The Rover Boys Megapack

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by Edward Stratemeyer


  “No, let us make a stand,” came from Rand. “I think a concerted volley from our pistols and guns will check their movements.”

  “Dat’s de talk!” cried Aleck. “Give it to ‘em hot!”

  It was decided to await the closer approach of the Bumwos, and each of the party improved the next minute in seeing to it that his weapon was ready for use.

  Suddenly a blood-curdling yell arose on the sultry air, and the Bumwos were seen to be approaching from two directions, at right angles to each other.

  “Now then, stand firm!” cried Dick Rover, and began to fire at one of the approaching forces.

  The fight that followed was, however, short and full of consternation to the Africans. One of the parties was led by King Susko himself, and the chief had covered less than half the distance to where the Americans stood when a bullet from Tom Rover’s pistol reached him, wounding him in the thigh and causing him to pitch headlong on the grass.

  The fall of the leader made the Africans set up a howl of dismay, and instead of keeping up the fight they gathered around their leader. Then, as the Americans continued to fire, they picked King Susko up and ran off with him. A few spears were hurled at our friends, but the whole battle, to use Sam’s way of summing up afterward, was a regular “two-for-a-cent affair.” Soon the Bumwos were out of sight down the mountain side.

  The first work of our friends after they had made certain that the Africans had really retreated, was to attend to Tom’s wound and the bruise Randolph Rover had received from the stone. Fortunately neither man nor boy was seriously hurt, although Tom carries the mark of the spear’s thrust to this day.

  “But I don’t care,” said Tom. “I hit old King Susko, and that was worth a good deal, for it stopped the battle. If the fight had kept on there is no telling how many of us might have been killed.”

  While the party was deliberating about what to do next, Cujo reappeared.

  “I go deep into de cabe when foah Bumwos come on me from behind,” he explained.

  “Da fight an’ fight an’ knock me down an’ tie me wid vines, an’ den run away. But I broke loose from de vines an’ cum just as quick as could run. Werry big cabe dat, an’ strange waterfall in de back.”

  “Let us explore the cave,” said Dick. “Somebody can remain on guard outside.”

  Some demurred to this, but the Rover boys could, not be held back, and on they went, with Aleck with them. Soon Randolph Rover hobbled after them, leaving Cujo and the college students to remain on the watch.

  The cave proved to be a large affair, running all of half a mile under the mountain. There were numerous holes in the roof, through which the sun shone down, making the use of torches unnecessary. To one side was a deep and swiftly flowing stream, coming from the waterfall Cujo had mentioned, and disappearing under the rocks near the entrance to the cavern.

  “Gold, true enough!” shouted Dick, as he gazed on the walls of the cave. “Am I not right, Uncle Randolph?”

  “You are, Dick; this is a regular cave of gold, and no mistake. No wonder King Susko wanted to keep us away!”

  Soon the waterfall was gained. It was a fascinating scene to watch the sparkling sheet as it thundered downward a distance of fully a hundred feet. At the bottom was a pool where the water was lashed into a milky foam which went swirling round and round.

  “Look! Look! The ghost!” suddenly cried Sam, and pointed into the falling water. “Oh, Uncle Randolph, did you ever see anything like it?” and he gave a shiver.

  “There are no such things as ghosts, Sam,” replied his uncle. “I see nothing.”

  “Stand here and look,” answered Sam, and his uncle did as requested. Presently from out of the mist came the form of a man—the likeness of Randolph Rover himself!

  “It is nothing but an optical illusion, Sam, such as are produced by some magicians on the theater stage. The sun comes down through yonder hole and reflects your image on the wet rock, which in turn reflects the form on the sheet of water.”

  “Gracious! And that must be the ghost the natives believe in,” answered Sam. “I’m glad you explained it. I can tell you I was startled.”

  “Here is a path leading up past the waterfall,” said Dick, who had been making an investigation. “Let us see what is beyond.”

