The Tunnel
Mr. Damon, of the three who heard
Professor Bumper make this statement, showed the least
sign of astonishment. It would have been more
correct to say that he showed none at all. But
Tom could not restrain himself.
“The lost city of Pelone!” he exclaimed.
“Is it here—in these mountains?”
asked Mr. Titus.
“I have reason to hope that
it is,” went on the professor. “The
golden tablets are very vague, but I have tried many
locations, and now I am about to try here. I hope
I shall succeed. At any rate, I shall have agreeable
company, which has not always been my luck on my previous
expeditions seeking to find the lost city.”
“Oh, Professor, are you still
on that quest?” asked Mr. Damon, in a matter-of-fact
tone.
“Yes, Mr. Damon, I am.
And now that I look about me, and see the shape of
these mountains, I feel that they conform more to
the description on the golden plates than any location
I have yet tried. Somehow I feel that I shall
be successful here.”
“Did you know Professor Bumper
was searching for a lost city of the Andes?”
asked Tom, of his eccentric friend.
“Why yes,” answered Mr.
Damon. “He has been searching for years
to locate it.”
“Why didn’t you tell us?” inquired
Mr. Titus.
“Why, I never thought of it.
Bless my memorandum book! it never occurred to me.
I did not think you would be interested. Tell
them your story, Professor Bumper.”
“I will soon. Just now
I must see to my equipment. The story will keep.”
And though Tom and Mr. Titus were
both anxious to hear about the lost city, they, too,
had much to do to get ready for the trip into the
interior.
The beginning of the tunnel under
one of the smaller of the ranges of the Andes lay
two days journey from the end of the railroad line.
And the trip must be made on mules, with llamas as
beasts of burden, transporting the powder and other
supplies.
“We’ll only need to take
enough food with us for the two days,” said
Mr. Titus. “We have a regular camp at the
tunnel mouth, and my brother has supplies of grub
and other things constantly coming in. We also
have shacks to live in; but on this trip we will use
tents, as the weather at this season is fine.”
It was quite a little expedition that
set off up the mountain trail that afternoon, for
they had arrived at the end of the railroad line shortly
before dinner, and had eaten at a rather poor restaurant.
Professor Bumper had made up his own
exploring party, consisting of himself and three native
Indian diggers with their picks and shovels.
They were to do whatever excavating he decided was
necessary to locate the hidden city.
Several mules and llamas, laden with
the new explosive, and burdened with camp equipment
and food, and a few Indian servants made up the cavalcade
of Tom, the contractor, Mr. Damon and Koku. The
giant was almost as much a source of wonder to the
Peruvians as he had been on board the ship. And
he was a great help, too. For some of the Indians
were under-sized, and could not lift the heavy boxes
and packages to the backs of the beasts of burden.
But Koku, thrusting the little men
aside, grasped with one hand what two of them had
tried in vain to lift, and set it on the back of mule
or llama.
The way was rough but they took their
time to it, for the trail was an ascending one.
Above and beyond them towered the great Andes, and
Tom, gazing up into the sky, which in places seemed
almost pierced by the snow-covered peaks, saw some
small black specks moving about.
“Condors,” said Mr. Titus,
when his attention was called to them. “Some
of them are powerful birds, and they sometimes pick
up a sheep and make off with it, though usually their
food consists of carrion.”
They went into camp before the sun
went down, for it grew dark soon after sunset, and
they wanted to be prepared. Supper was made ready
by the Indian helpers, and when this was over, and
they sat about a camp fire, Tom said:
“Now, Professor Bumper, perhaps
you’ll explain about the lost city.”
“I wish I could explain about
it,” began the scientist. “For years
I have dreamed of finding it, but always I have been
disappointed. Now, perhaps, my luck may change.”
“Do you think it may be near
here?” asked Mr. Titus, motioning toward the
dark and frowning peaks all about them.
“It may be. The signs are
most encouraging. In brief, the story of the
lost city of Pelone is this. Thousands of years
ago—in fact I do not know how many—there
existed somewhere in Peru an ancient city that was
the centre of civilization for this region. Older
it was than the civilization of the Mexicans—the
Montezumas—older and more cultured.
“It is many years since I became
interested in Peruvian antiquities, and then I had
no idea of the lost city. But some of the antiques
I picked up contained in their inscriptions references
to Pelone. At first I conceived this to be a
sort of god, a deity, or perhaps a powerful ruler.
But as I went on in my work of gathering ancient things
from Peru, I saw that the name Pelone referred to
a city—a seat of government, whence everything
had its origin.
