THE IDOL OF GOLD
“Forward! cried Tom Swift.
“Where?” asked Mr Damon,
hanging back for an instant. “Bless my
compass, Tom! do you know where you’re going?”
“I haven’t the least idea,
but it must lead to something, or the ancients who
made this revolving stone door wouldn’t have
taken such care to block the passage.”
“Ask Goosal if he knows anything
about it,” suggested Mr. Damon to the professor.
“He says he never was here before,”
translated the savant, “but years ago, when
he went into the hidden city by the cave we left yesterday,
he saw doors like this which opened this way.”
“Then we’re on the right
track!” cried Tom. “If this is the
same kind of door, it must lead to the same place.
Ho for Kurzon and the idol of gold!”
As they passed through the stone door,
Tom and Professor Bumper tried to get some idea of
the mechanism by which it worked. But they found
this impossible, it being hidden within the stone
itself or in the adjoining walls. But, in order
that it might not close of itself and entomb them,
the portal was blocked open with stones found in the
passage.
“It’s always well to have
a line of retreat open,” said Tom. “There’s
no telling what may lie beyond us.”
For a time there seemed to be nothing
more than the same passage along which they had come.
Then the passage suddenly widened, like the large
end of a square funnel. Upward and outward the
stone walls swept, and they saw dimly before them,
in the light of their torches, a vast cavern, seemingly
formed by the falling in of mountains, which, in toppling
over, had met overhead in a sort of rough arch, thus
protecting, in a great measure, that which lay beneath
them.
Goosal, who had brought with him some
of the fiber bark torches, set a bundle of them aflame.
As they flared up, a wondrous sight was revealed
to Tom Swift and his friends.
Stretching out before them, as though
they stood at the end of an elevated street and gazed
down on it, was a city—a large city, with
streets, houses, open squares, temples, statues, fountains,
dry for centuries—a buried and forgotten
city— a city in ruins—a city
of the dead, now dry as dust, but still a city, or,
rather, the strangely preserved remains of one.
“Look!” whispered Tom.
A louder voice just then, would have seemed a sacrilege.
“Look!”
“Is it what we are looking for?”
asked Ned in a low voice.
“I believe it is,” replied
the professor. “It is the lost city of
Kurzon, or one just like it. And now if we can
find the idol of gold our search will be ended—at
least the major part of it.”
“Where did you expect to find
the idol?” asked Tom.
“It should be in the main temple.
Come, we will walk in the ancient streets—streets
where no feet but ours have trod in many centuries.
Come!”
In eager silence they pressed on through
this newly discovered wonderland. For it was
a wonderful city, or had been. Though much of
it was in ruins, probably caused by an earthquake
or an eruption from a volcano, the central portion,
covered as it was by the overtoppling mountains that
formed the arching roof, was well preserved.
There were rude but beautiful stone
buildings. There were archways; temples; public
squares; and images, not at all beautiful, for they
seemed to be of man-monsters—doubtless
ancient gods. There were smoothly paved streets;
wondrously carved fountains, some in ruins, all now
as dry as bone, but which must have been places of
beauty where youths and maidens gathered in the ancient
days.
Of the ancient population there was
not a trace left. Tom and his friends penetrated
some of the houses, but not so much as a bone or a
heap of mouldering dust showed where the remains of
the people were. Either they had fled at the
approaching doom of the city and were buried elsewhere,
or some strange fire or other force of nature had
consumed and obliterated them.
“What a wealth of historic information
I shall find here!” murmured Professor Bumper,
as he caught sight of many inscriptions in strange
characters on the walls and buildings. “I
shall never get to the end of them.”
“But what about the idol of
gold?” asked Mr. Damon, “Do you think
you’ll find that?”
“We must hurry on to the temple
over there,” said the scientist, indicating
a building further along.
“And then we must see about
rescuing your rivals, Professor,” put in Tom.
“Yes, Tom. But fortunately
we are on the ground here before them,” agreed
the professor.
Undoubtedly it was the chief temple,
or place of worship, of the long-dead race which the
explorers now entered. It was a building beautiful
in its barbaric style, and yet simple. There
were massive walls, and a great inner court, at the
end of which seemed to be some sort of altar.
And then, as they lighted fresh torches, and pressed
forward with them and their electric lights, they
saw that which caused a cry of satisfaction to burst
from all of them.
“The idol of gold!”
Yes, there it squatted, an ugly, misshapen,
figure, a cross between a toad and a gila monster,
half man, half beast, with big red eyes—rubies
probably—that gleamed in the repulsive golden
face. And the whole figure, weighing many pounds,
seemed to be of solid gold!
Eagerly the others followed Professor
Bumper up the altar steps to the very throne of the
golden idol. The scientist touched it, tried
to raise it and make sure of its solidity and material.
“This is it!” he cried.
“It is the idol of gold! I have found
We have found it, for it belongs to all of us!”