  “Take care of where you go,” warned Randolph Rover. “There may be some nasty pitfall there.”

  “I’ll keep my eyes open,” responded Dick.

  He ascended the rocks, followed by Sam, while the others brought up in the rear. Up over the waterfall was another cave, long and narrow. There was now but little light from overhead, but far in the distance could be seen a long, narrow opening, as if the mountain top had been, by some convulsion of nature, split in half.

  “We are coming into the outer world again!” cried Dick, and ran forward. “Well, I never!” he ejaculated.

  For beyond the opening was a small plain, covered with short grass and surrounded on every side by jagged rocks which arose to the height of fifty or sixty feet. In the center of the plain were a number of native huts, of logs thatched with palm.

  CHAPTER XXX

  FINDING THE LONG-LOST

  “A village!” said Randolph Rover. “And not a soul in sight.”

  “There are several women and children,” returned Tom, pointing to one of the huts. “I guess the men went away to fight us.”

  “Probably you are right, Tom. Let us investigate, but with caution.”

  As they advanced, the women and children set up a cry of alarm, which was quickly taken up in several of the other huts.

  “Go away, white men; don’t touch us!” cried one old woman.

  “Have the white men come at last?” cried a voice in the purest English. “Thank God! Help me! Help!”

  “It is my brother’s voice!” gasped Randolph Rover. “Anderson! Anderson! We have come to save you!”

  “Father!” came from the three Rover boys, and they rushed off in all haste toward the hut from which the welcome cry had proceeded.

  Anderson Rover was found in the center of the hut, bound fast by a heavy iron chain to a post set deeply into the ground. His face was haggard and thin and his beard was all of a foot and a half long, while his hair fell thickly over his shoulders. He was dressed in the merest rags, and had evidently suffered much from starvation and from other cruel treatment.

  “My sons!” he gasped, as the boys appeared. “Do I see aright, or is it only another of those wild dreams that have entered my brain lately?”

  “Father; poor father!” burst out Dick, and hugged his parent around the neck.

  “It’s no dream, father; we are really here,” put in Tom, as he caught one of the slender hands, while Sam caught the other.

  “How thin you are!” said Sam. And then he added tenderly: “But we’ll take good care of you, now we have found you.”

  “And Randolph!” murmured Anderson Rover, as the brother came up. “Oh, thank God! Thank God, for this!” and the tears began to flow down his cheeks. “How long I have waited! Many a time I thought to give up in despair!”

  “We came as soon as we got that message you sent,” answered Dick. “But that was long after you had sent it.”

  “And is the sailor, Converse, safe?”

  “No; the sailor is dead.”

  “Too bad—he was the one friend I had here.”

  “And King Susko has kept you a prisoner all this while?” asked Randolph Rover.

  “Yes; and he has treated me shamefully in the bargain. He imagined I knew all of the secrets of this mountain, of a gold mine of great riches, and he would not let me go; but, instead, tried to wring the supposed secret from me by torture.”

  “We will settle accounts with him some day,” muttered Dick. “It’s a pity Tom didn’t kill him.”

  The native women and children were
looking in at the doorway curiously, not knowing what to say or do. Turning swiftly, Dick caught one by the arm.

  “The key to the lock,” he demanded, pointing to the lock on the iron chain which bound Anderson Rover. “Give it to me.”

  But the woman shook her head, and pointed off in the distance.

  “King Susko has the key,” explained Anderson Rover. “You will have to break the chain,” And this was at last done, although not without great difficulty.

  In the meantime the natives were ordered to prepare a meal for Anderson Rover and all of the others, and Cujo was called that he might question the Africans in their own language.

  The meal was soon forthcoming, the Bumwo women fearing that they would be slaughtered if they did not comply with the demands of the whites. To make sure that the food had not been poisoned, Dick made several of the natives eat portions of each dish. This made Cujo grin. “Um know a good deal,” he remarked.

