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CHOOSE YOUR OWN ADVENTURE • 18
UNDERGROUND
KINGDOM
BY EDWARD PACKARD
ILLUSTRATED BY ANTHONY KRAMER
BANTAM BOOKS
TORONTO • NEW YORK • LONDON • SYDNEY • AUCKLAND
WARNING!!!!
Do not read this book straight through from beginning to end! These pages contain many different adventures you can have as you try to reach
the Underground Kingdom. From time to time as
you read along, you will be asked to make a
choice. Your choice may lead to success or to
disaster! The adventures you have will be the
result of the decisions you make. After you make
your choice, follow the instructions to see what
happens to you next.
SPECIAL WARNING!!!!
The Underground Kingdom is not easy to reach.
Many readers never get there. Others never return.
Before starting out on your journey, you may
want to read Professor Bruckner's theory, which
is set forth on the pages that follow.
Professor Bruckner is a rather boring writer,
and I wouldn't suggest that you bother to read his
theory, except that, if you ever get to the Underground Kingdom, it might save your life.
Good luck!
PROFESSOR
BRUCKNER'S
THEORY
The discovery of the Bottomless Crevasse in
Greenland by Dr. Nera Vivaldi supports my
theory that the earth is not solid, as has been
thought, but that it is hollow. The Bottomless
Crevasse is probably the sole route from the
earth's surface to a vast "Underground Kingdom." The only other possible link would be an
underground river, flowing in alternating directions in response to the tides, but this seems
unlikely.
How, you may ask, was the earth hollowed
out? My studies show that more than a billion
years ago a tiny black hole collided with our
planet and lodged in its center, pulling the
whole molten core into an incredibly massive
sphere only a few hundred meters across.
If you were to stand on the inner surface of
the earth, like a fly on the inner shell of an
enormous pumpkin, you would see the black
hole directly overhead, like a black sun.
The gravity of the earth's thick shell would
hold you to the inner shell of the earth, though
you would weigh much less than you would on
the outer surface because the mass of the
Black Sun would tend to pull you toward it. If
there were a very tall mountain in the Underground Kingdom and you were to climb to the
top of it, you might be pulled up into the Black
Sun because gravity gets stronger as you approach a massive object.
In all other respects the Black Sun would
not be dangerous to any creatures in the Underground Kingdom. On the contrary, the
Black Sun would be necessary to life in the
underworld, but in the opposite way that the
sun is necessary to life on the earth's surface.
Our sun gives us heat and keeps us from freezing. The Black Sun absorbs heat. If there is an
underground kingdom, it is the Black Sun that
keeps its inhabitants from being baked to
death by the heat within the earth!
1
You are standing on the Toan Glacier in northern Greenland, staring down into the black void
of the crevasse. You shiver as you wonder
whether you were lucky or unlucky to be invited
on this expedition.
Standing next to you are Gunnar Larsen of the
National Research Institute and Dr. James Sneed,
a geologist. A small black box containing a signal
transmitter is suspended over the crevasse by two
long poles. The transmitter is wired to a console a
few yards away in the ice. Dr. Sneed turns a dial
as he monitors the display screen.
"Well?" Larsen's voice is impatient.
Sneed looks up, a broad smile on his face.
"This is it, friends—the Bottomless Crevasse."
"Any radar return?" Larsen asks.
Sneed shakes his head. "None."
For a minute no one speaks. Like you, the
others must feel excited to have reached their
goal but also a little sad. It was just a year ago that
your old friend, Dr. Nera Vivaldi, radioed from
this spot that she had reached the Bottomless
Crevasse. A few moments later, her radio went
dead. She was never seen again.
Go on to page 2.
2
Now you stand at the edge, lost in thought
How could the crevasse have no bottom? Could it
really lead to an underground kingdom? What
happened to Dr. Vivaldi?
But your thoughts are shattered. You didn't
seem to slip, yet suddenly you are falling into the
crevasse! A ledge is coming up fast beneath you.
You could land on it, but you're falling so fast
you're sure to be badly injured. You might only
be saving yourself for a slow, agonizing death.
These thoughts race through your head in a
split second.
If you try to land on the ledge,
turn to page 5.
If not, go on to the next page.
3
Your consciousness slips away as you fall faster
down, down, down.
The next thing you know, you're floating in air.
