Even with their flashlights on, they could see nothing but a long, dark pa.s.sage that went straight into Devil Mountain. Its walls were smooth, and the ceiling was just high enough to permit Pete-the tallest investigator-to stand up. For a distance of about forty feet the pa.s.sageway continued to be a straight tunnel with smooth stone walls. Then it suddenly opened into a large cavern.
The boys shone their flashlights all around the cavern. They were in a huge room with a towering ceiling. The far end of the cavern was so distant they could only just see it.
"It"s like a big city railroad station!" Bob exclaimed. "I never saw so big a cave." His voice sounded hollow and faraway.
"h.e.l.lo!" Pete called.
"h.e.l.lo ... h.e.l.lo ... h.e.l.lo-ooooooo," his voice echoed.
The boys laughed. The echoes seemed to bounce through the cavern. "h.e.l.lo ... h.e.l.lo-ooooo! " shouted Bob. " shouted Bob.
While Pete and Bob were shouting, Jupiter was inspecting the huge cavern more closely with the help of his flashlight.
"Look!" he suddenly called to them.
To their left, in the wall, was a small black hole-the opening of a pa.s.sage that seemed to lead out of the cavern. The boys aimed their flashlights at the walls on both sides of the cavern. They saw many more openings-at least ten pa.s.sages that led from the big cavern deeper into the mountain.
"Jeepers," Pete said, "which way do we go?"
All the pa.s.sages looked about the same-barely high enough for Pete to stand up in, and about four feet wide.
Jupiter frowned. "It is obvious that El Diablo"s Cave must be a large complex of pa.s.sages and chambers all through the mountain."
"Maybe that"s why the posse couldn"t find El Diablo," Bob said. "There were so many pa.s.sages that he could stay hidden."
Jupiter nodded. "That seems a likely explanation."
"How does a cave like this get started anyway?" Pete asked, looking around with awe.
"Water erosion mostly," Bob explained. "I"ve read about it in the library. A mountain like this is made up of different rocks, some softer than the others. The water comes in and wears away the softer rock. It takes millions of years sometimes. A lot of this area was under water a long time ago."
"Bob"s right," Jupiter said. "But I"m not sure that all of these pa.s.sages are natural.
Some of them look man-made. Maybe by El Diablo"s men."
"Or miners, Jupe," Bob said. "I read how they used to look for gold around here."
Pete was shining his light at first one pa.s.sage, then another. "Where do we start looking?" he asked.
"It could take us months to search all these pa.s.sages," said Bob. "I"ll bet each one branches out again farther on."
"Probably," Jupiter agreed, "but fortunately we have an easy way to eliminate some of them. We"re looking for the moaning sound. All we have to do is listen at each entrance until we find the one where the moaning is coming from."
"Hey, that"s right," Pete said with enthusiasm. "We"ll just follow the moaning."
"But Jupe ..." Bob was looking puzzled. "The moaning. I don"t hear it. I mean, I haven"t heard it since we came inside!"
The three boys stood perfectly still, listening intently. Bob was right - the cave was as quiet as a tomb.
"Jupe?" Pete said uneasily. "What does it mean?"
Jupiter shook his head in puzzlement. "I don"t know. Maybe it"s just a coincidence.
Maybe it"ll start again soon."
But the moaning did not start. Ten minutes pa.s.sed and there was no sound inside the cave.
"I remember hearing it just before that rock fell, Jupe," said Bob. "Only I wasn"t listening much after that."
"We were too excited to think about it," Jupiter said. "We can"t really be sure when it stopped."
"Gosh," Pete said, "what do we do now?"
"Perhaps it will begin again," Jupiter said hopefully. "Mr. Dalton did say the cave moans irregularly. While we"re waiting, I think we should start to search the side pa.s.sages one by one."
Bob and Pete agreed. Anything would be better than just standing there in the spooky darkness. Bob chalked a question mark and an arrow at the entrance to the first side pa.s.sage, and the boys entered the tunnel.
They moved cautiously, their flashlights probing ahead until, less than thirty feet from the entrance, the tunnel suddenly ended. It did not end in a blank wall but in a pile of fallen rock that completely blocked the pa.s.sage.
"Mr. Dalton said many of the tunnels were blocked by old earthquakes," Bob recalled.
Pete looked worried. "Do you think it"s still dangerous?"
"No," Jupiter said. "The ceilings are very solid. It took a heavy shock to make these rocks fall, and then only the very weakest places fell. This is a very safe cave."
They retraced their steps, and tried the next four tunnels, carefully marking each entrance. All four pa.s.sages ended in piles of fallen rocks.
"We"re wasting time," said Jupiter finally. "We"ll split up and each search a pa.s.sage.
They seem quite safe."
"We"ll each go through our tunnel until we can see the end," Bob agreed, "unless it turns out not to be blocked."
"That"s it," Jupiter said. "If one of us finds a clear pa.s.sage he can come back and wait here for the others."
