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--- a/39399-0.txt
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@@ -1,31 +1,4 @@
- TREASURE OF KINGS
-
-
-
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with almost
-no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it
-under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this
-eBook or online at http://www.gutenberg.org/license.
-
-
-Title: Treasure of Kings
- Being the Story of the Discovery of the "Big Fish," or the Quest
- of the Greater Treasure of the Incas of Peru.
-
-Author: Charles Gilson
-
-Release Date: April 07, 2012 [EBook #39399]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK TREASURE OF KINGS ***
-
-
-
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 39399 ***
Produced by Al Haines.
@@ -7302,374 +7275,4 @@ rescued and restored to his home. What boy wants more?
THE R.T.S., 4, BOUVERIE STREET, LONDON, E.C. 4.
-
-
-
-*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK TREASURE OF KINGS ***
-
-
-
-
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+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 39399 ***
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- TREASURE OF KINGS
-
-
-
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with almost
-no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it
-under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this
-eBook or online at http://www.gutenberg.org/license.
-
-
-Title: Treasure of Kings
- Being the Story of the Discovery of the "Big Fish," or the Quest
- of the Greater Treasure of the Incas of Peru.
-
-Author: Charles Gilson
-
-Release Date: April 07, 2012 [EBook #39399]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK TREASURE OF KINGS ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Al Haines.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: Cover art]
-
-
-
-[Illustration: "EVERYWHERE WAS GOLD, STACKED UPON THE FLOOR, PILED
-AGAINST THE WALLS." See page 208.]
-
-
-
-
- TREASURE OF KINGS
-
- Being the Story of the Discovery of
- the "Big Fish," or the Quest of the
- Greater Treasure of the Incas of Peru.
-
-
-
- By
-
- MAJOR CHARLES GILSON
-
- _Author of "The Realm of the Wizard King," "The Fire Gods,"_
- _"In the Power of the Pygmies," etc._
-
-
-
-
- With Frontispiece in Colour and Eight Full-page
- Illustrations by R. CATON WOODVILLE, R.I.
-
-
-
-
- LONDON
- "THE BOY'S OWN PAPER" OFFICE,
- 4, Bouverie Street, E.C. 4
-
-
-
-
- BY THE SAME AUTHOR
-
-The Realm of the Wizard King. A Tale of Prehistoric Monsters.
-The Scarlet Hand. A Tale of a Secret Society.
-Submarine U93. A Tale of the Great War at Sea.
-The Fire Gods. A Tale of the African Forest.
-The Mystery of Ah Jim. A Tale of the Sea.
-On Secret Service. A Spy Story.
-The Lost Empire. A Tale of the Battle of the Nile.
-The Lost Column. A Tale of the Boxer Rebellion.
-The Lost Island. A Tale of the Mysterious East.
-The Sword of Freedom. A Tale of the English Revolution.
-The Spy. A Tale of the Peninsular War.
-The Race Round the World. A Tale of a new Motor Spirit.
-The Pirate Aeroplane. A Tale of Ancient Egypt.
-In the Power of the Pygmies. A Tale of the Congo.
-A Motor Scout in Flanders. A Tale of the Fall of Antwerp.
-Across the Cameroons. A Tale of the Great War in West Africa.
-Held by Chinese Brigands. A Tale of China.
-The Society of the Tortoise Mask. A Tale of a Secret Society.
-The Captives of the Caves. A Tale of Savage Men.
-The Sword of Deliverance. A Tale of the Balkan War.
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
- CHAPTER I--JOHN BANNISTER
- CHAPTER II--THE COMING OF AMOS
- CHAPTER III--THE MAP
- CHAPTER IV--KIDNAPPED
- CHAPTER V--I SET FORTH UPON MY VOYAGE
- CHAPTER VI--I AM CONCERNED IN A MUTINY
- CHAPTER VII--AND AM MADE TO PAY FOR IT
- CHAPTER VIII--INTO THE WILDERNESS
- CHAPTER IX--I AM LEFT TO MY DOOM
- CHAPTER X--HOW THE WILD MEN CAME AND LOOKED AT ME
- CHAPTER XI--I BURN MY BOATS
- CHAPTER XII--THE PATH OF THE TIGER
- CHAPTER XIII--THE STORY OF ATUPO
- CHAPTER XIV--THE GLADE OF SILENT DEATH
- CHAPTER XV--HOW I BEHELD A MIRACLE
- CHAPTER XVI--I FIND THE "BIG FISH"
- CHAPTER XVII--THE GREATER TREASURE
- CHAPTER XVIII--I FALL IN WITH A FRIEND
- CHAPTER XIX--THE BOATSWAIN TELLS HIS STORY
- CHAPTER XX--I RETURN TO THE SOLDIER'S TOMB
- CHAPTER XXI--I AM MADE A GHOST, AND THEN A FOOL
- CHAPTER XXII--MR. FORSYTH AND I BECOME BETTER ACQUAINTED
- CHAPTER XXIII--HOW AMOS GAINED POSSESSION OF THE MAP
- CHAPTER XXIV--HOW AMOS WAS POSSESSED OF SEVEN DEVILS
- CHAPTER XXV--HOW THE SHEEP WERE SHORN
- CHAPTER XXVI--A NIGHT OF TERROR
- CHAPTER XXVII--HOW AMOS MET HIS END
- CHAPTER XXVIII--CONCLUSION
-
-
-
-
- LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
-
- BY R. CATON WOODVILLE, R.I.
-
-"Everywhere was gold, stacked upon the floor, piled against the walls" .
-. . . . . . . . Frontispiece
-
-"'Because,' he answered slowly, 'because you are a caveman, too'"
-
-"He rolled back the boulder as though it were nothing" (missing from
-book)
-
-"And bound I was, then and there, to a stout palm tree, a little
-distance from the margin of the forest"
-
-"They came closer than ever, to within an arm's length of me"
-
-"I had reached the conclusion of my journey. The Big Fish was there"
-
-"'Hands up!' he cried. 'Hands up, you brown barbarian, or else I shoot
-you dead!'"
-
-"'Lie there and rot!' he shouted. And they below heard his footsteps as
-he danced upon the stone"
-
-"And so we came to the seashore, and saw the sun go down upon the wide
-and golden Pacific Ocean"
-
-
-
-
- INSCRIBED TO
-
- BROMLEY DAVID SMITH-DORRIEN
-
-
-
-
- TREASURE OF KINGS
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I--JOHN BANNISTER
-
-
-I shall never forget the day on which I first set eyes upon John
-Bannister. I was then a boy--sixteen years of age, if I remember
-rightly--and I stood before him, tongue-tied by the questions that he
-asked me, wondering how he had come by the great ugly, horrid scar upon
-his face, awed--indeed, I think, a little frightened--by the great
-muscles in his forearms, naked to the elbows, his rough weather-beaten
-face with skin like leather, and above all else by the stature of the
-man.
-
-For he was a giant--a giant such as I had dreamed of when a child. As
-some such figure had I pictured Giant Despair, when my mother had read
-to me from _Pilgrim's Progress_: "And Giant Despair was in one of his
-fits again." I had pictured Strength and Madness let loose amid a
-thunderstorm of wrath. And when I first looked upon him who was to be
-my champion and my comrade. I forgot his soft, kindly words and
-pleasing smile, and could only think how terrible he must be in anger.
-
-There is a strip of beach upon the Sussex coast, so many miles from
-nowhere, where the sand-snipe gather and seldom a human being may be
-seen. There, as a lad, I would love to roam, with no certain object in
-view, but just to find what I could, to observe what chanced to come my
-way, and, when wearied of wandering, to sit upon the shingle over and
-above those plains of wet, grey sand and think of all manner of things
-as my boyish fancy pleased.
-
-I was seated thus one April morning, far from home, and wondering how my
-tired legs would carry me back to dinner, when my attention was
-attracted to two strange birds, of a kind that I could not remember to
-have seen before. The sea was calm as glass, the sun hot as August.
-They were large birds, and were engaged--so far as I could see at a
-distance of more than a hundred yards--in dragging from the shallow
-water what might have been the carcass of a fish.
-
-I watched them, greatly interested, forgetful even of my appetite,
-possibly for five minutes; and then there came a heavy step upon the
-shingle at my back.
-
-I turned quickly, to behold the figure of John Bannister. Like some
-great beast of prey, he had broken his way quite noiselessly through a
-thick brake of that shrub which, I think, is called
-sea-buckthorn--though I never knew one tree from another. And he stood
-regarding me, with his hands upon his hips.
-
-I got to my feet, thinking that such a man might be up to no good in so
-lonesome a place, and I might find it advisable to take to my heels.
-But, quite suddenly, he laughed; and at the sound of his laughter I knew
-at once that I, for sure, had nothing to fear. Since that memorable day
-I have learned in the world many true and singular things, but none
-truer than that you may know always an honest man by his laughter and
-the shake of his hand.
-
-"I startled you," he said.
-
-"I wondered who it was," I faltered sheepishly.
-
-"And you are still none the wiser," he answered.
-
-And at that, he seated himself by my side.
-
-He told me that the strange birds were hooded crows. He told me also
-how they bullied the rooks, robbed the gulls; how they were cleverer and
-more evil than any other bird, foes of all and feared by all--thieves
-and murderers. He talked like a book; he had the science of the matter
-at his finger-tips, and he could, at the same time, paint pictures, as
-it were, with words. With him the hooded crow was in a single sentence
-_corvus cornix_, and the "highwayman of the air."
-
-And as he talked to me, I wondered the more concerning him, and thought
-the less of the hooded crows. Who was he, whence had he come, and what
-was he doing there in such a lonely place, in his shirt sleeves, in the
-warm April sunshine? These were questions that he himself was to
-answer. I cannot say why he took me straightway into his confidence,
-and afterwards into the very chamber of his heart--but he did; else I
-would now have naught to write about.
-
-Let me confess that I have taken the whole tenour of my life from this
-man's greatness. I have tried my best, all my long years, to bear in
-mind his strength, his wisdom, and his courage, that I might walk humbly
-in the shadow of a glorious example. But, more than all besides, I know
-that I owe to him the restless spirit of adventure, the love of action,
-the joy of wandering, that has led me so often to strange and distant
-places where I have found myself in even stranger company.
-
-I cannot tell you of all he said to me upon the morning of our meeting.
-He spoke of many things, of the world he had seen, the dangers he had
-faced, the people he had known. As I had no longer feared him after his
-first word and his open, kindly smile, so after five minutes of his
-talking did I feel that I had known him all my life. For his words were
-magic. Wondrous pictures framed themselves before my eyes upon the calm
-surface of that English sea--pictures of wild men, of treeless deserts,
-of savage forests and inhospitable hills; and I longed then to follow in
-the footsteps of this heroic man, whose hairy arms were those of Vulcan
-and whose voice was soft as that of the mother whom I loved.
-
-I forgot my dinner. I hungered only for adventure. I sat upon the
-shingle, wondering what lay beyond the vague horizon where grey sea and
-sky were blended, where I could just discern the smoke of a solitary and
-distant steamer, the only sign of life or movement upon that desert
-sea--for we in the West of Sussex lay well away from the track of the
-Channel shipping.
-
-On a sudden, I asked him the time; and with a glance at the sun he told
-me it was two. At that, I jumped to my feet.
-
-"But I am late!" I cried.
-
-"Not for the first time," said he. "I can remember my own boyhood."
-
-"My dinner was at one."
-
-"Then you dine with me; for I eat when I have time and appetite, sleep
-when I will, and live as Nature meant me to."
-
-He led me back from the beach across some sand-hills to a place where
-the gorse was like a wave of gold. And there was a wooden hut--or,
-rather, shed, for it was walled upon three sides only. And within were
-all sorts of things: a sleeping-bag made of the skins of some small
-animal with fur soft as a mole's, which he said had come from the south
-of Africa; an iron cooking-pot, an evil-looking affair which he had
-brought with him from the Amazon; skins painted by North American
-savages; mocassins; a Malay sarong, a kind of towel worn around the
-waist; and more curiosities and rude, primitive utensils than I could
-well describe within the space of a page of the smallest print.
-
-And yet, I dined like a prince: a soup of fish, plover roasted upon a
-spit, and in place of bread, flour and water fried in a pan after the
-custom of the Afghans. It may have been the novelty of it all, or the
-fact that by then I was well-nigh famished, but I never ate more
-heartily, and I have never forgotten that meal, though I have had many
-such since then.
-
-In answer to my questions, he told me more concerning himself. Though
-he had lived a life of adventure, exploring wild countries, sleeping
-beneath the stars, in constant peril of his life from savage beasts and
-scarce less savage men, I could not of myself comprehend why he should
-in peaceful England bury himself miles from the abodes of his fellow
-human beings. For I write--you must remember--of many years ago, of the
-mid-Victorian time, as it is called--and good days they were, as we know
-full well who have lived to see these unsettled, troublous days. To-day,
-from the spot where John Bannister and I first met, you may catch a
-glimpse to the west along the coast of the red roofs of bungalows, where
-week-end visitors may come from London to set up bathing-huts upon the
-beach, whilst from the east, perhaps, a pair of lovers may wander from
-across the golf course at Littlehampton in search of desirable
-seclusion. For that stretch of coast is desolate still; but in those
-days it was a kind of No Man's Land, with no sign of life but the gulls
-and the sand-snipe, the smoke from John Bannister's camp-fire, and the
-hooded crows.
-
-Well, the truth was, he who feared neither beast of prey nor painted
-cannibal was afraid of civilised men. He went once a week to the little
-inland village a few miles distant to purchase groceries and stores.
-There--as I found out afterwards--they thought him a madman, though he
-was always courteous in his manner and paid without question for what he
-bought. He had few words for any man, and none ever for a woman.
-Later, when my mother came to learn of my new-found friend who lived
-alone among the sand-hills, she was anxious to see him, more for my own
-welfare than from curiosity; but he told me flatly that he had never
-known any civilised woman save his own mother, who had died when he was
-young, and he would rather face a wounded lion than pretend to talk to
-one.
-
-"For it comes to this," said he; "I have gone back, as it were, upon the
-centuries; I have learned to live as men lived in ancient times. Though
-I have read much and thought more, and have some claim, I suppose, to be
-called a scholar, in many ways I am no better than a cave-man. I have
-forgotten all the niceties of culture. I have neither small-talk nor
-table manners. So I prefer to live as I do, in my own way; and I offer
-no welcome to visitors. The farmer who owns this land is glad enough of
-the little I pay him in the way of rent; but, beyond that and my weekly
-shopping, I seek no intercourse with strangers. I am content to be
-alone."
-
-I asked if he were not often lonely, and he laughed.
-
-"Even here," said he, "in Sussex, Nature is a living force. The sea
-changes almost hour by hour. Birds come and visit me. Even the rabbits
-in the brake have already learned to know me. They all seem to
-know--these little, wild things--that I am one of them, and soon cease
-to fear me. They are my companions and my friends, and I have also
-books and memory. And I have health and air, the smell of the salt sea
-and the seaweed, and the sunrise to awaken me before your street-bred
-friends are stirring. The wind, the rain, and the sun--I welcome each
-as it comes. Did I want other comrades, I should go and seek them; but
-I prefer to live like this."
-
-"And yet you talked willingly to me?" I asked.
-
-"Because," he answered slowly--and his words came to me as a
-surprise--"because you are a cave-man, too."
-
-[Illustration: "'BECAUSE,' HE ANSWERED SLOWLY, 'BECAUSE YOU ARE A
-CAVE-MAN, TOO.'"]
-
-"I!" I exclaimed.
-
-"Every boy," said he, "every healthy, happy boy. It was the savage in
-you--though you may not realise it--that brought you out here alone,
-that took you right away from red bricks and shops and dinner."
-
-I cannot say whether I have conveyed to the reader in the space of this
-short chapter a true conception of the character of John Bannister, as
-he was when I knew him first. Of his personal appearance I have yet to
-write; and if it be a simple matter to describe that which is outwardly
-apparent, it is by no means easy either to fathom or to portray a man's
-soul and mind.
-
-Do not imagine that I myself knew aught of him until after we had
-sojourned together for months, faced the same dangers, stood side by
-side throughout the great adventure of which I have to tell. I knew
-from the first that he was wise and generous and kind: I could see with
-my eyes that he was strong, and his talk charmed the imagination of a
-dreamy, active boy. In spite of all he knew, of the experiences he had
-had in all parts of the world, he was one of the simplest men that ever
-lived. And there was something in him of the poet. I do not mean that
-he ever tried to set down his thoughts in verse, but that he lived in
-love with all things beautiful. I have seen him stand stock-still like
-one transfigured, with eyes illumined, gazing in wonderment upon a
-purple sunset upon the snow-capped crestline of the distant Andes--and
-that at a moment when his own life, as well as mine, was not worth a
-full day's purchase.
-
-Judge all men by their deeds and not their words. Hear this history to
-the end, and see what like of man was he whose charm and peril led me
-forth from green and sleepy Sussex to adventure in the darkness of those
-tropic forests that shut out the source of the great River of Mystery,
-where there are poison, black ignorance, and fell disease, and a man may
-no more count the dangers that encompass him than the myriads of
-stinging insects that drone about his ears.
-
-And one thing more: my own life has not been lived without event. It
-has been my fate to tell a score of times of the enterprise of others;
-but of all men of action I have ever known, read or written of, I rank
-John Bannister as first. Perhaps that may be because I can now seat
-myself of a winter's evening before my study fire and see him in my
-fancy as he was in all his strength and manhood, pass through again the
-dangers and the hardships, and live once more the glorious days that it
-was my privilege to pass with him, and remember that, had it not been
-for him, I might have lived all my life in Sussex and seen nothing of
-the world. But how can I set down the debt I owe him? For I owe him
-life itself.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II--THE COMING OF AMOS
-
-
-After that morning, throughout the summer months when I was at school,
-there was seldom a Saturday or a Wednesday afternoon when I was not to
-be seen hastening eastward along the beach to see John Bannister and to
-listen to his talk.
-
-During those days I learned much of him, of his travels and adventures;
-but there were certain matters upon which he would never speak in any
-detail. He would never tell me, for instance, the full story of how he
-had come by the great scar upon his face--a disfigurement so pronounced
-as to be at once pathetic and repulsive, which had aroused my boyish
-curiosity from the first. Had it not been for that scar, Bannister
-would have been a handsome man, as indeed he was when the left side of
-his face was to be seen in profile. He had deep-set steel-grey eyes
-that looked clean through you, and the forehead of a thinker; his hair,
-in those bygone days, was black, no more than touched with white upon
-the temples and about the ears, and his moustache the longest I have
-ever seen. Though there was never a man, I should suppose, who had less
-of vanity in his composition, I think he grew it thus to hide in part
-the record of the terrible wound that had extended from his right ear to
-the corner of his mouth--a scar that was always rough and white, though
-his face was burnt by the sun to the colour of tan.
-
-"I came by that," he once said to me in answer to my question, "in what
-might be called an honest cause. A thousand miles from nowhere, where
-there is neither Law nor Right nor Wrong nor Justice, one--who may or
-may not have learned the Lord's Prayer at his mother's knee--would have
-put to death some score of helpless human creatures, slaughtered them
-like sheep."
-
-"Why?" I asked.
-
-"Why," said he, "there are but few motives that sway the evil that lies
-in all men, and of these greed of gold is first. And this man of whom I
-speak was a great force of evil, and is so still, for I never doubt that
-he is yet alive. For gold he would have murdered those who had never
-wronged him, who had indeed shown him nothing but kindness and
-hospitality. Fate decreed that this man's path and mine should cross;
-and because I stood between him and an ill-gotten fortune, I was struck
-a coward's blow. You would never guess the weapon, Dick, that gave me
-my beauty mark for life?"
-
-He paused as if waiting for an answer, though I had none to give.
-
-"Well, then," he continued, "it was a sceptre--the golden sceptre of a
-bygone dynasty of monarchs, ended four hundred years ago--kings of no
-naked savages, but emperors, rulers over an ancient civilisation that
-has crumbled to the dust, of a people who were cultured in their own
-way, industrious and great. It is something, we may imagine, to carry
-through life the scar that was given by the symbol of such authority and
-power."
-
-"And where was this?" I asked.
-
-"Where the mountains overtop the clouds," he answered, "where one may
-see the last of the sunset beyond the valleys of Peru, and the dawn
-rises from the dark forests of the Upper Amazon, in which, Dick, there
-are secrets that no man yet has ever lived to learn."
-
-"It was the sceptre of the _Incas_!" I exclaimed; for I had read as a
-holiday task _The Conquest of Peru_.
-
-"The very same that was hidden from Pizarro," he made answer, "together
-with all the gold of Huaraz and Cuzco."
-
-"And who was the man who struck you?" I demanded.
-
-"When I tell you that his name is Amos Baverstock," said Bannister,
-"that he hails from the same west-country town as I do--and that is
-Tiverton in Devon--and that that man to this day counts himself as my
-greatest enemy, I tell you more than I should."
-
-And though I tried my utmost, I could get from him nothing more. A
-reticent man by nature, he was yet from the beginning prodigal of speech
-with me. With the exception of this great Peruvian adventure--which, I
-could tell from his demeanour, he ranked as the one outstanding episode
-in all his life--he would answer all my questions. I thought this
-strange; and there was an even stranger thing about him--and I was soon
-to learn that the two were linked together. Though he had to some
-extent confided in myself, he forbade me to speak of him to my
-schoolfellows. He told me he was well content to have found a friend in
-a boy after his own heart, much the same sort of lad as the John
-Bannister who had bathed in the Exe, and, barefooted, raced other boys
-upon the river bank; but, were the knowledge of his presence upon that
-lonely shore to become the common property of a clamouring, crowded
-school, his seclusion would be lost, his peace of mind disturbed, his
-haven of rest and solitude converted into a kind of monkey-house--for
-that is what he called it.
-
-I gave my word, and kept it; and yet, I could not but think of things.
-And it occurred to me that John Bannister lived as he did for other
-reasons than solely to enjoy the fruits of solitude. Not that he
-himself had ever told me anything that was not the truth: he had,
-indeed, sojourned for so many years in the wild places of the world that
-he had forgotten much concerning the ways of civilisation and could be
-shy--as he was before my mother--like an overgrown yokel who stands, cap
-in hand, first on one foot and then upon the other. He wanted more than
-solitude, he wanted secrecy. For more reasons than one I should have
-guessed it; but I was but a boy, and looked not for motives or for
-causes. I was content to take the man as he was: a hero in my eyes, who
-had risked his life a thousand times, who had done great deeds and seen
-strange sights and wondrous places that I had only dreamed of.
-
-And now I come, at last, to the beginning of my story: a blazing morning
-in the August sun, when our friendship was four months old, when the
-wheels of chance began to move, and those forces were set in motion that
-whirled me away, when still a schoolboy, from sunny, sleepy Sussex, to
-be a wayfarer with grim Death himself in dark, tropic lowlands, or amid
-the very clouds.
-
-It being holiday-time, and I having no thought in my head than what
-pertained to my hero, I set forth earlier than usual, and took the
-straight cut across the fields, instead of following the shore. This
-led me to a group of sand-hills, not half a mile from where Bannister
-had pitched his camp; and amid these I stumbled upon three men, seated,
-heads together, in the shadow of a gorse bush.
-
-I cannot for the life of me explain why I did it--never before or since
-have I played the eavesdropper of my own free choice--but the moment I
-set eyes upon a hunchback, with a clean, wrinkled face and two small
-eyes as black as boot-buttons, down I dropped on all fours, like a man
-shot, and crept silently and swiftly to the cover of a clump of
-reed-like grass.
-
-I think the sight of the man frightened me. He had the cruellest face I
-had ever seen; and there was cunning in it, too. Also, there was a
-suggestion of merriness, of latent mirth, about him--patent in the
-shining, bead-like eyes--that caused me instantly to shudder. Have you
-ever considered the eyes of a half-grown pig, as something apart from
-the glistening, inquisitive, joyful, and highly entertaining quadruped
-that a young pig happens invariably to be? They are wicked and gleeful,
-defiant and pitiless, those little, twinkling eyes. They are more
-fearful than those of a snake, because they are more alive and equally
-soulless. Well, then, such eyes had this man: eyes at once merciless
-and mischievous. And so it was, I must suppose, that I hid myself amid
-the grass.
-
-And then one of those who were with him used these very words; and when
-I heard them, it was as if I was deprived of the power to breathe.
-
-"I wish I were a hundred miles from here, I can tell you that. He's not
-likely to forget that it was you, Amos Baverstock, that trapped him and
-left him for dead, and that it was I who struck the blow."
-
-I lay in the long grass, close as a hare, my heart pumping within me
-like an engine. I had heard and seen enough already to know that my
-friend was in danger. I had a sense of some calamity impending, but no
-time just then to guess at the meaning of it all; for I must listen to
-the quiet, cold voice of Amos Baverstock--the hunchback with the pig
-eyes and a long, thin nose like a weasel.
-
-"You were right enough in London," said he, "when I told you I had
-tracked him down, as I swore to you both I should."
-
-"Maybe," said the other, "I forgot, for the moment, what he was. I
-would sooner face a tiger."
-
-He was a rough-looking man, with a red, untidy beard, and there was
-something about him of the sailor.
-
-"Tut, man," said Amos; "you make a mountain of a molehill! I do not
-propose to set about this matter like a fool. He's lying yonder like an
-old dog-fox in his earth, and we'll send a terrier in to fetch him out."
-
-"Me!" cried the red-bearded man, horror-stricken at the thought.
-
-But, before Amos Baverstock could answer, the third man spoke for the
-first time; and my attention being thereby attracted towards him, I was
-at once astonished at everything about his individuality: his voice, his
-personal appearance, the words he used, his very attitude of
-carelessness and ease.
-
-"_Cave tibi cane muto._"
-
-That is what he drawled, and though I was then a schoolboy who had
-struggled through the dull prose of Csar to the loftier realms of
-Virgil, I must confess that fear had so deprived me of my wits that I
-understood no word, except the first.
-
-The speaker lay flat upon his back, with his hands folded behind his
-head, and his face exposed to the sun--like a tripper who would go back
-to London nicely tanned. I observed that he had taken off his coat and
-rolled it into a pillow, and that the shirt he wore was of the softest,
-flimsiest silk.
-
-He was dressed like a fop in the height of the fashion of that day,
-wearing a white tie, with a great gold pin in it, a well-curled
-moustache and those short side-whiskers which were then the vogue. He
-had light-blue eyes and fair, curly hair, and had it not been for the
-side-whiskers, would have looked much younger than he was. Everything
-about him suggested that he was--or should have been--a gentleman of
-means and leisure.
-
-"_Cave tibi cane muto_," he repeated, more slowly than before. And this
-time I had the sense to understand it: "Beware of the silent dog."
-
-"Just so," said Amos. "We will tempt the dog with a bone. Trust to me,
-you dolt," he cried, turning sharp upon the man with the red beard, who
-was sitting with a scowl upon his face and his legs crossed like a
-Hindoo. "Ask yourself, have I ever yet sent you on a wild-goose chase?
-Am I one to take unnecessary risks?"
-
-"Then, shoot him, take what we want, and have done with it," growled the
-other.
-
-"Friend Joshua," said Amos, "we are some eight thousand miles from
-Chimborazo, and probably not two miles from a police-station. We want
-no questions asked, no hue and cry. That would ruin everything."
-
-"There's something in that," admitted the red-bearded man, whose name
-was evidently Joshua.
-
-Amos chuckled.
-
-"This is no baby's game," said he. "Bannister fears neither man, wild
-beast nor devil. No more am I afraid of him. I have tricked him once,
-and I can trick him again. Were I to get within arm's length of him, it
-is true, as like as not he would wring my precious neck; and the same
-applies to you, friend Joshua; for he will not have forgotten that it
-was you who struck him down at the end of the passage that leads from
-Cahazaxa's Tomb. But Mr. Forsyth here, he has never set eyes on in all
-his life."
-
-"In other words," cut in the young man with the side-whiskers, still
-stretched at full length upon the ground--"in other words, I myself am
-the bone to be presented to the silent, dangerous dog. A pleasant
-prospect--but I acquiesce. Having gone into this business, I am
-prepared to take what comes."
-
-Though he had spoken with a shade more animation than before, he had
-neither moved an inch nor troubled even to open his eyes. A calm
-customer, in very truth, was Mr. Gilbert Forsyth, as I was afterwards to
-learn, something to my cost--a man with more manners than morals, who
-was never afraid and never surprised, and who smelt of the vile pomade
-with which he plastered his moustache.
-
-"Sir," said Baverstock, "you are the very man for me. I promise you
-that, if we pull this business through, we shall wade knee-deep in
-gold."
-
-"I want gold to spend and not to paddle in," said Forsyth. "Give
-orders, Mr. Wisdom; I am here solely to obey."
-
-Amos produced a long and very black cigar, bit the end off and began to
-chew, making his face all wrinkles. I thought that he would light it,
-but he did no such thing. He would look at it with one eye half closed,
-use it much as a musical director wields his baton to punctuate his
-words, and then chew again, until the brown juice was streaming from the
-corners of his mouth.
-
-"Go to John Bannister this morning," said he. "Go to him now, if you
-like. He doesn't know you from Adam. Pretend you're just an idle,
-inquisitive holiday-maker who has dropped across him by chance; get into
-conversation with him, ask him foolish questions; and then, without
-advertisement, just--drop that across his head."
-
-As he said this, he threw across to Mr. Forsyth some kind of weighted
-implement, such as a house-breaker might have in his possession. It was
-about the size and shape of a belaying-pin, and attached to the thin end
-was a leather strap to secure it to the wrist.
-
-"Sounds simple enough," drawled Forsyth. "However, for the sake of
-argument, suppose I fail. I understand from what you both tell me, he
-has the strength of two ordinary men."
-
-"Six," growled the red-bearded fellow, who seemed to me to be a
-discontented rascal.
-
-"Strike hard and without warning," said Amos. "In case of mishap, Trust
-and I will be at hand to help you."
-
-I thought, at the time, that Trust was another man--a fourth party in
-this vile conspiracy; for I did not then know that the name of the
-red-bearded man--as great a rogue as Amos himself, if not a tenth as
-clever--was Joshua Trust, who had served before the mast in the Royal
-Navy, to be tried by court-martial for a felony and afterwards
-discharged.
-
-Mr. Forsyth, in the meantime, picked up the bludgeon and toyed with it
-in his hand.
-
-"A useful tool," he observed. "Convenient to carry, and--I should
-say--effective to use. To be candid, I'm a little afraid of it. Though
-I have not the pleasure of knowing Mr. Bannister, I should be sorry--for
-my own sake as well as his--to deprive him of his life."
-
-"You need not be afraid of that," laughed Amos. "Had his skull been
-thinner than a bullock's, it would have been broken years ago. We want
-him senseless, when we can bind him hand and foot, and help ourselves to
-the very thing we want. He has got it somewhere, sure enough; and had I
-to search the world for it, I would find it in the end."
-
-And then he clapped his hands and rubbed them together; and I have never
-seen in all my life an expression of such malignant glee.
-
-"Once it is ours," he cried, "across the Western Ocean! Nothing stands
-between us three and fortune. Gold!" he almost shrieked, "I tell you,
-it is there knee-deep in a cavern as large as a cathedral: golden
-ornaments and vessels, bars and rings and bracelets. You shall have
-your fair share, Mr. Forsyth; for all's square between us, and, I
-confess, we could not very well move in this business without you.
-Joshua here will tell you, though I may be an ill man to cross in more
-ways than one, I never yet went back upon my friends. You've come into
-this affair to help us, and I'll not forget it."
-
-"Dear me, no!" drawled Forsyth. "I join you for my own ultimate gain. I
-recognise that I am blessed with as little conscience as yourselves, and
-see profit in the matter. I know nothing of this fellow Bannister, and
-care still less. Besides, I have, I suppose, a natural taste for such
-an adventure as you propose. I am heartily tired of this dreary
-country, with its railways, gas-pipes and antimacassars. I would, in a
-word, stake all I have upon an only venture, to die soon or rich--I care
-little which it be."
-
-And thereupon he yawned, placing the tips of his fingers before his
-mouth in a manner exceedingly affected.
-
-They talked then for a while of other things; and all the time I was
-seeking an opportunity to escape, to hasten to my friend to warn him of
-his danger; and yet, though I was well screened from view of Amos
-Baverstock and his companions, it was some time before I could find the
-courage to bestir myself. I feared that they might hear me; and the
-very sight of Amos had instilled within me a sense of dread which
-returns to me even to this day whenever I think of the man.
-
-I lay in the long grass like a wounded bird: it was as if I had not the
-power to move. My thoughts were running riot--Bannister to be
-shamefully assaulted, something stolen, and I kept repeating to myself
-the magic phrase, "Gold knee-deep in a cavern large as a cathedral."
-
-There was something about all this of the kind of adventures I had often
-imagined; I had thought that I would revel in the prospect of such
-dangerous escapades; and here was I, scared out of my wits, too
-terrified to move, my heart beating violently, as if I were out of
-breath from running.
-
-Indeed, it was only the thought that Amos Baverstock or one of the
-others would get up to go, and then discover me, that made me shift from
-where I had been hiding; and no sooner was I out of earshot than I set
-off running as if pursued by fifty fiends. I never ran so fast before
-or since. Over the sand-hills, stumbling amidst the shingle, breaking
-my way through gorse and hedgerow, I came at last to John Bannister's
-cabin, lying in a hollow by the sea.
-
-"Mr. Bannister!" I cried. "Mr. Bannister! Something dreadful is about
-to happen!"
-
-I was, I suppose, half blinded by my running; or I had not the sense to
-look about me. I stood before the opening of the cabin, wringing my
-hands and crying out like a fool:
-
-"Mr. Bannister! Mr. Bannister! Come quickly!"
-
-I had for answer neither the sight of his great strength nor the
-familiar sound of his voice, but just the wash of the sea at high tide
-beyond the ridge where the buckthorn grew, a great rhythmical, breathing
-sound, as if a giant were slumbering.
-
-I was more afraid than ever when I realised that he was not there, and
-it might take time to find him; for, befogged as my wits were, I knew
-well enough that the occasion was one that would admit of no delay.
-
-I ran straight to the beach, and looked to the eastward and westward.
-For a moment I had hoped to find him, for he would sometimes bathe in
-the sea at that hour of the day; but a glance or so was enough to tell
-me I should not find him there.
-
-I wandered for a while somewhat aimlessly amongst the shrubberies that
-crowned the margin of the sand-hills and the shingle, and then returned
-to the cabin. As things happened, I must have done so in the nick of
-time; for, when I had searched in odd corners, as if looking for a
-hidden thimble, instead of a man of six-foot-four, I went to the
-threshold, and looking out beyond the gorse, beheld the tall figure of
-Mr. Gilbert Forsyth, strolling towards me, swinging in his hand his
-silver-mounted Malacca cane.
-
-I did not know whether or not he had seen me. It was sufficient for the
-moment that I had no way of escape. The cabin--as I have said--had been
-built in a hollow, and to cross the ridge that encompassed it would
-bring me into full view of Mr. Forsyth.
-
-On the other hand, I could think of nowhere to hide. I stood for a
-moment irresolute, with clenched fists, cudgelling my brains and wishing
-that I was anywhere else upon the wide face of the earth. Then I heard
-a footstep on the shingle without, and as I drew back into the shade of
-the hut, I saw the man's shadow cast upon the threshold.
-
-I looked about me in a wild and silly way, and then without a thought
-dived under the great fur sleeping-bag that lay ruffled against the
-wall.
-
-Forsyth entered. I could not see him, but I could hear him moving to
-and fro, and once he even trod upon my foot. Then I heard his voice,
-raised in a kind of drawling sing-song, as if he called to someone at a
-distance.
-
-"Come on," he sang. "The way's clear. The dog's out of his kennel."
-
-A full minute may have elapsed. On such occasions, time counts for next
-to nothing. But, presently, I was aware that, besides myself, there
-were three persons in that small place, and one of them was Amos
-Baverstock.
-
-"Here's our chance," said he. "Joshua, keep watch from without. He may
-not be far away, and it would be a rough-and-tumble business if he
-caught us in the act. And now, sir, help me to find the map. The thing
-must be somewhere in this hut, unless he carries it always on his
-person."
-
-And at those words was I made to realise that, as sure as I had been
-christened Richard Treadgold in the little church at Middleton, I had
-done a foolish thing and was like to be made to pay for it.
-
-For Amos Baverstock was come to search for a certain map, the
-significance of which I then, of course, knew nothing. Whether or not
-he would find this map was a question of itself; but there was no sort
-of a question within the bounds of probability that he could look for
-long and fail to discover _me_. And then, in truth, the fat would be in
-the fire.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III--THE MAP
-
-
-I expected every moment to be caught, to be jerked forth from my
-hiding-place like a landed fish. In the course of their searching they
-must sooner or later move the sleeping-bag, and I would be exposed.
-
-It occurs to me that fear must be one of the strangest of emotions; for
-I can honestly say that, now that I was in this hopeless and perilous
-predicament, I was no longer afraid. Certain that I must fall into the
-hands of Amos Baverstock, equally uncertain of what then would be my
-lot, I was resigned to my fate; I was long past apprehension. I still
-thought of Bannister, and wondered concerning the map for which Amos and
-Forsyth were looking, but for myself I now cared not a snap of the
-fingers what became of me; and this attitude of mind I preserved
-throughout the next eventful moments, else I had never acted as I did.
-
-For Amos never found me on his own account. No doubt he would have done
-so in a very little time, had not Forsyth, almost at once, struck upon
-the very map for which the two were searching.
-
-"What's this!" exclaimed Forsyth. "It seems the thing we want."
-
-"Where?" cried Amos, who, I judged, snatched it from the other's hand.
-
-"That's it!" he almost shouted. "The parchment map copied from that
-made ages ago by Villac Umu, the High Priest of the Incas of Peru.
-Bannister has translated it, and marked the route in red ink. It's all
-plain as daylight."
-
-I could tell by the sound of his voice that he was wildly excited. He
-spread out the map upon the little table in the centre of the cabin,
-and, feeling secure since Joshua Trust was keeping watch, spoke
-breathlessly to Forsyth, relating the matter in such detail that then
-and there I was made a party to the whole vile conspiracy--or as much of
-it as there was any need for me to know.
-
-"When the ancient Peruvians fled before the advance of the Pizarros," he
-explained, "they carried their treasures across the mountains. These
-they hid in two places: one, which is called the Little Fish, consists
-of all manner of earthenware utensils; the other--the Big Fish--is
-composed of golden ornaments and ingots. I have heard it said by some
-that the Little Fish is in Bolivia; by others, as far north as the
-Amazonas Territory--the truth being that no man living knows. It was
-John Bannister himself who discovered the secret of the Greater
-Treasure, or the Big Fish, as the natives call it. He lived for years
-among the wild savages who inhabit the forests about the eastern
-foothills of the Andes; and there, I believe, he came across some
-priestly descendants of those who had served the Incas. It was high up
-among the Conomamas, to the south of the great Region of the Woods, that
-I first fell in with Bannister. I was there prospecting for gold, but I
-had never dreamed of such a gold-mine as the Greater Treasure of the
-Incas. Bannister never told me that he had learned the secret from the
-priests, but I made so free as to inspect the map, when I believed him
-to be sleeping."
-
-"But is this safe?" asked Forsyth. "Supposing Bannister returns?"
-
-"There is nothing to fear," said Amos. "Time's our own. Joshua is on
-watch upon the sand-hills, and can see him coming half a mile away. We
-are as safe here as anywhere."
-
-"Well, then, go on with your story," said the other. "You saw the map
-yourself?"
-
-"No more than glanced at the thing before he had me by the throat and
-well-nigh strangled me," cried Amos. "After that we parted company,
-though I followed his track, and three times tried to kill him."
-
-I heard Mr. Forsyth laugh in his silly, affected way.
-
-"You do not mince your words," said he. "And I think I like you for it
-all the better. So you tried to murder him, and failed?"
-
-"I did not say 'murder,'" grumbled Amos. "You can do no worse than kill
-in the great Region of the Woods; and whether you slay a jaguar, a
-monkey or man, it is much the same in the end. But to kill a man like
-John Bannister is no such easy matter. He has the ear of a panther and
-the eye of a bird, and he strikes like the coral snake--silent and
-deadly--and for those self-same reasons, the story I am telling you must
-now turn something against myself. For I began the business by hunting
-John Bannister in the Wilderness; but, before the game was a week old,
-it was he that was hunting me, and hunting me, too, day and night, from
-the Putumayo to Bolivia, from the Amazon to the sea.
-
-"I sought safety, at last, in the port of Lima, where I was sheltered by
-some pretence of Law and Justice; and there I joined forces with friend
-Joshua and three other kindred spirits who now lie unburied, their bones
-picked by the vultures.
-
-"Well, then," Amos went on, "we five put our heads together and talked
-the question out. It was plain to us that, since Bannister was such a
-tough nut to crack, it were safer and simpler to go straight to the
-fountain head, as the saying goes, and see what could be done with the
-priests. I guessed from what Bannister had told me, that the Peruvians
-were a weak-kneed, cowardly lot, and thought it would not be difficult
-to frighten them into telling us all they knew. But we had to search
-the woods for months before we found them, living in the midst of black
-ignorance and superstition; and by then--would you believe
-it!--Bannister had got wind of our intentions, and had come back upon
-his own trail, crossing the mountains and descending into the Region of
-the Woods.
-
-"He turned up in time to ruin all our plans. His very presence gave the
-priests the courage they had lacked. There was a stiff fight, and we,
-having the worst of it, were obliged to beat a quick retreat to the
-foothills, though we carried with us a hostage. So far as this man was
-concerned, I took a leaf from the book of the Spaniards. I knew that
-Pizarro had not gained all his knowledge by fair words and promises. I
-tortured the wretch, until he shrieked for mercy and promised that he
-would guide us to Cahazaxa's Tomb, upon the very crestline of the Andes,
-where he swore to us the Greater Treasure was hid. Thither we went, to
-find that the rascal had lied to us. A few golden ornaments there were,
-in a vault cut in the living rock, at the end of a narrow passage, and
-amongst these was the ancient sceptre of the Incas, but the lot were not
-worth the price of our journey. Moreover, John Bannister himself had
-had the audacity to follow us. Night by night, he hovered about our
-bivouac, hoping to deprive us of our hostage. So I set my mind to work
-to finish him; and as fortune had it, the old Tomb was as good as a
-rat-trap. For there was a great boulder at the mouth of the passage,
-which might be rolled down-hill to block the entrance; and even then it
-was as much as Joshua and I could do. We fooled John Bannister to enter
-the Tomb by making a show of moving camp and leaving the Peruvian
-behind. However, when we thought we had caged him, we found to our
-great dismay that we had under-estimated the man's colossal strength;
-for he rolled back the boulder as though it were nothing, and came down
-upon us like a raging lion."
-
- [Illustration: "HE ROLLED BACK THE BOULDER AS IF IT WERE NOTHING
- (missing from book)]
-
-Amos paused a moment in his narrative. Listening eagerly for what was
-yet to come, I heard distinctly the disgusting noise of the chewing of
-one of his long, black cigars.
-
-"We were unprepared for that," he continued. "Indeed, thinking we had
-got him safely caught, to starve to death or shoot himself, we were
-standing before the entrance to the passage without our arms; and before
-we could master him, our party of five had been reduced to two. It was
-Joshua who ended the affair. We had looted the Tomb of the little
-treasure that was there; and Joshua snatched up the golden sceptre of
-the Incas and struck down John Bannister, whom that night we left for
-dead."
-
-"And what of the map?" asked Forsyth.
-
-"We searched him, but never found it. He may have left it with the
-priests, or hidden it somewhere in the forest. Two years later, I again
-journeyed to the Region of the Woods, and found out from the priests
-that Bannister had taken it away with him, after he had returned to the
-Wilderness from Cahazaxa's Tomb."
-
-Amos had calmed down by degrees whilst he related the whole story to Mr.
-Forsyth; but now, quite suddenly, he became as frantically excited as
-before.
-
-"For two years I have hunted for the man," he cried; "and I found him
-here by chance. I want nothing but the map, to know where the Greater
-Treasure has lain hidden for more than four centuries, and to learn how
-to get there. See here!" he shouted; "the place is far to the north,
-near the valley of the Yapura River. The treasure of the Incas was
-carried four hundred miles from Cuzco!"
-
-"What more could we want?" laughed Forsyth.
-
-"Why, nothing else," said Amos. "This map's worth more to us than the
-keys to the vaults of the Bank of England."
-
-I heard a sound like the rustle of paper or parchment, from which I
-judged that Amos flourished the map in his hand. And then it was that I
-did a thing so bold that I have never ceased to be amazed at my own
-audacity.
-
-I had passed from sheer fright to cold deliberation. I cared not two
-pins for my own safety; and though I was still in dread of Amos, I
-thought not once of him, but of John Bannister, whose very shadow I
-almost worshipped. Besides, it must be understood, I was already caught
-like a fly in the web of these adventures. I had listened, as to a
-story, to all that Amos had said, and had tried to figure in my mind's
-eye the Greater Treasure, all glittering in the dust, Cahazaxa's Tomb
-and the dark Region of the Woods. I knew, from what I had heard, that
-if all this wealth belonged to any Christian man, that man was John
-Bannister himself and never Amos Baverstock. Why Bannister was content
-to live as he did, when he could be master of such riches, was a
-circumstance I could not then explain, but which I was wise enough to
-see was no concern of mine. Upon one thing was I well determined, with
-a kind of blind pig-headedness that might have led to my own
-undoing--and that was that Amos should never take away with him the map.
-
-"Gold!" he cried. "Gold! We'll wade knee-deep in it!"
-
-And at that, I sprang from under the sleeping-bag and hurled myself
-straight at him whom I so truly feared.
-
-Both he and Mr. Forsyth were too surprised to do little else but gape,
-which gave me the chance I wanted, to snatch the parchment from his
-hand.
-
-I do not think I could have been much quicker; but he was not to be
-taken unawares. The parchment was old, and must have been half torn
-already, for, when he pulled one way and I the other, the thing came in
-half. And then, even before Baverstock had time to drop an oath, I was
-past the opening of the cabin and racing like a madman through the
-gorse.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV--KIDNAPPED
-
-
-While I went over the sand-hills like a hare, I looked back once and saw
-Amos running, his face all screwed up in fury, and his black eyes as if
-they were on fire. At the door of the cabin stood Mr. Forsyth, shaking
-his Malacca cane at me, but never troubling himself to move so much as
-an inch.
-
-I knew from the first that I had the legs of both of them, that Amos
-could never catch me though I carried a pound weight on either foot. And
-I believe, like a fool, I laughed, thinking myself secure; and when I
-pulled through a hedgerow that cut off the sand-drift from the open
-fields, I found myself face to face with Joshua.
-
-For my own excuse, it may be urged that I had had much to think of in
-the last few minutes; and if I had remembered my friendship with
-Bannister, I had at least forgotten the very existence of Joshua Trust.
-But there he was, as plain as a pike-staff, about thirty yards to the
-front of me.
-
-I pulled up and stared at him; and to my surprise he made no movement,
-until I heard the voice of Amos from behind me.
-
-"Catch the young fiend! Shoot, Joshua, before he gets away!"
-
-And at that I jumped to the right, straight into a rabbit-hole, and
-pitched on to my head.
-
-I lay where I was for a few seconds without moving, for I was a trifle
-shaken by the fall. I could still hear Amos, cursing and swearing
-horribly, and Joshua, beating along the hedge with his stick. For all
-that, neither could I see them nor could they see me; for I was flat
-upon my face in a bunch of thistles, which was near as great a torment
-as a swarm of bees.
-
-I knew from the first that sooner or later I would have to run for it;
-and the only thing that held me back from bolting then and there was the
-certain knowledge that Joshua Trust would shoot. I write with natural
-reluctance whatsoever stands something to the credit of myself; but,
-even at the moment, I thought more of the parchment than of my own skin.
-For I still held the crumpled fragment of the map in my right hand,
-gripping it tightly as if it were a running-cork.
-
-I heard Joshua's voice quite near to me; and knowing that he must find
-me if I remained where I was, I resolved to take my chance. But first,
-in case of possible misfortune, I stuffed my portion of the parchment
-map to the full length of an arm down the very rabbit-hole that had
-tripped me up. And as I did so, a thought flashed through my mind: that
-it was, indeed, a strange circumstance that half the secret of the
-Greater Treasure of the Incas of old Peru, who four hundred years ago
-had foiled the greedy Spaniards, should lie hidden in a rabbit-scrape in
-Sussex.
-
-And then I sprang to my feet and trusted to Providence to help me.
-Joshua was in front of me and threw out his arms to catch me. But I
-dived beneath them, swerved away from him, and ran for my very life.
-
-I heard Amos shouting like a madman. Out of the corner of an eye, I saw
-Joshua Trust fumbling in the region of his belt for the pistol I knew he
-carried.
-
-It was neck or nothing then. I had the sense not to run straight, but
-to dodge here and there like a snipe; and as like as not I owed my life
-to that. For I found out afterwards that Trust was a dead shot, who
-seldom missed his mark.
-
-As I fled, the sharp crack of his pistol broke upon the silence, scaring
-the sea birds from the beach. The bullet sang past my head and clipped
-the lobe of an ear, so that the blood ran down my neck. And thus was I,
-Dick Treadgold, blooded, in both metaphor and fact, to a life of peril
-and adventure.
-
-Whilst Joshua reloaded, I had a chance to double the distance between
-us. I headed inland, away from the shore, and made in the direction of
-the village which was more than a mile away. Straight in front of me
-was a clump of trees, and I hoped to gain this before Trust could fire
-again.
-
-Though the country that lies south of the Downs, from the west of
-Worthing to the ancient city of Chichester, is, in the main, as flat as
-a table, this particular clump of trees was perched upon a rounded
-hillock--though you would call it that nowhere but in western Sussex;
-and therefore, when I gained the trees, I could survey the land on every
-side of me to the extent of a good square mile.
-
-To the south were Joshua and Amos Baverstock, hastening after me, the
-latter some way behind his longer-legged companion. To the north, a
-little to the east, was the sharp belfry of the church in the village I
-would gain: and, to the west, was the lane that leads to Arundel.
-
-I had paused for a moment, not so much for breath as to get my bearings,
-to select the shortest route; and in this brief moment, I became aware
-of a circumstance that caused my heart to leap for joy. For, coming
-toward me, by way of a footpath that led across the fields, carrying
-under an arm a brown paper parcel that I knew to contain his weekly
-stock of provisions, I recognised the great, tall figure of John
-Bannister himself.
-
-All thoughts of my pursuers were instantly banished from my mind. What
-cared I now for Amos Baverstock and all his threats and oaths! I was
-conscious of nothing else but the bald fact that a friend in need was
-close at hand--and one, moreover, who would soon get the best of Master
-Baverstock--and so great was my elation that I took no heed of a
-dog-cart which, at that moment, came rattling round a bend in the road.
-
-I called loudly upon Bannister by name, though he was then scarcely
-within hearing, and dashed down the hill before Joshua could have
-reached the trees from the other side.
-
-The road in that place was bounded by a wooden fence, and balancing
-myself upon the top of this, I shouted frantically to Bannister.
-
-"Come quick!" I cried. "Amos Baverstock is here!"
-
-I was answered, before the last word had left my lips, by a shot fired
-at the back of me. The bullet splintered the woodwork of the very bar
-upon which I was standing; and, startled into action, I jumped into the
-road.
-
-Immediately I had to turn back again no less quickly, to avoid being run
-down by the dog-cart, the driver of which reined up with a jerk.
-
-I looked up at him at once, thinking to recognise some farmer that I
-knew; but, instead of that, I set eyes, to my amazement, upon Mr.
-Gilbert Forsyth, with his side-whiskers and his greased moustache.
-
-I remembered then--too late as things turned out--that the road curved
-seaward near the place where I had first discovered Amos and his
-friends. Had I thought of it at all, I must have known that they had
-never walked to that lonely spot. They had driven there, to leave the
-horse and cart upon the road, whilst they settled themselves at a little
-distance to discuss how best they might attack John Bannister, in his
-cabin by the sea. Moreover, had I known then as much as I know now of
-Mr. Gilbert Forsyth, I should never have supposed for a single instant
-that he could be as idle as he seemed, that he would have remained doing
-nothing before the opening of the cabin, whilst his friends were
-pursuing me.
-
-For Gilbert Forsyth, a fop to all appearances and a lazy dude, was in
-reality a man of action. He said not a word to me, but when he had
-reined in his horse, he lifted his whip, and cut me down as if I were a
-thistle.
-
-It was a long tandem whip--and tandems were much in fashion in the days
-when all this happened. The lash wrapped itself about my legs like a
-living snake; so that when Forsyth jerked the whip backwards with all
-his force, I was thrown violently on my face upon the hard, dusty road.
-
-I tried to get to my feet as quick as I could, but had done no more than
-struggle to my knees, when Forsyth struck me upon the crown of my head
-with the heavy handle of the whip.
-
-It was a cruel blow and a stout one; and I know that if I did not
-actually lose consciousness I, at least, saw the trees swing upward into
-the sky, and the white road upon which I lay rush round and round, like
-the spokes of a revolving wheel.
-
-And then the next thing I knew was that Forsyth had me by the throat.
-Though I was then young, I was not a weakling. I struggled desperately,
-and might, perhaps, have freed myself, had not Joshua Trust arrived upon
-the scene in time to settle the affair the wrong way for me.
-
-For he gathered me up in his arms, and I was held as if I were encased
-in iron. I shouted frantically, but that was of no more help than the
-cackling of a hen. I was lifted bodily into the cart.
-
-I heard Joshua shout to Amos: "Run like mad! Here's Bannister himself!"
-
-Forsyth had climbed upon the box. Trust was on the back seat, with me
-held like a squalling babe in his arms. The cart tilted forward a bit,
-as Amos scrambled up and took his seat beside the driver.
-
-I heard Forsyth crack his whip, and immediately the horse started off at
-a canter, the cart rocking like a boat in a heavy sea. I continued to
-shout, until Joshua swore at me and clapped one of his great hands
-across my mouth. And the last thing I saw, as the cart turned into the
-main road to Littlehampton, was John Bannister breaking through the
-boundary fence, and then standing quite still and upright in the middle
-of the road, staring after us, with his brown paper parcel still under
-his arm.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V--I SET FORTH UPON MY VOYAGE
-
-
-Though all these events took place more than fifty years ago, I have a
-very perfect recollection of that drive. In those days there was not
-much traffic on the Sussex roads; and we passed nothing on the way to
-Slindon save a hay-cart and a brewer's wagon. On neither occasion did I
-dare cry out for help, for Joshua Trust sat by the side of me with his
-loaded pistol, pressed close against my ribs, in the pocket of his
-sailor's pea-jacket. I never doubted for an instant that he would
-shoot. I had then, it is true, little experience of the world; but I
-could scarce fail to recognise that I was fallen into the hands of
-desperate men who counted human life of little worth.
-
-So I kept my silence upon the road, wondering all the time what was to
-become of me, and, above all else, what Amos Baverstock would say when
-he discovered that I had cast away my fragment of the map.
-
-That he thought I had it still was plain enough, since he twice told
-Joshua to keep an eye on me, lest I should throw it from the cart. He
-was in a great haste to reach the woods at Slindon, where in springtime
-the wild flowers are like a garden; and he had a good reason for this.
-Indeed, in all my experience of Amos, I never knew him fail for want of
-caution; and when a man is circumspect as well as fearless, he is an
-enemy who cannot be trifled with.
-
-It was the scoundrel's design, so I discovered, to reach the woods with
-as little delay as possible, and there to wait until the evening, when
-he could take the Portsmouth road under cover of darkness. There were,
-at that date, many coaches on the highways; and Amos evidently thought
-it wiser not to trust me.
-
-So to Slindon Woods we went, and were there in no time, soon after noon.
-They unharnessed the horse, and turned him out to graze; and whilst Mr.
-Forsyth unpacked a hamper that was well stocked with provisions and wine
-to drink, Amos took me by the shoulders, and looked me straight in the
-face.
-
-"And now, boy," he said, "I'll have no more nonsense from you--so
-understand me, once and for all. It's an unwise thing to pry into my
-affairs--I can tell you that. You know more about me already than I
-care to think; and I tell you fairly, you had best mend your ways, if
-you value life."
-
-I was afraid of the look of him, of the hard glitter in his eyes and the
-way in which his thin lips were tightly pressed together. And I was
-more afraid still of what would happen when he discovered that I had
-made away with my fragment of the torn map. My heart was in my mouth.
-I felt as if I were suspended by a thread upon the brink of a precipice,
-and that at any moment that thread would break and I be hurled into
-eternity.
-
-Fortunately, perhaps, I was not left long in such uncertainty; for no
-sooner had Amos taken his hands from off my shoulders than he clapped
-them together behind his back, and came out with the very question that
-I feared.
-
-"And where's the map, my boy?" said he.
-
-I answered nothing.
-
-"Give it up," he demanded, and held out a hand.
-
-"I have not got it," said I.
-
-At that his jaw dropped. He stared at me in amazement, not knowing
-whether or not to believe me.
-
-"Haven't got it!" he repeated. "What d'ye mean?"
-
-And the way he rapped out those last few words made my blood run cold. I
-saw, however, that I must make a clean breast of the matter, let it end
-which way it would.
-
-"I have not got it," said I, "for a simple reason; because I had thrown
-it away before you caught me. And now, you know the truth, and can do
-with me what you will."
-
-The hunchback stood staring at me as if I were a ghost. His thin,
-wrinkled face had gone a yellow or a greenish colour, and his little
-eyes looked blacker and more on fire than ever. He kept working his
-mouth about, as if he were chewing some of his vile tobacco; and, on the
-whole, I cannot conceive an expression more menacing, a countenance less
-prepossessing.
-
-He came up to me, and searched my pockets; and whilst he was doing so, I
-noticed that both his hands were trembling. He had then been joined by
-both Trust and Forsyth, who stood on either side of him.
-
-Amos, as he drew away from me, came out with an oath that I can never
-write. Indeed, the swearing of this man was not the least of his many
-sins.
-
-"He has not got it!" he cried. "We've been fooled, Mr. Forsyth; and
-that by a slip of a boy!"
-
-I thought that he would kill me, then and there, beneath the shadow of
-the trees in Slindon Woods. But, though Amos Baverstock often worked
-himself into fits of ungovernable fury, he never was guilty of a foolish
-action. For my life--though at the time I never guessed it--was of some
-use to him. Not only did I know where I had hidden the torn map, but,
-as like as not, I had looked at it, and might be able to remember the
-names of some of the places that were marked thereon--knowledge for
-which Amos would give much. Had it not been for this, I have little
-doubt he would have put me out of the world.
-
-They tied my feet together, in case I should endeavour to escape, whilst
-the three seated themselves upon the gnarled surface roots of a great
-oak tree, and examined their fragment of the map, discussing the
-question openly, so that I overheard them and learned of the trick that
-Providence had played us all.
-
-For the map had been rent in twain, not by the hands of Amos Baverstock
-and me, but by the sure and supple fingers of Almighty Destiny. Amos
-had in his possession at least three-quarters of the parchment--he had
-it all, indeed, except one corner, that which I had seized in my attempt
-to wrench it from his grasp. And, as good luck had it, that one corner
-contained the information of the greatest value: to wit, the exact
-locality where the Greater Treasure was to be found.
-
-As for the rest of the map, it carried you from the outskirts of what
-may pass as modern civilisation to within a certain unknown distance of
-the secret place. It put you on the right road, as it were, and then
-left you--lost in the midst of a wilderness of doubt.
-
-When Amos grasped the full significance of this, he jumped to his feet,
-a perfect figure of fury, storming at me and swearing, using threats and
-shouting of torture, if I did not then and there confess. But speak I
-would not. Whatever happened, I was resolved to hold my ground, though
-I was filled with grave misgivings.
-
-For all that afternoon they badgered me, trying intimidation, bribery
-and curses; and then, at last, they settled it amongst themselves that
-they would take me with them into Portsmouth, and thence across the sea
-into the very heart of a black barbarous country, where they hoped to
-find the Treasure of the Incas.
-
-It was then, whilst we waited in the woods for sunset, that I saw
-myself, a lad of sixteen summers, launched upon a series of adventures,
-among strange peoples and in wild, romantic lands--adventures such as
-those of which I had often read, of the bold Spaniards who had followed
-Columbus into a new and unknown world, and brave blades of the stamp of
-Drake and Grenville, who--like John Bannister himself--were all men of
-Devon. That I was to be one of a company so glorious seemed to me all
-my heart could wish, though I went as a hostage with my life itself at
-ransom.
-
-In a strange fashion, in very truth, did I begin my travels; for I
-journeyed that night to Portsmouth, not only bound hand and foot and
-tied to the seat of the dog-cart, but gagged as well; so that, by the
-time we reached our destination, I ached in every limb.
-
-For three weeks we dwelt together in a lodging-house, patronised by
-seamen, in a poor quarter of the town. The landlord--a fat, slovenly
-fellow whose hand was seldom far from a pint mug or near a razor--was,
-as I guessed, hand in glove with Amos; for he must have known that
-throughout those three dreary weeks I was kept locked in a stuffy room,
-where I had neither fresh air nor liberty, and no better fare than is
-accorded to a convict.
-
-I have said that we dwelt together, but this was not wholly so; for Mr.
-Gilbert Forsyth, though he was often of our party, had taken rooms in
-one of the best hotels. He was a gentleman somewhat fastidious in his
-habits, with a nice taste in wine and clothes, though--as he was soon to
-prove--he could rough it with the best of us.
-
-Joshua, too, was seldom in our lodgings. It appears that he spent most
-of his time in the neighbourhood of the docks, on the lookout for an old
-shipmate whom he knew he could trust, with whom Amos could strike a
-bargain.
-
-Such a man was eventually found. Joshua brought him in, one evening,
-and shortly afterwards Mr. Forsyth arrived, looking more than ever as if
-he had just come out of a bandbox.
-
-This fellow proved to be the skipper of a barque, due to sail in a few
-days' time, bound for Caracas in Venezuela. She must call first at
-Liverpool, to take on a cargo of cotton goods, but would touch at no
-port upon the voyage but Fayal in the Western Islands, which are now
-called the Azores.
-
-All this fitted in exceedingly well with Amos's plans. As I was in the
-next room when they talked the matter out, and they never troubled to
-close the door, I know for a fact that Baverstock bribed the skipper,
-and that Forsyth--who I suspected all along had undertaken to produce
-the funds--paid him as much as fifty pounds down, quite apart from the
-question of passage money, and there was more to come at the end of the
-voyage.
-
-Gilbert Forsyth, indeed, was a member of the expedition for no other
-reason than that he supplied the sinews of war, else Amos had never
-taken him into his confidence and agreed to forego a third part of the
-loot. For all that, Forsyth proved himself a man of action and
-resource, though he never looked it; and things would have gone worse
-with Amos than they did, had he not had at his right hand one so capable
-and cool throughout those wild, adventurous days.
-
-For Joshua Trust was well enough in his way to strike a blow or carry a
-camp-kettle across a mountain range that topped the clouds--otherwise he
-was a bull-in-a-china-shop kind of a fellow, whose worth was in his
-forearms and not his head.
-
-But Forsyth was cast in a finer mould: a man of education, with tags of
-Latin in the corners of memory, a sense of humour--subtle enough to be
-lost upon both his strange companions--and a wonderful brain for
-figures.
-
-The man's laziness was all pretence and affectation. He always talked
-as if he were half asleep, and yawned at intervals, screening his mouth
-with a hand upon one of the fingers of which he wore a golden signet
-ring; and yet, his brain was ever active, and he had the happy knack of
-doing the right thing at the right time--as he had already proved to my
-cost.
-
-Even whilst I lay imprisoned in that dingy room in Portsmouth, Forsyth
-returned along the coast to within a stone's throw of John Bannister's
-cabin by the sea, and searched vainly for the fragment of the map which
-I had thrown away. And that in itself was a bold thing to do; for the
-police--to whom Bannister had described the appearance of both
-Baverstock and Trust--had been told of my disappearance, and the
-countryside, from Arundel to Chichester, was populous with printed
-offers of reward.
-
-For, all this time, my mother was well near distracted by anxiety and
-distress. John Bannister called upon her, and tried in his own
-straightforward way to set her fears at rest, and swore to her that he
-would find me, though he had to search the world.
-
-Of how well he kept his oath it is my task to write, and of much else
-besides. For the barque, which was called the _Mary Greenfield_,
-dropped her pilot off the Needles of the Isle of Wight, and with a fair
-wind and under full canvas struck the open sea. And I, Dick Treadgold,
-was on board, sea-sick that night as any full-grown man could be, and
-sick at heart as well. For, when the white cliffs of dearest England
-faded in the evening light, I realised for the first time that I was
-alone, and there was no telling what the Fates held in store for me.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI--I AM CONCERNED IN A MUTINY
-
-
-I have neither space nor patience to describe in any detail that long
-and tedious voyage. For we were months at sea. I saw whales spouting
-water into the air, and schools of porpoises; and at one time, for a
-whole month on end, we were becalmed, the ship lying idle in the midst
-of a vast floating mass of seaweed, where there were all kinds of
-jelly-fish and squids. The heat was excessive, and there was a rank,
-almost putrid, smell in the air, which came from the decaying seaweed.
-That in itself was enough to try the temper of every member of the crew;
-but, to make matters worse, much of the tinned meat on board exploded in
-the hold. I cannot explain this, but I know that it happened, and am
-content to leave the explanation to the scientific reader. These
-circumstances, together with the surly nature of James Dagg, the
-captain, led from dissatisfaction to open grumbling, and thence to the
-mutiny of which I have now to tell.
-
-My own fortunes were, to some extent, involved in that affair; and in
-any case, I must describe the incident more or less as it occurred,
-since nothing could better serve to illustrate the true character of
-Amos Baverstock, who plays as important a part as myself in the
-narrative that follows.
-
-I had not been a week at sea, and just recovered from my sickness, when
-I was given clearly to understand that I was to hold no intercourse with
-any of the crew. I cannot say that I wished to, for they were a
-ruffianly lot--half of them, I verily believe, prison-birds, like Joshua
-Trust, and the remainder West Indian negroes, Chinamen, and Lascars from
-the coast of Malabar.
-
-I had to share a cabin with Amos himself, who seldom let me out of his
-sight. Thrown into such close intimacy with the man, I learned much
-concerning him, and he more of me. He seldom allowed a day to pass
-without questioning me in regard to what I knew of the map; and so
-terrible did his threats become that I was filled with fear for the
-future.
-
-On that account, I yearned for a friend, someone in whom I could
-confide; and it was not long before I found such a man on board that
-pestilential ship. Now that I can look back upon my series of
-adventures, I can see both men and matters in their true perspective,
-and I realise that, had it not been for William Rushby, the boatswain of
-the _Mary Greenfield_, the most honest and the whitest man that ever
-piped all hands on deck, this tale had never been told.
-
-When I saw him first, I sized him up as the true seaman that he was; but
-I dared not speak to him, because of the threats that had been heaped
-upon me. I knew also that I could go to none of the ship's officers
-with my story, for they were all tarred with the same brush as the
-skipper; but Providence before long gave me the chance I wanted.
-
-When we were in mid-ocean Amos tired of the voyage, and required little
-persuasion from Mr. Forsyth to take to playing cards. Captain Dagg was
-a card-player, too, and Joshua made the fourth; and this was the party
-that sat down nightly after supper to gamble, drink and smoke, by the
-light of a reeking paraffin lamp in the little stuffy saloon.
-
-I watched them play for many nights, and though I knew nothing of the
-game, it was quite clear to me that they were three babes at the
-business by the side of Mr. Forsyth. For it was he who always won, no
-matter with whom he played or what cards he held, and it was he who
-raked in their money.
-
-This was all one to me. I soon tired of watching them; and when I had
-once slipped away from them, to breathe the fresh air on deck, and no
-questions had been asked, I made it my constant practice to sit of an
-evening upon the poop, whence I could look down into the water and see
-the phosphorus as if smouldering in the wake of the ship.
-
-And here it was that I talked with William Rushby. At that hour it was
-his duty to see that the ship's lamps were lighted, and when he had
-hoisted the mast-head lights, and put the red light to port and the
-green to starboard, he would come aft, haul in the log, and speak to me
-in whispers.
-
-That he took that precaution from the first makes it plain enough that
-he guessed some mischief was afoot. He questioned me concerning who I
-was and what business I had in such company on board that ship. It was
-some time before I dared tell him the truth, for fear of Amos
-Baverstock; but I did so in the end, making him swear to keep my secret;
-which he did.
-
-"It is all like a fairy tale," said he, when he had heard my story; "and
-it's hard to tell the best way to help you. Of this much I am certain:
-if you set forth into the back country of Venezuela with a man like
-Baverstock, you'll not come back alive."
-
-"But I cannot escape!" I protested. "Even on board this ship, I am
-watched at all hours of the night and day."
-
-Rushby thought for a while, stroking his short black beard which was
-like that of a Russian Czar.
-
-"Maybe," said he, "at Caracas, I could desert and take you with me. I
-have no liking for my shipmates here, as you may well imagine. In the
-meantime, many weeks must pass before we sight the mainland, and in that
-time much may happen."
-
-As he said this with some significance, I asked him what he meant.
-
-"Why, just this," he answered; "there's trouble brewing aboard, which
-will come to a head before we touch port. The crew are a low-down,
-blackguard lot, no better men than sailors; and though they may be held
-to blame for that, it's no fault of theirs if they are fed worse than
-swine and cursed from dawn to sunset. Dagg I had heard about, though I
-never signed on under him before, nor will again, and the mate's even
-worse. There's high talk in the fo'c'sle, as it is, where the
-ringleader is that nigger cook. Mark my words--and I've sailed the seas
-for more than twenty years--a prize-fighting negro in the galley can
-cause more mischief aboard a sailing-ship than a monkey and a woman,
-both in one."
-
-I laughed, for I was not then accustomed to the talk of sailors.
-
-"And they've run out of lime-juice," he went on; "and that's a serious
-thing."
-
-"Lime-juice!" I repeated, thinking he was joking still.
-
-"A man must eat vegetables," he explained to me, "to keep his blood cool
-and his liver nicely trimmed. You can't eat green cabbages and
-Brussels-sprouts in mid-Atlantic, so you must carry lime-juice aboard;
-and we've run out. The men have much to complain of. They are in ill
-health, and one or two should be lying up in a sick berth, instead of
-being sworn at left and right for not moving quicker. So I see trouble
-ahead. It may be a hurricane, or just a summer squall; and if the
-first, Heaven help James Dagg and his officers, for they're a tough lot
-for'ard, as I know who've listened to their talk."
-
-And Rushby was proved to be in the right. We ran into a great calm as I
-have said. The sea was like glass; and though the sun was blotted out
-by a steam-like fog, the heat was so intense that we went about the deck
-in naught but vests and trousers, with the sweat dripping from our
-finger-tips.
-
-Without a doubt, the crew suffered for lack of lime-juice; some broke
-out with a horrid skin disease. And then the news came that the tinned
-meat had all gone bad, and we were forced to live on salted ling-fish,
-so that we went thirsty all day long.
-
-It was Ebenezer Hogg, the negro cook, who started all the trouble. He
-was a long, raw-boned Jamaica man, who had cut a figure in the
-prize-ring in his younger days. He had never forgiven the skipper for a
-blow across the mouth because the cabin potatoes had not been properly
-peeled, though this was the work of Ah Chin, the cook's mate, a
-half-daft Canton Chinaman, who would fire off crackers at all hours of
-the night, in honour (I suppose) of the heathen gods he worshipped.
-
-Hogg told his shipmates he cared not a "dime with a hole in it" for
-James Dagg or any man. They had no food fit to eat, so they might as
-well help themselves to the ship's grog, to keep--as he described
-it--body and soul together.
-
-Rushby--as his duty was--warned the captain of what was coming; but
-Dagg, who had been losing heavily at cards to Mr. Forsyth, only abused
-the boatswain for his pains, and said that he himself was the best judge
-of such matters and would know how to deal with insubordination.
-
-And that night the crew, led by Hogg, the nigger, broke into the
-storeroom with a hatchet and broached the rum casks. Within
-half-an-hour, they were all roaring drunk; and that was a night that I
-shall never live to forget.
-
-The moon came out from the white sea-mist, as if to look down in
-scandalised amazement upon a scene of debauchery and violence--a round,
-red ball of fire, casting its rays upon the stagnant, reeking seaweed,
-illuminating the deck of that floating madhouse with a dull crimson
-glare, whereby you might see the whites of men's eyes and the glitter of
-the sharp blades they handled.
-
-Dagg appeared on deck, his face livid with passion; and I could see by
-his walk that he, too, had been drinking heavily at his card-playing.
-
-"What's all this?" he shouted at the top of his voice. "Understand,
-I'll have no monkey-tricks aboard the ship that I command."
-
-Hogg at once squared up to him, his two fists before his face, very
-drunk and brazen.
-
-"Come on, James Dagg!" he cried, with his Christy-minstrel accent. "Time
-yer and me settled de account."
-
-"This here's mutiny!" exclaimed the captain.
-
-"Dat's de right word, boss," said Hogg. "Mutiny it is."
-
-And at that, he struck the captain with his fist, so that Dagg rolled
-over and over upon the deck, groaning loudly.
-
-The fat was now in the fire. If discipline could be restored, Hogg
-would be hanged at the yard-arm and his body cast into the sea; and
-drunk as he was, the nigger knew it.
-
-"I'm de captain of dis ship," he bellowed, "an' James Dagg's de cook."
-
-He showed his white teeth in a grin, and then gave orders as if he had
-been accustomed all his life to a position of authority; and the wonder
-was he was instantly obeyed. Five minutes later, both Dagg and his mate
-were bound hand and foot; and the second mate had been locked in his
-cabin, where he was fast asleep. The negro went staggering backwards
-and forwards, from the forecastle to the poop, crying out that he it was
-who was Captain and his name was Admiral Hogg.
-
-There were two spectators of this comedy, who could not be considered as
-partisans; and the one was William Rushby and the other was myself. The
-boatswain's sense of duty would have held him to the captain, had it not
-been for me; for, though I had no liking for any of the crew, and a
-feeling of positive loathing for a great brute like Hogg, I saw in the
-discomfiture of James Dagg and his officers some chance of my own
-ultimate deliverance. So that when the cook turned upon me, and caught
-me by the scruff of the neck, I played the card that I thought safest at
-the time, but which certainly lost me the trick that meant the game.
-
-"And now, boy," said Hogg, "which way de wind blow wid you? Will you
-sign on to serve as cabin-steward under Admiral Hogg?"
-
-"Why, sure," said I, having picked up something of the man's own way of
-speaking. "I was never a friend of Captain Dagg's, as you may have seen
-for yourself."
-
-And thereupon, I looked away from the negro's grinning countenance, and
-straight in the black, pig-like eyes of Amos Baverstock.
-
-If I had feared him before, I was well-nigh terrified of him then; for
-there was black murder in the look he gave me, and his mouth was working
-horribly.
-
-For all that, he straightened his face in half a second, and turned to
-Hogg as calm as the sea itself.
-
-"I'll settle with you in a moment," said he. "I've not lived more than
-half my life without learning how to deal with a buck nigger who's three
-parts tipsy. Bo's'n," said he to Rushby, pointing straight at me, "put
-that boy in irons."
-
-Rushby never moved.
-
-"Did you hear my orders?" rapped out Amos.
-
-"I heard right enough," said the boatswain. "But I'm not here to take
-orders from you."
-
-At that, the crew, who had gathered round, thinking that Rushby was with
-them, became bolder than ever. Knives were drawn from belts, and one of
-these was flourished in the face of the captain who still lay upon the
-deck, bound hand and foot.
-
-"Ho!" cried Amos. "So that's your tune, is it? I see you must all be
-taught a lesson."
-
-He talked with all the confidence in the world, though--with the
-exception of Mr. Gilbert Forsyth, who had just strolled on deck with
-both hands in his trouser pockets--there was no one at his back, and he
-faced a crowd of angry, drunken seamen who would not then have stopped
-short of murder.
-
-From Rushby he turned once more to Hogg. "And so," said he, "you claim
-to be the captain of this ship?"
-
-The negro glanced in his direction, but would not meet those cruel,
-steadfast eyes.
-
-"If I'm not," he blurted out, "then who is de captain? Tell me dat?"
-
-"Why, I am," roared Amos. "And what have you to say to it?"
-
-Hogg realised he was challenged. Perhaps, under the influence of rum,
-he had already gone further than he meant to; but, in any case, so far
-as he was concerned there was no question of retreat.
-
-"Put up your fists!" he shouted. "We fight for it and let de best man
-win."
-
-He grinned from ear to ear, as, standing in front of Amos--above whom he
-towered by a good clear head and shoulders--he lifted his great, black
-fists to the level of his face. I thought that he would kill Amos with
-a single blow; for the one was so big and bony, and the other so frail
-and shrivelled up. But I did not then know Amos Baverstock.
-
-"Come on!" cried Hogg, still grinning.
-
-I looked at Amos, thinking to find him alarmed; but never upon the face
-of any man have I beheld an expression of such complete contempt.
-
-"You black dog!" said he, with an oath.
-
-He drew back his right hand, as if about to strike, and immediately I
-caught the glint of a revolver barrel in the moonlight.
-
-There was a flash, a single loud report, and then a dull, heavy thud as
-the negro's great ungainly body came down upon the deck. And there he
-lay, full in the red moonshine, upon that tropic night, huddled and
-stone-dead--the black, bragging fool who had claimed to be our captain.
-
-"And now, then," said Amos, as cool as ever, turning to the crew, "is
-there any man else who would like to command this ship?"
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII--AND AM MADE TO PAY FOR IT
-
-
-And that was the end of the mutiny on board the _Mary Greenfield_. The
-match was struck by a negro; the flames were fed with rum; and the fire
-flared up, just to be stamped out by the one strong man on board.
-
-Amos at once released both the captain and his mate; whereupon Dagg
-treated the crew to a long-winded, high speech upon the subject of what
-he would do, if such insubordination occurred again; but as he had done
-naught during the crisis, but to get knocked down the moment he opened
-his mouth, there were few of his audience who were not laughing up their
-sleeves.
-
-I have told the full story of the disturbance, to illustrate the
-character of Amos Baverstock. I have yet to write of the sequel to the
-trouble, which more nearly concerned myself.
-
-For Amos was as good as his word, and made short work of William Rushby
-and of me. Though the crew had been bound over to keep the peace, as
-you might call it, admonished to behave themselves in future, the
-boatswain was not only degraded of his rank, but forthwith cast into
-irons.
-
-As for myself, I was led before a kind of tribunal, assembled in the
-saloon. Captain Dagg, Amos Baverstock, and Joshua Trust were my judges;
-and a strange triumvirate they made, Amos chewing his black cigar, and
-all three seated before their glasses of grog, with their greasy
-playing-cards scattered before them on the table.
-
-"Boy," said Dagg, "you joined in a mutiny. Do you know that, you whelp?
-Do you know what it means?"
-
-"No, sir," said I.
-
-"It means death," said Dagg. "The yard-arm--that's what it means."
-
-I believed, for the moment, that they were really going to kill me; and
-so seriously had the great heat and the excitement affected me that I
-don't think I cared very much whether they did so or not. Anyway, I
-know I answered boldly, though I had never the courage to look straight
-at Amos, whose eyes I felt were upon me.
-
-"Captain Dagg," said I, "if you want to murder me, get on with the
-matter. I ask you to do no more than to remember this: I did not come
-on board your ship of my own free will. I was kidnapped, and carried
-here by force, and I have no means of escape."
-
-At that, Amos struck the table with his fist; and, bold though my words
-had been, I jumped as if a cannon had been fired.
-
-"Silence!" he roared. "We are not here to argue with you. You were
-given your orders. You were told that on no account were you to
-communicate with anyone on board this ship, and you defied us. We have
-reason to suspect that you have taken into your confidence William
-Rushby, formerly boatswain. Do you deny it?"
-
-He banged the table again. I looked right into his face, and it was
-just as if I was under fire. But I could never answer him. I had the
-pluck neither to lie nor to tell the truth.
-
-"Good!" said he. "You admit as much. Well, then, we shall see that no
-such tricks are played us in the future. Rushby is in irons. As for
-you, for the rest of this voyage you remain a prisoner in your cabin;
-and if we have any more trouble with you--I warn you fairly--you meet
-the same fate as that hide-bound, cursed nigger."
-
-And that was the lame and impotent conclusion of the mutiny on board the
-_Mary Greenfield_.
-
-My lot was now even worse than before. For week after week I was locked
-in a stuffy cabin, and got neither fresh air, good food, nor exercise.
-The calm broke up quite suddenly with a squall, followed by a shower of
-rain. For about an hour the water came down like a cascade upon the
-sea, washing the ship from stem to stern, giving--as it appeared to me,
-looking out from my narrow port-hole--new life to the floating seaweed
-and the myriads of living things that were swarming in the midst of it.
-
-The ship rocked, turning lazily from side to side, like a sleeper
-awakening, and then, lurching, took on a list to starboard, as the wind
-gripped her hoisted sails. And then, once again, we were under canvas,
-ploughing westward across that great, lonely ocean.
-
-A few days later, we struck a trade wind, and made even better progress.
-Though I myself was never more miserable in all my life, I had reason to
-think that there was less discontent on board. I could hear the patter
-of the bare feet of the men on the deck above me, as they hastened about
-their work, as sailors should, and the shrill note of the boatswain's
-whistle--which caused me to wonder who the new boatswain was. It must
-be understood that during these days of my imprisonment I had nothing to
-read and nothing to do, but to meditate upon my own misfortunes.
-
-Life was not made any the more pleasant for me inasmuch as I still
-shared a cabin with Amos, though I was devoutly thankful that I saw
-little of him. Night by night, he would sit late at cards, trying--I
-should imagine--to win back what he had lost to Mr. Forsyth; and I made
-a point of being asleep, or pretending to be so, before he came to bed.
-
-And now I have to tell of something which has a direct bearing upon all
-that follows. I had become so despondent and forlorn, and I found
-myself in the company of such infamous and shameless rogues, that I had
-actually forgotten my friends. I had forgotten that there were yet in
-the world true, honest men who could be both brave and loyal.
-
-One evening, I must confess, my heart was near to breaking. The world
-seemed all so hopeless and so wicked that I brought my face to my hands
-and cried just as I had been wont to cry, when I was a little chap of
-four years old, when things had not gone for me exactly as I wanted. And
-as I sobbed, I could hear the gamblers in the saloon beyond the cabin
-door; the "clink" of the bottles and the glasses, and the deeper note of
-the coins upon the table; now and again, a gruff oath from Amos or
-Joshua Trust, and Mr. Forsyth's affected drawl. And then, a voice,
-quite near to me, whispered in my ear:
-
-"Me lad, be quick! I want a word with you."
-
-I sprang to my feet--I had been lying on my berth--and looked about me.
-I could see no one in the cabin, and had begun to think of ghosts and
-spirit-voices, when I heard the whispering again.
-
-"Here, me lad! The port-hole."
-
-I looked at the port, and could see a face by the light of the oil
-lamp--a face in a frame studded with stars, the face of a man with a
-short stump of a grisly beard.
-
-"Rushby!" I exclaimed.
-
-"The same," said he. "But speak low, for Heaven's sake! Those rascals
-are at their cards in the saloon; the door's thin, and it's all up with
-us if we're discovered."
-
-I went to the port-hole, so that my face was close to his.
-
-"But how are you here?" I asked.
-
-"I've not lived my life and done my duty," said he, "without making
-friends. One of the crew, of the name of Adams, to whom I have been of
-service in the past, has let me loose--just as you might unchain a
-yard-dog for a run. I have a few minutes at the best before I'm back in
-irons, but that's enough for what I have to say."
-
-"But where are you now?" I asked, for he appeared to me to be walking
-upon the sea.
-
-He explained that he was hanging on to a rope, made fast to a stanchion
-on the deck above, but that he had something of greater importance to
-tell me.
-
-"Are we near our journey's end?" I asked.
-
-"In three days," he answered, "we should sight the coast, unless the
-wind changes. What they intend to do with me at Caracas I neither know
-nor care. I will somehow find the means to escape, and make my way back
-to England; and then, Captain Dagg and Amos Baverstock shall pay for
-what they've done."
-
-"I entreat you," I exclaimed, "do not meddle with Amos!"
-
-Rushby laughed softly.
-
-"And leave you at his mercy!" he cried. "That's not my way, nor--I
-should think, if all you have told me be the truth--the way of Mr.
-Bannister. This matter shall never rest where it now stands. I am here
-to learn two things, though I am no better than a simple sailor, and it
-will want a wiser head than mine before we're safe in port. Come, tell
-me, lad, where did you hide the map you snatched from Baverstock? John
-Bannister may want it."
-
-"In a rabbit-hole," said I; and I went on to describe, as best I could,
-how that rabbit-hole might be found.
-
-"There's a warren," said I, "about two hundred yards to the west of
-Bannister's cabin----"
-
-"And how am I to find that?" Rushby took me up.
-
-I thought for a moment; and then I got a bright idea when most I needed
-it, for I realised there was little time to spare and that Amos, at any
-moment, might enter and find Rushby at the port-hole.
-
-I gave him my mother's address; for I had little doubt that Bannister
-had gone, long before this, to her. With my life in danger, he would--I
-knew--soon get the better of his natural dread of women.
-
-"That's all I want," said he.
-
-And a moment after he was gone. It so happened that many months were to
-elapse before I set eyes upon him again--a true man and an honest, big
-of heart and strong of hand, the type that has made the very name of
-British sailor to rank so highly all the world across, from the old
-three-decker to the battle-cruiser of to-day. And I speak of the men
-without whose cutlasses and courage Blake and Drake, or even Nelson
-himself, had never been the famous admirals that they were.
-
-For, when we were come to Caracas, I was discharged from that poisonous
-vessel like a worthless bale of freight. Unshipped by night into a
-broken-down two-wheeled cart, and conveyed through the narrow streets of
-an evil-smelling city, where men talked loudly in a foreign tongue, with
-quarrelsome voices and much waving of the hands, and then I found myself
-in a dirty hovel upon the slopes of tree-clad hills, where I could see
-the round moon through a great hole in the roof, and lie listening to
-the singing of millions of crickets, wondering what would be the end of
-it all.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII--INTO THE WILDERNESS
-
-
-For these few days, it happened that I was left in the charge of Joshua
-Trust. In other words, he was the watch-dog that guarded me, day and
-night; and a dull dog he was. He never opened his mouth, save to
-grumble at everything--the heat, the insects, the very food he cooked
-himself. Now and again, he would sigh; which puzzled me, until I solved
-the problem for myself: he was inclined to regret the idle days aboard
-the _Mary Greenfield_ when he had naught to think about except his grog
-and cards.
-
-So, in this man's company, I learned nothing concerning what was afoot.
-But I was free to use my eyes, and I could scarce fail to observe that
-they were turning by degrees that ruined habitation into a kind of
-dept. For, day and night, came stores and arms and ammunition to the
-place--all manner of such things as might be required upon an expedition
-into the wild hinterland of that strange country, where there were few
-roads, but many bridle-paths and broad rivers to be crossed.
-
-Amos came often to the hut, and Mr. Forsyth was always with him; and, as
-I knew, it was the last-named who had paid for all. That, however, was
-all one to me. I was safely caught, thousands of miles from dear, silly
-Sussex; and even if I was so fortunate as to escape from Joshua Trust,
-what was I to do in that foreign land, where I could not speak a word of
-the language and had no friend to whom to go?
-
-On the fourth day of my captivity came six mules, and with them three
-men whom I took to be half-castes of a sort, for they were no more than
-two parts black and spoke Spanish, shouting at one another when they
-conversed. But I was more interested in the mules, which were of a kind
-that I had never seen before; for they were small animals, little larger
-than donkeys, with mouse-grey woolly coats like sheep. Each of these
-was provided with a pack-saddle; and when they were loaded for the
-inspection of Amos Baverstock and Forsyth, I was amazed at the great
-weight that such slender and seemingly fragile beasts could carry.
-
-On the fifth day after we had left the ship, we set forth upon our great
-march towards the south. Our party numbered eight in all: Amos,
-Forsyth, and Trust (the first the acknowledged leader of the
-expedition); myself and the three mulemen, whilst the other was a
-guide--a lean, cadaverous Spaniard, black as a raven, whom I never heard
-called by any other name than that of Vasco. I do not think this fellow
-was an evil man by nature, except in so far as he was capable of doing
-almost anything for money. In that, at any rate, he was honest: he
-served his masters faithfully, no matter who they were.
-
-And now we come to the march itself that, step by step, led me farther
-and farther from the confines of civilisation and into the heart of a
-cruel and magic wilderness where things happened that I should not
-believe, had I not seen them with my eyes.
-
-The first stage of our journey was uneventful enough; and the
-scenery--especially on the mountains we were obliged to
-cross--surprisingly beautiful. We first climbed to a great height,
-following a zig-zag road, along which the little mules struggled
-gallantly with their heavy loads. I had thought that, on gaining the
-crestline, we must again descend to something approaching the level of
-the sea. But this was not so; for the mountains proved to consist of a
-series of parallel chains, and no sooner had we negotiated one valley
-than we found ourselves upon the watershed of another.
-
-These valleys were thickly populated. We were seldom out of sight of
-villages and towns, many of which contained considerable buildings. The
-country had the aspect of being extremely fertile and prosperous. There
-were plantations of coffee and cocoa, tobacco and cotton, but a far
-greater area of the valley regions was given over to the cultivation of
-manioc and maize. For all I could ever learn, there was no flour in the
-land, for I never tasted bread, but subsisted upon hot maize cakes, made
-by Vasco, the guide, which I found as good as hot-cross buns.
-
-When we were clear of the mountains, we began to descend into the valley
-of a great river which, had I learned more geography when I was at
-school, I would have known to be the Orinoco. The course of this great
-stream we followed for many days, marching in a south-westerly
-direction, against the current. The climate was now a great deal hotter
-than it had been near the coast, and towns and villages were few and far
-between. One thing that I observed was the courteous behaviour of the
-inhabitants, who seldom failed to wave their hands to us and pass the
-time of day.
-
-We came to a vast sea of grass where, here and there, were scattered
-woods; and finally, after crossing a river of some importance, a
-tributary of the Orinoco, we sighted a great mountain that overtopped
-the surrounding hills like a giant in the midst of pygmies.
-
-Amos, who had been unusually reticent upon the line-of-march, now became
-talkative, almost hilarious. He carried constantly a grin upon his
-fox-like countenance, and would often chuckle to himself.
-
-For the great mountain in front of us might be described as the gateway
-of the road to the Treasure we were seeking, and was marked upon the
-left-hand top corner of the map. It was called Mount Tigro, but by that
-name I have never been able to trace it upon any modern map, though it
-was shown to be about twenty miles south of the Rio Guaviare.