In the soft, reddish light you can see that you are
in a cavern, drifting toward the ceiling—or is it the
floor? In a flash you realize what has happened—
you've fallen to a point where gravity above you
is almost equal to gravity beneath you!
You brush against a firm surface—a wall that
feels like clay. You cling to it for a moment. Then
you're floating again, drifting slowly down. You
begin to lose your fear as you realize that gravity
here is so weak that you can fall mile after mile
without being hurt After a while you begin to
relax and enjoy drifting through a fantastic twilight world. You only wish it weren't so hot! Closing your eyes, you try to pretend that you are
safely home in bed.
Turn to page 6.
5
Your whole body is racked with pain as you
crash onto the ledge. You're shaken and bruised
but still alive! A snowbank cushioned your fall.
"HELP!" you cry.
"Hold on!" Larsen yells. "It's going to be tricky,
but we're rigging our ropes. We'll get you up."
You feel a flash of joy; then you remember
something that chills you to the bone. You were
very careful not to fall in. You're quite sure you
didn't slip; you were pulled as if by an unknown
force within the Bottomless Crevasse.
Should you warn your friends about the
strange force? If you do, they may be afraid to get
close enough to rescue you.
If you warn Larsen and Sneed,
turn to page 13.
If you just yell, "Please hurry!" turn to page 9.
6
Once again you brush against a firm surface.
This time it's the floor of the cavern. In fact, you
have touched down on the mossy bank of an
underground stream. You drink from the cool,
clear water, then step out of the cavern into this
strange world.
The only illumination is a dim red-orange glow
that seems to come from the ground. The air is so
clear that you can see shadowy, curving hills and
valleys stretching out in all directions, even above
you.
Why do you feel so good? It must be because
you are so light—you could hardly weigh more
than ten or fifteen pounds. You spring to your
feet Every movement is easy. You jump—twenty
or thirty feet high—and float gently to the
ground.
Then you realize that you are not alone. Only a
few yards away is an odd creature. As big as you
are, it seems to be some kind of bird yet much
more than a bird. Under a crown of soft golden
feathers are enormous blue-green eyes, so vivid
and intense that they seem to be not only a
means of vision, but also a means of power.
There is something terrifying about that face,
but also something angelic, something that draws
you to it In fact, you feel as if you are being
hypnotized by those eyes—eyes of an angel bird!
If you run from the strange creature,
turn to page 15.
If you hold your ground and face it,
turn to page 10.
8
You run as fast as you can, hoping that once
the mother sees her baby is safe, she will not
pursue you.
You dart into a cavern. It's darker and hotter
than the pleasant spot where you found the fledgling. Is it the same passageway you came
through?
Still running, you look back over your shoulder
to see if the mother bird is following. At that
moment you find yourself falling, or rather rising,
toward the earth's surface—drawn up into what
must be the same shaft that forms the Bottomless
Crevasse!
Soon you stop rising and start falling. Then you
rise a shorter distance, stop, and begin to fall
again. You feel like a yo-yo, bouncing up and
down, up and down, until you finally come to rest
at the center of gravity, the point where you will
neither rise nor fall. Like a cork thrown in the
ocean, you seem doomed to drift forever.
The End
9
"Hurry!" you yell.
A moment later you see Dr. Sneed's reassuring
face on one side of the opening above you.
Larsen peers over the other side. "Don't worry,"
he calls.
"Hey, what's..." Dr. Sneed's voice is cut off as
he slides over the icy lip of the crevasse. You
watch with horror as his body hurtles by, down
into the abyss!
You yell at Larsen to get back from the edge.
But a blur whirls by, and you feel the rush of air as
his body plummets after Sneed's.
They're both gone, and now you are alone,
trapped on a narrow icy ledge. If only you had
warned them, you would have saved them and
probably yourself too.
Now your chances look slim. A search helicopter might fly over. But will it land? Will anyone
ever find you down here? Will you even survive
the arctic night?
Turn to page 12.
10
You stand there and watch as the strange creature walks slowly toward you. Then you see the
large, blue-white pieces of broken shell. This angel bird is only a fledgling, just hatched!
Losing your fear, you walk up and stroke the
creature gently. It cocks its head to the side and
touches you with one of its wings. At that moment
it seems almost human.
But suddenly you hear a loud whirring sound.
Hovering above you is another angel bird, a
much larger one. It must be the mother of the
fledgling. She swoops toward you.
