Astounding Stories of Super-Science January 1931 - BestLightNovel.com
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And all the time, Larry had an uneasy feeling of gathering furtive hosts about them, waiting--waiting for what?
He confided his fears to no one, though he noted with relief that Von Ullrich seemed to sense these unseen presences too, for he proceeded with caution and always kept a strong guard outside.
By early afternoon, the _Nereid_ was one great coffer-chest.
But still the rapacious U-boat commander was unsatisfied, though Professor Stevens began to have doubts if his craft could lift that ma.s.sive weight of plunder to the top of the plateau.
"One more load and we go," he soothed. "A few more pretties for the little lady!"
Larry writhed, and should have suspected then and there--but as it was, the blow fell unexpected, stunning.
Filing from the lock, they failed to notice that Von Ullrich and his crew hung back, until there came a sudden, guttural command, whereupon Diane was seized and the ma.s.sive door flung shut in their faces.
Appalled by this overwhelming disaster, the party stood for a moment motionless, speechless. Then, as one, Larry and the professor rushed forward and beat upon that barred hatch, calling upon Von Ullrich to open it.
From within the submarine, through their vibrators, they heard him laugh.
"_Auf Wiedersehen!_" he toasted them. "I now have all the treasure I want! The rest I leave to you! Help yourselves!"
Even as he spoke, the _Nereid's_ auxiliary propellers started churning the water. Slowly, sluggishly, like some great gorged fish, the st.u.r.dy craft moved off, lifted her snout, headed upward.
Professor Stevens bowed his head, and Larry could well picture the grief that distorted the graybeard's face, inside that owl-eyed helmet.
"Cheer up!" he said, though his own face was twisted with anguish.
"Perhaps--"
Then he paused--for how could he say that perhaps the situation wasn't as bad as it seemed, when it was obviously hopeless?
"My poor Diane!" moaned the professor. "Poor child. Poor child!"
As for Captain Petersen and the crew, they said nothing. Perhaps they were thinking of Diane, perhaps of themselves. At least, they knew it was over.
Or so they thought. But to Larry, suddenly, occurred a gleam of hope.
That strange sense of unseen presences! It was bizarre, of course, but doesn't a drowning person catch at straws? And Lord knows they were drowning, if ever anyone was!
He turned and confided to Professor Stevens his idea, which was to retrace their steps within the city gates, seek out the populace and throw themselves on their mercy.
The stricken savant, too, grasped at the straw.
"It seems fantastic, but after all it is a chance," he admitted.
So they pushed back into that great submerged city, with Captain Petersen and his skeptical crew. They entered one of the largest of the temples, wandered forlornly through its flooded halls and corridors, seeking some sign of these alleged beings Larry had sensed.
Nor was their search unrewarded, for suddenly the captain himself, most skeptical of all, cried out:
"Listen! Did you hear that?"
There was no need to ask the question, for all had heard. It was a rasping sound, as of some great door swinging shut, followed almost immediately by a rus.h.i.+ng gurgle--and as they stood there tense, the water level began rapidly receding.
Even while it was still plas.h.i.+ng about their ankles, a secret block of masonry slid back and a horde of Antillians burst in upon them.
What happened then, happened with a rush that left them dazed.
Unable to talk directly with the pigmies, by reason of their pressure-suits, which they dared not remove, they started gesturing with them, trying to explain their predicament and make known that they bore them no ill-will, but the creatures waved for them to cease and led them swiftly through the now waterless temple.
"Well, I guess it's all up!" said Larry, adding with dismal humor: "They're probably going to finish that meal they started feeding their dragon last night!"
No one laughed, nor made any comment, and he relapsed into silence, realizing that they probably held him responsible for this latest disaster.
Leaving the temple, their captors led them into a pa.s.sage that was level for a time, then inclined sharply. It was laborious going but they struggled on.
"I believe they know we are not their enemies!" declared Professor Stevens, at length, to everyone's cheer. "They seem to be leading us back to the plateau by some underground pa.s.sage."
"Let's hope so!" said Larry. "Perhaps I had the right hunch after all."
"But my poor Diane!" came the professor's sorrowing after-thought.
"That fiend Von Ullrich could never get the _Nereid_ up safely."
"I think perhaps he could, with Miss Stevens to help him," put in Captain Petersen, his usual optimism returning. "She is thoroughly familiar with the craft's operation."
"That is so," her father admitted, his tone brighter. "But--"
"Of course it's so!" exclaimed Larry, breaking off any less hopeful reflections. "So cheerio, folks, as the English say. We'll make it yet!"
But in his heart, he was tormented with doubt for Diane's safety....
The trail was growing eery, now, and precipitous. To their right rose a sheer cliff. To their left, the path fell off abruptly to a gigantic caldron where red flames leaped and waned.
"Looks like something out of Dante's 'Inferno'!" muttered Larry, with a shudder.
"The volcano where they distill their atmosphere, evidently,"
commented Professor Stevens. "It would have been interesting, in other circ.u.mstances, to observe the process."
"Not to me, it wouldn't!"
Larry was glad when they had pa.s.sed that seething h.e.l.l-pot and were once more proceeding through a long, dark gallery.
But everywhere, though their guides were but a handful, was a sense of those unseen presences, of gathering, furtive hosts about them, waiting--waiting for what?
What was this strange sense of tension, of foreboding, that hung in the air? Was the professor wrong? Were they being led to their doom, after all?