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The Lost Continent (Lost Race)

The Lost Continent (Lost Race)

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A classic "lost race" story, with all of the required elements: a seductive empress, a straight-arrow hero, battles, escapes, sorcery, and earth-shattering cataclysms!

Chapter 1 Prefatory: The Legatees of Deucalion

We were the two of us not a little firm as the consequence of dozing out in the open all that evening, for even in Terrific Canary the dew-fall and the similar chill of murkiness are not to be played with. For myself on these events I like somewhat of a run as an early boost. In any case, here on this harsh ground in the island there were not three yards of level to be found, thus as Coppinger continued to go through some kind of hand weight practices with several pieces of bristly magma, I followed his model.

Coppinger has done a fair plan of improvising in his time, yet being a specialist of medication in addition to other things - he takes out another level or some likeness thereof on a normal each and every other year-he is perfect on wellbeing speculations, and practices them like a religion.

There had been downpour two days prior, and as there was still a touch of stream streaming along at the lower part of the barranca, we went down there and had a wash, and cleaned our teeth. Most prominent extravagance possible, a toothbrush, on this kind of endeavor. "Presently," said Coppinger when we had exhausted our pockets, "there's priceless little grub left, and it's not really any better or worse for being conveyed in a nearby Spanish paper." "Yours is for the most part tobacco cinders. "It'll deteriorate assuming that we leave it. We've significantly more awful scrambling in front of us." That was self-evident. So we plunked down adjacent to the stream there at the lower part of the barranca, and gobbled up what was all left.

It was a ten-mile drifter to the fonda at St Nick Brigida, where we had put down our snares; and as Coppinger needed to take a ton more photos and estimations before we left this specific gathering of caverns, it was reasonable we ought to be sharp set before we got our next dinner, and our next taste of the PATRON'S amazing old nation wine. My confidence! If by some stroke of good luck they knew down in the English lodgings in Las Palmas what heavenly wines one could get-with tact up in a portion of the mountain towns, the old rare would turn into a relic of times gone by in seven days. Presently to come clean, the two mummies he had accumulated currently very fulfilled my little desire.

The goatskins where they were closed up were essentially as weak as paper, and the unfortunate old things themselves gave out dust like a puffball at whatever point they were contacted. In any case, you understand what Coppinger is. He thought he'd happen upon hints of an old Guanche college, or consecrated school, or something of that sort, similar to the one there is on the opposite side of the island, and he wouldn't be fulfilled till he'd stripped each cavern in the entire essence of the bluff. He'd a lot of stuff left for the spotlight thing, and 28 additional movies in his kodak, and said we should overcome with the gig then as make a return venture all deliberately. So he took the crowbar, and I bore the rope, and away we went up to the edge of the bluff, where we had got such a baking from the sun the other day. Obviously these caverns were difficult to come at, or, more than likely they would have been struck a long time previously.

Coppinger, who on guideline makes out he has a lot of experience with these things, expresses that in the old Guanche days they had stepping stools of goatskin rope which they could pull up when they were at home, thus keep out unwanted guests; and as no other arrangement seems obvious me, maybe he might be correct. In any case the openings of the caverns were in a pretty much level line thirty feet underneath the edge of the bluff, and fifty feet over the base; and Spanish interest doesn't go in much where it can't walk. Presently laddering such caverns from beneath would have been lumbering, yet a light hitched rope is handily conveyed, and however it would have been difficult to move up this, our arrangement was to slide on each cavern mouth from a higher place, and afterward descend to the foot of the precipices, and begin again Stomach muscle INITIO for the following. Coppinger is sufficiently fearless, and he has a decent head on a level, yet there is no moving past the way that he is stout and closer fifty than 45. So you can see he probably been sharp.

Obviously I went first each time, and got into the cavern mouth, and did what I could to help him in; however when you need to stroll down an upward bluff face fly-style, with just a slim bootlace of a rope for help, it isn't a lot of genuine assistance the man beneath can give, with the exception of deal you his all the best. 1 needed to save him however much I could, and as the initial three caverns I moved to were little and void, appearing to be just store-places, I requested that he underestimate them, and save himself the rest. Yet, he demanded scrambling down to every one face to face, and as he concluded that one of my storehouses was a jail, and another a pot-production plant, and one more a schoolroom for youthful ministers, he normally said he hadn't a lot of dependence on my judgment, and would need to go through the entire part himself.

