“Beware the head-hunters!”
“That’s what I want!”
exclaimed the young inventor, as he finished the perusal
of the missionary’s missive.
“What is it?” asked Mr.
Swift, entering the shop at that moment.
“News from Africa, dad.
Mr. Illingway went to a lot of trouble to get more
information for us about the city of gold, and he sends
a better map. It seems there was one among the
effects of the white man who died near where Mr. Illingway
has his mission. With this map, and what additional
information I have, we ought to locate the underground
city. Look, dad,” and the lad showed the
map.
“Humph!” exclaimed Mr.
Swift with a smile. “I don’t call
that a very clear map. It shows a part of Central
Mexico, that’s true, but it’s on such
a small scale I don’t see how you’re going
to tell anything by it.”
“But I have a description,”
explained Tom. “It seems according to Mr.
Illingway’s letter, that you have to go to the
coast and strike into the interior until you are near
the old city of Poltec. That used to be it’s
name, but Mr. Illingway says it may be abandoned now,
or the name changed. But I guess we can find it.”
“Then, according to what he
could learn from the African natives, who talked with
the white man, the best way is to hire ox carts and
strike into the jungle. That’s the only
way to carry our baggage, and the dirigible balloon
which I’m going to take along.”
“Pretty uncertain way to look
for a buried city of gold,” commented Mr. Swift.
“But I suppose even if you don’t find it
you’ll have the fun of searching for it, Tom.”
“But we are going to find
it!” the lad declared. “We’ll
get there, you’ll see!”
“But how are you going to know
it when you see it?” asked his father.
“If it’s underground even a balloon won’t
help you much.”
“It’s true it is underground,”
agreed Tom, “but there must be an entrance to
it somewhere, and I’m going to hunt for that
entrance. Mr. Illingway writes that the city
is a very old one, and was built underground by the
priests of some people allied to the Aztecs. They
wanted a refuge in times of war and they also hid their
valuables there. They must have been rich to
have so much gold, or else they didn’t value
it as we do.”
“That might be so,” assented
Mr. Swift. “But I still maintain, Tom,
that it’s like looking for a needle in a haystack.”
“Still, I’m going to have
a try for it,” asserted the lad. “If
I can once locate the plain of the big temple I’ll
be near the entrance to the underground city.”
“What is the ‘plain of the big temple,’
Tom?”
“Mr. Illingway writes,”
said the lad, again referring to the letter, “that
somewhere near the beginning of the tunnel that leads
into the city of gold, there is an immense flat plain,
on which the ancient Aztecs once built a great temple.
Maybe they worshiped the golden images there.
Anyhow the temple is in ruins now, near an overgrown
jungle, according to the stories the white man used
to tell. He once got as near the city of gold
as the big temple, but hostile natives drove him and
his party back. Then he went to Africa after getting
an image from someone, and died there. So no one
since has ever found the city of gold.”
“Well, I hope you do, Tom, but
I doubt it. However, I suppose you will hurry
your preparations for going away, now that you have
all the information you can get.”
“Right, dad. I must send
word to Mr. Damon and Ned at once. A few more
days’ work, and my balloon will be in shape for
a trial flight, and then I can take it apart, pack
it up, and ship it. Then ho! for the city of
gold!”
Mr. Swift smiled at his son’s
enthusiasm, but he did not check it. He knew
Tom too well for that.
Naturally Mr. Damon and Ned were delighted
with the additional information the missionary had
sent, and Ned agreed with Tom that it was a mere matter
of diligent search to find the underground city.
“Bless my collar button!”
cried Mr. Damon. “It may not be as easy
as all that, but Tom Swift isn’t the kind that
gives up! We’ll get there!”
Meanwhile Tom worked diligently on
his balloon. He sent a letter of thanks to Mr.
Illingway, at the same time requesting that if any
more information was obtained within the next three
weeks to cable it, as there would not be time for
a letter to reach Shopton ere Tom planned to leave
for Mexico.
The following days were busy ones
for all. There was much to be done, and Tom worked
night and day. They had to get rifles ready,
for they might meet hostile natives. Then, too,
they had to arrange for the proper clothing, and other
supplies.
To take apart and ship the balloon
was no small task, and then there were the passages
to engage on a steamer that would land them at the
nearest point to strike into the interior, the question
of transportation after reaching Mexico, and many
other matters to consider.