If you run, turn to page 8.
If you grab the fledgling and try to use it to
shield yourself, turn to page 14.
If you dive to the ground and shield your face
with your arms, go on to page 11.
11
You dive to the ground and shield your face
with your arms, hoping the angel bird will leave
you unharmed.
Nothing happens; the angel bird must have
taken her young one away. What's more, you
begin to have the feeling that you are completely
safe. Slowly you get to your feet. Standing
nearby are three more of the large creatures. One
of them effortlessly leaves the ground, glides
through the air, and lands beside you. You have a
strong urge to climb on its back.
Why is it you feel so safe? The angel birds
begin to make musical sounds, more beautiful
than anything you've ever heard. Is it this music
that causes your good feelings, or something
more? These creatures seem to communicate not
in words, or even ideas, but in feelings.
Without thinking more about it, you leap up,
and because there's very little gravity, you almost
float onto the creature's feathery back. You nestle
in. It feels like a bed of goose down, soft and silky.
Turn to page 16.
12
You look along the ledge. It curves up toward
the surface, but it also becomes narrower. You try
to gauge how close to the surface you could get
without losing your footing. By cutting a couple of
handholds in the ice with your pocket knife, you
could make it to the top, if you don't lose your
grip.
If you try to make it, turn to page 18.
If you decide to wait, turn to page 20.
13
"Get back from the edge!" you yell. "I didn't
fall, I was pulled in!"
For a few moments you hear nothing; then
Sneed yells, "Thanks for warning us. There may
be some force here we don't understand. But
don't worry, we're rigging a brace so we can pull
you up without getting too close."
A few minutes later you see a nylon climbing
rope dangling in front of you. You pull in enough
to tie around your waist and under your arms.
Taking a firm grip, you call up to the top, "I'm
ready—pull away!"
Your heart skips a beat as you're yanked off the
ledge. You dangle for a moment; then, slowly,
foot by foot, your friends pull you up over the
edge. You scramble across the ice into their arms.
"Thank goodness we got you!" says Larsen.
"The Bottomless Crevasse is a killer. I think we'd
better quit now."
"I agree. I've had enough," Sneed says.
After what you've been through, you're not
about to argue with them. The three of you pack
up and begin the long trek back across the glacier.
You're happy to be alive, but you know that
you'll always regret that you never reached the
Underground Kingdom.
The End
14
You lunge for the baby bird, hoping that you
can use it as a shield.
Even as you move, you feel a rush of wind as
the mother dives to protect her baby. You realize
that you've just made the stupidest decision of
your life.
Strangely, the mother bird did not harm you.
Instead, you feel that you have been put into a
trance. Stranger still, you sense that something
has set time back—that you are being given another chance!
Turn to page 10.
15
You run from the angel bird—up a hill that gets
steeper and steeper. In the light gravity of the
underworld you can run faster than a deer, even
up this mountain. Twenty, thirty, forty feet at a
bound! You feel even lighter than you did before.
You try to leap only a few feet in the air, but you
find yourself floating. There is no way you can get
down. You are entombed between the ground
above and the ground below.
You close your eyes. Then, instead of feeling
warm, you feel cold; instead of feeling light, you
feel heavy. Instead of floating, you're lying on a
hard, cold surface. Opening your eyes, you see
ice walls rising above you.
Now you understand. When you fell into the
crevasse, you landed on this ledge, about thirty
feet below the surface. You must have hit your
head on the ice. What a strange dream you've
had! It seemed so real—as if the angel bird put
the dream in your head! But there are other
things to think of right now.
"HELP!" you shout
No one answers. Larsen and Sneed have probably given you up for lost
Turn to page 12.
16
The angel bird glides through the canyons and
corridors beneath the earth. It increases its speed,
and you hold tight as it swoops through long,
curving passageways. It's the most exciting ride of
your life, and would certainly be the scariest if
you didn't feel that you've never been safer.
Then, ahead of you, is a tunnel that flares out
into a broad new world. An endless landscape
stretches before you. It is bathed in soft, reddish
light, as if the sun had just set everywhere around
you!
A great river forms a curving line that divides
the land. Trees line its banks. Farther back from
the river are mountains, some of them lavender
or blue and others that flicker like glowing embers. Strangely there is no horizon; instead the
landscape fades into dusky reds and browns that
curve over your head, forming a sky that is almost
the same color as the ground. Directly above you
is something that looks like the sun, but it is
absolutely black!
