A WEARY SEARCH
“Are you sure it’s them?” asked
Ned.
“Bless my toothpick!” cried Mr. Damon.
“It isn’t possible, Tom?”
“Yes, it is,” said the
young inventor. “It’s the Fogers all
right. Take a look for yourself, Ned.”
The other lad did, and confirmed his
chum’s news, and then Mr. Damon also made sure,
by using the glass.
“No doubt of it,” the
odd man said. “But what are you going to
do, Tom?”
Our hero thought for a moment.
Then, once more, he looked steadfastly through the
glass at the other carts. The occupants of them
did not appear to know that they were under observation,
and at that distance they could not have made out
our friends without a telescope. Tom ascertained
that the Fogers were not using one.
“Has Senor Swift any orders?”
asked Delazes. “Who are these Fogers?
Enemies of yours I take it. Why should they follow
you merely to find a ruined city, that the ruins and
relics may be studied?”
“Here are the orders,”
spoke Tom, a bit sharply, not answering the question.
“We’ll camp and have supper, and then we’ll
go on and make all the distance we can after dark.”
“What, travel at night?”
cried the Mexican, as if in horror at the suggestion.
“Yes; why not?” asked
Tom calmly. “They can’t see us after
dark, and if we can strike off on another trail we
may throw them off our track. Surely we’ll
travel after supper.”
“But it will be night—dark—we
never work after dark,” protested Delazes.
“You’re going to this time,” declared
Tom grimly.
“But the oxen—they are not used to
it.”
“Nothing like getting used to
a thing,” went on the young inventor. “They
won’t mind after a rest and a good feed.
Besides, there is a moon to-night, and it will be
plenty light enough. Tell the men, Senor Delazes.”
“But they will protest. It is unheard of,
and—”
“Send them to me,” said
Tom quickly. “There’ll be double pay
for night work. Send them to me.”
“Ah, that is good. Senor
Swift. Double pay! I think the men will not
object,” and with a greedy look in his black
eyes the Mexican contractor hastened to tell his men
of the change of plans.
Tom took another look at the approaching
Fogers. Their carts were slowly crawling up the
trail, and as Tom could plainly see them, he made
no doubt but that his caravan was also observed by
Andy and his father.
“I guess that’s the best
plan to throw them off,” agreed Ned, when they
were once more underway. “But how are you
going to explain to Delazes, Tom, the reason the Fogers
are following us? He’ll get suspicious,
I’m afraid.”
“Let him. I’m not
going to explain. He can think what he likes,
I can’t stop him. More than likely though,
that he’ll put it down to some crazy whim of
us ‘Americanos.’ I hope he does.
We can talk loudly, when he’s around, about
how we want to get historical relics, and the Fogers
are after the same thing. There have been several
expeditions down this way from rival colleges or museums
after Aztec relics, and he may think we’re one
of them. For the golden images are historical
relics all right,” added Tom in a lower voice.
The Mexicans made no objections to
continuing on after supper, once they learned of the
double pay, and a little later they went into camp.
A turn of the trial hid the Fogers from sight, but
Tom and his friends had no doubt but what they were
still following.
It was rather novel, traveling along
by the light of the brilliant moon, and the boys and
Mr. Damon thoroughly enjoyed it. Orders had been
given to proceed as quietly as possible, for they did
not want the Fogers to learn of the night trip.
“They may see us,” Tom
had said when they were ready to start, “but
we’ve got to take a chance on that. If the
trail divides, however, we can lose them.”
“It does separate, a little
farther on,” Delazes had said.
“Good!” cried Tom, “then
we’ll fool our rival relic hunters and our museum
will get the benefit.” He said this quite
loudly.
“Ah, then you want the relics
for a museum?” asked the Mexican contractor
quickly.
“Yes, if they pay enough,”
replied Tom, and he meant it, for he had no doubt
that many museums would be glad to get specimens of
the golden images.
Just as they were about to start off
Tom had swept the moonlit trail with his night-glass,
but there was no sign of the Fogers, though they may
have seen their rivals start off.
“Let her go!” ordered
Tom, and they were once more underway.
It was about five miles to where the
trail divided, and it was midnight when they got there,
for the going was not easy.
“Now, which way,” asked
Delazes, as the caravan came to a halt. “To
the left or right?”
