole in the lower part of the holder. As soon as the +metal was penetrated the gas, which was under considerable pressure, +rushed from the tank with a hissing sound. At once the Mermaid began +to settle rapidly. + +But the professor was prepared for this. He thrust the end of the +stop-cock into the hole. It was screwed fast and the valve turned. +This stopped the flow of gas and checked the descent of the ship. +Then, by opening the tap the vapor was allowed to escape gradually, +bringing the Flying Mermaid gently to the water. + +As the adventurers approached they could see that the vessel was now a +mass of flames. The wind was driving the fire toward the forecastle, +and the crew had sought refuge aft. But this expedient could not last +long, for, already the tongues of fire were licking the sides of the +craft and coming nearer and nearer the seemingly doomed men. The +vessel was a large one, and heavily laden. + +As those in peril caught sight of the Mermaid settling down into the +water, apparently from the clouds, their fears gave place to +astonishment. So great was this that they ceased their cries of +terror. Then, as they saw that the strange craft navigated the ocean, +for the engines were started aboard the Mermaid, they began to call +for help. + + CHAPTER VIII + + THE FLYING MERMAID DISABLED + +"WE'LL save you!" shouted Mr. Henderson, who was on the deck, while +Mark was steering the craft. "Hold on a few minutes longer and we'll +be alongside!" + +"They're real! They're real!" some of those aboard the burning ship +could be heard to shout. Evidently more than one of them had taken the +Mermaid for a delusion of their fear-crazed brain. + +"They are real persons!" they called again and again. "They are coming +to save us!" + +Mr. Henderson ran his ship as near the burning craft as he dared. Then +he called to the crew to leap into the water and swim to him. He, with +Washington, Jack, Bill and Tom, stood ready to haul aboard any who +were too weak to help themselves. + +In a few minutes all of those left alive on the sailing vessel-- +fourteen in all-- had come safely aboard the Mermaid. The ship was now +completely enveloped in flames. + +"Are there any more left on her?" asked Mr. Henderson of one who +appeared to be a mate of the burning craft. + +"Not a soul!" was the answer. "The captain and ten men perished in the +flames. The fire broke out a week ago in the lower hold. We fought it +as well as we could but it got the best of us. Then it suddenly broke +through the decks, almost like an explosion, a little while ago, and +the captain and others were lost, and so were our small boats. We +managed to get aft but were about to give up when you appeared." + +"What ship is it and where are you from?" + +"The Good Hope, laden with logwood, hides, jute and other materials +from South America," the mate answered. "We were bound for New York." + +"It is more like the Last Hope instead of the Good Hope," observed Mr. +Henderson in a quiet voice, as he saw the flames mount higher and +higher over the ship. A few seconds later the craft seemed rent by an +internal explosion. It appeared to break in two parts, and, amid a +shower of sparks and a cloud of black smoke, the vessel sank under the +water and was seen no more. + +The rescued men turned to behold the final end of their ship. They +betrayed no particular emotion, and some of them even laughed, which +the professor thought, at the time, was rather strange. But there was +little opportunity for speculation. The men were in a sad plight. Few +of them had more than the clothes they stood in, though each one wore +about his waist a belt, and all of them seemed to guard the leather +circlets jealously. + +The professor and his crew were soon busy supplying remedies for +burns, since several of the men were seared by the flames. Then, as it +was learned they had eaten nothing for many hours, it having been +impossible to use the galley, a meal was prepared and the survivors of +the wreck were well fed. + +The hunger of the newcomers having been appeased, they showed much +curiosity over the strange craft that had so opportunely come to their +rescue. Most of the sailors were ignorant men, and the professor had +little fear of them learning anything concerning his secrets. He +explained briefly about the Mermaid, but said nothing of whither she +was bound. + +The addition of fourteen men to the rather small accommodations of the +Mermaid was a serious matter to consider. The ship was able to hold +them all, and even to sail through the air with them, since Mr. +Henderson had provided an excess of power. But it was going to be a +problem to feed so many, and still save enough provisions, for the +long voyage which lay ahead. + +However, Mr. Henderson felt his first duty to be toward his fellowmen, +even if his voyage must be delayed, or given up for a time, while he +got more provisions. There would be no sleeping quarters for the +sailors, but when this was explained to them they cheerfully said they +would sleep on deck if necessary. In fact some of them had to, but as +the weather was warm and clear this was no hardship. A few found +quarters in the engine room and other apartments of the Mermaid. + +Finding, after an examination, that his ship was in good order save +for the broken gas apparatus, Mr. Henderson gave orders to proceed +along the surface of the ocean. The sailors wanted to see how it felt +to mount into the air, but Mr. Henderson, refused to attempt a flight +until he had made complete repairs, and this would take a day or more. + +At this there appeared to be some discontent among the survivors, and +they muttered to each other as they stood in a group on deck. But the +professor and his assistants were too busy with their preparations for +fixing the break to notice this. + +While the men were gathered in a knot near the after part of the small +deck, the mate separated from them, and, coming close to where Mark +was standing, unscrewing some of the broken parts of the pipe said, in +a low voice. + +"Tell the captain to watch out." + +"What do you mean?" asked Mark quickly. + +"Hush! Not so loud!" the mate exclaimed. "If the men hear me talking +to you, or see me, they may kill me. Tell the captain to look out; +that's all. Be on guard, and watch the engine room carefully." + +"But why-- ?" Mark began, when, turning suddenly, the mate left him. +It was well he did so, for, at that instant, one of the sailors, who +had observed the two conversing, strolled in their direction. + +Much alarmed, Mark sought Mr. Henderson and told him what he had +heard. + +"I suppose the fire may have turned the poor man's head," the +scientist said. "I wonder if he thinks the men I rescued would mutiny +and take possession of my ship? If they did they would not know how to +work it, so what good would it do?" + +"Hadn't we better look out?" asked Mark. + +"I'm not afraid," replied the professor. "I will be too busy the next +few days, repairing the break, to think of anything else. Besides, +what would they want to harm us for? Didn't we save their lives?" + +Seeing the scientist placed no faith in what the mate had said, Mark +went back to his task. + +It soon became too dark to work, and it was decided, after supper, to +halt the ship until morning as it would be less risky. + +Mark did not sleep well, his dreams being disturbed by visions of +pirates and black flags. But morning came and nothing had developed. +The men seemed to recover their spirits with daybreak, and mast of the +crew, after breakfast, greeted Mr. Henderson pleasantly, and asked to +be allowed to help fix the ship. + +It took the skilled labor of the professor, Washington and the boys to +mend the break, and, even at that, it was four days in the repairing. +But at last the final bolt was in place, and the Mermaid was able to +resume her trips through the air. + +"We will rise the first thing in the morning," said the professor to +Mark and Jack that night. "I am anxious to see how the ship behaves +with a big load aboard." + + CHAPTER IX + + THE MUTINY + +MARK was awakened that night by feeling some one trying to turn him +over. At first he thought it was Jack, and sleepily muttered that he +wanted to be let alone. + +"Sorry I can't oblige ye, my hearty!" exclaimed a rough voice in his +ear, "but I got particular orders t' tie you up!" + +At that Mark tried to sit up, but he found he could not. He discovered +that he was closely bound with many turns of a rope, while in front of +his bunk stood one of the rescued sailors. + +"There," said the man, with a final tightening of the ropes. "I guess +you're safe." + +"What's the matter? What does it all mean?" asked Mark, much +bewildered. + +"It means that we have possession of the ship," the sailor answered, +"and, if you're wise you'll not make a fuss. It wouldn't do any good, +anyhow, as all your friends are in the same condition." + +Then, picking Mark up, as if he was a baby, the man slung him over his +shoulder and carried him to the living room. There Mark saw Jack, the +professor, Washington, and the others similarly bound. + +"Do you realize what you are doing?" asked the professor angrily of +his captors. "You are mutinying, and are liable to severe punishment." + +"If they ever get us," added one of the men. "We've got the ship now, +and we mean to keep her. You'll have to run her or show us how." + +"Never!" cried the professor. + +"I guess he will when he feels this," said one of the men, as he +dragged from a recess two wires. "I happen to know something of +electricity, and when he feels these perhaps he'll change his mind. +I'll start the dynamo." + +The sailor showed that he was acquainted with machinery, for soon the +hum of the electric apparatus was heard. + +"Now to make him tell!" the man with the wires exclaimed, advancing +toward the professor, who turned pale. + +"Stop! You must not torture the old man!" cried a voice, and the mate +of the Good Hope stepped in front of the sailor with the electrified +wires. + +"Who's going to stop me?" asked the man. + +"I will. It's not necessary," the mate went on quickly. "If we make +him weak we may kill him, and he can not tell us what we want to know. +One of the boys can tell us how to run the ship." + +The mate came quickly over to where Mark lay, and whispered: + +"Consent to tell. It is the only way of saving his life. Tell 'em how +to raise the craft. Then leave all to me. I will save you all and the +ship, too, if I can. But consent." + +Mark nodded his head, and the mate cried: + +"I knew I could fetch 'em. I have hypnotic power. This boy will raise +the ship for us. Loosen his bonds, some of you." + +Satisfied that they were now on the way to experiencing a new +sensation, the sailors took the ropes off Mark's arms and legs, and he +was allowed to rise. With a reassuring nod toward the professor he led +the way to the engine room, followed by half the men. He resolved to +start the gas machine slowly, so as to make the upward trip last +longer, thinking before it had gone far, some way of escape from the +mutineers might be found. + +While a crowd of the sailors stood near him, Mark operated the +machinery in the engine room that started the gas generating, and set +the negative gravity apparatus working. + +"You'd better not try any tricks on us," said one of the men in an +ugly tone of voice. + +"I'm not going to," replied Mark. "If you go out on deck you will soon +see the ship leaving the water and mounting into the air." + +"Some of you go," ordered a man with a big bushy red beard. "See if +the ship rises. When she begins to go up sing out. I'm going to stay +here and see how the young cub does it so I can work it myself." + +Obeying the red-bearded man, who seemed to be a leader, several of the +sailors went out on the deck. It was quite dark, but there was a +phosphorous glow to the water which made the rolling waves visible. + +The gas was being generated, as could be told by the hissing sound. +Mark watched the machinery anxiously, for he knew much depended on +him, and the professor was not at hand to guide and instruct him. He +watched the dial of the gage which registered the gas pressure and saw +it slowly moving. In a little while it would be at the point at which +the ship ought to rise. + +Presently a quiver seemed to run through the Mermaid. Now a shout came +from the watchers on deck. + +"She's going up!" + +The ship was indeed rising. The red-bearded man, who was addressed as +Tony, ran from the engine room to the deck. He saw that the ship was +now ten feet above the water. Back he came to where Mark stood by the +gas machine. + +"Lucky for you that you didn't fool us, lad," he said with a leer. +"See that you mind me hereafter. Now show me how the shebang works." + +When the ship had risen as far as Tony desired he made Mark send it +straight ahead. The boy adjusted the air tube to carry the craft +toward the south, but Tony, seeing by a compass in which direction +they were headed, ordered Mark to steer due east. + +"Fix things so they will stay so, too," added Tony. "I don't want to +stop until I get a thousand miles away. Then we'll come down, sail to +some sunny island, and enjoy life." + +Mark locked the steering apparatus so as to keep the Mermaid headed +due east. + +"Now you can go back to your friends," Tony said. "When I want you +I'll send for you." + +With a heavy heart Mark rejoined the professor and others. He found +them with their bonds removed. But to guard against their escape +several men were on watch outside the door. + +"What are they doing?" asked the professor eagerly as Mark entered, +and the boy told him what had taken place. + +"They will ruin my ship and spoil the whole trip," cried the old +scientist. "Oh, why did I ever go to the rescue of the scoundrels?" + +"Never mind," said Jack. "Perhaps we may yet outwit them." + +Morning came at last. The ship was still shooting forward at fast +speed, in an easterly direction. The sailors had learned, in their +short stay aboard, where the food and stores were kept, and they lost +little time in getting breakfast. They sent same in to their captives, +including a big pot of hot coffee, and, after partaking of this the +professor and his friends felt better. + +The mate of the Good Hope came in to help clear away the dishes. As he +passed Mark he slipped into the boy's hand a note. + +"Don't read it until you are alone," he said in a low voice, as he +hurried from the room. + +As soon as the other sailors had left, Mark glanced at the slip of +paper. It bore these words: + + "Open when you hear three raps, then two, then three, and keep + silent." + +"What is it?" asked Mr. Henderson. + +Mark showed him the paper. + +"I wonder what it means," the boy said. + +"Do you think he is a friend of ours?" the professor asked. + +Mark told him of the mate's conversation the night previous. + +"I think we can trust him," the scientist went on. "He must intend to +pay us a visit when the others are asleep. When we hear the knocks as +he specifies we must open the door and let him in." + +All that day the captives were kept in the living room. Once or twice +Mark was sent for to make some adjustment to the machinery, but the +apparatus, for the most part, was automatic, and needed little +attention. The professor, as well as the others, were all impatience +for the promised visit of the mate. Still they felt he would not come +until night. + +In fact it was long past midnight before Mark, Jack and the professor, +who were anxiously listening, heard the three raps, then two, then +three more. Mark quickly opened the door, and the mate stepped inside, +holding his finger to his lips as a sign of caution. Old Andy, +Washington, Bill and Tom had fallen asleep. + +"I have only time for a few words," the mate said. "I am closely +watched. Tony mistrusts me. I will save you if I can." + +"Why have they repaid my kindness with such actions?" asked Mr. +Henderson. + +"Because they are desperate men," replied the mate. "They are nothing +more than pirates. They mutinied on the other ship, killed the captain +and those of the crew who would not join them, and started off to seek +their fortunes. I pretended to join them to save my life, but I have +only been watching for a chance to escape. + +"Because of lax discipline the ship was sent on fire. We tried to put +it out but could not. The rest you know." + +"I heard them plan to capture this airship, but could do nothing to +stop them. Then I resolved to pretend to act with them. They fear +pursuit for their other mutiny, and are anxious to get as far away as +possible." + +"Do you think they will abandon the ship in a little while?" asked the +professor hopefully. + +"I'm afraid not," answered the mate. "I think they want to get rid of +all of you, so they can sail about as they please. Tony is a smart +man. He could soon learn to run this ship, he thinks." + +"I doubt it," Mr. Henderson answered. "But how are you going to help +us?" + +"I have not fully made up my plans," the mate answered. "However I +wanted you to know I would do my best to save you. Now I must go. Be +on the watch and when I can I will let you know what I have decided +on. I will hand Mark a note when I bring your meals, just as I did +to-day. I think----" + +"Hark! What was that?" asked the professor. + +There was a noise outside the door, as if some one was listening. + +"Put out the lights!" whispered the mate, and Jack switched off the +electric incandescents. + +A knock sounded on the door and the voice of Tony called: + +"Mark! Come here! I want you to look at the gas machine. It has +stopped working, and we are falling!" + + CHAPTER X + + FOOLING THEIR ENEMIES + +MARK hurried into the corridor, taking care to close the door after +him, so Tony could get no glimpse of the mate who had risked so much +to save his friends. But he need not have been alarmed for the leader +of the mutineers was too excited over the stopping of the gas +apparatus to give any heed to who was in with the captives. + +"Do you think you can fix it?" he asked the boy. + +"I guess so," Mark replied confidently. "If I can't there is no +danger, for we will fall gradually and land in the water." + +"But I don't want to do that," Tony objected. "I want to keep on +through the air." + +Mark did not reply. By this time he was at the gas machine. He soon +saw nothing was the matter save that new material must be placed in +the retort where the vapor was generated. He refilled it, the gas was +manufactured once more, and the ship began to rise. + +"I will know how to do it next time," Tony said with a grin. Mark +realized that every time he showed the leader of the mutineers +something about the ship it was putting the professor and his friends +more and more into the power of the scoundrels. But there was no help +for it. + +The ship was still plunging ahead, and kept about a mile above the +earth. As there was no further need of Mark, he was told he could go +back to his friends. When he reached the room where they were held +prisoners, he found the mate had gone away, promising again to do all +he could for them. + +The next night, which it seemed would never come, for the day, locked +as the captives were in their room, seemed endless, finally closed in. +Mark, Jack and the professor were anxious to know whether the mate +would pay them another visit. As for Andy, Tom and Bill, while they +were interested in the ship, and wanted to be free from the power of +the mutineers, they did not lose any sleep over it. + +Shortly after midnight, there came again the peculiar knock, and the +mate entered the room. He seemed much excited over something, and, as +soon as the portal was securely closed he said to Professor Henderson: + +"Is there an island any where near here where men could live for a +time?" + +"What do you mean?" asked the scientist. "Do you want us to desert the +ship and leave these scoundrels in charge?" + +"Nothing of the sort," replied the mate, who, had said his name was +Jack Rodgers. "But first answer my question. A great deal may depend +on it." + +Seeing Rodgers was in earnest, the professor looked over some maps and +charts, and announced that they were within a few hundred miles of a +group of islands. + +"When would we reach them?" was Rodgers's next question. + +Mr. Henderson made a few rapid calculations on a piece of paper. + +"At the present rate of sailing," he said, "we should be there about +ten o'clock to-morrow. That is, provided the ship does not slacken +speed or increase it." + +"There is no danger of either of those two things happening," said the +mate. "Tony is too afraid of the machinery to do anything to it. So +you may safely figure that our speed will continue the same." + +"Then I can guarantee, with all reasonable certainty," the professor +said, "that about ten o'clock to-morrow we will be less than a mile +from the islands. They are a group where friendly natives live, and +where many tropical fruits abound. One could scarcely select a better +place to be shipwrecked. But I hope the plans of Tony and his friends +do not include landing us there." + +"No, nothing like that," the mate answered. "Quite the contrary. But I +had better be going. I will try and see Mark some time to-morrow. Tony +does not mind when I speak to him." + +With this Rodgers left the captives, as he heard some of the sailors +moving about and did not want to be discovered. The professor and the +boys wondered what the mate's plan might be, but they had to be +content to wait and see. + +The night passed without incident. About nine o'clock the next morning +the mate came to the door of the room where the professor and his +friends were prisoners. He made no secret of his approach, but knocked +boldly. + +"Tell Mark I want to see him," he said, as the professor answered. +"All of you keep quiet," he added in a whisper. "There may be good +news soon." + +Mark slipped from the room. He followed the mate to the upper deck +which, at that time was deserted as all the sailors were in the dining +room eating, which practice they indulged in as often as they could. + +"I have a plan to get rid of these rough men," the mate said to Mark. +"It may work, and, again it may not. At any rate it is worth trying, +It all depends on you with what help I can give you." + +"I'm willing to do my share," Mark said, and for the next ten minutes +the boy and the mate were in earnest conversation. + +It was about thirty-five minutes later when there arose a sudden +commotion in the ship. Mark had returned to his friends and the mate +had disappeared. The confusion seemed to come from the engine room +where Tony had posted some of his men. + +"We're falling down! We'll all be killed!" shouted the men. "The ship +is falling into the sea!" + +"What is the trouble?" asked the professor as he heard the commotion. + +"It is part of the mate's plan," said Mark. "He told me to tell you to +do nothing. If Tony or any of the other men come to you just refer +them to me." + +Two minutes later Tony came rushing into the apartment where the +captives were held prisoners. + +"Here! Come quickly, Mark!" he exclaimed. "Something has gone wrong +with the gas machine again, and you must come and fix it before we are +all dashed to pieces!" + +With every appearance of haste Mark rushed from the apartment, +following Tony. The latter led the way to the engine room. + +"Can anything be done?" he asked. + +Mark took a survey of the machinery. + +"It is too late," he said as though much excited. "The ship is falling +down toward the sea with terrific force." + +It needed but a glance at the height gage to show this. The pointer +was revolving rapidly about the face of the dial. + +"Will the ship stand the blow?" asked Tony. + +"Not at the rate it is falling," replied Mark. "She will go all to +pieces when she strikes the water, and she may explode!" + +"What are we to do then?" asked the leader of the mutineers. + +"We must save ourselves!" cried the mate, running in at this juncture. +"Let our prisoners shift for themselves as best they can. Let's all +leap into the sea. There we at least have a chance for our lives. But +if we stay on this ship we will all be drowned like cats in a bag." + +"What do you propose?" asked Tony, his face white with fear. + +"When the ship comes near enough the surface of the water to make it +safe we should all drop overboard!" the mate exclaimed. "We are near +some islands, I understand, and we can thus save our lives by swimming +ashore." + +This plan seemed to meet with instant favor, and a little later there +was a rush for the deck, as each one wished to be the first to escape +from the boat they believed to be doomed. + +Lower and lower fell the Mermaid. She was like a wounded bird which +the shot of the hunter has crippled. Down and down she fluttered. + +By this time all the sailors, save the mate were on deck. He and Mark +remained in the engine room. + +"Don't let her get too low," the mate whispered. + +"I'll watch out," Mark replied. "I want to give them a good scare +while I'm at it." + +The ship was now within fifty feet of the water. There was a cry of +terror from the sailors. Some of them leaped over the rail and started +to swim ashore, as the ship was by this time close to a group of +islands. + +Suddenly, from the engine room the mate rushed. + +"Jump! Jump for your lives!" he exclaimed. "The ship is about to blow +up!" + + CHAPTER XI + + MYSTERIOUS HAPPENINGS + +THE voice of the mate echoed through the Mermaid. Those on deck heard +it, as did Tony in the engine room, where he was vainly trying to +understand the complicated machinery. + +An instant later there sounded from beneath the ship a series of +splashes. More sailors were leaping from the deck of the craft to the +ocean. The distance was not great, particularly as they all landed in +water. + +"Quick!" cried the mate to a group of sailors that hesitated before +taking the jump. "The ship may blow up any minute now." + +The men needed no second urging. As soon as they struck the water they +began to swim ashore, as it was not far away. One after another they +jumped over the rail. Tony was the last to go. He urged the captives +to follow him, but they all refused. + +A minute later the only one of the pirate crew left on the ship was +the mate. The others were all struggling in the sea. Eventually they +all reached shore in safety. + +The airship was now within about twenty feet of the water. It was +still falling but not so rapidly. + +"Better send her up, now," said the mate to Mark, and the boy turned +the necessary levers to accomplish this. + +Dipping into the water as a sea gull does when searching for food on +the wing, for she had come quite low, the Mermaid mounted once more +into the air, and was soon sailing along over the heads of Tony and +his gang. + +"What's it all about?" asked Mr. Henderson, who seemed in a sort of +stupor. "I thought the ship was broken. How, then, can it rise?" + +"It was only a trick of mine," Rodgers said. "The gas machine is not +broken. I had Mark fix it so that only a little vapor would be +generated. When the supply in the holder was not enough, and no more +was being made, the ship had to sink. Mark and I pretended it was +worse than it really was just to scare the scoundrels." + +"And you evidently succeeded," observed Mr. Henderson. "They have all +left us. I am glad you stayed." + +"So am I," said Rodgers. "I was just waiting for a chance to escape +from that crowd. This was the plan I thought of that night. I wanted +to see the men put on some island where they could manage to live, and +which was not too far away." + +The Mermaid was now mounting upward rapidly, as Mark had adjusted the +machinery properly. The craft was well rid of the pirate crew, and was +able to proceed on its way, and enable Mr. Henderson to carry out his +plans. + +When the Mermaid had reached a certain height her prow was turned the +other way, and she was sent back racing over the ground she had just +covered. But now the ship was in the hands of friends. Fortunately no +great damage had been done by the sailors, and the professor was soon +able to get things in ship-shape. The engines had not been molested +and were working better than ever. + +"Now to make another attempt to reach the big hole in the earth," the +professor cried. "We will be careful next time, who we rescue from +ships at sea." + +The island was soon left behind, becoming a mere speck on the ocean. +Those aboard the Mermaid knew no harm could befall the sailors, as +there were no savage tribes on the little spot of land. Eventually the +sailors were picked up by a passing vessel and taken to their homes. +The story of their first mutiny leaked out and they were properly +punished. + +It required several days travel before the airship regained the +distance she had lost because of the plans of the pirates. Also, there +were a number of minor repairs to make, and the professor and his +friends were kept busy. + +"How much longer before we come to the big hole?" asked Jack, one day. + +"I think we ought to be near it in about two weeks," the professor +replied. "I only hope we shall not be disappointed, and will be able +to explore it." + +"'Tain't goin' t' be no fun t' be decimated an' expurgitated inter a +conglomerous aggregation of elements constituting th' exterior portion +of human anatomy," said Washington in dubious tones. + +"You mean you're afraid of being boiled in the steam from the big +hole?" asked Mark. + +"Jest so," replied the colored man. + +"You don't need to worry about that," put in the professor. "I will +not take the ship down if there is any danger, though of course there +will be some risk." + +The ship, having been fully repaired, was now able to be speeded up, +and was sent scudding along toward her destination. Rodgers proved a +valuable acquisition toward the crew, for he had sailed many years in +the waters over which they were flying, and was able to give the +professor many valuable hints. He had heard vague stories of the +island with the big hole, but had never been near it. He did not make +the trip however, as, at his request, he was put off at an inhabited +island one night. + +It was about a week after the sailors were frightened from the ship, +that a curious experience befell Mark. Washington was on duty in the +conning tower, attending to the apparatus as the ship flew through the +air, and all the others had gone to bed. Mark had remained up, later +than the others as he was interested in reading a book on science. + +About ten o'clock he became hungry, and going to the pantry got some +bread and cold meat. He set these on a table, and then, remembering he +would need some water to drink, started after some in the cooler, +which was in a little room near the tower. + +Washington heard the boy as he turned the faucet to draw the liquid, +and spoke to him, as the colored man was rather lonesome at his post. +Mark did not linger more than a minute or two, but when he returned to +where he had left the food he was much surprised. + +There was not a trace of it to be seen. The dishes were on the table, +but every vestige of bread and meat had disappeared. + +"I wonder if a cat or dog has been here," was Mark's first thought. +Then he remembered that no such animals were aboard the Mermaid. + +Something on the floor caught his eye. He stooped and picked it up. It +was a slice of bread, but in such shape that the boy stared at it, +puzzled as to how it could have become so. + +It was flattened out quite thin, but the strangest part of it was that +it bore what seemed to be the marks of thumb and fingers from a very +large hand. So big, in fact, was the print, that Mark's hand scarce +covered half of it, and, where the bread had been squeezed into a +putty like mass (for it was quite fresh) the peculiar markings on the +skin of the tips of the fingers were visible. + +"It looks as if a giant grabbed this slice of bread," Mark observed. +"There are strange happenings aboard this ship. I wish I knew what +they meant." + +He looked all around for the food, thinking perhaps a rat had dragged +it off, but there was no trace of it. + +Suddenly the boy thought he heard a sound from the big storeroom. He +was almost sure he heard something moving in there. He started toward +the door when he was stopped by hearing the professor's voice call: + +"Don't open that door, Mark. Have I not told you that place must not +be entered?" + +"I thought I heard some one in there," Mark replied. + +"There is nothing in there but some apparatus of mine," Mr. Henderson +said. "I want no one to see it. What is the matter?" + +Mark explained matters to the scientist, who had, as he said later, +arisen on hearing the boy, moving about. + +"Oh, it was a rat that took your stuff," Mr. Henderson said. "I guess +there are some pretty big ones on the ship. Get some more food and go +to sleep." + +Mark felt it best to obey, though he was by no means satisfied with +the professor's explanation. He listened intently to see if any more +noises came from the storeroom, but none did, and he went to bed. + +Several times after that Mark tried the experiment of leaving food +about. On each occasion it was taken. + +"It looks as if the ship was haunted," he said. "Of course I know it +isn't, but it's very queer. They must be strange rats that can get +food from shelves when there is only the smooth side of the ship to +climb up," for on some occasions Mark had tried the experiment of +putting the food as nearly out of reach as possible. + +It took several nights to learn all this, and, as he did not want to +take any one into his confidence, he had to work in secret. But, with +all his efforts he learned nothing, save that there was something odd +about the ship that he could not fathom. + +At first he believed the professor had some strange animal concealed +in the storeroom, but he dismissed this idea almost as soon as he +thought of it. For what could the scientist want with an animal when +they were going to the interior of the earth? That some beast had +slipped aboard was out of the question. Mark was much puzzled, but +finally, deciding the matter did not concern him a great deal, gave up +trying to solve the mystery, at least for a time. + +The ship was now in the neighborhood of the equator and the climate +had become much warmer. So hot indeed were some nights that they slept +out on deck, with the Mermaid flying through the air at a moderate +pace, for it was deemed best not to go at any great speed after dark. + +One night the professor, after consulting various charts and maps, and +making calculations which covered several sheets of paper announced: + +"We should sight the mysterious island to-morrow." + +"That's good news!" exclaimed Jack. "I'm anxious to see what's below +inside of that big hole." + +"Everybody git ready for their funerals!" exclaimed Washington in a +deep voice. "I ain't got many----" + +"Cheer up," interrupted Jack, poking Washington in the ribs. The +colored man was very ticklish, and he began to laugh heartily, though, +perhaps, he did not feel like it. + +Suddenly, above the sound of his shouts, there came a crashing, +grinding noise from the engine room. + + CHAPTER XII + + THE BIG HOLE + +"SOMETHING has gone wrong!" exclaimed the professor as he jumped up. +He reached the engine room ahead of any one else, and when the two +boys got there they found him busy twisting wheels and shifting +levers. + +"Anything serious?" asked Jack. + +"It's the gas machine again," Mr. Henderson replied. "It broke where +we fixed it. However it doesn't matter. I was going to lower the ship +anyhow, as I want to approach the island from the water. We will go +down a little sooner than I counted on." + +The disabling of the gas machine caused the vapor to escape slowly +from the tank, and this made the ship sink gradually. By means of the +emergency stop-cock the descent could be controlled almost as well as +though the machinery was in working order. Half an hour later the +Mermaid rested on the water. + +It was a little rough, as there was quite a swell on, and not so +pleasant as floating in the air on an even keel, but they made the +best of it. + +On account of the little accident, and not being certain of its +extent, it was deemed best not to send the ship ahead. So they laid to +until morning. + +For the better part of two days all those on board the Mermaid had +their hands full mending the break and making other repairs found +necessary. In that time they lay to, floating idly with the currents, +or blown by the wind, for the professor would not start any of the +engines or apparatus until the ship was in good condition. + +In this time Mark had several times recalled the curious happenings in +regard to the disappearing food, and the mystery of the storeroom. But +there were no further manifestations, and no other signs that there +might be a strange visitor aboard. + +"I couldn't have imagined it all," said Mark, "but I guess what did +happen may have been caused by natural means, only I can't discover +them." + +It was about two days after this, the ship having sailed scores of +miles on the surface of the water, that Mark, who was in the conning +tower exclaimed: + +"That looks like a waterspout ahead of us." + +"That's what it is!" Jack agreed. "What shall we do?" + +"Call the professor!" said Mark. "He'll know." + +When Mr. Henderson came, he looked for a long time at a cloud of black +vapor which hung low in the east. + +"It may be a waterspout," he said. "We'll rise in the air and see if +we can avoid it." + +The ship was sent up into the air. As it rose higher and higher, the +professor, making frequent observations from his conning tower, cried +out: + +"That is no waterspout!" + +"What is it?" asked Mark. + +"It is the steam and vapor rising from the big hole in the earth! +Boys, we are almost there!" + +"Are you sure that's it?" asked Mark. + +"Almost positive," Mr. Henderson replied. "You can see how much warmer +it has become of late, as we approached the equator. We are almost due +at the island, and I have no doubt we have reached it." + +As the ship flew forward the mass of dark vapor became more +pronounced. Through the glasses it could be noticed to consist of +rolling masses of clouds. What lay beneath them no one knew. The +adventurers were going to try to find out. + +Now that they had arrived at the beginning of the main part of their +journey, the travelers felt their spirits sink a little. It was one +thing to plan to go down into the depths of the earth, but it was +quite another to make the actual attempt. Still, they were not going +to give up the project. The professor had confidence in his ship and +believed it could safely make the trip. Still it was with no little +apprehension that Mr. Henderson watched the nearer approach of the +craft to that strange island. + +"Perfesser, are yo' really an' truly goin' t' depress this elongated +spheroid an' its human consignment int' that conglomerous convoluted +mass of gaseous vapor regardless of th' consequences?" asked +Washington, as he gazed with wide opened eyes at the sight before him. + +"If you mean am I going to let the Mermaid go down into that hole you +are perfectly correct," the scientist answered, "though you could have +said it in fewer words, Washington." + +"I-- I guess I'll get out an' walk," the colored man made reply. + +"This isn't any trolley car," observed Mark. "Don't lose your nerve, +Wash. Stay with us, and we'll discover a gold or diamond mine, maybe." + +"Is there diamonds down there?" asked the colored man, his fright +seeming to leave him. + +"There are all sorts of things inside the earth," the professor +answered. + +"Then I'm goin' along!" Washington declared. "I always did want a +diamond ring, an' I knows a little colored gal that wants one, too. +I'm goin' all right! This suttenly am th' most kloslosterous +conjunctivity of combativeness that I ever sagaciated!" and he began +to do a sort of impromptu cake-walk. + + CHAPTER XIII + + DOWN INTO THE EARTH + +IT was now noon, but the adventurers did not think of dinner in the +excitement of approaching the mysterious island. The speed of the ship +was increased that they might the more quickly come to it. As they +approached they could see the masses of vapor more plainly, and it +appeared that some great commotion must be going on inside the big +hole, since clouds of steam arose. + +"I only hope it doesn't prove too hot for us," observed the professor. +"However, I provided a water jacket for the ship, and we may need it, +as well as the vacuum chambers to keep the heat from us." + +It was about three o'clock when the flying ship reached the edge of +the island. From there it was about a mile to the rim of the big hole, +over one side of which the waters of the ocean poured with a roar that +could be heard over half a mile off. + +"I think we had better halt and see that everything is in good shape +before proceeding," said Mr. Henderson. "Jack, you and Mark make a +thorough inspection of the engine room, and see that all the apparatus +is in working order," + +The two boys prepared to do as they were told. Mark, who was walking a +little ahead of Jack, entered the apartment from which the storeroom +opened. As he did so he saw, or thought he saw, the door of the place +where the extra supplies were kept, close. Without saying anything to +Jack he hurried forward, and tried the knob. It would not turn. + +"That's funny," said Mark to himself. "I could almost swear I saw some +one go into that room. Yet I know the professor did not enter, for I +just left him. And none of the others would dare to. I wonder if I +will ever solve the mystery." + +But he had too much to do to allow him to dwell on that matter. +Several of the dynamos needed adjusting and for two hours he and Jack +had all they could do. + +In the meanwhile the professor had gone over the other parts of the +ship, and gotten everything in readiness for the descent. The Mermaid +was lowered to within a few hundred feet of the sea, and, through a +hose that was let down, the compartments, provided for this emergency +were filled with water. These compartments were between the outer and +inner hulls of the lower part of the craft, and were designed to +prevent the interior becoming heated in case the travelers found they +had to pass close to fire. There were also vacuum chambers, and from +these the air was exhausted, as of course every schoolboy knows a +vacuum is a non-conductor of either heat or cold. + +"Now I think we are ready," the professor announced at length. + +"Everything's all right in the engine room," announced Jack. + +"Yes, an' everything's all right in th' kitchen," put in Washington. +"I've got a good meal ready as soon as any one wants to eat." + +"It will have to wait a while," Mr. Henderson remarked. "We are going +to start to make the descent before we dine." + +The hose was reeled up, and the ship was sent a few hundred feet +higher into the air, as Mr. Henderson wanted to take a last good +observation before he went down into the hole. + +But having risen some distance above the masses of rolling vapors he +found he was at no advantage, since the strongest telescope he could +bring to bear could not pierce the cloud masses. + +"We'll just have to trust to luck," the scientist said. "I judge we're +about over the centre of the opening. Lower away Mark!" + +The boy, who, under the watchful eye of the professor, was +manipulating the levers and wheels in the conning tower, shifted some +handles. The gas was expelled from the holder, the negative gravity +apparatus ceased to work, and the Flying Mermaid sank lower and lower, +toward the mysterious hole that yawned beneath her. + +The hearts of all beat strangely, if not with fear, at least with +apprehension, for they did not know what they might encounter. Perhaps +death in some terrible form awaited them. But the desire to discover +something new and strange had gripped all of them, and not one would +have voted to turn back. + +Even old Andy, who seldom got excited, was in unusual spirits. He took +down his gun and remarked: + +"Maybe I can kill some new kind of animal, and write a book about its +habits, for surely we will see strange beasts in the under-world." + +Lower and lower sank the ship. Now it was amid the first thin masses +of vapors, those that floated highest and were more like a light fog, +than anything else. By means of a window in the bottom of the craft, +which window was closed by a thick piece of plate glass, Professor +Henderson could look down and see what was beneath them. + +"The clouds seem to be getting thicker," he said, as he peered through +the small casement. "If they would only clear away we could see +something." + +But instead of doing this the vapors accumulated more thickly about +the ship. It was so dark inside the Mermaid now that the electric +lights had to be switched on. In the room with the floor-window the +lights were not used, as had they shone one could not have seen down +below. + +The professor maintained his position. The descent was a perilous one, +and he wanted to be on the watch to check it at once if the Mermaid +was liable to dash upon some pointed rock or fall into some fiery pit. +His hand was on the signal levers. + +Suddenly he looked up and glanced at a gage on the wall. The hand of +it was slowly revolving. + +"We are at the earth's surface," the scientist said. "Now we are below +it. Now we are fairly within the big hole! Boys, we may be on the +verge of a great discovery!" + +An instant later it seemed as if a hot wave had struck the Mermaid, or +as if the craft had been plunged into boiling water. + +"It's going to be hot!" cried the professor. "Lucky I provided the +water jackets!" + +Then the lights in the interior of the ship went out, leaving the +whole craft in darkness. + +"What has happened?" cried Mark. + + CHAPTER XIV + + MANY MILES BELOW + +"DON'T be alarmed," spoke the calm voice of the professor. "I have +only turned off the electrics. I want to switch on the search lights, +to see if we can learn anything about our position." + +As he spoke he turned a switch, and, the gloom below the ship, as the +boys could see by glimpses from the floor-window, was pierced by a +dazzling glare. In the bottom of the Mermaid were set a number of +powerful electric arc lights with reflectors, constructed to throw the +beams downward. The professor had built them in for just this +emergency, as he thought that at some time they might want to +illuminate what was below the craft. + +Not that it was of much avail on this occasion, for, though the lights +were powerful, they could not pierce the miles of gloom that lay below +them. The beams only served to accentuate the darkness. + +"I guess we'll have to trust to luck," the professor said, after a +vain attempt, by means of powerful glasses, to distinguish something. +"There is too much fog and vapor." + +"What makes it so warm?" asked Mark, removing his coat. + +"Well, you must remember you are approaching the interior of the +earth," the professor answered. "It has been calculated that the heat +increases one degree for every fifty-five feet you descend. We have +come down several hundred feet and of course it is getting warmer." + +"Then if we go down very far it will get so hot we will not be able to +stand it," Jack put in. + +"I do not believe we will suffer any great inconvenience," Mr. +Henderson went on. "I believe that after we pass a certain point it +will become cooler. I think the inner fires of the earth are more or +less heated gas in a sort of inner chamber between two shells. If we +can pass the second shell, we will be all right." + +"But aren't we liable to hit something, going down into the dark this +way?" asked Mark. + +"We will guard ourselves as far as possible," the scientist answered. + +The Mermaid seemed to be going down on a side of the immense shaft a +good way distant from the strange waterfall. When they had first +dropped into the hole the travelers could hear the rush of waters, but +now the noise was not audible. + +"I think the hole must widen out the farther down we go," the +professor said. "We are probably many miles from the fall now." + +"I'm sure I hope so," put in Jack. "It would be no fun to have to take +a shower bath in this place." + +After a meal, the boys and the professor took some more observations, +but with all their efforts nothing could be seen below the ship but a +vast black void, into which they were steadily descending. + +"I wonder when we're going to stop," asked Mark. "It's like playing +the game 'Going to Jerusalem,' you keep wondering when the music will +cease and you will have a chance to grab a chair. I only hope we have +a chair or something else to sit on, in case we go to smash." + +"We're not liable to have any accidents with the professor in charge," +Jack answered. "Didn't he bring us safe out of some pretty tight holes +when we went to the north pole in the airship, and again when we found +the south pole in the submarine?" + +"Yes, but this is different," objected Mark. + +"Well, I'm not worrying," Jack went on. "It doesn't do any good, and +only makes you lie awake nights. By the way, I wonder what time it is +getting to be." + +He looked at his watch and found it was close on to eight o'clock in +the evening. So late had dinner been served, and so varied were the +happenings of the last few hours, that time had passed quickly. + +"Why it's almost bed-time," said Jack. "I wonder if we are to go on +dropping into the depths of nowhere all night." + +At that moment the professor entered the room where the boys were. He +seemed quite pleased over something, and was smiling. + +"Everything is going along famously," he said. "I have just tested the +air and find it is rich in oxygen. We shall suffer nothing on that +score. The heat too, seems to have decreased. On the whole, everything +favors us." + +"Are we going on down?" asked Mark. + +"As far as we can," Mr. Henderson answered. "Let me see how far we are +below now." + +He went to the gage that indicated the vertical position of the ship. +Because of the changed conditions, the craft now sinking below the +surface of the earth instead of rising above it, as was its wont, some +calculations were necessary. These the scientist made as quickly as he +could. + +"We are now ten miles underground!" he exclaimed. "That is doing very +well. My theories are working out. I think we shall land somewhere +before long." + +"I hopes so!" exclaimed Washington coming in at this point. "I'm +mighty skeered shootin' down int' this dark hole, and no time-table t' +show when we's due t' arrive." + +"We ought to land in a couple of days more," the professor answered. +"Never mind about worrying Washington, I'll take care of you." + +"I hopes so, Perfesser," the colored man said. "I got a little girl +waitin' for me back in Georgia, an' I'd like t' see her 'fore I git +burned up." + +Accompanied by the professor, the boys made a tour of the ship to see +that all the machinery and apparatus were in working order. Owing to +the changed conditions the negative gravity engine had to be worked at +faster speed than usual, since the downward pull of the earth was +greater the farther they descended into the interior and they did not +want to fall too swiftly. But this was easily provided for, since the +professor had made the apparatus capable of standing a great strain. + +The ten miles had become fourteen when the professor, finding that +everything was in good shape, proposed that the boys go to bed. They, +did not want to, though they were sleepy, and they feared to miss some +strange sights. + +But when the professor had promised to call them in case anything +unusual developed, they consented to turn in, and Bill and Tom assumed +their duties, which were light enough, now that the ship was merely +falling into the immense shaft. + +When Mark turned into his bunk he could not go to sleep at once. It +may have been the excitement over their new position, or because he +had eaten too hearty a supper, but the fact was he remained awake for +some time. + +While thus tossing restlessly on his bed, wondering what ailed him, he +thought he heard a noise in the main apartment out of which the +storeroom opened. He crawled softly from his bed, and looked from his +stateroom door. + +In the light of a shaded electric Mark saw the figure of some one +glide across the floor and take refuge in the room, which Professor +Henderson always was so particular about. + +"I wonder what or who that was," reasoned Mark. "There is some mystery +in this. Can the professor have concealed some one on this ship whose +presence he does not want to admit? It certainly looks so." + +Not wanting to awaken the ship's crew, and remembering what Mr. +Henderson had said about any one entering the storeroom, Mark went +back to bed, to fall into an uneasy slumber. + +"Breakfast!" called Washington breaking in on a fine dream Jack was +having about being captain of a company of automobile soldiers. "Last +call for breakfast!" + +"Hello! Is it morning?" asked Jack. + +"Not so's you could notice it," Washington went on. "It's as dark as a +stack of black cats and another one throwed in. But breakfast is ready +jest the same." + +The boys were soon at the table, and learned that nothing of +importance had occurred during the night. The Mermaid had been kept +going slowly down, and about seven o'clock registered more than fifty +miles below the earth's surface. + +Still there was no change in the outward surroundings. It remained as +black as the interior of Egypt when that country was at its darkest. +The powerful electrics could not pierce the gloom. The ship was +working well, and the travelers were very comfortable. + +Down, down, down, went the Mermaid. The temperature, which had risen +to about ninety went back to sixty-nine, and there seemed to be no +more danger from the inner fires. + +They were now a hundred miles under the surface. But still the +professor kept the Mermaid sinking. Every now and again he would take +an observation, but only found the impenetrable darkness surrounded +them. + +"We must arrive somewhere, soon," he muttered. + +It was about six o'clock that night that the alarm bell set up a +sudden ringing. The professor who was making some calculations on a +piece of paper jumped to his feet, and so did a number of the others. + +"We are nearing the bottom!" he cried. "The bell has given us +warning!" + + CHAPTER XV + + IN THE STRANGE DRAUGHT + +THE boys ran to attend to the engines and apparatus to which they had +been assigned in view of this emergency. The professor, Washington, +Bill, Tom and Andy, who had kept to themselves since the descent, came +running out of the small cabin where they usually sat, and wanted to +know what it was all about. + +"We may hit something, in spite of all precautions," Mr. Henderson +remarked. "Slow down the ship." + +The Mermaid was, accordingly checked in her downward flight, by a +liberal use of the gas and the negative gravity machine. + +The bell continued to ring, and the dials pointed to the mark that +indicated the ship was more than one hundred and fifty miles down. + +Mark, who had run to the engine room to check the descent, came back. + +"Why didn't you slow her down?" asked the professor. + +"I did," replied the boy. "The negative gravity and the gas machines +are working at full speed." + +"Then why are we still descending?" asked the scientist. "For a while +our speed was checked, but now we are falling faster than before." + +"I attended to the apparatus," Mark insisted. + +Just then, from without the ship, came a terrible roaring sound, as +though there was a great cyclone in progress. At the same time, those +aboard the craft could feel themselves being pulled downward with +terrific force. + +"We are caught in a draught!" Mr. Henderson cried. "We are being +sucked down into the depths of the earth!" + +He ran to the engine room. With the help of the boys he set in motion +an auxiliary gravity machine, designed to exert a most powerful +influence against the downward pull of the earth. As they watched the +great wheels spin around, and heard the hum and whirr of the dynamos, +the boys watched the pointer which indicated how low they were +getting. + +And, as they watched, they saw that the needle of the dial kept +moving, moving, moving. + +"Our efforts are useless! We can't stop!" the professor cried. + +Grave indeed was the plight of the adventurers. In their ship they +were being sucked down into unknown regions and all their efforts did +not avail to save them. It was an emergency they could not guard +against, and which could not have been foreseen. + +"What are to do?" asked Mark. + +"We can only wait," Mr. Henderson replied. "The terrible suction may +cease, or it may carry us to some place of safety. Let us hope for the +best." + +Seeing there was no further use in running the engines in an effort to +check the downward rush the machines were stopped. Then they waited +for whatever might happen. + +Now that they seemed in imminent peril Washington was as cool as any +one. He went about putting his kitchen in order and getting ready for +the next meal as if they were sailing comfortably along on the surface +of the ocean. As for old Andy he was nervous and frightened, and +plainly showed it. With his gun in readiness he paced back and forth +as if on the lookout for strange beasts or birds. + +Bill and Tom were so alarmed that they were of little use in doing +anything, and they were not disturbed in their staterooms where they +went when it became known that the ship was unmanageable. + +The boys and the professor, while greatly frightened at the unexpected +turn of events, decided there was no use in giving way to foolish +alarm. They realized they could do nothing but await developments. + +At the same time they took every precaution. They piled all the +bedding on the floor of the living room, so that the pillows and +mattresses might form a sort of pad in case the ship was dashed down +on the bottom of the big hole. + +"Not that it would save us much," Jack observed with a grim smile, +"but somehow it sort of makes your mind easier." + +All this while the ship was being sucked down at a swift pace. The +pointer of the gage, indicating the depth, kept moving around and soon +they were several hundreds of miles below the surface of the earth. + +The professor tried, by means of several instruments, to discover in +which direction they were headed, and whether they were going straight +down or at an angle. But some strange influence seemed to affect the +gages and other pieces of apparatus, for the pointers and hands would +swing in all directions, at one time indicating that they were going +down, and, again, upward. + +"There must be a strong current of electricity here," Mr. Henderson +said, "or else there is, as many suspect, a powerful magnet at the +center of the earth, which we are nearing." + +"What will you do if the ship is pulled apart, or falls and is +smashed?" asked Mark with much anxiety. + +"You take a cheerful view of things," said Jack. + +"Well, it's a good thing to prepare for emergencies," Mark added. + +"If the ship was to be separated by the magnetic pull, or if it fell +on sharp rocks and was split in twain, I am afraid none of us could do +anything to save ourselves," the professor answered. "Still, if we +were given a little warning of the disaster, I have means at hand +whereby we might escape with our lives. But it would be a perilous way +of----" + +"I reckon yo' all better come out an' have supper," broke in +Washington. "Leastways we'll call it supper, though I don't rightly +know whether it's night or mornin'. Anyhow I've got a meal ready." + +"I don't suppose any of us feel much like eating," observed Mr. +Henderson, "but there is no telling when we will have the chance +again, so, perhaps, we had better take advantage of it." + +For a while they ate in silence, finding that they had better +appetites than they at first thought. Old Andy in particular did full +justice to the food Washington