-
-We were now--though I did not know it at the time--close upon the
-frontier of Colombia, and, I think, for a time our route lay through
-that little-known country, until we turned eastward again into the
-territories of the Amazonas.
-
-We were now in a mountainous and savage land, where we could make but
-the slowest progress. For not only were the hills steep and pathless,
-but in places clothed in such luxuriant vegetation that we had often to
-break a way with hatchets for the mules.
-
-We were marching by the map, and Amos had become our guide. He and
-Forsyth--who never seemed to tire--would lead our little column, myself
-walking in company of Joshua, and the pack-mules bringing up the rear.
-
-We were soon to bid good-bye to these faithful, dumb companions; for,
-after we had climbed the slopes of another range of mountains, we
-followed the course of a river valley that led us rapidly downward, to
-land us into the very heart of such a forest as I did not dream to be
-possible.
-
-The mulemen were paid off--by no means too handsomely, I thought--to
-return upon that long and tedious journey to the coast. And we five
-went on alone--Amos and his two confederates, Vasco and myself--carrying
-our stores and provisions in knapsacks on our backs, and all armed as
-though we were like to meet with savage men.
-
-In the first place, I must tell you that the heat was insufferable, for
-all this while we had been approaching the equator. The forest swarmed
-with myriads of stinging insects, and sometimes I saw great tree snakes
-of a magnitude that even now makes my blood run cold when I think of
-them. We came upon one, lying half coiled upon the bank of a woodland
-pool, and I am ready to swear that he was longer than a cricket-pitch,
-and of a thickness almost equal to my own waist.
-
-But I marvelled most at the forest trees, the names of some of which I
-learned from Vasco, who had a little English, of which he was
-exceedingly vain. One of these was a palm-tree, the very leaves of
-which were forty feet in length, standing almost erect, all bunched
-together--a magnificent sight to behold. And these forest giants were
-intertwined and intermingled with thousands of creepers, parasites, and
-climbers, so that in places, even at mid-day, when the tropic sun was at
-its height, it was dark as night in the vast Region of the Woods.
-
-For weeks we struggled onward, literally fighting our way through that
-all but impenetrable wilderness. I saw that Amos had more than he could
-do to trace our route upon the map; and there were times, I am
-convinced, when even Vasco and Baverstock himself truly believed that we
-were lost.
-
-He told us he was looking for a certain landmark; and in that dark and
-endless forest he might as well have searched for a pin. At one time,
-there was not a living soul within hundreds of miles of us. There were
-great alligators in the rivers that we crossed by means of rough dug-out
-canoes, which we made upon one bank and left upon the other; the jungle
-teemed with snakes, many of the venomous kind besides the great
-loathsome pythons, in whose coils an ox might have been crushed to
-death; thousands of gaily-coloured birds were among the tree-tops high
-above us, and the dead leaves about our pathway swarmed with little
-things that crept and crawled and stung so vilely that we were covered
-from head to foot with painful swellings. But never a sign did we see
-of any human being. Nature reigned in that black wilderness,
-untrammelled and supreme.
-
-And then, as one steps on a sudden from a darkened room, we came forth
-one morning from the forest into the blazing light of the sun. And
-there was such a wonder as I had never seen before.
-
-Before us was a plain upon which was growing a tall, reed-like grass;
-and in the centre of this plain was a long, hog-backed hillock, bare of
-trees. Remember, we were in the very heart of the Unknown, for months
-we had seen no sign or trace of humanity, and I, at least, judged myself
-to be hundreds of miles from the very outposts of the civilised world;
-and yet, upon the summit of this hillock was a great ruined palace or a
-temple, encircled by a colonnade of vast stone pillars, no less in their
-proportions than those of Stonehenge, on Salisbury Plain in England,
-only they were there by the score, and stood perpendicular and massive,
-not one having fallen from its place.
-
-I stood rooted in amazement, when my attention was attracted by Amos,
-whose behaviour was now that of a madman. He threw both his arms into
-the air, which action--in view of his hunched back and his pig-like,
-glittering eyes--made him look more evil and gleeful than ever, and
-shouted at the top of his voice:
-
-"Found!" he cried. "The Temple of Cahazaxa, who fled from Cuzco with
-the Treasure! And now, boy, the matter rests with you!"
-
-He changed as in a flash from unbounded joy to passion. He seized me by
-the shoulders, gripping me so tightly that it was as if his fingers
-burned into my flesh like red-hot irons.
-
-"I'll have the truth from you!" he shrieked, dancing like a maniac on
-his feet. "The truth, and nothing but the truth! Or else, I swear as
-I'm a living man, you die here and now."
-
-"What truth?" I asked.
-
-My voice was trembling; for so terrible did the man seem that a cold
-sweat had broken out upon my forehead. He drew nearer to me still,
-peering into my face and whispering.
-
-"Henceforward," said he, "you guide us. Either you have seen the map or
-Bannister has told you all he knows. In any case, you guide us from
-here to the place where the Greater Treasure is hid. Refuse, and you
-die, here and now, in the midst of this almighty desert."
-
-One glance at the man was enough to tell me that he meant every word he
-said. And yet, I do not think I was any longer afraid.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX--I AM LEFT TO MY DOOM
-
-
-I was now, it was apparent, in such a situation that my life was of
-little worth. Without doubt, Amos did believe that I was capable of
-guiding our little column to the place where the Greater Treasure was
-hidden.
-
-He thought, perhaps, that I had looked at the fragment of the map I had
-snatched from his hand, or else that John Bannister had told me the full
-story.
-
-As a matter of fact, I knew nothing. When flying for my very life from
-Amos, I had had other things to think of than to gratify a very natural
-curiosity, and had never so much as cast a glance at the map. And as
-for Bannister, I have said already this was the one subject upon which
-he could never or seldom be induced to talk.
-
-Amos, however, held a contrary opinion. Somehow, he must have learned
-that for several months John Bannister had been a good friend to me, and
-in his own mind had never questioned that I knew all there was to know.
-
-In either case, it was all the same to him; for my life was worth
-nothing if I could not help him in the furtherance of his purpose, and I
-was but a fifth mouth to feed in a wild, tropic region where food was
-difficult to find.
-
-That day I had a stormy scene with Amos, who was supported by Mr.
-Forsyth, whose questions I found even more difficult to answer; whilst
-Joshua Trust stood by, tugging at his red beard, which had now become
-more untidy and unkempt than ever. As for Vasco, he sat at a little
-distance, cross-legged, looking in a puzzled manner from Amos Baverstock
-to me.
-
-I swore on my oath to them that Bannister had told me nothing; but they
-would not believe me. Then, for the first time, I was shown the map
-which Amos had brought with him all the way from Sussex; and at once I
-observed a singular coincidence.
-
-For the parchment had been rent across the very place where was marked
-the great ruined building even then before us; and all Amos had of it
-was the following inscription: THE ANCIENT TEMPLE OF C---- and then came
-the torn edge, where I had held the parchment tightly between my thumb
-and forefinger.
-
-But this information, slight as it was, had been enough for Amos, who
-knew well the story of Cahazaxa, the Peruvian prince, of whom I will
-tell in the proper place. Both Bannister and Amos had heard often of
-Cahazaxa's Temple, which might be regarded as a kind of half-way house
-upon our treasure hunt. And upon the other portion of the map, which I
-had hidden in a rabbit-hole, were the letters "AHAZAXA," plain enough to
-any one who had ever heard of the temple, and thence the route marked
-plainly to the secret place where the Greater Treasure lay.
-
-Had Bannister ever shown me the map, I should in all probability have
-remembered the names of some of the places marked thereon; but he had
-never done so--which, after all, saved me a world of trouble at one of
-the most critical moments in my life.
-
-For, had I known, I trust I would never have confessed to these unholy
-scoundrels. I like to think that my courage would not have failed me at
-the eleventh hour. As it was, being wholly ignorant, I had nothing to
-tell, and boldly declared as much, though both the hunchback and Mr.
-Forsyth thought me to be lying.
-
-The former worked himself into a kind of frenzied passion. Gripping me
-by a wrist, he jerked me first in one direction, then in another,
-sometimes so violently that my head flew backward and forward like a
-weather-cock in the wind.
-
-"We'll have the truth from you!" he shouted. "I'll have it, though I
-must tear it from you with red-hot irons."
-
-"I know nothing," I persisted.
-
-"You'll speak or die," he answered. "And I'll see to it that death does
-not come easy!"
-
-All that day, they badgered me and persecuted me with questions. And in
-the end, when the sun was setting, they gave it up, and decided to put
-me to death.
-
-Mine was a strange fate, in very truth; and now, when I look back upon
-that hour, I marvel that I took it all so calmly. For it was my destiny
-to sit by the camp-fire, whilst our evening meal of maize and manioc was
-cooking, and hear them discuss among themselves how I should be done to
-death.
-
-Trust was all for rough-and-ready methods, in keeping with the blunt
-character of the man; Amos, for cold, deliberate torture; whereas
-Forsyth would bind me to a tree and leave me in the midst of that great
-wilderness to starve.
-
-It was Mr. Forsyth's vote that was carried; and now that I knew the
-manner of my death, I was filled with cold fear, though till then I had
-borne my ordeal with a fortitude that surprised even myself.
-
-And bound I was, then and there, to a stout palm-tree that stood by
-itself a little distance from the margin of the forest. For rope they
-used a kind of creeper that was common in the woods, and not only was
-this as strong as a ship's hawser, but so hard and tied so tightly that
-it cut into my legs and arms like bands of steel.
-
-[Illustration: "AND BOUND I WAS, THEN AND THERE, TO A STOUT PALM TREE, A
-LITTLE DISTANCE FROM THE MARGIN OF THE FOREST."]
-
-In such a manner was I doomed. For an hour or so I watched those three
-dread men, all so different, alike in nothing but their devilry, sitting
-together around the fire, talking in low voices, even pleasantly, as if
-to do murder were an every-day affair.
-
-Then they lay down to sleep, and both Trust and Amos were soon snoring;
-whereas I was left, already athirst and hungry, to await the approach of
-a terrible and lingering death.
-
-That night and those which followed will live always in my memory. I
-watched the moon rise, wondrous round and white and large, behind the
-rounded hill upon which stood Cahazaxa's Temple. The stars, which had
-been shining in their millions, faded in the moonshine, all save one
-bright planet in the sky above me. And there arose a mist, in which I
-thought there was something ghostly, upon the plain where the long grass
-stood like corn ready for the cutting. And behind me, as if striving to
-enfold me in an overpowering, stifling embrace, was the dark, deadly
-forest that cut me off from all and everything I loved.
-
-Long before dawn, Amos Baverstock was stirring. I watched him kindle
-the embers of the camp-fire into a blaze, and, sitting with his crooked
-back, he looked just like a monkey. I noticed that even at that hour he
-was chewing one of his foul, black cigars, his stock of which was
-running low. Presently, he awakened Trust and Forsyth. They ate their
-breakfast in silence; never a word was said. And then they packed their
-knapsacks and set forward upon the march, in the gloaming, with never a
-word or a glance at me.
-
-They marched in a bee-line upon the ruins of the ancient temple, and
-were soon lost both to sound and sight, for the plain lay even yet in
-the shadow of the night.
-
-The dawn--the great heat at midday--the majesty and grandeur of the
-wilderness in the heart of which I was doomed and lost for ever--and,
-above all else, the grave-like silence of that place--it were better I
-made no attempt to describe these things than fail in the endeavour. I
-know no more than that my loneliness was overpowering. It was as if I
-was the only living atom, save the insects and the butterflies that
-fluttered round about me, in all that world of gorgeous vegetation.
-
-I could not move a fraction of an inch. I would gaze by the hour at the
-great stones of the ruins before me, small in the distance and yet plain
-to see in that clear atmosphere, and wonder what manner of men had lived
-there in bygone days--what had been their hopes, their interests, their
-mode of life. And then my thirst would consume me; my tongue would
-cleave to the roof of my mouth, and I would suck my lips to find them
-dry as bones.
-
-One day of it had been more than I could bear; and that second night, I
-prayed that death might come speedily, for I saw that in death only
-would I find release from all my sufferings. But I lived on, like the
-Ancient Mariner himself; and on the third day, as on that tragic ship,
-there came a rain--a blessed rain from Heaven itself for me. Clouds
-appeared as if by magic, a dark canopy cast across the forest like a
-curtain; and the skies on a sudden opened and the rain came down in
-torrents.
-
-I was wetted in an instant to the skin, but I cared nothing for that. I
-threw back my head with opened mouth, and the water streaming down my
-face was life and strength and hope to me.
-
-And that night I no longer prayed for death; I prayed to the great God
-of Right and Justice for deliverance. And yet, how weak is human
-nature, how little is our faith! For before morning I was struggling
-like a madman to free myself from my bonds.
-
-The more violently I fought for liberty, the greater pain I suffered;
-for the hard fibre cut into my flesh until I gave it up, and, overcome
-by sheer exhaustion, I fell asleep, held upright by my bonds.
-
-I awoke to behold the half-light of approaching day. The plain of grass
-before me was lost in the mist which, in that weird place, came always
-at sunset and at dawn.
-
-I looked about me as if I yet were dreaming. The giant forest trees had
-taken upon themselves the shape of ugly spectres. The tall grass swayed
-in the wind of the dawn with a soft, rustling sound that reminded me of
-my mother's silken dresses. I watched a lizard, the length of a
-foot-rule, run swiftly down the trunk of a tree and make off into the
-grass.
-
-I endeavoured in vain to trace its passage, wondering whither the little
-creature was going so swiftly; and when I looked up I beheld to my
-astonishment--a man!
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X--HOW THE WILD MEN CAME AND LOOKED AT ME
-
-
-I have called him a man, and so he was, though, in very truth, at that
-time I had never seen his like. He was small in stature, little taller
-than myself; and there was something about him that was more animal than
-human. I cannot account for this, unless the explanation be found in
-the scared look upon his face, especially in the eyes--the eyes of a
-hunted beast.
-
-He was not black, but light brown of skin, though there was so much dirt
-about him that I was not even sure of that. His hair was lank and long.
-All matted with mud, it fell about his ears. He wore no clothing, save
-the skin of some small, wild animal hung loosely round his waist; and he
-held in one hand a long bamboo rod, which I took to be a blow-pipe.
-
-Now, I believed that this savage would kill me out of hand, defenceless
-as I was. But he stood staring at me for a long time, with his wild
-eyes and his mouth widely opened.
-
-So, by degrees, my courage returned to me, and with it something of
-hope. I tried to think--and it is no simple matter to be reasonable
-when one is exhausted by starvation and tortured both in body and in
-mind.
-
-It was manifest, in the first place, that I had no means of
-communicating with this man. I could neither speak to him nor sign,
-since I knew no word of any barbarous language, and my hands were bound
-fast to my sides. But I did the only thing I could do--I moved my mouth
-as if I were eating, hoping against hope that he would take my meaning:
-that I was starving and begged for food.
-
-And the more I mouthed at him and made grimaces, the more he stared at
-me, and the more frightened did he seem. For the better part of five
-minutes I swear he never moved an inch, and then, quite suddenly, he
-took to his heels and dived into the woods.
-
-For a little time I could scarce credit it that he had left me to my
-fate. But when a full hour had passed, and I realised that it was
-possible that the wild man might not return, my sense of loneliness
-became even more oppressive than before, and to tell the truth I cried.
-
-I am, in the evening of a long, adventurous life, at times of a
-reflective disposition, and I have considered often the strange
-complexities of human nature, for I have seen many men and places in my
-time. When I first beheld the savage, I was alarmed beyond measure that
-he would put the life out of me by means of his murderous-looking
-blow-pipe. I would, at that moment, gladly have had him on the other
-side of the world. And when he left me so suddenly, without sign or
-signal of either hostility or friendship, I felt no less dismayed.
-
-I was so utterly alone in that great silence, in the shadow of those
-mute, majestic trees. Not even the wild inhabitants of that
-inhospitable region would come and have done with it and kill me.
-
-And thus, indeed, I burst into tears, and cried as children cry. I
-think sheer weakness and the pain that I had suffered had much to do
-with it; and in any case it all seemed to me so pitiful and hopeless,
-for I was over-young to undergo such cruel privations.
-
-I slept again until the evening, when I was awakened of a sudden by a
-strange noise like the chuckling of a hen.
-
-I opened my eyes and looked upon the same wild man who had regarded me
-before. But this time he had brought three others with him--all four as
-like to one another as so many beans. And there they stood, in a row,
-immediately before me, one of them--as I have just expressed
-it--chuckling like a hen.
-
-I could not for the life of me make out whether or not he was laughing.
-He might have been amused, amazed, or angered. There was no expression
-upon his face. The noise seemed to come from somewhere out of his
-throat. When I opened my eyes and looked at him, he ceased at once; so
-I am inclined to think he had behaved thus in order to awaken me.
-
-I judged that the man I had seen earlier in the day had stood at a
-distance of about twenty paces from me; but now, made bolder by
-companionship, he had approached to within about twelve yards from the
-palm-tree to which I was bound. They were all armed with blowpipes, but
-they made no hostile movement; they just stood staring at me with their
-mad eyes, speechless and looking more afraid than I was.
-
-All on a sudden, I was impelled to cry out. I shouted as a dog yelps
-when trodden on, asleep upon a mat.
-
-"Give me food!" I cried. "Have pity on me! I am starving!"
-
-And at that they vanished, all the four of them. They scattered like
-birds, swiftly and in silence. At one moment, I beheld them; at the
-next, they were nowhere: they might have been spirited away.
-
-They did not return that night, which was the most miserable of all.
-Hunger was now gnawing at my vitals. There was a foul taste in my
-mouth, and I felt so weak and lifeless that it was as if the slow
-beating of my heart shook my whole frame, making it hard for me to
-breathe. Also, I was again consumed by a raging thirst; but the worst
-of the whole matter was the seeming hopelessness of my situation; for
-now I verity believed that my end was drawing near.
-
-Though often our endurance is strained to the utmost, and there are
-times when we are weighed down by grief and trouble, I know that the
-good God is merciful, that it is well to bear the ills we have so
-bravely as we may, in the firm conviction that faith and a stout heart
-to hope will conquer in the end.
-
-The sun rose in that lone place upon my misery; and a little after, came
-the wild men again; and this time they were nine in number, for I
-counted them as they stepped in single file forth from the darkness of
-the woods.
-
-They stood gazing at me as before; and now I was wise enough to hold my
-peace, though by then--if the truth be told--there was little strength
-within me; for, even as I looked at them, my eyelids dropped and my head
-nodded on my shoulders like that of a drunken man.
-
-They came closer than ever, to within an arm's length of me, and one
-timidly extended an arm and touched me, and then drew back quickly as if
-he had burned his fingers.
-
-[Illustration: "THEY CAME CLOSER THAN EVER, TO WITHIN AN ARM'S LENGTH OF
-ME."]
-
-I saw now that I had nothing to fear from them, that it was a keen
-struggle in their untutored minds as to whether fear or curiosity should
-win. I did my best to smile.
-
-It was a senseless, mirthless smile, forced upon lips that were dry and
-burning and eyes grown dim throughout long hours of watching and
-despair; and yet--by the grace of Providence--it achieved its simple
-purpose.
-
-For, forthwith, like a tribe of monkeys, they set to talking among
-themselves; and never had I heard such gibberish. They waved their
-hands, and made mouths and faces at one another that were astonishing to
-behold. They touched me repeatedly, fingering my tattered clothes; and
-one tugged so violently at the sleeve of my shirt, which had been torn
-to ribbons upon the thorn trees in the forest, that he pulled it off
-almost from the shoulder--and then began the monkey-house again.
-
-The very sight of my white skin, where it had not been tanned by the
-sun, set them jabbering for the space of half-an-hour; and all that time
-I kept my silence, fearing that, if I should speak, they would disperse
-like Sussex rooks at the sound of a farmer's gun.
-
-I had read and heard of fierce savage black men, cannibals and the like,
-who regarded as their natural foes all of alien race, whom they put
-horribly to death. But these wild people were shy as antelopes; and
-though they might have been dangerous if handled wrongly, there was
-nothing to fear from them in the case of one placed at so great a
-disadvantage as myself.
-
-I did nothing, then, but let them talk it out; and in the end, one of
-them took a bone knife with an edge like a saw, and cut through the
-fibre that bound me to the tree.
-
-The others stood a little apart with their long blow-pipes, ready to
-riddle me with darts that I learned afterwards were poisoned. But no
-sooner were my hands freed than I pointed a finger straight down my
-opened mouth--a gesture which no one could mistake.
-
-That set them talking once again; and when they were through with it,
-they took me with them back into the woods. In single file we wormed
-our way through the thick undergrowth of the forest, until at length we
-hit upon a footpath where they travelled fast and silently, these
-strange men of the woods. By then my strength was well-nigh exhausted.
-Both in mind and in body I was come to the end of my powers of
-endurance; and I could go no farther.
-
-And so, thereupon, they carried me, taking it in turns among themselves
-to bear my weight, for they were not strong men, but thin of limb and
-short in stature.
-
-We journeyed until nightfall, and then camped in the forest. They gave
-me food--roasted manioc and crushed bananas; and then I fell asleep.
-
-At daybreak--though in those dark places we saw little of the sun, and
-there was small difference betwixt night and morning--we were on the
-march again, and about midday struck the course of a considerable river
-which we followed up-stream for a distance of many miles. From this
-valley we turned into that of a tributary, and reached our destination
-in the evening.
-
-This was a small village of rude huts, inhabited--as I afterwards
-discovered--by the various members of a single family. I had walked
-many miles upon the second day, and found myself on arrival at the
-village as greatly fatigued as ever, suffering also from a stiffness in
-the joints, due to the cramped position I had been forced to assume when
-bound by the liana to the tree. So that after my simple meal that
-night, I again fell asleep, and slept, I verily believe, as I never did
-before or since. For not only was I spent and weary, but I had now the
-comfortable assurance that these wild people would do me no bodily harm.
-For the time being, at least, I was safe.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI--I BURN MY BOATS
-
-
-You may scarce credit it when I say that I sojourned for many months
-with these savage, yet simple, people, and whilst with them received
-neither hurt nor insult, but passed my days in pleasant idleness in the
-heart of those awe-inspiring woods.
-
-I have since described their ways and mode of living to a famous
-ethnologist, one whose business it was to study the sundry races of
-mankind; and he believed that I fell into the hands of a tribe of
-Caishana aborigines, one of the most primitive races in the world.
-
-Of this, however, no one can be sure; for I learned little of their
-language, and of that remembered nothing. Besides, there are so many
-hordes of Indians and tribes in the valleys of the Upper Amazon, and of
-so few of these is anything definite known, even at the present day,
-that a question of such slight importance, for the time being, may
-remain unanswered.
-
-It makes, in any case, no difference to my story. I do but state mere
-facts, leaving footnotes, queries and the like to scientists and
-students. For five months--as I can guess--I lived with this woodland
-people; and it pleases me to remember that, in return for their
-hospitality and kindness, I was able to render them some service. I
-taught them novel methods of catching the fish that abounded in the
-rivers, creeks and pools; and I gave them gladly the few belongings that
-I had upon me, even a large jack-knife, which the chief of the village
-received with unfeigned delight--for they were so uncivilised as to be
-altogether unacquainted with the use of iron.
-
-On my side, I learned many things from them, becoming, for instance,
-skilled in the use of the blow-pipe--a very deadly weapon, since it made
-no more noise than a pop-gun, and the arrows were invariably dipped in
-the juice of a poisonous herb that grew plentifully in the forest.
-
-I was much interested in the manufacture of these instruments. Many
-were of bamboo, but those of the better quality of a hard wood, from
-which the inside had been patiently scraped by means of a bone knife,
-until the surface was smooth as glass. Needless to say, to accomplish
-this, the shaft had to be split into two pieces, which were afterwards
-joined together. It took a skilled worker weeks to make a blow-pipe. A
-good specimen was always coveted, and he who possessed one was regarded
-as a person of importance. I was instructed also in the craft of making
-the darts or arrows; and this was an accomplishment that, more than once
-in the course of the next few months, stood me in good stead.
-
-Of the people themselves, of their strange ways and customs, I might
-write a full chapter, were I so disposed. I have no reason to think
-that they varied greatly from the majority of the wilder tribes in the
-great forests of the Amazon. They were small in stature, short-lived,
-and very dirty. They went well-nigh naked, and many suffered from a
-particularly loathsome disease, the character of which I know not, save
-that it left their skin marked black in patches. I feared, at first,
-that this would prove contagious; but, either my nationality or else my
-cleanly habits--for I bathed daily in the river--preserved my health and
-personal appearance.
-
-In regard to my bathing, I can relate a strange thing. It being the
-rainy season, the river was alive with alligators. I was at first
-considerably frightened of these horrid reptiles; but I soon discovered
-that all that was necessary was to beat the surface of the water
-violently with a stick in order to scare them away. Of course, it was
-needful to exercise a certain amount of discretion, to keep one's eyes
-open whilst in the water; and I do not say that there was no danger
-present. But the fact remains that the South American cayman, one of
-the most formidable-looking brutes in all the world, is a cowardly beast
-and by no means greatly to be feared.
-
-If that be so, I have another story to tell concerning the snakes of
-that dark region; for these I never ceased to fear, and not without good
-cause. My boots had long since ceased to be of the least practical use,
-and I had presented them, not without ceremony, to the head man of the
-village where I stayed. I was obliged therefore to go bare of foot in
-the forest, like the natives themselves, and day and night I walked in
-constant peril of my life.
-
-For the underwoods were populous with serpents of all kinds, many of
-which were venomous. They were usually to be found in the vicinity of
-water, and amongst them I cannot fail to mention the gigantic tree and
-water snakes, in whose deadly coils a full-grown man might well be
-crushed to death. More than once I set eyes upon these great, evil,
-stealthy monsters; and on each occasion my very blood ran cold. But I
-have yet to write of what I have called--for no better reason than that
-there is melodrama in the name--the Glade of Silent Death, where in part
-the tragedy of all my narrative attains some sort of a crisis--a crisis,
-at least, for one of whom I dare say more than I would of any other:
-that he well deserved his fate.
-
-Now, had I been content to eke out the remainder of my years with these
-untutored people, I should never have beheld the wonders of which I have
-to tell. I think I realised that if I continued to live as a savage, I
-must eventually myself become a savage, forgetting all I had ever
-learned of Christian civilisation. So I made up my mind to take my life
-into my hands, and set forth alone into the Wild.
-
-Beyond doubt, my ulterior motive was to regain the confines of the
-civilised world, to hear again the voices of men speaking my own
-language--even the lazy Sussex twang. But I was moved firstly not so
-much by a desire for liberty, as by the spirit of adventure. For I had
-caught something of the rover from John Bannister, as I sat listening to
-his stories to the soft accompaniment of the wash of the English sea;
-and I would find out all I could concerning the quest of Amos Baverstock
-and the secret of the Greater Treasure of the Incas, which the more
-civilised of the Indians called the "Big Fish."
-
-And so I asked the savages to guide me back to the place where they had
-found me, within sight of Cahazaxa's ruined temple. Though I never knew
-but a score of words of their language, I was now proficient in the art
-of conversing by signs and the drawing of pictures in the mud, as I was
-also something of a woodsman and--though but a few months older than
-when I had been kidnapped--no longer a boy, but the beginnings of a man,
-who was like to have a hard part to play. Life in the wilderness had
-made me self-reliant. To the wanderer in savage places peril comes
-naturally enough, and death itself is all in the work of the day.
-
-But it was one thing to ask, and another to receive. The chief man of
-the community--for it was hardly a village--was all against the project.
-In the first place, he and the rest of them had grown to be fond of
-me--I was regarded as both a curiosity and something of an acquisition.
-Secondly, I soon discovered that they stood in fear and trembling of the
-ruins, which they firmly believed to be haunted.
-
-Though they might have restrained me by force, we argued the matter out,
-and it came to a question of will-power--or obstinacy, if the word suit
-you better--and I had my way.
-
-Accordingly, one morning I set forth into the forest, accompanied by a
-guide. I was dressed in the remnants of my shirt, tied like a kilt
-about my waist, and carried a ten-foot blow-pipe and a score of darts;
-and beyond these I had neither arms nor clothing. I was just a white
-savage in a great dark wilderness, with my life in my own hands and all
-Nature at war against me. And I doubt if I can even say that I was
-white, for I was now tanned almost to the colour of the wild men amongst
-whom I had lived.
-
-In three days, by easy journeys, my companion and I came to the margin
-of the woods, to the great plain of waving grass, in the midst of which
-the Temple of Cahazaxa stood upon a hill-top.
-
-I begged of the man to come with me, to serve me as a servant, making
-vague promises of reward which I am sure he did not understand; and
-though, as I could see, the spirit was willing, the flesh was weak; for
-he fell down upon his knees before me, trembling in all his limbs,
-craving permission to return.
-
-I could not be heartless. From the tribe I had never received anything
-but kindness. But permission to be gone was not all the simple fellow
-wanted; for, when he saw that I was determined to go alone upon my way
-to the ruins on the hill-top, he again fell down upon his knees, and
-implored me to return with him.
-
-In so far as I could take his meaning, the old temple was infested by
-ghosts and evil spirits. Singular things for centuries had been known
-to happen among those grey, worn stones: weird singing had been heard
-and strange coloured lights had been seen of nights, and no man of the
-forest who had ever ventured to the hillock had as yet returned alive.
-
-To speak true, these fables--though I believed no word of them--did but
-whet my appetite for action. I had a taste for danger. For the first
-time in my life, I was conscious of my own individuality. Man or boy, I
-was free. I had a part to play upon the stage of life, and the wide
-world was my scene. I, too, was upon the same quest as Amos: the hunt
-for the Greater Treasure. It was as if something within me urged me to
-go forward, like a knight-errant of old, placing my firm trust in
-Providence; and I now have little doubt that it was the voice of Destiny
-that spoke within me.
-
-And so I bade farewell to the forest tribesman, whom I left upon the
-verge of tears, believing in his heart of hearts that I was as good as
-doomed; and with a light heart and my blow-pipe, I went my way across
-the plain, towards the hill upon which stood the ancient Temple of
-Cahazaxa, whilst the sun was sinking in the sky.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII--THE PATH OF THE TIGER
-
-
-It was near upon the time of sunset when I slowly climbed the hill. I
-could not take my eyes from the great stones before me, many of which
-must have been at least ten square yards in surface area, and cut so
-straight and square that, without cement or mortar, they fitted one
-against the other as nicely as a child's wooden bricks. I wondered how
-they had come there, by what means they had been transported and lifted
-into position; and I marvelled that an ancient people should have been
-masters of such science.
-
-But it was not this alone that caused my footsteps to become slower and
-slower as I approached the ruin. Despite myself, I could not help
-remembering much that the wild man had said to me of ghosts and evil
-spirits.
-
-In the dim evening light, wreathed in the mist that rose from the
-surrounding plain, those great pillars of cold, silent stone looked not
-to belong to this world of common things. Towering, as they did, above
-the tree-tops of the forest, they made me think of the enchanted palaces
-of which in childhood my mother had read to me from fairy tales. If
-there were ghosts anywhere in all the world, they were here--and I was
-sure of that.
-
-This notion got the strongest hold of me; and presently, a cold sweat
-broke out upon my forehead, and I wished that I were back with the wild
-men in their woodland village. However, I had more pride than to
-retreat, and that at the eleventh hour; and I continued to go forward,
-though something after the manner of a condemned man towards the
-gallows.
-
-As it grew darker I became more afraid. Night in those tropic latitudes
-comes suddenly; darkness falls like a curtain upon a stage; and when I
-had gained the outer pillars, which formed together an encircling
-colonnade, there was scarce light enough for me to see a distance of
-thirty yards.
-
-Within the circumference of these outer pillars--which attained upon an
-average a height of about fifty feet--was a great roofless building with
-a floor of flagstones, where the silence quite unnerved me. It was more
-oppressive than the silence of the forest, where I had always been
-conscious that one was surrounded by Life in a million forms: plants,
-insects, and animals--all at war that they might live.
-
-But this place seemed dead, save for vast colonies of small red ants
-whose bite was poisonous; for I had not been there a full minute before
-I was bitten from head to foot, and there were painful weals all over
-me.
-
-It was plain I could not sleep amid the ruins as I had intended. Not
-only would the ants torture me almost to distraction, but the place was
-uncanny, and I could now well understand how those ignorant woodlanders
-believed it to be haunted.
-
-I was about to go, and had actually turned towards the main entrance,
-which I could see quite clearly in the light of the newly-risen stars,
-when a sound came to my ears that was so like a groan that I felt my
-blood run cold.
-
-I stood transfixed, more frightened than bewildered. Looking about me
-on every side, straining my eyes in the semi-darkness, I could see
-nothing. I was convinced that there was no one in that vast chamber
-save myself and the red ants. And yet the groan came again, louder than
-before.
-
-I tip-toed across the room, my heart throbbing like an engine. And like
-a frightened child, I hid myself in a corner; for I had no convictions
-any longer, and I wished only to be somewhere where I could not be seen.
-
-Then a spider descended upon me from somewhere high up the wall. And
-you may laugh at me when I say that I sprang to my feet and dropped my
-blow-pipe and let out a cry that was very near a shriek. But you would
-never have laughed had you been placed as I was, seen that spider, and
-felt upon your shoulders his restless, furry legs. For this was no
-common spider that eats flies and gnats, but a bird-devouring brute, the
-size of a saucer; and this is no exaggeration when one takes into
-account the full extension of his legs.
-
-As I fled, I picked it from off me with my hand, and threw it away;
-whereupon I found that it had covered my fingers with a disgusting and
-sticky saliva. I am only thankful that it had no time to bite me, for I
-believe the bite of these terrible insects has been known to prove
-fatal. They build webs of such strength and solidity that birds as
-large as sparrows are caught in the toils and killed; and I have heard
-it said that these monsters also ascend trees, drive hens from their
-nests and then devour their eggs.
-
-However, this is no treatise upon Natural History. He who wishes to
-know more of this horrid creature may read of it in recognised works of
-science. For myself, to have felt once its quick, hairy legs upon my
-bare neck and shoulders is enough for many a day, and the thing may
-belong to any species and genus that it likes, so long as I never set
-eyes upon one again.
-
-For I was thoroughly scared; I had become as jumpy as a bean on a hot
-plate. I trust that I am not by nature a coward; but the atmosphere of
-that ghostly, misty place, the mysterious groans that I had heard, which
-had seemed to come from nowhere, and the long-legged, furry spider, had
-all so played upon my nerves that I knew neither what I was doing nor
-what would happen next.
-
-I had made, in any case, as much noise as a harlequinade. I had cried
-out at the top of my voice and had sent my wooden blow-pipe rattling to
-the ground. And then I stood motionless, breathless, waiting--as it
-seemed--for some new calamity.
-
-This time it was no groan I heard, but a human voice calling, at first
-loudly, and then more softly, in a strange foreign tongue.
-
-I listened, and I dared not move. The silence that followed endured for
-minutes, during which the seconds were punctuated by the violent beating
-of my heart. And, presently, I began to think. As I mastered my fears,
-I became capable of reasoning.
-
-It was folly to consider ghosts. Such superstitions were well enough
-for untutored savages, wild men of the forests, but they would never do
-for Richard Treadgold, who had lived his years in Sussex--though, of a
-certainty, I had heard of more than one so-called haunted house between
-Beachy Head and Selsey Bill.
-
-I was convinced that I had heard a human voice. I had been able even to
-distinguish words, howbeit in a language that I did not comprehend. And
-if that were so, it must follow that I was not the only human soul
-within that gloomy ruin.
-
-I looked about me, and saw in the starlight my blow-pipe, lying on the
-floor. I picked it up, and placing a dart within the mouthpiece, began
-to explore the place, starting at the wide entrance and making a tour of
-the walls.
-
-It was not long before I came upon a square hole in the ground, edged
-with shallow coping stones to keep out the water when the place was
-flooded by the rains. It reminded me of a hatchway on board a ship.
-
-Below it was quite dark. I lay down upon the floor at full length with
-the idea of listening: for I was now sure that I was on the track of the
-secret of the place. But presently my eyes grew accustomed to the
-darkness, and I saw before me a flight of narrow steps, leading
-downward--as it seemed--into the very bowels of the earth.
-
-I had now mastered my fears. I was determined to be a fool no longer,
-but to conduct myself like the man I wished I were. I would have
-descended without a second's thought had it not been for two grave
-considerations: firstly, I had no means of striking a light; and
-secondly, the stairway was so narrow that I must leave behind my long
-Indian blow-pipe, the only means of self-defence I had.
-
-I have set down already much by no means favourable to myself; and
-therefore I have the less hesitation in recording an incident which goes
-far to prove that there were moments when I was a worthy pupil and
-admirer of John Bannister himself. For I went down that black and
-shallow staircase, half naked as I was and quite unarmed, not knowing
-what would befall me at the end of it.
-
-Half-way down, the staircase turned, when to my surprise I saw below me
-the dim reflection of a light. And presently I found myself in a long
-shallow chamber, where I stood bewildered.
-
-In the centre of the room was a rough stone altar upon which burned an
-oil lamp of a quaint design and wrought in bronze. Of other such lamps,
-similar in all respects, I counted five, lying upon the stone flooring,
-each surrounded by its own pool of oil.
-
-The whole place indeed was in great disorder. Curtains of finely woven
-hair had been wrenched from the walls and cast upon the ground. Benches
-and short-legged tables had been overturned, and in some cases broken.
-Here lay a sword, and there a spear, and here again a pistol, broken at
-the small of the butt. Nor was all this the worst of it, by any means;
-for immediately before me, lying in stiff, huddled attitudes--a pathetic
-and a tragic thing to see--were three stone-dead men, as sure as I first
-saw the light of day in Sussex.
-
-Dead they were, for they neither moved nor even breathed. And when I
-sighed aloud at the wonder of it all, a fourth man whom I had not
-noticed, lying upon the floor at the other end of the room, struggled
-upon an elbow and cried out to me, and afterwards pointed a finger down
-his throat.
-
-I was no such fool as to mistake his meaning. He wanted water to drink,
-and I looked about me to find it. At the foot of the altar was a pool
-of clear, crystal water, a spring that bubbled from out of the crust of
-the earth, the overflow being conducted to the far end of the chamber by
-means of a shallow, wooden trough. I found a drinking vessel which, to
-my amazement, was of gold; and this I filled in haste, and brought to
-the wounded man.
-
-For wounded he was, a leg being broken at the thighbone, so that he
-could not move an inch without suffering the greatest pain. It was this
-pain I daresay, as much as loss of blood, which had thrown him in a
-fever; for his skin was burning to the touch.
-
-Three times I filled the cup, and each time he emptied it; and as he
-drank, he thanked me with his eyes.
-
-Then he lay back and rested, whilst I gazed upon that shambles; for a
-shambles it was--blood was everywhere.
-
-I went to the dead men, to each in turn, to make sure that there was no
-spark of life in any. And this was the second time that I looked upon
-the cold face of death; for, sure enough, each one was dead. And they
-were shot; they had been killed by leaden bullets: one in the head,
-another in the heart, whereas the third, poor wretch! had died in agony,
-with a great wound in his stomach.
-
-But dead though they were, I could not regard them without noticing how
-different they were in features and in figure from the wild men of the
-woods.
-
-The savages with whom I had sojourned for so long, for whose simple
-kindness I shall be ever grateful, were of a Mongolian cast of
-countenance: they had high cheek-bones, lips thinner than a negro's, and
-yet thick and loose, and their eyes were almond-shaped, inclining
-downwards to the nose. Also, their greatly receding foreheads and chins
-suggested that they belonged to one of the lower and least intelligent
-species of mankind.
-
-But the three dead men, as well as he who was yet alive, had aquiline
-noses, thin lips, and rounded eyes. Also they were fully dressed in
-long tunics of some woven material, open at the throat, and girdled at
-the waist. They wore their hair long, but cut straight, level with the
-eyebrows; and above this fringe a broad metal band encircled the head
-above the ears.
-
-I looked from them to the altar, and saw thereon a graven disc from
-which rays extended to the extremities of the stone. Beyond doubt this
-was meant to be the sun; and of a sudden I remembered that the
-inhabitants of Old Peru had been wont to worship the sun.
-
-So these, perhaps, were those same Peruvian priests of whom Amos
-Baverstock had spoken, they who shared with John Bannister the secret of
-the Greater Treasure of the Incas.
-
-And then the truth burst upon me as in a flash--I had struck the pathway
-traversed by the tiger. The death and destruction by which I was
-surrounded was the work of Amos Baverstock himself.
-
-I picked up the broken pistol, looked at it in the lamplight, and knew
-straightway that I had guessed aright. For I recognised it at once. It
-had belonged to Joshua Trust. It was the same pistol I had seen often
-in his hands, the one with which he had fired at me upon the
-Littlehampton road. And if I had had any doubts upon the matter, they
-would have been dispelled at once; for there were the man's initials,
-"J.T.," carved with his sailor's jack-knife on the wood.
-
-I just let the broken pistol fall to the ground at my feet; and at the
-noise, the wounded man, to whom I had given water, struggled again upon
-an elbow, and spoke to me--_in English_.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII--THE STORY OF ATUPO
-
-
-"Friend?" said he; and though he pronounced the word in the strangest
-fashion, I at once took his meaning.
-
-I assured him of my good intentions, that I was no friend of those who
-had committed so dastardly an outrage. And at that, though in the
-greatest pain--as I could see--he smiled and thanked me.
-
-I will not repeat word for word the childish broken English that he
-talked. He knew nouns enough to express his meaning, but this was all
-of our language that he had, and for verbs he was obliged to fall back
-upon grimaces and gesticulations. These, however, were so forcible and
-graphic that I was never at a loss to understand him: and during the six
-weeks that this man and I lived together in the ruins, whilst his broken
-leg was mending, he came to speak quite fluently in my language,
-whereas--to my shame, be it confessed--I learned not a dozen words of
-his.
-
-I asked him how he had picked up his English; and since I had already
-guessed his answer, the familiar sound of that fond name was no less
-pleasant in my ears.
-
-"John Bannister," said he; and then asked me eagerly where Bannister now
-was.
-
-I shook my head, telling him as simply and as briefly as I could the
-whole of my adventures, from the time when I was kidnapped a few miles
-from my home beyond the seas to the day when I took my departure from
-the habitations of the wild men of the woods.
-
-His story I got from him by degrees, after I had tended to his wounds. I
-had no knowledge of surgery, but I knew that a broken leg must be made
-fast to a splint; and, borrowing a knife, I returned that very evening
-to the forest, and cut a straight branch from a tree, as well as a long
-coil of liana, which I wound about my shoulders like a garden-hose.
-
-I peeled the bark from two sides of the branch to make it as smooth as
-possible, and then bound it tightly to the poor man's leg by means of
-the liana. I bathed his wound daily with the clean water from the
-spring within the vault; and in a few days the blood ceased to flow and
-the wound--a rough, ugly rent from a leaden bullet--began to heal.
-
-There was a plentiful supply of food within the chamber--bananas, dried
-berries, and manioc; and together we lived, this man and I, in
-uneventful idleness, he flat upon his back on a bed of rushes, I
-attending to his daily wants.
-
-He claimed direct descent from the _incas_ of Old Peru. He told me much
-that I already knew: that in the great land which had been discovered by
-Pizarro there had been two races, the common Peruvians and those of
-_inca_ stock. The latter was the nobility of the land, being of royal
-blood; and it was they who had held the important offices of state and
-formed the priesthood.
-
-Centuries ago, upon the fall of Cuzco, Cahazaxa, one of the greatest
-nobles in the kingdom, escorted by an army of priests and soldiers,
-conveyed the Greater Treasure across the mountains, and hid it in the
-forest that extends across the whole valley of the Upper Amazon and its
-tributaries. The Spaniards got wind of this, and some years afterwards,
-in the year 1541, an expedition led by the redoubtable Orellano, a
-lieutenant of Gonzalo Pizarro, crossed the eastern chain of the Andes in
-search of El Dorado, or that country which was then but vaguely known as
-the Land of the Gilded King.
-
-This "Gilded King" was Cahazaxa himself, who, at the time of Orellano's
-famed expedition, had been for some months dead. But the little
-civilised colony that he had established in the wilderness survived, and
-continued to survive until the middle of the last century, when I myself
-beheld the last of it.
-
-Now, in the narration of historical and other facts, I have the greatest
-regard for a certain principle, established by the Greeks: the habit of
-reserving for its proper place each item of information, whether it be
-of primary or secondary importance. On that account, I ask you,
-therefore, for the space of a chapter or so, to bear in mind the famous
-name of Orellano and his search for the Land of the Gilded King--an
-affair to which I must soon refer again. I set down now only that which
-the _inca_ himself told me, together with such historical facts as were
-known to me at the time.
-
-Cahazaxa was dead; and he was buried in a cavern, high amidst the
-cloud-wrapped mountains, where his soul might rest in peace the nearer
-to the God he worshipped--the life-giving and almighty Sun, who, as he
-held, in the very dawn of the ages had sent Manco Copac and Mama Oello
-Huaco to earth, to make the Incas of Peru glorious and great.
-
-Orellano, the Spaniard, failed to find the Treasure. Undergoing the
-most terrible privations, he and his gallant followers pierced the
-forest, and, making one of the most remarkable journeys in the whole
-history of exploration, descended into the main stream of the great
-River of Mystery--as I call the Amazon--and, finally, after eight months
-of hardship and of peril, came within sight of the Atlantic.
-
-The courage of these men is much to be commended. The modern explorer
-has at his service breech-loading magazine rifles, invaluable
-geographical and scientific knowledge, and an adequate supply of
-suitable food and drugs. But these bold Spaniards of the sixteenth
-century had nothing, save their own stout hearts and strong Toledo
-blades. Enough has been written concerning their greed, their bigotry
-and cruelty. The story might be told again and again of their
-indomitable bravery. Orellano knew not whither he was going. When he
-decided to shoot the rapids, taking his life in his hands, he might as
-well have thrown dice with Death. How can we do aught but honour the
-land that has produced such sons as Cortez and Pizarro, Orellano, Vasco
-Nunez, and Alonzo de Ojeda?
-
-But, for the present, we are more concerned with Cahazaxa, a hero no
-less than these doughty Spaniards. He and his followers hid themselves
-in the wilderness, and there both Orellano and Pizarro himself failed to
-find them; and in this there is little to wonder at, when we consider
-the immensity of the great Forest of the Amazon.
-
-They built for themselves a massive temple after the fashion of the
-sacred palaces of Quito and Cuzco, dedicated to the Sun; and in course
-of time they constructed roads and bridges across the rivers, founding
-for themselves a colony where the civilisation of the _incas_ lived for
-a century or more after their own country across the mountains had
-fallen under the dominion of the hated Spaniard.
-
-This was the land of the Gilded King, the country of El Dorado. Word of
-its existence came to Quito, from the lips of savage aborigines prone
-naturally to exaggeration; but, though party after party of avaricious,
-bold adventurers crossed the mountains, the Peruvian settlement remained
-undisturbed. The secret of the "Big Fish" was never discovered either
-by the Spaniards or the Portuguese, who in the next century came up the
-great river from the east, traversing the country that is now called
-Brazil.
-
-I did not learn all this from the _inca_ priest himself; but so much of
-it as he could not tell me I knew already from what I had read of those
-golden days when the New World was a land of Mystery and Romance, and
-men thought and talked of doubloons instead of dollars.
-
-It is true, I never beheld with my own eyes the actual civilisation of
-ancient Peru as it had existed in Cahazaxa's time, because, many years
-before, it had died a natural death. The Peruvians, born and bred upon
-the western sea-board or the great tablelands beyond the Andes, were not
-able to survive in the humid atmosphere of the tropic forest. In course
-of time, a colony of several thousands, whom Cahazaxa had led across the
-mountains, had dwindled to a community of a few families of the old
-_inca_ stock, the majority of whom served as priests of the Sun in the
-great ruined temple, constructed by their forefathers, which they were
-not able to keep in repair.
-
-It was these men, descended in a direct line from the _incas_ whom the
-Spanish conquerors had driven forth from Cuzco and Quito, who guarded
-the secret of the Greater Treasure. It was they who were treacherously
-attacked and foully done to death by Amos Baverstock. And I will now
-relate the full story of that brutal enterprise as I got it from the
-lips of the man whom I befriended.
-
-Baverstock, with his three companions, had come to the temple some weeks
-before, on the day they had tied me to the tree and left me to starve to
-death.
-
-The priests had been greatly alarmed at the sight of the intruder, whom
-they recognised at once. They remembered the time when Baverstock and
-Trust had attacked the temple, and they had been obliged to fight for
-their lives, and would then and there have been slaughtered, had it not
-been for John Bannister, who placed himself at their head and drove Amos
-forth.
-
-But Bannister was no longer with them to fortify them with his courage,
-to preside at their councils, and to deal death to their enemies with
-his swift, unerring aim. And they were terrified at the very sight of
-Amos, as I myself had been when I first set eyes on the man upon the
-Sussex shore.
-
-He demanded to know where the Greater Treasure was hidden. He reminded
-them that they had lied to him once, and held forth threats that made
-their blood run cold. If they lied to him again, he would return, and
-no man of them would live to fool Amos Baverstock a third time.
-
-Now, they dared not speak the truth, for they were sworn to secrecy
-before the Sun, which they believed to be the Creator of the Universe;
-and yet, they dared not lie, for they knew Amos would be as good, or as
-evil, as his word.
-
-So, swearing upon all things they looked upon as holy, they set Amos and
-his friends upon the right road to the "Big Fish." They told him to
-follow a certain track across the grassland, until he came to a range of
-down-like, grass-clad hills. Thence, to the west, lay a wood in
-mid-valley, and in a glade in this wood the Treasure was buried, the
-place being marked by a great red stone, standing forth in the form of a
-monster fish in the act of leaping from the water. Here, clearly, was
-the origin of the legend, current among the natives even to this day, of
-the Big and Little Fishes. And when I heard the story as it was told me
-by the _inca_ priest, I confess I was conscious that my heart beat more
-rapidly and the warm blood of my youth was stirred within me.
-
-But Amos Baverstock cared nothing for legend. He lived only to lay
-hands upon a horde of untold gold; and that same day he left the Temple
-of Cahazaxa and set forth to the west upon his treasure hunt.
-
-And when he was gone, the priests held conference, demanding of Atupo
-why he had told their enemy so much of their cherished secret--for Atupo
-was the name of the surviving priest with whom I talked among the temple
-ruins. For he it was who devised the scheme whereby he hoped both to
-save the lives of his friends and to preserve the Greater Treasure; and
-now that all had failed so dreadfully, to the great pain he suffered
-from his wound was added anguish and remorse, inasmuch as the blame was
-his.
-
-He advised them to arm themselves, and took with him ten of the best
-archers of the little community, ordering them to steep the heads of
-their arrows in the juice of the venomous weed that grows in the
-forest--which is nothing more or less than strychnine, one of the most
-virulent of poisons.
-
-Atupo, with these ten men, who were all young and fleet of foot,
-traversed the grassland by a series of forced marches by night, so that
-they outdistanced Amos and reached first the Wood of the Red Fish--for
-so, with a little latitude, may be translated the old Peruvian name. And
-there they laid an ambush by a pathway along which Amos, and those with
-him, would be obliged to pass, and each archer was instructed to pick
-out his man. Four were detailed to shoot at Amos, three at Trust, and
-two each at Forsyth and the Spaniard, Vasco.
-
-Now, it seems not possible that a plan so well thought out could fail;
-and yet, it would seem also that here, at least, the devil helped his
-own.
-
-For Mr. Forsyth, and not Amos, came first to the ambuscade; and of the
-two arrows, one struck a silver tobacco tin that he chanced to be
-carrying that day in the pocket over his heart, and the other sheared
-off his right ear as cleanly as a tailor snips his cloth with a pair of
-scissors. And in the fraction of a second, Forsyth, all bleeding from
-the head, had his revolver from its holster, and had shot down two of
-the priests.
-
-Thus was the alarm given to Amos and those who followed him; and there
-was no question of a surprise. It came to a hand-to-hand affair, and
-then a running fight amid the woodland undergrowth, in which the bow and
-arrow had but a small chance against modern firearms. One by one, the
-priests were dropped in their tracks, and only Atupo himself escaped
-with life, though sorely wounded in the leg.
-
-He got clear of the wood, and lay hidden, day after day, in the long
-grass of the plain, journeying by night towards the forest, endeavouring
-to reach the ruined Temple of Cahazaxa. Though his leg was not then
-broken, he could do no more than crawl a few miles at a time, so that he
-was long weeks upon the road.
-
-And during all these days, Amos beat the wood from west to east, from
-south to north, and failing to find the "Red Fish," believed that he had
-again been sent upon a wild-goose chase; and the more firm was he in
-this conviction since there had been such treachery on the part of the
-_inca_ priests.
-
-I heard afterwards that his wrath was like that of a madman; he stamped
-and raved, and swore that he would return to the temple and put every
-living soul to death. And yet, they could not move a yard upon their
-backward journey, until Forsyth's life was out of danger.
-
-Without doubt, Mr. Gilbert Forsyth would have died in torture, there
-amid the foothills of the distant Andes, had it not been for his own
-promptitude and courage. For no sooner did he feel the poison working
-inward from the wound where the arrow had cut off an ear, than he thrust
-the blade of a hunting-knife into a glowing charcoal camp-fire, and
-himself placed the red-hot steel upon the lacerated flesh.
-
-And though he fainted at the time, and fell afterwards into a raging
-fever, this action saved, perhaps, his life. In the wilderness,
-rough-and-ready methods are often unavoidable; only he who is bold and
-strong can survive, whilst the weakling falls by the way. That Forsyth,
-despite his affectations and his London ways, was a man of action who
-could face pain as well as danger, this deed of his was in itself enough
-to prove. With his own hand he burned the poison from his flesh.
-
-For all that, he lingered for many days betwixt life and death; and it
-was the delay caused thereby that gave Atupo time to regain the temple.
-
-He had intended to give warning to his brother priests, and for this
-purpose he arrived none too soon. Many were so alarmed at the news of
-the disaster that they departed instantly, seeking shelter in the forest
-and taking with them their wives and families. But three remained, to
-collect the sacred lamps and vessels that were within the Temple,
-meaning to set forth the following day. And these were caught at
-midnight by Amos, who turned assassin then and there; for it was he who
-killed them with his own hands, in the great vault beneath the ruins.
-
-Atupo, too, he shot, though the man lay wounded on the ground, exhausted
-after the effort of his long journey across the grassland, and left him
-there for dead, his already wounded leg fractured a few inches below the
-hip.
-
-All this I learned from the man himself, while I nursed him under the
-Temple--all save the story of the fortitude of Mr. Forsyth, of which I
-heard afterwards, as in due time I will tell.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV--THE GLADE OF SILENT DEATH
-
-
-When I had heard the story of Atupo, it seemed to me that I knew all
-there was to know concerning the "Big Fish." And a feeling of
-restlessness at once possessed me; I desired to be up and doing, to
-venture myself across the grassland, to find the Wood of the Red Fish,
-for which the bold Spaniards of a bygone century had searched so often
-and in vain.
-
-But I stood in the debt of charity and honour, and in consequence I felt
-for all the world like a kennelled dog that tugs barking on his chain.
-For some weeks, at least, I must stay by the side of the wounded man,
-whom I could now call my friend. And if those days were something idle,
-we were by no means out of danger; for any day Amos Baverstock might
-return when, of a certainty, it would go ill with Atupo and myself.
-
-I found ample time throughout this period of my adventuring to explore
-the neighbourhood of the Temple, and many things I found of the greatest
-interest. About a mile distant from the ruins was the village where the
-Peruvians had lived, and here also was a great convent built of stone
-and thatched with straw, after the fashion of the palaces in ancient
-Quito. In this convent--so Atupo told me--had dwelt some score of nuns,
-vestal virgins, whose lives were dedicated to the Sun, just as there had
-been such maidens in the service of Jupiter and Mars in the great
-temples of Rome; for in many respects did the ancient Peruvians resemble
-the Romans: they were great builders of roads, bridges, and forts; every
-man must serve the state; and the Inca, on returning from his victories,
-would march in public triumph through the chief city of the land.
-
-I found both the village and the convent quite deserted; for--as I have
-said--on hearing of the approach of Amos and his friends, the Peruvians
-had fled into the forest, preferring to run the risk of death at the
-hands of the wild men with their poisoned arrows, or from starvation in
-the midst of that unending wilderness, to finding themselves once again
-face to face with that implacable and murderous villain who had sworn to
-put them all--woman, man, and child--relentlessly to death.
-
-I learned afterwards that few of these poor fugitives survived; for Amos
-burned their homes to the ground and left not one stone upon another;
-and this he did in wrath and malice, since it served him no better
-purpose than to waste his time, and that at a moment when his fate was
-jeopardised and he himself stood betwixt life and death.
-
-When I saw the convent and the village, the place was just as the
-inhabitants had left it; and in such haste had they departed that I even
-found cooking-pots containing stews, all cold and jellified, standing in
-the ashes of burnt-out fires. The only sign of life to be seen was a
-number of llamas, long-necked Peruvian sheep, grazing in the shadow of
-the convent walls.
-
-And now I am arrived at that part of my story when I came within an ace
-of losing life itself, and was only delivered at the eleventh hour by
-what was little short of the miraculous. For, in course of time, Atupo
-was healed of his wound, and well able, with the help of a staff, to
-hobble about the temple. It was then that I told him of my plans, of
-how I longed to journey to the Wood of the Red Fish, if for nothing else
-than to gaze upon the treasure of the Incas.
-
-He listened patiently to all I had to say, and then sighed deeply.
-
-"As you will," said he. "Of what use now is all this gold? My brother
-priests are slain, my people are scattered broadcast; the children of
-Cahazaxa are no more. Find your way, if you will, to the 'Big Fish.' I
-have told you where it lies. Feast your eyes upon the wealth that was
-once the glory of Peru. The race of the Incas is ended; the blood of
-kings is cold; even our gods are dead."
-
-I knew that he referred to certain images in the Temple which Amos had
-wantonly destroyed; and I was sorry for the man.
-
-"You will come with me?" I asked.
-
-But he shook his head.
-
-"That is not possible," he answered. "And even were it so, there would
-be naught to gain. I am already too greatly in your debt, and were I to
-accompany you, I should be a hindrance and a danger."
-
-I could not deny the truth of this, though I was loth to leave him, weak
-and crippled as he was. And yet, it was manifest that we could not
-remain for an indefinite time within the Temple: sooner or later, our
-provisions would run out, and, any day, Amos might return.
-
-"Where will you go?" I asked.
-
-He pointed towards the forest.
-
-"Thither," said he; and there was a certain nobility in his manner when
-he added, "to find my own people; for find them I will, in this world or
-beyond the grave. Death holds no fears for the sons of Cahazaxa."
-
-And so, some days afterwards, we parted: he, to the east, to the dark,
-spreading forest; I, to the west, across the grassland, upon my treasure
-quest, to search for the Wood of the Ked Fish and the lost Treasure of
-Kings.
-
-I set forth upon my great adventure all naked like a savage, save for a
-loin-cloth of woven hair that Atupo, the priest, had given me. I was
-armed with my long Indian blow-pipe and a quiverful of darts. And I
-went into that strange, romantic land alone, without guide, compass or
-companion, never knowing at night-time, when I lay down to sleep, what
-calamity or fortune the morrow held in store for me. And this, I stand
-convinced even to this day, when my hairs are white and shoulders bowed,
-is the only way to live and to die.
-
-For three days I traversed a great plain of rolling, down-like country,
-that reminded me somewhat of my own dear Sussex, save that the grass was
-coarse and longer. Some miles before me was a high ridge that stood
-forth at sunset like a battlement across the sky; and I knew that I must
-gain the crest of this before I could find the Wood of the Red Fish.
-
-Presently, however, I found my progress impeded by a river that had
-worked its way throughout the centuries deep into the rock, so that it
-flowed between almost perpendicular cliffs.
-
-I could neither see nor devise any manner of crossing. I sat down upon
-the edge of the caon and ate some of the manioc I had brought with me
-from the temple. I remembered that both Amos and Atupo had somehow
-crossed the river; and this thought was not a little encouraging. Across
-the grassland I had followed no track or pathway, so that when I had
-found a means of crossing the caon, I must know that I was once again
-upon the right road to the wood that I was seeking.
-
-That night, in full moonshine, I worked up-stream for many miles upon
-the left bank of the ravine. I slept for a few hours, and at daybreak
-continued my journey, and a little after, came quite suddenly upon one
-of the most wondrous things that I have ever seen.
-
-For there before me was a great and magnificent suspension bridge,
-spanning the width of the ravine--a distance, I should say, of thirty or
-forty yards. The cables of this bridge were made of the twisted fibre
-of maguey, a kind of osier, and were at least three feet in diameter.
-It was hard to realise that the whole structure stood there more or less
-as it had been erected, centuries before; but it seemed to me an even
-more wonderful thing that, in the midst of such a desolate and barren
-region, I should so suddenly have come across evidence of the greatest
-skill in engineering. I could scarce believe that I had passed through
-an almost impenetrable tropical forest to traverse a ravine as easily as
-I might have walked along the familiar dyke from Sidlesham to Pagham.
-
-The bridge itself was no more than a footbridge, but it served its
-purpose well enough; and, crossing over, I hit almost at once upon a
-pathway through the grass. This I lost at nightfall, but I continued on
-my way in the moonlight, working upward upon a slope that rapidly became
-steeper.
-
-In the small hours of the morning, sheer fatigue brought me to a halt by
-the side of a spring of clear water, bubbling forth from the earth. And
-here I drank and ate, breathing deeply of the cool fresh air of the
-uplands, which was like strong wine to me after the humid atmosphere of
-the forest; so that I slumbered as I had not slept for months, since I
-had left my home in Sussex, nor did I awaken until the morning sun was
-high.
-
-I saw that I had but a little way to go to reach the crestline of the
-hills--an hour's climb would do it; and I set forward gleefully, in high
-anticipation, wondering what lay beyond the watershed, and whether I
-would sight the Wood of the Red Fish, but little dreaming what would
-there befall me.
-
-I reached the summit hot and out of breath; and then I stood stock
-still, breathless in wonderment and all amazed.
-
-I cast not one glance towards the wide valley at my feet. I stood
-staring before me, like one dumbfounded, at the gorgeous panorama I
-beheld. For yonder, more than a hundred miles away, but clear in the
-morning sun at the back of me, stood the mighty and majestic Andes.
-Snow-crowned they were, rugged as a wild sea, and yet bold and still and
-massive as the thrones of gods. And I, who had never seen such
-mountains in my life, was awed and wonder-struck; and I realised, I am
-sure, the glory of the works of God.
-
-I gazed--it may have been, for an hour, sitting cross-legged, naked as
-the wild men of the woods, with my blow-pipe on my knees--at that great
-range of mountains that spans near half the world, extending almost from
-pole to pole. And then I looked down into the valley, and the thought
-that I was now within a day's march of my goal banished from my mind all
-loftier thoughts, and I found myself wondering whether it was I who was
-to find, at last, the lost land of El Dorado.
-
-For the valley was cut up into marshland, plains and hillocks, in and
-out of which a river wandered, now and again to open out into a lake or
-swamp, in which there were little tree-clad islands. But to the north
-was a wood, diamond-shaped, flanked to the east by a spur of the hills,
-and to the west by a morass where I could see the water glittering in
-the sunlight.
-
-On the foothills across the valley was a considerable forest, extending
-as far as the eye could reach; but I could not doubt that the wood in
-mid-valley, to the right of me, being so like the description which
-Atupo, the priest, had given me, was the Wood of the Red Fish.
-
-And then and there I set forward running, for I was young and
-hot-headed, and had not yet learned that time is but the slave of man,
-and that patience and caution are of more worth than eager haste.
-
-So I came, that evening, hot and thirsty to the wood, and then, in the
-darkness of the trees, whilst the sun was setting, I stood like a fool,
-irresolute and wearied, not knowing what next that I should do.
-
-I was hungry as well, for I had eaten all the food I had carried with me
-from the temple, and saw now that I must trust to my blow-pipe for
-sustenance, and kill what came my way that might be fit to eat.
-Fortunately, during my sojourn with the wild men, I had learned
-something of Indian woodcraft; and setting about my business without
-further loss of time, I searched at random in the wood until I found a
-glade where there was a pool of water, and here I crouched under cover,
-lying motionless, with my blow-pipe ready for whatsoever animal might
-come down to the pool to drink whilst the evening light still lasted.
-
-This place--though I then knew it not--was the Glade of Silent Death;
-and I have given it that name for a certain reason, which was in very
-truth a tragedy.
-
-There came, as I waited, to the woodland pool a small kind of deer; and
-he waded knee-deep into the water that he might drink. As he did so, I
-thought that I perceived some movement on the surface, as it might have
-been a rat swimming swiftly a distance of a few yards. I took no heed
-of it at the time, my attention being taken up with my blow-pipe, that I
-might strike the deer stone-dead, beneath the point of the left
-shoulder, placing my arrow deep in the poor beast's heart.
-
-I was about to shoot, when suddenly he kicked, and then endeavoured with
-a jerk to throw himself backward on his haunches. To my astonishment I
-observed that he was held fast by the nose, which might have been
-gripped in a vice, and that in spite of all his efforts he was being
-dragged steadily and slowly deeper into the pool.
-
-It was as if I were smitten by a cold rush of ice, when the truth was
-made quite plain to me. It was that half-light of evening, which is
-neither day nor night, when the early moon vies with the dying sunlight.
-And I saw the monster writhing coils of a great serpent rise dripping
-from the water and enfold the broken stump of a tree.
-
-I knew now that the deer was doomed; and so illogical is human nature
-that I experienced two emotions: terror of the reptile and pity for the
-beast that but a moment since I myself would have gladly slain for food.
-
-No doubt the anaconda stood in need of nourishment as much as I, and
-wanted more of it, to boot. But snakes were accursed things since Eden,
-and this vile, stealthy giant more so than most, because of his great
-bulk and strength. I know now that he was nearer thirty than twenty
-feet in length, and that his girth about the middle was greater than
-that of my own chest, though I was a strong lad for my years.
-
-And now that he had lashed himself to the tree-stump, the deer was lost.
-Its head was already under water, so that in a few moments the animal
-must be drowned. It would then be crushed to a pulp in the powerful,
-band-like coils of the constrictor, covered all over with a loathsome
-saliva, to be swallowed slowly and gradually, and yet in bulk.
-
-I could see the head of the snake, for the light was fading and the deer
-in its death struggle lashed the water into foam. But I could see the
-great glistening body of the reptile but a few yards away from me, and
-into the thickest part of this I drove one of the darts from my Indian
-blow-pipe, and as I did so, shuddered, more revolted than afraid.
-
-The effect was instantaneous and surprising. My dart must have struck
-the snake in the region of the spinal cord, for the great length of the
-brute curled backward like the lash of a whip; and the deer, released
-from those murderous coils, scrambled from the water, panting and
-exhausted, with its red tongue hanging from its mouth.
-
-And then the animal fell dead upon the ground, but a few feet from where
-I lay. I could feel my own heart beating within me like a
-sledge-hammer. For some minutes I gazed at the pool that rocked and
-swelled like a sea in miniature. There came ripples, one after the
-other, to the water's edge, where they lipped and splashed like little
-waves. And then, at last, all was still--still as glass in the
-moonlight. But I knew that the great snake was somewhere near me, and
-my sole desire was to escape from that dread, silent place, and that as
-quickly as I might. And yet, the primal instinct of mankind was strong
-within me, the love of life that is sustained by food; and as I drew
-back into the thickets of the underwoods, I dragged with me by the horns
-the lifeless body of the deer.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV--HOW I BEHELD A MIRACLE
-
-
-I found a place where I could rest and eat; and there I cut steaks from
-the deer with a quaint knife which had been given me by Atupo--for I now
-prided myself on being a hunter of experience--and made a fire of dried
-sticks and leaves.
-
-The heat of the night was excessive, and I had little need of the
-warmth; but I was glad of the light of the flames, for I was still much
-shaken by my adventure with the great constrictor, and had imagined
-vague, savage enemies amid the dark thickets that hedged me in.
-
-It will be noted that I have referred to the snake as a "constrictor";
-but, from this, it must not be thought that the monster was a boa. The
-family of the boas, known scientifically as the _boidae_, contains many
-species which are to be found in all parts of the world: the diamond
-snake of Australia, the rock python of Natal, the Indian python, and the
-great South American genera--the anaconda and the true boa-constrictor.
-
-All these reptiles are remarkable for the partial development of hinder
-limbs, proving conclusively that the snakes and lizards are nearly
-related to one another. These rudimentary limbs, however, are not
-visible in the living animals, being covered by the skin, but are quite
-evident in their skeletons. It is also of interest to remember that
-birds have evolved from reptiles, the forelegs having been converted
-into wings.
-
-All the constrictors kill their prey by crushing, and none have
-poison-fangs; and though these species are, with one or two exceptions,
-the largest snakes in the world, they move, whether in the water or
-among the tree-tops, in absolute silence. That which I myself attacked
-was undoubtedly an anaconda; and I know this for sure, because, though
-the light was bad, I distinctly saw two rows of great, dark spots upon
-his back, and not a black chain, which is the distinguishing mark of the
-boa-constrictor. Besides, the anaconda is essentially a water-snake,
-whereas the boa, though he will take readily to water, lives as a rule
-among the trees.
-
-Well, though I shudder when I think of the brute, I had no real cause at
-the time to abuse him, for I might not have slain the deer with my
-blow-pipe, and I was now supplied with food so long as the meat would
-keep in that steaming hothouse of a jungle.
-
-I did not sleep so well that night, weary though I was. I think I was
-not so much afraid as oppressed by an almost overwhelming sense of
-loneliness.
-
-Quite suddenly I realised, as I sat by my camp-fire, chewing the venison
-steaks--which were inordinately tough--that I was utterly alone. For
-weeks I had enjoyed the company of Atupo, and before that of the wild
-men; and even Amos and his companions, my sworn enemies, had human
-voices to which I had been wont to listen of an evening by the fire when
-the day's march was ended. But here was I indeed, alone in the dark
-wilderness, and I could not but recognise that the woods around me were
-alive, that life in a thousand shapes and forms was all about me,
-unseen, but not unheard.
-
-For I listened to strange and little noises everywhere--upon the ground,
-in the thick undergrowth, among the great trees that towered above me.
-My strained ears heard, perhaps, sounds that never were; but I know that
-great moths came fluttering to my fire, and leaves moved where insects
-crept and crawled, and now and again some kind of cricket would begin to
-sing, only to cease quite suddenly, I should think, on the approach of
-danger.
-
-They all lived, thought I, on sufferance, by the grace of the great God
-who made them all, and me as well. For I was one with them, even these
-little living things of the endless wilderness, encompassed by so many
-dangers, at the mercy of the great forces of Nature that might at any
-moment rise against us and stamp out our little lives.
-
-And I thought, too, of Amos. In the silence and the darkness, my old
-dread of the man returned; and I asked myself where was he all these
-months, and what were he and his companions doing?
-
-I knew that, like myself, he had been searching for the Treasure in this
-same Wood of the Red Fish; but I could not think that he was still in
-the neighbourhood. At the time, of course, I knew nothing of Forsyth's
-wound, which had delayed Baverstock so long; and when I afterwards came
-to work the matter out, I arrived at the conclusion that Amos must have
-left the wood on the very night when I encountered the anaconda. He
-then returned to the temple, and, finding both the ruins and the village
-quite deserted, gave unholy vent to his wrath by burning everything that
-fire could touch. He then came back upon his own tracks, by way of the
-suspension bridge, drawn to the Red Fish like steel to a magnet, for the
-man's soul itself was magnetised by gold.
-
-And all this time was I searching in the wood. For ten days I roamed
-here and there, living upon wild fruits and berries, and the birds I
-slew with my blow-pipe. Atupo had given me certain vague directions,
-which had seemed clear enough to me at the time. However, the man's
-knowledge of our language was but imperfect, and the wood itself a
-veritable maze, a labyrinth of shallow, twisting tunnels, from which the
-sunlight was eternally shut out.
-
-I wandered daily, lost in very truth, and came often to the Glade of
-Silent Death, near which place I would never venture to sleep for fear
-of the great serpent that I knew lay somewhere in the pool.
-
-On the tenth night of my wanderings, I received something in the nature
-of a shock. I had made my camp-fire somewhat earlier than was my wont,
-and a small, gay-feathered bird that I had shot and plucked was roasting
-over the red-hot charcoal, when, of a sudden, a shot from a rifle rang
-out in the woods not far from where I was.
-
-I sprang to my feet, in a high state of alarm, and kicked the fire
-broadcast, for I had gone barefooted for so long that the soles of my
-feet were like leather. And even as I did so, several other shots were
-fired in quick succession.
-
-I ate my bird half cooked--for I was hungry--and sat in the darkness for
-hour upon hour, certain that Amos himself was near at hand, and filled
-with apprehension.
-
-I had a good mind that night to give up my quest, to return to the
-grassland, where I could breathe the open air and feel the warmth of
-Heaven's sun upon me, hoping that thence I might somehow find my way
-back to the abodes of civilised men. I was sick at heart for want of
-the sound of a human voice and the sight of those I loved.
-
-What would be my fate in that dark wilderness, armed only with my
-blow-pipe, if I should fall into the hands of men like Amos Baverstock
-and Trust? In my thinking, the shots that I had heard could have been
-fired by no one else. And yet, of my own free will, for three days
-longer I delayed within the wood; and now, when I can look back upon
-those wild, adventurous days, I am devoutly thankful that I did.
-
-My own audacity can be explained, I think, by the fact that I was now
-three parts a savage. I was, as one might say, on friendly terms with
-danger. Peril and I had sojourned together for so long that I had come
-to regard even grim Death itself as no such weighty matter. Life was no
-more to me than to the little wild things that I daily slew for food.
-And so, for three days, I continued my searching in the jungle, howbeit
-acting more cautiously than before, making little noise and pausing
-frequently to listen.
-
-And then, by chance, I made a great discovery. At the time, in very
-truth, I did believe that I beheld the manifestation of a miracle; and I
-warrant that he that reads this will think the same, when I have set
-down the facts as they occurred.
-
-I came, late of an afternoon, upon an open place where there were rocks
-among the trees; and between these rocks the ground was soft, the soil
-quite black, being composed of the decayed vegetation of many tropic
-seasons. Here I found footmarks of living men, and, moreover, men who
-were no strangers to leather boots.
-
-That more than one of them had visited this very place, I was well
-convinced, since the footmarks bore evidence of at least two pairs of
-boots--one with great hobnails, and the other without. I never doubted
-that I had hit upon the trail of Amos and his friends; and I had--as I
-thought--sure proof of this, a little after, when I came upon an empty
-cartridge-case.
-
-The most of us believe that we have latent abilities, little suspected
-by our friends, that we are never called upon to use. I have heard it
-said that the great Duke of Wellington thought little of himself as
-soldier, but far too much of his reputation as a politician. And on
-this occasion it was something pleasing to my vanity to play the part of
-a detective, though I knew not the very alphabet of the business. I
-examined the footmarks, and made quite sure that I had found the trail
-of Joshua Trust, who wore, I knew, a pair of heavy boots with hobnails;
-and the brass cartridge-case--which I have kept to this day as a
-memento--had, I surmised, once been the property of Amos. So I went
-down on hands and knees, groping in the half-light of the woods to see
-what else I could discover. And whilst thus employed, I hit upon the
-miracle that all but cost me life itself.
-
-I found a place beneath the rocks where there was a smooth stone slab,
-fashioned plainly by the hand of man. And this rocked gently when I
-pressed my weight upon it, which suggested that it had been moved quite
-recently.
-
-In any case, both the shape and the size of the thing bewildered me, for
-it was all the world like a tombstone. And one would not think to find
-tombstones in the tropic wilderness beneath the Andes.
-
-I found the stone quite easy to lift, for it was thin as a plank, and
-had a hole in the middle, through which I could place a hand. And then
-I stood gazing into the cavity below.
-
-And as I gazed, I gasped. I drew back a little, with a quick catch of
-the breath, and then came forward once again, to stand staring, like one
-who is entirely daft, at what lay at my feet.
-
-For the round moon, of a surety, shone down into a tomb; and there
-before me was a corpse--or what had been a corpse, four hundred years
-ago. There lay a skeleton, white-boned and horrible--moreover, a
-skeleton that was encased in armour.
-
-He who lay there before me in the moonlight had once been a man and a
-soldier of old Spain; for his bony hands were crossed upon his chest and
-held between them the handle of a naked sword. And at his head was a
-steel helmet, and the trunk of his body was enclosed in a breastplate;
-so that I could see naught but his grinning skull and the white bones of
-his legs and arms.
-
-I stood and looked, and wondered. I wondered who he was, how he had
-come there, and of the tales that he could tell, were life to return to
-this bold adventurer of four hundred years ago. Though I do not fear
-death more than most men, I dread even to this day to look upon the face
-of it; and it took me time to gather my courage in both hands and to
-light a fire by the graveside, that I might see the better and solve so
-much of the mystery as I could.
-
-I have no proof--for we can seldom prove the past--but must weigh what
-evidence there is. For all that, I am convinced--now that I have
-thought and talked of it all to John Bannister and others--that I looked
-then upon the remnants of one of the soldiers of the gallant Orellano.
-I could not judge of the quality of the rusted steel of his breastplate
-and his sword; but I should think that he had been an officer of some
-distinction; since, on close inspection, I discovered that the long
-blade had been damascened in silver, a metal that will never rust. And
-that set my mind a-thinking of the great and gallant men who had been
-the first to cross to the Pacific, to whom to-day--in spite of all their
-bigotry and cruelty--the world owes so much.
-
-If one of Orellano's followers had lain buried in this place for all
-this time, how nearly had the Spaniards come to finding the Greater
-Treasure! I was not far, I knew, from the Big Fish, though I had
-searched the Wood for days and never found it. And Orellano had crossed
-the mountains to the west in search of El Dorado, and, having failed in
-his purpose, had gone on down to the great river, and thence to the
-Atlantic. And here lay one of his stout-hearted lieutenants, buried
-like a Christian warrior, with the arms he had fought with, within a few
-miles from where the Treasure lay.
-
-Wonder-struck, and not without great reverence, I put back the sword
-between those bony hands, and then lifted the helmet to see if that,
-too, could tell me anything concerning this tragedy of long ago.
-Besides, I was curious to know how the man had met his death. Had he
-been slain by a savage Indian? Or had he died of some fell, tropical
-disease? And so I took the helmet in my hands; and when I did so,
-something white fell out.
-
-I stooped and picked it up, and then examined it by the fire that I had
-lighted. It was parchment--it was a fragment of a map--a piece torn
-from the corner of a larger sheet. I looked at it and rubbed my eyes,
-and looked again, to be sure that I was not dreaming.
-
-If I did not dream, then I was wholly mad. The thought came to me that
-I had fallen into a fever, and now suffered one of those delusions which
-are common enough when the heart is racing and the brow dry and burning.
-
-I felt my pulse and the skin upon my forearm, and found that I was wet
-with sweat. Nor was I mad or dreaming, for I was Dick Treadgold, and my
-home lay far away, upon the Sussex shore. And yet, that which I held in
-my hand was the very fragment of John Bannister's map which I myself had
-torn from the hands of Amos Baverstock--that same fragment which I had
-thrust, to the full length of my arm, down a rabbit-hole, by Middleton,
-for fear that it should fall into the possession of that scoundrel,
-Joshua Trust.
-
-There can be no disputing the testimony of a torn piece of paper. There
-is, I believe, a celebrated murder trial, quoted in books of law as an
-example of irrefutable circumstantial evidence, wherein the murderer and
-the murdered man are each found in possession of a torn piece of
-newspaper, these two fragments fitting together line for line without a
-letter missing.
-
-You will never tear a sheet of paper twice in precisely the same way,
-though you try a million times. In this case, I had the evidence of my
-eyes and of my memory. It was the very fragment I had snatched from the
-hands of Amos; I remembered the shape of it; I remembered the shape also
-of the torn edge of the map that Amos himself had carried into the
-wilderness; and, above all, there were the letters "AHAZAXA," the
-rending of the parchment having decapitated the name "Cahazaxa."
-
-At first sight, what could look more like a miracle? There was no
-question of coincidence. Here were two facts that, normally, could in
-no way be related to one another: a rabbit burrows a hole for himself
-upon the sandhills by the English Channel, and in the sixteenth century
-a brave Spanish soldier lays down his life, and is buried in the
-wilderness of South America. It will be readily understood that it took
-me time to realise what I could certainly not explain.
-
-How came that fragment there? And why? I regarded the stained and
-yellow parchment that I held in my hand as I sat by the side of the
-fire, and felt even a trifle afraid of it. I had heard stories of
-mummies coming to life, of inanimate objects--such as jasper scarabi,
-totems, and wooden, heathen gods--becoming active agencies for good or
-evil. Had this thing taken wings upon itself, and flown across half the
-world? Fate or luck--call it what you will--had guided me to find it.
-But why should a document so precious have sought a refuge in the rusted
-helmet of a soldier of fortune, who once, perhaps, had clinked his sword
-in the gay courts of Granada or the narrow streets of old Cadiz, who lay
-now amid the silence of the tropic jungle--a few blanched and silly
-bones?
-
-I had no answer for these questions of my own, though I sat long into
-the night and racked my brains for a solution of the problem. It was,
-in consequence, an hour, as I should guess, before I could look the bare
-fact in the countenance, before I could acknowledge the situation as it
-was.
-
-No matter how it came there, by means comprehensible or supernatural,
-there it was. And then, quite suddenly, I realised what it was. _I had
-as good as found the Treasure_.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI--I FIND THE "BIG FISH"
-
-
-For a considerable time I had regarded this small piece of parchment in
-the light of a mystery, a species of conjuring trick, just as one
-regards the billiard-ball, the rabbit, or the eggs that a conjuror
-produces from the upturned sleeve of his shirt. But now I saw quite
-clearly that the thing had an intrinsic value, a significance of its
-own; it bore a certain definite message--a message that most nearly
-concerned myself.
-
-Eagerly, with hands that trembled somewhat, I studied the map. It will
-be remembered that the portion which Amos possessed had been torn across
-the place where was marked the Temple of Cahazaxa. Upon the fragment
-that had come into my hands by so strange and mysterious a chance, I was
-able to trace the route that I myself had taken from the temple ruins to
-the Wood of the Red Fish. The ravine was shown, and that wonderful
-suspension-bridge that had so amazed me when I saw it. From the hills to
-the east--from the crestline of which I bad viewed the distant glory of
-the Andes--a track was marked, leading towards the south; whereas I, in
-hot haste at the time, had continued upon my way due westward.
-
-Now, this track was shown to lead to a certain stream that came forth
-from the Wood of the Red Fish upon the south. And it was called the
-Brook of Scarlet Pebbles, an Indian name being thus translated in red
-ink in the handwriting of John Bannister.
-
-The map had been drawn to no scale. Like many ancient and medival
-documents, it was entirely without proportion or perspective. For
-instance, the Wood itself--which was never more than fifteen miles
-across--appeared to be of area equal to that vast tract of country that
-lay between the great mountain to the north of the forest and the Temple
-of Cahazaxa--a journey that had taken us many weeks.
-
-There was some sense in this; for in regard to the Wood of the Red Fish,
-where the Treasure itself was hidden, it was necessary to be precise, if
-the map were to be of any value. I saw that one must follow the Brook
-of Scarlet Pebbles, until it entered a pool, where Bannister had written
-the words: "Electric Eels." There, it appeared, the stream flowed
-underground, for its course was dotted, and these dots ended at a cross,
-bearing the words: "THE RED FISH IS HERE."
-
-This cross referred, as I could see at a glance, to certain marginal
-notes, written in such minute handwriting that it was all that I could
-do to read them, especially in view of the fact that Bannister's red ink
-had faded. At last, however, I managed to make out the following
-inscription:
-
- "_The tail of the Fish. A blow-pipe from the nose of the Fish.
- Twenty yards across the Brook. Three feet, below the ground--a
- Ring._"
-
-This I read to myself over and over again. At one moment I thought it
-clear enough, and at the next, too vague. At all events, thought I, I
-will find out when I get there, for thither I intended to go.
-
-I could not sleep that night, and I will not go so far as to say that I
-tried to. I was so thrilled and mystified that my thoughts were running
-riot; and surely there is little to wonder at in this. The bones of the
-Spanish warrior lay in the ground beneath me, together with his armour
-and his sword, for I had put back the tombstone in its place and covered
-it again with a thin layer of soil. That brave adventurer slept in
-tranquillity in the silent chamber of the heart of the tropic jungle.
-He and the sword I have little doubt he had wielded with such subtlety
-and skill were now alike at rest. His treasure-hunt, at least, was
-ended; but mine was only just begun.
-
-For I was determined to set forward when the daylight came, to search
-for the Brook of Scarlet Pebbles. If I found the margin of the Wood,
-and followed this towards the south, I must sooner or later hit upon the
-stream--if the map had any claim to accuracy. I could then follow the
-brook, until eventually I found the Red Fish itself; and, if I could not
-then associate any definite meaning with the queer, disjointed words in
-the margin of the map, my own intelligence must alone be held to blame.
-
-One of the reasons why I could not sleep was that I had committed these
-words to memory and kept repeating them to myself, just like a parrot,
-without any idea as to their meaning. That they had a meaning I never
-doubted, for John Bannister himself had written them; and though I was
-now grown older and had had many strange adventures of my own, I had
-still my ancient and profound respect for the wisdom of my hero.
-
-I thought of him that night, but more of Amos Baverstock, whom I
-believed to be somewhere near at hand, upon the same quest as I. On
-that account, I realised that I must make haste upon the morrow. I had
-risked so much already, I had undergone so many hardships, that I was
-determined--now that I thought myself within reach of my goal--to see
-the business through. From the hills to the east I had looked down upon
-the Wood, and knew that it was not three days' march from one side to
-the other, though the undergrowth was thick and tangled; and therefore I
-knew also that the Red Fish could not be far away.
-
-I think I slept a little in the early hours of the morning, to be
-awakened by the birds stirring in the trees, and the daylight streaming
-from above through that same gap by means of which my nightly task had
-been illumined by the moon. I ate such food as I had left, and then set
-forth towards the east, guiding my footsteps as well as I was able by
-the light of the rising sun.
-
-I came, at about midday, to the eastern side of the Wood, and looked out
-towards the hills whither I had journeyed from the plain. Thence, I
-turned towards the south and, walking once again in open country,
-progressed at a fair pace, and never once sat down to rest, until the
-daylight waned. I went then into the Wood, and searched for berries
-that I knew were fit to eat; and when I had eaten these, I lay down
-beneath a great tree and immediately fell fast asleep.
-
-The following morning, I continued my journey along the margin of the
-Wood. My naked body was now burned by the sun to the colour of an
-Indian's skin. Indeed, I am not sure that I was not even darker of
-complexion than the wild woodland people with whom I had lived. My hair
-was long, like that of a savage, for it had not been cut for months. I
-had a leather girdle over a shoulder from which depended an Indian
-quiver filled with darts. And there was something of the joy of life
-within me, as I swung upon my way. I had health, at least, if I wore no
-clothes upon my back. I felt convinced that my footsteps were leading
-me to the hidden Treasure of the Incas; and I tossed my blow-pipe in the
-air and caught it, time and again.
-
-The joy of life was in me, and the spirit of adventure. The sun shone
-down upon me, and I breathed deeply of the open air; for the wind was
-from the east, and the rank smell of decaying vegetation--so general
-throughout the Wood--was no longer in my nostrils.
-
-And, presently, I came upon the Brook of Scarlet Pebbles. The water was
-clear as crystal, and I went down upon my knees to drink my fill, for I
-was thirsty. There was no question that I had found the stream for
-which I had been searching, since the water flowed over a bed of little
-rounded stones, every one of which was in colouring some tone or tint of
-red. They ranged from pink to crimson; and they were all of granite,
-though worn as smooth as marbles.
-
-Here was the brook that I must follow; so I turned into the Wood again,
-and all that day followed the course of the stream, which winded and
-twisted in so many directions that I wondered I had never seen it
-before.
-
-That afternoon, being hungry for the taste of meat, I killed with my
-blow-pipe a great bird that I found sitting on a branch, blinking like
-an owl. I think he was some kind of bustard. At any rate, he was good
-to eat, when roasted, and I sat long by my camp-fire, picking his bones
-with my fingers. Then I pulled out my fragment of the map and looked at
-it.
-
-It was manifest that I was not yet come to that part of the brook where
-its course was marked by means of little dots; but, knowing the full
-extent of the Wood, I had a good reason to suppose that I was not far
-from my destination. And then I read again the queer marginal
-instructions: _The tail of the Fish_--I must see that for myself; _a
-blow-pipe from the nose of the Fish_--whatever that might mean, at all
-events I had a blow-pipe, and a good one, too. As for the rest, I gave
-it up. It was a riddle that I would solve when I got there--I felt
-quite sure of that. I folded up the map and placed it in my quiver, the
-nearest thing to a pocket that I possessed.
-
-And the next day I continued on my way, following the course of the
-Brook of Scarlet Pebbles. I noticed that these pebbles were now larger
-than before, and were so deep red in the shadow under the trees that the
-clear water had the look of blood. Then I came to the pool, and thought
-at first that the brook was come to an end.
-
-There were no pebbles here, but mud; and in my eagerness I waded in, to
-be made at once painfully conscious of a tingling sensation in my legs.
-Now and again something touched me--something quick and slimy; and each
-time I received a shock. I had forgotten, for the moment, all about the
-electric eels; but, when I remembered it, I was more pleased than
-startled, for I knew that, so far, I was on the right track and that the
-map could be relied upon.
-
-All about the pool was dense and tangled underwood, the branches of
-which dipped here and there into the water. And there were also water
-plants, some with flat, floating leaves, others tall reeds with
-plume-like heads.
-
-I knew that this pool was not the termination of the brook; and yet,
-though I searched for a long time, I could find no continuation of the
-stream, until an idea occurred to me which at once solved the problem. I
-plucked the little down-like feathers from one of my blow-pipe darts.
-And these, at intervals of a few yards, I dropped upon the surface of
-the water, all around the bank of the pool, until I found the stream
-itself, flowing through a dense clump of thickets.
-
-Through this I broke my way, and as I did so, I remembered the anaconda,
-and was filled with my old fear of snakes. It was plain already that my
-surmise had been wrong. The brook did not flow underground, but, for
-about a hundred yards or so, through a dark and narrow tunnel, formed of
-low-growing creepers.
-
-So dense were these that I was obliged to break my way, almost every
-inch; and, though my skin was now near as hard as leather, I was
-scratched so badly by the thorn-trees that I was bleeding from a score
-of places upon my chest and shoulders, when I came forth once more into
-the half-light of the woods.
