“Is it A rescue?”
“Can you see anything, Tom?
Any lever or anything by which we can raise the stone
gate?”
It was Ned who spoke, and he addressed
his chum, who was closely examining the pedestal of
the fallen golden statue.
“Bless my soul!” exclaimed
Mr. Damon, “we’ve get to find some way
out of here soon—or—”
He did not finish the sentence, but
they all knew what he meant.
“Oh good landy!” cried
Eradicate. “What’s gwine t’
become ob us?”
“Don’t you see anything, Tom?” repeated
Ned.
“Not a thing. Not a sign
of a lever or handle by which the stone might be raised.
But wait, I’m going to get on top of the pedestal.”
He managed to scramble up by stepping
on and clinging to various ornamental projections,
and soon gained the flat place where the big golden
statue had rested. But he saw at a glance that
it was as smooth as a billiard table.
“Nothing here!” he called down to Ned.
“Then how do you suppose the
gate closed down when the statue was pulled off?”
asked Ned.
“It must have been because of
the disturbance of the equilibrium, or due to a change
of weight. Probably this pedestal rests on a
platform, like the platform of a large scale.
Its weight, with that of the statue, rested on certain
concealed levers, and held the stone up out of sight
in the roof of the tunnel. When I yanked down
the statue I made the weight uneven, and the stone
fell, and there doesn’t seem to be any way of
putting the weight back again.”
“No, we never could get the
statue back on the pedestal,” said Ned.
“But maybe there’s some mechanism at the
stone gate, or near it, like the black knob which
turned off the water. We may be able to work
that and raise the big stone slab.”
“It’s the only thing to
try, as long as we haven’t dynamite to blast
it,” agreed Tom. “Come on, we’ll
take a look.”
They went back to where the rock closed
the tunnel, but a long and frantic search failed to
show the least projection, lever, handle or any other
thing, that could be moved.
“What in the world do you suppose
those ancients made such a terrible contrivance for?”
Ned wanted to know.
“Well, if we could read the
warning on the statue we might know,” replied
Mr. Damon. “That probably says that whoever
disturbs the status will close up the golden city
forever.”
“Maybe there’s another
way out—or in,” suggested Tom hopefully.
“We didn’t look for that. It must
be our next move. We must not let a single chance
go by. We’ll look for some way of getting
out, at the far end of this underground city.”
Filled with gloomy and foreboding
thoughts, they walked away from the stone barrier.
To search for another means of egress would take some
time, and the same fear came to all of them—could
they live that long?
“It was a queer thing, to make
that statue hollow,” mused Ned as he walked
between Mr. Damon and Tom. “I wonder why
it was done, when all the others are solid gold?”
“Maybe they found they couldn’t
melt up, and cast in a mould, enough gold to make
a solid statue that size,” suggested Mr. Damon.
“Then, too, there may have been no means of
getting it on the pedestal if they made it too heavy.”
They discussed these and other matters
as they hurried on to seek for some way of escape.
In fact to talk seemed to make them less gloomy and
sad, and they tried to keep up their spirits.
For several hours they searched eagerly
for some means of getting out of the underground city.
They went to the farthest limits of it, and found
it to be several miles in diameter, but eventually
they came to solid walls of stone which reached from
roof to ceiling, and there was no way out.
They found that the underground city
was exactly like an overturned bowl, or an Esquimo
ice hut, hollow within, and with a tunnel leading
to it—but all below the surface of the earth.
The city had been hollowed out of solid rock, and
there was but one way in or out, and that was closed
by the seamless stone.
“There’s no use hunting
any longer,” declared Tom, when, weary and footsore,
they had completed a circuit of the outer circumference
of the city, “the rock passage is our only hope.”
“And that’s no hope at all!” declared
Ned.
“Yes, we must try to raise that
stone slab, or—break it!” cried Tom
desperately. “Come on.”
“Wait a bit,” advised
Mr. Damon. “Bless my dinner plate! but I’m
hungry. We brought some food along, and my advice
to you is to eat and keep up our strength. We’ll
need it.”
“By golly gracious, that’s
so!” declared Eradicate. “I’ll
git de eatin’s.”
Fortunately there was a goodly supply,
and, going in one the houses they ate off a table
of solid gold, and off dishes of the precious, yellow
metal. Yet they would have given it all—yes,
even the gold in their dirigible balloon—for
a chance for freedom.
“I wonder what became of the
chaps who used to live here?” mused Ned as he
finished the rather frugal meal.
“Oh, they probably died—from
a plague maybe, or there may have been a war, or the
people may have risen in revolt and killed them off,”
suggested Tom grimly.
“But then there ought to be
some remains—some mummies or skeletons
or something.”
