“I tell you I'm not crazy," insisted the
tall man. "Durkin, they got a big mine."
Bill Durkin laughed roughly, and sneered openly at
his partner, Frank Maget. "G'wan, you're drunk."
"Well, I was last night," admitted
Maget. "But I'd slept it off this morning. I was lying under that table in
the Portuguee's, and when I opened my eyes, there were these three birds
sitting near me. They hadn't spotted me. I heard 'em talking of wealth, how
their mine was of unbelievable richness and greater than any other deposit in
the world. Well, that means something, don't it?"
"That's all right," said Durkin.
"But whoever saw a cricket fifteen inches long?"[369]
Its form was that of a gigantic frog, and from its
throat sounded the terrific bellowing which rivaled thunder.Its form was that
of a gigantic frog, and from its throat sounded the terrific bellowing which
rivaled thunder.
"Listen. There were three of these guys. One
was a hell of a looking fellow: his face was piebald, with purple spots. His
skin was bleached and withered, and one eye looked like a pearl collar button!
They called him Professor, too, Professor Gurlone. Well, he takes out this damn
cricket thing and it was sort of reddish purple but alive, and as long as your
forearm. This professor guy says his son had taken an ordinary cricket and made
it grow into the one he had. But the mine was what interested me. I kept my
mouth shut and my ears open, and it's in the Matto Grosso. May be emeralds,
diamonds, or gold. Boy, I'm heading for it, right now. The old guy's going back
to-morrow, get me?"
"It's a lot of bunk," growled Durkin,
who was stout and red of countenance.
"Yeh? Well, Otto Ulrich don't put fifty
thousand into bunk."
Durkin whistled. "You mean the German
loosened up that much?" he asked, and his eyes showed interest.
"Sure. He paid this Gurlone fifty thousand
dollars—credit, of course."
"Well—maybe there's something in the mine
story. But boy, you were drunk when you saw that cricket. No cricket ever grew
that big. You always see things when you get too much rum in you."
"The hell you say," cried Maget. "I
saw it, I tell you!"[370]
***
Durkin feigned elaborate politeness. "Oh, all
right, Frank. Have it your own way. You saw a cricket that big and this Gurlone
feller took a couple of pink elephants out of his pocket to pay the check.
Sure, I believe you."
But money never failed to attract the two tropical
tramps. They were looking for trouble, not work, and the idea of a raid on a
rich mine in the Matto Grosso was just what they would enjoy.
An hour later, they had cornered a small,
inoffensive peon named Juan. Juan, Maget and Durkin had discovered, had come
out of the wilderness with Professor Gurlone, the strange looking gentleman who
spoke of a fabulously wealthy mine and commanded checks for fifty thousand
dollars from a reputable banking firm. Such a man was worth watching.
The two rascals were expert at pumping the little
half-breed. They knew peons, and the first thing that happened was that Durkin
had slipped Juan several dollars and had pressed a large glass of whiskey on
the little man.
The conversation was in broken English and
Spanish.
"Quien sabe?"
Durkin and Maget had this phrase flung at them
often during the course of the talk with Juan, and there were many elaborate
shrugs.
There was a mine, way back in the Matto Grosso,
said Juan. He thought it might contain silver: there had been the shaft of an
old mine there. But now they were deep down in the ground, digging out reddish
brown ore, and the cavern smoked and smelled so badly a man could work but an
hour or two before being relieved. But the pay was very high. Also, Juan, in
his rambling way, spoke of grotesque animals. What were these creatures like?
asked Durkin. Then came a shrug, and Juan said they were like nothing else on
earth.
***
Durkin discounted the part of the story having to
do with the strange animals. He thought it was peon superstition. But now he
was sure there was a rich mine to be raided.
"It's a tough part of the Grosso," he
said, turning to Maget.
"Sure. Hard to carry enough water and
supplies to make it. Say, Juan, who was that big Portuguee with Professor
Gurlone? He's blind, ain't he? His eyes were white as milk, and his face tanned
black as river mud. Surely is a great big guy, and tough looking, too."
Durkin drummed on the table, considering the
matter, while Juan spoke of the big Portuguese. The swarthy man with the
colorless blind eyes was Espinosa, former owner of the mine. He had sold part
of his claim to the Gurlones, but had remained with them as an assistant.
Though blind, he knew the depths of the mine and could feel his way about, and
direct the peons in their labors.
"I've got it," said Durkin, turning back
to Juan and Maget. "Juan, it's up to you. You've got to blaze the trail so
we can follow you in. And you can steal food and cache it for use on the way,
see? We'll come along a day or so after the Gurlones."
It took some persuading to make Juan consent to
their plot, but the peon yielded at last to money and the promise of part of
the spoils. "Maybe you can steal Gurlone's samples and they'll give us a
line on what he's up to out there. Whether it's emeralds or diamonds or gold
that they're taking out of the mine."
Juan was stupid and superstitious, like most of
his fellows. He had obeyed orders, digging out the red ore, and that was all he
knew. But prompted by the two tramps, he was ready for trouble, too.
Juan told them that Professor Gurlone carried a
small lead case which he seemed to prize greatly.
"Get it, then," ordered Durkin.[371]
The two tramps saw Gurlone's party start on the
morrow. There were many cases of supplies loaded into launches, some marked
Glass, Acids, and so on. Then there were boxes of food and various things
needed in a jungle camp.
***
Juan, their tool, was working with the other
peons, and at ten o'clock in the morning the launches set out, pushing into the
current of the Madeira.
Old Gurlone, of the livid face, was in charge of
one boat, and the gigantic Portuguese, with his colorless eyes and burned
complexion, sat beside him.
That night, the two tropical tramps stole a small
boat with a one-cylinder motor, and started up the river.