had prepared. + +"I always found it a good plan to eat as much and as often as you +can," the hunter remarked. "This is a mighty uncertain world." + +"You started to tell us a little while ago, Professor," said Mark, +"about a plan you had for saving out lives if worst came to worst, and +there was a chance to put it into operation. What is it?" + +"I will tell you," the aged inventor said. "It is something about +which I have kept silent, as I did not want to frighten any of you. It +was my latest invention, and I had only perfected it when we started +off on this voyage. Consequently I had no chance to try it. The +machine works in theory, but whether it does in practice is another +question. That is why I say there is a risk. But we may have to take +this risk. I have placed aboard this ship a----" + +The professor was interrupted in what he was about to say by a curious +tremor that made the whole ship shiver as though it had struck some +obstruction. Yet there was no sudden jolt or jar such as would have +been occasioned by that. + +At the same time Washington, who was out in the kitchen, came running +into the dining room, crying: + +"We're droppin' into a ragin' fire, Perfesser!" + +"What do you mean?" asked Mr. Henderson. + +"I jest took a look down through th' hole in th' bottom of the ship!" +cried Washington. "It's all flames an' smoke below us!" + +"I wonder if it is the end," the professor muttered in a low voice. + +Followed by the boys, the inventor hastened to the floor-window. The +lights were turned off to enable a better view to be had of what was +below them. + +Leaning over the glass protected aperture the boys and the professor +saw, far, far down, a bright light shining. It was as if they were +miles above a whole town of blast furnaces, the stacks of which were +belching forth flames and smoke. The rolling clouds of vapor were +illuminated by a peculiar greenish light, which, at times, turned to +red, blue, purple and yellowish hues. + +The effect was weird and beautiful though it was full of terror for +the travelers. It seemed as if they were falling into some terrible +pit of fire, for the reflection of what they feared were flames, could +plainly be seen. + +"I wish I'd never come on this terrible voyage!" wailed Washington. +"I'd rather freeze to death than be burned up." + +"Washington, be quiet!" commanded the professor sternly. "This is no +time for foolishness. We must work hard to save our lives, for we are +in dire peril. + +"Mark, you and Washington, with Jack, start the engines. Turn on every +bit of power you can. Fill the gas holder as full as it will hold, and +use extra heavy pressure. I will see if I can not work the negative +gravity apparatus to better advantage than we did before. We must +escape if possible!" + +The boys, as was also Washington, were only too glad to have something +to do to take their mind off their troubles. All three were much +frightened, but Mark and Jack tried not to show it. As for Washington +he was almost crying. + +Soon the whirr and hum of the machinery in the Mermaid was heard. The +craft, which was rushing in some direction, either downward, ahead or +backwards within the unknown depths, shivered from the speed of the +dynamos and other apparatus. Soon the boys could hear the professor +starting the negative gravity engine, and then began a struggle +between the forces of nature and those of mankind. + +Once more the adventurers anxiously watched the gages and indicators. +For a while the ship seemed to be holding out against the terrible +influence that was sucking her down. She appeared to hesitate. Then, +as the downward force triumphed over the mechanical energy in the +craft, she began to settle again, and soon was descending, if that was +the direction, as fast as before. + +"It is of no use," said the professor with a groan. "I must try our +last resort!" + +He started from the engine room where Mark and Jack had gone. As he +did so, he glanced at a thermometer hanging on the wall near the door. + +"Has any one turned on the heat?" he asked. + +"It's shut off," replied Mark, looking at the electric stove. + +"Then what makes it so hot?" asked the scientist. + +He pointed to the little silvery column in the tiny tube of the +instrument. It registered close to one hundred degrees, though a few +minutes before it had been but sixty. And the starting of the +machinery could not account for the rise in temperature, since most of +the apparatus was run by electricity and developed little heat save in +the immediate proximity. The thermometer was fully ten feet away from +any machine. + +"It's the fiery furnace that's doing it!" cried Washington. "We're +falling into th' terrible pit an' we're goin' t' be roasted alive!" + +"It certainly is getting warmer," observed Mark, as he took off his +coat. Soon he had to shed his vest, and Jack and the professor +followed his example. The others too, also found all superfluous +garments a burden, and, in a little while they were going about in +scanty attire. + +Still the heat increased, until it was almost torture to remain in the +engine room. Nor was it much cooler elsewhere. In vain did the +professor set a score of big electric fans to whirring. He even placed +cakes of ice, from the small ice machine that was carried, in front of +the revolving blades, to cool off the air. But the ice was melted +almost as soon as it was taken from the apparatus. + +"Them flames is gittin' worser!" Washington cried a little later. +"We's comin' nearer!" + +From the bottom window the professor and the boys looked down. True +enough the curious, changing, vari-colored lights seemed brighter. +They could almost see the tongues of flame shooting upward in +anticipation of what they were soon to devour. + +The heat was increasing every minute. The sides of the ship were hot. +The heads of the travelers were getting dizzy. They could hardly talk +or move about. + +"I must save our lives! I must trust to the----" The professor, who +was muttering to himself started toward the storeroom. As in a dream +Mark watched him. He remembered afterward that he had speculated on +what might be the outcome of the mystery the professor threw about the +place. "I will have to use it," he heard the scientist say softly. + +Just as Mr. Henderson was about to open the door there came a fiercer +blast of heat than any that had preceded. At the same instant the +conditions in the Mermaid became so fearful that each of the travelers +felt himself fainting away. + +"Go to-- storeroom-- get cylinder-- get in----" the professor +murmured, and then he fell forward in a faint. + + CHAPTER XVI + + THE NEW LAND + +"WHAT is it? Tell us!" exclaimed Jack, almost in his last breath, for, +a few seconds later he too toppled over senseless. Then Washington +went down, while Andy, Bill and Tom succumbed to the terrible heat. + +Mark felt his head swimming. His eyes were almost bulging from their +sockets. He dimly remembered trying to force himself to go to the +storeroom and see what was there. He started toward it with that +intention, but fell half way to it. + +As he did so he saw something which impressed itself on his mind, half +unconscious as he was. + +The door of the storeroom suddenly opened, and from it came a giant +shape, that seemed to expand until it filled the whole of the +apartment where the stricken ones lay. It was like the form of some +monster, half human, half beast. Mark shuddered, and then, closing his +eyes, he felt himself sinking down into some terrible deep and black +pit. A second later the whole ship was jarred as though it had hit +something. + +How long he and the others remained unconscious Mark did not know. He +was the first to revive, and his first sensation was one as though he +had slept hard and long, and did not want to get up. He felt very +comfortable, although he was lying flat on the floor, with his head +jammed against the side of a locker. It was so dark that he could not +distinguish his hand held close to his face. + +"I wonder if I'm dead, and if all the others are dead too," he thought +to himself. "What has happened? Let's see, the last I remember was +some horrible shape rushing from the storeroom. I wonder what it could +have been? Surely that was not the secret the professor referred to." + +Mark shuddered as he recalled the monster that seemed to have grown +more terrible as each second passed. Then the boy raised himself up +from his prostrate position. + +"Well, at any rate, some one has turned off the heat," he murmured. +"It's very comfortable in here now. I wish I could strike a light." + +He listened intently, to learn if any of the others were moving about. +He could hear them breathing, but so faintly as to indicate they were +insensible. Mark stretched out his hand and felt that some one was +lying close to him, but who of the adventurers it was he could not +determine. + +"If only the dynamo was working we could have light," he said. "But it +seems to have stopped," and, indeed there was a lacking of the +familiar purr and hum of the electrical machine. In fact none of the +apparatus in the ship was working. + +"The storage battery!" exclaimed Mark. "That would give light for a +while, if I can only find the switch in the dark." + +He began crawling about on his hands and knees. It was so intensely +black that he ran into many things and received severe bruises. At +last he came to a doorway, and as he did so his hand came in contact +with an easy chair. It was the only one aboard, and by that he knew he +had passed into the sitting room. He had his general direction now, +and knew if he kept straight on he would come to the engine room. +There he was familiar enough with the apparatus and levers to be able +to turn the electric switch. + +Crawling slowly and cautiously, he reached the room where all the +engines were. Then he had to feel around the sides to locate the +switch. At length he found it. There was a click, a little flash of +greenish fire, and the copper conductors came together, and the ship +was flooded with the glow from the incandescents. + +Mark hurried back to where the others were lying. They were still +unconscious, but an uneasy, movement on the part of Jack told that he +was coming out of the stupor. Mark got some ammonia and held it +beneath his comrade's nose. The strong fumes completed the work that +nature had started and Jack opened his eyes. + +"Where am I? What has happened? Are any of them dead?" he asked +quickly. + +"I hope no one is dead," Mark replied. "As to the other question, I +can't answer. I don't know whether we are a thousand miles +underground, or floating on the ocean, though I'm more inclined to the +former theory. But never mind that now. Help me to bring the others +back to their senses. I'll work on the professor and you can begin on +Bill or Tom. Washington seems to be all right," for at that moment the +colored man opened his eyes, stared about him and then got up. + +"I thought I was dead for suah!" he exclaimed. + +"Some of the others may be if we don't hurry," said Mark. "Get to +work, Wash!" + +With the colored man to help them the two boys, by the use of the +ammonia, succeeded in reviving Bill, Tom and old Andy. But the +professor, probably on account of his advanced age, did not respond so +readily to the treatment. The boys were getting quite alarmed, as even +some of the diluted ammonia, forced between his lips, did not cause +him to open his eyes, or increase his heart action. + +"If he should die, and leave us all alone with the ship in this +terrible place, what would we do?" asked Jack. + +"He's not going to die!" exclaimed Mark. "Here I have another plan. +Washington bring that medical electrical battery from the engine +room." This was a small machine the professor had brought along for +experimental purposes. + +Quickly adjusting it, Mark placed the handles in the nerveless fingers +of Mr. Henderson. Then he started the current. In about a minute the +eyelids of the aged inventor began to quiver, and, in less than five +minutes he had been revived sufficiently to enable him to sit up. He +passed his hand across his forehead. + +"What has happened?" he asked in a faint voice. + +"I don't know; none of us knows," Mark answered. "We all lost our +senses when it got so hot, and there seemed to be some peculiar vapor +in the air. The last I remember was seeing some horrible shape rush +from the storeroom, soon after the ship struck. Then I fainted away. +When I woke up I managed to turn the lights on, and then I came back +here." + +"I wonder where we are," the old man murmured. "I must find out. We +must take every precaution. Washington, go and look at the gage +indicating our depth." + +The colored man was gone but a few seconds. When he returned his eyes +were bulging in terror. + +"What is it?" asked Mr. Henderson, who, thanks to the battery, had +almost completely recovered. + +"It ain't possible!" gasped Washington. "I'll never believe it!" + +"What is it?" asked Mr. Henderson, while the others waited in anxiety +for the answer. + +"We're five hundred miles down!" declared Washington. + +"Five hundred miles!" muttered the inventor. "It does not seem +possible, but it must be so. We fell very rapidly and the terrible +draught sucked us down with incredible rapidity. But come, we must see +what our situation is, and where we are. We are stationary, and are +evidently on some solid substance." + +They all felt much recovered now, and, as the terrible fright of being +consumed in a fiery furnace had passed, they all were in better +spirits. + +At the suggestion of the professor, the boys and Washington made a +tour of the ship. They found, for some unaccountable reason, that +nearly all the engines and apparatuses were out of gear. In some the +parts had broken, and others were merely stopped, from the failure of +some other machine, on which they were dependent. + +"I'm afraid this is the end of the Mermaid," said Mark, in a sorrowful +tone. + +"Nonsense!" replied Jack, who was of a more cheerful nature. "Things +are not so bad as they look. The professor can fix everything." + +"I'm sure I hope so," Mark went on, not much encouraged, however, by +Jack's philosophy. "It would be no joke to have to stay five hundred +miles underground the rest of our lives." + +"You don't know," retorted Jack. "Don't judge of a country you've +never seen. This may be as fine a place as it is on the surface of the +earth. I want a chance to see it," and Jack began to whistle a +cheerful tune. + +They completed the tour of the ship, and found, that, aside from the +damage to the machinery, the Mermaid had not sustained any harm. The +hull was in good order, though of course they could not tell about the +gas holder. It was not possible to see this except by going into the +conning tower or out on the small deck, and this they did not venture +to do. The connections between the holder and the main ship seemed to +be all right, and there was still a small quantity of gas in the big +tank, as Mark found on opening a stop-cock. + +They went back to the professor and told him what they had observed. +He seemed somewhat alarmed, the more so as the experience he had just +passed through had weakened him considerably. + +"I hope I shall be able to make the repairs," he said. "It is our only +hope." + +As he spoke he looked up at the electric lights that shone overhead +from wall brackets. + +"Who is shutting down the power?" he asked. + +"There is no power on, Professor," replied Mark. "I am running the +lights from the storage battery. But something is the matter, for they +are growing dim." + +The filaments were now mere dull red wires, and the ship was being +shrouded in gloom again. + +"The battery is failing!" exclaimed Mr. Henderson. "We shall be left +in darkness, and there is no other way to produce light. I ought to +have brought some lamps or candles along in case of emergency," + +The next instant the Mermaid became as black as Egypt is popularly +supposed to be, and something like an exclamation of terror came from +the professor. + +For several minutes they all sat there in the blackness and gloom, +waiting for they knew not what. Then, suddenly, there sounded +throughout the ship, a creaking as of metal sliding along metal. Some +big lever creaked, and, a second later the whole place was flooded +with light. + +"What has happened?" cried the professor, starting to his feet in +alarm. + +"We are going to be burned up!" exclaimed old Andy. + +"It's all right! It's all right!" yelled Washington from the engine +room where the boys had left him. "Don't git skeered! I done it! I +opened the port holes, by yanking on the lever. Golly, but we's +arrived at the new land! Look out, everybody!" + + CHAPTER XVII + + A STRANGE COUNTRY + +THEY all ran to the port holes, which were openings in the side of the +ship. They were fitted with thick, double glass, and covered on the +outside with steel shutters. These shutters were worked by a single +lever from the engine room, so that one person could open or close +them in a second or two. Washington, by accident, it appeared later, +had slid back the protecting pieces of steel, and the rest followed. + +As the adventurers looked from the glass ports they saw that the light +which had flooded the ship came from without. They were in the midst +of a beautiful glow, which seemed to be diffused about them like rays +from a sun. + +Only, in place of being a yellow or white light, such as the sun gives +off at varying times, the glow was of violet hue. And, as they +watched, they saw the light change color, becoming a beautiful red, +then blue, and again green. + +"Well, this is certainly remarkable!" the professor said. "I wonder +what causes that." + +"We've arrived! We're here, anyhow!" Washington cried, coming into the +room. "See the country!" + +Then, for the first time, the travelers, taking their attention from +the curious light that was all around them, saw that they had indeed +arrived. They were on a vast plain, one, seemingly, boundless in +extent, though off to the left there was a range of lofty mountains, +while to the right there was the glimmer of what might be a big lake +or inland sea. + +"See, we are resting on the ground!" exclaimed Jack. He pointed out of +the window, and the others, looking close at hand, noted that the +Mermaid had settled down in the midst of what seemed to be a field of +flowers. Big red and yellow blossoms were all in front, and some grew +so tall as to almost be up to the edge of the port. + +"I wonder if we can be seeing aright," the professor muttered. "Is +this really the interior of the earth; such a beautiful place as +this?" + +There could be little doubt of it. The ship had descended through the +big shaft, had been sucked down by the terrible air current, and had +really landed in a strange country. + +Of its size, shape and general conditions the adventurers, as yet, +could but guess. They could see it was a pleasant place, and one where +there might be the means to sustain life. For, as the professor said +afterward, he felt that where there were flowers there would be +fruits, and where both of these provisions of nature were to be found +there would likely be animal life, and even, perhaps, human beings. + +But, for the time, they were content to look from the port on the +beautiful scene that lay stretched out before them. The ship rested on +an even keel and had landed so softly that none of the plates were +strained. + +"We have plenty of air, at all events," said the professor as he took +a deep breath. "I was afraid of that, but it seems there was no need. +The air appears to be as good and fresh as that on the surface of the +earth, only there is a curious property to it. It makes one feel +larger. I imagine it must be thinner than the air of the earth, which +is a rather strange thing, since the higher one goes the more rarefied +the air becomes, and the lower, the more dense. Still we can not apply +natural philosophy to conditions under the earth. All the usual +theories may be upset. However, we should be content to take things as +we find them, and be glad we were not dashed to pieces when the ship +was caught in the terrible current." + +"What do you suppose caused the awful heat, and then made it go away +again?" asked Jack. + +"I can only make a guess at it," Mr. Henderson answered. "There are +many strange things we will come across if we stay here long, I +believe. As for the fire I think we must have passed a sort of +interior volcano." + +"But what sort of a place do you think we have come to, Professor?" +asked Mark. + +"It is hard to say," the scientist replied. "We are certainly +somewhere within the earth. Our gage tells us it is five hundred +miles. That may or may not be correct, but I believe we are several +hundred miles under the crust, at all events. As to what sort of a +place it is, you can see for yourselves." + +"But how is it we can breathe here, and things can grow?" asked Bill, +who was beginning to lose his fright at the thought of being +practically buried alive. + +"I do not know what makes such things possible," Mr. Henderson +replied, "but that there is air here is a certainty. I can hardly +believe it is drawn from the surface of the earth, down the big hole, +and I am inclined to think this place of the under-world has an +atmosphere of its own, and one which produces different effects than +does our own." + +"They certainly have larger flowers than we have," said Mark. "See how +big they grow, and what strong colors they have." + +He pointed to the port, against which some of the blooms were nodding +in the wind that had sprung up, for, in spite of the many differences, +the under-world was in some respects like the upper one. + +"Probably the difference in the atmosphere accounts for that," the +professor said. "It enables things to grow larger. And, by the way, +Mark, that reminds me of something you said about seeing some horrible +monster fleeing from the ship. Did you dream that?" + +"I did see something horrible, Professor," he answered. "I'm not +positive what it was, but I'll tell you as nearly as I can what it was +like." + +Thereupon Mark detailed what he had seen. + +"But how could anything, least of all some big monster, be concealed +in the storeroom, and we not know anything about it?" asked Mr. +Henderson. + +"I thought you did know something of it," replied Mark. + +"Who, me? My dear boy, you must be dreaming again. Why should I want +to conceal any being in the storeroom? Come, there is something back +of this. Tell me all you know of it. I can't imagine why you think I +was hiding something in the apartment." + +"I thought so because you were always so anxious not to have me go +near it," answered the boy. "Don't you remember when you saw me going +toward it, several times, you warned me away?" + +"So I did!" exclaimed Mr. Henderson, a light breaking over his face. +"But, Mark, it was not because I had hidden some human being or animal +there. I can't tell you what it is yet, save that I can say it is +merely a machine of mine that I have invented. For reasons of my own I +don't want any one to see it yet. Perhaps it may never be seen. I +thought, not long ago, that we might have to undertake a terrible risk +in escaping from this place. I directed you to go to the storeroom-- +but there, I can't say any more, my friends. Sufficient that I had +nothing in the animal line concealed there." + +"But I am certain there was some beast or human being in there," +insisted Mark. "I heard curious noises in there. Besides, how do you +account for the food disappearing and the door being open at times?" + +"It might have been rats," said Jack. + +"I don't believe there are rats in the ship," put in the professor. +"More likely it was one of us who got up hungry and took the +victuals." + +"I'm sorry I can't agree with you," Mark added respectfully. "I am +sure some strange being was on board this ship, and I believe it has +now escaped. Who or what it was I can't say, but you'll find I'm +right, some day." + +"All right," spoke Mr. Henderson with a laugh. "I like to see any one +brave enough to stick up for his opinion, but, at the same time, I +can't very well imagine any person or thing being concealed in that +storeroom ever since we started. How could it get in?" + +Mark did not; answer, but there came to him the recollection of that +night, previous to the sailing of the Flying Mermaid, when he had +observed some strange shadow that seemed to glide aboard the craft. + +"Now let's forget all about such things," the professor went on. "We +are in a strange country, and there are many things to see and do. +Let's explore a little. Then we must see what we can do with the ship. +We are dependent on it, and it will not do to allow it to remain in a +damaged state. We expect to travel many miles in the interior of the +earth if it is possible, and we have only our craft to go in." + +"I reckon we'd all better assimilate into our interior progression +some molecules and atoms of partly disentegrated matter in order to +supply combustion for the carbonaceous elements and assist in the +manufacture of red corpuscles," said Washington, appearing in the +door, with a broad grin on his good-natured face. + +"Which, being interpreted," the professor said, "means, I suppose, +that we had better eat something to keep our digestive apparatus in +good working order?" + +"Yo' done guessed it!" exclaimed the colored man, relapsing into his +ordinary speech. "I'se got a meal all ready." + +They agreed that they might not have another opportunity soon to +partake of food, so they all gathered about the table, on which +Washington had spread a good meal. + +"Come on, let's go outside and view this new and strange land at +closer quarters," the professor said, when they had satisfied their +appetites. "We can't see much from inside the ship." + +Accordingly the heavy door in the side of the Mermaid was slid back, +and, for the first time the travelers stepped out on the surface of +the land in the interior of the earth. + +At first it seemed no different than the ordinary land to which they +were accustomed. But they soon found it had many strange attributes. +The queer shifting and changing light, with the myriad of hues was one +of them, but to this the adventurers had, by this time, become +accustomed, though it was, none the less, a marvel to them. It was odd +enough to see the landscape blood red one instant, and a pale green +the next, as it does when you look through differently colored +glasses. + +Then, too, they noticed that the grass and flowers grew much more +abundantly than in the outer part of the world. They saw clover six +feet high, and blades of grass even taller. In some places the growth +of grass was so big that they were in danger of getting lost in it. + +"If the grass is like this, what will the trees be?" asked Mark. + +"There are some away over there," Jack replied. "We'll have to take a +sail over. They must be several hundred feet high." + +"Well, at any rate, here's a little brook, and the water looks good to +drink," went on Mark. "I'm thirsty, so here goes." + +He hurried to where a stream was flowing sluggishly between grassy +banks. The water was as clear as crystal, and Mark got down on his +face and prepared to sip some of the liquid up. + +But, no sooner had his lips touched it, than he sprang up with a cry +and stood gazing at the water. + +"What's the matter?" asked Jack. "Hot?" + +"No, it isn't hot," Mark replied, "but it isn't water. It's white +molasses!" + +"White molasses?" repeated the professor, coming up at that moment. +"What are you talking about?" + +He stooped down and dipped his finger into the stream. He drew it up +quickly, and there ran from it big drops that flowed as slowly as the +extract of the sugarcane does in cold weather. + +"You're about right, Mark," he said. "It's water but it's almost as +thick as molasses." He touched his finger to his tongue. "It's good to +drink, all right," he went on, "only it will be a little slow going +down." + +Then he dipped up a palm full, and let it trickle down his throat. + +"It is the strangest water I ever saw," he added. "It must be that the +lack of some peculiar property of air, which we have on the surface, +has caused this. I must make some notes on it," and he drew out pencil +and paper. He was about to jot down some facts when he was interrupted +by a cry from Washington. + +"Come and see what's the matter with this stone!" he cried. + + CHAPTER XVIII + + CAUGHT BY A STRANGE PLANT + +"WASHINGTON is in trouble!" exclaimed Mr. Henderson. Followed by the +two boys he ran to where the colored man stood in a stooping position +over a small pile of stones. + +"What is it? Has something bit you?" asked the scientist, as he came +up on the run. + +"No, but I can't git this stone up!" Washington said. "Look at what a +little stone it is, but I can't lift it. Something must have happened +to me. Maybe some one put th' evil eye on me! Maybe I'm bewitched!" + +"Nonsense!" exclaimed the professor, "what did you want the stone +for?" + +"Nothin' in particular," replied Washington, still tugging away at the +stone, which was the size of his head. "I was just goin' t' throw it +at a big bird, but when I went to lift it this little stone 'peared t' +be glued fast." + +Washington moved aside to give Mr. Henderson a chance to try to pick +up the piece of rock. As the scientist grasped it a look of surprise +came over his features: + +"This is most remarkable!" he exclaimed. "I can't budge it. I wonder +if a giant magnet is holding it down." + +He tugged and tugged until he was red in the face. Then he beckoned to +the two boys, and they came to his aid. There was barely room for them +all to each get one hand on the rock, and then, only after a powerful +tug did it come up. Almost instantly it dropped back to the earth. + +"This is remarkable!" the professor said. "I wonder if the other +stones are the same." + +He tried several others, and one and all resisted his efforts. It was +only the small stones he was able to lift alone, and these, he said, +were so weighty that it would have been a task to throw them any +distance. + +"The water and the stones are strangely heavy in this land," he said. +"I wonder what other queer things we shall see." + +"I saw a bird a little while ago, when I went to pick up that stone," +observed Washington. + +"What kind was it?" asked the inventor. + +"I don't know, only it was about as big as an eagle." + +The travelers wandered about a quarter of a mile from the ship. They +avoided the tall grass and the lofty nodding flowers that seemed to +grow in regular groves, and kept to places where they could walk with +comparative freedom. + +"Have you formed any idea, Professor, as to the nature of this +country?" asked Mark, who liked to get at the bottom of things. + +"I have, but it is only a theory," Mr. Henderson answered. "I believe +we are on a sort of small earth that is inside the larger one we live +on. This sphere floats in space, just as our earth does, and we have +passed through the void that lies between our globe and this interior +one. I think this new earth is about a quarter the size of ours and in +some respects the same. In others it is vastly different. + +"But we will not think of those things now. We must see what our +situation is, whether we are in any danger, and must look to repairing +our ship. There will be time enough for other matters later." + +The travelers were walking slowly along, noting the strange things on +every side. As they advanced the vegetation seemed to become more +luxuriant, as if nature had tried to out-do herself in providing +beautiful flowers and plants. The changing lights added to the beauty +and weirdness of the scene. + +The plain was a rolling one, and here and there were small hills and +hollows. As the travelers topped a rise Jack, who was in advance, +called out: + +"Oh what queer plants! They are giant Jacks-in-the-pulpit!" + +The others hastened forward to see what the boy had discovered. Jack +was too eager to wait, and pressed on. The hill which sloped away from +the top of the little plateau on which he stood, was steeper than he +had counted on. As he leaned forward he lost his balance and toppled, +head foremost, down the declivity, rolling over. + +"Look out!" cried Mark, who had almost reached his comrade's side. + +The scene that confronted the travelers was a strange one. Before them +in a sort of hollow, were scores of big plants, shaped somewhat like a +Jack-in-the-pulpit, or a big lily, with a curved top or flap to it. + +The plants were about eight feet tall, three feet across the top, and +the flap or covering was raised about two feet. They were nodding and +swaying in the wind on their short stems. + +"He's headed right for one of them!" Mr. Henderson exclaimed. "I hope +he'll not fall into one of the openings." + +"Is there any danger?" asked Mark. + +"I'm afraid there is," the inventor added. "Those plants are a variety +of the well-known pitcher plant, or fly-trap, as they are sometimes +called. In tropical countries they grow to a large size, but nothing +like these. They are filled, in the cup, with a sort of sticky, sweet +mixture, and this attracts insects. When one enters the cup the top +flap folds over, and the hapless insect is caught there. The plant +actually devours it, nature providing a sort of vegetable digestive +apparatus. These giant plants are the same, and they seem large enough +to take in a man, to say nothing of Jack!" + +With anxious faces the adventurers turned to watch the fate of their +comrade. Jack was slipping, sliding and rolling down the hill. He +could not seem to stop, though he was making desperate efforts to do +so. He was headed straight for one of the largest of the terrible +plants. + +In vain, as he saw what was in front of him, did he try to change the +course of his involuntary voyage. Over and over he rolled, until, at +length, he struck a little grassy hummock, bounced into the air, and +right into the opening of a monster pitcher plant. + +"It has him!" cried Mark. "We must save him! Come on everyone!" + +He raced down the hill, while the others came closely after him. They +reached the plant into which Jack had bounced. The flap, or top piece, +had closed down, tightly over the unfortunate boy. + +"Quick! We must save him or he will be smothered to death or drowned +in the liquid the cup contains!" Mr. Henderson exclaimed. "Attack the +plant with anything you can find!" + +"Let's cut through the side of the flower-cup!" suggested Mark. "That +seems softer than the stem." + +His idea was quickly put into operation. Andy's long hunting knife +came in very handy. While the sides of the long natural cup were +tough, the knife made an impression on them, and, soon, a small door +or opening had been cut in the side of the pitcher plant, large enough +to enable a human body to pass through. + +When the last fibre had been severed by Andy, who was chosen to wield +the knife because of his long practice as a hunter, there was a sudden +commotion within the plant. Then a dark object, dripping water, made a +spring and landed almost at the feet of the professor. + +It was Jack, and a sorry sight he presented. He was covered from head +to foot with some sticky substance, which dripped from all over him. + +With hasty movements he cleared the stuff from his eyes and mouth, and +spluttered: + +"It's a good thing you cut me out when you did. I couldn't have held +on much longer!" + + CHAPTER XIX + + THE BIG PEACH + +JACK soon recovered from his remarkable experience. The terrible plant +that had nearly eaten him alive was a mass of cut-up vegetable matter +which attracted a swarm of insects. Most of them were ants, but such +large ones the boys had never seen before, and the professor said they +exceeded in size anything he had read about. Some of them were as +large as big rats. They bit off large pieces of the fallen plant and +carried them to holes in the ground which were big enough for +Washington to slip his foot into, and he wore a No. 11 shoe. + +But the adventurers felt there were more important things for them to +look at than ants, so they started away again, the professor telling +them all to be careful and avoid accidents. + +It was while they were strolling through a little glade, which they +came upon unexpectedly, that Washington, who was in the lead called +out: + +"Gracious goodness! It must be Thanksgivin'!" + +"Why so?" asked Jack. + +"'Cause here's th' remarkablest extraordinary and expansionist of a +pumpkin that ever I laid eyes on!" the colored man cried. + +They all hurried to where Washington had come to a halt. There, on the +ground in front of him, was a big round object, about the size of a +hogshead. It was yellow in color, and was not unlike the golden +vegetable from which mothers make such delicious pies. + +"I allers was fond of pumpkins," said Washington, placing his hand on +the thing, which was almost as tall as he was, "but I never thought +I'd come across such a one as this." + +The professor and the two boys went closer to the monstrosity. Mr. +Henderson passed his hand over it and then, bending closer, smelled of +it. + +"That's not a pumpkin!" he exclaimed. + +"What is it then?" asked Washington. + +"It's a giant peach," the inventor remarked. "Can't you see the fuzz, +and smell it? Of course it's a peach." + +"Well I'll be horn-swoggled!" cried Washington, leaning against the +big fruit, which easily, supported him. + +"Hurrah!" cried Jack, drawing his knife from his pocket and opening +the largest blade. "I always did like peaches. Now I can have all I +want," and he drove the steel into the object, cutting off a big slice +which he began to eat. + +"It may be poisonous!" exclaimed Mark. + +"Too late now," responded Jack, the juice running down from his mouth. +"Taste's good, anyhow." + +They all watched Jack while he devoured his slice of fruit. Washington +acted as if he expected his friend to topple over unconscious, but +Jack showed no bad symptoms. + +"You'd better all have some," the boy said. "It's the best I ever +tasted." + +Encouraged by Jack's example, Mark thought he, too, would have some of +the fruit. He opened his knife and was about to take off some of the +peach when suddenly the thing began to roll forward, almost upon him. + +"Hi! Stop your shoving!" he exclaimed. "Do you want to have the thing +roll over me, Jack?" + +"I'm not shoving!" replied Jack. + +"Some one is!" Mark went on. He dodged around the far side of the +immense fruit and what he saw made him cry out in astonishment. + +Two grasshoppers, each one standing about three feet high, were +standing on their hind legs, and with their fore feet were pushing the +peach along the ground. They had been attracted to the fruit by some +juice which escaped from a bruise on that side, which was the ripest, +and, being fond of sweets had, evidently decided to take their find to +some safe place where they could eat it at their leisure. Or perhaps +they wanted to provide for their families if grasshoppers have them. + +"Did you ever see such monsters?" asked Jack. "They're as big as +dogs!" + +At the sound of his voice the two grasshoppers, becoming alarmed, +ceased their endeavors to roll the peach along, and, assuming a +crouching attitude seemed to be waiting. + +"They certainly are remarkable specimens," Mr. Henderson said. "If the +other animals are in proportion, and if there are persons in this new +world, we are likely to have a hard time of it." + +This time the immense insects concluded the strangers were not to +their liking. With a snapping of their big muscular legs and a whirr +of their wings that was like the starting of an automobile, the +grasshoppers rose into the air and sailed away over the heads of the +adventurers. Their flight was more than an eighth of a mile in extent, +and they came down in a patch of the very tall grass. + +"Let's go after them!" exclaimed old Andy. "I was so excited I forgot +to take a shot at them. Come on!" + +"I think we'd better not," counseled the professor. "In the first +place we don't need them. They would be no good for food. Then we +don't know but what they might attack us, and it would be no joke to +be bitten by a grasshopper of that size. Let them alone. We may find +other game which will need your attention, Andy. Better save your +ammunition." + +Somewhat against his will, Andy had to submit to the professor's +ruling. The old hunter consoled himself with the reflection that if +insects grew to that size he would have some excellent sport hunting +even the birds of the inner world. + +"I wonder what sort of a tree that peach grew on," Jack remarked, as +he cut off another slice, when the excitement caused by the discovery +of the grasshoppers had subsided. "It must be taller than a church +steeple. I wonder how the fruit got here, for there are no trees +around." + +"I fancy those insects rolled it along for a good distance," Mr. +Henderson put in. "You can see the marks on the ground, where they +pushed it. They are wonderful creatures." + +"Are we going any farther?" asked Mark. "Perhaps we can find the peach +tree, and, likely there are other fruit trees near it." + +At the professor's suggestion they strolled along for some distance. +They were now about three miles from the airship, and found that what +they had supposed was a rather level plain, was becoming a succession +of hills and hollows. It was while descending into a rather deep +valley that Jack pointed ahead and exclaimed: + +"I guess there's our peach orchard, but I never saw one like it +before." + +Nor had any of the others. Instead of trees the peaches were attached +to vines growing along the ground. They covered a large part of the +valley, and the peaches, some bigger than the one they first +discovered, some small and green, rose up amid the vines, just as +pumpkins do in a corn field. + +"Stranger and stranger," the professor murmured. "Peaches grow on +vines. I suppose potatoes will grow on trees. Everything seems to be +reversed here." + +They made their way down toward the peach "orchard" as Jack called it, +though "patch" would have been a better name. Besides peaches they +found plums, apples, and pears growing in the same way, and all of a +size proportionate to the first-named fruit. + +"Well, one thing is evident," Mr. Henderson remarked, "we shall not +starve here. There is plenty to eat, even if we have to turn +vegetarians." + +"I wonder what time it is getting to be," Jack remarked. "My watch +says twelve o'clock but whether it's noon or midnight I can't tell, +with this colored light coming and going. I wonder if it ever sets as +the sun does." + +"That is something we'll have to get used to," the professor said. +"But I think we had better go back to the ship now. We have many +things to do to get it in order again. Besides, I am a little afraid +to leave it unguarded so long. No telling but what some strange +beast-- or persons, for that matter-- might injure it." + +"I'm going to take back some slices of peaches with me, anyhow," Mark +said, and he and Jack cut off enough to make several meals, while +Bill, Tom and Washington took along all they could carry. + +As they walked back toward the ship the strange lights seemed to be +dying out. At first they hardly noticed this, but as they continued on +it became quite gloomy, and an odd sort of gloom it was too, first +green, then yellow, then red and then blue. + +"I believe whatever serves as a sun down here is setting," the +professor observed. "We must hurry. I don't want to be caught out here +after dark." + +They hurried on, the lights dying out more and more, until, as they +came in sight of their ship, it was so black they could hardly see. + +Mark who was in the rear turned around, glancing behind him. As he did +so he caught sight of a gigantic shadow moving along on top of the +nearest hill. The shadow was not unlike that of a man in shape, but of +such gigantic stature that Mark knew it could be like no human being +he had ever seen. At the same time it bore a curious resemblance to +the weird shadow he had seen slip into the Mermaid that night before +they sailed. + +"I wonder if it can be the same-- the same thing-- grown larger, just +as the peach grows larger than those in our world," Mark thought, +while a shiver of fear seemed to go over him. "I wonder if that-- that +thing could have been on the ship----" + +Then the last rays of light died away and there was total darkness. + + CHAPTER XX + + OVERHAULING THE SHIP + +"KEEP together!" shouted the professor. "It will not do to become lost +now. We are close to the ship, and will soon be there. Come after me." + +It was more by following the sound of the scientist's voice, than by +any sight which the others could get of him, that they managed to +trail along behind. They reached the ship in safety, however, and +entered. There was no sound as of beasts or insects within, and, +though Mark felt a little apprehensive on account of what he had seen, +he and the others as well, were glad to be again in something that +seemed like home. + +"I wish we had some candles, or some sort of a light to see by," the +professor remarked. "We can do nothing in the dark, and there is no +telling how long this night is going to last once it has set in. If I +could have a little illumination, I might be able to fix the dynamo, +and then we could turn on the incandescents. That portable light we +had is broken. + +"By cracky!" exclaimed Andy. "I believe I have the very thing!" + +"You don't mean to say you have a torch or a candle with you, do you?" +asked Mr. Henderson. + +"No, but I have my patent pipe lighting apparatus," the hunter said. +"I always carry it. It gives a little light, but not much, though it +may be enough to work by." + +Not until after several hours work, handicapped as they were by lack +of light, were the repairs to the ship completed. + +"Now we'll start the engine and see how we will come out," the +inventor exclaimed, as he wiped his hands on some waste. + +It did not take long to generate enough power to turn the dynamo. Soon +the familiar hum and whirr was heard, and, a few seconds later the +filaments in the lamps began to glow a dull red, which gradually +brightened until they were shining in all their usual brilliancy. + +"Hurrah!" cried the boys. "Now we can see!" + +They all felt in better spirits with the restoration of the lights, +and, washing off the grease and dirt of their labors in the engine +room, they prepared to sit down to the meal which Washington prepared. + +As soon as the dynamo was working well, care had to be taken not to +speed it too much on account of a mended belt. The professor turned +off part of the lights and switched some of the current into the +storage batteries, to provide for emergencies. For there was no +telling how long the night might last. + +Jack was the first one to finish the meal-- they did not know whether +to call it dinner, supper or breakfast. He went into the conning +tower, and, as soon as he reached it he called out: + +"Come on up here, professor! There's something strange going on!" + +Mr. Henderson, followed by Mark, hurried to the tower. As he reached +it and looked out of the forward window, a beautiful white glow +illuminated the whole scene, and then, from below the horizon, there +arose seven luminous disks. One was in the centre, while about it +circled the other six, like some immense pin-wheel. + +"It's the moon!" cried Mark. + +"It's seven moons!" Jack exclaimed. "Why it's almost as light as day!" + +And so it was, for the seven moons, if that is what they were, gave an +illumination not unlike the sun in brilliancy though it was like the +beams from the pale moon of the earth. + +"I guess we need not have worried about the darkness," the professor +remarked. "Still it is a good thing I fixed the dynamo." + +For some time he and the other adventurers watched the odd sight of +the moons, as they rose higher and higher overhead. The scene was a +beautiful, if weird one, for the whole plain was bathed in the soft +light. + +"I guess we can turn off the incandescents, and use all the power for +the storage batteries," Mr. Henderson went on, as he descended into +the ship, and opened the port shutters which had been closed when they +started off on their exploring tour. The interior of the Mermaid was +almost as light as when the odd colored beams had been playing over +the new earth to which they had come. + +"I think we had better continue with our work of making repairs," Mr. +Henderson said. "We can't count on these moons remaining here any +length of time, and I want to take advantage of them. So though some +of us perhaps need sleep, we will forego it and fix up the Mermaid. I +want to take a trip and see what other wonders await us." + +They all agreed that they would rather work than sleep, and soon the +entire force was busy in the engine room. There was much to be done, +and the most important things were attended to first. The motive power +was overhauled and found to be in need of several new parts. These +were put in and then the gas generator, and the negative gravity +machine, were put in shape. + +It would have taken something very substantial to have awakened any +one on board the Mermaid that night. They all slept soundly and awoke +to find the strange colored lights shining in through the glass +covered port holes. + +"Well, the sun, or what corresponds to it, is up," observed Jack, "and +I guess we had better do as the little boy in the school reader did, +and get up, too, Mark." + +Soon all the travelers were aroused, and the sound of Washington +bustling about in the kitchen, whence came the smell of coffee, bacon +and eggs, told the hungry ones that breakfast was under way. + +After the meal work was again started on repairing the ship, and by +noon the professor remarked: + +"I think we shall try a little flight after dinner. That is, if one +thing doesn't prevent us." + +"What is that?" asked Jack. + +"We may be held down, as were those stones," was the grave answer. + + CHAPTER XXI + + THE FISH THAT WALKED + +IT was with no little apprehension that the professor prepared to take +his first flight aboard the ship in the realms of the new world. He +knew little or nothing of the conditions he might meet with, the +density of the atmosphere, or how the Mermaid would behave under +another environment than that to which she was accustomed. + +Yet he felt it was necessary to make a start. They would have to +attempt a flight sooner or later, and Mr. Henderson was not the one to +delay matters. So, the last adjustment having been made to the +repaired machinery, they all took their places in the ship. + +The boys and the professor went to the conning tower to direct +matters, while Washington and the others were in the engine room to +see that the machinery worked properly. Mark gave a last look outside +as he closed the big steel cover over the hole through which admission +was had to the craft. He thought he might catch a glimpse of the queer +shadow, but nothing was in sight. It was like a beautiful summer's +day, save for the strange lights, shifting and changing. But the +travelers had become somewhat used to them by this time. + +The professor turned the valve that allowed the gas to enter the +holder. There was a hissing sound and a sort of trembling throughout +the entire ship. The dynamos were whizzing away and the negative +gravity machine was all ready to start. + +For several minutes the travelers waited until the big lifting tank +was filled with the strong vapor. They watched the gages which +indicated the pressure to be several hundred pounds. + +"I think we can chance it now," remarked Mr. Henderson, as he threw +over several levers. "We'll try, at any rate." + +With a tremor the Mermaid left the surface of the inner earth and went +sailing upward toward the-- well it wasn't exactly the sky, but it was +what corresponded to it in the new world, though there were no clouds +and no blue depths such as the boys were used to. At all events the +Mermaid was flying again, and, as the adventurers felt themselves +being lifted up they gave a spontaneous cheer at the success which had +crowned their efforts. + +The ship went up several hundred feet, and then, the professor, having +brought her to a stop, sent her ahead at a slow pace. He wanted to be +sure all the apparatus was in good working order before he tried any +speed. + +The Mermaid responded readily. Straight as an arrow through the air +she flew. + +"Well, this is almost as good as being on the regular earth!" +exclaimed Jack. + +"It's better," put in Mark. "We haven't seen half the wonders yet. +Let's open the floor shutter, and see how it looks down below." + +He and Jack went to the room where there was an opening in the floor +of the ship, covered by heavy glass. They slid back the steel shutter +and there, down below them, was the strange new, world they had come +to, stretched out like some big map. + +They could see mountains, forests, plains, and rivers, the water +sparkling in the colored light. Over green fields they flew, then +across some stretches where only sand and rocks were to be seen. +Faster and faster the ship went, as the professor found the machinery +was once more in perfect order. Jack was idly watching the play of +tinted lights over the surface of the ground. + +"I wonder what makes it," he said. + +"I have tried to account for it in several ways," said the professor, +who had called Washington to the conning tower and come to join the +boys. "I have had first one theory and then another, but the one I am +almost sure is correct is that hidden volcanic fires cause the +illumination. + +"I think they flare up and die away, and have become so regular that +they produce the same effect as night and day with us. Probably the +fires go out for lack of fuel, and when it is supplied they start up +again. Perhaps it is a sort of gas that they burn." + +"Well, it's queer enough, whatever it is," Jack remarked. "What +strikes me as funny, though, is that we haven't seen a single person +since we came here. Surely this place must be inhabited." + +Mark thought of the strange shadow he had seen, but said nothing. + +"I believe it is," the professor answered. "We will probably come upon +the inhabitants soon. I only hope they are a people who will do us no +harm." + +"If they tried any of their tricks we could mount up in our ship and +escape them," said Andy. + +"Provided they gave us the chance," Mr. Henderson put in. "Well, we'll +not worry about that now." + +For several hours the ship traveled on, until it had come to a +different sort of country. It was wilder and not so level, and there +were a number of streams and small lakes to be seen. + +"Are you going to sail all night?" asked Jack. + +"No," replied the professor. "I think we'll descend very soon now, and +camp out for a while. That lake just ahead seems to offer a good +place," and he pointed to a large sheet of water that sparkled in the +distance, for by this time they had all gone back to the conning +tower. + +The lake was in the midst of a wood that extended for some distance on +all sides, and was down in a sort of valley. The ship headed toward +it, and in a short time a landing was made close to shore. + +"Maybe we can have some fresh fish for supper," exclaimed Jack as he +ran from the ship as soon as the sliding door in the side was opened. +"Looks as if that lake had some in it. It is not thick water like in +that stream we stopped at," he added. + +"I believe you're right," old Andy put in, as he turned back to look +for some lines and hooks among his traps. He soon found what he +wanted, and gave them to the boys, taking his trusty gun along for +himself. + +While the professor, Washington, Tom and Bill remained behind to make +some adjustments to the machinery, and to get things in shape for the +night, which, they calculated would soon be upon them, Jack, Mark and +Andy went down to the shore of the lake. The boys cut some poles from +the trees, and baiting the hooks with some fat worms found under the +bark, threw in. + +"Let's see who'll get the first bite," spoke Jack. "I'm pretty +generally lucky at fishing." + +"Well, while you're waiting to decide that there contest, I think I'll +take a stroll along shore and see if I can see anything to shoot," +Andy remarked. + +For several minutes the boys sat in silence on the bank of the lake, +watching the play of the vari-colored lights on the water. Suddenly +Jack felt a quiver on his line, and his pole began to shake. + +"I've got something!" he cried. Then his pole bent almost double and +he began to pull for all he was worth. "It's a whopper!" he cried. +"Come and help me, Mark!" + +Mark ran to his friend's aid. Whatever was on the other end of the +line was strong enough to tax the muscles of both boys. They could +hear the pole beginning to break. But for the excellent quality of +Andy's line that would have parted some time before. + +All at once there came a sudden slacking of the pull from whatever was +in the water. And so quickly did it cease that both boys went over +backward in a heap. + +"He's got away!" cried Jack, getting up and brushing some of the dirt +from his clothes. + +"There's something that didn't get away!" cried Mark, who had risen to +his knees, and was pointing at the lake. Jack looked and what he saw +made him almost believe he was dreaming. + +For, emerging from the water, dragging the pole and line the boys had +dropped along with it, was a most curious creature. It was a big fish, +but a fish with four short legs on which it was walking, or rather +waddling along as much as a duck, with a double supply of feet, might +do. + +"Say, do I see that or is there something the matter with my eyes?" +sung out Jack, making ready to run away. + +"It's there all right!" exclaimed Mark. "Hi! Andy! Here's something to +shoot!" he yelled, for indeed the creature was big enough to warrant +attack with a gun. It was about five feet long and two feet through. + +On and on it came, straight at the boys, as if to have revenge for the +pain the fish hook must have caused it, for the barb could be seen +dangling from its lip. On and on it came, waddling forward, the water +dripping from it at every step. It had the body and general shape of a +fish, save that the tail was rather large in proportion. As it came +nearer the boys noted that the feet were webbed, like those of a water +fowl. + +"Come on!" cried Jack. "It may attack us!" + +At that moment the creature opened its mouth, showing a triple row of +formidable teeth, and gave utterance to a sort of groan and grunt +combined. + +This was enough to send Jack and Mark off on a run up the bank, and +did they stop until they heard Andy's voice hailing them. + +"What's the matter, boys?" + +"Come here! Quick!" answered Jack. + +The fish-animal had halted and seemed to be taking an observation. To +do this, as it could not turn its neck, it had to shift its whole +body. Old Andy came up on the run, his gun held in readiness. + +"Where is it?" he asked, and the boys pointed silently. + +The hunter could not repress a start of astonishment as he saw the +strange creature. But he did not hesitate a second. There was a crack +of the rifle, and the thing, whatever it was, toppled over, dead. + +Andy hurried up to it, to get a closer view. + +"Well, this is the limit!" he exclaimed. "First we have grasshoppers +that can roll peaches as big as hogsheads, and now we come across fish +that walk. I wonder what we will see next." + +"I don't want to go fishing in this lake any more," spoke Jack, as he +looked at the repulsive creature. "I never want to eat fish any more." + +"Same here," agreed Mark, and old Andy was of the opinion that the +thing killed would not make a wholesome dish for the table. + +"There don't seem to be any game in this section," he remarked. "Not a +sign could I see, nor have I since we have been here, unless you count +those grasshoppers. But the fruit is good, I'll say that." + +"Come on, we'd