“Let me see,” mused Tom,
trying to remember the map the African missionary
had sent him. “Do these roads come together
farther on?”
“No, but there is a cross trail
about twenty miles ahead by which one can get from
either of these trails to the other.”
“Good!” cried the young
inventor. “Then we’ll go to the right,
and we can make our way back. But wait a minute.
Send a couple of carts on the left trail for about
two miles. We’ll wait here until they come
back.”
“The senor is pleased to joke,”
remarked the Mexican quickly.
“I never was more earnest in
all my life,” replied Tom.
“What’s the answer?” asked Ned.
“I want to fool the Fogers.
If they see cart tracks on both roads they won’t
know which one we took. They may hit on the right
one first shot, and again, they may go to the left
until they come to the place where our two carts turn
back. In that case we’ll gain a little
time.”
“Good!” cried Ned.
“I might have known you had a good reason, Tom.”
“Send on two carts,” ordered
the young inventor, and now Delazes understood the
reason for the strategy. He chuckled as he ordered
two of the drivers to start off, and come back after
covering a couple of miles.
It was rather dreary waiting there
at the fork of the trail, and to beguile the time
Tom ordered fires lighted and chocolate made.
The men appreciated this, and were ready to start
off again when their companions returned.
“There,” announced Tom,
when they were on the way once more, “I think
we’ve given them something to think over at any
rate. Now for a few more miles, and then we’ll
rest until morning.”
All were glad enough when Tom decided
to go into camp, and they slept later than usual the
next morning. The trail was now of such a character
that no one following them could be detected until
quite close, so it was useless to worry over what
the Fogers might do.
“We’ll just make the best
time we can, and trust to luck,” Tom said.
They traveled on for two days more,
and saw nothing of the Fogers. Sometimes they
would pass through Mexican villages where they would
stop to eat, and Tom would make inquiries about the
ancient city of Poltec and the plain of the ruined
temple. In every case the Mexicans shook their
heads. They had never heard of it. Long before
this Tom had ascertained that neither Delazes nor any
of his men knew the location of this plain nor had
they ever heard of it.
“If there is such a place it
must be far in—very far in,” the
contractor had said. “You will never find
it.”
“Oh, yes, I will,” declared Tom.
But when a week passed, and he was
no nearer it than at first even Tom began to get a
little doubtful. They made inquiries at every
place they stopped, of villagers, of town authorities,
and even in some cases of the priests who obligingly
went over their ancient church records for them.
But there was no trace of the temple plain, and of
course none of the city of gold.
Peasants, journeying along the road,
parties of travelers, and often little bodies of soldiers
were asked about the ruined temple, but always the
answer was the same. They had never heard of it,
nor of the head-hunters either.
“Well, I’m glad of the
last,” said Mr. Damon, looking apprehensively
around, while Eradicate of his head to see if it was
still fast on his shoulders.
It was a weary search, and when two
weeks had passed even Tom had to admit that it was
not as easy as it had seemed at first. As for
the Mexicans, they kept on, spurred by the offer of
good wages. Delazes watched Tom narrowly, for
a sign or hint of what the party was really after,
but the young inventor and his friends guarded their
secret well.
“But I’m not going to
give up!” cried Tom. “Our map may
be wrong, and likely it is, but I’m sure we’re
near the spot, and I’m going to keep on.
If we don’t get some hint of it in a few days,
though, I’ll establish a camp, go up in the
air and see what I can pick out from the balloon.”
“That’s the stuff!”
cried Ned. “It will be a relief from these
rough ox carts.”
So for the next few days they doubled
and redoubled on their trail, criss-crossing back
and forth, ever hoping to get some trace of the temple,
which was near the entrance to the city of gold.
In all that time nothing was seen of the Fogers.
“We’ll try the balloon
to-morrow,” decided Tom, as they went into camp
one night after a weary day. Every one was tired
enough to sleep soundly under the tents which were
set up over the carts, in which beds were laid.
It must have been about midnight when Tom, who felt
a bit chilly (for the nights were cool in spite of
the heat of the day), got up to look at the campfire.
It was almost out so he went over to throw on some
more logs.
As he did so he heard a noise as if
something or somebody had leaped down out of a tree
to the ground. A moment later, before he could
toss on the sticks he had caught up, Tom was aware
of two eyes of greenish brightness staring at him
in the glow of the dying fire, and not ten feet away.