It was a wild and desolate country
in which Tom Swift and Mr. Jenks were traveling.
Villages were far apart, and they were at best but
small settlements. In their journeys from place
to place they met few travelers.
But of these few they made cautious
inquiries as to the location of Phantom Mountain,
or the landmark known as the great stone head.
Prospectors, miners and hunters, whom they asked,
shook their heads.
“I’ve heard of Phantom
Mountain,” said one grizzled miner, “but
I couldn’t say where it is. Maybe it’s
only a fish story—the place may not even
exist.”
“Oh, it does, for I’ve
been there!” exclaimed Mr. Jenks.
“Then why don’t you go back to it?”
asked the miner.
“Because I can’t locate it again,”
was the reply.
“Humph! Mighty queer if
you’ve seen a place once, and can’t get
to it again,” and the man looked as if he thought
there was something strange about Tom and his companion.
Mr. Jenks did not want to say that he had been taken
to the mountain blindfolded, for that would have caused
too much talk.
“I think if we spent to-night
in a place where the miners congregate, listened to
their talk, and put a few casual questions to them,
more as if we were only asking out of idle curiosity,
we might learn something,” suggested Tom.
“Very well, we’ll try that scheme.”
Accordingly, after they had left the
suspicious miner the two proceeded to a small milling
town, not far from Indian Ridge. There they engaged
rooms for the night at the only hotel, and, after
supper they sat around the combined dance hall and
gambling place.
There were wild, rough scenes, which
were distasteful to Tom, and to Mr. Jenks, but they
felt that this was their only chance to get on the
right trail, and so they stayed. As strangers
in a western mining settlement they were made roughly
welcome, and in response to their inquiries about
the country, they were told many tales, some of which
were evidently gotten up for the benefit of the “tenderfeet.”
“Is there a place around here
called Phantom Mountain?” asked Tom, at length,
as quietly as he could.
“Never heard of it, stranger,”
replied a miner who had done most of the talking.
“I never heard of it, and what Bill Slatterly
don’t know ain’t worth knowin’.
I’m Bill Slatterly,” he added, lest there
be some doubt on that score.
“Isn’t there some sort
of a landmark around here shaped like a great stone
head?” went on Tom, after some unimportant questions.
“Seems to me I’ve heard of that.”
“Nary a one,” answered
Mr. Slatterly. “No stone heads, and no
Phantom Mountains—nary a one.
“Who says there ain’t
no Phantom Mountains?” demanded an elderly miner,
who had been dozing in one corner of the room, but
who was awakened by Slatterly’s loud voice.
“Who says so?”
“I do,” answered the one
who claimed to know everything.
“Then you’re wrong!”
Tom’s heart commenced beating faster than usual.
“Do you mean to say you’ve
seen Phantom Mountain, Jed Nugg?” demanded Slatterly.
“No, I ain’t exactly seen
it, an’ I don’t want to, but there is
such a place, about sixty mile from here. Folks
says it’s haunted, and them sort of places I
steer clear from.”
“Can you tell me about it?”
asked Mr. Jenks, eagerly. “I am interested
in such things.”
“I can’t tell you much
about it,” was the reply, “and I wouldn’t
git too interested, if I was you. It might not
be healthy. All I know is that one time my partner
and I were in hard luck. We got grub-staked,
and went out prospectin’. We strayed into
a wild part of the country about sixty mile from here,
and one night we camped on a mountain—a
wild, desolate place it was too.”
The miner stopped, and began leisurely
filling his pipe.
“Well?” asked Tom, trying
not to let his voice sound too eager.
“Well, that was Phantom Mountain.”
The miner seemed to have finished his story.
“Is that all?” asked Mr.
Jenks. “How did you know it was Phantom
Mountain?”
“’Cause we seen the ghost—my
partner and I—that’s why!”
exclaimed the man, puffing on his pipe. “As
I said, we was campin’ there, and ‘long
about midnight we seen somethin’ tall and white,
and all shimmerin’, with a sort of yellow fire,
slidin’ down the side of the mountain It made
straight for our camp.”