“Then I got on the track more
closely. I examined ancient documents. I
found traces of an ancient language and writings,
different from anything else in the world. I
managed to construct an alphabet and to read some of
the documents. From them I learned that Pelone
was a city situated in some fertile valley of the
Andes. It had existed for thousands of years;
it was the seat of learning and culture. Much
light would be thrown on the lives of the people who
lived in Peru before the present races inhabited it,
if I could but locate Pelone.
“Then I came across two golden
tablets on which were graven the information that
Pelone had utterly vanished.”
“How?” asked Tom.
“The golden tablets did not
say. They simply stated the fact that Pelone
was lost, and one sentence read: ’He who
shall find it again shall be richly rewarded.’
But it is not for that that I seek. It is that
I may give to the world the treasures it must contain—the
treasures of an ancient civilization.”
“And how do you think the city
disappeared?” asked Mr. Titus.
“I do not know. Whether
it was destroyed by enemies, whether it was buried
under the ashes of a volcano, whether it still exists,
deserted and solitary in some valley amid the mountain
fastnesses of the Andes, I do not know. But I
am certain the city once existed, and it may exist
yet, though it may be in dust-covered ruins.
That is what I seek to find. See! Here are
the tablets telling about it. I got them from
an old Peruvian grave.”
He took from a box two thin sheets
of yellow metal. They were covered with curious
marks, but Tom and the others could make nothing of
them. Only Professor Bumper was able to decipher
them.
“And that is the story of the
lost city of Pelone—as much as I know,”
he said. “For years I have sought it.
If I can find it I shall be famous, for I shall have
added to human knowledge.”
“If the people of that city
wrote on golden tablets, the yellow metal must have
been plentiful,” commented Mr. Titus. “You
might strike a rich mine.”
“I have no use for riches,” said the professor.
“Well, I have,” the contractor
said, with a laugh. “That’s why I’m
putting through this tunnel. And if my brother
and I don’t do it we’ll be in a bad way
financially. We have struck traces of gold, but
not in paying quantities. I should like to see
this lost city of yours, Professor Bumper. It
may contain gold.”
“You may have all the gold,
if I am allowed to keep the antiquities we find,”
stipulated the scientist. “Then you will
help me in my search?”
“As much as we can spare time
for from the tunnel work,” promised Mr. Titus.
“I’ll instruct my men to keep their eyes
open for any sign of ancient writings on the rocks
we blast out.”
“Thank you,” said the professor.
The night passed uneventfully enough,
if one excepts the mosquitoes which seemed to get
through the nets, making life miserable for all.
And once Tom thought he heard gruntings in the bush
back of the tent, which noises might, he imagined,
have been caused by a bear. Toward morning he
heard an unearthly screech in the woods, and one of
the Indians, tending the fire, grunted out a word
which meant pumas.
“I can see it isn’t going
to be dull here,” Tom mused, as he turned over
and tried to sleep.
Breakfast made them all feel better,
and they set off on the final stage of their journey.
“If all goes well we’ll
be at the tunnel entrance and camp to-night,”
said the contractor. “This second half of
the trip is the roughest.”
There was no need of saying that,
for it was perfectly evident. The trail was a
most precarious one, and only a mule or llama could
have traveled it. The mules were most sure-footed,
but, as it was, one slipped, and came near falling
over a cliff.
But no real accident occurred, and
finally, about an hour before sunset, the cavalcade
turned down the slope and emerged on a level plain,
which ended against the face of a great cliff.
As Tom rode nearer the cliff he could
make out around it groups of rude buildings, covered
with corrugated iron. There was quite a settlement
it seemed.
Then, in the face of the cliff there
showed something black—like a blot of ink,
though more regular in outline.
“The mouth of the tunnel,”
said Mr. Titus to Tom. “Come on over to
the office and I’ll introduce you to my brother.
I guess he will be glad we’ve arrived.”
Tom dismounted from his mule, an example
followed by the others. Professor Bumper gazed
up at the great mountains and murmured:
“I wonder if the lost city of
Pelone lies among them?”
Suddenly the silence of the evening
was broken by a dull, rumbling sound.
“Bless my court plaster!”
cried Mr. Damon. “What’s that?”
“A blast,” answered Mr.
Titus. “But I never knew them to set off
one so late before. I hope nothing is wrong!”
And, as he spoke, panic-stricken men
began running out of the mouth of the tunnel, while
those outside hastened toward them, shouting and calling.