It was a hard journey, but they were used to river
and jungle work, and the object they had in view was enough to make them
discount trouble. They speculated upon what manner of treasure it was they
would find in the cavern of the Matto Grosso mine. It might be precious stones,
it might be gold. Certainly it was something very valuable.
They carried little supplies, but they were heavily
armed. For food, they might hunt and also depend on the caches left by their
friend, Juan the peon.
Three hundred miles from Manaos, they came to the
landing where old Gurlone had unloaded his boats. The two tramps drew their own
craft up on shore a quarter of a mile away, keeping out of sight, and hid the
boat in dense brush. Then they crept up the river bank, keeping out of sight of
the boatmen, who were preparing for the return voyage, and cut into the jungle
so as to strike the trail of the caravan ahead.
For several hours they followed the path easily.
They found palm trees blazed with new marks, and these they were sure their
friend Juan had left for them. But the trail was easy to keep without these.
The supplies had been loaded on burros, which had been awaiting the boats.
That night, they camped beside a small stream.
They were but twenty-four hours behind Professor Gurlone and his party, and the
food Juan had cached for them was in good condition.
***
They were up at daybreak, and pressed on, armed to
the teeth and ready for a fight.
"What's that?" said Durkin, stopping so
suddenly that Maget ran into him.
They had been walking at a swift pace along the
jungle path, the giant trees forming a canopy overhead. Monkeys screamed at
them, birds flitted a hundred feet above them in the roof of the forest.
The sun beat on the jungle top, but few rays
lightened the gloom beneath.
From up ahead sounded a frightful scream, followed
by a long drawn out wailing. Maget glanced at Durkin, and the latter shrugged,
and pressed on. But he gripped his rifle tightly, for the cries were eery.
From time to time the two stopped to catch better
the direction of the wails. At last, they located the spot where the injured
person lay.
It was under a great bombax tree, and on the
shaded ground writhed a man. The two stopped, horrified at the squirming
figure. The man was tearing at his face with his nails, and his countenance was
bloody with long scratches.
He cursed and moaned in Spanish, and Durkin,
approaching closer, recognized Juan the peon.
"Hey, Juan, what the hell's the matter? A
snake bite you?"
The bronzed face of the sturdy little peon writhed
in agony. He screamed in answer, he could not talk coherently. He mumbled, he
groaned, but they could not catch his words.
At his side lay a small lead container, and
closer, as though he had dropped it after extracting it from its case, lay a
tube some six inches in length. It[372] was a queer tube, for it seemed to be
filled with smoky, pallid worms of light that writhed even as Juan writhed.
"What's the trouble?" asked Durkin
gruffly, for he was alarmed at the behavior of the peon. It seemed to both
tramps that the man must have gone mad.
***
They kept back from him, with ready guns. Juan
shrieked, and it sounded as though he said he was burning up, in a great fire.
Suddenly the peon staggered to his feet; as he
pushed himself up, his hands gripped the tube, and he clawed at his face.
Perplexity and horror were writ on the faces of
the two tramps. Maget was struck with pity for the unfortunate peon, who seemed
to be suffering the tortures of the damned. He was not a bad man, was Maget,
but rather a weakling who had a run of bad luck and was under the thumb of
Durkin, a really hard character. Durkin, while astounded at the actions of
Juan, showed no pity.
Maget stepped forward, to try and comfort Juan;
the peon struck out at him, and whirled around. But a few yards away was the
bank of the stream, and Juan crashed into a black palm set with spines, caromed
off it, and fell face downward into the water. The glass tube was smashed and
the pieces fell into the stream.
"God, he must be blind," groaned Maget.
"Poor guy, I've got to save him."
"The hell with him," growled Durkin. He
grasped his partner's arm and stared curiously down at the dying peon.
"Let go, I'll pull him out," said Maget,
trying to wrench away from Durkin.
"He's done for. Why worry about a peon?"
said Durkin. "Look at those fish!"
The muddy waters of the stream had parted, and
dead fish were rising about the body of Juan. But not about the dying man so
much as close to the spot where the broken tube had fallen. White bellies up,
the fish died as though by magic.
"Let's—let's get the hell back to Manoas,
Bill," said Maget in a sickly voice. "This—this is too much for
me."
***
A nameless fear, which had been with Maget ever
since the beginning of the venture, was growing more insistent.
"What?" cried Durkin. "Turn back
now? The hell you say! That damn peon got into a fight with somebody and maybe
got bit by a snake later. We'll go on and get that treasure."
"But—but what made those fish come up that way?"
said Maget, his brows creased in perplexity.
Durkin shrugged. "What's the difference?
We're O. K., ain't we?"
In spite of the stout man's bravado, it was
evident that he, too, was disturbed at the strange happenings. He kept voicing
aloud the question in his mind; what was in the queer tube?
But he forced Maget to go on. Without Juan, the
peon, to leave them caches of food on the trail, they would have a difficult
time getting provender, but both were trained jungle travelers and could find
fruit and shoot enough game to keep them going.
Day after day they marched on, not far from the
rear of the party before them. They took care to keep off Gurlone's heels, for
they did not wish their presence to be discovered.
When they had been on the journey, which led them
east, for four days, the two rascals came to a waterless plateau, which
stretched before them in dry perspective. Before they came to the end of this,
they knew what real thirst was, and their tongues were black in their mouths
before they caught the curling smoke of fires in the valley where they knew the
mine must be.
"That's the mine," gasped Durkin,
pointing to the smoke.
***
The sun was setting in golden splendor at their
backs; they crept forward, using great boulders and piles of reddish earth,
strange to them, for cover. Finally they reached the trail which led to the
hills overlooking the valley, and a panorama spread before them which amazed
them because of its elaborateness.