“Huh! Guess you run, didn’t
you, Jed?” asked Bill Slatterly.
“Course we did. You’d
a run too, if you seen a ghost comm’ at you,
an’ firm’ a gun.”
“Ghosts can’t fire guns!”
declared Bill. “I guess you dreamed it,
Jed.”
“Ghosts can’t fire guns,
eh? That’s all you know about it. This
one did, and to prove I didn’t dream it, there
was a bullet hole in my hat next mornin’.
I could prove it, too, only I ain’t got that
hat any more. But that was Phantom Mountain, strangers,
an’ my advice to you is to keep away from it.
I was on it but I didn’t exactly see it, ’cause
it was dark at the time.”
“Was it near a peak that looked
like a stone head?” asked Tom.
“It were, stranger, but I didn’t
take much notice of it. Me and my partner got
out of them diggin’s next day, and I never went
back. I ain’t never said much about this
place, but it’s called Phantom Mountain all
right, and I ain’t the only one that’s
seen a ghost there. Other grub-stakers has had
the same experience.”
“Why ain’t I never heard
about it?” demanded Bill, suspiciously.
“‘Cause as why you’re
allers so busy talkin’ that you don’t
never listen to nothin’ I reckon,” was
Jed’s answer, amid laughter.
“Can you tell us what trail
to take to get there?” asked Tom, of the miner.
“Yes, it’s called the
old silver trail, and you strike it by goin’
to a place called Black Gulch, about forty mile from
here. Then it’s twenty mile farther on.
But take my advice and don’t go.”
“Can it be reached by way of
Indian Ridge?” asked Mr. Jenks, wondering how
he had been taken to the cave of the diamond makers.
He did not remember Black Gulch.
“Yes, you can git there by Indian
Ridge way, but it’s more dangerous. You’re
likely to lose your way, for that’s a trail
that’s seldom traveled.” Mr. Jenks
thought that, perhaps, was the reason the gang had
taken him that way. “It’s easier to
get to the stone head and Phantom Mountain by Black
Gulch, but it ain’t healthy to go there, strangers,
take my advice on that,” concluded the miner,
as he prepared to go to sleep again.
Tom could scarcely contain the exultation
he felt. At last, it seemed, they were on the
trail. He motioned to Mr. Jenks, and they slipped
quietly from the place, just as another dance was
beginning.
“Now for Black Gulch!”
cried Tom. “We must hurry back to the airship,
and tell the good news.
“It’s too late to-night,”
decided Mr. Jenks, and so they waited until morning,
when they made an early start.
They found Mr. Damon and Mr. Parker
anxiously awaiting their return. Mr. Damon blessed
so many things that he was nearly out of breath, and
Mr. Parker related something of the observations he
had made.
“I think I have discovered traces
of a dormant volcano,” he said. “I
am in hopes that it will have an eruption while we
are here.”
“I’m not,” spoke
Tom, decidedly. “We’ll start for Black
Gulch as soon as possible.”
The airship once more rose in the
air, and, following the directions the miner had given
him, Tom pointed his craft for the depression in the
mountains which had been given the name Black Gulch.
It was reached in a short time, and then, making a
turn up a long valley the airship proceeded at reduced
speed.
“We ought to see that stone
head soon now,” spoke Tom, as he peered from
the windows of the pilot house.
“It’s queer we didn’t
notice it when we were up in the air,” remarked
Mr. Jenks. “We’ve been over this place
before, I’m sure of it.”
The next moment Mr. Damon uttered
a cry. “Bless my watch-chain!” he
exclaimed. “Look at that!”
He pointed off to the left. There,
jutting out from the side of a steep mountain peak
was a mass of stone—black stone—which,
as the airship slowly approached, took the form and
shape of a giant’s head.
“That’s it! That’s
it!” cried Tom. “The great stone head!”
“And now for Phantom Mountain
and the diamonds!” shouted Mr. Jenks, as Tom
let the airship slowly settle to the bottom of the
valley.