THE FACE IN THE ABYSS: Sci-Fi Classic. Abraham Merritt

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THE FACE IN THE ABYSS: Sci-Fi Classic - Abraham  Merritt


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       Abraham Merritt

      THE FACE IN THE ABYSS: Sci-Fi Classic

      Science Fantasy Novel

      Published by

      Books

      - Advanced Digital Solutions & High-Quality eBook Formatting -

       [email protected]

      2018 OK Publishing

      ISBN 978-80-272-4301-3

      Table of Contents

       1 SUARRA

       2 THE UNSEEN WATCHERS

       3 THE WHITE LLAMA

       4 THE THING THAT FLED

       5 THE ELFIN HORNS

       6 THE FACE IN THE ABYSS

       7 THE GUARDED FRONTIER

       8 THE LIZARD MEN

       9 IN THE LAIR OF HUON

       10 OUTLAWS OF YU-ATLANCHI

       11 THE DEATHLESS PEOPLE

       12 THE SECRET ANCIENT CITY

       13 CAVERN OF THE FROG-WOMAN

       14 SHADOW OF THE LIZARD MASK

       15 “LEND ME YOUR BODY, GRAYDON!”

       16 THE PAINTED CHAMBER

       17 TAKING OF HUON’S LAIR

       18 THE ARENA OF THE DINOSAURS

       19 THE SNAKE MOTHER

       20 WISDOM OF THE SERPENT MOTHER

       21 THE CAVERN OF THE LOST WISDOM

       22 THE FEAST OF THE DREAM MAKERS

       23 THE TAKING OF SUARRA

       24 BRIDE OF THE LIZARD-MAN

       25 THE COLLAR OF NIMIR

       26 RAGNAROK IN YU-ATLANCHI

       27 FAREWELL OF THE SNAKE MOTHER

      1

      SUARRA

       Table of Contents

      Nicholas Graydon ran into Starrett in Quito. Rather, Starrett sought him out there. Graydon had often heard of the big West Coast adventurer, but their trails had never crossed. It was with lively curiosity that he opened his door to his visitor.

      Starrett came to the point at once. Graydon had heard the legend of the treasure train bringing to Pizarro the ransom of the Inca Atahualpa? And that its leaders, learning of the murder of their monarch by the butcher-boy Conquistador, had turned aside and hidden the treasure somewhere in the Andean wilderness?

      Graydon had heard it, hundreds of times; had even considered hunting for it. He said so. Starrett nodded.

      “I know where it is,” he said.

      Graydon laughed.

      In the end Starrett convinced him; convinced him, at least, that he had something worth looking into.

      Graydon rather liked the big man. There was a bluff directness that made him overlook the hint of cruelty in eyes and jaw. There were two others with him, Starrett said, both old companions. Graydon asked why they had picked him out. Starrett bluntly told him—because they knew he could afford to pay the expenses of the expedition. They would all share equally in the treasure. If they didn’t find it, Graydon was a first-class mining engineer, and the region they were going into was rich in minerals. He was practically sure of making some valuable discovery on which they could cash in.

      Graydon considered. There were no calls upon him. He had just passed his thirty-fourth birthday, and since he had been graduated from the Harvard School of Mines eleven years ago he had never had a real holiday. He could well afford the cost. There would be some excitement, if nothing else.

      After he had looked over Starrett’s two comrades—Soames, a lanky, saturnine, hard-bitten Yankee, and Dancret, a cynical, amusing little Frenchman—they had drawn up an agreement and he had signed it.

      They went down by rail to Cerro de Pasco for their outfit, that being the town of any size closest to where their trek into the wilderness would begin. A week later with eight burros and six arrieros, or packmen, they were within the welter of peaks through which, Starrett’s map indicated, lay their road.

      It had been the map which had persuaded Graydon. It was no parchment, but a sheet of thin gold quite as flexible. Starrett drew it out of a small golden tube of ancient workmanship, and unrolled it. Graydon examined it and was unable to see any map upon it—or anything else. Starrett held it at a peculiar angle—and the markings upon it became plain.

      It was a beautiful piece of cartography. It was, in fact, less a map than a picture. Here and there were curious symbols which Starrett said were signs cut upon the rocks along the way; guiding marks for those of the old race who would set forth to recover the treasure when the Spaniards had been swept from the land.

      Whether it was clue to Atahualpa’s ransom hoard or to something else—Graydon did not know. Starrett said it was. But Graydon did not believe his story of how the golden sheet had come into his possession. Nevertheless, there had been purpose in the making of the map, and stranger purpose in the cunning with which the markings had been concealed. Something interesting lay at the end of that trail.

      They


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