It seemed more like a stage scene than a
wilderness picture. Straight ahead of them, as they lay flat on their stomachs
and peered at the big camp, yawned the black mouth of a large cavern. This,
they were sure, was the mine itself. Close by this mouth stood a stone hut. It
was clear that this building had something to do with the ore, perhaps a
refining plant, Durkin suggested.
There were long barracks for the peons, inside a
barbed wire enclosure, and they could see the little men lounging now about
campfires, where frying food was being prepared. Also, there was a long, low
building with many windows in it, and houses for supplies and for the use of
the owners of the camp.
"Looks like they were ready in case of a
fight," said Durkin at last. "That fence around the peons looks like
they might be havin' trouble."
"Some camp," breathed Maget.
"We got to find somethin' to drink,"
said Durkin. "Come on."
They worked their way about the rim of the valley,
and in doing so caught glimpses of Professor Gurlone, the elderly man they had
spotted in Manaos, and also saw the big Portuguese with his sightless eyes.
At the other side of the valley, they came on a
spring which flowed to the east and disappeared under ground farther down.
"Funny water, ain't it?" said Durkin,
lying down on his stomach to suck up the milky water.
But they were not in any mood to be particular
about the fluids they drank. The long dry march across the arid lands
separating the camp from the rest of the world had taken all moisture from
their throats.
***
Maget, drinking beside his partner, saw that the
water glinted and sparkled, though the sun was below the opposite rim of the
valley. It seemed that greenish, silvery specks danced in the milky fluid.
"Boy, that's good," Durkin finally found
time to say, "I feel like I could fight a wildcat."
The water did, indeed, impart a feeling of
exhilaration to the two tramps. They crept up close to the roof of the parallel
shaft which they had seen from the other side of the valley, and looked down
into the camp again.
Professor Gurlone of the livid face and Espinosa
the blind Portuguese, were talking to a big man whose golden beard shone in the
last rays of the sun.
"That's the old bird's son," said
Durkin, "that Juan told us about. Young Gurlone."
A rumbling, pleasant laugh floated on the breeze,
issuing from the big youth's throat. The wind was their way, now, and the
valley breathed forth an unpleasant odor of chemicals and tainted meat.
"Funny place," said Maget. "Say, I
got a hell of a headache, Bill."
"So've I," grunted Durkin. "Maybe
that water ain't as good as it seemed at first."
***
They lay in a small hollow, watching the activity
of the camp. The peons were in their pen, and it was evident that they were
being watched by the owners of the camp.
As purple twilight fell across the strange land,
the two tramps began to notice the dull sounds which came to their ears from
time to time.
"That's funny thunder," said Maget
nervously. "If I didn't know it was thunder, I'd swear some big frogs were
around here."
"Oh, hell. Maybe it's an earthquake,"
said Durkin irritatedly. "For God's sake, quit your bellyachin'.
You've[374] done nothin' but whine ever since we left Juan."
"Well, who could blame me—" began Maget.
He broke off suddenly, the pique in his voice turned to a quiver of fear, as he
grasped Durkin's arm. "Oh, look," he gasped.
Durkin, seeing his partner's eyes staring at a
point directly behind him, leaped up and scrambled away, thinking that a snake
must be about to strike him.
He turned round when he felt he was far enough
away, and saw that the ground was moving near the spot where he had been lying.
The earth was heaving, as though ploughed by a giant
share; a blunt, purplish head, which seemed too fearful to be really alive,
showed through the broken ground, and a worm began to draw its purple length
from the depths. It was no snake, but a gigantic angleworm, and as it came
forth, foot after foot, the two watched with glazed eyes.
Maget swallowed. "I've seen 'em two feet
long," he said. "But never like that."
Durkin, however, when he realized that the
loathsome creature could not see them and was creeping blindly towards them
with its ugly, fat body creasing and elongating, picked up rocks and began to
destroy the monstrous worm. He cursed as he worked.
Dull red blood spattered them, and a fetid odor
from the gashes caused them to retch, but they finally cut the thing in two,
and then they moved away from there.
***
The dull rumblings beneath them frightened Maget,
and Durkin too, though the latter tried to brazen it out.
"Come on, it's gettin' dark. We can take a
look in their mine now."
Maget, whimpering, followed. The booming sounds
were increasing.
But Durkin slipped down the hillside, and Maget
followed into the valley. They crept past the stone shack, which they noticed
was padlocked heavily.
Durkin stopped suddenly, and cursed. "I've
cut my foot," he said. "These damn shoes are gone, all right, from
that march. But come on, never mind."
They crept to the mouth of the cavern and peered
in. "Ugh," said Maget.
He drew back with a shudder. The floor of the mine
was covered with a grey slush, in which were seething white masses of slugs
weaving in the slime. A powerful, rotten odor breathed in their faces, as
though they stood in the mouth of a great giant.
"Ah!" yelled Durkin, throwing his arms
across his face.
The greenish, ghostly light which emanated from
the slime was weaker than moonlight, just enough to see by; a vast shadow
hovered above their heads, as though a gigantic bat flew there. The sweep and
beat of great wings drove them back, and they fled in terror from such awful
corruption.
But the flying monster, with a wing spread of
eight feet, dashed past them, and silhouetted against the rising moon like a
goblin. Then came another, and finally a flock of the big birds.
Durkin and Maget ran away, passing the stone house
which stood near the cavern's mouth. The booming sounds from the bowels of the
earth filled their ears now, and it was not thunder; no, it issued from the
depths of the mine.
"We—we got to get somethin' to eat,"
said Durkin, as they paused near one of the shacks, in which shone a light.