better be getting back," Mark said, as he noticed it +was getting dark. "I'm hungry." + + CHAPTER XXII + + THE SNAKE-TREE + +THEY managed to make a good meal of the food supplies they had brought +along, and as a dessert Washington made some peach short-cake from the +slices of the giant fruit they had found, the day before. Just as they +finished supper it got very dark, but, in about an hour, the +moon-beams, as the travelers called them, came up, and illuminated the +lake with a weird light. + +As the machinery of the Mermaid was now in working order there was no +further alarm because of the darkness. The ship rested on a level keel +about a hundred yards back from the lake, and, seeing that all was +snug, and the fastenings secure, the travelers went to bed. + +Though they had to forego fish for breakfast the travelers made a good +meal. After seeing that the ship was in readiness for a quick start, +the professor suggested they take a walk around and see what sort of +country they might be in now. + +They tramped on for several miles, meeting with no adventures, and +seeing nothing out of the ordinary. It was a pleasant day, just warm +enough to be comfortable, and a little wind was blowing through the +trees. + +"It would be almost like home if it wasn't for the strange lights, and +the memory of the queer things here," said Jack. "I feel fine. Let's +see if you can hit that dead tree over there, Mark." + +Jack stooped to grab up a stone, but no sooner had his fingers touched +it than he called out: + +"There! I forgot all about the stones here being heavier than lead. +Guess we can't throw any of 'em. But come on. I'll race you to the +dead tree!" + +Mark was willing, so the two boys set off at a fast pace. + +"Look out where you're going!" the professor called after them. "No +telling what may be in those woods," for the boys were approaching a +little glade, on the edge of which the dead tree stood. + +Jack reached the goal first, and stood leaning against the trunk, +waiting for Mark. + +"You'd better practice sprinting!" exclaimed the victor. + +Mark was about to excuse himself for his poor showing, on the plea of +having eaten too much breakfast, when to his horror he saw what seemed +to be a long thin snake spring out from the branches of a nearby tree +and twine itself about Jack. + +"Help me! Save me!" cried the unfortunate boy, as he was lifted high +into the air and pulled within the shadow of the wood. + +For an instant Mark was too horror-stricken to move. Then with a shout +that alarmed the others, who were coming along more slowly, he made a +dash for the place he had last seen Jack. + +Had old Andy not been on the watch, with those keen eyes of his, there +might have been a double tragedy. He had seen from afar the sudden +snatching up of Jack, and noted Mark's rush to save his chum. + +"Stand still! Don't go in there for your life!" yelled the hunter, at +the same time running forward with gun ready. + +His example was followed by the professor, Washington and the other +two men. + +"A snake has Jack!" called Mark, when Andy was at his side. + +"No! It's not a snake!" replied the hunter. "It's worse. It's the +snake-tree!" + +"What's that?" asked Mr. Henderson, hurrying up. + +"The snake-tree has Jack," the hunter went on. "It is a plant, half +animal, half-vegetable. It has long branches, not unlike a snake in +shape. They can move about and grab things." + +"One of them got a grip on Jack as he leaned against the dead tree +trunk. I just caught a glimpse of it, and called to prevent Mark from +running into danger." + +"Can't we save him?" asked Mr. Henderson. + +"I'm going to try!" replied Andy. "Quick! Gather up some pieces of dry +wood. I have some paper, and my pipe lighter. We must fight the +snake-tree with fire!" + + CHAPTER XXIII + + THE DESERTED VILLAGE + +JACK'S Cries were growing fainter and fainter. Peering in through the +branches of the dead tree the professor could see the whip-like limbs +winding closer and closer about the boy. + +"I am afraid we will be too late!" he said. + +Andy had twisted some paper into a rude torch. He set fire to it with +his pocket lighter, and, when Bill and Mark brought him some little +pieces of dead wood the old hunter added them to his bundle, which was +now blazing brightly. + +"How are you going to do it?" asked the professor. + +"I'll show you," replied Andy. He bound the sticks and paper together +with wisps of grass and then, when it was so hot he could hardly hold +it longer, he ran as close as he dared to the snake-tree and tossed +the torch at the foot of it. + +The blazing bundle fell among some damp leaves and grass, as Andy had +intended it should, and soon a dense smoke arose, pouring straight up +through the branches of the animal-tree, the limbs of which were +gathered in a knot about the half-unconscious form of the boy. + +For a few minutes they all waited anxiously. Would Andy's trick +succeed? Had the terrible tree not already squeezed the life from +Jack? + +But, while they watched, there seemed to come a change over the tree. +The snake-like arms waved less and less. They seemed to straighten +out, as though deprived of power by the smoke which was now so dense +as to hide Jack from sight. Then the arms suddenly relaxed and +something rolled from them and fell to the ground. With a quick +movement Andy darted in, crawling on his hands and knees beneath the +limbs, and brought Jack out. The boy was white and his eyes were +closed. + +"Get some water!" cried the old hunter. + +Mark ran toward a stream a little distance away. He brought some of +the curiously thick liquid in his hat, and while Andy held the boy the +professor sprinkled some of the drops on his face, and forced some +between his lips. In a little while Jack's eyes slowly opened. + +"Don't let it eat me!" he begged. + +"You're all right now," said Andy heartily. "Not a bit harmed, Jack. +But," he added in a low tone, "it was a close call." + +A few whiffs from a bottle of ammonia the professor carried soon +brought Jack's color back. + +"Do you feel better now?" asked Mark. + +"I guess so. Yes, I'm all right," replied Jack, struggling to his +feet. "What happened? Feels as if I had been tied up with a lot of +rope." + +"That's about what you were," Andy replied, "only it was the worst +kind of rope I ever saw. Those snake-trees are terrible things. I've +read of 'em, but I never saw one before. The book that told of them +says they squeeze their victims to death just as a snake does. The +only way to do is to make some smoke and fire at the bottom. This sort +of kills the branches or makes them stupid and they let go. The trees +are half animal, and awful things. I hope we don't meet with any +more." + +"Same here," added Jack fervently, as he grasped Andy's hand, and +thanked him for saving his life. + +"Do you think you can go on, or shall we return to the ship'?" the +professor asked. + +"Oh I can trail along, if you move a little slowly," Jack replied. +"I'm a bit stiff, that's all." + +So they resumed their journey. They had gone, perhaps, three miles +when Washington, who was in the lead, suddenly stopped and called: + +"Sounds like thunder." + +The others listened. Sure enough there was a dull rumble and roar +audible. It seemed off to the left, but they could see no clouds in +the sky, nor any signs of a storm. + +"Let's take a walk over that way and see what it is," Mr. Henderson +suggested. + +As they walked on the noise became louder, until in about half an hour +it was like the sound from a blast furnace. + +"What do you suppose it can be?" asked Mark. + +"Perhaps some new freak of nature," the professor replied. "We seem to +have a good many of them here." + +They were all on their guard now, for there was no telling into what +danger they might run. As they went up a little hill the noise became +much louder. The professor and Andy, who had taken the lead, kept a +sharp lookout ahead, that they might not unexpectedly fall into some +hidden stream or lake. As they topped the hill they saw before them a +deep valley, and in the midst of it was that which was causing the +roaring sound. + +From the centre of an immense mound of rock and earth there spouted up +a great column of water, three hundred feet or more, as straight as a +flag staff. It was about ten feet in diameter, and at the top it broke +into a rosette of sparkling liquid, which as the vari-colored lights +played on it, resembled some wonderful flower. + +"It's a great geyser!" the professor exclaimed. "We have come to a +place like Yellowstone Park. We must be very careful. The crust may be +very thin here, and let us down into some boiling spring." + +The others gathered around the professor, and, from a safe distance +watched the ever rising and falling shaft of water. + +It was not regular in motion. Sometimes it would shoot up to a great +distance, nearly a thousand feet, the professor estimated. Again it +would sink down, as the power sending it out lessened, until it was +only a few hundred feet above the rounded top of the mound from which +it spurted. But it never fell below this. All the while there was the +constant roaring sound, as though the forces of nature below the +surface were calling to be let out. + +"I hope there are not many of those about," Mr. Henderson remarked +after a pause. "If the ship should hit one during the night it would +be all up with us. We must keep a careful look-out." + +The spouting column had a fascination which held them to the spot for +some time. From the hill they had a good view of the surrounding +country, but did not see any more geysers. + +"Do you think it is hot water?" asked Mark. + +"There is no vapor," the professor answered, "but most of the geysers +are produced by the action of steam in the interior of the earth. +However we'll not take any chances by investigating. I fear it would +not be safe to go into that valley." + +"Look there!" cried Andy. "I guess we're better off here!" He pointed +a little to the right of where the water spouted. The others looked, +and saw, coming from a hole in the ground, some shaggy black object. + +"What is it?" asked Jack. + +"It looks like a bear," replied the hunter, "but I never saw one like +it before." + +Nor had any of the others, for the creature was a terrible one. It had +the body of a bear, but the feet and legs were those of an alligator, +while the tail trailed out behind like a snake, and the head had a +long snout, not unlike the trunk of an elephant. The creature was +about ten feet long and five feet in height. + +"Let me try a shot at it!" exclaimed Andy. "That is something worth +shooting," and he cocked his rifle. + +"Don't!" exclaimed the professor shortly. "You might only wound it, +and it would pursue us. We are not ready to fight such creatures as +that, and you are the only one armed." + +"I never missed anything I aimed at yet," said Andy, a little hurt +that any one should doubt his ability to kill at the first shot. + +"Perhaps not, but how do you know but what this creature has a bullet +proof armor under its hide. This is a strange world, Andy. It is +better to take no chances." + +"I hate to see him get away," the hunter said. + +But, as it happened, the beast was not to get away. As they watched +they saw the horrible animal approach the mound from which the water +spurted. Up the sides it climbed. + +"I guess he's going to get a drink," said Mark. + +That was evidently the beast's intention. It went close to the +spouting column of water, and thrust its head out so that its tongue +could lap from the side. It seemed to have been in the habit of doing +this. + +For once, and for the last time, however, it made a mistake. The water +seemed to veer to one side. In its eagerness to get a drink the animal +took another step forward. At that moment the direction of the column +changed again, and it tilted over toward the beast. + +Suddenly, as the travelers watched, the full force of the big column +caught the beast just under the fore shoulders. Up into the air the +creature shot, propelled by thousands of pounds pressure. Right up to +the top of the column it went, and this time the water rose a thousand +feet into the air. + +Up and up went the animal, struggling to get away from the remorseless +grip. Then, when the water had reached its height, it shot the beast +off to one side. Then the brute began to fall, twisting, turning, +wiggling and struggling. Down it came with a thud that could be heard +above the noise of the geyser. + +"I reckon that finishes him," observed Andy. And it had, for there was +not a sign of life from the creature. + +"I guess we have seen enough for one morning," the professor said, +"Let's go back to the airship. It must be nearly dinner time." + +They started away. Mark gave a last look at the queer column of water +and the dead body of the strange animal. As he passed down the hill he +thought he saw the creature move, and stayed to see if this was so. +But a second glance convinced him he was mistaken. + +The others had gone on and were some distance ahead. Mark hurried on +to join them. As he got a last glance at the top of the column, over +the brow of the hill, he happened to look off to the left. There was +another hill, about the size of the one they had been on. + +And, as Mark looked he saw something move. At first he thought it was +another beast. But, to his terror he saw that the creature had only +two legs, and that it stood upright like a man, but such a man as Mark +had never seen before, for he was nearly twelve feet tall. + +He was about to cry out and warn the others, when the thing, whatever +it was, sunk down, apparently behind some tall bushes, and disappeared +as if the earth had opened and swallowed it. + +"I wonder if I had better tell them," thought Mark. "I can't show them +anything. I wonder if I really saw it, or if it was only a shadow. I +guess I'll say nothing. But it is very strange." + +Then he hurried on to join the others. + +"What makes you so pale?" asked Jack of his chum. + +"Nothing," said Mark, somewhat confused. "I guess I'm a little tired, +that's all." + +They reached the ship in safety, and, having dinner started the +machinery and took the Mermaid up into the air. + +"We'll travel on and see if we can't find some human beings," the +professor said. + +All that afternoon they sailed, the country below them unfolding like +a panorama. They passed over big lakes, sailing on the surface of +some, and over rivers, and vast stretches of forest and dreary plains. +But they never saw a sign of human inhabitants. + +It was getting on to five o'clock, the hour when the brilliant lights +usually disappeared, when Mark, who was steering in the conning tower, +gave a cry. + +"What is it?" asked the professor, looking up from a rude map he was +making of the land they had just traversed. + +"It looks like a town before us," said the boy. + +Mr. Henderson and Jack looked to where Mark pointed. A few miles ahead +and below them were great mounds, not unlike that from which the +geyser had spouted. But they were arranged in regular form, like +houses on a street, row after row of them. And, as they approached +nearer, they could see that the mounds had doors and windows to them. +Some of the mounds wer rger than others, and some were of double and +triple formation. + +"It's a city! The first city of the new world!" cried Jack. + +"It is a deserted village!" said the professor. "We have found where +the people live, but we have not found them." And he was right, for +there was not a sign of life about the place, over which the airship +was now suspended. + + CHAPTER XXIV + + THE GIANTS + +"LET'S go down and investigate," suggested Jack. + +"Better wait," counseled the professor. "It will soon be dark, and, +though we will have moonlight, we can not see to advantage. I think it +will be best to keep the ship in the air to-night, and descend in the +morning. Then we can look about and decide on what to do." + +They all agreed this was the best plan, and, after making a circle +above the deserted village, and noting no signs of life, the Mermaid +was brought to a halt over the centre of the town, and about three +hundred feet above it. There the travelers would be comparatively +safe. + +It was deemed best to keep watch that night, and so, Mark, Jack, Bill +and Tom took turns, though there was nothing for them to do, as not a +thing happened. With the first appearance of dawn Mr. Henderson gave +orders to have the ship lowered, and it came to rest in the middle of +what corresponded to a street in the queer mound village. + +"Now to see what kind of people have lived here!" cried Jack. "They +must have been a queer lot. Something like the Esquimaux, only they +probably had more trouble keeping cool than the chaps up at the north +pole do." + +Now that they were down among the mound houses, they saw that the +dwellings were much larger than they had supposed. They towered high +above the boys' heads, and some of them were large enough in area to +have accomodated a company of soldiers. + +"Say, the chaps who lived in these must have been some pumpkins," said +Jack. "Why the ceilings are about fifteen feet high, and the doors +almost the same! Talk about giants! I guess we've struck where they +used to hang out, at any rate." + +The houses were a curious mixture of clay and soft stone. There were +doors, with big skins from animals as curtains, and the windows were +devoid of glass. Instead of stairs there were rude ladders, and the +furniture in the mound houses was of the roughest kind. + +There were fire-places in some of the houses, and the blackened and +smoked walls showed that they must have been used. In one or two of +the houses clay dishes, most of them broken, were scattered about, and +the size of them, in keeping with everything else, indicated that +those who used them were of no small stature. + +"Some of the bowls would do for bath tubs," said Jack, as he came +across one or two large ones. + +By this time the professor, Bill and Tom had joined the boys, and the +five went on with the exploring tour, while Washington and Andy +remained in the ship to get breakfast. + +"The inhabitants are evidently of a half-civilized race," the +professor said. "Their houses, and the manner in which they live, show +them to be allied to the Aztecs, though of course they are much larger +than that race." + +"What's bothering me," Bill said, "is not so much what race they +belong to, as what chance we'd stand in a race with them if they took +it into their heads to chase after us. I've read that them there +Azhandled races----" + +"You mean the Aztecs," interrupted the professor. + +"Well the Aztecs, then. But I've read they used to place their enemies +on a stone altar and cut their hearts out. Now I'm not hankerin' after +anything like that." + +"Don't be foolish," spoke Mr. Henderson. "Wait until you meet some of +the giants, if that is what they are, and then you can decide what to +do." + +"It may be too late then," remarked Bill in a low tone, and the boys +were somewhat inclined to agree with him. + +However, there seemed to be no immediate danger, as there was no sign +of any of the big people about the village. The adventurers walked +about for some time, but made no discoveries that would throw any +light on the reason for the place being left uninhabited. It seemed as +if there had been a sudden departure from the place, for in a number +of the houses the remains of half-cooked meals were seen. + +"Well, I think we have noted enough for the time being," the professor +remarked, after they had traversed almost half the length of what +seemed to be the principal street. "Let's go back to the ship and have +something to eat. Washington may have become alarmed at our absence." + +They made a circle in order to take in another part of the town on +their way back. While passing through a sort of alley, though it was +only narrow by comparison with the other thoroughfares that were very +wide, Mark came to a place where there was a circular slab of stone, +resting on the ground. In the centre was a big iron ring. + +"Hello! Here's something new!" he exclaimed. "Maybe it leads to a +secret passage, or covers some hidden treasure." + +"I guess it will have to continue to cover it then," Jack spoke. "That +probably weighs several tons. None of us could move it." + +They made their way back to the ship, where they found Washington and +Andy discussing the advisability of going off in search of them. + +"Breakfast is mighty near spoiled," said the colored man with an +injured air. + +But the travelers did full justice to the meal, notwithstanding this. +Deciding there was nothing to be gained by staying in that vicinity, +the professor started the ship off again. + +They traveled several hundred miles in the air, and, as the afternoon +was coming to a close, Jack, who was in charge of the conning tower, +spied, just ahead of them, another village. + +"We will descend there for the night," the professor said. "Does there +seem to be any sign of life about?" + +"None," replied Mark, who was observing through a telescope the town +they were approaching. "It's as dead as the other one." + +The airship settled down in a field back of some of the mound houses. + +"Now for supper!" cried Jack. "I'm as hungry as----" + +He stopped short, for, seeming to rise from the very ground, all about +the ship, there appeared a throng of men. And such men as they were! +For not one was less than ten feet tall, and some were nearly fifteen! + +"The giants have us!" cried Bill, as he saw the horde of creatures +surrounding the ship. + + CHAPTER XXV + + HELD BY THE ENEMY + +"KEEP the doors closed!" cried the professor. "It is our only hope! I +will send the ship up again!" + +But it was too late. Washington, who had obeyed the signal from the +conning tower to shut off the engines, had disconnected most of them +so they could not be started again save from the main room. At the +same time there came a yell of dismay from the colored man, who had +slid back the steel covering of the main side entrance to the Mermaid. + +"I'm caught!" cried Washington. + +As the professor and the boys hurried from the tower, they could hear +a struggle from where Washington was, and his voice calling: + +"Let me go! Let me go!" + +Reaching the engine room, which opened directly on the side entrance, +the professor saw a pair of enormous hands and arms dragging poor +Washington, feet first, out of the ship. Bill and Tom were crouched in +one corner, pale with fright. + +"Wait until I get my gun!" cried Andy, as he ran for his rifle. + +"Hold on!" called the professor in a loud voice. "It will be folly to +shoot them! We must try strategy!" + +Washington's cries ceased as he was drawn entirely from the ship, the +giant hands disappearing at the same time. + +"Follow me!" yelled Mr. Henderson, running out of the door. + +Hardly knowing what they did, the boys went after him, and their +hearts almost stopped beating in fright as they saw the terrible +things, which, in the glare of the changing lights, were on every side +of them. + +For the men were very repulsive looking. They there attired in +clothes, very similar in cut to those worn by the travelers, and which +seemed to be made of some sort of cloth. But they were loose and baggy +and only added to the queer appearance of the giants. Veritable giants +they were too. Their faces seemed as large as kegs, and they were so +clumsy in shape that Mark, even, frightened as he was, exclaimed: + +"They look like men made of putty!" At the same time he saw they bore +a resemblance to the creature he had observed on the hill top. + +"What shall we do?" asked Andy of the professor. "They are really +carrying Washington away!" + +Three of the giants were dragging the colored man along the ground, +while the other terrible beings stood about as if waiting to see the +outcome of the first sally. + +"I will try to speak to them," Mr. Henderson said. "I know several +languages. They may understand one." + +But before he could start on his parley a surprising thing happened. +There was a struggle in the little group about Washington. The colored +man seemed to be fighting, though the odds, it would appear, were too +great to enable him to accomplish anything. But, making a desperate +effort to escape, Washington quickly wrenched himself free from the +giants' hands and then, striking out with his fists, knocked the three +down, one after another. + +"I never knew Washington was so strong!" exclaimed Jack. + +"Nor I," put in Mark. "Why I should think the men could carry him in +one arm as if he was a baby." + +The three giants rose slowly to their feet. They uttered strange +cries, and motioned with their hands toward the professor, the boys, +and the others in the crowd. + +"Look out! They're goin' t' grab yo'!" cried Washington. + +Three of the giants approached Mark, and a like number closed in on +Jack. + +"Back to the ship!" cried the professor. "We must defend ourselves!" + +But by this time the big men had grabbed the two boys. Then a strange +thing took place. Mark and Jack, though they felt that the giants must +overcome them in a test of strength, struggled with all their might +against being captured. They fought, as a cornered rat will fight, +though it knows the odds to be overwhelming. But in this case the +unexpected happened. + +Both boys found they could easily break the holds of the giants, and +Mark, by a vigorous effort, pushed the three men away from him, one at +a time violently so that they fell in a heap, one on top of the other. + +"Hurrah! We can fight 'em!" cried Mark. "Don't be afraid. They're like +mush! They're putty men!" + +And, so it seemed, the giants were. Though big in size they were +flabby and had nothing like the muscle they should have had in +proportion to their build. They went down like meal sacks and were +slow to rise. + +Jack, seeing how successful his comrade was, attacked the three giants +who were striving to make him a captive. He succeeded in disposing of +them, knocking one down so hard that the man was unable to rise until +his companions helped him. + +"That's the way!" cried Washington. "They're soft as snow men!" + +The vanquished giants set up a sort of roar, which was answered by +their fellows, and soon there was a terrible din. + +"All get together!" called the professor. "They are evidently going to +make a rush for us. If we stand by one another we may fight them off, +though they outnumber us a hundred to one. Besides it will soon be +dark, and we may be able to escape!" + +Washington, Jack and Mark retreated toward the ship, in the direction +of which the others had also made their way. The big men had gathered +in a compact mass and were advancing on the adventurers. + +"What do you suppose makes them so soft?" asked Mark. "I believe I +could manage half a dozen." + +"It must be the effect of the climate and conditions here," the +professor replied. "Probably they have to be big to stand the pressure +of the thick water, and the increased attraction of gravitation. Then +too, being without the weight of the atmosphere to which we are +accustomed, they have probably expanded. If they were to go up to +earth, they might shrink to our size." + +"Do you think that possible?" + +"Of course. Why do you ask?" + +"Nothing in particular," replied Mark. But to himself, he added: "That +would explain it all." + +It was getting dusk now. The travelers had reached their ship, and +rushed inside and tried to close the doors in the face of the +advancing horde. But, by this time the giants were so close that one +or two of them thrust their big feet in, and prevented this movement. +At the same time they set up a great howling. + +"Quick!" cried the professor. "We must start the ship and get away!" + +"I can't close the door!" yelled Washington, who had been the last to +enter. + +"Never mind that! Go up with it open! Drag them along if they won't +let go!" answered Mr. Henderson, as he ran toward the engine room. + +There was a sudden rush among the giants, and a sound as if something +was being thrown over the top and ends of the ship. Mark turned the +gas machine on, while Jack worked the negative gravity apparatus. They +waited for the ship to rise. + +"Why don't we go up?" asked the professor. + +"'Cause they've caught us!" called out Washington. + +"Caught us? How?" + +"They've thrown ropes over the top and ends of the ship, and fastened +them to their big houses!" + +Running to a side window the professor saw that the Mermaid was +fastened down by a score of cables, each one six inches thick. They +were held captives by the enemy. + + CHAPTER XXVI + + A FRIEND INDEED + +THOUGH the giants, man for man, were no match for the travelers, +collectively the horde proved too much. They had swarmed about the +ship, and, by passing the big cables over her, effectively held her +down. + +"Let me get out and I'll cut 'em!" cried Andy. "We must get away from +these savages!" + +"No, no, don't go out!" exclaimed the professor. "They would +eventually kill you, though you might fight them off for a time. We +must wait and see what develops. They can have no object in harming +us, as we have not injured them." + +"I'd rather fight 'em," insisted the old hunter. + +But the professor had his way and Andy was forced to obey. The giants +had withdrawn their big feet from the side door and Washington had +closed it. But nothing else had been accomplished, and the ship could +not rise. The gas and negative gravity machines were stopped, as they +were only under a useless strain. + +Suddenly, the colored lights which had been growing dimmer and dimmer, +with the approach of night, went out altogether. Almost as suddenly, +Mark, who was watching the giants from the conning tower, as they made +fast the loose ends of the cables, saw them make a dash for the mound +houses. + +"They're afraid of the dark!" he cried. "Come on! We can go out now +and loosen the ropes!" + +He hurried to tell the professor what he had noticed. + +"Good!" exclaimed Mr. Henderson. "Perhaps we can escape now!" + +They waited a few minutes, listening to the sound of many big feet +running away from the ship, and then, Bill cautiously opened the side +door. The others were behind him, waiting, with knives and hatchets in +their hands, to rush out and cut the restraining cables. + +"All ready!" called Bill. "There doesn't seem to be a one in sight!" + +He stepped out but no sooner had he set foot on the ground than there +came a thud, and Bill went down as if some one had knocked his feet +from under him. + +"Go back! Go back!" he cried. "They hit me with something. I'm being +smothered!" + +"Bring a light!" cried the professor, for the sally had been started +in the dark. + +Jack brought the portable electric it having been repaired and flashed +it out of the door. In the gleam of it, Bill was seen lying prostrate, +half covered by an orange, about half as big as himself. The fruit was +as soft and mushy as some of the giants themselves, or Bill would not +have fared so easily. + +Then, as the others stood watching, and while Bill arose and wiped +some of the juice from his face, there came a regular shower of the +monstrous oranges. + +"Get inside quick! We'll be smothered under them!" Mr. Henderson +cried. + +Pausing only to rescue Bill, the adventurers retreated inside the +ship, and made fast the door. Outside they could hear the thud as the +oranges were thrown, some hitting the Flying Mermaid and many dropping +all about her. + +"I guess they are going to have things their own way," observed Bill, +as he gazed down on his clothes, which were covered with juice from +the fruit. + +The night was one of anxiety. The travelers took turns standing guard, +but nothing more occurred. The giants remained in their houses, and +the heavy ropes still held the ship fast. + +"We must hold a council of war," the professor decided as they +gathered at breakfast, which was far from a cheerful meal. + +With the return of the colored lights the giants again made their +appearance. They came swarming from the mound houses, and a great +crowd they proved to be. Several thousand at least, Jack estimated, +and when he went up into the conning tower and took a survey he could +see the strange and terrible creatures pouring in from the surrounding +country. + +"I'm afraid there will be trouble," he said, as he came down and +reported what he had seen. + +"We must hold a council of war," repeated the professor. "Has any one +anything to suggest?" + +"Get a lot of powder and blow 'em up!" cried Andy. + +"Arrange electric wires and shock 'em to death!" was Bill's plan. + +"Can't we slip the ropes in some way and escape?" asked Jack. "I don't +believe we can successfully fight the giants. They are too many, even +if they are weak, individually." + +"I think you're right there," Mr. Henderson said. "We must try some +sort of strategy, but what? That is the question." + +For a few minutes no one spoke. They were all thinking deeply, for +their lives might hang in the balance. + +"I think I have a plan," said Mark, at length. "Did we bring any +diving suits with us?" + +"There may be one or two," the professor replied. "But what good will +they do?" + +"Two of us could put them on," continued Mark, "and, as they afford +good protection from any missiles like fruit, we could crawl out on +the deck of the ship. From there, armed with hatchets or knives we +could cut the ropes. Then the ship could rise." + +"That's a good plan!" cried the scientist. "We'll try it at once." + +Search revealed that two diving suits were among the stores of the +Mermaid. Jack and Mark wanted to be the ones to don them, but as the +suits were rather large, and as the professor thought it would take +more strength than the boys had to do the work, it was decided that +Andy and Washington should make the attempt to cut the ropes. + +The hunter and colored man lost little time in getting into the modern +armor. In the meanwhile Jack, who had been posted as a lookout, +reported that there seemed to be some activity among the giants. They +were running here and there, and some seemed to be going off toward +the woods, that were not far away. + +"Now work quickly," urged the professor. "We will be on the watch, and +as soon as the last rope is cut we will start the machinery and send +the ship up. We will not wait for you to come back inside, so hold +fast as best you can when the Mermaid rises." + +"We will," answered Andy, just before the big copper helmet was +fastened on his head, and Washington nodded to show he understood. + +The two who were to attempt the rescue of their comrades were soon on +deck. In the conning tower Jack and the professor kept anxious watch, +while Mark, Bill and Tom were at the various machines, ready, at the +signal, to start the engines. + +The giants had now become so interested in whatever plan they had +afoot, that they paid little attention to the ship. Consequently +Washington and Andy, crawling along the deck in their diving suits, +did not, at first attract any attention. + +In fact they had cut several of the big ropes, and it began to look as +if the plan would succeed, particularly as they were partly hidden +from view by the upper gas holder. They were working with feverish +haste, sawing away at the big cables with keen knives. + +"I guess we'll beat 'em yet!" cried Jack. + +"I hope so," replied the professor. "It looks----" + +He stopped short, for at that moment a cry arose from the midst of the +giants, and one of them pointed toward the ship. An instant later the +air was darkened with a flight of big oranges, which the queer +creatures seemed to favor as missiles. Probably they found stones too +heavy. + +"Well, those things can't hurt 'em much with those heavy suits on," +observed Mr. Henderson. "There, Washington got one right on the head +that time, and it didn't bother him a bit." + +Jack had seen the fruit strike the big copper helmet and observed that +the colored man only moved his head slightly in order to get rid of +the orange. + +In fact the giants, seeing for themselves that this mode of warfare +was not going to answer, since the two men on the ship continued to +cut the restraining cables, gave it up. There was a good deal of +shouting among them, and a number ran here and there, seemingly +gathering up long poles. + +"I wonder if they are going to try the flailing method, and beat poor +Andy and Washington," said Mr. Henderson. "It looks so." + +The two rescuers were now about a quarter through their hard task. The +throwing of the oranges had ceased. But the giants were up to a new +trick. They divided into two sections, one taking up a position on one +side of the ship, and the other on the opposite. There were about two +hundred in each crowd, while the others in the horde drew some +distance back. + +"They're up to some queer dodge," observed Jack. "What are they +placing those sticks to their mouths for?" + +The professor observed the throng curiously for a few seconds. Then he +exclaimed: + +"They are using blow-guns! They are going to shoot arrows at +Washington and Andy! We must get them in at once!" + +He darted toward a door that opened from the conning tower out on the +deck. + +"Don't go!" cried Jack. "It's too late! They are beginning to blow!" + +He pointed to the throng of giants. The professor could see their +cheeks puffed out as the big creatures filled their lungs with air and +prepared to expel it through the hollow tubes. + +Then there came a sound as if a great wind was blowing. It howled and +roared over the ship, not unlike a hurricane in its fury. But there +was no flight of arrows through the air, such as would have come from +regular blow guns. + +"That is strange," said the professor. He thought for a moment. "I +have it!" he cried. "They are trying to blow Washington and Andy, off +the ship by the power of their breaths! They are not blowing arrows at +them! My, but they must have strong lungs!" + +And, in truth, that was the plan of the giants. The hollow tubes, made +from some sort of big weed, sent a blast of air at the two men on the +ship's deck, that made them lie flat and cling with both hands to +avoid being sent flying into the midst of the giants, on one side or +the other. But the giants had reckoned without the weight of the +diving suits, and it was those, with the big lead soles of the shoes, +that helped to hold Washington and Andy in place. + +"Come back! Came back!" cried the professor, opening the conning tower +door and calling to the two brave men. "Come back, both of you! Do you +hear?" + +As the portal slid back the rush of air was almost like that of a +cyclone. Then it suddenly ceased, as the giants saw their plan was not +likely to succeed. + +But now there arose from the outer circle of the horde a shout of +triumph. It was caused by the return of those who had, a little while +before, hurried off to the woods. They came back bearing big trees, +tall and slender, stripped of their branches, so that they resembled +flag staffs. It took a dozen giants to carry each one. + +The whole throng was soon busy laying the poles in a row in front of +the ship. + +"What can they be up to now?" asked Jack. + +"It looks as if they were going to slide the ship along on rollers," +the professor replied. + +Sure enough this was the giant's plan. A few minutes later those in +the Mermaid felt her moving forward, as the giants, massed behind, +shoved. On to the poles she slid. The ropes were loosened to permit +this, but not enough to enable the boat to rise. + +Then the travelers felt the ship being lifted up. + +"They are going to carry us away, with the poles for a big stretcher!" +cried the professor. + +Looking from the side windows the boys saw that a great crowd of the +big men were on either side of the Mermaid, each giant grasping a +pole, and lifting. Farther out were others, holding the ends of the +cables which Washington and Andy had not succeeded in cutting. + +The ship was being carried along by a thousand or more giants, as the +ancient warriors, slain in battle, were carried home on the spears of +their comrades. + +"This is the end of the Mermaid!" murmured Mr. Henderson in sorrowful +tones. + +As they looked from the conning tower the professor and the two boys +observed a commotion among the leaders of the giants. They seemed to +be wavering. Suddenly the forward part of the ship sank, as those +ahead laid their poles down on the ground. Then those behind did the +same, and the Mermaid, came to a stop, and once more rested on the +earth. + +"What does this mean?" asked the scientist in wonder. + +All at once the entire crowd of giants threw themselves down on their +faces, and there, standing at the bow of the ship, was a giant, half +again as large as any of the others. He was clad in a complete suit of +golden armor on which the changing lights played with beautiful +effect, and in his hand he held an immense golden sword. He pointed +the weapon at the ship as if he had raised it in protection, and his +hand was stretched in commanding gesture over the prostrate giants. + +"Perhaps he has come to save us!" cried Mark. + + CHAPTER XXVII + + A GREAT JOURNEY + +SUCH indeed, seemed to be the case. The golden-armored giant, after +standing for a few moments in an attitude of command, waved his sword +three times about his head, and uttered a command, in a voice that +sounded like thunder. Then the prostrate ones arose, and, making low +bows hurried away in all directions. + +Watching them disappear, the golden one sheathed his weapon and +approached the ship. He caught sight of the professor and the two boys +in the conning tower, for Mark had gone there when he found the ship +being transported, and held up his two hands, the palms outward. + +"It is the sign of peace in the language all natives employ," said the +professor. "I think I shall trust him." + +Followed by the boys he descended from the little platform in the +tower, and to the door that opened on the deck. + +"Shall we go out?" he asked. + +"We can't be much worse off," replied Mark. "Let's chance it." + +So, not without many misgivings, they slid back the portal and stepped +out to face the strange and terrible being who had so suddenly come to +their rescue. + +The giant in the golden armor did not seem surprised to see them. In +fact he acted as though he rather expected them. He continued to hold +up one hand, with the palm, outward, while, with the other, he removed +his helmet and bowed low. Then he cast his sword on the ground and +advanced toward the ship. When within ten feet he sat down on the +ground, and this brought his head nearer the earth, so that his +auditors could both see and hear him to better advantage. + +As soon as the giant saw the travelers were outside their ship he +began to speak to them in a voice, which, though he might have meant +it to be low and gentle, was like the bellowing of a bull. At the same +time he made many gestures, pointing to the ship, to himself and to +Mark. + +"What is he saying, professor?" asked Jack. + +"I can't understand all he says," Mr. Henderson replied. "He uses some +words derived from the Latin and some from the Greek. But by piecing +it out here and there, and by interpreting his motions I am able to +get at something." + +"And what is it all about?" + +"It is a strange story," the scientist replied. "He has only gone +about half way through it. Wait until he finishes and I will tell +you." + +The golden-armored giant, who had stopped in his narrative while Jack +was speaking, resumed. His gestures became more rapid, and his words +came faster. Several times Mr. Henderson held up his hand for him to +cease, while he puzzled out what was meant. + +At one point, the professor seemed much startled, and motioned for the +strange being to repeat the last part of his discourse. When this had +been done Mr. Henderson shook his head as though in doubt. + +At length the story was finished, and the lone giant, for there were +no others in sight now, folded his arms and seemed to await what the +professor's answer might be. Mr. Henderson turned to the boys, and to +the others of the Mermaid's company, who, by this time, had joined +him, and said: + +"Friends, I have just listened to a strange story. It is so strange +that, but for the fact that our own adventures are verging on the +marvelous, I could hardly believe it. In the first place, this man +here is the king of this country. That is why all the other natives +obeyed him. + +"In the second place it seems he has been a passenger in our boat, and +came here from the earth's surface with us!" + +"What's that?" cried Jack. + +"That explains the strange happenings!" ejaculated Mark. "No wonder I +could never solve the secret of the storeroom." + +"You are right, it does," replied Mr. Henderson. "I will not go into +all the details of how it happened, but it seems the big hole through +which we came is only one of two entrances to this inner world. Rather +it is the entrance, and there is another, close to it, which is the +exit. Through the latter a big stream of water spouts up, just as one +pours down through the opening we used. + +"Hankos, which is the name of the king, was for many years a student +of science. He longed to see where the big stream of upward spurting +water went, and wanted to know whence came the down-pouring one. So he +undertook a daring experiment. + +"He constructed a great cylinder, and, keeping his plans a secret, +conveyed it to the spouting water, entered it, and, by means of +pulleys and levers, after he had shut himself inside, cast himself +into the up-shooting column. He took along compressed air cylinders to +supply an atmosphere he could breathe, and some food to eat, for it +appears our giant friends are something of inventors in their way. The +current of water bore him to the surface of the earth, and he was cast +up on the ocean, in what was probably taken for a waterspout if any +one saw it. + +"Then a strange thing happened. No sooner did Hankos open his +cylinder, which served him as a boat, than he lost his gigantic size, +owing to the difference of the two atmospheres. He became almost of +the same size as ourselves, except that his skin hung in great folds +on him, and he seemed like a wrinkled old man. His clothes too, were a +world too large. + +"He had a terrible time before he reached shore, and a hard one after +it, for his strange appearance turned almost every one against him. He +was sorry he had ventured to solve the mystery of the up-shooting +stream of water, for he was worse than an outcast. + +"Then he began to plan to get back to his own inner world. But he +could not find the downward stream, and, not knowing the language of +the countries where he landed, he had no means of ascertaining. He +traveled from place to place, always seeking for something that would +lead him back to his own country. + +"Finally he heard of us, and of our ship, though how I do not know, as +I thought I had kept it a great secret. By almost superhuman struggles +he made his way to our island. He says he concealed himself aboard the +Mermaid the night before we sailed, but I hardly believe it possible. +It seems----" + +"He did it, for I saw him!" interrupted Mark. + +"You saw him!" cried Mr. Henderson. + +Then Mark told of the many things that had puzzled him so, how he had +seen the queer figure slinking aboard the boat, of the disappearance +of food from time to time, and of the strange noises in the storeroom. + +"That bears out what he told me," the professor said. "Hankos says he +used to steal out nights and take what food he could get, and he also +mentions some one, answering to Mark's description, who nearly +discovered him once as he hurried back into the apartment. + +"However, it seems to be true, since Mark confirms it. At any rate +Hankos stayed in hiding, and made the entire trip with us, and, just +as we all became overcome with the strange gas he escaped, having +begun to expand to his original giant size, and being unable to remain +any longer in his cramped quarters." + +"That's so, he did!" cried Mark. "I saw him come out of the place just +before I lost my senses. It was a terrible sight, and none of you +would believe me when I told you some of the occurrences afterward." + +"You must forgive us for that," the professor said. "We have learned +much since then." + +"What did Hankos do after he left the ship when it landed in this +country?" asked Jack. + +"He traveled until he came to this village, which is the chief one of +this country," replied the professor. "Part of the time he followed us +at a distance, being able to travel very fast." + +Mark remembered the strange figure of a giant he had seen on the hill +tops several times, and knew that he had been observing the being who +had played such a queer part in their lives. + +"When he came back among his own people," went on Mr. Henderson, "they +would not receive him at first, believing him to be an impostor. But +Hankos convinced them of his identity and was allowed to don the +golden armor, which is the badge of kingship. He had only been in +office for a little while when he heard of the arrival of the strange +thing, which turned out to be our ship. He recognized it from the +description, and, learning that we were likely to be sacrificed to the +fury and ignorance of the giants, he hurried here and saved our lives. + +"He says he can never thank us enough for being the means whereby he +was able to get back to his own country, and says the freedom of this +whole inner world is ours. He has given orders that we are to go +wherever we like, and none will molest us. He tells me the land is a +wonderful one, compared to our own, and urges us to make a long +journey. He would like to go with us, only, now that he has resumed +his natural size, he can not get inside the ship." + +"Hurrah for King Hankos!" cried Jack and the others joined him in a +hearty cheer. + +The giant in the golden armor evidently understood the compliment +which was paid him, for he waved his helmet in the air and responded +with a shout of welcome that made the ground tremble. + +Hankos waited until the professor had translated all of the story to +the other travelers. Then the genial giant began to talk some more, +and the professor listened intently. + +"He says," spoke Mr. Henderson to his friends, "that we will be +supplied with all the fruit we want, and with the best of the houses +to sleep in on our journey. He also tells me he has great stores of +shining stones and piles of the metal of which his armor is made, and +that we are welcome to as much as we want. If this means unlimited +gold and diamonds, we may make our fortunes." + +"Jest let me git ma' hand on a few sparklers an' I'll quit work!" +exclaimed Washington. + +"I have told him," the scientist went on, "that we will take advantage +of his kind offer. We will start on our trip in a day or so, after we +have looked over the ship to see if it is not damaged. He tells me the +gold and sparkling stones are several thousand miles away, on top of a +high mountain. We will make that our objective point." + +The interview between the king and Mr. Henderson having ended, the +former waved his sword in the air and the swarm of big men came back. +They had been hiding back in the woods. Now their manner was very +different. They carefully removed the rollers and ropes, and soon +there was brought to the adventurers an immense pile of fine fruits. +If our friends had stayed there a year they could not have eaten it +all. The giants were judging the appetites of the travelers by their +own. + +That night the adventurers slept more soundly than they had since +entering the strange world. They felt they had nothing to fear from +the giants. In the morning they were not molested, though big crowds +gathered to look at the ship. But they kept back a good distance. The +machinery was found to be in good shape, save for a few repairs, and +when these were made, the professor announced he would start on a long +journey. + +For several weeks after that the travelers swung about in their ship, +sometimes sailing in the air and again on big seas and lakes viewing +the wonders of the inner world. They were many and varied, and the +professor collected enough material for a score of books which he said +he would write when he got back to the outer world once more. + +One afternoon, as they were sailing over a vast stretch of woodland, +which did not seem to be inhabited, Mr. Henderson, looking at one of +the gages on the wall, asked: + +"Boys do you know how far you have traveled underground?" + +"How far?" asked Jack, who hated to guess riddles. + +"More than four thousand miles," was the answer. + +"But we haven't come to that mountain of gold and diamonds," said +Mark. "I am anxious to see that." + +"Have patience," replied the professor. "I have not steered toward it +yet. There are other things to see." + +Just then Washington's voice could be heard calling from the conning +tower: + +"We're coming to a big mountain!" + + CHAPTER XXVIII + + THE TEMPLE OF TREASURE + +"WHAT'S that?" fairly yelled the professor. + +"We am propelling ourselves in a contiguous direction an' in close +proximity to an elevated portion of th' earth's surface which rises in +antiguous proximity t' th' forward part of our present means of +locomotion!" said the colored man in a loud voice. + +"Which means there may be a collision," the professor said, as he and +the boys hurried toward the tower, + +"Jest what I said," retorted Washington. "What'll I do?" + +"Send the ship a little higher," answered Mr. Henderson. "We mustn't +hit any mountains." + +Washington forced more gas into the holder, and speeded the negative +gravity machine up some, so that the Mermaid, which was flying rather +low, ascended until it was in no danger of colliding with the peak +which reared its lofty height just ahead of them. + +As the ship sailed slowly over the mountain, Mark gazed down and +exclaimed: + +"Doesn't that look like the ruins of some building?" + +The professor took a pair of field glasses from a rack in the wall and +took a long view. + +"It must be the place," he said in a low voice. + +"What place?" asked Jack. + +"The temple of treasure," was the answer. "Hankos told me it was on +top of the highest mountain in the land, and this must be it, for it +is the loftiest place we have seen. But we must be careful, for there +is danger down there." + +"What kind?" asked Mark. + +"The place was long ago deserted by the giants," Mr. Henderson went +on. "Ages ago it was one of their storehouses for treasure, but there +were wars among themselves, Hankos said, and this part of the country +was laid waste. Savage beasts took up their abode in the temple, and +since then, in spite of the great size of the giants, they have not +dared to venture here. If we brave the animals we may have all the +gold and diamonds we can take away." + +"Then for one, I'm willin' t' go down an' begin th' extermination at +once," put in Andy. "I've always wanted t' be rich." + +"We must proceed cautiously," the professor said. "We are ill prepared +to fight any such beasts as we saw at the big geyser. At the same time +they may have deserted this place. I think we will lower the ship down +over the temple, and spend several hours in observation. Then, if +nothing develops, we can enter and see if the treasure is there." + +This plan was voted a good one, and the Mermaid after having been +steered directly over the ruined temple, was brought to a halt, and +enough gas let out so that it fell to about fifty feet in the air +above it. + +The adventurers began their watch. The afternoon waned and there were +no signs of any beasts in or about the temple. + +"I reckon we can take a chance," said Andy, who was anxious to get his +hands on some diamonds. + +"Better wait until morning," counseled Mr. Henderson. "It will soon be +dark, and it doesn't look like a nice place to go stumbling about in +by moonlight." + +So, though all but the scientist were anxious, they had to wait until +the night had passed. Several times Washington got up to see if the +temple had, by any chance, taken wings during the long hours of +darkness, but each time he found it was still in place. + +"Seems laik it'll never come mornin'." he said. + +But dawn came at length, and, after a hasty breakfast, preparations to +enter the temple were made. Andy loaded his gun for "bear" as he +expressed it, and the boys each took a revolver. + +The ship was lowered to as level a place as could be found, and then, +seeing that everything was in readiness for a quick departure, the +professor led the way out of the Mermaid. + +The entrance to the temple was through a big arched gateway. Some of +the stones had fallen down, and the whole structure looked as if it +might topple over at any moment. + +"Go carefully," cautioned Mr. Henderson, "Watch on all sides and up +above. Better let Andy and me go ahead." + +The scientist and the old hunter led the way. Through the arch they +went, and emerged into what must at one time have been a magnificent +courtyard. Before them was the temple proper, a vast structure, with +an opening through which fifty men might have marched abreast. But the +doors were gone, and the portal was but a black hole. + +"I hope there ain't any ghosts in there," said Washington, with a +shiver. + +"Nonsense!" exclaimed the professor. "There may be things as bad, but +there are no such things as ghosts. Have your gun ready, Andy." + +With every sense on the alert, the old hunter advanced. Every one was +a bit nervous, and, as Mark and Jack afterward admitted, they half +expected some terrible beast to rush out at them. But nothing of the +kind happened, and they went into the interior of the temple. + +At first it was so dark they could see nothing. There were vast dim +shapes on every side, and from the hollow echo of their footsteps they +judged the roof must be very high and the structure big in every way. + +Then, as their eyes became used to the darkness, they could make out, +up front, something like an altar or pulpit. + +"Perhaps that's where they offered up the gold and diamonds as a +sacrifice to their gods," spoke Mark in a whisper. + +"Sacrifice to their gods!" came back a hundred echoes and the sound +made every one shudder. + +"Oh!" said Washington, in a low voice. + +"Oh! Oh! Oh!" repeated the echoes in voices of thunder. + +"Well, this is pleasant," spoke Andy, in his natural tones, and, to +the surprise of all there was no echo. It was only when a person +whispered or spoke low that the sound was heard. After that they +talked naturally. + +"You stay here, and Andy and I will go up front and see what there +is," said Mr. Henderson. "Be on your guard, and if you hear us coming +back in a hurry, run!" + +It was with no little feeling of nervousness that the boys, Bill, Tom +and Washington watched the two men move off in the darkness. They +could hear their footsteps on the stone flags and could dimly see +them. + +"They must be almost to the altar by this time," said Mark, after a +long pause. + +Hardly had he spoken than there came a loud, sound from where Mr. +Henderson and Andy had gone. It was as if some giant wings were +beating the air. Then came shrill cries and the voice of the old +hunter could be heard calling: + +"Kneel down, Professor! Let me get a shot at the brute!" + +Those waiting in the rear of the temple huddled closer together. What +terrible beast could have been aroused? + +The next instant the place seemed illuminated as if by a lightning +flash, and a sound as of a thousand thunder claps resounded. + +"I think I winged him!" cried Andy's voice, and the boys knew he had +fired at something. + +Then there came a crash, and from the roof of the old temple a dozen +stones toppled off to one side, letting in a flood of colored light. + +By this illumination could be seen, flapping through the big space +overhead, an enormous bat, as large as three eagles. And, as it flew +about in a circle it gave utterance to shrill cries. + +"Bang!" Andy's gun spoke again, and