In Drupal, you cannot run the .module files directly from the web. Each module should implement hook_menu and that hook creates the URLs you'd use. So you'd give Tropo the URL that's created by yourmodule_menu, and not the path to yourmodule.module.
For example, here's a hook_menu from an example module for Tropo.
<?php
function demo_menu() {
$items = array();
// Set up a route for the incoming call
$items['demo/answer'] = array(
'page callback' => 'demo_answer',
'access arguments' => array('access content'),
'type' => MENU_NORMAL_ITEM,
);
return $items;
}
function demo_answer() {
module_load_include('php', 'tropo', 'lib/tropo/tropo.class');
$tropo = new Tropo();
$tropo->say('Hello. And Goodbye.');
print $tropo;
}
?>
The demo_menu function defines demo/answer as a URL on your site. If your site was at example.com you'd give Tropo your URL as http://example.com/demo/answer. Then when someone calls your Tropo phone number, the demo_answer() function would run, which speaks "Hello. And Goodbye." and then hangs up.
There's a simple demo module that I've used in a talk on using Drupal as a application framework that might help - I use Tropo extensively in the demo. https://github.com/akalsey/drupal-framework-demo
The Phone poll module would also be a good example. It uses Tropo to add voice and SMS to Drupal 6's built-in poll module. http://drupal.org/project/phonepoll
You might also want to have a look at VoipDrupal. This allows you to build scripts directly in Drupal that interact with services like Tropo. http://drupal.org/project/voipdrupal