Still, it had to be done, so they set off. It was easier after the first stretch, for there were all kinds of plants and bushes firmly rooted in the sloping cliff, and these could be used as handholds or footholds. Jack helped Lucy-Ann along, but Dinah scorned Philip’s help, especially as she knew he had the lizard somewhere about him.

  It took them at least half an hour of stiff scrambling and climbing to reach the wall of black rock, though actually, in distance, it was not so very far. They stood by the rock, panting.

  ‘Funny shiny black rock,’ said Jack, running his fingers over the smooth surface. ‘Wonder what it is.’

  ‘Oh, never mind,’ said Dinah, impatient to get on. ‘What’s our next signpost? This is the third.’

  ‘A spring of water,’ said Philip. ‘Isn’t that right, Jack – or shall we look at the map?’

  ‘No – I know it by heart,’ said Jack. ‘A spring of water is next. Not that I can see one at all – though I wish I could because I could do with a drink after that hot scramble. My hands are filthy and so are my knees.’

  ‘Yes, we could all do with a jolly good wash now,’ said Philip. ‘A good old rub and a scrub.’

  ‘Rubbenascrub,’ said Kiki, and went off into one of her dreadful cackles.

  ‘Stop it, Kiki,’ said Jack. ‘I’ll give you a rubbenascrub in a minute.’

  There was no spring of water to be seen. Lucy-Ann began to look very disappointed.

  ‘Cheer up!’ said Jack. ‘We may not be able to see the spring from this wall of rock – but we can surely find it if it’s anywhere near.’

  ‘Let’s listen,’ suggested Dinah.

  So they stood perfectly still and listened. ‘Shhhhhh!’ said Kiki annoyingly.

  Jack smacked her on the beak. She gave a dismal squawk and sat silent. And, in the silence of the peaceful mountainside, the children heard the tinkle-tinkle of water – a merry, gurgling noise, cheerful and friendly.

  ‘I can hear it!’ cried Lucy-Ann in delight. ‘It comes from somewhere over there.’

  She leapt across to a little thicket of trees, and there, hidden deep in the flower-strewn grass, bubbled a clear spring, trickling down the hillside, a tiny stream of crystal cold water.

  ‘It starts just up there, look,’ said Jack, and pointed to a big bush. The spring bubbled out from below the bush. ‘Fourth signpost!’

  ‘Now for the fifth – and last!’ said Lucy-Ann excited. ‘Oooh – do you honestly think we are getting near to the treasure? It’s really not very far from our waterfall cave. I thought I could hear the faint, distant roar of the fall when I stood listening for the gurgling of the spring.’

  ‘I thought I could too,’ said Dinah. ‘Now, what do we look for next?’

  ‘The oddly shaped rock,’ said Jack. ‘You know – like a man in a long cloak, with a round head at the top.’

  ‘Easy!’ said Philip triumphantly, and pointed upwards. ‘There it is – quite clear against the sky!’

  They all looked up. Philip was right. There stood the curious-shaped rock, easy to see against the sky.

  ‘Come on!’ said Jack excitedly. ‘Up we go! Come along, treasure hunters!’

  They climbed up to where the odd-shaped rock stood. Other rocks lay about, but this one was much taller, and, because of its height and shape, it stood out among the others.

  ‘Our last signpost!’ said Jack. ‘And now – where’s the treasure?’

  Ah, yes – where was the treasure? Lucy-Ann looked about the hillside as if she half expected it to be strewn there. The others began to search for a cave opening. But nobody could find anything.

  ‘Why didn’t you ask Otto exactly where to find the treasure, after coming to the last signpost?’ complained Dinah, tired and disappointed, coming over to Jack.

  ‘Well, I didn’t know we were going to look for it, silly, did I?’ said Jack. ‘I thought Julius Muller was going to take charge of the treasure hunt. No doubt if he got as far as this he’d know where the treasure was all right.’

  ‘Well, it’s most awfully disappointing to come all this way, and read the map so well, and then not find a thing,’ said Dinah, who was cross and tired. ‘I’m fed up. I shan’t hunt any more. You can all go on looking if you like, but I’m going to have a rest.’

