THE MAP ON THE GOLD
Naturally, when Tom pointed at the
golden image, the eyes of all the Mexicans in the
room, as well as those of the friends of the young
inventor, followed. For a moment there was silence
and then the aged Mexican, whom Eradicate had asked
for corn meal, rapidly uttered something in Spanish.
“Yes! Yes!” chorused
his companions, and they followed this up, by crying
aloud when he had said something else: “No!
No!” Then there was confused talking, seemingly
directed at Tom, who, though he had lowered his hand,
continued to stare at the golden image.
“What in the world are they
saying?” asked Ned, who only knew a little Spanish.
“I can’t get on to all
of it,” explained Tom above the confusion.
“Evidently they think we’ve come to take
the image away from them and they are objecting.”
“Offer to buy it then,” suggested Ned.
“That’s what I’m
going to do,” answered Tom, and once more addressing
the aged Mexican, who seemed to be at the head of the
household, Tom offered to purchase the relic which
meant so much to him, agreeing to pay a large sum.
This seemed to create further confusion,
and one of the women of the household hastily took
down the little statute and was carrying it into an
inner room, when Miguel Delazes came up. He looked
into the open doorway, glanced about the room which
was illuminated by several rude oil lamps, saw the
looks of wonder and surprise on the faces of Tom and
his companions, noted the excitement among the Mexicans,
and then he caught sight of the golden image which
the woman held.
“Ah!” exclaimed Delazes,
and there was a world of meaning in his tone.
His small dark eyes glittered. They roved from
the image to Tom, and back to the little golden figure
again. “Ah!” muttered the contractor.
“And so the senor has found that for what he
was searching? It is gold after all, but
such gold as never I have seen before. So, the
senor hopes to get many relics like that for his museum?
So, is it not? Ah, ha! But that is worth
coming many miles to get!”
Tom realized that if he did net act
quickly Delazes might have his secret, and once it
was known that Tom was seeking the buried city of
gold, the Mexicans could never be shaken off his trail.
He decided on a bold step.
“Look here, Senor Delazes,”
said the young inventor. “I had no more
idea that golden image was here than you did.
I would like to buy it, in fact I offered to, but
they don’t seem to want to sell it. If
you can purchase it for me I’ll pay you
a good price for it.”
“And doubtless the senor would
like many more,” suggested Delazes, with an
open sneer.
“Doubtless the senor would!”
snapped Tom. “Look here, Delazes, I’m
here on business, to get all the relics I can—this
kind or any other that I may fancy. You can think
we’re after buried treasure if you want to—I’m
not going to take the trouble to contradict you.
I hired you and your men for a certain purpose.
But if you don’t want to stay and let me and
my friends run things, the sooner you tell me so the
better. But I don’t want any more of your
underhand remarks. Understand?”
For a moment Delazes stared at Tom
with snapping eyes, as though he would like to have
attacked him. Then, knowing that Tom and his
friends were well armed, and doubtless thinking that
strategy was better than open force he bowed, smiled
in what he probably meant for a friendly fashion,
and said:
“The senor is pleased to joke.
Very well, I shall believe what I like. Meanwhile,
does Senor Swift commission me to buy the image for
him?”
Tom hesitated a moment. He feared
he would be no match for the shrewd Mexican, and he
wondered how much Delazes already knew. Then
he decided on keeping up his end baldly, as that had
seemed to have the best effect.
“You can have a try at buying
the image after I have failed,” he said.
“I’ll try my hand first.”
“Very well,” assented
the contractor. The talk had been in English,
and none of the Mexicans gave any signs of having understood
it. Tom realized that he was playing a dangerous
game, for naturally Delazes would privately tell the
Mexicans to put so high a price on the statute as
to prevent Tom from getting it and then the contractor
would make his own terms.
But Tom decided that this was the
only course, and he followed it.