You know what these intensive - going archeologists are for creative mind. Yet, as the day went on, and the sun ascended higher, Coppinger started plainly to have had enough of it, however he was exceptionally game, and demanded continuing significantly longer than was protected. I should say I could have done without it. You see the drop was only sometimes under eighty feet from the highest point of the bluffs. In any case, finally he had to surrender it. I proposed walking off to St Nick Brigida forthwith, yet he wouldn't do that. There were three more cavern openings to be investigated, and on the off chance that I wouldn't do them for him, he would need to put forth one more attempt to arrive himself. He attempted to make out he was giving an exceptionally extraordinary blessing on me by proposing to take a report exclusively from my undeveloped perception, yet I straight would not see it in that light. I was really drained additionally; I was splashed with sweat from the intensity; my head throbbed from the savagery of the sun; and my hands were cut crude with the rope. Coppinger may be worn out, yet he was as yet excited. He attempted to make me energetic moreover. "Look here," he said, "there's no understanding what you might track down up there, and on the off chance that you do lay hands on anything, recollect it's your own. I will have no case whatever." "Extremely sort of you, however I have no need for additional mummies done up in goatskin packs." "Bah! That is not an internment cave up there. Don't you know the distinction yet in the openings? Presently, be a decent individual. It doesn't follow that since we have drawn the remainder clear, you won't coincidentally find a decent find for yourself up there." "Goodness, great," I said, as he appeared to be so set on it; and away I staggered over the fallen rocks, and along the edge, and afterward mixed up by that gap in the bluff which saved us the two-mile round which we had needed to take from the beginning. I tweaked out the crowbar, and stuck it down in another spot, and afterward away I went over the side, with hands stinging more terrible at each new hold of the rope. It was an abnormal work swinging into the cavern mouth on the grounds that the stone above overhung, or the consequences will be severe (what came to exactly the same thing) it had split away underneath; however I oversaw it some way or another, in spite of the fact that I arrived with an off-kilter pound on my back, and simultaneously I didn't give up the rope. It wouldn't do to have lost the rope then, at that point: Coppinger could never have flicked it into me from where he was beneath. Presently from the principal look I could see that this cavern was of various design to the others. They were generally simple sanctums, balanced at any rate; this had been looked up with cutting devices, so every one of the points were perfect, and the sides smooth and level. The walls slanted inwards to the rooftop, helping me to remember a design I had seen previously yet couldn't recall where, and in addition there were a few rooms associated up with sections. I was satisfied to find that the other cavern openings which Coppinger believed me should investigate were simply the windows or the entryways of two of these different rooms. Of engravings or markings on the walls there was not a follow, however I looked cautiously, and with the exception of bats the spot was completely exposed. I lit a cigarette and smoked it through-Coppinger generally thinks one is slurring over work in the event that it is traversed excessively fast and, I went to the entry where the rope was, and inclined out, and yelled down my news. He turned up an extremely restless face. "Have you looked through it completely?" he bellowed back. "Obviously I have. What do you suppose I've been doing this time?" "No, don't as yet descend. Stand by a moment. I say, elderly person, do stand by a moment. I'm making quick the kodak and the electric lamp contraption on the finish of the rope. Pull them up, and simply make me about six openings, there's a decent individual." "Gracious, okay," I said, and pulled the things up, and got them inside. The photos would be totally dull and dreary, yet that wouldn't make any difference to Coppinger. He rather liked them as such. One must be cautious about halation in shooting these dull insides, yet there was a kind of edge like a seat by the side of every entryway, thus I held up the camera on that to get a consistent stand, and snapped off the electric lamp from behind or more. I got pictures of four of the chambers along these lines, and afterward came to one where the edge was higher and more extensive. I put down the camera, wedged it level with pieces of stone, and afterward plunked down myself to re-energize the electric lamp machine. However, the second my weight got on that edge, there was a sharp pop, and down I went about six inches. Obviously I was up again lovely strongly, and gobbled up the kodak similarly as it planned to slide off to the ground. I will admit, as well, I was feeling satisfied. Around here in any event a Guanche pantry of sorts, and as they had gone out of the way to airtight seal it with concrete, the chances were that it had something inside worth stowing away.