the bat with a louder cry than +before, darted through the hole in the roof made by the falling +stones, which had been loosened by the concussion from the rifle. + +"Come on!" cried the old hunter. "That was the guardian of the +treasure! We are safe now!" + +Then, in the light which streamed through the broken roof, the +adventurers could see, heaped up on a great altar, behind which sat a +horrible graven image, piles of yellow metal, and sparkling stones. In +little heaps they were, arranged as if offerings to the terrible god +of the giants. There were bars and rings of gold, dishes of odd shape, +and even weapons. As for the sparkling stones, they were of many +colors, but the white ones were more plentiful than all the others. + +"Gold and diamonds! Diamonds and gold!" murmured the professor. "There +is the ransom of many kings in this ancient temple." + +"Wish I had a big bag!" exclaimed Washington, as he began filling all +his pockets with the precious metal and gems. "If I had a-thought I'd +have brought a dress-suit case!" + +"A dress-suit case full of diamonds!" exclaimed Mark. + +Then he too, as did all the others, fell to filling his pockets with +the wealth spread so lavishly before them. There was the riches of a +whole world in one place and no one but themselves to take it. + +For several minutes no one spoke. The only sound was the rattle of the +stones and the clink of gold, and when some of the diamonds dropped on +the floor they did not bother to gather them up. There were too many +on the altar. + +"We will be rich for life!" gasped old Andy, who had been poor all his +years. + +"I can't carry any more!" gasped Washington. "I'm goin' back for----" + +What he was going back for he never said, for, at that instant, +happening to look up at the hole in the roof, he gave a startled try: + +"Here come the terrible bats!" + +They all gazed upward. Through the opening they could see a great +flock of the awful birds, headed for the temple, and they were led by +one which seemed to fly with difficulty. It was the guardian of the +treasure that Andy had wounded. + +"Quick! We must get out of here!" shouted the old hunter. "They are +big enough and strong enough to tear us all to pieces. Hurry!" + +Down the centre of the temple they rushed, and not a moment too soon, +for, ere they had passed half way to the entrance, the opening in the +roof was darkened by the coming of the bats, and soon the flapping of +their wings awoke the thundering echoes in the ruined structure, while +their shrill cries struck terror to the hearts of the travelers. + +Up to the altar circled the bats, and then wheeling they flapped down +the dim aisles toward the adventurers. + +"Hurry! Hurry!" shouted Andy, who was in the rear. + +He raised his rifle and fired several shots into the midst of the +terrible creatures. + +A number of the bats were wounded, and the others were so frightened +by the sound of the shots and the flashes of fire that they turned +back. This enabled the fleeing ones to gain the entrance to the +temple, and soon they were outside. + +"To the ship!" yelled Bill. + +"There's little danger now!" called Andy, panting, for the run had +winded him. "They will hardly attack us in the light!" + +And he was right, for, though they could hear the bats flying about +inside the temple, and uttering their cries, none came outside. + +But no one felt like staying near the uncanny structure, and little +time was lost in reaching the Mermaid. Then the doors were fastened, +and the ship was sent high up into the air. + +"Which way?" asked Jack, when Mr. Henderson told him to go to the +conning tower and steer. + +"Back to where we first met the giants," replied the professor. "We +must prepare to start for our own earth again soon." + +"I've almost forgotten how real sunlight looks," thought Jack, as he +headed the ship around the other way. As he turned the levers a big +diamond dropped from his pocket and rolled on the floor. + +"This will be a good reminder of our trip though," he added. + +The travelers, even including Mr. Henderson, were so taken up with +their suddenly acquired riches that they hardly thought of meals. At +the professor's suggestion they tied their gold and stones up in small +packages convenient to carry. + +"Better place them where you can grab them in a hurry in case of +accident," the old scientist went on. "Of course if there should be +too bad an accident they would never be of any use to us down here, +but we'll look on the bright side of things." + +"Do you anticipate any accident?" asked Jack anxiously. + +"No, Oh no," replied Mr. Henderson, but Jack thought the aged man had +something weighing on his mind. + + CHAPTER XXIX + + BACK HOME-- CONCLUSION + +ON and on sped the Mermaid. Now that the travelers felt their journey +accomplished they were anxious to begin the homeward trip. They made a +straight course for the village where they had so nearly met with +disaster, and where the king of the giants had saved them. They went +in a direct line, and did not travel here and there, as they had after +they left the town. Consequently they shortened the route by a great +distance. Yet it was long enough, and when they finally came in sight +of the place the dial registered a trip of five thousand miles +underground. + +It was one evening when they landed almost at the spot whence they had +taken flight eventually to reach the temple of the treasure. Most of +the giants had betaken themselves to their mound houses, but Hankos +was walking in the fields, and, when he caught sight of the airship +hovering above him he waved his great sword in welcome. + +He rushed up to shake hands with the travelers when they came out of +the ship, though to greet him it was only possible for the adventurers +to grasp one of his immense fingers. + +As soon as the greetings were over Hankos began to speak rapidly to +the professor, at the same time going through many strange motions. + +"It is as I feared!" suddenly exclaimed the scientist. + +"What is the matter?" asked Mark. + +"The worst has happened!" went on Mr. Henderson. "The great hole by +which we came into this place has been closed by an earthquake shock!" + +"The hole closed?" repeated Jack. + +"An earthquake shock!" murmured Mark. + +"Then how are we going to get back to earth?" asked old Andy. + +A terrible fear entered the hearts of the travelers. The closing of +the opening by which they had come to the strange world meant, in all +probability that they would have to spend the rest of their lives in +this underground place. + +"What good did it do us to get all those diamonds and that gold?" +asked Mark in a sorrowful tone. + +Hankos began to speak again, using his gestures which were almost as +eloquent as words. The professor watched and listened intently. Then +there seemed to come a more hopeful look to his face. He nodded +vigorously as Hankos went on with what seemed to be an explanation. + +"It's worth trying, at all events!" the scientist exclaimed. "It is +our only hope!" + +"What is?" asked Jack. + +"Friends," began the professor in solemn tones. "I must admit our +plight is desperate. At the same time there is a bare chance of our +getting back to our own earth. As you remember, Hankos went from this +place to the upper regions through the upward spouting column of +water." + +"If we had our submarine we might also," interrupted Jack. "But the +Mermaid isn't built to sail in that fashion." + +"Nor would the Porpoise have served us in this emergency," said the +professor. "It would prove too heavy. But, nevertheless, I think I +have a plan. Now, Mark, you are about to learn the secret of the +storeroom. The real one, not the hiding of Hankos in there, which you +imagined to be the cause of my desire to keep something hidden. When +we planned a trip to this underground world I had a dim idea that we +might meet with trouble. So I planned and made a cylinder lifeboat." + +"A cylinder lifeboat?" repeated Mark. + +"Yes," replied Mr. Henderson. "I have it in the storeroom. I did not +want any of you to see it for fear you would have faint hearts. I +thought there might be no necessity of using it. But, since there is, +we must do our best. I will admit it may be a fearful ordeal, but we +will have to risk something in order to escape. + +"I have in the storeroom a large cylinder, capable of holding us all. +It will also contain food and drink for a month, but we will all have +to go, packed almost like sardines in a box. My plan is to take the +Mermaid to the place where the column of water shoots up. There we +will get into the cylinder, close it, and trust ourselves to the +terrible force that may bring us back to the upper world. What do you +say? Shall we attempt it?" + +For a few seconds no one spoke. Then Jack said slowly: + +"I don't see that we can do anything else. I don't want to stay here +all my life." + +"I wants a chance t' wear some of them sparklers," put in Washington. + +"Then we will make the attempt," the professor added. "Now all aboard +for the place where the water shoots up!" + +Questioning Hankos, the professor learned how to reach the strange +place. It was in the midst of a desolate country where none of the +giants ever went, so afraid were they of the strange phenomenon. + +It was a week's journey. Sometimes the Mermaid flew through the air, +and again it sailed on vast lakes or inland seas. On the trip they met +with big waterfalls and terrible geysers that spouted a mile or more +into the air. They traveled by night as well as day, though it was +necessary to keep a sharp watch. + +Sometimes the ship passed through great flocks of birds that +surrounded her and sought to pierce the aluminum hull with their sharp +beaks and talons. Over the mountains and valleys the ship sailed +until, one evening, there sounded through the air a strange rumbling +sound. + +"It is thunder," said Old Andy. + +"It is the water column," replied the scientist. "We are at the end of +our trip. May the remainder be as successful!" + +The ship was lowered to the surface, as it was deemed best to approach +the column when the lights were shining. No one slept much that night, +for the roaring and rumbling never ceased. + +In the morning the ship was sent forward slowly. Ever and ever the +terrific sound increased, until it was almost deafening. They had to +call to each other to be heard. + +Then, as the Mermaid passed over a mountain, the adventurers saw, in a +valley below them, the up-shooting water. + +It was a vast column, nearly three hundred feet in thickness, and as +solid and white as a shaft of marble. Up, up, up, it went, until it +was lost to sight, but there were no falling drops, and not even a +spray came from the watery shafts. + +"There is a terrible power to it," the professor said. "May it prove +our salvation!" + +The ship was lowered about a hundred feet away from the waterspout. +All around them the ground was vibrating with the force of the fluid. + +"To think that connects with the world above!" exclaimed Jack. + +"It's a good thing for us that it does," Mark answered. + +"We must lose no time," the professor put in. "If the earthquake +destroyed the downward shaft, it may effect this one in time. We must +escape while we can." + +Then, for the first time, he opened the storeroom and the big cylinder +was disclosed to view. It was made of aluminum, and shaped like an +immense cigar. The hull was double, and it was strongly braced. Inside +were padded berths for the occupants, and there was just room enough +for the seven adventurers. Once they had entered they could not move +about, but must stay in their little compartment. + +Compressed air in strong cylinders furnished a means of breathing, and +there were tiny electric lights operated by a storage battery. There +was also a chamber to be filled with the lifting gas. The cylinder was +so arranged that it would float on it's long axis if thrown into the +water. A trap door hermetically sealed gave access to the interior. A +small propeller, worked by compressed air, furnished motive power. + +The food supply consisted of compressed capsules on which a man could +subsist for several days. There was also some water, but not much, +since that can not be compressed and would, therefore, take +considerable room. + +"The only thing for us to do," said the professor, "is to get into the +cylinder, seal it up, and trust to Providence. This is what I intended +to use when we were caught in the draught." + +"How can we get into the column of water after we shut ourselves into +the cylinder?" asked Mark. + +"The cylinder fits into a sort of improvised cannon," said Mr. +Henderson. "It is fired by electricity and compressed air. "We will +aim it at the column, press the button and be projected into the midst +of the water. Then----" He did not finish the sentence, but the others +knew what he meant. + +"When are we to start?" asked Mark. + +"As soon as possible," replied the professor. "I must arrange the +cylinder, compress the air and lay out the food supply." + +It took the rest of the day to do this, as the inventor found it would +be advisable to attach a weight to the end of the cylinder, to hold it +upright in the column of water. The weight could be detached +automatically when they were shot up into the midst of the ocean, +where, as Hankos had told them, the column spurted forth. + +Then some food was stored in the tiny ship that was destined to be +their last hope, and some tanks of water were placed in it. + +"I think we are almost ready," Mr. Henderson said about noon the next +day. + +"What about our gold and diamonds?" asked Jack suddenly. "Can we take +them with us in the cylinder?" + +"That's so!" exclaimed Mr. Henderson. "I forgot about them. I'm afraid +we'll have to leave the riches behind. We will not be able to carry +them and the food we need, for it may be a week or more before we can +leave the cylinder. Gold and diamonds will be a poor substitute for +something to eat." + +"I'm goin' t' take mine!" said Washington with much conviction. "I +might as well starve rich as starve poor!" + +"We may be able to take a few diamonds," the professor answered. "The +gold will be too heavy. Let each one select the largest of the +diamonds he has and put them in his pockets." + +Then began a sorting of the wealth. It was strange, as they recalled +afterward, throwing away riches that would have made millionaires +envious, but it had to be done. All the wealth in the world would not +equal a beef capsule when they were starving, and they realized it. So +they only saved a few pieces of gold as souvenirs, and took the best +of the diamonds. But even then they had a vast fortune with them. + +At last all was in readiness. The cylinder had been placed in the tube +from which it was to be shot gently forth by compressed air, so that +it would fall into the upward spouting column of water. The charge of +compressed air was put in and the electric wires arranged. + +"Are we all ready?" asked Mr. Henderson. + +"I think so," said Jack, in what sounded like a whisper, but which was +loud, only the noise of the water muffled it. + +"Then we had better enter the cylinder," spoke the inventor. "Take a +last look at the Flying Mermaid, boys, for you will never see again +the ship that has borne us many thousand miles. She served us well, +and might again, but for the freak of nature that has placed us in +this position." + +For the first time the adventurers realized that they must abandon the +craft in which they had reached the new world. So it was with no +little feeling of sadness that they climbed up the ladder that had +been arranged and slid down into the cylinder. One by one they took +their places in the padded berths arranged for them. It was a snug +fit, for the professor knew if there was too much room he and the +others might be so tossed about as to be killed. + +Mr. Henderson was the last to enter. Standing at the manhole he took a +final look at his pet creation, the Mermaid. Through the opened +windows the colored lights came, shifting here and there. Outside the +terrible column of water was roaring as if anxious to devour them. + +"Good-bye, Mermaid!" said the professor softly. + +Then he closed down the manhole cover and tightened the screws that +held it in place. He touched a button that turned on the electric +lights and the interior of the cylinder was illuminated with a soft +glow. + +"Are you all ready?" he asked. + +"Jest as much as I ever will be," replied Washington, who, as the +crisis approached, seemed more light-hearted than any of the others. + +"Then here we go!" exclaimed Mr. Henderson. + +His fingers touched the button that connected with the electric +machine, which operated the compressed air. + +There sounded a muffled report. Then it seemed to those in the +cylinder that the end of the world had come. They shot upward and +outward, through the top of the conning tower which had been removed. +The cylinder, launched straight at the column of water struck it +squarely and, an instant later was caught in the grasp of the giant +force and hurled toward the upper world. + +Up and up and up the mass of metal with its human freight went. Now it +was spinning like a top, again it shot toward the earth's crust like +an arrow from the archer's bow. + +It was moving with the velocity of a meteor, yet because of being +surrounded with water, and traveling with the same velocity as the +column, there was no friction. Had there been, the heat generated +would have melted the case in an instant. + +For the first few seconds those in the cylinder were dazed by the +sudden rush. Then as it became greater and greater there came a +curious dull feeling, and, one after another lost consciousness. The +terror of the water column, and the frightful speed, had made them +senseless. + _______ + +It seemed like a month later, though, of course, it could have been +only a few hours or a day at most when Jack opened his eyes. He saw +his companions, white and senseless all around him, and at first +thought they were dead. Then he saw Mark looking at him, and +Washington asked: + +"Is any one livin' 'sides me?" + +"I am," replied Jack decidedly. + +Then, one after another they regained their senses. But they were in a +strange daze, for they were being carried along like a shooting star, +only, as they went at the same rate as did the element carrying them, +they did not realize this. + +"I think I'm hungry," said Bill, who had the best appetite of any of +the travelers. + +"You'll find a beef capsule in the little compartment over your head," +spoke the professor. + +Bill was about to reach for it, when they were all startled by a +sudden side motion of the cylinder. Then came a violent shock, and a +sound as of splashing water. Next the cylinder seemed to be falling, +and, a few minutes later to be shooting upward. Following this there +was another splash and the cylinder began to bob about like a cork on +a mill pond. + +"We have reached the sea! We are afloat on the ocean!" cried the +professor. + +Hurriedly he disengaged himself from the straps that held him to his +bunk. He pushed back the lever that opened the manhole. Into the +opening glowed the glorious sunlight, while to the occupants came the +breath of salt air. + +"Hurrah!" cried Jack. "We are safe at last!" + +"Safe at last!" the professor answered, and then they all gave a +cheer. + +For their cylinder, which might now be termed a boat, was floating on +the great Atlantic. The blue sky was overhead and the air of the sea +fanned their cheeks. + +They had shot up from the underground earth, in the column of water, +had been tossed high into the air, had fallen back when the liquid +shaft broke into spray, had descended into the ocean, gone down a +hundred feet or more, and then had shot up like a cork to bob about +the surface. + +For a week they were afloat, and then they were picked up by a passing +vessel, rather weak and very much cramped, but otherwise in good +shape. They said nothing of their adventures, save to explain that +they were experimenting in a new kind of boat. About a month later, +for the ship that had rescued them was a slow sailer, they were back +on the island whence that wonderful voyage was begun. + _______ + +"Well, we solved the mystery of the center of the earth," remarked +Jack, one evening, when they were gathered in the old shack where so +many wonderful adventures had been planned. + +"Yes, we did," said Mr. Henderson. "And no one else is ever likely to +go there." + +"Why?" + +"Because the only way of getting there was destroyed by the +earthquake, and no one could ever force his way down through that +upward-shooting column of water." + +"That's so. Well, we have the diamonds, anyway," spoke Mark. "They +ought to make us rich." + +And the jewels did, for the stones proved to be of great value, even +though the adventurers had saved only a few of the many they found in +the ruined temple. + +But there was money enough so that they all could live in comfort; the +rest of their lives. As the professor was getting quite old, and +incapable of making any more wonderful inventions, he closed up his +workshop and settled down to a quiet life. As for Washington, Andy, +and Bill and Tom, they invested their money received from the sale of +the diamonds in different business ventures, and each one did well. + +"I am going in for a good education," said Jack to Mark. + +"Just what I am going to do," answered his chum. "And after we've got +that----" He paused suggestively. + +"We'll go in for inventing airships, or something like that, eh?" + +"Yes. We've learned a great deal from Mr. Henderson, and in the course +of time we ought to be able to turn out something even more wonderful +than the Electric Monarch, the Porpoise, or the Flying Mermaid." + +"Yes, and when we've invented something better----" + +"We'll take another trip." + +"Right you are!" + +And then the two chums shook hands warmly; and here we will say +good-bye. + + THE END. + + + + +*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK, FIVE THOUSAND MILES UNDERGROUND *** + +This file should be named ftmun10.txt or ftmun10.zip +Corrected EDITIONS of our eBooks get a new NUMBER, ftmun11.txt +VERSIONS based on separate sources get new LETTER, ftmun10a.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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FOR PUBLIC DOMAIN EBOOKS*Ver.02/11/02*END* + diff --git a/old/ftmun10.zip b/old/ftmun10.zip Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..f15b125 --- /dev/null +++ b/old/ftmun10.zip diff --git a/old/ftmun10h.htm b/old/ftmun10h.htm new file mode 100644 index 0000000..ebbf164 --- /dev/null +++ b/old/ftmun10h.htm @@ -0,0 +1,6150 @@ +<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN"> +<html> +<head> +<title>Five Thousand Miles Underground</title> +<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=iso-8859-1"> +<style type="text/css"> +<!-- +body {margin:10%; text-align:justify} +blockquote {font-size:14pt} +P {font-size:14pt} +--> +</style> +</head> +<body> + + + + +<h1>The Project Gutenberg EBook of Five Thousand Miles Underground, by Roy Rockwood +</h1> +<pre> +Copyright laws are changing all over the world. 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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: Five Thousand Miles Underground + +Author: Roy Rockwood + +Release Date: January, 2004 [EBook #4994] +[Yes, we are more than one year ahead of schedule] +[This file was first posted on April 7, 2002] + +Edition: 10 + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ASCII + +*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK, FIVE THOUSAND MILES UNDERGROUND *** + + + + +This eBook was produced by Jim Weiler, xooqi.com + + + + +</pre> + +<h1> +Five Thousand Miles Underground</h1> +<h4>Or</h4> +<h2>The Mystery of the Centre of the Earth</h2> +<h2> +by Roy Rockwood, 1908</h2> +<HR> +<h3>CHAPTER I</h3> +<h4>WASHINGTON BACKS OUT</h4> +<P> +"WASHINGTON! I say Washington!" +<P> +Throughout a big shed, filled for the most part with huge pieces of machinery, +echoed the voice of Professor Amos Henderson. He did not look up from a small +engine over which he was bending. +<P> +"Washington! Where are you? Why don't you answer me?" +<P> +From somewhere underneath an immense pile of iron, steel and aluminum came +the voice of a colored man. +<P> +"Yas sir, Perfesser, I'se goin' t' saggasiate my bodily presence in yo' +contiguous proximity an' attend t' yo' immediate conglomerated prescriptions +at th' predistined period. Yas, sir!" +<P> +"Well, Washington, if you had started when you began that long speech you +would have been at least half way here by this time. Hurry up! Never mind +tightning those bolts now. Find the boys. I need them to help me with this +engine. They must be around somewhere." +<P> +"I seen 'em goin' fishin' down by th' brook a little while ago," answered +the negro, crawling out from under what seemed to be a combined airship and +watercraft. "Jack says as how yo' gived him permission t' occupy his +indisputatious period of levity in endeavorin' t' extract from th' liquid +element some specimens of swimmin' creatures." +<P> +"If you mean I said he and Mark could go fishing in the brook, you're right, +Washington," replied the professor with a smile. "But you waste a lot of +time and breath trying to say it. Why, don't you give up using big words?" +<P> +"I reckon I was brought up t' it," replied the colored man grinning from +ear to ear. He did not always use big words but when he did they were generally +the wrong ones. Sometimes, he spoke quite correctly. +<P> +"Well, I suppose you can't help it," resumed Mr. Henderson. "However, never +mind that. Find the boys and send them to me." +<P> +"With th' least appreciatableness amount of postponement," answered the +messenger, and he went out. +<P> +Washington White, who in color was just the opposite to his name, a general +helper and companion to Professor Henderson, found Mark Sampson and Jack +Darrow about a quarter of a mile from the big shed, which was in the center +of a wooded island off the coast of Maine. The lads were seated on the bank +of a small brook, fishing. +<P> +"Perfesser wants yo' immediate," said Washington. +<P> +"But we haven't caught a single fish," objected Mark. +<P> +"Them's the orders from headquarters," replied the colored man. "Yo' both +got t' project yo'selves in th' vicinity of th' machine shop. I reckon th' +new fangled contraption that th' perfesser is goin' t' navigate th' air an' +sail th' angry seas in, am about done. He want's t' try th' engine." +<P> +"Come on then," said Jack. "We probably would not catch any fish, anyhow, +Mark." +<P> +Accompanied by Washington, the youths, each of whom was about eighteen years +old, started toward the big shed. +<P> +While they are on their way opportunity may be taken to tell a little about +them, as well as about Washington and the professor, and the curious craft +on which the scientist was working. +<P> +A few years before this story opens Mr. Henderson had invented a wonderful +electric airship. He had it about completed when, one day, he and the two +boys became unexpectedly acquainted, and, as it developed, friends. +<P> +Mark and Jack were orphans. After having rather a hard time knocking about +the world trying to make a living, they chanced to meet, and resolved to +cast their lots together. They boarded a freight train, and, as told in the +first volume of this series, entitled, "Through the Air to the North Pole; +or the Wonderful Cruise of the Electric Monarch," the cars were wrecked near +where Professor Henderson was building his strange craft. +<P> +The boys were cared for by the scientist, and, after their recovery from +hurts received in the collision, they accepted his invitation to make the +trip through the upper regions in the airship, to search for the north pole. +With them went Andy Sudds, an old hunter, and Tom Smith and Bill Jones, two +farmers, but who were hired as helpers on the voyage. The party had many +adventures on the trip, having battles with savage animals and more savage +Esquimaux, and were tossed about in terrible storms. After making some scientific +observations, which the professor was much interested in, they started back +home. +<P> +Having found he could successfully sail in the air, Mr. Henderson resolved +to try what it might be like under water. +<P> +He moved his machine shop to a lonely spot on the Maine coast, and there, +with the help of the boys, Washington, Andy and two machinists constructed +a submarine boat, called the <I>Porpoise.</I> +<P> +In this the professor resolved to seek the south pole, he having a theory +that it was surrounded by an open sea. After much hard work the <I>Porpoise +</I>was made ready for the voyage. +<P> +What occurred on this great trip is described in the second book of this +series, called "Under the Ocean to the South Pole, or the Strange Cruise +of the Submarine Wonder." In that is told how once more Tom and Bill, with +Andy, the boys and Washington, accompanying Professor Henderson, had many +thrilling experiences. +<P> +They were caught in the grip of the grass of the terrible Sargasso Sea. Monstrous +suckers grasped the boat in their powerful arms, and had to be fought off. +They were caught in a sea of boiling water and imprisoned between big fields +of ice. +<P> +By means of strong diving suits they were able to leave the ship and walk +about on the bottom of the sea. They visited a graveyard of sunken ships, +saw many strange monsters as well as many beautiful fish in the great depths +to which they sunk. Many times they were in dire peril but the resources +of the professor, the bravery and daring of the boys, no less than the help +Washington and Andy Sudds, the hunter, rendered at times, brought them through. +<P> +Those of you who read of their adventures will recall the strange island +which they came upon in the Atlantic Ocean, far from the coast of South America. +<P> +When they first drew near this island they were almost sucked into the depths +of a great whirlpool, caused by water pouring down a big hole that seemed +to lead far into the earth. They reversed their ship just in time. +<P> +But, on going to another side of the island they were able to approach safely, +as at this point the great hole was farther from the shore. Then they landed +and investigated. +<P> +They found the island was almost circular, and the hole was also round, but +not in the center of the land. It was an immense cavity, so wide they could +not see across, and as for the depth they could only guess at it. Looking +down they could only see rolling masses of vapor and clouds caused by the +water which poured down from the ocean with the force of a Niagara. +<P> +Gazing down into the big hole Mark suggested it might lead to the centre +of the earth, which some scientists claim is hollow. The professor admitted +that the cavity looked as though it led to China. +<P> +They had no means of investigating further the mystery of the opening and +returned to their submarine, completing the voyage to the south pole. +<P> +It was now about two years since they had come back from that eventful trip. +One of the first things the professor did, after docking the <I>Porpoise, +</I>was to shut himself up in his study and begin to draw plans. To the questions +of the boys he returned no answer for several days. Then he announced he +was working on a craft which could both sail on top of the water and navigate +the air. +<P> +In time the plans were done, and, in order to keep the work secret, the shop +was moved to an island which the professor owned. +<P> +Parts of the <I>Monarch </I>and the <I>Porpoise </I>were used in constructing +the new craft, so there was no need to get other help than that which the +boys, Washington and Bill and Tom could give, since the two latter accepted +an offer of the professor to remain and work for him. The boys, of course, +would not leave their friend. +<P> +The professor realized that he had a more difficult task in his new venture +than he had set himself on other occasions. For a ship to be light enough +to rise in the air, and, at another time, and with no change, to be strong +enough to navigate the ocean, was indeed something to tax Mr. Henderson's +ingenuity. +<P> +However, in the course of a little over a year the larger part of the work +was done. Inside the big shed was the huge affair which, it was hoped, would +enable its owner to be master of both air and water. +<P> +"Did the professor say anything special?" asked Mark of Washington. +<P> +"Nope. I reckon he were too busy problamatin' the exact altitude projected +in an inverse direction by th' square root of th' new engine when operated +at a million times inside of a few seconds, but he didn't say nothin' t' +me. I were busy underneath th' ship, fixin' bolts when he tole me t' find +yo'. I wouldn't be s'prised if he had th' thing goin' soon." +<P> +"Do you think he'll be generating the new gas to-day?" asked Jack eagerly. +"That's the most troublesome part; to get that gas right." +<P> +"He didn't say nothin' t' me 'bout it," Washington stated, as he walked along +beside the two boys. "He jest seemed anxious like." +<P> +"We'd better hurry," advised Mark. "He may be at an important part in his +experiments and probably needs us. I hope it will work. He has spent many +days on it, and we all have worked hard. It ought to be a success." +<P> +"Perfesser allers makes things work," declared Washington stoutly. +<P> +"That's a good way to feel about it, anyway," observed Mark. "Well, we'll +soon know." +<P> +The three hurried to the shed which they could see as they rounded a turn +of the path through the wood. They noticed an elderly man approaching with +a gun on his shoulder. On one arm he carried a game bag. +<P> +"Guess Andy got something for dinner," remarked Jack. +<P> +"I hopes so, honey," put in Washington. "I'se got a sort of gone feelin' +in my stomach!" +<P> +"Any luck, Andy?" called Mark, when he came within hailing distance. +<P> +"Fine," replied Andy Sudds. "Rabbits and quail. We'll have a good dinner +to-morrow." +<P> +While Andy entered the living part of the big shed to put away his gun and +game, the boys and Washington kept on to the engine room. They found the +professor, with Bill and Tom, busy fitting pipes to the small engine which +was set up at one side of the structure. +<P> +"Come, boys, I need your aid," remarked Mr. Henderson as they entered. "Take +off your coats and pitch in. Tighten up these bolts, Jack. Mark, you mix +up those chemicals the way I taught you, and see that the dynamo is in working +order for Washington to attend to." +<P> +In a little while the shop was a veritable hive of industry, and it resounded +to the sound of hammers, wrenches and machinery. In the background was the +big ship, which seemed like two immense cigars, one above the other, the +lower one the larger. +<P> +"Where was you calalatin' t' take this here ship when it gits done, Perfesser?" +asked Washington, during a lull in the operations. +<P> +"Do you remember that big hole in the island we visited on our trip to the +south pole?" +<P> +"I suah does," answered the colored man. +<P> +"We are going to explore that," went on the scientist. "We are going to make +a voyage to the interior of the earth in our <I>Flying Mermaid."</I> +<P> +"Go down into th' earth!" exclaimed Washington, his eyes big with fright. +<P> +"Certainly; why not?" +<P> +"Not for mine!" cried the colored man, dropping the wrench he was holding. +"No sire I'm not goin' t' project myself int' a grave while I'se alive. Time +enough when I kicks th' bucket. No sir! If yo' an' the boys wants t' risk +yo' se'ves goin' down int' th' interior of th' earth, where th' Bible says +there's fiery furnaces, yo' kin go, but Washington White stays on terra cotta! +That's where he stays; He ain't ready t' be buried, not jest yet!" and the +frightened colored man started to leave the shed. +<h3>CHAPTER II</h3> +<h4>THE FLYING MERMAID</h4> +<P> +"HERE! Stop him!" cried Professor Henderson. "Don't let him get away. We +still need his help to get the ship in shape. He needn't be frightened. We're +not going to start at once." +<P> +Mark and Jack ran after Washington, whose progress was somewhat impeded because +he kept looking back as if he feared the new ship was chasing him. +<P> +"Come on back!" said Mark. "There's no danger, and if there was we're not +going to start to-day." +<P> +"Ain't yo' foolin' me?" asked Washington, pausing and looking doubtfully +at the boys. +<P> +"Of course not," answered Mark. "You know Professor Henderson would not make +you do anything you didn't want to do, Wash. He wishes you to stay and help +him get ready, that's all." +<P> +"Well, Washington," observed the aged scientist. "I didn't think you'd go +back on me." +<P> +"I'd do mos' anything fer yo', Perfesser," said the colored man, "but I got +t' beg off this time," and he looked at the <I>Flying Mermaid </I>as if he +thought the metal sides would open and devour him. +<P> +Then help me get things in shape to generate the gas," the scientist said. +"I want to give the new vapor the first real test in lifting power to-day. +On the success of it depends the future of the ship." +<P> +Seeing there was no immediate danger of being carried to the centre of the +earth, Washington resumed his labors. The professor, the boys, Bill and Tom +were also hurrying matters to enable a test to be made before night. +<P> +As will readily be seen, even by those not familiar with the construction +of airships and submarines, the chief problem was to find some agent strong +enough to lift from the earth a weight heavier than had ever before been +put into an apparatus that was destined to traverse the clouds. For the +<I>Flying Mermaid </I>was not only an airship but an ocean voyager as well. +It had to be made light enough to be lifted far above the earth, yet the +very nature of it, necessitating it being made heavy enough to stand the +buffeting of the waves and the pressure of water, was against its flying +abilities. +<P> +Professor Henderson realized this and knew that the chief concern would be +to discover a gas or vapor with five times the lifting power of hydrogen, +one of the lightest gases known, and one sometimes used to inflate balloons. +<P> +After long study he had been partially successful, but he knew from experiments +made that the gas he had so far been able to manufacture would not answer. +What he wanted was some element that could be mixed with the gas, to neutralize +the attraction of gravitation, or downward pull of the earth. +<P> +While he was seeking this, and experimenting on many lines, the construction +of the air-water ship went on. In general the outward construction was two +cigar shaped hulls, one above the other. Aluminum, being the lightest and +strongest metal that could be used for the purpose, formed the main part +of both bodies. +<P> +The upper hull was one hundred feet long and twenty feet in diameter at the +widest part. It tapered to points at either end. It was attached to the lower +hull by strong braces, at either end, while from the center there extended +a pipe which connected with the lower section. This pipe was intended to +convey the lifting gas to the part which corresponded to the bag of the balloon, +save that it was of metal instead of silk, or rubber as is usual. +<P> +There were two reasons for this. One was that it would not be liable to puncture, +particularly in the proposed underground trip, and the other was that it +did not have to be so large as a cloth bag would have had to be. It was also +a permanent part of the ship, and on a voyage where part of the time the +travelers would be in the air and part on the water, and when the change +from one to the other would have to be made quickly, this was necessary. +It would have taken too long to raise the ship in the air had a cloth bag +been used to contain the gas. +<P> +The lower hull or main part of the craft was one hundred and fifty feet long, +and forty feet through at the largest part, in the centre. +<P> +It was divided into four sections. The forward one contained the sleeping +quarters of Professor Henderson and his crew. There was a small stateroom +for each one. Above was a conning or observation tower, reached by a small +flight of steps. From this tower the ship could be steered, stopped and started, +as could also be done from the engine room, which was in the after part of +the hull. +<P> +As in the <I>Porpoise </I>and <I>Monarch, </I>electricity formed the motive +power and was also used for many other purposes on board. Engines operated +by gas produced the current which heated, lighted and moved the ship, as +well as played a part in producing the wonderful gas. +<P> +The ship moved forward or backward by means of a novel arrangement. This +was by the power of compressed air. From either end of the lower hull there +projected a short pipe working in a ball and socket joint, so it could be +turned in any direction. By means of strong pumps a current of compressed +air could be sent out from either pipe. Thus when floating above the earth +the ship was forced forward by the blast of air rushing from the pipe at +the stern. It was the same principle as that on which a sky rocket is shot +heavenward, save that gases produced by the burning of powder in the pasteboard +rocket form its moving impulse. +<P> +In the case of the <I>Flying Mermaid, </I>it could be made to move backward +by sending the air out of the forward tube. Thus, when in the water, the +compressed air rushing from the pipe struck the fluid and forced the ship +forward or backward as was desired. It floated on the surface, the deck being +about three feet out of water, while the aluminum gas bag was overhead. +<P> +The engine room was a marvel of machine construction. It contained pumps +for air and water, motors, dynamos, gas engines, and a maze of wheels and +levers. Yet everything was very compact and no room was wasted. +<P> +The use of the air method of propulsion did away with the necessity of a +large propellor such as most airships have to use, a propellor which must +of necessity be very light and which is easily broken. +<P> +Next to the engine room was the kitchen. It contained an electric range and +all necessary appliances and utensils for preparing meals. There were lockers +and a large reserve storeroom which when the time came would be well stocked +with food. Forward of the kitchen was the living and dining room. It contained +comfortable seats, folding tables and a small library. Here, also were many +instruments designed to show how the various machines were working. There +were gages, pointers and dials, which told the direction the ship was traveling, +the speed and the distance above the earth or below the surface. Similar +indicators were in the conning tower, which had a powerful search light. +<P> +The ship was lighted throughout by incandescent lamps, and there was even +a small automatic piano worked by the electric current, on which popular +airs could be played. +<P> +If the gas and the gravity neutralizer worked as Professor Henderson hoped +they would, as soon as the ship was completed, all that would be necessary +to start on the voyage would be to fill the aluminum bag and set the air +compressor in motion. +<P> +The gas was made from common air, chemically treated and with a secret material +added which by means of a complicated machine in a measure did away with +the downward pull of the earth. Thus all that was necessary to carry on a +long voyage was a quantity of gasolene to operate the engine which worked +the electric machines, and some of this secret compound. +<P> +The professor and his helpers had been working to good advantage. At last +all was in readiness for the gas test. +<P> +It was proposed to try it on an experimental scale. Some of the fluid was +to be generated and forced into an aluminum cylinder under the same pressure +it would be used in the air ship. To this cylinder were attached weights +in proportion to the weight of the <I>Flying Mermaid </I>with its load of +human freight, engines and equipment. +<P> +"This cylinder is just one one-hundredth the size of the cylinder of the +ship," said the professor. "I am going to fasten to it a hundred pound weight. +If it lifts that our latest contrivance will be a success." +<P> +"You mean if the little cylinder pulls a hundred pounds up the big ship will +take us and the machinery up?" asked Mark. +<P> +"Certainly," answered the professor. "If this cylinder lifts a hundred pounds, +one a hundred times as big (as that of the <I>Mermaid </I>is), will lift +a hundred times as much, or ten thousand pounds. That is five tons, or more +than a ton over what I figure to be the weight of our ship and contents. +The latest war balloon can lift one ton with ease, and if my machine can +not do five times as well I shall be disappointed." +<P> +The last adjustments were made, pipes were run from the gas generator to +the cylinder, and the hundred pound weight was attached. +<P> +"Everybody look out now," said Mr. Henderson. "I am going to start the machine +and let the gas enter the cylinder. It is a very powerful gas and may break +the cylinder. If it does you must all duck." +<P> +The scientist gave a last look at everything. The boys got behind some boards +whence they could see without being in danger. Washington, who had little +fear so long as there was no danger of going under ground, took his place +at the dynamo. Andy Sudds, with Bill and Tom, stationed themselves in safe +places. +<P> +"All ready!" called the professor. +<P> +He pulled a lever toward him, turned a wheel and signalled to Washington +to start the dynamo. There was a sound of buzzing machinery, which was followed +by a hiss as the gas began to enter the cylinder under pressure. Would it +stand the strain? That question was uppermost in every one's mind save the +professor's. He only cared to see the cylinder leave the ground, carrying +the weight with it. That would prove his long labors were crowned with success. +<P> +Faster and faster whirred the dynamo. The gas was being generated from the +air. The secret chemical made a hissing which could be heard for some distance. +The gage registered a heavy pressure. Anxiously the professor watched the +cylinder. +<P> +"There!" he exclaimed at length. "It has all the gas it can hold. Now to +see if it works!" +<P> +He disconnected the pipe leading from the generator. This left the cylinder +free. It seemed to tremble slightly. There appeared to be a movement to the +hundred pound weight which rested on the ground. It was as if it was tugging +to get loose. +<P> +"There it goes! There it goes!" cried Mark, joyfully. +<P> +"Hurrah!" shouted Jack. "There she rises!" +<P> +"It suttinly am projectin' itself skyward!" yelled Washington, coming from +the dynamo. +<P> +Sure enough the cylinder was slowly rising in the air, bearing the weight +with it. It had lifted it clear from the ground and was approaching the roof +of the big shed. +<P> +"It will work! It will work!" exclaimed the professor, strangely excited. +<P> +The next instant the cylinder, carrying the weight, sailed right out of an +open skylight, and began drifting outside the shop, and across the fields. +<P> +"Quick! We must get it back!" cried Mr. Henderson. "If it gets away my secret +may be discovered and I will lose all! We must secure it!" +<P> +But the cylinder was now two hundred feet in the air and being blown to the +east, the weight dangling below it, making it look like a miniature airship. +<P> +"We can never catch that!" cried Mark. +<h3>CHAPTER III</h3> +<h4>WASHINGTON DECIDES</h4> +<P> +"WE must catch that cylinder!" the professor exclaimed. "Some one may find +it when it comes down and analyze the gas. Then he would discover how to +make it. The cylinder must come down!" +<P> +"Don't see how we can proximate ourselves inter th' vicinity of it lessen +we delegate th' imperial functions of orinthological specimens t' some member +of this here party," observed Washington. +<P> +"If you mean we can't catch that there contraption unless we turn into birds +I'll show you that you're mistaken!" cried Andy Sudds. "I guess I have a +trick or two up my sleeve," and the old hunter quickly threw open the breech +of his gun and inserted a couple of cartridges. +<P> +He raised the piece to his shoulder and took quick aim. There was a sliver +of flame, a puff of smoke and a sharp report. The professor and the boys +who were watching the cylinder saw it vibrate up in the air. Then there came +a whistling sound. An instant later the metal body began to descend, and +it and the weight fell to the earth. +<P> +"I'm sorry I had to put a bullet through it, Professor," said old Andy with +a queer smile, "but it was the only way I saw of bringing it down. Hope it +isn't damaged much." +<P> +"It doesn't matter if it is," the scientist answered. "I can make more cylinders, +but I don't want that secret of the gas to become known. Your bullet served +a good turn, Andy, for it let the compressed vapor out just in time." +<P> +"Then we may consider the experiment a success," said Mark, as Washington +went to where the cylinder had fallen, to detach it from the weight and bring +both to the shed. +<P> +"It seems so," Mr. Henderson answered. "True, it was only an experiment. +We have yet to test the ship itself." +<P> +"When can we do that?" asked Jack. +<P> +"I hope by Monday," the scientist answered. +<P> +"Will you try it in the water or air first?" asked Mark. +<P> +"I'm almost certain it will float in the water," the aged inventor said. +"It does not require much work to make a ship which will do that. But the +air proposition is another matter. However, since the cylinder rose, I am +pretty sure the <I>Flying Mermaid </I>will. +<P> +"But we have done enough work to-day. Let's rest and have something to eat. +Then, with Sunday to sit around and talk matters over, we will be ready for +Monday's test." +<P> +Some of the game Andy had killed was soon on the table, for Washington, in +addition to his other accomplishments, was an expert cook. During the evening +the boys and their friends sat in the living room of the big shed and talked +over the events of the day. +<P> +Sunday was spent in discussing what adventures might lie before them should +they be able to descend into the big hole. Washington did not say, much, +but it was easy to see he had no notion of going. He even began to pack his +few belongings in readiness to leave the service of Mr. Henderson, for whom +he had worked a good many years. +<P> +No one remained long abed Monday morning. Even Washington was up early in +spite of the interest he had lost in the professor's voyage. +<P> +"I jest wants t' see yo' start fer that place where they buries live folks," +he said. +<P> +In order to properly test the <I>Flying Mermaid </I>it was necessary to move +the craft from the shed from which place it had never been taken since it's +construction was started. It had been built on big rollers in anticipation +of this need, so that all which was now necessary was to open the doors at +the end, and roll the craft out. +<P> +This was accomplished with no small amount of labor, and it was nearly noon +before the big ship was moved into the open. It was shoved along to a little +clearing in front of the shed, where no trees would interfere with its possible +upward movement. +<P> +Everyone was bustling about. The professor was busiest of all. He went from +one machine to another; from this apparatus to that, testing here, turning +wheels there, adjusting valves and seeing that all was in readiness for the +generating of the powerful gas. +<P> +As the airship was half round on the bottom and as it rested in a sort of +semi-circular cradle; it brought the entrance some distance above the ground. +To make it easier to get in and out while preparations for the trial were +going on, Bill and Tom had made an improvised pair of steps, which were tied +to the side of the ship with ropes. +<P> +Up and down these the professor, the boys and Andy went, taking in tools +and materials, and removing considerable refuse which had accumulated during +the building of the craft. +<P> +Finally all was in readiness for starting the making of the gas. The ship +was not wholly complete and no supplies or provisions for the long voyage +had been taken aboard. The <I>Flying Mermaid </I>was about a ton lighter +than it would be when fully fitted out, but to make up for this the professor +had left in the ship a lot of tools and surplus machinery so that the craft +held as much weight as it would under normal conditions. If the gas lifted +it now it would at any other time. +<P> +"Start the generator," said Mr. Henderson, to Mark. "We'll soon see whether +we are going to succeed or fail." +<P> +The boy turned a number of levers and wheels. The machine which made the +powerful vapor was soon in operation. The professor had already added enough +of the secret compound to the tank containing the other ingredients, and +the big pump was sucking in air to be transformed into the lifting gas. +<P> +The boys and the professor were in the engine room. Andy Sudds, with Bill +and Tom, had taken their places in the living room, to more evenly balance +the ship, since the things in it were not yet all in their proper places. +As for Washington he was busy running from the shed to the ship with various +tools and bits of machinery the professor desired. +<P> +The gas was being generated rapidly. Throughout the ship there resounded +a hissing noise that told it was being forced through the pipe into the aluminum +shell above the ship proper. +<P> +"I wonder how soon it will begin to lift us," said Mark. +<P> +"It will take about half an hour," replied Mr. Henderson. "You see we have +first to fill the holder completely, since there is no gas in it. After this +we will keep some on hand, so that it will only need the addition of a small +quantity to enable the ship to rise." +<P> +He was busy watching the pointer on a dial which indicated the pressure of +the gas, and the lifting force. The boys were kept busy making adjustments +to the machinery and oiling bearings. +<P> +Suddenly, throughout the length of the craft there was felt a curious trembling. +It was as though the screw of a powerful steamer was revolving in the water. +<P> +"What is it?" asked Jack. +<P> +"I hope it is the lifting power of the gas making itself felt," the professor +answered. "Perhaps the <I>Flying Mermaid is </I>getting ready to try her +wings." +<P> +The trembling became more pronounced. The gas was being generated faster +than ever. The whole ship was trembling. Tom and Bill came from the room, +where they were stationed, to inquire the meaning, but were reassured by +the professor. +<P> +"Don't be alarmed if you find yourselves up in the air pretty soon," he remarked +with a smile. "Remember the <I>Electric Monarch, </I>and the flights she +took. We may not go as high as we did in her, but it will answer the same +purpose." +<P> +The gas was hissing through the big tube as it rushed into the overhead holder. +The gage indicated a heavy pressure. The ship began to tremble more violently +and to sway slightly from side to side. +<P> +"I think we shall rise presently," said Mr. Henderson. His voice showed the +pride he felt at the seeming success with which his invention was about to +meet. +<P> +Suddenly, with a little jerk, as though some one with a giant hand had plucked +the <I>Flying Mermaid </I>from the earth, the ship gave a little bound into +the air, and was floating free. +<P> +"Here we go!" cried Mr. Henderson. "The ship is a success. Now we're off +for the hole in the earth!" +<P> +The <I>Flying Mermaid </I>was indeed rising in the air. True it did not go +up so swiftly as had the <I>Monarch, </I>but then it was a much heavier and +stronger vessel, and flying was only one of its accomplishments. +<P> +"It's a success! It's a success!" shouted Mark, capering about in his excitement. +<P> +"Now we'll see what the centre of the earth looks like," went on Jack. "I +can hardly wait for the time to come when we are to start on the voyage." +<P> +At that instant, when the ship was but a few feet from the ground, but slowly +rising, the boys and the professor heard a shouting below them. +<P> +"What's that?" asked the scientist. "Is any one hurt?" +<P> +Mark ran to a small window, something like a port hole in an ocean steamer, +and looked out. +<P> +"Quick!" he shouted. "Stop the ship! Washington will be killed!" +<P> +In fact from the agonized yells which proceeded from somewhere under the +craft it seemed that the accident was in process of happening. +<P> +"Save me! Save me!" cried the colored man. "I'm goin' to fall! Catch me, +some one!" +<P> +"What is it?" asked the professor, making ready to shut off the power and +let the ship settle back to earth, from which it had moved about fifty feet. +<P> +"It's Washington," explained Mark. "He evidently tried to walk up the steps +just as the boat mounted skyward. He rolled down and managed to grab the +end of the rope which was left over after the steps were tied. Now he's swinging +down there." +<P> +"Are you going to lower the ship?" asked Jack. +<P> +"Of course!" exclaimed the professor. "I only hope he hangs on until his +feet touch the earth." +<P> +"Keep a tight hold!" shouted Mark, from out of the small window. +<P> +"That's th' truest thing yo' ever said!" exclaimed Washington. "You bet I'm +goin' to hold on, and I'm comin' up too," which he proceeded to do, hand +over hand, like a sailor. +<P> +The boys and the professor watched the colored man's upward progress. The +ship had hardly begun to settle as, in the excitement, not enough gas had +been let out. Closer and closer came Washington, until he was able to grasp +the edge of the opening, to which the steps were fastened. +<P> +"I thought you weren't coming with us," observed the professor, when he saw +that his helper was safe. +<P> +"I changed my mind," said the colored man. "It's jest luck. Seems like th' +ship done wanted me t' go 'long, an' I'm goin'. I'll take my chances on bein' +buried alive. I ain't never seen th' centre of th' earth, an' I want's to +'fore I die. I'm goin' 'long, Perfessor!" +<h3>CHAPTER IV</h3> +<h4>WHAT DID MARK SEE?