  She flung herself down, and lay flat, looking upwards at the steep mountainside above her. It was ridged with flat slabs of rock, sticking out here and there like ledges. Dinah examined them lazily with her eyes. Then she sat up suddenly.

  ‘Hi!’ she called to the others. ‘Look up there!’

  They came over to her and looked up. ‘See those big ledges of rock sticking out all the way up the cliff-side?’ she said. ‘Like shelves. Well, look halfway up – see one that sticks out rather far? Look underneath it. Is that a hole there?’

  ‘It does look rather like a hole,’ said Jack. ‘Maybe a fox-hole, though. Still, it’s the only sizeable hole hereabouts, so we’d better explore. I’ll go up. Coming, Tufty?’

  ‘Rather,’ said Philip. ‘It doesn’t look difficult. Aren’t you two girls coming too?’

  Dinah forgot that she was fed up, and she joined in the climb to the hole under the ledge of rock. When they got there they found that it was a very big hole indeed. It could not possibly be seen from above, for the shelf of rock stuck right out over it and hid it. It could only be seen from one place below, at a certain angle – and that was the place where Dinah had flung herself down some time back.

  ‘Bit of luck you happened to spot it, Dinah,’ said Jack. ‘We might have hunted all day and never found it. I wonder if this is the entrance to the real treasure cave.’

  They peered down. The hole yawned below them, dark and appearing rather vast. ‘Where’s my torch?’ said Jack, and, taking it from his pocket, he switched it on.

  The children gazed down into the hole. It seemed nothing but a hole. No treasure was there. But, as Jack swung his torch a little further down, Dinah thought she caught sight of a passage further back.

  ‘I believe,’ she said, almost falling into the hole in her excitement, ‘I do believe it goes right back, into a passage.’

  Kiki flew off Jack’s shoulder and disappeared into the hole. A mournful voice floated up to them.

  ‘What’s down there, Kiki?’ called Jack.

  ‘Three blind mice,’ answered Kiki, solemnly and untruthfully. ‘Three blind mice. Pop!’

  ‘You’re a fibber,’ said Jack. ‘Anyway – down we go to find the . . .’

  ‘Three blind mice,’ said Kiki, and went off into an imitation of Lucy-Ann’s giggle.

  21

  The strange caves

  Jack went down the hole first. He lowered himself right in, and only had to drop about a foot to the ground below.

  ‘Lucy-Ann, you come next,’ he said, and helped her down. Then came the others, excited and eager. Had they really found the treasure cave?

  ‘It simply must be the hiding place for the treasure!’ said Jack. ‘There isn’t another hole or cave anywhere. Now, let me flash my torch round a bit.’

  At the back of the hole, as Dinah had thought, there was a passage – quite a wide one, and fairly high. A very tall man could have walked down it with ease.

  ‘Come on!’ said Jack, his voice shaking with excitement. ‘We’re getting warm!’

  They followed him down the passage, Kiki sitting on his shoulder. Lucy-Ann held on to his sleeve, half fearful of what they might find.

  The passage was wide and high all the way along, but wound about a little. It went downwards, and kept more or less in the same direction, for all its windings – that is, towards the heart of the mountain.

  Suddenly the passage came to an abrupt end. Jack paused, and gasped. In front of him was a most extraordinary sight.

  His torch shone brightly on to an unending mass of brilliant columns, hanging from the high roof of a cave. Whatever could they be?

  Lucy-Ann clutched his arm and gasped too. She stared at the shining white thi
ngs. She saw that other white columns were growing up from the floor of the cave too. Some had met the hanging ones, and had joined, so that it seemed as if the cave roof was being supported by pillars.

  ‘Jack! What is it? Is it the treasure?’ whispered Lucy-Ann.

  ‘It’s icicles, isn’t it?’ said Dinah in an awed tone. ‘I’ve never seen anything so beautiful in my life! Look at them hanging down – so still and white and lovely!’

  ‘No – they’re not icicles,’ said Jack. ‘They are stalactites – at least, the hanging ones are. They’re not made of ice, either – but of limestone, I think. My word – what a sight!’

  The children stood quite still and gazed their fill at the silent, beautiful cave. Its roof was as high as a cathedral, and the graceful stalactites hung down from it in dozens, gleaming in the light of Jack’s torch.