“Hurray!” cried Tom Swift,
and Ned and Mr. Damon joined in the cry.
There was no need for silence or caution
now; and yet, as they stood about the squat and ugly
figure, which, in spite of its hideousness, was worth
a fortune intrinsically and as an antique, they heard
from the direction of the stone passage a noise.
“What is it?” asked Tom Swift.
There was a murmur of voices.
“Indians!” cried Professor
Bumper, recognizing the language—a mixture
of Spanish and Indian.
The cave was illuminated by the glare
of other torches which seemed to rush forward.
A moment later it was seen that they were being carried
by a number of Indians.
“Friends,” murmured Goosal,
using the Spanish term, “Amigos.”
“They are our own Indians!”
cried Tom Swift. “I see Tolpec!”
and he pointed to the native who had deserted from
Jacinto’s force to help them.
“How did they get here?”
asked Professor Bumper.
This was quickly told. In their
camp, where, under the leadership of Tolpec they had
been left to do the excavating, the natives had heard,
seen and felt the effects of the storm and the earthquake,
though it did little damage in their vicinity.
But they became alarmed for the safety of the professor
and his party and, at Tolpec’s suggestion, set
off in search of them.
The Indians had seen, passing along
the trail, the uprooted trees, and had noted the footsteps
of the explorers going down to the stone passage.
It was easy for them to determine that Tom and his
friends had gone in, since the marks of their boots
were plainly in evidence in the soft soil.
None of the Indians was as much wrought
up over the discovery of Kurzon and the idol as were
the white adventurers. The gold, of course,
meant something to the natives, but they were indifferent
to the wonders of the underground city. Perhaps
they had heard too many legends concerning such things
to be impressed.
“That statue is yours—all
yours,” said old Goosal when he had talked with
his relatives and friends among the natives.
“They all say what you find you keep, and we
will help you keep it.”
“That’s good,” murmured
Professor Bumper. “There was some doubt
in my mind as to our right to this, but after all,
the natives who live in this land are the original
owners, and if they pass title to us it is clear.
That settles the last difficulty.”
“Except that of getting the
idol out,” said Mr. Damon.
“Oh, we’ll accomplish that!” cried
Tom.
“I can hardly believe my good
luck,” declared Professor Bumper. “I
shall write a whole book on this idol alone and then——”
Once more came an interruption.
This time it was from another direction, but it was
of the same character—an approaching band
of torch-bearers. They were Indians, too, but
leading them were a number of whites.
And at their head was no less personage
than Professor Beecher himself.
For a moment, as the three parties
stood together in the ancient temple, in the glare
of many torches, no one spoke. Then Professor
Bumper found his voice.
“We are glad to see you,”
he said to his rival. “That is glad to
see you alive, for we saw the landslide bury you.
And we were coming to dig you out. We thought
this cave—the cave of the buried city—would
lead us to you easier than by digging through the
slide. We have just discovered this idol,”
and he put his hand on the grim golden image.
“Oh, you have discovered it,
have you?” asked Professor Beecher, and his
voice was bitter.
“Yes, not ten minutes ago.
The natives have kindly acknowledged my right to
it under the law of priority. I am sorry but——”
With a look of disgust and chagrined
disappointment on his face, Professor Beecher turned
to the other scientists and said:
“Let us go. We are too
late. He has what I came after.”
“Well, it is the fortune of
war—and discovery,” put in Mr. Hardy,
one of the party who seemed the least ill-natured.
“Your luck might have been ours, Professor
Bumper. I congratulate you.”
“Thank you! Are you sure
your party is all right—not in need of
assistance? How did you get out of the place
you were buried?”
“Thank you! We do not require
any help. It was good of you to think of us.
But we got out the way we came in. We did not
enter the tunnel as you did, but came in through another
entrance which was not closed by the landslide.
Then we made a turn through a gateway in a tunnel
connecting with ours—a gateway which seems
to have been opened by the earthquake—
and we came here, just now.
“Too late, I see, to claim the
discovery of the idol of gold,” went on Mr.
Hardy. “But I trust you will be generous,
and allow us to make observations of the buildings
and other relics.”
“As much as you please, and
with the greatest pleasure in the world,” was
the prompt answer of Professor Bumper. “All
I lay sole claim to is the golden idol. You
are at liberty to take whatever else you find in Kurzon
and to make what observations you like.”
“That is generous of you, and
quite in contrast to—er—to the
conduct of our leader. I trust he may awaken
to a sense of the injustice he did you.”
But Professor Beecher was not there
to hear this. He had stalked away in anger.
“Humph!” grunted Tom.
Then he continued: “That story about a
government concession was all a fake, Professor, else
he’d have put up a fight now. Contemptible
sneak!”
