TOM HEARS SOMETHING
On hearing Mr. Damon’s rather
startling announcement, Tom and Ned looked at one
another. There seemed to be something back of
the simple statement—an ominous and portending
“something.”
“On the same steamer with us,
is he?” mused Tom.
“How did you learn this?” asked Ned.
“Just got a wire from Professor
Bumper telling me. He asked me to telephone
to you about it, as he was too busy to call up on
the long distance from New York. But instead
of ’phoning I decided to come over myself.”
“Glad you did,” said Tom,
heartily. “Did Professor Bumper want us
to do anything special, now that it is certain his
rival will be so close on his trail?”
“Yes, he asked me to warn you
to be careful what you did and said in reference to
the expedition.”
“Then does he fear something?” asked Ned.
“Yes, in a way. I think
he is very much afraid this young Beecher will not
only be first on the site of the underground city,
but that he may be the first to discover the idol
of gold. It would be a great thing for a young
archaeologist like Beecher to accomplish a mission
of this sort, and beat Professor Bumper in the race.”
“Do you think that’s why
Beecher decided to go on the same steamer we are to
take?” asked Ned.
“Yes, I do,” said Mr.
Damon. “Though from what Professor Bumper
said I know he regards Professor Beecher as a perfectly
honorable man, as well as a brilliant student.
I do not believe Beecher or his party would stoop
to anything dishonorable or underhand, though they
would not hesitate, nor would we, to take advantage
of every fair chance to win in the race.”
“No, I suppose that’s
right,” observed Tom; but there was a queer
gleam in his eye, and his chum wondered if Tom did
not have in mind the prospective race between himself
and Fenimore Beecher for the regard of Mary Nestor.
“We’ll do our best to win, and any one
is at liberty to travel on the same steamer we are
to take,” added the young inventor, and his
tone became more incisive.
“It will be all the livelier
with two expeditions after the same golden idol,”
remarked Ned.
“Yes, I think we’re in
for some excitement,” observed Tom grimly.
But even he did not realize all that lay before them
ere they would reach Kurzon.
Mr. Damon, having delivered his message,
and remarking that his preparations for leaving were
nearly completed, went back to Waterfield, from there
to proceed to New York in a few days with Tom and
Ned, to meet Professor Bumper.
“Well, I guess we have everything
in pretty good shape,” remarked Tom to his chum
a day or so after the visit of Mr. Damon. “Everything
is packed, and as I have a few personal matters to
attend to I think I’ll take the afternoon off.”
“Go to it!” laughed Ned,
guessing a thing of two. “I’ve got
a raft of stuff myself to look after, but don’t
let that keep you.”
“If there is anything I can
do,” began Tom, “don’t hesitate
to——”
“Nonsense!” exclaimed
Ned. “I can do it all alone. It’s
some of the company’s business, anyhow, and
I’m paid for looking after that.”
“All right, then I’ll
cut along,” Tom said, and he wore a relieved
air.
“He’s going to see Mary,”
observed Ned with a grin, as he observed Tom hop into
his trim little roadster, which under his orders,
Koku had polished and cleaned until it looked as though
it had just come from the factory.
A little later the trim and speedy
car drew up in front of the Nestor home, and Tom bounded
up on the front porch, his heart not altogether as
light as his feet.
“No, I’m sorry, but Mary
isn’t in,” said Mrs. Nestor, answering
his inquiry after greeting him.
“Not at home?”
“No, she went on a little visit
to her cousin’s at Fayetteville. She said
something about letting you know she was going.”
“She did drop me a card,”
answered Tom, and, somehow he did not feel at all
cheerful. “But I thought it wasn’t
until next week she was going.”
“That was her plan, Tom.
But she changed it. Her cousin wired, asking
her to advance the date, and this Mary did.
There was something about a former school chum who
was also to be at Myra’s house—Myra
is Mary’s cousin you know.”
“Yes, I know,” assented
the young inventor. “And so Mary is gone.
How long is she going to stay?”
“Oh, about two weeks.
She wasn’t quite certain. It depends on
the kind of a time she has, I suppose.”