  ‘The ones growing up from the floor are stalagmites, I think,’ said Jack. ‘Aren’t they, Philip? Do you know anything about them? I’ve never in my life seen anything like this before!’

  ‘Yes – they’re stalagmites,’ said Philip. ‘I remember seeing pictures of them. Stalactites and stalagmites. Gosh, what a sight!’

  Kiki tried to say the two words and couldn’t. Even she seemed to be awed by the amazing and unexpected discovery.

  ‘Oh, look!’ said Lucy-Ann suddenly, and pointed to what looked like an old, old shawl carved in ivory. ‘Look – this has grown here too – it’s just like a shawl – even to the pattern in it! And look at that sort of gate over there – all carved too! Surely somebody made them – surely they didn’t just grow!’

  ‘Well – they formed,’ said Jack, trying to explain. ‘You know – just as the crystals in a snowflake form. They don’t grow because they’re not alive – they form.’

  Lucy-Ann couldn’t quite understand. Secretly she thought that all the marvellous hanging pillars had grown, and then got frozen in their beauty.

  I thought this must be the treasure!’ she said, half laughing.

  ‘I’m not surprised,’ said Jack. ‘It’s too beautiful for words. Fancy finding a cave like this! It’s like an enormous underground cathedral – it just wants an organ to begin playing a grand and magnificent hymn.’

  ‘There’s a kind of path down the middle,’ said Dinah. ‘I don’t know if it’s just a natural path, Jack, or whether it has been made by man. Do you see what I mean?’

  ‘Yes,’ said Jack, flashing his torch along it. ‘Bit of both, I think. Well – shall we go on? There’s no treasure here.’

  They went along the middle of the great silent hall, surrounded on all sides by the hanging icicle-like pillars. Lucy-Ann pointed out many that had joined with columns growing from the ground.

  ‘The drops of water from the stalactites must have dripped to the ground, and made stalagmites form there, growing up to meet the column above,’ said Philip. ‘They must have taken ages and ages to form – hundreds of years. I say – no wonder this cave feels awfully old to us. I feel as if there is no Time here at all – no years, or days of the week or hours – just nothing.’

  Lucy-Ann didn’t like that very much. It gave her a strange feeling of being only a dream, and not real. She took hold of Jack’s arm and was glad to feel its nice, solid warmth.

  They walked slowly to the end of the enormous cave. A great archway stood there, and that too was set with stalactites, which, however, did not hang far down. The children could walk under them with ease.

  ‘This archway is quite like a tunnel,’ said Philip. His voice sounded big and hollow there and made them all jump. Kiki gave a mournful cough, which was magnified to a hollow, giant cough that startled everyone very much.

  They came to another cave. The roof of this was not so high as the one before, and only small, icicle-like stalactites hung from it.

  ‘Do those stalactites shine in the dark?’ asked Dinah suddenly. ‘I thought I saw something glowing in the corner over there.’

  Jack switched off his torch – and immediately the children gasped. For up in the roof and over the walls there glowed thousands of tiny stars. They were green and blue, and shone and flickered in a most enchanting manner.

  ‘Gracious! What are they?’ whispered Dinah, amazed. ‘Are they alive?’

  The boys didn’t know. They watched the shimmering flickering stars, that seemed to go in and out like elfin lights. ‘Might be a kind of glowworm,’ said Jack. ‘Aren’t they lovely?’

  He put on his torch again and the roof shone brightly in the yellow-white light. The stars disappeared.

  ‘Oh, do put your torch out!’ begged Lucy-Ann. ‘I want to watch those stars a bit longer. I never saw anything so fascinating in my life! They shine like phosphorescence – all blue and green and green and blue; look how they flicker off and on. Oh, I wish I could take a hundred back with me and put them on my bedroom ceiling at home!’

  The others laughed, but they too thought that the shining, flickering stars were most entrancing to watch. Jack did not put on his torch again until each had gazed his fill.

  ‘That’s two simply wonderful caves,’ said Lucy-Ann with a sigh. ‘What will the next one be? I really do feel as if we’d discovered Aladdin’s Cave, or something like that!’

  A long passage, leading downwards, led out of the cave of stars, as Lucy-Ann named it.