-
-I could not see at first, for my eyes had grown accustomed to the
-darkness, and I found myself in an open glade, where the trees were thin
-and the rays of the sun no more than broken by the leaves above me.
-
-Then I looked, and I saw the brook before me, here flowing straight upon
-a rocky bed. Indeed, there were rocks everywhere, with rich soil
-between them, in which were growing many strange and beautiful plants.
-It was a natural rock-garden, far more wonderful to see than any yet
-designed by man. The rocks were of dark-red granite, and the flowers
-there in bloom were all the colours of the rainbow. But I looked not
-once at them. I gazed, like one hypnotised, upon a great stone to my
-right; for I had seen at once that this stone was the very shape and
-image of a fish.
-
-How it stood there I cannot say, for, like the famous toadstone at
-Tunbridge Wells, which I myself had seen when my mother took me there in
-childhood, it looked as if it would topple over. For the fish, as
-fishes are, was big in the head and narrow in the tail; and he stood
-forth from the ground at an angle of about sixty degrees, and his mouth
-was open, and there was a hole--on my side, at any rate--near where his
-eye should be.
-
-The more I looked at it, the more wonderful I thought it. It might have
-been graven by the hand of man, and cleverly at that; save that this
-fish was devoid of fins, and the semblance, as I afterwards discovered,
-was not so striking from any other point of view.
-
-Stepping from the water, I scrambled over the rocks, where I sat me
-down, and heaved a great sigh, which I do not pretend to be able to
-explain. Relief, joy, victory--all were mixed up in it, I do not doubt.
-Here was I, at the end of all my travels; I had reached the conclusion
-of my journey. The Big Fish was there.
-
-[Illustration: "I HAD REACHED THE CONCLUSION OF MY JOURNEY. THE BIG
-FISH WAS THERE."]
-
-To achieve anything is a conquest, great or small. I had sojourned in
-the wilderness, it seemed, for years; I had stood in constant peril of
-my life; I had journeyed in company of cut-throats; I had lived with
-savage men; I had seen something of the glories of old Peru, the Temple
-of Cahazaxa; I had marched for days and days alone, naked and carrying
-my Indian blow-pipe in my hand. And there was the Big Fish--the very
-sign-post, as one might call it, to the Greater Treasure of the Incas.
-
-And as these thoughts jangled in my brain, a shot rang out--how far away
-I could not tell, but somewhere in the Wood.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII--THE GREATER TREASURE
-
-
-I held my breath and listened, thinking that I would hear other shots,
-as I had done before. But no sound came to break the stillness. Save
-for the birds among the tops of the trees, and a big, solitary monkey
-that swung himself from branch to branch, chattering as he went, I was
-surrounded by the silence of the woods.
-
-It was no news to me that I stood in the gravest peril. Such had been
-the case for many a day; and--as I have said--I had come to look upon
-life as of little worth. Amos I knew to be somewhere in the
-neighbourhood; and I knew also that if he found me it would go ill with
-me; I should not live for long if I fell again into that great villain's
-clutches.
-
-And yet I did no more than shrug my shoulders. I had sublime faith in
-myself, in my youth, and the Divine Providence that, so far, had kept me
-from the way of harm. I had my blow-pipe, too; and, if the worst should
-happen, I could use it well enough to drive one of my feathered arrows
-straight into the heart of Amos Baverstock.
-
-One learns, in the everlasting twilight of the woods, where danger lurks
-on every hand, to live for the moment only, to let the future look after
-itself. And so did I now; for Amos was no more to me than the jaguar
-and the anaconda--brutes of prey, all three of them, and the mortal man
-the vilest. Death in many forms and shapes was all about me--sharp
-fangs, the serpent's coils, poison, and disease. There was no need to
-scent from afar such dangers as might never come my way.
-
-And so, once again, I turned my thoughts to the Red Fish, standing forth
-before me in the sunlight--a quaint and humorous-looking thing, had I
-been able for a moment to forget its wonderful significance.
-
-I sat and looked at it; it may have been for half an hour, or even more.
-And my memory took me back to that sunny August morning by the Sussex
-shore, where I had first heard Amos speak of the Greater Treasure of the
-Incas; and I remembered, word for word, what he had said: "Gold! It is
-there knee-deep in a cavern, large as a cathedral." And here was I, Dick
-Treadgold, in the very place myself, after a series of most strange and
-unbelievable adventures, thousands of miles from Sussex. My very name,
-I thought, was to prove a kind of analogue with my destiny and actions;
-for I was fated, so it seemed, to tread on gold.
-
-And at that, I pulled out my fragment of the map, and looked at it,
-reading again and again the passage that had puzzled me so often:
-
- "_The tail of the Fish. A blow-pipe from the nose of the Fish.
- Twenty yards across the Brook. Three feet, below the ground--a
- Ring._"
-
-There, sure enough, was the tail of the Fish--or, at least, the upper
-part of it, a sharp spur of rock protruding from the ground. I got to
-my feet and approached, taking my blow-pipe with me.
-
-"_A blow-pipe from the nose of the Fish._" That clause had always
-puzzled me. It seemed possible that I should use my blow-pipe as a kind
-of measuring-rod; but I could not think in what direction I should place
-it. Besides, the nose of the Fish was at least six feet from the
-ground. And then I observed for the first time what I had not perceived
-before; namely, that the body of the Fish was curved; and it was this
-that gave me the very clue I wanted. What if I were to use the
-blow-pipe as a plumb-line?
-
-At all events, I would try. So I drove the blow-pipe into the soft
-ground, as near the perpendicular as I could judge, in such a manner
-that it just touched the tip of the Fish's nose.
-
-I read my instructions again--though I already knew them by heart, and
-tried to guess their meaning. I crossed the brook, which in that place
-was very shallow, the water reaching little above my ankles; and no
-sooner did I find myself upon the other side than I observed that my
-wooden blow-pipe and the sharp, upright spur of rock that formed the
-Fish's tail were in the same alignment.
-
-"_Twenty yards across the Brook_" could have but a single meaning. Since
-the Red Fish itself was not that distance from the water, twenty yards
-must be measured upon the other side; and this I at once resolved to do.
-
-I already had an imaginary line, extending an indefinite distance. If I
-held to this line--or if, in other words, I kept my blow-pipe
-immediately between myself and the Fish's tail--I could not go far wrong
-by stepping the prescribed twenty yards from the margin of the brook.
-
-This I did, and, to verify my position, looked to see that I still had
-my two fixed points in line with one another. I had verged a little to
-the left, but soon put this right by taking a short pace in the other
-direction. And then I repeated to myself the last sentence of my
-instructions: "_Three feet, below the ground--a Ring_."
-
-Down I went upon all-fours, and began to scrape up the earth in my
-hands. For the soil was soft, though now and again I hit upon a rock,
-which, without great difficulty, I loosened with my knife, to cast aside
-and continue with my work.
-
-It was nightfall by the time that I had gained a depth of three feet or
-more; but, by then, I had come upon a great, smooth slab of stone; and
-this discovery set my heart so wildly beating that I was obliged to
-leave my task and rest awhile, drinking deeply of the water of the
-brook.
-
-In the moonlight I laboured still, and a slow business it was,
-displacing the earth a handful at a time, and scratching with the Indian
-knife that Atupo, the priest, had given me. I was hot and weary, and my
-finger-tips were painful; and yet I could not desist, but worked on till
-midnight, to be at last rewarded. I came across a metal ring, fastened
-to the slab, about eight inches in diameter. And when I had washed the
-earth away, bringing water in my quiver from the brook, I discovered
-that this ring was made of gold.
-
-I tugged at it and pulled with all my might, but could not move the
-stone an inch; so back I went to my work again, grubbing with my hands,
-for all the world like a dog that smells a rat. Sheer fatigue at length
-quite overcame me, and I was obliged to lie down and rest, and fell
-sound asleep, though I had intended no such thing.
-
-I awoke suddenly, at the first sign of daybreak, and went to the great
-hole I had made in the ground, and wondered at myself that I had done so
-much. The stone slab, I saw, was almost clear of earth.
-
-In less than an hour the great slab was free. I cut round the edges of
-it with my knife, to loosen it, and then looked down upon my work, to
-see how I might approach the conclusion of my task with the greatest
-prospect of success.
-
-The stone slab was about three feet wide and twice as long. And the
-gold ring, I could not fail to notice, was much nearer one end than the
-other. As the handle is never to be found in the middle of a door, this
-seemed to suggest that the slab opened upon hinges. It remained to be
-seen, however, whether or not I had the strength to lift it.
-
-I tried more than once, and failed, though I moved the stone an inch or
-so. Finally, I went into the Wood and cut a length of liana, one end of
-which I tied to the golden ring. And then I tugged with all my might;
-and the stone slab uprose like a derrick on a ship, attained a vertical
-position, and there remained stationary and upright.
-
-I stepped to the hole and looked down upon a narrow flight of steps all
-covered with the earth that had fallen from above. Down these I
-hastened, presently to find myself in utter darkness, so that there was
-nothing for it but for me to return and look about me for some means of
-making a torch.
-
-I was now as skilled as any forest Indian in the art of making fire. For
-months I had journeyed without matches, tinder-box or magnifying-glass.
-I knew where to find touch-wood in the forest, and could strike sparks
-from pieces of flint. For an hour I laboured in the making of a torch,
-which I constructed of touchwood bound about by reeds. And whilst I was
-thus employed I realised for the first time how hungry I was--for I had
-eaten nothing for twenty-four hours, though I had consumed great
-quantities of water.
-
-And now I did a strange thing, in view of the fact that I have always
-been somewhat impetuous by nature and was then but a boy in years.
-Though I was actually trembling with excitement, all eagerness to behold
-the interior of the vault that I knew to be at the foot of the steps, I
-went deliberately into the jungle in search of food.
-
-Finding no living thing that I could kill but monkeys, I was obliged to
-content myself with wild nuts and berries; and then I returned to the
-Red Fish, drank again from the brook, took up my torch and lit it from
-the fire that I had kindled. And then down I went into the vault, to
-feast my eyes upon the buried Treasure of the Incas.
-
-The stairway was at first so shallow that I must stoop as I descended;
-but presently I found myself in a little chamber, hollowed out of the
-living rock, the walls of which were of the same red granite as the
-strange stone above. And weird and almost magic did the whole place
-look in the light of my burning torch.
-
-For the very walls sparkled as with diamonds. Everywhere were little
-grains of felspar, mica, or quartz, which caught the reflection of the
-light. And when I looked upon the floor I saw that Amos had been right.
-I trod upon bars of gold, all of the same length and size, and laid with
-such regularity and neatness that they might have been the palings of a
-fence--or many fences--spread flat upon the ground.
-
-How deep these ingots went I could not say, and was not then disposed to
-inquire, for my attention was attracted by an arched opening, like the
-doorway of a church, on the other side of the room. Through this I
-passed, and found myself at the head of another flight of stone steps,
-much broader and wider than the others--a gigantic stairway that
-descended into the middle of a chamber so vast that my torch did no more
-than throw a kind of halo all around me.
-
-I rushed down these steps with a loud, glad cry, and below I hastened
-like a madman, here and there, passing along the walls, crossing at
-random that wide, gloomy subterranean room.
-
-Everywhere was gold, stacked upon the floor, piled against the walls. I
-saw golden chalices and cups, bracelets, rings and girdles; great jugs
-of gold and golden basins, besides bars and ingots that one might have
-counted by the thousand.
-
-I know not why it was, but the very sight of it made me dizzy, as I
-staggered blindly about that wondrous place. At times I slipped and
-stumbled, and at other times I fell between those glittering stacks, to
-find myself--as Amos Baverstock had said in my hearing--knee-deep in the
-very stuff that has made the world as wicked as it is.
-
-And then, at last, I sat down upon I know not what, save that it was
-gold. The very sight that I had seen had exhausted me far more than all
-my travels and privations. I felt sick at heart and weary. I looked
-about me with tired and dreamy eyes.
-
-It seemed to me strange--now that I had beheld this wonder--that I had
-endured so much for sake of it. How had it come to pass that men prized
-so highly what after all is no more than yellow metal? Here was enough
-of it, in very truth, to serve the needs of a nation; and here it had
-lain for four hundred years--and the world was none the worse. How
-little of this vast treasure would be enough for me, or even Amos
-Baverstock, in spite of all his greed!
-
-It frightened me--and that is the truth of it. I could not think what I
-should do if all this precious wealth were mine. And then I wondered if
-I had any right to call it mine just because it was mine for the moment
-to gaze upon, to regard in breathless bewilderment and fear.
-
-You may behold that which you never own, as you may own that which you
-never see. Boy though I was, so much was clear to me as daylight. Nor
-had I any reason to suppose that I was the first to look upon this
-marvel, since the fugitives from Cuzco, centuries ago, had carried it
-across the mountains to hide it in this secret place. John Bannister
-himself, perhaps, had looked upon it, though he had never told me so. If
-it belonged to any living man, all this wealth was his.
-
-I felt by now as if I were about to faint; and besides, my torch was
-burning low. And therefore I got unsteadily upon my feet and walked
-into the little outer room, and thence ascended the steps in the broad
-light of day. And there I stood breathing deeply, with my eyes closed
-and my mouth parched as if by thirst.
-
-On a sudden I cast my burning torch into the brook before me, and fell
-upon my knees and prayed to God. I prayed aloud, as if the living trees
-and running water and the red stones about me could all hear my prayer.
-And it was the Lord's Prayer that I had learned at my mother's knee;
-for, boy though I was, I felt that which I had looked upon was the very
-pith and kernel of all temptation to which, since Eden, humanity was
-heir.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVIII--I FALL IN WITH A FRIEND
-
-
-I sat for many hours that morning, idle and oppressed by a feeling as of
-emptiness. What use to me was all the wealth that I had seen--or, for
-the matter of that, to any one? I had no means at my disposal to take a
-millionth part of it away.
-
-And then I remembered Amos, and thought it my duty to take what steps I
-could to see that that dread man should never solve the riddle of the
-Red Fish, though it was unlikely he would find the place without the aid
-of my fragment of the map.
-
-The sight of all that gold had, as it were, unnerved me--filled me with
-a kind of weariness of life. I cannot say exactly how it was, but I
-know that I had lost, on a sudden, all my energy and enthusiasm; and it
-was late in the afternoon before I bestirred myself and got to work.
-
-I lowered the great slab and covered it with earth, which I trampled
-down with my bare feet. Then I went into the woods and dug up plants
-with my Indian knife, and these I stuck in the ground so that I made a
-little garden. One shower of tropic rain and they would take root and
-grow, and thus hide all trace of how the soil had been disturbed. And
-looking up at the sky, where it was visible here and there between the
-branches of the trees above me, I saw that such a shower was coming.
-
-The rain fell that evening, when I was camped once more in the woods
-towards the east, having gone back the way that I had come, following
-the course of the Brook of Scarlet Pebbles. I took shelter from the
-rain beneath a tree, the great leaves of which formed a veritable roof
-above me, so that not one drop of water fell upon the fire that I had
-kindled.
-
-I ate my simple meal, and then lay down, not to sleep, but to think and
-to listen to the rain, beating with a noise like many drums upon the
-leaves.
-
-Well, I had seen the Treasure of the Incas. With my own eyes I had
-beheld it. And I asked myself if I were any the better for it, and
-could not see that I was. For gold is mud, and part of man is mud; and
-yet there is a great God who is above, around and within us all. And
-that night, as I lay awake in the woods, listening to the drumming of
-the rain, I tried to think out such problems as man has not yet begun to
-understand--problems that, perhaps, he may never solve on this side of
-the grave.
-
-No doubt, the constant propinquity of danger had made me serious for my
-years. I had lived for many months in the wilderness, and my pulse now
-beat in rhythm with the earth. The forest, the majestic mountains I had
-seen at sunrise, the sky of stars above the plain--all these were
-mysteries to me, wondrous and eternal. But there was neither eternity
-nor mystery in the work of man; in gold, in the rusted sword of
-Orellano's soldier, or Cahazaxa's Temple.
-
-I saw quite clearly now that this hidden treasure was no affair of mine.
-I had lived happily for months as Nature meant me to, and the sum total
-of my wealth had been my blow-pipe and the knife that Atupo, the priest,
-had given me. I now understood--far better than I had done at the
-time--all John Bannister had told me of his dread of cities and of
-people. I, too, would like to live my life far from the abodes of men,
-with the little shy things as my friends, in the chamber of the Wild.
-For the very sight of the Treasure of Kings had frightened me. Four
-hundred years it had lain there, beneath the ground, like a great,
-harmful dragon; and it seemed to me that to let this monster loose upon
-the world would be a bold thing to do--to saddle my conscience with a
-load of responsibility such as I was never strong enough to bear. I
-wished now that I was not one of the few who had solved this precious
-riddle.
-
-And yet I was not sure of anything, for the gold tempted me sorely. I
-was tempted more than I can say. If I had now learned to understand
-something of John Bannister's ideals, I saw also, with alarming clarity,
-the motives that swayed the deeds of Amos Baverstock. Gold to him was a
-living force, the origin of all his strength and evil, the prompter of
-his actions. Once or twice that night was I tempted to return to the
-Red Fish that I might feast my eyes again upon the Treasure.
-
-I told myself that I had not seen enough of it. I was like a drunkard
-who had tasted wine. I wondered what worth it had in coinage that I
-knew, and I set to thinking how I would spend so vast a sum.
-
-But these were thoughts only of the night-time, in the darkness and the
-silence of the woods. I fell asleep at last, sick at heart and
-wretched; but dawning day came to me with comfort, and I continued on my
-journey with new hopes and prospects.
-
-The dragon was behind my back, buried once again. For all I cared, it
-might lie there for ever, untouched by mortal hand, unseen by mortal
-eye, to be smothered in the dust of endless ages.
-
-As for myself, when I came forth from the undergrowth of the wood into
-the warm light of the evening sun, I turned to the south, and continued
-on my way until long after dark. I had made up my mind, and that was
-something; I would pass round the Wood of the Red Fish, and journey
-westward towards the great mountains. These I would cross, and come
-down upon the tableland beyond, where I knew that I would find men who
-were as civilised as I. Thence, as best I could, I must find my way
-back to England. I had little doubt that I might be able to work a
-passage for myself on board a ship that sailed from Callao or Guayaquil.
-
-But I was a fool to think my adventures so nearly at an end. My destiny
-was no more in my own hands than that of a withered leaf, carried here
-and there by the wind.
-
-I found the western side of the Wood to be very different from the
-other. It was a country broken up by rocky spurs that descended from
-the foothills just above me; and the ravines or little valleys that lay
-between these spurs were densely choked with undergrowth, similar in all
-respects to the thickets in the wood.
-
-It was no easy travelling, and yet there was no other road for me to
-take, for to the north lay the big morass that I had observed from the
-hill-top on the morning when I first looked down upon the Wood.
-
-So I made my way along the crestline of a rocky ridge, setting forth
-upon my journey to the Andes early in the morning with the whole day
-before me. Though the rays of the sun were powerful, the day was cool,
-for a soft breeze was blowing from the mountains. I had not yet
-breakfasted, since I thought it likely that in this more open country I
-might kill with my blow-pipe some animal that was good to eat; and,
-therefore, as I marched upon the way, I kept my eyes open, looking into
-the ravines on either side of me, to see if I could catch a glimpse of
-any living thing. And I had not gone far before--to my bewilderment--I
-set eyes upon the solitary figure of _a man_.
-
-I dropped, on the instant, flat upon my face--for I was now a savage in
-more ways than one. I had all the instincts of the wild man who knows
-that danger may lurk behind every tree and shrub and rock. I lay upon
-the ground, still as a lizard, with my eyes upon the stranger. And the
-more I looked at him the more I wondered.
-
-The Forest Indians were small in stature, as I have observed in the
-proper place. But this man was six feet in height. He was as brown as
-I; and yet he wore clothes--clothes which were all in rags and tatters,
-and a pair of boots, split open at the toe-caps and bound with string
-about his ankles. Moreover, he carried in his hand a rifle; and this
-rifle he used as a staff, placing the butt upon the ground and leaning
-with his whole weight upon it as he limped slowly and painfully upon his
-way down the ravine immediately beneath me.
-
-I have said that I had the instincts of a wild man. I was cautious, shy
-and cunning. I had learned to trust no one, to be suspicious of every
-one. And so I lay and watched him.
-
-It occurred to me, by degrees, that I had seen him before. I could not
-for the life of me remember where. Then he sat down, with his face
-toward me.
-
-He had a rough, weather-beaten, and yet a kindly, face. He had
-steel-grey eyes, and a rough, tangled beard. He was so close to me that
-I could see that his bare arms were tattooed; and it was this, perhaps,
-that gave me the clue I wanted. I looked at his beard again, and,
-unkempt as it was, it reminded me somehow of the beard of a Russian
-Czar. This man was William Rushby.
-
-I was not sure of it at first. He was greatly changed from the honest
-sailor who had befriended me on board the _Mary Greenfield_. But when
-my mind was made up, and I was well-nigh carried away by mingled
-feelings of astonishment and gladness, I got to my feet and went towards
-him with my blow-pipe in my hand.
-
-Without any ado, he whipped the butt of his rifle into the hollow of his
-shoulder, and I saw the sights were directed straight upon my heart.
-
-"Hands up!" he cried to me in English. "Hands up, you brown barbarian,
-or else I shoot you dead!"
-
-[Illustration: "'HANDS UP!' HE CRIED. 'HANDS UP, YOU BROWN BARBARIAN,
-OR ELSE I SHOOT YOU DEAD!'"]
-
-I grasped the truth in an instant; and it is well I did, for I have
-little doubt that he would have shot me where I stood. If William
-Rushby had changed in personal appearance since last we met, of a
-certainty I myself had changed still more. He took me for a wild man of
-the woods, though he yelled at me in English, and would have killed me
-out of hand, had I not lifted my arms and answered him, and laughed.
-
-"Rushby!" I cried. "Do you not know me? It is I--Dick Treadgold."
-
-He brought down his rifle, and stared at me like one who sees a ghost.
-
-"Dick!" said he, and then came forward, holding out his great hand, into
-which I placed my own.
-
-And there we stood, and shook hands with one another, as though we had
-met at Charing Cross. And he was near as naked as I, and we were both
-so burned by the sun that the whites of our eyes were almost comical,
-and our hair was long like that of gipsies, and the skin upon our legs
-and arms had been scratched in scores of places by the thorn-trees in
-the forest.
-
-"Dick!" he cried again. "I can see it now, though I would never have
-believed it."
-
-"It is I who am asked to believe the most," said I. "How came you here,
-of all people in the world?"
-
-"There's a yarn at the back of that," said he. "But, first, you must
-tell me how you escaped from Amos."
-
-He seated himself, as he spoke, upon a boulder that lay in the ravine;
-and when he moved I was reminded of a fact I had perceived
-already--Rushby was badly wounded and lame of a leg.
-
-For all that, I saw that he would glean little in the way of information
-if we did nothing but ask one another questions; so I mastered my own
-curiosity, and replied to him.
-
-"Why," I told him, "Amos tied me to a tree, and left me in the
-wilderness to starve. And then I fell into the hands of savage men, to
-whom I shall be ever grateful. From their dwellings in the forest I
-journeyed alone to Cahazaxa's Temple, and thence across the plain to the
-Wood of the Red Fish, where I find an old friend, and still believe that
-I am dreaming. It is months now since I last set eyes upon a white man,
-and that was Amos Baverstock himself."
-
-"Months!" cried Rushby in amazement. "You've not seen Baverstock--for
-months!"
-
-He looked at me as if he thought that I was lying. I was at a loss to
-know what he was driving at, though I assured him that I spoke the
-truth.
-
-"Months!" he repeated, holding his head between his hands, as if his
-puzzled brains were paining him. "But we were told, two days ago, that
-Amos held you prisoner."
-
-"Who told you?" I demanded.
-
-I was now as surprised as he, and even more astonished when I heard his
-answer.
-
-"Baverstock himself," said Rushby.
-
-"Amos!" I exclaimed. "You have seen him, then?"
-
-"He lied to me!" cried Rushby, driving his clenched fist into the palm
-of a hand. "He lied to me! And Bannister was right."
-
-"Bannister!" I echoed.
-
-But Rushby, rocking his shoulders from side to side like a man who
-suffers anguish, stamped a foot upon the ground.
-
-"Oh, but I have done a fool's thing!" he cried. "I have been fooled,
-and I have sent John Bannister to death!"
-
-I stood before him, speechless, gasping. Though I could make neither
-head nor tail of what he had told me, I could see with my eyes that the
-man was suffering torture in his soul. If Bannister was in danger, if
-it was possible to save anything from the fire, it was I myself--and I
-alone--who was capable of action, since Rushby was dead lame. And yet I
-must first know the truth of the matter, for I was wholly in the dark.
-
-I went to Rushby and laid a hand upon his shoulder.
-
-"Come, tell me what it all means," said I. "Tell me your story from the
-first."
-
-He looked up at me, and then for the first time smiled--a sad smile,
-none the less.
-
-"Sit down," he answered, in a calmer voice. "I will tell you all from
-the beginning, as quickly as I can."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIX--THE BOATSWAIN TELLS HIS STORY
-
-
-This that follows is the story that was told to me by William Rushby,
-sometime boatswain of the _Mary Greenfield_, as we sat together side by
-side in the ravine, the while John Bannister had gone forth alone in
-peril of his life.
-
-To begin with, he reminded me of that evening when he had spoken to me
-through the porthole on the ship, when I was held a prisoner in the
-cabin that I shared with Amos Baverstock. After that--it will be
-remembered--I never saw him again; for when the ship arrived at Caracas,
-I was transported by night to the hills beyond the town.
-
-As for Rushby, he fell in with a friend--and that is the best of being a
-sailor, who is never at a loss for a handshake and a word of greeting in
-every port in all the world. For the boatswain, when the ship was
-alongside the wharf, had seized the opportunity to desert, and lay in
-hiding in the town, until news was brought him that Amos and his party
-had set forth across the mountains. He then worked his way to Rio, and
-a month later turned up in Southampton, where by the merest chance he
-found John Bannister, about to set forth in quest of me across the
-Western Ocean.
-
-The boatswain told Bannister all he knew, and together they searched in
-the warren for the rabbit-hole in which I had hidden my fragment of the
-map. This they found at last, not much the worse for wear; and having
-set my mother's fears at rest, so far as they were able, they started
-forth together for the port of Colon; for Bannister, knowing whither
-Amos Baverstock was bound, deemed that the shortest route.
-
-From Colon they crossed the Isthmus to Panama, and thence sailed--as
-Pizarro himself had done--down the coast to Guayaquil, the port of
-Equador. From this place they journeyed inland, passed the great height
-of Chimborazo, the summit of the Andes, and thence eastward, a march of
-many weeks, into the Wild Region of the Woods.
-
-Bannister realised from the first that his task was well-nigh
-impossible. He might as well hope to find me in the forest as a needle
-in a haystack; and so, knowing where the treasure was, he went straight
-to the Wood of the Red Fish, there to await the arrival of Amos and the
-others.
-
-He had started some months after us, but he had taken the shorter route
-and had been delayed by nothing. For all that, he arrived in the
-neighbourhood of the Red Fish some weeks after Amos; for he and Rushby
-heard nothing of the fight which took place when Atupo laid his ambush
-and Forsyth was so badly wounded.
-
-Amos--as we know--returned across the plain to wreak his vengeance upon
-the Peruvian priests in the Temple of Cahazaxa. Then the man's greed of
-gold drew him westward once again to search for the Big Fish, as the
-natives called the treasure.
-
-It was then that Vasco, the Spaniard, struck by the merest chance the
-trail of John Bannister and Rushby. A fight took place between them,
-and those were the shots which I myself had heard, one of which had
-sorely wounded the boatswain in the leg.
-
-John Bannister had saved his comrade's life. William Rushby was a big
-man, broadly made and heavy; but Bannister had whipped him up as though
-he were a child and carried him all night throughout the jungle, with
-the result that Amos, for the time being, lost all trace of them, though
-he was searching in all directions in the Wood.
-
-It is a wonder, indeed, and something to be thankful for, that Amos and
-his friends never stumbled across myself, whilst I was wandering about
-with my blow-pipe and my arrows in search of the Red Fish, not knowing
-where to look. For I was not then in possession of the map, of which I
-have now to tell, and how it was that I found it in so singular a place.
-
-Rushby was a wounded man and weak from loss of blood, and now Bannister
-himself--great as was his strength--being overcome by his exertions,
-fell into a raging fever. Knowing the Wood of old, he had carried
-Rushby to the place of the Tomb of Orellano's soldier; and whilst in
-hiding there he became so ill that for three days he raved, delirious.
-And he had no one but a wounded man to tend him.
-
-They had no food, and were without means of getting any; for the
-boatswain could not walk a dozen yards, but from time to time must drag
-himself on all-fours to the stream to fetch his companion water to
-drink.
-
-Rushby, left to his own resources, and suffering the greatest pain, had
-little doubt that they were lost. Look at the affair which way he
-might, he could see no way out of their difficulties; they must either
-be found by Baverstock or else starve to death. For himself, he cared
-not which way it ended; but upon one thing he was determined--the
-fragment of the map which they had brought with them from my rabbit-hole
-in Sussex should never fall into the hands of Amos Baverstock.
-
-And so it was William Rushby himself who opened the tomb, and hid the
-map in the helmet of the Spanish soldier. And that was how I found it,
-a few days afterwards; for the earth had been disturbed and trampled
-underfoot.
-
-The night after that, when John Bannister was a little recovered of his
-fever, though still terribly weak, they heard the report of a shot-gun,
-fired not far from where they were; and Rushby, realising that Amos was
-still upon their track, made the supreme effort of his life, hoping
-thereby to save both Bannister and himself.
-
-It was the old case of the blind leading the blind; for the one was so
-weak that he tottered when he walked, and the other was lame of a leg,
-with an open, septic wound that would not heal. But together, with
-their arms around each other, they made good their escape, only to be
-caught later in the great morass that lay upon the northern side of the
-Wood, and being at the end of their resources and well-nigh starved to
-death, they had no option but to surrender and without condition.
-
-There is no question Amos would have killed John Bannister then and
-there had it not been for one potent circumstance: Bannister knew the
-secret of the Big Fish. Both Baverstock and Trust regarded my friend as
-their arch-enemy, who had foiled them more than once; and Rushby told me
-of the look of unutterable hatred that was stamped upon every evil
-feature of the face of Amos whenever he looked at Bannister--which he
-did, by the same token, no more often than he had to, since it was plain
-to see that he found it hard to meet the eyes of one stronger than
-himself both in mind and body, and a thousand times more honest.
-
-And here, in his narrative, the boatswain became, on a sudden, wildly
-excited, and pointed to a palm-tree that stood not far away from where
-we both were seated, about a hundred yards down the ravine.
-
-"You see that tree?" he cried; and I nodded in reply. "Well, then,"
-Rushby continued, "the villain bound Bannister to that--bound him hand
-and foot, and stood before him with a loaded rifle in his hands. He
-cursed him; he threatened and blasphemed. He said that if Bannister
-would not tell him where the treasure was, he would shoot him on the
-spot. But he might as well have tried to frighten those white bones in
-the tomb where I myself had hid the map."
-
-William Rushby paused, and ran his fingers through his beard. I never
-saw a man who looked more miserable than he. And yet, so foolish was I,
-indeed, that I did naught but ask him silly questions, when time was of
-as much account as the life of the most heroic man that ever lived.
-
-"And Bannister would not speak?" said I.
-
-"Speak!" the boatswain cried. "Speak he did, and to the point. He told
-Baverstock to shoot."
-
-He was silent for a moment, and sat looking at the open wound in his
-leg.
-
-"I never saw any one more angry," he continued, "and I have served in my
-day under many men of the same stamp as James Dagg, if not so bad as he.
-All that night I lay awake, dead sure that Baverstock would murder
-Bannister, if on the following morning he still refused to speak."
-
-"And you were camped in this ravine?" I asked.
-
-"In this same place," said Rushby; "for I have not moved since a hundred
-yards."
-
-"And where are the others?" I asked.
-
-"Listen!" said the boatswain. "I can do no more than spin a yarn from
-the beginning. I am coming to what you want to know. Baverstock, his
-threats having failed with Bannister, played his trump-card upon me, and
-won the trick. Leaving Bannister still weak from fever, bound hand and
-foot, he came to me by night and talked in whispers. He told me that he
-held you a prisoner, and, like a fool, I believed him. He said that if
-he did not learn the truth in regard to the exact position of the Big
-Fish he would put not only Bannister and myself to death, but also you,
-whose life he had purposely preserved throughout all these months."
-
-"He lied!" I interrupted.
-
-"I know he did," said Rushby. "But I swallowed all those lies as a
-shark takes a baited hook. I was neither strong nor wise like
-Bannister. For my own life I cared not greatly, but I was loth to
-behold John Bannister put to death, and I knew how much he cared for
-you, and how he would grieve if you were to die through any fault of
-mine. And thus it was that I told Amos Baverstock the truth. I told
-him that we had brought with us from Sussex your little fragment of the
-map; and I told him that I had hidden it within the helmet in the Tomb
-of the Spanish soldier.
-
-"He said no more to me that night, but posted Vasco, the Spaniard, as a
-sentry, with orders to see that Bannister and I did not communicate. And
-at daybreak the next morning, in the utmost haste, he and his three
-companions went back into the Wood to find the map in the Spaniard's
-Tomb, and thence to discover the Red Fish itself, where the gold of Peru
-is hidden."
-
-When I heard that, I burst into loud laughter. Rushby looked at me,
-surprised, and asked me why I laughed.
-
-"He will never find it," I cried. "He will never find the map! For it
-is no longer in the Tomb."
-
-"Not in the Tomb!" he burst forth. "Then, where is it? And how do you
-know where it is?"
-
-"Because it is here," said I. And as I said the words, I pulled forth
-the little piece of parchment from the quiver in which I kept my
-blow-pipe arrows.
-
-Rushby looked at it, recognised it at once, and sat staring at me, as
-if, on a sudden, he had been bereft of his senses.
-
-"How did you get this?" he blurted out.
-
-I told him in a few words how I had found it.
-
-"Merciful powers!" he groaned. "What have I done? Bannister is on a
-wild-goose chase after all!"
-
-He again carried his hands to his head, and sat rocking from side to
-side, as he had done before. I got to my feet, and shook him violently;
-for--though as yet I understood no more than half the matter--I saw that
-there had been some great mistake that was like to cost us dearly.
-
-"What is it?" I cried. "Tell me the truth! Even now, it may not be too
-late to make amends. Tell me what has happened."
-
-He looked up at me with a sad face. I am inclined to think that there
-were even teardrops in his eyes.
-
-"When Baverstock and those with him were gone," said he; "when they were
-returned to the Wood and lost to view, I picked up my jack-knife, and
-limped to the tree, where I cut Bannister's bonds. You must understand
-that Amos departed that morning in such hot haste that he left behind
-our knives and rifles, as well as much of his own equipment. However,
-that is neither here nor there. I was obliged to tell Bannister the
-truth; and, no sooner had I done so, than he made me realise what a
-simpleton I was.
-
-"He told me that I had been a fool to hide the map in any place where it
-could afterwards be found. It had been better had I torn it to shreds.
-Nor would he believe that you were still in the hands of Amos
-Baverstock. And the very thought that this unholy villain was to solve
-at last the riddle of the Big Fish gave, upon the instant, new strength
-to Bannister. For then and there he rose to his feet, and said that he
-was going himself into the Wood, that he would reach the Tomb in advance
-of Amos and take possession of the map."
-
-"He has gone there!" I shouted, like a maniac, springing to my feet and
-pointing towards the Wood.
-
-"Yes," said Rushby. "He said that he would rather die a thousand times
-than that Amos should find the Treasure."
-
-I felt as if I had received a violent blow. I knew not, for the moment,
-what to do. And then I saw my course quite clear before me.
-
-"I'll go to him!" I cried. "Take that, and keep it safe."
-
-And I flung at him my portion of the map, and then snatched up my
-blow-pipe and my quiver filled with darts, and set off running down the
-ravine, as fast as my legs would carry me, towards the Wood.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XX--I RETURN TO THE SOLDIER'S TOMB
-
-
-I had every reason to be filled with apprehension. I was going, of a
-certainty, into danger greater than any I had yet encountered. Whilst
-searching in the Wood for John Bannister, my friend, I was like as not
-to fall in with Amos Baverstock; and if that should happen, I could hope
-for little mercy.
-
-Bannister--as Rushby had told me--was weak from illness and half
-starved,, so that much of his great strength of former days must have
-deserted him, when most he had a need of it. Besides, I knew not
-whether he were armed, for that was a question I had not stayed to ask
-when I hurried forth from the ravine upon my quest.
-
-I had therefore some cause to be afraid. And yet, in my heart, I was
-glad as I had never been for months, as I raced upon my way into the
-darkness of the Wood.
-
-I was journeying towards my friend, the great man whom I had learned to
-honour and admire upon the beach in Sussex. And I believed that the
-Fates would not be so cruel to me that I should fail to find him. I
-felt that I would soon look upon him once again, feel the iron grasp of
-his hand, and behold the light of recognition in his kindly eyes.
-
-Many hours of daylight were before me, when I entered the Wood of the
-Red Fish; and then, for the first time I think, I realised that my task
-was not an easy one. Had I started from the other side of the Wood, I
-believe that I could have found the Spaniard's Tomb without much loss of
-time; for I was by now well acquainted with that portion of the jungle.
-
-But in this neighbourhood I was an utter stranger, though I had the sun
-to guide me whenever I caught glimpses of the daylight between the
-overhanging branches of the trees. Also, I carried in my mind a very
-perfect recollection of the map.
-
-I saw that it was necessary above all else to calm myself, to think the
-matter out, instead of plunging into the business like a bolting horse.
-My destination was the Spaniard's Tomb, and I was in possession of
-certain valuable information, the most of which was quite unknown to
-Amos. The Wood of the Red Fish itself was diamond-shaped, the four
-angles approximately directed towards the north, south, east, and west.
-Now, the Big Fish lay somewhere in the very centre of the Wood; and I
-had formerly journeyed to the place from the south, following the Brook
-of Scarlet Pebbles. This brook--as I had observed--flowed in a
-north-westerly direction, towards the morass, which I had passed at the
-end of the ravine in which I had just left William Rushby.
-
-During the earlier days when I had adventured all alone, when I had
-discovered both the Glade of Silent Death and the Tomb of Orellano's
-soldier, I am convinced that I had never crossed the Brook of Scarlet
-Pebbles. Indeed, I could scarce have done so without noticing at once
-the singular character of the stream. I had become, during these months
-extraordinarily observant; and my attention would certainly have been
-attracted by the peculiar red stones with which the bed of the brook was
-strewn. Hence, by a simple process of deduction, I was forced to the
-conclusion that the Spaniard's Tomb must be somewhere in the
-north-westerly part of the Wood; and the reader will the better
-understand me if he glances at the map which I myself have made, and
-which he must not think a facsimile of the real parchment map whereon
-the Tomb was not even mentioned.
-
-[Illustration: Map of the Wood of the Red Fish]
-
-I was now, as I knew, somewhere on the southern side of the brook; and
-that was the wrong side, if I was to find the Tomb with as little delay
-as possible. Aided, therefore, by the position of the morning sun, I
-directed my footsteps in a northerly direction, and came early in the
-afternoon upon the Brook of Scarlet Pebbles, to the north of the Big
-Fish. Thence, I decided to journey due eastward, hoping, sooner or
-later, to come upon some place that I would recognise, which would
-inform me of my whereabouts.
-
-Sunset overtook me when I was in the very heart of the jungle. There
-was just time to search for food before the darkness came; and then I
-lay down to rest without venturing to light a fire.
-
-I remember well that, at the time, I was surprised that I did not find
-myself oppressed by the almost overwhelming sense of loneliness that
-hitherto had always come upon me when I journeyed by myself in the midst
-of the silent woods. But, now that I am old, and have thought much upon
-many things, I have an explanation--howbeit somewhat mystical--to
-account for the happiness I then experienced. I knew that I was near my
-friend.
-
-I was fortified by memory. Thus it was with me. And more than that;
-for it looked as if I was to give a helping hand to the great strong man
-whom I had seen first upon the Sussex coast, who had told me of the
-hooded crows, and to whose tales of travel I had listened eagerly, day
-after day, before ever Amos Baverstock and the like of him had stepped
-across my path. I would find the Tomb--upon that I was determined. And
-I would find Bannister as well. Perhaps he was sleeping, even then, not
-two hundred yards away from me, in that tangled, tropic wilderness.
-With so pleasant a reflection I fell sound asleep, and slept until
-daylight wakened me and the birds and monkeys were stirring in the
-trees.
-
-I walked many miles that day, looking everywhere in vain for some tree
-or stream that I should recognise, for the burnt-out embers of an old
-camp-fire or the feathers of some bird that I myself had plucked and
-eaten. But I found nothing, until late in the afternoon, when I came,
-of a sudden, upon the dried-up skin of a small woodland deer.
-
-There also were his bones, dried and whitened, all the flesh therefrom
-devoured by creeping insects. And, thinking it more than likely that
-this was the same deer that had served me for many a meal, when I first
-was come into the Wood--the same poor beast that had been crushed to
-death by the great serpent that had lain in hiding beneath the water of
-the pool--I cast about me, and soon found the Glade of Silent Death. And
-now, I knew, I was on the right track to the Tomb, which from this place
-lay towards the south; for I had a first-hand knowledge of all this
-portion of the Wood, where I had sojourned for many days.
-
-Then an idea came to me whereby valuable time might be saved. I was not
-far from the edge of the Wood, and if I could gain this before the
-darkness came I might travel some distance southward by night, to
-continue my searching in the morning. Keeping, therefore, the setting
-sun at my back, I journeyed eastward, and came presently to open
-country, when I travelled a good two miles to the south by the light of
-the rising moon.
-
-Late at night I rested, sleeping till daybreak; and then, entering the
-Wood again, I found by chance one of my old camping-places, and
-following my old trail for several hours came at last--as I
-expected--upon the Tomb of Orellano's soldier.
-
-As it was then almost dark, I hastened immediately to the Tomb, and
-threw back the stone slab. There was light enough for me to see at a
-glance that nothing had been touched. There were the white bones, the
-breast-plate, sword and helmet--exactly as I had left them. I stood
-irresolute a moment, looking down into the grave; and all at once, a
-great fear possessed me that some calamity had overtaken Bannister.
-
-I was here in advance of both him and Amos--which was more than I had
-ever hoped for. The next thing to decide was what to do, and--as will
-be seen, in a moment--I was given no choice in the matter.
-
-Fear spreads, I think, like fire. I was solicitous, at first, for
-Bannister; and then I feared for myself. Or there may be something in
-the notion that the evil that is in a man taints the very atmosphere in
-which he moves. At any rate, even as I thought of Amos Baverstock, I
-became filled, on a sudden, with my old dread of him. I stood
-shivering, as if from cold, beneath the trees, by the side of that
-ancient grave, whilst the darkness spread around me.
-
-And then it was that the voice of Amos Baverstock himself came to my
-ears with such startling suddenness that I was taken unawares. It was
-just as if I had received some kind of electric shock. I straightened
-with a jerk, and I verily believe that my heart itself stood still.
-
-I had not been able to hear the exact words he used; but I knew only too
-well the hard, strident tones of his voice. I think he called upon
-Joshua Trust to make haste and not to lag behind, and the language that
-he used was vile as always.
-
-I stood where I was, stock-still, like one transfixed. And then I heard
-the breaking of the undergrowth, as someone rapidly approached.
-
-I felt much as a mouse must feel, when the trapdoor closes after him. I
-was spurred into sudden action. And yet there was nothing I could do.
-
-If I rushed into the thickets, my enemies must hear me. And what chance
-had my blow-pipe against a leaden bullet? I looked up at the trees
-around me, and saw at once that there was not one that I could climb
-without a deal of trouble. And yet, Amos himself was coming nearer and
-nearer, as I could tell by the breaking of the underwoods and the dead
-sticks upon the ground. On a sudden, without a thought, I jumped down
-into the Tomb, and pulled the stone slab into its place above me.
-
-It is easy to say that this was the action of a fool. I attempt no more
-than to relate what happened. That no man in a calm moment would have
-done anything so rash and stupid, I would never for a moment deny. I
-was, however, very far from calm. If the truth be told, I was afraid.
-I hid my face like an ostrich--for that is all it comes to.
-
-And as soon as I found myself lying at full length upon those white and
-aged bones in the darkness of the grave, I realised that I was
-lost--that it had been far better for me had I fled into the jungle.
-Amos himself must shift the slab to search the Tomb for the map that he
-believed he would find within.
-
-And presently, through the opening in the slab, I heard, with a
-distinctness that was indeed alarming, the voice of the man himself.
-
-"It is here!" he cried. "We've found it, as I said we would!"
-
-From the certain fact that no one answered him, I judged that Baverstock
-was alone; and I was the more sure of this, since I could hear the
-footsteps of but a single man upon the thin stone above me. And I began
-to reckon what my chances would amount to, if it came to a square fight
-between the two of us, with no one to intervene.
-
-Then I remembered that I was unarmed; for I had left my blow-pipe above
-ground, though the chances were that it was now so dark that he might
-not notice it. By the noise he made, his grunting and his muttered
-oaths, I judged that he was searching for the means to lift the slab.
-
-I touched the stone above me with my fingers; and when I felt it moving,
-I knew that the hour of my ordeal was come. I must fight and defend
-myself, or die--and very likely both. I rose as the stone was lifted,
-and, as I did so, placed the Spaniard's helmet on my head and took up
-the rusted sword.
-
-Amos threw aside the slab, and then jumped backward, as I stood up in
-the grave, waist-deep in mother earth.
-
-It was that half-light which is neither night nor day--a weird and
-ghostly light, pervading like a mist the shadows of the Wood. Small
-wonder that that evil man thought that he beheld the resurrection of a
-corpse!
-
-He let out a shriek--such a shriek as I never heard before or
-since--that seemed as if it must have been audible for miles throughout
-the evening silence of the jungle. It was the shriek of one whose hair
-stands upright on his head. He stood before me quaking at the knees;
-and then he found his voice again.
-
-"Mercy!" he cried.
-
-And at that I rushed upon him with my sword.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXI--I AM MADE A GHOST, AND THEN A FOOL
-
-
-I sprang at him with my sword, the rusty blade that I had filched from
-those grim and whitened bones.
-
-The man was at my mercy. He was unarmed, having laid aside his rifle
-before he approached the Tomb. He trembled in every limb as he fled
-before my onslaught, and cried out aloud for pity, as I jabbed at him in
-a kind of vicious frenzy.
-
-In the twilight his face looked pale-green in colouring, and his little
-pig-like eyes seemed in danger of springing from his head. It would be
-difficult to conceive an expression upon which abject terror was more
-strongly marked.
-
-Amos Baverstock was an evil man in many ways, and a brave man in others;
-else he had never risked his life so often amid the dangers of the
-tropic wilderness. Courage of a sort he had in plenty, but, because he
-was evil in his nature, he feared death and all connected with the
-grave, though I had never thought to find him as superstitious as he
-was. He had always struck me as a hard, calculating man, who looked
-upon the practical side of all things. And yet, without a doubt, he now
-took me for a ghost.
-
-And after all--when the full facts are considered--his mistake was
-excusable; even to-day, when I call to mind that scene which was enacted
-in the half-light of the woods, I am inclined to laugh at it all, for
-there was something ludicrous about it.
-
-I wore the helmet of the dead man, and had sprung at Amos out of the
-Tomb, without giving him time to think. Assuredly, in his eyes, what
-else could I have been but an infuriated ghost, dangerous and active
-because my peace and solitude had been disturbed.
-
-I thrust at him savagely in the darkness, whilst he hurried here and
-there, in and out among the trees, yelling like a fiend. How hideous he
-was! I can see him now, with his hunchback, his green face, his staring
-eyes, his mouth contorted in terror. For all that he was quick and
-agile, and once or twice eluded a sword-thrust that would have pierced
-him to the heart.
-
-And then, at last, I had him. I carried my sword in my right hand, and,
-as I lunged, he jumped aside, towards the left. As quick as thought I
-caught him by the throat. Whereat he fell down before me on his quaking
-knees, and clasped his hands in the attitude of one who pleads for
-mercy.
-
-He was in my power. I said not a word, but clenched my teeth, and
-looked into those eyes that even then I feared. I drew back my sword,
-and then paused a moment; for I had no liking for the work, which was
-the hangman's job.
-
-"Mercy!" he groaned.
-
-I took in a deep breath, like a man about to dive. I felt that I must
-brace myself for this red task of common justice. I looked at his body,
-clothed in tatters, to select a spot most vulnerable where I might
-plunge my rusted sword.
-
-"Mercy!" he cried again.
-
-I clenched my teeth. I was on the point of speaking, but fortunately
-did not.
-
-I could hear him breathing heavily.
-
-And thereupon, on a sudden, I was felled by some one who had crept upon
-me from behind. I was felled like an ox. A single blow upon the back
-of the head sent me over like a ninepin, and I lay stretched at my full
-length upon the ground, but half-conscious, with a singing sensation in
-my head.
-
-Presently I sat up and looked about me. There was Amos, still upon his
-knees, as green as ever. And immediately above me stood one whom I did
-well to recognise as Mr. Gilbert Forsyth.
-
-That place was dimly illumined by the white light of the newly-risen
-moon, turning the leaves upon the trees above us to a glistening silver.
-
-Forsyth was wearing the remnants of a pair of trousers, the legs of
-which ended in a tattered fringe a little below his knees. He was naked
-to the waist, around which was a belt, crammed with knives and pistols.
-
-I remembered his curled whiskers and his pomaded moustache on the
-morning when I had first set eyes upon him, when I lay hidden in the
-gorse-bush. His fair hair now had grown so long that it reached to his
-shoulders; and his whiskers had spread into a short, shaggy beard, which
-was divided somewhat in the middle like that of a Frenchman or a Sikh.
-I had thought of him always as a very immaculate gentleman; but here was
-a desperate, piratical blade who, one might easily believe, chewed glass
-and compelled his unhappy victims to walk the plank.
-
-He looked at me and folded his arms; and then spoke in a voice quite
-calm.
-
-"And who the blazes are you?" he asked.
-
-I was wise enough not to answer. Ghosts--so far as I knew--could never
-speak. And was I not a ghost?
-
-If I had been a fool to go down into the Tomb, I showed at least a
-little wisdom in now holding my tongue. For this, however, I take no
-credit. I could not foresee the course that events would take. I had
-been surprised and mastered, and cursed myself because I had not killed
-Amos out of hand, when the man was in my power. Disappointed, disgusted
-with myself, I was stubborn as a mule. They might do what they would,
-they might torture me, but still I would not speak.
-
-Forsyth repeated his question; and for answer, I rushed again at Amos,
-and even then would have killed him, had not the other caught me in his
-arms and held me fast.
-
-The man was stronger than I thought; for, though I kicked and struggled,
-I could not free myself. Amos, as he watched us, regained a little of
-his commonsense, and got slowly upon his feet.
-
-"No ghost," said he. "No ghost." And he went on repeating the words as
-if he were a parrot.
-
-"Ghost!" laughed Forsyth. "If this is a ghost, he is a warm-blooded
-one, and as vicious as they make 'em."
-
-"Then, who is he?" asked Baverstock. "I swear to you, he came out of
-the Tomb, as I'm a living man."
-
-"And he's another," added Forsyth. "Who he is, or what business he has
-in such a place as this, I can no more say than you can. None the less,
-the circumstantial evidence is all against mortality. I am reminded, my
-friend, of the Carthaginian Queen: '_Exoriare aliquis nostris ex ossibus
-ultor_'--(May some avenger arise from my bones). I call this individual
-'Hannibal,' on that account."
-
-"Who wants your Latin gibberish!" cried Amos. "Look plain facts in the
-face; call a spade a spade."
-
-"Also," said Forsyth, in his usual sing-song voice, "call a man a man,
-and not a ghost."
-
-"If he's alive," said Amos, coming even nearer, "then, who is he? I
-tell you, when I lifted the tombstone, he sprang forth like a
-Jack-in-a-box, and, had it not been for you, I would never have escaped
-with life."
-
-"I have told you already," said the other, "I know no more of him than
-you do."
-
-It was then that they were joined by the Spaniard, Vasco, and Joshua
-Trust, who came together from the darkness of the thickets into the full
-light of the moon. And when they saw me, they also were afraid; for I
-still wore the helmet on my head and stood at no great distance from the
-open grave.
-
-Forsyth explained the situation in a few words, with many a wave of the
-hand, as if he introduced us. Baverstock, in the meantime, was rapidly
-becoming his normal self. He seemed to have forgotten, for the time
-being, the very object of his journey.
-
-"There's some mischief here!" on a sudden he exclaimed. "Rushby told us
-we would find the map beneath the helmet of the Spaniard."
-
-At this, Forsyth laughed, and pointed straight at me.
-
-"And since our Hannibal," he observed, "wears such a headgear somewhat
-out of fashion, we may safely presume that he could tell us where the
-map is, if he had the power to make us understand--which, for myself, I
-doubt."
-
-The truth then dawned upon me on the instant. Mr. Gilbert Forsyth, for
-all his cleverness and calmness, was as fully in the wrong as Amos
-Baverstock had been; for he believed me to be a savage, whereas the
-other had taken me for a ghost, the awful apparition of a bygone Spanish
-soldier. If I had refused to speak before from sheer pigheadedness, I
-was now resolved to play the part that I was cast for, putting my trust
-in Providence and fortified by resolution. Though they burnt my flesh
-with red-hot irons, I was determined I would never speak.
-
-They questioned me in every barbarous language that they knew. Vasco
-and Amos himself were my inquisitors, for Trust was no scholar, and
-Forsyth's learning went no further than the dead classic tongues, and, I
-believe, a little French. But I just gaped at them like a fool, and at
-last they gave it up as a bad business; and Amos, by now well convinced
-that I was human, struck me a cowardly blow across the mouth.
-
-They looked in the Tomb; they searched everywhere for the map. They
-made a great fire of brushwood that they might see the better, and
-neglected no possible hiding-place where that little strip of parchment
-might be hidden. They looked inside my quiver, and even in the hollow
-of my blow-pipe. And then, at length, quite late at night, they gave it
-up. And in an ill mood they were, especially Trust and Amos.
-
-They must have thought, however, that I was likely to be of some use to
-them, for they bound me hand and foot before I was permitted to lie down
-to rest. They were evidently not disposed to set me free, until they
-had solved the riddle I presented. They were altogether at a loss to
-explain who I was or why--apparently of my own free will--I had gone
-down into that grim and ancient vault. I think, even then, they
-connected me in some way or other with Bannister himself.
-
-Left alone, I was given time to think, and I lay awake that night for
-many hours, wondering what would happen.
-
-There were exactly three reasons why they should not have recognised me:
-firstly, I was so altered in appearance, so brown and wrinkled by the
-sun, with my hair all long and shaggy, that I do not think my own mother
-herself would have known me; secondly, my face had been half-hidden by
-the helmet I had worn; and, thirdly--the most potent fact of all--they
-never dreamed for a moment that I was yet alive. Months before, they had
-tied me to a tree, and left me to starve to death in the great forest
-many miles away across the plain beyond Cahazaxa's Temple. And, as I
-remembered this, it occurred to me that, even if they were to recognise
-me, they might again believe me to be a ghost, since for so long they
-had been certain I was dead.
-
-These were my thoughts as I lay awake, too near the fire for comfort;
-and as I was thinking, I observed a singular phenomenon, which at first
-gave me cause for new alarm.
-
-Amos, Forsyth, and Vasco were sound asleep, and Joshua Trust was on
-watch, seated on the ground a little way from me. He was not
-particularly alert. Indeed, he was occupied in the kind of pastime that
-amused him. With a red-hot firebrand in his hand, he was killing, one
-by one, the little insects that crawled upon the ground.
-
-I looked past him into the thickets, and at once I could have sworn that
-I observed a pair of eyes in which the firelight was reflected--eyes
-that steadily regarded me. Now, I might have believed these eyes to be
-those of a jaguar, were it not that they resembled the eyes of a man,
-and I knew for a fact that John Bannister was on the trail.
-
-I made neither sound nor movement, but at once set out upon this new
-train of thought. Were a jaguar prowling around the camp, and I had
-seen in his eyes the reflection of the firelight, it had been of a
-certainty but a few inches from the ground; for I knew well the habits
-and the nature of this most beautiful of beasts. But these eyes were
-four feet at least above the ground, and, being too large for those of a
-monkey, must belong to a human being--who could be none other than John
-Bannister himself.
-
-Sure of my facts, I was resolved to take no action, though my life
-itself were in the greatest danger. I knew that I might safely leave
-the matter in the hands of an older, wiser, and a stronger man than I.
-
-I saw those eyes for no longer than a few seconds, and then they
-disappeared. I heard no sound, not so much as the stirring of a leaf,
-for the night was strangely still. There was not a breath of wind.
-
-How can I describe the emotions that then swayed me! I knew that I must
-possess my soul in patience, leaving what was best to do to Bannister
-himself. And yet I longed with all my heart to grasp the hand of my
-friend. I knew now, for certain, that he was near to me, watching over
-me, ready to strike a strong blow in my defence when the opportunity
-should offer. And for that reason--so great was my faith in him--I was
-conscious of a sense of security that I had not known for months.
-
-I remembered that I had not seen him since that day when I beheld him
-running across the Sussex fields, with his brown paper parcel under his
-arm, when Forsyth had struck me down with his whip and carried me away,
-to begin my series of adventures. I remembered him, too, as I had seen
-him, standing in the white road looking after us. And he was now quite
-near to me, thousands of miles away from where I had caught my last
-glimpse of him; for it is a long march, in very truth, from the South
-Downs of England to the shadow of the Andes; and much lies between that
-is strange and wonderful and savage--the great ocean, the mystery of
-those broad and endless rivers, and the forest with its eternal twilight
-and dark, silent places where death lies in wait. John Bannister had
-gone forth to find me; and he had found me, at last, after all these
-dreadful days.
-
-How was it possible for me to sleep? I lay awake for hours with quickly
-beating heart, and thought of all that had been and all that might be
-yet to come. I saw Vasco take the watch from Trust, and then Mr.
-Forsyth post himself as sentry towards the early hours of morning. And
-when at length the daylight came, Forsyth looked at me and saw that I
-was awake. We sat for a while, looking straight into one another's
-eyes.
-
-"Friend Hannibal," said he.
-
-But I made no answer. At which he thought--for he was a strange man in
-many ways--to test me with the classics.
-
-"'_Tutum silentii praemium_,'" said he; "or, as we have it, 'Silence is
-ever golden.' However, I believe that you could tell us much, were you
-so disposed."
-
-Still I never answered. He could think what he liked; I was determined
-to hold my peace. For all that, I was considerably disconcerted; for he
-continued to look at me for a long time in a very searching manner, the
-while the daylight grew and the woods became flooded with that faint,
-evanescent twilight that fades and seems to drift, even when the sun is
-at its height.
-
-At last he gave a start, and sat bolt upright, rubbing both his eyes.
-
-"A strange thing!" said he, and continued to look at me, but this time
-with a frown.
-
-"A strange thing, indeed!" he repeated.
-
-There was another pause, during which I had not the courage to look him
-in the face. I had some presentiment of what was now to come; in spite
-of which the suddenness with which he had made it manifest that my
-secret was out, quite took away my breath.
-
-"Allow me," said he, "to offer you my most hearty congratulations. We
-have every reason to presume that Master Richard Treadgold is unloved by
-the gods."
-
-And at that, he held out a hand, and I was obliged to shake with him,
-though I felt at once frightened and a fool.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXII--MR. FORSYTH AND I BECOME BETTER ACQUAINTED
-
-
-Forsyth got to his feet, and to my horror, immediately awakened Amos.
-Then was I certain that my last hour was at hand. I never thought for a
-moment that protection would come to me from a quarter whence I had no
-reason to expect it.
-
-I had always suspected Amos to be a kind of madman; and that grey
-morning in the woods I was, for the first time, convinced of it. He
-behaved like no sane man, but cursed and raved and stamped upon the
-ground, upon which at last he flung himself writhing as if in pain.
-
-He had been both foiled and fooled, and recognised it, too. Months
-before, he had left me in the woods to die, and now beheld me as alive
-as ever, and still standing betwixt him and the goal that he would gain.
-Twice, it appeared, had he lost possession of the map--or that part of
-it which was of the greatest value to him--and on both occasions it was
-through me that he had failed. Besides that, he had taken me for a
-ghost, an apparition; he had fallen down upon his knees before me; and
-had I had the heart in cold blood to plunge my sword into the half naked
-and defenceless body of a living man, Amos Baverstock would now have
-been as dead as the Spanish warrior himself.
-
-Make no mistake in thinking that he felt a shade of gratitude for that.
-It was bitter disappointment and blind, livid fury that mastered what
-sanity was his. He rolled in his wrath here and there about the ground,
-biting the withered leaves and the dead sticks, like the mad dog he was.
-
-Then he got to his feet and swore that he would kill me, and this time
-there would be no muddling in connection with a matter so inordinately
-simple. For this dreadful purpose he took into his hands a long
-hunting-knife, and with this he came toward me. And as he did so, I
-looked over his shoulder, and saw in the midst of the thickets the
-gleaming barrel of a rifle.
-
-I knew then for certain that I was not to die, and smiled into the evil
-face of Amos. John Bannister himself was near at hand, my guardian and
-my friend. Had Amos taken another step, or raised his hand to strike, I
-know he would have dropped stone-dead upon the spot; for Bannister, at
-such a moment, would have counted his own life as nothing. But now I
-come to the strangest part of all my story: it was Mr. Gilbert Forsyth
-who intervened.
-
-"You cannot do this," he drawled.
-
-He had stepped between us. Without violence, almost politely, with an
-arm extended, he pushed Amos aside.
-
-"Why not?" gasped Baverstock, gaping at the other.
-
-"Mainly, my good friend," answered Forsyth, "because it will profit you
-nothing. But there are other reasons. In the first place, last night
-he might have killed you, and did no such thing. Secondly, I am already
-disposed to admire this youth, and to think that it would have been the
-better for us had he been upon our side from the beginning. Thirdly, to
-kill him as you propose would be a foul and dirty business, such as I
-refuse to countenance."
-
-Amos turned upon him like a wild beast.
-
-"You!" he cried. "Who are you to dictate terms to me? Who brought you
-here?"
-
-"I brought myself," said Forsyth, very calmly, "and I brought you and
-Trust as well; for money makes the world go round, and without my worthy
-banker you were still kicking your heels in England. So the less you
-speak of that the better."
-
-I never saw a man more self-possessed; and, on the other hand, I never
-saw one more livid with rage than Amos. On the instant, forgetting me,
-he turned the full current of his wrath upon Mr. Forsyth.
-
-It would be irksome to repeat, word for word, the altercation that took
-place between them; for they fought with words and argued for many hours
-that morning. And whilst this was happening, now and again I shot a
-glance toward the thickets, where I had seen the barrel of the rifle I
-was sure belonged to Bannister. But I saw no further sign of him, and
-heard no sound. I did not know, therefore, whether he was still at
-hand; for as yet I had no experience of his great skill as a woodsman.
-I did not know that, in spite of his bulk, he could move in the
-undergrowth as silently as a snake, and when he struck, he did so with
-the suddenness with which the jaguar springs upon his prey.
-
-For nearly all that morning Forsyth and Amos wrangled, the one to save
-me, and the other to do murder--the one, quiet and calm; the other,
-raving mad.
-
-It was a question, I suppose, of will-power only; and Forsyth conquered
-in the end. Amos, I could see, was utterly exhausted. The fire within
-him had consumed the better part of his vitality and the violence of his
-nature. He was at last reduced to utter speechlessness. He stood
-before us, panting, his shallow chest heaving greatly like a man who has
-run a race. He could not stand steadily upon his feet, but swayed
-about, from one side to the other. I observed, also, a strange
-difference in his eyes. They were no longer glistening and pig-like;
-they were just the wild, staring eyes of a lunatic. And, sure enough, a
-lunatic he was.
-
-He seated himself upon the trunk of a fallen tree, and there he sat for
-many minutes, shivering as if from cold. At last he turned and spoke in
-a weak voice--quite unlike his own--to Joshua Trust.
-
-"Get me water, you dog," he ordered, "and be quick about it."
-
-Trust went to a stream that was not far away; and even as the man
-entered the thickets, I thought that I heard something move beneath the
-trees, a little to his right.
-
-He came back with the water, and Amos drained it at a gulp.
-
-"I would know this," said Trust, standing before them both with folded
-arms. "Who's master now? Who takes the bridge? Whose orders am I
-expected to obey?"
-
-"That's a matter for yourself to settle," answered Mr. Forsyth. "Here
-we are, in the midst of this almighty wilderness; and if we don't hold
-together, as like as not we die. For myself, I am not one who, once he
-has decided on a certain course of action, is easily turned aside. I
-have come this distance to behold the Greater Treasure, and I do not go
-back again until my quest is ended."
-
-At that, Amos brightened up in a manner truly wonderful. The very
-thought of gold was to him a kind of tonic. He got again upon his feet.
-
-"Why, there you speak some sense!" he cried. "I am the last man in the
-world to go back upon my friends. But we can do nothing without the
-map."
-
-"Leave that to me," said Forsyth; "and, sooner or later, I will find it.
-A little subtlety and sense may very well succeed where cold-blooded
-murder must have failed."
-
-And thereupon Forsyth turned to me and, taking me by both shoulders,
-held me at arm's length.
-
-"Dick Hannibal," said he--for he had a singular sense of humour, quite
-his own--"I would have you, as you love me, and are greatly in my debt,
-tell us the whole truth; for I am convinced in my mind that you know all
-there is to know."
-
-I shook my head. I was resolved to be as stubborn as before. And
-besides, I had every reason now to think that John Bannister was
-hovering on the outskirts of the camp, and might at any moment hasten to
-my aid.
-
-Forsyth waited for some minutes. Then he shrugged his shoulders.
-
-"I see," said he, "that neither threats nor violence will be of much
-avail. You may think differently, however, when I prove to you that I
-am neither such a fool, nor yet so soft of heart, as you appear to think
-me.
-
-"We find you in the Tomb," he went on, in his slow, deliberate voice,
-"where we believe the map to have been hidden. You knew, therefore,
-that it was there; and, therefore, also, you have fallen in with Rushby.
-Very well, then, we all go back to Rushby; and what is more, we start
-without delay. We know where we left him, and we know that he cannot
-escape. The question, so far as I can see, presents no difficulty at
-all."
-
-He appeared so confident that I was considerably alarmed, and not
-without some reason, for I knew that I had left William Rushby in
-possession of the map. Yet, Forsyth himself could never have known
-this. He had, however, some definite plan at the back of his mind, and
-appeared so cock-sure of himself that I wished more than ever that I had
-some one with whom I might take counsel.
-
-I had no chance that day to attempt to satisfy my curiosity; for, so
-soon as we had eaten a meal, we packed up what little equipment Amos had
-brought with him from the ravine, and set forward on our march towards
-the west. I calculated that it would not take us more than two days to
-reach the other side of the Wood; for we followed the trail by which
-Amos and the others had come, and it was seldom necessary for him, who
-led the little column, to make use of either axe or bill-hook.
-
-On the first night, I had the privilege of being enlightened by Mr.
-Forsyth, who now appeared to have taken me to some extent into his
-heart--though upon that long march across the Great Forest, when we had
-travelled in one another's company for many months, he had never deigned
-to speak to me on more than one or two occasions.
-
-Amos, on the other hand, gave me as wide a berth as possible, and sat
-regarding me with scowls which--to tell the truth--I could not fail to
-see I shared with Mr. Forsyth. Indeed, I trusted Baverstock so little
-that, when sheer fatigue compelled me to fall asleep, I did so in the
-firm conviction that the man might plunge a knife into my heart at any
-moment. He was sullen and morose, addressing himself only to Trust and
-the Spaniard, Vasco, and then never without an oath, and in the voice of
-one who gives orders to a dog.
-
-But the case was very different with Mr. Forsyth, whose demeanour was
-scrupulously polite.
-
-"I would delight to hear your story from the first," he said to me; "for
-I cannot believe that you have arrived so far as this without some very
-exceptional adventures."
-
-"I did not know," said I, "that my affairs meant anything to you."
-
-"On the contrary, you interest me vastly," he replied. "Consider, had
-it not been for my humble self, you had now been lying with your throat
-cut beside the open grave--or, perhaps, we might have buried you, with
-some pretence of decent feelings."
-
-And so I told him as much as I thought it would do him no harm to
-hear--of how I had been found by the wild men of the woods, and had
-journeyed by myself to Cahazaxa's Temple. Thence, I told him, I had
-found my way to the Wood of the Red Fish, where I had had the good
-fortune to fall in with William Rushby. But I told him nothing of
-Atupo, the Peruvian priest, or of the map which I myself had found by so
-singular a chance, or of the Treasure that my living eyes had looked
-upon.
-
-"And this is all your story?" he asked.
-
-I thought it best not to answer him; but I saw by the sly, half-amused
-expression upon his face that he knew well enough that I would keep him
-half in the dark.
-
-He said nothing for a long time. And then quite suddenly, he slapped a
-hand upon a knee.
-
-"Upon my life and soul," he cried, "you are a lad of spirit, such as I
-myself once was, until I learned that in this world it is best to assume
-a pose! Let me explain to you. There are certain commodities upon the
-earth that all men are ever after, and money is the first of these. We
-are, therefore, all enemies of one another; we scramble in the same
-gutter--to such heights has civilisation attained. Be set down for a
-fool, a lazy rascal and a fop, and it is easy enough to take by surprise
-those who think they have the whip-hand of you. You have had an example
-of this yourself in your own brief experience of Gilbert Forsyth. When
-you made off from John Bannister's cabin, on the morning when you saw us
-first, you never suspected that I was the one who would catch you. And
-so now. It is I who will outwit you, where friend Amos, with his knife
-and oaths, has failed already."
-
-I pricked my ears at that; for my curiosity was roused.
-
-"And where are we going?" I asked.
-
-"To William Rushby," he answered, "sometime boatswain of the _Mary
-Greenfield_."
-
-"And why?" I asked.
-
-He laughed outright.
-
-"You must learn to see things," he observed, "from the point of view of
-others. Remember that I am well aware of this: Rushby and you, when you
-met, compared notes and hatched a plot together. John Bannister himself
-may, or may not, have been a party to your mild conspiracy. That is a
-point that does not affect the issue. I am not so sure Rushby spoke the
-truth when he told us he had hidden the map in the Spaniard's Tomb;
-otherwise, I cannot see why we did not find it. I go back to Rushby,
-and I take you with me, to learn the real truth."
-
-"How will you do that?" I asked.
-
-I thought, at first, that he had ignored the question; for he answered
-in a round-about way.
-
-"There is a game of cards called Poker," he observed, "at which I myself
-am tolerably proficient. In this game--with which you are too young to
-be well acquainted--there is a method of gaining by what is known as
-Bluff. Amos played the game of Bluff on Bannister, and failed. He
-tried it again on Rushby, and was singularly successful. In other words,
-Baverstock pretended that he held you in his power, and he was never
-asked to show his cards. To bluff, therefore is a risky business, which
-should be practised only in moments of emergency or urgent need. I go
-now to William Rushby, to lay my hand upon the table, knowing for a
-certainty that I hold the best card in the pack."
-
-"I quite fail to understand you," said I, shaking my head; for all this
-was so much double Dutch to me.
-
-"You," said Forsyth, "are the best card in the pack. There is no
-occasion for us to bluff. We have you in our power, as we have also
-Rushby. Between you, you know the truth. If one will not speak, the
-other will. If neither speaks, Amos can have his way, and both of you
-can leave your bones in this savage country, where you have ventured of
-your own free will."
-
-I saw now there was nothing about the matter so subtle as I had thought.
-After all, it was no more than the old game they had played from the
-beginning.
-
-"I see," said I, quite slowly.
-
-"I am glad of that," said Forsyth.
-
-Whereupon he lay down upon his side, and almost immediately fell sound
-asleep.
-
-And for a long time I watched him slumbering, and wondered greatly upon
-the strange complexity of the man's character. He was polished and
-refined, and something of a scholar, too, if there was real learning
-behind his tags of Latin. He was also not without humanity and a sense
-of justice; else I had now been dead for a whole day and night--and that
-I was still alive I was profoundly grateful. And still, he was a
-villain, as cold-blooded as Amos himself, and more dangerous in the
-sense that he was saner.
-
-These were the thoughts that carried me far into the night. Trust was
-again on sentry; and as I watched the man, I observed that he was
-nodding by the fire. Plainly, he was three parts asleep. Were my hands
-not bound behind my back, it would be a simple matter to escape. And as
-this thought came into my head--lo and behold!--_I was free_!
-
-Someone had approached quite silently from behind me, from the direction
-of the thickets. In a trice, a sharp knife had cut my bonds. And--as I
-have stated--I was free.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIII--HOW AMOS GAINED POSSESSION OF THE MAP
-
-
-The thing was done so swiftly that I had no time even to look round. I
-sat regarding the burly figure of Joshua Trust, very definitely outlined
-before the red glow of the fire; and I know that the man never suspected
-for a moment what had happened.
-
-Someone whispered in my ear:
-
-"Keep an eye on Trust. Draw back into the thickets as silently as you
-can. There you will find me waiting for you."
-
-I had no need to look at him. I knew the voice of John Bannister, even
-though he did no more than whisper. I was resolved to carry out his
-instructions to the word.
-
-Bannister withdrew. I neither heard nor saw him go, but I felt
-instinctively that he was no longer at my back.
-
-I sat watching Joshua Trust, and saw that the man's chin had dropped
-upon his chest. It was plain to see that, though he tried his best to
-keep awake, he was so sleepy that he could not do so. But, knowing that
-there would be trouble of a certainty if Amos caught him sleeping on his
-post, he might awaken with a start at any moment, and for that reason I
-thought that I had best take the chance that offered.
-
-I had been sitting upright, and still kept my hands behind my back,
-though they were no longer bound together. Moving my attitude as little
-as possible, I drew myself backwards, inch by inch. By this cautious
-method it took me the better part of three minutes to gain the margin of
-the undergrowth--a distance of ten yards at the very most. There I was
-suddenly lifted off my feet, carried a short distance and released, to
-grasp my old friend by the hand.
-
-And so he had found me at last, though it seemed to me for all the world
-as if it was I who had discovered him. He had fulfilled the oath he had
-sworn to my mother many months before; and from this moment we were
-never again to be parted throughout our great adventure.
-
-His story I had learned from William Rushby; but Bannister as yet knew
-nothing of what had happened to me, since he had not seen me from the
-day when I was kidnapped upon the Littlehampton road. But there was no
-time then to talk to one another. With as small delay as possible, we
-must get well beyond the reach of Amos and his friends.
-
-That night we journeyed in one another's company for several hours
-through the darkness of the woods. We could not see where we were
-going, for it was not possible to see a hand before one's face, and we
-were scratched most painfully and often upon the thorn-trees that were
-plentiful amid the underwoods. But this was of no great account, if our
-own safety were ensured; for, sooner or later, Joshua must see that I
-was gone, and would at once give the alarm; and if we were not well out
-of the way by then, it was quite possible that we might be overtaken,
-and our plight would be as bad as ever.
-
-So we hurried blindly on our way, until at last John Bannister deemed
-that we were safe. Then it was that I learned for the first time how
-utterly exhausted he was. He had had no sleep, he told me, for two
-nights, and he was still weak from the fever which had robbed him of
-more than half his strength.
-
-"Let us sleep, Dick," said he. "To-morrow there will be time enough for
-you to tell me all I want to know."
-
-And thereupon we lay down to sleep together, side by side, in the dense
-wood in which I had wandered for so long alone; and, strange as it may
-seem, we slept hand in hand.
-
-I experienced a sense of security and peace such as I had never known,
-it seemed to me, for years. He and I were at last together; and on the
-morrow he must hear all my story, just as I myself had once been wont to
-listen to his wondrous tales of enterprise and daring. I know that I
-was happy, and I also know the reason: I had often dreamed--as boys will
-let their fancy run away with them--that he and I were sojourning
-together in some savage place, beset by many dangers. And I always knew
-that, if he were with me, there would be naught to fear; we would come
-forth unscathed from every peril that threatened life or limb.
-
-In all conscience, we had enough of danger now, on every side of us, in
-the darkness of the Wood. And yet I slept, contented and at peace.
-
-Daylight awoke us, for we were both creatures of the Wild. Marking the
-position of the sun, we set forward towards the west, hoping to gain
-that night the ravine where we had left William Rushby.
-
-Bannister told me that he feared for Rushby's life, since he was sure
-that Amos and the others would return to the ravine with all possible
-speed, so soon as ever they discovered that I had escaped from their
-clutches. I thought by now that I had a fair knowledge of the
-topography of the Wood; but I soon found that Bannister knew as much, or
-even more, than I. In the night we must have fled towards the south;
-for we had not gone far upon the route that we had chosen before we came
-upon the Brook of Scarlet Pebbles.
-
-"I know where we are," cried Bannister, at once. "We are about five
-miles to the south of the Big Fish itself. I can tell that by the size
-of the stones in the stream. We had better change our course towards
-the south."
-
-"But that will take us away from the ravine," said I, "which lies due
-west of the Wood, some distance to the north of the Spaniard's Tomb!"
-
-"You're right, there," said Bannister. "It may be a long way round; but
-the longest way is often the quickest, Dick. In a few hours we should
-be clear of the Wood, although too far to the south. But we shall have
-open country before us, and should march four miles an hour."
-
-I had, by now, told Bannister my story of all that had happened to me
-since I first fell into the hands of Amos Baverstock. He asked few
-questions, though these were always to the point; and when I had told
-him everything, he said nothing, but just placed one of his great hands
-upon my shoulder, and patted me so affectionately that the action
-conveyed far more to me than any words he might have used. I knew that
-he cared for me more than he dared trust himself to say, and, moreover,
-he approved of all that I had done.
-
-So we journeyed towards the north-west, and came, full early in the
-afternoon, to open country. Before us we could see the rocky spurs and
-ridges--which were, in fact, the beginning of the foothills of the
-Andes--running northward for several miles, to end quite suddenly at the
-morass.
-
-John Bannister had changed greatly since the days when I knew him first.
-He looked as big and strong as ever, but had become pitifully thin; and
-I thought his hair was greyer, and there were deeper lines upon his
-forehead. His mouth I could not see, for he had grown a great beard,
-more than touched with grey. And this beard, merged into his long
-moustache, was spread like the beard of a paladin upon his chest.
-
-We directed our way northward in a bee-line, so far as we could judge,
-towards the ravine where we had left William Rushby; and this compelled
-us to clamber over the rocky hillocks and to cross the gullies and
-declivities that intervened. It was hard work, and the sun was baking
-hot. And yet Bannister would not halt, even for food, for we both knew
-well enough that the boatswain's life was in the greatest danger.
-
-"If Baverstock gets there before us," said he, "not only will he gain
-possession of the map, and thereby learn the secret of the Treasure, but
-there is very little doubt that he will put Rushby to death."
-
-"I think so, too," said I. "He has been baulked so often that he will
-not care to take further risks. However, I now believe the man to be
-quite mad. Last evening I saw him look for a long time at Forsyth, and
-I swear there was murder in his eye."
-
-"No such criminals are wholly sane," said Bannister. "Amos has done
-murder more than once, and he will never hesitate to do it again, if he
-thinks that he sees profit in the business. Rushby is defenceless. His
-wound has become septic, though I have dressed it often with what skill
-I have. There is a chance that the evil may spread; and in that case
-nothing can save his life but amputation of the leg. And that, of
-course, we have neither the means of doing, nor the skill to do it if we
-had."
-
-We were silent for a long time after that, though we hastened our
-footsteps, knowing that life and death were in the scales.
-
-I was soon utterly fatigued, and could not fail to see that Bannister as
-well was well-nigh at the end of all his strength. For all that, we
-would not give in; for William Rushby was an honest man, to whom we both
-owed much, and we were determined, if we could, to save his life.
-
-Presently, we began to doubt whether we would reach the ravine before
-nightfall; for the sun, as we could see, was descending rapidly towards
-the crestline of the Andes. Once only did Bannister pause, and then he
-stood stock-still upon a hill-top, shading his eyes with the palm of a
-hand and looking towards the west.
-
-"Was ever anything more wonderful!" said he. "I can never look upon a
-mountain without thinking of Coleridge's _Hymn before Sunrise_: 'Earth
-with her thousand voices, praises God.'"
-
-He stood for a while like a man in a dream; and I, also shading my eyes,
-followed the direction of his gaze, and saw again the great and glorious
-mountains in the distance, like a rugged battlement, scarred and
-crumbled throughout ons of old Time, rising thousands of feet before
-the red sky of evening. And I, too, though I knew naught of the poet,
-felt within me a sense of great awe and reverence for the most mighty
-works of God.
-
-I would have lingered there, I cannot say how long, had not Bannister
-taken me by a hand and led me forcibly away with such long strides that
-I was obliged to run. He looked straight in front of him as he walked.
-I could see that he was preoccupied with his thoughts, and I did not
-care to interrupt them. Looking about me, I thought I recognised the
-country. I was certain we could not be far from the ravine.
-
-And a little after, on a sudden, we heard a shot, fired but a little
-distance to the front of us, towards the right.
-
-Without a word we both began to run, and came, unexpectedly, upon the
-very head of the ravine.
-
-The sun was now behind us; and we could see clearly all there was to
-see. Far down the ravine was the solitary tree to which Bannister had
-been bound when Amos had threatened him with death. And a few yards
-from this, near where the old camping-ground had been, were the figures
-of three men hastening in our direction; and these we recognised at once
-as Forsyth, Trust, and Amos Baverstock himself. Vasco we saw a little
-after come forth from the shadows of the Wood, so laden with cooking
-utensils and the like that he might have been a pack-mule, for he was
-doubled almost in half.
-
-However, we took little notice of him; for our eyes were fixed upon the
-pathetic figure of poor Rushby, who was limping in great agony as he
-tried to run. It was clear from the first that he had little chance of
-escaping. It was inevitable that he must be overtaken almost at once.
-Suddenly he pitched forward upon his face, and lay quite still upon the
-ground; and, since no shot had been fired, we guessed that he had
-fainted from pain and exhaustion. Amos pounced upon him as a cat
-springs upon a mouse.
-
-I was, of course, unarmed, for I had left my blow-pipe by the Tomb. But
-Bannister, who carried his rifle, hesitated to shoot, for a very natural
-reason: at that range, if he fired at Amos, as like as not he might hit
-William Rushby. So, together, we set forward running, hoping that even
-yet we might not be too late to save the boatswain's life.
-
-Amos was on his hands and knees by the side of Rushby; and as we
-approached he sprang to his feet, waving something in his hand.
-
-"He has got the map!" cried Bannister, who at once brought his rifle to
-his shoulder and fired straight at Amos.
-
-The singing of the bullet must have made Baverstock realise that he was
-not by any means as safe as he would like. For the man cast no more
-than a glance in our direction, and then turned upon his heel, to set
-off running down the ravine as fast as his legs could carry him.
-
-Trust followed his example; and Vasco, the Spaniard, turned at once back
-into the Wood. I saw that Forsyth hesitated for a moment; and then,
-knowing full well that his strength was as nothing when compared to that
-of Bannister, he also turned and fled.
-
-Bannister fired two more shots; but, as he was out of breath from
-running, neither of these had any effect upon Amos, at whom they were
-directed, save that they were near enough to make him run the faster.
-
-Our first care, at any rate, was for William Rushby, who--as we
-guessed--had fainted from his great efforts to escape. He regained
-consciousness as soon as ever his face was bathed with water; and then,
-sitting up, he looked at us and groaned.
-
-"He has taken it?" he asked.
-
-Bannister tugged at his beard and shot a glance towards the Wood.
-
-"Yes," said he. "At last Amos has the map. By to-morrow evening he
-will have found the Big Fish. After all these years he will be able to
-feast his eyes upon the Greater Treasure of the Incas."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIV--HOW AMOS WAS POSSESSED OF SEVEN DEVILS
-
-
-I felt, at that moment, so despondent that I was disposed to burst into
-tears, to cry like a child through utter disappointment. For a minute
-we discussed the matter between ourselves, and tried in vain to see one
-ray of daylight. Look at it as we might, from every aspect, the
-situation seemed just about as bad as it could be.
-
-Bannister himself was too exhausted to continue the pursuit, and Rushby
-was a wounded man, whom, in any case, we dared not again leave alone in
-the ravine.
-
-"What is to be done?" I asked. And there was something so woeful in my
-expression that Bannister smiled.
-
-"We must make the best of a bad business, Dick," said he. "After all,
-Rushby's life is of more account than the Treasure. Clearly, it is not
-safe for us to remain here in open country. We must return to the Wood,
-and find a place where we can hide. A few hours' rest, and I shall have
-strength enough to go on; but I am not disposed to leave my comrade
-until his life is out of danger."
-
-As he spoke, he placed a hand upon Rushby's shoulder; and I saw by the
-look in the boatswain's face that he thought no less of John Bannister
-than I.
-
-"You'll not wait for me, sir," the boatswain answered. "I want nothing
-better than to see Amos run to earth; for I have not forgotten the
-voyage of the _Mary Greenfield_, when mainly through him I was cast into
-irons. Besides, it's my fault that he has now got the map, and I'll
-never cease to blame myself for that."
-
-"Forget it all!" said Bannister. "And as for future plans, they can
-wait till we are rested. The sooner we are out of this place the
-better; for we know not what Baverstock may do."
-
-Then and there we gathered together what little baggage we possessed, as
-well as everything that Amos had left behind him when he had hurried
-from the camp. There were two rifles between us--and we wanted no more,
-since Rushby was a casualty; but we could find only ten rounds of
-ammunition, and I was without my blow-pipe.
-
-I loaded myself with the rifles and equipment, whereas Bannister picked
-up Rushby in his arms and carried him into the Wood. There we had not
-long to search before we found a good hiding-place, a little hollow in
-the midst of the thickets, where, Bannister told us, a jaguar had reared
-her cubs. There was a stream near by, that connected, beyond doubt,
-with the Brook of Scarlet Pebbles, and we were therefore well supplied
-with water.
-
-Almost at once the three of us fell fast asleep. For myself, I had
-never been so fatigued; and yet I awoke at daybreak, and immediately,
-without disturbing my companions, went forth in search of food, and did
-not return until I had as many wild fruits and berries as I could
-conveniently carry in Bannister's haversack. I then made a fire; and
-whilst I was thus employed the other two awakened.
-
-Bannister's first office was to attend to the boatswain's wound. This
-he washed and dressed--very skilfully, I thought--and then ordered
-Rushby to lie quite still and to make no attempt to move.
-
-Whilst we were eating we talked of what was best to do; and in this
-argument the boatswain took a leading part. He had a mind of his own,
-and was determined, from the first, to have his way.
-
-He told us that he was well enough where he was, if we left him food to
-eat and a pannikin of water within reach, so that there would be no need
-for him to move. As for John Bannister and me, we must take the two
-rifles and what ammunition there was, and set forward without delay
-towards the Big Fish, to find Baverstock and his three companions.
-
-"Though the odds are two to one against you," he added, "that will make
-no difference. Stalk him, as you would a wild beast, and put a bullet
-through the scoundrel, as he comes up from the vault. This evening he
-will be there or thereabouts. Our one consolation is that he has no
-means of taking the Treasure away. But you must be quick, sir; for I'm
-open to a wager that Baverstock goes back across the plain, to find
-forest Indians to work for him under the whip, that he may carry all
-this gold to one of the rivers, and thence down-stream in more than one
-canoe."
-
-There was little question that William Rushby had got the hang of the
-affair. Indeed, all that he predicted was, or might have been, the
-truth. It was not so much, I think, because Bannister wished to thwart
-his ancient enemy, as because he desired to see for himself how the
-whole business would end, that we set forward into the Wood at about
-midday, our destination being the Red Fish itself.
-
-Bannister told me that you could not reach the Treasure from the
-northern side, because the brook there opened out into a swamp, where
-you could sink to the neck in mud, to be eaten alive by leeches. It was
-therefore necessary for us to journey by a circuitous route towards the
-west, until we came upon the Brook of Scarlet Pebbles, somewhere to the
-south of the tunnel that led to the Fish. However, we had the sun to
-guide us, and both Bannister and I were well acquainted with the Wood.
-
-And now, for once, I must tell my story from a point of view other than
-my own, and follow, for a few hours, the fortunes of Amos Baverstock.
-Afterwards, I was destined to behold with my own eyes the raving lunacy
-of that unhappy man, and to witness the spectacle of a tragedy, at once
-gruesome and fantastic. But first, I tell the story as I heard it from
-the lips of Mr. Forsyth; and very weird it is.
-
-With the map in his possession, Amos set forth without delay to feast
-his eyes upon the Treasure. Though his three companions were overcome
-by fatigue, and there was but half an hour that evening before sunset,
-the hunchback would not halt until darkness compelled him to do so; and
-that night the excited and disordered condition of his mind would not
-allow him to sleep.
-
-He had them up in the small hours that they might be ready to start at
-daybreak; and they struck the Brook of Scarlet Pebbles early that
-morning, but a few miles to the north of the Big Fish.
-
-Forsyth afterwards told us that all that day Amos never spoke, but
-forged ahead with the map in his hand, the others following as best they
-could. The man was now blinded by his own greed and avarice. He seemed
-alike incapable of fatigue and insensible to physical pain; for he
-rushed forward with such mad impetuosity that he was cut to pieces on
-the thorns, and was soon bleeding profusely from a score of places.
-
-He came, on a sudden, upon the swamp, into which he plunged so
-recklessly that he was waist-deep before he knew it. Then, to his great
-alarm, he found that he was unable to move. He was held tight in the
-mud, and was at once attacked by scores of little leeches.
-
-He threw up his arms into the air like a drowning man, crying out
-piteously for help. Forsyth, as cool as ever--as I can well imagine--at
-once cut down a long bamboo, and held this out to Amos, who was
-eventually hauled back to safety, though covered from head to foot in
-mud.
-
-The leeches they were obliged to cut away from him with knives; and all
-the time the man reviled them for not making greater haste, telling them
-repeatedly that they were but a short distance from the Treasure, upon
-which he was determined to set eyes that very day.
-
-It was then that his companions, for the first time, suspected that the
-man's mind was disordered; for Amos talked like a lunatic, and there was
-a strange look in his eyes. For instance, he whipped round upon Forsyth
-and told him that he had ever been a stumbling-block, with his refined
-manners and his London airs, since the expedition started from Caracas.
-At which Forsyth laughed aloud.
-
-"Your memory is something short," said he. "Less than five minutes ago
-I saved your life. You were sinking even as I pulled you out. Had it
-not been for me, you would have been drowned in black, stinking mud, and
-your corpse devoured by leeches."
