THE LITTLE GREEN GOD
“Tom how soon can we go?”
asked Professor Bumper, as he began arranging his
papers, maps and documents ready to place them back
in the valise.
“Within a week, if you want
to start that soon.”
“The sooner the better.
A week will suit me. I don’t know just
what Beecher’s plans are, but, he may try to
get on the ground first. Though, without boasting,
I may say that he has not had as much experience as
I have had, thanks to you, Tom, when you helped me
find the lost city of Pelone.”
“Well, I hope we’ll be
as successful this time,” murmured Tom.
“I don’t want to see Beecher beat you.”
“I didn’t know you knew
him, Tom,” said the professor.
“Oh, yes, I have met him. once,”
and there was something in Tom’s manner, though
he tried to speak indifferently, that made Ned believe
there was more behind his chum’s sudden change
of determination than had yet appeared.
“He never mentioned you,”
went on Professor Bumper; “yet the last time
I saw him I said I was coming to see you, though I
did not tell him why.”
“No, he wouldn’t be likely
to speak of me,” said Tom significantly.
“Well, if that’s all settled,
I guess I’ll go back home and pack up,”
said Mr. Damon, making a move to depart.
“There’s no special rush,”
Tom said. “We won’t leave for a
week. I can’t get ready in much less time
than that.”
“Bless my socks! I know
that,” ejaculated Mr. Damon. “But
if I get my things packed I can go to a hotel to stay
while my wife is away. She might take a notion
to come home unexpectedly, and, though she is a dear,
good soul, she doesn’t altogether approve of
my going off on these wild trips with you, Tom Swift.
But if I get all packed, and clear out, she can’t
find me and she can’t hold me back. She
is visiting her mother now. I can send her a
wire from Kurzon after I get there.”
“I don’t believe the telegraph
there is work-ing,” laughed Professor Bumper.
“But suit yourself. I must go back to
New York to arrange for the goods we’ll have
to take with us. In a week, Tom, we’ll
start.”
“You must stay to dinner,”
Tom said. “You can’t get a train
now anyhow, and father wants to meet you again.
He’s pretty well, considering his age.
And he’s much better I verily believe since
I said I’d turn over to him the task of finishing
the stabilizer. He likes to work.”
“We’ll stay and take the
night train back,” agreed Mr. Damon. “It
will be like old times, Tom,” he went on, “traveling
off together into the wilds. Central America
is pretty wild, isn’t it?” he asked, as
if in fear of being disappointed! on that score.
“Oh, it’s wild enough
to suit any one,” answered Professor Bumper.
“Well, now to settle a few details,”
observed Tom. “Ned, what is the situation
as regards the financial affairs of my father and
myself? Nothing will come to grief if we go
away, will there?”
“I guess not, Tom. But
are you going to take your father with you?”
“No, of course not.”
“But you spoke of `we.’ “
“I meant you and I are going.”
“Me, Tom?”
“Sure, you! I wouldn’t
think of leaving you behind. You want Ned along,
don’t you, Professor?”
“Of course. It will be
an ideal party—we four. We’ll
have to take natives when we get to Honduras, and
make up a mule pack-train for the interior.
I had some thoughts of asking you to take an airship
along, but it might frighten the Indians, and I shall
have to depend on them for guides, as well as for
porters. So it will be an old-fashioned expedition,
in a way.”
Mr. Swift came in at this point to
meet his old friends.
“The boy needs a little excitement,”
he said. “He’s been puttering over
that stabilizer invention too long. I can finish
the model for him in a very short time.”
Professor Bumper told Mr. Swift something
about the proposed trip, while Mr. Damon went out
with Tom and Ned to one of the shops to look at a
new model aeroplane the young inventor had designed.
There was a merry party around the
table at dinner, though now and then Ned noticed that
Tom had an abstracted and preoccupied air.
“Thinking about the idol of
gold?” asked Ned in a whisper to his chum, when
they were about to leave the table.
“The idol of gold? Oh,
yes! Of course! It will be great if we can
bring that back with us.” But the manner
in which he said this made Ned feel sure that Tom
had had other thoughts, and that he had used a little
subterfuge in his answer.
Ned was right, as he proved for himself
a little later, when, Mr. Damon and the professor
having gone home, the young financial secretary took
his friend to a quiet corner and asked:
“What’s the matter, Tom?”
“Matter? What do you mean?”
“I mean what made you make up
your mind so quickly to go on this expedition when
you heard Beecher was going?”