  “Cujo was goin’ to tell Dick to do dat.”

  “I am glad the women and children are here,” said Randolph Rover. “We can take them with us when we leave and warn King Susko that if he attacks us we will kill them. I think he will rather let us go than see all of the women and children slaughtered.”

  While they ate, Anderson Rover told his story, which is far too long to insert here. He had found a gold mine further up the country and also this mountain of gold, but had been unable to do anything since King Susko had made him and the sailor prisoners. During his captivity he had suffered untold cruelties, but all this was now forgotten in the joy of the reunion with his brother and his three sons.

  It was decided that the party should leave the mountain without delay, and Cujo told the female natives to get ready to move. At this they set up a loud protest, but it availed them nothing, and they soon quieted down when assured that no harm would befall them if they behaved.

  CHAPTER XXXI

  HOME AGAIN—CONCLUSION

  Nightfall found the entire expedition, including the women and children, on the mountain side below the caves. As the party went down the mountain a strict watch was kept for the Bumwo warriors, and just as the sun was setting, they were discovered in camp on the trail to the northwest.

  “We will send out a flag of truce,” said Randolph Rover. “Cujo can talk to them.”

  This was done, and presently a tall Bumwo under chief came out in a plain to hold a mujobo, or “law talk.”

  In a few words Cujo explained the situation, stating that they now held in bondage eighteen women and children, including King Susko’s favorite wife Afgona. If the whites were allowed to pass through the country unharmed until they, reached the village of Kwa, where the Kassai River joins the Congo, they would release all of the women and children at that point and they could go back to rejoin their husbands and fathers. If, on the other hand, the expedition was attacked the whites would put all of those in bondage to instant death.

  It is not likely that this horrible threat would have been put into execution. As Dick said when relating the particulars of the affair afterward. “We couldn’t have done such a terrible thing, for it would not have been human.” But the threat had the desired effect, and in the morning King Susko, who was now on a sick bed, sent word that they should go through unmolested.

  And go through they did, through jungles and over plains, across rivers and lakes and treacherous swamps, watching continually for their enemies, and bringing down many a savage beast that showed itself. On the return they fell in with Mortimer Blaze, and he, being a crack shot, added much to the strength of their command.

  At last Kwa was reached, and here they found themselves under the protection of several European military organizations. The native women and children were released, much to their joy, and my readers can rest assured that these Africans lost no time in getting back to that portion of the Dark Continent which they called home.

  From Kwa to Boma the journey was comparatively easy. At Stanley Pool they rested for a week, and all in the party felt the better for it.

  “Some day I will go back and open up the mines I have discovered,” said Anderson Rover. “But not now. I want to see my own dear native land first.”

  At Boma news awaited them. Josiah Crabtree had turned up and been joined by Dan Baxter, and both had left for parts unknown.

  “I hope we never see them again,” said Dick, and his brothers said the same.

  An American ship was in port, bound for Baltimore, and all of our party, including the Yale students, succeeded in obtaining passage on her for home. The trip was a most delightful one, and no days could have been happier than those which the Rover boys spent grouped around their father listening to all he had to tell of the numerous adventures which had befallen him since he had left home. A long letter was written to Captain Townsend, telling of the finding of Anderson Rover, and the master of the Rosabel was, later on, sent a gift of one hundred dollars for his goodness to the Rovers.

  Of course Anderson Rover was greatly interested in what his sons had been doing and was glad to learn that they were progressing so finely at Putnam Hall.

  “We will let Arnold Baxter drop,” he said.

  “He is our enemy, I know; but just now we will let the law take its course for the rascality he practiced in Albany.”

  “All right, father,” answered Dick. “We can afford to let him drop, seeing how well things have terminated for ourselves.”

  “And how happy we are going to be,” chimed in Sam.

  “And how rich—when father settles up that mining claim in the West,” put in Tom.