</h4> +<P> +"WELL, I'm glad you've decided at last," the professor remarked. "Now come +inside and we'll see how the ship works." +<P> +Once over his fright, Washington made himself at home on the craft he had +helped build. He went from one room to another and observed the engine. +<P> +"She certainly am workin'" he observed with pride. "Are we still goin' up, +Perfessor?" +<P> +"Still mounting," replied Mr. Henderson, "We are now three hundred feet above +the earth," he added as he glanced at a registering gage. +<P> +The great air pump was set going and soon from the after tube, a big stream +of the compressed vapor rushed. It acted on the ship instantly and sent the +craft ahead at a rapid rate. By elevating or depressing the tube the craft +could be sent obliquely up or down. Then, by forcing the air from the forward +tube, the <I>Mermaid </I>was reversed and scudded backward. +<P> +But it was more with the ship's ability to rise and descend that Professor +Henderson was concerned, since on that depended their safety. So various +tests were made, in generating the gas and using the negative gravity apparatus. +<P> +All worked to perfection. Obeying the slightest turn of the wheels and levers +the <I>Mermaid </I>rose or fell. She stood still, suspended herself in the +air, or rushed backward and forward. +<P> +Of course the machinery was new and did not operate as smoothly as it would +later, but the professor and his friends were very well satisfied. +<P> +"Now we'll try something new," said the scientist to the two boys as they +stood beside him in the tower. "I only hope this part succeeds, and we shall +soon be off on our voyage." +<P> +He turned several levers. There was a hissing sound as the gas rushed from +the container, and the ship began to settle down. +<P> +"What's th' matter? Are we goin' t' hit th' earth?" yelled Washington, rushing +from the engine room. +<P> +"Keep quiet," ordered the professor. "We are only going down, that's all." +<P> +"But good land! Perfesser!" exclaimed the colored man. "The ocean's right +under us! You forgot you sailed sway from the island! We'll be drowned suah!" +<P> +"Leave it to me," said Mr. Henderson. "The <I>Flying Mermaid </I>is going +to take a bath!" +<P> +"As long as it swims it will be all right," observed Mark in a low tone to +Jack. "I'm glad I can take care of myself in the water." +<P> +Before Jack could reply the <I>Mermaid </I>seemed to take a sudden dive through +the air. The next instant she struck the water with a splash that sent the +waves rolling all about. The craft rocked violently to and fro on the surface +of the sea. For a while there were anxious hearts aboard, for there was no +certainty but that the ship might not sink to the bottom. +<P> +But the old professor had not calculated and builded in vain. After rocking +about like a vessel newly launched, the strange craft rode safely and upright +on the water. It set down far enough to bring the propelling tubes well under, +but not so far but that the conning tower was well out and there was a small +deck available. +<P> +"Now to see if we can conquer the water as we did the air!" cried the professor. +"Mark, start the air pump. Jack, you steer, for I want to watch the machinery +under the additional strain." +<P> +From the rear tube rushed such a volume of air that the ocean near it bubbled +and foamed. The ship trembled from stem to stern, and then, after hanging +for an instant as if undecided what to do, it began to move forward as easily +as though it had never sailed any other element than the sea. +<P> +"She fits her name!" the professor cried. "She is indeed the <I>Flying Mermaid, +</I>for she sails the ocean as easily as she navigates in the clouds!" +<P> +For a mile or two the craft was sent ahead over the waves. Then it was reversed +and run backwards. Satisfied that his long months of work had not gone for +naught, the professor after trying several experiments, decided to try and +raise the ship while in motion. +<P> +With Jack and Mark to look after the air pumps, while Washington, Tom and +Bill busied themselves in the engine room, Mr. Henderson began to generate +the gas and start the negative gravity apparatus. All the while the craft +was forging ahead. +<P> +There was again the hissing sound that told of the aluminum holder being +filled. For a few minutes there seemed to be no change, the <I>Mermaid +</I>plowing forward. +<P> +Then like a bird rising from the waves, or like a flying fish leaping from +the sea to escape some pursuing monster of the deep, the new ship shot up +diagonally from the surface and winged its way into the upper regions of +the air. +<P> +"Success! Success!" cried the professor. "This proves all I wanted to know. +Now. we are ready for our great trip!" +<P> +Great were the rejoicings in the camp that night. It was like living over +again the days when they were aboard the diving <I>Porpoise </I>or the flying +<I>Monarch. </I>To the recollections were added the anticipations of what +was before them in the trip to the interior of the earth. +<P> +Busy days followed, for there was still much to be done to the <I>Flying +Mermaid. </I>The machinery, which was only partly completed, had to be finished. +Besides this the professor was working on some apparatus, the use of which +he did not disclose to any one. It was stored aboard the ship at the last +minute. +<P> +Plenty of provisions had to be taken aboard, and many supplies needed to +work the <I>Mermaid </I>and insure that it would go to the end of the voyage. +The materials for generating the gas and negative gravity, spare parts, records +for the automatic piano and other things were stored away. +<P> +Some guns and ammunition were taken along as were a few revolvers, since +old Andy had said it was best to prepare for any thing in the shape of enemies +or wild beasts that might be met with in the interior regions. +<P> +It was decided to make the start by sailing along the surface of the sea +for several days, as in the event of any weakness in the machinery being +discovered there would be less danger. If, at the end of four days, no trouble +developed, the professor said he would send the <I>Mermaid </I>into the air +and make the rest of the voyage through the sky. +<P> +The night before the start was to be made the professor, with the boys, +Washington and the other helpers, went about through the various shops and +buildings, locking them up securely. For they could not tell how long they +would be away, and they had to leave behind much valuable material. +<P> +As there were several things that needed attention they divided the work +up. Mark had finished his share and was walking back toward the living cabin +where they were all quartered, when, down at the shore, near where the boat +was moored, he fancied he saw, in the gathering darkness, a moving figure. +<P> +"I wonder who that can be," he thought. "All the others are near the machine +shop, for I just left them there. Perhaps it's some one trying to spy out +how the <I>Mermaid </I>is built." +<P> +Knowing the professor wanted his secret well guarded, Mark walked softly +toward the little dock that served as a place whence the <I>Mermaid </I>could +be easily boarded. As he approached he saw the figure moving. Something struck +the boy as peculiar. +<P> +Though the object had some of the characteristics of a man it did not walk +like a human being, but shuffled along more like a huge ape or monkey. It +seemed bent over, as if it stooped toward the ground. +<P> +"Who are you?" called Mark suddenly. +<P> +For an instant the figure halted and then hurried on faster than before, +with a curious, shuffling walk. It was approaching the ship. +<P> +Somehow it struck Mark as if it was an uncanny being; an inhabitant of some +other world. Then he laughed at his half-fear, and started on a run toward +the dock. +<P> +"If it's some tramp trying to find a place to sleep he'd better not go aboard +the ship, he might do some damage," the boy thought. +<P> +He could hardly see the figure now as it had passed into the shadow cast +by the boat. He was about to summon the professor to make an investigation, +when Washington started going the search light which was placed just over +the door of the living cabin. It was kept there as a sort of beacon light, +as, near the island was a dangerous ledge of rocks. +<P> +Then, in the blinding white glare from the big lantern as Washington accidentally +swung it toward the <I>Mermaid, </I>Mark beheld a strange sight. +<P> +The figure he had been watching stood out in bold relief. Though it was shaped +like a human being it was not like any person the boy had ever seen. It seemed +covered with a skin twice too large for it; a skin, which, in spite of the +clothes that concealed it, hung in folds about the arms and legs, dropping +pendent like from the neck like a big garment, and flapping in the wind. +<P> +For an instant Mark was so startled he cried out, and the professor and the +others ran to see what was the matter. +<P> +"There—by the ship! A horrible creature!" exclaimed Mark. +<P> +Shouting to Washington to keep the light steady in the direction of the dock, +Mr. Henderson ran toward the moored <I>Mermaid. </I>Jack, Andy, Bill and +Tom, with Mark in the rear followed him. +<P> +"Nothing here," said the scientist, after a careful search about. "Are you +sure you saw something, Mark?" +<P> +"Positively," replied the lad with a shudder. He described the vision of +the darkness. +<P> +"I guess it was a big otter, or maybe an enormous turtle," the professor +said. +<h3>CHAPTER V</h3> +<h4>ATTACKED BY A WHALE</h4> +<P> +BUT Mark was certain it was nothing like that, though a careful search failed +to reveal anything or any person near the ship. It was too dark to examine +for footprints, and even Mark, after taking a look all about, felt he might +have been deceived by shadows. Still he was a little nervous, and could hardly +sleep for imagining what the thing he saw could have been. +<P> +The next day every one was so busy that no one, not even Mark, recalled the +little excitement of the night before. Shortly after noon, final preparations +having been made, they all got aboard the <I>Mermaid </I>and started off. +<P> +It was a bright sunshiny day, and the craft, speeding away from the island +where it had been constructed, over the dancing blue waves, must have presented +a strange sight had there been any spectators. For surely no such ship had +ever before sailed those waters. +<P> +However, there was no other vessel in sight, and the island, as far as the +professor and his friends knew, had never been inhabited. +<P> +"We will not try for any great speed," Mr. Henderson remarked as he, with +Mark and Jack, stood in the conning tower managing the <I>Mermaid. </I>"We +don't want to strain any joints at the start or heat any engine bearings. +There will be time enough for speed later." +<P> +"Yes, and we may need it more when we get into the centre of the earth than +we do now," observed Mark. +<P> +"Why so?" asked Jack. +<P> +"No telling what we may run up against underneath the ground," went on Mark. +"We may have to fight strange animals and stranger beings. Besides, the +atmosphere and water there can't be the same as up here; do you think so, +Professor?" +<P> +For a few minutes the scientist was silent. He seemed to be thinking deeply. +<P> +"I will tell you what I believe," he said at length. "I have never spoken +of it before, but now that we are fairly started and may eventually have +a chance to prove my theory, I will say that I think the centre of this earth +on which we live is hollow. Inside of it, forming a core, so to speak, I +believe there is another earth, similar to ours in some respects which revolves +inside this larger sphere." +<P> +They were well out to sea now, as they could observe when they emerged on +the little deck. Above their heads was the aluminum gas holder, which served +as a sort of protection from the sun that was quite warm. The <I>Mermaid +</I>rode with an easy motion, being submerged just enough to make her steady, +yet not deep enough to encounter much resistance from the water. In fact +it could not have been arranged better for speed or comfort. +<P> +"I think we will sail well to the eastward before making our course south," +Mr. Henderson said. "I do not care to meet too many ships, as those aboard +will be very curious and I do not want too much news of this venture to get +out. We will take an unfrequented route and avoid delays by being hailed +by every passing vessel whose captain will wonder what queer craft he had +met with." +<P> +The boys enjoyed the sail, for the weather could not have been better. Even +old Andy, who seldom said much, seemed delighted with the prospect of having +strange adventures. He had his rifle with him, and, indeed, he seldom went +anywhere that he did not carry it. +<P> +"For there's no telling when you may see something you want to shoot or that +ought to be shot," he used to say, "and it's always the man without a gun +who needs it most. So I'm taking no chances." +<P> +They sailed all that afternoon without meeting with a craft of any kind. +Straight to the east they went, and when night began to settle down Washington +got supper. It was decided to run slowly after dark until all hands were +more familiar with the ship. +<P> +Morning found the <I>Mermaid </I>about a hundred miles from the island where +she had been launched. The night had been uneventful, except that Mark told +Jack he heard some strange noise near his bunk several times. He was nearest +the storeroom where spare parts, and the curious cylinder the professor had +brought aboard, were kept. +<P> +"I guess it was rats," said Jack. "They are always in ships." +<P> +"Old wooden ships, yes," admitted Mark. "But I'll bet there's not a rat aboard +the <I>Mermaid."</I> +<P> +"Then you were dreaming," said Jack, as if that settled it. +<P> +Mark did not speak further of the noise, but he did considerable thinking. +However, the next night there was no further disturbance. +<P> +The fourth day out, when everything had passed off well, the engines doing +their best, the professor decided to speed them up a bit, since he was satisfied +they had "found" themselves as mechanics term it. +<P> +"We'll see how fast we can go through the water," said Mr. Henderson, "and +then I think we can safely turn our course south. We are well beyond the +ordinary lines of travel now." +<P> +Having oiled the bearings well, and seen that everything was in place and +properly adjusted, the professor and the boys took their places in the conning +tower, while Washington, Tom and Bill remained in the engine room. Andy stayed +on deck with his gun. +<P> +"I might see a big fish, and we could vary our bill of fare," he said with +a laugh. +<P> +"Here we go!" exclaimed the professor as he shifted the levers and turned +some wheels and valves. "Now we'll see how fast we can travel." +<P> +As he spoke the <I>Mermaid </I>responded to the added impulse of the compressed +air and shot through the water at a terrific speed. The sudden increase in +momentum almost threw the boys from their feet, and they would have fallen +had they not grasped some projecting levers. +<P> +"I guess that will do," Said the scientist. "I think we have speed enough +for almost any emergency. I'll let her run at this rate for a while, and +then we'll slack up." +<P> +Looking ahead, the boys could see the green waters parting in front of the +bow of the <I>Mermaid, </I>as if to make room for her. Two huge waves were +thrown upon either side. +<P> +Suddenly, dead ahead, there loomed up a big black object. +<P> +"Look out you'll hit the rock!" cried Mark to the professor, who was steering. +<P> +With a turn of his wrist Mr. Henderson moved the wheel which controlled the +tube. It was deflected and sent the boat to larboard. +<P> +At that instant from the rock two small fountains of water rose in the air, +falling back in a shower of spray through which the sun gleamed. +<P> +"That's not a rock! It's a big whale!" cried Jack. "And we're going to hit +him!" +<P> +The professor had miscalculated the speed of the craft, or else had not thrown +her far enough to larboard, for, a second later, the <I>Mermaid </I>was almost +upon the big leviathan. +<P> +With a desperate twirling of the steering wheel the professor veered the +craft as far as possible. But all he could do did not suffice, for the craft +hit the whale a glancing blow on the side, and the ship careened as if she +would turn turtle. +<P> +At the same time there rang out from upon deck the sound of a rifle shot. +Old Andy had taken a chance at the enormous creature of the deep. +<P> +"Hurrah!" the bays heard him shout. "I give him one plumb in the eye! A fine +shot! And we hit him besides with the boat. I guess he's a goner!" +<P> +"I'm afraid not," muttered the professor. "That was a bad blow we struck +him, but I think it will only ruffle his temper. We'll have to look sharp +now, boys." +<P> +By this time the ship had rushed past the whale, but the boys, looking through +a window in the rear of the tower could see the huge body. Now the fountains +of water which the whale spouted were tinged with red. +<P> +"He's bleeding!" exclaimed the professor. "I guess Andy hit him in a vital +spot." +<P> +"But not vital enough!" cried Mark. "See! He's coming after us!" +<P> +And so it proved. The whale, angered, and, probably half crazed by the pain +of the bullet and the blow, was coursing after the ship, coming on with the +speed of an express train. Straight at the <I>Mermaid </I>he lunged his huge +bulk. +<P> +"We must escape him!" cried Mr. Henderson. "If he hits us he'll send us to +the bottom!" +<P> +He had made ready to slow up the <I>Mermaid </I>to see if it had sustained +any damage from the impact with the whale, but when he saw the monster coming +after the boat he knew the only safety lay in flight. +<P> +"Let us go up into the air and so escape him!" cried Jack, with sudden +inspiration. +<P> +For an instant neither Mark nor the professor grasped what Jack meant. Then, +with an exclamation, the professor pulled forward the lever that generated +the gas and set working the gravity neutralizer, which would enable the ship +to rise. +<P> +Faster through the water went the <I>Mermaid, </I>and faster after her came +the whale. Above the hum of the engines was heard the hiss of the powerful +gas. The ship trembled more violently. +<P> +"We are rising!" exclaimed the professor, as he looked at a gage. +<P> +The boys could feel the craft lifting from the waves which clung to her as +if they hated to lose her. The boys knew the gas was beginning to operate. +<P> +"If it is not too late!" whispered Mark, half to himself. +<P> +For the monster of the seas was coming on, lashing the water to foam with +his terrible flukes, and sending aloft a bloody spray. His speed was awful. +<P> +Now he was but ten feet away from the fleeing craft—now but eight—now five! +Ten seconds more and the big head, like the blunt stern of a battle ship, +forced forward by the tons of blubber, flesh, bone and fat behind it would +strike the <I>Mermaid </I>and crush it like an egg shell. +<P> +Now if ever was the need for the <I>Flying Mermaid </I>to prove herself worthy +of the name. Now, if ever, was the time for her to leave the watery element +and take to the lighter one. +<P> +And she did. With a last tremble, as if to free herself from the hold of +the waves, the gallant craft soared up into the air, leaving the water, which +dripped from her keel like a fountain's spray, and shooting aloft like a +bird, escaped her terrible enemy which passed under her, so close that the +lower part of the <I>Flying Mermaid </I>scraped the whale's back. +<P> +"Saved!" exclaimed the professor. +<h3>CHAPTER VI</h3> +<h4>THE CYCLONE</h4> +<P> +IT was only in the nick of time, for a second later and the big mammal of +the ocean would have struck the ship and split it from stem to stern. +<P> +Higher and higher into the air mounted the <I>Flying Mermaid, </I>while in +the water below, the whale, incensed by missing his prey, was lashing the +waves to foam. +<P> +"Well, that was a narrow squeak; as close as I ever care to come to it!" +exclaimed Andy as he let go of the steel rail to which he was clinging and +entered the conning tower. "I had no idea of hitting the big fish." +<P> +"I guess he would have taken after us whether you had fired at him or not," +said Mr. Henderson. "He was probably looking for trouble, and took the first +thing that came in his way, which happened to be us. Some whales are like +that, so I have read; big bull creatures, exiled from the school to which +they once belonged, they get like mad creatures and know neither friend nor +foe. Something like rogue elephants, I imagine." +<P> +Now, having thus unexpectedly risen into the air, the professor decided to +continue travel in that style for a while at least. It would require less +force to propel the ship, and the going would be more comfortable, since +in the upper regions the <I>Mermaid </I>rode on an even keel, while in the +water there was more or less rolling, due to the action of the waves. +<P> +Once recovered from their fright caused by the whale, and having lost sight +of the enormous creature, for they were now far above the ocean, the adventurers +began to think of something to eat. +<P> +Washington lost little time in preparing a meal, and it was eaten with a +relish. The electric cooking stove worked to perfection, for the colored +man had learned how to use that aboard the <I>Porpoise </I>and <I>Monarch, +</I>and could be depended on to turn out appetizing dishes. +<P> +"What do you say to traveling through the air at night?" asked Mr. Henderson, +as he arose from the table. +<P> +"Suits me," replied Mark. "There's less danger than in the water, I think," +<P> +Bill, Tom and Washington arranged to stand the night watch, and, when the +professor had examined the engines and given orders about keeping the ship +on her course through the air, he retired to his bunk. Jack and Mark soon +followed. +<P> +It must have been about midnight when Mark was awakened by a movement that +seemed to come from the storeroom next to where his sleeping place was located. +At first he thought he had been dreaming, but, as he found he was wide awake, +he knew it was no imagination that had affected him. +<P> +"I certainly heard something," he said to himself. "It sounded just as it +did the other night. I wonder if I ought to investigate." +<P> +He thought over the matter carefully as he sat upright in his bunk in the +darkness. True the noise might be a natural one, due to the vibration of +the engine, or to some echo from the machinery. As Mark listened he heard +it again. +<P> +This time he realized it was the slow movement of some heavy body. He felt +a cold shiver run over him and his hair evinced an uncomfortable tendency +to stand upright. But he conquered his feelings and resolved to keep cool +and see if he could discover what had awakened him. +<P> +He got up and moved softly about the little room that contained his bunk. +He could hear better now, and knew it was no echo or vibration that had come +to his ears. +<P> +Once again he heard the strange sound. It was exactly the same as before; +as if some big creature was pulling itself over the floor. +<P> +"Maybe it's a snake; a water snake!" thought Mark. "It may have crawled aboard +when we did not notice it." +<P> +Then he remembered that the ship had not been open in any way that would +enable a serpent to come on it, since it had been started on its ocean trip. +Before that, he was sure no snake had entered the <I>Flying Mermaid. </I>Still +it sounded more like a snake than anything else. +<P> +"I'm going to make a search," decided the boy. +<P> +He took a small portable electric light, run by a storage battery, and, slipping +on a pair of shoes and a bath robe, he left his stateroom. +<P> +He had decided that the noise came from the storage compartment and so made +for that. The door he knew was not locked, since he had seen Mr. Henderson +go in late that afternoon, and the professor had used no key. +<P> +Moving softly, Mark left his room and soon found himself in a corridor, on +either side of which were located the sleeping quarters of the others. He +did not want to awaken them, and, perhaps, be laughed at for his curiosity. +<P> +To get to the storeroom Mark had to go first from the corridor into the dining +room. He soon reached the door that guarded what he thought might be a strange +secret. Trying the knob softly he found it giving under his fingers. +<P> +"I wonder if I had better go in," he thought. "Perhaps, after all, it was +only rats, as Jack said." +<P> +But, even as he listened he again heard the odd sound coming from the room. +This determined him. He would solve the mystery if possible. +<P> +Cautiously he turned the knob. The door was slowly swinging open when Mark +was startled by a noise from behind him. He turned suddenly to see Professor +Henderson confronting him. +<P> +"What is it, Mark? Is the ship on fire? What's the matter? Is any one hurt?" +<P> +"I was just going in this room to——" began Mark. +<P> +"Don't do it! Don't do it!" exclaimed the professor in an excited whisper. +"No one must go in that room. I forgot to tell you and Jack about it. No +one must enter. It contains a secret!" +<P> +"I heard a strange noise and——" Mark began again. +<P> +"It could make no noise! It would be impossible for it to make a noise!" +the professor exclaimed. +<P> +"I heard something," the boy insisted. +<P> +"You were dreaming!" said the professor. "Now go back to bed, Mark, and don't +let this happen again. Remember, no one must enter that room unless I give +permission!" +<P> +Somewhat crestfallen at the outcome of his investigations, but realizing +that the professor could do what he wanted to aboard his own ship, Mark went +back to bed. But he could not sleep. All the rest of the night he was wondering +whether Mr. Henderson had some strange creature hidden aboard the <I>Mermaid. +</I>He feared lest the old scientist's mind might be affected and, in his +wildness he had made some infernal machine that would, in time, blow the +whole ship apart. +<P> +But tired nature asserted itself at last, and, weary with vain imaginings, +Mark fell into a slumber. The next morning he awoke with a start from a dream +that he was being devoured by an immense water snake. +<P> +He said nothing to the others about his night's adventure, for, as it transpired, +no one else had been awakened by his investigations. The professor did not +refer to his conversation with Mark. +<P> +"There's something queer going on aboard the ship this trip," said Mark to +himself. "But I guess it's none of my business. Professor Henderson seems +to know what he is doing and I guess I can trust him." +<P> +He resolved to think no more of the strange noises and movements, and, for +several nights thereafter he was not disturbed by them. +<P> +The weather, which, up to this time had been fair, took a sudden turn for +the worse about the fourth day after Mark's little night expedition. One +evening the sun sank in a mass of dull lead-colored clouds and a sharp wind +sprang up. +<P> +"We're going to have a storm," said Mr. Henderson. "It's liable to be a bad +one, too, from the way the barometer is falling." +<P> +He looked at the glass, and scanned the various instruments that told how +high up the <I>Mermaid </I>was and how fast she was traveling. +<P> +"We're pretty high up in the air," he said, "and scooting along at about +fifty miles an hour. We are going against the wind, too, but fortunately +it is not blowing hard." +<P> +At that moment there sounded from without a peculiar howling sound, as if +a siren whistle was being blown. +<P> +"'Pears like there's goin' t' be a tumultuous demonstration of sub-maxiliary +contortions in th' empherial regions contiguous t' th' upper atmosphere!" +exclaimed Washington, entering from the engine room into the conning tower. +<P> +"What's the trouble?" asked Mr. Henderson. +<P> +"Terrible big black cloud chasin' us from behind!" exclaimed the colored +man. +<P> +Noting the alarm in Washington's voice the professor glanced from the rear +window. What he saw caused him to exclaim: +<P> +"It's a cyclone! We must drop down to avoid it!" +<P> +He sprang to a lever controlling the gas and yanked it toward him. There +was a shrill hissing sound, and a second later the <I>Mermaid </I>began to +sink. The boys watching the gages on the wall of the tower, saw that the +craft was falling rapidly. +<P> +But, with a rush and roar, the terrible wind was upon them. It caught the +craft in its fearful grip and heeled it over as a ship careens to the ocean +blast. +<P> +"It's a storm in the upper regions! We'll find it calm below!" cried the +professor above the howling of the gale. He opened the gas outlet wider and +the ship fell more rapidly. +<P> +"Are you sure we're over the ocean?" asked Mark. +<P> +"Positive!" the professor called back. "We have been traveling straight south +over the Atlantic for the last week. We will land in the midst of the waters +and float safely." +<P> +Lower and lower went the <I>Mermaid. </I>The wind was now blowing with the +force of a tornado, and, as the craft had to slant in order to descend, it +felt the power of the gale more than if it had scudded before it. But, by +skilful use of the directing tube, the professor was able to keep the boat +from turning over. As they came further down toward the earth the force of +the wind was felt less and less, until, as they came within two hundred feet +of the water which they saw below them in the gathering dusk, it died out +altogether. +<P> +"Now we are free from it," said the professor as the <I>Mermaid </I>came +down on the waves like an immense swan. +<P> +"Are you going ahead or going to stop here?" asked Mark +<P> +"We'll keep right on," Mr. Henderson answered. "No telling when the storm +may strike down here. We'll go as far as we can to-night." +<h3>CHAPTER VII</h3> +<h4>A QUEER SAIL</h4> +<P> +NOW that the fear and worriment was over they all began to feel hungry, and, +while Mark and Jack took charge of the conning tower Washington got breakfast. +The professor seemed preoccupied during the meal, and several times, when +Mark spoke to him, he did not reply. +<P> +"I wonder if he is worried about something, or is thinking of something which +seems to be concealed in the storeroom," the boy thought. +<P> +But, after a while, the professor seemed to be more like himself. He was +busy over several maps and charts, and then announced the ship would try +air-sailing again for a while. +<P> +"We can make better time above than we can on the water," he said, "and I +am anxious to get to the mysterious island and learn what is in store for +us." +<P> +Perhaps if the professor had been able to look ahead, and see what was soon +going to happen, he would not have been so anxious for it to occur. +<P> +It was shortly after dinner when, the gas container having been filled, the +ship rose in the air, and began sailing over the ocean, about a mile up. +The day was a fine one, and, as they were moving south, it was constantly +growing warmer. Down on the water, in fact, it was quite hot, but in the +air it was just right. +<P> +Like some immense bird the <I>Mermaid </I>went flying through the air. The +boys and the professor sat upon the deck in easy chairs. It was like being +on the top of some tall "sky-scraper" building which, by some strange power, +was being moved forward. Below them the ocean tumbled in long, lazy swells. +<P> +Suddenly Mark, who was looking through a telescope at the expanse of water +stretched out under them, gave a cry. +<P> +"There's a ship! She's on fire!" +<P> +"Where?" asked the professor, stretching out his hand for the glass. +<P> +"Just to the port of the forward tube. See the smoke!" exclaimed Mark. +<P> +Mr. Henderson looked. Through the lens he saw a column of black vapor rising +skyward. Mingled with it were red flames. +<P> +"Lower the <I>Mermaid!" </I>he cried. "We must save those on board if we +can!" +<P> +Mark ran to the conning tower, where Washington was, to give the order. The +colored man, who was looking ahead, intent on guiding the ship, did not at +first hear what Mark called. +<P> +"Lower us! Send the <I>Mermaid </I>down!" Mark cried again. +<P> +The sudden shout, and the excited voice of Mark so startled Washington, that, +fearing some accident had happened, he pulled the lever, controlling the +gas supply, with more force than necessary. +<P> +There was a loud explosion, followed by a crackling sound, a flash of light, +and the <I>Mermaid </I>came to a sudden stop. +<P> +"What's the matter?" cried Mark, feeling that something was wrong. +<P> +"I don't know!" Washington replied, as he dashed toward the engine room. +<P> +The <I>Mermaid, </I>her forward flight checked, hung in the air, suspended, +neither rising or falling. +<P> +"Why don't we go on down?" the professor asked, hurrying to the tower. +<P> +"There has been an explosion—an accident!" exclaimed Mark. "I guess we can't +go down!" +<P> +"But we must!" Mr. Henderson insisted, seizing the lever which should have +produced a downward motion. The handle swung to and fro. It was disconnected +from the apparatus it operated. +<P> +The ship was now stationary in the air, moving neither forward nor backward, +neither rising nor falling. Washington had stopped the air pumps as soon +as he learned something was wrong. +<P> +When Mr. Henderson saw the useless lever, which had controlled the outlet +of gas from the holder, he ran out on deck. One glance told him what had +happened. One of the electric wires had become short-circuited,—that is, +the insulation had worn off and allowed the current to escape. This had produced +a spark, which had exploded the gas which was in the pipe leading from the +generator up into the aluminum holder. Fortunately there was an automatic +cut-off for the supply of vapor, or the whole tank would have gone up. +<P> +As it was, only a small quantity had blown up, but this was enough to break +the machinery at the point where the lever in the conning tower joined the +pipe. If it had not been for the automatic cut-off all the gas in the holder +would have poured out in a great volume, and the ship would have fallen like +a shot. +<P> +"Can we do nothing to save those on the burning vessel?" asked Mark, pointing +to where a cloud of smoke hung over the ocean. +<P> +"I fear not, now," answered the professor. "We are in a bad plight ourselves." +<P> +"Are we in any danger?" asked Jack. +<P> +"Not specially," Mr. Henderson replied. "But we must find a means of lowering +ourselves gradually." +<P> +"Then it will be too late to save any of those on the ship," observed Mark. +<P> +"I'm afraid so," the scientist made reply. +<P> +The <I>Mermaid </I>rested some distance above the surface of the waters. +She moved slightly to and fro with the wind, and rocked gently. The professor +was examining the broken machinery. +<P> +"I have a plan!" suddenly cried Mark. +<P> +"What is it?" asked Mr. Henderson. +<P> +"Can't we bore a hole in the tank, insert a small faucet or tap, and let +the gas out that way gradually?" asked the boy. "When we get down we can +rescue those in danger of fire, and, later, can repair the break." +<P> +"The very thing!" exclaimed Mr. Henderson. "I never thought of that! Here, +Washington! Bring me a drill, and a small stop-cock!" +<P> +The drill was obtained from the engine room. Working rapidly Mr. Henderson +bored a hole in the lower part of the holder. As soon as the metal was penetrated +the gas, which was under considerable pressure, rushed from the tank with +a hissing sound. At once the <I>Mermaid </I>began to settle rapidly. +<P> +But the professor was prepared for this. He thrust the end of the stop-cock +into the hole. It was screwed fast and the valve turned. This stopped the +flow of gas and checked the descent of the ship. Then, by opening the tap +the vapor was allowed to escape gradually, bringing the <I>Flying Mermaid +</I>gently to the water. +<P> +As the adventurers approached they could see that the vessel was now a mass +of flames. The wind was driving the fire toward the forecastle, and the crew +had sought refuge aft. But this expedient could not last long, for, already +the tongues of fire were licking the sides of the craft and coming nearer +and nearer the seemingly doomed men. The vessel was a large one, and heavily +laden. +<P> +As those in peril caught sight of the <I>Mermaid </I>settling down into the +water, apparently from the clouds, their fears gave place to astonishment. +So great was this that they ceased their cries of terror. Then, as they saw +that the strange craft navigated the ocean, for the engines were started +aboard the <I>Mermaid, </I>they began to call for help. +<h3>CHAPTER VIII</h3> +<h4>THE FLYING MERMAID DISABLED</h4> +<P> +"WE'LL save you!" shouted Mr. Henderson, who was on the deck, while Mark +was steering the craft. "Hold on a few minutes longer and we'll be alongside!" +<P> +"They're real! They're real!" some of those aboard the burning ship could +be heard to shout. Evidently more than one of them had taken the <I>Mermaid +</I>for a delusion of their fear-crazed brain. +<P> +"They are real persons!" they called again and again. "They are coming to +save us!" +<P> +Mr. Henderson ran his ship as near the burning craft as he dared. Then he +called to the crew to leap into the water and swim to him. He, with Washington, +Jack, Bill and Tom, stood ready to haul aboard any who were too weak to help +themselves. +<P> +In a few minutes all of those left alive on the sailing vessel—fourteen +in all—had come safely aboard the <I>Mermaid. </I>The ship was now completely +enveloped in flames. +<P> +"Are there any more left on her?" asked Mr. Henderson of one who appeared +to be a mate of the burning craft. +<P> +"Not a soul!" was the answer. "The captain and ten men perished in the flames. +The fire broke out a week ago in the lower hold. We fought it as well as +we could but it got the best of us. Then it suddenly broke through the decks, +almost like an explosion, a little while ago, and the captain and others +were lost, and so were our small boats. We managed to get aft but were about +to give up when you appeared." +<P> +"What ship is it and where are you from?" +<P> +"The <I>Good Hope, </I>laden with logwood, hides, jute and other materials +from South America," the mate answered. "We were bound for New York." +<P> +"It is more like the <I>Last Hope </I>instead of the <I>Good Hope," +</I>observed Mr. Henderson in a quiet voice, as he saw the flames mount higher +and higher over the ship. A few seconds later the craft seemed rent by an +internal explosion. It appeared to break in two parts, and, amid a shower +of sparks and a cloud of black smoke, the vessel sank under the water and +was seen no more. +<P> +The rescued men turned to behold the final end of their ship. They betrayed +no particular emotion, and some of them even laughed, which the professor +thought, at the time, was rather strange. But there was little opportunity +for speculation. The men were in a sad plight. Few of them had more than +the clothes they stood in, though each one wore about his waist a belt, and +all of them seemed to guard the leather circlets jealously. +<P> +The professor and his crew were soon busy supplying remedies for burns, since +several of the men were seared by the flames. Then, as it was learned they +had eaten nothing for many hours, it having been impossible to use the galley, +a meal was prepared and the survivors of the wreck were well fed. +<P> +The hunger of the newcomers having been appeased, they showed much curiosity +over the strange craft that had so opportunely come to their rescue. Most +of the sailors were ignorant men, and the professor had little fear of them +learning anything concerning his secrets. He explained briefly about the +<I>Mermaid, </I>but said nothing of whither she was bound. +<P> +The addition of fourteen men to the rather small accommodations of the +<I>Mermaid </I>was a serious matter to consider. The ship was able to hold +them all, and even to sail through the air with them, since Mr. Henderson +had provided an excess of power. But it was going to be a problem to feed +so many, and still save enough provisions, for the long voyage which lay +ahead. +<P> +However, Mr. Henderson felt his first duty to be toward his fellowmen, even +if his voyage must be delayed, or given up for a time, while he got more +provisions. There would be no sleeping quarters for the sailors, but when +this was explained to them they cheerfully said they would sleep on deck +if necessary. In fact some of them had to, but as the weather was warm and +clear this was no hardship. A few found quarters in the engine room and other +apartments of the <I>Mermaid.</I> +<P> +Finding, after an examination, that his ship was in good order save for the +broken gas apparatus, Mr. Henderson gave orders to proceed along the surface +of the ocean. The sailors wanted to see how it felt to mount into the air, +but Mr. Henderson, refused to attempt a flight until he had made complete +repairs, and this would take a day or more. +<P> +At this there appeared to be some discontent among the survivors, and they +muttered to each other as they stood in a group on deck. But the professor +and his assistants were too busy with their preparations for fixing the break +to notice this. +<P> +While the men were gathered in a knot near the after part of the small deck, +the mate separated from them, and, coming close to where Mark was standing, +unscrewing some of the broken parts of the pipe said, in a low voice. +<P> +"Tell the captain to watch out." +<P> +"What do you mean?" asked Mark quickly. +<P> +"Hush! Not so loud!" the mate exclaimed. "If the men hear me talking to you, +or see me, they may kill me. Tell the captain to look out; that's all. Be +on guard, and watch the engine room carefully." +<P> +"But why—?" Mark began, when, turning suddenly, the mate left him. It was +well he did so, for, at that instant, one of the sailors, who had observed +the two conversing, strolled in their direction. +<P> +Much alarmed, Mark sought Mr. Henderson and told him what he had heard. +<P> +"I suppose the fire may have turned the poor man's head," the scientist said. +"I wonder if he thinks the men I rescued would mutiny and take possession +of my ship? If they did they would not know how to work it, so what good +would it do?" +<P> +"Hadn't we better look out?" asked Mark. +<P> +"I'm not afraid," replied the professor. "I will be too busy the next few +days, repairing the break, to think of anything else. Besides, what would +they want to harm us for? Didn't we save their lives?" +<P> +Seeing the scientist placed no faith in what the mate had said, Mark went +back to his task. +<P> +It soon became too dark to work, and it was decided, after supper, to halt +the ship until morning as it would be less risky. +<P> +Mark did not sleep well, his dreams being disturbed by visions of pirates +and black flags. But morning came and nothing had developed. The men seemed +to recover their spirits with daybreak, and mast of the crew, after breakfast, +greeted Mr. Henderson pleasantly, and asked to be allowed to help fix the +ship. +<P> +It took the skilled labor of the professor, Washington and the boys to mend +the break, and, even at that, it was four days in the repairing. But at last +the final bolt was in place, and the <I>Mermaid </I>was able to resume her +trips through the air. +<P> +"We will rise the first thing in the morning," said the professor to Mark +and Jack that night. "I am anxious to see how the ship behaves with a big +load aboard." +<h3>CHAPTER IX</h3> +<h4>THE MUTINY</h4> +<P> +MARK was awakened that night by feeling some one trying to turn him over. +At first he thought it was Jack, and sleepily muttered that he wanted to +be let alone. +<P> +"Sorry I can't oblige ye, my hearty!" exclaimed a rough voice in his ear, +"but I got particular orders t' tie you up!" +<P> +At that Mark tried to sit up, but he found he could not. He discovered that +he was closely bound with many turns of a rope, while in front of his bunk +stood one of the rescued sailors. +<P> +"There," said the man, with a final tightening of the ropes. "I guess you're +safe." +<P> +"What's the matter? What does it all mean?" asked Mark, much bewildered. +<P> +"It means that we have possession of the ship," the sailor answered, "and, +if you're wise you'll not make a fuss. It wouldn't do any good, anyhow, as +all your friends are in the same condition." +<P> +Then, picking Mark up, as if he was a baby, the man slung him over his shoulder +and carried him to the living room. There Mark saw Jack, the professor, +Washington, and the others similarly bound. +<P> +"Do you realize what you are doing?" asked the professor angrily of his captors. +"You are mutinying, and are liable to severe punishment." +<P> +"If they ever get us," added one of the men. "We've got the ship now, and +we mean to keep her. You'll have to run her or show us how." +<P> +"Never!" cried the professor. +<P> +"I guess he will when he feels this," said one of the men, as he dragged +from a recess two wires. "I happen to know something of electricity, and +when he feels these perhaps he'll change his mind. I'll start the dynamo." +<P> +The sailor showed that he was acquainted with machinery, for soon the hum +of the electric apparatus was heard. +<P> +"Now to make him tell!" the man with the wires exclaimed, advancing toward +the professor, who turned pale. +<P> +"Stop! You must not torture the old man!" cried a voice, and the mate of +the <I>Good Hope </I>stepped in front of the sailor with the electrified +wires. +<P> +"Who's going to stop me?" asked the man. +<P> +"I will. It's not necessary," the mate went on quickly. "If we make him weak +we may kill him, and he can not tell us what we want to know. One of the +boys can tell us how to run the ship." +<P> +The mate came quickly over to where Mark lay, and whispered: +<P> +"Consent to tell. It is the only way of saving his life. Tell 'em how to +raise the craft. Then leave all to me. I will save you all and the ship, +too, if I can. But consent." +<P> +Mark nodded his head, and the mate cried: +<P> +"I knew I could fetch 'em. I have hypnotic power. This boy will raise the +ship for us. Loosen his bonds, some of you." +<P> +Satisfied that they were now on the way to experiencing a new sensation, +the sailors took the ropes off Mark's arms and legs, and he was allowed to +rise. With a reassuring nod toward the professor he led the way to the engine +room, followed by half the men. He resolved to start the gas machine slowly, +so as to make the upward trip last longer, thinking before it had gone far, +some way of escape from the mutineers might be found. +<P> +While a crowd of the sailors stood near him, Mark operated the machinery +in the engine room that started the gas generating, and set the negative +gravity apparatus working. +<P> +"You'd better not try any tricks on us," said one of the men in an ugly tone +of voice. +<P> +"I'm not going to," replied Mark. "If you go out on deck you will soon see +the ship leaving the water and mounting into the air." +<P> +"Some of you go," ordered a man with a big bushy red beard. "See if the ship +rises. When she begins to go up sing out. I'm going to stay here and see +how the young cub does it so I can work it myself." +<P> +Obeying the red-bearded man, who seemed to be a leader, several of the sailors +went out on the deck. It was quite dark, but there was a phosphorous glow +to the water which made the rolling waves visible. +<P> +The gas was being generated, as could be told by the hissing sound. Mark +watched the machinery anxiously, for he knew much depended on him, and the +professor was not at hand to guide and instruct him. He watched the dial +of the gage which registered the gas pressure and saw it slowly moving. In +a little while it would be at the point at which the ship ought to rise. +<P> +Presently a quiver seemed to run through the <I>Mermaid. </I>Now a shout +came from the watchers on deck. +<P> +"She's going up!" +<P> +The ship was indeed rising. The red-bearded man, who was addressed as Tony, +ran from the engine room to the deck. He saw that the ship was now ten feet +above the water. Back he came to where Mark stood by the gas machine. +<P> +"Lucky for you that you didn't fool us, lad," he said with a leer. "See that +you mind me hereafter. Now show me how the shebang works." +<P> +When the ship had risen as far as Tony desired he made Mark send it straight +ahead. The boy adjusted the air tube to carry the craft toward the south, +but Tony, seeing by a compass in which direction they were headed, ordered +Mark to steer due east. +<P> +"Fix things so they will stay so, too," added Tony. "I don't want to stop +until I get a thousand miles away. Then we'll come down, sail to some sunny +island, and enjoy life." +<P> +Mark locked the steering apparatus so as to keep the <I>Mermaid </I>headed +due east. +<P> +"Now you can go back to your friends," Tony said. "When I want you I'll send +for you." +<P> +With a heavy heart Mark rejoined the professor and others. He found them +with their bonds removed. But to guard against their escape several men were +on watch outside the door. +<P> +"What are they doing?" asked the professor eagerly as Mark entered, and the +boy told him what had taken place. +<P> +"They will ruin my ship and spoil the whole trip," cried the old scientist. +"Oh, why did I ever go to the rescue of the scoundrels?" +<P> +"Never mind," said Jack. "Perhaps we may yet outwit them." +<P> +Morning came at last. The ship was still shooting forward at fast speed, +in an easterly direction. The sailors had learned, in their short stay aboard, +where the food and stores were kept, and they lost little time in getting +breakfast. They sent same in to their captives, including a big pot of hot +coffee, and, after partaking of this the professor and his friends felt better. +<P> +The mate of the <I>Good Hope </I>came in to help clear away the dishes. As +he passed Mark he slipped into the boy's hand a note. +<P> +"Don't read it until you are alone," he said in a low voice, as he hurried +from the room. +<P> +As soon as the other sailors had left, Mark glanced at the slip of paper. +It bore these words: + +<BLOCKQUOTE> + "Open when you hear three raps, then two, then three, and keep silent." +</BLOCKQUOTE> +<P> +"What is it?" asked Mr. Henderson. +<P> +Mark showed him the paper. +<P> +"I wonder what it means," the boy said. +<P> +"Do you think he is a friend of ours?" the professor asked. +<P> +Mark told him of the mate's conversation the night previous. +<P> +"I think we can trust him," the scientist went on. "He must intend to pay +us a visit when the others are asleep. When we hear the knocks as he specifies +we must open the door and let him in." +<P> +All that day the captives were kept in the living room. Once or twice Mark +was sent for to make some adjustment to the machinery, but the apparatus, +for the most part, was automatic, and needed little attention. The professor, +as well as the others, were all impatience for the promised visit of the +mate. Still they felt he would not come until night. +<P> +In fact it was long past midnight before Mark, Jack and the professor, who +were anxiously listening, heard the three raps, then two, then three more. +Mark quickly opened the door, and the mate stepped inside, holding his finger +to his lips as a sign of caution. Old Andy, Washington, Bill and Tom had +fallen asleep. +<P> +"I have only time for a few words," the mate said. "I am closely watched. +Tony mistrusts me. I will save you if I can." +<P> +"Why have they repaid my kindness with such actions?" asked Mr. Henderson. +<P> +"Because they are desperate men," replied the mate. "They are nothing more +than pirates. They mutinied on the other ship, killed the captain and those +of the crew who would not join them, and started off to seek their fortunes. +I pretended to join them to save my life, but I have only been watching for +a chance to escape. +<P> +"Because of lax discipline the ship was sent on fire. We tried to put it +out but could not. The rest you know." +<P> +"I heard them plan to capture this airship, but could do nothing to stop +them. Then I resolved to pretend to act with them. They fear pursuit for +their other mutiny, and are anxious to get as far away as possible." +<P> +"Do you think they will abandon the ship in a little while?" asked the professor +hopefully. +<P> +"I'm afraid not," answered the mate. "I think they want to get rid of all +of you, so they can sail about as they please. Tony is a smart man. He could +soon learn to run this ship, he thinks." +<P> +"I doubt it," Mr. Henderson answered. "But how are you going to help us?" +<P> +"I have not fully made up my plans," the mate answered. "However I wanted +you to know I would do my best to save you. Now I must go. Be on the watch +and when I can I will let you know what I have decided on. I will hand Mark +a note when I bring your meals, just as I did to-day. I think——" +<P> +"Hark! What was that?" asked the professor. +<P> +There was a noise outside the door, as if some one was listening. +<P> +"Put out the lights!" whispered the mate, and Jack switched off the electric +incandescents. +<P> +A knock sounded on the door and the voice of Tony called: +<P> +"Mark! Come here! I want you to look at the gas machine. It has stopped working, +and we are falling!" +<h3>CHAPTER X</h3> +<h4>FOOLING THEIR ENEMIES</h4> +<P> +MARK hurried into the corridor, taking care to close the door after him, +so Tony could get no glimpse of the mate who had risked so much to save his +friends. But he need not have been alarmed for the leader of the mutineers +was too excited over the stopping of the gas apparatus to give any heed to +who was in with the captives. +<P> +"Do you think you can fix it?" he asked the boy. +<P> +"I guess so," Mark replied confidently. "If I can't there is no danger, for +we will fall gradually and land in the water." +<P> +"But I don't want to do that," Tony objected. "I want to keep on through +the air." +<P> +Mark did not reply. By this time he was at the gas machine. He soon saw nothing +was the matter save that new material must be placed in the retort where +the vapor was generated. He refilled it, the gas was manufactured once more, +and the ship began to rise. +<P> +"I will know how to do it next time," Tony said with a grin. Mark realized +that every time he showed the leader of the mutineers something about the +ship it was putting the professor and his friends more and more into the +power of the scoundrels. But there was no help for it. +<P> +The ship was still plunging ahead, and kept about a mile above the earth. +As there was no further need of Mark, he was told he could go back to his +friends. When he reached the room where they were held prisoners, he found +the mate had gone away, promising again to do all he could for them. +<P> +The next night, which it seemed would never come, for the day, locked as +the captives were in their room, seemed endless, finally closed in. Mark, +Jack and the professor were anxious to know whether the mate would pay them +another visit. As for Andy, Tom and Bill, while they were interested in the +ship, and wanted to be free from the power of the mutineers, they did not +lose any sleep over it. +<P> +Shortly after midnight, there came again the peculiar knock, and the mate +entered the room. He seemed much excited over something, and, as soon as +the portal was securely closed he said to Professor Henderson: +<P> +"Is there an island any where near here where men could live for a time?" +<P> +"What do you mean?" asked the scientist. "Do you want us to desert the ship +and leave these scoundrels in charge?" +<P> +"Nothing of the sort," replied the mate, who, had said his name was Jack +Rodgers. "But first answer my question. A great deal may depend on it." +<P> +Seeing Rodgers was in earnest, the professor looked over some maps and charts, +and announced that they were within a few hundred miles of a group of islands. +<P> +"When would we reach them?" was Rodgers's next question. +<P> +Mr. Henderson made a few rapid calculations on a piece of paper. +<P> +"At the present rate of sailing," he said, "we should be there about ten +o'clock to-morrow. That is, provided the ship does not slacken speed or increase +it." +<P> +"There is no danger of either of those two things happening," said the mate. +"Tony is too afraid of the machinery to do anything to it. So you may safely +figure that our speed will continue the same." +<P> +"Then I can guarantee, with all reasonable certainty," the professor said, +"that about ten o'clock to-morrow we will be less than a mile from the islands. +They are a group where friendly natives live, and where many tropical fruits +abound. One could scarcely select a better place to be shipwrecked. But I +hope the plans of Tony and his friends do not include landing us there." +<P> +"No, nothing like that," the mate answered. "Quite the contrary. But I had +better be going. I will try and see Mark some time to-morrow. Tony does not +mind when I speak to him." +<P> +With this Rodgers left the captives, as he heard some of the sailors moving +about and did not want to be discovered. The professor and the boys wondered +what the mate's plan might be, but they had to be content to wait and see. +<P> +The night passed without incident. About nine o'clock the next morning the +mate came to the door of the room where the professor and his friends were +prisoners. He made no secret of his approach, but knocked boldly. +<P> +"Tell Mark I want to see him," he said, as the professor answered. "All of +you keep quiet," he added in a whisper. "There may be good news soon." +<P> +Mark slipped from the room. He followed the mate to the upper deck which, +at that time was deserted as all the sailors were in the dining room eating, +which practice they indulged in as often as they could. +<P> +"I have a plan to get rid of these rough men," the mate said to Mark. "It +may work, and, again it may not. At any rate it is worth trying, It all depends +on you with what help I can give you." +<P> +"I'm willing to do my share," Mark said, and for the next ten minutes the +boy and the mate were in earnest conversation. +<P> +It was about thirty-five minutes later when there arose a sudden commotion +in the ship. Mark had returned to his friends and the mate had disappeared. +The confusion seemed to come from the engine room where Tony had posted some +of his men. +<P> +"We're falling down! We'll all be killed!" shouted the men. "The ship is +falling into the sea!" +<P> +"What is the trouble?" asked the professor as he heard the commotion. +<P> +"It is part of the mate's plan," said Mark. "He told me to tell you to do +nothing. If Tony or any of the other men come to you just refer them to me." +<P> +Two minutes later Tony came rushing into the apartment where the captives +were held prisoners. +<P> +"Here! Come quickly, Mark!" he exclaimed. "Something has gone wrong with +the gas machine again, and you must come and fix it before we are all dashed +to pieces!" +<P> +With every appearance of haste Mark rushed from the apartment, following +Tony. The latter led the way to the engine room. +<P> +"Can anything be done?" he asked. +<P> +Mark took a survey of the machinery. +<P> +"It is too late," he said as though much excited. "The ship is falling down +toward the sea with terrific force." +<P> +It needed but a glance at the height gage to show this. The pointer was revolving +rapidly about the face of the dial. +<P> +"Will the ship stand the blow?" asked Tony. +<P> +"Not at the rate it is falling," replied Mark. "She will go all to pieces +when she strikes the water, and she may explode!" +<P> +"What are we to do then?" asked the leader of the mutineers. +<P> +"We must save ourselves!" cried the mate, running in at this juncture. "Let +our prisoners shift for themselves as best they can. Let's all leap into +the sea. There we at least have a chance for our lives. But if we stay on +this ship we will all be drowned like cats in a bag." +<P> +"What do you propose?" asked Tony, his face white with fear. +<P> +"When the ship comes near enough the surface of the water to make it safe +we should all drop overboard!" the mate exclaimed. "We are near some islands, +I understand, and we can thus save our lives by swimming ashore." +<P> +This plan seemed to meet with instant favor, and a little later there was +a rush for the deck, as each one wished to be the first to escape from the +boat they believed to be doomed. +<P> +Lower and lower fell the <I>Mermaid. </I>She was like a wounded bird which +the shot of the hunter has crippled. Down and down she fluttered. +<P> +By this time all the sailors, save the mate were on deck. He and Mark remained +in the engine room. +<P> +"Don't let her get too low," the mate whispered. +<P> +"I'll watch out," Mark replied. "I want to give them a good scare while I'm +at it." +<P> +The ship was now within fifty feet of the water. There was a cry of terror +from the sailors. Some of them leaped over the rail and started to swim ashore, +as the ship was by this time close to a group of islands. +<P> +Suddenly, from the engine room the mate rushed. +<P> +"Jump! Jump for your lives!" he exclaimed. "The ship is about to blow up!" +<h3>CHAPTER XI</h3> +<h4>MYSTERIOUS HAPPENINGS</h4> +<P> +THE voice of the mate echoed through the <I>Mermaid. </I>Those on deck heard +it, as did Tony in the engine room, where he was vainly trying to understand +the complicated machinery. +<P> +An instant later there sounded from beneath the ship a series of splashes. +More sailors were leaping from the deck of the craft to the ocean. The distance +was not great, particularly as they all landed in water. +<P> +"Quick!" cried the mate to a group of sailors that hesitated before taking +the jump. "The ship may blow up any minute now." +<P> +The men needed no second urging. As soon as they struck the water they began +to swim ashore, as it was not far away. One after another they jumped over +the rail. Tony was the last to go. He urged the captives to follow him, but +they all refused. +<P> +A minute later the only one of the pirate crew left on the ship was the mate. +The others were all struggling in the sea. Eventually they all reached shore +in safety. +<P> +The airship was now within about twenty feet of the water. It was still falling +but not so rapidly. +<P> +"Better send her up, now," said the mate to Mark, and the boy turned the +necessary levers to accomplish this. +<P> +Dipping into the water as a sea gull does when searching for food on the +wing, for she had come quite low, the <I>Mermaid </I>mounted once more into +the air, and was soon sailing along over the heads of Tony and his gang. +<P> +"What's it all about?" asked Mr. Henderson, who seemed in a sort of stupor. +"I thought the ship was broken. How, then, can it rise?" +<P> +"It was only a trick of mine," Rodgers said. "The gas machine is not broken. +I had Mark fix it so that only a little vapor would be generated. When the +supply in the holder was not enough, and no more was being made, the ship +had to sink. Mark and I pretended it was worse than it really was just to +scare the scoundrels." +<P> +"And you evidently succeeded," observed Mr. Henderson. "They have all left +us. I am glad you stayed." +<P> +"So am I," said Rodgers. "I was just waiting for a chance to escape from +that crowd. This was the plan I thought of that night. I wanted to see the +men put on some island where they could manage to live, and which was not +too far away." +<P> +The <I>Mermaid </I>was now mounting upward rapidly, as Mark had adjusted +the machinery properly. The craft was well rid of the pirate crew, and was +able to proceed on its way, and enable Mr. Henderson to carry out his plans. +<P> +When the <I>Mermaid </I>had reached a certain height her prow was turned +the other way, and she was sent back racing over the ground she had just +covered. But now the ship was in the hands of friends. Fortunately no great +damage had been done by the sailors, and the professor was soon able to get +things in ship-shape. The engines had not been molested and were working +better than ever. +<P> +"Now to make another attempt to reach the big hole in the earth," the professor +cried. "We will be careful next time, who we rescue from ships at sea." +<P> +The island was soon left behind, becoming a mere speck on the ocean. Those +aboard the <I>Mermaid </I>knew no harm could befall the sailors, as there +were no savage tribes on the little spot of land. Eventually the sailors +were picked up by a passing vessel and taken to their homes. The story of +their first mutiny leaked out and they were properly punished. +<P> +It required several days travel before the airship regained the distance +she had lost because of the plans of the pirates. Also, there were a number +of minor repairs to make, and the professor and his friends were kept busy. +<P> +"How much longer before we come to the big hole?" asked Jack, one day. +<P> +"I think we ought to be near it in about two weeks," the professor replied. +"I only hope we shall not be disappointed, and will be able to explore it." +<P> +"'Tain't goin' t' be no fun t' be decimated an' expurgitated inter a conglomerous +aggregation of elements constituting th' exterior portion of human anatomy," +said Washington in dubious tones. +<P> +"You mean you're afraid of being boiled in the steam from the big hole?" +asked Mark. +<P> +"Jest so," replied the colored man. +<P> +"You don't need to worry about that," put in the professor. "I will not take +the ship down if there is any danger, though of course there will be some +risk." +<P> +The ship, having been fully repaired, was now able to be speeded up, and +was sent scudding along toward her destination. Rodgers proved a valuable +acquisition toward the crew, for he had sailed many years in the waters over +which they were flying, and was able to give the professor many valuable +hints. He had heard vague stories of the island with the big hole, but had +never been near it. He did not make the trip however, as, at his request, +he was put off at an inhabited island one night. +<P> +It was about a week after the sailors were frightened from the ship, that +a curious experience befell Mark. Washington was on duty in the conning tower, +attending to the apparatus as the ship flew through the air, and all the +others had gone to bed. Mark had remained up, later than the others as he +was interested in reading a book on science. +<P> +About ten o'clock he became hungry, and going to the pantry got some bread +and cold meat. He set these on a table, and then, remembering he would need +some water to drink, started after some in the cooler, which was in a little +room near the tower. +<P> +Washington heard the boy as he turned the faucet to draw the liquid, and +spoke to him, as the colored man was rather lonesome at his post. Mark did +not linger more than a minute or two, but when he returned to where he had +left the food he was much surprised. +<P> +There was not a trace of it to be seen. The dishes were on the table, but +every vestige of bread and meat had disappeared. +<P> +"I wonder if a cat or dog has been here," was Mark's first thought. Then +he remembered that no such animals were aboard the <I>Mermaid.