But gradually things began to shape
themselves and it looked as though the expedition
could start for the city of gold in about two weeks
after the receipt of the second letter from the missionary.
“I think I’ll give the
balloon a trial to-morrow,” said Tom one night,
after a hard day’s work, “It’s all
ready, and it ought to work pretty good. It will
be just what we need to sail over some dense jungle
and land down on the plain by the great temple.”
“Bless my slipers!” exclaimed
Mr. Damon. “I must think up some way of
telling my wife that I’m going.”
“Haven’t you told her yet?” asked
Ned.
The eccentric man shook his head.
“I haven’t had a good
chance,” he said, “but I think I’ll
tell her to-morrow, and promise her one of the gold
images. Then she won’t mind.”
Tom was just a little bit nervous
when he got ready for a trial flight in the new dirigible
balloon. To tell the truth he much preferred
aeroplanes to balloons, but he realized that in a country
where the jungle growth prevailed, and where there
might be no level places to get a “take off,”
or a starting place for an aeroplane, the balloon
was more feasible.
But he need have had no fears, for
the balloon worked perfectly. In the bag Tom
used a new gas, much more powerful even than hydrogen,
and which he could make from chemicals that could easily
be carried on their trip.
The air craft was small but powerful,
and could easily carry Tom, Ned and Mr. Damon, together
with a quantity of food and other supplies. They
intended to use it by starting from the place where
they would leave the most of their baggage, after getting
as near to the city of gold as they could by foot
trails. Tom hoped to establish a camp in the
interior of Mexico, and make trips off in different
directions to search for the ruined temple. If
unsuccessful they could sail back each night, and if
he should discover the entrance to the buried city
there was food enough in the car of the balloon to
enable them to stay away from camp for a week or more.
In order to give the balloon a good
test, Tom took up with him not only Ned and Mr. Damon,
but Eradicate and Mr. Swift to equalize the weight
of food and supplies that later would be carried.
The test showed that the craft more than came up to
expectations, though the trial trip was a little marred
by the nervousness of the colored man.
“I doan’t jest laik dis
yeah kind of travelin’,” said Eradicate.
“I’d radder be on de ground.”
Most of the remaining two weeks were
spent in packing the balloon for shipment, and then
the travelers got their own personal equipment ready.
They put up some condensed food, but they depended
on getting the major portion in Mexico.
It was two days before they were to
start. Their passage had been engaged on a steamer,
and the balloon and most of their effects had been
shipped. Mr. Damon had broken the news to his
wife, and she had consented to allow him to go, though
she said it would be for the last time.
“But if I bring her back a nice,
big, gold image I know she’ll let me go on other
trips with you, Tom.” said the eccentric man.
“Bless my yard stick, if I couldn’t go
off on an adventure now and then I don’t know
what I’d do.”
They were in the library of the Swift
home that evening. Tom, Ned, Mr. Damon and the
aged inventor, and of course the only thing talked
of was the prospective trip to the city of gold.
“What I can’t understand,”
Mr. Swift was saying, “is why the natives made
so many of the same images of gold, and why there is
that large one in the underground place. What
did they want of it?”
“That’s part of the mystery
we hope to solve,” said Tom. “I’m
going to bring that big image home with me if I can.
I guess—”
He was interrupted by a ring at the front door.
“I hope that isn’t Andy Foger,”
remarked Ned.
“No danger,” replied Tom.
“He’ll keep away from here after what he
did to my aeroplane.”
Mrs. Baggert went to the door.
“A message for you, Tom,”
she announced a little later, handing in an envelope.
“Hello, a cablegram!”
exclaimed the young inventor. “It must be
from Mr. Illingway, in Africa. It is,”
he added a moment later as he glanced at the signature.
“What does he say?” asked Mr. Swift.
“Can he give us any more definite
information about the city of gold?” inquired
Ned.
“I’ll read it,”
said Tom, and there was a curious, strained note in
his voice. “This is what it says:”
“’No more information
obtainable. But if you go to the city of gold
beware of the head-hunters!’”
“Head-hunters!” exclaimed
Mr. Damon. “Bless my top-knot, what are
they?”
“I don’t know,”
answered Tom simply, “but whatever they are we’ve
got to be on the lookout for them when we get to the
gold city, and that’s where I’m going,
head-hunters or no head-hunters!”