  Here I must bring to a finish the story of the Rover boys’ adventures in the jungles of Africa. They had started out to find their father, and they had found him, and for the time being all went well.

  The home-coming of the Rovers was the occasion of a regular celebration at Valley Brook farm. The neighbors came in from far and wide and with them several people from the city who in former years had known Anderson Rover well.

  It was a time never to be forgotten, and the celebration was kept up for several days. Captain Putnam was there, and with him came Frank, Fred, Larry, and several others. The captain apologized handsomely to Aleck for the way he had treated the colored man.

  “I wish I had been with you,” said Fred. “You Rover boys are wonders for getting around. Where will you go next?”

  “I think we’ll go West next,” answered Dick. “Father wants to look up his mining interests, you know. We are going to ask him to take us along.” They did go west, and what adventures they had will be related in a new volume, entitled “The Rover Boys Out West; or, The Search for a Lost Mine.”

  “But we are coming back to Putnam Hall first,” added Tom. “Dear old Putnam Hall! I thought of it even in the heart of Africa!”

  “And so did I,” put in Sam. “I’ll tell you, fellows, it’s good enough to roam around, but, after all, there is no place like home.”

  And with this truthful remark from the youngest Rover, let us close this volume, kind reader, hoping that all of us may meet again in the next book of the series, to be entitled, “The Rover Boys Out West; or, The Search for a Lost Mine.” In this story all of our friends will once more play important parts, and we will learn what the Baxters, father and son, did toward wresting the Rover Boys’ valuable mining property from them. But for the time being all went well, and so good-by.

  THE ROVER BOYS OUT WEST

  CHAPTER I

  RETURNING FROM A GREAT GAME

  “Zip! Boom! Ah!”

  “Hurrah for Putnam Hall!”

  “Let her go, Peleg, lively now, and mind you don’t upset us, or we’ll use you worse than we did the football.”

  “All right, young gents. All in? Hold fast, everybody, or I won’t be responsible, nohow, if you drop off. Git along, Jack; up with ye, Sally!”

 
And with a crack of the whip, a tooting of tin horns, and it mad yelling and cheering from the students, the long Putnam Hall stage left the football enclosure attached to the Pornell Academy grounds and started along the lake road for Putnam Hall.

  The stage was packed, inside and out, with as merry and light-hearted a crowd of boys as could be found anywhere; and why should they not be merry and light-hearted, seeing as they had just won a great football match by a score of 16 to 8? Tom Rover, who was on the top of the stage, actually danced a jig for joy.

  “That’s the third time we have done them up, fellows!” he cried. “My, but won’t there be gloom around Pornell Academy to-night! It will be thick enough to cut with a knife.”

  “They were never in it from the start,” piped up Sam Rover. “And they were all heavier than our team, too,” he added, proudly.

  “It was science, not weight, that won the match,” said Frank Harrington.

  “Yes, it was science,” broke in Larry Colby. “And for that science we have to thank Dick Rover. Oh, but didn’t that rush to the left fool them nicely!”

  Dick Rover’s handsome face flushed with pleasure. “We won because every player did his full duty,” he said. “If we—” He broke off short. “Great Scott, what a racket on top! Who’s that capering around?”

  “It’s me, thank you!” yelled Tom, with more force than good grammar. “I’m doing an Indian war dance in honor of the victory. Want to join in, anybody?”

  “Stop it; you’ll be coming through the roof. We had only one man hurt on the field; I don’t want a dozen hurt on the ride home.”

  “Oh, it’s safe enough, Dick. If I feel the roof giving way I’ll jump and save myself,” and Tom began a wilder caper than ever. But suddenly George Granbury, who sat nearby, caught him by the foot, and he came down with a thump that threatened to split the stage top from end to end.

  “It won’t do, nohow!” pleaded Peleg Snuggers, the general utility man attached to Putnam Hall Military Academy. “Them hosses is skittish, and—”

 

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