itâll be even farther. Weâre in for a long flight.â
After the pilot had taken off, the boys studied the guidebook. They discovered that Easter Island was quite small, only fifteen miles by eleven, with a population of about two thousand people. âIt has a number of extinct volcanos,â Joe announced, âthe most important being Mount Rano Raraku where the natives got the volcanic stone from which they carved their giant figures.â
Frank smiled. âThatâs one thing Iâve been wanting to see for a long time, and thought I never would. The stone heads of Easter Island!â
âI know one thing you wonât see,â Joe said. âTrees!â
âYou mean there are none on the island?â
âThatâs right. Only grass. Sheepherding is one of the leading industries, but many natives make a living from the growing tourist trade.â
âWell,â Frank quipped, âin that case, the only place Santana can hide is in a volcano!â
15 The Wizard
As they were thundering along over the ocean, Frank flipped through the pages of Aku-Aku.
âThis book is great,â he said. âTells about Thor Heyerdahlâs expedition. He wanted to solve the mysteries of the island, which he did. Some of them, anyhow. Like that business of the long ears on the statues. He says the Incas who came from South America had long ears. So when they made the carvings, they gave them long ears.â
âBut why did they produce those big stone figures?â Joe asked.
âThatâs one mystery Heyerdahl didnât solve. He says no one knows why they created them or how they transported them from Mount Rano Raraku. Some weigh fifty tons! Look at this picture.â
Frank pointed to an illustration of Heyerdahl sitting on top of a stone figure twenty feet tall. Other illustrations showed giant carvings lying on the ground near platforms on which they had once stood.
âWho knocked them over?â Joe wondered.
âInvaders from across the Pacific, Heyerdahl thinks,â Frank replied. âThey came from Polynesia and conquered Easter Island. To demonstrate they were the bosses, they pushed the statues off the platforms. Thatâs the way it was when a Dutch sea captain discovered the island in the eighteenth century. Later, Captain Cook landed there during his voyage around the world. Finally, Chile annexed the place in the nineteenth century.â
Their conversation was interrupted by their pilot, who offered them sandwiches that he had brought along.
âOh, Iâm so glad you thought of that,â Joe said. âIâm starved!â
After their meal, they slept for several hours until at last Easter Island came in sight. The plane circled over the area, and the Hardys got a broad view of rolling, grass-covered terrain. They looked down into the craters of extinct volcanos and noticed that high cliffs fell off into the water along most of the coast.
Over the airfield, Joe commented, âNo planes on the ground. The Inca Chief must have left already. I hope they arrested Santana when he arrived!â
After landing, the Hardys went to the control tower and asked about Santanaâs plane.
âAccording to the flight plan of pilot Pedro Morena, that planeâs overdue,â said a man at the monitoring control board. âIâll see if I can raise him on the radio.â
He lifted the transmitter and called, âEaster Island control to Inca Chief! Come in, please! Pedro Morena, come in, please!â He repeated the call several times, then set the transmitter aside.
âNo answer,â he reported.
âWill you let us know what happens?â Frank asked. âWeâll be at the Hanga Roa Hotel.â
âAs soon as we know,â the man promised.
âThanks. Our names are Frank and Joe Hardy.â
The boys retraced their steps just in time to catch the bus to the hotel at the southeastern end of
Valerie Martin
L. R. Wright
Dorothy Koomson
L.E. Modesitt Jr.
Gillian White
Susan Wiggs
Ana Gabriel
Lisa Marie Davis
Tiffany Allee
Natalie Anderson