So this is the Underground Kingdom—strange,
vast, and very beautiful. What people or creatures
live here? What mysteries does it hold? But you
are swept from your daydreaming by the realization that your life here could be in danger.
If you set out to explore the Underground
Kingdom, turn to page 19.
If you concentrate on getting safely back home,
turn to page 22.
18
You inch your way along the edge, keeping
your body flat against the wall of the crevasse.
You should be able to make it, as long as you
don't panic. You try not to look down.
After almost an hour of slow progress, you're
able to raise a hand over the rim. But you still
can't pull yourself up.
You hack away at the ice, gouging out another
handhold, then another foothold. It seems like
hours before you can take even one step higher.
Then, with one great effort, you heave yourself
over the edge, then twist and roll away from the
deadly opening.
Stiff and shaky, you manage to stand and stare
at the bleak world around you. The sun has set
behind the western mountains, and you begin to
shiver in the chill wind. You're thankful that in this
part of Greenland it never grows dark in July. But
it does grow cold—well below freezing—and
you're too exhausted to run and jump to warm
yourself.
Turn to page 21.
19
You know how you feel: the risks don't matter.
You want to explore the Underground Kingdom!
The angel bird seems to understand. Steeply
banking, it swoops down along the great river and
glides gently onto a mossy plain. Nearby is a
grove of tall trees. Short stumpy branches with
clusters of multicolored leaves thrust out from
their trunks. They look almost like hands holding
bunches of flowers.
You slide to the ground, and at once the angel
bird rises in the air. As it glides up into the dark
red sky, you feel a wave of happiness. You follow
its path with your eyes long after it has disappeared. Then, turning to survey the strange landscape, you wonder where you will go. What
dangers await you?
Turn to page 40.
20
You decide not to risk the treacherous climb to
the surface. Surely help is on the way. You huddle
on the icy ledge, stamping your feet and clapping
your hands, trying to keep warm. You feel your
body temperature dropping. You've got to stay
awake until a search party arrives.
The hours pass slowly. The sun dips below the
horizon, but there is still light in the sky. Straining,
you think you hear something. . . .Pocka pocka
pocka pocka pocka . . . overhead. A chopper is
Hovering over the crevasse! For a moment you're
blinded by a searchlight. The chopper drops to
just a few yards above you. The crew lowers a
harness. Eagerly you grab it and buckle it around
you.
"HOLD ON. WE'RE PULLING YOU UP."
Beautiful words over the bullhorn. You're suddenly yanked into the air. Moments later a pair of
hands pulls you through the hatch. The pilot
pours you a cup of hot chocolate from his Thermos.
"Thanks for staying alive till we got here," he
says with a grin.
You soon feel life seeping back into your body.
"Thanks for pulling me out!"
"This is the one place in the world everyone
should stay away from," the pilot says.
"Nothing could get me back here," you say.
The End
21
There is no shelter from the relentless wind and
no sign of Larsen or Sneed. It's getting hard to
breathe. You soon begin to feel the dull aches,
stiffness, and sick feeling you've read about—the
dread symptoms of hypothermia; you are freezing to death. Maybe a search helicopter will arrive
any moment. Maybe in a few hours. Maybe
never.
You are very tired. You desperately need rest.
If you huddle in your parka and try to conserve
your strength, turn to page 32.
If you force yourself to keep walking,
turn to page 25.
22
Your strongest desire now is to be home again.
You cling tightly to the angel bird. As if it knows
what you're thinking, it rises in the air, banks
steeply, and then, accelerating, hurtles into a corridor within the ground. You nestle into its thick
downy coat as it streaks through the darkness. All
the while you feel completely safe, and in time
you sleep.
When you awake, it is much colder. A chill
wind bites against your body. The brightness of
the world around you is not the warm red light of
the Underground Kingdom, but the cold white
light of the Arctic. The barren landscape,
pocketed with ice and snow, is a familiar scene, as
is the rude village of shacks and tin-roofed buildings nearby. You're in Greenland! The village is
the coastal settlement from which your party began its trek across the ice fields to the Bottomless
Crevasse.
Go on to the next page.
23
As you trudge across the frozen slope to the
village, you think about the angel bird and the
Underground Kingdom, and you think how
much more there must be in the universe, and
even on our own planet, than we can ever imagine.