</I> +<P> +Something on the floor caught his eye. He stooped and picked it up. It was +a slice of bread, but in such shape that the boy stared at it, puzzled as +to how it could have become so. +<P> +It was flattened out quite thin, but the strangest part of it was that it +bore what seemed to be the marks of thumb and fingers from a very large hand. +So big, in fact, was the print, that Mark's hand scarce covered half of it, +and, where the bread had been squeezed into a putty like mass (for it was +quite fresh) the peculiar markings on the skin of the tips of the fingers +were visible. +<P> +"It looks as if a giant grabbed this slice of bread," Mark observed. "There +are strange happenings aboard this ship. I wish I knew what they meant." +<P> +He looked all around for the food, thinking perhaps a rat had dragged it +off, but there was no trace of it. +<P> +Suddenly the boy thought he heard a sound from the big storeroom. He was +almost sure he heard something moving in there. He started toward the door +when he was stopped by hearing the professor's voice call: +<P> +"Don't open that door, Mark. Have I not told you that place must not be entered?" +<P> +"I thought I heard some one in there," Mark replied. +<P> +"There is nothing in there but some apparatus of mine," Mr. Henderson said. +"I want no one to see it. What is the matter?" +<P> +Mark explained matters to the scientist, who had, as he said later, arisen +on hearing the boy, moving about. +<P> +"Oh, it was a rat that took your stuff," Mr. Henderson said. "I guess there +are some pretty big ones on the ship. Get some more food and go to sleep." +<P> +Mark felt it best to obey, though he was by no means satisfied with the +professor's explanation. He listened intently to see if any more noises came +from the storeroom, but none did, and he went to bed. +<P> +Several times after that Mark tried the experiment of leaving food about. +On each occasion it was taken. +<P> +"It looks as if the ship was haunted," he said. "Of course I know it isn't, +but it's very queer. They must be strange rats that can get food from shelves +when there is only the smooth side of the ship to climb up," for on some +occasions Mark had tried the experiment of putting the food as nearly out +of reach as possible. +<P> +It took several nights to learn all this, and, as he did not want to take +any one into his confidence, he had to work in secret. But, with all his +efforts he learned nothing, save that there was something odd about the ship +that he could not fathom. +<P> +At first he believed the professor had some strange animal concealed in the +storeroom, but he dismissed this idea almost as soon as he thought of it. +For what could the scientist want with an animal when they were going to +the interior of the earth? That some beast had slipped aboard was out of +the question. Mark was much puzzled, but finally, deciding the matter did +not concern him a great deal, gave up trying to solve the mystery, at least +for a time. +<P> +The ship was now in the neighborhood of the equator and the climate had become +much warmer. So hot indeed were some nights that they slept out on deck, +with the <I>Mermaid </I>flying through the air at a moderate pace, for it +was deemed best not to go at any great speed after dark. +<P> +One night the professor, after consulting various charts and maps, and making +calculations which covered several sheets of paper announced: +<P> +"We should sight the mysterious island to-morrow." +<P> +"That's good news!" exclaimed Jack. "I'm anxious to see what's below inside +of that big hole." +<P> +"Everybody git ready for their funerals!" exclaimed Washington in a deep +voice. "I ain't got many——" +<P> +"Cheer up," interrupted Jack, poking Washington in the ribs. The colored +man was very ticklish, and he began to laugh heartily, though, perhaps, he +did not feel like it. +<P> +Suddenly, above the sound of his shouts, there came a crashing, grinding +noise from the engine room. +<h3>CHAPTER XII</h3> +<h4>THE BIG HOLE</h4> +<P> +"SOMETHING has gone wrong!" exclaimed the professor as he jumped up. He reached +the engine room ahead of any one else, and when the two boys got there they +found him busy twisting wheels and shifting levers. +<P> +"Anything serious?" asked Jack. +<P> +"It's the gas machine again," Mr. Henderson replied. "It broke where we fixed +it. However it doesn't matter. I was going to lower the ship anyhow, as I +want to approach the island from the water. We will go down a little sooner +than I counted on." +<P> +The disabling of the gas machine caused the vapor to escape slowly from the +tank, and this made the ship sink gradually. By means of the emergency stop-cock +the descent could be controlled almost as well as though the machinery was +in working order. Half an hour later the <I>Mermaid </I>rested on the water. +<P> +It was a little rough, as there was quite a swell on, and not so pleasant +as floating in the air on an even keel, but they made the best of it. +<P> +On account of the little accident, and not being certain of its extent, it +was deemed best not to send the ship ahead. So they laid to until morning. +<P> +For the better part of two days all those on board the <I>Mermaid </I>had +their hands full mending the break and making other repairs found necessary. +In that time they lay to, floating idly with the currents, or blown by the +wind, for the professor would not start any of the engines or apparatus until +the ship was in good condition. +<P> +In this time Mark had several times recalled the curious happenings in regard +to the disappearing food, and the mystery of the storeroom. But there were +no further manifestations, and no other signs that there might be a strange +visitor aboard. +<P> +"I couldn't have imagined it all," said Mark, "but I guess what did happen +may have been caused by natural means, only I can't discover them." +<P> +It was about two days after this, the ship having sailed scores of miles +on the surface of the water, that Mark, who was in the conning tower exclaimed: +<P> +"That looks like a waterspout ahead of us." +<P> +"That's what it is!" Jack agreed. "What shall we do?" +<P> +"Call the professor!" said Mark. "He'll know." +<P> +When Mr. Henderson came, he looked for a long time at a cloud of black vapor +which hung low in the east. +<P> +"It may be a waterspout," he said. "We'll rise in the air and see if we can +avoid it." +<P> +The ship was sent up into the air. As it rose higher and higher, the professor, +making frequent observations from his conning tower, cried out: +<P> +"That is no waterspout!" +<P> +"What is it?" asked Mark. +<P> +"It is the steam and vapor rising from the big hole in the earth! Boys, we +are almost there!" +<P> +"Are you sure that's it?" asked Mark. +<P> +"Almost positive," Mr. Henderson replied. "You can see how much warmer it +has become of late, as we approached the equator. We are almost due at the +island, and I have no doubt we have reached it." +<P> +As the ship flew forward the mass of dark vapor became more pronounced. Through +the glasses it could be noticed to consist of rolling masses of clouds. What +lay beneath them no one knew. The adventurers were going to try to find out. +<P> +Now that they had arrived at the beginning of the main part of their journey, +the travelers felt their spirits sink a little. It was one thing to plan +to go down into the depths of the earth, but it was quite another to make +the actual attempt. Still, they were not going to give up the project. The +professor had confidence in his ship and believed it could safely make the +trip. Still it was with no little apprehension that Mr. Henderson watched +the nearer approach of the craft to that strange island. +<P> +"Perfesser, are yo' really an' truly goin' t' depress this elongated spheroid +an' its human consignment int' that conglomerous convoluted mass of gaseous +vapor regardless of th' consequences?" asked Washington, as he gazed with +wide opened eyes at the sight before him. +<P> +"If you mean am I going to let the <I>Mermaid </I>go down into that hole +you are perfectly correct," the scientist answered, "though you could have +said it in fewer words, Washington." +<P> +"I—I guess I'll get out an' walk," the colored man made reply. +<P> +"This isn't any trolley car," observed Mark. "Don't lose your nerve, Wash. +Stay with us, and we'll discover a gold or diamond mine, maybe." +<P> +"Is there diamonds down there?" asked the colored man, his fright seeming +to leave him. +<P> +"There are all sorts of things inside the earth," the professor answered. +<P> +"Then I'm goin' along!" Washington declared. "I always did want a diamond +ring, an' I knows a little colored gal that wants one, too. I'm goin' all +right! This suttenly am th' most kloslosterous conjunctivity of combativeness +that I ever sagaciated!" and he began to do a sort of impromptu cake-walk. +<h3>CHAPTER XIII</h3> +<h4>DOWN INTO THE EARTH</h4> +<P> +IT was now noon, but the adventurers did not think of dinner in the excitement +of approaching the mysterious island. The speed of the ship was increased +that they might the more quickly come to it. As they approached they could +see the masses of vapor more plainly, and it appeared that some great commotion +must be going on inside the big hole, since clouds of steam arose. +<P> +"I only hope it doesn't prove too hot for us," observed the professor. "However, +I provided a water jacket for the ship, and we may need it, as well as the +vacuum chambers to keep the heat from us." +<P> +It was about three o'clock when the flying ship reached the edge of the island. +From there it was about a mile to the rim of the big hole, over one side +of which the waters of the ocean poured with a roar that could be heard over +half a mile off. +<P> +"I think we had better halt and see that everything is in good shape before +proceeding," said Mr. Henderson. "Jack, you and Mark make a thorough inspection +of the engine room, and see that all the apparatus is in working order," +<P> +The two boys prepared to do as they were told. Mark, who was walking a little +ahead of Jack, entered the apartment from which the storeroom opened. As +he did so he saw, or thought he saw, the door of the place where the extra +supplies were kept, close. Without saying anything to Jack he hurried forward, +and tried the knob. It would not turn. +<P> +"That's funny," said Mark to himself. "I could almost swear I saw some one +go into that room. Yet I know the professor did not enter, for I just left +him. And none of the others would dare to. I wonder if I will ever solve +the mystery." +<P> +But he had too much to do to allow him to dwell on that matter. Several of +the dynamos needed adjusting and for two hours he and Jack had all they could +do. +<P> +In the meanwhile the professor had gone over the other parts of the ship, +and gotten everything in readiness for the descent. The <I>Mermaid </I>was +lowered to within a few hundred feet of the sea, and, through a hose that +was let down, the compartments, provided for this emergency were filled with +water. These compartments were between the outer and inner hulls of the lower +part of the craft, and were designed to prevent the interior becoming heated +in case the travelers found they had to pass close to fire. There were also +vacuum chambers, and from these the air was exhausted, as of course every +schoolboy knows a vacuum is a non-conductor of either heat or cold. +<P> +"Now I think we are ready," the professor announced at length. +<P> +"Everything's all right in the engine room," announced Jack. +<P> +"Yes, an' everything's all right in th' kitchen," put in Washington. "I've +got a good meal ready as soon as any one wants to eat." +<P> +"It will have to wait a while," Mr. Henderson remarked. "We are going to +start to make the descent before we dine." +<P> +The hose was reeled up, and the ship was sent a few hundred feet higher into +the air, as Mr. Henderson wanted to take a last good observation before he +went down into the hole. +<P> +But having risen some distance above the masses of rolling vapors he found +he was at no advantage, since the strongest telescope he could bring to bear +could not pierce the cloud masses. +<P> +"We'll just have to trust to luck," the scientist said. "I judge we're about +over the centre of the opening. Lower away Mark!" +<P> +The boy, who, under the watchful eye of the professor, was manipulating the +levers and wheels in the conning tower, shifted some handles. The gas was +expelled from the holder, the negative gravity apparatus ceased to work, +and the <I>Flying Mermaid </I>sank lower and lower, toward the mysterious +hole that yawned beneath her. +<P> +The hearts of all beat strangely, if not with fear, at least with apprehension, +for they did not know what they might encounter. Perhaps death in some terrible +form awaited them. But the desire to discover something new and strange had +gripped all of them, and not one would have voted to turn back. +<P> +Even old Andy, who seldom got excited, was in unusual spirits. He took down +his gun and remarked: +<P> +"Maybe I can kill some new kind of animal, and write a book about its habits, +for surely we will see strange beasts in the under-world." +<P> +Lower and lower sank the ship. Now it was amid the first thin masses of vapors, +those that floated highest and were more like a light fog, than anything +else. By means of a window in the bottom of the craft, which window was closed +by a thick piece of plate glass, Professor Henderson could look down and +see what was beneath them. +<P> +"The clouds seem to be getting thicker," he said, as he peered through the +small casement. "If they would only clear away we could see something." +<P> +But instead of doing this the vapors accumulated more thickly about the ship. +It was so dark inside the <I>Mermaid </I>now that the electric lights had +to be switched on. In the room with the floor-window the lights were not +used, as had they shone one could not have seen down below. +<P> +The professor maintained his position. The descent was a perilous one, and +he wanted to be on the watch to check it at once if the <I>Mermaid </I>was +liable to dash upon some pointed rock or fall into some fiery pit. His hand +was on the signal levers. +<P> +Suddenly he looked up and glanced at a gage on the wall. The hand of it was +slowly revolving. +<P> +"We are at the earth's surface," the scientist said. "Now we are below it. +Now we are fairly within the big hole! Boys, we may be on the verge of a +great discovery!" +<P> +An instant later it seemed as if a hot wave had struck the <I>Mermaid, </I>or +as if the craft had been plunged into boiling water. +<P> +"It's going to be hot!" cried the professor. "Lucky I provided the water +jackets!" +<P> +Then the lights in the interior of the ship went out, leaving the whole craft +in darkness. +<P> +"What has happened?" cried Mark. +<h3>CHAPTER XIV</h3> +<h4>MANY MILES BELOW</h4> +<P> +"DON'T be alarmed," spoke the calm voice of the professor. "I have only turned +off the electrics. I want to switch on the search lights, to see if we can +learn anything about our position." +<P> +As he spoke he turned a switch, and, the gloom below the ship, as the boys +could see by glimpses from the floor-window, was pierced by a dazzling glare. +In the bottom of the <I>Mermaid </I>were set a number of powerful electric +arc lights with reflectors, constructed to throw the beams downward. The +professor had built them in for just this emergency, as he thought that at +some time they might want to illuminate what was below the craft. +<P> +Not that it was of much avail on this occasion, for, though the lights were +powerful, they could not pierce the miles of gloom that lay below them. The +beams only served to accentuate the darkness. +<P> +"I guess we'll have to trust to luck," the professor said, after a vain attempt, +by means of powerful glasses, to distinguish something. "There is too much +fog and vapor." +<P> +"What makes it so warm?" asked Mark, removing his coat. +<P> +"Well, you must remember you are approaching the interior of the earth," +the professor answered. "It has been calculated that the heat increases one +degree for every fifty-five feet you descend. We have come down several hundred +feet and of course it is getting warmer." +<P> +"Then if we go down very far it will get so hot we will not be able to stand +it," Jack put in. +<P> +"I do not believe we will suffer any great inconvenience," Mr. Henderson +went on. "I believe that after we pass a certain point it will become cooler. +I think the inner fires of the earth are more or less heated gas in a sort +of inner chamber between two shells. If we can pass the second shell, we +will be all right." +<P> +"But aren't we liable to hit something, going down into the dark this way?" +asked Mark. +<P> +"We will guard ourselves as far as possible," the scientist answered. +<P> +The <I>Mermaid </I>seemed to be going down on a side of the immense shaft +a good way distant from the strange waterfall. When they had first dropped +into the hole the travelers could hear the rush of waters, but now the noise +was not audible. +<P> +"I think the hole must widen out the farther down we go," the professor said. +"We are probably many miles from the fall now." +<P> +"I'm sure I hope so," put in Jack. "It would be no fun to have to take a +shower bath in this place." +<P> +After a meal, the boys and the professor took some more observations, but +with all their efforts nothing could be seen below the ship but a vast black +void, into which they were steadily descending. +<P> +"I wonder when we're going to stop," asked Mark. "It's like playing the game +'Going to Jerusalem,' you keep wondering when the music will cease and you +will have a chance to grab a chair. I only hope we have a chair or something +else to sit on, in case we go to smash." +<P> +"We're not liable to have any accidents with the professor in charge," Jack +answered. "Didn't he bring us safe out of some pretty tight holes when we +went to the north pole in the airship, and again when we found the south +pole in the submarine?" +<P> +"Yes, but this is different," objected Mark. +<P> +"Well, I'm not worrying," Jack went on. "It doesn't do any good, and only +makes you lie awake nights. By the way, I wonder what time it is getting +to be." +<P> +He looked at his watch and found it was close on to eight o'clock in the +evening. So late had dinner been served, and so varied were the happenings +of the last few hours, that time had passed quickly. +<P> +"Why it's almost bed-time," said Jack. "I wonder if we are to go on dropping +into the depths of nowhere all night." +<P> +At that moment the professor entered the room where the boys were. He seemed +quite pleased over something, and was smiling. +<P> +"Everything is going along famously," he said. "I have just tested the air +and find it is rich in oxygen. We shall suffer nothing on that score. The +heat too, seems to have decreased. On the whole, everything favors us." +<P> +"Are we going on down?" asked Mark. +<P> +"As far as we can," Mr. Henderson answered. "Let me see how far we are below +now." +<P> +He went to the gage that indicated the vertical position of the ship. Because +of the changed conditions, the craft now sinking below the surface of the +earth instead of rising above it, as was its wont, some calculations were +necessary. These the scientist made as quickly as he could. +<P> +"We are now ten miles underground!" he exclaimed. "That is doing very well. +My theories are working out. I think we shall land somewhere before long." +<P> +"I hopes so!" exclaimed Washington coming in at this point. "I'm mighty skeered +shootin' down int' this dark hole, and no time-table t' show when we's due +t' arrive." +<P> +"We ought to land in a couple of days more," the professor answered. "Never +mind about worrying Washington, I'll take care of you." +<P> +"I hopes so, Perfesser," the colored man said. "I got a little girl waitin' +for me back in Georgia, an' I'd like t' see her 'fore I git burned up." +<P> +Accompanied by the professor, the boys made a tour of the ship to see that +all the machinery and apparatus were in working order. Owing to the changed +conditions the negative gravity engine had to be worked at faster speed than +usual, since the downward pull of the earth was greater the farther they +descended into the interior and they did not want to fall too swiftly. But +this was easily provided for, since the professor had made the apparatus +capable of standing a great strain. +<P> +The ten miles had become fourteen when the professor, finding that everything +was in good shape, proposed that the boys go to bed. They, did not want to, +though they were sleepy, and they feared to miss some strange sights. +<P> +But when the professor had promised to call them in case anything unusual +developed, they consented to turn in, and Bill and Tom assumed their duties, +which were light enough, now that the ship was merely falling into the immense +shaft. +<P> +When Mark turned into his bunk he could not go to sleep at once. It may have +been the excitement over their new position, or because he had eaten too +hearty a supper, but the fact was he remained awake for some time. +<P> +While thus tossing restlessly on his bed, wondering what ailed him, he thought +he heard a noise in the main apartment out of which the storeroom opened. +He crawled softly from his bed, and looked from his stateroom door. +<P> +In the light of a shaded electric Mark saw the figure of some one glide across +the floor and take refuge in the room, which Professor Henderson always was +so particular about. +<P> +"I wonder what or who that was," reasoned Mark. "There is some mystery in +this. Can the professor have concealed some one on this ship whose presence +he does not want to admit? It certainly looks so." +<P> +Not wanting to awaken the ship's crew, and remembering what Mr. Henderson +had said about any one entering the storeroom, Mark went back to bed, to +fall into an uneasy slumber. +<P> +"Breakfast!" called Washington breaking in on a fine dream Jack was having +about being captain of a company of automobile soldiers. "Last call for +breakfast!" +<P> +"Hello! Is it morning?" asked Jack. +<P> +"Not so's you could notice it," Washington went on. "It's as dark as a stack +of black cats and another one throwed in. But breakfast is ready jest the +same." +<P> +The boys were soon at the table, and learned that nothing of importance had +occurred during the night. The <I>Mermaid </I>had been kept going slowly +down, and about seven o'clock registered more than fifty miles below the +earth's surface. +<P> +Still there was no change in the outward surroundings. It remained as black +as the interior of Egypt when that country was at its darkest. The powerful +electrics could not pierce the gloom. The ship was working well, and the +travelers were very comfortable. +<P> +Down, down, down, went the <I>Mermaid. </I>The temperature, which had risen +to about ninety went back to sixty-nine, and there seemed to be no more danger +from the inner fires. +<P> +They were now a hundred miles under the surface. But still the professor +kept the <I>Mermaid </I>sinking. Every now and again he would take an +observation, but only found the impenetrable darkness surrounded them. +<P> +"We must arrive somewhere, soon," he muttered. +<P> +It was about six o'clock that night that the alarm bell set up a sudden ringing. +The professor who was making some calculations on a piece of paper jumped +to his feet, and so did a number of the others. +<P> +"We are nearing the bottom!" he cried. "The bell has given us warning!" +<h3>CHAPTER XV</h3> +<h4>IN THE STRANGE DRAUGHT</h4> +<P> +THE boys ran to attend to the engines and apparatus to which they had been +assigned in view of this emergency. The professor, Washington, Bill, Tom +and Andy, who had kept to themselves since the descent, came running out +of the small cabin where they usually sat, and wanted to know what it was +all about. +<P> +"We may hit something, in spite of all precautions," Mr. Henderson remarked. +"Slow down the ship." +<P> +The <I>Mermaid </I>was, accordingly checked in her downward flight, by a +liberal use of the gas and the negative gravity machine. +<P> +The bell continued to ring, and the dials pointed to the mark that indicated +the ship was more than one hundred and fifty miles down. +<P> +Mark, who had run to the engine room to check the descent, came back. +<P> +"Why didn't you slow her down?" asked the professor. +<P> +"I did," replied the boy. "The negative gravity and the gas machines are +working at full speed." +<P> +"Then why are we still descending?" asked the scientist. "For a while our +speed was checked, but now we are falling faster than before." +<P> +"I attended to the apparatus," Mark insisted. +<P> +Just then, from without the ship, came a terrible roaring sound, as though +there was a great cyclone in progress. At the same time, those aboard the +craft could feel themselves being pulled downward with terrific force. +<P> +"We are caught in a draught!" Mr. Henderson cried. "We are being sucked down +into the depths of the earth!" +<P> +He ran to the engine room. With the help of the boys he set in motion an +auxiliary gravity machine, designed to exert a most powerful influence against +the downward pull of the earth. As they watched the great wheels spin around, +and heard the hum and whirr of the dynamos, the boys watched the pointer +which indicated how low they were getting. +<P> +And, as they watched, they saw that the needle of the dial kept moving, moving, +moving. +<P> +"Our efforts are useless! We can't stop!" the professor cried. +<P> +Grave indeed was the plight of the adventurers. In their ship they were being +sucked down into unknown regions and all their efforts did not avail to save +them. It was an emergency they could not guard against, and which could not +have been foreseen. +<P> +"What are to do?" asked Mark. +<P> +"We can only wait," Mr. Henderson replied. "The terrible suction may cease, +or it may carry us to some place of safety. Let us hope for the best." +<P> +Seeing there was no further use in running the engines in an effort to check +the downward rush the machines were stopped. Then they waited for whatever +might happen. +<P> +Now that they seemed in imminent peril Washington was as cool as any one. +He went about putting his kitchen in order and getting ready for the next +meal as if they were sailing comfortably along on the surface of the ocean. +As for old Andy he was nervous and frightened, and plainly showed it. With +his gun in readiness he paced back and forth as if on the lookout for strange +beasts or birds. +<P> +Bill and Tom were so alarmed that they were of little use in doing anything, +and they were not disturbed in their staterooms where they went when it became +known that the ship was unmanageable. +<P> +The boys and the professor, while greatly frightened at the unexpected turn +of events, decided there was no use in giving way to foolish alarm. They +realized they could do nothing but await developments. +<P> +At the same time they took every precaution. They piled all the bedding on +the floor of the living room, so that the pillows and mattresses might form +a sort of pad in case the ship was dashed down on the bottom of the big hole. +<P> +"Not that it would save us much," Jack observed with a grim smile, "but somehow +it sort of makes your mind easier." +<P> +All this while the ship was being sucked down at a swift pace. The pointer +of the gage, indicating the depth, kept moving around and soon they were +several hundreds of miles below the surface of the earth. +<P> +The professor tried, by means of several instruments, to discover in which +direction they were headed, and whether they were going straight down or +at an angle. But some strange influence seemed to affect the gages and other +pieces of apparatus, for the pointers and hands would swing in all directions, +at one time indicating that they were going down, and, again, upward. +<P> +"There must be a strong current of electricity here," Mr. Henderson said, +"or else there is, as many suspect, a powerful magnet at the center of the +earth, which we are nearing." +<P> +"What will you do if the ship is pulled apart, or falls and is smashed?" +asked Mark with much anxiety. +<P> +"You take a cheerful view of things," said Jack. +<P> +"Well, it's a good thing to prepare for emergencies," Mark added. +<P> +"If the ship was to be separated by the magnetic pull, or if it fell on sharp +rocks and was split in twain, I am afraid none of us could do anything to +save ourselves," the professor answered. "Still, if we were given a little +warning of the disaster, I have means at hand whereby we might escape with +our lives. But it would be a perilous way of——" +<P> +"I reckon yo' all better come out an' have supper," broke in Washington. +"Leastways we'll call it supper, though I don't rightly know whether it's +night or mornin'. Anyhow I've got a meal ready." +<P> +"I don't suppose any of us feel much like eating," observed Mr. Henderson, +"but there is no telling when we will have the chance again, so, perhaps, +we had better take advantage of it." +<P> +For a while they ate in silence, finding that they had better appetites than +they at first thought. Old Andy in particular did full justice to the food +Washington had prepared. +<P> +"I always found it a good plan to eat as much and as often as you can," the +hunter remarked. "This is a mighty uncertain world." +<P> +"You started to tell us a little while ago, Professor," said Mark, "about +a plan you had for saving out lives if worst came to worst, and there was +a chance to put it into operation. What is it?" +<P> +"I will tell you," the aged inventor said. "It is something about which I +have kept silent, as I did not want to frighten any of you. It was my latest +invention, and I had only perfected it when we started off on this voyage. +Consequently I had no chance to try it. The machine works in theory, but +whether it does in practice is another question. That is why I say there +is a risk. But we may have to take this risk. I have placed aboard this ship +a——" +<P> +The professor was interrupted in what he was about to say by a curious tremor +that made the whole ship shiver as though it had struck some obstruction. +Yet there was no sudden jolt or jar such as would have been occasioned by +that. +<P> +At the same time Washington, who was out in the kitchen, came running into +the dining room, crying: +<P> +"We're droppin' into a ragin' fire, Perfesser!" +<P> +"What do you mean?" asked Mr. Henderson. +<P> +"I jest took a look down through th' hole in th' bottom of the ship!" cried +Washington. "It's all flames an' smoke below us!" +<P> +"I wonder if it is the end," the professor muttered in a low voice. +<P> +Followed by the boys, the inventor hastened to the floor-window. The lights +were turned off to enable a better view to be had of what was below them. +<P> +Leaning over the glass protected aperture the boys and the professor saw, +far, far down, a bright light shining. It was as if they were miles above +a whole town of blast furnaces, the stacks of which were belching forth flames +and smoke. The rolling clouds of vapor were illuminated by a peculiar greenish +light, which, at times, turned to red, blue, purple and yellowish hues. +<P> +The effect was weird and beautiful though it was full of terror for the +travelers. It seemed as if they were falling into some terrible pit of fire, +for the reflection of what they feared were flames, could plainly be seen. +<P> +"I wish I'd never come on this terrible voyage!" wailed Washington. "I'd +rather freeze to death than be burned up." +<P> +"Washington, be quiet!" commanded the professor sternly. "This is no time +for foolishness. We must work hard to save our lives, for we are in dire +peril. +<P> +"Mark, you and Washington, with Jack, start the engines. Turn on every bit +of power you can. Fill the gas holder as full as it will hold, and use extra +heavy pressure. I will see if I can not work the negative gravity apparatus +to better advantage than we did before. We must escape if possible!" +<P> +The boys, as was also Washington, were only too glad to have something to +do to take their mind off their troubles. All three were much frightened, +but Mark and Jack tried not to show it. As for Washington he was almost crying. +<P> +Soon the whirr and hum of the machinery in the <I>Mermaid </I>was heard. +The craft, which was rushing in some direction, either downward, ahead or +backwards within the unknown depths, shivered from the speed of the dynamos +and other apparatus. Soon the boys could hear the professor starting the +negative gravity engine, and then began a struggle between the forces of +nature and those of mankind. +<P> +Once more the adventurers anxiously watched the gages and indicators. For +a while the ship seemed to be holding out against the terrible influence +that was sucking her down. She appeared to hesitate. Then, as the downward +force triumphed over the mechanical energy in the craft, she began to settle +again, and soon was descending, if that was the direction, as fast as before. +<P> +"It is of no use," said the professor with a groan. "I must try our last +resort!" +<P> +He started from the engine room where Mark and Jack had gone. As he did so, +he glanced at a thermometer hanging on the wall near the door. +<P> +"Has any one turned on the heat?" he asked. +<P> +"It's shut off," replied Mark, looking at the electric stove. +<P> +"Then what makes it so hot?" asked the scientist. +<P> +He pointed to the little silvery column in the tiny tube of the instrument. +It registered close to one hundred degrees, though a few minutes before it +had been but sixty. And the starting of the machinery could not account for +the rise in temperature, since most of the apparatus was run by electricity +and developed little heat save in the immediate proximity. The thermometer +was fully ten feet away from any machine. +<P> +"It's the fiery furnace that's doing it!" cried Washington. "We're falling +into th' terrible pit an' we're goin' t' be roasted alive!" +<P> +"It certainly is getting warmer," observed Mark, as he took off his coat. +Soon he had to shed his vest, and Jack and the professor followed his example. +The others too, also found all superfluous garments a burden, and, in a little +while they were going about in scanty attire. +<P> +Still the heat increased, until it was almost torture to remain in the engine +room. Nor was it much cooler elsewhere. In vain did the professor set a score +of big electric fans to whirring. He even placed cakes of ice, from the small +ice machine that was carried, in front of the revolving blades, to cool off +the air. But the ice was melted almost as soon as it was taken from the +apparatus. +<P> +"Them flames is gittin' worser!" Washington cried a little later. "We's comin' +nearer!" +<P> +From the bottom window the professor and the boys looked down. True enough +the curious, changing, vari-colored lights seemed brighter. They could almost +see the tongues of flame shooting upward in anticipation of what they were +soon to devour. +<P> +The heat was increasing every minute. The sides of the ship were hot. The +heads of the travelers were getting dizzy. They could hardly talk or move +about. +<P> +"I must save our lives! I must trust to the——" The professor, who was muttering +to himself started toward the storeroom. As in a dream Mark watched him. +He remembered afterward that he had speculated on what might be the outcome +of the mystery the professor threw about the place. "I will have to use it," +he heard the scientist say softly. +<P> +Just as Mr. Henderson was about to open the door there came a fiercer blast +of heat than any that had preceded. At the same instant the conditions in +the <I>Mermaid </I>became so fearful that each of the travelers felt himself +fainting away. +<P> +"Go to—storeroom—get cylinder—get in——" the professor murmured, and then +he fell forward in a faint. +<h3>CHAPTER XVI</h3> +<h4>THE NEW LAND</h4> +<P> +"WHAT is it? Tell us!" exclaimed Jack, almost in his last breath, for, a +few seconds later he too toppled over senseless. Then Washington went down, +while Andy, Bill and Tom succumbed to the terrible heat. +<P> +Mark felt his head swimming. His eyes were almost bulging from their sockets. +He dimly remembered trying to force himself to go to the storeroom and see +what was there. He started toward it with that intention, but fell half way +to it. +<P> +As he did so he saw something which impressed itself on his mind, half +unconscious as he was. +<P> +The door of the storeroom suddenly opened, and from it came a giant shape, +that seemed to expand until it filled the whole of the apartment where the +stricken ones lay. It was like the form of some monster, half human, half +beast. Mark shuddered, and then, closing his eyes, he felt himself sinking +down into some terrible deep and black pit. A second later the whole ship +was jarred as though it had hit something. +<P> +How long he and the others remained unconscious Mark did not know. He was +the first to revive, and his first sensation was one as though he had slept +hard and long, and did not want to get up. He felt very comfortable, although +he was lying flat on the floor, with his head jammed against the side of +a locker. It was so dark that he could not distinguish his hand held close +to his face. +<P> +"I wonder if I'm dead, and if all the others are dead too," he thought to +himself. "What has happened? Let's see, the last I remember was some horrible +shape rushing from the storeroom. I wonder what it could have been? Surely +that was not the secret the professor referred to." +<P> +Mark shuddered as he recalled the monster that seemed to have grown more +terrible as each second passed. Then the boy raised himself up from his prostrate +position. +<P> +"Well, at any rate, some one has turned off the heat," he murmured. "It's +very comfortable in here now. I wish I could strike a light." +<P> +He listened intently, to learn if any of the others were moving about. He +could hear them breathing, but so faintly as to indicate they were insensible. +Mark stretched out his hand and felt that some one was lying close to him, +but who of the adventurers it was he could not determine. +<P> +"If only the dynamo was working we could have light," he said. "But it seems +to have stopped," and, indeed there was a lacking of the familiar purr and +hum of the electrical machine. In fact none of the apparatus in the ship +was working. +<P> +"The storage battery!" exclaimed Mark. "That would give light for a while, +if I can only find the switch in the dark." +<P> +He began crawling about on his hands and knees. It was so intensely black +that he ran into many things and received severe bruises. At last he came +to a doorway, and as he did so his hand came in contact with an easy chair. +It was the only one aboard, and by that he knew he had passed into the sitting +room. He had his general direction now, and knew if he kept straight on he +would come to the engine room. There he was familiar enough with the apparatus +and levers to be able to turn the electric switch. +<P> +Crawling slowly and cautiously, he reached the room where all the engines +were. Then he had to feel around the sides to locate the switch. At length +he found it. There was a click, a little flash of greenish fire, and the +copper conductors came together, and the ship was flooded with the glow from +the incandescents. +<P> +Mark hurried back to where the others were lying. They were still unconscious, +but an uneasy, movement on the part of Jack told that he was coming out of +the stupor. Mark got some ammonia and held it beneath his comrade's nose. +The strong fumes completed the work that nature had started and Jack opened +his eyes. +<P> +"Where am I? What has happened? Are any of them dead?" he asked quickly. +<P> +"I hope no one is dead," Mark replied. "As to the other question, I can't +answer. I don't know whether we are a thousand miles underground, or floating +on the ocean, though I'm more inclined to the former theory. But never mind +that now. Help me to bring the others back to their senses. I'll work on +the professor and you can begin on Bill or Tom. Washington seems to be all +right," for at that moment the colored man opened his eyes, stared about +him and then got up. +<P> +"I thought I was dead for suah!" he exclaimed. +<P> +"Some of the others may be if we don't hurry," said Mark. "Get to work, Wash!" +<P> +With the colored man to help them the two boys, by the use of the ammonia, +succeeded in reviving Bill, Tom and old Andy. But the professor, probably +on account of his advanced age, did not respond so readily to the treatment. +The boys were getting quite alarmed, as even some of the diluted ammonia, +forced between his lips, did not cause him to open his eyes, or increase +his heart action. +<P> +"If he should die, and leave us all alone with the ship in this terrible +place, what would we do?" asked Jack. +<P> +"He's not going to die!" exclaimed Mark. "Here I have another plan. Washington +bring that medical electrical battery from the engine room." This was a small +machine the professor had brought along for experimental purposes. +<P> +Quickly adjusting it, Mark placed the handles in the nerveless fingers of +Mr. Henderson. Then he started the current. In about a minute the eyelids +of the aged inventor began to quiver, and, in less than five minutes he had +been revived sufficiently to enable him to sit up. He passed his hand across +his forehead. +<P> +"What has happened?" he asked in a faint voice. +<P> +"I don't know; none of us knows," Mark answered. "We all lost our senses +when it got so hot, and there seemed to be some peculiar vapor in the air. +The last I remember was seeing some horrible shape rush from the storeroom, +soon after the ship struck. Then I fainted away. When I woke up I managed +to turn the lights on, and then I came back here." +<P> +"I wonder where we are," the old man murmured. "I must find out. We must +take every precaution. Washington, go and look at the gage indicating our +depth." +<P> +The colored man was gone but a few seconds. When he returned his eyes were +bulging in terror. +<P> +"What is it?" asked Mr. Henderson, who, thanks to the battery, had almost +completely recovered. +<P> +"It ain't possible!" gasped Washington. "I'll never believe it!" +<P> +"What is it?" asked Mr. Henderson, while the others waited in anxiety for +the answer. +<P> +"We're five hundred miles down!" declared Washington. +<P> +"Five hundred miles!" muttered the inventor. "It does not seem possible, +but it must be so. We fell very rapidly and the terrible draught sucked us +down with incredible rapidity. But come, we must see what our situation is, +and where we are. We are stationary, and are evidently on some solid substance." +<P> +They all felt much recovered now, and, as the terrible fright of being consumed +in a fiery furnace had passed, they all were in better spirits. +<P> +At the suggestion of the professor, the boys and Washington made a tour of +the ship. They found, for some unaccountable reason, that nearly all the +engines and apparatuses were out of gear. In some the parts had broken, and +others were merely stopped, from the failure of some other machine, on which +they were dependent. +<P> +"I'm afraid this is the end of the <I>Mermaid," </I>said Mark, in a sorrowful +tone. +<P> +"Nonsense!" replied Jack, who was of a more cheerful nature. "Things are +not so bad as they look. The professor can fix everything." +<P> +"I'm sure I hope so," Mark went on, not much encouraged, however, by Jack's +philosophy. "It would be no joke to have to stay five hundred miles underground +the rest of our lives." +<P> +"You don't know," retorted Jack. "Don't judge of a country you've never seen. +This may be as fine a place as it is on the surface of the earth. I want +a chance to see it," and Jack began to whistle a cheerful tune. +<P> +They completed the tour of the ship, and found, that, aside from the damage +to the machinery, the <I>Mermaid </I>had not sustained any harm. The hull +was in good order, though of course they could not tell about the gas holder. +It was not possible to see this except by going into the conning tower or +out on the small deck, and this they did not venture to do. The connections +between the holder and the main ship seemed to be all right, and there was +still a small quantity of gas in the big tank, as Mark found on opening a +stop-cock. +<P> +They went back to the professor and told him what they had observed. He seemed +somewhat alarmed, the more so as the experience he had just passed through +had weakened him considerably. +<P> +"I hope I shall be able to make the repairs," he said. "It is our only hope." +<P> +As he spoke he looked up at the electric lights that shone overhead from +wall brackets. +<P> +"Who is shutting down the power?" he asked. +<P> +"There is no power on, Professor," replied Mark. "I am running the lights +from the storage battery. But something is the matter, for they are growing +dim." +<P> +The filaments were now mere dull red wires, and the ship was being shrouded +in gloom again. +<P> +"The battery is failing!" exclaimed Mr. Henderson. "We shall be left in darkness, +and there is no other way to produce light. I ought to have brought some +lamps or candles along in case of emergency," +<P> +The next instant the <I>Mermaid </I>became as black as Egypt is popularly +supposed to be, and something like an exclamation of terror came from the +professor. +<P> +For several minutes they all sat there in the blackness and gloom, waiting +for they knew not what. Then, suddenly, there sounded throughout the ship, +a creaking as of metal sliding along metal. Some big lever creaked, and, +a second later the whole place was flooded with light. +<P> +"What has happened?" cried the professor, starting to his feet in alarm. +<P> +"We are going to be burned up!" exclaimed old Andy. +<P> +"It's all right! It's all right!" yelled Washington from the engine room +where the boys had left him. "Don't git skeered! I done it! I opened the +port holes, by yanking on the lever. Golly, but we's arrived at the new land! +Look out, everybody!" +<h3>CHAPTER XVII</h3> +<h4>A STRANGE COUNTRY</h4> +<P> +THEY all ran to the port holes, which were openings in the side of the ship. +They were fitted with thick, double glass, and covered on the outside with +steel shutters. These shutters were worked by a single lever from the engine +room, so that one person could open or close them in a second or two. Washington, +by accident, it appeared later, had slid back the protecting pieces of steel, +and the rest followed. +<P> +As the adventurers looked from the glass ports they saw that the light which +had flooded the ship came from without. They were in the midst of a beautiful +glow, which seemed to be diffused about them like rays from a sun. +<P> +Only, in place of being a yellow or white light, such as the sun gives off +at varying times, the glow was of violet hue. And, as they watched, they +saw the light change color, becoming a beautiful red, then blue, and again +green. +<P> +"Well, this is certainly remarkable!" the professor said. "I wonder what +causes that." +<P> +"We've arrived! We're here, anyhow!" Washington cried, coming into the room. +"See the country!" +<P> +Then, for the first time, the travelers, taking their attention from the +curious light that was all around them, saw that they had indeed arrived. +They were on a vast plain, one, seemingly, boundless in extent, though off +to the left there was a range of lofty mountains, while to the right there +was the glimmer of what might be a big lake or inland sea. +<P> +"See, we are resting on the ground!" exclaimed Jack. He pointed out of the +window, and the others, looking close at hand, noted that the <I>Mermaid +</I>had settled down in the midst of what seemed to be a field of flowers. +Big red and yellow blossoms were all in front, and some grew so tall as to +almost be up to the edge of the port. +<P> +"I wonder if we can be seeing aright," the professor muttered. "Is this really +the interior of the earth; such a beautiful place as this?" +<P> +There could be little doubt of it. The ship had descended through the big +shaft, had been sucked down by the terrible air current, and had really landed +in a strange country. +<P> +Of its size, shape and general conditions the adventurers, as yet, could +but guess. They could see it was a pleasant place, and one where there might +be the means to sustain life. For, as the professor said afterward, he felt +that where there were flowers there would be fruits, and where both of these +provisions of nature were to be found there would likely be animal life, +and even, perhaps, human beings. +<P> +But, for the time, they were content to look from the port on the beautiful +scene that lay stretched out before them. The ship rested on an even keel +and had landed so softly that none of the plates were strained. +<P> +"We have plenty of air, at all events," said the professor as he took a deep +breath. "I was afraid of that, but it seems there was no need. The air appears +to be as good and fresh as that on the surface of the earth, only there is +a curious property to it. It makes one feel larger. I imagine it must be +thinner than the air of the earth, which is a rather strange thing, since +the higher one goes the more rarefied the air becomes, and the lower, the +more dense. Still we can not apply natural philosophy to conditions under +the earth. All the usual theories may be upset. However, we should be content +to take things as we find them, and be glad we were not dashed to pieces +when the ship was caught in the terrible current." +<P> +"What do you suppose caused the awful heat, and then made it go away again?" +asked Jack. +<P> +"I can only make a guess at it," Mr. Henderson answered. "There are many +strange things we will come across if we stay here long, I believe. As for +the fire I think we must have passed a sort of interior volcano." +<P> +"But what sort of a place do you think we have come to, Professor?" asked +Mark. +<P> +"It is hard to say," the scientist replied. "We are certainly somewhere within +the earth. Our gage tells us it is five hundred miles. That may or may not +be correct, but I believe we are several hundred miles under the crust, at +all events. As to what sort of a place it is, you can see for yourselves." +<P> +"But how is it we can breathe here, and things can grow?" asked Bill, who +was beginning to lose his fright at the thought of being practically buried +alive. +<P> +"I do not know what makes such things possible," Mr. Henderson replied, "but +that there is air here is a certainty. I can hardly believe it is drawn from +the surface of the earth, down the big hole, and I am inclined to think this +place of the under-world has an atmosphere of its own, and one which produces +different effects than does our own." +<P> +"They certainly have larger flowers than we have," said Mark. "See how big +they grow, and what strong colors they have." +<P> +He pointed to the port, against which some of the blooms were nodding in +the wind that had sprung up, for, in spite of the many differences, the +under-world was in some respects like the upper one. +<P> +"Probably the difference in the atmosphere accounts for that," the professor +said. "It enables things to grow larger. And, by the way, Mark, that reminds +me of something you said about seeing some horrible monster fleeing from +the ship. Did you dream that?" +<P> +"I did see something horrible, Professor," he answered. "I'm not positive +what it was, but I'll tell you as nearly as I can what it was like." +<P> +Thereupon Mark detailed what he had seen. +<P> +"But how could anything, least of all some big monster, be concealed in the +storeroom, and we not know anything about it?" asked Mr. Henderson. +<P> +"I thought you did know something of it," replied Mark. +<P> +"Who, me? My dear boy, you must be dreaming again. Why should I want to conceal +any being in the storeroom? Come, there is something back of this. Tell me +all you know of it. I can't imagine why you think I was hiding something +in the apartment." +<P> +"I thought so because you were always so anxious not to have me go near it," +answered the boy. "Don't you remember when you saw me going toward it, several +times, you warned me away?" +<P> +"So I did!" exclaimed Mr. Henderson, a light breaking over his face. "But, +Mark, it was not because I had hidden some human being or animal there. I +can't tell you what it is yet, save that I can say it is merely a machine +of mine that I have invented. For reasons of my own I don't want any one +to see it yet. Perhaps it may never be seen. I thought, not long ago, that +we might have to undertake a terrible risk in escaping from this place. I +directed you to go to the storeroom—but there, I can't say any more, my +friends. Sufficient that I had nothing in the animal line concealed there." +<P> +"But I am certain there was some beast or human being in there," insisted +Mark. "I heard curious noises in there. Besides, how do you account for the +food disappearing and the door being open at times?" +<P> +"It might have been rats," said Jack. +<P> +"I don't believe there are rats in the ship," put in the professor. "More +likely it was one of us who got up hungry and took the victuals." +<P> +"I'm sorry I can't agree with you," Mark added respectfully. "I am sure some +strange being was on board this ship, and I believe it has now escaped. Who +or what it was I can't say, but you'll find I'm right, some day." +<P> +"All right," spoke Mr. Henderson with a laugh. "I like to see any one brave +enough to stick up for his opinion, but, at the same time, I can't very well +imagine any person or thing being concealed in that storeroom ever since +we started. How could it get in?" +<P> +Mark did not; answer, but there came to him the recollection of that night, +previous to the sailing of the <I>Flying Mermaid, </I>when he had observed +some strange shadow that seemed to glide aboard the craft. +<P> +"Now let's forget all about such things," the professor went on. "We are +in a strange