“I guess every one left this
underground city—every soul.” suggested
Mr. Damon, “and then they turned on the river
and left it. I shouldn’t be surprised but
what we are the first persons to set foot here in
thousands of years.”
“And we may stay here for
a thousand years,” predicted Tom.
“Oh, good land a’ massy;
doan’t say dat!” cried Eradicate.
“Why we’ll all be dead ob starvation in
dat time.”
“Before then, I guess,”
muttered Tom. “I wonder if there’s
any water in this hole?”
“We’ll need it—soon,”
remarked Ned, looking at the scanty supply they had
brought in with them. “Let’s have
a hunt for it.”
“Let Rad do that, while we work
on the stone gate,” proposed the young inventor.
“Rad, chase off and see if you can find some
water.”
While the colored man was gone, Tom,
Ned and Mr. Damon went back to the stone gate.
To attack it without tools, or some powerful blasting
powder seemed useless, but their case was desperate
and they knew they must do something.
“We’ll try chipping away
the stone at the base,” suggested Tom. “It
isn’t a very hard rock, in fact it’s a
sort of soft marble, or white sand stone, and we may
be able to cut out a way under the slab door with
our knifes.”
Fortunately they had knives with big,
strong blades, and as Tom had said, the stone was
comparatively soft. But, after several hours’
work they only had a small depression under the stone
door.
“At this rate it will take a month,” sighed
Ned.
“Say!” cried Tom, “we’re
foolish. We should try to cut through the stone
slab itself. It can’t be so very thick.
And another thing. I’m going to play the
flames from the gas torches on the stone. The
fires will make it brittle and it will chip off easier.”
This was so, but even with that advantage
they had only made a slight impression on the solid
stone door after more than four hours of work, and
Eradicate came back, with a hopeless look on his face,
to report that he had been unable to find water.
“Then we’ve got to save
every drop of what we’ve got,” declared
Tom. “Short rations for everybody.”
“And our lights, too,”
added Mr. Damon. “We must save them.”
“All out but one!” cried
Tom quickly. “If we’re careful we
can make them gas torches last a week, and the electric
flashes are good for several days yet.”
Then they laid out a plan of procedure,
and divided the food into as small rations as would
support life. It was grim work, but it had to
be done. They found, with care, that they might
live for four days on the food and water and then—
Well—no one liked to think about it.
“We must take turns chipping
away at the stone door,” decided Tom. “Some
of us will work and some will sleep—two
and two, I guess.”
This plan was also carried out, and
Tom and Eradicate took the first trick of hacking
away at the door.
How they managed to live in the days
that followed they could never tell clearly afterward.
It was like some horrible nightmare, composed of hours
of hacking away at the stone, and then of eating sparingly,
drinking more sparingly, and resting, to get up, and
do it all over again.
Their water was the first to give
out, for it made them thirsty to cut at the stone,
and parched mouths and swollen tongues demanded moisture.
They did manage to find a place where a few drops of
water trickled through the rocky roof, and without
this they would have died before five days had passed.
They even searched, at times for another
way out of the city of gold, for Tom had insisted
there must be a way, as the air in the underground
cave remained so fresh. But there must have been
a secret way of ventilating the place, as no opening
was found, and they went back to hacking at the stone.
Just how many days they spent in their
horrible golden prison they never really knew.
Tom said it was over a week, Ned insisted it was a
month, Mr. Damon two months, and Eradicate pitifully
said “it seem mos’ laik a yeah, suah!”
It must have been about eight days,
and at the end of that time there was not a scrap
of food left, and only a little water. They were
barely alive, and could hardly wield the knives against
the stone slab. They had dug a hole about a foot
deep in it, but it would have to be made much larger
before any one could crawl through, even when it penetrated
to the other side. And how soon this would be
they did not know.
It was about the end of the eighth
day. and Tom and Ned were hacking away at the rocky
slab, for Mr. Damon and Eradicate were too weary.
Tom paused for a moment to look helplessly
at his chum. As he did so he heard, amid the
silence, a noise on the other side of the stone door.
“What—what’s that?” Tom
gasped faintly.
“It sounds—sounds
like some one—coming,” whispered Ned.
“Oh, if it is only a rescue party!”
“A rescue party?” whispered
Tom. “Where would a rescue party—”
He stopped suddenly. Unmistakably
there were voices on the other side of the barrier—human
voices.
“It is a rescue party!” cried Ned.
“I—I hope so,” spoke Tom slowly.
“Mr. Damon—Eradicate!”
yelled Ned with the sudden strength of hope, “they’re
coming to save us! Hurry ever here!”
And then, as he and Tom stood, they
saw, with staring eyes, the great stone slab slowly
beginning to rise!