***
Sounds of voices came from the interior. They
crept closer, and listened outside the window. Inside, they could see Espinosa,
Gurlone senior, and the big youth with the golden beard, Gurlone junior.
"Yes, father," the young man was saying.
"I believe we had better leave, at once. It's getting dangerous. I've
reached the five million mark now, with the new process, and it is ready
to[375] work with or sell, just as we wish."
"Hear that?" whispered Durkin
triumphantly. "Five million!"
"It's all ready, in the stone house,"
said young Gurlone.
"Why should we leave now?" said old
Gurlone, his livid face working. "Now, when we are just at the point of
success in our great experiments? So far, while we have struck many creatures
of abnormal growth, still, we have overcome them."
"Well, father, there is something in the mine
now which makes it too dangerous to work. That is, until they are put out of
the way. You can hear them now."
The three inside the shack listened, and so did
Durkin and Maget. The booming sounds swelled louder and the earth of the valley
shook.
"I t'ink we better go," said Espinosa
gruffly. "I agree with your son, Professor."
"No, no. We can conquer this, what ever it
is."
"You see, father, while you were away, we
broke through into a natural cavern, an underground river. It was then that the
trouble started. You know the effect of the stuff on the insects and birds. It
enlarged a cricket one hundred times. You saw that yourself. Six of the peons
have disappeared—they didn't run away, either. They went down the shaft and
never came back."
"Oh, they probably fell into the water and
drowned," said old Gurlone impatiently. "Even if they did not, we can
kill anything with these large bore rifles."
"We'd better pull out and let it alone for a
while," said young Gurlone gravely. "The peons have been trying to
bolt for several days. They'd be gone now if I hadn't penned them in and
electrified the fence."
***
Maget put his hand on his friend's shoulder.
"I'm starving," he whispered.
Durkin nodded, and they turned away, toward what
they had marked as a supply shack. They heard a low murmur from the peons' pen,
as they began to break off the hasps of the lock which held the door of the
storehouse.
They got inside with little trouble, and began to
feel about in the dark for food. They located biscuits and canned goods which
they split open, and these they wolfed hungrily, listening carefully for sounds
from outside.
"Here they come," said Maget, gripping
Durkin's arm.
They looked out the window of the supply shack,
and saw old Gurlone issue from the building outside which the two tramps had
been listening. In one hand, the old Professor, brave as a lion, carried an old
fashioned double-barreled elephant gun, and the rays from a powerful electric
torch shone across the barrel.
At least, they thought the bizarre figure was old
Gurlone, from the size. For the man was clad in a black, shiny suit, and over
his head was a flapping hood of the same material in which were large eyeholes
of green glass. Behind this strange form came a larger one, armed also with a
big bore rifle and with another powerful flashlight.
The blind Portuguese was armed, too, but he was
not clad in the black suit. He took his stand beside the mouth of the cavern,
and waited while the two Gurlones entered the mine.
"My foot hurts," said Durkin suddenly,
breaking the silence.
"I'm going out and see what happens,"
said Maget.
***
Durkin limped after Maget, who now took the lead.
They crept close as possible to the mine opening, and saw the big Portuguese
standing there in silence, listening carefully. Any sounds the two might have
made were drowned in the great bellowing from within the cavern.
These noises, so like the croak of bullfrogs but
magnified a thousand[376] times, were terrifying to the heart.
The sweep of wings sounded on the night air, and
Espinosa drew back and squatted close to the ground, as immense green
creatures, flying on dusty wings, issued from the mine.
"God, those are moths," breathed Maget.
Yes, unmistakably, they were moths, as large as
condors. The green ones, but for their size, were lunar moths, familiar enough
to the two tramps. More bats came, disturbed by the entrance of the two
Gurlones.
Durkin broke, then. "I'm—I'm—I guess you're
right, Maget," he whispered, in a terrified voice. "We should have
never come. If my foot wasn't hurt, I'd start for the river now. Curse it, what
a place!"
The booming, vast croaks filled the whole valley,
reverberating through the hills. Wails sounded from the peon camp.
The big Portuguese was shouting to the Gurlones.
"Come out, come out!"
Maget gripped his own rifle, and stood up,
bravely. His fear, though it was great, seemed to have brought out the better
side of the man, while Durkin, so brave at first, had cracked under the strain.
"Look out, they'll see you," whimpered
Durkin.
Maget strode forward. A blast of fetid, stinking
air struck his face, and he choked. The noises were now ear-splitting, but
above the bellows came the sounds of the big rifles, the echoes booming through
the recesses of the cavern.
Then the two Gurlones, running madly, burst from
the mine entrance.
"Run," they screamed. "Run for your
life, Espinosa!"
"I'll help you," cried Maget, and Durkin
could detain him no longer.
***
The Gurlones hardly noticed the newcomer, as they
ran madly towards the shelter of their houses. Espinosa joined them, going
swiftly in spite of his blind eyes.
The croaking made Maget's brain scream with the
immensity of the sound. Luminous, white disks, three feet in diameter, glared
at him, and the creature, which progressed with jerky leaps toward him, almost
filled the mouth of the mine.
It was hot in pursuit of the fleeing Gurlones. It
squatted and then jumped, and presently it was out in the night air.
Its form was that of a gigantic frog, but it stood
some twenty feet in height, and from its throat sounded the terrific bellowing
which rivalled the thunder.
Maget bravely stepped forward, and began to fire
into the huge, soft body. The great mouth opened, and as the dum-dum bullets
tore gashes in the blackish green batrachian, the thunderous croaks took on a
note of pain.