country, and there are many things to see and do. Let's explore +a little. Then we must see what we can do with the ship. We are dependent +on it, and it will not do to allow it to remain in a damaged state. We expect +to travel many miles in the interior of the earth if it is possible, and +we have only our craft to go in." +<P> +"I reckon we'd all better assimilate into our interior progression some molecules +and atoms of partly disentegrated matter in order to supply combustion for +the carbonaceous elements and assist in the manufacture of red corpuscles," +said Washington, appearing in the door, with a broad grin on his good-natured +face. +<P> +"Which, being interpreted," the professor said, "means, I suppose, that we +had better eat something to keep our digestive apparatus in good working +order?" +<P> +"Yo' done guessed it!" exclaimed the colored man, relapsing into his ordinary +speech. "I'se got a meal all ready." +<P> +They agreed that they might not have another opportunity soon to partake +of food, so they all gathered about the table, on which Washington had spread +a good meal. +<P> +"Come on, let's go outside and view this new and strange land at closer +quarters," the professor said, when they had satisfied their appetites. "We +can't see much from inside the ship." +<P> +Accordingly the heavy door in the side of the <I>Mermaid </I>was slid back, +and, for the first time the travelers stepped out on the surface of the land +in the interior of the earth. +<P> +At first it seemed no different than the ordinary land to which they were +accustomed. But they soon found it had many strange attributes. The queer +shifting and changing light, with the myriad of hues was one of them, but +to this the adventurers had, by this time, become accustomed, though it was, +none the less, a marvel to them. It was odd enough to see the landscape blood +red one instant, and a pale green the next, as it does when you look through +differently colored glasses. +<P> +Then, too, they noticed that the grass and flowers grew much more abundantly +than in the outer part of the world. They saw clover six feet high, and blades +of grass even taller. In some places the growth of grass was so big that +they were in danger of getting lost in it. +<P> +"If the grass is like this, what will the trees be?" asked Mark. +<P> +"There are some away over there," Jack replied. "We'll have to take a sail +over. They must be several hundred feet high." +<P> +"Well, at any rate, here's a little brook, and the water looks good to drink," +went on Mark. "I'm thirsty, so here goes." +<P> +He hurried to where a stream was flowing sluggishly between grassy banks. +The water was as clear as crystal, and Mark got down on his face and prepared +to sip some of the liquid up. +<P> +But, no sooner had his lips touched it, than he sprang up with a cry and +stood gazing at the water. +<P> +"What's the matter?" asked Jack. "Hot?" +<P> +"No, it isn't hot," Mark replied, "but it isn't water. It's white molasses!" +<P> +"White molasses?" repeated the professor, coming up at that moment. "What +are you talking about?" +<P> +He stooped down and dipped his finger into the stream. He drew it up quickly, +and there ran from it big drops that flowed as slowly as the extract of the +sugarcane does in cold weather. +<P> +"You're about right, Mark," he said. "It's water but it's almost as thick +as molasses." He touched his finger to his tongue. "It's good to drink, all +right," he went on, "only it will be a little slow going down." +<P> +Then he dipped up a palm full, and let it trickle down his throat. +<P> +"It is the strangest water I ever saw," he added. "It must be that the lack +of some peculiar property of air, which we have on the surface, has caused +this. I must make some notes on it," and he drew out pencil and paper. He +was about to jot down some facts when he was interrupted by a cry from +Washington. +<P> +"Come and see what's the matter with this stone!" he cried. +<h3>CHAPTER XVIII</h3> +<h4>CAUGHT BY A STRANGE PLANT</h4> +<P> +"WASHINGTON is in trouble!" exclaimed Mr. Henderson. Followed by the two +boys he ran to where the colored man stood in a stooping position over a +small pile of stones. +<P> +"What is it? Has something bit you?" asked the scientist, as he came up on +the run. +<P> +"No, but I can't git this stone up!" Washington said. "Look at what a little +stone it is, but I can't lift it. Something must have happened to me. Maybe +some one put th' evil eye on me! Maybe I'm bewitched!" +<P> +"Nonsense!" exclaimed the professor, "what did you want the stone for?" +<P> +"Nothin' in particular," replied Washington, still tugging away at the stone, +which was the size of his head. "I was just goin' t' throw it at a big bird, +but when I went to lift it this little stone 'peared t' be glued fast." +<P> +Washington moved aside to give Mr. Henderson a chance to try to pick up the +piece of rock. As the scientist grasped it a look of surprise came over his +features: +<P> +"This is most remarkable!" he exclaimed. "I can't budge it. I wonder if a +giant magnet is holding it down." +<P> +He tugged and tugged until he was red in the face. Then he beckoned to the +two boys, and they came to his aid. There was barely room for them all to +each get one hand on the rock, and then, only after a powerful tug did it +come up. Almost instantly it dropped back to the earth. +<P> +"This is remarkable!" the professor said. "I wonder if the other stones are +the same." +<P> +He tried several others, and one and all resisted his efforts. It was only +the small stones he was able to lift alone, and these, he said, were so weighty +that it would have been a task to throw them any distance. +<P> +"The water and the stones are strangely heavy in this land," he said. "I +wonder what other queer things we shall see." +<P> +"I saw a bird a little while ago, when I went to pick up that stone," observed +Washington. +<P> +"What kind was it?" asked the inventor. +<P> +"I don't know, only it was about as big as an eagle." +<P> +The travelers wandered about a quarter of a mile from the ship. They avoided +the tall grass and the lofty nodding flowers that seemed to grow in regular +groves, and kept to places where they could walk with comparative freedom. +<P> +"Have you formed any idea, Professor, as to the nature of this country?" +asked Mark, who liked to get at the bottom of things. +<P> +"I have, but it is only a theory," Mr. Henderson answered. "I believe we +are on a sort of small earth that is inside the larger one we live on. This +sphere floats in space, just as our earth does, and we have passed through +the void that lies between our globe and this interior one. I think this +new earth is about a quarter the size of ours and in some respects the same. +In others it is vastly different. +<P> +"But we will not think of those things now. We must see what our situation +is, whether we are in any danger, and must look to repairing our ship. There +will be time enough for other matters later." +<P> +The travelers were walking slowly along, noting the strange things on every +side. As they advanced the vegetation seemed to become more luxuriant, as +if nature had tried to out-do herself in providing beautiful flowers and +plants. The changing lights added to the beauty and weirdness of the scene. +<P> +The plain was a rolling one, and here and there were small hills and hollows. +As the travelers topped a rise Jack, who was in advance, called out: +<P> +"Oh what queer plants! They are giant Jacks-in-the-pulpit!" +<P> +The others hastened forward to see what the boy had discovered. Jack was +too eager to wait, and pressed on. The hill which sloped away from the top +of the little plateau on which he stood, was steeper than he had counted +on. As he leaned forward he lost his balance and toppled, head foremost, +down the declivity, rolling over. +<P> +"Look out!" cried Mark, who had almost reached his comrade's side. +<P> +The scene that confronted the travelers was a strange one. Before them in +a sort of hollow, were scores of big plants, shaped somewhat like a +Jack-in-the-pulpit, or a big lily, with a curved top or flap to it. +<P> +The plants were about eight feet tall, three feet across the top, and the +flap or covering was raised about two feet. They were nodding and swaying +in the wind on their short stems. +<P> +"He's headed right for one of them!" Mr. Henderson exclaimed. "I hope he'll +not fall into one of the openings." +<P> +"Is there any danger?" asked Mark. +<P> +"I'm afraid there is," the inventor added. "Those plants are a variety of +the well-known pitcher plant, or fly-trap, as they are sometimes called. +In tropical countries they grow to a large size, but nothing like these. +They are filled, in the cup, with a sort of sticky, sweet mixture, and this +attracts insects. When one enters the cup the top flap folds over, and the +hapless insect is caught there. The plant actually devours it, nature providing +a sort of vegetable digestive apparatus. These giant plants are the same, +and they seem large enough to take in a man, to say nothing of Jack!" +<P> +With anxious faces the adventurers turned to watch the fate of their comrade. +Jack was slipping, sliding and rolling down the hill. He could not seem to +stop, though he was making desperate efforts to do so. He was headed straight +for one of the largest of the terrible plants. +<P> +In vain, as he saw what was in front of him, did he try to change the course +of his involuntary voyage. Over and over he rolled, until, at length, he +struck a little grassy hummock, bounced into the air, and right into the +opening of a monster pitcher plant. +<P> +"It has him!" cried Mark. "We must save him! Come on everyone!" +<P> +He raced down the hill, while the others came closely after him. They reached +the plant into which Jack had bounced. The flap, or top piece, had closed +down, tightly over the unfortunate boy. +<P> +"Quick! We must save him or he will be smothered to death or drowned in the +liquid the cup contains!" Mr. Henderson exclaimed. "Attack the plant with +anything you can find!" +<P> +"Let's cut through the side of the flower-cup!" suggested Mark. "That seems +softer than the stem." +<P> +His idea was quickly put into operation. Andy's long hunting knife came in +very handy. While the sides of the long natural cup were tough, the knife +made an impression on them, and, soon, a small door or opening had been cut +in the side of the pitcher plant, large enough to enable a human body to +pass through. +<P> +When the last fibre had been severed by Andy, who was chosen to wield the +knife because of his long practice as a hunter, there was a sudden commotion +within the plant. Then a dark object, dripping water, made a spring and landed +almost at the feet of the professor. +<P> +It was Jack, and a sorry sight he presented. He was covered from head to +foot with some sticky substance, which dripped from all over him. +<P> +With hasty movements he cleared the stuff from his eyes and mouth, and +spluttered: +<P> +"It's a good thing you cut me out when you did. I couldn't have held on much +longer!" +<h3>CHAPTER XIX</h3> +<h4>THE BIG PEACH</h4> +<P> +JACK soon recovered from his remarkable experience. The terrible plant that +had nearly eaten him alive was a mass of cut-up vegetable matter which attracted +a swarm of insects. Most of them were ants, but such large ones the boys +had never seen before, and the professor said they exceeded in size anything +he had read about. Some of them were as large as big rats. They bit off large +pieces of the fallen plant and carried them to holes in the ground which +were big enough for Washington to slip his foot into, and he wore a No. 11 +shoe. +<P> +But the adventurers felt there were more important things for them to look +at than ants, so they started away again, the professor telling them all +to be careful and avoid accidents. +<P> +It was while they were strolling through a little glade, which they came +upon unexpectedly, that Washington, who was in the lead called out: +<P> +"Gracious goodness! It must be Thanksgivin'!" +<P> +"Why so?" asked Jack. +<P> +"'Cause here's th' remarkablest extraordinary and expansionist of a pumpkin +that ever I laid eyes on!" the colored man cried. +<P> +They all hurried to where Washington had come to a halt. There, on the ground +in front of him, was a big round object, about the size of a hogshead. It +was yellow in color, and was not unlike the golden vegetable from which mothers +make such delicious pies. +<P> +"I allers was fond of pumpkins," said Washington, placing his hand on the +thing, which was almost as tall as he was, "but I never thought I'd come +across such a one as this." +<P> +The professor and the two boys went closer to the monstrosity. Mr. Henderson +passed his hand over it and then, bending closer, smelled of it. +<P> +"That's not a pumpkin!" he exclaimed. +<P> +"What is it then?" asked Washington. +<P> +"It's a giant peach," the inventor remarked. "Can't you see the fuzz, and +smell it? Of course it's a peach." +<P> +"Well I'll be horn-swoggled!" cried Washington, leaning against the big fruit, +which easily, supported him. +<P> +"Hurrah!" cried Jack, drawing his knife from his pocket and opening the largest +blade. "I always did like peaches. Now I can have all I want," and he drove +the steel into the object, cutting off a big slice which he began to eat. +<P> +"It may be poisonous!" exclaimed Mark. +<P> +"Too late now," responded Jack, the juice running down from his mouth. "Taste's +good, anyhow." +<P> +They all watched Jack while he devoured his slice of fruit. Washington acted +as if he expected his friend to topple over unconscious, but Jack showed +no bad symptoms. +<P> +"You'd better all have some," the boy said. "It's the best I ever tasted." +<P> +Encouraged by Jack's example, Mark thought he, too, would have some of the +fruit. He opened his knife and was about to take off some of the peach when +suddenly the thing began to roll forward, almost upon him. +<P> +"Hi! Stop your shoving!" he exclaimed. "Do you want to have the thing roll +over me, Jack?" +<P> +"I'm not shoving!" replied Jack. +<P> +"Some one is!" Mark went on. He dodged around the far side of the immense +fruit and what he saw made him cry out in astonishment. +<P> +Two grasshoppers, each one standing about three feet high, were standing +on their hind legs, and with their fore feet were pushing the peach along +the ground. They had been attracted to the fruit by some juice which escaped +from a bruise on that side, which was the ripest, and, being fond of sweets +had, evidently decided to take their find to some safe place where they could +eat it at their leisure. Or perhaps they wanted to provide for their families +if grasshoppers have them. +<P> +"Did you ever see such monsters?" asked Jack. "They're as big as dogs!" +<P> +At the sound of his voice the two grasshoppers, becoming alarmed, ceased +their endeavors to roll the peach along, and, assuming a crouching attitude +seemed to be waiting. +<P> +"They certainly are remarkable specimens," Mr. Henderson said. "If the other +animals are in proportion, and if there are persons in this new world, we +are likely to have a hard time of it." +<P> +This time the immense insects concluded the strangers were not to their liking. +With a snapping of their big muscular legs and a whirr of their wings that +was like the starting of an automobile, the grasshoppers rose into the air +and sailed away over the heads of the adventurers. Their flight was more +than an eighth of a mile in extent, and they came down in a patch of the +very tall grass. +<P> +"Let's go after them!" exclaimed old Andy. "I was so excited I forgot to +take a shot at them. Come on!" +<P> +"I think we'd better not," counseled the professor. "In the first place we +don't need them. They would be no good for food. Then we don't know but what +they might attack us, and it would be no joke to be bitten by a grasshopper +of that size. Let them alone. We may find other game which will need your +attention, Andy. Better save your ammunition." +<P> +Somewhat against his will, Andy had to submit to the professor's ruling. +The old hunter consoled himself with the reflection that if insects grew +to that size he would have some excellent sport hunting even the birds of +the inner world. +<P> +"I wonder what sort of a tree that peach grew on," Jack remarked, as he cut +off another slice, when the excitement caused by the discovery of the +grasshoppers had subsided. "It must be taller than a church steeple. I wonder +how the fruit got here, for there are no trees around." +<P> +"I fancy those insects rolled it along for a good distance," Mr. Henderson +put in. "You can see the marks on the ground, where they pushed it. They +are wonderful creatures." +<P> +"Are we going any farther?" asked Mark. "Perhaps we can find the peach tree, +and, likely there are other fruit trees near it." +<P> +At the professor's suggestion they strolled along for some distance. They +were now about three miles from the airship, and found that what they had +supposed was a rather level plain, was becoming a succession of hills and +hollows. It was while descending into a rather deep valley that Jack pointed +ahead and exclaimed: +<P> +"I guess there's our peach orchard, but I never saw one like it before." +<P> +Nor had any of the others. Instead of trees the peaches were attached to +vines growing along the ground. They covered a large part of the valley, +and the peaches, some bigger than the one they first discovered, some small +and green, rose up amid the vines, just as pumpkins do in a corn field. +<P> +"Stranger and stranger," the professor murmured. "Peaches grow on vines. +I suppose potatoes will grow on trees. Everything seems to be reversed here." +<P> +They made their way down toward the peach "orchard" as Jack called it, though +"patch" would have been a better name. Besides peaches they found plums, +apples, and pears growing in the same way, and all of a size proportionate +to the first-named fruit. +<P> +"Well, one thing is evident," Mr. Henderson remarked, "we shall not starve +here. There is plenty to eat, even if we have to turn vegetarians." +<P> +"I wonder what time it is getting to be," Jack remarked. "My watch says twelve +o'clock but whether it's noon or midnight I can't tell, with this colored +light coming and going. I wonder if it ever sets as the sun does." +<P> +"That is something we'll have to get used to," the professor said. "But I +think we had better go back to the ship now. We have many things to do to +get it in order again. Besides, I am a little afraid to leave it unguarded +so long. No telling but what some strange beast—or persons, for that +matter—might injure it." +<P> +"I'm going to take back some slices of peaches with me, anyhow," Mark said, +and he and Jack cut off enough to make several meals, while Bill, Tom and +Washington took along all they could carry. +<P> +As they walked back toward the ship the strange lights seemed to be dying +out. At first they hardly noticed this, but as they continued on it became +quite gloomy, and an odd sort of gloom it was too, first green, then yellow, +then red and then blue. +<P> +"I believe whatever serves as a sun down here is setting," the professor +observed. "We must hurry. I don't want to be caught out here after dark." +<P> +They hurried on, the lights dying out more and more, until, as they came +in sight of their ship, it was so black they could hardly see. +<P> +Mark who was in the rear turned around, glancing behind him. As he did so +he caught sight of a gigantic shadow moving along on top of the nearest hill. +The shadow was not unlike that of a man in shape, but of such gigantic stature +that Mark knew it could be like no human being he had ever seen. At the same +time it bore a curious resemblance to the weird shadow he had seen slip into +the <I>Mermaid </I>that night before they sailed. +<P> +"I wonder if it can be the same—the same thing—grown larger, just as the +peach grows larger than those in our world," Mark thought, while a shiver +of fear seemed to go over him. "I wonder if that—that thing could have been +on the ship——" +<P> +Then the last rays of light died away and there was total darkness. +<h3>CHAPTER XX</h3> +<h4>OVERHAULING THE SHIP</h4> +<P> +"KEEP together!" shouted the professor. "It will not do to become lost now. +We are close to the ship, and will soon be there. Come after me." +<P> +It was more by following the sound of the scientist's voice, than by any +sight which the others could get of him, that they managed to trail along +behind. They reached the ship in safety, however, and entered. There was +no sound as of beasts or insects within, and, though Mark felt a little +apprehensive on account of what he had seen, he and the others as well, were +glad to be again in something that seemed like home. +<P> +"I wish we had some candles, or some sort of a light to see by," the professor +remarked. "We can do nothing in the dark, and there is no telling how long +this night is going to last once it has set in. If I could have a little +illumination, I might be able to fix the dynamo, and then we could turn on +the incandescents. That portable light we had is broken. +<P> +"By cracky!" exclaimed Andy. "I believe I have the very thing!" +<P> +"You don't mean to say you have a torch or a candle with you, do you?" asked +Mr. Henderson. +<P> +"No, but I have my patent pipe lighting apparatus," the hunter said. "I always +carry it. It gives a little light, but not much, though it may be enough +to work by." +<P> +Not until after several hours work, handicapped as they were by lack of light, +were the repairs to the ship completed. +<P> +"Now we'll start the engine and see how we will come out," the inventor +exclaimed, as he wiped his hands on some waste. +<P> +It did not take long to generate enough power to turn the dynamo. Soon the +familiar hum and whirr was heard, and, a few seconds later the filaments +in the lamps began to glow a dull red, which gradually brightened until they +were shining in all their usual brilliancy. +<P> +"Hurrah!" cried the boys. "Now we can see!" +<P> +They all felt in better spirits with the restoration of the lights, and, +washing off the grease and dirt of their labors in the engine room, they +prepared to sit down to the meal which Washington prepared. +<P> +As soon as the dynamo was working well, care had to be taken not to speed +it too much on account of a mended belt. The professor turned off part of +the lights and switched some of the current into the storage batteries, to +provide for emergencies. For there was no telling how long the night might +last. +<P> +Jack was the first one to finish the meal—they did not know whether to call +it dinner, supper or breakfast. He went into the conning tower, and, as soon +as he reached it he called out: +<P> +"Come on up here, professor! There's something strange going on!" +<P> +Mr. Henderson, followed by Mark, hurried to the tower. As he reached it and +looked out of the forward window, a beautiful white glow illuminated the +whole scene, and then, from below the horizon, there arose seven luminous +disks. One was in the centre, while about it circled the other six, like +some immense pin-wheel. +<P> +"It's the moon!" cried Mark. +<P> +"It's seven moons!" Jack exclaimed. "Why it's almost as light as day!" +<P> +And so it was, for the seven moons, if that is what they were, gave an +illumination not unlike the sun in brilliancy though it was like the beams +from the pale moon of the earth. +<P> +"I guess we need not have worried about the darkness," the professor remarked. +"Still it is a good thing I fixed the dynamo." +<P> +For some time he and the other adventurers watched the odd sight of the moons, +as they rose higher and higher overhead. The scene was a beautiful, if weird +one, for the whole plain was bathed in the soft light. +<P> +"I guess we can turn off the incandescents, and use all the power for the +storage batteries," Mr. Henderson went on, as he descended into the ship, +and opened the port shutters which had been closed when they started off +on their exploring tour. The interior of the <I>Mermaid </I>was almost as +light as when the odd colored beams had been playing over the new earth to +which they had come. +<P> +"I think we had better continue with our work of making repairs," Mr. Henderson +said. "We can't count on these moons remaining here any length of time, and +I want to take advantage of them. So though some of us perhaps need sleep, +we will forego it and fix up the <I>Mermaid. </I>I want to take a trip and +see what other wonders await us." +<P> +They all agreed that they would rather work than sleep, and soon the entire +force was busy in the engine room. There was much to be done, and the most +important things were attended to first. The motive power was overhauled +and found to be in need of several new parts. These were put in and then +the gas generator, and the negative gravity machine, were put in shape. +<P> +It would have taken something very substantial to have awakened any one on +board the <I>Mermaid </I>that night. They all slept soundly and awoke to +find the strange colored lights shining in through the glass covered port +holes. +<P> +"Well, the sun, or what corresponds to it, is up," observed Jack, "and I +guess we had better do as the little boy in the school reader did, and get +up, too, Mark." +<P> +Soon all the travelers were aroused, and the sound of Washington bustling +about in the kitchen, whence came the smell of coffee, bacon and eggs, told +the hungry ones that breakfast was under way. +<P> +After the meal work was again started on repairing the ship, and by noon +the professor remarked: +<P> +"I think we shall try a little flight after dinner. That is, if one thing +doesn't prevent us." +<P> +"What is that?" asked Jack. +<P> +"We may be held down, as were those stones," was the grave answer. +<h3>CHAPTER XXI</h3> +<h4>THE FISH THAT WALKED</h4> +<P> +IT was with no little apprehension that the professor prepared to take his +first flight aboard the ship in the realms of the new world. He knew little +or nothing of the conditions he might meet with, the density of the atmosphere, +or how the <I>Mermaid </I>would behave under another environment than that +to which she was accustomed. +<P> +Yet he felt it was necessary to make a start. They would have to attempt +a flight sooner or later, and Mr. Henderson was not the one to delay matters. +So, the last adjustment having been made to the repaired machinery, they +all took their places in the ship. +<P> +The boys and the professor went to the conning tower to direct matters, while +Washington and the others were in the engine room to see that the machinery +worked properly. Mark gave a last look outside as he closed the big steel +cover over the hole through which admission was had to the craft. He thought +he might catch a glimpse of the queer shadow, but nothing was in sight. It +was like a beautiful summer's day, save for the strange lights, shifting +and changing. But the travelers had become somewhat used to them by this +time. +<P> +The professor turned the valve that allowed the gas to enter the holder. +There was a hissing sound and a sort of trembling throughout the entire ship. +The dynamos were whizzing away and the negative gravity machine was all ready +to start. +<P> +For several minutes the travelers waited until the big lifting tank was filled +with the strong vapor. They watched the gages which indicated the pressure +to be several hundred pounds. +<P> +"I think we can chance it now," remarked Mr. Henderson, as he threw over +several levers. "We'll try, at any rate." +<P> +With a tremor the <I>Mermaid </I>left the surface of the inner earth and +went sailing upward toward the—well it wasn't exactly the sky, but it was +what corresponded to it in the new world, though there were no clouds and +no blue depths such as the boys were used to. At all events the <I>Mermaid +</I>was flying again, and, as the adventurers felt themselves being lifted +up they gave a spontaneous cheer at the success which had crowned their efforts. +<P> +The ship went up several hundred feet, and then, the professor, having brought +her to a stop, sent her ahead at a slow pace. He wanted to be sure all the +apparatus was in good working order before he tried any speed. +<P> +The <I>Mermaid </I>responded readily. Straight as an arrow through the air +she flew. +<P> +"Well, this is almost as good as being on the regular earth!" exclaimed Jack. +<P> +"It's better," put in Mark. "We haven't seen half the wonders yet. Let's +open the floor shutter, and see how it looks down below." +<P> +He and Jack went to the room where there was an opening in the floor of the +ship, covered by heavy glass. They slid back the steel shutter and there, +down below them, was the strange new, world they had come to, stretched out +like some big map. +<P> +They could see mountains, forests, plains, and rivers, the water sparkling +in the colored light. Over green fields they flew, then across some stretches +where only sand and rocks were to be seen. Faster and faster the ship went, +as the professor found the machinery was once more in perfect order. Jack +was idly watching the play of tinted lights over the surface of the ground. +<P> +"I wonder what makes it," he said. +<P> +"I have tried to account for it in several ways," said the professor, who +had called Washington to the conning tower and come to join the boys. "I +have had first one theory and then another, but the one I am almost sure +is correct is that hidden volcanic fires cause the illumination. +<P> +"I think they flare up and die away, and have become so regular that they +produce the same effect as night and day with us. Probably the fires go out +for lack of fuel, and when it is supplied they start up again. Perhaps it +is a sort of gas that they burn." +<P> +"Well, it's queer enough, whatever it is," Jack remarked. "What strikes me +as funny, though, is that we haven't seen a single person since we came here. +Surely this place must be inhabited." +<P> +Mark thought of the strange shadow he had seen, but said nothing. +<P> +"I believe it is," the professor answered. "We will probably come upon the +inhabitants soon. I only hope they are a people who will do us no harm." +<P> +"If they tried any of their tricks we could mount up in our ship and escape +them," said Andy. +<P> +"Provided they gave us the chance," Mr. Henderson put in. "Well, we'll not +worry about that now." +<P> +For several hours the ship traveled on, until it had come to a different +sort of country. It was wilder and not so level, and there were a number +of streams and small lakes to be seen. +<P> +"Are you going to sail all night?" asked Jack. +<P> +"No," replied the professor. "I think we'll descend very soon now, and camp +out for a while. That lake just ahead seems to offer a good place," and he +pointed to a large sheet of water that sparkled in the distance, for by this +time they had all gone back to the conning tower. +<P> +The lake was in the midst of a wood that extended for some distance on all +sides, and was down in a sort of valley. The ship headed toward it, and in +a short time a landing was made close to shore. +<P> +"Maybe we can have some fresh fish for supper," exclaimed Jack as he ran +from the ship as soon as the sliding door in the side was opened. "Looks +as if that lake had some in it. It is not thick water like in that stream +we stopped at," he added. +<P> +"I believe you're right," old Andy put in, as he turned back to look for +some lines and hooks among his traps. He soon found what he wanted, and gave +them to the boys, taking his trusty gun along for himself. +<P> +While the professor, Washington, Tom and Bill remained behind to make some +adjustments to the machinery, and to get things in shape for the night, which, +they calculated would soon be upon them, Jack, Mark and Andy went down to +the shore of the lake. The boys cut some poles from the trees, and baiting +the hooks with some fat worms found under the bark, threw in. +<P> +"Let's see who'll get the first bite," spoke Jack. "I'm pretty generally +lucky at fishing." +<P> +"Well, while you're waiting to decide that there contest, I think I'll take +a stroll along shore and see if I can see anything to shoot," Andy remarked. +<P> +For several minutes the boys sat in silence on the bank of the lake, watching +the play of the vari-colored lights on the water. Suddenly Jack felt a quiver +on his line, and his pole began to shake. +<P> +"I've got something!" he cried. Then his pole bent almost double and he began +to pull for all he was worth. "It's a whopper!" he cried. "Come and help +me, Mark!" +<P> +Mark ran to his friend's aid. Whatever was on the other end of the line was +strong enough to tax the muscles of both boys. They could hear the pole beginning +to break. But for the excellent quality of Andy's line that would have parted +some time before. +<P> +All at once there came a sudden slacking of the pull from whatever was in +the water. And so quickly did it cease that both boys went over backward +in a heap. +<P> +"He's got away!" cried Jack, getting up and brushing some of the dirt from +his clothes. +<P> +"There's something that didn't get away!" cried Mark, who had risen to his +knees, and was pointing at the lake. Jack looked and what he saw made him +almost believe he was dreaming. +<P> +For, emerging from the water, dragging the pole and line the boys had dropped +along with it, was a most curious creature. It was a big fish, but a fish +with four short legs on which it was walking, or rather waddling along as +much as a duck, with a double supply of feet, might do. +<P> +"Say, do I see that or is there something the matter with my eyes?" sung +out Jack, making ready to run away. +<P> +"It's there all right!" exclaimed Mark. "Hi! Andy! Here's something to shoot!" +he yelled, for indeed the creature was big enough to warrant attack with +a gun. It was about five feet long and two feet through. +<P> +On and on it came, straight at the boys, as if to have revenge for the pain +the fish hook must have caused it, for the barb could be seen dangling from +its lip. On and on it came, waddling forward, the water dripping from it +at every step. It had the body and general shape of a fish, save that the +tail was rather large in proportion. As it came nearer the boys noted that +the feet were webbed, like those of a water fowl. +<P> +"Come on!" cried Jack. "It may attack us!" +<P> +At that moment the creature opened its mouth, showing a triple row of formidable +teeth, and gave utterance to a sort of groan and grunt combined. +<P> +This was enough to send Jack and Mark off on a run up the bank, and did they +stop until they heard Andy's voice hailing them. +<P> +"What's the matter, boys?" +<P> +"Come here! Quick!" answered Jack. +<P> +The fish-animal had halted and seemed to be taking an observation. To do +this, as it could not turn its neck, it had to shift its whole body. Old +Andy came up on the run, his gun held in readiness. +<P> +"Where is it?" he asked, and the boys pointed silently. +<P> +The hunter could not repress a start of astonishment as he saw the strange +creature. But he did not hesitate a second. There was a crack of the rifle, +and the thing, whatever it was, toppled over, dead. +<P> +Andy hurried up to it, to get a closer view. +<P> +"Well, this is the limit!" he exclaimed. "First we have grasshoppers that +can roll peaches as big as hogsheads, and now we come across fish that walk. +I wonder what we will see next." +<P> +"I don't want to go fishing in this lake any more," spoke Jack, as he looked +at the repulsive creature. "I never want to eat fish any more." +<P> +"Same here," agreed Mark, and old Andy was of the opinion that the thing +killed would not make a wholesome dish for the table. +<P> +"There don't seem to be any game in this section," he remarked. "Not a sign +could I see, nor have I since we have been here, unless you count those +grasshoppers. But the fruit is good, I'll say that." +<P> +"Come on, we'd better be getting back," Mark said, as he noticed it was getting +dark. "I'm hungry." +<h3>CHAPTER XXII</h3> +<h4>THE SNAKE-TREE</h4> +<P> +THEY managed to make a good meal of the food supplies they had brought along, +and as a dessert Washington made some peach short-cake from the slices of +the giant fruit they had found, the day before. Just as they finished supper +it got very dark, but, in about an hour, the moon-beams, as the travelers +called them, came up, and illuminated the lake with a weird light. +<P> +As the machinery of the <I>Mermaid </I>was now in working order there was +no further alarm because of the darkness. The ship rested on a level keel +about a hundred yards back from the lake, and, seeing that all was snug, +and the fastenings secure, the travelers went to bed. +<P> +Though they had to forego fish for breakfast the travelers made a good meal. +After seeing that the ship was in readiness for a quick start, the professor +suggested they take a walk around and see what sort of country they might +be in now. +<P> +They tramped on for several miles, meeting with no adventures, and seeing +nothing out of the ordinary. It was a pleasant day, just warm enough to be +comfortable, and a little wind was blowing through the trees. +<P> +"It would be almost like home if it wasn't for the strange lights, and the +memory of the queer things here," said Jack. "I feel fine. Let's see if you +can hit that dead tree over there, Mark." +<P> +Jack stooped to grab up a stone, but no sooner had his fingers touched it +than he called out: +<P> +"There! I forgot all about the stones here being heavier than lead. Guess +we can't throw any of 'em. But come on. I'll race you to the dead tree!" +<P> +Mark was willing, so the two boys set off at a fast pace. +<P> +"Look out where you're going!" the professor called after them. "No telling +what may be in those woods," for the boys were approaching a little glade, +on the edge of which the dead tree stood. +<P> +Jack reached the goal first, and stood leaning against the trunk, waiting +for Mark. +<P> +"You'd better practice sprinting!" exclaimed the victor. +<P> +Mark was about to excuse himself for his poor showing, on the plea of having +eaten too much breakfast, when to his horror he saw what seemed to be a long +thin snake spring out from the branches of a nearby tree and twine itself +about Jack. +<P> +"Help me! Save me!" cried the unfortunate boy, as he was lifted high into +the air and pulled within the shadow of the wood. +<P> +For an instant Mark was too horror-stricken to move. Then with a shout that +alarmed the others, who were coming along more slowly, he made a dash for +the place he had last seen Jack. +<P> +Had old Andy not been on the watch, with those keen eyes of his, there might +have been a double tragedy. He had seen from afar the sudden snatching up +of Jack, and noted Mark's rush to save his chum. +<P> +"Stand still! Don't go in there for your life!" yelled the hunter, at the +same time running forward with gun ready. +<P> +His example was followed by the professor, Washington and the other two men. +<P> +"A snake has Jack!" called Mark, when Andy was at his side. +<P> +"No! It's not a snake!" replied the hunter. "It's worse. It's the snake-tree!" +<P> +"What's that?" asked Mr. Henderson, hurrying up. +<P> +"The snake-tree has Jack," the hunter went on. "It is a plant, half animal, +half-vegetable. It has long branches, not unlike a snake in shape. They can +move about and grab things." +<P> +"One of them got a grip on Jack as he leaned against the dead tree trunk. +I just caught a glimpse of it, and called to prevent Mark from running into +danger." +<P> +"Can't we save him?" asked Mr. Henderson. +<P> +"I'm going to try!" replied Andy. "Quick! Gather up some pieces of dry wood. +I have some paper, and my pipe lighter. We must fight the snake-tree with +fire!" +<h3>CHAPTER XXIII</h3> +<h4>THE DESERTED VILLAGE</h4> +<P> +JACK'S Cries were growing fainter and fainter. Peering in through the branches +of the dead tree the professor could see the whip-like limbs winding closer +and closer about the boy. +<P> +"I am afraid we will be too late!" he said. +<P> +Andy had twisted some paper into a rude torch. He set fire to it with his +pocket lighter, and, when Bill and Mark brought him some little pieces of +dead wood the old hunter added them to his bundle, which was now blazing +brightly. +<P> +"How are you going to do it?" asked the professor. +<P> +"I'll show you," replied Andy. He bound the sticks and paper together with +wisps of grass and then, when it was so hot he could hardly hold it longer, +he ran as close as he dared to the snake-tree and tossed the torch at the +foot of it. +<P> +The blazing bundle fell among some damp leaves and grass, as Andy had intended +it should, and soon a dense smoke arose, pouring straight up through the +branches of the animal-tree, the limbs of which were gathered in a knot about +the half-unconscious form of the boy. +<P> +For a few minutes they all waited anxiously. Would Andy's trick succeed? +Had the terrible tree not already squeezed the life from Jack? +<P> +But, while they watched, there seemed to come a change over the tree. The +snake-like arms waved less and less. They seemed to straighten out, as though +deprived of power by the smoke which was now so dense as to hide Jack from +sight. Then the arms suddenly relaxed and something rolled from them and +fell to the ground. With a quick movement Andy darted in, crawling on his +hands and knees beneath the limbs, and brought Jack out. The boy was white +and his eyes were closed. +<P> +"Get some water!" cried the old hunter. +<P> +Mark ran toward a stream a little distance away. He brought some of the curiously +thick liquid in his hat, and while Andy held the boy the professor sprinkled +some of the drops on his face, and forced some between his lips. In a little +while Jack's eyes slowly opened. +<P> +"Don't let it eat me!" he begged. +<P> +"You're all right now," said Andy heartily. "Not a bit harmed, Jack. But," +he added in a low tone, "it was a close call." +<P> +A few whiffs from a bottle of ammonia the professor carried soon brought +Jack's color back. +<P> +"Do you feel better now?" asked Mark. +<P> +"I guess so. Yes, I'm all right," replied Jack, struggling to his feet. "What +happened? Feels as if I had been tied up with a lot of rope." +<P> +"That's about what you were," Andy replied, "only it was the worst kind of +rope I ever saw. Those snake-trees are terrible things. I've read of 'em, +but I never saw one before. The book that told of them says they squeeze +their victims to death just as a snake does. The only way to do is to make +some smoke and fire at the bottom. This sort of kills the branches or makes +them stupid and they let go. The trees are half animal, and awful things. +I hope we don't meet with any more." +<P> +"Same here," added Jack fervently, as he grasped Andy's hand, and thanked +him for saving his life. +<P> +"Do you think you can go on, or shall we return to the ship'?" the professor +asked. +<P> +"Oh I can trail along, if you move a little slowly," Jack replied. "I'm a +bit stiff, that's all." +<P> +So they resumed their journey. They had gone, perhaps, three miles when +Washington, who was in the lead, suddenly stopped and called: +<P> +"Sounds like thunder." +<P> +The others listened. Sure enough there was a dull rumble and roar audible. +It seemed off to the left, but they could see no clouds in the sky, nor any +signs of a storm. +<P> +"Let's take a walk over that way and see what it is," Mr. Henderson suggested. +<P> +As they walked on the noise became louder, until in about half an hour it +was like the sound from a blast furnace. +<P> +"What do you suppose it can be?" asked Mark. +<P> +"Perhaps some new freak of nature," the professor replied. "We seem to have +a good many of them here." +<P> +They were all on their guard now, for there was no telling into what danger +they might run. As they went up a little hill the noise became much louder. +The professor and Andy, who had taken the lead, kept a sharp lookout ahead, +that they might not unexpectedly fall into some hidden stream or lake. As +they topped the hill they saw before them a deep valley, and in the midst +of it was that which was causing the roaring sound. +<P> +From the centre of an immense mound of rock and earth there spouted up a +great column of water, three hundred feet or more, as straight as a flag +staff. It was about ten feet in diameter, and at the top it broke into a +rosette of sparkling liquid, which as the vari-colored lights played on it, +resembled some wonderful flower. +<P> +"It's a great geyser!" the professor exclaimed. "We have come to a place +like Yellowstone Park. We must be very careful. The crust may be very thin +here, and let us down into some boiling spring." +<P> +The others gathered around the professor, and, from a safe distance watched +the ever rising and falling shaft of water. +<P> +It was not regular in motion. Sometimes it would shoot up to a great distance, +nearly a thousand feet, the professor estimated. Again it would sink down, +as the power sending it out lessened, until it was only a few hundred feet +above the rounded top of the mound from which it spurted. But it never fell +below this. All the while there was the constant roaring sound, as though +the forces of nature below the surface were calling to be let out. +<P> +"I hope there are not many of those about," Mr. Henderson remarked after +a pause. "If the ship should hit one during the night it would be all up +with us. We must keep a careful look-out." +<P> +The spouting column had a fascination which held them to the spot for some +time. From the hill they had a good view of the surrounding country, but +did not see any more geysers. +<P> +"Do you think it is hot water?" asked Mark. +<P> +"There is no vapor," the professor answered, "but most of the geysers are +produced by the action of steam in the interior of the earth. However we'll +not take any chances by investigating. I fear it would not be safe to go +into that valley." +<P> +"Look there!" cried Andy. "I guess we're better off here!" He pointed a little +to the right of where the water spouted. The others looked, and saw, coming +from a hole in the ground, some shaggy black object. +<P> +"What is it?" asked Jack. +<P> +"It looks like a bear," replied the hunter, "but I never saw one like it +before." +<P> +Nor had any of the others, for the creature was a terrible one. It had the +body of a bear, but the feet and legs were those of an alligator, while the +tail trailed out behind like a snake, and the head had a long snout, not +unlike the trunk of an elephant. The creature was about ten feet long and +five feet in height. +<P> +"Let me try a shot at it!" exclaimed Andy. "That is something worth shooting," +and he cocked his rifle. +<P> +"Don't!" exclaimed the professor shortly. "You might only wound it, and it +would pursue us. We are not ready to fight such creatures as that, and you +are the only one armed." +<P> +"I never missed anything I aimed at yet," said Andy, a little hurt that any +one should doubt his ability to kill at the first shot. +<P> +"Perhaps not, but how do you know but what this creature has a bullet proof +armor under its hide. This is a strange world, Andy. It is better to take +no chances." +<P> +"I hate to see him get away," the hunter said. +<P> +But, as it happened, the beast was not to get away. As they watched they +saw the horrible animal approach the mound from which the water spurted. +Up the sides it climbed. +<P> +"I guess he's going to get a drink," said Mark. +<P> +That was evidently the beast's intention. It went close to the spouting column +of water, and thrust its head out so that its tongue could lap from the side. +It seemed to have been in the habit of doing this. +<P> +For once, and for the last time, however, it made a mistake. The water seemed +to veer to one side. In its eagerness to get a drink the animal took another +step forward. At that moment the direction of the column changed again, and +it tilted over toward the beast. +<P> +Suddenly, as the travelers watched, the full force of the big column caught +the beast just under the fore shoulders. Up into the air the creature shot, +propelled by thousands of pounds pressure. Right up to the top of the column +it went, and this time the water rose a thousand feet into the air. +<P> +Up and up went the animal, struggling to get away from the remorseless grip. +Then, when the water had reached its height, it shot the beast off to one +side. Then the brute began to fall, twisting, turning, wiggling and struggling. +Down it came with a thud that could be heard above the noise of the geyser. +<P> +"I reckon that finishes him," observed Andy. And it had, for there was not +a sign of life from the creature. +<P> +"I guess we have seen enough for one morning," the professor said, "Let's +go back to the airship. It must be nearly dinner time." +<P> +They started away. Mark gave a last look at the queer column of water and +the dead body of the strange animal. As he passed down the hill he thought +he saw the creature move, and stayed to see if this was so. But a second +glance convinced him he was mistaken. +<P> +The others had gone on and were some distance ahead. Mark hurried on to join +them. As he got a last glance at the top of the column, over the brow of +the hill, he happened to look off to the left. There was another hill, about +the size of the one they had been on. +<P> +And, as Mark looked he saw something move. At first he thought it was another +beast. But, to his terror he saw that the creature had only two legs, and +that it stood upright like a man, but such a man as Mark had never seen before, +for he was nearly twelve feet tall. +<P> +He was about to cry out and warn the others, when the thing, whatever it +was, sunk down, apparently behind some tall bushes, and disappeared as if +the earth had opened and swallowed it. +<P> +"I wonder if I had better tell them," thought Mark. "I can't show them anything. +I wonder if I really saw it, or if it was only a shadow. I guess I'll say +nothing. But it is very strange." +<P> +Then he hurried on to join the others. +<P> +"What makes you so pale?" asked Jack of his chum. +<P> +"Nothing," said Mark, somewhat confused. "I guess I'm a little tired, that's +all." +<P> +They reached the ship in safety, and, having dinner started the machinery +and took the <I>Mermaid </I>up into the air. +<P> +"We'll travel on and see if we can't find some human beings," the professor +said. +<P> +All that afternoon they sailed, the country below them unfolding like a panorama. +They passed over big lakes, sailing on the surface of some, and over rivers, +and vast stretches of forest and dreary plains. But they never saw a sign +of human inhabitants. +<P> +It was getting on to five o'clock, the hour when the brilliant lights usually +disappeared, when Mark, who was steering in the conning tower, gave a cry. +<P> +"What is it?" asked the professor, looking up from a rude map he was making +of the land they had just traversed. +<P> +"It looks like a town before us," said the boy. +<P> +Mr. Henderson and Jack looked to where Mark pointed. A few miles ahead and +below them were great mounds, not unlike that from which the geyser had spouted. +But they were arranged in regular form, like houses on a street, row after +row of them. And, as they approached nearer, they could see that the mounds +had doors and windows to them. Some of the mounds wer rger than others, +and some were of double and triple formation. +<P> +"It's a city! The first city of the new world!" cried Jack. +<P> +"It is a deserted village!" said the professor. "We have found where the +people live, but we have not found them." And he was right, for there was +not a sign of life about the place, over which the airship was now suspended. +<h3>CHAPTER XXIV</h3> +<h4>THE GIANTS</h4> +<P> +"LET'S go down and investigate," suggested Jack. +<P> +"Better wait," counseled the professor. "It will soon be dark, and, though +we will have moonlight, we can not see to advantage. I think it will be best +to keep the ship in the air to-night, and descend in the morning. Then we +can look about and decide on what to do." +<P> +They all agreed this was the best plan, and, after making a circle above +the deserted village, and noting no signs of life, the <I>Mermaid </I>was +brought to a halt over the centre of the town, and about three hundred feet +above it. There the travelers would be comparatively safe. +<P> +It was deemed best to keep watch that night, and so, Mark, Jack, Bill and +Tom took turns, though there was nothing for them to do, as not a thing happened. +With the first appearance of dawn Mr. Henderson gave orders to have the ship +lowered, and it came to rest in the middle of what corresponded to a street +in the queer mound village. +<P> +"Now to see what kind of people have lived here!" cried Jack. "They must +have been a queer lot. Something like the Esquimaux, only they probably had +more trouble keeping cool than the chaps up at the north pole do." +<P> +Now that they were down among the mound houses, they saw that the dwellings +were much larger than they had supposed. They towered high above the boys' +heads, and some of them were large enough in area to have accomodated a company +of soldiers. +<P> +"Say, the chaps who lived in these must have been some pumpkins," said Jack. +"Why the ceilings are about fifteen feet high, and the doors almost the same! +Talk about giants! I guess we've struck where they used to hang out, at any +rate." +<P> +The houses were a curious mixture of clay and soft stone. There were doors, +with big skins from animals as curtains, and the windows were devoid of glass. +Instead of stairs there were rude ladders, and the furniture in the mound +houses was of the roughest kind. +<P> +There were fire-places in some of the houses, and the blackened and smoked +walls showed that they must have been used. In one or two of the houses clay +dishes, most of them broken, were scattered about, and the size of them, +in keeping with everything else, indicated that those who used them were +of no small stature. +<P> +"Some of the bowls would do for bath tubs," said Jack, as he came across +one or two large ones. +<P> +By this time the professor, Bill and Tom had joined the boys, and the five +went on with the exploring tour, while Washington and Andy remained in the +ship to get breakfast. +<P> +"The inhabitants are evidently of a half-civilized race," the professor said. +"Their houses, and the manner in which they live, show them to be allied +to the Aztecs, though of course they are much larger than that race." +<P> +"What's bothering me," Bill said, "is not so much what race they belong to, +as what chance we'd stand in a race with them if they took it into their +heads to chase after us. I've read that them there Azhandled races——" +<P> +"You mean the Aztecs," interrupted the professor. +<P> +"Well the Aztecs, then. But I've read they used to place their enemies on +a stone altar and cut their hearts out. Now I'm not hankerin' after anything +like that." +<P> +"Don't be foolish," spoke Mr. Henderson. "Wait until you meet some of the +giants, if that is what they are, and then you can decide what to do." +<P> +"It may be too late then," remarked Bill in a low tone, and the boys were +somewhat inclined to agree with him. +<P> +However, there seemed to be no immediate danger, as there was no sign of +any of the big people about the village. The adventurers walked about for +some time, but made no discoveries that would throw any light on the reason +for the place being left uninhabited. It seemed as if there had been a sudden +departure from the place, for in a number of the houses the remains of +half-cooked meals were seen. +<P> +"Well, I think we have noted enough for the time being," the professor remarked, +after they had traversed almost half the length of what seemed to be the +principal street. "Let's go back to the ship and have something to eat. +Washington may have become alarmed at our absence." +<P> +They made a circle in order to take in another part of the town on their +way back. While passing through a sort of alley, though it was only narrow +by comparison with the other thoroughfares that were very wide, Mark came +to a place where there was a circular slab of stone, resting on the ground. +In the centre was a big iron ring. +<P> +"Hello! Here's something new!" he exclaimed. "Maybe it leads to a secret +passage, or covers some hidden treasure." +<P> +"I guess it will have to continue to cover it then," Jack spoke. "That probably +weighs several tons. None of us could move it." +<P> +They made their way back to the ship, where they found Washington and Andy +discussing the advisability of going off in search of them. +<P> +"Breakfast is mighty near spoiled," said the colored man with an injured +air. +<P> +But the travelers did full justice to the meal, notwithstanding this. Deciding +there was nothing to be gained by staying in that vicinity, the professor +started the ship off again. +<P> +They traveled several hundred miles in the air, and, as the afternoon was +coming to a close, Jack, who was in charge of the conning tower, spied, just +ahead of them, another village. +<P> +"We will descend there for the night," the professor said. "Does there seem +to be any sign of life about?" +<P> +"None," replied Mark, who was observing through a telescope the town they +were approaching. "It's as dead as the other one." +<P> +The airship settled down in a field back of some of the mound houses. +<P> +"Now for supper!" cried Jack. "I'm as hungry as——" +<P> +He stopped short, for, seeming to rise from the very ground, all about the +ship, there appeared a throng of men. And such men as they were! For not +one was less than ten feet tall, and some were nearly fifteen! +<P> +"The giants have us!" cried Bill, as he saw the horde of creatures surrounding +the ship. +<h3>CHAPTER XXV</h3> +<h4>HELD BY THE ENEMY</h4> +<P> +"KEEP the doors closed!" cried the professor. "It is our only hope! I will +send the ship up again!" +<P> +But it was too late. Washington, who had obeyed the signal from the conning +tower to shut off the engines, had disconnected most of them so they could +not be started again save from the main room. At the same time there came +a yell of dismay from the colored man, who had slid back the steel covering +of the main side entrance to the <I>Mermaid.