A MEETING IN THE JUNGLE
Before Tom and Ned reached the place
whence Professor Bumper had called, they heard strange
noises, other than the imploring voice of their friend.
It seemed as though some great body was threshing
about in the jungle, lashing the trees, bushes and
leaves about, and when the two young men, followed
by Mr. Damon, reached the scene they saw that, in
a measure, this really accounted for what they heard.
Something like a great whip was beating
about close to two trees that grew near together.
And then, when the storm of twigs, leaves and dirt,
caused by the leaping, threshing thing ceased for
a moment, the onlookers saw something that filled
them with terror.
Between the two trees, and seemingly
bound to them by a great coiled rope, spotted and
banded, was the body of Professor Bumper. His
arms were pinioned to his sides and there was horror
and terror on his face, that looked imploringly at
the youths from above the topmost coil of those encircling
him.
“What is it?” cried Mr.
Damon, as he ran pantingly up. “What has
caught him? Is it the giant iguana?”
“It’s a snake—a
great boa!” gasped Tom. “It has
him in its coils. But it is wound around the
trees, too. That alone prevents it from crushing
the professor to death.
“Ned, be ready with your rifle.
Put in the heaviest charge, and watch your chance
to fire!”
The great, ugly head of the boa reared
itself up from the coils which it had, with the quickness
of thought, thrown about the man between the two trees.
This species of snake is not poisonous, and kills
its prey by crushing it to death, making it into a
pulpy mass, with scarcely a bone left unbroken, after
which it swallows its meal. The crushing power
of one of these boas, some of which reach a length
of thirty feet, with a body as large around as that
of a full-grown man, is enormous.
“I’m going to fire!”
suddenly cried Tom. He had seen his chance and
he took it. There was the faint report—the
crack of the electric rifle— and the folds
of the serpent seemed to relax.
“I see a good chance now,”
added Ned, who had taken the small charge from his
weapon, replacing it with a heavier one.
His rifle was also discharged in the
direction of the snake, and Tom saw that the hit was
a good one, right through the ugly head of the reptile.
“One other will be enough to
make him loosen his coils!” cried Tom, as he
fired again, and such was the killing power of the
electric bullets that the snake, though an immense
one, and one that short of decapitation could have
received many injuries without losing power, seemed
to shrivel up.
Its folds relaxed, and the coils of
the great body fell in a heap at the roots of the
two trees, between which the scientist had been standing.
Professor Bumper seemed to fall backward
as the grip of the serpent relaxed, but Tom, dropping
his rifle, and calling to Ned to keep an eye on the
snake, leaped forward and caught his friend.
“Are you hurt?” asked
Tom, carrying the limp form over to a grassy place.
There was no answer, the savant’s eyes were
closed and he breathed but faintly.
Ned Newton fired two more electric
bullets into the still writhing body of the boa.
“I guess he’s all in,” he called
to Tom.
“Bless my horseradish!
And so our friend seems to be,” commented Mr.
Damon. “Have you anything with which to
revive him, Tom?”
“Yes. Some ammonia.
See if you can find a little water.”
“I have some in my flask.”
Tom mixed a dose of the spirits which
he carried with him, and this, forced between the
pallid lips of the scientist, revived him.
“What happened?” he asked
faintly as he opened his eyes. “Oh, yes,
I remember,” he added slowly. “The
boa——”
“Don’t try to talk,”
urged Tom. “You’re all right.
The snake is dead, or dying. Are you much hurt?”
Professor Bumper appeared to be considering.
He moved first one limb, then another. He seemed
to have the power over all his muscles.
“I see how it happened,”
he said, as he sat up, after taking a little more
of the ammonia. “I was following the iguana,
and when the big lizard came to a stop, in a little
hollow place in the ground, at the foot of those two
trees, I leaned over to slip a noose of rope about
its neck. Then I felt myself caught, as if in
the hands of a giant, and bound fast between the two
trees.”
“It was the big boa that whipped
itself around you, as you leaned over,” explained
Tom, as Ned came up to announce that the snake was
no longer dangerous. “But when it coiled
around you it also coiled around the two trees, you,
fortunately slipping between them. Had it not
been that their trunks took off some of the pressure
of the coils you wouldn’t have lasted a minute.”
“Well, I was pretty badly squeezed
as it was,” remarked the professor. “I
hardly had breath enough left to call to you.
I tried to fight off the serpent, but it was of no
use.”
“I should say not!” cried
Mr. Damon. “Bless my circus ring! one
might as well try to combat an elephant! But,
my dear professor, are you all right now?”
“I think so—yes.
Though I shall be lame and stiff for a few days,
I fear. I can hardly walk.”
Professor Bumper was indeed unable
to go about much for a few days after his encounter
with the great serpent. He stretched out in a
hammock under trees in the camp clearing, and with
his friends waited for the possible return of Tolpec
and the porters.
Ned and Tom made one or two short
hunting trips, and on these occasions they kept a
lookout in the direction the Indian had taken when
he went away.