The odor of the creature was horrible. Maget could
scarcely draw his breath as he fired the contents of the magazine into the big
animal. Two more jumps brought the frog almost to Maget's feet, and the
tropical tramp felt a whiskerlike tentacle touch his face, and bad smelling
slime covered him.
The frog was blind, without doubt, from its
underground life, but the tentacles seemed to be the way it finally located its
prey, for it turned on Maget and made a final snap at him. The great jaws
closed like the flap of hell, and Maget leaped back with a cry of triumphant
terror.
***
The bullets had finally stopped the big frog, but
at its heels came a strange, jellylike creature, not quite as bulky as the
frog, but pushing along on its legs and with a tail some eight feet thick and
fifteen feet in length. This, too, evidently a polywog, was blind, with
whitened discs for eyes, but it slid along at a rapid rate because of its size.
Maget's gun was empty; he turned so flee, but the polywog stopped and sniffed
at the thick blood of its fellow. Then, to Maget's relief, it be[377]gan to
hungrily devour its companion.
Utterly filthy, and ferocious, the polywog in
silence snapped great chunks from the dead giant frog.
"Hello. Who are you?"
Maget turned, having forgotten the amenities of
life in the excitement. Professor Gurlone and his son, still clad in their
black suits, but with their helmets off, were standing beside him, clutching
their guns and lights.
The big Portuguese, Espinosa, appeared, and Durkin
was beside him.
"Why," said Maget, between gasps,
"we just happened to be out exploring, and we saw your camp. We were on
our way in when we heard the noises and came to investigate."
"I see," said old Gurlone. "What
made you head in this direction, and where's your outfit?"
"Oh, we cached most of it back there,"
said Maget. "My partner's hurt his foot, so he can't walk well. Isn't that
so, Durkin?"
"Yeh," growled Durkin. "I got a
sore foot, all right."
***
Old Gurlone was suspicious of the vague story
which Maget and Durkin concocted as the explanation of their presence in the
valley. But evidently the Professor was too worried about the situation in
which he and his friends were, to question the two tramps very closely. In
fact, he seemed rather glad that he had two more pairs of hands to aid him and
he thanked Maget for his bravery.
They dispatched the great polywog as it tore its
parent to bits, and then the five men, the two Gurlones, Espinoza, Maget, and
the limping, cursing Durkin, retired to one of the shacks.
The living quarters of the Gurlones was quite
elaborate. There were many books on rough shelves, and there was a small bench
filled with glass phials and chemicals, though the main laboratory was in one
of the long buildings.
Professor Gurlone poured drinks for the five, and
welcomed Durkin and Maget as allies.
"We'll need every man we can get, if we are
to cope with these great creatures," said old Gurlone. "The peons are
too frightened to be of use. Luckily, it was a frog we came upon on the banks
of the subterranean river. There is no telling how many more creatures of the
same or greater size may be down there. We will have to destroy them, every
one."
Maget and Durkin shuddered. "Say,"
blurted Durkin, his face working nervously, "how the hell did that frog
get so big? I thought I was seein' things, Professor."
"No, no," said Professor Gurlone.
"You see, the ore in the mine contains radium, that is, salts of radium.
It is a pitchblende deposit, and it happens to be so rich in radium content
that throughout the ages it has affected all the life in the cavern. The arid
land surrounding the ore—this has been, generally, one of the characteristics
of radium deposits—has kept most of the jungle creatures away, but underground
beings such as reptiles, worms and frogs, have gradually become immune to the
effects of the ore and have grown prodigiously and abnormally under the
stimulation of the rays given off by the radium.
"Now, this is nothing strange in itself, but
never before has such a rich deposit been discovered, so that the amounts of
radium available have been too small to really check its effect on growth in
animals. That is our chief scientific object in coming here: we realized, from
Senor Espinosa's description of the played-out silver mine he had, and from his
loss of sight, that he had stumbled upon a valuable deposit of radium. It
usually occurs with silver, that is, the uranium mother ore does, through the
disintegration of which radium is formed. The content of radium per ton in this
ore proved unbelievably rich: we were delighted. I have always suspected that
the animal cell might be stimulated into abnormal growth by exposure to radium
salts, for such a thing already has been[378] hinted at in the scientific
world. Not till our chance came here, however, has enough radium been available
for the experiments."
***
Maget and Durkin listened with open mouths. Radium
meant but vague things to them. They had heard of radium paint which shone in
the dark on the dials of watches and clothes, but of the properties of the
metal and its salts they were utterly ignorant.
"That radium stuff is what makes the funny
light in that mine, then?" asked Maget.
"Exactly. The radio-activity of the elements
in the ore give off the light. There are three rays, the alpha, beta and gamma,
and—"
The professor forgot himself in a lecture on the
properties of radium.
Durkin, breaking in, asked, slyly. "Is this
radium worth as much as silver?"
Young Kenneth Gurlone laughed, and even old
Professor Gurlone smiled. "Radium is worth more than gold or diamonds or
platinum. Its value is fabulous. We have five million dollars worth already, in
the form of the chloride."
"Whew," whistled Durkin.
He glanced sidewise at Maget.
"Yes," said Professor Gurlone,
"five million dollars worth of it! Those great monsters who have been
developed throughout the ages by the action of the radium rays on their bodies,
causing them to grow so prodigiously, are but incidents. We must destroy them,
so that our work cannot be interfered with. We must use dynamite, blow them to
bits. They are powerful enough to crush the stone bank by the mine mouth and
ruin the labors of the past two years, gentlemen."
Armed, and once more fortified with whiskey, the
five made their way outside. The moon was darkened by an immense shadow, as one
of the giant bats winged its way over their heads. But there were no more
monster frogs. The ugly, bulky shapes of the dead polywog and its parent lay
before them.
