tain? And, besides what object could Dr. Syx have
in pretending that there is free metal to be had
for the digging?"
"He may have Halted the mountain, for all I
know," said Hall. "As for his object, I confess I
am entirely in the dark, but, for alt that, I an*
convinced that we shall find no more metal if we
dig ten miles for it."
"Nonsense," said the president;: "if we keep (tii
we 3hall strike it. Did not Dr. Syx himself admit
that he found no free artemisium until his tunnel
had reached the core of the peak? We" must go as
deep as he has gone before we give up."
"I fear the depths he attains are beyond most
people's reach," was Hall's answer, while a thought-
ful look crossed hia clear-cut brow, "but since you
desire it, of course the work shall go on, I should
like, however, to change the direction of the tun-
nel."
"Certainly," replied Mr. Boon; "bore in what-
ever direction you think proper, only don't des-
pair."
About a- month after this conversation Andrew
Hall, with whom a community of tastes' in many
things had made' me intimately acquainted, asked
me one morning to accompany him 1 into' Ms tufi'
nel.
"I want to have s trusty friend at my elbow,"
he said, "for, unless I am- a dreamer, something re-
markable will happen within the next hour, and
two witnesses are better than one."
A Friendly Investigator — Andrew Hatf Proposes to
Solve the Mystery
I KNEW Hall was not the person to' make such a
remark carelessly, and my curiosity was in-
tensely excited, but, knowing his peculiarities,
I did not press him for an explanation. When we
arrived at the head of the tunnel I was surprised at
finding no workmen there.
"I stopped blasting some time ago," said Ha0, in
explanation, "for a reason which, I hope, will be-
come evident to you Very soon. Lately I have been
boring very slowly, and yesterday I paid off the
men- and dismissed them with the announcement,
which I am confident, President Boon will sanction
after' he hears by reports of this morning's' work,
that the tunnel is abandoned. You see,- 1 am now
using a drill which I can manage without assis-
tance, I believe the work is almost completed, and
I want you: to witness the end of it."
He' then carefully applied the drill, which noise-
lessly screwed its nose into the rock. When: it had
sunk, to a depth of & few inches he withdrew it,
and, taking a hand-drill capable of making A hole
not more than an eighth of am inch in diameter,
cautiously began boring in; the centre of the larger
cavitf. He had made hardly a hundred tur-n.3' of the 1
bandle 1 when the: drill shot through the root! A
gratified smile illuminated his features, and he said-
in a suppressed voice:
"Don't be alarmed;- I'm: going to put out the
lighfc"
Instantly we were in complete darkness,, but be-
ing- dose at Hall's side I could detect his move-
ments. He pulled out the drill,- and for half- a min-
ute' remained, motionless as if listening. There-' was
no sound.
"I must enlarge the opening," he whispered, and
immediately the faint grating of a sharp tool cut-
ting through the rock informed, me of his pro-
gress.
"There," at last he said, "I think that will do ;
now for a look."
I Conld tell that he had placed his eye at the hole
and Was gazing with breathless attention. Presently
he pulled my sleeve.
"Put your eye here," he whispered, pushing me
into the proper position for looking through the
hole.
Looking Through a Peep-Hole
AT first I could discern nothing except a smoky
blue glow. But soon my vision cleared a little,
and then I perceived that I was gazing into a
narrow tunnel which met ours directly end to end.
Glancing along the axis of thi3 gallery I saw, some
two hundred yards away, a faint light Which evi-
dently indicated the mouth of the tunnel.-
At the end where we had met it the mysterious
tunnel was considerably widened at one side, as if
the excavators had started to change direction and
then abandoned the work, and in this elbow I could
just see the outlines of two or three fiat cars loaded
with broken stone r while' a heap of the same ma-
terial lay near them. Through the centre of the
tunnel ran a railway track.
"Do* you know what- you are looking at?" asked
Hall in my ear.
"I begin to suspect," I- repliedy "that you have ac-
cidentally run into Dr. Syx"s mine."
"If Dr. Syx had been on his guard this accident
wouldn't have happened," replied Hall, with an al-
mOBt inaudible chuckle.
"I heard you remark a month- ago," I said, "that
yoU were changing the direction of your tunnel.
Has this 1 been the aims of- your labors ever' since?"
Discoveries Under Hall's Auspices
'"OU have' hit it/' he replied. "Long ago* I
I became convinced that my company was
throwing- away its money in a vain attempt
to strike a lode of pure artemisium. But President
Boon has great faith in Dr. Syx, and would not
give up the work. So I adopted what I regarded a's
the only practical method of proving the' truth of
my opinion and saving the company's fundsi An
electric indicater, of my invention, enabled me to
locate the Syx tunnel when I got near it, and I have
met it end- on,- and opened this peep-hole in order to
observe the doctor's operations. I feet fihat such
spying is entirely justified in the circumstances.
Although I cannot yet explain' just how or why I
feel sure that Dr. Syx Was the cause of- the sudden
discovery of- the surface nuggets, and that he has
encouraged the'miners for- his own ends,- until he has
brought ruin to thousands' who have spent their last '
cent in driving useless tunnels into this mountaini
It is a- righteous thing to expose him."
"But," I interposed, "I do not see that you- have
exposed anything yet except the interior o'f a- tuS-
nel."
"You 1 will' see' more' clearly after" a while;* #£<#
the reply.-
Hall now placed his eye again at the aperture,
and wa3 unable entirely to repress the cxchrru: J ,;on
i t
Page:Amazing Stories Volume 01 Number 04.djvu/43
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THE MOON METAL
331