In fact the story of Tom Swift’s
trip to the underground land of wonders is ended,
for with the discovery of the idol of gold the main
object of the expedition was accomplished. But
their adventures were not over by any means, though
there is not room in this volume to record them.
Suffice it to say that means were
at once taken to get the golden image out of the cave
of the ancient city. It was not accomplished
without hard work, for the gold was heavy, and Professor
Bumper would not, naturally, consent to the shaving
off of so much as an ear or part of the flat nose,
to say nothing of one of the half dozen extra arms
and legs with which the ugly idol was furnished.
Finally it was safely taken out of
the cave, and along the stone passage to the opening
formed by the overthrown trees, and thence on to camp.
And at the camp a surprise awaited Tom.
Some long-delayed mail had been forwarded
from the nearest place of civilization and there were
letters for all, including several for our hero.
One in particular he picked out first and read eagerly.
“Well, is every little thing
all right, Tom?” asked Ned, as he saw a cheerful
grin spread itself over his chum’s face.
“I should say it is, and then
some! Look here, Ned. This is a letter
from——”
“I know. Mary Nestor. Go on.”
“How’d you guess?”
“Oh, I’m a mind-reader.”
“Huh! Well, you know she
was away when I went to call to say good-bye, and
I was a little afraid Beecher had got an inside edge
on me.”
“Had he?”
“No, but he tried hard enough.
He went to see Mary in Fayetteville, just as you
heard, be-fore he came on to join his party, but
he didn’t pay much of a visit to her.”
“No?”
“No. Mary told him he’d
better hurry along to Central America, or wherever
it was he intended going, as she didn’t care
for him as much as he flattered himself she did.”
“Good!” cried Ned. “Shake,
old man. I’m glad!”
They shook hands.
“Well, what’s the matter?
Didn’t you read all of her letter?” asked
Ned when he saw his chum once more perusing the epistle.
“No. There’s a postscript here.
“`Sorry I couldn’t see
you before you left. It was a mistake, but when
you come back——’
“Oh, that part isn’t any
of your affair!” and, blushing under his tan,
Tom thrust the letter into his pocket and strode away,
while Ned laughed happily.
With the idol of gold safe in their
possession, Professor Bumper’s party could devote
their time to making other explorations in the buried
city. This they did, as is testified to by a
long list of books and magazine articles since turned
out by the scientist, dealing strictly with archaeo-logical
subjects, touching on the ancient Mayan race and its
civilization, with particular reference to their system
of computing time.
Professor Beecher, young and foolish,
would not consent to delve into the riches of the
ancient city, being too much chagrined over the loss
of the idol. It seems he had really promised
to give a part of it to Mary Nestor. But he
never got the chance.
His colleagues, after their first
disappointment at being beaten, joined forces with
Professor Bumper in exploring the old city, and made
many valuable discoveries.
In one point Professor Bumper had
done his rival an injustice. That was in thinking
Professor Beecher was responsible for the treachery
of Jacinto. That was due to the plotter’s
own work. It was true that Professor Beecher
had tentatively engaged Jacinto, and had sent word
to him to keep other explorers away from the vicinity
of the ancient city if possible; but Jacinto, who
did not return Professor Bumper’s money, as
he had promised, had acted treacherously in order
to enrich himself. Professor Beecher had nothing
to do with that, nor had he with the taking of the
map, as has been seen, the loss of which, after all,
was a blessing in disguise, for Kurzon would never
have been located by following the directions given
there, as it was very inaccurate.
In another point it was demonstrated
that the old documents were at fault. This was
in reference to the golden idol having been overthrown
and another set up in its place, an act which had
caused the destruction of Kurzon.
It is true that the city was destroyed,
or rather, buried, but this catastrophe was probably
brought about by an earthquake. And another
great idol, one of clay, was found, perhaps a rival
of Quitzel, but it was this clay image which was thrown
down and broken, and not the golden one.
Perhaps an effort had been made, just
before the burying of the city, to change idols and
the system of worship, but Quitzel seemed to have
held his own. The old manuscripts were not very
reliable, it was found, except in general.
“Well, I guess this will hold
Beecher for a while,” said Tom, the night of
the arrival of Mary’s letter, and after he had
written one in answer, which was dispatched by a runner
to the nearest place whence mail could be forwarded.
“Yes, luck seems to favor you,”
replied Ned. “You’ve had a hand in
the discovery of the idol of gold, and——”
“Yes. And I discovered
something else I wasn’t quite sure of,”
interrupted Tom, as he felt to make sure he had a
certain letter safe in his pocket.
It was several weeks later that the
explorations of Kurzon came to an end—a
temporary end, for the rainy season set in, when the
tropics are unsuitable for white men. Tom, Professor
Bumper, Ned and Mr. Damon set sail for the United
States, the valuable idol of gold safe on board.
And there, with their vessel plowing
the blue waters of the Caribbean Sea, we will take
leave of Tom Swift and his friends.