  ‘We found a cave of echoes, a cave of stalactites and a cave of stars,’ she said. ‘I like this part of our adventure. Now I’d like to find a cave of treasure.’

  The tunnel they were in was wide and high like the first passage they had entered. Jack’s torch suddenly shone brightly on something on the floor. He stopped.

  ‘Look at that!’ he said. ‘What is it?’

  Dinah bent to pick it up. ‘It’s a brooch,’ she said. A brooch without its pin. The pin’s gone. It must have broken and the brooch fell off whoever was wearing it. Isn’t it perfectly lovely?’

  It certainly was. It was a large gold brooch, about three inches wide, set with brilliant red stones, as red as blood.

  ‘Are they rubies?’ said Dinah in awe. ‘Look how they glow! Oh, Jack, do you think this is a bit of the treasure?’

  ‘Probably,’ said Jack, and at once excitement caught hold of the children again, and their hearts began to beat fast. A ruby brooch, set in carved gold! What would the other treasure be? Wonderful visions arose in the children’s minds and they stumbled on their way eagerly their eyes searching the ground for any other gleaming jewel.

  ‘If we could find a cave of jewels,’ said Lucy-Ann. ‘Oooooh – all gleaming like stars and suns! That’s what I would love.’

  ‘We might find something like that,’ said Dinah. ‘If we do, I shall deck myself from head to foot with them and pretend I’m a princess.’

  The passage went on and on, still leading downwards, but, when Jack looked at his compass, he saw that he was no longer going into the heart of the mountain, but in the opposite direction. He hoped they wouldn’t suddenly come out into the daylight without finding the cave of treasure.

  Suddenly they came to steps that led downwards. They were carved out of the solid rock, steep, wide steps that curved as the passage curved.

  ‘Almost a spiral stairway,’ said Jack. ‘Where are we coming to now?’

  There were about twenty of the steps. Then came an enormous door, made of some kind of stout wood, set with iron studs. The children stood and stared at it.

  A door! What was behind it? Was it locked and bolted? Who had put it there, and why? Was it to shut in the treasure cave and guard it?

  There was no handle to turn. There was not even a lock to be seen. There were great bolts, but these were not shot into place.

  ‘How can you open a door without a handle?’ said Jack in despair. He pushed at the door, but it remained quite firm.

  ‘Kick it, like we did the door of the hut,’ said Philip, and Jack kicked it hard. But the door did not open.

  They stared at it in despair. To come so far and then to be stopped
by a door! It was too bad. Jack shone his torch all over the door, from top to bottom.

  Lucy-Ann’s sharp eyes noticed something. ‘See that iron stud?’ she said, pointing. ‘It’s much brighter than the others. I wonder why.’

  Jack shone his torch on it, and saw that it was slightly bigger than the others – and also, as Lucy-Ann said, it was brighter, as if it had had some handling.

  He pressed it. Nothing happened. He banged on it with a stone. No result at all.

  ‘Let me try,’ said Philip, and pushed Jack aside. ‘Shine your torch on it closely. That’s right.’

  Philip took hold of the iron stud and shook it. It seemed to give a little. He shook it again. Nothing happened. Then he thought of twisting it.

  It twisted round very easily indeed. There was a loud click – and the door swung slowly open. Jack switched off his torch, afraid that anyone in the cave might see them – though if anyone had been there surely they would have heard the bangs and kicks at the door.

  The door now stood wide open. A dim light shone beyond, showing another cave. Lucy-Ann clutched Jacks arm in fright.

  ‘It’s full of people,’ she whispered. ‘Look!’

  22

  The treasure at last!

  The four children stared breathlessly through the open door. They saw something that made them feel very creepy.

  In the dim light figures stood about all over the place. Their eyes gleamed queerly and their teeth shone in the darkness. Their arms and necks flashed and glittered with jewels.

  The children clutched one another in fright. Who were these strange, silent folk, standing about with gleaming eyes, covered with jewels?

  The people in the cave did not move. They did not speak a word either. Not one of them was sitting. All were standing. They stood there, some turned towards the frightened children, some turned away. Why didn’t they speak? Why didn’t they point to the children and say, ‘Look – who’s there?’

  Lucy-Ann began to shiver. ‘Let’s go back. I don’t like them. They’re not alive. Only their eyes are.’