“Oh—er—well,
you wouldn’t want to see our old friend Professor
Bumper left, would you, after he had worked out the
secret of the idol of gold? You wouldn’t
want some young whipper-snapper to beat him in the
race, would you, Ned?”
“No, of course not.”
“Neither would I. That’s
why I changed my mind. This Beecher isn’t
going to get that idol if I can stop him!”
“You seem rather bitter against him.”
“Bitter? Oh, not at all.
I simply don’t want to see my friends disappointed.”
“Then Beecher isn’t a friend of yours?”
“Oh, I’ve met him, that
is all,” and Tom tried to speak indifferently.
“Humph!” mused Ned, “there’s
more here than I dreamed of. I’m going
to get at the bottom of it.”
But though Ned tried to pump Tom,
he was not successful. The young inventor admitted
knowing the youthful scientist, but that was all,
Tom reiterating his determination not to let Professor
Bumper be beaten in the race for the idol of gold.
“Let me see,” mused Ned,
as he went home that evening. “Tom did
not change his mind until he heard Beecher’s
name mentioned. Now this shows that Beecher
had something to do with it. The only reason
Tom doesn’t want Beecher to get this idol or
find the buried city is because Professor Bumper is
after it. And yet the professor is not an old
or close friend of Tom’s. They met only
when Tom went to dig his big tunnel. There must
be some other reason.”
Ned did some more thinking.
Then he clapped his hands together, and a smile spread
over his face.
“I believe I have it!”
he cried. “The little green god as compared
to the idol of gold! That’s it. I’m
going to make a call on my way home.”
This he did, stopping at the home
of Mary Nestor, a pretty girl, who, rumor had it,
was tacitly engaged to Tom. Mary was not at
home, but Mr. Nestor was, and for Ned’s purpose
this answered.
“Well, well, glad to see you!”
exclaimed Mary’s father. “Isn’t
Tom with you?” he asked a moment later, seeing
that Ned was alone.
“No, Tom isn’t with me
this evening,” Ned answered. “The
fact is, he’s getting ready to go off on another
expedition, and I’m going with him.”
“You young men are always going
somewhere,” remarked Mrs. Nestor. “Where
is it to this time?”
“Some place in Central America,”
Ned answered, not wishing to be too particular.
He was wondering how he could find out what he wanted
to know, when Mary’s mother unexpectedly gave
him just the information he was after.
“Central America!” she
exclaimed. “Why, Father,” and she
looked at her husband, “that’s where Professor
Beecher is going, isn’t it?”
“Yes, I believe he did mention
something about that.”
“Professor Beecher, the man
who is an author-ity on Aztec ruins?” asked
Ned, taking a shot in the dark.
“Yes,” said Mr. Nestor.
“And a mighty fine young man he is, too.
I knew his father well. He was here on a visit
not long ago, young Beecher was, and he talked most
entertainingly about his discoveries. You remember
how interested Mary was, Mother?”
“Yes, she seemed to be,”
said Mrs. Nestor. “Tom Swift dropped in
during the course of the evening,” she added
to Ned, “and Mary introduced him to Professor
Beecher. But I can’t say that Tom was
much interested in the professor’s talk.”
“No?” questioned Ned.
“No, not at all. But Tom
did not stay long. He left just as Mary and the
professor were drawing a map so the professor could
indicate where he had once made a big discovery.”
“I see,” murmured Ned.
“Well, I suppose Tom must have been thinking
of something else at the time.”
“Very likely,” agreed
Mr. Nestor. “But Tom missed a very profitable
talk. I was very much interested myself in what
the professor told us, and so was Mary. She
invited Mr. Beecher to come again. He takes
after his father in being very thorough in what he
does.
“Sometimes I think,” went
on Mr. Nestor, “that Tom isn’t quite steady
enough. He’s thinking of so many things,
perhaps, that he can’t get his mind down to
the commonplace. I remember he once sent something
here in a box labeled `dynamite.’ Though
there was no explosive in it, it gave us a great fright.
But Tom is a boy, in spite of his years. Professor
Beecher seems much older. We all like him very
much.”
“That’s nice,” said
Ned, as he took his departure. He had found
out what he had come to learn.
“I knew it!” Ned exclaimed
as he walked home. “I knew something was
in the wind. The little green god of jealousy
has Tom in his clutches. That’s why my
inventive friend was so anxious to go on this expedition
when he learned Beecher was to go. He wants
to beat him. I guess the professor has plainly
shown that he wouldn’t like anything better
than to cut Tom out with Mary. Whew! that’s
something to think about!”