-
-At that, Amos burst into the wild and hideous laughter of a madman.
-
-"Liar!" he shrieked. "You saved the map! It was not me you saved; it
-was the map--and without risk to yourself. Much good may it do you! I
-shall see to it that you profit nothing. Trust Amos Baverstock for
-that!"
-
-And then he laughed again, and again called Forsyth "Liar!"
-
-At the time they thought little or nothing of all this, the high talk of
-an excited man. They believed him to be in one of his fits of
-uncontrollable anger, when he could never rightly be held responsible
-for either his actions or his words. But they left him as he was,
-sticky with the black mud, with many horrid little leeches still glued
-upon his skin, that was already all blood-stained from the thorns. And
-they made a circuit of the swamp towards the east, and came suddenly
-upon the open place where the Red Fish stood forth from the ground, with
-opened mouth, as if in the act of leaping from the water.
-
-They had no need to cast about them, as I had done, in order to find the
-entrance to the vault; for I had left traces as plain as any printed
-book to read, and the flowers and ferns that I had planted were not yet
-so well established that they looked quite natural.
-
-Amos rushed in like a mad dog, and in feverish haste fell to working
-with his knife, scattering broadcast the soft, rich soil that lay
-between the rocks. In this task he was assisted by the others--for now
-they were all near as wild with excitement as Amos himself. In a little
-time they had the slab laid bare; then they threw it backwards, so that
-they beheld the stone steps leading downward to the vault.
-
-They had no need to make a torch, as I had done, since they had always
-carried with them a small collapsible lantern, and with this in one hand
-and the map in the other, Amos led the way down the steps, through the
-ante-chamber where the floor was paved with ingots, and thence into the
-great vault below.
-
-And, thereupon, there is little doubt that Amos Baverstock went wholly
-mad. He rushed here and there, yelling like a fiend. He snatched up
-the gold in handfuls--the drinking vessels, the rings and bracelets and
-the ingots--and cast them, in a kind of frenzy, right and left, all the
-time shouting and dancing and filling that great chamber with the echoes
-of his laughter.
-
-Then he filled his arms with ingots, and tied these together with a
-rifle-sling, so that they resembled a great golden faggot, and weighed
-far more than any normal man could carry. For the time being, he knew
-not what he did; but was possessed of seven devils that were brothers,
-and more like to one another than in general brothers are; and their
-names were Avarice, Violence, Jealousy, Cruelty, Revenge, Cowardice, and
-Cunning. Forsyth and the others regarded him amazed.
-
-Amos dashed up the stairway, carrying his great load upon his crooked
-back. When he reached the open air, he threw his bundle down upon the
-ground, and then turned an ear to listen at the stairhead.
-
-He heard Forsyth, Trust, and Vasco ascending in pursuit of him; and then
-again he burst into his madman's laughter, and, laying hold of the slab,
-hurled it back into its place, and rolled a great boulder upon the top
-of it; for his strength was not his own, but that of all the seven
-devils that were brothers who possessed him.
-
-"Lie there and rot!" he shouted. And they below heard his footsteps as
-he danced upon the stone.
-
-[Illustration: "'LIE THERE AND ROT!' HE SHOUTED. AND THEY BELOW HEARD
-HIS FOOTSTEPS AS HE DANCED UPON THE STONE."]
-
-They cried out to him to be merciful and to release them; but he only
-laughed the more, telling them that he was going alone across the plain
-to find Indian porters to carry the Treasure through the wilderness, and
-that he would not return for months--by which time they three would be
-dead--dead as Orellano's soldier--starved to death in the very midst of
-the gold they had endured so much to gain.
-
-And then Amos Baverstock set forward, laughing loudly, with his heavy
-burden on his back, and a heavier burden still upon his soul. He went
-alone into the woods, whilst the daylight faded and the shadows flooded
-the undergrowth; and his loud, mad laughter scared the monkeys and the
-birds amid the tree-tops; even the jaguar slunk away in fear at the
-sound of that unholy mirth. The very Wild was filled with terror--all
-save the great and stealthy snake that lay coiled in silence in the cool
-woodland pool, more evil even than Amos, more strong than all his seven
-devils, more cruel than Death itself.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXV--HOW THE SHEEP WERE SHORN
-
-
-In the meantime, John Bannister and I journeyed together through the
-Wood, and came in a few hours to the Brook of Scarlet Pebbles. This we
-crossed, and took up our westerly route, in order to avoid the swamp of
-which we knew. This was a far longer march than that accomplished by
-Amos; and that night we camped in the jungle--so far as we could tell--a
-mile or two to the west of the Red Fish.
-
-Early the following morning we continued on our way, and soon struck the
-Brook, as chance had it, at the pool of the electric eels, into which we
-waded without a moment's hesitation. We found the tunnel without
-difficulty, and through this advanced stealthily towards the open place
-where we knew the Red Fish to be. We took good care to make as little
-noise as possible; for we expected to find Amos and his friends encamped
-above the vault. And then Bannister ordered me to remain behind, whilst
-he went forward to get what news he could.
-
-I should say that half an hour elapsed before he returned; and that was
-an anxious time for me. Expecting every moment to hear a rifle-shot, I
-waited, knee-deep in water, in the impenetrable darkness of the tunnel.
-So dark was it, indeed, that I never knew that Bannister had returned,
-until I heard his voice quite close to me.
-
-He told me what he had seen. There was little doubt that the vault had
-been visited since my departure, several days before; but there was one
-circumstance which he could not by any means explain.
-
-"A great boulder has been rolled upon the slab," said he, "as if to
-weigh it down. It looks as if Amos meant to keep the Treasure safe."
-
-"I know nothing of that," said I.
-
-"Then, you had best come with me," said Bannister. "The road's clear
-enough, though something extraordinary has happened."
-
-We came forth together from the tunnel, and I was at once half-blinded
-by the sudden daylight, just as I had been before, when I first beheld
-the red rock standing forth from the ground in the very semblance of a
-fish with opened mouth. But when I could use my eyes again, I saw that
-everything in that strange place was just as I had left it, with the
-exception that the stone slab was no longer covered with earth, and a
-great boulder, round as a snowball, lay upon the top of it.
-
-"Who placed this here?" I asked; and that was more than Bannister could
-answer.
-
-We went together to the slab, and there he lay down and listened, with
-his ear upon the stone.
-
-"I can hear nothing," said he. "It will be safe enough to enter."
-
-At this we removed the boulder, lifted the slab, and went down the stone
-steps into the Treasure-chamber below.
-
-It was quite dark, for we had neither torch nor lantern. We had made
-certain that the place would be deserted, and it therefore came to us
-something in the nature of a shock, when we beard a jingling sound--as
-if some one, who had been asleep upon the gold, had sprung on a sudden
-to his feet. And then a human voice cried out to us; and this was so
-loud and unexpected that I confess I jumped as if I had been pricked
-with the point of a knife. For all that, I recognised the voice at once
-as that of Joshua Trust.
-
-"You've come back!" he cried. "Stand clear of me, or else I'll wring
-your neck! Who's he who swore that he never yet went back upon his
-friends?"
-
-There followed a pause, during which I tried my best to make head and
-tail of what the man had said. It speaks much for John Bannister's
-intelligence that he tumbled to the truth at once. To my bewilderment,
-he answered in a voice that was like enough to that of Amos Baverstock.
-
-"I've come back all right," said he. "But I'm here to offer terms,
-which you may accept or not, as you wish."
-
-And thereupon, for some reason or other, the Spaniard, Vasco, burst
-forth into such a rapid stream of language that it seemed to me--who
-understood not a word of what he said--that he swore with the most
-amazing fluency and violence. At all events, when at last he ended,
-apparently for want of breath, it came as a kind of relief to us to hear
-the lazy drawl of Mr. Forsyth.
-
-"_Amicus certus in re incerta_," he observed. "Sure friend in doubtful
-circumstances. Amos, we welcome you. We greet you as Joseph received
-his brethren."
-
-It was then that Bannister spoke in his natural voice; and, as I
-listened, I tried to imagine the feelings of those others whom his words
-took so wholly by surprise.
-
-"Amos Baverstock has not returned," said he; "and I am prepared to take
-my oath he never will. A certain friend, in very truth, was he who led
-you here, and then entrapped you that you all might starve to death!"
-
-"Who's that?" cried Trust.
-
-"My name's John Bannister. And it was you, Joshua Trust, who once tried
-to kill me--who, indeed, left me for dead. Do you remember that day in
-the mountains, when Amos caught me in Cahazaxa's Tomb? Well, now he has
-done the same for you. He has buried you alive; and when he comes back
-for the gold he covets, he will think to find it strewn with the bones
-of those who were fools enough to believe he was their friend."
-
-I heard Trust groan in the darkness; or, I think, perhaps, a growl
-describes it better. Forsyth, judging by the tones of his voice, was
-just as calm as ever.
-
-"Bannister!" he exclaimed. "So this is the end of it all! We are to
-owe our lives to you!"
-
-"That's a matter," answered Bannister, "for yourselves to settle. How
-long have you been here?"
-
-"Not many hours," said Forsyth; "but it seems like days and nights. We
-have had time enough in which to consider the misery of our end--without
-water, food, or light, in the midst of all this gold."
-
-Bannister was silent a moment. He had not descended the stairs into the
-chamber, but stood upon a step about midway down with myself close
-behind him.
-
-"I'll have no treachery," said he. "It is very needful that you
-understand the situation as it is. I am a man of my word, as you may or
-may not know, and I set you free on certain conditions only."
-
-"Fire ahead," said Forsyth. "State your terms. Anything for daylight
-and for freedom--for the certain knowledge that we have been granted a
-new lease of life."
-
-"Good!" said Bannister. "I go before you up the staircase, and wait for
-you above. Whatever arms you have you leave behind you. If any one of
-you comes forth with a rifle in his possession, I shoot him dead upon
-the spot."
-
-"We share the gold with you?" asked Joshua Trust.
-
-"Not an ounce of it, you fool!" cried Bannister. "Years ago I might
-have had it for myself, had I wished to play the robber. All this
-treasure is not yours or mine or anyone's; it belongs by right to the
-Government of the country. I am neither a smuggler nor a thief. Were
-it worth less, I might not be so honest; but here are millions, such as
-to release would be to let loose a great force of evil that would profit
-no one, and ourselves least of all. Here this gold has lain for ages,
-and here let it lie. That is one of my conditions."
-
-"Let us out!" cried Trust. "All night I have dreamed that I must eat
-bars of gold to live. I have sucked golden ingots with parched, dry
-lips. I have slept upon gold, and never before had I a couch so
-uninviting. Let us out, I say! I agree to anything."
-
-At that, Bannister bade me ascend the stairs, and followed close upon my
-heels. When we reached the top, we waited both with our rifles at the
-ready, prepared to fire upon the first sign of trouble. But the three
-of them, one behind the other, came forth out of the vault as meek as
-shorn lambs--first Trust; then Vasco; and finally, Mr. Gilbert Forsyth,
-who, swaggering into the daylight in no particular haste, had the
-audacity to hold out a hand to Bannister, as if he greeted an old
-acquaintance.
-
-John Bannister, however, did no more than shrug his shoulders, and then
-went to the stone slab and threw it back into its place.
-
-"When did Amos leave here?" he asked, turning again to Forsyth.
-
-"Last night."
-
-"Did he say anything before he went?"
-
-"Yes, he was so gracious as to tell us we could die where he had left
-us. As for himself, he was going back into the forest to find native
-porters to carry the gold away."
-
-"Just as we thought!" said Bannister. "Rushby was in the right."
-
-And, thereupon, our attention was immediately attracted by the strange
-conduct of Joshua Trust, who looked up at the little patch of blue sky
-just visible between the overhanging branches of the trees, clenched
-both his fists in an amazing burst of passion, and shook them above his
-head.
-
-"He shall pay for this!" he cried, with an oath that can never be
-repeated. "And I have served him faithfully for years! He has gone
-back upon me, when he saw that he had gained everything he wanted! By
-thunder, he shall pay for it!"
-
-Bannister looked at him, and smiled.
-
-"Have more sense, man," said he. "What use is all this anger? Amos
-Baverstock is mad."
-
-"Mad or sane," cried Trust, "he shall answer for what he has done. Come,
-tell me, what's the time?"
-
-"I should think no more than ten," said Bannister. "We started at
-daybreak, and we were not two hours upon the march before we found the
-brook."
-
-When I looked at Joshua, I was reminded of the man whom I had known on
-board the _Mary Greenfield_, who was wont to sit drinking at his cards.
-He was red of eye and flushed of countenance, and I saw that his lips
-trembled with a passion he was quite unable to contain. He was a rough
-man, in any case; and now that he had lived for months in the
-wilderness, and had been saved from death as it were at the eleventh
-hour, he was the greatest savage of the five of us.
-
-"Ten o'clock," he repeated. "Four bells, by Christopher! Then, he
-can't be far away. He can never have travelled far by night, for he
-took with him a hundredweight of gold. I'll go after him," he cried.
-"He shall answer yet for what he tried to do."
-
-Bannister stretched out an arm to detain the man; but Trust sprang aside
-and, with another oath, dived into the thickets.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVI--A NIGHT OF TERROR
-
-
-I was about to follow in pursuit of Trust, and had even taken a few
-steps towards the undergrowth upon the right bank of the brook, when
-Bannister called me back.
-
-"What's the use?" said he. "Let dogs delight. We have our own friends
-to think of."
-
-"Our own friends?" said I.
-
-"Have you forgotten Rushby? We have left him alone too long as it is.
-His life is more to us than the fate of either Trust or Baverstock; and
-he is in danger just as great."
-
-At those words, I felt something of shame that I had indeed forgotten
-one who had proved himself so loyal and true a comrade.
-
-"Then, what's to be done?" I asked.
-
-"That's not so easy to decide," said Bannister. "I take it," he added,
-turning again to Forsyth, "that you are now willing to cast in your lot
-with us, to give up all thought of plunder?"
-
-Forsyth actually yawned.
-
-"Have it your own way," said he. "I have made a promise which I will
-faithfully keep. I have always believed that there was honour among
-thieves; but, even here, I find I was mistaken. To speak the truth, I
-am heartily sick of the whole business, which has cost me a pretty penny
-with nothing to show for it, save a scratched skin and a score of
-bruises, and the loss of an ear. You may count me as one of yourselves.
-I have little enough, perhaps, upon which to flatter myself, but if
-there is skill in gaining, there is at least an art in losing. It can
-be done gracefully. Do you not agree?"
-
-"Moralise as much as you like," laughed Bannister. "It amounts to no
-more than this: you have failed dismally, and are glad enough to find
-yourself alive. You are wise to accept the situation as it is. That's
-all the same to me. Henceforward, you are under my orders, and I expect
-prompt obedience."
-
-"I shall be charmed," said Forsyth, with a mock bow. "And what of
-Rushby?"
-
-"He lies some way to the north," said Bannister. "I am alarmed at his
-condition. The wound in his leg is septic, and it is very doubtful
-whether he will recover."
-
-"I am distressed to hear it," answered the other, to whose effrontery
-there seemed no end; for he added, "If the truth be told, it was I
-myself who shot him--with the best intentions in the world."
-
-"No doubt," said Bannister grimly. "There has been give and take on
-both sides; and I am the more glad to have saved your life, since I know
-for a fact that you stood between Dick, here, and certain death, when
-Amos would have killed him. But we waste time in useless talk. Before
-we leave this place, I propose to cover the slab with earth, to hide all
-traces of an intrusion so utterly worthless, doomed to failure from the
-start."
-
-And thereupon the four of us set to work, scraping the soft earth back
-upon the stone slab; for Bannister, who had enough of Spanish to express
-his meaning, soon found another ally in Vasco, who, after all, was a
-weak, shiftless kind of fellow, with few opinions of his own. Though the
-man had been bewildered by the sight of so much gold, the Treasure had
-had much the same effect on him as on myself when I first went down into
-that vast, amazing chamber. He was frightened of it all; and as well as
-that, he now realised for the first time that he had served for all
-these months one who was both treacherous and mad; and had it not been
-for Bannister and me, he would not have escaped with life.
-
-We were all hard at work upon our hands and knees, when we were
-surprised by the sound of a rifle-shot, fired at no great distance in
-the Wood, in a northerly direction.
-
-Bannister got slowly to his feet, and stood listening; and then,
-although he turned in my direction, it was as if he spoke quietly to
-himself.
-
-"One shot," said he. "And one shot only."
-
-That was all he said.
-
-"Trust was never armed," said I.
-
-"That signifies nothing," answered Bannister. "Amos is loaded down by
-gold. If he carried a rifle, Trust may have wrenched it from his
-hands."
-
-We waited for some minutes, expecting to hear another shot, or perhaps
-some other sound. But the whole Wood was silent--the silence of midday,
-when the sun is at its height and all the wilderness is resting, the
-wild things seeking refuge from the fierce rays of the tropic sun.
-
-"Come," said Bannister, "we had best see to this."
-
-He led the way into the undergrowth, and we followed him in single file.
-The trail of Amos was broad as a road, for, in his madness, he had
-rushed forward, breaking down all obstacles that stood in his path by
-the sheer weight of the gold he carried and the impetuous, headlong
-nature of his flight.
-
-There could be little doubt that Joshua Trust had followed him with as
-little difficulty as we. Certain it was that they could not be far
-ahead, since Trust himself had not yet been absent half an hour. In all
-probability, the night before, Amos himself, overtaken by the darkness,
-had fallen sound asleep, and, being exhausted by his frenzied efforts,
-had slumbered on until long after daybreak.
-
-In any case, we had not journeyed far before we came upon the still,
-huddled form of him who had once been known as Joshua Trust, who now lay
-a corpse, in a pool of his own blood, upon the trail that he had
-followed.
-
-John Bannister kneeled down upon the ground beside the body, but
-presently got sharply to his feet.
-
-"Stone-dead," said he, and nodded sagely, as if to signify that hither
-in the end go all things weak and mortal.
-
-"Shot?" I asked.
-
-"By Amos. Through the heart."
-
-We stood in silence around the body, and I know that I was thinking that
-it would be no more than common decency to bury this poor, misguided man
-where he had fallen, when there came to my ears a sound that made my
-very blood run cold.
-
-It was a sound of laughter, faint and far away. Never in my wildest
-nightmares had I heard laughter to compare to that. It was the laughter
-of a fiend, terrible to listen to, for there was something in it of the
-chuckling of an old, demented man, the cry of a new-born child, and the
-senseless mirth of one who is delirious.
-
-In that half-light we looked at one another. There was cold fear in the
-eyes of us all, even in the eyes of John Bannister, who I did not know
-had fear of anything that lived upon the earth.
-
-"Amos!" he exclaimed. But his voice was no more than a whisper.
-
-I saw that Forsyth shuddered. And then that man, as a rule so calm and
-nonchalant, who had always seemed to me to dread nothing so much as that
-he might show his feelings, burst forth in the hottest indignation. I
-shall never forget that moment, for it was the only occasion upon which
-I saw John Bannister afraid, and Mr. Forsyth alive--a living, sentient
-being--in every fibre of his body.
-
-"This madman must not live!" he shouted.
-
-Bannister answered slowly, in the same quiet voice in which he had
-spoken before.
-
-"I am inclined to think you right," said he. "His very existence upon
-the face of the earth is a blot upon Creation. The sound of that
-hideous laughter robs the wilderness of all its beauty."
-
-"Then, after him!" cried Forsyth.
-
-"Leave that to me," said Bannister.
-
-He opened his rifle, and slipped a cartridge into the breech. I heard
-the click of the lock, and I saw how tightly his right hand gripped the
-small of the butt. And I knew that death was still in the pot, that we
-were not yet at the end of all this strife and horrid bloodshed.
-
-We went forward in pursuit, Bannister leading, hot upon the trail, the
-other three of us following at his heels.
-
-All that afternoon we journeyed in a direction north-eastward, so far as
-we could judge. And from time to time we heard the shrill, savage
-laughter of that maniac, but a little way before us. And each time we
-heard it, we were filled with dread--the dread that comes naturally to
-one who finds himself confronted by the supernatural--the same dread
-that is believed to make the human hair to stand on end in the presence
-of a ghost.
-
-For Amos Baverstock, body, mind, and soul, was still in the possession
-of his seven raging devils; and it was as if these evil spirits infested
-the humid, stifling atmosphere of the very jungle through which we
-passed in hot pursuit. Hitherto, we had been adventurers in a savage
-land; we had walked in the midst of dangers that were material and real.
-But now, with that unearthly laughter for ever in our ears, we felt that
-we were wayfarers in the dark nether regions, that not only our lives,
-but our very souls as well, were in peril of perdition, of everlasting
-death. The fleeting shadows of the Wood were to us the twilight of the
-Underworld. We were opposed by forces stronger and more evil than wild
-beasts and wicked men.
-
-Darkness caught us before we had overtaken the madman whom we chased.
-How he had managed to elude us for so long is little short of a miracle;
-for he was weighed down by the gold he carried on his back. There were
-times when he was quite near to us, when we could distinctly hear him
-breaking his way through the thickets, rushing blindly onward. And at
-such times he was silent--ominously silent. But he would always, quite
-suddenly, shoot ahead again--how, we could not tell--and presently, we
-would hear his wild laughter as before, far away from us--laughter in
-which there was something of triumphant glee, as well as lunacy and
-senseless mirth, incomprehensible and terrible to hear.
-
-All that night, during which we rested twice--on each occasion for an
-hour or more--we heard his laughter in the Wood, throughout the length
-and breadth of which it was as if fear of the man had spread. I verily
-believe the monkeys sat shivering above us in the tree-tops, and the
-great beasts of prey, who were wont to hunt by night, crouched with
-flattened ears like frightened cats in the dark places of the jungle.
-
-Speaking for myself, I know that I experienced a most novel and insecure
-sensation. I felt that the constant sound of this demoniacal laughter
-would in the end drive me also mad; and Vasco, I am certain, felt the
-same, though I cannot speak for the others.
-
-For all that, I had never seen an expression of such invincible
-determination as the daylight disclosed upon the face of Bannister. His
-jaw was set: his lips tight pressed, and there was a look in his eyes as
-hard as steel.
-
-He said not a word to any one of us; and we had no thought of food,
-though we all four drank deeply of water at the first stream to which we
-came.
-
-Then we went on, following the trail, with the sound of that maniac's
-laughter to guide us like the siren of a ship in a fog at sea.
-
-Never was a journey more strange, more ghostly. We were haunted men,
-though we found upon the road evidence of the material. For, here and
-there, lay golden ingots that had fallen from his arms, and there was
-blood, too, upon the dead leaves upon the ground, where he had torn his
-flesh upon the thorns.
-
-And then, at last, we sighted him, in a place where the undergrowth was
-sparse and the trees a little way apart. For no longer than an instant
-did we see him, else John Bannister had shot him dead; for it was a mad
-dog we hunted, and it was not right that he should live. Strange as it
-may seem--since they had sojourned for so many months in one another's
-company--it was Mr. Gilbert Forsyth who was most keen upon the chase. He
-was like a bloodhound on the trail. It was as much as Bannister could
-do to keep him back.
-
-"Have at him!" he cried. "There he is! Shoot, man! Shoot him down!"
-
-But--as I have said--we caught no more than a glimpse of him. That
-glimpse, however, was enough. If it had been terrible to hear his
-laughter, it was even more terrible to behold him with our eyes. Every
-shred of clothing had been torn from his back. He was plastered with
-black mud from the swamp in which he had waded; and this mud--though we
-could not see that--was still alive with little leeches that were
-draining the life's blood in his veins. His hair was all ragged and
-dirty; and without clothes he was more hideous than ever. We could see
-the ingots, tied in a great bundle upon his back; and we marvelled that
-any human being could carry so great a load. He shot a look at us
-before he dived again into the undergrowth; and in that look there was
-that for which we could not fail to pity him, vile and evil though the
-man had been all the days of his life.
-
-His eyes were bright as ever, yet seemed to have grown larger, and, at
-the same time, to have sunk deep into his head. His mouth, which was
-never straight, was twisted to a degree that was alarming. He had
-always the thinnest of lips, which he kept as a rule pressed tight
-together; but now his mouth was opened wide, and he was slobbering. As
-for his eyebrows, they reminded me of Satan himself as I have seen him
-pictured, for they met upon the bridge of his nose, to slant upward,
-arrow-shaped.
-
-John Bannister dashed forward. I saw that he meant to make a supreme
-effort to overtake the man. We all wanted it to end, for the whole
-affair was ghastly; and yet we dreaded the end, just as a hangman must
-have no liking for his duty. And ours--we thought--was the very
-hangman's work.
-
-It so happened that in this place the Wood was dense. Amos did not
-laugh again, but we could hear him just in front of us; though, strive
-as we might, we could not overtake him, until the pursuit had lasted,
-perhaps, another twenty minutes--for, in such a case as this, it is
-impossible to keep account of time.
-
-Bannister, who was still leading, of a sudden caught his foot in the
-root of a tree, and pitched forward on his face. Without pausing an
-instant, Forsyth rushed past him; and I, knowing that Forsyth was
-unarmed, and fearing that he might come to the same violent end as
-Joshua Trust, hastened after him, without looking to see if Bannister
-were hurt.
-
-Almost at once I caught sight of Amos, but dared not fire at him,
-because Forsyth was in front of me. And then, suddenly and
-unaccountably, to my amazement Amos stopped, and looked back at us with
-a face hideously contorted.
-
-I carried my rifle to my shoulder, and I believe I would have pressed
-the trigger, had I not then seen what it was that had brought the
-fugitive to a standstill. He had broken his way headlong through the
-thickets, and now found himself upon the bank of a wide, dark pool, and
-we were so close upon his heels that he had no time to turn either to
-the right or to the left.
-
-It is my great regret that I did not fire; but I may be excused,
-inasmuch as I did not at once recognise the place, and had then not the
-least suspicion of what was about to happen. No sooner was my rifle to
-my shoulder than Amos turned away from me, and, without a sound, with
-his great load of gold upon his back, plunged straight into the pool.
-
-He sank so low at first that we thought he must be well beyond his
-depth; but, almost at once, his feet found something firm--I think the
-fallen trunk of a tree buried beneath the water. He rose to his full
-height with the water no higher than his knees, and began to stumble
-onward, when the whole of this uncanny business reached its tragic and
-terrible conclusion.
-
-I saw something move upon the surface of the water--something that shot
-across the pool in utter silence and with the rapidity of an arrow.
-Right round Amos it swerved, and passed so close to us--who stood gaping
-on the bank--that we could not fail to recognise what this horror was.
-It was the flat and evil head of a gigantic, loathsome serpent.
-
-Then the truth burst upon me like a sudden rush of ice, and I realised
-that Amos Baverstock was come to that place which I myself had named the
-Glade of Silent Death.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVII--HOW AMOS MET HIS END
-
-
-We stood horror-stricken upon the bank of that dark pool--mute, impotent
-spectators of a tragedy we were powerless to prevent.
-
-Vasco, the Spaniard, stood beside me; and I heard his teeth chattering
-in his head like castanets. As for Forsyth, before that gruesome
-spectacle was ended he turned away with a kind of sickening sob, at the
-same time passing a hand across his eyes, by which I knew that the man
-was human after all. Bannister--who had soon caught us up--said
-nothing, but stood rigid at the back of us, his rifle in his hands,
-ready to fire so soon as an opportunity should offer. As for myself, it
-was as if I was transfixed in petrified amazement. I was hypnotised by
-the terror of the thing I saw, and could not look away, but must watch
-the tragic business to the last.
-
-With a great splash of water, the immense body of the snake arose from
-out the middle of the pool, the surface of which forthwith became
-agitated by scores of little waves, forming a series of concentric
-circles, spreading outward to the bank.
-
-We saw the glistening coils of the terrific reptile wind themselves,
-swiftly and yet stealthily, around the frail body of the doomed, unhappy
-Amos. He let out a piercing shriek, far more terrifying to hear than
-the uncanny laughter with which he had disturbed the silence of the
-woods--it was freezing in its shrillness. And at the same time he threw
-both his arms above his head, so that his heavy bundle of golden ingots
-fell into the water and at once disappeared from view.
-
-He made--so far as we could see--no effort of resistance. Terror, it
-seemed, had mastered every muscle, nerve, and sinew in his body. He was
-paralysed by fear. We could see, in that dim, religious light, the huge
-head of the snake swaying backward and forward in front of him, whilst
-its long forked tongue darted swiftly in and out. We saw the man's
-face, too, livid with fright, and his wide, staring eyes. For a moment
-all his features worked spasmodically. I think he tried to cry out once
-more; but the breath had already been driven from his slender frame by
-the colossal strength of the relentless serpent that, even as we looked,
-broke down the slender bulwark of his ribs.
-
-It was then that John Bannister fired. He told me afterwards that he
-meant to put Baverstock out of the torture he was suffering both of body
-and of mind. If that were so, it was a lucky shot; for it killed at
-once the reptile and the man.
-
-The bullet drilled the anaconda, breaking its spine, and thence pierced
-the heart of Amos Baverstock. The unhappy wretch vanished from sight
-upon the instant beneath the water of the pool; but the dying struggles
-of that gigantic snake were amazing to behold.
-
-It lashed right and left, twisting all ways, writhing like a worm; so
-that we, who looked on, were drenched in flying water. It made the most
-frantic efforts to drag itself from the pool. The lower part of its
-body seemed to be paralysed and quite useless; but at last it succeeded
-in half twining itself around the trunk of a tree, where its head swayed
-from side to side quite aimlessly. What surprised--and I think
-horrified--us most of all was the silence of the brute.
-
-I fired, and missed; for my hand trembled violently. And, thereby, it
-was left to Bannister to end the work he had begun. With his second
-shot he smashed in the reptile's head; and the great snake at last lay
-motionless, as loathsome in death as it had been terrible in life. I am
-ready to believe that five minutes elapsed before any one of us spake or
-even moved.
-
-"I shall never cease to dream of this," said Forsyth, in a weak voice,
-at last. "No such nightmare ever was!"
-
-I saw that he wiped a hand across his forehead; and I did the same.
-Though I was splashed all over with the water from the pool, a great
-sweat had broken out upon me, and I experienced, in quick succession,
-alternate sensations of extreme heat and cold.
-
-Vasco seized Bannister by an arm.
-
-"We go away!" he cried, in broken English. "We go now! It is no good
-stay here."
-
-The man turned back into the Wood as if he would retreat by the way we
-had come; but Bannister called him back.
-
-"Not that way," said he, in Spanish. "It is but a little way from here
-to the end of the Wood, and we can pass round to the north across open
-country. I know a way to the south of the morass."
-
-We were under Bannister's orders. And thankful we were that we had such
-a man to follow. We knew there was an urgent need to go back to Rushby
-as quickly as we might.
-
-We were obliged to pass round the pool, and this brought us to within a
-few yards of the great body of the snake.
-
-"I never knew," said Bannister, "that such a monster could exist. He
-must be over thirty feet in length. But, come; we can do nothing here."
-
-In single file, as before, we followed him, and presently came forth
-into the open air upon the skirting of the Wood.
-
-There we regarded one another in shocked surprise; for the faces of us
-all were white, and Vasco was still trembling. We said nothing; not a
-word passed between us; but we all breathed deeply, like men who had
-been for a long time under water.
-
-I looked up at the blue sky and the hills in the distance, to the east,
-whence I had first looked down upon the Wood of the Red Fish, after my
-journey across the plain. And I remembered what I had then thought; how
-I was filled with the restless spirit of adventure; how the joy of life
-was strong within me, whilst I ran the danger of my life, all naked as I
-was, with my Indian blow-pipe in my hand and my quiver full of arrows.
-But now I had seen the very face of death. I had beheld a living
-terror. The mask of Romance had been removed from the forbidding face
-of Tragedy. And that Wood was now to me a dread, unholy place, wherein,
-I knew, I would never dare to venture again, in spite of the great
-Treasure that lay hidden in its midst.
-
-"I would not go back," I cried to Bannister, "for all the Treasure of
-the Incas, for all the treasure in the world!"
-
-My old friend looked at me, and smiled.
-
-"You are right," he answered. "And there never will be a need to, Dick.
-As soon as we are rested, we must find our honest Rushby, and do what we
-can for him."
-
-We camped that night in the open air, a mile or so to the south of the
-morass; and the following morning continued our journey, keeping the
-Wood to our left.
-
-We had not gone far before we discovered the figure of a man, who came
-running towards us from the direction of the hills. I noticed that he
-advanced with a peculiar limp, and on this account, for the moment, I
-believed it to be Rushby, most marvellously recovered of his wound.
-
-But when the runner had drawn quite near to us, I was surprised beyond
-measure to recognise my old friend, Atupo, the Peruvian priest, whom I
-had befriended in the vault beneath the Temple of Cahazaxa.
-
-Though I called him by his name, he cast never so much as a glance at me
-or any of the others, save Bannister, at whose feet he threw himself, as
-pagans prostrate themselves before the idols that they worship.
-
-"My master!" he exclaimed, and went on, in his quaint, broken English,
-in some such strain as this: "I never thought to live to set eyes on you
-again."
-
-Bannister lifted him to his feet and, laying a hand affectionately upon
-his shoulder, asked him what news he had of his friends and brethren,
-who had fled from their dwellings before the wrath of Amos.
-
-Atupo told him that the majority had sought refuge in the woods, where
-many of their number had been treacherously murdered by the wild men. He
-himself, however, had founded a small colony of some score of persons
-who were living by the side of the ravine that crossed the plain, not so
-far beyond the hills that we could see. All these, he said, were
-anxious to return to Cahazaxa's Temple, but dared not do so, believing
-Amos to be still abroad.
-
-Bannister at once set the man's mind at rest, assuring him that it was
-not only safe for them to return, but that Amos himself was dead and the
-Greater Treasure undisturbed.
-
-At that, Atupo threw up his hands by way of a gesture of delight; and
-then, looking about him, for the first time recognised both Mr. Forsyth
-and myself. And it is doubtful which of the two of us he was most
-surprised to see.
-
-Myself he regarded as a trusted friend; but he knew that Forsyth had
-been one of Baverstock's party, and he was astounded to behold that
-gentleman alive. Being told by Bannister that he had naught to fear, he
-pointed straight at Forsyth.
-
-"But that man should be dead!" he cried. "With my own eyes I saw him
-shot with an arrow, the point of which was steeped in deadly poison."
-
-And then it was that Mr. Gilbert Forsyth told us the truth, which I have
-set down already: how, with a fortitude that one cannot but admire, he
-had burned the poison from his flesh, and thus saved his life, though he
-had fallen into a fever.
-
-Atupo, soon afterwards, expressed himself anxious to return to his own
-friends; but Bannister was one whose custom it was to look well ahead,
-and he knew that the ancient Peruvians had been well skilled in
-medicine.
-
-"Friend Atupo," said he, "we have need of your assistance; for there is
-one of our number who is sorely wounded. You and your comrades owe not
-a little to us; and I will, therefore, ask you to go back to the Temple,
-and there await our coming. Prepare such drugs as you may have for a
-man who has a wound in the leg that will not heal."
-
-"Does the sun ask the moon to shine?" inquired the Peruvian. "What of
-the white man's medicines?"
-
-Bannister threw out his hands.
-
-"Alas!" he exclaimed. "We have none; we have used all we had."
-
-And so the matter was settled; Atupo, the priest, returning to the
-Temple, and ourselves veering round to the west, between the Wood and
-the morass, towards the place where we had left William Rushby.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVIII--CONCLUSION
-
-
-Early that afternoon we arrived at our destination, and found that we
-were none too soon. For Rushby had long since consumed all the water we
-had left him, but had managed somehow to move himself, though in the
-greatest pain, to the bank of the stream that flowed near at hand, where
-he was able, from time to time, to fill his pannikin with water. Also,
-that very morning, he had eaten the last of the food that we had left
-him. So it was well we came no later.
-
-He told us that he had slept daily for many hours; and on one occasion
-he had awakened quite suddenly, to find one of those small deer that
-were numerous in the Wood staring at him with its soft, mild eyes, from
-a distance of not more than ten yards.
-
-I asked him if he had not been afraid that some wild beast of prey might
-find him in the night. But he told me that he had never bothered
-himself about such matters, since both by day and night he had kept a
-fire alight. He had heard the report of the first shot, that which had
-brought about the death of Joshua Trust, though he had heard nothing of
-the other shots, upon the far side of the Wood, fired in the glade where
-Amos Baverstock had met his tragic end.
-
-"I have lain here for days," said he, "wondering what was happening, and
-whether I would ever set eyes upon any one of you again."
-
-When we told him the story of the death of Amos, he seemed little enough
-impressed; for he was a rough-and-ready seaman, without the gift of
-imagination, and he had not been there himself to behold with his own
-eyes the terror of that incident or to hear the wild laughter of the
-fugitive as he fled before us through the Wood.
-
-"A fit end for such a man," said he. "He himself was as evil as any
-snake, though he had courage of a sort; for I remember him well, when he
-faced the mutineers on board the _Mary Greenfield_. And what of the
-map?" he asked, turning suddenly to Bannister, who shrugged his
-shoulders.
-
-"We do not know," he answered; "but in default of certain evidence we
-must presume that that little fragment which we brought with us all the
-way from Sussex went down into the water when Amos was crushed to
-death."
-
-"So then," said William Rushby, who was of a practical turn of mind, "no
-one is any the wiser, so far as the Big Fish is concerned?"
-
-"No one," said Bannister, "save we five, and I do not suppose that any
-one of us will ever care again to undertake such an expedition."
-
-I looked at Mr. Gilbert Forsyth; for I was inclined to think that he was
-the only member of our party who was likely to persevere upon the quest
-of the Greater Treasure in spite of any promise he had made.
-
-I was surprised at the attitude he had assumed; for there was something
-in it that jogged my memory, that took me back to the day when I had
-first seen him and Baverstock and Joshua Trust. For he lay upon his
-back, with his hands clasped behind his head, and one knee thrown
-carelessly across the other. But how different was he now! He no
-longer wore his highly polished boots, his double-breasted waistcoat,
-and his hat tilted at a jaunty angle on his head. He was in rags and
-tatters, burnt and blistered by the sun, deprived of an ear where the
-skin was all white and scarred owing to his having burnt it. And yet he
-yawned in the same lazy fashion.
-
-"I've had enough of it," said he. "I want nothing better than a land of
-chimney-pots and gas-pipes. I shall rejoice at the sight of a
-policeman."
-
-And he yawned again.
-
-Rushby, we found, was in no better plight than before. It was quite
-impossible for him to walk. We saw at once that we must carry him; and
-as delay would profit us nothing, we set forward that very afternoon,
-heading in the direction of the hills towards the east.
-
-It was a silent, almost a saddened, party that crossed the plain to
-Cahazaxa's Temple. We took it in turns, two at a time, to carry Rushby;
-and on that account we could not make many miles a day. We crossed the
-suspension bridge, and at last came within sight of the great ruin,
-whence from the hill-top we looked down upon the forest, wherein we had
-all risked our lives so often, in the heart of which I had lived for
-weeks with the wild men of the woods.
-
-I asked Bannister how it was that they had treated me so kindly, when it
-was these same people who had murdered Atupo's friends.
-
-"Curiosity," said he; for he could explain most things. "The South
-American savage is not by any means as curious as the African; but you
-must remember that the men who found you had never before set eyes upon
-a white man. They probably looked upon you as a kind of god. With the
-Peruvians, it was different. Though the forest folk never ventured to
-the Temple, they had regarded the priests for years as their natural
-foes."
-
-We remained for two weeks at the Temple, during which time Atupo
-personally attended to Rushby's wound, bathing it with a decoction made
-from a herb that he procured in the forest. Whatever this was it
-proved, at any rate, effective; for the wound soon healed, and the
-boatswain was at last able to walk with the aid of a stick.
-
-We then set forward upon our journey towards the west, bidding good-bye
-to the quaint people whom we had already learned to love. We crossed
-the plain and that marvellous suspension bridge that had existed for
-centuries, and stands--for all I know--to this day, as evidence of the
-bygone civilisation of a great and ancient people. We came to the
-valley in which lay the Wood of the Red Fish; but we passed so far to
-the south that we did no more than see it dimly through the thick
-morning haze that lay between the hills. And after that we entered into
-a country very different from any we had yet seen--a land of high
-mountains and deep valleys, clothed with trees.
-
-We were days upon our march across the Andes. We were obliged to
-progress by easy stages, because Rushby was half a cripple. There, in
-the highlands, we found a mild, simple people, engaged in agricultural
-pursuits, tending large flocks of llamas, or Peruvian sheep. From
-village to village we went, like beggars, and were always treated with
-hospitality and kindness.
-
-At last we gained the crestline of those immortal mountains, and could
-see, both to the north and to the south of us, peak upon peak, rugged
-and inaccessible, towering like giants into the sky. Thence we
-descended to the narrow tableland, where the grass was knee-deep and
-native villages were many.
-
-All this was a journey of several weeks, and yet, in more ways than one,
-something in the nature of a pleasant picnic after the hardships and the
-perils we had been called upon to face.
-
-Sleeping night by night beneath the stars, wayfarers among the glorious
-and rugged hills, we had learned the art of comradeship. We found that
-there was good even in Forsyth and the sleepy, idle Vasco; and
-fortunate, indeed, is he who never travels in worse company than that of
-men like Bannister and Rushby.
-
-And so, upon a certain day at sunset, I was strangely conscious of a
-feeling of sadness when I knew that we were come to the end of our
-adventures, and that we soon must part. We stood then on a steep bluff,
-and looked down upon a narrow strip of sea-board, populous with towns
-and hamlets, with fertile fields between; and so we came to the
-seashore, and saw the sun go down upon the wide and golden Pacific
-Ocean.
-
-[Illustration: "AND SO WE CAME TO THE SHORE AND SAW THE SUN GO DOWN UPON
-THE WIDE AND GOLDEN PACIFIC OCEAN."]
-
-And now my story is told. Since those days I have ventured often in the
-wild places of the world--upon great open spaces, amid the summits of
-unknown mountains, in dense, steaming forests--but never again have I
-journeyed to the Wood of the Red Fish. Nor, to my certain knowledge,
-did any of the others.
-
-In that, as in much else, we thought alike. Let the Inca gold lie in
-the dust, where it has lain for above four hundred years. He who will
-may yet go forth to find it. As for me, whenever I remember that dread
-Wood I see the gold, stacked and glimmering in the torch-light, and I
-hear the wild, mad laughter of Amos Baverstock as he fled before us, and
-see him once again and hear his piercing shriek, when he was caught in
-the silent, stealthy coils that crushed that evil man to death before
-our very eyes. And I ask God to have mercy on us who are yet alive, and
-to save us from a like living and ending.
-
-
-
- THE END.
-
-
-
- PRINTED IN GREAT BRITAIN BY
- WILLIAM CLOWES AND SONS, LIMITED,
- LONDON AND BECCLES.
-
-
-
-
- THE BOY'S LIBRARY OF
- _Adventure and Heroism._
-
-
-_An excellent series of Gift Books, of good bulk, handsomely printed,
-illustrated and bound. Large crown 8vo, cloth gilt coloured wrappers._
-
-
-The Fifth Form at St Dominic's. By TALBOT BAINES REED.
-
-A lively and thoroughly healthy tale of Public School life; abounding in
-stirring incident and in humorous descriptions.
-
-
-A Hero in Wolfskin. By TOM BEVAN.
-
-A Story of Pagan and Christian.
-
-A young Goth performs feats of valour against the Roman legions, and
-dazzles a huge audience with his prowess in the Coliseum.
-
-
-The Adventures of Val Daintry in the Graeco-Turkish War. By V. L.
-GOING.
-
-A bright and vigorous story, the main scenes of which are laid in the
-last war between Turkey and Greece.
-
-
-The Adventures of a Three-Guinea Watch. By TALBOT BAINES REED.
-
-A straightforward story of school-life, and of the duties and
-temptations of young men entering upon the work of life.
-
-
-The Cock-House at Fellsgarth. A Public School Story. By TALBOT BAINES
-REED.
-
-The juniors' rollicking fun, the seniors' rivalry, the school elections
-and football match are all told in a forcible manner.
-
-
-A Dog with a Bad Name. By TALBOT BAINES REED.
-
-The story of a big, ungainly youth who seemed fated to be misunderstood,
-and to be made the butt of his comrades.
-
-
-The Master of the Shell. By TALBOT BAINES REED.
-
-Dealing with the pranks of schoolboys, bubbling over with mischief and
-fun, and the trials of a young House-Master.
-
-
-From Scapegrace to Hero. By ERNEST PROTHEROE.
-
-The Scapegrace, who became a thorough-going hero, was a wild,
-unmanageable village boy possessing an inveterate taste for mischief.
-
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-Sir Ludar. By TALBOT BAINES REED.
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-A stirring tale of the days of Queen Elizabeth, dealing with the
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-Tom, Dick and Harry. By TALBOT BAINES REED.
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-A splendid story, exhibiting in the highest degree this popular author's
-knowledge of schoolboy life and humour.
-
-
-Submarine U93. By MAJOR CHARLES GILSON.
-
-A thrilling tale, in which the U boat is the principal factor. The
-youthful hero, with that redoubtable personage, Captain Crouch, passes
-through many ordeals and adventures.
-
-
-Into the Soundless Deeps. A Tale of Wonder and Invention. By P. H.
-BOLTON.
-
-The problems of sound and a "wonder-box," known as the "long distance"
-ear, provide the main theme in this exciting story, in which adventures
-with Spanish brigands also figure.
-
-
-The Mystery of Ah Jim. A Story of the Chinese Underworld, and of Piracy
-and Adventure in Eastern Seas. By MAJOR CHARLES GILSON.
-
-In the unravelling of the mystery surrounding his parentage, an English
-boy, brought up as a Chinese, passes through many adventures on sea and
-land.
-
-
-The Fire Gods. By MAJOR CHARLES GILSON.
-
-A dashing, exciting story of adventure and mystery in Central Africa in
-which Captain Crouch again distinguishes himself,
-
-
-The Scarlet Hand. By MAJOR CHARLES GILSON.
-
-Trapped by a powerful Chinese Secret Society, leagued with Germany, two
-British boys are kidnapped to China. Their pluck and resource carry
-them through a series of adventures.
-
-
-The Guardians of the Shield. By ALFRED COLBECK.
-
-The hero of this thrilling story is a boy, the last of a princely Jewish
-family, whose fortunes are closely bound up with a priceless golden
-shield. Boys will delight in the succession of exciting adventures
-which befall the hero.
-
-
-Alan Dale. By SYLVANUS.
-
-Alan is stolen by gypsies, arrested for complicity in murder,
-transported to Van Diemen's Land, escapes from prison, and is at last
-rescued and restored to his home. What boy wants more?
-
-
- THE R.T.S., 4, BOUVERIE STREET, LONDON, E.C. 4.
-
-
-
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-*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK TREASURE OF KINGS ***
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@@ -435,38 +435,9 @@ pre { font-family: monospace; font-size: 0.9em; white-space: pre-wrap
</style>
</head>
<body>
+<div>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 39399 ***</div>
<div class="document" id="treasure-of-kings">
<h1 class="document-title level-1 pfirst title">TREASURE OF KINGS</h1>
-
-<!-- -*- encoding: utf-8 -*- -->
-<div class="clearpage">
-</div>
-<!-- -*- encoding: utf-8 -*- -->
-<div class="align-None container language-en noindent pgheader" id="pg-header" xml:lang="en" lang="en">
-<p class="noindent pfirst">This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the <a class="reference internal" href="#project-gutenberg-license">Project Gutenberg License</a>
-included with this eBook or online at
-<a class="reference external" href="http://www.gutenberg.org/license">http://www.gutenberg.org/license</a>.</p>
-<p class="noindent pnext"></p>
-<div class="noindent vspace" style="height: 2em">
-</div>
-<div class="align-None container noindent white-space-pre-line" id="pg-machine-header">
-<p class="noindent pfirst white-space-pre-line"><span class="white-space-pre-line">Title: Treasure of Kings<br />
- Being the Story of the Discovery of the "Big Fish," or the Quest<br />
- of the Greater Treasure of the Incas of Peru.<br />
-<br />
-Author: Charles Gilson<br />
-<br />
-Release Date: April 07, 2012 [EBook #39399]<br />
-<br />
-Language: English<br />
-<br />
-Character set encoding: UTF-8</span></p>
-</div>
-<div class="noindent vspace" style="height: 2em">
-</div>
-<p class="noindent pfirst" id="pg-start-line">*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK <span>TREASURE OF KINGS</span> ***</p>
<div class="noindent vspace" style="height: 4em">
</div>
<p class="noindent pfirst" id="pg-produced-by"><span>Produced by Al Haines.</span></p>
@@ -6525,347 +6496,6 @@ rescued and restored to his home. What boy wants more?</p>
<!-- -*- encoding: utf-8 -*- -->
<div class="backmatter">
</div>
-<p class="pfirst" id="pg-end-line">*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK <span>TREASURE OF KINGS</span> ***</p>
-<div class="cleardoublepage">
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class="language-en level-2 pgfooter section" id="a-word-from-project-gutenberg" xml:lang="en" lang="en">
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+<div>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 39399 ***</div>
</body>
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--- a/39399-rst.zip
+++ /dev/null
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@@ -1,7460 +0,0 @@
-.. -*- encoding: utf-8 -*-
-
-.. meta::
- :PG.Id: 39399
- :PG.Title: Treasure of Kings
- :PG.Released: 2012-04-07
- :PG.Rights: Public Domain
- :PG.Producer: Al Haines
- :DC.Creator: Charles Gilson
- :MARCREL.ill: R. Caton Woodville
- :DC.Title: Treasure of Kings
- Being the Story of the Discovery of the \"Big Fish,\" or the Quest of the Greater Treasure of the Incas of Peru.
- :DC.Language: en
- :DC.Created: 1922
- :coverpage: images/img-cover.jpg
-
-.. role:: small-caps
- :class: small-caps
-
-=================
-TREASURE OF KINGS
-=================
-
-.. clearpage::
-
-.. pgheader::
-
-.. vspace:: 3
-
-.. container: coverpage
-
-.. figure:: images/img-cover.jpg
- :align: center
- :alt: Cover art
-
- Cover art
-
-.. vspace:: 3
-
-.. container: frontispiece
-
-.. _`"Everywhere was gold, stacked upon the floor, piled against the walls"`:
-
-.. figure:: images/img-front.jpg
- :align: center
- :alt: "EVERYWHERE WAS GOLD, STACKED UPON THE FLOOR, PILED AGAINST THE WALLS
-
- "EVERYWHERE WAS GOLD, STACKED UPON THE FLOOR, PILED AGAINST THE WALLS." See page 208.
-
-.. vspace:: 4
-
-.. container:: titlepage center white-space-pre-line
-
- .. class:: x-large
-
- TREASURE OF KINGS
-
- .. class:: small
-
- Being the Story of the Discovery of
- the "Big Fish," or the Quest of the
- Greater Treasure of the Incas of Peru.
-
- .. vspace:: 3
-
- .. class:: medium
-
- By
-
- .. class:: large
-
- MAJOR CHARLES GILSON
-
- .. class:: small
-
- *Author of "The Realm of the Wizard King," "The Fire Gods,"*
- *"In the Power of the Pygmies," etc.*
-
- .. vspace:: 4
-
- .. class:: small
-
- With Frontispiece in Colour and Eight Full-page
- Illustrations by R. CATON WOODVILLE, R.I.
-
- .. vspace:: 4
-
- .. class:: medium
-
- LONDON
- "THE BOY'S OWN PAPER" OFFICE,
- 4, Bouverie Street, E.C. 4
-
-.. clearpage::
-
-.. class:: center medium
-
-BY THE SAME AUTHOR
-
-.. vspace:: 1
-
-.. class:: left small white-space-pre-line
-
-The Realm of the Wizard King. A Tale of Prehistoric Monsters.
-The Scarlet Hand. A Tale of a Secret Society.
-Submarine U93. A Tale of the Great War at Sea.
-The Fire Gods. A Tale of the African Forest.
-The Mystery of Ah Jim. A Tale of the Sea.
-On Secret Service. A Spy Story.
-The Lost Empire. A Tale of the Battle of the Nile.
-The Lost Column. A Tale of the Boxer Rebellion.
-The Lost Island. A Tale of the Mysterious East.
-The Sword of Freedom. A Tale of the English Revolution.
-The Spy. A Tale of the Peninsular War.
-The Race Round the World. A Tale of a new Motor Spirit.
-The Pirate Aeroplane. A Tale of Ancient Egypt.
-In the Power of the Pygmies. A Tale of the Congo.
-A Motor Scout in Flanders. A Tale of the Fall of Antwerp.
-Across the Cameroons. A Tale of the Great War in West Africa.
-Held by Chinese Brigands. A Tale of China.
-The Society of the Tortoise Mask. A Tale of a Secret Society.
-The Captives of the Caves. A Tale of Savage Men.
-The Sword of Deliverance. A Tale of the Balkan War.
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-.. clearpage::
-
-
-
-.. contents:: CONTENTS
- :depth: 1
- :backlinks: entry
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-.. clearpage::
-
-.. class:: center medium
-
-LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
-
-.. class:: center small
-
-BY R. CATON WOODVILLE, R.I.
-
-.. vspace:: 1
-
-.. class:: left small white-space-pre-line
-
-`"Everywhere was gold, stacked upon the floor, piled against the walls"`_ . . . . . . . . . Frontispiece
-
-.. vspace:: 1
-
-`"'Because,' he answered slowly, 'because you are a caveman, too'"`_
-
-.. vspace:: 1
-
-`"He rolled back the boulder as though it were nothing"`_ (missing from book)
-
-.. vspace:: 1
-
-`"And bound I was, then and there, to a stout palm tree, a little distance from the margin of the forest"`_
-
-.. vspace:: 1
-
-`"They came closer than ever, to within an arm's length of me"`_
-
-.. vspace:: 1
-
-`"I had reached the conclusion of my journey. The Big Fish was there"`_
-
-.. vspace:: 1
-
-`"'Hands up!' he cried. 'Hands up, you brown barbarian, or else I shoot you dead!'"`_
-
-.. vspace:: 1
-
-`"'Lie there and rot!' he shouted. And they below heard his footsteps as he danced upon the stone"`_
-
-.. vspace:: 1
-
-`"And so we came to the seashore, and saw the sun go down upon the wide and golden Pacific Ocean"`_
-
-.. vspace:: 4
-
-.. container: dedication center white-space-pre-line
-
-.. class:: center small
-
-INSCRIBED TO
-
-.. class:: center medium
-
-BROMLEY DAVID SMITH-DORRIEN
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-.. clearpage::
-
-.. class:: center x-large
-
-TREASURE OF KINGS
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-CHAPTER I--JOHN BANNISTER
-=========================
-
-I shall never forget the day on which I first set eyes upon John
-Bannister. I was then a boy--sixteen years of age, if I remember
-rightly--and I stood before him, tongue-tied by the questions that he
-asked me, wondering how he had come by the great ugly, horrid scar upon
-his face, awed--indeed, I think, a little frightened--by the great
-muscles in his forearms, naked to the elbows, his rough weather-beaten
-face with skin like leather, and above all else by the stature of the
-man.
-
-For he was a giant--a giant such as I had dreamed of when a child. As
-some such figure had I pictured Giant Despair, when my mother had read
-to me from *Pilgrim's Progress*: "And Giant Despair was in one of his
-fits again." I had pictured Strength and Madness let loose amid a
-thunderstorm of wrath. And when I first looked upon him who was to be
-my champion and my comrade. I forgot his soft, kindly words and
-pleasing smile, and could only think how terrible he must be in anger.
-
-There is a strip of beach upon the Sussex coast, so many miles from
-nowhere, where the sand-snipe gather and seldom a human being may be
-seen. There, as a lad, I would love to roam, with no certain object in
-view, but just to find what I could, to observe what chanced to come my
-way, and, when wearied of wandering, to sit upon the shingle over and
-above those plains of wet, grey sand and think of all manner of things
-as my boyish fancy pleased.
-
-I was seated thus one April morning, far from home, and wondering how
-my tired legs would carry me back to dinner, when my attention was
-attracted to two strange birds, of a kind that I could not remember to
-have seen before. The sea was calm as glass, the sun hot as August.
-They were large birds, and were engaged--so far as I could see at a
-distance of more than a hundred yards--in dragging from the shallow
-water what might have been the carcass of a fish.
-
-I watched them, greatly interested, forgetful even of my appetite,
-possibly for five minutes; and then there came a heavy step upon the
-shingle at my back.
-
-I turned quickly, to behold the figure of John Bannister. Like some
-great beast of prey, he had broken his way quite noiselessly through a
-thick brake of that shrub which, I think, is called
-sea-buckthorn--though I never knew one tree from another. And he stood
-regarding me, with his hands upon his hips.
-
-I got to my feet, thinking that such a man might be up to no good in so
-lonesome a place, and I might find it advisable to take to my heels.
-But, quite suddenly, he laughed; and at the sound of his laughter I
-knew at once that I, for sure, had nothing to fear. Since that
-memorable day I have learned in the world many true and singular
-things, but none truer than that you may know always an honest man by
-his laughter and the shake of his hand.
-
-"I startled you," he said.
-
-"I wondered who it was," I faltered sheepishly.
-
-"And you are still none the wiser," he answered.
-
-And at that, he seated himself by my side.
-
-He told me that the strange birds were hooded crows. He told me also
-how they bullied the rooks, robbed the gulls; how they were cleverer
-and more evil than any other bird, foes of all and feared by
-all--thieves and murderers. He talked like a book; he had the science
-of the matter at his finger-tips, and he could, at the same time, paint
-pictures, as it were, with words. With him the hooded crow was in a
-single sentence *corvus cornix*, and the "highwayman of the air."
-
-And as he talked to me, I wondered the more concerning him, and thought
-the less of the hooded crows. Who was he, whence had he come, and what
-was he doing there in such a lonely place, in his shirt sleeves, in the
-warm April sunshine? These were questions that he himself was to
-answer. I cannot say why he took me straightway into his confidence,
-and afterwards into the very chamber of his heart--but he did; else I
-would now have naught to write about.
-
-Let me confess that I have taken the whole tenour of my life from this
-man's greatness. I have tried my best, all my long years, to bear in
-mind his strength, his wisdom, and his courage, that I might walk
-humbly in the shadow of a glorious example. But, more than all
-besides, I know that I owe to him the restless spirit of adventure, the
-love of action, the joy of wandering, that has led me so often to
-strange and distant places where I have found myself in even stranger
-company.
-
-I cannot tell you of all he said to me upon the morning of our meeting.
-He spoke of many things, of the world he had seen, the dangers he had
-faced, the people he had known. As I had no longer feared him after
-his first word and his open, kindly smile, so after five minutes of his
-talking did I feel that I had known him all my life. For his words
-were magic. Wondrous pictures framed themselves before my eyes upon
-the calm surface of that English sea--pictures of wild men, of treeless
-deserts, of savage forests and inhospitable hills; and I longed then to
-follow in the footsteps of this heroic man, whose hairy arms were those
-of Vulcan and whose voice was soft as that of the mother whom I loved.
-
-I forgot my dinner. I hungered only for adventure. I sat upon the
-shingle, wondering what lay beyond the vague horizon where grey sea and
-sky were blended, where I could just discern the smoke of a solitary
-and distant steamer, the only sign of life or movement upon that desert
-sea--for we in the West of Sussex lay well away from the track of the
-Channel shipping.
-
-On a sudden, I asked him the time; and with a glance at the sun he told
-me it was two. At that, I jumped to my feet.
-
-"But I am late!" I cried.
-
-"Not for the first time," said he. "I can remember my own boyhood."
-
-"My dinner was at one."
-
-"Then you dine with me; for I eat when I have time and appetite, sleep
-when I will, and live as Nature meant me to."
-
-He led me back from the beach across some sand-hills to a place where
-the gorse was like a wave of gold. And there was a wooden hut--or,
-rather, shed, for it was walled upon three sides only. And within were
-all sorts of things: a sleeping-bag made of the skins of some small
-animal with fur soft as a mole's, which he said had come from the south
-of Africa; an iron cooking-pot, an evil-looking affair which he had
-brought with him from the Amazon; skins painted by North American
-savages; mocassins; a Malay sarong, a kind of towel worn around the
-waist; and more curiosities and rude, primitive utensils than I could
-well describe within the space of a page of the smallest print.
-
-And yet, I dined like a prince: a soup of fish, plover roasted upon a
-spit, and in place of bread, flour and water fried in a pan after the
-custom of the Afghans. It may have been the novelty of it all, or the
-fact that by then I was well-nigh famished, but I never ate more
-heartily, and I have never forgotten that meal, though I have had many
-such since then.
-
-In answer to my questions, he told me more concerning himself. Though
-he had lived a life of adventure, exploring wild countries, sleeping
-beneath the stars, in constant peril of his life from savage beasts and
-scarce less savage men, I could not of myself comprehend why he should
-in peaceful England bury himself miles from the abodes of his fellow
-human beings. For I write--you must remember--of many years ago, of
-the mid-Victorian time, as it is called--and good days they were, as we
-know full well who have lived to see these unsettled, troublous days.
-To-day, from the spot where John Bannister and I first met, you may
-catch a glimpse to the west along the coast of the red roofs of
-bungalows, where week-end visitors may come from London to set up
-bathing-huts upon the beach, whilst from the east, perhaps, a pair of
-lovers may wander from across the golf course at Littlehampton in
-search of desirable seclusion. For that stretch of coast is desolate
-still; but in those days it was a kind of No Man's Land, with no sign
-of life but the gulls and the sand-snipe, the smoke from John
-Bannister's camp-fire, and the hooded crows.
-
-Well, the truth was, he who feared neither beast of prey nor painted
-cannibal was afraid of civilised men. He went once a week to the
-little inland village a few miles distant to purchase groceries and
-stores. There--as I found out afterwards--they thought him a madman,
-though he was always courteous in his manner and paid without question
-for what he bought. He had few words for any man, and none ever for a
-woman. Later, when my mother came to learn of my new-found friend who
-lived alone among the sand-hills, she was anxious to see him, more for
-my own welfare than from curiosity; but he told me flatly that he had
-never known any civilised woman save his own mother, who had died when
-he was young, and he would rather face a wounded lion than pretend to
-talk to one.
-
-"For it comes to this," said he; "I have gone back, as it were, upon
-the centuries; I have learned to live as men lived in ancient times.
-Though I have read much and thought more, and have some claim, I
-suppose, to be called a scholar, in many ways I am no better than a
-cave-man. I have forgotten all the niceties of culture. I have
-neither small-talk nor table manners. So I prefer to live as I do, in
-my own way; and I offer no welcome to visitors. The farmer who owns
-this land is glad enough of the little I pay him in the way of rent;
-but, beyond that and my weekly shopping, I seek no intercourse with
-strangers. I am content to be alone."
-
-I asked if he were not often lonely, and he laughed.
-
-"Even here," said he, "in Sussex, Nature is a living force. The sea
-changes almost hour by hour. Birds come and visit me. Even the
-rabbits in the brake have already learned to know me. They all seem to
-know--these little, wild things--that I am one of them, and soon cease
-to fear me. They are my companions and my friends, and I have also
-books and memory. And I have health and air, the smell of the salt sea
-and the seaweed, and the sunrise to awaken me before your street-bred
-friends are stirring. The wind, the rain, and the sun--I welcome each
-as it comes. Did I want other comrades, I should go and seek them; but
-I prefer to live like this."
-
-"And yet you talked willingly to me?" I asked.
-
-"Because," he answered slowly--and his words came to me as a
-surprise--"because you are a cave-man, too."
-
-.. _`"'Because,' he answered slowly, 'because you are a caveman, too'"`:
-
-.. figure:: images/img-016.jpg
- :align: center
- :alt: "'BECAUSE,' HE ANSWERED SLOWLY, 'BECAUSE YOU ARE A CAVE-MAN, TOO.'"
-
- "'BECAUSE,' HE ANSWERED SLOWLY, 'BECAUSE YOU ARE A CAVE-MAN, TOO.'"
-
-"I!" I exclaimed.
-
-"Every boy," said he, "every healthy, happy boy. It was the savage in
-you--though you may not realise it--that brought you out here alone,
-that took you right away from red bricks and shops and dinner."
-
-I cannot say whether I have conveyed to the reader in the space of this
-short chapter a true conception of the character of John Bannister, as
-he was when I knew him first. Of his personal appearance I have yet to
-write; and if it be a simple matter to describe that which is outwardly
-apparent, it is by no means easy either to fathom or to portray a man's
-soul and mind.
-
-Do not imagine that I myself knew aught of him until after we had
-sojourned together for months, faced the same dangers, stood side by
-side throughout the great adventure of which I have to tell. I knew
-from the first that he was wise and generous and kind: I could see with
-my eyes that he was strong, and his talk charmed the imagination of a
-dreamy, active boy. In spite of all he knew, of the experiences he had
-had in all parts of the world, he was one of the simplest men that ever
-lived. And there was something in him of the poet. I do not mean that
-he ever tried to set down his thoughts in verse, but that he lived in
-love with all things beautiful. I have seen him stand stock-still like
-one transfigured, with eyes illumined, gazing in wonderment upon a
-purple sunset upon the snow-capped crestline of the distant Andes--and
-that at a moment when his own life, as well as mine, was not worth a
-full day's purchase.
-
-Judge all men by their deeds and not their words. Hear this history to
-the end, and see what like of man was he whose charm and peril led me
-forth from green and sleepy Sussex to adventure in the darkness of
-those tropic forests that shut out the source of the great River of
-Mystery, where there are poison, black ignorance, and fell disease, and
-a man may no more count the dangers that encompass him than the myriads
-of stinging insects that drone about his ears.
-
-And one thing more: my own life has not been lived without event. It
-has been my fate to tell a score of times of the enterprise of others;
-but of all men of action I have ever known, read or written of, I rank
-John Bannister as first. Perhaps that may be because I can now seat
-myself of a winter's evening before my study fire and see him in my
-fancy as he was in all his strength and manhood, pass through again the
-dangers and the hardships, and live once more the glorious days that it
-was my privilege to pass with him, and remember that, had it not been
-for him, I might have lived all my life in Sussex and seen nothing of
-the world. But how can I set down the debt I owe him? For I owe him
-life itself.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II--THE COMING OF AMOS
-==============================
-
-After that morning, throughout the summer months when I was at school,
-there was seldom a Saturday or a Wednesday afternoon when I was not to
-be seen hastening eastward along the beach to see John Bannister and to
-listen to his talk.
-
-During those days I learned much of him, of his travels and adventures;
-but there were certain matters upon which he would never speak in any
-detail. He would never tell me, for instance, the full story of how he
-had come by the great scar upon his face--a disfigurement so pronounced
-as to be at once pathetic and repulsive, which had aroused my boyish
-curiosity from the first. Had it not been for that scar, Bannister
-would have been a handsome man, as indeed he was when the left side of
-his face was to be seen in profile. He had deep-set steel-grey eyes
-that looked clean through you, and the forehead of a thinker; his hair,
-in those bygone days, was black, no more than touched with white upon
-the temples and about the ears, and his moustache the longest I have
-ever seen. Though there was never a man, I should suppose, who had
-less of vanity in his composition, I think he grew it thus to hide in
-part the record of the terrible wound that had extended from his right
-ear to the corner of his mouth--a scar that was always rough and white,
-though his face was burnt by the sun to the colour of tan.
-
-"I came by that," he once said to me in answer to my question, "in what
-might be called an honest cause. A thousand miles from nowhere, where
-there is neither Law nor Right nor Wrong nor Justice, one--who may or
-may not have learned the Lord's Prayer at his mother's knee--would have
-put to death some score of helpless human creatures, slaughtered them
-like sheep."
-
-"Why?" I asked.
-
-"Why," said he, "there are but few motives that sway the evil that lies
-in all men, and of these greed of gold is first. And this man of whom
-I speak was a great force of evil, and is so still, for I never doubt
-that he is yet alive. For gold he would have murdered those who had
-never wronged him, who had indeed shown him nothing but kindness and
-hospitality. Fate decreed that this man's path and mine should cross;
-and because I stood between him and an ill-gotten fortune, I was struck
-a coward's blow. You would never guess the weapon, Dick, that gave me
-my beauty mark for life?"
-
-He paused as if waiting for an answer, though I had none to give.
-
-"Well, then," he continued, "it was a sceptre--the golden sceptre of a
-bygone dynasty of monarchs, ended four hundred years ago--kings of no
-naked savages, but emperors, rulers over an ancient civilisation that
-has crumbled to the dust, of a people who were cultured in their own
-way, industrious and great. It is something, we may imagine, to carry
-through life the scar that was given by the symbol of such authority
-and power."
-
-"And where was this?" I asked.
-
-"Where the mountains overtop the clouds," he answered, "where one may
-see the last of the sunset beyond the valleys of Peru, and the dawn
-rises from the dark forests of the Upper Amazon, in which, Dick, there
-are secrets that no man yet has ever lived to learn."
-
-"It was the sceptre of the *Incas*!" I exclaimed; for I had read as a
-holiday task *The Conquest of Peru*.
-
-"The very same that was hidden from Pizarro," he made answer, "together
-with all the gold of Huaraz and Cuzco."
-
-"And who was the man who struck you?" I demanded.
-
-"When I tell you that his name is Amos Baverstock," said Bannister,
-"that he hails from the same west-country town as I do--and that is
-Tiverton in Devon--and that that man to this day counts himself as my
-greatest enemy, I tell you more than I should."
-
-And though I tried my utmost, I could get from him nothing more. A
-reticent man by nature, he was yet from the beginning prodigal of
-speech with me. With the exception of this great Peruvian
-adventure--which, I could tell from his demeanour, he ranked as the one
-outstanding episode in all his life--he would answer all my questions.
-I thought this strange; and there was an even stranger thing about
-him--and I was soon to learn that the two were linked together. Though
-he had to some extent confided in myself, he forbade me to speak of him
-to my schoolfellows. He told me he was well content to have found a
-friend in a boy after his own heart, much the same sort of lad as the
-John Bannister who had bathed in the Exe, and, barefooted, raced other
-boys upon the river bank; but, were the knowledge of his presence upon
-that lonely shore to become the common property of a clamouring,
-crowded school, his seclusion would be lost, his peace of mind
-disturbed, his haven of rest and solitude converted into a kind of
-monkey-house--for that is what he called it.
-
-I gave my word, and kept it; and yet, I could not but think of things.
-And it occurred to me that John Bannister lived as he did for other
-reasons than solely to enjoy the fruits of solitude. Not that he
-himself had ever told me anything that was not the truth: he had,
-indeed, sojourned for so many years in the wild places of the world
-that he had forgotten much concerning the ways of civilisation and
-could be shy--as he was before my mother--like an overgrown yokel who
-stands, cap in hand, first on one foot and then upon the other. He
-wanted more than solitude, he wanted secrecy. For more reasons than
-one I should have guessed it; but I was but a boy, and looked not for
-motives or for causes. I was content to take the man as he was: a hero
-in my eyes, who had risked his life a thousand times, who had done
-great deeds and seen strange sights and wondrous places that I had only
-dreamed of.
-
-And now I come, at last, to the beginning of my story: a blazing
-morning in the August sun, when our friendship was four months old,
-when the wheels of chance began to move, and those forces were set in
-motion that whirled me away, when still a schoolboy, from sunny, sleepy
-Sussex, to be a wayfarer with grim Death himself in dark, tropic
-lowlands, or amid the very clouds.
-
-It being holiday-time, and I having no thought in my head than what
-pertained to my hero, I set forth earlier than usual, and took the
-straight cut across the fields, instead of following the shore. This
-led me to a group of sand-hills, not half a mile from where Bannister
-had pitched his camp; and amid these I stumbled upon three men, seated,
-heads together, in the shadow of a gorse bush.
-
-I cannot for the life of me explain why I did it--never before or since
-have I played the eavesdropper of my own free choice--but the moment I
-set eyes upon a hunchback, with a clean, wrinkled face and two small
-eyes as black as boot-buttons, down I dropped on all fours, like a man
-shot, and crept silently and swiftly to the cover of a clump of
-reed-like grass.
-
-I think the sight of the man frightened me. He had the cruellest face
-I had ever seen; and there was cunning in it, too. Also, there was a
-suggestion of merriness, of latent mirth, about him--patent in the
-shining, bead-like eyes--that caused me instantly to shudder. Have you
-ever considered the eyes of a half-grown pig, as something apart from
-the glistening, inquisitive, joyful, and highly entertaining quadruped
-that a young pig happens invariably to be? They are wicked and
-gleeful, defiant and pitiless, those little, twinkling eyes. They are
-more fearful than those of a snake, because they are more alive and
-equally soulless. Well, then, such eyes had this man: eyes at once
-merciless and mischievous. And so it was, I must suppose, that I hid
-myself amid the grass.
-
-And then one of those who were with him used these very words; and when
-I heard them, it was as if I was deprived of the power to breathe.
-
-"I wish I were a hundred miles from here, I can tell you that. He's
-not likely to forget that it was you, Amos Baverstock, that trapped him
-and left him for dead, and that it was I who struck the blow."
-
-I lay in the long grass, close as a hare, my heart pumping within me
-like an engine. I had heard and seen enough already to know that my
-friend was in danger. I had a sense of some calamity impending, but no
-time just then to guess at the meaning of it all; for I must listen to
-the quiet, cold voice of Amos Baverstock--the hunchback with the pig
-eyes and a long, thin nose like a weasel.
-
-"You were right enough in London," said he, "when I told you I had
-tracked him down, as I swore to you both I should."
-
-"Maybe," said the other, "I forgot, for the moment, what he was. I
-would sooner face a tiger."
-
-He was a rough-looking man, with a red, untidy beard, and there was
-something about him of the sailor.
-
-"Tut, man," said Amos; "you make a mountain of a molehill! I do not
-propose to set about this matter like a fool. He's lying yonder like
-an old dog-fox in his earth, and we'll send a terrier in to fetch him
-out."
-
-"Me!" cried the red-bearded man, horror-stricken at the thought.
-
-But, before Amos Baverstock could answer, the third man spoke for the
-first time; and my attention being thereby attracted towards him, I was
-at once astonished at everything about his individuality: his voice,
-his personal appearance, the words he used, his very attitude of
-carelessness and ease.
-
-"*Cave tibi cane muto.*"
-
-That is what he drawled, and though I was then a schoolboy who had
-struggled through the dull prose of Cæsar to the loftier realms of
-Virgil, I must confess that fear had so deprived me of my wits that I
-understood no word, except the first.
-
-The speaker lay flat upon his back, with his hands folded behind his
-head, and his face exposed to the sun--like a tripper who would go back
-to London nicely tanned. I observed that he had taken off his coat and
-rolled it into a pillow, and that the shirt he wore was of the softest,
-flimsiest silk.
-
-He was dressed like a fop in the height of the fashion of that day,
-wearing a white tie, with a great gold pin in it, a well-curled
-moustache and those short side-whiskers which were then the vogue. He
-had light-blue eyes and fair, curly hair, and had it not been for the
-side-whiskers, would have looked much younger than he was. Everything
-about him suggested that he was--or should have been--a gentleman of
-means and leisure.
-
-"*Cave tibi cane muto*," he repeated, more slowly than before. And
-this time I had the sense to understand it: "Beware of the silent dog."
-
-"Just so," said Amos. "We will tempt the dog with a bone. Trust to
-me, you dolt," he cried, turning sharp upon the man with the red beard,
-who was sitting with a scowl upon his face and his legs crossed like a
-Hindoo. "Ask yourself, have I ever yet sent you on a wild-goose chase?
-Am I one to take unnecessary risks?"
-
-"Then, shoot him, take what we want, and have done with it," growled
-the other.
-
-"Friend Joshua," said Amos, "we are some eight thousand miles from
-Chimborazo, and probably not two miles from a police-station. We want
-no questions asked, no hue and cry. That would ruin everything."
-
-"There's something in that," admitted the red-bearded man, whose name
-was evidently Joshua.
-
-Amos chuckled.
-
-"This is no baby's game," said he. "Bannister fears neither man, wild
-beast nor devil. No more am I afraid of him. I have tricked him once,
-and I can trick him again. Were I to get within arm's length of him,
-it is true, as like as not he would wring my precious neck; and the
-same applies to you, friend Joshua; for he will not have forgotten that
-it was you who struck him down at the end of the passage that leads
-from Cahazaxa's Tomb. But Mr. Forsyth here, he has never set eyes on
-in all his life."
-
-"In other words," cut in the young man with the side-whiskers, still
-stretched at full length upon the ground--"in other words, I myself am
-the bone to be presented to the silent, dangerous dog. A pleasant
-prospect--but I acquiesce. Having gone into this business, I am
-prepared to take what comes."
-
-Though he had spoken with a shade more animation than before, he had
-neither moved an inch nor troubled even to open his eyes. A calm
-customer, in very truth, was Mr. Gilbert Forsyth, as I was afterwards
-to learn, something to my cost--a man with more manners than morals,
-who was never afraid and never surprised, and who smelt of the vile
-pomade with which he plastered his moustache.
-
-"Sir," said Baverstock, "you are the very man for me. I promise you
-that, if we pull this business through, we shall wade knee-deep in
-gold."
-
-"I want gold to spend and not to paddle in," said Forsyth. "Give
-orders, Mr. Wisdom; I am here solely to obey."
-
-Amos produced a long and very black cigar, bit the end off and began to
-chew, making his face all wrinkles. I thought that he would light it,
-but he did no such thing. He would look at it with one eye half
-closed, use it much as a musical director wields his baton to punctuate
-his words, and then chew again, until the brown juice was streaming
-from the corners of his mouth.
-
-"Go to John Bannister this morning," said he. "Go to him now, if you
-like. He doesn't know you from Adam. Pretend you're just an idle,
-inquisitive holiday-maker who has dropped across him by chance; get
-into conversation with him, ask him foolish questions; and then,
-without advertisement, just--drop that across his head."
-
-As he said this, he threw across to Mr. Forsyth some kind of weighted
-implement, such as a house-breaker might have in his possession. It
-was about the size and shape of a belaying-pin, and attached to the
-thin end was a leather strap to secure it to the wrist.
-
-"Sounds simple enough," drawled Forsyth. "However, for the sake of
-argument, suppose I fail. I understand from what you both tell me, he
-has the strength of two ordinary men."
-
-"Six," growled the red-bearded fellow, who seemed to me to be a
-discontented rascal.
-
-"Strike hard and without warning," said Amos. "In case of mishap,
-Trust and I will be at hand to help you."
-
-I thought, at the time, that Trust was another man--a fourth party in
-this vile conspiracy; for I did not then know that the name of the
-red-bearded man--as great a rogue as Amos himself, if not a tenth as
-clever--was Joshua Trust, who had served before the mast in the Royal
-Navy, to be tried by court-martial for a felony and afterwards
-discharged.
-
-Mr. Forsyth, in the meantime, picked up the bludgeon and toyed with it
-in his hand.
-
-"A useful tool," he observed. "Convenient to carry, and--I should
-say--effective to use. To be candid, I'm a little afraid of it.
-Though I have not the pleasure of knowing Mr. Bannister, I should be
-sorry--for my own sake as well as his--to deprive him of his life."
-
-"You need not be afraid of that," laughed Amos. "Had his skull been
-thinner than a bullock's, it would have been broken years ago. We want
-him senseless, when we can bind him hand and foot, and help ourselves
-to the very thing we want. He has got it somewhere, sure enough; and
-had I to search the world for it, I would find it in the end."
-
-And then he clapped his hands and rubbed them together; and I have
-never seen in all my life an expression of such malignant glee.
-
-"Once it is ours," he cried, "across the Western Ocean! Nothing stands
-between us three and fortune. Gold!" he almost shrieked, "I tell you,
-it is there knee-deep in a cavern as large as a cathedral: golden
-ornaments and vessels, bars and rings and bracelets. You shall have
-your fair share, Mr. Forsyth; for all's square between us, and, I
-confess, we could not very well move in this business without you.
-Joshua here will tell you, though I may be an ill man to cross in more
-ways than one, I never yet went back upon my friends. You've come into
-this affair to help us, and I'll not forget it."
-
-"Dear me, no!" drawled Forsyth. "I join you for my own ultimate gain.
-I recognise that I am blessed with as little conscience as yourselves,
-and see profit in the matter. I know nothing of this fellow Bannister,
-and care still less. Besides, I have, I suppose, a natural taste for
-such an adventure as you propose. I am heartily tired of this dreary
-country, with its railways, gas-pipes and antimacassars. I would, in a
-word, stake all I have upon an only venture, to die soon or rich--I
-care little which it be."
-
-And thereupon he yawned, placing the tips of his fingers before his
-mouth in a manner exceedingly affected.
-
-They talked then for a while of other things; and all the time I was
-seeking an opportunity to escape, to hasten to my friend to warn him of
-his danger; and yet, though I was well screened from view of Amos
-Baverstock and his companions, it was some time before I could find the
-courage to bestir myself. I feared that they might hear me; and the
-very sight of Amos had instilled within me a sense of dread which
-returns to me even to this day whenever I think of the man.
-
-I lay in the long grass like a wounded bird: it was as if I had not the
-power to move. My thoughts were running riot--Bannister to be
-shamefully assaulted, something stolen, and I kept repeating to myself
-the magic phrase, "Gold knee-deep in a cavern large as a cathedral."
-
-There was something about all this of the kind of adventures I had
-often imagined; I had thought that I would revel in the prospect of
-such dangerous escapades; and here was I, scared out of my wits, too
-terrified to move, my heart beating violently, as if I were out of
-breath from running.
-
-Indeed, it was only the thought that Amos Baverstock or one of the
-others would get up to go, and then discover me, that made me shift
-from where I had been hiding; and no sooner was I out of earshot than I
-set off running as if pursued by fifty fiends. I never ran so fast
-before or since. Over the sand-hills, stumbling amidst the shingle,
-breaking my way through gorse and hedgerow, I came at last to John
-Bannister's cabin, lying in a hollow by the sea.
-
-"Mr. Bannister!" I cried. "Mr. Bannister! Something dreadful is about
-to happen!"
-
-I was, I suppose, half blinded by my running; or I had not the sense to
-look about me. I stood before the opening of the cabin, wringing my
-hands and crying out like a fool:
-
-"Mr. Bannister! Mr. Bannister! Come quickly!"
-
-I had for answer neither the sight of his great strength nor the
-familiar sound of his voice, but just the wash of the sea at high tide
-beyond the ridge where the buckthorn grew, a great rhythmical,
-breathing sound, as if a giant were slumbering.
-
-I was more afraid than ever when I realised that he was not there, and
-it might take time to find him; for, befogged as my wits were, I knew
-well enough that the occasion was one that would admit of no delay.
-
-I ran straight to the beach, and looked to the eastward and westward.
-For a moment I had hoped to find him, for he would sometimes bathe in
-the sea at that hour of the day; but a glance or so was enough to tell
-me I should not find him there.
-
-I wandered for a while somewhat aimlessly amongst the shrubberies that
-crowned the margin of the sand-hills and the shingle, and then returned
-to the cabin. As things happened, I must have done so in the nick of
-time; for, when I had searched in odd corners, as if looking for a
-hidden thimble, instead of a man of six-foot-four, I went to the
-threshold, and looking out beyond the gorse, beheld the tall figure of
-Mr. Gilbert Forsyth, strolling towards me, swinging in his hand his
-silver-mounted Malacca cane.
-
-I did not know whether or not he had seen me. It was sufficient for
-the moment that I had no way of escape. The cabin--as I have said--had
-been built in a hollow, and to cross the ridge that encompassed it
-would bring me into full view of Mr. Forsyth.
-
-On the other hand, I could think of nowhere to hide. I stood for a
-moment irresolute, with clenched fists, cudgelling my brains and
-wishing that I was anywhere else upon the wide face of the earth. Then
-I heard a footstep on the shingle without, and as I drew back into the
-shade of the hut, I saw the man's shadow cast upon the threshold.
-
-I looked about me in a wild and silly way, and then without a thought
-dived under the great fur sleeping-bag that lay ruffled against the
-wall.
-
-Forsyth entered. I could not see him, but I could hear him moving to
-and fro, and once he even trod upon my foot. Then I heard his voice,
-raised in a kind of drawling sing-song, as if he called to someone at a
-distance.
-
-"Come on," he sang. "The way's clear. The dog's out of his kennel."
-
-A full minute may have elapsed. On such occasions, time counts for
-next to nothing. But, presently, I was aware that, besides myself,
-there were three persons in that small place, and one of them was Amos
-Baverstock.
-
-"Here's our chance," said he. "Joshua, keep watch from without. He
-may not be far away, and it would be a rough-and-tumble business if he
-caught us in the act. And now, sir, help me to find the map. The
-thing must be somewhere in this hut, unless he carries it always on his
-person."
-
-And at those words was I made to realise that, as sure as I had been
-christened Richard Treadgold in the little church at Middleton, I had
-done a foolish thing and was like to be made to pay for it.
-
-For Amos Baverstock was come to search for a certain map, the
-significance of which I then, of course, knew nothing. Whether or not
-he would find this map was a question of itself; but there was no sort
-of a question within the bounds of probability that he could look for
-long and fail to discover *me*. And then, in truth, the fat would be
-in the fire.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III--THE MAP
-====================
-
-I expected every moment to be caught, to be jerked forth from my
-hiding-place like a landed fish. In the course of their searching they
-must sooner or later move the sleeping-bag, and I would be exposed.
-
-It occurs to me that fear must be one of the strangest of emotions; for
-I can honestly say that, now that I was in this hopeless and perilous
-predicament, I was no longer afraid. Certain that I must fall into the
-hands of Amos Baverstock, equally uncertain of what then would be my
-lot, I was resigned to my fate; I was long past apprehension. I still
-thought of Bannister, and wondered concerning the map for which Amos
-and Forsyth were looking, but for myself I now cared not a snap of the
-fingers what became of me; and this attitude of mind I preserved
-throughout the next eventful moments, else I had never acted as I did.
-
-For Amos never found me on his own account. No doubt he would have
-done so in a very little time, had not Forsyth, almost at once, struck
-upon the very map for which the two were searching.
-
-"What's this!" exclaimed Forsyth. "It seems the thing we want."
-
-"Where?" cried Amos, who, I judged, snatched it from the other's hand.
-
-"That's it!" he almost shouted. "The parchment map copied from that
-made ages ago by Villac Umu, the High Priest of the Incas of Peru.
-Bannister has translated it, and marked the route in red ink. It's all
-plain as daylight."
-
-I could tell by the sound of his voice that he was wildly excited. He
-spread out the map upon the little table in the centre of the cabin,
-and, feeling secure since Joshua Trust was keeping watch, spoke
-breathlessly to Forsyth, relating the matter in such detail that then
-and there I was made a party to the whole vile conspiracy--or as much
-of it as there was any need for me to know.
-
-"When the ancient Peruvians fled before the advance of the Pizarros,"
-he explained, "they carried their treasures across the mountains.
-These they hid in two places: one, which is called the Little Fish,
-consists of all manner of earthenware utensils; the other--the Big
-Fish--is composed of golden ornaments and ingots. I have heard it said
-by some that the Little Fish is in Bolivia; by others, as far north as
-the Amazonas Territory--the truth being that no man living knows. It
-was John Bannister himself who discovered the secret of the Greater
-Treasure, or the Big Fish, as the natives call it. He lived for years
-among the wild savages who inhabit the forests about the eastern
-foothills of the Andes; and there, I believe, he came across some
-priestly descendants of those who had served the Incas. It was high up
-among the Conomamas, to the south of the great Region of the Woods,
-that I first fell in with Bannister. I was there prospecting for gold,
-but I had never dreamed of such a gold-mine as the Greater Treasure of
-the Incas. Bannister never told me that he had learned the secret from
-the priests, but I made so free as to inspect the map, when I believed
-him to be sleeping."
-
-"But is this safe?" asked Forsyth. "Supposing Bannister returns?"
-
-"There is nothing to fear," said Amos. "Time's our own. Joshua is on
-watch upon the sand-hills, and can see him coming half a mile away. We
-are as safe here as anywhere."
-
-"Well, then, go on with your story," said the other. "You saw the map
-yourself?"
-
-"No more than glanced at the thing before he had me by the throat and
-well-nigh strangled me," cried Amos. "After that we parted company,
-though I followed his track, and three times tried to kill him."
-
-I heard Mr. Forsyth laugh in his silly, affected way.
-
-"You do not mince your words," said he. "And I think I like you for it
-all the better. So you tried to murder him, and failed?"
-
-"I did not say 'murder,'" grumbled Amos. "You can do no worse than
-kill in the great Region of the Woods; and whether you slay a jaguar, a
-monkey or man, it is much the same in the end. But to kill a man like
-John Bannister is no such easy matter. He has the ear of a panther and
-the eye of a bird, and he strikes like the coral snake--silent and
-deadly--and for those self-same reasons, the story I am telling you
-must now turn something against myself. For I began the business by
-hunting John Bannister in the Wilderness; but, before the game was a
-week old, it was he that was hunting me, and hunting me, too, day and
-night, from the Putumayo to Bolivia, from the Amazon to the sea.
-
-"I sought safety, at last, in the port of Lima, where I was sheltered
-by some pretence of Law and Justice; and there I joined forces with
-friend Joshua and three other kindred spirits who now lie unburied,
-their bones picked by the vultures.
-
-"Well, then," Amos went on, "we five put our heads together and talked
-the question out. It was plain to us that, since Bannister was such a
-tough nut to crack, it were safer and simpler to go straight to the
-fountain head, as the saying goes, and see what could be done with the
-priests. I guessed from what Bannister had told me, that the Peruvians
-were a weak-kneed, cowardly lot, and thought it would not be difficult
-to frighten them into telling us all they knew. But we had to search
-the woods for months before we found them, living in the midst of black
-ignorance and superstition; and by then--would you believe
-it!--Bannister had got wind of our intentions, and had come back upon
-his own trail, crossing the mountains and descending into the Region of
-the Woods.
-
-"He turned up in time to ruin all our plans. His very presence gave
-the priests the courage they had lacked. There was a stiff fight, and
-we, having the worst of it, were obliged to beat a quick retreat to the
-foothills, though we carried with us a hostage. So far as this man was
-concerned, I took a leaf from the book of the Spaniards. I knew that
-Pizarro had not gained all his knowledge by fair words and promises. I
-tortured the wretch, until he shrieked for mercy and promised that he
-would guide us to Cahazaxa's Tomb, upon the very crestline of the
-Andes, where he swore to us the Greater Treasure was hid. Thither we
-went, to find that the rascal had lied to us. A few golden ornaments
-there were, in a vault cut in the living rock, at the end of a narrow
-passage, and amongst these was the ancient sceptre of the Incas, but
-the lot were not worth the price of our journey. Moreover, John
-Bannister himself had had the audacity to follow us. Night by night,
-he hovered about our bivouac, hoping to deprive us of our hostage. So
-I set my mind to work to finish him; and as fortune had it, the old
-Tomb was as good as a rat-trap. For there was a great boulder at the
-mouth of the passage, which might be rolled down-hill to block the
-entrance; and even then it was as much as Joshua and I could do. We
-fooled John Bannister to enter the Tomb by making a show of moving camp
-and leaving the Peruvian behind. However, when we thought we had caged
-him, we found to our great dismay that we had under-estimated the man's
-colossal strength; for he rolled back the boulder as though it were
-nothing, and came down upon us like a raging lion."