“For he’s sure to come
back that way—if he comes at all,”
declared Ned; “which I am beginning to doubt.”
“Well, he may not come,”
agreed Tom, who was beginning to lose some of his
first hope. “But he won’t necessarily
come from the same direction he took. He may
have had to go in an entirely different way to get
help. We’ll hope for the best.”
A week passed. Professor Bumper
was able to be about, and Tom and Ned noticed that
there was an anxious look on his face. Was he,
too, beginning to despair?
“Well, this isn’t hunting
for golden idols very fast,” said Mr. Damon,
the morning of the eighth day after their desertion
by the faithless Jacinto. “What do you
say, Professor Bumper; ought we not to start off on
our own account?”
“We had better if Tolpec does
not return today,” was the answer.
They had eaten breakfast, had put
their camp in order, and were about to have a consultation
on what was best to do, when Tom suddenly called to
Ned, who was whistling:
“Hark!”
Through the jungle came a faint sound
of singing —not a harmonious air, but the
somewhat barbaric chant of the natives.
“It is Tolpec coming back!”
cried Mr. Damon. “Hurray! Now our
troubles are over t Bless my meal ticket! Now
we can start!”
“It may be Jacinto,” suggested Ned.
“Nonsense! you old cold-water
pitcher!” cried Tom. “It’s
Tolpec! I can see him! He’s a good
scout all right!”
And then, walking at the head of a
band of Indians who were weirdly chanting while behind
them came a train of mules, was Tolpec, a cheerful
grin covering his honest, if homely, dark face.
“Me come back!” he exclaimed
in gutteral English, using about half of his foreign
vocabulary.
“I see you did,” answered
Professor Bumper in the man’s own tongue.
“Glad to see you. Is everything all right?”
“All right,” was the answer.
“These Indians will take you where you want
to go, and will not leave you as Jacinto did.”
“We’ll start in the morning!”
exclaimed the savant his own cheerful self again,
now that there was a prospect of going further into
the interior. “Tell the men to get something
to eat, Tolpec. There is plenty for all.”
“Good!” grunted the new
guide and soon the hungry Indians, who had come far,
were satisfying their hunger.
As they ate Tolpec explained to Professor
Bumper, who repeated it to the youths and Mr. Damon,
that it had been necessary to go farther than he had
intended to get the porters and mules. But the
Indians were a friendly tribe, of which he was a member,
and could be depended on.
There was a feast and a sort of celebration
in camp that night. Tom and Ned shot two deer,
and these formed the main part of the feast and the
Indians made merry about the fire until nearly midnight.
They did not seem to mind in the least the swarms
of mosquitoes and other bugs that flew about, attracted
by the light. As for Tom Swift and his friends,
their nets protected them.
An early start was made the following
morning. Such packages of goods and supplies
as could not well be carried by the Indians in their
head straps, were loaded on the backs of the pack-mules.
Tolpec explained that on reaching the Indian village,
where he had secured the porters, they could get some
ox-carts which would be a convenience in traveling
into the interior toward the Copan valley.
The march onward for the next two
days was tiresome; but the Indians Tolpec had secured
were as faithful and efficient as he had described
them, and good progress was made.
There were a few accidents.
One native fell into a swiftly running stream as they
were fording it and lost a box containing some much-needed
things. But as the man’s life was saved
Professor Bumper said it made up for the other loss.
Another accident did not end so auspiciously.
One of the bearers was bitten by a poisonous snake,
and though prompt measures were taken, the poison
spread so rapidly that the man died.
In due season the Indian village was
reached. where, after a day spent in holding funeral
services over the dead bearer, preparations were
made for proceeding farther.
This time some of the bearers were
left behind, and ox-carts were substituted for them,
as it was possible to carry more goods this way,
“And now we’re really
off for Copan!” exclaimed Professor Bumper one
morning, when the cavalcade, led by Tolpec in the
capacity of head guide, started off. “I
hope we have no more delays.”
“I hope not, either,”
agreed Tom. “That Beecher may be there
ahead of us.”
Weary marches fell to their portion.
There were mountains to climb, streams to ford or
swim, sending the carts over on rudely made rafts.
There were storms to endure, and the eternal heat
to fight.
But finally the party emerged from
the lowlands of the coast and went up in among the
hills, where though the going was harder, the climate
was better. It was not so hot and moist.
Not wishing to attract attention in
Copan itself, Professor Bumper and his party made
a detour, and finally, after much consultation with
Tom over the ancient maps, the scientist announced
that he thought they were in the vicinity of the buried
city.
“We will begin test excavations
in the morning,” he said.
The party was in camp, and preparations
were made for spending the night in the forest, when
from among the trees there floated to the ears of
our friends a queer Indian chant.
“Some one is coming,” said Tom to Ned.
Almost as he spoke there filed into
the clearing where the camp had been set up, a cavalcade
of white men, followed by Indians. And at the
sight of one of the white men Tom Swift uttered a
cry.
“Professor Beecher!” gasped
the young inventor.