"We are safe for the moment," said
Professor Gurlone. "Go and quiet the peons, Espinosa: they will listen to
you."
***
The peons still wailed in terror; the blind
Espinosa slipped silently away.
"Come," said Professor Gurlone, to his
son and to Maget and Durkin. "I will show you the laboratory, so that you
can understand better the effects of radium on growth."
The professor led them to the long, low,
many-windowed building nearby, and flooded it with light. It contained cage
after cage in which were monkeys, pumas, and various jungle folk. These
creatures set up a chattering and howling at the light and intruders.
Maget glanced curiously about him. He saw shining
vials and glassware of queer shapes on long black tables, and tubes of
chemicals. There were immense screens of dull lead. "Those are for
protection," said Professor Gurlone, "as are the lead-cloth suits we
wear. Otherwise we would be burned by radium rays."
Maget looked about, to see if his partner was
listening, but he had gone away.
However, Maget was intensely interested. He went
from cage to cage as Professor Gurlone, rather in the manner of a man giving a lecture
to students, pointed out animal after animal that had been treated by the
radium.
"This," said the professor, "is a
monkey which usually attains a height of two feet. You can see for yourself
that it is now larger than a gorilla."
***
The horrible, malformed creature bared its teeth
and shook its bars in rage, but it was weak, evidently, from the treatment
accorded it. Its hair was burned off in spots, and its eyes were almost white.
There was a jaguar, and this beast[379] seemed to
have burst its skin in its effort to grow as large as three of its kind.
"You see, we have not so much time as
nature," said Professor Gurlone. "These beasts cannot be enlarged too
rapidly, or they would die. They must be protected from the direct rays of the
radium, which is refined. In the ore, the action is more gradual and gentle,
since it is less concentrated. But the metal itself would burn the vital organs
out of these creatures, cause them to be struck blind, shrivel them up inside
and kill them in a few minutes in the quantity we have. We expose them bit by
bit, allowing more and more time as they begin to grow immune to the rays.
Here, you see, are smaller creatures which have grown some eight or ten times
beyond normal size."
All the animals seemed the worse for wear. Maget,
his brain reeling, yet was beginning to grasp what radium did to one. It was
not gold that you could pick up and carry away.
"If a man touched that radium," he
asked, "what would happen to him?"
"Just what I said would happen to the animals
if we did not give it to them gradually," said Gurlone, with a wave of his
hand. "It would kill him, strike him down as though by invisible poison
gas. His heart and lungs would cease to function, pernicious anemia would set
in, as the red corpuscles in his blood perished by millions. He would be struck
blind, fall down and die in agony."
To Maget came the picture of the unfortunate Juan.
As though answering his unasked question, Professor Gurlone went on. "We had
a peon coming up with us," he said. "His name was Juan. He stole my
sample-case, which contained an ounce of radium chloride, and ran off with it.
If he opens it, it will kill him in just that way."
***
Maget shivered. "But—but didn't it hurt you
to carry it?" he asked.
"No. For it was incased in a lead container
some two inches in thickness, and the rays cannot penetrate such a depth of
lead. They are trapped in the metal."
"Father, father, you're wasting time,"
broke in Kenneth Gurlone, shaking his yellow head. "We must act at once.
The peons are almost mad with fear. Even Espinosa cannot quiet them. And every
moment is precious, for the monsters may break forth."
But Maget was looking nervously about for Durkin.
Where was he? Durkin had his mind on the treasure, and—
As they turned toward the door, the professor
saying. "The rays from the ore, which is not so concentrated as the
purified metal, do not kill—" Durkin suddenly appeared.
He carried his rifle at his hip, and he limped and
cursed angrily. "Come across," shouted Durkin. "Give me the key
to that stone house. Snap into it, and no argument."
"The key—to the stone bank?" repeated
old Gurlone.
"Yes. I'll give you five counts to throw it
over—then I'll shoot you and take it," snarled Durkin savagely. "I
want that treasure, whatever it is, and I'll have it. One ... two ...
three...." The tramp sent a shot over their heads as a warning.
"Hey, Bill, easy, easy," pleaded Maget.
"That stuff is radium. It'll ruin you, boy!"
"Shut up, you yeller-bellied bum,"
snarled Durkin. "Four...."
A tinkle of metal came on the stone floor of the
laboratory, as old Gurlone tossed his keys to Durkin.
"Don't go in that shack," cried young
Gurlone. "It'll be your death, man—"
"Liars," yelled Durkin, and backed out
the door.
"H'm," said old Gurlone, turning to
Maget. "So you came to rob us, eh?"
***
But Maget thought of Juan, and then he knew he did
not want Durkin, in spite of his failings, to per[380]ish so. He ran for the
door, and across the clearing.
"Durkin—Bill—wait, it's Frank—"
Great bellowings sounded from the bowels of the
earth, but Maget ignored these in his effort to save his partner. Durkin had
the padlock off the stone shack, and pulled back the door.
As the door disclosed the interior, Maget could
see that a greenish haze filled the entire building. Wan liquid light streamed
forth like heavy fluid.
Bravely, to save his pal from death, Maget ran
forward. But Durkin had entered the stone shack.
Maget went to the very door of the building.
Durkin was inside, and Maget could see his partner's thick form as a black
object in the strange, thick air.
An eery scream came suddenly from Durkin's lips;
Maget wrung his hands and called for help.
"Come out, Bill, come out," he cried.
Durkin evidently tried to obey, for he turned
toward the door. But his knees seemed to give way beneath him, he threw his arm
across his eyes as he sank to the ground, crying in agony, incoherent sounds
issuing from his lips.
Shriek after shriek the unfortunate man uttered.
