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Five Thousand Miles Underground Part 20

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It was Jack, and a sorry sight he presented. He was covered from head to foot with some sticky substance, which dripped from all over him.

With hasty movements he cleared the stuff from his eyes and mouth, and spluttered:

"It's a good thing you cut me out when you did. I couldn't have held on much longer!"

CHAPTER XIX

THE BIG PEACH

JACK soon recovered from his remarkable experience. The terrible plant that had nearly eaten him alive was a ma.s.s of cut-up vegetable matter which attracted a swarm of insects. Most of them were ants, but such large ones the boys had never seen before, and the professor said they exceeded in size anything he had read about. Some of them were as large as big rats. They bit off large pieces of the fallen plant and carried them to holes in the ground which were big enough for Was.h.i.+ngton to slip his foot into, and he wore a No. 11 shoe.

But the adventurers felt there were more important things for them to look at than ants, so they started away again, the professor telling them all to be careful and avoid accidents.

It was while they were strolling through a little glade, which they came upon unexpectedly, that Was.h.i.+ngton, who was in the lead called out:

"Gracious goodness! It must be Thanksgivin'!"

"Why so?" asked Jack.

"'Cause here's th' remarkablest extraordinary and expansionist of a pumpkin that ever I laid eyes on!" the colored man cried.

They all hurried to where Was.h.i.+ngton had come to a halt. There, on the ground in front of him, was a big round object, about the size of a hogshead. It was yellow in color, and was not unlike the golden vegetable from which mothers make such delicious pies.

"I allers was fond of pumpkins," said Was.h.i.+ngton, placing his hand on the thing, which was almost as tall as he was, "but I never thought I'd come across such a one as this."

The professor and the two boys went closer to the monstrosity. Mr.

Henderson pa.s.sed his hand over it and then, bending closer, smelled of it.

"That's not a pumpkin!" he exclaimed.

"What is it then?" asked Was.h.i.+ngton.

"It's a giant peach," the inventor remarked. "Can't you see the fuzz, and smell it? Of course it's a peach."

"Well I'll be horn-swoggled!" cried Was.h.i.+ngton, leaning against the big fruit, which easily, supported him.

"Hurrah!" cried Jack, drawing his knife from his pocket and opening the largest blade. "I always did like peaches. Now I can have all I want," and he drove the steel into the object, cutting off a big slice which he began to eat.

"It may be poisonous!" exclaimed Mark.

"Too late now," responded Jack, the juice running down from his mouth.

"Taste's good, anyhow."

They all watched Jack while he devoured his slice of fruit. Was.h.i.+ngton acted as if he expected his friend to topple over unconscious, but Jack showed no bad symptoms.

"You'd better all have some," the boy said. "It's the best I ever tasted."

Encouraged by Jack's example, Mark thought he, too, would have some of the fruit. He opened his knife and was about to take off some of the peach when suddenly the thing began to roll forward, almost upon him.

"Hi! Stop your shoving!" he exclaimed. "Do you want to have the thing roll over me, Jack?"

"I'm not shoving!" replied Jack.

"Some one is!" Mark went on. He dodged around the far side of the immense fruit and what he saw made him cry out in astonishment.

Two gra.s.shoppers, each one standing about three feet high, were standing on their hind legs, and with their fore feet were pus.h.i.+ng the peach along the ground. They had been attracted to the fruit by some juice which escaped from a bruise on that side, which was the ripest, and, being fond of sweets had, evidently decided to take their find to some safe place where they could eat it at their leisure. Or perhaps they wanted to provide for their families if gra.s.shoppers have them.

"Did you ever see such monsters?" asked Jack. "They're as big as dogs!"

At the sound of his voice the two gra.s.shoppers, becoming alarmed, ceased their endeavors to roll the peach along, and, a.s.suming a crouching att.i.tude seemed to be waiting.

"They certainly are remarkable specimens," Mr. Henderson said. "If the other animals are in proportion, and if there are persons in this new world, we are likely to have a hard time of it."

This time the immense insects concluded the strangers were not to their liking. With a snapping of their big muscular legs and a whirr of their wings that was like the starting of an automobile, the gra.s.shoppers rose into the air and sailed away over the heads of the adventurers. Their flight was more than an eighth of a mile in extent, and they came down in a patch of the very tall gra.s.s.

"Let's go after them!" exclaimed old Andy. "I was so excited I forgot to take a shot at them. Come on!"

"I think we'd better not," counseled the professor. "In the first place we don't need them. They would be no good for food. Then we don't know but what they might attack us, and it would be no joke to be bitten by a gra.s.shopper of that size. Let them alone. We may find other game which will need your attention, Andy. Better save your ammunition."

Somewhat against his will, Andy had to submit to the professor's ruling. The old hunter consoled himself with the reflection that if insects grew to that size he would have some excellent sport hunting even the birds of the inner world.

"I wonder what sort of a tree that peach grew on," Jack remarked, as he cut off another slice, when the excitement caused by the discovery of the gra.s.shoppers had subsided. "It must be taller than a church steeple. I wonder how the fruit got here, for there are no trees around."

"I fancy those insects rolled it along for a good distance," Mr.

Henderson put in. "You can see the marks on the ground, where they pushed it. They are wonderful creatures."

"Are we going any farther?" asked Mark. "Perhaps we can find the peach tree, and, likely there are other fruit trees near it."

At the professor's suggestion they strolled along for some distance.

They were now about three miles from the airs.h.i.+p, and found that what they had supposed was a rather level plain, was becoming a succession of hills and hollows. It was while descending into a rather deep valley that Jack pointed ahead and exclaimed:

"I guess there's our peach orchard, but I never saw one like it before."

Nor had any of the others. Instead of trees the peaches were attached to vines growing along the ground. They covered a large part of the valley, and the peaches, some bigger than the one they first discovered, some small and green, rose up amid the vines, just as pumpkins do in a corn field.

"Stranger and stranger," the professor murmured. "Peaches grow on vines. I suppose potatoes will grow on trees. Everything seems to be reversed here."

They made their way down toward the peach "orchard" as Jack called it, though "patch" would have been a better name. Besides peaches they found plums, apples, and pears growing in the same way, and all of a size proportionate to the first-named fruit.

"Well, one thing is evident," Mr. Henderson remarked, "we shall not starve here. There is plenty to eat, even if we have to turn vegetarians."

"I wonder what time it is getting to be," Jack remarked. "My watch says twelve o'clock but whether it's noon or midnight I can't tell, with this colored light coming and going. I wonder if it ever sets as the sun does."

"That is something we'll have to get used to," the professor said.

"But I think we had better go back to the s.h.i.+p now. We have many things to do to get it in order again. Besides, I am a little afraid to leave it unguarded so long. No telling but what some strange beast--or persons, for that matter--might injure it."

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