</I> +<P> +"I'm caught!" cried Washington. +<P> +As the professor and the boys hurried from the tower, they could hear a struggle +from where Washington was, and his voice calling: +<P> +"Let me go! Let me go!" +<P> +Reaching the engine room, which opened directly on the side entrance, the +professor saw a pair of enormous hands and arms dragging poor Washington, +feet first, out of the ship. Bill and Tom were crouched in one corner, pale +with fright. +<P> +"Wait until I get my gun!" cried Andy, as he ran for his rifle. +<P> +"Hold on!" called the professor in a loud voice. "It will be folly to shoot +them! We must try strategy!" +<P> +Washington's cries ceased as he was drawn entirely from the ship, the giant +hands disappearing at the same time. +<P> +"Follow me!" yelled Mr. Henderson, running out of the door. +<P> +Hardly knowing what they did, the boys went after him, and their hearts almost +stopped beating in fright as they saw the terrible things, which, in the +glare of the changing lights, were on every side of them. +<P> +For the men were very repulsive looking. They there attired in clothes, very +similar in cut to those worn by the travelers, and which seemed to be made +of some sort of cloth. But they were loose and baggy and only added to the +queer appearance of the giants. Veritable giants they were too. Their faces +seemed as large as kegs, and they were so clumsy in shape that Mark, even, +frightened as he was, exclaimed: +<P> +"They look like men made of putty!" At the same time he saw they bore a +resemblance to the creature he had observed on the hill top. +<P> +"What shall we do?" asked Andy of the professor. "They are really carrying +Washington away!" +<P> +Three of the giants were dragging the colored man along the ground, while +the other terrible beings stood about as if waiting to see the outcome of +the first sally. +<P> +"I will try to speak to them," Mr. Henderson said. "I know several languages. +They may understand one." +<P> +But before he could start on his parley a surprising thing happened. There +was a struggle in the little group about Washington. The colored man seemed +to be fighting, though the odds, it would appear, were too great to enable +him to accomplish anything. But, making a desperate effort to escape, Washington +quickly wrenched himself free from the giants' hands and then, striking out +with his fists, knocked the three down, one after another. +<P> +"I never knew Washington was so strong!" exclaimed Jack. +<P> +"Nor I," put in Mark. "Why I should think the men could carry him in one +arm as if he was a baby." +<P> +The three giants rose slowly to their feet. They uttered strange cries, and +motioned with their hands toward the professor, the boys, and the others +in the crowd. +<P> +"Look out! They're goin' t' grab yo'!" cried Washington. +<P> +Three of the giants approached Mark, and a like number closed in on Jack. +<P> +"Back to the ship!" cried the professor. "We must defend ourselves!" +<P> +But by this time the big men had grabbed the two boys. Then a strange thing +took place. Mark and Jack, though they felt that the giants must overcome +them in a test of strength, struggled with all their might against being +captured. They fought, as a cornered rat will fight, though it knows the +odds to be overwhelming. But in this case the unexpected happened. +<P> +Both boys found they could easily break the holds of the giants, and Mark, +by a vigorous effort, pushed the three men away from him, one at a time violently +so that they fell in a heap, one on top of the other. +<P> +"Hurrah! We can fight 'em!" cried Mark. "Don't be afraid. They're like mush! +They're putty men!" +<P> +And, so it seemed, the giants were. Though big in size they were flabby and +had nothing like the muscle they should have had in proportion to their build. +They went down like meal sacks and were slow to rise. +<P> +Jack, seeing how successful his comrade was, attacked the three giants who +were striving to make him a captive. He succeeded in disposing of them, knocking +one down so hard that the man was unable to rise until his companions helped +him. +<P> +"That's the way!" cried Washington. "They're soft as snow men!" +<P> +The vanquished giants set up a sort of roar, which was answered by their +fellows, and soon there was a terrible din. +<P> +"All get together!" called the professor. "They are evidently going to make +a rush for us. If we stand by one another we may fight them off, though they +outnumber us a hundred to one. Besides it will soon be dark, and we may be +able to escape!" +<P> +Washington, Jack and Mark retreated toward the ship, in the direction of +which the others had also made their way. The big men had gathered in a compact +mass and were advancing on the adventurers. +<P> +"What do you suppose makes them so soft?" asked Mark. "I believe I could +manage half a dozen." +<P> +"It must be the effect of the climate and conditions here," the professor +replied. "Probably they have to be big to stand the pressure of the thick +water, and the increased attraction of gravitation. Then too, being without +the weight of the atmosphere to which we are accustomed, they have probably +expanded. If they were to go up to earth, they might shrink to our size." +<P> +"Do you think that possible?" +<P> +"Of course. Why do you ask?" +<P> +"Nothing in particular," replied Mark. But to himself, he added: "That would +explain it all." +<P> +It was getting dusk now. The travelers had reached their ship, and rushed +inside and tried to close the doors in the face of the advancing horde. But, +by this time the giants were so close that one or two of them thrust their +big feet in, and prevented this movement. At the same time they set up a +great howling. +<P> +"Quick!" cried the professor. "We must start the ship and get away!" +<P> +"I can't close the door!" yelled Washington, who had been the last to enter. +<P> +"Never mind that! Go up with it open! Drag them along if they won't let go!" +answered Mr. Henderson, as he ran toward the engine room. +<P> +There was a sudden rush among the giants, and a sound as if something was +being thrown over the top and ends of the ship. Mark turned the gas machine +on, while Jack worked the negative gravity apparatus. They waited for the +ship to rise. +<P> +"Why don't we go up?" asked the professor. +<P> +"'Cause they've caught us!" called out Washington. +<P> +"Caught us? How?" +<P> +"They've thrown ropes over the top and ends of the ship, and fastened them +to their big houses!" +<P> +Running to a side window the professor saw that the <I>Mermaid </I>was fastened +down by a score of cables, each one six inches thick. They were held captives +by the enemy. +<h3>CHAPTER XXVI</h3> +<h4>A FRIEND INDEED</h4> +<P> +THOUGH the giants, man for man, were no match for the travelers, collectively +the horde proved too much. They had swarmed about the ship, and, by passing +the big cables over her, effectively held her down. +<P> +"Let me get out and I'll cut 'em!" cried Andy. "We must get away from these +savages!" +<P> +"No, no, don't go out!" exclaimed the professor. "They would eventually kill +you, though you might fight them off for a time. We must wait and see what +develops. They can have no object in harming us, as we have not injured them." +<P> +"I'd rather fight 'em," insisted the old hunter. +<P> +But the professor had his way and Andy was forced to obey. The giants had +withdrawn their big feet from the side door and Washington had closed it. +But nothing else had been accomplished, and the ship could not rise. The +gas and negative gravity machines were stopped, as they were only under a +useless strain. +<P> +Suddenly, the colored lights which had been growing dimmer and dimmer, with +the approach of night, went out altogether. Almost as suddenly, Mark, who +was watching the giants from the conning tower, as they made fast the loose +ends of the cables, saw them make a dash for the mound houses. +<P> +"They're afraid of the dark!" he cried. "Come on! We can go out now and loosen +the ropes!" +<P> +He hurried to tell the professor what he had noticed. +<P> +"Good!" exclaimed Mr. Henderson. "Perhaps we can escape now!" +<P> +They waited a few minutes, listening to the sound of many big feet running +away from the ship, and then, Bill cautiously opened the side door. The others +were behind him, waiting, with knives and hatchets in their hands, to rush +out and cut the restraining cables. +<P> +"All ready!" called Bill. "There doesn't seem to be a one in sight!" +<P> +He stepped out but no sooner had he set foot on the ground than there came +a thud, and Bill went down as if some one had knocked his feet from under +him. +<P> +"Go back! Go back!" he cried. "They hit me with something. I'm being smothered!" +<P> +"Bring a light!" cried the professor, for the sally had been started in the +dark. +<P> +Jack brought the portable electric it having been repaired and flashed it +out of the door. In the gleam of it, Bill was seen lying prostrate, half +covered by an orange, about half as big as himself. The fruit was as soft +and mushy as some of the giants themselves, or Bill would not have fared +so easily. +<P> +Then, as the others stood watching, and while Bill arose and wiped some of +the juice from his face, there came a regular shower of the monstrous oranges. +<P> +"Get inside quick! We'll be smothered under them!" Mr. Henderson cried. +<P> +Pausing only to rescue Bill, the adventurers retreated inside the ship, and +made fast the door. Outside they could hear the thud as the oranges were +thrown, some hitting the <I>Flying Mermaid </I>and many dropping all about +her. +<P> +"I guess they are going to have things their own way," observed Bill, as +he gazed down on his clothes, which were covered with juice from the fruit. +<P> +The night was one of anxiety. The travelers took turns standing guard, but +nothing more occurred. The giants remained in their houses, and the heavy +ropes still held the ship fast. +<P> +"We must hold a council of war," the professor decided as they gathered at +breakfast, which was far from a cheerful meal. +<P> +With the return of the colored lights the giants again made their appearance. +They came swarming from the mound houses, and a great crowd they proved to +be. Several thousand at least, Jack estimated, and when he went up into the +conning tower and took a survey he could see the strange and terrible creatures +pouring in from the surrounding country. +<P> +"I'm afraid there will be trouble," he said, as he came down and reported +what he had seen. +<P> +"We must hold a council of war," repeated the professor. "Has any one anything +to suggest?" +<P> +"Get a lot of powder and blow 'em up!" cried Andy. +<P> +"Arrange electric wires and shock 'em to death!" was Bill's plan. +<P> +"Can't we slip the ropes in some way and escape?" asked Jack. "I don't believe +we can successfully fight the giants. They are too many, even if they are +weak, individually." +<P> +"I think you're right there," Mr. Henderson said. "We must try some sort +of strategy, but what? That is the question." +<P> +For a few minutes no one spoke. They were all thinking deeply, for their +lives might hang in the balance. +<P> +"I think I have a plan," said Mark, at length. "Did we bring any diving suits +with us?" +<P> +"There may be one or two," the professor replied. "But what good will they +do?" +<P> +"Two of us could put them on," continued Mark, "and, as they afford good +protection from any missiles like fruit, we could crawl out on the deck of +the ship. From there, armed with hatchets or knives we could cut the ropes. +Then the ship could rise." +<P> +"That's a good plan!" cried the scientist. "We'll try it at once." +<P> +Search revealed that two diving suits were among the stores of the <I>Mermaid. +</I>Jack and Mark wanted to be the ones to don them, but as the suits were +rather large, and as the professor thought it would take more strength than +the boys had to do the work, it was decided that Andy and Washington should +make the attempt to cut the ropes. +<P> +The hunter and colored man lost little time in getting into the modern armor. +In the meanwhile Jack, who had been posted as a lookout, reported that there +seemed to be some activity among the giants. They were running here and there, +and some seemed to be going off toward the woods, that were not far away. +<P> +"Now work quickly," urged the professor. "We will be on the watch, and as +soon as the last rope is cut we will start the machinery and send the ship +up. We will not wait for you to come back inside, so hold fast as best you +can when the <I>Mermaid </I>rises." +<P> +"We will," answered Andy, just before the big copper helmet was fastened +on his head, and Washington nodded to show he understood. +<P> +The two who were to attempt the rescue of their comrades were soon on deck. +In the conning tower Jack and the professor kept anxious watch, while Mark, +Bill and Tom were at the various machines, ready, at the signal, to start +the engines. +<P> +The giants had now become so interested in whatever plan they had afoot, +that they paid little attention to the ship. Consequently Washington and +Andy, crawling along the deck in their diving suits, did not, at first attract +any attention. +<P> +In fact they had cut several of the big ropes, and it began to look as if +the plan would succeed, particularly as they were partly hidden from view +by the upper gas holder. They were working with feverish haste, sawing away +at the big cables with keen knives. +<P> +"I guess we'll beat 'em yet!" cried Jack. +<P> +"I hope so," replied the professor. "It looks——" +<P> +He stopped short, for at that moment a cry arose from the midst of the giants, +and one of them pointed toward the ship. An instant later the air was darkened +with a flight of big oranges, which the queer creatures seemed to favor as +missiles. Probably they found stones too heavy. +<P> +"Well, those things can't hurt 'em much with those heavy suits on," observed +Mr. Henderson. "There, Washington got one right on the head that time, and +it didn't bother him a bit." +<P> +Jack had seen the fruit strike the big copper helmet and observed that the +colored man only moved his head slightly in order to get rid of the orange. +<P> +In fact the giants, seeing for themselves that this mode of warfare was not +going to answer, since the two men on the ship continued to cut the restraining +cables, gave it up. There was a good deal of shouting among them, and a number +ran here and there, seemingly gathering up long poles. +<P> +"I wonder if they are going to try the flailing method, and beat poor Andy +and Washington," said Mr. Henderson. "It looks so." +<P> +The two rescuers were now about a quarter through their hard task. The throwing +of the oranges had ceased. But the giants were up to a new trick. They divided +into two sections, one taking up a position on one side of the ship, and +the other on the opposite. There were about two hundred in each crowd, while +the others in the horde drew some distance back. +<P> +"They're up to some queer dodge," observed Jack. "What are they placing those +sticks to their mouths for?" +<P> +The professor observed the throng curiously for a few seconds. Then he exclaimed: +<P> +"They are using blow-guns! They are going to shoot arrows at Washington and +Andy! We must get them in at once!" +<P> +He darted toward a door that opened from the conning tower out on the deck. +<P> +"Don't go!" cried Jack. "It's too late! They are beginning to blow!" +<P> +He pointed to the throng of giants. The professor could see their cheeks +puffed out as the big creatures filled their lungs with air and prepared +to expel it through the hollow tubes. +<P> +Then there came a sound as if a great wind was blowing. It howled and roared +over the ship, not unlike a hurricane in its fury. But there was no flight +of arrows through the air, such as would have come from regular blow guns. +<P> +"That is strange," said the professor. He thought for a moment. "I have it!" +he cried. "They are trying to blow Washington and Andy, off the ship by the +power of their breaths! They are not blowing arrows at them! My, but they +must have strong lungs!" +<P> +And, in truth, that was the plan of the giants. The hollow tubes, made from +some sort of big weed, sent a blast of air at the two men on the ship's deck, +that made them lie flat and cling with both hands to avoid being sent flying +into the midst of the giants, on one side or the other. But the giants had +reckoned without the weight of the diving suits, and it was those, with the +big lead soles of the shoes, that helped to hold Washington and Andy in place. +<P> +"Come back! Came back!" cried the professor, opening the conning tower door +and calling to the two brave men. "Come back, both of you! Do you hear?" +<P> +As the portal slid back the rush of air was almost like that of a cyclone. +Then it suddenly ceased, as the giants saw their plan was not likely to succeed. +<P> +But now there arose from the outer circle of the horde a shout of triumph. +It was caused by the return of those who had, a little while before, hurried +off to the woods. They came back bearing big trees, tall and slender, stripped +of their branches, so that they resembled flag staffs. It took a dozen giants +to carry each one. +<P> +The whole throng was soon busy laying the poles in a row in front of the +ship. +<P> +"What can they be up to now?" asked Jack. +<P> +"It looks as if they were going to slide the ship along on rollers," the +professor replied. +<P> +Sure enough this was the giant's plan. A few minutes later those in the +<I>Mermaid </I>felt her moving forward, as the giants, massed behind, shoved. +On to the poles she slid. The ropes were loosened to permit this, but not +enough to enable the boat to rise. +<P> +Then the travelers felt the ship being lifted up. +<P> +"They are going to carry us away, with the poles for a big stretcher!" cried +the professor. +<P> +Looking from the side windows the boys saw that a great crowd of the big +men were on either side of the <I>Mermaid, </I>each giant grasping a pole, +and lifting. Farther out were others, holding the ends of the cables which +Washington and Andy had not succeeded in cutting. +<P> +The ship was being carried along by a thousand or more giants, as the ancient +warriors, slain in battle, were carried home on the spears of their comrades. +<P> +"This is the end of the <I>Mermaid!" </I>murmured Mr. Henderson in sorrowful +tones. +<P> +As they looked from the conning tower the professor and the two boys observed +a commotion among the leaders of the giants. They seemed to be wavering. +Suddenly the forward part of the ship sank, as those ahead laid their poles +down on the ground. Then those behind did the same, and the <I>Mermaid, +</I>came to a stop, and once more rested on the earth. +<P> +"What does this mean?" asked the scientist in wonder. +<P> +All at once the entire crowd of giants threw themselves down on their faces, +and there, standing at the bow of the ship, was a giant, half again as large +as any of the others. He was clad in a complete suit of golden armor on which +the changing lights played with beautiful effect, and in his hand he held +an immense golden sword. He pointed the weapon at the ship as if he had raised +it in protection, and his hand was stretched in commanding gesture over the +prostrate giants. +<P> +"Perhaps he has come to save us!" cried Mark. +<h3>CHAPTER XXVII</h3> +<h4>A GREAT JOURNEY</h4> +<P> +SUCH indeed, seemed to be the case. The golden-armored giant, after standing +for a few moments in an attitude of command, waved his sword three times +about his head, and uttered a command, in a voice that sounded like thunder. +Then the prostrate ones arose, and, making low bows hurried away in all +directions. +<P> +Watching them disappear, the golden one sheathed his weapon and approached +the ship. He caught sight of the professor and the two boys in the conning +tower, for Mark had gone there when he found the ship being transported, +and held up his two hands, the palms outward. +<P> +"It is the sign of peace in the language all natives employ," said the professor. +"I think I shall trust him." +<P> +Followed by the boys he descended from the little platform in the tower, +and to the door that opened on the deck. +<P> +"Shall we go out?" he asked. +<P> +"We can't be much worse off," replied Mark. "Let's chance it." +<P> +So, not without many misgivings, they slid back the portal and stepped out +to face the strange and terrible being who had so suddenly come to their +rescue. +<P> +The giant in the golden armor did not seem surprised to see them. In fact +he acted as though he rather expected them. He continued to hold up one hand, +with the palm, outward, while, with the other, he removed his helmet and +bowed low. Then he cast his sword on the ground and advanced toward the ship. +When within ten feet he sat down on the ground, and this brought his head +nearer the earth, so that his auditors could both see and hear him to better +advantage. +<P> +As soon as the giant saw the travelers were outside their ship he began to +speak to them in a voice, which, though he might have meant it to be low +and gentle, was like the bellowing of a bull. At the same time he made many +gestures, pointing to the ship, to himself and to Mark. +<P> +"What is he saying, professor?" asked Jack. +<P> +"I can't understand all he says," Mr. Henderson replied. "He uses some words +derived from the Latin and some from the Greek. But by piecing it out here +and there, and by interpreting his motions I am able to get at something." +<P> +"And what is it all about?" +<P> +"It is a strange story," the scientist replied. "He has only gone about half +way through it. Wait until he finishes and I will tell you." +<P> +The golden-armored giant, who had stopped in his narrative while Jack was +speaking, resumed. His gestures became more rapid, and his words came faster. +Several times Mr. Henderson held up his hand for him to cease, while he puzzled +out what was meant. +<P> +At one point, the professor seemed much startled, and motioned for the strange +being to repeat the last part of his discourse. When this had been done Mr. +Henderson shook his head as though in doubt. +<P> +At length the story was finished, and the lone giant, for there were no others +in sight now, folded his arms and seemed to await what the professor's answer +might be. Mr. Henderson turned to the boys, and to the others of the +<I>Mermaid's </I>company, who, by this time, had joined him, and said: +<P> +"Friends, I have just listened to a strange story. It is so strange that, +but for the fact that our own adventures are verging on the marvelous, I +could hardly believe it. In the first place, this man here is the king of +this country. That is why all the other natives obeyed him. +<P> +"In the second place it seems he has been a passenger in our boat, and came +here from the earth's surface with us!" +<P> +"What's that?" cried Jack. +<P> +"That explains the strange happenings!" ejaculated Mark. "No wonder I could +never solve the secret of the storeroom." +<P> +"You are right, it does," replied Mr. Henderson. "I will not go into all +the details of how it happened, but it seems the big hole through which we +came is only one of two entrances to this inner world. Rather it is the entrance, +and there is another, close to it, which is the exit. Through the latter +a big stream of water spouts up, just as one pours down through the opening +we used. +<P> +"Hankos, which is the name of the king, was for many years a student of science. +He longed to see where the big stream of upward spurting water went, and +wanted to know whence came the down-pouring one. So he undertook a daring +experiment. +<P> +"He constructed a great cylinder, and, keeping his plans a secret, conveyed +it to the spouting water, entered it, and, by means of pulleys and levers, +after he had shut himself inside, cast himself into the up-shooting column. +He took along compressed air cylinders to supply an atmosphere he could breathe, +and some food to eat, for it appears our giant friends are something of inventors +in their way. The current of water bore him to the surface of the earth, +and he was cast up on the ocean, in what was probably taken for a waterspout +if any one saw it. +<P> +"Then a strange thing happened. No sooner did Hankos open his cylinder, which +served him as a boat, than he lost his gigantic size, owing to the difference +of the two atmospheres. He became almost of the same size as ourselves, except +that his skin hung in great folds on him, and he seemed like a wrinkled old +man. His clothes too, were a world too large. +<P> +"He had a terrible time before he reached shore, and a hard one after it, +for his strange appearance turned almost every one against him. He was sorry +he had ventured to solve the mystery of the up-shooting stream of water, +for he was worse than an outcast. +<P> +"Then he began to plan to get back to his own inner world. But he could not +find the downward stream, and, not knowing the language of the countries +where he landed, he had no means of ascertaining. He traveled from place +to place, always seeking for something that would lead him back to his own +country. +<P> +"Finally he heard of us, and of our ship, though how I do not know, as I +thought I had kept it a great secret. By almost superhuman struggles he made +his way to our island. He says he concealed himself aboard the <I>Mermaid +</I>the night before we sailed, but I hardly believe it possible. It seems——" +<P> +"He did it, for I saw him!" interrupted Mark. +<P> +"You saw him!" cried Mr. Henderson. +<P> +Then Mark told of the many things that had puzzled him so, how he had seen +the queer figure slinking aboard the boat, of the disappearance of food from +time to time, and of the strange noises in the storeroom. +<P> +"That bears out what he told me," the professor said. "Hankos says he used +to steal out nights and take what food he could get, and he also mentions +some one, answering to Mark's description, who nearly discovered him once +as he hurried back into the apartment. +<P> +"However, it seems to be true, since Mark confirms it. At any rate Hankos +stayed in hiding, and made the entire trip with us, and, just as we all became +overcome with the strange gas he escaped, having begun to expand to his original +giant size, and being unable to remain any longer in his cramped quarters." +<P> +"That's so, he did!" cried Mark. "I saw him come out of the place just before +I lost my senses. It was a terrible sight, and none of you would believe +me when I told you some of the occurrences afterward." +<P> +"You must forgive us for that," the professor said. "We have learned much +since then." +<P> +"What did Hankos do after he left the ship when it landed in this country?" +asked Jack. +<P> +"He traveled until he came to this village, which is the chief one of this +country," replied the professor. "Part of the time he followed us at a distance, +being able to travel very fast." +<P> +Mark remembered the strange figure of a giant he had seen on the hill tops +several times, and knew that he had been observing the being who had played +such a queer part in their lives. +<P> +"When he came back among his own people," went on Mr. Henderson, "they would +not receive him at first, believing him to be an impostor. But Hankos convinced +them of his identity and was allowed to don the golden armor, which is the +badge of kingship. He had only been in office for a little while when he +heard of the arrival of the strange thing, which turned out to be our ship. +He recognized it from the description, and, learning that we were likely +to be sacrificed to the fury and ignorance of the giants, he hurried here +and saved our lives. +<P> +"He says he can never thank us enough for being the means whereby he was +able to get back to his own country, and says the freedom of this whole inner +world is ours. He has given orders that we are to go wherever we like, and +none will molest us. He tells me the land is a wonderful one, compared to +our own, and urges us to make a long journey. He would like to go with us, +only, now that he has resumed his natural size, he can not get inside the +ship." +<P> +"Hurrah for King Hankos!" cried Jack and the others joined him in a hearty +cheer. +<P> +The giant in the golden armor evidently understood the compliment which was +paid him, for he waved his helmet in the air and responded with a shout of +welcome that made the ground tremble. +<P> +Hankos waited until the professor had translated all of the story to the +other travelers. Then the genial giant began to talk some more, and the professor +listened intently. +<P> +"He says," spoke Mr. Henderson to his friends, "that we will be supplied +with all the fruit we want, and with the best of the houses to sleep in on +our journey. He also tells me he has great stores of shining stones and piles +of the metal of which his armor is made, and that we are welcome to as much +as we want. If this means unlimited gold and diamonds, we may make our fortunes." +<P> +"Jest let me git ma' hand on a few sparklers an' I'll quit work!" exclaimed +Washington. +<P> +"I have told him," the scientist went on, "that we will take advantage of +his kind offer. We will start on our trip in a day or so, after we have looked +over the ship to see if it is not damaged. He tells me the gold and sparkling +stones are several thousand miles away, on top of a high mountain. We will +make that our objective point." +<P> +The interview between the king and Mr. Henderson having ended, the former +waved his sword in the air and the swarm of big men came back. They had been +hiding back in the woods. Now their manner was very different. They carefully +removed the rollers and ropes, and soon there was brought to the adventurers +an immense pile of fine fruits. If our friends had stayed there a year they +could not have eaten it all. The giants were judging the appetites of the +travelers by their own. +<P> +That night the adventurers slept more soundly than they had since entering +the strange world. They felt they had nothing to fear from the giants. In +the morning they were not molested, though big crowds gathered to look at +the ship. But they kept back a good distance. The machinery was found to +be in good shape, save for a few repairs, and when these were made, the professor +announced he would start on a long journey. +<P> +For several weeks after that the travelers swung about in their ship, sometimes +sailing in the air and again on big seas and lakes viewing the wonders of +the inner world. They were many and varied, and the professor collected enough +material for a score of books which he said he would write when he got back +to the outer world once more. +<P> +One afternoon, as they were sailing over a vast stretch of woodland, which +did not seem to be inhabited, Mr. Henderson, looking at one of the gages +on the wall, asked: +<P> +"Boys do you know how far you have traveled underground?" +<P> +"How far?" asked Jack, who hated to guess riddles. +<P> +"More than four thousand miles," was the answer. +<P> +"But we haven't come to that mountain of gold and diamonds," said Mark. "I +am anxious to see that." +<P> +"Have patience," replied the professor. "I have not steered toward it yet. +There are other things to see." +<P> +Just then Washington's voice could be heard calling from the conning tower: +<P> +"We're coming to a big mountain!" +<h3>CHAPTER XXVIII</h3> +<h4>THE TEMPLE OF TREASURE</h4> +<P> +"WHAT'S that?" fairly yelled the professor. +<P> +"We am propelling ourselves in a contiguous direction an' in close proximity +to an elevated portion of th' earth's surface which rises in antiguous proximity +t' th' forward part of our present means of locomotion!" said the colored +man in a loud voice. +<P> +"Which means there may be a collision," the professor said, as he and the +boys hurried toward the tower, +<P> +"Jest what I said," retorted Washington. "What'll I do?" +<P> +"Send the ship a little higher," answered Mr. Henderson. "We mustn't hit +any mountains." +<P> +Washington forced more gas into the holder, and speeded the negative gravity +machine up some, so that the <I>Mermaid, </I>which was flying rather low, +ascended until it was in no danger of colliding with the peak which reared +its lofty height just ahead of them. +<P> +As the ship sailed slowly over the mountain, Mark gazed down and exclaimed: +<P> +"Doesn't that look like the ruins of some building?" +<P> +The professor took a pair of field glasses from a rack in the wall and took +a long view. +<P> +"It must be the place," he said in a low voice. +<P> +"What place?" asked Jack. +<P> +"The temple of treasure," was the answer. "Hankos told me it was on top of +the highest mountain in the land, and this must be it, for it is the loftiest +place we have seen. But we must be careful, for there is danger down there." +<P> +"What kind?" asked Mark. +<P> +"The place was long ago deserted by the giants," Mr. Henderson went on. "Ages +ago it was one of their storehouses for treasure, but there were wars among +themselves, Hankos said, and this part of the country was laid waste. Savage +beasts took up their abode in the temple, and since then, in spite of the +great size of the giants, they have not dared to venture here. If we brave +the animals we may have all the gold and diamonds we can take away." +<P> +"Then for one, I'm willin' t' go down an' begin th' extermination at once," +put in Andy. "I've always wanted t' be rich." +<P> +"We must proceed cautiously," the professor said. "We are ill prepared to +fight any such beasts as we saw at the big geyser. At the same time they +may have deserted this place. I think we will lower the ship down over the +temple, and spend several hours in observation. Then, if nothing develops, +we can enter and see if the treasure is there." +<P> +This plan was voted a good one, and the <I>Mermaid </I>after having been +steered directly over the ruined temple, was brought to a halt, and enough +gas let out so that it fell to about fifty feet in the air above it. +<P> +The adventurers began their watch. The afternoon waned and there were no +signs of any beasts in or about the temple. +<P> +"I reckon we can take a chance," said Andy, who was anxious to get his hands +on some diamonds. +<P> +"Better wait until morning," counseled Mr. Henderson. "It will soon be dark, +and it doesn't look like a nice place to go stumbling about in by moonlight." +<P> +So, though all but the scientist were anxious, they had to wait until the +night had passed. Several times Washington got up to see if the temple had, +by any chance, taken wings during the long hours of darkness, but each time +he found it was still in place. +<P> +"Seems laik it'll never come mornin'." he said. +<P> +But dawn came at length, and, after a hasty breakfast, preparations to enter +the temple were made. Andy loaded his gun for "bear" as he expressed it, +and the boys each took a revolver. +<P> +The ship was lowered to as level a place as could be found, and then, seeing +that everything was in readiness for a quick departure, the professor led +the way out of the <I>Mermaid.</I> +<P> +The entrance to the temple was through a big arched gateway. Some of the +stones had fallen down, and the whole structure looked as if it might topple +over at any moment. +<P> +"Go carefully," cautioned Mr. Henderson, "Watch on all sides and up above. +Better let Andy and me go ahead." +<P> +The scientist and the old hunter led the way. Through the arch they went, +and emerged into what must at one time have been a magnificent courtyard. +Before them was the temple proper, a vast structure, with an opening through +which fifty men might have marched abreast. But the doors were gone, and +the portal was but a black hole. +<P> +"I hope there ain't any ghosts in there," said Washington, with a shiver. +<P> +"Nonsense!" exclaimed the professor. "There may be things as bad, but there +are no such things as ghosts. Have your gun ready, Andy." +<P> +With every sense on the alert, the old hunter advanced. Every one was a bit +nervous, and, as Mark and Jack afterward admitted, they half expected some +terrible beast to rush out at them. But nothing of the kind happened, and +they went into the interior of the temple. +<P> +At first it was so dark they could see nothing. There were vast dim shapes +on every side, and from the hollow echo of their footsteps they judged the +roof must be very high and the structure big in every way. +<P> +Then, as their eyes became used to the darkness, they could make out, up +front, something like an altar or pulpit. +<P> +"Perhaps that's where they offered up the gold and diamonds as a sacrifice +to their gods," spoke Mark in a whisper. +<P> +"Sacrifice to their gods!" came back a hundred echoes and the sound made +every one shudder. +<P> +"Oh!" said Washington, in a low voice. +<P> +"Oh! Oh! Oh!" repeated the echoes in voices of thunder. +<P> +"Well, this is pleasant," spoke Andy, in his natural tones, and, to the surprise +of all there was no echo. It was only when a person whispered or spoke low +that the sound was heard. After that they talked naturally. +<P> +"You stay here, and Andy and I will go up front and see what there is," said +Mr. Henderson. "Be on your guard, and if you hear us coming back in a hurry, +run!" +<P> +It was with no little feeling of nervousness that the boys, Bill, Tom and +Washington watched the two men move off in the darkness. They could hear +their footsteps on the stone flags and could dimly see them. +<P> +"They must be almost to the altar by this time," said Mark, after a long +pause. +<P> +Hardly had he spoken than there came a loud, sound from where Mr. Henderson +and Andy had gone. It was as if some giant wings were beating the air. Then +came shrill cries and the voice of the old hunter could be heard calling: +<P> +"Kneel down, Professor! Let me get a shot at the brute!" +<P> +Those waiting in the rear of the temple huddled closer together. What terrible +beast could have been aroused? +<P> +The next instant the place seemed illuminated as if by a lightning flash, +and a sound as of a thousand thunder claps resounded. +<P> +"I think I winged him!" cried Andy's voice, and the boys knew he had fired +at something. +<P> +Then there came a crash, and from the roof of the old temple a dozen stones +toppled off to one side, letting in a flood of colored light. +<P> +By this illumination could be seen, flapping through the big space overhead, +an enormous bat, as large as three eagles. And, as it flew about in a circle +it gave utterance to shrill cries. +<P> +"Bang!" Andy's gun spoke again, and the bat with a louder cry than before, +darted through the hole in the roof made by the falling stones, which had +been loosened by the concussion from the rifle. +<P> +"Come on!" cried the old hunter. "That was the guardian of the treasure! +We are safe now!" +<P> +Then, in the light which streamed through the broken roof, the adventurers +could see, heaped up on a great altar, behind which sat a horrible graven +image, piles of yellow metal, and sparkling stones. In little heaps they +were, arranged as if offerings to the terrible god of the giants. There were +bars and rings of gold, dishes of odd shape, and even weapons. As for the +sparkling stones, they were of many colors, but the white ones were more +plentiful than all the others. +<P> +"Gold and diamonds! Diamonds and gold!" murmured the professor. "There is +the ransom of many kings in this ancient temple." +<P> +"Wish I had a big bag!" exclaimed Washington, as he began filling all his +pockets with the precious metal and gems. "If I had a-thought I'd have brought +a dress-suit case!" +<P> +"A dress-suit case full of diamonds!" exclaimed Mark. +<P> +Then he too, as did all the others, fell to filling his pockets with the +wealth spread so lavishly before them. There was the riches of a whole world +in one place and no one but themselves to take it. +<P> +For several minutes no one spoke. The only sound was the rattle of the stones +and the clink of gold, and when some of the diamonds dropped on the floor +they did not bother to gather them up. There were too many on the altar. +<P> +"We will be rich for life!" gasped old Andy, who had been poor all his years. +<P> +"I can't carry any more!" gasped Washington. "I'm goin' back for——" +<P> +What he was going back for he never said, for, at that instant, happening +to look up at the hole in the roof, he gave a startled try: +<P> +"Here come the terrible bats!" +<P> +They all gazed upward. Through the opening they could see a great flock of +the awful birds, headed for the temple, and they were led by one which seemed +to fly with difficulty. It was the guardian of the treasure that Andy had +wounded. +<P> +"Quick! We must get out of here!" shouted the old hunter. "They are big enough +and strong enough to tear us all to pieces. Hurry!" +<P> +Down the centre of the temple they rushed, and not a moment too soon, for, +ere they had passed half way to the entrance, the opening in the roof was +darkened by the coming of the bats, and soon the flapping of their wings +awoke the thundering echoes in the ruined structure, while their shrill cries +struck terror to the hearts of the travelers. +<P> +Up to the altar circled the bats, and then wheeling they flapped down the +dim aisles toward the adventurers. +<P> +"Hurry! Hurry!" shouted Andy, who was in the rear. +<P> +He raised his rifle and fired several shots into the midst of the terrible +creatures. +<P> +A number of the bats were wounded, and the others were so frightened by the +sound of the shots and the flashes of fire that they turned back. This enabled +the fleeing ones to gain the entrance to the temple, and soon they were outside. +<P> +"To the ship!" yelled Bill. +<P> +"There's little danger now!" called Andy, panting, for the run had winded +him. "They will hardly attack us in the light!" +<P> +And he was right, for, though they could hear the bats flying about inside +the temple, and uttering their cries, none came outside. +<P> +But no one felt like staying near the uncanny structure, and little time +was lost in reaching the <I>Mermaid. </I>Then the doors were fastened, and +the ship was sent high up into the air. +<P> +"Which way?" asked Jack, when Mr. Henderson told him to go to the conning +tower and steer. +<P> +"Back to where we first met the giants," replied the professor. "We must +prepare to start for our own earth again soon." +<P> +"I've almost forgotten how real sunlight looks," thought Jack, as he headed +the ship around the other way. As he turned the levers a big diamond dropped +from his pocket and rolled on the floor. +<P> +"This will be a good reminder of our trip though," he added. +<P> +The travelers, even including Mr. Henderson, were so taken up with their +suddenly acquired riches that they hardly thought of meals. At the professor's +suggestion they tied their gold and stones up in small packages convenient +to carry. +<P> +"Better place them where you can grab them in a hurry in case of accident," +the old scientist went on. "Of course if there should be too bad an accident +they would never be of any use to us down here, but we'll look on the bright +side of things." +<P> +"Do you anticipate any accident?" asked Jack anxiously. +<P> +"No, Oh no," replied Mr. Henderson, but Jack thought the aged man had something +weighing on his mind. +<h3>CHAPTER XXIX</h3> +<h4>BACK HOME—CONCLUSION</h4> +<P> +ON and on sped the <I>Mermaid. </I>Now that the travelers felt their journey +accomplished they were anxious to begin the homeward trip. They made a straight +course for the village where they had so nearly met with disaster, and where +the king of the giants had saved them. They went in a direct line, and did +not travel here and there, as they had after they left the town. Consequently +they shortened the route by a great distance. Yet it was long enough, and +when they finally came in sight of the place the dial registered a trip of +five thousand miles underground. +<P> +It was one evening when they landed almost at the spot whence they had taken +flight eventually to reach the temple of the treasure. Most of the giants +had betaken themselves to their mound houses, but Hankos was walking in the +fields, and, when he caught sight of the airship hovering above him he waved +his great sword in welcome. +<P> +He rushed up to shake hands with the travelers when they came out of the +ship, though to greet him it was only possible for the adventurers to grasp +one of his immense fingers. +<P> +As soon as the greetings were over Hankos began to speak rapidly to the +professor, at the same time going through many strange motions. +<P> +"It is as I feared!" suddenly exclaimed the scientist. +<P> +"What is the matter?" asked Mark. +<P> +"The worst has happened!" went on Mr. Henderson. "The great hole by which +we came into this place has been closed by an earthquake shock!" +<P> +"The hole closed?" repeated Jack. +<P> +"An earthquake shock!" murmured Mark. +<P> +"Then how are we going to get back to earth?" asked old Andy. +<P> +A terrible fear entered the hearts of the travelers. The closing of the opening +by which they had come to the strange world meant, in all probability that +they would have to spend the rest of their lives in this underground place. +<P> +"What good did it do us to get all those diamonds and that gold?" asked Mark +in a sorrowful tone. +<P> +Hankos began to speak again, using his gestures which were almost as eloquent +as words. The professor watched and listened intently. Then there seemed +to come a more hopeful look to his face. He nodded vigorously as Hankos went +on with what seemed to be an explanation. +<P> +"It's worth trying, at all events!" the scientist exclaimed. "It is our only +hope!" +<P> +"What is?" asked Jack. +<P> +"Friends," began the professor in solemn tones. "I must admit our plight +is desperate. At the same time there is a bare chance of our getting back +to our own earth. As you remember, Hankos went from this place to the upper +regions through the upward spouting column of water." +<P> +"If we had our submarine we might also," interrupted Jack. "But the <I>Mermaid +</I>isn't built to sail in that fashion." +<P> +"Nor would the <I>Porpoise </I>have served us in this emergency," said the +professor. "It would prove too heavy. But, nevertheless, I think I have a +plan. Now, Mark, you are about to learn the secret of the storeroom. The +real one, not the hiding of Hankos in there, which you imagined to be the +cause of my desire to keep something hidden. When we planned a trip to this +underground world I had a dim idea that we might meet with trouble. So I +planned and made a cylinder lifeboat." +<P> +"A cylinder lifeboat?" repeated Mark. +<P> +"Yes," replied Mr. Henderson. "I have it in the storeroom. I did not want +any of you to see it for fear you would have faint hearts. I thought there +might be no necessity of using it. But, since there is, we must do our best. +I will admit it may be a fearful ordeal, but we will have to risk something +in order to escape. +<P> +"I have in the storeroom a large cylinder, capable of holding us all. It +will also contain food and drink for a month, but we will all have to go, +packed almost like sardines in a box. My plan is to take the <I>Mermaid </I>to +the place where the column of water shoots up. There we will get into the +cylinder, close it, and trust ourselves to the terrible force that may bring +us back to the upper world. What do you say? Shall we attempt it?" +<P> +For a few seconds no one spoke. Then Jack said slowly: +<P> +"I don't see that we can do anything else. I don't want to stay here all +my life." +<P> +"I wants a chance t' wear some of them sparklers," put in Washington. +<P> +"Then we will make the attempt," the professor added. "Now all aboard for +the place where the water shoots up!" +<P> +Questioning Hankos, the professor learned how to reach the strange place. +It was in the midst of a desolate country where none of the giants ever went, +so afraid were they of the strange phenomenon. +<P> +It was a week's journey. Sometimes the <I>Mermaid </I>flew through the air, +and again it sailed on vast lakes or inland seas. On the trip they met with +big waterfalls and terrible geysers that spouted a mile or more into the +air. They traveled by night as well as day, though it was necessary to keep +a sharp watch. +<P> +Sometimes the ship passed through great flocks of birds that surrounded her +and sought to pierce the aluminum hull with their sharp beaks and talons. +Over the mountains and valleys the ship sailed until, one evening, there +sounded through the air a strange rumbling sound. +<P> +"It is thunder," said Old Andy. +<P> +"It is the water column," replied the scientist. "We are at the end of our +trip. May the remainder be as successful!" +<P> +The ship was lowered to the surface, as it was deemed best to approach the +column when the lights were shining. No one slept much that night, for the +roaring and rumbling never ceased. +<P> +In the morning the ship was sent forward slowly. Ever and ever the terrific +sound increased, until it was almost deafening. They had to call to each +other to be heard. +<P> +Then, as the <I>Mermaid </I>passed over a mountain, the adventurers saw, +in a valley below them, the up-shooting water. +<P> +It was a vast column, nearly three hundred feet in thickness, and as solid +and white as a shaft of marble. Up, up, up, it went, until it was lost to +sight, but there were no falling drops, and not even a spray came from the +watery shafts. +<P> +"There is a terrible power to it," the professor said. "May it prove our +salvation!" +<P> +The ship was lowered about a hundred feet away from the waterspout. All around +them the ground was vibrating with the force of the fluid. +<P> +"To think that connects with the world above!" exclaimed Jack. +<P> +"It's a good thing for us that it does," Mark answered. +<P> +"We must lose no time," the professor put in. "If the earthquake destroyed +the downward shaft, it may effect this one in time. We must escape while +we can." +<P> +Then, for the first time, he opened the storeroom and the big cylinder was +disclosed to view. It was made of aluminum, and shaped like an immense cigar. +The hull was double, and it was strongly braced. Inside were padded berths +for the occupants, and there was just room enough for the seven adventurers. +Once they had entered they could not move about, but must stay in their little +compartment. +<P> +Compressed air in strong cylinders furnished a means of breathing, and there +were tiny electric lights operated by a storage battery. There was also a +chamber to be filled with the lifting gas. The cylinder was so arranged that +it would float on it's long axis if thrown into the water. A trap door +hermetically sealed gave access to the interior. A small propeller, worked +by compressed air, furnished motive power. +<P> +The food supply consisted of compressed capsules on which a man could subsist +for several days. There was also some water, but not much, since that can +not be compressed and would, therefore, take considerable room. +<P> +"The only thing for us to do," said the professor, "is to get into the cylinder, +seal it up, and trust to Providence. This is what I intended to use when +we were caught in the draught." +<P> +"How can we get into the column of water after we shut ourselves into the +cylinder?" asked Mark. +<P> +"The cylinder fits into a sort of improvised cannon," said Mr. Henderson. +"It is fired by electricity and compressed air. "We will aim it at the column, +press the button and be projected into the midst of the water. Then——" He +did not finish the sentence, but the others knew what he meant. +<P> +"When are we to start?" asked Mark. +<P> +"As soon as possible," replied the professor. "I must arrange the cylinder, +compress the air and lay out the food supply." +<P> +It took the rest of the day to do this, as the inventor found it would be +advisable to attach a weight to the end of the cylinder, to hold it upright +in the column of water. The weight could be detached automatically when they +were shot up into the midst of the ocean, where, as Hankos had told them, +the column spurted forth. +<P> +Then some food was stored in the tiny ship that was destined to be their +last hope, and some tanks of water were placed in it. +<P> +"I think we are almost ready," Mr. Henderson said about noon the next day. +<P> +"What about our gold and diamonds?" asked Jack suddenly. "Can we take them +with us in the cylinder?" +<P> +"That's so!" exclaimed Mr. Henderson. "I forgot about them. I'm afraid we'll +have to leave the riches behind. We will not be able to carry them and the +food we need, for it may be a week or more before we can leave the cylinder. +Gold and diamonds will be a poor substitute for something to eat." +<P> +"I'm goin' t' take mine!" said Washington with much conviction. "I might +as well starve rich as starve poor!" +<P> +"We may be able to take a few diamonds," the professor answered. "The gold +will be too heavy. Let each one select the largest of the diamonds he has +and put them in his pockets." +<P> +Then began a sorting of the wealth. It was strange, as they recalled afterward, +throwing away riches that would have made millionaires envious, but it had +to be done. All the wealth in the world would not equal a beef capsule when +they were starving, and they realized it. So they only saved a few pieces +of gold as souvenirs, and took the best of the diamonds. But even then they +had a vast fortune with them. +<P> +At last all was in readiness. The cylinder had been placed in the tube from +which it was to be shot gently forth by compressed air, so that it would +fall into the upward spouting column of water. The charge of compressed air +was put in and the electric wires arranged. +<P> +"Are we all ready?" asked Mr. Henderson. +<P> +"I think so," said Jack, in what sounded like a whisper, but which was loud, +only the noise of the water muffled it. +<P> +"Then we had better enter the cylinder," spoke the inventor. "Take a last +look at the <I>Flying Mermaid, </I>boys, for you will never see again the +ship that has borne us many thousand miles. She served us well, and might +again, but for the freak of nature that has placed us in this position." +<P> +For the first time the adventurers realized that they must abandon the craft +in which they had reached the new world. So it was with no little feeling +of sadness that they climbed up the ladder that had been arranged and slid +down into the cylinder. One by one they took their places in the padded berths +arranged for them. It was a snug fit, for the professor knew if there was +too much room he and the others might be so tossed about as to be killed. +<P> +Mr. Henderson was the last to enter. Standing at the manhole he took a final +look at his pet creation, the <I>Mermaid. </I>Through the opened windows +the colored lights came, shifting here and there. Outside the terrible column +of water was roaring as if anxious to devour them. +<P> +"Good-bye, <I>Mermaid!" </I>said the professor softly. +<P> +Then he closed down the manhole cover and tightened the screws that held +it in place. He touched a button that turned on the electric lights and the +interior of the cylinder was illuminated with a soft glow. +<P> +"Are you all ready?" he asked. +<P> +"Jest as much as I ever will be," replied Washington, who, as the crisis +approached, seemed more light-hearted than any of the others. +<P> +"Then here we go!" exclaimed Mr. Henderson. +<P> +His fingers touched the button that connected with the electric machine, +which operated the compressed air. +<P> +There sounded a muffled report. Then it seemed to those in the cylinder that +the end of the world had come. They shot upward and outward, through the +top of the conning tower which had been removed. The cylinder, launched straight +at the column of water struck it squarely and, an instant later was caught +in the grasp of the giant force and hurled toward the upper world. +<P> +Up and up and up the mass of metal with its human freight went. Now it was +spinning like a top, again it shot toward the earth's crust like an arrow +from the archer's bow. +<P> +It was moving with the velocity of a meteor, yet because of being surrounded +with water, and traveling with the same velocity as the column, there was +no friction. Had there been, the heat generated would have melted the case +in an instant. +<P> +For the first few seconds those in the cylinder were dazed by the sudden +rush. Then as it became greater and greater there came a curious dull feeling, +and, one after another lost consciousness. The terror of the water column, +and the frightful speed, had made them senseless. +<P> + <HR> +<P> +It seemed like a month later, though, of course, it could have been only +a few hours or a day at most when Jack opened his eyes. He saw his companions, +white and senseless all around him, and at first thought they were dead. +Then he saw Mark looking at him, and Washington asked: +<P> +"Is any one livin' 'sides me?" +<P> +"I am," replied Jack decidedly. +<P> +Then, one after another they regained their senses. But they were in a strange +daze, for they were being carried along like a shooting star, only, as they +went at the same rate as did the element carrying them, they did not realize +this. +<P> +"I think I'm hungry," said Bill, who had the best appetite of any of the +travelers. +<P> +"You'll find a beef capsule in the little compartment over your head," spoke +the professor. +<P> +Bill was about to reach for it, when they were all startled by a sudden side +motion of the cylinder. Then came a violent shock, and a sound as of splashing +water. Next the cylinder seemed to be falling, and, a few minutes later to +be shooting upward. Following this there was another splash and the cylinder +began to bob about like a cork on a mill pond. +<P> +"We have reached the sea! We are afloat on the ocean!" cried the professor. +<P> +Hurriedly he disengaged himself from the straps that held him to his bunk. +He pushed back the lever that opened the manhole. Into the opening glowed +the glorious sunlight, while to the occupants came the breath of salt air. +<P> +"Hurrah!" cried Jack. "We are safe at last!" +<P> +"Safe at last!" the professor answered, and then they all gave a cheer. +<P> +For their cylinder, which might now be termed a boat, was floating on the +great Atlantic. The blue sky was overhead and the air of the sea fanned their +cheeks. +<P> +They had shot up from the underground earth, in the column of water, had +been tossed high into the air, had fallen back when the liquid shaft broke +into spray, had descended into the ocean, gone down a hundred feet or more, +and then had shot up like a cork to bob about the surface. +<P> +For a week they were afloat, and then they were picked up by a passing vessel, +rather weak and very much cramped, but otherwise in good shape. They said +nothing of their adventures, save to explain that they were experimenting +in a new kind of boat. About a month later, for the ship that had rescued +them was a slow sailer, they were back on the island whence that wonderful +voyage was begun. +<P> + <HR> +<P> +"Well, we solved the mystery of the center of the earth," remarked Jack, +one evening, when they were gathered in the old shack where so many wonderful +adventures had been planned. +<P> +"Yes, we did," said Mr. Henderson. "And no one else is ever likely to go +there." +<P> +"Why?" +<P> +"Because the only way of getting there was destroyed by the earthquake, and +no one could ever force his way down through that upward-shooting column +of water." +<P> +"That's so. Well, we have the diamonds, anyway," spoke Mark. "They ought +to make us rich." +<P> +And the jewels did, for the stones proved to be of great value, even though +the adventurers had saved only a few of the many they found in the ruined +temple. +<P> +But there was money enough so that they all could live in comfort; the rest +of their lives. As the professor was getting quite old, and incapable of +making any more wonderful inventions, he closed up his workshop and settled +down to a quiet life. As for Washington, Andy, and Bill and Tom, they invested +their money received from the sale of the diamonds in different business +ventures, and each one did well. +<P> +"I am going in for a good education," said Jack to Mark. +<P> +"Just what I am going to do," answered his chum. "And after we've got that——" +He paused suggestively. +<P> +"We'll go in for inventing airships, or something like that, eh?" +<P> +"Yes. We've learned a great deal from Mr. Henderson, and in the course of +time we ought to be able to turn out something even more wonderful than the +<I>Electric Monarch, </I>the <I>Porpoise, </I>or the <I>Flying Mermaid."</I> +<P> +"Yes, and when we've invented something better——" +<P> +"We'll take another trip." +<P> +"Right you are!" +<P> +And then the two chums shook hands warmly; and here we will say good-bye. +<h4>THE END.</h4> +<pre> +*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK, FIVE THOUSAND MILES UNDERGROUND *** + +This file should be named ftmun10.txt or ftmun10.zip +Corrected EDITIONS of our eBooks get a new NUMBER, ftmun11.txt +VERSIONS based on separate sources get new LETTER, ftmun10a.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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