Quickly, each of the boys plunged into a tunnel, hopefully shining his flashlight ahead.
Jupiter found that his pa.s.sage was natural for only a short distance. Then his flashlight revealed beams and braces that held up the walls, as in a mine shaft. He moved ahead cautiously for a few more yards, studying the floor and walls of the shaft.
Abruptly he came to a wall of rock and dirt that blocked the pa.s.sage. Kneeling down to inspect the barricade more closely, he discovered a small, hard black stone that puzzled him. It was quite different from any stone he had ever seen. He stuck it into his pocket to examine later.
Just then a yell echoed through the pa.s.sage.
"Jupe! Bob! Hurry!"
At that moment Bob was in another cavern similar to the first they had found. The tunnel he had been exploring had led him straight into another cavern. He was standing there dismayed because this one, too, had many small pa.s.sages that led out of it. He had just decided to return to the first cavern and wait for the others when he heard Pete"s yell.
Immediately he rushed back to the entrance of his tunnel.
Meanwhile, Jupiter was racing towards the mouth of Pete"s tunnel. Suddenly something came hurtling at him out of the dark. The next thing he knew he was sprawling on the stone floor with some wild creature clawing at him.
"Help!" a voice called in fright.
The voice was almost in Jupiter"s ear. It was Bob"s voice.
"Bob, it"s me!" cried Jupiter.
The hands that were clawing at Jupe relaxed, and the two boys shone their lights on each other.
"Gosh, I thought something had grabbed me," Bob said.
"My reaction was the same," Jupiter said. "It was a case of panic brought on by Pete"s call for--"
"Pete!" Bob cried.
"Come on!" said Jupe.
The two boys raced into the pa.s.sage Pete had taken. The tunnel seemed longer than the others. They had been running for some distance before they saw a light ahead. It was coming from Pete"s flashlight.
"Here I am!" Pete called.
Bob and Jupiter burst out of the pa.s.sage into still another large cavern. Pete stood in the centre, the beam of his flashlight trained on the left wall. He was looking pale.
"There was ... something in here!" Pete stammered. "I saw it. All black and shiny!"
Bob and Jupiter focused their flashlights on the wall. They could see nothing at all.
"I tell you I saw something," Pete insisted. "When I came out of the tunnel I heard a noise. I shone my light and saw ... this ... thing! Over there near the wall. It was big. I was so surprised I dropped my light, and when I picked it up the thing was gone."
Bob looked sceptical. "Maybe you were just nervous, Pete. We shouldn"t have split up."
But Jupiter walked over to the wall where Pete said he had seen the black, shiny shape.
He knelt down.
"Pete wasn"t just nervous, Bob," Jupiter said. "Look here."
Pete and Bob hurried to where Jupe was kneeling. There were two large, dark marks on the stone floor. Big, egg-shaped footprints that reflected the bright beam of the flashlight.
"What ..." Bob hesitated. "What is it, Jupe?"
"Something wet," Jupiter said. "Water probably, but it might be something else."
"Ugh," Pete gulped.
Jupiter shone his light all across the floor. There were no other marks. The ceiling, too, was completely dry.
"There"s nothing else wet around," he said. "Pete is right. Something was standing here. Something that left wet marks."
"Marks that big? They must be two or three feet long!" Bob said.
"At least," Jupiter said solemnly. "Big and wet and shiny. Sort of a-"
"Monster!" Pete finished the sentence for Jupiter.
"The Old One!" Bob exclaimed.
The three boys looked at each other nervously. They did not believe in unknown monsters, but what could have made such big, wet marks?
Then a powerful glare of light fixed the three boys like moths against the wall. A harsh voice called from behind the dazzling light.
"What"s goin" on here?"
A figure came slowly towards them - a bent, twisted figure with a wild white beard, carrying an enormous-looking rifle.
A Dangerous Pa.s.sage
THE old man pointed towards the dark tunnels that led from the cavern.
"Them pa.s.sages goes a far piece inside," he said in a high, cracked voice. "You young-uns could get lost mighty easy in there."
The old man"s red-rimmed eyes gleamed wickedly.
"Got to be mightly careful here," he croaked. "Got to know the country, yessir. Seventy years I lived out here, never lost my scalp. No sir. Got to think ahead, that"s the story.
Know the country and fight the enemy."
"Scalp?" Pete stared. "You fought Indians? Here?"
The old man waved his ancient rifle. "Injuns! I"ll tell you about Injuns, I will. Lived with Injuns all my life. Fine people but hard enemies, yessir. Almost lost my scalp twice. Ute country and Apache country. Sneaky, the Apaches. But I got away."
"I don"t think there are any Indians now, sir," Jupiter said politely, "and we won"t become lost."
The old man"s eyes suddenly focused on the boys. For the first time he actually seemed to be seeing them. "Now?" he repeated. "Of course there"re no Injuns now. Are you boys crazy? You must be, wandering around in the cave. Strangers around here, eh?" His voice was lower now, and steadier, and he had lost his wild look.