“Yes, I suppose so,” agreed
Tom. “Well, if you write before I do you
might say I called, Mrs. Nestor.”
“I will, Tom. And I know
Mary will be sorry she wasn’t here to take a
ride with you; it’s such a nice day,”
and the lady smiled as she looked at the speedy roadster.
“Maybe—maybe you’d
like to come for a spin?” asked Tom, half desperately.
“No, thank you. I’m
too old to be jounced around in one of those small
cars.”
“Nonsense! She rides as
easily as a Pullman sleeper.”
“Well, I have to go to a Red
Cross meeting, anyhow, so I can’t come, Tom.
Thank you, just the same.”
Tom did not drive back immediately
to his home. He wanted to do a bit of thinking,
and he believed he could do it best by himself.
So it was late afternoon when he again greeted Ned,
who, meanwhile, had been kept very busy.
“Well?” called Tom’s chum.
“Um!” was the only answer, and Tom called
Koku to put the car away in the garage.
“Something wrong,” mused Ned.
The next three days were crowded with
events and with work. Mr. Damon came over frequently
to consult with Tom and Ned, and finally the last
of their baggage had been packed, certain of Tom’s
inventions and implements sent on by express to New
York to be taken to Honduras, and then our friends
themselves followed to the metropolis.
“Good-bye, Tom,” said
his father. “Good-bye, and good luck!
If you don’t get the idol of gold I’m
sure you’ll have experiences that will be valuable
to you.”
“We’re going to get the
idol of gold!” said Tom determinedly.
“Look out for the bad bugs,”
suggested Eradicate.
“We will,” promised Ned.
Tom’s last act was to send a
message to Mary Nestor, and then he, with Ned and
Mr. Damon, who blessed everything in sight from the
gasoline in the automobile to the blue sky overhead,
started for the station.
New York was reached without incident.
The trio put up at the hotel where Professor Bumper
was to meet them.
“He hasn’t arrived yet,”
said Tom, after glancing over the names on the hotel
register and not seeing Professor Bumper’s among
them.
“Oh, he’ll be here all
right,” asserted Mr. Damon. “Bless
my galvanic battery! he sent me a telegram at one
o’clock this morning saying he’d be sure
to meet us in New York. No fear of him not starting
for the land of wonders.”
“There are some other professors
registered, though,” observed Ned, as he glanced
at the book, noting the names of several scientists
of whom he and Tom had read.
“Yes. I wonder what they’re doing
in New
York,” replied Tom. “They are from
New
England. Maybe there’s a convention going
on.
Well, we’ll have to wait, that’s all,
until
Professor Bumper comes.”
And during that wait Tom heard something
that surprised him and caused him no little worry.
It was when Ned came back to his room, which adjoined
Tom’s, that the young treasurer gave his chum
the news.
“I say, Tom!” Ned exclaimed.
“Who do you think those professors are, whose
names we saw on the register?”
“I haven’t the least idea.”
“Why, they’re of Beecher’s party!”
“You don’t mean it!”
“I surely do.”
“How do you know?”
“I happened to overhear two
of them talking down in the lobby a while ago.
They didn’t make any secret of it. They
spoke freely of going with Beecher to some ancient
city in Honduras, to look for an idol of gold.”
“They did? But where is Beecher?”
“He hasn’t joined them
yet. Their plans have been changed. Instead
of leaving on the same steamer we are to take in the
morning they are to come on a later one. The
professors here are waiting for Beecher to come.”
“Why isn’t he here now?”
“Well, I heard one of the other
scientists say that he had gone to a place called
Fayetteville, and will come on from there.”
“Fayetteville!” ejaculated Tom.
“Yes. That isn’t far from Shopton.”
“I know,” assented Tom.
“I wonder—I wonder why he is going
there?”
“I can tell you that, too.”
“You can? You’re a regular detective.”
“No, I just happened to overhear
it. Beecher is going to call on Mary Nestor
in Fayetteville, so his friends here said he told
them, and his call has to do with an important matter—to
him!” and Ned gazed curiously at his chum.