The End
24
"There's no chance of that," Professor
Bruckner's assistant tells you. "An aerial photograph taken a few weeks ago showed that the
glacier has moved, sealing the crevasse with
6,000 feet of solid ice."
You hang up the phone and stand by the window, thinking about the world that lies beneath
the earth's surface. What is it like? What creatures
might live there? What happened to Professor
Bruckner? Did he find Larsen and Sneed? Is Dr.
Vivaldi still alive? Now, of course, you'll never
know.
The End
25
You force yourself to keep walking. If you
wander too far from the crevasse, a search team
might miss you, so you walk in a large square:
fifty paces north . . . fifty east. . . fifty south . . .
fifty west . . . fifty north . . . again . . . again.
Your legs feel like lead. Your eyes are half shut.
You hardly notice when the weak arctic sun reappears ... the sun . . . you can't think . . . dizzy
. . . you can't stand. . . .
It seems like another world when you wake up
in a room with pale green walls and gleaming tile
floors. Your head is swimming. What happened
to Larsen and Sneed? You feel as if you've lived
through a nightmare.
"You're lucky, we were able to save your leg."
A tall, bearded doctor is speaking. "You'll be
OK." Then his voice trails off as he tells you that
your friends, Gunnar Larsen and Dr. Sneed, have
joined Dr. Vivaldi, all lost forever.
"Larsen . . . Sneed." You keep mumbling their
names until finally sleep comes.
By morning your head has cleared. It was a
terrible ordeal, but at least you survived. In a few
weeks you'll be home—home for good, because
nothing could ever persuade you to go near the
Bottomless Crevasse again!
Go on to page 26.
26
Three months have passed. You return home
late one afternoon to find a man waiting at your
front door.
"I'm Professor Bruckner. From the National
Research Institute in Washington." He shakes
your hand warmly.
"Please come in. Are you still studying the
Bottomless Crevasse?"
Bruckner nods. "We've identified the force that
may have pulled Larsen and Sneed into the crevasse. Would you be willing to go back? Precautions would be taken so there would be no
chance of its happening again."
27
You shake your head. "I'm afraid not, Professor. I don't think I could go back to the place
where my friends died."
Smiling, the professor leans toward you.
"Would it change your mind if I told you that your
friends may still be alive?"
"What?"
"It's true. We received faint radio signals from a
point far beneath the earth's surface. I believe that
one or more of the others must be alive somewhere in the Underground Kingdom, and we
have the means to reach them. Now will you
come?"
If you say that you'll go on the expedition,
go on to page 28.
If you decide it would be too dangerous to go
with Bruckner, turn to page 30.
28
"Professor Bruckner, count me in!"
"Good," he says. "This time we'll be far better
equipped. NASA has put two helicopters at my
disposal. One of them will transport our party of
scientists and technicians. The other will carry the
Vertacraft, a rocket-propelled capsule specifically
designed for this mission."
Go on to the next page.
29
Three weeks later you find yourself staring
once again at the Bottomless Crevasse.
"It looks narrower than when I was here before," you remark.
"Yes," Bruckner says, "the glacier has been
advancing about three feet a year. It won't be
long before the crevasse is completely sealed."
While you and the other members of the party
stand at a safe distance, the professor cautiously
walks to the rim of the crevasse. In one hand he
holds an oblong instrument that emits an increasingly rapid clicking.
"Don't get too close!" you cry.
"Indeed." Bruckner takes a few steps back. "I
think I know what happened to Larsen, Sneed,
and Vivaldi."
"What?"
"Gravity waves coming from the center of the
earth have disrupted space-time enough to pull
them in." The professor looks down into your
puzzled face. "And you, as well," he adds. "I've
always suspected that the laws of physics may be
different in the vicinity of a black hole. Now we
have proof!"
"What does this mean?"
The professor smiles. "It means that the interior
of the earth—beginning about 800 miles deep—
is hollow."
Turn to page 75.
30
"No, thank you, Professor," you say. "I've seen
enough. I never want to get near the Bottomless
Crevasse again."
Bruckner shrugs. "I understand," he says as he
holds out his hand.
From then on, you follow the news eagerly,
hoping to hear some report on Professor Bruckner's expedition. One day, passing a newsstand,
you see a headline that makes your heart sink:
PROFESSOR AND PARTY MISSING IN
WORLD'S MOST DANGEROUS ICE FIELDS!