As Maget made a dash forward to take a chance with death and rescue his friend,
Professor Gurlone and his son Kenneth ran up and threw a black cloak over the
tramp.
The three entered the shack of death. Maget, not
entirely covered, felt his heart give a terrific jump, and he gasped for
breath. Durkin was quivering on the floor which was lined with lead.
***
Round vials stood about the room like a battery of
search-lights, and from these emanated the deadly green haze.
But almost before Maget touched his pal, Durkin
was dead. Curled up as though sewed together by heavy cords. Durkin lay in a
ball, a shaking mass of burned flesh.
The two Gurlones pushed out ahead of them, and
raised their hands. They had on their black suits and their helmets.
"It is too late to do anything for him
now," said Kenneth Gurlone sadly. "He was headstrong. You can see for
yourself that the five million dollars takes care of itself. Certain death goes
with it if you are unprotected. These lead-cloth suits will keep off the rays
for a short time. We always wear them when we are working with the metal, even
when we have a lead screen."
"Poor Bill," sobbed Maget. "It's
terrible!"
Professor Gurlone shrugged. "It was his own
fault. He was a thief and he would not let us stop him. I hope it's been a
lesson to you, Maget."
"Yes, I want to help you," said Maget.
"If you'll keep me with you, I'll work for you and be straight. Give me a
chance."
"Good. Then shake hands on it," said
Kenneth, and they clasped hands firmly.
Espinosa appeared from the darkness. "The
peons are mad with terror," he said morosely. "They cannot be held
much longer. They will revolt."
"Well, we must kill the creatures in the
cavern: that will quiet them more than anything else," said Professor
Gurlone.
"Better close the stone shack," said
Kenneth.
But as he spoke, a vast shape, another giant frog,
appeared in the entrance of the shaft.
"Get some dynamite and fuses," ordered
Professor Gurlone quietly. "Come on Kenneth, and you, Maget, if you care
to risk your life. You need not do so unless you wish to."
Bravely, the older man led the way towards the
croaking monster. The ground shook at its approach. It was heading for the
bodies of the dead frog and polywog, bent on a search for food. Evidently these
vast creatures were forced to prey upon one another for sustenance.[381]
***
The rifles spoke, and Maget and the professor, in
their black suits, protected by the lead-cloth and helmets from the rays,
advanced. They poured bullet after bullet into the frog.
Kenneth came running to join them, and Espinosa
stood by. Kenneth had dynamite bombs with fuses ready for lighting and
throwing. He also brought more ammunition, and the three armed themselves to
the teeth.
It was well after midnight when they started into
the mine. They knew they must act quickly or retreat, for the bellowing sounded
nearer and nearer the surface of the earth.
Each man carried big, powerful flashlights, and
the three entered the mine shaft and walked across the seething slugs into the
bowels of the earth.
"Stay close together," ordered old
Gurlone.
The mine was easy to descend for the first hundred
yards. It led in a gentle slope downward. The way, save for a few giant bats
and moths, and the big maggots, was clear. The greenish haze, not so bright as
that in the death shack, enveloped them, but they needed their flashes to see
clearly.
"Slowly, take it easy," counseled old
Gurlone.
The mine spread out now, and began a steeper
descent. The air was poor, and it was hard to breathe through the mask. Maget,
his heart thumping mightily, listened to the roaring within the depths of the
mine.
Now the ground seemed to drop away before them.
Maget could hear the running of water, the underground river, and every now and
then there came an immense splash, as if some great whale had thrown itself
about in the water.
A terrifically loud hissing filled their ears, and
suddenly, before them, showed an utterly white snake with a head as big as a
barrel. Its white eyes glared sightlessly, but its tongue stuck forth for
several feet.
Kenneth Gurlone coolly tossed a lighted bomb at
the creature: the explosion shattered their ear-drums, but it also smashed the
serpent.
***
The writhing, wriggling coils, bigger than the
body of a horse, slashed about, dangerously near. They picked themselves up,
and pushed on, keeping close to the right wall.
A great bat smashed against Maget, and knocked the
light out of his hand, but the blow was a glancing one, and he was able to
retrieve his light and hurry on.
They were far from the entrance now. The hole
which had been broken through by the peons showed before them, and they could
see milky water dashing over black rocks.
Pallid eyes looked at them, and they knew they gazed
upon another of the giant frogs. They tossed a bomb at the creature, and blew a
jagged hole in his back. No sooner had he begun to die than there came a sudden
rush of other monsters and a feast began.
"Throw, all together," yelled Kenneth
Gurlone.
Into the vast mass of creatures, who crowded one
another in the river for their share of the spoils, they threw bomb after bomb.
The dynamite deafened them, and acrid fumes choked them, but they fired their
rifles at the prodigious animals and there, in the big river cavern, was a
seething mass of horrible life, dying in agony.
The bellowings and hissings sounded louder, so
loud that the earth shook as if actuated by a mighty earthquake.
Maget gripped Kenneth Gurlone's arm. "My
bombs are gone," he shouted.
He had but a few rounds of ammunition left, and
still more of the giant reptiles appeared. A centipede with its creeping,
horrible legs topped the mass of squirming matter; they could see the terrific
sting of the creature, so deadly when but a fraction of an inch long, and which
was now at least a foot, armed with poison.
There came the rush of more bats and moths, a rush
that threw the three men off their feet.[382]
"We must have opened the hole more with our
bombs," shrieked old Gurlone. "The dead bodies attract the other
creatures, more and more of them are coming. It is impossible; we cannot deal
with them all."
***
The vast gobbling of the great animals in the
river below them was so prodigious they could not grasp it. It seemed it must
be optical illusion. In a few moments, the dead had been eaten, swallowed
whole, and fights were progressing between the victors.