-
-.. vspace:: 1
-
-.. _`"He rolled back the boulder as though it were nothing"`:
-
-.. class:: center medium white-space-pre-line
-
- \[Illustration: "HE ROLLED BACK THE BOULDER AS IF IT WERE NOTHING
- (missing from book)\]
-
-.. vspace:: 1
-
-Amos paused a moment in his narrative. Listening eagerly for what was
-yet to come, I heard distinctly the disgusting noise of the chewing of
-one of his long, black cigars.
-
-"We were unprepared for that," he continued. "Indeed, thinking we had
-got him safely caught, to starve to death or shoot himself, we were
-standing before the entrance to the passage without our arms; and
-before we could master him, our party of five had been reduced to two.
-It was Joshua who ended the affair. We had looted the Tomb of the
-little treasure that was there; and Joshua snatched up the golden
-sceptre of the Incas and struck down John Bannister, whom that night we
-left for dead."
-
-"And what of the map?" asked Forsyth.
-
-"We searched him, but never found it. He may have left it with the
-priests, or hidden it somewhere in the forest. Two years later, I
-again journeyed to the Region of the Woods, and found out from the
-priests that Bannister had taken it away with him, after he had
-returned to the Wilderness from Cahazaxa's Tomb."
-
-Amos had calmed down by degrees whilst he related the whole story to
-Mr. Forsyth; but now, quite suddenly, he became as frantically excited
-as before.
-
-"For two years I have hunted for the man," he cried; "and I found him
-here by chance. I want nothing but the map, to know where the Greater
-Treasure has lain hidden for more than four centuries, and to learn how
-to get there. See here!" he shouted; "the place is far to the north,
-near the valley of the Yapura River. The treasure of the Incas was
-carried four hundred miles from Cuzco!"
-
-"What more could we want?" laughed Forsyth.
-
-"Why, nothing else," said Amos. "This map's worth more to us than the
-keys to the vaults of the Bank of England."
-
-I heard a sound like the rustle of paper or parchment, from which I
-judged that Amos flourished the map in his hand. And then it was that
-I did a thing so bold that I have never ceased to be amazed at my own
-audacity.
-
-I had passed from sheer fright to cold deliberation. I cared not two
-pins for my own safety; and though I was still in dread of Amos, I
-thought not once of him, but of John Bannister, whose very shadow I
-almost worshipped. Besides, it must be understood, I was already
-caught like a fly in the web of these adventures. I had listened, as
-to a story, to all that Amos had said, and had tried to figure in my
-mind's eye the Greater Treasure, all glittering in the dust, Cahazaxa's
-Tomb and the dark Region of the Woods. I knew, from what I had heard,
-that if all this wealth belonged to any Christian man, that man was
-John Bannister himself and never Amos Baverstock. Why Bannister was
-content to live as he did, when he could be master of such riches, was
-a circumstance I could not then explain, but which I was wise enough to
-see was no concern of mine. Upon one thing was I well determined, with
-a kind of blind pig-headedness that might have led to my own
-undoing--and that was that Amos should never take away with him the map.
-
-"Gold!" he cried. "Gold! We'll wade knee-deep in it!"
-
-And at that, I sprang from under the sleeping-bag and hurled myself
-straight at him whom I so truly feared.
-
-Both he and Mr. Forsyth were too surprised to do little else but gape,
-which gave me the chance I wanted, to snatch the parchment from his
-hand.
-
-I do not think I could have been much quicker; but he was not to be
-taken unawares. The parchment was old, and must have been half torn
-already, for, when he pulled one way and I the other, the thing came in
-half. And then, even before Baverstock had time to drop an oath, I was
-past the opening of the cabin and racing like a madman through the
-gorse.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV--KIDNAPPED
-=====================
-
-While I went over the sand-hills like a hare, I looked back once and
-saw Amos running, his face all screwed up in fury, and his black eyes
-as if they were on fire. At the door of the cabin stood Mr. Forsyth,
-shaking his Malacca cane at me, but never troubling himself to move so
-much as an inch.
-
-I knew from the first that I had the legs of both of them, that Amos
-could never catch me though I carried a pound weight on either foot.
-And I believe, like a fool, I laughed, thinking myself secure; and when
-I pulled through a hedgerow that cut off the sand-drift from the open
-fields, I found myself face to face with Joshua.
-
-For my own excuse, it may be urged that I had had much to think of in
-the last few minutes; and if I had remembered my friendship with
-Bannister, I had at least forgotten the very existence of Joshua Trust.
-But there he was, as plain as a pike-staff, about thirty yards to the
-front of me.
-
-I pulled up and stared at him; and to my surprise he made no movement,
-until I heard the voice of Amos from behind me.
-
-"Catch the young fiend! Shoot, Joshua, before he gets away!"
-
-And at that I jumped to the right, straight into a rabbit-hole, and
-pitched on to my head.
-
-I lay where I was for a few seconds without moving, for I was a trifle
-shaken by the fall. I could still hear Amos, cursing and swearing
-horribly, and Joshua, beating along the hedge with his stick. For all
-that, neither could I see them nor could they see me; for I was flat
-upon my face in a bunch of thistles, which was near as great a torment
-as a swarm of bees.
-
-I knew from the first that sooner or later I would have to run for it;
-and the only thing that held me back from bolting then and there was
-the certain knowledge that Joshua Trust would shoot. I write with
-natural reluctance whatsoever stands something to the credit of myself;
-but, even at the moment, I thought more of the parchment than of my own
-skin. For I still held the crumpled fragment of the map in my right
-hand, gripping it tightly as if it were a running-cork.
-
-I heard Joshua's voice quite near to me; and knowing that he must find
-me if I remained where I was, I resolved to take my chance. But first,
-in case of possible misfortune, I stuffed my portion of the parchment
-map to the full length of an arm down the very rabbit-hole that had
-tripped me up. And as I did so, a thought flashed through my mind:
-that it was, indeed, a strange circumstance that half the secret of the
-Greater Treasure of the Incas of old Peru, who four hundred years ago
-had foiled the greedy Spaniards, should lie hidden in a rabbit-scrape
-in Sussex.
-
-And then I sprang to my feet and trusted to Providence to help me.
-Joshua was in front of me and threw out his arms to catch me. But I
-dived beneath them, swerved away from him, and ran for my very life.
-
-I heard Amos shouting like a madman. Out of the corner of an eye, I
-saw Joshua Trust fumbling in the region of his belt for the pistol I
-knew he carried.
-
-It was neck or nothing then. I had the sense not to run straight, but
-to dodge here and there like a snipe; and as like as not I owed my life
-to that. For I found out afterwards that Trust was a dead shot, who
-seldom missed his mark.
-
-As I fled, the sharp crack of his pistol broke upon the silence,
-scaring the sea birds from the beach. The bullet sang past my head and
-clipped the lobe of an ear, so that the blood ran down my neck. And
-thus was I, Dick Treadgold, blooded, in both metaphor and fact, to a
-life of peril and adventure.
-
-Whilst Joshua reloaded, I had a chance to double the distance between
-us. I headed inland, away from the shore, and made in the direction of
-the village which was more than a mile away. Straight in front of me
-was a clump of trees, and I hoped to gain this before Trust could fire
-again.
-
-Though the country that lies south of the Downs, from the west of
-Worthing to the ancient city of Chichester, is, in the main, as flat as
-a table, this particular clump of trees was perched upon a rounded
-hillock--though you would call it that nowhere but in western Sussex;
-and therefore, when I gained the trees, I could survey the land on
-every side of me to the extent of a good square mile.
-
-To the south were Joshua and Amos Baverstock, hastening after me, the
-latter some way behind his longer-legged companion. To the north, a
-little to the east, was the sharp belfry of the church in the village I
-would gain: and, to the west, was the lane that leads to Arundel.
-
-I had paused for a moment, not so much for breath as to get my
-bearings, to select the shortest route; and in this brief moment, I
-became aware of a circumstance that caused my heart to leap for joy.
-For, coming toward me, by way of a footpath that led across the fields,
-carrying under an arm a brown paper parcel that I knew to contain his
-weekly stock of provisions, I recognised the great, tall figure of John
-Bannister himself.
-
-All thoughts of my pursuers were instantly banished from my mind. What
-cared I now for Amos Baverstock and all his threats and oaths! I was
-conscious of nothing else but the bald fact that a friend in need was
-close at hand--and one, moreover, who would soon get the best of Master
-Baverstock--and so great was my elation that I took no heed of a
-dog-cart which, at that moment, came rattling round a bend in the road.
-
-I called loudly upon Bannister by name, though he was then scarcely
-within hearing, and dashed down the hill before Joshua could have
-reached the trees from the other side.
-
-The road in that place was bounded by a wooden fence, and balancing
-myself upon the top of this, I shouted frantically to Bannister.
-
-"Come quick!" I cried. "Amos Baverstock is here!"
-
-I was answered, before the last word had left my lips, by a shot fired
-at the back of me. The bullet splintered the woodwork of the very bar
-upon which I was standing; and, startled into action, I jumped into the
-road.
-
-Immediately I had to turn back again no less quickly, to avoid being
-run down by the dog-cart, the driver of which reined up with a jerk.
-
-I looked up at him at once, thinking to recognise some farmer that I
-knew; but, instead of that, I set eyes, to my amazement, upon Mr.
-Gilbert Forsyth, with his side-whiskers and his greased moustache.
-
-I remembered then--too late as things turned out--that the road curved
-seaward near the place where I had first discovered Amos and his
-friends. Had I thought of it at all, I must have known that they had
-never walked to that lonely spot. They had driven there, to leave the
-horse and cart upon the road, whilst they settled themselves at a
-little distance to discuss how best they might attack John Bannister,
-in his cabin by the sea. Moreover, had I known then as much as I know
-now of Mr. Gilbert Forsyth, I should never have supposed for a single
-instant that he could be as idle as he seemed, that he would have
-remained doing nothing before the opening of the cabin, whilst his
-friends were pursuing me.
-
-For Gilbert Forsyth, a fop to all appearances and a lazy dude, was in
-reality a man of action. He said not a word to me, but when he had
-reined in his horse, he lifted his whip, and cut me down as if I were a
-thistle.
-
-It was a long tandem whip--and tandems were much in fashion in the days
-when all this happened. The lash wrapped itself about my legs like a
-living snake; so that when Forsyth jerked the whip backwards with all
-his force, I was thrown violently on my face upon the hard, dusty road.
-
-I tried to get to my feet as quick as I could, but had done no more
-than struggle to my knees, when Forsyth struck me upon the crown of my
-head with the heavy handle of the whip.
-
-It was a cruel blow and a stout one; and I know that if I did not
-actually lose consciousness I, at least, saw the trees swing upward
-into the sky, and the white road upon which I lay rush round and round,
-like the spokes of a revolving wheel.
-
-And then the next thing I knew was that Forsyth had me by the throat.
-Though I was then young, I was not a weakling. I struggled
-desperately, and might, perhaps, have freed myself, had not Joshua
-Trust arrived upon the scene in time to settle the affair the wrong way
-for me.
-
-For he gathered me up in his arms, and I was held as if I were encased
-in iron. I shouted frantically, but that was of no more help than the
-cackling of a hen. I was lifted bodily into the cart.
-
-I heard Joshua shout to Amos: "Run like mad! Here's Bannister himself!"
-
-Forsyth had climbed upon the box. Trust was on the back seat, with me
-held like a squalling babe in his arms. The cart tilted forward a bit,
-as Amos scrambled up and took his seat beside the driver.
-
-I heard Forsyth crack his whip, and immediately the horse started off
-at a canter, the cart rocking like a boat in a heavy sea. I continued
-to shout, until Joshua swore at me and clapped one of his great hands
-across my mouth. And the last thing I saw, as the cart turned into the
-main road to Littlehampton, was John Bannister breaking through the
-boundary fence, and then standing quite still and upright in the middle
-of the road, staring after us, with his brown paper parcel still under
-his arm.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V--I SET FORTH UPON MY VOYAGE
-=====================================
-
-Though all these events took place more than fifty years ago, I have a
-very perfect recollection of that drive. In those days there was not
-much traffic on the Sussex roads; and we passed nothing on the way to
-Slindon save a hay-cart and a brewer's wagon. On neither occasion did
-I dare cry out for help, for Joshua Trust sat by the side of me with
-his loaded pistol, pressed close against my ribs, in the pocket of his
-sailor's pea-jacket. I never doubted for an instant that he would
-shoot. I had then, it is true, little experience of the world; but I
-could scarce fail to recognise that I was fallen into the hands of
-desperate men who counted human life of little worth.
-
-So I kept my silence upon the road, wondering all the time what was to
-become of me, and, above all else, what Amos Baverstock would say when
-he discovered that I had cast away my fragment of the map.
-
-That he thought I had it still was plain enough, since he twice told
-Joshua to keep an eye on me, lest I should throw it from the cart. He
-was in a great haste to reach the woods at Slindon, where in springtime
-the wild flowers are like a garden; and he had a good reason for this.
-Indeed, in all my experience of Amos, I never knew him fail for want of
-caution; and when a man is circumspect as well as fearless, he is an
-enemy who cannot be trifled with.
-
-It was the scoundrel's design, so I discovered, to reach the woods with
-as little delay as possible, and there to wait until the evening, when
-he could take the Portsmouth road under cover of darkness. There were,
-at that date, many coaches on the highways; and Amos evidently thought
-it wiser not to trust me.
-
-So to Slindon Woods we went, and were there in no time, soon after
-noon. They unharnessed the horse, and turned him out to graze; and
-whilst Mr. Forsyth unpacked a hamper that was well stocked with
-provisions and wine to drink, Amos took me by the shoulders, and looked
-me straight in the face.
-
-"And now, boy," he said, "I'll have no more nonsense from you--so
-understand me, once and for all. It's an unwise thing to pry into my
-affairs--I can tell you that. You know more about me already than I
-care to think; and I tell you fairly, you had best mend your ways, if
-you value life."
-
-I was afraid of the look of him, of the hard glitter in his eyes and
-the way in which his thin lips were tightly pressed together. And I
-was more afraid still of what would happen when he discovered that I
-had made away with my fragment of the torn map. My heart was in my
-mouth. I felt as if I were suspended by a thread upon the brink of a
-precipice, and that at any moment that thread would break and I be
-hurled into eternity.
-
-Fortunately, perhaps, I was not left long in such uncertainty; for no
-sooner had Amos taken his hands from off my shoulders than he clapped
-them together behind his back, and came out with the very question that
-I feared.
-
-"And where's the map, my boy?" said he.
-
-I answered nothing.
-
-"Give it up," he demanded, and held out a hand.
-
-"I have not got it," said I.
-
-At that his jaw dropped. He stared at me in amazement, not knowing
-whether or not to believe me.
-
-"Haven't got it!" he repeated. "What d'ye mean?"
-
-And the way he rapped out those last few words made my blood run cold.
-I saw, however, that I must make a clean breast of the matter, let it
-end which way it would.
-
-"I have not got it," said I, "for a simple reason; because I had thrown
-it away before you caught me. And now, you know the truth, and can do
-with me what you will."
-
-The hunchback stood staring at me as if I were a ghost. His thin,
-wrinkled face had gone a yellow or a greenish colour, and his little
-eyes looked blacker and more on fire than ever. He kept working his
-mouth about, as if he were chewing some of his vile tobacco; and, on
-the whole, I cannot conceive an expression more menacing, a countenance
-less prepossessing.
-
-He came up to me, and searched my pockets; and whilst he was doing so,
-I noticed that both his hands were trembling. He had then been joined
-by both Trust and Forsyth, who stood on either side of him.
-
-Amos, as he drew away from me, came out with an oath that I can never
-write. Indeed, the swearing of this man was not the least of his many
-sins.
-
-"He has not got it!" he cried. "We've been fooled, Mr. Forsyth; and
-that by a slip of a boy!"
-
-I thought that he would kill me, then and there, beneath the shadow of
-the trees in Slindon Woods. But, though Amos Baverstock often worked
-himself into fits of ungovernable fury, he never was guilty of a
-foolish action. For my life--though at the time I never guessed
-it--was of some use to him. Not only did I know where I had hidden the
-torn map, but, as like as not, I had looked at it, and might be able to
-remember the names of some of the places that were marked
-thereon--knowledge for which Amos would give much. Had it not been for
-this, I have little doubt he would have put me out of the world.
-
-They tied my feet together, in case I should endeavour to escape,
-whilst the three seated themselves upon the gnarled surface roots of a
-great oak tree, and examined their fragment of the map, discussing the
-question openly, so that I overheard them and learned of the trick that
-Providence had played us all.
-
-For the map had been rent in twain, not by the hands of Amos Baverstock
-and me, but by the sure and supple fingers of Almighty Destiny. Amos
-had in his possession at least three-quarters of the parchment--he had
-it all, indeed, except one corner, that which I had seized in my
-attempt to wrench it from his grasp. And, as good luck had it, that
-one corner contained the information of the greatest value: to wit, the
-exact locality where the Greater Treasure was to be found.
-
-As for the rest of the map, it carried you from the outskirts of what
-may pass as modern civilisation to within a certain unknown distance of
-the secret place. It put you on the right road, as it were, and then
-left you--lost in the midst of a wilderness of doubt.
-
-When Amos grasped the full significance of this, he jumped to his feet,
-a perfect figure of fury, storming at me and swearing, using threats
-and shouting of torture, if I did not then and there confess. But
-speak I would not. Whatever happened, I was resolved to hold my
-ground, though I was filled with grave misgivings.
-
-For all that afternoon they badgered me, trying intimidation, bribery
-and curses; and then, at last, they settled it amongst themselves that
-they would take me with them into Portsmouth, and thence across the sea
-into the very heart of a black barbarous country, where they hoped to
-find the Treasure of the Incas.
-
-It was then, whilst we waited in the woods for sunset, that I saw
-myself, a lad of sixteen summers, launched upon a series of adventures,
-among strange peoples and in wild, romantic lands--adventures such as
-those of which I had often read, of the bold Spaniards who had followed
-Columbus into a new and unknown world, and brave blades of the stamp of
-Drake and Grenville, who--like John Bannister himself--were all men of
-Devon. That I was to be one of a company so glorious seemed to me all
-my heart could wish, though I went as a hostage with my life itself at
-ransom.
-
-In a strange fashion, in very truth, did I begin my travels; for I
-journeyed that night to Portsmouth, not only bound hand and foot and
-tied to the seat of the dog-cart, but gagged as well; so that, by the
-time we reached our destination, I ached in every limb.
-
-For three weeks we dwelt together in a lodging-house, patronised by
-seamen, in a poor quarter of the town. The landlord--a fat, slovenly
-fellow whose hand was seldom far from a pint mug or near a razor--was,
-as I guessed, hand in glove with Amos; for he must have known that
-throughout those three dreary weeks I was kept locked in a stuffy room,
-where I had neither fresh air nor liberty, and no better fare than is
-accorded to a convict.
-
-I have said that we dwelt together, but this was not wholly so; for Mr.
-Gilbert Forsyth, though he was often of our party, had taken rooms in
-one of the best hotels. He was a gentleman somewhat fastidious in his
-habits, with a nice taste in wine and clothes, though--as he was soon
-to prove--he could rough it with the best of us.
-
-Joshua, too, was seldom in our lodgings. It appears that he spent most
-of his time in the neighbourhood of the docks, on the lookout for an
-old shipmate whom he knew he could trust, with whom Amos could strike a
-bargain.
-
-Such a man was eventually found. Joshua brought him in, one evening,
-and shortly afterwards Mr. Forsyth arrived, looking more than ever as
-if he had just come out of a bandbox.
-
-This fellow proved to be the skipper of a barque, due to sail in a few
-days' time, bound for Caracas in Venezuela. She must call first at
-Liverpool, to take on a cargo of cotton goods, but would touch at no
-port upon the voyage but Fayal in the Western Islands, which are now
-called the Azores.
-
-All this fitted in exceedingly well with Amos's plans. As I was in the
-next room when they talked the matter out, and they never troubled to
-close the door, I know for a fact that Baverstock bribed the skipper,
-and that Forsyth--who I suspected all along had undertaken to produce
-the funds--paid him as much as fifty pounds down, quite apart from the
-question of passage money, and there was more to come at the end of the
-voyage.
-
-Gilbert Forsyth, indeed, was a member of the expedition for no other
-reason than that he supplied the sinews of war, else Amos had never
-taken him into his confidence and agreed to forego a third part of the
-loot. For all that, Forsyth proved himself a man of action and
-resource, though he never looked it; and things would have gone worse
-with Amos than they did, had he not had at his right hand one so
-capable and cool throughout those wild, adventurous days.
-
-For Joshua Trust was well enough in his way to strike a blow or carry a
-camp-kettle across a mountain range that topped the clouds--otherwise
-he was a bull-in-a-china-shop kind of a fellow, whose worth was in his
-forearms and not his head.
-
-But Forsyth was cast in a finer mould: a man of education, with tags of
-Latin in the corners of memory, a sense of humour--subtle enough to be
-lost upon both his strange companions--and a wonderful brain for
-figures.
-
-The man's laziness was all pretence and affectation. He always talked
-as if he were half asleep, and yawned at intervals, screening his mouth
-with a hand upon one of the fingers of which he wore a golden signet
-ring; and yet, his brain was ever active, and he had the happy knack of
-doing the right thing at the right time--as he had already proved to my
-cost.
-
-Even whilst I lay imprisoned in that dingy room in Portsmouth, Forsyth
-returned along the coast to within a stone's throw of John Bannister's
-cabin by the sea, and searched vainly for the fragment of the map which
-I had thrown away. And that in itself was a bold thing to do; for the
-police--to whom Bannister had described the appearance of both
-Baverstock and Trust--had been told of my disappearance, and the
-countryside, from Arundel to Chichester, was populous with printed
-offers of reward.
-
-For, all this time, my mother was well near distracted by anxiety and
-distress. John Bannister called upon her, and tried in his own
-straightforward way to set her fears at rest, and swore to her that he
-would find me, though he had to search the world.
-
-Of how well he kept his oath it is my task to write, and of much else
-besides. For the barque, which was called the *Mary Greenfield*,
-dropped her pilot off the Needles of the Isle of Wight, and with a fair
-wind and under full canvas struck the open sea. And I, Dick Treadgold,
-was on board, sea-sick that night as any full-grown man could be, and
-sick at heart as well. For, when the white cliffs of dearest England
-faded in the evening light, I realised for the first time that I was
-alone, and there was no telling what the Fates held in store for me.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI--I AM CONCERNED IN A MUTINY
-======================================
-
-I have neither space nor patience to describe in any detail that long
-and tedious voyage. For we were months at sea. I saw whales spouting
-water into the air, and schools of porpoises; and at one time, for a
-whole month on end, we were becalmed, the ship lying idle in the midst
-of a vast floating mass of seaweed, where there were all kinds of
-jelly-fish and squids. The heat was excessive, and there was a rank,
-almost putrid, smell in the air, which came from the decaying seaweed.
-That in itself was enough to try the temper of every member of the
-crew; but, to make matters worse, much of the tinned meat on board
-exploded in the hold. I cannot explain this, but I know that it
-happened, and am content to leave the explanation to the scientific
-reader. These circumstances, together with the surly nature of James
-Dagg, the captain, led from dissatisfaction to open grumbling, and
-thence to the mutiny of which I have now to tell.
-
-My own fortunes were, to some extent, involved in that affair; and in
-any case, I must describe the incident more or less as it occurred,
-since nothing could better serve to illustrate the true character of
-Amos Baverstock, who plays as important a part as myself in the
-narrative that follows.
-
-I had not been a week at sea, and just recovered from my sickness, when
-I was given clearly to understand that I was to hold no intercourse
-with any of the crew. I cannot say that I wished to, for they were a
-ruffianly lot--half of them, I verily believe, prison-birds, like
-Joshua Trust, and the remainder West Indian negroes, Chinamen, and
-Lascars from the coast of Malabar.
-
-I had to share a cabin with Amos himself, who seldom let me out of his
-sight. Thrown into such close intimacy with the man, I learned much
-concerning him, and he more of me. He seldom allowed a day to pass
-without questioning me in regard to what I knew of the map; and so
-terrible did his threats become that I was filled with fear for the
-future.
-
-On that account, I yearned for a friend, someone in whom I could
-confide; and it was not long before I found such a man on board that
-pestilential ship. Now that I can look back upon my series of
-adventures, I can see both men and matters in their true perspective,
-and I realise that, had it not been for William Rushby, the boatswain
-of the *Mary Greenfield*, the most honest and the whitest man that ever
-piped all hands on deck, this tale had never been told.
-
-When I saw him first, I sized him up as the true seaman that he was;
-but I dared not speak to him, because of the threats that had been
-heaped upon me. I knew also that I could go to none of the ship's
-officers with my story, for they were all tarred with the same brush as
-the skipper; but Providence before long gave me the chance I wanted.
-
-When we were in mid-ocean Amos tired of the voyage, and required little
-persuasion from Mr. Forsyth to take to playing cards. Captain Dagg was
-a card-player, too, and Joshua made the fourth; and this was the party
-that sat down nightly after supper to gamble, drink and smoke, by the
-light of a reeking paraffin lamp in the little stuffy saloon.
-
-I watched them play for many nights, and though I knew nothing of the
-game, it was quite clear to me that they were three babes at the
-business by the side of Mr. Forsyth. For it was he who always won, no
-matter with whom he played or what cards he held, and it was he who
-raked in their money.
-
-This was all one to me. I soon tired of watching them; and when I had
-once slipped away from them, to breathe the fresh air on deck, and no
-questions had been asked, I made it my constant practice to sit of an
-evening upon the poop, whence I could look down into the water and see
-the phosphorus as if smouldering in the wake of the ship.
-
-And here it was that I talked with William Rushby. At that hour it was
-his duty to see that the ship's lamps were lighted, and when he had
-hoisted the mast-head lights, and put the red light to port and the
-green to starboard, he would come aft, haul in the log, and speak to me
-in whispers.
-
-That he took that precaution from the first makes it plain enough that
-he guessed some mischief was afoot. He questioned me concerning who I
-was and what business I had in such company on board that ship. It was
-some time before I dared tell him the truth, for fear of Amos
-Baverstock; but I did so in the end, making him swear to keep my
-secret; which he did.
-
-"It is all like a fairy tale," said he, when he had heard my story;
-"and it's hard to tell the best way to help you. Of this much I am
-certain: if you set forth into the back country of Venezuela with a man
-like Baverstock, you'll not come back alive."
-
-"But I cannot escape!" I protested. "Even on board this ship, I am
-watched at all hours of the night and day."
-
-Rushby thought for a while, stroking his short black beard which was
-like that of a Russian Czar.
-
-"Maybe," said he, "at Caracas, I could desert and take you with me. I
-have no liking for my shipmates here, as you may well imagine. In the
-meantime, many weeks must pass before we sight the mainland, and in
-that time much may happen."
-
-As he said this with some significance, I asked him what he meant.
-
-"Why, just this," he answered; "there's trouble brewing aboard, which
-will come to a head before we touch port. The crew are a low-down,
-blackguard lot, no better men than sailors; and though they may be held
-to blame for that, it's no fault of theirs if they are fed worse than
-swine and cursed from dawn to sunset. Dagg I had heard about, though I
-never signed on under him before, nor will again, and the mate's even
-worse. There's high talk in the fo'c'sle, as it is, where the
-ringleader is that nigger cook. Mark my words--and I've sailed the
-seas for more than twenty years--a prize-fighting negro in the galley
-can cause more mischief aboard a sailing-ship than a monkey and a
-woman, both in one."
-
-I laughed, for I was not then accustomed to the talk of sailors.
-
-"And they've run out of lime-juice," he went on; "and that's a serious
-thing."
-
-"Lime-juice!" I repeated, thinking he was joking still.
-
-"A man must eat vegetables," he explained to me, "to keep his blood
-cool and his liver nicely trimmed. You can't eat green cabbages and
-Brussels-sprouts in mid-Atlantic, so you must carry lime-juice aboard;
-and we've run out. The men have much to complain of. They are in ill
-health, and one or two should be lying up in a sick berth, instead of
-being sworn at left and right for not moving quicker. So I see trouble
-ahead. It may be a hurricane, or just a summer squall; and if the
-first, Heaven help James Dagg and his officers, for they're a tough lot
-for'ard, as I know who've listened to their talk."
-
-And Rushby was proved to be in the right. We ran into a great calm as
-I have said. The sea was like glass; and though the sun was blotted
-out by a steam-like fog, the heat was so intense that we went about the
-deck in naught but vests and trousers, with the sweat dripping from our
-finger-tips.
-
-Without a doubt, the crew suffered for lack of lime-juice; some broke
-out with a horrid skin disease. And then the news came that the tinned
-meat had all gone bad, and we were forced to live on salted ling-fish,
-so that we went thirsty all day long.
-
-It was Ebenezer Hogg, the negro cook, who started all the trouble. He
-was a long, raw-boned Jamaica man, who had cut a figure in the
-prize-ring in his younger days. He had never forgiven the skipper for
-a blow across the mouth because the cabin potatoes had not been
-properly peeled, though this was the work of Ah Chin, the cook's mate,
-a half-daft Canton Chinaman, who would fire off crackers at all hours
-of the night, in honour (I suppose) of the heathen gods he worshipped.
-
-Hogg told his shipmates he cared not a "dime with a hole in it" for
-James Dagg or any man. They had no food fit to eat, so they might as
-well help themselves to the ship's grog, to keep--as he described
-it--body and soul together.
-
-Rushby--as his duty was--warned the captain of what was coming; but
-Dagg, who had been losing heavily at cards to Mr. Forsyth, only abused
-the boatswain for his pains, and said that he himself was the best
-judge of such matters and would know how to deal with insubordination.
-
-And that night the crew, led by Hogg, the nigger, broke into the
-storeroom with a hatchet and broached the rum casks. Within
-half-an-hour, they were all roaring drunk; and that was a night that I
-shall never live to forget.
-
-The moon came out from the white sea-mist, as if to look down in
-scandalised amazement upon a scene of debauchery and violence--a round,
-red ball of fire, casting its rays upon the stagnant, reeking seaweed,
-illuminating the deck of that floating madhouse with a dull crimson
-glare, whereby you might see the whites of men's eyes and the glitter
-of the sharp blades they handled.
-
-Dagg appeared on deck, his face livid with passion; and I could see by
-his walk that he, too, had been drinking heavily at his card-playing.
-
-"What's all this?" he shouted at the top of his voice. "Understand,
-I'll have no monkey-tricks aboard the ship that I command."
-
-Hogg at once squared up to him, his two fists before his face, very
-drunk and brazen.
-
-"Come on, James Dagg!" he cried, with his Christy-minstrel accent.
-"Time yer and me settled de account."
-
-"This here's mutiny!" exclaimed the captain.
-
-"Dat's de right word, boss," said Hogg. "Mutiny it is."
-
-And at that, he struck the captain with his fist, so that Dagg rolled
-over and over upon the deck, groaning loudly.
-
-The fat was now in the fire. If discipline could be restored, Hogg
-would be hanged at the yard-arm and his body cast into the sea; and
-drunk as he was, the nigger knew it.
-
-"I'm de captain of dis ship," he bellowed, "an' James Dagg's de cook."
-
-He showed his white teeth in a grin, and then gave orders as if he had
-been accustomed all his life to a position of authority; and the wonder
-was he was instantly obeyed. Five minutes later, both Dagg and his
-mate were bound hand and foot; and the second mate had been locked in
-his cabin, where he was fast asleep. The negro went staggering
-backwards and forwards, from the forecastle to the poop, crying out
-that he it was who was Captain and his name was Admiral Hogg.
-
-There were two spectators of this comedy, who could not be considered
-as partisans; and the one was William Rushby and the other was myself.
-The boatswain's sense of duty would have held him to the captain, had
-it not been for me; for, though I had no liking for any of the crew,
-and a feeling of positive loathing for a great brute like Hogg, I saw
-in the discomfiture of James Dagg and his officers some chance of my
-own ultimate deliverance. So that when the cook turned upon me, and
-caught me by the scruff of the neck, I played the card that I thought
-safest at the time, but which certainly lost me the trick that meant
-the game.
-
-"And now, boy," said Hogg, "which way de wind blow wid you? Will you
-sign on to serve as cabin-steward under Admiral Hogg?"
-
-"Why, sure," said I, having picked up something of the man's own way of
-speaking. "I was never a friend of Captain Dagg's, as you may have
-seen for yourself."
-
-And thereupon, I looked away from the negro's grinning countenance, and
-straight in the black, pig-like eyes of Amos Baverstock.
-
-If I had feared him before, I was well-nigh terrified of him then; for
-there was black murder in the look he gave me, and his mouth was
-working horribly.
-
-For all that, he straightened his face in half a second, and turned to
-Hogg as calm as the sea itself.
-
-"I'll settle with you in a moment," said he. "I've not lived more than
-half my life without learning how to deal with a buck nigger who's
-three parts tipsy. Bo's'n," said he to Rushby, pointing straight at
-me, "put that boy in irons."
-
-Rushby never moved.
-
-"Did you hear my orders?" rapped out Amos.
-
-"I heard right enough," said the boatswain. "But I'm not here to take
-orders from you."
-
-At that, the crew, who had gathered round, thinking that Rushby was
-with them, became bolder than ever. Knives were drawn from belts, and
-one of these was flourished in the face of the captain who still lay
-upon the deck, bound hand and foot.
-
-"Ho!" cried Amos. "So that's your tune, is it? I see you must all be
-taught a lesson."
-
-He talked with all the confidence in the world, though--with the
-exception of Mr. Gilbert Forsyth, who had just strolled on deck with
-both hands in his trouser pockets--there was no one at his back, and he
-faced a crowd of angry, drunken seamen who would not then have stopped
-short of murder.
-
-From Rushby he turned once more to Hogg. "And so," said he, "you claim
-to be the captain of this ship?"
-
-The negro glanced in his direction, but would not meet those cruel,
-steadfast eyes.
-
-"If I'm not," he blurted out, "then who is de captain? Tell me dat?"
-
-"Why, I am," roared Amos. "And what have you to say to it?"
-
-Hogg realised he was challenged. Perhaps, under the influence of rum,
-he had already gone further than he meant to; but, in any case, so far
-as he was concerned there was no question of retreat.
-
-"Put up your fists!" he shouted. "We fight for it and let de best man
-win."
-
-He grinned from ear to ear, as, standing in front of Amos--above whom
-he towered by a good clear head and shoulders--he lifted his great,
-black fists to the level of his face. I thought that he would kill
-Amos with a single blow; for the one was so big and bony, and the other
-so frail and shrivelled up. But I did not then know Amos Baverstock.
-
-"Come on!" cried Hogg, still grinning.
-
-I looked at Amos, thinking to find him alarmed; but never upon the face
-of any man have I beheld an expression of such complete contempt.
-
-"You black dog!" said he, with an oath.
-
-He drew back his right hand, as if about to strike, and immediately I
-caught the glint of a revolver barrel in the moonlight.
-
-There was a flash, a single loud report, and then a dull, heavy thud as
-the negro's great ungainly body came down upon the deck. And there he
-lay, full in the red moonshine, upon that tropic night, huddled and
-stone-dead--the black, bragging fool who had claimed to be our captain.
-
-"And now, then," said Amos, as cool as ever, turning to the crew, "is
-there any man else who would like to command this ship?"
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII--AND AM MADE TO PAY FOR IT
-======================================
-
-And that was the end of the mutiny on board the *Mary Greenfield*. The
-match was struck by a negro; the flames were fed with rum; and the fire
-flared up, just to be stamped out by the one strong man on board.
-
-Amos at once released both the captain and his mate; whereupon Dagg
-treated the crew to a long-winded, high speech upon the subject of what
-he would do, if such insubordination occurred again; but as he had done
-naught during the crisis, but to get knocked down the moment he opened
-his mouth, there were few of his audience who were not laughing up
-their sleeves.
-
-I have told the full story of the disturbance, to illustrate the
-character of Amos Baverstock. I have yet to write of the sequel to the
-trouble, which more nearly concerned myself.
-
-For Amos was as good as his word, and made short work of William Rushby
-and of me. Though the crew had been bound over to keep the peace, as
-you might call it, admonished to behave themselves in future, the
-boatswain was not only degraded of his rank, but forthwith cast into
-irons.
-
-As for myself, I was led before a kind of tribunal, assembled in the
-saloon. Captain Dagg, Amos Baverstock, and Joshua Trust were my
-judges; and a strange triumvirate they made, Amos chewing his black
-cigar, and all three seated before their glasses of grog, with their
-greasy playing-cards scattered before them on the table.
-
-"Boy," said Dagg, "you joined in a mutiny. Do you know that, you
-whelp? Do you know what it means?"
-
-"No, sir," said I.
-
-"It means death," said Dagg. "The yard-arm--that's what it means."
-
-I believed, for the moment, that they were really going to kill me; and
-so seriously had the great heat and the excitement affected me that I
-don't think I cared very much whether they did so or not. Anyway, I
-know I answered boldly, though I had never the courage to look straight
-at Amos, whose eyes I felt were upon me.
-
-"Captain Dagg," said I, "if you want to murder me, get on with the
-matter. I ask you to do no more than to remember this: I did not come
-on board your ship of my own free will. I was kidnapped, and carried
-here by force, and I have no means of escape."
-
-At that, Amos struck the table with his fist; and, bold though my words
-had been, I jumped as if a cannon had been fired.
-
-"Silence!" he roared. "We are not here to argue with you. You were
-given your orders. You were told that on no account were you to
-communicate with anyone on board this ship, and you defied us. We have
-reason to suspect that you have taken into your confidence William
-Rushby, formerly boatswain. Do you deny it?"
-
-He banged the table again. I looked right into his face, and it was
-just as if I was under fire. But I could never answer him. I had the
-pluck neither to lie nor to tell the truth.
-
-"Good!" said he. "You admit as much. Well, then, we shall see that no
-such tricks are played us in the future. Rushby is in irons. As for
-you, for the rest of this voyage you remain a prisoner in your cabin;
-and if we have any more trouble with you--I warn you fairly--you meet
-the same fate as that hide-bound, cursed nigger."
-
-And that was the lame and impotent conclusion of the mutiny on board
-the *Mary Greenfield*.
-
-My lot was now even worse than before. For week after week I was
-locked in a stuffy cabin, and got neither fresh air, good food, nor
-exercise. The calm broke up quite suddenly with a squall, followed by
-a shower of rain. For about an hour the water came down like a cascade
-upon the sea, washing the ship from stem to stern, giving--as it
-appeared to me, looking out from my narrow port-hole--new life to the
-floating seaweed and the myriads of living things that were swarming in
-the midst of it.
-
-The ship rocked, turning lazily from side to side, like a sleeper
-awakening, and then, lurching, took on a list to starboard, as the wind
-gripped her hoisted sails. And then, once again, we were under canvas,
-ploughing westward across that great, lonely ocean.
-
-A few days later, we struck a trade wind, and made even better
-progress. Though I myself was never more miserable in all my life, I
-had reason to think that there was less discontent on board. I could
-hear the patter of the bare feet of the men on the deck above me, as
-they hastened about their work, as sailors should, and the shrill note
-of the boatswain's whistle--which caused me to wonder who the new
-boatswain was. It must be understood that during these days of my
-imprisonment I had nothing to read and nothing to do, but to meditate
-upon my own misfortunes.
-
-Life was not made any the more pleasant for me inasmuch as I still
-shared a cabin with Amos, though I was devoutly thankful that I saw
-little of him. Night by night, he would sit late at cards, trying--I
-should imagine--to win back what he had lost to Mr. Forsyth; and I made
-a point of being asleep, or pretending to be so, before he came to bed.
-
-And now I have to tell of something which has a direct bearing upon all
-that follows. I had become so despondent and forlorn, and I found
-myself in the company of such infamous and shameless rogues, that I had
-actually forgotten my friends. I had forgotten that there were yet in
-the world true, honest men who could be both brave and loyal.
-
-One evening, I must confess, my heart was near to breaking. The world
-seemed all so hopeless and so wicked that I brought my face to my hands
-and cried just as I had been wont to cry, when I was a little chap of
-four years old, when things had not gone for me exactly as I wanted.
-And as I sobbed, I could hear the gamblers in the saloon beyond the
-cabin door; the "clink" of the bottles and the glasses, and the deeper
-note of the coins upon the table; now and again, a gruff oath from Amos
-or Joshua Trust, and Mr. Forsyth's affected drawl. And then, a voice,
-quite near to me, whispered in my ear:
-
-"Me lad, be quick! I want a word with you."
-
-I sprang to my feet--I had been lying on my berth--and looked about me.
-I could see no one in the cabin, and had begun to think of ghosts and
-spirit-voices, when I heard the whispering again.
-
-"Here, me lad! The port-hole."
-
-I looked at the port, and could see a face by the light of the oil
-lamp--a face in a frame studded with stars, the face of a man with a
-short stump of a grisly beard.
-
-"Rushby!" I exclaimed.
-
-"The same," said he. "But speak low, for Heaven's sake! Those rascals
-are at their cards in the saloon; the door's thin, and it's all up with
-us if we're discovered."
-
-I went to the port-hole, so that my face was close to his.
-
-"But how are you here?" I asked.
-
-"I've not lived my life and done my duty," said he, "without making
-friends. One of the crew, of the name of Adams, to whom I have been of
-service in the past, has let me loose--just as you might unchain a
-yard-dog for a run. I have a few minutes at the best before I'm back
-in irons, but that's enough for what I have to say."
-
-"But where are you now?" I asked, for he appeared to me to be walking
-upon the sea.
-
-He explained that he was hanging on to a rope, made fast to a stanchion
-on the deck above, but that he had something of greater importance to
-tell me.
-
-"Are we near our journey's end?" I asked.
-
-"In three days," he answered, "we should sight the coast, unless the
-wind changes. What they intend to do with me at Caracas I neither know
-nor care. I will somehow find the means to escape, and make my way
-back to England; and then, Captain Dagg and Amos Baverstock shall pay
-for what they've done."
-
-"I entreat you," I exclaimed, "do not meddle with Amos!"
-
-Rushby laughed softly.
-
-"And leave you at his mercy!" he cried. "That's not my way, nor--I
-should think, if all you have told me be the truth--the way of Mr.
-Bannister. This matter shall never rest where it now stands. I am
-here to learn two things, though I am no better than a simple sailor,
-and it will want a wiser head than mine before we're safe in port.
-Come, tell me, lad, where did you hide the map you snatched from
-Baverstock? John Bannister may want it."
-
-"In a rabbit-hole," said I; and I went on to describe, as best I could,
-how that rabbit-hole might be found.
-
-"There's a warren," said I, "about two hundred yards to the west of
-Bannister's cabin----"
-
-"And how am I to find that?" Rushby took me up.
-
-I thought for a moment; and then I got a bright idea when most I needed
-it, for I realised there was little time to spare and that Amos, at any
-moment, might enter and find Rushby at the port-hole.
-
-I gave him my mother's address; for I had little doubt that Bannister
-had gone, long before this, to her. With my life in danger, he
-would--I knew--soon get the better of his natural dread of women.
-
-"That's all I want," said he.
-
-And a moment after he was gone. It so happened that many months were
-to elapse before I set eyes upon him again--a true man and an honest,
-big of heart and strong of hand, the type that has made the very name
-of British sailor to rank so highly all the world across, from the old
-three-decker to the battle-cruiser of to-day. And I speak of the men
-without whose cutlasses and courage Blake and Drake, or even Nelson
-himself, had never been the famous admirals that they were.
-
-For, when we were come to Caracas, I was discharged from that poisonous
-vessel like a worthless bale of freight. Unshipped by night into a
-broken-down two-wheeled cart, and conveyed through the narrow streets
-of an evil-smelling city, where men talked loudly in a foreign tongue,
-with quarrelsome voices and much waving of the hands, and then I found
-myself in a dirty hovel upon the slopes of tree-clad hills, where I
-could see the round moon through a great hole in the roof, and lie
-listening to the singing of millions of crickets, wondering what would
-be the end of it all.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII--INTO THE WILDERNESS
-=================================
-
-For these few days, it happened that I was left in the charge of Joshua
-Trust. In other words, he was the watch-dog that guarded me, day and
-night; and a dull dog he was. He never opened his mouth, save to
-grumble at everything--the heat, the insects, the very food he cooked
-himself. Now and again, he would sigh; which puzzled me, until I
-solved the problem for myself: he was inclined to regret the idle days
-aboard the *Mary Greenfield* when he had naught to think about except
-his grog and cards.
-
-So, in this man's company, I learned nothing concerning what was afoot.
-But I was free to use my eyes, and I could scarce fail to observe that
-they were turning by degrees that ruined habitation into a kind of
-depôt. For, day and night, came stores and arms and ammunition to the
-place--all manner of such things as might be required upon an
-expedition into the wild hinterland of that strange country, where
-there were few roads, but many bridle-paths and broad rivers to be
-crossed.
-
-Amos came often to the hut, and Mr. Forsyth was always with him; and,
-as I knew, it was the last-named who had paid for all. That, however,
-was all one to me. I was safely caught, thousands of miles from dear,
-silly Sussex; and even if I was so fortunate as to escape from Joshua
-Trust, what was I to do in that foreign land, where I could not speak a
-word of the language and had no friend to whom to go?
-
-On the fourth day of my captivity came six mules, and with them three
-men whom I took to be half-castes of a sort, for they were no more than
-two parts black and spoke Spanish, shouting at one another when they
-conversed. But I was more interested in the mules, which were of a
-kind that I had never seen before; for they were small animals, little
-larger than donkeys, with mouse-grey woolly coats like sheep. Each of
-these was provided with a pack-saddle; and when they were loaded for
-the inspection of Amos Baverstock and Forsyth, I was amazed at the
-great weight that such slender and seemingly fragile beasts could carry.
-
-On the fifth day after we had left the ship, we set forth upon our
-great march towards the south. Our party numbered eight in all: Amos,
-Forsyth, and Trust (the first the acknowledged leader of the
-expedition); myself and the three mulemen, whilst the other was a
-guide--a lean, cadaverous Spaniard, black as a raven, whom I never
-heard called by any other name than that of Vasco. I do not think this
-fellow was an evil man by nature, except in so far as he was capable of
-doing almost anything for money. In that, at any rate, he was honest:
-he served his masters faithfully, no matter who they were.
-
-And now we come to the march itself that, step by step, led me farther
-and farther from the confines of civilisation and into the heart of a
-cruel and magic wilderness where things happened that I should not
-believe, had I not seen them with my eyes.
-
-The first stage of our journey was uneventful enough; and the
-scenery--especially on the mountains we were obliged to
-cross--surprisingly beautiful. We first climbed to a great height,
-following a zig-zag road, along which the little mules struggled
-gallantly with their heavy loads. I had thought that, on gaining the
-crestline, we must again descend to something approaching the level of
-the sea. But this was not so; for the mountains proved to consist of a
-series of parallel chains, and no sooner had we negotiated one valley
-than we found ourselves upon the watershed of another.
-
-These valleys were thickly populated. We were seldom out of sight of
-villages and towns, many of which contained considerable buildings.
-The country had the aspect of being extremely fertile and prosperous.
-There were plantations of coffee and cocoa, tobacco and cotton, but a
-far greater area of the valley regions was given over to the
-cultivation of manioc and maize. For all I could ever learn, there was
-no flour in the land, for I never tasted bread, but subsisted upon hot
-maize cakes, made by Vasco, the guide, which I found as good as
-hot-cross buns.
-
-When we were clear of the mountains, we began to descend into the
-valley of a great river which, had I learned more geography when I was
-at school, I would have known to be the Orinoco. The course of this
-great stream we followed for many days, marching in a south-westerly
-direction, against the current. The climate was now a great deal
-hotter than it had been near the coast, and towns and villages were few
-and far between. One thing that I observed was the courteous behaviour
-of the inhabitants, who seldom failed to wave their hands to us and
-pass the time of day.
-
-We came to a vast sea of grass where, here and there, were scattered
-woods; and finally, after crossing a river of some importance, a
-tributary of the Orinoco, we sighted a great mountain that overtopped
-the surrounding hills like a giant in the midst of pygmies.
-
-Amos, who had been unusually reticent upon the line-of-march, now
-became talkative, almost hilarious. He carried constantly a grin upon
-his fox-like countenance, and would often chuckle to himself.
-
-For the great mountain in front of us might be described as the gateway
-of the road to the Treasure we were seeking, and was marked upon the
-left-hand top corner of the map. It was called Mount Tigro, but by
-that name I have never been able to trace it upon any modern map,
-though it was shown to be about twenty miles south of the Rio Guaviare.
-
-We were now--though I did not know it at the time--close upon the
-frontier of Colombia, and, I think, for a time our route lay through
-that little-known country, until we turned eastward again into the
-territories of the Amazonas.
-
-We were now in a mountainous and savage land, where we could make but
-the slowest progress. For not only were the hills steep and pathless,
-but in places clothed in such luxuriant vegetation that we had often to
-break a way with hatchets for the mules.
-
-We were marching by the map, and Amos had become our guide. He and
-Forsyth--who never seemed to tire--would lead our little column, myself
-walking in company of Joshua, and the pack-mules bringing up the rear.
-
-We were soon to bid good-bye to these faithful, dumb companions; for,
-after we had climbed the slopes of another range of mountains, we
-followed the course of a river valley that led us rapidly downward, to
-land us into the very heart of such a forest as I did not dream to be
-possible.
-
-The mulemen were paid off--by no means too handsomely, I thought--to
-return upon that long and tedious journey to the coast. And we five
-went on alone--Amos and his two confederates, Vasco and
-myself--carrying our stores and provisions in knapsacks on our backs,
-and all armed as though we were like to meet with savage men.
-
-In the first place, I must tell you that the heat was insufferable, for
-all this while we had been approaching the equator. The forest swarmed
-with myriads of stinging insects, and sometimes I saw great tree snakes
-of a magnitude that even now makes my blood run cold when I think of
-them. We came upon one, lying half coiled upon the bank of a woodland
-pool, and I am ready to swear that he was longer than a cricket-pitch,
-and of a thickness almost equal to my own waist.
-
-But I marvelled most at the forest trees, the names of some of which I
-learned from Vasco, who had a little English, of which he was
-exceedingly vain. One of these was a palm-tree, the very leaves of
-which were forty feet in length, standing almost erect, all bunched
-together--a magnificent sight to behold. And these forest giants were
-intertwined and intermingled with thousands of creepers, parasites, and
-climbers, so that in places, even at mid-day, when the tropic sun was
-at its height, it was dark as night in the vast Region of the Woods.
-
-For weeks we struggled onward, literally fighting our way through that
-all but impenetrable wilderness. I saw that Amos had more than he
-could do to trace our route upon the map; and there were times, I am
-convinced, when even Vasco and Baverstock himself truly believed that
-we were lost.
-
-He told us he was looking for a certain landmark; and in that dark and
-endless forest he might as well have searched for a pin. At one time,
-there was not a living soul within hundreds of miles of us. There were
-great alligators in the rivers that we crossed by means of rough
-dug-out canoes, which we made upon one bank and left upon the other;
-the jungle teemed with snakes, many of the venomous kind besides the
-great loathsome pythons, in whose coils an ox might have been crushed
-to death; thousands of gaily-coloured birds were among the tree-tops
-high above us, and the dead leaves about our pathway swarmed with
-little things that crept and crawled and stung so vilely that we were
-covered from head to foot with painful swellings. But never a sign did
-we see of any human being. Nature reigned in that black wilderness,
-untrammelled and supreme.
-
-And then, as one steps on a sudden from a darkened room, we came forth
-one morning from the forest into the blazing light of the sun. And
-there was such a wonder as I had never seen before.
-
-Before us was a plain upon which was growing a tall, reed-like grass;
-and in the centre of this plain was a long, hog-backed hillock, bare of
-trees. Remember, we were in the very heart of the Unknown, for months
-we had seen no sign or trace of humanity, and I, at least, judged
-myself to be hundreds of miles from the very outposts of the civilised
-world; and yet, upon the summit of this hillock was a great ruined
-palace or a temple, encircled by a colonnade of vast stone pillars, no
-less in their proportions than those of Stonehenge, on Salisbury Plain
-in England, only they were there by the score, and stood perpendicular
-and massive, not one having fallen from its place.
-
-I stood rooted in amazement, when my attention was attracted by Amos,
-whose behaviour was now that of a madman. He threw both his arms into
-the air, which action--in view of his hunched back and his pig-like,
-glittering eyes--made him look more evil and gleeful than ever, and
-shouted at the top of his voice:
-
-"Found!" he cried. "The Temple of Cahazaxa, who fled from Cuzco with
-the Treasure! And now, boy, the matter rests with you!"
-
-He changed as in a flash from unbounded joy to passion. He seized me
-by the shoulders, gripping me so tightly that it was as if his fingers
-burned into my flesh like red-hot irons.
-
-"I'll have the truth from you!" he shrieked, dancing like a maniac on
-his feet. "The truth, and nothing but the truth! Or else, I swear as
-I'm a living man, you die here and now."
-
-"What truth?" I asked.
-
-My voice was trembling; for so terrible did the man seem that a cold
-sweat had broken out upon my forehead. He drew nearer to me still,
-peering into my face and whispering.
-
-"Henceforward," said he, "you guide us. Either you have seen the map
-or Bannister has told you all he knows. In any case, you guide us from
-here to the place where the Greater Treasure is hid. Refuse, and you
-die, here and now, in the midst of this almighty desert."
-
-One glance at the man was enough to tell me that he meant every word he
-said. And yet, I do not think I was any longer afraid.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX--I AM LEFT TO MY DOOM
-================================
-
-I was now, it was apparent, in such a situation that my life was of
-little worth. Without doubt, Amos did believe that I was capable of
-guiding our little column to the place where the Greater Treasure was
-hidden.
-
-He thought, perhaps, that I had looked at the fragment of the map I had
-snatched from his hand, or else that John Bannister had told me the
-full story.
-
-As a matter of fact, I knew nothing. When flying for my very life from
-Amos, I had had other things to think of than to gratify a very natural
-curiosity, and had never so much as cast a glance at the map. And as
-for Bannister, I have said already this was the one subject upon which
-he could never or seldom be induced to talk.
-
-Amos, however, held a contrary opinion. Somehow, he must have learned
-that for several months John Bannister had been a good friend to me,
-and in his own mind had never questioned that I knew all there was to
-know.
-
-In either case, it was all the same to him; for my life was worth
-nothing if I could not help him in the furtherance of his purpose, and
-I was but a fifth mouth to feed in a wild, tropic region where food was
-difficult to find.
-
-That day I had a stormy scene with Amos, who was supported by Mr.
-Forsyth, whose questions I found even more difficult to answer; whilst
-Joshua Trust stood by, tugging at his red beard, which had now become
-more untidy and unkempt than ever. As for Vasco, he sat at a little
-distance, cross-legged, looking in a puzzled manner from Amos
-Baverstock to me.
-
-I swore on my oath to them that Bannister had told me nothing; but they
-would not believe me. Then, for the first time, I was shown the map
-which Amos had brought with him all the way from Sussex; and at once I
-observed a singular coincidence.
-
-For the parchment had been rent across the very place where was marked
-the great ruined building even then before us; and all Amos had of it
-was the following inscription: THE ANCIENT TEMPLE OF C---- and then
-came the torn edge, where I had held the parchment tightly between my
-thumb and forefinger.
-
-But this information, slight as it was, had been enough for Amos, who
-knew well the story of Cahazaxa, the Peruvian prince, of whom I will
-tell in the proper place. Both Bannister and Amos had heard often of
-Cahazaxa's Temple, which might be regarded as a kind of half-way house
-upon our treasure hunt. And upon the other portion of the map, which I
-had hidden in a rabbit-hole, were the letters "AHAZAXA," plain enough
-to any one who had ever heard of the temple, and thence the route
-marked plainly to the secret place where the Greater Treasure lay.
-
-Had Bannister ever shown me the map, I should in all probability have
-remembered the names of some of the places marked thereon; but he had
-never done so--which, after all, saved me a world of trouble at one of
-the most critical moments in my life.
-
-For, had I known, I trust I would never have confessed to these unholy
-scoundrels. I like to think that my courage would not have failed me
-at the eleventh hour. As it was, being wholly ignorant, I had nothing
-to tell, and boldly declared as much, though both the hunchback and Mr.
-Forsyth thought me to be lying.
-
-The former worked himself into a kind of frenzied passion. Gripping me
-by a wrist, he jerked me first in one direction, then in another,
-sometimes so violently that my head flew backward and forward like a
-weather-cock in the wind.
-
-"We'll have the truth from you!" he shouted. "I'll have it, though I
-must tear it from you with red-hot irons."
-
-"I know nothing," I persisted.
-
-"You'll speak or die," he answered. "And I'll see to it that death
-does not come easy!"
-
-All that day, they badgered me and persecuted me with questions. And
-in the end, when the sun was setting, they gave it up, and decided to
-put me to death.
-
-Mine was a strange fate, in very truth; and now, when I look back upon
-that hour, I marvel that I took it all so calmly. For it was my
-destiny to sit by the camp-fire, whilst our evening meal of maize and
-manioc was cooking, and hear them discuss among themselves how I should
-be done to death.
-
-Trust was all for rough-and-ready methods, in keeping with the blunt
-character of the man; Amos, for cold, deliberate torture; whereas
-Forsyth would bind me to a tree and leave me in the midst of that great
-wilderness to starve.
-
-It was Mr. Forsyth's vote that was carried; and now that I knew the
-manner of my death, I was filled with cold fear, though till then I had
-borne my ordeal with a fortitude that surprised even myself.
-
-And bound I was, then and there, to a stout palm-tree that stood by
-itself a little distance from the margin of the forest. For rope they
-used a kind of creeper that was common in the woods, and not only was
-this as strong as a ship's hawser, but so hard and tied so tightly that
-it cut into my legs and arms like bands of steel.
-
-.. _`"And bound I was, then and there, to a stout palm tree, a little distance from the margin of the forest"`:
-
-.. figure:: images/img-096.jpg
- :align: center
- :alt: "AND BOUND I WAS, THEN AND THERE, TO A STOUT PALM TREE, A LITTLE DISTANCE FROM THE MARGIN OF THE FOREST."
-
- "AND BOUND I WAS, THEN AND THERE, TO A STOUT PALM TREE, A LITTLE DISTANCE FROM THE MARGIN OF THE FOREST."
-
-In such a manner was I doomed. For an hour or so I watched those three
-dread men, all so different, alike in nothing but their devilry,
-sitting together around the fire, talking in low voices, even
-pleasantly, as if to do murder were an every-day affair.
-
-Then they lay down to sleep, and both Trust and Amos were soon snoring;
-whereas I was left, already athirst and hungry, to await the approach
-of a terrible and lingering death.
-
-That night and those which followed will live always in my memory. I
-watched the moon rise, wondrous round and white and large, behind the
-rounded hill upon which stood Cahazaxa's Temple. The stars, which had
-been shining in their millions, faded in the moonshine, all save one
-bright planet in the sky above me. And there arose a mist, in which I
-thought there was something ghostly, upon the plain where the long
-grass stood like corn ready for the cutting. And behind me, as if
-striving to enfold me in an overpowering, stifling embrace, was the
-dark, deadly forest that cut me off from all and everything I loved.
-
-Long before dawn, Amos Baverstock was stirring. I watched him kindle
-the embers of the camp-fire into a blaze, and, sitting with his crooked
-back, he looked just like a monkey. I noticed that even at that hour
-he was chewing one of his foul, black cigars, his stock of which was
-running low. Presently, he awakened Trust and Forsyth. They ate their
-breakfast in silence; never a word was said. And then they packed
-their knapsacks and set forward upon the march, in the gloaming, with
-never a word or a glance at me.
-
-They marched in a bee-line upon the ruins of the ancient temple, and
-were soon lost both to sound and sight, for the plain lay even yet in
-the shadow of the night.
-
-The dawn--the great heat at midday--the majesty and grandeur of the
-wilderness in the heart of which I was doomed and lost for ever--and,
-above all else, the grave-like silence of that place--it were better I
-made no attempt to describe these things than fail in the endeavour. I
-know no more than that my loneliness was overpowering. It was as if I
-was the only living atom, save the insects and the butterflies that
-fluttered round about me, in all that world of gorgeous vegetation.
-
-I could not move a fraction of an inch. I would gaze by the hour at
-the great stones of the ruins before me, small in the distance and yet
-plain to see in that clear atmosphere, and wonder what manner of men
-had lived there in bygone days--what had been their hopes, their
-interests, their mode of life. And then my thirst would consume me; my
-tongue would cleave to the roof of my mouth, and I would suck my lips
-to find them dry as bones.
-
-One day of it had been more than I could bear; and that second night, I
-prayed that death might come speedily, for I saw that in death only
-would I find release from all my sufferings. But I lived on, like the
-Ancient Mariner himself; and on the third day, as on that tragic ship,
-there came a rain--a blessed rain from Heaven itself for me. Clouds
-appeared as if by magic, a dark canopy cast across the forest like a
-curtain; and the skies on a sudden opened and the rain came down in
-torrents.
-
-I was wetted in an instant to the skin, but I cared nothing for that.
-I threw back my head with opened mouth, and the water streaming down my
-face was life and strength and hope to me.
-
-And that night I no longer prayed for death; I prayed to the great God
-of Right and Justice for deliverance. And yet, how weak is human
-nature, how little is our faith! For before morning I was struggling
-like a madman to free myself from my bonds.
-
-The more violently I fought for liberty, the greater pain I suffered;
-for the hard fibre cut into my flesh until I gave it up, and, overcome
-by sheer exhaustion, I fell asleep, held upright by my bonds.
-
-I awoke to behold the half-light of approaching day. The plain of
-grass before me was lost in the mist which, in that weird place, came
-always at sunset and at dawn.
-
-I looked about me as if I yet were dreaming. The giant forest trees
-had taken upon themselves the shape of ugly spectres. The tall grass
-swayed in the wind of the dawn with a soft, rustling sound that
-reminded me of my mother's silken dresses. I watched a lizard, the
-length of a foot-rule, run swiftly down the trunk of a tree and make
-off into the grass.
-
-I endeavoured in vain to trace its passage, wondering whither the
-little creature was going so swiftly; and when I looked up I beheld to
-my astonishment--a man!
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X--HOW THE WILD MEN CAME AND LOOKED AT ME
-=================================================
-
-I have called him a man, and so he was, though, in very truth, at that
-time I had never seen his like. He was small in stature, little taller
-than myself; and there was something about him that was more animal
-than human. I cannot account for this, unless the explanation be found
-in the scared look upon his face, especially in the eyes--the eyes of a
-hunted beast.
-
-He was not black, but light brown of skin, though there was so much
-dirt about him that I was not even sure of that. His hair was lank and
-long. All matted with mud, it fell about his ears. He wore no
-clothing, save the skin of some small, wild animal hung loosely round
-his waist; and he held in one hand a long bamboo rod, which I took to
-be a blow-pipe.
-
-Now, I believed that this savage would kill me out of hand, defenceless
-as I was. But he stood staring at me for a long time, with his wild
-eyes and his mouth widely opened.
-
-So, by degrees, my courage returned to me, and with it something of
-hope. I tried to think--and it is no simple matter to be reasonable
-when one is exhausted by starvation and tortured both in body and in
-mind.
-
-It was manifest, in the first place, that I had no means of
-communicating with this man. I could neither speak to him nor sign,
-since I knew no word of any barbarous language, and my hands were bound
-fast to my sides. But I did the only thing I could do--I moved my
-mouth as if I were eating, hoping against hope that he would take my
-meaning: that I was starving and begged for food.
-
-And the more I mouthed at him and made grimaces, the more he stared at
-me, and the more frightened did he seem. For the better part of five
-minutes I swear he never moved an inch, and then, quite suddenly, he
-took to his heels and dived into the woods.
-
-For a little time I could scarce credit it that he had left me to my
-fate. But when a full hour had passed, and I realised that it was
-possible that the wild man might not return, my sense of loneliness
-became even more oppressive than before, and to tell the truth I cried.
-
-I am, in the evening of a long, adventurous life, at times of a
-reflective disposition, and I have considered often the strange
-complexities of human nature, for I have seen many men and places in my
-time. When I first beheld the savage, I was alarmed beyond measure
-that he would put the life out of me by means of his murderous-looking
-blow-pipe. I would, at that moment, gladly have had him on the other
-side of the world. And when he left me so suddenly, without sign or
-signal of either hostility or friendship, I felt no less dismayed.
-
-I was so utterly alone in that great silence, in the shadow of those
-mute, majestic trees. Not even the wild inhabitants of that
-inhospitable region would come and have done with it and kill me.
-
-And thus, indeed, I burst into tears, and cried as children cry. I
-think sheer weakness and the pain that I had suffered had much to do
-with it; and in any case it all seemed to me so pitiful and hopeless,
-for I was over-young to undergo such cruel privations.
-
-I slept again until the evening, when I was awakened of a sudden by a
-strange noise like the chuckling of a hen.
-
-I opened my eyes and looked upon the same wild man who had regarded me
-before. But this time he had brought three others with him--all four
-as like to one another as so many beans. And there they stood, in a
-row, immediately before me, one of them--as I have just expressed
-it--chuckling like a hen.
-
-I could not for the life of me make out whether or not he was laughing.
-He might have been amused, amazed, or angered. There was no expression
-upon his face. The noise seemed to come from somewhere out of his
-throat. When I opened my eyes and looked at him, he ceased at once; so
-I am inclined to think he had behaved thus in order to awaken me.
-
-I judged that the man I had seen earlier in the day had stood at a
-distance of about twenty paces from me; but now, made bolder by
-companionship, he had approached to within about twelve yards from the
-palm-tree to which I was bound. They were all armed with blowpipes,
-but they made no hostile movement; they just stood staring at me with
-their mad eyes, speechless and looking more afraid than I was.
-
-All on a sudden, I was impelled to cry out. I shouted as a dog yelps
-when trodden on, asleep upon a mat.
-
-"Give me food!" I cried. "Have pity on me! I am starving!"
-
-And at that they vanished, all the four of them. They scattered like
-birds, swiftly and in silence. At one moment, I beheld them; at the
-next, they were nowhere: they might have been spirited away.
-
-They did not return that night, which was the most miserable of all.
-Hunger was now gnawing at my vitals. There was a foul taste in my
-mouth, and I felt so weak and lifeless that it was as if the slow
-beating of my heart shook my whole frame, making it hard for me to
-breathe. Also, I was again consumed by a raging thirst; but the worst
-of the whole matter was the seeming hopelessness of my situation; for
-now I verity believed that my end was drawing near.
-
-Though often our endurance is strained to the utmost, and there are
-times when we are weighed down by grief and trouble, I know that the
-good God is merciful, that it is well to bear the ills we have so
-bravely as we may, in the firm conviction that faith and a stout heart
-to hope will conquer in the end.
-
-The sun rose in that lone place upon my misery; and a little after,
-came the wild men again; and this time they were nine in number, for I
-counted them as they stepped in single file forth from the darkness of
-the woods.
-
-They stood gazing at me as before; and now I was wise enough to hold my
-peace, though by then--if the truth be told--there was little strength
-within me; for, even as I looked at them, my eyelids dropped and my
-head nodded on my shoulders like that of a drunken man.
-
-They came closer than ever, to within an arm's length of me, and one
-timidly extended an arm and touched me, and then drew back quickly as
-if he had burned his fingers.
-
-.. _`"They came closer than ever, to within an arm's length of me"`:
-
-.. figure:: images/img-128.jpg
- :align: center
- :alt: "THEY CAME CLOSER THAN EVER, TO WITHIN AN ARM'S LENGTH OF ME."
-
- "THEY CAME CLOSER THAN EVER, TO WITHIN AN ARM'S LENGTH OF ME."
-
-I saw now that I had nothing to fear from them, that it was a keen
-struggle in their untutored minds as to whether fear or curiosity
-should win. I did my best to smile.
-
-It was a senseless, mirthless smile, forced upon lips that were dry and
-burning and eyes grown dim throughout long hours of watching and
-despair; and yet--by the grace of Providence--it achieved its simple
-purpose.
-
-For, forthwith, like a tribe of monkeys, they set to talking among
-themselves; and never had I heard such gibberish. They waved their
-hands, and made mouths and faces at one another that were astonishing
-to behold. They touched me repeatedly, fingering my tattered clothes;
-and one tugged so violently at the sleeve of my shirt, which had been
-torn to ribbons upon the thorn trees in the forest, that he pulled it
-off almost from the shoulder--and then began the monkey-house again.
-
-The very sight of my white skin, where it had not been tanned by the
-sun, set them jabbering for the space of half-an-hour; and all that
-time I kept my silence, fearing that, if I should speak, they would
-disperse like Sussex rooks at the sound of a farmer's gun.
-
-I had read and heard of fierce savage black men, cannibals and the
-like, who regarded as their natural foes all of alien race, whom they
-put horribly to death. But these wild people were shy as antelopes;
-and though they might have been dangerous if handled wrongly, there was
-nothing to fear from them in the case of one placed at so great a
-disadvantage as myself.
-
-I did nothing, then, but let them talk it out; and in the end, one of
-them took a bone knife with an edge like a saw, and cut through the
-fibre that bound me to the tree.
-
-The others stood a little apart with their long blow-pipes, ready to
-riddle me with darts that I learned afterwards were poisoned. But no
-sooner were my hands freed than I pointed a finger straight down my
-opened mouth--a gesture which no one could mistake.
-
-That set them talking once again; and when they were through with it,
-they took me with them back into the woods. In single file we wormed
-our way through the thick undergrowth of the forest, until at length we
-hit upon a footpath where they travelled fast and silently, these
-strange men of the woods. By then my strength was well-nigh exhausted.
-Both in mind and in body I was come to the end of my powers of
-endurance; and I could go no farther.
-
-And so, thereupon, they carried me, taking it in turns among themselves
-to bear my weight, for they were not strong men, but thin of limb and
-short in stature.
-
-We journeyed until nightfall, and then camped in the forest. They gave
-me food--roasted manioc and crushed bananas; and then I fell asleep.
-
-At daybreak--though in those dark places we saw little of the sun, and
-there was small difference betwixt night and morning--we were on the
-march again, and about midday struck the course of a considerable river
-which we followed up-stream for a distance of many miles. From this
-valley we turned into that of a tributary, and reached our destination
-in the evening.
-
-This was a small village of rude huts, inhabited--as I afterwards
-discovered--by the various members of a single family. I had walked
-many miles upon the second day, and found myself on arrival at the
-village as greatly fatigued as ever, suffering also from a stiffness in
-the joints, due to the cramped position I had been forced to assume
-when bound by the liana to the tree. So that after my simple meal that
-night, I again fell asleep, and slept, I verily believe, as I never did
-before or since. For not only was I spent and weary, but I had now the
-comfortable assurance that these wild people would do me no bodily
-harm. For the time being, at least, I was safe.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI--I BURN MY BOATS
-===========================
-
-You may scarce credit it when I say that I sojourned for many months
-with these savage, yet simple, people, and whilst with them received
-neither hurt nor insult, but passed my days in pleasant idleness in the
-heart of those awe-inspiring woods.
-
-I have since described their ways and mode of living to a famous
-ethnologist, one whose business it was to study the sundry races of
-mankind; and he believed that I fell into the hands of a tribe of
-Caishana aborigines, one of the most primitive races in the world.
-
-Of this, however, no one can be sure; for I learned little of their
-language, and of that remembered nothing. Besides, there are so many
-hordes of Indians and tribes in the valleys of the Upper Amazon, and of
-so few of these is anything definite known, even at the present day,
-that a question of such slight importance, for the time being, may
-remain unanswered.
-
-It makes, in any case, no difference to my story. I do but state mere
-facts, leaving footnotes, queries and the like to scientists and
-students. For five months--as I can guess--I lived with this woodland
-people; and it pleases me to remember that, in return for their
-hospitality and kindness, I was able to render them some service. I
-taught them novel methods of catching the fish that abounded in the
-rivers, creeks and pools; and I gave them gladly the few belongings
-that I had upon me, even a large jack-knife, which the chief of the
-village received with unfeigned delight--for they were so uncivilised
-as to be altogether unacquainted with the use of iron.
-
-On my side, I learned many things from them, becoming, for instance,
-skilled in the use of the blow-pipe--a very deadly weapon, since it
-made no more noise than a pop-gun, and the arrows were invariably
-dipped in the juice of a poisonous herb that grew plentifully in the
-forest.
-
-I was much interested in the manufacture of these instruments. Many
-were of bamboo, but those of the better quality of a hard wood, from
-which the inside had been patiently scraped by means of a bone knife,
-until the surface was smooth as glass. Needless to say, to accomplish
-this, the shaft had to be split into two pieces, which were afterwards
-joined together. It took a skilled worker weeks to make a blow-pipe.
-A good specimen was always coveted, and he who possessed one was
-regarded as a person of importance. I was instructed also in the craft
-of making the darts or arrows; and this was an accomplishment that,
-more than once in the course of the next few months, stood me in good
-stead.
-
-Of the people themselves, of their strange ways and customs, I might
-write a full chapter, were I so disposed. I have no reason to think
-that they varied greatly from the majority of the wilder tribes in the
-great forests of the Amazon. They were small in stature, short-lived,
-and very dirty. They went well-nigh naked, and many suffered from a
-particularly loathsome disease, the character of which I know not, save
-that it left their skin marked black in patches. I feared, at first,
-that this would prove contagious; but, either my nationality or else my
-cleanly habits--for I bathed daily in the river--preserved my health
-and personal appearance.
-
-In regard to my bathing, I can relate a strange thing. It being the
-rainy season, the river was alive with alligators. I was at first
-considerably frightened of these horrid reptiles; but I soon discovered
-that all that was necessary was to beat the surface of the water
-violently with a stick in order to scare them away. Of course, it was
-needful to exercise a certain amount of discretion, to keep one's eyes
-open whilst in the water; and I do not say that there was no danger
-present. But the fact remains that the South American cayman, one of
-the most formidable-looking brutes in all the world, is a cowardly
-beast and by no means greatly to be feared.
-
-If that be so, I have another story to tell concerning the snakes of
-that dark region; for these I never ceased to fear, and not without
-good cause. My boots had long since ceased to be of the least
-practical use, and I had presented them, not without ceremony, to the
-head man of the village where I stayed. I was obliged therefore to go
-bare of foot in the forest, like the natives themselves, and day and
-night I walked in constant peril of my life.
-
-For the underwoods were populous with serpents of all kinds, many of
-which were venomous. They were usually to be found in the vicinity of
-water, and amongst them I cannot fail to mention the gigantic tree and
-water snakes, in whose deadly coils a full-grown man might well be
-crushed to death. More than once I set eyes upon these great, evil,
-stealthy monsters; and on each occasion my very blood ran cold. But I
-have yet to write of what I have called--for no better reason than that
-there is melodrama in the name--the Glade of Silent Death, where in
-part the tragedy of all my narrative attains some sort of a crisis--a
-crisis, at least, for one of whom I dare say more than I would of any
-other: that he well deserved his fate.
-
-Now, had I been content to eke out the remainder of my years with these
-untutored people, I should never have beheld the wonders of which I
-have to tell. I think I realised that if I continued to live as a
-savage, I must eventually myself become a savage, forgetting all I had
-ever learned of Christian civilisation. So I made up my mind to take
-my life into my hands, and set forth alone into the Wild.
-
-Beyond doubt, my ulterior motive was to regain the confines of the
-civilised world, to hear again the voices of men speaking my own
-language--even the lazy Sussex twang. But I was moved firstly not so
-much by a desire for liberty, as by the spirit of adventure. For I had
-caught something of the rover from John Bannister, as I sat listening
-to his stories to the soft accompaniment of the wash of the English
-sea; and I would find out all I could concerning the quest of Amos
-Baverstock and the secret of the Greater Treasure of the Incas, which
-the more civilised of the Indians called the "Big Fish."
-
-And so I asked the savages to guide me back to the place where they had
-found me, within sight of Cahazaxa's ruined temple. Though I never
-knew but a score of words of their language, I was now proficient in
-the art of conversing by signs and the drawing of pictures in the mud,
-as I was also something of a woodsman and--though but a few months
-older than when I had been kidnapped--no longer a boy, but the
-beginnings of a man, who was like to have a hard part to play. Life in
-the wilderness had made me self-reliant. To the wanderer in savage
-places peril comes naturally enough, and death itself is all in the
-work of the day.
-
-But it was one thing to ask, and another to receive. The chief man of
-the community--for it was hardly a village--was all against the
-project. In the first place, he and the rest of them had grown to be
-fond of me--I was regarded as both a curiosity and something of an
-acquisition. Secondly, I soon discovered that they stood in fear and
-trembling of the ruins, which they firmly believed to be haunted.
-
-Though they might have restrained me by force, we argued the matter
-out, and it came to a question of will-power--or obstinacy, if the word
-suit you better--and I had my way.
-
-Accordingly, one morning I set forth into the forest, accompanied by a
-guide. I was dressed in the remnants of my shirt, tied like a kilt
-about my waist, and carried a ten-foot blow-pipe and a score of darts;
-and beyond these I had neither arms nor clothing. I was just a white
-savage in a great dark wilderness, with my life in my own hands and all
-Nature at war against me. And I doubt if I can even say that I was
-white, for I was now tanned almost to the colour of the wild men
-amongst whom I had lived.
-
-In three days, by easy journeys, my companion and I came to the margin
-of the woods, to the great plain of waving grass, in the midst of which
-the Temple of Cahazaxa stood upon a hill-top.
-
-I begged of the man to come with me, to serve me as a servant, making
-vague promises of reward which I am sure he did not understand; and
-though, as I could see, the spirit was willing, the flesh was weak; for
-he fell down upon his knees before me, trembling in all his limbs,
-craving permission to return.
-
-I could not be heartless. From the tribe I had never received anything
-but kindness. But permission to be gone was not all the simple fellow
-wanted; for, when he saw that I was determined to go alone upon my way
-to the ruins on the hill-top, he again fell down upon his knees, and
-implored me to return with him.
-
-In so far as I could take his meaning, the old temple was infested by
-ghosts and evil spirits. Singular things for centuries had been known
-to happen among those grey, worn stones: weird singing had been heard
-and strange coloured lights had been seen of nights, and no man of the
-forest who had ever ventured to the hillock had as yet returned alive.
-
-To speak true, these fables--though I believed no word of them--did but
-whet my appetite for action. I had a taste for danger. For the first
-time in my life, I was conscious of my own individuality. Man or boy,
-I was free. I had a part to play upon the stage of life, and the wide
-world was my scene. I, too, was upon the same quest as Amos: the hunt
-for the Greater Treasure. It was as if something within me urged me to
-go forward, like a knight-errant of old, placing my firm trust in
-Providence; and I now have little doubt that it was the voice of
-Destiny that spoke within me.
-
-And so I bade farewell to the forest tribesman, whom I left upon the
-verge of tears, believing in his heart of hearts that I was as good as
-doomed; and with a light heart and my blow-pipe, I went my way across
-the plain, towards the hill upon which stood the ancient Temple of
-Cahazaxa, whilst the sun was sinking in the sky.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII--THE PATH OF THE TIGER
-==================================
-
-It was near upon the time of sunset when I slowly climbed the hill. I
-could not take my eyes from the great stones before me, many of which
-must have been at least ten square yards in surface area, and cut so
-straight and square that, without cement or mortar, they fitted one
-against the other as nicely as a child's wooden bricks. I wondered how
-they had come there, by what means they had been transported and lifted
-into position; and I marvelled that an ancient people should have been
-masters of such science.
-
-But it was not this alone that caused my footsteps to become slower and
-slower as I approached the ruin. Despite myself, I could not help
-remembering much that the wild man had said to me of ghosts and evil
-spirits.
-
-In the dim evening light, wreathed in the mist that rose from the
-surrounding plain, those great pillars of cold, silent stone looked not
-to belong to this world of common things. Towering, as they did, above
-the tree-tops of the forest, they made me think of the enchanted
-palaces of which in childhood my mother had read to me from fairy
-tales. If there were ghosts anywhere in all the world, they were
-here--and I was sure of that.
-
-This notion got the strongest hold of me; and presently, a cold sweat
-broke out upon my forehead, and I wished that I were back with the wild
-men in their woodland village. However, I had more pride than to
-retreat, and that at the eleventh hour; and I continued to go forward,
-though something after the manner of a condemned man towards the
-gallows.
-
-As it grew darker I became more afraid. Night in those tropic
-latitudes comes suddenly; darkness falls like a curtain upon a stage;
-and when I had gained the outer pillars, which formed together an
-encircling colonnade, there was scarce light enough for me to see a
-distance of thirty yards.
-
-Within the circumference of these outer pillars--which attained upon an
-average a height of about fifty feet--was a great roofless building
-with a floor of flagstones, where the silence quite unnerved me. It
-was more oppressive than the silence of the forest, where I had always
-been conscious that one was surrounded by Life in a million forms:
-plants, insects, and animals--all at war that they might live.
-
-But this place seemed dead, save for vast colonies of small red ants
-whose bite was poisonous; for I had not been there a full minute before
-I was bitten from head to foot, and there were painful weals all over
-me.
-
-It was plain I could not sleep amid the ruins as I had intended. Not
-only would the ants torture me almost to distraction, but the place was
-uncanny, and I could now well understand how those ignorant woodlanders
-believed it to be haunted.
-
-I was about to go, and had actually turned towards the main entrance,
-which I could see quite clearly in the light of the newly-risen stars,
-when a sound came to my ears that was so like a groan that I felt my
-blood run cold.
-
-I stood transfixed, more frightened than bewildered. Looking about me
-on every side, straining my eyes in the semi-darkness, I could see
-nothing. I was convinced that there was no one in that vast chamber
-save myself and the red ants. And yet the groan came again, louder
-than before.
-
-I tip-toed across the room, my heart throbbing like an engine. And
-like a frightened child, I hid myself in a corner; for I had no
-convictions any longer, and I wished only to be somewhere where I could
-not be seen.
-
-Then a spider descended upon me from somewhere high up the wall. And
-you may laugh at me when I say that I sprang to my feet and dropped my
-blow-pipe and let out a cry that was very near a shriek. But you would
-never have laughed had you been placed as I was, seen that spider, and
-felt upon your shoulders his restless, furry legs. For this was no
-common spider that eats flies and gnats, but a bird-devouring brute,
-the size of a saucer; and this is no exaggeration when one takes into
-account the full extension of his legs.
-
-As I fled, I picked it from off me with my hand, and threw it away;
-whereupon I found that it had covered my fingers with a disgusting and
-sticky saliva. I am only thankful that it had no time to bite me, for
-I believe the bite of these terrible insects has been known to prove
-fatal. They build webs of such strength and solidity that birds as
-large as sparrows are caught in the toils and killed; and I have heard
-it said that these monsters also ascend trees, drive hens from their
-nests and then devour their eggs.
-
-However, this is no treatise upon Natural History. He who wishes to
-know more of this horrid creature may read of it in recognised works of
-science. For myself, to have felt once its quick, hairy legs upon my
-bare neck and shoulders is enough for many a day, and the thing may
-belong to any species and genus that it likes, so long as I never set
-eyes upon one again.
-
-For I was thoroughly scared; I had become as jumpy as a bean on a hot
-plate. I trust that I am not by nature a coward; but the atmosphere of
-that ghostly, misty place, the mysterious groans that I had heard,
-which had seemed to come from nowhere, and the long-legged, furry
-spider, had all so played upon my nerves that I knew neither what I was
-doing nor what would happen next.
-
-I had made, in any case, as much noise as a harlequinade. I had cried
-out at the top of my voice and had sent my wooden blow-pipe rattling to
-the ground. And then I stood motionless, breathless, waiting--as it
-seemed--for some new calamity.
-
-This time it was no groan I heard, but a human voice calling, at first
-loudly, and then more softly, in a strange foreign tongue.
-
-I listened, and I dared not move. The silence that followed endured
-for minutes, during which the seconds were punctuated by the violent
-beating of my heart. And, presently, I began to think. As I mastered
-my fears, I became capable of reasoning.
-
-It was folly to consider ghosts. Such superstitions were well enough
-for untutored savages, wild men of the forests, but they would never do
-for Richard Treadgold, who had lived his years in Sussex--though, of a
-certainty, I had heard of more than one so-called haunted house between
-Beachy Head and Selsey Bill.
-
-I was convinced that I had heard a human voice. I had been able even
-to distinguish words, howbeit in a language that I did not comprehend.
-And if that were so, it must follow that I was not the only human soul
-within that gloomy ruin.
-
-I looked about me, and saw in the starlight my blow-pipe, lying on the
-floor. I picked it up, and placing a dart within the mouthpiece, began
-to explore the place, starting at the wide entrance and making a tour
-of the walls.
-
-It was not long before I came upon a square hole in the ground, edged
-with shallow coping stones to keep out the water when the place was
-flooded by the rains. It reminded me of a hatchway on board a ship.
-
-Below it was quite dark. I lay down upon the floor at full length with
-the idea of listening: for I was now sure that I was on the track of
-the secret of the place. But presently my eyes grew accustomed to the
-darkness, and I saw before me a flight of narrow steps, leading
-downward--as it seemed--into the very bowels of the earth.
-
-I had now mastered my fears. I was determined to be a fool no longer,
-but to conduct myself like the man I wished I were. I would have
-descended without a second's thought had it not been for two grave
-considerations: firstly, I had no means of striking a light; and
-secondly, the stairway was so narrow that I must leave behind my long
-Indian blow-pipe, the only means of self-defence I had.
-
-I have set down already much by no means favourable to myself; and
-therefore I have the less hesitation in recording an incident which
-goes far to prove that there were moments when I was a worthy pupil and
-admirer of John Bannister himself. For I went down that black and
-shallow staircase, half naked as I was and quite unarmed, not knowing
-what would befall me at the end of it.
-
-Half-way down, the staircase turned, when to my surprise I saw below me
-the dim reflection of a light. And presently I found myself in a long
-shallow chamber, where I stood bewildered.
-
-In the centre of the room was a rough stone altar upon which burned an
-oil lamp of a quaint design and wrought in bronze. Of other such
-lamps, similar in all respects, I counted five, lying upon the stone
-flooring, each surrounded by its own pool of oil.
-
-The whole place indeed was in great disorder. Curtains of finely woven
-hair had been wrenched from the walls and cast upon the ground.
-Benches and short-legged tables had been overturned, and in some cases
-broken. Here lay a sword, and there a spear, and here again a pistol,
-broken at the small of the butt. Nor was all this the worst of it, by
-any means; for immediately before me, lying in stiff, huddled
-attitudes--a pathetic and a tragic thing to see--were three stone-dead
-men, as sure as I first saw the light of day in Sussex.
-
-Dead they were, for they neither moved nor even breathed. And when I
-sighed aloud at the wonder of it all, a fourth man whom I had not
-noticed, lying upon the floor at the other end of the room, struggled
-upon an elbow and cried out to me, and afterwards pointed a finger down
-his throat.
-
-I was no such fool as to mistake his meaning. He wanted water to
-drink, and I looked about me to find it. At the foot of the altar was
-a pool of clear, crystal water, a spring that bubbled from out of the
-crust of the earth, the overflow being conducted to the far end of the
-chamber by means of a shallow, wooden trough. I found a drinking
-vessel which, to my amazement, was of gold; and this I filled in haste,
-and brought to the wounded man.
-
-For wounded he was, a leg being broken at the thighbone, so that he
-could not move an inch without suffering the greatest pain. It was
-this pain I daresay, as much as loss of blood, which had thrown him in
-a fever; for his skin was burning to the touch.
-
-Three times I filled the cup, and each time he emptied it; and as he
-drank, he thanked me with his eyes.
-
-Then he lay back and rested, whilst I gazed upon that shambles; for a
-shambles it was--blood was everywhere.
-
-I went to the dead men, to each in turn, to make sure that there was no
-spark of life in any. And this was the second time that I looked upon
-the cold face of death; for, sure enough, each one was dead. And they
-were shot; they had been killed by leaden bullets: one in the head,
-another in the heart, whereas the third, poor wretch! had died in
-agony, with a great wound in his stomach.
-
-But dead though they were, I could not regard them without noticing how
-different they were in features and in figure from the wild men of the
-woods.
-
-The savages with whom I had sojourned for so long, for whose simple
-kindness I shall be ever grateful, were of a Mongolian cast of
-countenance: they had high cheek-bones, lips thinner than a negro's,
-and yet thick and loose, and their eyes were almond-shaped, inclining
-downwards to the nose. Also, their greatly receding foreheads and
-chins suggested that they belonged to one of the lower and least
-intelligent species of mankind.
-
-But the three dead men, as well as he who was yet alive, had aquiline
-noses, thin lips, and rounded eyes. Also they were fully dressed in
-long tunics of some woven material, open at the throat, and girdled at
-the waist. They wore their hair long, but cut straight, level with the
-eyebrows; and above this fringe a broad metal band encircled the head
-above the ears.
-
-I looked from them to the altar, and saw thereon a graven disc from
-which rays extended to the extremities of the stone. Beyond doubt this
-was meant to be the sun; and of a sudden I remembered that the
-inhabitants of Old Peru had been wont to worship the sun.
-
-So these, perhaps, were those same Peruvian priests of whom Amos
-Baverstock had spoken, they who shared with John Bannister the secret
-of the Greater Treasure of the Incas.
-
-And then the truth burst upon me as in a flash--I had struck the
-pathway traversed by the tiger. The death and destruction by which I
-was surrounded was the work of Amos Baverstock himself.
-
-I picked up the broken pistol, looked at it in the lamplight, and knew
-straightway that I had guessed aright. For I recognised it at once.
-It had belonged to Joshua Trust. It was the same pistol I had seen
-often in his hands, the one with which he had fired at me upon the
-Littlehampton road. And if I had had any doubts upon the matter, they
-would have been dispelled at once; for there were the man's initials,
-"J.T.," carved with his sailor's jack-knife on the wood.
-
-I just let the broken pistol fall to the ground at my feet; and at the
-noise, the wounded man, to whom I had given water, struggled again upon
-an elbow, and spoke to me--*in English*.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII--THE STORY OF ATUPO
-================================
-
-"Friend?" said he; and though he pronounced the word in the strangest
-fashion, I at once took his meaning.
-
-I assured him of my good intentions, that I was no friend of those who
-had committed so dastardly an outrage. And at that, though in the
-greatest pain--as I could see--he smiled and thanked me.