“We’ll stay here in the
village for to-night,” he went on. “Delazes,
you and your men can make yourselves comfortable with
any friends you may find here. We’ll set
up our tent as usual, after we get some corn meal
for supper. I’ll talk to them about the
relic to-morrow. They seem to be afraid now.”
“Very well,” assented
the contractor again, and then be said something in
Spanish to the aged Mexican. What it was Tom could
not catch, for Delazes spoke rapidly and seemed to
use some colloquial, or slang phrases with which our
hero was not familiar. The old Mexican assented
by a nod, and then he brought out some corn meal which
Eradicate took. The woman with the golden image
had gone into an inner room.
“Bless my pocketbook!”
exclaimed Mr. Damon, when he Tom, Ned and Eradicate
were busy setting up their tent near a campfire just
on the edge of the village. “This is most
unexpected. What are you going to do, Tom?”
“I hardly know. I want
to have a talk with whoever owns that image, to learn
where they got it. One thing is sure, it proves
that Mr. Illingway’s information about the city
of gold is correct.”
“But it doesn’t tell us where it is,”
said Ned.
“It must be somewhere around
here,” declared his chum. “Otherwise
the image wouldn’t be here.”
“Bless my gaiters, that’s so!” exclaimed
the odd man.
“Not necessarily,” insisted
Ned. “Why one of the images is away over
in Africa, and this one may have been brought hundreds
of miles from the underground city.”
“I don’t believe so,”
declared Tom. “We’re somewhere in
the neighborhood of the city, according to Mr. Illingway’s
map, I’m sure. That would be true, image
or no image. But when you take the little gold
statue into consideration it makes me positive that
I’m near the end of the trail. I’ve
just got to have a talk with those people to learn
where the statue came from.”
“Look out for Delazes,” warned Ned.
“I intend to. As soon as
I can, I’m going to leave him and his men behind
and set off in the balloon. But first I want to
get an idea of where to head for. We must locate
the plain on which stands the ruined temple.”
“It’s getting exciting,” remarked
Ned. “I wish—”
“Supper am serbed in de dinin’
cah!” interrupted Eradicate with a laugh, as
he imitated a Pullman porter.
“That’s the best thing
you could wish for,” put in Tom gaily. “Come
on, we’ll have a good meal, a sleep, and then
we’ll be ready to play detectives again to-morrow.”
They all slept soundly that night,
though Tom had some idea of staying awake to see if
Delazes paid any secret visits to the house where
the golden image was kept. But he realized that
the Mexican, if he wanted to, could easily find means
to outwit him, so the young inventor decided to get
all the rest he could and trust to chance to help
him out.
His first visit after breakfast was
to the house of the aged Mexican. The image was
not in sight, though Tom and Ned and Mr. Damon looked
eagerly around for it. There was a curious light
in the eyes of the old man as Tom asked for the little
statue of gold. Delazes was not in evidence.
Tom had to conduct the conversation in Spanish, no
particularly easy task for him, though he made out
all right.
“Will you sell the image?” he asked.
“No sell,” replied the Mexican quickly.
“Will you please let me look at it?”
The Mexican hesitated a moment, called
a command to some one in the next room, and, a moment
later the old woman shuffled in, bearing the wonderful
golden image. Tom could not repress a little gasp
of delight as he saw it at close range, for it was
beautifully carved out of solid, yellow gold.
The woman set it on a rude table,
and the young inventor, Ned and Mr. Damon drew near
to look at the image more closely. It was the
work of a master artist. The statue was about
eight inches high, and showed a man, dressed in flowing
robes, seated crosslegged on a sort of raised pedestal.
On the head was a crown, many pointed and the face
beneath it showed calm dignity like that of a superior
being. In one extended hand was a round ball,
with lines on it to show the shape of the earth, though
only the two American continents appeared. In
the other hand was what might be tables of stone, a
book, or something to represent law-giving authority.
“How much?” asked Tom.
“No sell,” was the monotonous answer.
“Five hundred dollars,” offered our hero.
