The End of the Tunnel
by Paul Capon
Tom and his sister, Ruth, are home from school for a
holiday. They are joined by their American friends, the Wheatley twins, Jane
and Boyd. The four have already planned to explore Orleigh Cave, which has a
local reputation of being haunted. But they are searching for a lost treasure
of the Romans which they believe to lie somewhere in the cave. After being
trapped in the cave by a rock fall, they travel deeper into the cave and stumble
upon and into a secret world beneath the earth which is inhabited by descendants
of the very Romans whose treasure they have been seeking. These people, with
their debased Latin and their partly archaic and partly modern technology,
guard their secret and their habitat rigorously from the upper earth.
Fortunately the children make contact with a contemporary who has long been a
prisoner and who has the aid of a "native" girl. But even with their
new friends’ help, an escape attempt will put them in grave danger with only a
chance of gaining freedom.Paul Capon (1912-1969) was a British novelist of considerable reputation. He had over twenty novels to his credit and counted film editing and script writing as part of his experience. He traveled extensively in Europe and made hobbies of chess, book-collecting and swimming.
holiday. They are joined by their American friends, the Wheatley twins, Jane
and Boyd. The four have already planned to explore Orleigh Cave, which has a
local reputation of being haunted. But they are searching for a lost treasure
of the Romans which they believe to lie somewhere in the cave. After being
trapped in the cave by a rock fall, they travel deeper into the cave and stumble
upon and into a secret world beneath the earth which is inhabited by descendants
of the very Romans whose treasure they have been seeking. These people, with
their debased Latin and their partly archaic and partly modern technology,
guard their secret and their habitat rigorously from the upper earth.
Fortunately the children make contact with a contemporary who has long been a
prisoner and who has the aid of a "native" girl. But even with their
new friends’ help, an escape attempt will put them in grave danger with only a
chance of gaining freedom.Paul Capon (1912-1969) was a British novelist of considerable reputation. He had over twenty novels to his credit and counted film editing and script writing as part of his experience. He traveled extensively in Europe and made hobbies of chess, book-collecting and swimming.