In the months that follow you hear nothing
further about the Bottomless Crevasse, until one
night, watching the news, you hear an interview
with two scientists who claim to have picked up
radio signals coming from inside the earth. "We
can't explain their seemingly impossible origin,"
one of them reports, "nor can we decipher the
message, except for two words, All Safe."
The next morning you call Professor
Bruckner's office at the National Research Institute. "I was wondering whether there were any
plans for another expedition to the Bottomless
Crevasse," you say.
Turn to page 24.
32
You huddle in your parka, but the cruel wind
penetrates your body. You feel yourself growing
numb. You try to stand up, but your legs won't
move. You feel as if you are drifting through time
and space. Then you feel nothing at all.
The search and rescue team almost reached
you in time. They were never able to locate
Larsen and Sneed. A few days later a memorial
service was held for the brave people who lost
their lives exploring the Bottomless Crevasse. Everyone spoke very highly of you.
The End
33
"All right," says Bruckner, "if no one will volunteer, I'll go alone." The rest of you help position
the Vertacraft over the crevasse and wish him well
as he snaps the hatch shut and releases the craft
into free-fall.
Hank Crouter, Bruckner's assistant, glances at
his watch. "If he survives, we'll get a signal back
within ten minutes," he says.
You all wait anxiously, watching the clock,
watching the crevasse. Ten minutes go by, fifteen,
twenty, twenty-five. A chilling wind bites through
your parka. You kick the icy ground.
"Thirty minutes," says Crouter. "There's no
way . . ."
Weary and sad, your party trudges back across
the ice fields. The moving glacier is rapidly closing
the crevasse. There won't be another chance.
The End
35
You know that your chances of surviving the
expedition are slim. Even if you safely descend
into the Bottomless Crevasse, there's no assurance
that the Vertacraft will be able to get you out
again. Still, it's your only chance to find your lost
friends and to explore a new world.
You grit your teeth and climb aboard. The
professor climbs in beside you.
"Ready?" he says. "I'm going to activate us as
soon as we're centered."
"Ready." You strap yourself in and say a
prayer. You feel like a larva inside a cocoon.
Looking through the port, you watch the others position the Vertacraft over the crevasse. You
wave at them, and they wave back. Suddenly you
are falling—faster and faster, plummeting toward
the center of the earth. Has the Vertacraft gone
out of control?
"Professor Bruckner!" you yell. "Won't the
rockets work? Can't you slow us?"
"We're saving our fuel," he shouts. "Gravity
will slow us—you'll see."
Has he gone mad? You notice a red button on
the control panel. Next to it is a sign that reads:
EMERGENCY
REVERSE/RETURN TO INITIAL POSITION.
Turn to page 37.
36
You and Dr. Vivaldi cross the Great River and
start your trek to the Shining Mountains. Along
the way your guide, Mopur, brings back mountain game, breadbush, and tanga.
The air seems lighter and brighter than in the
valley of the Great River. Never have you felt so
happy as you do right now—hiking through the
Shining Mountains.
But your Archpod guide grumbles and frets.
He blinks and rubs his eyes.
Turn to page 92.
37
Thanks to the dual control system, it looks as if
you have a chance to escape this madness. Still,
you can't be sure it will save you. . . .
If you decide to push the Emergency-Reverse
button, turn to page 89.
If you try to reason with Dr. Bruckner,
turn to page 38.
38
"We're going too fast! Can't we slow down?"
you call.
"No. We have hundreds of miles to go. We've
got to get through the earth's mantle fast, or we'll
be baked to death." Bruckner's voice is cool and
reassuring. Maybe he knows what he's doing.
But every minute, the temperature rises. You
begin to sweat. Whatever made you think you
could survive such a trip? Sipping cold lemonade
from a plastic bottle, you try to close your eyes
and relax. Then it seems as if the Vertacraft is
slowing, but you can't be sure.
Suddenly everything is still. The Vertacraft has
come to rest. Looking through a porthole, you
see that you have landed inside a large crater.
Slowly you climb out of the Vertacraft and open
the other compartment. Professor Bruckner's face
is ashen gray. You feel for his pulse. Nothing. The
strain of the descent must have been too much
for his heart.
Turn to page 43.