They tossed the rest of their bombs, fired the
remaining ammunition, and as they prepared to retreat, several of the big
creatures slopped over and started up the river bank into the mine shaft.
They ran for their lives, the three. Madly, with
the earth shaking behind them as they were pursued by a hopping monster of a
beetle with immense mandibles reaching out at them, they dashed for the open
air.
Giant moths and bats struck at them, and Maget
fell down several times before he reached the outside, and he was bruised and
out of breath.
"Come on, there are too many to fight,"
gasped old Gurlone, throwing off the lead suit.
But there was no need to talk. The creatures,
disturbed by the bombs, had collected in one spot and, shown the way out by one
of their number, were coming.
Espinosa, with Kenneth Gurlone holding his hand,
ran swiftly for the hills surrounding the valley. Maget helped old Professor
Gurlone, who was so out of breath that he could scarcely move.
The great beetle which had been pursuing them was
the first to break forth into the valley. Turning back for a look over his
shoulder, Maget saw the thing pause, but the cavern belched forth a vast array
of monsters, the beasts roaring, hissing, bellowing, in an increasing mass of
sound.
They swarmed over the ground, and giant bats and
moths winged their way about the heads of the monsters.
At the rim of the valley, the four men paused.
"God help the peons," said Kenneth
Gurlone.
***
Now the horde of monsters swelled more and more;
the bats and moths winged in mad frenzy about the open door of the radium
shack. There were great beetles, centipedes, ants, crickets, hopping, crawling
things, and grotesquely immense in size. Fights progressed here and there, but
the majority of them were carried along in the sweep of the multitude.
"See, the radium kills those who get too
close," said Professor Gurlone, in a hushed voice.
The giant moths and bats were unable to withstand
the lure of the green light. They flew with mad beatings of wings straight for
the open door of the death house, and many of the great creatures, attracted by
the light and urged on by an unexplainable force which sent them to death like
gnats and moths in a flame, crowded near to the death-dealing radium.
Not until the whole shack was covered with
quivering forms of the dead, did the other creatures veer off and with hops,
creepings and myriad giant legs, begin to cover the whole valley.
The stone walls of the death shack had crumpled in
with the weight; the other buildings, more lightly built, gave at once, with
crackings and crashings.
The four men were powerless to assist the
unfortunate peons, who were trapped in their barracks. The charged wires
stopped many of the big beasts, but soon the electric light was
short-circuited, and the valley, in the moonlight, was a seething mass of
fighting, dying, feasting monsters.
***
Other sounds, besides those made by the big
creatures, came to the ears of the stricken men on the hillside. The breaking
of glass, the cries[383] of the jungle animals trapped in their cages, the
shrieks of dying peons who were eaten at a gulp by the big frogs or stung to
death, impaled on the mandibles of some great stinging centipede.
In the spot where the radium death shack had been,
was a pulpy mass of livid, smoky light.
Now the bowl of the valley was filled as by some
vast jelly. The creatures were slopping over the walls, and battling together.
The shambles was not yet over, but the four could
remain no longer. They made their way down the hillside and struck out across
the arid lands.
Maget, the tramp, became the leader. He was a
trained jungle man, and it was he who finally brought them safely to the
Madeira.
He was their strong man, the one who found the
trail and located roots and fruit for the party to subsist on. They nearly
perished in the trip for lack of water, but again, Maget was able to supply
them with roots which kept them from dying in agony.
***
They lay upon the river bank now, exhausted but
alive. Maget had assisted old Gurlone, acted as his staff, half carried him the
last miles of the trip.
Their clothes were almost gone, they were burned
to crisps by the tropic sun. Flies and other insects had taken their toll. But
Maget had brought them through.
The tall, thin fellow's hair had turned utterly
white. But so had his soul.
"You're a good man, Maget," said
Professor Gurlone. "You have saved us, and you have been brave as a lion."
Maget shook his head. "Professor," he
said. "I came into the jungle to rob you. Durkin and I bribed Juan to
steal that radium, and I feel responsible for his death. We thought you had
diamonds or gold in the Matto Grosso, and we were after it. That's why I am
here."
"You have repaid your debt to us, more than
fully," said Kenneth, holding out his hand.
"Yes," said Espinosa.
"Will you keep me with you, then?" asked
Maget anxiously. "Are—will you go back there?"
***
Professor Gurlone stared at him, and then said, in
a surprised tone, "Why, of course!"
"But the monsters?" asked Maget.
"Many of them will die in the outer
air," said Gurlone. "The survivors of the battles will start eating
the dead. They will finally clear away the debris of dead creatures about the
radium shack. As each is exposed to the rays of the concentrated metal, it will
die. The others will eat it, and be killed in turn. Thus, they will be
destroyed. If there are any survivors after this evident turn of events, then
we will cope with them when we return, reinforced. Dynamite, enough of it, will
finish them off. And, Maget, in your next pursuit after knowledge of strange
things, you may get a few earthly riches. The radium is still there, and you
will share in it."
"Thank you," said Maget humbly.
"I'm with you to the end."
"You must keep quiet about this,"
cautioned Kenneth Gurlone. "We do not want the world to know too much of
our vast store of radium. It would attract adventurers and we would be annoyed
by ignorant men. But we're thankful you lay drunk in that saloon when my father
spoke of the millions, Maget."
In Manzos, Maget found himself a changed man. To
his surprise, in spite of his white hair, brought on by the horror of what he
had seen, he found that he had gained two inches in height, and that he was
larger of girth. This, Professor Gurlone told him, was the effect of the radium
rays.
Never again did Maget lie drunk on the floor of a
saloon. The events through which he had gone had seared the tramp's soul, and
he kept close to his new master, Professor Gurlone.
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