On the Watch
The mystery of the disappearance of
the ten men—for mystery it was—remained,
and as no side opening or passage could be found within
the tunnel, it came to be the generally accepted explanation
that the laborers had come out unobserved, and, for
reasons of their own, had run away.
This habit on the part of the Peruvian
workers was not unusual. In fact, the Titus brothers
had to maintain a sort of permanent employment agency
in Lima to replace the deserters. But they were
used to this. The difference was that the Indians
used to vanish from camp at night, and invariably
after pay-day.
“And that’s the only reason
I have a slight doubt that they walked out of the
tunnel,” said Job Titus. “There was
money due em.”
“They never came out of the
front entrance of the tunnel,” said Tom.
“Of that I’m positive.”
But there was no way of proving his assertion.
The third blast, while not as successful
as the second in the amount of rock loosened, was
better than the first, and made a big advance in the
tunnel progress. Tom was beginning to understand
the nature of the mountain into which the big shaft
was being driven and he learned how better to apply
the force of his explosive.
That was the work which he had charge
of—the placing of the giant powder so it
would do the most effective work. Then, when
the fumes from the blast had cleared away, in would
surge the workmen to clear away the debris.
Under the direction of Mr. Swift,
left at Shopton to oversee the manufacture of the
explosive, new shipments came on promptly to Lima,
and were brought out to the tunnel on the backs of
mules, or in the case of small quantities, on the
llamas. But the latter brutes will not carry a
heavy load, lying down and refusing to get up if they
are overburdened, whereas one has yet to find a mule’s
limit.
After his first success in getting
the natives to take a more active interest in the
gathering of the cinchona bark, Mr. Damon found it
rather easy, for the story of Tom’s electric
rifle and how it had killed the mad dog spread among
the tribes, and Mr. Damon had but to announce that
the “lightning shooter,” as Tom was called,
was a friend of the drug concern to bring about the
desired results. Mr. Damon, by paying a sort
of bribe, disguised under the name “tax,”
secured the help of Peruvian officials so he had no
trouble on that score.
Koku was in his element. He liked
a wild life and Peru was much more like the country
of giants where Tom had found him, than any place
the big man had since visited. Koku had great
strength and wanted to use it, and after a week or
so of idleness he persuaded Tom to let him go in the
tunnel to work.
The giant was made a sort of foreman
under Tim, and the two became great friends.
The only trouble with Koku was that he would do a
thing himself instead of letting his men do it, as,
of course, all proper foremen should do. If the
giant saw two or three of the Indians trying to lift
a big rock into the little dump cars, and failing
because of its great weight, he would good-naturedly
thrust them aside, pick up the big stone in his mighty
arms, and deposit it in its place.
And once when an unusually big load
had been put in a car, and the mule attached found
it impossible to pull it out to the tunnel mouth,
Koku unhitched the creature and, slipping the harness
around his waist, walked out, dragging the load as
easily as if pulling a child on a sled.
Professor Bumper kept on with his
search for the lost city of Pelone. Back and
forth he wandered among the wild Andes Mountains,
now hopeful that he was on the right trail, and again
in despair. Tom and Mr. Damon went with him once
more for a week, and though they enjoyed the trip,
for the professor was a delightful companion, there
were no results. But the scientist would not
give up.
Tom Swift was kept busy looking after
the shipments of the explosive, and arranging for
the blasts. He had letters from Ned Newton in
which news of Shopton was given, and Mr. Swift wrote
occasionally. But the mails in the wilderness
of the Andes were few and far between.
Tom wrote a letter of explanation
to Mr. Nestor, in addition to the wireless he had
sent regarding the box labeled dynamite, but he got
no answer. Nor were his letters to Mary answered.
“I wonder what’s wrong?”
Tom mused. “It can’t be that they
think I did that on purpose. And even if Mr. Nestor
is angry at me for something that wasn’t my
fault, Mary ought to write.”
But she did not, and Tom grew a bit
despondent as the days went by and no word came.
“I suppose they might be offended
because I left Rad to do up that package instead of
attending to it myself,” thought Tom. “Well,
I did make a mistake there, but I didn’t mean
to. I never thought about Eradicate’s not
reading. I’ll make him go to night school
as soon as I get back. But maybe I’ll never
get another chance to send Mary anything. If I
do, I’ll not let Rad deliver it—that’s
sure.”
