第52章
So the big bore was finished on time--ahead of time in fact, and Titus Brothers received from Senor Belasdo, the Peruvian representative, a large bonus of money, in which Tom Swift shared.
"So our rivals didn't balk us after all," said Walter Titus, "though they tried mighty hard."The big tunnel was finished--at least Tom Swift's work on it.All thatremained to do was to clear away the debris and lay the connecting rails.Tom and Mr.Damon prepared to go back home.The latter's work was done.As for Professor Bumper, nothing could take him from Pelone.He said he was going to live there, and, practically, he did.
Tom, Koku and Mr.Damon returned to Lima, thence to go to Callao to take the steamer for San Francisco.One day the manager of the hotel spoke to them.
"You are Americans, are you not?" he asked."Yes," answered Tom."Why?""Because there is another American here.He is friendless and alone, and he is dying.He has no friends, he says.Perhaps--""Of course we'll do what we can for him," said Tom, impulsively."Where is he?"With Mr.Damon he entered the room where the dying man lay.He had caught a fever, the hotel manager said, and could not recover.Tom, catching sight of the sufferer, cried:
"The bearded man! Waddington!"
He had recognized the mysterious person who had been on the Bellaconda, and the man whose face had stared at him through the secret shaft of the tunnel.
"Yes, the 'bearded man' now," said the sufferer in a hoarse voice, "and some one else too.You are right.I am Waddington!"And so it proved.He had grown a beard to disguise himself so he might better follow Tom Swift and Mr.Titus.And he had followed them, seeking to prevent the completion of the tunnel.But he had not been successful.
Waddington it was who had thrown the bomb, though he declared he only hoped to disable Tom and Mr.Titus, and not to injure them.He was fighting for delay.And it was Waddington, working in conjunction with the rascally foreman Serato, who had induced the tunnel workers to desert so mysteriously, hoping to scare the other Indians away.He nearly succeeded too, had it not been for the gratitude of the woman whose baby Tom had saved from the condor.
Waddington had been an actor before he became involved with therival contractors.He was smooth shaven when first he went to Shopton, to spy on Mr.Titus, whose movements he had been commanded to follow by Blakeson & Grinder.Then he disappeared after Mr.Titus chased him, only to reappear, in disguise, on board the Bellaconda, as Senor Pinto.
Waddington, meanwhile, had grown a beard and this, with his knowledge of theatrical makeup, enabled him to deceive even Mr.Titus.Of course it was comparatively easy to deceive Tom, who had not known him.Waddington had really been ill when he called for help on the ship, and he had not noticed that it was Tom and Mr.Titus who came into his stateroom to his aid.When he did recognize them, he relied on his disguise to screen him from recognition, and he was successful.He had only pretended to be ill, though, the time he slipped out and threw the bomb.
Reaching Peru he at once began his plotting.Serato told him about the secret shaft leading into the tunnel, and with the knotted rope, and with the aid of the faithless foreman, the men were got out of the tunnel and paid to hide away.Waddington was planning further disappearances when Tom saw him, but thought it a dream.
Masni, the Indian woman, out herb-hunting one day, had seen Waddington, 'the bearded man' as he then was--working the secret stone.Hidden, she observed him and told her husband, who was afraid to reveal what he knew.But when Tom saved the baby the woman rewarded him in the only way possible.And it was Serato, who, at Waddington's suggestion, caused the "hit" among the men by working on their superstitious fears.
Waddington, knowing that he was dying, confessed everything, and begged forgiveness from Tom and his friends, which was granted, in as much as no real harm had been done.Waddington was but a tool in the hands of the rival contractors, who deserted him in his hour of need.His last hours, however, were made as comfortable as possible by the generosity of Tom and Mr.Damon.
No effort was made to bring Blakeson & Grinder to justice, as there was no evidence against them after Waddington died.And, as the tunnel was finished, the Titus brothers had no further cause for worry.
"But if it had not been for Tom's big blast, and the discovery of thehidden city of Pelone just in the right place, we might be digging at that tunnel yet," said Job Titus.
The day before the steamer was to sail, Tom Swift received a cable message.Its receipt seemed to fill him with delight, so that Mr.Damon asked:
"Is it from your father, Tom?"
"No it's from Mary Nestor.She says her father has forgiven me.They have been away, and Mary has been ill, which accounts for no letters up to now.But everything is all right now, and they feel that the dynamite trick wasn't my fault.But, all the same, I'm going to teach Eradicate to read," concluded Tom.
"I think it would be a good idea," agreed Mr.Damon.
Tom, Mr.Damon and Koku, bidding farewell to the friends they had made in Peru, went.aboard the steamer, Job Titus and his brother coming to see them off.
"Give us an option on all that explosive you make, Tom Swift!" begged Walter Titus."We were so successful with this tunnel, thanks to you, that the government is going to have us dig another.Will you come down and help?""Maybe," said Tom, with a smile."But I'm going home first," and once more he read the message from Mary Nestor.
And as Tom, on the deck of the steamer, waved his hands to Professor Bumper and his other friends whom he was leaving in Peru, we also, will say farewell.