At first nothing remained to be seen except for a ton of residue and rubble, so I lit a touch of flame and cleaned this up. By and by, nonetheless, I started to find that I was laying out something not concrete. It chipped away, in standard layers, and when I took it to the light I observed that each layer was comprised of two sections. One side was sparkly staff that seemed to be story, and on this was spread a covering of dim toffee-hued material, that could have been wax. The toffee-hued surface was worked over with an example of some sort. Presently I declare to no information on these issues, and as a result took what Coppinger had enlightened me concerning Guanche propensities and acquirements as pretty much obvious. For example, he had more than once presented for me that this elderly folks individuals couldn't compose, and having this in my memory, I didn't figure that the examples scribed through the wax were letters in some old person, which, whenever left to myself, likely I ought to have done. Yet simultaneously I reached the resolution that the stuff merited plundering, thus set to sort out quarrying it with the impact point of my boot and a folding knife. The sheets were all pretty much stayed together, thus I didn't go in for isolating them farther. They fitted precisely to the depression wherein they were put away, yet by crushing down its front I had the option to get at the foot of them, and afterward I hacked away through the base layers with the blade till I got the mass out in one strong piece. It estimated exactly twenty crawls by fifteen, by fifteen, yet it was not so exceptionally weighty as it looked, and when I had taken the leftover photos, I let it down to Coppinger on the finish of the rope. There was something else to do in the caverns then, so I went down myself next. The chunk of sheets was on the ground, and Coppinger was down on the ground adjacent to it. He was very almost frantic with fervor. "What is it?" I asked him. "I don't have the foggiest idea yet. Be that as it may, it is the most important see as made in the Canary Islands, and it's yours, you unappreciative hobo; essentially what there is left of it. Gracious, man, man, you've crushed up the start, and you've crushed up the finish of some set of experiences that is likely precious. It's my own shortcoming. 1 should have had some better sense than set an undeveloped man to accomplish significant investigating work." " ought to say it's your issue assuming anything's turned out badly. You said there was no such thing as composing known to these antiquated Canarios, and I trusted you. For anything I realized the stuff could have been something to eat." "It isn't Guanche work by any means," said he irritably. "You should have known that from the powder. Incredible sky, man, have you no eyes? Haven't you seen the overall development of the island? Don't you be aware there's no powder here?" "I'm no geologist. Is this imported writing then?" "Obviously. It's Egyptian: that is clear initially. However the way that it has here I can't as yet tell. It isn't stuff you can peruse off like a paper. The person's a variation on any of those that have been found up until this point. Furthermore, concerning this waxy stuff spread over the powder, it's extraordinary. It's some kind of a mineral, I think: maybe black-top. It doesn't scratch up like creature wax. I'II investigate that later. Why they once created it, and afterward let such an awe inspiring thought exit use, is only a wonder. I could remain boasting over this day in and day out." "Well," I said, "assuming it's no different either way for you, I'd prefer brag over a dinner. It's a decent ten miles hard going to the fonda, and I'm essentially as eager as a falcon as of now. Look here, do you realize it is four o'clock as of now? It takes more time than you suspect moving down to every one of these caverns, and afterward getting up again for the next." Coppinger spread his jacket on the ground, and wrapped the piece of sheets with delicate consideration, however wouldn't permit it to be attached with a rope inspired by a paranoid fear of breaking a greater amount of the edges. He demanded conveying it himself as well, and did as such for the bigger mostly to St Nick Brigida, and it was just when he was inside a pro of dropping himself with sheer sleepiness that he deigned to allow me to go ahead. He was passably ill mannered about it as well. "I guess you should convey the stuff," he snapped, "seeing that after all it's your own." By and by, when we got to the fonda, I had as great a supper as was obtainable, and a jug of that old Canary wine, and transformed into bed after a last line. Coppinger ate additionally, yet I have motivation to accept he didn't rest a lot. Anyway found him actually poring over the track down next morning, and looking exceptionally weighty peered toward, however overflowing with energy. "Do you be aware," he said, "that you've bumbled upon the most significant verifiable composition that the advanced world has at any point yet seen? Obviously, with your ungainly approach to getting it out, you've caused a vastness of harm. For example, those top sheets you shelled away and ruined, contained likely a totally remarkable record of the old civilisation of Yucatan." "Where's that, at any rate?" "In the Bay of Mexico. It's all remnants to-day, yet when it was an extremely prosperous province of the Atlanteans." "Never knew about them. However, gracious indeed, I have. They were individuals Herodotus expounded on, isn't that right? Yet, I thought they were legendary." "They were genuine, as