-
-I will not repeat word for word the childish broken English that he
-talked. He knew nouns enough to express his meaning, but this was all
-of our language that he had, and for verbs he was obliged to fall back
-upon grimaces and gesticulations. These, however, were so forcible and
-graphic that I was never at a loss to understand him: and during the
-six weeks that this man and I lived together in the ruins, whilst his
-broken leg was mending, he came to speak quite fluently in my language,
-whereas--to my shame, be it confessed--I learned not a dozen words of
-his.
-
-I asked him how he had picked up his English; and since I had already
-guessed his answer, the familiar sound of that fond name was no less
-pleasant in my ears.
-
-"John Bannister," said he; and then asked me eagerly where Bannister
-now was.
-
-I shook my head, telling him as simply and as briefly as I could the
-whole of my adventures, from the time when I was kidnapped a few miles
-from my home beyond the seas to the day when I took my departure from
-the habitations of the wild men of the woods.
-
-His story I got from him by degrees, after I had tended to his wounds.
-I had no knowledge of surgery, but I knew that a broken leg must be
-made fast to a splint; and, borrowing a knife, I returned that very
-evening to the forest, and cut a straight branch from a tree, as well
-as a long coil of liana, which I wound about my shoulders like a
-garden-hose.
-
-I peeled the bark from two sides of the branch to make it as smooth as
-possible, and then bound it tightly to the poor man's leg by means of
-the liana. I bathed his wound daily with the clean water from the
-spring within the vault; and in a few days the blood ceased to flow and
-the wound--a rough, ugly rent from a leaden bullet--began to heal.
-
-There was a plentiful supply of food within the chamber--bananas, dried
-berries, and manioc; and together we lived, this man and I, in
-uneventful idleness, he flat upon his back on a bed of rushes, I
-attending to his daily wants.
-
-He claimed direct descent from the *incas* of Old Peru. He told me
-much that I already knew: that in the great land which had been
-discovered by Pizarro there had been two races, the common Peruvians
-and those of *inca* stock. The latter was the nobility of the land,
-being of royal blood; and it was they who had held the important
-offices of state and formed the priesthood.
-
-Centuries ago, upon the fall of Cuzco, Cahazaxa, one of the greatest
-nobles in the kingdom, escorted by an army of priests and soldiers,
-conveyed the Greater Treasure across the mountains, and hid it in the
-forest that extends across the whole valley of the Upper Amazon and its
-tributaries. The Spaniards got wind of this, and some years
-afterwards, in the year 1541, an expedition led by the redoubtable
-Orellano, a lieutenant of Gonzalo Pizarro, crossed the eastern chain of
-the Andes in search of El Dorado, or that country which was then but
-vaguely known as the Land of the Gilded King.
-
-This "Gilded King" was Cahazaxa himself, who, at the time of Orellano's
-famed expedition, had been for some months dead. But the little
-civilised colony that he had established in the wilderness survived,
-and continued to survive until the middle of the last century, when I
-myself beheld the last of it.
-
-Now, in the narration of historical and other facts, I have the
-greatest regard for a certain principle, established by the Greeks: the
-habit of reserving for its proper place each item of information,
-whether it be of primary or secondary importance. On that account, I
-ask you, therefore, for the space of a chapter or so, to bear in mind
-the famous name of Orellano and his search for the Land of the Gilded
-King--an affair to which I must soon refer again. I set down now only
-that which the *inca* himself told me, together with such historical
-facts as were known to me at the time.
-
-Cahazaxa was dead; and he was buried in a cavern, high amidst the
-cloud-wrapped mountains, where his soul might rest in peace the nearer
-to the God he worshipped--the life-giving and almighty Sun, who, as he
-held, in the very dawn of the ages had sent Manco Copac and Mama Oello
-Huaco to earth, to make the Incas of Peru glorious and great.
-
-Orellano, the Spaniard, failed to find the Treasure. Undergoing the
-most terrible privations, he and his gallant followers pierced the
-forest, and, making one of the most remarkable journeys in the whole
-history of exploration, descended into the main stream of the great
-River of Mystery--as I call the Amazon--and, finally, after eight
-months of hardship and of peril, came within sight of the Atlantic.
-
-The courage of these men is much to be commended. The modern explorer
-has at his service breech-loading magazine rifles, invaluable
-geographical and scientific knowledge, and an adequate supply of
-suitable food and drugs. But these bold Spaniards of the sixteenth
-century had nothing, save their own stout hearts and strong Toledo
-blades. Enough has been written concerning their greed, their bigotry
-and cruelty. The story might be told again and again of their
-indomitable bravery. Orellano knew not whither he was going. When he
-decided to shoot the rapids, taking his life in his hands, he might as
-well have thrown dice with Death. How can we do aught but honour the
-land that has produced such sons as Cortez and Pizarro, Orellano, Vasco
-Nunez, and Alonzo de Ojeda?
-
-But, for the present, we are more concerned with Cahazaxa, a hero no
-less than these doughty Spaniards. He and his followers hid themselves
-in the wilderness, and there both Orellano and Pizarro himself failed
-to find them; and in this there is little to wonder at, when we
-consider the immensity of the great Forest of the Amazon.
-
-They built for themselves a massive temple after the fashion of the
-sacred palaces of Quito and Cuzco, dedicated to the Sun; and in course
-of time they constructed roads and bridges across the rivers, founding
-for themselves a colony where the civilisation of the *incas* lived for
-a century or more after their own country across the mountains had
-fallen under the dominion of the hated Spaniard.
-
-This was the land of the Gilded King, the country of El Dorado. Word
-of its existence came to Quito, from the lips of savage aborigines
-prone naturally to exaggeration; but, though party after party of
-avaricious, bold adventurers crossed the mountains, the Peruvian
-settlement remained undisturbed. The secret of the "Big Fish" was
-never discovered either by the Spaniards or the Portuguese, who in the
-next century came up the great river from the east, traversing the
-country that is now called Brazil.
-
-I did not learn all this from the *inca* priest himself; but so much of
-it as he could not tell me I knew already from what I had read of those
-golden days when the New World was a land of Mystery and Romance, and
-men thought and talked of doubloons instead of dollars.
-
-It is true, I never beheld with my own eyes the actual civilisation of
-ancient Peru as it had existed in Cahazaxa's time, because, many years
-before, it had died a natural death. The Peruvians, born and bred upon
-the western sea-board or the great tablelands beyond the Andes, were
-not able to survive in the humid atmosphere of the tropic forest. In
-course of time, a colony of several thousands, whom Cahazaxa had led
-across the mountains, had dwindled to a community of a few families of
-the old *inca* stock, the majority of whom served as priests of the Sun
-in the great ruined temple, constructed by their forefathers, which
-they were not able to keep in repair.
-
-It was these men, descended in a direct line from the *incas* whom the
-Spanish conquerors had driven forth from Cuzco and Quito, who guarded
-the secret of the Greater Treasure. It was they who were treacherously
-attacked and foully done to death by Amos Baverstock. And I will now
-relate the full story of that brutal enterprise as I got it from the
-lips of the man whom I befriended.
-
-Baverstock, with his three companions, had come to the temple some
-weeks before, on the day they had tied me to the tree and left me to
-starve to death.
-
-The priests had been greatly alarmed at the sight of the intruder, whom
-they recognised at once. They remembered the time when Baverstock and
-Trust had attacked the temple, and they had been obliged to fight for
-their lives, and would then and there have been slaughtered, had it not
-been for John Bannister, who placed himself at their head and drove
-Amos forth.
-
-But Bannister was no longer with them to fortify them with his courage,
-to preside at their councils, and to deal death to their enemies with
-his swift, unerring aim. And they were terrified at the very sight of
-Amos, as I myself had been when I first set eyes on the man upon the
-Sussex shore.
-
-He demanded to know where the Greater Treasure was hidden. He reminded
-them that they had lied to him once, and held forth threats that made
-their blood run cold. If they lied to him again, he would return, and
-no man of them would live to fool Amos Baverstock a third time.
-
-Now, they dared not speak the truth, for they were sworn to secrecy
-before the Sun, which they believed to be the Creator of the Universe;
-and yet, they dared not lie, for they knew Amos would be as good, or as
-evil, as his word.
-
-So, swearing upon all things they looked upon as holy, they set Amos
-and his friends upon the right road to the "Big Fish." They told him
-to follow a certain track across the grassland, until he came to a
-range of down-like, grass-clad hills. Thence, to the west, lay a wood
-in mid-valley, and in a glade in this wood the Treasure was buried, the
-place being marked by a great red stone, standing forth in the form of
-a monster fish in the act of leaping from the water. Here, clearly,
-was the origin of the legend, current among the natives even to this
-day, of the Big and Little Fishes. And when I heard the story as it
-was told me by the *inca* priest, I confess I was conscious that my
-heart beat more rapidly and the warm blood of my youth was stirred
-within me.
-
-But Amos Baverstock cared nothing for legend. He lived only to lay
-hands upon a horde of untold gold; and that same day he left the Temple
-of Cahazaxa and set forth to the west upon his treasure hunt.
-
-And when he was gone, the priests held conference, demanding of Atupo
-why he had told their enemy so much of their cherished secret--for
-Atupo was the name of the surviving priest with whom I talked among the
-temple ruins. For he it was who devised the scheme whereby he hoped
-both to save the lives of his friends and to preserve the Greater
-Treasure; and now that all had failed so dreadfully, to the great pain
-he suffered from his wound was added anguish and remorse, inasmuch as
-the blame was his.
-
-He advised them to arm themselves, and took with him ten of the best
-archers of the little community, ordering them to steep the heads of
-their arrows in the juice of the venomous weed that grows in the
-forest--which is nothing more or less than strychnine, one of the most
-virulent of poisons.
-
-Atupo, with these ten men, who were all young and fleet of foot,
-traversed the grassland by a series of forced marches by night, so that
-they outdistanced Amos and reached first the Wood of the Red Fish--for
-so, with a little latitude, may be translated the old Peruvian name.
-And there they laid an ambush by a pathway along which Amos, and those
-with him, would be obliged to pass, and each archer was instructed to
-pick out his man. Four were detailed to shoot at Amos, three at Trust,
-and two each at Forsyth and the Spaniard, Vasco.
-
-Now, it seems not possible that a plan so well thought out could fail;
-and yet, it would seem also that here, at least, the devil helped his
-own.
-
-For Mr. Forsyth, and not Amos, came first to the ambuscade; and of the
-two arrows, one struck a silver tobacco tin that he chanced to be
-carrying that day in the pocket over his heart, and the other sheared
-off his right ear as cleanly as a tailor snips his cloth with a pair of
-scissors. And in the fraction of a second, Forsyth, all bleeding from
-the head, had his revolver from its holster, and had shot down two of
-the priests.
-
-Thus was the alarm given to Amos and those who followed him; and there
-was no question of a surprise. It came to a hand-to-hand affair, and
-then a running fight amid the woodland undergrowth, in which the bow
-and arrow had but a small chance against modern firearms. One by one,
-the priests were dropped in their tracks, and only Atupo himself
-escaped with life, though sorely wounded in the leg.
-
-He got clear of the wood, and lay hidden, day after day, in the long
-grass of the plain, journeying by night towards the forest,
-endeavouring to reach the ruined Temple of Cahazaxa. Though his leg
-was not then broken, he could do no more than crawl a few miles at a
-time, so that he was long weeks upon the road.
-
-And during all these days, Amos beat the wood from west to east, from
-south to north, and failing to find the "Red Fish," believed that he
-had again been sent upon a wild-goose chase; and the more firm was he
-in this conviction since there had been such treachery on the part of
-the *inca* priests.
-
-I heard afterwards that his wrath was like that of a madman; he stamped
-and raved, and swore that he would return to the temple and put every
-living soul to death. And yet, they could not move a yard upon their
-backward journey, until Forsyth's life was out of danger.
-
-Without doubt, Mr. Gilbert Forsyth would have died in torture, there
-amid the foothills of the distant Andes, had it not been for his own
-promptitude and courage. For no sooner did he feel the poison working
-inward from the wound where the arrow had cut off an ear, than he
-thrust the blade of a hunting-knife into a glowing charcoal camp-fire,
-and himself placed the red-hot steel upon the lacerated flesh.
-
-And though he fainted at the time, and fell afterwards into a raging
-fever, this action saved, perhaps, his life. In the wilderness,
-rough-and-ready methods are often unavoidable; only he who is bold and
-strong can survive, whilst the weakling falls by the way. That
-Forsyth, despite his affectations and his London ways, was a man of
-action who could face pain as well as danger, this deed of his was in
-itself enough to prove. With his own hand he burned the poison from
-his flesh.
-
-For all that, he lingered for many days betwixt life and death; and it
-was the delay caused thereby that gave Atupo time to regain the temple.
-
-He had intended to give warning to his brother priests, and for this
-purpose he arrived none too soon. Many were so alarmed at the news of
-the disaster that they departed instantly, seeking shelter in the
-forest and taking with them their wives and families. But three
-remained, to collect the sacred lamps and vessels that were within the
-Temple, meaning to set forth the following day. And these were caught
-at midnight by Amos, who turned assassin then and there; for it was he
-who killed them with his own hands, in the great vault beneath the
-ruins.
-
-Atupo, too, he shot, though the man lay wounded on the ground,
-exhausted after the effort of his long journey across the grassland,
-and left him there for dead, his already wounded leg fractured a few
-inches below the hip.
-
-All this I learned from the man himself, while I nursed him under the
-Temple--all save the story of the fortitude of Mr. Forsyth, of which I
-heard afterwards, as in due time I will tell.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV--THE GLADE OF SILENT DEATH
-======================================
-
-When I had heard the story of Atupo, it seemed to me that I knew all
-there was to know concerning the "Big Fish." And a feeling of
-restlessness at once possessed me; I desired to be up and doing, to
-venture myself across the grassland, to find the Wood of the Red Fish,
-for which the bold Spaniards of a bygone century had searched so often
-and in vain.
-
-But I stood in the debt of charity and honour, and in consequence I
-felt for all the world like a kennelled dog that tugs barking on his
-chain. For some weeks, at least, I must stay by the side of the
-wounded man, whom I could now call my friend. And if those days were
-something idle, we were by no means out of danger; for any day Amos
-Baverstock might return when, of a certainty, it would go ill with
-Atupo and myself.
-
-I found ample time throughout this period of my adventuring to explore
-the neighbourhood of the Temple, and many things I found of the
-greatest interest. About a mile distant from the ruins was the village
-where the Peruvians had lived, and here also was a great convent built
-of stone and thatched with straw, after the fashion of the palaces in
-ancient Quito. In this convent--so Atupo told me--had dwelt some score
-of nuns, vestal virgins, whose lives were dedicated to the Sun, just as
-there had been such maidens in the service of Jupiter and Mars in the
-great temples of Rome; for in many respects did the ancient Peruvians
-resemble the Romans: they were great builders of roads, bridges, and
-forts; every man must serve the state; and the Inca, on returning from
-his victories, would march in public triumph through the chief city of
-the land.
-
-I found both the village and the convent quite deserted; for--as I have
-said--on hearing of the approach of Amos and his friends, the Peruvians
-had fled into the forest, preferring to run the risk of death at the
-hands of the wild men with their poisoned arrows, or from starvation in
-the midst of that unending wilderness, to finding themselves once again
-face to face with that implacable and murderous villain who had sworn
-to put them all--woman, man, and child--relentlessly to death.
-
-I learned afterwards that few of these poor fugitives survived; for
-Amos burned their homes to the ground and left not one stone upon
-another; and this he did in wrath and malice, since it served him no
-better purpose than to waste his time, and that at a moment when his
-fate was jeopardised and he himself stood betwixt life and death.
-
-When I saw the convent and the village, the place was just as the
-inhabitants had left it; and in such haste had they departed that I
-even found cooking-pots containing stews, all cold and jellified,
-standing in the ashes of burnt-out fires. The only sign of life to be
-seen was a number of llamas, long-necked Peruvian sheep, grazing in the
-shadow of the convent walls.
-
-And now I am arrived at that part of my story when I came within an ace
-of losing life itself, and was only delivered at the eleventh hour by
-what was little short of the miraculous. For, in course of time, Atupo
-was healed of his wound, and well able, with the help of a staff, to
-hobble about the temple. It was then that I told him of my plans, of
-how I longed to journey to the Wood of the Red Fish, if for nothing
-else than to gaze upon the treasure of the Incas.
-
-He listened patiently to all I had to say, and then sighed deeply.
-
-"As you will," said he. "Of what use now is all this gold? My brother
-priests are slain, my people are scattered broadcast; the children of
-Cahazaxa are no more. Find your way, if you will, to the 'Big Fish.'
-I have told you where it lies. Feast your eyes upon the wealth that
-was once the glory of Peru. The race of the Incas is ended; the blood
-of kings is cold; even our gods are dead."
-
-I knew that he referred to certain images in the Temple which Amos had
-wantonly destroyed; and I was sorry for the man.
-
-"You will come with me?" I asked.
-
-But he shook his head.
-
-"That is not possible," he answered. "And even were it so, there would
-be naught to gain. I am already too greatly in your debt, and were I
-to accompany you, I should be a hindrance and a danger."
-
-I could not deny the truth of this, though I was loth to leave him,
-weak and crippled as he was. And yet, it was manifest that we could
-not remain for an indefinite time within the Temple: sooner or later,
-our provisions would run out, and, any day, Amos might return.
-
-"Where will you go?" I asked.
-
-He pointed towards the forest.
-
-"Thither," said he; and there was a certain nobility in his manner when
-he added, "to find my own people; for find them I will, in this world
-or beyond the grave. Death holds no fears for the sons of Cahazaxa."
-
-And so, some days afterwards, we parted: he, to the east, to the dark,
-spreading forest; I, to the west, across the grassland, upon my
-treasure quest, to search for the Wood of the Ked Fish and the lost
-Treasure of Kings.
-
-I set forth upon my great adventure all naked like a savage, save for a
-loin-cloth of woven hair that Atupo, the priest, had given me. I was
-armed with my long Indian blow-pipe and a quiverful of darts. And I
-went into that strange, romantic land alone, without guide, compass or
-companion, never knowing at night-time, when I lay down to sleep, what
-calamity or fortune the morrow held in store for me. And this, I stand
-convinced even to this day, when my hairs are white and shoulders
-bowed, is the only way to live and to die.
-
-For three days I traversed a great plain of rolling, down-like country,
-that reminded me somewhat of my own dear Sussex, save that the grass
-was coarse and longer. Some miles before me was a high ridge that
-stood forth at sunset like a battlement across the sky; and I knew that
-I must gain the crest of this before I could find the Wood of the Red
-Fish.
-
-Presently, however, I found my progress impeded by a river that had
-worked its way throughout the centuries deep into the rock, so that it
-flowed between almost perpendicular cliffs.
-
-I could neither see nor devise any manner of crossing. I sat down upon
-the edge of the cañon and ate some of the manioc I had brought with me
-from the temple. I remembered that both Amos and Atupo had somehow
-crossed the river; and this thought was not a little encouraging.
-Across the grassland I had followed no track or pathway, so that when I
-had found a means of crossing the cañon, I must know that I was once
-again upon the right road to the wood that I was seeking.
-
-That night, in full moonshine, I worked up-stream for many miles upon
-the left bank of the ravine. I slept for a few hours, and at daybreak
-continued my journey, and a little after, came quite suddenly upon one
-of the most wondrous things that I have ever seen.
-
-For there before me was a great and magnificent suspension bridge,
-spanning the width of the ravine--a distance, I should say, of thirty
-or forty yards. The cables of this bridge were made of the twisted
-fibre of maguey, a kind of osier, and were at least three feet in
-diameter. It was hard to realise that the whole structure stood there
-more or less as it had been erected, centuries before; but it seemed to
-me an even more wonderful thing that, in the midst of such a desolate
-and barren region, I should so suddenly have come across evidence of
-the greatest skill in engineering. I could scarce believe that I had
-passed through an almost impenetrable tropical forest to traverse a
-ravine as easily as I might have walked along the familiar dyke from
-Sidlesham to Pagham.
-
-The bridge itself was no more than a footbridge, but it served its
-purpose well enough; and, crossing over, I hit almost at once upon a
-pathway through the grass. This I lost at nightfall, but I continued
-on my way in the moonlight, working upward upon a slope that rapidly
-became steeper.
-
-In the small hours of the morning, sheer fatigue brought me to a halt
-by the side of a spring of clear water, bubbling forth from the earth.
-And here I drank and ate, breathing deeply of the cool fresh air of the
-uplands, which was like strong wine to me after the humid atmosphere of
-the forest; so that I slumbered as I had not slept for months, since I
-had left my home in Sussex, nor did I awaken until the morning sun was
-high.
-
-I saw that I had but a little way to go to reach the crestline of the
-hills--an hour's climb would do it; and I set forward gleefully, in
-high anticipation, wondering what lay beyond the watershed, and whether
-I would sight the Wood of the Red Fish, but little dreaming what would
-there befall me.
-
-I reached the summit hot and out of breath; and then I stood stock
-still, breathless in wonderment and all amazed.
-
-I cast not one glance towards the wide valley at my feet. I stood
-staring before me, like one dumbfounded, at the gorgeous panorama I
-beheld. For yonder, more than a hundred miles away, but clear in the
-morning sun at the back of me, stood the mighty and majestic Andes.
-Snow-crowned they were, rugged as a wild sea, and yet bold and still
-and massive as the thrones of gods. And I, who had never seen such
-mountains in my life, was awed and wonder-struck; and I realised, I am
-sure, the glory of the works of God.
-
-I gazed--it may have been, for an hour, sitting cross-legged, naked as
-the wild men of the woods, with my blow-pipe on my knees--at that great
-range of mountains that spans near half the world, extending almost
-from pole to pole. And then I looked down into the valley, and the
-thought that I was now within a day's march of my goal banished from my
-mind all loftier thoughts, and I found myself wondering whether it was
-I who was to find, at last, the lost land of El Dorado.
-
-For the valley was cut up into marshland, plains and hillocks, in and
-out of which a river wandered, now and again to open out into a lake or
-swamp, in which there were little tree-clad islands. But to the north
-was a wood, diamond-shaped, flanked to the east by a spur of the hills,
-and to the west by a morass where I could see the water glittering in
-the sunlight.
-
-On the foothills across the valley was a considerable forest, extending
-as far as the eye could reach; but I could not doubt that the wood in
-mid-valley, to the right of me, being so like the description which
-Atupo, the priest, had given me, was the Wood of the Red Fish.
-
-And then and there I set forward running, for I was young and
-hot-headed, and had not yet learned that time is but the slave of man,
-and that patience and caution are of more worth than eager haste.
-
-So I came, that evening, hot and thirsty to the wood, and then, in the
-darkness of the trees, whilst the sun was setting, I stood like a fool,
-irresolute and wearied, not knowing what next that I should do.
-
-I was hungry as well, for I had eaten all the food I had carried with
-me from the temple, and saw now that I must trust to my blow-pipe for
-sustenance, and kill what came my way that might be fit to eat.
-Fortunately, during my sojourn with the wild men, I had learned
-something of Indian woodcraft; and setting about my business without
-further loss of time, I searched at random in the wood until I found a
-glade where there was a pool of water, and here I crouched under cover,
-lying motionless, with my blow-pipe ready for whatsoever animal might
-come down to the pool to drink whilst the evening light still lasted.
-
-This place--though I then knew it not--was the Glade of Silent Death;
-and I have given it that name for a certain reason, which was in very
-truth a tragedy.
-
-There came, as I waited, to the woodland pool a small kind of deer; and
-he waded knee-deep into the water that he might drink. As he did so, I
-thought that I perceived some movement on the surface, as it might have
-been a rat swimming swiftly a distance of a few yards. I took no heed
-of it at the time, my attention being taken up with my blow-pipe, that
-I might strike the deer stone-dead, beneath the point of the left
-shoulder, placing my arrow deep in the poor beast's heart.
-
-I was about to shoot, when suddenly he kicked, and then endeavoured
-with a jerk to throw himself backward on his haunches. To my
-astonishment I observed that he was held fast by the nose, which might
-have been gripped in a vice, and that in spite of all his efforts he
-was being dragged steadily and slowly deeper into the pool.
-
-It was as if I were smitten by a cold rush of ice, when the truth was
-made quite plain to me. It was that half-light of evening, which is
-neither day nor night, when the early moon vies with the dying
-sunlight. And I saw the monster writhing coils of a great serpent rise
-dripping from the water and enfold the broken stump of a tree.
-
-I knew now that the deer was doomed; and so illogical is human nature
-that I experienced two emotions: terror of the reptile and pity for the
-beast that but a moment since I myself would have gladly slain for food.
-
-No doubt the anaconda stood in need of nourishment as much as I, and
-wanted more of it, to boot. But snakes were accursed things since
-Eden, and this vile, stealthy giant more so than most, because of his
-great bulk and strength. I know now that he was nearer thirty than
-twenty feet in length, and that his girth about the middle was greater
-than that of my own chest, though I was a strong lad for my years.
-
-And now that he had lashed himself to the tree-stump, the deer was
-lost. Its head was already under water, so that in a few moments the
-animal must be drowned. It would then be crushed to a pulp in the
-powerful, band-like coils of the constrictor, covered all over with a
-loathsome saliva, to be swallowed slowly and gradually, and yet in bulk.
-
-I could see the head of the snake, for the light was fading and the
-deer in its death struggle lashed the water into foam. But I could see
-the great glistening body of the reptile but a few yards away from me,
-and into the thickest part of this I drove one of the darts from my
-Indian blow-pipe, and as I did so, shuddered, more revolted than afraid.
-
-The effect was instantaneous and surprising. My dart must have struck
-the snake in the region of the spinal cord, for the great length of the
-brute curled backward like the lash of a whip; and the deer, released
-from those murderous coils, scrambled from the water, panting and
-exhausted, with its red tongue hanging from its mouth.
-
-And then the animal fell dead upon the ground, but a few feet from
-where I lay. I could feel my own heart beating within me like a
-sledge-hammer. For some minutes I gazed at the pool that rocked and
-swelled like a sea in miniature. There came ripples, one after the
-other, to the water's edge, where they lipped and splashed like little
-waves. And then, at last, all was still--still as glass in the
-moonlight. But I knew that the great snake was somewhere near me, and
-my sole desire was to escape from that dread, silent place, and that as
-quickly as I might. And yet, the primal instinct of mankind was strong
-within me, the love of life that is sustained by food; and as I drew
-back into the thickets of the underwoods, I dragged with me by the
-horns the lifeless body of the deer.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV--HOW I BEHELD A MIRACLE
-==================================
-
-I found a place where I could rest and eat; and there I cut steaks from
-the deer with a quaint knife which had been given me by Atupo--for I
-now prided myself on being a hunter of experience--and made a fire of
-dried sticks and leaves.
-
-The heat of the night was excessive, and I had little need of the
-warmth; but I was glad of the light of the flames, for I was still much
-shaken by my adventure with the great constrictor, and had imagined
-vague, savage enemies amid the dark thickets that hedged me in.
-
-It will be noted that I have referred to the snake as a "constrictor";
-but, from this, it must not be thought that the monster was a boa. The
-family of the boas, known scientifically as the *boidae*, contains many
-species which are to be found in all parts of the world: the diamond
-snake of Australia, the rock python of Natal, the Indian python, and
-the great South American genera--the anaconda and the true
-boa-constrictor.
-
-All these reptiles are remarkable for the partial development of hinder
-limbs, proving conclusively that the snakes and lizards are nearly
-related to one another. These rudimentary limbs, however, are not
-visible in the living animals, being covered by the skin, but are quite
-evident in their skeletons. It is also of interest to remember that
-birds have evolved from reptiles, the forelegs having been converted
-into wings.
-
-All the constrictors kill their prey by crushing, and none have
-poison-fangs; and though these species are, with one or two exceptions,
-the largest snakes in the world, they move, whether in the water or
-among the tree-tops, in absolute silence. That which I myself attacked
-was undoubtedly an anaconda; and I know this for sure, because, though
-the light was bad, I distinctly saw two rows of great, dark spots upon
-his back, and not a black chain, which is the distinguishing mark of
-the boa-constrictor. Besides, the anaconda is essentially a
-water-snake, whereas the boa, though he will take readily to water,
-lives as a rule among the trees.
-
-Well, though I shudder when I think of the brute, I had no real cause
-at the time to abuse him, for I might not have slain the deer with my
-blow-pipe, and I was now supplied with food so long as the meat would
-keep in that steaming hothouse of a jungle.
-
-I did not sleep so well that night, weary though I was. I think I was
-not so much afraid as oppressed by an almost overwhelming sense of
-loneliness.
-
-Quite suddenly I realised, as I sat by my camp-fire, chewing the
-venison steaks--which were inordinately tough--that I was utterly
-alone. For weeks I had enjoyed the company of Atupo, and before that
-of the wild men; and even Amos and his companions, my sworn enemies,
-had human voices to which I had been wont to listen of an evening by
-the fire when the day's march was ended. But here was I indeed, alone
-in the dark wilderness, and I could not but recognise that the woods
-around me were alive, that life in a thousand shapes and forms was all
-about me, unseen, but not unheard.
-
-For I listened to strange and little noises everywhere--upon the
-ground, in the thick undergrowth, among the great trees that towered
-above me. My strained ears heard, perhaps, sounds that never were; but
-I know that great moths came fluttering to my fire, and leaves moved
-where insects crept and crawled, and now and again some kind of cricket
-would begin to sing, only to cease quite suddenly, I should think, on
-the approach of danger.
-
-They all lived, thought I, on sufferance, by the grace of the great God
-who made them all, and me as well. For I was one with them, even these
-little living things of the endless wilderness, encompassed by so many
-dangers, at the mercy of the great forces of Nature that might at any
-moment rise against us and stamp out our little lives.
-
-And I thought, too, of Amos. In the silence and the darkness, my old
-dread of the man returned; and I asked myself where was he all these
-months, and what were he and his companions doing?
-
-I knew that, like myself, he had been searching for the Treasure in
-this same Wood of the Red Fish; but I could not think that he was still
-in the neighbourhood. At the time, of course, I knew nothing of
-Forsyth's wound, which had delayed Baverstock so long; and when I
-afterwards came to work the matter out, I arrived at the conclusion
-that Amos must have left the wood on the very night when I encountered
-the anaconda. He then returned to the temple, and, finding both the
-ruins and the village quite deserted, gave unholy vent to his wrath by
-burning everything that fire could touch. He then came back upon his
-own tracks, by way of the suspension bridge, drawn to the Red Fish like
-steel to a magnet, for the man's soul itself was magnetised by gold.
-
-And all this time was I searching in the wood. For ten days I roamed
-here and there, living upon wild fruits and berries, and the birds I
-slew with my blow-pipe. Atupo had given me certain vague directions,
-which had seemed clear enough to me at the time. However, the man's
-knowledge of our language was but imperfect, and the wood itself a
-veritable maze, a labyrinth of shallow, twisting tunnels, from which
-the sunlight was eternally shut out.
-
-I wandered daily, lost in very truth, and came often to the Glade of
-Silent Death, near which place I would never venture to sleep for fear
-of the great serpent that I knew lay somewhere in the pool.
-
-On the tenth night of my wanderings, I received something in the nature
-of a shock. I had made my camp-fire somewhat earlier than was my wont,
-and a small, gay-feathered bird that I had shot and plucked was
-roasting over the red-hot charcoal, when, of a sudden, a shot from a
-rifle rang out in the woods not far from where I was.
-
-I sprang to my feet, in a high state of alarm, and kicked the fire
-broadcast, for I had gone barefooted for so long that the soles of my
-feet were like leather. And even as I did so, several other shots were
-fired in quick succession.
-
-I ate my bird half cooked--for I was hungry--and sat in the darkness
-for hour upon hour, certain that Amos himself was near at hand, and
-filled with apprehension.
-
-I had a good mind that night to give up my quest, to return to the
-grassland, where I could breathe the open air and feel the warmth of
-Heaven's sun upon me, hoping that thence I might somehow find my way
-back to the abodes of civilised men. I was sick at heart for want of
-the sound of a human voice and the sight of those I loved.
-
-What would be my fate in that dark wilderness, armed only with my
-blow-pipe, if I should fall into the hands of men like Amos Baverstock
-and Trust? In my thinking, the shots that I had heard could have been
-fired by no one else. And yet, of my own free will, for three days
-longer I delayed within the wood; and now, when I can look back upon
-those wild, adventurous days, I am devoutly thankful that I did.
-
-My own audacity can be explained, I think, by the fact that I was now
-three parts a savage. I was, as one might say, on friendly terms with
-danger. Peril and I had sojourned together for so long that I had come
-to regard even grim Death itself as no such weighty matter. Life was
-no more to me than to the little wild things that I daily slew for
-food. And so, for three days, I continued my searching in the jungle,
-howbeit acting more cautiously than before, making little noise and
-pausing frequently to listen.
-
-And then, by chance, I made a great discovery. At the time, in very
-truth, I did believe that I beheld the manifestation of a miracle; and
-I warrant that he that reads this will think the same, when I have set
-down the facts as they occurred.
-
-I came, late of an afternoon, upon an open place where there were rocks
-among the trees; and between these rocks the ground was soft, the soil
-quite black, being composed of the decayed vegetation of many tropic
-seasons. Here I found footmarks of living men, and, moreover, men who
-were no strangers to leather boots.
-
-That more than one of them had visited this very place, I was well
-convinced, since the footmarks bore evidence of at least two pairs of
-boots--one with great hobnails, and the other without. I never doubted
-that I had hit upon the trail of Amos and his friends; and I had--as I
-thought--sure proof of this, a little after, when I came upon an empty
-cartridge-case.
-
-The most of us believe that we have latent abilities, little suspected
-by our friends, that we are never called upon to use. I have heard it
-said that the great Duke of Wellington thought little of himself as
-soldier, but far too much of his reputation as a politician. And on
-this occasion it was something pleasing to my vanity to play the part
-of a detective, though I knew not the very alphabet of the business. I
-examined the footmarks, and made quite sure that I had found the trail
-of Joshua Trust, who wore, I knew, a pair of heavy boots with hobnails;
-and the brass cartridge-case--which I have kept to this day as a
-memento--had, I surmised, once been the property of Amos. So I went
-down on hands and knees, groping in the half-light of the woods to see
-what else I could discover. And whilst thus employed, I hit upon the
-miracle that all but cost me life itself.
-
-I found a place beneath the rocks where there was a smooth stone slab,
-fashioned plainly by the hand of man. And this rocked gently when I
-pressed my weight upon it, which suggested that it had been moved quite
-recently.
-
-In any case, both the shape and the size of the thing bewildered me,
-for it was all the world like a tombstone. And one would not think to
-find tombstones in the tropic wilderness beneath the Andes.
-
-I found the stone quite easy to lift, for it was thin as a plank, and
-had a hole in the middle, through which I could place a hand. And then
-I stood gazing into the cavity below.
-
-And as I gazed, I gasped. I drew back a little, with a quick catch of
-the breath, and then came forward once again, to stand staring, like
-one who is entirely daft, at what lay at my feet.
-
-For the round moon, of a surety, shone down into a tomb; and there
-before me was a corpse--or what had been a corpse, four hundred years
-ago. There lay a skeleton, white-boned and horrible--moreover, a
-skeleton that was encased in armour.
-
-He who lay there before me in the moonlight had once been a man and a
-soldier of old Spain; for his bony hands were crossed upon his chest
-and held between them the handle of a naked sword. And at his head was
-a steel helmet, and the trunk of his body was enclosed in a
-breastplate; so that I could see naught but his grinning skull and the
-white bones of his legs and arms.
-
-I stood and looked, and wondered. I wondered who he was, how he had
-come there, and of the tales that he could tell, were life to return to
-this bold adventurer of four hundred years ago. Though I do not fear
-death more than most men, I dread even to this day to look upon the
-face of it; and it took me time to gather my courage in both hands and
-to light a fire by the graveside, that I might see the better and solve
-so much of the mystery as I could.
-
-I have no proof--for we can seldom prove the past--but must weigh what
-evidence there is. For all that, I am convinced--now that I have
-thought and talked of it all to John Bannister and others--that I
-looked then upon the remnants of one of the soldiers of the gallant
-Orellano. I could not judge of the quality of the rusted steel of his
-breastplate and his sword; but I should think that he had been an
-officer of some distinction; since, on close inspection, I discovered
-that the long blade had been damascened in silver, a metal that will
-never rust. And that set my mind a-thinking of the great and gallant
-men who had been the first to cross to the Pacific, to whom to-day--in
-spite of all their bigotry and cruelty--the world owes so much.
-
-If one of Orellano's followers had lain buried in this place for all
-this time, how nearly had the Spaniards come to finding the Greater
-Treasure! I was not far, I knew, from the Big Fish, though I had
-searched the Wood for days and never found it. And Orellano had
-crossed the mountains to the west in search of El Dorado, and, having
-failed in his purpose, had gone on down to the great river, and thence
-to the Atlantic. And here lay one of his stout-hearted lieutenants,
-buried like a Christian warrior, with the arms he had fought with,
-within a few miles from where the Treasure lay.
-
-Wonder-struck, and not without great reverence, I put back the sword
-between those bony hands, and then lifted the helmet to see if that,
-too, could tell me anything concerning this tragedy of long ago.
-Besides, I was curious to know how the man had met his death. Had he
-been slain by a savage Indian? Or had he died of some fell, tropical
-disease? And so I took the helmet in my hands; and when I did so,
-something white fell out.
-
-I stooped and picked it up, and then examined it by the fire that I had
-lighted. It was parchment--it was a fragment of a map--a piece torn
-from the corner of a larger sheet. I looked at it and rubbed my eyes,
-and looked again, to be sure that I was not dreaming.
-
-If I did not dream, then I was wholly mad. The thought came to me that
-I had fallen into a fever, and now suffered one of those delusions
-which are common enough when the heart is racing and the brow dry and
-burning.
-
-I felt my pulse and the skin upon my forearm, and found that I was wet
-with sweat. Nor was I mad or dreaming, for I was Dick Treadgold, and
-my home lay far away, upon the Sussex shore. And yet, that which I
-held in my hand was the very fragment of John Bannister's map which I
-myself had torn from the hands of Amos Baverstock--that same fragment
-which I had thrust, to the full length of my arm, down a rabbit-hole,
-by Middleton, for fear that it should fall into the possession of that
-scoundrel, Joshua Trust.
-
-There can be no disputing the testimony of a torn piece of paper.
-There is, I believe, a celebrated murder trial, quoted in books of law
-as an example of irrefutable circumstantial evidence, wherein the
-murderer and the murdered man are each found in possession of a torn
-piece of newspaper, these two fragments fitting together line for line
-without a letter missing.
-
-You will never tear a sheet of paper twice in precisely the same way,
-though you try a million times. In this case, I had the evidence of my
-eyes and of my memory. It was the very fragment I had snatched from
-the hands of Amos; I remembered the shape of it; I remembered the shape
-also of the torn edge of the map that Amos himself had carried into the
-wilderness; and, above all, there were the letters "AHAZAXA," the
-rending of the parchment having decapitated the name "Cahazaxa."
-
-At first sight, what could look more like a miracle? There was no
-question of coincidence. Here were two facts that, normally, could in
-no way be related to one another: a rabbit burrows a hole for himself
-upon the sandhills by the English Channel, and in the sixteenth century
-a brave Spanish soldier lays down his life, and is buried in the
-wilderness of South America. It will be readily understood that it
-took me time to realise what I could certainly not explain.
-
-How came that fragment there? And why? I regarded the stained and
-yellow parchment that I held in my hand as I sat by the side of the
-fire, and felt even a trifle afraid of it. I had heard stories of
-mummies coming to life, of inanimate objects--such as jasper scarabæi,
-totems, and wooden, heathen gods--becoming active agencies for good or
-evil. Had this thing taken wings upon itself, and flown across half
-the world? Fate or luck--call it what you will--had guided me to find
-it. But why should a document so precious have sought a refuge in the
-rusted helmet of a soldier of fortune, who once, perhaps, had clinked
-his sword in the gay courts of Granada or the narrow streets of old
-Cadiz, who lay now amid the silence of the tropic jungle--a few
-blanched and silly bones?
-
-I had no answer for these questions of my own, though I sat long into
-the night and racked my brains for a solution of the problem. It was,
-in consequence, an hour, as I should guess, before I could look the
-bare fact in the countenance, before I could acknowledge the situation
-as it was.
-
-No matter how it came there, by means comprehensible or supernatural,
-there it was. And then, quite suddenly, I realised what it was. *I
-had as good as found the Treasure*.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI--I FIND THE "BIG FISH"
-==================================
-
-For a considerable time I had regarded this small piece of parchment in
-the light of a mystery, a species of conjuring trick, just as one
-regards the billiard-ball, the rabbit, or the eggs that a conjuror
-produces from the upturned sleeve of his shirt. But now I saw quite
-clearly that the thing had an intrinsic value, a significance of its
-own; it bore a certain definite message--a message that most nearly
-concerned myself.
-
-Eagerly, with hands that trembled somewhat, I studied the map. It will
-be remembered that the portion which Amos possessed had been torn
-across the place where was marked the Temple of Cahazaxa. Upon the
-fragment that had come into my hands by so strange and mysterious a
-chance, I was able to trace the route that I myself had taken from the
-temple ruins to the Wood of the Red Fish. The ravine was shown, and
-that wonderful suspension-bridge that had so amazed me when I saw it.
-From the hills to the east--from the crestline of which I bad viewed
-the distant glory of the Andes--a track was marked, leading towards the
-south; whereas I, in hot haste at the time, had continued upon my way
-due westward.
-
-Now, this track was shown to lead to a certain stream that came forth
-from the Wood of the Red Fish upon the south. And it was called the
-Brook of Scarlet Pebbles, an Indian name being thus translated in red
-ink in the handwriting of John Bannister.
-
-The map had been drawn to no scale. Like many ancient and mediæval
-documents, it was entirely without proportion or perspective. For
-instance, the Wood itself--which was never more than fifteen miles
-across--appeared to be of area equal to that vast tract of country that
-lay between the great mountain to the north of the forest and the
-Temple of Cahazaxa--a journey that had taken us many weeks.
-
-There was some sense in this; for in regard to the Wood of the Red
-Fish, where the Treasure itself was hidden, it was necessary to be
-precise, if the map were to be of any value. I saw that one must
-follow the Brook of Scarlet Pebbles, until it entered a pool, where
-Bannister had written the words: "Electric Eels." There, it appeared,
-the stream flowed underground, for its course was dotted, and these
-dots ended at a cross, bearing the words: "THE RED FISH IS HERE."
-
-This cross referred, as I could see at a glance, to certain marginal
-notes, written in such minute handwriting that it was all that I could
-do to read them, especially in view of the fact that Bannister's red
-ink had faded. At last, however, I managed to make out the following
-inscription:
-
-
- "*The tail of the Fish. A blow-pipe from the nose of the Fish. Twenty
- yards across the Brook. Three feet, below the ground--a Ring.*"
-
-
-This I read to myself over and over again. At one moment I thought it
-clear enough, and at the next, too vague. At all events, thought I, I
-will find out when I get there, for thither I intended to go.
-
-I could not sleep that night, and I will not go so far as to say that I
-tried to. I was so thrilled and mystified that my thoughts were
-running riot; and surely there is little to wonder at in this. The
-bones of the Spanish warrior lay in the ground beneath me, together
-with his armour and his sword, for I had put back the tombstone in its
-place and covered it again with a thin layer of soil. That brave
-adventurer slept in tranquillity in the silent chamber of the heart of
-the tropic jungle. He and the sword I have little doubt he had wielded
-with such subtlety and skill were now alike at rest. His
-treasure-hunt, at least, was ended; but mine was only just begun.
-
-For I was determined to set forward when the daylight came, to search
-for the Brook of Scarlet Pebbles. If I found the margin of the Wood,
-and followed this towards the south, I must sooner or later hit upon
-the stream--if the map had any claim to accuracy. I could then follow
-the brook, until eventually I found the Red Fish itself; and, if I
-could not then associate any definite meaning with the queer,
-disjointed words in the margin of the map, my own intelligence must
-alone be held to blame.
-
-One of the reasons why I could not sleep was that I had committed these
-words to memory and kept repeating them to myself, just like a parrot,
-without any idea as to their meaning. That they had a meaning I never
-doubted, for John Bannister himself had written them; and though I was
-now grown older and had had many strange adventures of my own, I had
-still my ancient and profound respect for the wisdom of my hero.
-
-I thought of him that night, but more of Amos Baverstock, whom I
-believed to be somewhere near at hand, upon the same quest as I. On
-that account, I realised that I must make haste upon the morrow. I had
-risked so much already, I had undergone so many hardships, that I was
-determined--now that I thought myself within reach of my goal--to see
-the business through. From the hills to the east I had looked down
-upon the Wood, and knew that it was not three days' march from one side
-to the other, though the undergrowth was thick and tangled; and
-therefore I knew also that the Red Fish could not be far away.
-
-I think I slept a little in the early hours of the morning, to be
-awakened by the birds stirring in the trees, and the daylight streaming
-from above through that same gap by means of which my nightly task had
-been illumined by the moon. I ate such food as I had left, and then
-set forth towards the east, guiding my footsteps as well as I was able
-by the light of the rising sun.
-
-I came, at about midday, to the eastern side of the Wood, and looked
-out towards the hills whither I had journeyed from the plain. Thence,
-I turned towards the south and, walking once again in open country,
-progressed at a fair pace, and never once sat down to rest, until the
-daylight waned. I went then into the Wood, and searched for berries
-that I knew were fit to eat; and when I had eaten these, I lay down
-beneath a great tree and immediately fell fast asleep.
-
-The following morning, I continued my journey along the margin of the
-Wood. My naked body was now burned by the sun to the colour of an
-Indian's skin. Indeed, I am not sure that I was not even darker of
-complexion than the wild woodland people with whom I had lived. My
-hair was long, like that of a savage, for it had not been cut for
-months. I had a leather girdle over a shoulder from which depended an
-Indian quiver filled with darts. And there was something of the joy of
-life within me, as I swung upon my way. I had health, at least, if I
-wore no clothes upon my back. I felt convinced that my footsteps were
-leading me to the hidden Treasure of the Incas; and I tossed my
-blow-pipe in the air and caught it, time and again.
-
-The joy of life was in me, and the spirit of adventure. The sun shone
-down upon me, and I breathed deeply of the open air; for the wind was
-from the east, and the rank smell of decaying vegetation--so general
-throughout the Wood--was no longer in my nostrils.
-
-And, presently, I came upon the Brook of Scarlet Pebbles. The water
-was clear as crystal, and I went down upon my knees to drink my fill,
-for I was thirsty. There was no question that I had found the stream
-for which I had been searching, since the water flowed over a bed of
-little rounded stones, every one of which was in colouring some tone or
-tint of red. They ranged from pink to crimson; and they were all of
-granite, though worn as smooth as marbles.
-
-Here was the brook that I must follow; so I turned into the Wood again,
-and all that day followed the course of the stream, which winded and
-twisted in so many directions that I wondered I had never seen it
-before.
-
-That afternoon, being hungry for the taste of meat, I killed with my
-blow-pipe a great bird that I found sitting on a branch, blinking like
-an owl. I think he was some kind of bustard. At any rate, he was good
-to eat, when roasted, and I sat long by my camp-fire, picking his bones
-with my fingers. Then I pulled out my fragment of the map and looked
-at it.
-
-It was manifest that I was not yet come to that part of the brook where
-its course was marked by means of little dots; but, knowing the full
-extent of the Wood, I had a good reason to suppose that I was not far
-from my destination. And then I read again the queer marginal
-instructions: *The tail of the Fish*--I must see that for myself; *a
-blow-pipe from the nose of the Fish*--whatever that might mean, at all
-events I had a blow-pipe, and a good one, too. As for the rest, I gave
-it up. It was a riddle that I would solve when I got there--I felt
-quite sure of that. I folded up the map and placed it in my quiver,
-the nearest thing to a pocket that I possessed.
-
-And the next day I continued on my way, following the course of the
-Brook of Scarlet Pebbles. I noticed that these pebbles were now larger
-than before, and were so deep red in the shadow under the trees that
-the clear water had the look of blood. Then I came to the pool, and
-thought at first that the brook was come to an end.
-
-There were no pebbles here, but mud; and in my eagerness I waded in, to
-be made at once painfully conscious of a tingling sensation in my legs.
-Now and again something touched me--something quick and slimy; and each
-time I received a shock. I had forgotten, for the moment, all about
-the electric eels; but, when I remembered it, I was more pleased than
-startled, for I knew that, so far, I was on the right track and that
-the map could be relied upon.
-
-All about the pool was dense and tangled underwood, the branches of
-which dipped here and there into the water. And there were also water
-plants, some with flat, floating leaves, others tall reeds with
-plume-like heads.
-
-I knew that this pool was not the termination of the brook; and yet,
-though I searched for a long time, I could find no continuation of the
-stream, until an idea occurred to me which at once solved the problem.
-I plucked the little down-like feathers from one of my blow-pipe darts.
-And these, at intervals of a few yards, I dropped upon the surface of
-the water, all around the bank of the pool, until I found the stream
-itself, flowing through a dense clump of thickets.
-
-Through this I broke my way, and as I did so, I remembered the
-anaconda, and was filled with my old fear of snakes. It was plain
-already that my surmise had been wrong. The brook did not flow
-underground, but, for about a hundred yards or so, through a dark and
-narrow tunnel, formed of low-growing creepers.
-
-So dense were these that I was obliged to break my way, almost every
-inch; and, though my skin was now near as hard as leather, I was
-scratched so badly by the thorn-trees that I was bleeding from a score
-of places upon my chest and shoulders, when I came forth once more into
-the half-light of the woods.
-
-I could not see at first, for my eyes had grown accustomed to the
-darkness, and I found myself in an open glade, where the trees were
-thin and the rays of the sun no more than broken by the leaves above me.
-
-Then I looked, and I saw the brook before me, here flowing straight
-upon a rocky bed. Indeed, there were rocks everywhere, with rich soil
-between them, in which were growing many strange and beautiful plants.
-It was a natural rock-garden, far more wonderful to see than any yet
-designed by man. The rocks were of dark-red granite, and the flowers
-there in bloom were all the colours of the rainbow. But I looked not
-once at them. I gazed, like one hypnotised, upon a great stone to my
-right; for I had seen at once that this stone was the very shape and
-image of a fish.
-
-How it stood there I cannot say, for, like the famous toadstone at
-Tunbridge Wells, which I myself had seen when my mother took me there
-in childhood, it looked as if it would topple over. For the fish, as
-fishes are, was big in the head and narrow in the tail; and he stood
-forth from the ground at an angle of about sixty degrees, and his mouth
-was open, and there was a hole--on my side, at any rate--near where his
-eye should be.
-
-The more I looked at it, the more wonderful I thought it. It might
-have been graven by the hand of man, and cleverly at that; save that
-this fish was devoid of fins, and the semblance, as I afterwards
-discovered, was not so striking from any other point of view.
-
-Stepping from the water, I scrambled over the rocks, where I sat me
-down, and heaved a great sigh, which I do not pretend to be able to
-explain. Relief, joy, victory--all were mixed up in it, I do not
-doubt. Here was I, at the end of all my travels; I had reached the
-conclusion of my journey. The Big Fish was there.
-
-.. _`"I had reached the conclusion of my journey. The Big Fish was there"`:
-
-.. figure:: images/img-176.jpg
- :align: center
- :alt: "I HAD REACHED THE CONCLUSION OF MY JOURNEY. THE BIG FISH WAS THERE."
-
- "I HAD REACHED THE CONCLUSION OF MY JOURNEY. THE BIG FISH WAS THERE."
-
-To achieve anything is a conquest, great or small. I had sojourned in
-the wilderness, it seemed, for years; I had stood in constant peril of
-my life; I had journeyed in company of cut-throats; I had lived with
-savage men; I had seen something of the glories of old Peru, the Temple
-of Cahazaxa; I had marched for days and days alone, naked and carrying
-my Indian blow-pipe in my hand. And there was the Big Fish--the very
-sign-post, as one might call it, to the Greater Treasure of the Incas.
-
-And as these thoughts jangled in my brain, a shot rang out--how far
-away I could not tell, but somewhere in the Wood.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII--THE GREATER TREASURE
-==================================
-
-I held my breath and listened, thinking that I would hear other shots,
-as I had done before. But no sound came to break the stillness. Save
-for the birds among the tops of the trees, and a big, solitary monkey
-that swung himself from branch to branch, chattering as he went, I was
-surrounded by the silence of the woods.
-
-It was no news to me that I stood in the gravest peril. Such had been
-the case for many a day; and--as I have said--I had come to look upon
-life as of little worth. Amos I knew to be somewhere in the
-neighbourhood; and I knew also that if he found me it would go ill with
-me; I should not live for long if I fell again into that great
-villain's clutches.
-
-And yet I did no more than shrug my shoulders. I had sublime faith in
-myself, in my youth, and the Divine Providence that, so far, had kept
-me from the way of harm. I had my blow-pipe, too; and, if the worst
-should happen, I could use it well enough to drive one of my feathered
-arrows straight into the heart of Amos Baverstock.
-
-One learns, in the everlasting twilight of the woods, where danger
-lurks on every hand, to live for the moment only, to let the future
-look after itself. And so did I now; for Amos was no more to me than
-the jaguar and the anaconda--brutes of prey, all three of them, and the
-mortal man the vilest. Death in many forms and shapes was all about
-me--sharp fangs, the serpent's coils, poison, and disease. There was
-no need to scent from afar such dangers as might never come my way.
-
-And so, once again, I turned my thoughts to the Red Fish, standing
-forth before me in the sunlight--a quaint and humorous-looking thing,
-had I been able for a moment to forget its wonderful significance.
-
-I sat and looked at it; it may have been for half an hour, or even
-more. And my memory took me back to that sunny August morning by the
-Sussex shore, where I had first heard Amos speak of the Greater
-Treasure of the Incas; and I remembered, word for word, what he had
-said: "Gold! It is there knee-deep in a cavern, large as a cathedral."
-And here was I, Dick Treadgold, in the very place myself, after a
-series of most strange and unbelievable adventures, thousands of miles
-from Sussex. My very name, I thought, was to prove a kind of analogue
-with my destiny and actions; for I was fated, so it seemed, to tread on
-gold.
-
-And at that, I pulled out my fragment of the map, and looked at it,
-reading again and again the passage that had puzzled me so often:
-
-
- "*The tail of the Fish. A blow-pipe from the nose of the Fish. Twenty
- yards across the Brook. Three feet, below the ground--a Ring.*"
-
-
-There, sure enough, was the tail of the Fish--or, at least, the upper
-part of it, a sharp spur of rock protruding from the ground. I got to
-my feet and approached, taking my blow-pipe with me.
-
-"*A blow-pipe from the nose of the Fish.*" That clause had always
-puzzled me. It seemed possible that I should use my blow-pipe as a
-kind of measuring-rod; but I could not think in what direction I should
-place it. Besides, the nose of the Fish was at least six feet from the
-ground. And then I observed for the first time what I had not
-perceived before; namely, that the body of the Fish was curved; and it
-was this that gave me the very clue I wanted. What if I were to use
-the blow-pipe as a plumb-line?
-
-At all events, I would try. So I drove the blow-pipe into the soft
-ground, as near the perpendicular as I could judge, in such a manner
-that it just touched the tip of the Fish's nose.
-
-I read my instructions again--though I already knew them by heart, and
-tried to guess their meaning. I crossed the brook, which in that place
-was very shallow, the water reaching little above my ankles; and no
-sooner did I find myself upon the other side than I observed that my
-wooden blow-pipe and the sharp, upright spur of rock that formed the
-Fish's tail were in the same alignment.
-
-"*Twenty yards across the Brook*" could have but a single meaning.
-Since the Red Fish itself was not that distance from the water, twenty
-yards must be measured upon the other side; and this I at once resolved
-to do.
-
-I already had an imaginary line, extending an indefinite distance. If
-I held to this line--or if, in other words, I kept my blow-pipe
-immediately between myself and the Fish's tail--I could not go far
-wrong by stepping the prescribed twenty yards from the margin of the
-brook.
-
-This I did, and, to verify my position, looked to see that I still had
-my two fixed points in line with one another. I had verged a little to
-the left, but soon put this right by taking a short pace in the other
-direction. And then I repeated to myself the last sentence of my
-instructions: "*Three feet, below the ground--a Ring*."
-
-Down I went upon all-fours, and began to scrape up the earth in my
-hands. For the soil was soft, though now and again I hit upon a rock,
-which, without great difficulty, I loosened with my knife, to cast
-aside and continue with my work.
-
-It was nightfall by the time that I had gained a depth of three feet or
-more; but, by then, I had come upon a great, smooth slab of stone; and
-this discovery set my heart so wildly beating that I was obliged to
-leave my task and rest awhile, drinking deeply of the water of the
-brook.
-
-In the moonlight I laboured still, and a slow business it was,
-displacing the earth a handful at a time, and scratching with the
-Indian knife that Atupo, the priest, had given me. I was hot and
-weary, and my finger-tips were painful; and yet I could not desist, but
-worked on till midnight, to be at last rewarded. I came across a metal
-ring, fastened to the slab, about eight inches in diameter. And when I
-had washed the earth away, bringing water in my quiver from the brook,
-I discovered that this ring was made of gold.
-
-I tugged at it and pulled with all my might, but could not move the
-stone an inch; so back I went to my work again, grubbing with my hands,
-for all the world like a dog that smells a rat. Sheer fatigue at
-length quite overcame me, and I was obliged to lie down and rest, and
-fell sound asleep, though I had intended no such thing.
-
-I awoke suddenly, at the first sign of daybreak, and went to the great
-hole I had made in the ground, and wondered at myself that I had done
-so much. The stone slab, I saw, was almost clear of earth.
-
-In less than an hour the great slab was free. I cut round the edges of
-it with my knife, to loosen it, and then looked down upon my work, to
-see how I might approach the conclusion of my task with the greatest
-prospect of success.
-
-The stone slab was about three feet wide and twice as long. And the
-gold ring, I could not fail to notice, was much nearer one end than the
-other. As the handle is never to be found in the middle of a door,
-this seemed to suggest that the slab opened upon hinges. It remained
-to be seen, however, whether or not I had the strength to lift it.
-
-I tried more than once, and failed, though I moved the stone an inch or
-so. Finally, I went into the Wood and cut a length of liana, one end
-of which I tied to the golden ring. And then I tugged with all my
-might; and the stone slab uprose like a derrick on a ship, attained a
-vertical position, and there remained stationary and upright.
-
-I stepped to the hole and looked down upon a narrow flight of steps all
-covered with the earth that had fallen from above. Down these I
-hastened, presently to find myself in utter darkness, so that there was
-nothing for it but for me to return and look about me for some means of
-making a torch.
-
-I was now as skilled as any forest Indian in the art of making fire.
-For months I had journeyed without matches, tinder-box or
-magnifying-glass. I knew where to find touch-wood in the forest, and
-could strike sparks from pieces of flint. For an hour I laboured in
-the making of a torch, which I constructed of touchwood bound about by
-reeds. And whilst I was thus employed I realised for the first time
-how hungry I was--for I had eaten nothing for twenty-four hours, though
-I had consumed great quantities of water.
-
-And now I did a strange thing, in view of the fact that I have always
-been somewhat impetuous by nature and was then but a boy in years.
-Though I was actually trembling with excitement, all eagerness to
-behold the interior of the vault that I knew to be at the foot of the
-steps, I went deliberately into the jungle in search of food.
-
-Finding no living thing that I could kill but monkeys, I was obliged to
-content myself with wild nuts and berries; and then I returned to the
-Red Fish, drank again from the brook, took up my torch and lit it from
-the fire that I had kindled. And then down I went into the vault, to
-feast my eyes upon the buried Treasure of the Incas.
-
-The stairway was at first so shallow that I must stoop as I descended;
-but presently I found myself in a little chamber, hollowed out of the
-living rock, the walls of which were of the same red granite as the
-strange stone above. And weird and almost magic did the whole place
-look in the light of my burning torch.
-
-For the very walls sparkled as with diamonds. Everywhere were little
-grains of felspar, mica, or quartz, which caught the reflection of the
-light. And when I looked upon the floor I saw that Amos had been
-right. I trod upon bars of gold, all of the same length and size, and
-laid with such regularity and neatness that they might have been the
-palings of a fence--or many fences--spread flat upon the ground.
-
-How deep these ingots went I could not say, and was not then disposed
-to inquire, for my attention was attracted by an arched opening, like
-the doorway of a church, on the other side of the room. Through this I
-passed, and found myself at the head of another flight of stone steps,
-much broader and wider than the others--a gigantic stairway that
-descended into the middle of a chamber so vast that my torch did no
-more than throw a kind of halo all around me.
-
-I rushed down these steps with a loud, glad cry, and below I hastened
-like a madman, here and there, passing along the walls, crossing at
-random that wide, gloomy subterranean room.
-
-Everywhere was gold, stacked upon the floor, piled against the walls.
-I saw golden chalices and cups, bracelets, rings and girdles; great
-jugs of gold and golden basins, besides bars and ingots that one might
-have counted by the thousand.
-
-I know not why it was, but the very sight of it made me dizzy, as I
-staggered blindly about that wondrous place. At times I slipped and
-stumbled, and at other times I fell between those glittering stacks, to
-find myself--as Amos Baverstock had said in my hearing--knee-deep in
-the very stuff that has made the world as wicked as it is.
-
-And then, at last, I sat down upon I know not what, save that it was
-gold. The very sight that I had seen had exhausted me far more than
-all my travels and privations. I felt sick at heart and weary. I
-looked about me with tired and dreamy eyes.
-
-It seemed to me strange--now that I had beheld this wonder--that I had
-endured so much for sake of it. How had it come to pass that men
-prized so highly what after all is no more than yellow metal? Here was
-enough of it, in very truth, to serve the needs of a nation; and here
-it had lain for four hundred years--and the world was none the worse.
-How little of this vast treasure would be enough for me, or even Amos
-Baverstock, in spite of all his greed!
-
-It frightened me--and that is the truth of it. I could not think what
-I should do if all this precious wealth were mine. And then I wondered
-if I had any right to call it mine just because it was mine for the
-moment to gaze upon, to regard in breathless bewilderment and fear.
-
-You may behold that which you never own, as you may own that which you
-never see. Boy though I was, so much was clear to me as daylight. Nor
-had I any reason to suppose that I was the first to look upon this
-marvel, since the fugitives from Cuzco, centuries ago, had carried it
-across the mountains to hide it in this secret place. John Bannister
-himself, perhaps, had looked upon it, though he had never told me so.
-If it belonged to any living man, all this wealth was his.
-
-I felt by now as if I were about to faint; and besides, my torch was
-burning low. And therefore I got unsteadily upon my feet and walked
-into the little outer room, and thence ascended the steps in the broad
-light of day. And there I stood breathing deeply, with my eyes closed
-and my mouth parched as if by thirst.
-
-On a sudden I cast my burning torch into the brook before me, and fell
-upon my knees and prayed to God. I prayed aloud, as if the living
-trees and running water and the red stones about me could all hear my
-prayer. And it was the Lord's Prayer that I had learned at my mother's
-knee; for, boy though I was, I felt that which I had looked upon was
-the very pith and kernel of all temptation to which, since Eden,
-humanity was heir.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVIII--I FALL IN WITH A FRIEND
-======================================
-
-I sat for many hours that morning, idle and oppressed by a feeling as
-of emptiness. What use to me was all the wealth that I had seen--or,
-for the matter of that, to any one? I had no means at my disposal to
-take a millionth part of it away.
-
-And then I remembered Amos, and thought it my duty to take what steps I
-could to see that that dread man should never solve the riddle of the
-Red Fish, though it was unlikely he would find the place without the
-aid of my fragment of the map.
-
-The sight of all that gold had, as it were, unnerved me--filled me with
-a kind of weariness of life. I cannot say exactly how it was, but I
-know that I had lost, on a sudden, all my energy and enthusiasm; and it
-was late in the afternoon before I bestirred myself and got to work.
-
-I lowered the great slab and covered it with earth, which I trampled
-down with my bare feet. Then I went into the woods and dug up plants
-with my Indian knife, and these I stuck in the ground so that I made a
-little garden. One shower of tropic rain and they would take root and
-grow, and thus hide all trace of how the soil had been disturbed. And
-looking up at the sky, where it was visible here and there between the
-branches of the trees above me, I saw that such a shower was coming.
-
-The rain fell that evening, when I was camped once more in the woods
-towards the east, having gone back the way that I had come, following
-the course of the Brook of Scarlet Pebbles. I took shelter from the
-rain beneath a tree, the great leaves of which formed a veritable roof
-above me, so that not one drop of water fell upon the fire that I had
-kindled.
-
-I ate my simple meal, and then lay down, not to sleep, but to think and
-to listen to the rain, beating with a noise like many drums upon the
-leaves.
-
-Well, I had seen the Treasure of the Incas. With my own eyes I had
-beheld it. And I asked myself if I were any the better for it, and
-could not see that I was. For gold is mud, and part of man is mud; and
-yet there is a great God who is above, around and within us all. And
-that night, as I lay awake in the woods, listening to the drumming of
-the rain, I tried to think out such problems as man has not yet begun
-to understand--problems that, perhaps, he may never solve on this side
-of the grave.
-
-No doubt, the constant propinquity of danger had made me serious for my
-years. I had lived for many months in the wilderness, and my pulse now
-beat in rhythm with the earth. The forest, the majestic mountains I
-had seen at sunrise, the sky of stars above the plain--all these were
-mysteries to me, wondrous and eternal. But there was neither eternity
-nor mystery in the work of man; in gold, in the rusted sword of
-Orellano's soldier, or Cahazaxa's Temple.
-
-I saw quite clearly now that this hidden treasure was no affair of
-mine. I had lived happily for months as Nature meant me to, and the
-sum total of my wealth had been my blow-pipe and the knife that Atupo,
-the priest, had given me. I now understood--far better than I had done
-at the time--all John Bannister had told me of his dread of cities and
-of people. I, too, would like to live my life far from the abodes of
-men, with the little shy things as my friends, in the chamber of the
-Wild. For the very sight of the Treasure of Kings had frightened me.
-Four hundred years it had lain there, beneath the ground, like a great,
-harmful dragon; and it seemed to me that to let this monster loose upon
-the world would be a bold thing to do--to saddle my conscience with a
-load of responsibility such as I was never strong enough to bear. I
-wished now that I was not one of the few who had solved this precious
-riddle.
-
-And yet I was not sure of anything, for the gold tempted me sorely. I
-was tempted more than I can say. If I had now learned to understand
-something of John Bannister's ideals, I saw also, with alarming
-clarity, the motives that swayed the deeds of Amos Baverstock. Gold to
-him was a living force, the origin of all his strength and evil, the
-prompter of his actions. Once or twice that night was I tempted to
-return to the Red Fish that I might feast my eyes again upon the
-Treasure.
-
-I told myself that I had not seen enough of it. I was like a drunkard
-who had tasted wine. I wondered what worth it had in coinage that I
-knew, and I set to thinking how I would spend so vast a sum.
-
-But these were thoughts only of the night-time, in the darkness and the
-silence of the woods. I fell asleep at last, sick at heart and
-wretched; but dawning day came to me with comfort, and I continued on
-my journey with new hopes and prospects.
-
-The dragon was behind my back, buried once again. For all I cared, it
-might lie there for ever, untouched by mortal hand, unseen by mortal
-eye, to be smothered in the dust of endless ages.
-
-As for myself, when I came forth from the undergrowth of the wood into
-the warm light of the evening sun, I turned to the south, and continued
-on my way until long after dark. I had made up my mind, and that was
-something; I would pass round the Wood of the Red Fish, and journey
-westward towards the great mountains. These I would cross, and come
-down upon the tableland beyond, where I knew that I would find men who
-were as civilised as I. Thence, as best I could, I must find my way
-back to England. I had little doubt that I might be able to work a
-passage for myself on board a ship that sailed from Callao or Guayaquil.
-
-But I was a fool to think my adventures so nearly at an end. My
-destiny was no more in my own hands than that of a withered leaf,
-carried here and there by the wind.
-
-I found the western side of the Wood to be very different from the
-other. It was a country broken up by rocky spurs that descended from
-the foothills just above me; and the ravines or little valleys that lay
-between these spurs were densely choked with undergrowth, similar in
-all respects to the thickets in the wood.
-
-It was no easy travelling, and yet there was no other road for me to
-take, for to the north lay the big morass that I had observed from the
-hill-top on the morning when I first looked down upon the Wood.
-
-So I made my way along the crestline of a rocky ridge, setting forth
-upon my journey to the Andes early in the morning with the whole day
-before me. Though the rays of the sun were powerful, the day was cool,
-for a soft breeze was blowing from the mountains. I had not yet
-breakfasted, since I thought it likely that in this more open country I
-might kill with my blow-pipe some animal that was good to eat; and,
-therefore, as I marched upon the way, I kept my eyes open, looking into
-the ravines on either side of me, to see if I could catch a glimpse of
-any living thing. And I had not gone far before--to my bewilderment--I
-set eyes upon the solitary figure of *a man*.
-
-I dropped, on the instant, flat upon my face--for I was now a savage in
-more ways than one. I had all the instincts of the wild man who knows
-that danger may lurk behind every tree and shrub and rock. I lay upon
-the ground, still as a lizard, with my eyes upon the stranger. And the
-more I looked at him the more I wondered.
-
-The Forest Indians were small in stature, as I have observed in the
-proper place. But this man was six feet in height. He was as brown as
-I; and yet he wore clothes--clothes which were all in rags and tatters,
-and a pair of boots, split open at the toe-caps and bound with string
-about his ankles. Moreover, he carried in his hand a rifle; and this
-rifle he used as a staff, placing the butt upon the ground and leaning
-with his whole weight upon it as he limped slowly and painfully upon
-his way down the ravine immediately beneath me.
-
-I have said that I had the instincts of a wild man. I was cautious,
-shy and cunning. I had learned to trust no one, to be suspicious of
-every one. And so I lay and watched him.
-
-It occurred to me, by degrees, that I had seen him before. I could not
-for the life of me remember where. Then he sat down, with his face
-toward me.
-
-He had a rough, weather-beaten, and yet a kindly, face. He had
-steel-grey eyes, and a rough, tangled beard. He was so close to me
-that I could see that his bare arms were tattooed; and it was this,
-perhaps, that gave me the clue I wanted. I looked at his beard again,
-and, unkempt as it was, it reminded me somehow of the beard of a
-Russian Czar. This man was William Rushby.
-
-I was not sure of it at first. He was greatly changed from the honest
-sailor who had befriended me on board the *Mary Greenfield*. But when
-my mind was made up, and I was well-nigh carried away by mingled
-feelings of astonishment and gladness, I got to my feet and went
-towards him with my blow-pipe in my hand.
-
-Without any ado, he whipped the butt of his rifle into the hollow of
-his shoulder, and I saw the sights were directed straight upon my heart.
-
-"Hands up!" he cried to me in English. "Hands up, you brown barbarian,
-or else I shoot you dead!"
-
-.. _`"'Hands up!' he cried. 'Hands up, you brown barbarian, or else I shoot you dead!'"`:
-
-.. figure:: images/img-224.jpg
- :align: center
- :alt: "'HANDS UP!' HE CRIED. 'HANDS UP, YOU BROWN BARBARIAN, OR ELSE I SHOOT YOU DEAD!'"
-
- "'HANDS UP!' HE CRIED. 'HANDS UP, YOU BROWN BARBARIAN, OR ELSE I SHOOT YOU DEAD!'"
-
-I grasped the truth in an instant; and it is well I did, for I have
-little doubt that he would have shot me where I stood. If William
-Rushby had changed in personal appearance since last we met, of a
-certainty I myself had changed still more. He took me for a wild man
-of the woods, though he yelled at me in English, and would have killed
-me out of hand, had I not lifted my arms and answered him, and laughed.
-
-"Rushby!" I cried. "Do you not know me? It is I--Dick Treadgold."
-
-He brought down his rifle, and stared at me like one who sees a ghost.
-
-"Dick!" said he, and then came forward, holding out his great hand,
-into which I placed my own.
-
-And there we stood, and shook hands with one another, as though we had
-met at Charing Cross. And he was near as naked as I, and we were both
-so burned by the sun that the whites of our eyes were almost comical,
-and our hair was long like that of gipsies, and the skin upon our legs
-and arms had been scratched in scores of places by the thorn-trees in
-the forest.
-
-"Dick!" he cried again. "I can see it now, though I would never have
-believed it."
-
-"It is I who am asked to believe the most," said I. "How came you
-here, of all people in the world?"
-
-"There's a yarn at the back of that," said he. "But, first, you must
-tell me how you escaped from Amos."
-
-He seated himself, as he spoke, upon a boulder that lay in the ravine;
-and when he moved I was reminded of a fact I had perceived
-already--Rushby was badly wounded and lame of a leg.
-
-For all that, I saw that he would glean little in the way of
-information if we did nothing but ask one another questions; so I
-mastered my own curiosity, and replied to him.
-
-"Why," I told him, "Amos tied me to a tree, and left me in the
-wilderness to starve. And then I fell into the hands of savage men, to
-whom I shall be ever grateful. From their dwellings in the forest I
-journeyed alone to Cahazaxa's Temple, and thence across the plain to
-the Wood of the Red Fish, where I find an old friend, and still believe
-that I am dreaming. It is months now since I last set eyes upon a
-white man, and that was Amos Baverstock himself."
-
-"Months!" cried Rushby in amazement. "You've not seen Baverstock--for
-months!"
-
-He looked at me as if he thought that I was lying. I was at a loss to
-know what he was driving at, though I assured him that I spoke the
-truth.
-
-"Months!" he repeated, holding his head between his hands, as if his
-puzzled brains were paining him. "But we were told, two days ago, that
-Amos held you prisoner."
-
-"Who told you?" I demanded.
-
-I was now as surprised as he, and even more astonished when I heard his
-answer.
-
-"Baverstock himself," said Rushby.
-
-"Amos!" I exclaimed. "You have seen him, then?"
-
-"He lied to me!" cried Rushby, driving his clenched fist into the palm
-of a hand. "He lied to me! And Bannister was right."
-
-"Bannister!" I echoed.
-
-But Rushby, rocking his shoulders from side to side like a man who
-suffers anguish, stamped a foot upon the ground.
-
-"Oh, but I have done a fool's thing!" he cried. "I have been fooled,
-and I have sent John Bannister to death!"
-
-I stood before him, speechless, gasping. Though I could make neither
-head nor tail of what he had told me, I could see with my eyes that the
-man was suffering torture in his soul. If Bannister was in danger, if
-it was possible to save anything from the fire, it was I myself--and I
-alone--who was capable of action, since Rushby was dead lame. And yet
-I must first know the truth of the matter, for I was wholly in the dark.
-
-I went to Rushby and laid a hand upon his shoulder.
-
-"Come, tell me what it all means," said I. "Tell me your story from
-the first."
-
-He looked up at me, and then for the first time smiled--a sad smile,
-none the less.
-
-"Sit down," he answered, in a calmer voice. "I will tell you all from
-the beginning, as quickly as I can."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIX--THE BOATSWAIN TELLS HIS STORY
-==========================================
-
-This that follows is the story that was told to me by William Rushby,
-sometime boatswain of the *Mary Greenfield*, as we sat together side by
-side in the ravine, the while John Bannister had gone forth alone in
-peril of his life.
-
-To begin with, he reminded me of that evening when he had spoken to me
-through the porthole on the ship, when I was held a prisoner in the
-cabin that I shared with Amos Baverstock. After that--it will be
-remembered--I never saw him again; for when the ship arrived at
-Caracas, I was transported by night to the hills beyond the town.
-
-As for Rushby, he fell in with a friend--and that is the best of being
-a sailor, who is never at a loss for a handshake and a word of greeting
-in every port in all the world. For the boatswain, when the ship was
-alongside the wharf, had seized the opportunity to desert, and lay in
-hiding in the town, until news was brought him that Amos and his party
-had set forth across the mountains. He then worked his way to Rio, and
-a month later turned up in Southampton, where by the merest chance he
-found John Bannister, about to set forth in quest of me across the
-Western Ocean.
-
-The boatswain told Bannister all he knew, and together they searched in
-the warren for the rabbit-hole in which I had hidden my fragment of the
-map. This they found at last, not much the worse for wear; and having
-set my mother's fears at rest, so far as they were able, they started
-forth together for the port of Colon; for Bannister, knowing whither
-Amos Baverstock was bound, deemed that the shortest route.
-
-From Colon they crossed the Isthmus to Panama, and thence sailed--as
-Pizarro himself had done--down the coast to Guayaquil, the port of
-Equador. From this place they journeyed inland, passed the great
-height of Chimborazo, the summit of the Andes, and thence eastward, a
-march of many weeks, into the Wild Region of the Woods.
-
-Bannister realised from the first that his task was well-nigh
-impossible. He might as well hope to find me in the forest as a needle
-in a haystack; and so, knowing where the treasure was, he went straight
-to the Wood of the Red Fish, there to await the arrival of Amos and the
-others.
-
-He had started some months after us, but he had taken the shorter route
-and had been delayed by nothing. For all that, he arrived in the
-neighbourhood of the Red Fish some weeks after Amos; for he and Rushby
-heard nothing of the fight which took place when Atupo laid his ambush
-and Forsyth was so badly wounded.
-
-Amos--as we know--returned across the plain to wreak his vengeance upon
-the Peruvian priests in the Temple of Cahazaxa. Then the man's greed
-of gold drew him westward once again to search for the Big Fish, as the
-natives called the treasure.
-
-It was then that Vasco, the Spaniard, struck by the merest chance the
-trail of John Bannister and Rushby. A fight took place between them,
-and those were the shots which I myself had heard, one of which had
-sorely wounded the boatswain in the leg.
-
-John Bannister had saved his comrade's life. William Rushby was a big
-man, broadly made and heavy; but Bannister had whipped him up as though
-he were a child and carried him all night throughout the jungle, with
-the result that Amos, for the time being, lost all trace of them,
-though he was searching in all directions in the Wood.
-
-It is a wonder, indeed, and something to be thankful for, that Amos and
-his friends never stumbled across myself, whilst I was wandering about
-with my blow-pipe and my arrows in search of the Red Fish, not knowing
-where to look. For I was not then in possession of the map, of which I
-have now to tell, and how it was that I found it in so singular a place.
-
-Rushby was a wounded man and weak from loss of blood, and now Bannister
-himself--great as was his strength--being overcome by his exertions,
-fell into a raging fever. Knowing the Wood of old, he had carried
-Rushby to the place of the Tomb of Orellano's soldier; and whilst in
-hiding there he became so ill that for three days he raved, delirious.
-And he had no one but a wounded man to tend him.
-
-They had no food, and were without means of getting any; for the
-boatswain could not walk a dozen yards, but from time to time must drag
-himself on all-fours to the stream to fetch his companion water to
-drink.
-
-Rushby, left to his own resources, and suffering the greatest pain, had
-little doubt that they were lost. Look at the affair which way he
-might, he could see no way out of their difficulties; they must either
-be found by Baverstock or else starve to death. For himself, he cared
-not which way it ended; but upon one thing he was determined--the
-fragment of the map which they had brought with them from my
-rabbit-hole in Sussex should never fall into the hands of Amos
-Baverstock.
-
-And so it was William Rushby himself who opened the tomb, and hid the
-map in the helmet of the Spanish soldier. And that was how I found it,
-a few days afterwards; for the earth had been disturbed and trampled
-underfoot.
-
-The night after that, when John Bannister was a little recovered of his
-fever, though still terribly weak, they heard the report of a shot-gun,
-fired not far from where they were; and Rushby, realising that Amos was
-still upon their track, made the supreme effort of his life, hoping
-thereby to save both Bannister and himself.
-
-It was the old case of the blind leading the blind; for the one was so
-weak that he tottered when he walked, and the other was lame of a leg,
-with an open, septic wound that would not heal. But together, with
-their arms around each other, they made good their escape, only to be
-caught later in the great morass that lay upon the northern side of the
-Wood, and being at the end of their resources and well-nigh starved to
-death, they had no option but to surrender and without condition.
-
-There is no question Amos would have killed John Bannister then and
-there had it not been for one potent circumstance: Bannister knew the
-secret of the Big Fish. Both Baverstock and Trust regarded my friend
-as their arch-enemy, who had foiled them more than once; and Rushby
-told me of the look of unutterable hatred that was stamped upon every
-evil feature of the face of Amos whenever he looked at Bannister--which
-he did, by the same token, no more often than he had to, since it was
-plain to see that he found it hard to meet the eyes of one stronger
-than himself both in mind and body, and a thousand times more honest.
-
-And here, in his narrative, the boatswain became, on a sudden, wildly
-excited, and pointed to a palm-tree that stood not far away from where
-we both were seated, about a hundred yards down the ravine.
-
-"You see that tree?" he cried; and I nodded in reply. "Well, then,"
-Rushby continued, "the villain bound Bannister to that--bound him hand
-and foot, and stood before him with a loaded rifle in his hands. He
-cursed him; he threatened and blasphemed. He said that if Bannister
-would not tell him where the treasure was, he would shoot him on the
-spot. But he might as well have tried to frighten those white bones in
-the tomb where I myself had hid the map."
-
-William Rushby paused, and ran his fingers through his beard. I never
-saw a man who looked more miserable than he. And yet, so foolish was
-I, indeed, that I did naught but ask him silly questions, when time was
-of as much account as the life of the most heroic man that ever lived.
-
-"And Bannister would not speak?" said I.
-
-"Speak!" the boatswain cried. "Speak he did, and to the point. He
-told Baverstock to shoot."
-
-He was silent for a moment, and sat looking at the open wound in his
-leg.
-
-"I never saw any one more angry," he continued, "and I have served in
-my day under many men of the same stamp as James Dagg, if not so bad as
-he. All that night I lay awake, dead sure that Baverstock would murder
-Bannister, if on the following morning he still refused to speak."
-
-"And you were camped in this ravine?" I asked.
-
-"In this same place," said Rushby; "for I have not moved since a
-hundred yards."
-
-"And where are the others?" I asked.
-
-"Listen!" said the boatswain. "I can do no more than spin a yarn from
-the beginning. I am coming to what you want to know. Baverstock, his
-threats having failed with Bannister, played his trump-card upon me,
-and won the trick. Leaving Bannister still weak from fever, bound hand
-and foot, he came to me by night and talked in whispers. He told me
-that he held you a prisoner, and, like a fool, I believed him. He said
-that if he did not learn the truth in regard to the exact position of
-the Big Fish he would put not only Bannister and myself to death, but
-also you, whose life he had purposely preserved throughout all these
-months."
-
-"He lied!" I interrupted.
-
-"I know he did," said Rushby. "But I swallowed all those lies as a
-shark takes a baited hook. I was neither strong nor wise like
-Bannister. For my own life I cared not greatly, but I was loth to
-behold John Bannister put to death, and I knew how much he cared for
-you, and how he would grieve if you were to die through any fault of
-mine. And thus it was that I told Amos Baverstock the truth. I told
-him that we had brought with us from Sussex your little fragment of the
-map; and I told him that I had hidden it within the helmet in the Tomb
-of the Spanish soldier.
-
-"He said no more to me that night, but posted Vasco, the Spaniard, as a
-sentry, with orders to see that Bannister and I did not communicate.
-And at daybreak the next morning, in the utmost haste, he and his three
-companions went back into the Wood to find the map in the Spaniard's
-Tomb, and thence to discover the Red Fish itself, where the gold of
-Peru is hidden."
-
-When I heard that, I burst into loud laughter. Rushby looked at me,
-surprised, and asked me why I laughed.
-
-"He will never find it," I cried. "He will never find the map! For it
-is no longer in the Tomb."
-
-"Not in the Tomb!" he burst forth. "Then, where is it? And how do you
-know where it is?"
-
-"Because it is here," said I. And as I said the words, I pulled forth
-the little piece of parchment from the quiver in which I kept my
-blow-pipe arrows.
-
-Rushby looked at it, recognised it at once, and sat staring at me, as
-if, on a sudden, he had been bereft of his senses.
-
-"How did you get this?" he blurted out.
-
-I told him in a few words how I had found it.
-
-"Merciful powers!" he groaned. "What have I done? Bannister is on a
-wild-goose chase after all!"
-
-He again carried his hands to his head, and sat rocking from side to
-side, as he had done before. I got to my feet, and shook him
-violently; for--though as yet I understood no more than half the
-matter--I saw that there had been some great mistake that was like to
-cost us dearly.
-
-"What is it?" I cried. "Tell me the truth! Even now, it may not be
-too late to make amends. Tell me what has happened."
-
-He looked up at me with a sad face. I am inclined to think that there
-were even teardrops in his eyes.
-
-"When Baverstock and those with him were gone," said he; "when they
-were returned to the Wood and lost to view, I picked up my jack-knife,
-and limped to the tree, where I cut Bannister's bonds. You must
-understand that Amos departed that morning in such hot haste that he
-left behind our knives and rifles, as well as much of his own
-equipment. However, that is neither here nor there. I was obliged to
-tell Bannister the truth; and, no sooner had I done so, than he made me
-realise what a simpleton I was.
-
-"He told me that I had been a fool to hide the map in any place where
-it could afterwards be found. It had been better had I torn it to
-shreds. Nor would he believe that you were still in the hands of Amos
-Baverstock. And the very thought that this unholy villain was to solve
-at last the riddle of the Big Fish gave, upon the instant, new strength
-to Bannister. For then and there he rose to his feet, and said that he
-was going himself into the Wood, that he would reach the Tomb in
-advance of Amos and take possession of the map."
-
-"He has gone there!" I shouted, like a maniac, springing to my feet and
-pointing towards the Wood.
-
-"Yes," said Rushby. "He said that he would rather die a thousand times
-than that Amos should find the Treasure."
-
-I felt as if I had received a violent blow. I knew not, for the
-moment, what to do. And then I saw my course quite clear before me.
-
-"I'll go to him!" I cried. "Take that, and keep it safe."
-
-And I flung at him my portion of the map, and then snatched up my
-blow-pipe and my quiver filled with darts, and set off running down the
-ravine, as fast as my legs would carry me, towards the Wood.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XX--I RETURN TO THE SOLDIER'S TOMB
-==========================================
-
-I had every reason to be filled with apprehension. I was going, of a
-certainty, into danger greater than any I had yet encountered. Whilst
-searching in the Wood for John Bannister, my friend, I was like as not
-to fall in with Amos Baverstock; and if that should happen, I could
-hope for little mercy.
-
-Bannister--as Rushby had told me--was weak from illness and half
-starved,, so that much of his great strength of former days must have
-deserted him, when most he had a need of it. Besides, I knew not
-whether he were armed, for that was a question I had not stayed to ask
-when I hurried forth from the ravine upon my quest.
-
-I had therefore some cause to be afraid. And yet, in my heart, I was
-glad as I had never been for months, as I raced upon my way into the
-darkness of the Wood.
-
-I was journeying towards my friend, the great man whom I had learned to
-honour and admire upon the beach in Sussex. And I believed that the
-Fates would not be so cruel to me that I should fail to find him. I
-felt that I would soon look upon him once again, feel the iron grasp of
-his hand, and behold the light of recognition in his kindly eyes.
-
-Many hours of daylight were before me, when I entered the Wood of the
-Red Fish; and then, for the first time I think, I realised that my task
-was not an easy one. Had I started from the other side of the Wood, I
-believe that I could have found the Spaniard's Tomb without much loss
-of time; for I was by now well acquainted with that portion of the
-jungle.
-
-But in this neighbourhood I was an utter stranger, though I had the sun
-to guide me whenever I caught glimpses of the daylight between the
-overhanging branches of the trees. Also, I carried in my mind a very
-perfect recollection of the map.
-
-I saw that it was necessary above all else to calm myself, to think the
-matter out, instead of plunging into the business like a bolting horse.
-My destination was the Spaniard's Tomb, and I was in possession of
-certain valuable information, the most of which was quite unknown to
-Amos. The Wood of the Red Fish itself was diamond-shaped, the four
-angles approximately directed towards the north, south, east, and west.
-Now, the Big Fish lay somewhere in the very centre of the Wood; and I
-had formerly journeyed to the place from the south, following the Brook
-of Scarlet Pebbles. This brook--as I had observed--flowed in a
-north-westerly direction, towards the morass, which I had passed at the
-end of the ravine in which I had just left William Rushby.
-
-During the earlier days when I had adventured all alone, when I had
-discovered both the Glade of Silent Death and the Tomb of Orellano's
-soldier, I am convinced that I had never crossed the Brook of Scarlet
-Pebbles. Indeed, I could scarce have done so without noticing at once
-the singular character of the stream. I had become, during these
-months extraordinarily observant; and my attention would certainly have
-been attracted by the peculiar red stones with which the bed of the
-brook was strewn. Hence, by a simple process of deduction, I was
-forced to the conclusion that the Spaniard's Tomb must be somewhere in
-the north-westerly part of the Wood; and the reader will the better
-understand me if he glances at the map which I myself have made, and
-which he must not think a facsimile of the real parchment map whereon
-the Tomb was not even mentioned.
-
-.. figure:: images/img-238.jpg
- :align: center
- :alt: Map of the Wood of the Red Fish
-
- Map of the Wood of the Red Fish
-
-I was now, as I knew, somewhere on the southern side of the brook; and
-that was the wrong side, if I was to find the Tomb with as little delay
-as possible. Aided, therefore, by the position of the morning sun, I
-directed my footsteps in a northerly direction, and came early in the
-afternoon upon the Brook of Scarlet Pebbles, to the north of the Big
-Fish. Thence, I decided to journey due eastward, hoping, sooner or
-later, to come upon some place that I would recognise, which would
-inform me of my whereabouts.
-
-Sunset overtook me when I was in the very heart of the jungle. There
-was just time to search for food before the darkness came; and then I
-lay down to rest without venturing to light a fire.
-
-I remember well that, at the time, I was surprised that I did not find
-myself oppressed by the almost overwhelming sense of loneliness that
-hitherto had always come upon me when I journeyed by myself in the
-midst of the silent woods. But, now that I am old, and have thought
-much upon many things, I have an explanation--howbeit somewhat
-mystical--to account for the happiness I then experienced. I knew that
-I was near my friend.
-
-I was fortified by memory. Thus it was with me. And more than that;
-for it looked as if I was to give a helping hand to the great strong
-man whom I had seen first upon the Sussex coast, who had told me of the
-hooded crows, and to whose tales of travel I had listened eagerly, day
-after day, before ever Amos Baverstock and the like of him had stepped
-across my path. I would find the Tomb--upon that I was determined.
-And I would find Bannister as well. Perhaps he was sleeping, even
-then, not two hundred yards away from me, in that tangled, tropic
-wilderness. With so pleasant a reflection I fell sound asleep, and
-slept until daylight wakened me and the birds and monkeys were stirring
-in the trees.