The feeling of alarm engendered among
the Indians by the disappearance of their ten fellow-workers
seemed to have disappeared. There were rumors
that some of the mysterious ten had been seen in distant
villages and settlements, but the Titus brothers could
not confirm this.
“I don’t think anything
serious happened to them, anyhow,” said Job
Titus one day. “And I should hate to think
our work was responsible for harm to any one.”
“Your rivals don’t seem
to be doing much to hamper you,” observed Tom.
“I guess Waddington gave up.
“I won’t be too sure of that,” said
Mr. Titus.
“Why, what has happened?” Tom asked.
“Well, nothing down here—that
is, directly—but we are meeting with trouble
on the financial end. The Peruvian government
is holding back payments.”
“Why is that?”
“They claim we are not as far advanced as we
ought to be.”
“Aren’t you?”
“Practically, yes. There
was no set limit of work to be done for the intermediate
payments. We bonded ourselves to have the tunnel
done at a certain date.
“If we fail, we lose a large
sum, and if we get it done ahead of time we get a
big premium. There was no question as to completing
a certain amount of footage before we received certain
payments. But Senor Belasdo, the government representative,
claims that we will not be done in time, and therefore
he is holding back money due us. I’m sure
the rival contractors have set him up to this, because
he was always decent to us before.
“Another matter, too, makes
me suspicious. We have tried to raise money in
New York to tide us over while the government is holding
up our funds here. But our New York office is
meeting with difficulties. They report there is
a story current to the effect that we are going to
fail, and while that isn’t so, you know how
hard it is to borrow money in the face of such rumors.
We are doing all we can to fight them, of course,
and maybe we’ll beat out our rivals yet.
“But that isn’t all.
I’m sure some one is on the ground here trying
to make trouble among our workers. I never knew
so many men to leave, one after another. It’s
keeping the employment agency in Lima busy supplying
us with new workers. And so many of them are
unskilled. They aren’t able to do half
the work of the old men, and poor Tim Sullivan is
in despair.”
“You think some one here is
causing dissensions and desertions among your men?”
“I’m sure of it!
I’ve tried to ferret out who it is, but the
spy, for such he must be, keeps his identity well
hidden.”
Tom thought for a moment. Then he said:
“Mr. Titus, with your permission,
I’ll see if I can find out about this for you.”
“Find out what, Tom?”
“What is causing the men to
leave. I don’t believe it’s the scare
about the ten missing ones.”
“Nor do I. That’s past
and gone. But how are you going to get at the
bottom of it?”
“By keeping watch. I’ve
got nothing to do now for the next week. We’ve
just set off a big blast, and I’ve got the powder
for the following one all ready. The men will
be busy for some time getting out the broken rock.
Now what I propose to do is to go in the tunnel and
work among them until I can learn something.
“I can understand the language
pretty well now, though I can’t speak much of
it. I’ll go in the tunnel every day and
find out what’s going on.”
“But you’ll be known,
and if one of our men, or one who we suppose is one,
turns out to be a spy, he’ll be very cautious
while you’re in there.”
“He won’t know me,”
Tom said. “This is how I’ll work it.
I’ll go off with Professor Bumper the next time
he starts on one of his weekly expeditions into the
woods. But I won’t go far until I turn
around and come back. I’ll adopt some sort
of disguise, and I’ll apply to you for work.
You can tell Tim to put me on. You might let
him into the secret, but no one else.”
A few days later Tom was seen departing
with Professor Bumper into the interior, presumably
to help look for the lost city. Mr. Damon was
away from camp on business connected with the drug
concern, and Koku, to his delight, had been given
charge of a stationary hoisting engine outside the
tunnel, so he would not come in contact with Tom.
It was not thought wise to take the giant into the
secret.
Then one day, shortly after Professor
Bumper and Tom had disappeared into the forest, a
ragged and unkempt white man applied at the tunnel
camp for work. There was just the barest wink
as he accosted Mr. Titus, who winked in turn, and
then the new man was handed over to Tim Sullivan, as
a sort of helper.
And so Tom Swift began his watch.