was Atlantis, the mainland where they resided, which lay only north of the Canaries here." "What's that crocodile kind of thing with wings attracted the edge?" "A monster that lived in those former days of some kind or another. The pages are brimming with them. That is a cavern tiger. Furthermore, that is a giant bat of some kind. Thank heavens he had the sense to represent completely, the one who composed this, or we ought to always have been unable to reproduce the story, or in any event could never have seen half of it. Entire species have ceased to exist since this was composed, similarly all in all landmass has been cleared away and three civilisations extinguished. The most terrible of it will be, it was composed by a profoundly instructed man who to some degree normally composes an extremely awful clench hand. I've pounded at it all the night through, and have simply figured out how to make out a couple of sentences here and there"_he scoured his hands gratefully. "It will take me a year's persistent effort to appropriately interpret this." "Each man as he would prefer. I'm apprehensive my advantage in the thing wouldn't keep going really that long. Yet, how could it arrive? Did your old Egyptian come to Stupendous Canary to ultimately benefit his lungs, and compose it since he felt dull up in that cavern?" "I committed an error there. The creator was not an Egyptian. It was the closeness of the engraved person which misdirected me. The book was composed by one Deucalion, who appears to have been a cleric or general-or maybe both-and he was an Atlantean. How it arrived, I don't have any idea yet. Likely that was told in the last couple of pages, which a specific hoodlum crushed up with his folding knife, in moving them away from the spot where they were stashed." "Believe it or not, misuse me. Deucalion you say? There was a Deucalion in the Greek folklore. He was one of the two who got away from the Flood: their Noah, truth be told." "The overwhelming of the mainland of Atlantis might just compare to the Flood." "Is there a Pyrrha then? She was Deucalion's better half. " "I haven't gone over her yet. In any case, a be something very similar. there's a Phorenice. She appears to have been the dominant Ruler, to the extent that I can make out as of now." 1 looked with interest at delineations in the edge. They were very justifiable, albeit the viewpoint was completely off-base. "Bizarre monsters they appear to have had thumping about the country back then. Whacking enormous size as well, in the event that one might pass judgment. By Jove, that will be a cavern tiger attempting to puff down a mammoth. I shouldn't want to have lived back then." "Most likely they had some approach to battling the animals. Nonetheless, that will show itself as I coexist with the interpretation." He checked the time -"| assume I should be embarrassed about myself, yet I haven't been to bed. Is it true or not that you are going out?" "I will drive back to Las Palmas. I guaranteed a man to have a round at golf this evening." "Great, see you at supper. I trust they've sent back my dress shirts from the wash. O, master! I'm drowsy." 1 remaining him hitting the sack, and headed outside and requested a carriage to bring me down, and there I might say we separated for a significant time frame. A link was hanging tight for me in the inn at Las Palmas to return home for business forthwith, and there was a Liverpool boat in the harbor which I just figured out how to get as she was steaming out. It was something nearby, and the boatmen made a little fortune out of my rush. Presently Coppinger was just an inn colleague, and as I ultimately depended on the eyes in work when I returned to Britain, I'm apprehensive I didn't think a lot of more about him at that point. One doesn't with individuals one simply meets nonchalantly abroad like that. What's more, it probably been essentially a year after the fact that I saw by a passage in one of the papers, that he had given the chunk of sheets to the English Gallery, and that the assessed worth of them was 10,000 pounds at the least valuation. Indeed, this was a touch of disclosure, and as he had so over and over dazzled on me that the things were mine by right of revelation, I composed rather a sharp note to him referencing that he appeared to have been making fairly free with my property. Immediately returned an unnatural letter starting, "Specialist Coppinger laments, etc, and with it the English interpretation of the wax-upon-story MSS. He "very conceded" my case, and "believed that the benefits of distribution would be an adequate repayment for any harm got." Presently I had no clue about that he would take me disagreeably like this, and composed back a really warm answer with that impact; however the main response I got to this was through a firm of specialists, who expressed that all further correspondences with Dr. Coppinger should be made through them. 1 will say here freely that I lament the line he has assumed control over the matter; however as the undertaking has gone up to this point, I'm arranged to follow out his suggestion. Appropriately the old history is here printed; the credit (and the obligation of the interpretation rests with Dr. Coppinger; and anything income builds from perusers, goes to the locater of the first powder upon-wax sheets, myself. On the off chance that there is a further change in this game plan, it will be reported freely sometime in the not too distant future. However, at present this seems, by all accounts, to be generally improbable.

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