39
You could probably climb a nearby tree and
hide among the clusters of giant leaves. But is it
wise to run like a frightened animal? Maybe
things will go better for you if you bravely face the
inhabitants of this world.
If you decide to face the creatures,
turn to page 42.
If you decide to hide in a cluster-leaf tree,
turn to page 46.
40
The scene around you reminds you of a photographic negative. All the shades and colors seem
reversed. The ground is grayish pink clay with
white outcroppings. In the distance you can see
areas that glow like beds of hot coals. Nearby is a
forest of trees with green trunks and white leaves.
The trees are short; yet their branches, taking
advantage of the light gravity, spread out for hundreds of feet in all directions.
You climb a small hill to get a better view.
Wherever you look, the land curves upward, as if
you were standing in the bottom of an enormous
bowl. The sky is covered with what looks like
reddish yellow clouds.
Most amazing of all is the sight directly overhead—a disc almost the size of the sun; but,
instead of shining brightly, it is absolutely black.
You can feel its coolness, as if it were drawing
heat from your skin. It's the black hole at the
center of the earth!
You turn sharply at the sound of chattering.
Coming up the ravine are more than a dozen
creatures, smaller than you, yet walking upright
on two legs. Half human, half ape, they look like
creatures that might have once lived on the
earth's surface. They are carrying ropes and nets.
Turn to page 39.
42
You step forward to meet the strange procession. The underworld creatures form a circle
around you, cackling and gesturing to each other.
You smile and hold out your arms. "Hello,"
you begin, but the creatures raise their nets and
close in on you. One of them barks an order.
They motion for you to follow them. You don't
have much choice. Despite their small size, they
move rapidly through the thick woods. Occasionally they freeze, and you hear them whispering,
"Kota, ib saben Kota."
You march a mile or so through groves of trees.
It's as hot as you've ever known it, and you feel as
if you're going to faint, but finally you reach open
land. Instantly you feel cooler. The Black Sun is
drawing heat from your body.
Soon you reach a village of igloo-shaped structures that look as if they're made of green clay.
One of your captors leads you to the nearest one.
"Ib agon," he says as he takes you inside.
Turn to page 44.
43
You bury the professor's body near the Vertacraft, and say a prayer. You feel sad and afraid
of setting forth alone in a strange world. But there
is no choice. You must search for food and shelter.
First, you've got to get out of this crater. There
is a tunnel nearby. Peering inside, you see that it
leads straight down. Suddenly you realize that it
was through this tunnel that the Vertacraft traveled; you're looking through the other end of the
Bottomless Crevasse. The tunnel doesn't lead
straight down, but straight up—to the surface of
the earth!
So Professor Bruckner was right. The earth is
like a hollowed-out pumpkin, and you're standing on its inner shell. Your feet must be held to
the ground by the gravity of the shell itself.
You look around at the walls of the crater. They
are too steep to climb. But you feel so light—as if
you were walking on the moon—you might be
able to jump out.
You stand there a minute, wondering why the
pull of gravity here isn't as strong as it is on the
earth's surface. Then you remember the rest of
Bruckner's theory: There is a black hole at the
center of the earth, pulling you toward it. You
leap as high as you can—twenty feet in the air!
Then, with one great bound, you're out, standing
on the surface of the Underground Kingdom.
Turn to page 40.
44
The interior of the agon, as it seems to be
called, is lit by glowing stones circling the inner
wall. In the center is a small fountain. Clear water
bubbles forth and flows along a silver trough
before disappearing underground. The floor is
soft and spongy, like a thick bed of moss.
The leader steps forward. "Ket," he says,
pointing to himself. "Ket Raka." Pointing to the
others, he says, "Akim Raka, Tor Raka ..."
You repeat each name, then pointing to yourself, tell them your name. The Rakas laugh as
they try to pronounce the strange sound.
Tor, who seems younger than the others, brings
you something that looks like cheese but tastes
like honey. Ket gives you a small pink fruit. "Ib
tanga," he says, smiling.
Tanga is delicious, and you are eating a second
one when a large blue-furred Raka rushes into
the agon. Pointing at you, he speaks excitedly in
his own tongue. Tor begins to argue with him.
The others join in.
"Nar mg calla!" the blue-furred Raka says
loudly. It's clear he wants you to come with him; it
seems likely that he represents the chief, or
leader.