“No sell.”
“One thousand dollars.”
“No sell.”
“Why is it so valuable to you?” Tom wanted
to know.
“We have him for many years.
Bad luck come if he go.” Then the Mexican
went on to explain that the image had been in his family
for many generations, and that once, when it had been
taken by an enemy, death and poverty followed until
the statue was recovered. He said he would never
part with it.
“Where did it come from?”
asked Tom, and he cared more about this than he did
about buying the image.
“Far, far off,” said the
Mexican. “No man know. I no know—my
father he no know—his father’s father
no know. Too many years back—many
years.”
He motioned to the woman to take the
statue away, and Tom and his friend realized that
little more could be learned. The young inventor
stretched out his hand with an involuntary motion,
and the Mexican understood. He spoke to the woman
and she handed the image to Tom. The Mexican
had recognized his desire for a moment’s closer
inspection and had granted it.
“Jove! It’s as heavy
as lead!” exclaimed Tom. “And solid
gold.”
“Isn’t it hollow up the
middle?” asked Ned. “Look on the underside,
Tom.”
His chum did so. As he turned
the image over to look at the base he had all he could
do not to utter a cry of surprise. For there,
rudely scratched on the plain surface of the gold,
was what was unmistakably a map. And it was a
map showing the location of the ruined temple—the
temple and the country surrounding it—the
ancient city of Poltec, and the map was plain enough
so that Tom could recognize part of the route over
which they had traveled.
But, better than all, was a tiny arrow,
something like the compass mark on modern maps.
And this arrow pointed straight at the ruins of the
temple, and the direction indicated was due west from
the village where our travelers now were. Tom
Swift had found out what he wanted to know.
Without a word he handed back the
image and then, trying not to let his elation show
in his face, he motioned to Ned and Mr. Damon to follow
him from the house.
“Bless my necktie!” exclaimed
the odd man, when they were out of hearing distance.
“What’s up, Tom.”
“I know the way to the ruined
temple. We’ll start at once,” and
he told them of the map on the image.
“Who do you suppose could have made it?”
asked Ned.
“Probably whoever took the image
from the city of gold. He wanted to find his
way back again, or show some one, but evidently none
of the recent owners of the image understand about
the map, if they know it’s there. The lines
are quite faint, but it is perfectly plain.”
“It’s lucky I saw it.
I don’t have to try to buy the image now, nor
seek to learn where it came from. Anyhow, if they
told me they’d tell Delazes, and he’d
be hot after us. As it is I doubt if he can learn
now. Come, we’ll get ready to hit the trail
again.”
And they did, to the no small wonder
of the contractor and his men, who could not understand
why Tom should start out without the image, or without
having learned where it came from, for Delazes had
questioned the old Mexican, and learned all that took
place. But he did not look on the base of the
statue.
Due west went the cavalcade, and then
a new complication arose. Tom did not want to
take the Mexicans any nearer to the plain of the temple
than possible, and he did not know how many miles it
was away. So he decided on taking a longer balloon
voyage than at first contemplated.
“We’ll camp to-night at
the best place we can find,” he said to Delazes,
“and then I’m going on in the balloon.
You and your men will stay in camp until we come back.”
“Ha! And suppose the senors
do not come back with the balloon?”
“Wait a reasonable time for
us, and then you can do as you wish. I’ll
pay you to the end of the month and if you wait for
us any longer I have given instructions for the bank
in Tampico to pay you and your men what is right.”
“Good! And the senors are going into the
unknown?”
“Yes, we don’t know where
we’ll wind up. This hunting for relics is
uncertain business. Make yourselves comfortable
in camp, and wait.”
“Waiting is weary business,
Senor Swift. If we could come with you—”
began Delazes, with an eager look in his eyes.
“Out of the question,”
spoke Tom shortly. “There isn’t room
in the balloon.”
“Very well, senor,” and
with a snapping glance from his black eyes the contractor
walked away.