-
-I walked many miles that day, looking everywhere in vain for some tree
-or stream that I should recognise, for the burnt-out embers of an old
-camp-fire or the feathers of some bird that I myself had plucked and
-eaten. But I found nothing, until late in the afternoon, when I came,
-of a sudden, upon the dried-up skin of a small woodland deer.
-
-There also were his bones, dried and whitened, all the flesh therefrom
-devoured by creeping insects. And, thinking it more than likely that
-this was the same deer that had served me for many a meal, when I first
-was come into the Wood--the same poor beast that had been crushed to
-death by the great serpent that had lain in hiding beneath the water of
-the pool--I cast about me, and soon found the Glade of Silent Death.
-And now, I knew, I was on the right track to the Tomb, which from this
-place lay towards the south; for I had a first-hand knowledge of all
-this portion of the Wood, where I had sojourned for many days.
-
-Then an idea came to me whereby valuable time might be saved. I was
-not far from the edge of the Wood, and if I could gain this before the
-darkness came I might travel some distance southward by night, to
-continue my searching in the morning. Keeping, therefore, the setting
-sun at my back, I journeyed eastward, and came presently to open
-country, when I travelled a good two miles to the south by the light of
-the rising moon.
-
-Late at night I rested, sleeping till daybreak; and then, entering the
-Wood again, I found by chance one of my old camping-places, and
-following my old trail for several hours came at last--as I
-expected--upon the Tomb of Orellano's soldier.
-
-As it was then almost dark, I hastened immediately to the Tomb, and
-threw back the stone slab. There was light enough for me to see at a
-glance that nothing had been touched. There were the white bones, the
-breast-plate, sword and helmet--exactly as I had left them. I stood
-irresolute a moment, looking down into the grave; and all at once, a
-great fear possessed me that some calamity had overtaken Bannister.
-
-I was here in advance of both him and Amos--which was more than I had
-ever hoped for. The next thing to decide was what to do, and--as will
-be seen, in a moment--I was given no choice in the matter.
-
-Fear spreads, I think, like fire. I was solicitous, at first, for
-Bannister; and then I feared for myself. Or there may be something in
-the notion that the evil that is in a man taints the very atmosphere in
-which he moves. At any rate, even as I thought of Amos Baverstock, I
-became filled, on a sudden, with my old dread of him. I stood
-shivering, as if from cold, beneath the trees, by the side of that
-ancient grave, whilst the darkness spread around me.
-
-And then it was that the voice of Amos Baverstock himself came to my
-ears with such startling suddenness that I was taken unawares. It was
-just as if I had received some kind of electric shock. I straightened
-with a jerk, and I verily believe that my heart itself stood still.
-
-I had not been able to hear the exact words he used; but I knew only
-too well the hard, strident tones of his voice. I think he called upon
-Joshua Trust to make haste and not to lag behind, and the language that
-he used was vile as always.
-
-I stood where I was, stock-still, like one transfixed. And then I
-heard the breaking of the undergrowth, as someone rapidly approached.
-
-I felt much as a mouse must feel, when the trapdoor closes after him.
-I was spurred into sudden action. And yet there was nothing I could do.
-
-If I rushed into the thickets, my enemies must hear me. And what
-chance had my blow-pipe against a leaden bullet? I looked up at the
-trees around me, and saw at once that there was not one that I could
-climb without a deal of trouble. And yet, Amos himself was coming
-nearer and nearer, as I could tell by the breaking of the underwoods
-and the dead sticks upon the ground. On a sudden, without a thought, I
-jumped down into the Tomb, and pulled the stone slab into its place
-above me.
-
-It is easy to say that this was the action of a fool. I attempt no
-more than to relate what happened. That no man in a calm moment would
-have done anything so rash and stupid, I would never for a moment deny.
-I was, however, very far from calm. If the truth be told, I was
-afraid. I hid my face like an ostrich--for that is all it comes to.
-
-And as soon as I found myself lying at full length upon those white and
-aged bones in the darkness of the grave, I realised that I was
-lost--that it had been far better for me had I fled into the jungle.
-Amos himself must shift the slab to search the Tomb for the map that he
-believed he would find within.
-
-And presently, through the opening in the slab, I heard, with a
-distinctness that was indeed alarming, the voice of the man himself.
-
-"It is here!" he cried. "We've found it, as I said we would!"
-
-From the certain fact that no one answered him, I judged that
-Baverstock was alone; and I was the more sure of this, since I could
-hear the footsteps of but a single man upon the thin stone above me.
-And I began to reckon what my chances would amount to, if it came to a
-square fight between the two of us, with no one to intervene.
-
-Then I remembered that I was unarmed; for I had left my blow-pipe above
-ground, though the chances were that it was now so dark that he might
-not notice it. By the noise he made, his grunting and his muttered
-oaths, I judged that he was searching for the means to lift the slab.
-
-I touched the stone above me with my fingers; and when I felt it
-moving, I knew that the hour of my ordeal was come. I must fight and
-defend myself, or die--and very likely both. I rose as the stone was
-lifted, and, as I did so, placed the Spaniard's helmet on my head and
-took up the rusted sword.
-
-Amos threw aside the slab, and then jumped backward, as I stood up in
-the grave, waist-deep in mother earth.
-
-It was that half-light which is neither night nor day--a weird and
-ghostly light, pervading like a mist the shadows of the Wood. Small
-wonder that that evil man thought that he beheld the resurrection of a
-corpse!
-
-He let out a shriek--such a shriek as I never heard before or
-since--that seemed as if it must have been audible for miles throughout
-the evening silence of the jungle. It was the shriek of one whose hair
-stands upright on his head. He stood before me quaking at the knees;
-and then he found his voice again.
-
-"Mercy!" he cried.
-
-And at that I rushed upon him with my sword.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXI--I AM MADE A GHOST, AND THEN A FOOL
-===============================================
-
-I sprang at him with my sword, the rusty blade that I had filched from
-those grim and whitened bones.
-
-The man was at my mercy. He was unarmed, having laid aside his rifle
-before he approached the Tomb. He trembled in every limb as he fled
-before my onslaught, and cried out aloud for pity, as I jabbed at him
-in a kind of vicious frenzy.
-
-In the twilight his face looked pale-green in colouring, and his little
-pig-like eyes seemed in danger of springing from his head. It would be
-difficult to conceive an expression upon which abject terror was more
-strongly marked.
-
-Amos Baverstock was an evil man in many ways, and a brave man in
-others; else he had never risked his life so often amid the dangers of
-the tropic wilderness. Courage of a sort he had in plenty, but,
-because he was evil in his nature, he feared death and all connected
-with the grave, though I had never thought to find him as superstitious
-as he was. He had always struck me as a hard, calculating man, who
-looked upon the practical side of all things. And yet, without a
-doubt, he now took me for a ghost.
-
-And after all--when the full facts are considered--his mistake was
-excusable; even to-day, when I call to mind that scene which was
-enacted in the half-light of the woods, I am inclined to laugh at it
-all, for there was something ludicrous about it.
-
-I wore the helmet of the dead man, and had sprung at Amos out of the
-Tomb, without giving him time to think. Assuredly, in his eyes, what
-else could I have been but an infuriated ghost, dangerous and active
-because my peace and solitude had been disturbed.
-
-I thrust at him savagely in the darkness, whilst he hurried here and
-there, in and out among the trees, yelling like a fiend. How hideous
-he was! I can see him now, with his hunchback, his green face, his
-staring eyes, his mouth contorted in terror. For all that he was quick
-and agile, and once or twice eluded a sword-thrust that would have
-pierced him to the heart.
-
-And then, at last, I had him. I carried my sword in my right hand,
-and, as I lunged, he jumped aside, towards the left. As quick as
-thought I caught him by the throat. Whereat he fell down before me on
-his quaking knees, and clasped his hands in the attitude of one who
-pleads for mercy.
-
-He was in my power. I said not a word, but clenched my teeth, and
-looked into those eyes that even then I feared. I drew back my sword,
-and then paused a moment; for I had no liking for the work, which was
-the hangman's job.
-
-"Mercy!" he groaned.
-
-I took in a deep breath, like a man about to dive. I felt that I must
-brace myself for this red task of common justice. I looked at his
-body, clothed in tatters, to select a spot most vulnerable where I
-might plunge my rusted sword.
-
-"Mercy!" he cried again.
-
-I clenched my teeth. I was on the point of speaking, but fortunately
-did not.
-
-I could hear him breathing heavily.
-
-And thereupon, on a sudden, I was felled by some one who had crept upon
-me from behind. I was felled like an ox. A single blow upon the back
-of the head sent me over like a ninepin, and I lay stretched at my full
-length upon the ground, but half-conscious, with a singing sensation in
-my head.
-
-Presently I sat up and looked about me. There was Amos, still upon his
-knees, as green as ever. And immediately above me stood one whom I did
-well to recognise as Mr. Gilbert Forsyth.
-
-That place was dimly illumined by the white light of the newly-risen
-moon, turning the leaves upon the trees above us to a glistening silver.
-
-Forsyth was wearing the remnants of a pair of trousers, the legs of
-which ended in a tattered fringe a little below his knees. He was
-naked to the waist, around which was a belt, crammed with knives and
-pistols.
-
-I remembered his curled whiskers and his pomaded moustache on the
-morning when I had first set eyes upon him, when I lay hidden in the
-gorse-bush. His fair hair now had grown so long that it reached to his
-shoulders; and his whiskers had spread into a short, shaggy beard,
-which was divided somewhat in the middle like that of a Frenchman or a
-Sikh. I had thought of him always as a very immaculate gentleman; but
-here was a desperate, piratical blade who, one might easily believe,
-chewed glass and compelled his unhappy victims to walk the plank.
-
-He looked at me and folded his arms; and then spoke in a voice quite
-calm.
-
-"And who the blazes are you?" he asked.
-
-I was wise enough not to answer. Ghosts--so far as I knew--could never
-speak. And was I not a ghost?
-
-If I had been a fool to go down into the Tomb, I showed at least a
-little wisdom in now holding my tongue. For this, however, I take no
-credit. I could not foresee the course that events would take. I had
-been surprised and mastered, and cursed myself because I had not killed
-Amos out of hand, when the man was in my power. Disappointed,
-disgusted with myself, I was stubborn as a mule. They might do what
-they would, they might torture me, but still I would not speak.
-
-Forsyth repeated his question; and for answer, I rushed again at Amos,
-and even then would have killed him, had not the other caught me in his
-arms and held me fast.
-
-The man was stronger than I thought; for, though I kicked and
-struggled, I could not free myself. Amos, as he watched us, regained a
-little of his commonsense, and got slowly upon his feet.
-
-"No ghost," said he. "No ghost." And he went on repeating the words
-as if he were a parrot.
-
-"Ghost!" laughed Forsyth. "If this is a ghost, he is a warm-blooded
-one, and as vicious as they make 'em."
-
-"Then, who is he?" asked Baverstock. "I swear to you, he came out of
-the Tomb, as I'm a living man."
-
-"And he's another," added Forsyth. "Who he is, or what business he has
-in such a place as this, I can no more say than you can. None the
-less, the circumstantial evidence is all against mortality. I am
-reminded, my friend, of the Carthaginian Queen: '*Exoriare aliquis
-nostris ex ossibus ultor*'--(May some avenger arise from my bones). I
-call this individual 'Hannibal,' on that account."
-
-"Who wants your Latin gibberish!" cried Amos. "Look plain facts in the
-face; call a spade a spade."
-
-"Also," said Forsyth, in his usual sing-song voice, "call a man a man,
-and not a ghost."
-
-"If he's alive," said Amos, coming even nearer, "then, who is he? I
-tell you, when I lifted the tombstone, he sprang forth like a
-Jack-in-a-box, and, had it not been for you, I would never have escaped
-with life."
-
-"I have told you already," said the other, "I know no more of him than
-you do."
-
-It was then that they were joined by the Spaniard, Vasco, and Joshua
-Trust, who came together from the darkness of the thickets into the
-full light of the moon. And when they saw me, they also were afraid;
-for I still wore the helmet on my head and stood at no great distance
-from the open grave.
-
-Forsyth explained the situation in a few words, with many a wave of the
-hand, as if he introduced us. Baverstock, in the meantime, was rapidly
-becoming his normal self. He seemed to have forgotten, for the time
-being, the very object of his journey.
-
-"There's some mischief here!" on a sudden he exclaimed. "Rushby told
-us we would find the map beneath the helmet of the Spaniard."
-
-At this, Forsyth laughed, and pointed straight at me.
-
-"And since our Hannibal," he observed, "wears such a headgear somewhat
-out of fashion, we may safely presume that he could tell us where the
-map is, if he had the power to make us understand--which, for myself, I
-doubt."
-
-The truth then dawned upon me on the instant. Mr. Gilbert Forsyth, for
-all his cleverness and calmness, was as fully in the wrong as Amos
-Baverstock had been; for he believed me to be a savage, whereas the
-other had taken me for a ghost, the awful apparition of a bygone
-Spanish soldier. If I had refused to speak before from sheer
-pigheadedness, I was now resolved to play the part that I was cast for,
-putting my trust in Providence and fortified by resolution. Though
-they burnt my flesh with red-hot irons, I was determined I would never
-speak.
-
-They questioned me in every barbarous language that they knew. Vasco
-and Amos himself were my inquisitors, for Trust was no scholar, and
-Forsyth's learning went no further than the dead classic tongues, and,
-I believe, a little French. But I just gaped at them like a fool, and
-at last they gave it up as a bad business; and Amos, by now well
-convinced that I was human, struck me a cowardly blow across the mouth.
-
-They looked in the Tomb; they searched everywhere for the map. They
-made a great fire of brushwood that they might see the better, and
-neglected no possible hiding-place where that little strip of parchment
-might be hidden. They looked inside my quiver, and even in the hollow
-of my blow-pipe. And then, at length, quite late at night, they gave
-it up. And in an ill mood they were, especially Trust and Amos.
-
-They must have thought, however, that I was likely to be of some use to
-them, for they bound me hand and foot before I was permitted to lie
-down to rest. They were evidently not disposed to set me free, until
-they had solved the riddle I presented. They were altogether at a loss
-to explain who I was or why--apparently of my own free will--I had gone
-down into that grim and ancient vault. I think, even then, they
-connected me in some way or other with Bannister himself.
-
-Left alone, I was given time to think, and I lay awake that night for
-many hours, wondering what would happen.
-
-There were exactly three reasons why they should not have recognised
-me: firstly, I was so altered in appearance, so brown and wrinkled by
-the sun, with my hair all long and shaggy, that I do not think my own
-mother herself would have known me; secondly, my face had been
-half-hidden by the helmet I had worn; and, thirdly--the most potent
-fact of all--they never dreamed for a moment that I was yet alive.
-Months before, they had tied me to a tree, and left me to starve to
-death in the great forest many miles away across the plain beyond
-Cahazaxa's Temple. And, as I remembered this, it occurred to me that,
-even if they were to recognise me, they might again believe me to be a
-ghost, since for so long they had been certain I was dead.
-
-These were my thoughts as I lay awake, too near the fire for comfort;
-and as I was thinking, I observed a singular phenomenon, which at first
-gave me cause for new alarm.
-
-Amos, Forsyth, and Vasco were sound asleep, and Joshua Trust was on
-watch, seated on the ground a little way from me. He was not
-particularly alert. Indeed, he was occupied in the kind of pastime
-that amused him. With a red-hot firebrand in his hand, he was killing,
-one by one, the little insects that crawled upon the ground.
-
-I looked past him into the thickets, and at once I could have sworn
-that I observed a pair of eyes in which the firelight was
-reflected--eyes that steadily regarded me. Now, I might have believed
-these eyes to be those of a jaguar, were it not that they resembled the
-eyes of a man, and I knew for a fact that John Bannister was on the
-trail.
-
-I made neither sound nor movement, but at once set out upon this new
-train of thought. Were a jaguar prowling around the camp, and I had
-seen in his eyes the reflection of the firelight, it had been of a
-certainty but a few inches from the ground; for I knew well the habits
-and the nature of this most beautiful of beasts. But these eyes were
-four feet at least above the ground, and, being too large for those of
-a monkey, must belong to a human being--who could be none other than
-John Bannister himself.
-
-Sure of my facts, I was resolved to take no action, though my life
-itself were in the greatest danger. I knew that I might safely leave
-the matter in the hands of an older, wiser, and a stronger man than I.
-
-I saw those eyes for no longer than a few seconds, and then they
-disappeared. I heard no sound, not so much as the stirring of a leaf,
-for the night was strangely still. There was not a breath of wind.
-
-How can I describe the emotions that then swayed me! I knew that I
-must possess my soul in patience, leaving what was best to do to
-Bannister himself. And yet I longed with all my heart to grasp the
-hand of my friend. I knew now, for certain, that he was near to me,
-watching over me, ready to strike a strong blow in my defence when the
-opportunity should offer. And for that reason--so great was my faith
-in him--I was conscious of a sense of security that I had not known for
-months.
-
-I remembered that I had not seen him since that day when I beheld him
-running across the Sussex fields, with his brown paper parcel under his
-arm, when Forsyth had struck me down with his whip and carried me away,
-to begin my series of adventures. I remembered him, too, as I had seen
-him, standing in the white road looking after us. And he was now quite
-near to me, thousands of miles away from where I had caught my last
-glimpse of him; for it is a long march, in very truth, from the South
-Downs of England to the shadow of the Andes; and much lies between that
-is strange and wonderful and savage--the great ocean, the mystery of
-those broad and endless rivers, and the forest with its eternal
-twilight and dark, silent places where death lies in wait. John
-Bannister had gone forth to find me; and he had found me, at last,
-after all these dreadful days.
-
-How was it possible for me to sleep? I lay awake for hours with
-quickly beating heart, and thought of all that had been and all that
-might be yet to come. I saw Vasco take the watch from Trust, and then
-Mr. Forsyth post himself as sentry towards the early hours of morning.
-And when at length the daylight came, Forsyth looked at me and saw that
-I was awake. We sat for a while, looking straight into one another's
-eyes.
-
-"Friend Hannibal," said he.
-
-But I made no answer. At which he thought--for he was a strange man in
-many ways--to test me with the classics.
-
-"'*Tutum silentii praemium*,'" said he; "or, as we have it, 'Silence is
-ever golden.' However, I believe that you could tell us much, were you
-so disposed."
-
-Still I never answered. He could think what he liked; I was determined
-to hold my peace. For all that, I was considerably disconcerted; for
-he continued to look at me for a long time in a very searching manner,
-the while the daylight grew and the woods became flooded with that
-faint, evanescent twilight that fades and seems to drift, even when the
-sun is at its height.
-
-At last he gave a start, and sat bolt upright, rubbing both his eyes.
-
-"A strange thing!" said he, and continued to look at me, but this time
-with a frown.
-
-"A strange thing, indeed!" he repeated.
-
-There was another pause, during which I had not the courage to look him
-in the face. I had some presentiment of what was now to come; in spite
-of which the suddenness with which he had made it manifest that my
-secret was out, quite took away my breath.
-
-"Allow me," said he, "to offer you my most hearty congratulations. We
-have every reason to presume that Master Richard Treadgold is unloved
-by the gods."
-
-And at that, he held out a hand, and I was obliged to shake with him,
-though I felt at once frightened and a fool.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXII--MR. FORSYTH AND I BECOME BETTER ACQUAINTED
-========================================================
-
-Forsyth got to his feet, and to my horror, immediately awakened Amos.
-Then was I certain that my last hour was at hand. I never thought for
-a moment that protection would come to me from a quarter whence I had
-no reason to expect it.
-
-I had always suspected Amos to be a kind of madman; and that grey
-morning in the woods I was, for the first time, convinced of it. He
-behaved like no sane man, but cursed and raved and stamped upon the
-ground, upon which at last he flung himself writhing as if in pain.
-
-He had been both foiled and fooled, and recognised it, too. Months
-before, he had left me in the woods to die, and now beheld me as alive
-as ever, and still standing betwixt him and the goal that he would
-gain. Twice, it appeared, had he lost possession of the map--or that
-part of it which was of the greatest value to him--and on both
-occasions it was through me that he had failed. Besides that, he had
-taken me for a ghost, an apparition; he had fallen down upon his knees
-before me; and had I had the heart in cold blood to plunge my sword
-into the half naked and defenceless body of a living man, Amos
-Baverstock would now have been as dead as the Spanish warrior himself.
-
-Make no mistake in thinking that he felt a shade of gratitude for that.
-It was bitter disappointment and blind, livid fury that mastered what
-sanity was his. He rolled in his wrath here and there about the
-ground, biting the withered leaves and the dead sticks, like the mad
-dog he was.
-
-Then he got to his feet and swore that he would kill me, and this time
-there would be no muddling in connection with a matter so inordinately
-simple. For this dreadful purpose he took into his hands a long
-hunting-knife, and with this he came toward me. And as he did so, I
-looked over his shoulder, and saw in the midst of the thickets the
-gleaming barrel of a rifle.
-
-I knew then for certain that I was not to die, and smiled into the evil
-face of Amos. John Bannister himself was near at hand, my guardian and
-my friend. Had Amos taken another step, or raised his hand to strike,
-I know he would have dropped stone-dead upon the spot; for Bannister,
-at such a moment, would have counted his own life as nothing. But now
-I come to the strangest part of all my story: it was Mr. Gilbert
-Forsyth who intervened.
-
-"You cannot do this," he drawled.
-
-He had stepped between us. Without violence, almost politely, with an
-arm extended, he pushed Amos aside.
-
-"Why not?" gasped Baverstock, gaping at the other.
-
-"Mainly, my good friend," answered Forsyth, "because it will profit you
-nothing. But there are other reasons. In the first place, last night
-he might have killed you, and did no such thing. Secondly, I am
-already disposed to admire this youth, and to think that it would have
-been the better for us had he been upon our side from the beginning.
-Thirdly, to kill him as you propose would be a foul and dirty business,
-such as I refuse to countenance."
-
-Amos turned upon him like a wild beast.
-
-"You!" he cried. "Who are you to dictate terms to me? Who brought you
-here?"
-
-"I brought myself," said Forsyth, very calmly, "and I brought you and
-Trust as well; for money makes the world go round, and without my
-worthy banker you were still kicking your heels in England. So the
-less you speak of that the better."
-
-I never saw a man more self-possessed; and, on the other hand, I never
-saw one more livid with rage than Amos. On the instant, forgetting me,
-he turned the full current of his wrath upon Mr. Forsyth.
-
-It would be irksome to repeat, word for word, the altercation that took
-place between them; for they fought with words and argued for many
-hours that morning. And whilst this was happening, now and again I
-shot a glance toward the thickets, where I had seen the barrel of the
-rifle I was sure belonged to Bannister. But I saw no further sign of
-him, and heard no sound. I did not know, therefore, whether he was
-still at hand; for as yet I had no experience of his great skill as a
-woodsman. I did not know that, in spite of his bulk, he could move in
-the undergrowth as silently as a snake, and when he struck, he did so
-with the suddenness with which the jaguar springs upon his prey.
-
-For nearly all that morning Forsyth and Amos wrangled, the one to save
-me, and the other to do murder--the one, quiet and calm; the other,
-raving mad.
-
-It was a question, I suppose, of will-power only; and Forsyth conquered
-in the end. Amos, I could see, was utterly exhausted. The fire within
-him had consumed the better part of his vitality and the violence of
-his nature. He was at last reduced to utter speechlessness. He stood
-before us, panting, his shallow chest heaving greatly like a man who
-has run a race. He could not stand steadily upon his feet, but swayed
-about, from one side to the other. I observed, also, a strange
-difference in his eyes. They were no longer glistening and pig-like;
-they were just the wild, staring eyes of a lunatic. And, sure enough,
-a lunatic he was.
-
-He seated himself upon the trunk of a fallen tree, and there he sat for
-many minutes, shivering as if from cold. At last he turned and spoke
-in a weak voice--quite unlike his own--to Joshua Trust.
-
-"Get me water, you dog," he ordered, "and be quick about it."
-
-Trust went to a stream that was not far away; and even as the man
-entered the thickets, I thought that I heard something move beneath the
-trees, a little to his right.
-
-He came back with the water, and Amos drained it at a gulp.
-
-"I would know this," said Trust, standing before them both with folded
-arms. "Who's master now? Who takes the bridge? Whose orders am I
-expected to obey?"
-
-"That's a matter for yourself to settle," answered Mr. Forsyth. "Here
-we are, in the midst of this almighty wilderness; and if we don't hold
-together, as like as not we die. For myself, I am not one who, once he
-has decided on a certain course of action, is easily turned aside. I
-have come this distance to behold the Greater Treasure, and I do not go
-back again until my quest is ended."
-
-At that, Amos brightened up in a manner truly wonderful. The very
-thought of gold was to him a kind of tonic. He got again upon his feet.
-
-"Why, there you speak some sense!" he cried. "I am the last man in the
-world to go back upon my friends. But we can do nothing without the
-map."
-
-"Leave that to me," said Forsyth; "and, sooner or later, I will find
-it. A little subtlety and sense may very well succeed where
-cold-blooded murder must have failed."
-
-And thereupon Forsyth turned to me and, taking me by both shoulders,
-held me at arm's length.
-
-"Dick Hannibal," said he--for he had a singular sense of humour, quite
-his own--"I would have you, as you love me, and are greatly in my debt,
-tell us the whole truth; for I am convinced in my mind that you know
-all there is to know."
-
-I shook my head. I was resolved to be as stubborn as before. And
-besides, I had every reason now to think that John Bannister was
-hovering on the outskirts of the camp, and might at any moment hasten
-to my aid.
-
-Forsyth waited for some minutes. Then he shrugged his shoulders.
-
-"I see," said he, "that neither threats nor violence will be of much
-avail. You may think differently, however, when I prove to you that I
-am neither such a fool, nor yet so soft of heart, as you appear to
-think me.
-
-"We find you in the Tomb," he went on, in his slow, deliberate voice,
-"where we believe the map to have been hidden. You knew, therefore,
-that it was there; and, therefore, also, you have fallen in with
-Rushby. Very well, then, we all go back to Rushby; and what is more,
-we start without delay. We know where we left him, and we know that he
-cannot escape. The question, so far as I can see, presents no
-difficulty at all."
-
-He appeared so confident that I was considerably alarmed, and not
-without some reason, for I knew that I had left William Rushby in
-possession of the map. Yet, Forsyth himself could never have known
-this. He had, however, some definite plan at the back of his mind, and
-appeared so cock-sure of himself that I wished more than ever that I
-had some one with whom I might take counsel.
-
-I had no chance that day to attempt to satisfy my curiosity; for, so
-soon as we had eaten a meal, we packed up what little equipment Amos
-had brought with him from the ravine, and set forward on our march
-towards the west. I calculated that it would not take us more than two
-days to reach the other side of the Wood; for we followed the trail by
-which Amos and the others had come, and it was seldom necessary for
-him, who led the little column, to make use of either axe or bill-hook.
-
-On the first night, I had the privilege of being enlightened by Mr.
-Forsyth, who now appeared to have taken me to some extent into his
-heart--though upon that long march across the Great Forest, when we had
-travelled in one another's company for many months, he had never
-deigned to speak to me on more than one or two occasions.
-
-Amos, on the other hand, gave me as wide a berth as possible, and sat
-regarding me with scowls which--to tell the truth--I could not fail to
-see I shared with Mr. Forsyth. Indeed, I trusted Baverstock so little
-that, when sheer fatigue compelled me to fall asleep, I did so in the
-firm conviction that the man might plunge a knife into my heart at any
-moment. He was sullen and morose, addressing himself only to Trust and
-the Spaniard, Vasco, and then never without an oath, and in the voice
-of one who gives orders to a dog.
-
-But the case was very different with Mr. Forsyth, whose demeanour was
-scrupulously polite.
-
-"I would delight to hear your story from the first," he said to me;
-"for I cannot believe that you have arrived so far as this without some
-very exceptional adventures."
-
-"I did not know," said I, "that my affairs meant anything to you."
-
-"On the contrary, you interest me vastly," he replied. "Consider, had
-it not been for my humble self, you had now been lying with your throat
-cut beside the open grave--or, perhaps, we might have buried you, with
-some pretence of decent feelings."
-
-And so I told him as much as I thought it would do him no harm to
-hear--of how I had been found by the wild men of the woods, and had
-journeyed by myself to Cahazaxa's Temple. Thence, I told him, I had
-found my way to the Wood of the Red Fish, where I had had the good
-fortune to fall in with William Rushby. But I told him nothing of
-Atupo, the Peruvian priest, or of the map which I myself had found by
-so singular a chance, or of the Treasure that my living eyes had looked
-upon.
-
-"And this is all your story?" he asked.
-
-I thought it best not to answer him; but I saw by the sly, half-amused
-expression upon his face that he knew well enough that I would keep him
-half in the dark.
-
-He said nothing for a long time. And then quite suddenly, he slapped a
-hand upon a knee.
-
-"Upon my life and soul," he cried, "you are a lad of spirit, such as I
-myself once was, until I learned that in this world it is best to
-assume a pose! Let me explain to you. There are certain commodities
-upon the earth that all men are ever after, and money is the first of
-these. We are, therefore, all enemies of one another; we scramble in
-the same gutter--to such heights has civilisation attained. Be set
-down for a fool, a lazy rascal and a fop, and it is easy enough to take
-by surprise those who think they have the whip-hand of you. You have
-had an example of this yourself in your own brief experience of Gilbert
-Forsyth. When you made off from John Bannister's cabin, on the morning
-when you saw us first, you never suspected that I was the one who would
-catch you. And so now. It is I who will outwit you, where friend
-Amos, with his knife and oaths, has failed already."
-
-I pricked my ears at that; for my curiosity was roused.
-
-"And where are we going?" I asked.
-
-"To William Rushby," he answered, "sometime boatswain of the *Mary
-Greenfield*."
-
-"And why?" I asked.
-
-He laughed outright.
-
-"You must learn to see things," he observed, "from the point of view of
-others. Remember that I am well aware of this: Rushby and you, when
-you met, compared notes and hatched a plot together. John Bannister
-himself may, or may not, have been a party to your mild conspiracy.
-That is a point that does not affect the issue. I am not so sure
-Rushby spoke the truth when he told us he had hidden the map in the
-Spaniard's Tomb; otherwise, I cannot see why we did not find it. I go
-back to Rushby, and I take you with me, to learn the real truth."
-
-"How will you do that?" I asked.
-
-I thought, at first, that he had ignored the question; for he answered
-in a round-about way.
-
-"There is a game of cards called Poker," he observed, "at which I
-myself am tolerably proficient. In this game--with which you are too
-young to be well acquainted--there is a method of gaining by what is
-known as Bluff. Amos played the game of Bluff on Bannister, and
-failed. He tried it again on Rushby, and was singularly successful.
-In other words, Baverstock pretended that he held you in his power, and
-he was never asked to show his cards. To bluff, therefore is a risky
-business, which should be practised only in moments of emergency or
-urgent need. I go now to William Rushby, to lay my hand upon the
-table, knowing for a certainty that I hold the best card in the pack."
-
-"I quite fail to understand you," said I, shaking my head; for all this
-was so much double Dutch to me.
-
-"You," said Forsyth, "are the best card in the pack. There is no
-occasion for us to bluff. We have you in our power, as we have also
-Rushby. Between you, you know the truth. If one will not speak, the
-other will. If neither speaks, Amos can have his way, and both of you
-can leave your bones in this savage country, where you have ventured of
-your own free will."
-
-I saw now there was nothing about the matter so subtle as I had
-thought. After all, it was no more than the old game they had played
-from the beginning.
-
-"I see," said I, quite slowly.
-
-"I am glad of that," said Forsyth.
-
-Whereupon he lay down upon his side, and almost immediately fell sound
-asleep.
-
-And for a long time I watched him slumbering, and wondered greatly upon
-the strange complexity of the man's character. He was polished and
-refined, and something of a scholar, too, if there was real learning
-behind his tags of Latin. He was also not without humanity and a sense
-of justice; else I had now been dead for a whole day and night--and
-that I was still alive I was profoundly grateful. And still, he was a
-villain, as cold-blooded as Amos himself, and more dangerous in the
-sense that he was saner.
-
-These were the thoughts that carried me far into the night. Trust was
-again on sentry; and as I watched the man, I observed that he was
-nodding by the fire. Plainly, he was three parts asleep. Were my
-hands not bound behind my back, it would be a simple matter to escape.
-And as this thought came into my head--lo and behold!--*I was free*!
-
-Someone had approached quite silently from behind me, from the
-direction of the thickets. In a trice, a sharp knife had cut my bonds.
-And--as I have stated--I was free.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIII--HOW AMOS GAINED POSSESSION OF THE MAP
-====================================================
-
-The thing was done so swiftly that I had no time even to look round. I
-sat regarding the burly figure of Joshua Trust, very definitely
-outlined before the red glow of the fire; and I know that the man never
-suspected for a moment what had happened.
-
-Someone whispered in my ear:
-
-"Keep an eye on Trust. Draw back into the thickets as silently as you
-can. There you will find me waiting for you."
-
-I had no need to look at him. I knew the voice of John Bannister, even
-though he did no more than whisper. I was resolved to carry out his
-instructions to the word.
-
-Bannister withdrew. I neither heard nor saw him go, but I felt
-instinctively that he was no longer at my back.
-
-I sat watching Joshua Trust, and saw that the man's chin had dropped
-upon his chest. It was plain to see that, though he tried his best to
-keep awake, he was so sleepy that he could not do so. But, knowing
-that there would be trouble of a certainty if Amos caught him sleeping
-on his post, he might awaken with a start at any moment, and for that
-reason I thought that I had best take the chance that offered.
-
-I had been sitting upright, and still kept my hands behind my back,
-though they were no longer bound together. Moving my attitude as
-little as possible, I drew myself backwards, inch by inch. By this
-cautious method it took me the better part of three minutes to gain the
-margin of the undergrowth--a distance of ten yards at the very most.
-There I was suddenly lifted off my feet, carried a short distance and
-released, to grasp my old friend by the hand.
-
-And so he had found me at last, though it seemed to me for all the
-world as if it was I who had discovered him. He had fulfilled the oath
-he had sworn to my mother many months before; and from this moment we
-were never again to be parted throughout our great adventure.
-
-His story I had learned from William Rushby; but Bannister as yet knew
-nothing of what had happened to me, since he had not seen me from the
-day when I was kidnapped upon the Littlehampton road. But there was no
-time then to talk to one another. With as small delay as possible, we
-must get well beyond the reach of Amos and his friends.
-
-That night we journeyed in one another's company for several hours
-through the darkness of the woods. We could not see where we were
-going, for it was not possible to see a hand before one's face, and we
-were scratched most painfully and often upon the thorn-trees that were
-plentiful amid the underwoods. But this was of no great account, if
-our own safety were ensured; for, sooner or later, Joshua must see that
-I was gone, and would at once give the alarm; and if we were not well
-out of the way by then, it was quite possible that we might be
-overtaken, and our plight would be as bad as ever.
-
-So we hurried blindly on our way, until at last John Bannister deemed
-that we were safe. Then it was that I learned for the first time how
-utterly exhausted he was. He had had no sleep, he told me, for two
-nights, and he was still weak from the fever which had robbed him of
-more than half his strength.
-
-"Let us sleep, Dick," said he. "To-morrow there will be time enough
-for you to tell me all I want to know."
-
-And thereupon we lay down to sleep together, side by side, in the dense
-wood in which I had wandered for so long alone; and, strange as it may
-seem, we slept hand in hand.
-
-I experienced a sense of security and peace such as I had never known,
-it seemed to me, for years. He and I were at last together; and on the
-morrow he must hear all my story, just as I myself had once been wont
-to listen to his wondrous tales of enterprise and daring. I know that
-I was happy, and I also know the reason: I had often dreamed--as boys
-will let their fancy run away with them--that he and I were sojourning
-together in some savage place, beset by many dangers. And I always
-knew that, if he were with me, there would be naught to fear; we would
-come forth unscathed from every peril that threatened life or limb.
-
-In all conscience, we had enough of danger now, on every side of us, in
-the darkness of the Wood. And yet I slept, contented and at peace.
-
-Daylight awoke us, for we were both creatures of the Wild. Marking the
-position of the sun, we set forward towards the west, hoping to gain
-that night the ravine where we had left William Rushby.
-
-Bannister told me that he feared for Rushby's life, since he was sure
-that Amos and the others would return to the ravine with all possible
-speed, so soon as ever they discovered that I had escaped from their
-clutches. I thought by now that I had a fair knowledge of the
-topography of the Wood; but I soon found that Bannister knew as much,
-or even more, than I. In the night we must have fled towards the
-south; for we had not gone far upon the route that we had chosen before
-we came upon the Brook of Scarlet Pebbles.
-
-"I know where we are," cried Bannister, at once. "We are about five
-miles to the south of the Big Fish itself. I can tell that by the size
-of the stones in the stream. We had better change our course towards
-the south."
-
-"But that will take us away from the ravine," said I, "which lies due
-west of the Wood, some distance to the north of the Spaniard's Tomb!"
-
-"You're right, there," said Bannister. "It may be a long way round;
-but the longest way is often the quickest, Dick. In a few hours we
-should be clear of the Wood, although too far to the south. But we
-shall have open country before us, and should march four miles an hour."
-
-I had, by now, told Bannister my story of all that had happened to me
-since I first fell into the hands of Amos Baverstock. He asked few
-questions, though these were always to the point; and when I had told
-him everything, he said nothing, but just placed one of his great hands
-upon my shoulder, and patted me so affectionately that the action
-conveyed far more to me than any words he might have used. I knew that
-he cared for me more than he dared trust himself to say, and, moreover,
-he approved of all that I had done.
-
-So we journeyed towards the north-west, and came, full early in the
-afternoon, to open country. Before us we could see the rocky spurs and
-ridges--which were, in fact, the beginning of the foothills of the
-Andes--running northward for several miles, to end quite suddenly at
-the morass.
-
-John Bannister had changed greatly since the days when I knew him
-first. He looked as big and strong as ever, but had become pitifully
-thin; and I thought his hair was greyer, and there were deeper lines
-upon his forehead. His mouth I could not see, for he had grown a great
-beard, more than touched with grey. And this beard, merged into his
-long moustache, was spread like the beard of a paladin upon his chest.
-
-We directed our way northward in a bee-line, so far as we could judge,
-towards the ravine where we had left William Rushby; and this compelled
-us to clamber over the rocky hillocks and to cross the gullies and
-declivities that intervened. It was hard work, and the sun was baking
-hot. And yet Bannister would not halt, even for food, for we both knew
-well enough that the boatswain's life was in the greatest danger.
-
-"If Baverstock gets there before us," said he, "not only will he gain
-possession of the map, and thereby learn the secret of the Treasure,
-but there is very little doubt that he will put Rushby to death."
-
-"I think so, too," said I. "He has been baulked so often that he will
-not care to take further risks. However, I now believe the man to be
-quite mad. Last evening I saw him look for a long time at Forsyth, and
-I swear there was murder in his eye."
-
-"No such criminals are wholly sane," said Bannister. "Amos has done
-murder more than once, and he will never hesitate to do it again, if he
-thinks that he sees profit in the business. Rushby is defenceless.
-His wound has become septic, though I have dressed it often with what
-skill I have. There is a chance that the evil may spread; and in that
-case nothing can save his life but amputation of the leg. And that, of
-course, we have neither the means of doing, nor the skill to do it if
-we had."
-
-We were silent for a long time after that, though we hastened our
-footsteps, knowing that life and death were in the scales.
-
-I was soon utterly fatigued, and could not fail to see that Bannister
-as well was well-nigh at the end of all his strength. For all that, we
-would not give in; for William Rushby was an honest man, to whom we
-both owed much, and we were determined, if we could, to save his life.
-
-Presently, we began to doubt whether we would reach the ravine before
-nightfall; for the sun, as we could see, was descending rapidly towards
-the crestline of the Andes. Once only did Bannister pause, and then he
-stood stock-still upon a hill-top, shading his eyes with the palm of a
-hand and looking towards the west.
-
-"Was ever anything more wonderful!" said he. "I can never look upon a
-mountain without thinking of Coleridge's *Hymn before Sunrise*: 'Earth
-with her thousand voices, praises God.'"
-
-He stood for a while like a man in a dream; and I, also shading my
-eyes, followed the direction of his gaze, and saw again the great and
-glorious mountains in the distance, like a rugged battlement, scarred
-and crumbled throughout æons of old Time, rising thousands of feet
-before the red sky of evening. And I, too, though I knew naught of the
-poet, felt within me a sense of great awe and reverence for the most
-mighty works of God.
-
-I would have lingered there, I cannot say how long, had not Bannister
-taken me by a hand and led me forcibly away with such long strides that
-I was obliged to run. He looked straight in front of him as he walked.
-I could see that he was preoccupied with his thoughts, and I did not
-care to interrupt them. Looking about me, I thought I recognised the
-country. I was certain we could not be far from the ravine.
-
-And a little after, on a sudden, we heard a shot, fired but a little
-distance to the front of us, towards the right.
-
-Without a word we both began to run, and came, unexpectedly, upon the
-very head of the ravine.
-
-The sun was now behind us; and we could see clearly all there was to
-see. Far down the ravine was the solitary tree to which Bannister had
-been bound when Amos had threatened him with death. And a few yards
-from this, near where the old camping-ground had been, were the figures
-of three men hastening in our direction; and these we recognised at
-once as Forsyth, Trust, and Amos Baverstock himself. Vasco we saw a
-little after come forth from the shadows of the Wood, so laden with
-cooking utensils and the like that he might have been a pack-mule, for
-he was doubled almost in half.
-
-However, we took little notice of him; for our eyes were fixed upon the
-pathetic figure of poor Rushby, who was limping in great agony as he
-tried to run. It was clear from the first that he had little chance of
-escaping. It was inevitable that he must be overtaken almost at once.
-Suddenly he pitched forward upon his face, and lay quite still upon the
-ground; and, since no shot had been fired, we guessed that he had
-fainted from pain and exhaustion. Amos pounced upon him as a cat
-springs upon a mouse.
-
-I was, of course, unarmed, for I had left my blow-pipe by the Tomb.
-But Bannister, who carried his rifle, hesitated to shoot, for a very
-natural reason: at that range, if he fired at Amos, as like as not he
-might hit William Rushby. So, together, we set forward running, hoping
-that even yet we might not be too late to save the boatswain's life.
-
-Amos was on his hands and knees by the side of Rushby; and as we
-approached he sprang to his feet, waving something in his hand.
-
-"He has got the map!" cried Bannister, who at once brought his rifle to
-his shoulder and fired straight at Amos.
-
-The singing of the bullet must have made Baverstock realise that he was
-not by any means as safe as he would like. For the man cast no more
-than a glance in our direction, and then turned upon his heel, to set
-off running down the ravine as fast as his legs could carry him.
-
-Trust followed his example; and Vasco, the Spaniard, turned at once
-back into the Wood. I saw that Forsyth hesitated for a moment; and
-then, knowing full well that his strength was as nothing when compared
-to that of Bannister, he also turned and fled.
-
-Bannister fired two more shots; but, as he was out of breath from
-running, neither of these had any effect upon Amos, at whom they were
-directed, save that they were near enough to make him run the faster.
-
-Our first care, at any rate, was for William Rushby, who--as we
-guessed--had fainted from his great efforts to escape. He regained
-consciousness as soon as ever his face was bathed with water; and then,
-sitting up, he looked at us and groaned.
-
-"He has taken it?" he asked.
-
-Bannister tugged at his beard and shot a glance towards the Wood.
-
-"Yes," said he. "At last Amos has the map. By to-morrow evening he
-will have found the Big Fish. After all these years he will be able to
-feast his eyes upon the Greater Treasure of the Incas."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIV--HOW AMOS WAS POSSESSED OF SEVEN DEVILS
-====================================================
-
-I felt, at that moment, so despondent that I was disposed to burst into
-tears, to cry like a child through utter disappointment. For a minute
-we discussed the matter between ourselves, and tried in vain to see one
-ray of daylight. Look at it as we might, from every aspect, the
-situation seemed just about as bad as it could be.
-
-Bannister himself was too exhausted to continue the pursuit, and Rushby
-was a wounded man, whom, in any case, we dared not again leave alone in
-the ravine.
-
-"What is to be done?" I asked. And there was something so woeful in my
-expression that Bannister smiled.
-
-"We must make the best of a bad business, Dick," said he. "After all,
-Rushby's life is of more account than the Treasure. Clearly, it is not
-safe for us to remain here in open country. We must return to the
-Wood, and find a place where we can hide. A few hours' rest, and I
-shall have strength enough to go on; but I am not disposed to leave my
-comrade until his life is out of danger."
-
-As he spoke, he placed a hand upon Rushby's shoulder; and I saw by the
-look in the boatswain's face that he thought no less of John Bannister
-than I.
-
-"You'll not wait for me, sir," the boatswain answered. "I want nothing
-better than to see Amos run to earth; for I have not forgotten the
-voyage of the *Mary Greenfield*, when mainly through him I was cast
-into irons. Besides, it's my fault that he has now got the map, and
-I'll never cease to blame myself for that."
-
-"Forget it all!" said Bannister. "And as for future plans, they can
-wait till we are rested. The sooner we are out of this place the
-better; for we know not what Baverstock may do."
-
-Then and there we gathered together what little baggage we possessed,
-as well as everything that Amos had left behind him when he had hurried
-from the camp. There were two rifles between us--and we wanted no
-more, since Rushby was a casualty; but we could find only ten rounds of
-ammunition, and I was without my blow-pipe.
-
-I loaded myself with the rifles and equipment, whereas Bannister picked
-up Rushby in his arms and carried him into the Wood. There we had not
-long to search before we found a good hiding-place, a little hollow in
-the midst of the thickets, where, Bannister told us, a jaguar had
-reared her cubs. There was a stream near by, that connected, beyond
-doubt, with the Brook of Scarlet Pebbles, and we were therefore well
-supplied with water.
-
-Almost at once the three of us fell fast asleep. For myself, I had
-never been so fatigued; and yet I awoke at daybreak, and immediately,
-without disturbing my companions, went forth in search of food, and did
-not return until I had as many wild fruits and berries as I could
-conveniently carry in Bannister's haversack. I then made a fire; and
-whilst I was thus employed the other two awakened.
-
-Bannister's first office was to attend to the boatswain's wound. This
-he washed and dressed--very skilfully, I thought--and then ordered
-Rushby to lie quite still and to make no attempt to move.
-
-Whilst we were eating we talked of what was best to do; and in this
-argument the boatswain took a leading part. He had a mind of his own,
-and was determined, from the first, to have his way.
-
-He told us that he was well enough where he was, if we left him food to
-eat and a pannikin of water within reach, so that there would be no
-need for him to move. As for John Bannister and me, we must take the
-two rifles and what ammunition there was, and set forward without delay
-towards the Big Fish, to find Baverstock and his three companions.
-
-"Though the odds are two to one against you," he added, "that will make
-no difference. Stalk him, as you would a wild beast, and put a bullet
-through the scoundrel, as he comes up from the vault. This evening he
-will be there or thereabouts. Our one consolation is that he has no
-means of taking the Treasure away. But you must be quick, sir; for I'm
-open to a wager that Baverstock goes back across the plain, to find
-forest Indians to work for him under the whip, that he may carry all
-this gold to one of the rivers, and thence down-stream in more than one
-canoe."
-
-There was little question that William Rushby had got the hang of the
-affair. Indeed, all that he predicted was, or might have been, the
-truth. It was not so much, I think, because Bannister wished to thwart
-his ancient enemy, as because he desired to see for himself how the
-whole business would end, that we set forward into the Wood at about
-midday, our destination being the Red Fish itself.
-
-Bannister told me that you could not reach the Treasure from the
-northern side, because the brook there opened out into a swamp, where
-you could sink to the neck in mud, to be eaten alive by leeches. It
-was therefore necessary for us to journey by a circuitous route towards
-the west, until we came upon the Brook of Scarlet Pebbles, somewhere to
-the south of the tunnel that led to the Fish. However, we had the sun
-to guide us, and both Bannister and I were well acquainted with the
-Wood.
-
-And now, for once, I must tell my story from a point of view other than
-my own, and follow, for a few hours, the fortunes of Amos Baverstock.
-Afterwards, I was destined to behold with my own eyes the raving lunacy
-of that unhappy man, and to witness the spectacle of a tragedy, at once
-gruesome and fantastic. But first, I tell the story as I heard it from
-the lips of Mr. Forsyth; and very weird it is.
-
-With the map in his possession, Amos set forth without delay to feast
-his eyes upon the Treasure. Though his three companions were overcome
-by fatigue, and there was but half an hour that evening before sunset,
-the hunchback would not halt until darkness compelled him to do so; and
-that night the excited and disordered condition of his mind would not
-allow him to sleep.
-
-He had them up in the small hours that they might be ready to start at
-daybreak; and they struck the Brook of Scarlet Pebbles early that
-morning, but a few miles to the north of the Big Fish.
-
-Forsyth afterwards told us that all that day Amos never spoke, but
-forged ahead with the map in his hand, the others following as best
-they could. The man was now blinded by his own greed and avarice. He
-seemed alike incapable of fatigue and insensible to physical pain; for
-he rushed forward with such mad impetuosity that he was cut to pieces
-on the thorns, and was soon bleeding profusely from a score of places.
-
-He came, on a sudden, upon the swamp, into which he plunged so
-recklessly that he was waist-deep before he knew it. Then, to his
-great alarm, he found that he was unable to move. He was held tight in
-the mud, and was at once attacked by scores of little leeches.
-
-He threw up his arms into the air like a drowning man, crying out
-piteously for help. Forsyth, as cool as ever--as I can well
-imagine--at once cut down a long bamboo, and held this out to Amos, who
-was eventually hauled back to safety, though covered from head to foot
-in mud.
-
-The leeches they were obliged to cut away from him with knives; and all
-the time the man reviled them for not making greater haste, telling
-them repeatedly that they were but a short distance from the Treasure,
-upon which he was determined to set eyes that very day.
-
-It was then that his companions, for the first time, suspected that the
-man's mind was disordered; for Amos talked like a lunatic, and there
-was a strange look in his eyes. For instance, he whipped round upon
-Forsyth and told him that he had ever been a stumbling-block, with his
-refined manners and his London airs, since the expedition started from
-Caracas. At which Forsyth laughed aloud.
-
-"Your memory is something short," said he. "Less than five minutes ago
-I saved your life. You were sinking even as I pulled you out. Had it
-not been for me, you would have been drowned in black, stinking mud,
-and your corpse devoured by leeches."
-
-At that, Amos burst into the wild and hideous laughter of a madman.
-
-"Liar!" he shrieked. "You saved the map! It was not me you saved; it
-was the map--and without risk to yourself. Much good may it do you! I
-shall see to it that you profit nothing. Trust Amos Baverstock for
-that!"
-
-And then he laughed again, and again called Forsyth "Liar!"
-
-At the time they thought little or nothing of all this, the high talk
-of an excited man. They believed him to be in one of his fits of
-uncontrollable anger, when he could never rightly be held responsible
-for either his actions or his words. But they left him as he was,
-sticky with the black mud, with many horrid little leeches still glued
-upon his skin, that was already all blood-stained from the thorns. And
-they made a circuit of the swamp towards the east, and came suddenly
-upon the open place where the Red Fish stood forth from the ground,
-with opened mouth, as if in the act of leaping from the water.
-
-They had no need to cast about them, as I had done, in order to find
-the entrance to the vault; for I had left traces as plain as any
-printed book to read, and the flowers and ferns that I had planted were
-not yet so well established that they looked quite natural.
-
-Amos rushed in like a mad dog, and in feverish haste fell to working
-with his knife, scattering broadcast the soft, rich soil that lay
-between the rocks. In this task he was assisted by the others--for now
-they were all near as wild with excitement as Amos himself. In a
-little time they had the slab laid bare; then they threw it backwards,
-so that they beheld the stone steps leading downward to the vault.
-
-They had no need to make a torch, as I had done, since they had always
-carried with them a small collapsible lantern, and with this in one
-hand and the map in the other, Amos led the way down the steps, through
-the ante-chamber where the floor was paved with ingots, and thence into
-the great vault below.
-
-And, thereupon, there is little doubt that Amos Baverstock went wholly
-mad. He rushed here and there, yelling like a fiend. He snatched up
-the gold in handfuls--the drinking vessels, the rings and bracelets and
-the ingots--and cast them, in a kind of frenzy, right and left, all the
-time shouting and dancing and filling that great chamber with the
-echoes of his laughter.
-
-Then he filled his arms with ingots, and tied these together with a
-rifle-sling, so that they resembled a great golden faggot, and weighed
-far more than any normal man could carry. For the time being, he knew
-not what he did; but was possessed of seven devils that were brothers,
-and more like to one another than in general brothers are; and their
-names were Avarice, Violence, Jealousy, Cruelty, Revenge, Cowardice,
-and Cunning. Forsyth and the others regarded him amazed.
-
-Amos dashed up the stairway, carrying his great load upon his crooked
-back. When he reached the open air, he threw his bundle down upon the
-ground, and then turned an ear to listen at the stairhead.
-
-He heard Forsyth, Trust, and Vasco ascending in pursuit of him; and
-then again he burst into his madman's laughter, and, laying hold of the
-slab, hurled it back into its place, and rolled a great boulder upon
-the top of it; for his strength was not his own, but that of all the
-seven devils that were brothers who possessed him.
-
-"Lie there and rot!" he shouted. And they below heard his footsteps as
-he danced upon the stone.
-
-.. _`"'Lie there and rot!' he shouted. And they below heard his footsteps as he danced upon the stone"`:
-
-.. figure:: images/img-288.jpg
- :align: center
- :alt: "'LIE THERE AND ROT!' HE SHOUTED. AND THEY BELOW HEARD HIS FOOTSTEPS AS HE DANCED UPON THE STONE."
-
- "'LIE THERE AND ROT!' HE SHOUTED. AND THEY BELOW HEARD HIS FOOTSTEPS AS HE DANCED UPON THE STONE."
-
-They cried out to him to be merciful and to release them; but he only
-laughed the more, telling them that he was going alone across the plain
-to find Indian porters to carry the Treasure through the wilderness,
-and that he would not return for months--by which time they three would
-be dead--dead as Orellano's soldier--starved to death in the very midst
-of the gold they had endured so much to gain.
-
-And then Amos Baverstock set forward, laughing loudly, with his heavy
-burden on his back, and a heavier burden still upon his soul. He went
-alone into the woods, whilst the daylight faded and the shadows flooded
-the undergrowth; and his loud, mad laughter scared the monkeys and the
-birds amid the tree-tops; even the jaguar slunk away in fear at the
-sound of that unholy mirth. The very Wild was filled with terror--all
-save the great and stealthy snake that lay coiled in silence in the
-cool woodland pool, more evil even than Amos, more strong than all his
-seven devils, more cruel than Death itself.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXV--HOW THE SHEEP WERE SHORN
-=====================================
-
-In the meantime, John Bannister and I journeyed together through the
-Wood, and came in a few hours to the Brook of Scarlet Pebbles. This we
-crossed, and took up our westerly route, in order to avoid the swamp of
-which we knew. This was a far longer march than that accomplished by
-Amos; and that night we camped in the jungle--so far as we could
-tell--a mile or two to the west of the Red Fish.
-
-Early the following morning we continued on our way, and soon struck
-the Brook, as chance had it, at the pool of the electric eels, into
-which we waded without a moment's hesitation. We found the tunnel
-without difficulty, and through this advanced stealthily towards the
-open place where we knew the Red Fish to be. We took good care to make
-as little noise as possible; for we expected to find Amos and his
-friends encamped above the vault. And then Bannister ordered me to
-remain behind, whilst he went forward to get what news he could.
-
-I should say that half an hour elapsed before he returned; and that was
-an anxious time for me. Expecting every moment to hear a rifle-shot, I
-waited, knee-deep in water, in the impenetrable darkness of the tunnel.
-So dark was it, indeed, that I never knew that Bannister had returned,
-until I heard his voice quite close to me.
-
-He told me what he had seen. There was little doubt that the vault had
-been visited since my departure, several days before; but there was one
-circumstance which he could not by any means explain.
-
-"A great boulder has been rolled upon the slab," said he, "as if to
-weigh it down. It looks as if Amos meant to keep the Treasure safe."
-
-"I know nothing of that," said I.
-
-"Then, you had best come with me," said Bannister. "The road's clear
-enough, though something extraordinary has happened."
-
-We came forth together from the tunnel, and I was at once half-blinded
-by the sudden daylight, just as I had been before, when I first beheld
-the red rock standing forth from the ground in the very semblance of a
-fish with opened mouth. But when I could use my eyes again, I saw that
-everything in that strange place was just as I had left it, with the
-exception that the stone slab was no longer covered with earth, and a
-great boulder, round as a snowball, lay upon the top of it.
-
-"Who placed this here?" I asked; and that was more than Bannister could
-answer.
-
-We went together to the slab, and there he lay down and listened, with
-his ear upon the stone.
-
-"I can hear nothing," said he. "It will be safe enough to enter."
-
-At this we removed the boulder, lifted the slab, and went down the
-stone steps into the Treasure-chamber below.
-
-It was quite dark, for we had neither torch nor lantern. We had made
-certain that the place would be deserted, and it therefore came to us
-something in the nature of a shock, when we beard a jingling sound--as
-if some one, who had been asleep upon the gold, had sprung on a sudden
-to his feet. And then a human voice cried out to us; and this was so
-loud and unexpected that I confess I jumped as if I had been pricked
-with the point of a knife. For all that, I recognised the voice at
-once as that of Joshua Trust.
-
-"You've come back!" he cried. "Stand clear of me, or else I'll wring
-your neck! Who's he who swore that he never yet went back upon his
-friends?"
-
-There followed a pause, during which I tried my best to make head and
-tail of what the man had said. It speaks much for John Bannister's
-intelligence that he tumbled to the truth at once. To my bewilderment,
-he answered in a voice that was like enough to that of Amos Baverstock.
-
-"I've come back all right," said he. "But I'm here to offer terms,
-which you may accept or not, as you wish."
-
-And thereupon, for some reason or other, the Spaniard, Vasco, burst
-forth into such a rapid stream of language that it seemed to me--who
-understood not a word of what he said--that he swore with the most
-amazing fluency and violence. At all events, when at last he ended,
-apparently for want of breath, it came as a kind of relief to us to
-hear the lazy drawl of Mr. Forsyth.
-
-"*Amicus certus in re incerta*," he observed. "Sure friend in doubtful
-circumstances. Amos, we welcome you. We greet you as Joseph received
-his brethren."
-
-It was then that Bannister spoke in his natural voice; and, as I
-listened, I tried to imagine the feelings of those others whom his
-words took so wholly by surprise.
-
-"Amos Baverstock has not returned," said he; "and I am prepared to take
-my oath he never will. A certain friend, in very truth, was he who led
-you here, and then entrapped you that you all might starve to death!"
-
-"Who's that?" cried Trust.
-
-"My name's John Bannister. And it was you, Joshua Trust, who once
-tried to kill me--who, indeed, left me for dead. Do you remember that
-day in the mountains, when Amos caught me in Cahazaxa's Tomb? Well,
-now he has done the same for you. He has buried you alive; and when he
-comes back for the gold he covets, he will think to find it strewn with
-the bones of those who were fools enough to believe he was their
-friend."
-
-I heard Trust groan in the darkness; or, I think, perhaps, a growl
-describes it better. Forsyth, judging by the tones of his voice, was
-just as calm as ever.
-
-"Bannister!" he exclaimed. "So this is the end of it all! We are to
-owe our lives to you!"
-
-"That's a matter," answered Bannister, "for yourselves to settle. How
-long have you been here?"
-
-"Not many hours," said Forsyth; "but it seems like days and nights. We
-have had time enough in which to consider the misery of our
-end--without water, food, or light, in the midst of all this gold."
-
-Bannister was silent a moment. He had not descended the stairs into
-the chamber, but stood upon a step about midway down with myself close
-behind him.
-
-"I'll have no treachery," said he. "It is very needful that you
-understand the situation as it is. I am a man of my word, as you may
-or may not know, and I set you free on certain conditions only."
-
-"Fire ahead," said Forsyth. "State your terms. Anything for daylight
-and for freedom--for the certain knowledge that we have been granted a
-new lease of life."
-
-"Good!" said Bannister. "I go before you up the staircase, and wait
-for you above. Whatever arms you have you leave behind you. If any
-one of you comes forth with a rifle in his possession, I shoot him dead
-upon the spot."
-
-"We share the gold with you?" asked Joshua Trust.
-
-"Not an ounce of it, you fool!" cried Bannister. "Years ago I might
-have had it for myself, had I wished to play the robber. All this
-treasure is not yours or mine or anyone's; it belongs by right to the
-Government of the country. I am neither a smuggler nor a thief. Were
-it worth less, I might not be so honest; but here are millions, such as
-to release would be to let loose a great force of evil that would
-profit no one, and ourselves least of all. Here this gold has lain for
-ages, and here let it lie. That is one of my conditions."
-
-"Let us out!" cried Trust. "All night I have dreamed that I must eat
-bars of gold to live. I have sucked golden ingots with parched, dry
-lips. I have slept upon gold, and never before had I a couch so
-uninviting. Let us out, I say! I agree to anything."
-
-At that, Bannister bade me ascend the stairs, and followed close upon
-my heels. When we reached the top, we waited both with our rifles at
-the ready, prepared to fire upon the first sign of trouble. But the
-three of them, one behind the other, came forth out of the vault as
-meek as shorn lambs--first Trust; then Vasco; and finally, Mr. Gilbert
-Forsyth, who, swaggering into the daylight in no particular haste, had
-the audacity to hold out a hand to Bannister, as if he greeted an old
-acquaintance.
-
-John Bannister, however, did no more than shrug his shoulders, and then
-went to the stone slab and threw it back into its place.
-
-"When did Amos leave here?" he asked, turning again to Forsyth.
-
-"Last night."
-
-"Did he say anything before he went?"
-
-"Yes, he was so gracious as to tell us we could die where he had left
-us. As for himself, he was going back into the forest to find native
-porters to carry the gold away."
-
-"Just as we thought!" said Bannister. "Rushby was in the right."
-
-And, thereupon, our attention was immediately attracted by the strange
-conduct of Joshua Trust, who looked up at the little patch of blue sky
-just visible between the overhanging branches of the trees, clenched
-both his fists in an amazing burst of passion, and shook them above his
-head.
-
-"He shall pay for this!" he cried, with an oath that can never be
-repeated. "And I have served him faithfully for years! He has gone
-back upon me, when he saw that he had gained everything he wanted! By
-thunder, he shall pay for it!"
-
-Bannister looked at him, and smiled.
-
-"Have more sense, man," said he. "What use is all this anger? Amos
-Baverstock is mad."
-
-"Mad or sane," cried Trust, "he shall answer for what he has done.
-Come, tell me, what's the time?"
-
-"I should think no more than ten," said Bannister. "We started at
-daybreak, and we were not two hours upon the march before we found the
-brook."
-
-When I looked at Joshua, I was reminded of the man whom I had known on
-board the *Mary Greenfield*, who was wont to sit drinking at his cards.
-He was red of eye and flushed of countenance, and I saw that his lips
-trembled with a passion he was quite unable to contain. He was a rough
-man, in any case; and now that he had lived for months in the
-wilderness, and had been saved from death as it were at the eleventh
-hour, he was the greatest savage of the five of us.
-
-"Ten o'clock," he repeated. "Four bells, by Christopher! Then, he
-can't be far away. He can never have travelled far by night, for he
-took with him a hundredweight of gold. I'll go after him," he cried.
-"He shall answer yet for what he tried to do."
-
-Bannister stretched out an arm to detain the man; but Trust sprang
-aside and, with another oath, dived into the thickets.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVI--A NIGHT OF TERROR
-===============================
-
-I was about to follow in pursuit of Trust, and had even taken a few
-steps towards the undergrowth upon the right bank of the brook, when
-Bannister called me back.
-
-"What's the use?" said he. "Let dogs delight. We have our own friends
-to think of."
-
-"Our own friends?" said I.
-
-"Have you forgotten Rushby? We have left him alone too long as it is.
-His life is more to us than the fate of either Trust or Baverstock; and
-he is in danger just as great."
-
-At those words, I felt something of shame that I had indeed forgotten
-one who had proved himself so loyal and true a comrade.
-
-"Then, what's to be done?" I asked.
-
-"That's not so easy to decide," said Bannister. "I take it," he added,
-turning again to Forsyth, "that you are now willing to cast in your lot
-with us, to give up all thought of plunder?"
-
-Forsyth actually yawned.
-
-"Have it your own way," said he. "I have made a promise which I will
-faithfully keep. I have always believed that there was honour among
-thieves; but, even here, I find I was mistaken. To speak the truth, I
-am heartily sick of the whole business, which has cost me a pretty
-penny with nothing to show for it, save a scratched skin and a score of
-bruises, and the loss of an ear. You may count me as one of
-yourselves. I have little enough, perhaps, upon which to flatter
-myself, but if there is skill in gaining, there is at least an art in
-losing. It can be done gracefully. Do you not agree?"
-
-"Moralise as much as you like," laughed Bannister. "It amounts to no
-more than this: you have failed dismally, and are glad enough to find
-yourself alive. You are wise to accept the situation as it is. That's
-all the same to me. Henceforward, you are under my orders, and I
-expect prompt obedience."
-
-"I shall be charmed," said Forsyth, with a mock bow. "And what of
-Rushby?"
-
-"He lies some way to the north," said Bannister. "I am alarmed at his
-condition. The wound in his leg is septic, and it is very doubtful
-whether he will recover."
-
-"I am distressed to hear it," answered the other, to whose effrontery
-there seemed no end; for he added, "If the truth be told, it was I
-myself who shot him--with the best intentions in the world."
-
-"No doubt," said Bannister grimly. "There has been give and take on
-both sides; and I am the more glad to have saved your life, since I
-know for a fact that you stood between Dick, here, and certain death,
-when Amos would have killed him. But we waste time in useless talk.
-Before we leave this place, I propose to cover the slab with earth, to
-hide all traces of an intrusion so utterly worthless, doomed to failure
-from the start."
-
-And thereupon the four of us set to work, scraping the soft earth back
-upon the stone slab; for Bannister, who had enough of Spanish to
-express his meaning, soon found another ally in Vasco, who, after all,
-was a weak, shiftless kind of fellow, with few opinions of his own.
-Though the man had been bewildered by the sight of so much gold, the
-Treasure had had much the same effect on him as on myself when I first
-went down into that vast, amazing chamber. He was frightened of it
-all; and as well as that, he now realised for the first time that he
-had served for all these months one who was both treacherous and mad;
-and had it not been for Bannister and me, he would not have escaped
-with life.
-
-We were all hard at work upon our hands and knees, when we were
-surprised by the sound of a rifle-shot, fired at no great distance in
-the Wood, in a northerly direction.
-
-Bannister got slowly to his feet, and stood listening; and then,
-although he turned in my direction, it was as if he spoke quietly to
-himself.
-
-"One shot," said he. "And one shot only."
-
-That was all he said.
-
-"Trust was never armed," said I.
-
-"That signifies nothing," answered Bannister. "Amos is loaded down by
-gold. If he carried a rifle, Trust may have wrenched it from his
-hands."
-
-We waited for some minutes, expecting to hear another shot, or perhaps
-some other sound. But the whole Wood was silent--the silence of
-midday, when the sun is at its height and all the wilderness is
-resting, the wild things seeking refuge from the fierce rays of the
-tropic sun.
-
-"Come," said Bannister, "we had best see to this."
-
-He led the way into the undergrowth, and we followed him in single
-file. The trail of Amos was broad as a road, for, in his madness, he
-had rushed forward, breaking down all obstacles that stood in his path
-by the sheer weight of the gold he carried and the impetuous, headlong
-nature of his flight.
-
-There could be little doubt that Joshua Trust had followed him with as
-little difficulty as we. Certain it was that they could not be far
-ahead, since Trust himself had not yet been absent half an hour. In
-all probability, the night before, Amos himself, overtaken by the
-darkness, had fallen sound asleep, and, being exhausted by his frenzied
-efforts, had slumbered on until long after daybreak.
-
-In any case, we had not journeyed far before we came upon the still,
-huddled form of him who had once been known as Joshua Trust, who now
-lay a corpse, in a pool of his own blood, upon the trail that he had
-followed.
-
-John Bannister kneeled down upon the ground beside the body, but
-presently got sharply to his feet.
-
-"Stone-dead," said he, and nodded sagely, as if to signify that hither
-in the end go all things weak and mortal.
-
-"Shot?" I asked.
-
-"By Amos. Through the heart."
-
-We stood in silence around the body, and I know that I was thinking
-that it would be no more than common decency to bury this poor,
-misguided man where he had fallen, when there came to my ears a sound
-that made my very blood run cold.
-
-It was a sound of laughter, faint and far away. Never in my wildest
-nightmares had I heard laughter to compare to that. It was the
-laughter of a fiend, terrible to listen to, for there was something in
-it of the chuckling of an old, demented man, the cry of a new-born
-child, and the senseless mirth of one who is delirious.
-
-In that half-light we looked at one another. There was cold fear in
-the eyes of us all, even in the eyes of John Bannister, who I did not
-know had fear of anything that lived upon the earth.
-
-"Amos!" he exclaimed. But his voice was no more than a whisper.
-
-I saw that Forsyth shuddered. And then that man, as a rule so calm and
-nonchalant, who had always seemed to me to dread nothing so much as
-that he might show his feelings, burst forth in the hottest
-indignation. I shall never forget that moment, for it was the only
-occasion upon which I saw John Bannister afraid, and Mr. Forsyth
-alive--a living, sentient being--in every fibre of his body.
-
-"This madman must not live!" he shouted.
-
-Bannister answered slowly, in the same quiet voice in which he had
-spoken before.
-
-"I am inclined to think you right," said he. "His very existence upon
-the face of the earth is a blot upon Creation. The sound of that
-hideous laughter robs the wilderness of all its beauty."
-
-"Then, after him!" cried Forsyth.
-
-"Leave that to me," said Bannister.
-
-He opened his rifle, and slipped a cartridge into the breech. I heard
-the click of the lock, and I saw how tightly his right hand gripped the
-small of the butt. And I knew that death was still in the pot, that we
-were not yet at the end of all this strife and horrid bloodshed.
-
-We went forward in pursuit, Bannister leading, hot upon the trail, the
-other three of us following at his heels.
-
-All that afternoon we journeyed in a direction north-eastward, so far
-as we could judge. And from time to time we heard the shrill, savage
-laughter of that maniac, but a little way before us. And each time we
-heard it, we were filled with dread--the dread that comes naturally to
-one who finds himself confronted by the supernatural--the same dread
-that is believed to make the human hair to stand on end in the presence
-of a ghost.
-
-For Amos Baverstock, body, mind, and soul, was still in the possession
-of his seven raging devils; and it was as if these evil spirits
-infested the humid, stifling atmosphere of the very jungle through
-which we passed in hot pursuit. Hitherto, we had been adventurers in a
-savage land; we had walked in the midst of dangers that were material
-and real. But now, with that unearthly laughter for ever in our ears,
-we felt that we were wayfarers in the dark nether regions, that not
-only our lives, but our very souls as well, were in peril of perdition,
-of everlasting death. The fleeting shadows of the Wood were to us the
-twilight of the Underworld. We were opposed by forces stronger and
-more evil than wild beasts and wicked men.
-
-Darkness caught us before we had overtaken the madman whom we chased.
-How he had managed to elude us for so long is little short of a
-miracle; for he was weighed down by the gold he carried on his back.
-There were times when he was quite near to us, when we could distinctly
-hear him breaking his way through the thickets, rushing blindly onward.
-And at such times he was silent--ominously silent. But he would
-always, quite suddenly, shoot ahead again--how, we could not tell--and
-presently, we would hear his wild laughter as before, far away from
-us--laughter in which there was something of triumphant glee, as well
-as lunacy and senseless mirth, incomprehensible and terrible to hear.
-
-All that night, during which we rested twice--on each occasion for an
-hour or more--we heard his laughter in the Wood, throughout the length
-and breadth of which it was as if fear of the man had spread. I verily
-believe the monkeys sat shivering above us in the tree-tops, and the
-great beasts of prey, who were wont to hunt by night, crouched with
-flattened ears like frightened cats in the dark places of the jungle.
-
-Speaking for myself, I know that I experienced a most novel and
-insecure sensation. I felt that the constant sound of this demoniacal
-laughter would in the end drive me also mad; and Vasco, I am certain,
-felt the same, though I cannot speak for the others.
-
-For all that, I had never seen an expression of such invincible
-determination as the daylight disclosed upon the face of Bannister.
-His jaw was set: his lips tight pressed, and there was a look in his
-eyes as hard as steel.
-
-He said not a word to any one of us; and we had no thought of food,
-though we all four drank deeply of water at the first stream to which
-we came.
-
-Then we went on, following the trail, with the sound of that maniac's
-laughter to guide us like the siren of a ship in a fog at sea.
-
-Never was a journey more strange, more ghostly. We were haunted men,
-though we found upon the road evidence of the material. For, here and
-there, lay golden ingots that had fallen from his arms, and there was
-blood, too, upon the dead leaves upon the ground, where he had torn his
-flesh upon the thorns.
-
-And then, at last, we sighted him, in a place where the undergrowth was
-sparse and the trees a little way apart. For no longer than an instant
-did we see him, else John Bannister had shot him dead; for it was a mad
-dog we hunted, and it was not right that he should live. Strange as it
-may seem--since they had sojourned for so many months in one another's
-company--it was Mr. Gilbert Forsyth who was most keen upon the chase.
-He was like a bloodhound on the trail. It was as much as Bannister
-could do to keep him back.
-
-"Have at him!" he cried. "There he is! Shoot, man! Shoot him down!"
-
-But--as I have said--we caught no more than a glimpse of him. That
-glimpse, however, was enough. If it had been terrible to hear his
-laughter, it was even more terrible to behold him with our eyes. Every
-shred of clothing had been torn from his back. He was plastered with
-black mud from the swamp in which he had waded; and this mud--though we
-could not see that--was still alive with little leeches that were
-draining the life's blood in his veins. His hair was all ragged and
-dirty; and without clothes he was more hideous than ever. We could see
-the ingots, tied in a great bundle upon his back; and we marvelled that
-any human being could carry so great a load. He shot a look at us
-before he dived again into the undergrowth; and in that look there was
-that for which we could not fail to pity him, vile and evil though the
-man had been all the days of his life.
-
-His eyes were bright as ever, yet seemed to have grown larger, and, at
-the same time, to have sunk deep into his head. His mouth, which was
-never straight, was twisted to a degree that was alarming. He had
-always the thinnest of lips, which he kept as a rule pressed tight
-together; but now his mouth was opened wide, and he was slobbering. As
-for his eyebrows, they reminded me of Satan himself as I have seen him
-pictured, for they met upon the bridge of his nose, to slant upward,
-arrow-shaped.
-
-John Bannister dashed forward. I saw that he meant to make a supreme
-effort to overtake the man. We all wanted it to end, for the whole
-affair was ghastly; and yet we dreaded the end, just as a hangman must
-have no liking for his duty. And ours--we thought--was the very
-hangman's work.
-
-It so happened that in this place the Wood was dense. Amos did not
-laugh again, but we could hear him just in front of us; though, strive
-as we might, we could not overtake him, until the pursuit had lasted,
-perhaps, another twenty minutes--for, in such a case as this, it is
-impossible to keep account of time.
-
-Bannister, who was still leading, of a sudden caught his foot in the
-root of a tree, and pitched forward on his face. Without pausing an
-instant, Forsyth rushed past him; and I, knowing that Forsyth was
-unarmed, and fearing that he might come to the same violent end as
-Joshua Trust, hastened after him, without looking to see if Bannister
-were hurt.
-
-Almost at once I caught sight of Amos, but dared not fire at him,
-because Forsyth was in front of me. And then, suddenly and
-unaccountably, to my amazement Amos stopped, and looked back at us with
-a face hideously contorted.
-
-I carried my rifle to my shoulder, and I believe I would have pressed
-the trigger, had I not then seen what it was that had brought the
-fugitive to a standstill. He had broken his way headlong through the
-thickets, and now found himself upon the bank of a wide, dark pool, and
-we were so close upon his heels that he had no time to turn either to
-the right or to the left.
-
-It is my great regret that I did not fire; but I may be excused,
-inasmuch as I did not at once recognise the place, and had then not the
-least suspicion of what was about to happen. No sooner was my rifle to
-my shoulder than Amos turned away from me, and, without a sound, with
-his great load of gold upon his back, plunged straight into the pool.
-
-He sank so low at first that we thought he must be well beyond his
-depth; but, almost at once, his feet found something firm--I think the
-fallen trunk of a tree buried beneath the water. He rose to his full
-height with the water no higher than his knees, and began to stumble
-onward, when the whole of this uncanny business reached its tragic and
-terrible conclusion.
-
-I saw something move upon the surface of the water--something that shot
-across the pool in utter silence and with the rapidity of an arrow.
-Right round Amos it swerved, and passed so close to us--who stood
-gaping on the bank--that we could not fail to recognise what this
-horror was. It was the flat and evil head of a gigantic, loathsome
-serpent.
-
-Then the truth burst upon me like a sudden rush of ice, and I realised
-that Amos Baverstock was come to that place which I myself had named
-the Glade of Silent Death.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVII--HOW AMOS MET HIS END
-===================================
-
-We stood horror-stricken upon the bank of that dark pool--mute,
-impotent spectators of a tragedy we were powerless to prevent.
-
-Vasco, the Spaniard, stood beside me; and I heard his teeth chattering
-in his head like castanets. As for Forsyth, before that gruesome
-spectacle was ended he turned away with a kind of sickening sob, at the
-same time passing a hand across his eyes, by which I knew that the man
-was human after all. Bannister--who had soon caught us up--said
-nothing, but stood rigid at the back of us, his rifle in his hands,
-ready to fire so soon as an opportunity should offer. As for myself,
-it was as if I was transfixed in petrified amazement. I was hypnotised
-by the terror of the thing I saw, and could not look away, but must
-watch the tragic business to the last.
-
-With a great splash of water, the immense body of the snake arose from
-out the middle of the pool, the surface of which forthwith became
-agitated by scores of little waves, forming a series of concentric
-circles, spreading outward to the bank.
-
-We saw the glistening coils of the terrific reptile wind themselves,
-swiftly and yet stealthily, around the frail body of the doomed,
-unhappy Amos. He let out a piercing shriek, far more terrifying to
-hear than the uncanny laughter with which he had disturbed the silence
-of the woods--it was freezing in its shrillness. And at the same time
-he threw both his arms above his head, so that his heavy bundle of
-golden ingots fell into the water and at once disappeared from view.
-
-He made--so far as we could see--no effort of resistance. Terror, it
-seemed, had mastered every muscle, nerve, and sinew in his body. He
-was paralysed by fear. We could see, in that dim, religious light, the
-huge head of the snake swaying backward and forward in front of him,
-whilst its long forked tongue darted swiftly in and out. We saw the
-man's face, too, livid with fright, and his wide, staring eyes. For a
-moment all his features worked spasmodically. I think he tried to cry
-out once more; but the breath had already been driven from his slender
-frame by the colossal strength of the relentless serpent that, even as
-we looked, broke down the slender bulwark of his ribs.
-
-It was then that John Bannister fired. He told me afterwards that he
-meant to put Baverstock out of the torture he was suffering both of
-body and of mind. If that were so, it was a lucky shot; for it killed
-at once the reptile and the man.
-
-The bullet drilled the anaconda, breaking its spine, and thence pierced
-the heart of Amos Baverstock. The unhappy wretch vanished from sight
-upon the instant beneath the water of the pool; but the dying struggles
-of that gigantic snake were amazing to behold.
-
-It lashed right and left, twisting all ways, writhing like a worm; so
-that we, who looked on, were drenched in flying water. It made the
-most frantic efforts to drag itself from the pool. The lower part of
-its body seemed to be paralysed and quite useless; but at last it
-succeeded in half twining itself around the trunk of a tree, where its
-head swayed from side to side quite aimlessly. What surprised--and I
-think horrified--us most of all was the silence of the brute.
-
-I fired, and missed; for my hand trembled violently. And, thereby, it
-was left to Bannister to end the work he had begun. With his second
-shot he smashed in the reptile's head; and the great snake at last lay
-motionless, as loathsome in death as it had been terrible in life. I
-am ready to believe that five minutes elapsed before any one of us
-spake or even moved.
-
-"I shall never cease to dream of this," said Forsyth, in a weak voice,
-at last. "No such nightmare ever was!"
-
-I saw that he wiped a hand across his forehead; and I did the same.
-Though I was splashed all over with the water from the pool, a great
-sweat had broken out upon me, and I experienced, in quick succession,
-alternate sensations of extreme heat and cold.
-
-Vasco seized Bannister by an arm.
-
-"We go away!" he cried, in broken English. "We go now! It is no good
-stay here."
-
-The man turned back into the Wood as if he would retreat by the way we
-had come; but Bannister called him back.
-
-"Not that way," said he, in Spanish. "It is but a little way from here
-to the end of the Wood, and we can pass round to the north across open
-country. I know a way to the south of the morass."
-
-We were under Bannister's orders. And thankful we were that we had
-such a man to follow. We knew there was an urgent need to go back to
-Rushby as quickly as we might.
-
-We were obliged to pass round the pool, and this brought us to within a
-few yards of the great body of the snake.
-
-"I never knew," said Bannister, "that such a monster could exist. He
-must be over thirty feet in length. But, come; we can do nothing here."
-
-In single file, as before, we followed him, and presently came forth
-into the open air upon the skirting of the Wood.
-
-There we regarded one another in shocked surprise; for the faces of us
-all were white, and Vasco was still trembling. We said nothing; not a
-word passed between us; but we all breathed deeply, like men who had
-been for a long time under water.
-
-I looked up at the blue sky and the hills in the distance, to the east,
-whence I had first looked down upon the Wood of the Red Fish, after my
-journey across the plain. And I remembered what I had then thought;
-how I was filled with the restless spirit of adventure; how the joy of
-life was strong within me, whilst I ran the danger of my life, all
-naked as I was, with my Indian blow-pipe in my hand and my quiver full
-of arrows. But now I had seen the very face of death. I had beheld a
-living terror. The mask of Romance had been removed from the
-forbidding face of Tragedy. And that Wood was now to me a dread,
-unholy place, wherein, I knew, I would never dare to venture again, in
-spite of the great Treasure that lay hidden in its midst.
-
-"I would not go back," I cried to Bannister, "for all the Treasure of
-the Incas, for all the treasure in the world!"
-
-My old friend looked at me, and smiled.
-
-"You are right," he answered. "And there never will be a need to,
-Dick. As soon as we are rested, we must find our honest Rushby, and do
-what we can for him."
-
-We camped that night in the open air, a mile or so to the south of the
-morass; and the following morning continued our journey, keeping the
-Wood to our left.
-
-We had not gone far before we discovered the figure of a man, who came
-running towards us from the direction of the hills. I noticed that he
-advanced with a peculiar limp, and on this account, for the moment, I
-believed it to be Rushby, most marvellously recovered of his wound.
-
-But when the runner had drawn quite near to us, I was surprised beyond
-measure to recognise my old friend, Atupo, the Peruvian priest, whom I
-had befriended in the vault beneath the Temple of Cahazaxa.
-
-Though I called him by his name, he cast never so much as a glance at
-me or any of the others, save Bannister, at whose feet he threw
-himself, as pagans prostrate themselves before the idols that they
-worship.
-
-"My master!" he exclaimed, and went on, in his quaint, broken English,
-in some such strain as this: "I never thought to live to set eyes on
-you again."
-
-Bannister lifted him to his feet and, laying a hand affectionately upon
-his shoulder, asked him what news he had of his friends and brethren,
-who had fled from their dwellings before the wrath of Amos.
-
-Atupo told him that the majority had sought refuge in the woods, where
-many of their number had been treacherously murdered by the wild men.
-He himself, however, had founded a small colony of some score of
-persons who were living by the side of the ravine that crossed the
-plain, not so far beyond the hills that we could see. All these, he
-said, were anxious to return to Cahazaxa's Temple, but dared not do so,
-believing Amos to be still abroad.
-
-Bannister at once set the man's mind at rest, assuring him that it was
-not only safe for them to return, but that Amos himself was dead and
-the Greater Treasure undisturbed.
-
-At that, Atupo threw up his hands by way of a gesture of delight; and
-then, looking about him, for the first time recognised both Mr. Forsyth
-and myself. And it is doubtful which of the two of us he was most
-surprised to see.
-
-Myself he regarded as a trusted friend; but he knew that Forsyth had
-been one of Baverstock's party, and he was astounded to behold that
-gentleman alive. Being told by Bannister that he had naught to fear,
-he pointed straight at Forsyth.
-
-"But that man should be dead!" he cried. "With my own eyes I saw him
-shot with an arrow, the point of which was steeped in deadly poison."
-
-And then it was that Mr. Gilbert Forsyth told us the truth, which I
-have set down already: how, with a fortitude that one cannot but
-admire, he had burned the poison from his flesh, and thus saved his
-life, though he had fallen into a fever.
-
-Atupo, soon afterwards, expressed himself anxious to return to his own
-friends; but Bannister was one whose custom it was to look well ahead,
-and he knew that the ancient Peruvians had been well skilled in
-medicine.
-
-"Friend Atupo," said he, "we have need of your assistance; for there is
-one of our number who is sorely wounded. You and your comrades owe not
-a little to us; and I will, therefore, ask you to go back to the
-Temple, and there await our coming. Prepare such drugs as you may have
-for a man who has a wound in the leg that will not heal."
-
-"Does the sun ask the moon to shine?" inquired the Peruvian. "What of
-the white man's medicines?"
-
-Bannister threw out his hands.
-
-"Alas!" he exclaimed. "We have none; we have used all we had."
-
-And so the matter was settled; Atupo, the priest, returning to the
-Temple, and ourselves veering round to the west, between the Wood and
-the morass, towards the place where we had left William Rushby.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVIII--CONCLUSION
-==========================
-
-Early that afternoon we arrived at our destination, and found that we
-were none too soon. For Rushby had long since consumed all the water
-we had left him, but had managed somehow to move himself, though in the
-greatest pain, to the bank of the stream that flowed near at hand,
-where he was able, from time to time, to fill his pannikin with water.
-Also, that very morning, he had eaten the last of the food that we had
-left him. So it was well we came no later.
-
-He told us that he had slept daily for many hours; and on one occasion
-he had awakened quite suddenly, to find one of those small deer that
-were numerous in the Wood staring at him with its soft, mild eyes, from
-a distance of not more than ten yards.
-
-I asked him if he had not been afraid that some wild beast of prey
-might find him in the night. But he told me that he had never bothered
-himself about such matters, since both by day and night he had kept a
-fire alight. He had heard the report of the first shot, that which had
-brought about the death of Joshua Trust, though he had heard nothing of
-the other shots, upon the far side of the Wood, fired in the glade
-where Amos Baverstock had met his tragic end.
-
-"I have lain here for days," said he, "wondering what was happening,
-and whether I would ever set eyes upon any one of you again."
-
-When we told him the story of the death of Amos, he seemed little
-enough impressed; for he was a rough-and-ready seaman, without the gift
-of imagination, and he had not been there himself to behold with his
-own eyes the terror of that incident or to hear the wild laughter of
-the fugitive as he fled before us through the Wood.
-
-"A fit end for such a man," said he. "He himself was as evil as any
-snake, though he had courage of a sort; for I remember him well, when
-he faced the mutineers on board the *Mary Greenfield*. And what of the
-map?" he asked, turning suddenly to Bannister, who shrugged his
-shoulders.
-
-"We do not know," he answered; "but in default of certain evidence we
-must presume that that little fragment which we brought with us all the
-way from Sussex went down into the water when Amos was crushed to
-death."
-
-"So then," said William Rushby, who was of a practical turn of mind,
-"no one is any the wiser, so far as the Big Fish is concerned?"
-
-"No one," said Bannister, "save we five, and I do not suppose that any
-one of us will ever care again to undertake such an expedition."
-
-I looked at Mr. Gilbert Forsyth; for I was inclined to think that he
-was the only member of our party who was likely to persevere upon the
-quest of the Greater Treasure in spite of any promise he had made.
-
-I was surprised at the attitude he had assumed; for there was something
-in it that jogged my memory, that took me back to the day when I had
-first seen him and Baverstock and Joshua Trust. For he lay upon his
-back, with his hands clasped behind his head, and one knee thrown
-carelessly across the other. But how different was he now! He no
-longer wore his highly polished boots, his double-breasted waistcoat,
-and his hat tilted at a jaunty angle on his head. He was in rags and
-tatters, burnt and blistered by the sun, deprived of an ear where the
-skin was all white and scarred owing to his having burnt it. And yet
-he yawned in the same lazy fashion.
-
-"I've had enough of it," said he. "I want nothing better than a land
-of chimney-pots and gas-pipes. I shall rejoice at the sight of a
-policeman."
-
-And he yawned again.
-
-Rushby, we found, was in no better plight than before. It was quite
-impossible for him to walk. We saw at once that we must carry him; and
-as delay would profit us nothing, we set forward that very afternoon,
-heading in the direction of the hills towards the east.
-
-It was a silent, almost a saddened, party that crossed the plain to
-Cahazaxa's Temple. We took it in turns, two at a time, to carry
-Rushby; and on that account we could not make many miles a day. We
-crossed the suspension bridge, and at last came within sight of the
-great ruin, whence from the hill-top we looked down upon the forest,
-wherein we had all risked our lives so often, in the heart of which I
-had lived for weeks with the wild men of the woods.
-
-I asked Bannister how it was that they had treated me so kindly, when
-it was these same people who had murdered Atupo's friends.
-
-"Curiosity," said he; for he could explain most things. "The South
-American savage is not by any means as curious as the African; but you
-must remember that the men who found you had never before set eyes upon
-a white man. They probably looked upon you as a kind of god. With the
-Peruvians, it was different. Though the forest folk never ventured to
-the Temple, they had regarded the priests for years as their natural
-foes."
-
-We remained for two weeks at the Temple, during which time Atupo
-personally attended to Rushby's wound, bathing it with a decoction made
-from a herb that he procured in the forest. Whatever this was it
-proved, at any rate, effective; for the wound soon healed, and the
-boatswain was at last able to walk with the aid of a stick.
-
-We then set forward upon our journey towards the west, bidding good-bye
-to the quaint people whom we had already learned to love. We crossed
-the plain and that marvellous suspension bridge that had existed for
-centuries, and stands--for all I know--to this day, as evidence of the
-bygone civilisation of a great and ancient people. We came to the
-valley in which lay the Wood of the Red Fish; but we passed so far to
-the south that we did no more than see it dimly through the thick
-morning haze that lay between the hills. And after that we entered
-into a country very different from any we had yet seen--a land of high
-mountains and deep valleys, clothed with trees.