Ket and Akim gesture as if you should obey.
But Tor shakes his head, warning you not to go.
If you follow the blue-furred Raka,
turn to page 48.
If you refuse, turn to page 50.
46
You hide in the cluster-leaf tree. The strange
creatures pass by except for one straggler, who
stops to stretch. For a moment he looks right at
you. "Kota zaark!" he cries, then turns and runs
after the others.
Perhaps you needn't have been so cautious.
The creature looked more like a frightened animal than a fierce hunter.
As you climb down from the tree, you hear a
low moaning coming from the brush. A pair of
bright blue lights is shining from within the darkness.
Go on to the next page.
47
Now the moaning comes from behind you.
Turning, you see another pair of blue lights. Beneath them are long, glistening fangs. Slowly the
creatures close in on you; their moans rise into
high-pitched shrieks. What are they?
You have only a few seconds to live, so it
hardly matters.
The End
48
Hoping for the best, you follow the blue-furred
Raka to the center of the village. As you walk
along the narrow footpaths, other Rakas emerge
from their agons and stare at you curiously.
When you reach the central agon the bluefurred Raka lets out a long, low hooting noise,
which is answered from within. Inside an old
white-headed Raka sits near the central fountain.
A large black disc hangs from his neck. For a long
49
time he stares at you. Finally he rises and steps
closer. "So, you are what my hunters found. My
name is Arton. I am the High Raka of the village
of Rakmara."
You are so startled by the familiar words that it
takes you a minute to answer. "How is it you
speak my language?" you finally ask.
Arton smiles. "A visitor from the Nether World.
She called herself Nera."
"Dr. Vivaldi? She's alive? Where?"
The old Raka shakes his head. "She tried to
swim across the Great River. The river spirits have
swallowed her."
"She might have made it across!" you say.
"Even if she did, the Archpods would have fed
her to the Kota beasts."
"What are Archpods?"
"The Archpods live beyond the Great River.
For a long time the Rakas and Archpods have
each had one hunting boat; that is the law. Now
the Archpods build many boats. They are not
hunting boats; they are war boats. The Archpods
plan to conquer Rakmara."
You hold your head in your hands. Poor Dr.
Vivaldi! And now the threat of war.
Turn to page 51.
50
You shake your head and stand your ground.
The blue-furred Raka glares at you and strides
from the agon. He returns a few moments later
with two other Rakas, each holding ropes and a
net.
"I won't be taken captive like some animal!"
you shout.
A Raka tries to rope you, but you duck out of
reach. They draw closer. Like a football quarterback, you spin and dart past them.
"Kela! Zaark!" the Rakas yell, but you're already out of the agon, running across the dimly lit
land.
Helped by the light gravity, you quickly reach a
grove of cluster-leaf trees, and you keep running,
on and on. At last you reach the open countryside. In the soft reddish gray twilight you see
the Great River just ahead. You stop to rest beside
its waters.
Turn to page 53.
51
"Yes, bad times are upon us," Arton continues.
"But we shall protect ourselves. We have learned
to mix powders and call up the fire of the earth in
a great blast of noise and heat"
"You mean bombs?"
"We call them brakpa. With brakpa and with
your help, we shall destroy the Archpods before
they destroy us."
"What do you mean, 'with my help'?" you ask.
"You come from the Nether World, where war
is the way of life. If you ride with us, our warriors
will have courage."
"What are the Kota beasts?"
"You ask too many questions!" the High Raka
snaps back. "Now you must answer mine: Will
you go with our warriors to attack the Archpods?"
You shrink back from the choice. The High
Raka's voice grows stern and cold "If you are not
with us, then you are against us, and we shall deal
with you as our enemy."
If you tell the High Raka that you will go with
his warriors, turn to page 52.
If you tell him that you won't take part in a
war, turn to page 56.
52
"I'll go with your warriors," you answer.
"Very well," says Alton. "You will stay with
Tomo. Vivaldi taught him English, and he will tell
you what you need to know."
Immediately one of the Rakas steps forward
and takes your arm. "I am Tomo," he says. Then
he leads you to the outskirts of the village and
into his agon. He brings you woven mats. "You
must rest now," he says.
You peer outside at the red-streaked sky.
"Doesn't it ever get dark here?"
"We have no night or day," says Tomo. "We
measure time by the tides of the Great River. Dr.