-
-We were days upon our march across the Andes. We were obliged to
-progress by easy stages, because Rushby was half a cripple. There, in
-the highlands, we found a mild, simple people, engaged in agricultural
-pursuits, tending large flocks of llamas, or Peruvian sheep. From
-village to village we went, like beggars, and were always treated with
-hospitality and kindness.
-
-At last we gained the crestline of those immortal mountains, and could
-see, both to the north and to the south of us, peak upon peak, rugged
-and inaccessible, towering like giants into the sky. Thence we
-descended to the narrow tableland, where the grass was knee-deep and
-native villages were many.
-
-All this was a journey of several weeks, and yet, in more ways than
-one, something in the nature of a pleasant picnic after the hardships
-and the perils we had been called upon to face.
-
-Sleeping night by night beneath the stars, wayfarers among the glorious
-and rugged hills, we had learned the art of comradeship. We found that
-there was good even in Forsyth and the sleepy, idle Vasco; and
-fortunate, indeed, is he who never travels in worse company than that
-of men like Bannister and Rushby.
-
-And so, upon a certain day at sunset, I was strangely conscious of a
-feeling of sadness when I knew that we were come to the end of our
-adventures, and that we soon must part. We stood then on a steep
-bluff, and looked down upon a narrow strip of sea-board, populous with
-towns and hamlets, with fertile fields between; and so we came to the
-seashore, and saw the sun go down upon the wide and golden Pacific
-Ocean.
-
-.. _`"And so we came to the seashore, and saw the sun go down upon the wide and golden Pacific Ocean"`:
-
-.. figure:: images/img-320.jpg
- :align: center
- :alt: "AND SO WE CAME TO THE SHORE AND SAW THE SUN GO DOWN UPON THE WIDE AND GOLDEN PACIFIC OCEAN."
-
- "AND SO WE CAME TO THE SHORE AND SAW THE SUN GO DOWN UPON THE WIDE AND GOLDEN PACIFIC OCEAN."
-
-And now my story is told. Since those days I have ventured often in
-the wild places of the world--upon great open spaces, amid the summits
-of unknown mountains, in dense, steaming forests--but never again have
-I journeyed to the Wood of the Red Fish. Nor, to my certain knowledge,
-did any of the others.
-
-In that, as in much else, we thought alike. Let the Inca gold lie in
-the dust, where it has lain for above four hundred years. He who will
-may yet go forth to find it. As for me, whenever I remember that dread
-Wood I see the gold, stacked and glimmering in the torch-light, and I
-hear the wild, mad laughter of Amos Baverstock as he fled before us,
-and see him once again and hear his piercing shriek, when he was caught
-in the silent, stealthy coils that crushed that evil man to death
-before our very eyes. And I ask God to have mercy on us who are yet
-alive, and to save us from a like living and ending.
-
-.. vspace:: 3
-
-.. class:: center medium
-
-THE END.
-
-.. vspace:: 3
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-.. class:: center small white-space-pre-line
-
-PRINTED IN GREAT BRITAIN BY
-WILLIAM CLOWES AND SONS, LIMITED,
-LONDON AND BECCLES.
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- THE BOY'S LIBRARY OF
- *Adventure and Heroism.*
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-*An excellent series of Gift Books, of good bulk, handsomely printed,
-illustrated and bound. Large crown 8vo, cloth gilt coloured wrappers.*
-
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-The Fifth Form at St Dominic's. By TALBOT BAINES REED.
-
-A lively and thoroughly healthy tale of Public School life; abounding
-in stirring incident and in humorous descriptions.
-
-.. vspace:: 2
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-A Hero in Wolfskin. By TOM BEVAN.
-
-A Story of Pagan and Christian.
-
-A young Goth performs feats of valour against the Roman legions, and
-dazzles a huge audience with his prowess in the Coliseum.
-
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-
-The Adventures of Val Daintry in the Graeco-Turkish War. By V. L.
-GOING.
-
-A bright and vigorous story, the main scenes of which are laid in the
-last war between Turkey and Greece.
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-The Adventures of a Three-Guinea Watch. By TALBOT BAINES REED.
-
-A straightforward story of school-life, and of the duties and
-temptations of young men entering upon the work of life.
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
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-REED.
-
-The juniors' rollicking fun, the seniors' rivalry, the school elections
-and football match are all told in a forcible manner.
-
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-A Dog with a Bad Name. By TALBOT BAINES REED.
-
-The story of a big, ungainly youth who seemed fated to be
-misunderstood, and to be made the butt of his comrades.
-
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-The Master of the Shell. By TALBOT BAINES REED.
-
-Dealing with the pranks of schoolboys, bubbling over with mischief and
-fun, and the trials of a young House-Master.
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-From Scapegrace to Hero. By ERNEST PROTHEROE.
-
-The Scapegrace, who became a thorough-going hero, was a wild,
-unmanageable village boy possessing an inveterate taste for mischief.
-
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-
-Sir Ludar. By TALBOT BAINES REED.
-
-A stirring tale of the days of Queen Elizabeth, dealing with the
-wonderful adventures of a sturdy 'prentice-lad.
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-Tom, Dick and Harry. By TALBOT BAINES REED.
-
-A splendid story, exhibiting in the highest degree this popular
-author's knowledge of schoolboy life and humour.
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-Submarine U93. By MAJOR CHARLES GILSON.
-
-A thrilling tale, in which the U boat is the principal factor. The
-youthful hero, with that redoubtable personage, Captain Crouch, passes
-through many ordeals and adventures.
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-Into the Soundless Deeps. A Tale of Wonder and Invention. By P. H.
-BOLTON.
-
-The problems of sound and a "wonder-box," known as the "long distance"
-ear, provide the main theme in this exciting story, in which adventures
-with Spanish brigands also figure.
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-The Mystery of Ah Jim. A Story of the Chinese Underworld, and of
-Piracy and Adventure in Eastern Seas. By MAJOR CHARLES GILSON.
-
-In the unravelling of the mystery surrounding his parentage, an English
-boy, brought up as a Chinese, passes through many adventures on sea and
-land.
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-The Fire Gods. By MAJOR CHARLES GILSON.
-
-A dashing, exciting story of adventure and mystery in Central Africa in
-which Captain Crouch again distinguishes himself,
-
-.. vspace:: 2
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-The Scarlet Hand. By MAJOR CHARLES GILSON.
-
-Trapped by a powerful Chinese Secret Society, leagued with Germany, two
-British boys are kidnapped to China. Their pluck and resource carry
-them through a series of adventures.
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-The Guardians of the Shield. By ALFRED COLBECK.
-
-The hero of this thrilling story is a boy, the last of a princely
-Jewish family, whose fortunes are closely bound up with a priceless
-golden shield. Boys will delight in the succession of exciting
-adventures which befall the hero.
-
-.. vspace:: 2
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-Alan Dale. By SYLVANUS.
-
-Alan is stolen by gypsies, arrested for complicity in murder,
-transported to Van Diemen's Land, escapes from prison, and is at last
-rescued and restored to his home. What boy wants more?
-
-.. vspace:: 2
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-.. class:: center medium
-
-THE R.T.S., 4, BOUVERIE STREET, LONDON, E.C. 4.
-
-.. vspace:: 4
-
-.. pgfooter::
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- TREASURE OF KINGS
-
-
-
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with almost
-no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it
-under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this
-eBook or online at http://www.gutenberg.org/license.
-
-
-Title: Treasure of Kings
- Being the Story of the Discovery of the "Big Fish," or the Quest
- of the Greater Treasure of the Incas of Peru.
-
-Author: Charles Gilson
-
-Release Date: April 07, 2012 [EBook #39399]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: US-ASCII
-
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK TREASURE OF KINGS ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Al Haines.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: Cover art]
-
-
-
-[Illustration: "EVERYWHERE WAS GOLD, STACKED UPON THE FLOOR, PILED
-AGAINST THE WALLS." See page 208.]
-
-
-
-
- TREASURE OF KINGS
-
- Being the Story of the Discovery of
- the "Big Fish," or the Quest of the
- Greater Treasure of the Incas of Peru.
-
-
-
- By
-
- MAJOR CHARLES GILSON
-
- _Author of "The Realm of the Wizard King," "The Fire Gods,"_
- _"In the Power of the Pygmies," etc._
-
-
-
-
- With Frontispiece in Colour and Eight Full-page
- Illustrations by R. CATON WOODVILLE, R.I.
-
-
-
-
- LONDON
- "THE BOY'S OWN PAPER" OFFICE,
- 4, Bouverie Street, E.C. 4
-
-
-
-
- BY THE SAME AUTHOR
-
-The Realm of the Wizard King. A Tale of Prehistoric Monsters.
-The Scarlet Hand. A Tale of a Secret Society.
-Submarine U93. A Tale of the Great War at Sea.
-The Fire Gods. A Tale of the African Forest.
-The Mystery of Ah Jim. A Tale of the Sea.
-On Secret Service. A Spy Story.
-The Lost Empire. A Tale of the Battle of the Nile.
-The Lost Column. A Tale of the Boxer Rebellion.
-The Lost Island. A Tale of the Mysterious East.
-The Sword of Freedom. A Tale of the English Revolution.
-The Spy. A Tale of the Peninsular War.
-The Race Round the World. A Tale of a new Motor Spirit.
-The Pirate Aeroplane. A Tale of Ancient Egypt.
-In the Power of the Pygmies. A Tale of the Congo.
-A Motor Scout in Flanders. A Tale of the Fall of Antwerp.
-Across the Cameroons. A Tale of the Great War in West Africa.
-Held by Chinese Brigands. A Tale of China.
-The Society of the Tortoise Mask. A Tale of a Secret Society.
-The Captives of the Caves. A Tale of Savage Men.
-The Sword of Deliverance. A Tale of the Balkan War.
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
- CHAPTER I--JOHN BANNISTER
- CHAPTER II--THE COMING OF AMOS
- CHAPTER III--THE MAP
- CHAPTER IV--KIDNAPPED
- CHAPTER V--I SET FORTH UPON MY VOYAGE
- CHAPTER VI--I AM CONCERNED IN A MUTINY
- CHAPTER VII--AND AM MADE TO PAY FOR IT
- CHAPTER VIII--INTO THE WILDERNESS
- CHAPTER IX--I AM LEFT TO MY DOOM
- CHAPTER X--HOW THE WILD MEN CAME AND LOOKED AT ME
- CHAPTER XI--I BURN MY BOATS
- CHAPTER XII--THE PATH OF THE TIGER
- CHAPTER XIII--THE STORY OF ATUPO
- CHAPTER XIV--THE GLADE OF SILENT DEATH
- CHAPTER XV--HOW I BEHELD A MIRACLE
- CHAPTER XVI--I FIND THE "BIG FISH"
- CHAPTER XVII--THE GREATER TREASURE
- CHAPTER XVIII--I FALL IN WITH A FRIEND
- CHAPTER XIX--THE BOATSWAIN TELLS HIS STORY
- CHAPTER XX--I RETURN TO THE SOLDIER'S TOMB
- CHAPTER XXI--I AM MADE A GHOST, AND THEN A FOOL
- CHAPTER XXII--MR. FORSYTH AND I BECOME BETTER ACQUAINTED
- CHAPTER XXIII--HOW AMOS GAINED POSSESSION OF THE MAP
- CHAPTER XXIV--HOW AMOS WAS POSSESSED OF SEVEN DEVILS
- CHAPTER XXV--HOW THE SHEEP WERE SHORN
- CHAPTER XXVI--A NIGHT OF TERROR
- CHAPTER XXVII--HOW AMOS MET HIS END
- CHAPTER XXVIII--CONCLUSION
-
-
-
-
- LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
-
- BY R. CATON WOODVILLE, R.I.
-
-"Everywhere was gold, stacked upon the floor, piled against the walls" .
-. . . . . . . . Frontispiece
-
-"'Because,' he answered slowly, 'because you are a caveman, too'"
-
-"He rolled back the boulder as though it were nothing" (missing from
-book)
-
-"And bound I was, then and there, to a stout palm tree, a little
-distance from the margin of the forest"
-
-"They came closer than ever, to within an arm's length of me"
-
-"I had reached the conclusion of my journey. The Big Fish was there"
-
-"'Hands up!' he cried. 'Hands up, you brown barbarian, or else I shoot
-you dead!'"
-
-"'Lie there and rot!' he shouted. And they below heard his footsteps as
-he danced upon the stone"
-
-"And so we came to the seashore, and saw the sun go down upon the wide
-and golden Pacific Ocean"
-
-
-
-
- INSCRIBED TO
-
- BROMLEY DAVID SMITH-DORRIEN
-
-
-
-
- TREASURE OF KINGS
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I--JOHN BANNISTER
-
-
-I shall never forget the day on which I first set eyes upon John
-Bannister. I was then a boy--sixteen years of age, if I remember
-rightly--and I stood before him, tongue-tied by the questions that he
-asked me, wondering how he had come by the great ugly, horrid scar upon
-his face, awed--indeed, I think, a little frightened--by the great
-muscles in his forearms, naked to the elbows, his rough weather-beaten
-face with skin like leather, and above all else by the stature of the
-man.
-
-For he was a giant--a giant such as I had dreamed of when a child. As
-some such figure had I pictured Giant Despair, when my mother had read
-to me from _Pilgrim's Progress_: "And Giant Despair was in one of his
-fits again." I had pictured Strength and Madness let loose amid a
-thunderstorm of wrath. And when I first looked upon him who was to be
-my champion and my comrade. I forgot his soft, kindly words and
-pleasing smile, and could only think how terrible he must be in anger.
-
-There is a strip of beach upon the Sussex coast, so many miles from
-nowhere, where the sand-snipe gather and seldom a human being may be
-seen. There, as a lad, I would love to roam, with no certain object in
-view, but just to find what I could, to observe what chanced to come my
-way, and, when wearied of wandering, to sit upon the shingle over and
-above those plains of wet, grey sand and think of all manner of things
-as my boyish fancy pleased.
-
-I was seated thus one April morning, far from home, and wondering how my
-tired legs would carry me back to dinner, when my attention was
-attracted to two strange birds, of a kind that I could not remember to
-have seen before. The sea was calm as glass, the sun hot as August.
-They were large birds, and were engaged--so far as I could see at a
-distance of more than a hundred yards--in dragging from the shallow
-water what might have been the carcass of a fish.
-
-I watched them, greatly interested, forgetful even of my appetite,
-possibly for five minutes; and then there came a heavy step upon the
-shingle at my back.
-
-I turned quickly, to behold the figure of John Bannister. Like some
-great beast of prey, he had broken his way quite noiselessly through a
-thick brake of that shrub which, I think, is called
-sea-buckthorn--though I never knew one tree from another. And he stood
-regarding me, with his hands upon his hips.
-
-I got to my feet, thinking that such a man might be up to no good in so
-lonesome a place, and I might find it advisable to take to my heels.
-But, quite suddenly, he laughed; and at the sound of his laughter I knew
-at once that I, for sure, had nothing to fear. Since that memorable day
-I have learned in the world many true and singular things, but none
-truer than that you may know always an honest man by his laughter and
-the shake of his hand.
-
-"I startled you," he said.
-
-"I wondered who it was," I faltered sheepishly.
-
-"And you are still none the wiser," he answered.
-
-And at that, he seated himself by my side.
-
-He told me that the strange birds were hooded crows. He told me also
-how they bullied the rooks, robbed the gulls; how they were cleverer and
-more evil than any other bird, foes of all and feared by all--thieves
-and murderers. He talked like a book; he had the science of the matter
-at his finger-tips, and he could, at the same time, paint pictures, as
-it were, with words. With him the hooded crow was in a single sentence
-_corvus cornix_, and the "highwayman of the air."
-
-And as he talked to me, I wondered the more concerning him, and thought
-the less of the hooded crows. Who was he, whence had he come, and what
-was he doing there in such a lonely place, in his shirt sleeves, in the
-warm April sunshine? These were questions that he himself was to
-answer. I cannot say why he took me straightway into his confidence,
-and afterwards into the very chamber of his heart--but he did; else I
-would now have naught to write about.
-
-Let me confess that I have taken the whole tenour of my life from this
-man's greatness. I have tried my best, all my long years, to bear in
-mind his strength, his wisdom, and his courage, that I might walk humbly
-in the shadow of a glorious example. But, more than all besides, I know
-that I owe to him the restless spirit of adventure, the love of action,
-the joy of wandering, that has led me so often to strange and distant
-places where I have found myself in even stranger company.
-
-I cannot tell you of all he said to me upon the morning of our meeting.
-He spoke of many things, of the world he had seen, the dangers he had
-faced, the people he had known. As I had no longer feared him after his
-first word and his open, kindly smile, so after five minutes of his
-talking did I feel that I had known him all my life. For his words were
-magic. Wondrous pictures framed themselves before my eyes upon the calm
-surface of that English sea--pictures of wild men, of treeless deserts,
-of savage forests and inhospitable hills; and I longed then to follow in
-the footsteps of this heroic man, whose hairy arms were those of Vulcan
-and whose voice was soft as that of the mother whom I loved.
-
-I forgot my dinner. I hungered only for adventure. I sat upon the
-shingle, wondering what lay beyond the vague horizon where grey sea and
-sky were blended, where I could just discern the smoke of a solitary and
-distant steamer, the only sign of life or movement upon that desert
-sea--for we in the West of Sussex lay well away from the track of the
-Channel shipping.
-
-On a sudden, I asked him the time; and with a glance at the sun he told
-me it was two. At that, I jumped to my feet.
-
-"But I am late!" I cried.
-
-"Not for the first time," said he. "I can remember my own boyhood."
-
-"My dinner was at one."
-
-"Then you dine with me; for I eat when I have time and appetite, sleep
-when I will, and live as Nature meant me to."
-
-He led me back from the beach across some sand-hills to a place where
-the gorse was like a wave of gold. And there was a wooden hut--or,
-rather, shed, for it was walled upon three sides only. And within were
-all sorts of things: a sleeping-bag made of the skins of some small
-animal with fur soft as a mole's, which he said had come from the south
-of Africa; an iron cooking-pot, an evil-looking affair which he had
-brought with him from the Amazon; skins painted by North American
-savages; mocassins; a Malay sarong, a kind of towel worn around the
-waist; and more curiosities and rude, primitive utensils than I could
-well describe within the space of a page of the smallest print.
-
-And yet, I dined like a prince: a soup of fish, plover roasted upon a
-spit, and in place of bread, flour and water fried in a pan after the
-custom of the Afghans. It may have been the novelty of it all, or the
-fact that by then I was well-nigh famished, but I never ate more
-heartily, and I have never forgotten that meal, though I have had many
-such since then.
-
-In answer to my questions, he told me more concerning himself. Though
-he had lived a life of adventure, exploring wild countries, sleeping
-beneath the stars, in constant peril of his life from savage beasts and
-scarce less savage men, I could not of myself comprehend why he should
-in peaceful England bury himself miles from the abodes of his fellow
-human beings. For I write--you must remember--of many years ago, of the
-mid-Victorian time, as it is called--and good days they were, as we know
-full well who have lived to see these unsettled, troublous days. To-day,
-from the spot where John Bannister and I first met, you may catch a
-glimpse to the west along the coast of the red roofs of bungalows, where
-week-end visitors may come from London to set up bathing-huts upon the
-beach, whilst from the east, perhaps, a pair of lovers may wander from
-across the golf course at Littlehampton in search of desirable
-seclusion. For that stretch of coast is desolate still; but in those
-days it was a kind of No Man's Land, with no sign of life but the gulls
-and the sand-snipe, the smoke from John Bannister's camp-fire, and the
-hooded crows.
-
-Well, the truth was, he who feared neither beast of prey nor painted
-cannibal was afraid of civilised men. He went once a week to the little
-inland village a few miles distant to purchase groceries and stores.
-There--as I found out afterwards--they thought him a madman, though he
-was always courteous in his manner and paid without question for what he
-bought. He had few words for any man, and none ever for a woman.
-Later, when my mother came to learn of my new-found friend who lived
-alone among the sand-hills, she was anxious to see him, more for my own
-welfare than from curiosity; but he told me flatly that he had never
-known any civilised woman save his own mother, who had died when he was
-young, and he would rather face a wounded lion than pretend to talk to
-one.
-
-"For it comes to this," said he; "I have gone back, as it were, upon the
-centuries; I have learned to live as men lived in ancient times. Though
-I have read much and thought more, and have some claim, I suppose, to be
-called a scholar, in many ways I am no better than a cave-man. I have
-forgotten all the niceties of culture. I have neither small-talk nor
-table manners. So I prefer to live as I do, in my own way; and I offer
-no welcome to visitors. The farmer who owns this land is glad enough of
-the little I pay him in the way of rent; but, beyond that and my weekly
-shopping, I seek no intercourse with strangers. I am content to be
-alone."
-
-I asked if he were not often lonely, and he laughed.
-
-"Even here," said he, "in Sussex, Nature is a living force. The sea
-changes almost hour by hour. Birds come and visit me. Even the rabbits
-in the brake have already learned to know me. They all seem to
-know--these little, wild things--that I am one of them, and soon cease
-to fear me. They are my companions and my friends, and I have also
-books and memory. And I have health and air, the smell of the salt sea
-and the seaweed, and the sunrise to awaken me before your street-bred
-friends are stirring. The wind, the rain, and the sun--I welcome each
-as it comes. Did I want other comrades, I should go and seek them; but
-I prefer to live like this."
-
-"And yet you talked willingly to me?" I asked.
-
-"Because," he answered slowly--and his words came to me as a
-surprise--"because you are a cave-man, too."
-
-[Illustration: "'BECAUSE,' HE ANSWERED SLOWLY, 'BECAUSE YOU ARE A
-CAVE-MAN, TOO.'"]
-
-"I!" I exclaimed.
-
-"Every boy," said he, "every healthy, happy boy. It was the savage in
-you--though you may not realise it--that brought you out here alone,
-that took you right away from red bricks and shops and dinner."
-
-I cannot say whether I have conveyed to the reader in the space of this
-short chapter a true conception of the character of John Bannister, as
-he was when I knew him first. Of his personal appearance I have yet to
-write; and if it be a simple matter to describe that which is outwardly
-apparent, it is by no means easy either to fathom or to portray a man's
-soul and mind.
-
-Do not imagine that I myself knew aught of him until after we had
-sojourned together for months, faced the same dangers, stood side by
-side throughout the great adventure of which I have to tell. I knew
-from the first that he was wise and generous and kind: I could see with
-my eyes that he was strong, and his talk charmed the imagination of a
-dreamy, active boy. In spite of all he knew, of the experiences he had
-had in all parts of the world, he was one of the simplest men that ever
-lived. And there was something in him of the poet. I do not mean that
-he ever tried to set down his thoughts in verse, but that he lived in
-love with all things beautiful. I have seen him stand stock-still like
-one transfigured, with eyes illumined, gazing in wonderment upon a
-purple sunset upon the snow-capped crestline of the distant Andes--and
-that at a moment when his own life, as well as mine, was not worth a
-full day's purchase.
-
-Judge all men by their deeds and not their words. Hear this history to
-the end, and see what like of man was he whose charm and peril led me
-forth from green and sleepy Sussex to adventure in the darkness of those
-tropic forests that shut out the source of the great River of Mystery,
-where there are poison, black ignorance, and fell disease, and a man may
-no more count the dangers that encompass him than the myriads of
-stinging insects that drone about his ears.
-
-And one thing more: my own life has not been lived without event. It
-has been my fate to tell a score of times of the enterprise of others;
-but of all men of action I have ever known, read or written of, I rank
-John Bannister as first. Perhaps that may be because I can now seat
-myself of a winter's evening before my study fire and see him in my
-fancy as he was in all his strength and manhood, pass through again the
-dangers and the hardships, and live once more the glorious days that it
-was my privilege to pass with him, and remember that, had it not been
-for him, I might have lived all my life in Sussex and seen nothing of
-the world. But how can I set down the debt I owe him? For I owe him
-life itself.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II--THE COMING OF AMOS
-
-
-After that morning, throughout the summer months when I was at school,
-there was seldom a Saturday or a Wednesday afternoon when I was not to
-be seen hastening eastward along the beach to see John Bannister and to
-listen to his talk.
-
-During those days I learned much of him, of his travels and adventures;
-but there were certain matters upon which he would never speak in any
-detail. He would never tell me, for instance, the full story of how he
-had come by the great scar upon his face--a disfigurement so pronounced
-as to be at once pathetic and repulsive, which had aroused my boyish
-curiosity from the first. Had it not been for that scar, Bannister
-would have been a handsome man, as indeed he was when the left side of
-his face was to be seen in profile. He had deep-set steel-grey eyes
-that looked clean through you, and the forehead of a thinker; his hair,
-in those bygone days, was black, no more than touched with white upon
-the temples and about the ears, and his moustache the longest I have
-ever seen. Though there was never a man, I should suppose, who had less
-of vanity in his composition, I think he grew it thus to hide in part
-the record of the terrible wound that had extended from his right ear to
-the corner of his mouth--a scar that was always rough and white, though
-his face was burnt by the sun to the colour of tan.
-
-"I came by that," he once said to me in answer to my question, "in what
-might be called an honest cause. A thousand miles from nowhere, where
-there is neither Law nor Right nor Wrong nor Justice, one--who may or
-may not have learned the Lord's Prayer at his mother's knee--would have
-put to death some score of helpless human creatures, slaughtered them
-like sheep."
-
-"Why?" I asked.
-
-"Why," said he, "there are but few motives that sway the evil that lies
-in all men, and of these greed of gold is first. And this man of whom I
-speak was a great force of evil, and is so still, for I never doubt that
-he is yet alive. For gold he would have murdered those who had never
-wronged him, who had indeed shown him nothing but kindness and
-hospitality. Fate decreed that this man's path and mine should cross;
-and because I stood between him and an ill-gotten fortune, I was struck
-a coward's blow. You would never guess the weapon, Dick, that gave me
-my beauty mark for life?"
-
-He paused as if waiting for an answer, though I had none to give.
-
-"Well, then," he continued, "it was a sceptre--the golden sceptre of a
-bygone dynasty of monarchs, ended four hundred years ago--kings of no
-naked savages, but emperors, rulers over an ancient civilisation that
-has crumbled to the dust, of a people who were cultured in their own
-way, industrious and great. It is something, we may imagine, to carry
-through life the scar that was given by the symbol of such authority and
-power."
-
-"And where was this?" I asked.
-
-"Where the mountains overtop the clouds," he answered, "where one may
-see the last of the sunset beyond the valleys of Peru, and the dawn
-rises from the dark forests of the Upper Amazon, in which, Dick, there
-are secrets that no man yet has ever lived to learn."
-
-"It was the sceptre of the _Incas_!" I exclaimed; for I had read as a
-holiday task _The Conquest of Peru_.
-
-"The very same that was hidden from Pizarro," he made answer, "together
-with all the gold of Huaraz and Cuzco."
-
-"And who was the man who struck you?" I demanded.
-
-"When I tell you that his name is Amos Baverstock," said Bannister,
-"that he hails from the same west-country town as I do--and that is
-Tiverton in Devon--and that that man to this day counts himself as my
-greatest enemy, I tell you more than I should."
-
-And though I tried my utmost, I could get from him nothing more. A
-reticent man by nature, he was yet from the beginning prodigal of speech
-with me. With the exception of this great Peruvian adventure--which, I
-could tell from his demeanour, he ranked as the one outstanding episode
-in all his life--he would answer all my questions. I thought this
-strange; and there was an even stranger thing about him--and I was soon
-to learn that the two were linked together. Though he had to some
-extent confided in myself, he forbade me to speak of him to my
-schoolfellows. He told me he was well content to have found a friend in
-a boy after his own heart, much the same sort of lad as the John
-Bannister who had bathed in the Exe, and, barefooted, raced other boys
-upon the river bank; but, were the knowledge of his presence upon that
-lonely shore to become the common property of a clamouring, crowded
-school, his seclusion would be lost, his peace of mind disturbed, his
-haven of rest and solitude converted into a kind of monkey-house--for
-that is what he called it.
-
-I gave my word, and kept it; and yet, I could not but think of things.
-And it occurred to me that John Bannister lived as he did for other
-reasons than solely to enjoy the fruits of solitude. Not that he
-himself had ever told me anything that was not the truth: he had,
-indeed, sojourned for so many years in the wild places of the world that
-he had forgotten much concerning the ways of civilisation and could be
-shy--as he was before my mother--like an overgrown yokel who stands, cap
-in hand, first on one foot and then upon the other. He wanted more than
-solitude, he wanted secrecy. For more reasons than one I should have
-guessed it; but I was but a boy, and looked not for motives or for
-causes. I was content to take the man as he was: a hero in my eyes, who
-had risked his life a thousand times, who had done great deeds and seen
-strange sights and wondrous places that I had only dreamed of.
-
-And now I come, at last, to the beginning of my story: a blazing morning
-in the August sun, when our friendship was four months old, when the
-wheels of chance began to move, and those forces were set in motion that
-whirled me away, when still a schoolboy, from sunny, sleepy Sussex, to
-be a wayfarer with grim Death himself in dark, tropic lowlands, or amid
-the very clouds.
-
-It being holiday-time, and I having no thought in my head than what
-pertained to my hero, I set forth earlier than usual, and took the
-straight cut across the fields, instead of following the shore. This
-led me to a group of sand-hills, not half a mile from where Bannister
-had pitched his camp; and amid these I stumbled upon three men, seated,
-heads together, in the shadow of a gorse bush.
-
-I cannot for the life of me explain why I did it--never before or since
-have I played the eavesdropper of my own free choice--but the moment I
-set eyes upon a hunchback, with a clean, wrinkled face and two small
-eyes as black as boot-buttons, down I dropped on all fours, like a man
-shot, and crept silently and swiftly to the cover of a clump of
-reed-like grass.
-
-I think the sight of the man frightened me. He had the cruellest face I
-had ever seen; and there was cunning in it, too. Also, there was a
-suggestion of merriness, of latent mirth, about him--patent in the
-shining, bead-like eyes--that caused me instantly to shudder. Have you
-ever considered the eyes of a half-grown pig, as something apart from
-the glistening, inquisitive, joyful, and highly entertaining quadruped
-that a young pig happens invariably to be? They are wicked and gleeful,
-defiant and pitiless, those little, twinkling eyes. They are more
-fearful than those of a snake, because they are more alive and equally
-soulless. Well, then, such eyes had this man: eyes at once merciless
-and mischievous. And so it was, I must suppose, that I hid myself amid
-the grass.
-
-And then one of those who were with him used these very words; and when
-I heard them, it was as if I was deprived of the power to breathe.
-
-"I wish I were a hundred miles from here, I can tell you that. He's not
-likely to forget that it was you, Amos Baverstock, that trapped him and
-left him for dead, and that it was I who struck the blow."
-
-I lay in the long grass, close as a hare, my heart pumping within me
-like an engine. I had heard and seen enough already to know that my
-friend was in danger. I had a sense of some calamity impending, but no
-time just then to guess at the meaning of it all; for I must listen to
-the quiet, cold voice of Amos Baverstock--the hunchback with the pig
-eyes and a long, thin nose like a weasel.
-
-"You were right enough in London," said he, "when I told you I had
-tracked him down, as I swore to you both I should."
-
-"Maybe," said the other, "I forgot, for the moment, what he was. I
-would sooner face a tiger."
-
-He was a rough-looking man, with a red, untidy beard, and there was
-something about him of the sailor.
-
-"Tut, man," said Amos; "you make a mountain of a molehill! I do not
-propose to set about this matter like a fool. He's lying yonder like an
-old dog-fox in his earth, and we'll send a terrier in to fetch him out."
-
-"Me!" cried the red-bearded man, horror-stricken at the thought.
-
-But, before Amos Baverstock could answer, the third man spoke for the
-first time; and my attention being thereby attracted towards him, I was
-at once astonished at everything about his individuality: his voice, his
-personal appearance, the words he used, his very attitude of
-carelessness and ease.
-
-"_Cave tibi cane muto._"
-
-That is what he drawled, and though I was then a schoolboy who had
-struggled through the dull prose of Caesar to the loftier realms of
-Virgil, I must confess that fear had so deprived me of my wits that I
-understood no word, except the first.
-
-The speaker lay flat upon his back, with his hands folded behind his
-head, and his face exposed to the sun--like a tripper who would go back
-to London nicely tanned. I observed that he had taken off his coat and
-rolled it into a pillow, and that the shirt he wore was of the softest,
-flimsiest silk.
-
-He was dressed like a fop in the height of the fashion of that day,
-wearing a white tie, with a great gold pin in it, a well-curled
-moustache and those short side-whiskers which were then the vogue. He
-had light-blue eyes and fair, curly hair, and had it not been for the
-side-whiskers, would have looked much younger than he was. Everything
-about him suggested that he was--or should have been--a gentleman of
-means and leisure.
-
-"_Cave tibi cane muto_," he repeated, more slowly than before. And this
-time I had the sense to understand it: "Beware of the silent dog."
-
-"Just so," said Amos. "We will tempt the dog with a bone. Trust to me,
-you dolt," he cried, turning sharp upon the man with the red beard, who
-was sitting with a scowl upon his face and his legs crossed like a
-Hindoo. "Ask yourself, have I ever yet sent you on a wild-goose chase?
-Am I one to take unnecessary risks?"
-
-"Then, shoot him, take what we want, and have done with it," growled the
-other.
-
-"Friend Joshua," said Amos, "we are some eight thousand miles from
-Chimborazo, and probably not two miles from a police-station. We want
-no questions asked, no hue and cry. That would ruin everything."
-
-"There's something in that," admitted the red-bearded man, whose name
-was evidently Joshua.
-
-Amos chuckled.
-
-"This is no baby's game," said he. "Bannister fears neither man, wild
-beast nor devil. No more am I afraid of him. I have tricked him once,
-and I can trick him again. Were I to get within arm's length of him, it
-is true, as like as not he would wring my precious neck; and the same
-applies to you, friend Joshua; for he will not have forgotten that it
-was you who struck him down at the end of the passage that leads from
-Cahazaxa's Tomb. But Mr. Forsyth here, he has never set eyes on in all
-his life."
-
-"In other words," cut in the young man with the side-whiskers, still
-stretched at full length upon the ground--"in other words, I myself am
-the bone to be presented to the silent, dangerous dog. A pleasant
-prospect--but I acquiesce. Having gone into this business, I am
-prepared to take what comes."
-
-Though he had spoken with a shade more animation than before, he had
-neither moved an inch nor troubled even to open his eyes. A calm
-customer, in very truth, was Mr. Gilbert Forsyth, as I was afterwards to
-learn, something to my cost--a man with more manners than morals, who
-was never afraid and never surprised, and who smelt of the vile pomade
-with which he plastered his moustache.
-
-"Sir," said Baverstock, "you are the very man for me. I promise you
-that, if we pull this business through, we shall wade knee-deep in
-gold."
-
-"I want gold to spend and not to paddle in," said Forsyth. "Give
-orders, Mr. Wisdom; I am here solely to obey."
-
-Amos produced a long and very black cigar, bit the end off and began to
-chew, making his face all wrinkles. I thought that he would light it,
-but he did no such thing. He would look at it with one eye half closed,
-use it much as a musical director wields his baton to punctuate his
-words, and then chew again, until the brown juice was streaming from the
-corners of his mouth.
-
-"Go to John Bannister this morning," said he. "Go to him now, if you
-like. He doesn't know you from Adam. Pretend you're just an idle,
-inquisitive holiday-maker who has dropped across him by chance; get into
-conversation with him, ask him foolish questions; and then, without
-advertisement, just--drop that across his head."
-
-As he said this, he threw across to Mr. Forsyth some kind of weighted
-implement, such as a house-breaker might have in his possession. It was
-about the size and shape of a belaying-pin, and attached to the thin end
-was a leather strap to secure it to the wrist.
-
-"Sounds simple enough," drawled Forsyth. "However, for the sake of
-argument, suppose I fail. I understand from what you both tell me, he
-has the strength of two ordinary men."
-
-"Six," growled the red-bearded fellow, who seemed to me to be a
-discontented rascal.
-
-"Strike hard and without warning," said Amos. "In case of mishap, Trust
-and I will be at hand to help you."
-
-I thought, at the time, that Trust was another man--a fourth party in
-this vile conspiracy; for I did not then know that the name of the
-red-bearded man--as great a rogue as Amos himself, if not a tenth as
-clever--was Joshua Trust, who had served before the mast in the Royal
-Navy, to be tried by court-martial for a felony and afterwards
-discharged.
-
-Mr. Forsyth, in the meantime, picked up the bludgeon and toyed with it
-in his hand.
-
-"A useful tool," he observed. "Convenient to carry, and--I should
-say--effective to use. To be candid, I'm a little afraid of it. Though
-I have not the pleasure of knowing Mr. Bannister, I should be sorry--for
-my own sake as well as his--to deprive him of his life."
-
-"You need not be afraid of that," laughed Amos. "Had his skull been
-thinner than a bullock's, it would have been broken years ago. We want
-him senseless, when we can bind him hand and foot, and help ourselves to
-the very thing we want. He has got it somewhere, sure enough; and had I
-to search the world for it, I would find it in the end."
-
-And then he clapped his hands and rubbed them together; and I have never
-seen in all my life an expression of such malignant glee.
-
-"Once it is ours," he cried, "across the Western Ocean! Nothing stands
-between us three and fortune. Gold!" he almost shrieked, "I tell you,
-it is there knee-deep in a cavern as large as a cathedral: golden
-ornaments and vessels, bars and rings and bracelets. You shall have
-your fair share, Mr. Forsyth; for all's square between us, and, I
-confess, we could not very well move in this business without you.
-Joshua here will tell you, though I may be an ill man to cross in more
-ways than one, I never yet went back upon my friends. You've come into
-this affair to help us, and I'll not forget it."
-
-"Dear me, no!" drawled Forsyth. "I join you for my own ultimate gain. I
-recognise that I am blessed with as little conscience as yourselves, and
-see profit in the matter. I know nothing of this fellow Bannister, and
-care still less. Besides, I have, I suppose, a natural taste for such
-an adventure as you propose. I am heartily tired of this dreary
-country, with its railways, gas-pipes and antimacassars. I would, in a
-word, stake all I have upon an only venture, to die soon or rich--I care
-little which it be."
-
-And thereupon he yawned, placing the tips of his fingers before his
-mouth in a manner exceedingly affected.
-
-They talked then for a while of other things; and all the time I was
-seeking an opportunity to escape, to hasten to my friend to warn him of
-his danger; and yet, though I was well screened from view of Amos
-Baverstock and his companions, it was some time before I could find the
-courage to bestir myself. I feared that they might hear me; and the
-very sight of Amos had instilled within me a sense of dread which
-returns to me even to this day whenever I think of the man.
-
-I lay in the long grass like a wounded bird: it was as if I had not the
-power to move. My thoughts were running riot--Bannister to be
-shamefully assaulted, something stolen, and I kept repeating to myself
-the magic phrase, "Gold knee-deep in a cavern large as a cathedral."
-
-There was something about all this of the kind of adventures I had often
-imagined; I had thought that I would revel in the prospect of such
-dangerous escapades; and here was I, scared out of my wits, too
-terrified to move, my heart beating violently, as if I were out of
-breath from running.
-
-Indeed, it was only the thought that Amos Baverstock or one of the
-others would get up to go, and then discover me, that made me shift from
-where I had been hiding; and no sooner was I out of earshot than I set
-off running as if pursued by fifty fiends. I never ran so fast before
-or since. Over the sand-hills, stumbling amidst the shingle, breaking
-my way through gorse and hedgerow, I came at last to John Bannister's
-cabin, lying in a hollow by the sea.
-
-"Mr. Bannister!" I cried. "Mr. Bannister! Something dreadful is about
-to happen!"
-
-I was, I suppose, half blinded by my running; or I had not the sense to
-look about me. I stood before the opening of the cabin, wringing my
-hands and crying out like a fool:
-
-"Mr. Bannister! Mr. Bannister! Come quickly!"
-
-I had for answer neither the sight of his great strength nor the
-familiar sound of his voice, but just the wash of the sea at high tide
-beyond the ridge where the buckthorn grew, a great rhythmical, breathing
-sound, as if a giant were slumbering.
-
-I was more afraid than ever when I realised that he was not there, and
-it might take time to find him; for, befogged as my wits were, I knew
-well enough that the occasion was one that would admit of no delay.
-
-I ran straight to the beach, and looked to the eastward and westward.
-For a moment I had hoped to find him, for he would sometimes bathe in
-the sea at that hour of the day; but a glance or so was enough to tell
-me I should not find him there.
-
-I wandered for a while somewhat aimlessly amongst the shrubberies that
-crowned the margin of the sand-hills and the shingle, and then returned
-to the cabin. As things happened, I must have done so in the nick of
-time; for, when I had searched in odd corners, as if looking for a
-hidden thimble, instead of a man of six-foot-four, I went to the
-threshold, and looking out beyond the gorse, beheld the tall figure of
-Mr. Gilbert Forsyth, strolling towards me, swinging in his hand his
-silver-mounted Malacca cane.
-
-I did not know whether or not he had seen me. It was sufficient for the
-moment that I had no way of escape. The cabin--as I have said--had been
-built in a hollow, and to cross the ridge that encompassed it would
-bring me into full view of Mr. Forsyth.
-
-On the other hand, I could think of nowhere to hide. I stood for a
-moment irresolute, with clenched fists, cudgelling my brains and wishing
-that I was anywhere else upon the wide face of the earth. Then I heard
-a footstep on the shingle without, and as I drew back into the shade of
-the hut, I saw the man's shadow cast upon the threshold.
-
-I looked about me in a wild and silly way, and then without a thought
-dived under the great fur sleeping-bag that lay ruffled against the
-wall.
-
-Forsyth entered. I could not see him, but I could hear him moving to
-and fro, and once he even trod upon my foot. Then I heard his voice,
-raised in a kind of drawling sing-song, as if he called to someone at a
-distance.
-
-"Come on," he sang. "The way's clear. The dog's out of his kennel."
-
-A full minute may have elapsed. On such occasions, time counts for next
-to nothing. But, presently, I was aware that, besides myself, there
-were three persons in that small place, and one of them was Amos
-Baverstock.
-
-"Here's our chance," said he. "Joshua, keep watch from without. He may
-not be far away, and it would be a rough-and-tumble business if he
-caught us in the act. And now, sir, help me to find the map. The thing
-must be somewhere in this hut, unless he carries it always on his
-person."
-
-And at those words was I made to realise that, as sure as I had been
-christened Richard Treadgold in the little church at Middleton, I had
-done a foolish thing and was like to be made to pay for it.
-
-For Amos Baverstock was come to search for a certain map, the
-significance of which I then, of course, knew nothing. Whether or not
-he would find this map was a question of itself; but there was no sort
-of a question within the bounds of probability that he could look for
-long and fail to discover _me_. And then, in truth, the fat would be in
-the fire.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III--THE MAP
-
-
-I expected every moment to be caught, to be jerked forth from my
-hiding-place like a landed fish. In the course of their searching they
-must sooner or later move the sleeping-bag, and I would be exposed.
-
-It occurs to me that fear must be one of the strangest of emotions; for
-I can honestly say that, now that I was in this hopeless and perilous
-predicament, I was no longer afraid. Certain that I must fall into the
-hands of Amos Baverstock, equally uncertain of what then would be my
-lot, I was resigned to my fate; I was long past apprehension. I still
-thought of Bannister, and wondered concerning the map for which Amos and
-Forsyth were looking, but for myself I now cared not a snap of the
-fingers what became of me; and this attitude of mind I preserved
-throughout the next eventful moments, else I had never acted as I did.
-
-For Amos never found me on his own account. No doubt he would have done
-so in a very little time, had not Forsyth, almost at once, struck upon
-the very map for which the two were searching.
-
-"What's this!" exclaimed Forsyth. "It seems the thing we want."
-
-"Where?" cried Amos, who, I judged, snatched it from the other's hand.
-
-"That's it!" he almost shouted. "The parchment map copied from that
-made ages ago by Villac Umu, the High Priest of the Incas of Peru.
-Bannister has translated it, and marked the route in red ink. It's all
-plain as daylight."
-
-I could tell by the sound of his voice that he was wildly excited. He
-spread out the map upon the little table in the centre of the cabin,
-and, feeling secure since Joshua Trust was keeping watch, spoke
-breathlessly to Forsyth, relating the matter in such detail that then
-and there I was made a party to the whole vile conspiracy--or as much of
-it as there was any need for me to know.
-
-"When the ancient Peruvians fled before the advance of the Pizarros," he
-explained, "they carried their treasures across the mountains. These
-they hid in two places: one, which is called the Little Fish, consists
-of all manner of earthenware utensils; the other--the Big Fish--is
-composed of golden ornaments and ingots. I have heard it said by some
-that the Little Fish is in Bolivia; by others, as far north as the
-Amazonas Territory--the truth being that no man living knows. It was
-John Bannister himself who discovered the secret of the Greater
-Treasure, or the Big Fish, as the natives call it. He lived for years
-among the wild savages who inhabit the forests about the eastern
-foothills of the Andes; and there, I believe, he came across some
-priestly descendants of those who had served the Incas. It was high up
-among the Conomamas, to the south of the great Region of the Woods, that
-I first fell in with Bannister. I was there prospecting for gold, but I
-had never dreamed of such a gold-mine as the Greater Treasure of the
-Incas. Bannister never told me that he had learned the secret from the
-priests, but I made so free as to inspect the map, when I believed him
-to be sleeping."
-
-"But is this safe?" asked Forsyth. "Supposing Bannister returns?"
-
-"There is nothing to fear," said Amos. "Time's our own. Joshua is on
-watch upon the sand-hills, and can see him coming half a mile away. We
-are as safe here as anywhere."
-
-"Well, then, go on with your story," said the other. "You saw the map
-yourself?"
-
-"No more than glanced at the thing before he had me by the throat and
-well-nigh strangled me," cried Amos. "After that we parted company,
-though I followed his track, and three times tried to kill him."
-
-I heard Mr. Forsyth laugh in his silly, affected way.
-
-"You do not mince your words," said he. "And I think I like you for it
-all the better. So you tried to murder him, and failed?"
-
-"I did not say 'murder,'" grumbled Amos. "You can do no worse than kill
-in the great Region of the Woods; and whether you slay a jaguar, a
-monkey or man, it is much the same in the end. But to kill a man like
-John Bannister is no such easy matter. He has the ear of a panther and
-the eye of a bird, and he strikes like the coral snake--silent and
-deadly--and for those self-same reasons, the story I am telling you must
-now turn something against myself. For I began the business by hunting
-John Bannister in the Wilderness; but, before the game was a week old,
-it was he that was hunting me, and hunting me, too, day and night, from
-the Putumayo to Bolivia, from the Amazon to the sea.
-
-"I sought safety, at last, in the port of Lima, where I was sheltered by
-some pretence of Law and Justice; and there I joined forces with friend
-Joshua and three other kindred spirits who now lie unburied, their bones
-picked by the vultures.
-
-"Well, then," Amos went on, "we five put our heads together and talked
-the question out. It was plain to us that, since Bannister was such a
-tough nut to crack, it were safer and simpler to go straight to the
-fountain head, as the saying goes, and see what could be done with the
-priests. I guessed from what Bannister had told me, that the Peruvians
-were a weak-kneed, cowardly lot, and thought it would not be difficult
-to frighten them into telling us all they knew. But we had to search
-the woods for months before we found them, living in the midst of black
-ignorance and superstition; and by then--would you believe
-it!--Bannister had got wind of our intentions, and had come back upon
-his own trail, crossing the mountains and descending into the Region of
-the Woods.
-
-"He turned up in time to ruin all our plans. His very presence gave the
-priests the courage they had lacked. There was a stiff fight, and we,
-having the worst of it, were obliged to beat a quick retreat to the
-foothills, though we carried with us a hostage. So far as this man was
-concerned, I took a leaf from the book of the Spaniards. I knew that
-Pizarro had not gained all his knowledge by fair words and promises. I
-tortured the wretch, until he shrieked for mercy and promised that he
-would guide us to Cahazaxa's Tomb, upon the very crestline of the Andes,
-where he swore to us the Greater Treasure was hid. Thither we went, to
-find that the rascal had lied to us. A few golden ornaments there were,
-in a vault cut in the living rock, at the end of a narrow passage, and
-amongst these was the ancient sceptre of the Incas, but the lot were not
-worth the price of our journey. Moreover, John Bannister himself had
-had the audacity to follow us. Night by night, he hovered about our
-bivouac, hoping to deprive us of our hostage. So I set my mind to work
-to finish him; and as fortune had it, the old Tomb was as good as a
-rat-trap. For there was a great boulder at the mouth of the passage,
-which might be rolled down-hill to block the entrance; and even then it
-was as much as Joshua and I could do. We fooled John Bannister to enter
-the Tomb by making a show of moving camp and leaving the Peruvian
-behind. However, when we thought we had caged him, we found to our
-great dismay that we had under-estimated the man's colossal strength;
-for he rolled back the boulder as though it were nothing, and came down
-upon us like a raging lion."
-
- [Illustration: "HE ROLLED BACK THE BOULDER AS IF IT WERE NOTHING
- (missing from book)]
-
-Amos paused a moment in his narrative. Listening eagerly for what was
-yet to come, I heard distinctly the disgusting noise of the chewing of
-one of his long, black cigars.
-
-"We were unprepared for that," he continued. "Indeed, thinking we had
-got him safely caught, to starve to death or shoot himself, we were
-standing before the entrance to the passage without our arms; and before
-we could master him, our party of five had been reduced to two. It was
-Joshua who ended the affair. We had looted the Tomb of the little
-treasure that was there; and Joshua snatched up the golden sceptre of
-the Incas and struck down John Bannister, whom that night we left for
-dead."
-
-"And what of the map?" asked Forsyth.
-
-"We searched him, but never found it. He may have left it with the
-priests, or hidden it somewhere in the forest. Two years later, I again
-journeyed to the Region of the Woods, and found out from the priests
-that Bannister had taken it away with him, after he had returned to the
-Wilderness from Cahazaxa's Tomb."
-
-Amos had calmed down by degrees whilst he related the whole story to Mr.
-Forsyth; but now, quite suddenly, he became as frantically excited as
-before.
-
-"For two years I have hunted for the man," he cried; "and I found him
-here by chance. I want nothing but the map, to know where the Greater
-Treasure has lain hidden for more than four centuries, and to learn how
-to get there. See here!" he shouted; "the place is far to the north,
-near the valley of the Yapura River. The treasure of the Incas was
-carried four hundred miles from Cuzco!"
-
-"What more could we want?" laughed Forsyth.
-
-"Why, nothing else," said Amos. "This map's worth more to us than the
-keys to the vaults of the Bank of England."
-
-I heard a sound like the rustle of paper or parchment, from which I
-judged that Amos flourished the map in his hand. And then it was that I
-did a thing so bold that I have never ceased to be amazed at my own
-audacity.
-
-I had passed from sheer fright to cold deliberation. I cared not two
-pins for my own safety; and though I was still in dread of Amos, I
-thought not once of him, but of John Bannister, whose very shadow I
-almost worshipped. Besides, it must be understood, I was already caught
-like a fly in the web of these adventures. I had listened, as to a
-story, to all that Amos had said, and had tried to figure in my mind's
-eye the Greater Treasure, all glittering in the dust, Cahazaxa's Tomb
-and the dark Region of the Woods. I knew, from what I had heard, that
-if all this wealth belonged to any Christian man, that man was John
-Bannister himself and never Amos Baverstock. Why Bannister was content
-to live as he did, when he could be master of such riches, was a
-circumstance I could not then explain, but which I was wise enough to
-see was no concern of mine. Upon one thing was I well determined, with
-a kind of blind pig-headedness that might have led to my own
-undoing--and that was that Amos should never take away with him the map.
-
-"Gold!" he cried. "Gold! We'll wade knee-deep in it!"
-
-And at that, I sprang from under the sleeping-bag and hurled myself
-straight at him whom I so truly feared.
-
-Both he and Mr. Forsyth were too surprised to do little else but gape,
-which gave me the chance I wanted, to snatch the parchment from his
-hand.
-
-I do not think I could have been much quicker; but he was not to be
-taken unawares. The parchment was old, and must have been half torn
-already, for, when he pulled one way and I the other, the thing came in
-half. And then, even before Baverstock had time to drop an oath, I was
-past the opening of the cabin and racing like a madman through the
-gorse.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV--KIDNAPPED
-
-
-While I went over the sand-hills like a hare, I looked back once and saw
-Amos running, his face all screwed up in fury, and his black eyes as if
-they were on fire. At the door of the cabin stood Mr. Forsyth, shaking
-his Malacca cane at me, but never troubling himself to move so much as
-an inch.
-
-I knew from the first that I had the legs of both of them, that Amos
-could never catch me though I carried a pound weight on either foot. And
-I believe, like a fool, I laughed, thinking myself secure; and when I
-pulled through a hedgerow that cut off the sand-drift from the open
-fields, I found myself face to face with Joshua.
-
-For my own excuse, it may be urged that I had had much to think of in
-the last few minutes; and if I had remembered my friendship with
-Bannister, I had at least forgotten the very existence of Joshua Trust.
-But there he was, as plain as a pike-staff, about thirty yards to the
-front of me.
-
-I pulled up and stared at him; and to my surprise he made no movement,
-until I heard the voice of Amos from behind me.
-
-"Catch the young fiend! Shoot, Joshua, before he gets away!"
-
-And at that I jumped to the right, straight into a rabbit-hole, and
-pitched on to my head.
-
-I lay where I was for a few seconds without moving, for I was a trifle
-shaken by the fall. I could still hear Amos, cursing and swearing
-horribly, and Joshua, beating along the hedge with his stick. For all
-that, neither could I see them nor could they see me; for I was flat
-upon my face in a bunch of thistles, which was near as great a torment
-as a swarm of bees.
-
-I knew from the first that sooner or later I would have to run for it;
-and the only thing that held me back from bolting then and there was the
-certain knowledge that Joshua Trust would shoot. I write with natural
-reluctance whatsoever stands something to the credit of myself; but,
-even at the moment, I thought more of the parchment than of my own skin.
-For I still held the crumpled fragment of the map in my right hand,
-gripping it tightly as if it were a running-cork.
-
-I heard Joshua's voice quite near to me; and knowing that he must find
-me if I remained where I was, I resolved to take my chance. But first,
-in case of possible misfortune, I stuffed my portion of the parchment
-map to the full length of an arm down the very rabbit-hole that had
-tripped me up. And as I did so, a thought flashed through my mind: that
-it was, indeed, a strange circumstance that half the secret of the
-Greater Treasure of the Incas of old Peru, who four hundred years ago
-had foiled the greedy Spaniards, should lie hidden in a rabbit-scrape in
-Sussex.
-
-And then I sprang to my feet and trusted to Providence to help me.
-Joshua was in front of me and threw out his arms to catch me. But I
-dived beneath them, swerved away from him, and ran for my very life.
-
-I heard Amos shouting like a madman. Out of the corner of an eye, I saw
-Joshua Trust fumbling in the region of his belt for the pistol I knew he
-carried.
-
-It was neck or nothing then. I had the sense not to run straight, but
-to dodge here and there like a snipe; and as like as not I owed my life
-to that. For I found out afterwards that Trust was a dead shot, who
-seldom missed his mark.
-
-As I fled, the sharp crack of his pistol broke upon the silence, scaring
-the sea birds from the beach. The bullet sang past my head and clipped
-the lobe of an ear, so that the blood ran down my neck. And thus was I,
-Dick Treadgold, blooded, in both metaphor and fact, to a life of peril
-and adventure.
-
-Whilst Joshua reloaded, I had a chance to double the distance between
-us. I headed inland, away from the shore, and made in the direction of
-the village which was more than a mile away. Straight in front of me
-was a clump of trees, and I hoped to gain this before Trust could fire
-again.
-
-Though the country that lies south of the Downs, from the west of
-Worthing to the ancient city of Chichester, is, in the main, as flat as
-a table, this particular clump of trees was perched upon a rounded
-hillock--though you would call it that nowhere but in western Sussex;
-and therefore, when I gained the trees, I could survey the land on every
-side of me to the extent of a good square mile.
-
-To the south were Joshua and Amos Baverstock, hastening after me, the
-latter some way behind his longer-legged companion. To the north, a
-little to the east, was the sharp belfry of the church in the village I
-would gain: and, to the west, was the lane that leads to Arundel.
-
-I had paused for a moment, not so much for breath as to get my bearings,
-to select the shortest route; and in this brief moment, I became aware
-of a circumstance that caused my heart to leap for joy. For, coming
-toward me, by way of a footpath that led across the fields, carrying
-under an arm a brown paper parcel that I knew to contain his weekly
-stock of provisions, I recognised the great, tall figure of John
-Bannister himself.
-
-All thoughts of my pursuers were instantly banished from my mind. What
-cared I now for Amos Baverstock and all his threats and oaths! I was
-conscious of nothing else but the bald fact that a friend in need was
-close at hand--and one, moreover, who would soon get the best of Master
-Baverstock--and so great was my elation that I took no heed of a
-dog-cart which, at that moment, came rattling round a bend in the road.
-
-I called loudly upon Bannister by name, though he was then scarcely
-within hearing, and dashed down the hill before Joshua could have
-reached the trees from the other side.
-
-The road in that place was bounded by a wooden fence, and balancing
-myself upon the top of this, I shouted frantically to Bannister.
-
-"Come quick!" I cried. "Amos Baverstock is here!"
-
-I was answered, before the last word had left my lips, by a shot fired
-at the back of me. The bullet splintered the woodwork of the very bar
-upon which I was standing; and, startled into action, I jumped into the
-road.
-
-Immediately I had to turn back again no less quickly, to avoid being run
-down by the dog-cart, the driver of which reined up with a jerk.
-
-I looked up at him at once, thinking to recognise some farmer that I
-knew; but, instead of that, I set eyes, to my amazement, upon Mr.
-Gilbert Forsyth, with his side-whiskers and his greased moustache.
-
-I remembered then--too late as things turned out--that the road curved
-seaward near the place where I had first discovered Amos and his
-friends. Had I thought of it at all, I must have known that they had
-never walked to that lonely spot. They had driven there, to leave the
-horse and cart upon the road, whilst they settled themselves at a little
-distance to discuss how best they might attack John Bannister, in his
-cabin by the sea. Moreover, had I known then as much as I know now of
-Mr. Gilbert Forsyth, I should never have supposed for a single instant
-that he could be as idle as he seemed, that he would have remained doing
-nothing before the opening of the cabin, whilst his friends were
-pursuing me.
-
-For Gilbert Forsyth, a fop to all appearances and a lazy dude, was in
-reality a man of action. He said not a word to me, but when he had
-reined in his horse, he lifted his whip, and cut me down as if I were a
-thistle.
-
-It was a long tandem whip--and tandems were much in fashion in the days
-when all this happened. The lash wrapped itself about my legs like a
-living snake; so that when Forsyth jerked the whip backwards with all
-his force, I was thrown violently on my face upon the hard, dusty road.
-
-I tried to get to my feet as quick as I could, but had done no more than
-struggle to my knees, when Forsyth struck me upon the crown of my head
-with the heavy handle of the whip.
-
-It was a cruel blow and a stout one; and I know that if I did not
-actually lose consciousness I, at least, saw the trees swing upward into
-the sky, and the white road upon which I lay rush round and round, like
-the spokes of a revolving wheel.
-
-And then the next thing I knew was that Forsyth had me by the throat.
-Though I was then young, I was not a weakling. I struggled desperately,
-and might, perhaps, have freed myself, had not Joshua Trust arrived upon
-the scene in time to settle the affair the wrong way for me.
-
-For he gathered me up in his arms, and I was held as if I were encased
-in iron. I shouted frantically, but that was of no more help than the
-cackling of a hen. I was lifted bodily into the cart.
-
-I heard Joshua shout to Amos: "Run like mad! Here's Bannister himself!"
-
-Forsyth had climbed upon the box. Trust was on the back seat, with me
-held like a squalling babe in his arms. The cart tilted forward a bit,
-as Amos scrambled up and took his seat beside the driver.
-
-I heard Forsyth crack his whip, and immediately the horse started off at
-a canter, the cart rocking like a boat in a heavy sea. I continued to
-shout, until Joshua swore at me and clapped one of his great hands
-across my mouth. And the last thing I saw, as the cart turned into the
-main road to Littlehampton, was John Bannister breaking through the
-boundary fence, and then standing quite still and upright in the middle
-of the road, staring after us, with his brown paper parcel still under
-his arm.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V--I SET FORTH UPON MY VOYAGE
-
-
-Though all these events took place more than fifty years ago, I have a
-very perfect recollection of that drive. In those days there was not
-much traffic on the Sussex roads; and we passed nothing on the way to
-Slindon save a hay-cart and a brewer's wagon. On neither occasion did I
-dare cry out for help, for Joshua Trust sat by the side of me with his
-loaded pistol, pressed close against my ribs, in the pocket of his
-sailor's pea-jacket. I never doubted for an instant that he would
-shoot. I had then, it is true, little experience of the world; but I
-could scarce fail to recognise that I was fallen into the hands of
-desperate men who counted human life of little worth.
-
-So I kept my silence upon the road, wondering all the time what was to
-become of me, and, above all else, what Amos Baverstock would say when
-he discovered that I had cast away my fragment of the map.
-
-That he thought I had it still was plain enough, since he twice told
-Joshua to keep an eye on me, lest I should throw it from the cart. He
-was in a great haste to reach the woods at Slindon, where in springtime
-the wild flowers are like a garden; and he had a good reason for this.
-Indeed, in all my experience of Amos, I never knew him fail for want of
-caution; and when a man is circumspect as well as fearless, he is an
-enemy who cannot be trifled with.
-
-It was the scoundrel's design, so I discovered, to reach the woods with
-as little delay as possible, and there to wait until the evening, when
-he could take the Portsmouth road under cover of darkness. There were,
-at that date, many coaches on the highways; and Amos evidently thought
-it wiser not to trust me.
-
-So to Slindon Woods we went, and were there in no time, soon after noon.
-They unharnessed the horse, and turned him out to graze; and whilst Mr.
-Forsyth unpacked a hamper that was well stocked with provisions and wine
-to drink, Amos took me by the shoulders, and looked me straight in the
-face.
-
-"And now, boy," he said, "I'll have no more nonsense from you--so
-understand me, once and for all. It's an unwise thing to pry into my
-affairs--I can tell you that. You know more about me already than I
-care to think; and I tell you fairly, you had best mend your ways, if
-you value life."
-
-I was afraid of the look of him, of the hard glitter in his eyes and the
-way in which his thin lips were tightly pressed together. And I was
-more afraid still of what would happen when he discovered that I had
-made away with my fragment of the torn map. My heart was in my mouth.
-I felt as if I were suspended by a thread upon the brink of a precipice,
-and that at any moment that thread would break and I be hurled into
-eternity.
-
-Fortunately, perhaps, I was not left long in such uncertainty; for no
-sooner had Amos taken his hands from off my shoulders than he clapped
-them together behind his back, and came out with the very question that
-I feared.
-
-"And where's the map, my boy?" said he.
-
-I answered nothing.
-
-"Give it up," he demanded, and held out a hand.
-
-"I have not got it," said I.
-
-At that his jaw dropped. He stared at me in amazement, not knowing
-whether or not to believe me.
-
-"Haven't got it!" he repeated. "What d'ye mean?"
-
-And the way he rapped out those last few words made my blood run cold. I
-saw, however, that I must make a clean breast of the matter, let it end
-which way it would.
-
-"I have not got it," said I, "for a simple reason; because I had thrown
-it away before you caught me. And now, you know the truth, and can do
-with me what you will."
-
-The hunchback stood staring at me as if I were a ghost. His thin,
-wrinkled face had gone a yellow or a greenish colour, and his little
-eyes looked blacker and more on fire than ever. He kept working his
-mouth about, as if he were chewing some of his vile tobacco; and, on the
-whole, I cannot conceive an expression more menacing, a countenance less
-prepossessing.
-
-He came up to me, and searched my pockets; and whilst he was doing so, I
-noticed that both his hands were trembling. He had then been joined by
-both Trust and Forsyth, who stood on either side of him.
-
-Amos, as he drew away from me, came out with an oath that I can never
-write. Indeed, the swearing of this man was not the least of his many
-sins.
-
-"He has not got it!" he cried. "We've been fooled, Mr. Forsyth; and
-that by a slip of a boy!"
-
-I thought that he would kill me, then and there, beneath the shadow of
-the trees in Slindon Woods. But, though Amos Baverstock often worked
-himself into fits of ungovernable fury, he never was guilty of a foolish
-action. For my life--though at the time I never guessed it--was of some
-use to him. Not only did I know where I had hidden the torn map, but,
-as like as not, I had looked at it, and might be able to remember the
-names of some of the places that were marked thereon--knowledge for
-which Amos would give much. Had it not been for this, I have little
-doubt he would have put me out of the world.
-
-They tied my feet together, in case I should endeavour to escape, whilst
-the three seated themselves upon the gnarled surface roots of a great
-oak tree, and examined their fragment of the map, discussing the
-question openly, so that I overheard them and learned of the trick that
-Providence had played us all.
-
-For the map had been rent in twain, not by the hands of Amos Baverstock
-and me, but by the sure and supple fingers of Almighty Destiny. Amos
-had in his possession at least three-quarters of the parchment--he had
-it all, indeed, except one corner, that which I had seized in my attempt
-to wrench it from his grasp. And, as good luck had it, that one corner
-contained the information of the greatest value: to wit, the exact
-locality where the Greater Treasure was to be found.
-
-As for the rest of the map, it carried you from the outskirts of what
-may pass as modern civilisation to within a certain unknown distance of
-the secret place. It put you on the right road, as it were, and then
-left you--lost in the midst of a wilderness of doubt.
-
-When Amos grasped the full significance of this, he jumped to his feet,
-a perfect figure of fury, storming at me and swearing, using threats and
-shouting of torture, if I did not then and there confess. But speak I
-would not. Whatever happened, I was resolved to hold my ground, though
-I was filled with grave misgivings.
-
-For all that afternoon they badgered me, trying intimidation, bribery
-and curses; and then, at last, they settled it amongst themselves that
-they would take me with them into Portsmouth, and thence across the sea
-into the very heart of a black barbarous country, where they hoped to
-find the Treasure of the Incas.
-
-It was then, whilst we waited in the woods for sunset, that I saw
-myself, a lad of sixteen summers, launched upon a series of adventures,
-among strange peoples and in wild, romantic lands--adventures such as
-those of which I had often read, of the bold Spaniards who had followed
-Columbus into a new and unknown world, and brave blades of the stamp of
-Drake and Grenville, who--like John Bannister himself--were all men of
-Devon. That I was to be one of a company so glorious seemed to me all
-my heart could wish, though I went as a hostage with my life itself at
-ransom.
-
-In a strange fashion, in very truth, did I begin my travels; for I
-journeyed that night to Portsmouth, not only bound hand and foot and
-tied to the seat of the dog-cart, but gagged as well; so that, by the
-time we reached our destination, I ached in every limb.
-
-For three weeks we dwelt together in a lodging-house, patronised by
-seamen, in a poor quarter of the town. The landlord--a fat, slovenly
-fellow whose hand was seldom far from a pint mug or near a razor--was,
-as I guessed, hand in glove with Amos; for he must have known that
-throughout those three dreary weeks I was kept locked in a stuffy room,
-where I had neither fresh air nor liberty, and no better fare than is
-accorded to a convict.
-
-I have said that we dwelt together, but this was not wholly so; for Mr.
-Gilbert Forsyth, though he was often of our party, had taken rooms in
-one of the best hotels. He was a gentleman somewhat fastidious in his
-habits, with a nice taste in wine and clothes, though--as he was soon to
-prove--he could rough it with the best of us.
-
-Joshua, too, was seldom in our lodgings. It appears that he spent most
-of his time in the neighbourhood of the docks, on the lookout for an old
-shipmate whom he knew he could trust, with whom Amos could strike a
-bargain.
-
-Such a man was eventually found. Joshua brought him in, one evening,
-and shortly afterwards Mr. Forsyth arrived, looking more than ever as if
-he had just come out of a bandbox.
-
-This fellow proved to be the skipper of a barque, due to sail in a few
-days' time, bound for Caracas in Venezuela. She must call first at
-Liverpool, to take on a cargo of cotton goods, but would touch at no
-port upon the voyage but Fayal in the Western Islands, which are now
-called the Azores.
-
-All this fitted in exceedingly well with Amos's plans. As I was in the
-next room when they talked the matter out, and they never troubled to
-close the door, I know for a fact that Baverstock bribed the skipper,
-and that Forsyth--who I suspected all along had undertaken to produce
-the funds--paid him as much as fifty pounds down, quite apart from the
-question of passage money, and there was more to come at the end of the
-voyage.
-
-Gilbert Forsyth, indeed, was a member of the expedition for no other
-reason than that he supplied the sinews of war, else Amos had never
-taken him into his confidence and agreed to forego a third part of the
-loot. For all that, Forsyth proved himself a man of action and
-resource, though he never looked it; and things would have gone worse
-with Amos than they did, had he not had at his right hand one so capable
-and cool throughout those wild, adventurous days.
-
-For Joshua Trust was well enough in his way to strike a blow or carry a
-camp-kettle across a mountain range that topped the clouds--otherwise he
-was a bull-in-a-china-shop kind of a fellow, whose worth was in his
-forearms and not his head.
-
-But Forsyth was cast in a finer mould: a man of education, with tags of
-Latin in the corners of memory, a sense of humour--subtle enough to be
-lost upon both his strange companions--and a wonderful brain for
-figures.
-
-The man's laziness was all pretence and affectation. He always talked
-as if he were half asleep, and yawned at intervals, screening his mouth
-with a hand upon one of the fingers of which he wore a golden signet
-ring; and yet, his brain was ever active, and he had the happy knack of
-doing the right thing at the right time--as he had already proved to my
-cost.
-
-Even whilst I lay imprisoned in that dingy room in Portsmouth, Forsyth
-returned along the coast to within a stone's throw of John Bannister's
-cabin by the sea, and searched vainly for the fragment of the map which
-I had thrown away. And that in itself was a bold thing to do; for the
-police--to whom Bannister had described the appearance of both
-Baverstock and Trust--had been told of my disappearance, and the
-countryside, from Arundel to Chichester, was populous with printed
-offers of reward.
-
-For, all this time, my mother was well near distracted by anxiety and
-distress. John Bannister called upon her, and tried in his own
-straightforward way to set her fears at rest, and swore to her that he
-would find me, though he had to search the world.
-
-Of how well he kept his oath it is my task to write, and of much else
-besides. For the barque, which was called the _Mary Greenfield_,
-dropped her pilot off the Needles of the Isle of Wight, and with a fair
-wind and under full canvas struck the open sea. And I, Dick Treadgold,
-was on board, sea-sick that night as any full-grown man could be, and
-sick at heart as well. For, when the white cliffs of dearest England
-faded in the evening light, I realised for the first time that I was
-alone, and there was no telling what the Fates held in store for me.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI--I AM CONCERNED IN A MUTINY
-
-
-I have neither space nor patience to describe in any detail that long
-and tedious voyage. For we were months at sea. I saw whales spouting
-water into the air, and schools of porpoises; and at one time, for a
-whole month on end, we were becalmed, the ship lying idle in the midst
-of a vast floating mass of seaweed, where there were all kinds of
-jelly-fish and squids. The heat was excessive, and there was a rank,
-almost putrid, smell in the air, which came from the decaying seaweed.
-That in itself was enough to try the temper of every member of the crew;
-but, to make matters worse, much of the tinned meat on board exploded in
-the hold. I cannot explain this, but I know that it happened, and am
-content to leave the explanation to the scientific reader. These
-circumstances, together with the surly nature of James Dagg, the
-captain, led from dissatisfaction to open grumbling, and thence to the
-mutiny of which I have now to tell.
-
-My own fortunes were, to some extent, involved in that affair; and in
-any case, I must describe the incident more or less as it occurred,
-since nothing could better serve to illustrate the true character of
-Amos Baverstock, who plays as important a part as myself in the
-narrative that follows.
-
-I had not been a week at sea, and just recovered from my sickness, when
-I was given clearly to understand that I was to hold no intercourse with
-any of the crew. I cannot say that I wished to, for they were a
-ruffianly lot--half of them, I verily believe, prison-birds, like Joshua
-Trust, and the remainder West Indian negroes, Chinamen, and Lascars from
-the coast of Malabar.
-
-I had to share a cabin with Amos himself, who seldom let me out of his
-sight. Thrown into such close intimacy with the man, I learned much
-concerning him, and he more of me. He seldom allowed a day to pass
-without questioning me in regard to what I knew of the map; and so
-terrible did his threats become that I was filled with fear for the
-future.
-
-On that account, I yearned for a friend, someone in whom I could
-confide; and it was not long before I found such a man on board that
-pestilential ship. Now that I can look back upon my series of
-adventures, I can see both men and matters in their true perspective,
-and I realise that, had it not been for William Rushby, the boatswain of
-the _Mary Greenfield_, the most honest and the whitest man that ever
-piped all hands on deck, this tale had never been told.
-
-When I saw him first, I sized him up as the true seaman that he was; but
-I dared not speak to him, because of the threats that had been heaped
-upon me. I knew also that I could go to none of the ship's officers
-with my story, for they were all tarred with the same brush as the
-skipper; but Providence before long gave me the chance I wanted.
-
-When we were in mid-ocean Amos tired of the voyage, and required little
-persuasion from Mr. Forsyth to take to playing cards. Captain Dagg was
-a card-player, too, and Joshua made the fourth; and this was the party
-that sat down nightly after supper to gamble, drink and smoke, by the
-light of a reeking paraffin lamp in the little stuffy saloon.
-
-I watched them play for many nights, and though I knew nothing of the
-game, it was quite clear to me that they were three babes at the
-business by the side of Mr. Forsyth. For it was he who always won, no
-matter with whom he played or what cards he held, and it was he who
-raked in their money.
-
-This was all one to me. I soon tired of watching them; and when I had
-once slipped away from them, to breathe the fresh air on deck, and no
-questions had been asked, I made it my constant practice to sit of an
-evening upon the poop, whence I could look down into the water and see
-the phosphorus as if smouldering in the wake of the ship.
-
-And here it was that I talked with William Rushby. At that hour it was
-his duty to see that the ship's lamps were lighted, and when he had
-hoisted the mast-head lights, and put the red light to port and the
-green to starboard, he would come aft, haul in the log, and speak to me
-in whispers.
-
-That he took that precaution from the first makes it plain enough that
-he guessed some mischief was afoot. He questioned me concerning who I
-was and what business I had in such company on board that ship. It was
-some time before I dared tell him the truth, for fear of Amos
-Baverstock; but I did so in the end, making him swear to keep my secret;
-which he did.
-
-"It is all like a fairy tale," said he, when he had heard my story; "and
-it's hard to tell the best way to help you. Of this much I am certain:
-if you set forth into the back country of Venezuela with a man like
-Baverstock, you'll not come back alive."
-
-"But I cannot escape!" I protested. "Even on board this ship, I am
-watched at all hours of the night and day."
-
-Rushby thought for a while, stroking his short black beard which was
-like that of a Russian Czar.
-
-"Maybe," said he, "at Caracas, I could desert and take you with me. I
-have no liking for my shipmates here, as you may well imagine. In the
-meantime, many weeks must pass before we sight the mainland, and in that
-time much may happen."
-
-As he said this with some significance, I asked him what he meant.
-
-"Why, just this," he answered; "there's trouble brewing aboard, which
-will come to a head before we touch port. The crew are a low-down,
-blackguard lot, no better men than sailors; and though they may be held
-to blame for that, it's no fault of theirs if they are fed worse than
-swine and cursed from dawn to sunset. Dagg I had heard about, though I
-never signed on under him before, nor will again, and the mate's even
-worse. There's high talk in the fo'c'sle, as it is, where the
-ringleader is that nigger cook. Mark my words--and I've sailed the seas
-for more than twenty years--a prize-fighting negro in the galley can
-cause more mischief aboard a sailing-ship than a monkey and a woman,
-both in one."
-
-I laughed, for I was not then accustomed to the talk of sailors.
-
-"And they've run out of lime-juice," he went on; "and that's a serious
-thing."
-
-"Lime-juice!" I repeated, thinking he was joking still.
-
-"A man must eat vegetables," he explained to me, "to keep his blood cool
-and his liver nicely trimmed. You can't eat green cabbages and
-Brussels-sprouts in mid-Atlantic, so you must carry lime-juice aboard;
-and we've run out. The men have much to complain of. They are in ill
-health, and one or two should be lying up in a sick berth, instead of
-being sworn at left and right for not moving quicker. So I see trouble
-ahead. It may be a hurricane, or just a summer squall; and if the
-first, Heaven help James Dagg and his officers, for they're a tough lot
-for'ard, as I know who've listened to their talk."
-
-And Rushby was proved to be in the right. We ran into a great calm as I
-have said. The sea was like glass; and though the sun was blotted out
-by a steam-like fog, the heat was so intense that we went about the deck
-in naught but vests and trousers, with the sweat dripping from our
-finger-tips.
-
-Without a doubt, the crew suffered for lack of lime-juice; some broke
-out with a horrid skin disease. And then the news came that the tinned
-meat had all gone bad, and we were forced to live on salted ling-fish,
-so that we went thirsty all day long.
-
-It was Ebenezer Hogg, the negro cook, who started all the trouble. He
-was a long, raw-boned Jamaica man, who had cut a figure in the
-prize-ring in his younger days. He had never forgiven the skipper for a
-blow across the mouth because the cabin potatoes had not been properly
-peeled, though this was the work of Ah Chin, the cook's mate, a
-half-daft Canton Chinaman, who would fire off crackers at all hours of
-the night, in honour (I suppose) of the heathen gods he worshipped.
-
-Hogg told his shipmates he cared not a "dime with a hole in it" for
-James Dagg or any man. They had no food fit to eat, so they might as
-well help themselves to the ship's grog, to keep--as he described
-it--body and soul together.
-
-Rushby--as his duty was--warned the captain of what was coming; but
-Dagg, who had been losing heavily at cards to Mr. Forsyth, only abused
-the boatswain for his pains, and said that he himself was the best judge
-of such matters and would know how to deal with insubordination.
-
-And that night the crew, led by Hogg, the nigger, broke into the
-storeroom with a hatchet and broached the rum casks. Within
-half-an-hour, they were all roaring drunk; and that was a night that I
-shall never live to forget.
-
-The moon came out from the white sea-mist, as if to look down in
-scandalised amazement upon a scene of debauchery and violence--a round,
-red ball of fire, casting its rays upon the stagnant, reeking seaweed,
-illuminating the deck of that floating madhouse with a dull crimson
-glare, whereby you might see the whites of men's eyes and the glitter of
-the sharp blades they handled.
-
-Dagg appeared on deck, his face livid with passion; and I could see by
-his walk that he, too, had been drinking heavily at his card-playing.
-
-"What's all this?" he shouted at the top of his voice. "Understand,
-I'll have no monkey-tricks aboard the ship that I command."
-
-Hogg at once squared up to him, his two fists before his face, very
-drunk and brazen.
-
-"Come on, James Dagg!" he cried, with his Christy-minstrel accent. "Time
-yer and me settled de account."
-
-"This here's mutiny!" exclaimed the captain.
-
-"Dat's de right word, boss," said Hogg. "Mutiny it is."
-
-And at that, he struck the captain with his fist, so that Dagg rolled
-over and over upon the deck, groaning loudly.
-
-The fat was now in the fire. If discipline could be restored, Hogg
-would be hanged at the yard-arm and his body cast into the sea; and
-drunk as he was, the nigger knew it.
-
-"I'm de captain of dis ship," he bellowed, "an' James Dagg's de cook."
-
-He showed his white teeth in a grin, and then gave orders as if he had
-been accustomed all his life to a position of authority; and the wonder
-was he was instantly obeyed. Five minutes later, both Dagg and his mate
-were bound hand and foot; and the second mate had been locked in his
-cabin, where he was fast asleep. The negro went staggering backwards
-and forwards, from the forecastle to the poop, crying out that he it was
-who was Captain and his name was Admiral Hogg.
-
-There were two spectators of this comedy, who could not be considered as
-partisans; and the one was William Rushby and the other was myself. The
-boatswain's sense of duty would have held him to the captain, had it not
-been for me; for, though I had no liking for any of the crew, and a
-feeling of positive loathing for a great brute like Hogg, I saw in the
-discomfiture of James Dagg and his officers some chance of my own
-ultimate deliverance. So that when the cook turned upon me, and caught
-me by the scruff of the neck, I played the card that I thought safest at
-the time, but which certainly lost me the trick that meant the game.
-
-"And now, boy," said Hogg, "which way de wind blow wid you? Will you
-sign on to serve as cabin-steward under Admiral Hogg?"
-
-"Why, sure," said I, having picked up something of the man's own way of
-speaking. "I was never a friend of Captain Dagg's, as you may have seen
-for yourself."
-
-And thereupon, I looked away from the negro's grinning countenance, and
-straight in the black, pig-like eyes of Amos Baverstock.
-
-If I had feared him before, I was well-nigh terrified of him then; for
-there was black murder in the look he gave me, and his mouth was working
-horribly.
-
-For all that, he straightened his face in half a second, and turned to
-Hogg as calm as the sea itself.
-
-"I'll settle with you in a moment," said he. "I've not lived more than
-half my life without learning how to deal with a buck nigger who's three
-parts tipsy. Bo's'n," said he to Rushby, pointing straight at me, "put
-that boy in irons."
-
-Rushby never moved.
-
-"Did you hear my orders?" rapped out Amos.
-
-"I heard right enough," said the boatswain. "But I'm not here to take
-orders from you."
-
-At that, the crew, who had gathered round, thinking that Rushby was with
-them, became bolder than ever. Knives were drawn from belts, and one of
-these was flourished in the face of the captain who still lay upon the
-deck, bound hand and foot.
-
-"Ho!" cried Amos. "So that's your tune, is it? I see you must all be
-taught a lesson."
-
-He talked with all the confidence in the world, though--with the
-exception of Mr. Gilbert Forsyth, who had just strolled on deck with
-both hands in his trouser pockets--there was no one at his back, and he
-faced a crowd of angry, drunken seamen who would not then have stopped
-short of murder.
-
-From Rushby he turned once more to Hogg. "And so," said he, "you claim
-to be the captain of this ship?"
-
-The negro glanced in his direction, but would not meet those cruel,
-steadfast eyes.
-
-"If I'm not," he blurted out, "then who is de captain? Tell me dat?"
-
-"Why, I am," roared Amos. "And what have you to say to it?"
-
-Hogg realised he was challenged. Perhaps, under the influence of rum,
-he had already gone further than he meant to; but, in any case, so far
-as he was concerned there was no question of retreat.
-
-"Put up your fists!" he shouted. "We fight for it and let de best man
-win."
-
-He grinned from ear to ear, as, standing in front of Amos--above whom he
-towered by a good clear head and shoulders--he lifted his great, black
-fists to the level of his face. I thought that he would kill Amos with
-a single blow; for the one was so big and bony, and the other so frail
-and shrivelled up. But I did not then know Amos Baverstock.
-
-"Come on!" cried Hogg, still grinning.
-
-I looked at Amos, thinking to find him alarmed; but never upon the face
-of any man have I beheld an expression of such complete contempt.
-
-"You black dog!" said he, with an oath.
-
-He drew back his right hand, as if about to strike, and immediately I
-caught the glint of a revolver barrel in the moonlight.
-
-There was a flash, a single loud report, and then a dull, heavy thud as
-the negro's great ungainly body came down upon the deck. And there he
-lay, full in the red moonshine, upon that tropic night, huddled and
-stone-dead--the black, bragging fool who had claimed to be our captain.
-
-"And now, then," said Amos, as cool as ever, turning to the crew, "is
-there any man else who would like to command this ship?"
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII--AND AM MADE TO PAY FOR IT
-
-
-And that was the end of the mutiny on board the _Mary Greenfield_. The
-match was struck by a negro; the flames were fed with rum; and the fire
-flared up, just to be stamped out by the one strong man on board.
-
-Amos at once released both the captain and his mate; whereupon Dagg
-treated the crew to a long-winded, high speech upon the subject of what
-he would do, if such insubordination occurred again; but as he had done
-naught during the crisis, but to get knocked down the moment he opened
-his mouth, there were few of his audience who were not laughing up their
-sleeves.
-
-I have told the full story of the disturbance, to illustrate the
-character of Amos Baverstock. I have yet to write of the sequel to the
-trouble, which more nearly concerned myself.
-
-For Amos was as good as his word, and made short work of William Rushby
-and of me. Though the crew had been bound over to keep the peace, as
-you might call it, admonished to behave themselves in future, the
-boatswain was not only degraded of his rank, but forthwith cast into
-irons.
-
-As for myself, I was led before a kind of tribunal, assembled in the
-saloon. Captain Dagg, Amos Baverstock, and Joshua Trust were my judges;
-and a strange triumvirate they made, Amos chewing his black cigar, and
-all three seated before their glasses of grog, with their greasy
-playing-cards scattered before them on the table.
-
-"Boy," said Dagg, "you joined in a mutiny. Do you know that, you whelp?
-Do you know what it means?"
-
-"No, sir," said I.
-
-"It means death," said Dagg. "The yard-arm--that's what it means."
-
-I believed, for the moment, that they were really going to kill me; and
-so seriously had the great heat and the excitement affected me that I
-don't think I cared very much whether they did so or not. Anyway, I
-know I answered boldly, though I had never the courage to look straight
-at Amos, whose eyes I felt were upon me.
-
-"Captain Dagg," said I, "if you want to murder me, get on with the
-matter. I ask you to do no more than to remember this: I did not come
-on board your ship of my own free will. I was kidnapped, and carried
-here by force, and I have no means of escape."
-
-At that, Amos struck the table with his fist; and, bold though my words
-had been, I jumped as if a cannon had been fired.
-
-"Silence!" he roared. "We are not here to argue with you. You were
-given your orders. You were told that on no account were you to
-communicate with anyone on board this ship, and you defied us. We have
-reason to suspect that you have taken into your confidence William
-Rushby, formerly boatswain. Do you deny it?"
-
-He banged the table again. I looked right into his face, and it was
-just as if I was under fire. But I could never answer him. I had the
-pluck neither to lie nor to tell the truth.
-
-"Good!" said he. "You admit as much. Well, then, we shall see that no
-such tricks are played us in the future. Rushby is in irons. As for
-you, for the rest of this voyage you remain a prisoner in your cabin;
-and if we have any more trouble with you--I warn you fairly--you meet
-the same fate as that hide-bound, cursed nigger."
-
-And that was the lame and impotent conclusion of the mutiny on board the
-_Mary Greenfield_.
-
-My lot was now even worse than before. For week after week I was locked
-in a stuffy cabin, and got neither fresh air, good food, nor exercise.
-The calm broke up quite suddenly with a squall, followed by a shower of
-rain. For about an hour the water came down like a cascade upon the
-sea, washing the ship from stem to stern, giving--as it appeared to me,
-looking out from my narrow port-hole--new life to the floating seaweed
-and the myriads of living things that were swarming in the midst of it.
-
-The ship rocked, turning lazily from side to side, like a sleeper
-awakening, and then, lurching, took on a list to starboard, as the wind
-gripped her hoisted sails. And then, once again, we were under canvas,
-ploughing westward across that great, lonely ocean.
-
-A few days later, we struck a trade wind, and made even better progress.
-Though I myself was never more miserable in all my life, I had reason to
-think that there was less discontent on board. I could hear the patter
-of the bare feet of the men on the deck above me, as they hastened about
-their work, as sailors should, and the shrill note of the boatswain's
-whistle--which caused me to wonder who the new boatswain was. It must
-be understood that during these days of my imprisonment I had nothing to
-read and nothing to do, but to meditate upon my own misfortunes.
-
-Life was not made any the more pleasant for me inasmuch as I still
-shared a cabin with Amos, though I was devoutly thankful that I saw
-little of him. Night by night, he would sit late at cards, trying--I
-should imagine--to win back what he had lost to Mr. Forsyth; and I made
-a point of being asleep, or pretending to be so, before he came to bed.
-
-And now I have to tell of something which has a direct bearing upon all
-that follows. I had become so despondent and forlorn, and I found
-myself in the company of such infamous and shameless rogues, that I had
-actually forgotten my friends. I had forgotten that there were yet in
-the world true, honest men who could be both brave and loyal.
-
-One evening, I must confess, my heart was near to breaking. The world
-seemed all so hopeless and so wicked that I brought my face to my hands
-and cried just as I had been wont to cry, when I was a little chap of
-four years old, when things had not gone for me exactly as I wanted. And
-as I sobbed, I could hear the gamblers in the saloon beyond the cabin
-door; the "clink" of the bottles and the glasses, and the deeper note of
-the coins upon the table; now and again, a gruff oath from Amos or
-Joshua Trust, and Mr. Forsyth's affected drawl. And then, a voice,
-quite near to me, whispered in my ear:
-
-"Me lad, be quick! I want a word with you."
-
-I sprang to my feet--I had been lying on my berth--and looked about me.
-I could see no one in the cabin, and had begun to think of ghosts and
-spirit-voices, when I heard the whispering again.
-
-"Here, me lad! The port-hole."
-
-I looked at the port, and could see a face by the light of the oil
-lamp--a face in a frame studded with stars, the face of a man with a
-short stump of a grisly beard.
-
-"Rushby!" I exclaimed.
-
-"The same," said he. "But speak low, for Heaven's sake! Those rascals
-are at their cards in the saloon; the door's thin, and it's all up with
-us if we're discovered."
-
-I went to the port-hole, so that my face was close to his.
-
-"But how are you here?" I asked.
-
-"I've not lived my life and done my duty," said he, "without making
-friends. One of the crew, of the name of Adams, to whom I have been of
-service in the past, has let me loose--just as you might unchain a
-yard-dog for a run. I have a few minutes at the best before I'm back in
-irons, but that's enough for what I have to say."
-
-"But where are you now?" I asked, for he appeared to me to be walking
-upon the sea.
-
-He explained that he was hanging on to a rope, made fast to a stanchion
-on the deck above, but that he had something of greater importance to
-tell me.
-
-"Are we near our journey's end?" I asked.
-
-"In three days," he answered, "we should sight the coast, unless the
-wind changes. What they intend to do with me at Caracas I neither know
-nor care. I will somehow find the means to escape, and make my way back
-to England; and then, Captain Dagg and Amos Baverstock shall pay for
-what they've done."
-
-"I entreat you," I exclaimed, "do not meddle with Amos!"
-
-Rushby laughed softly.
-
-"And leave you at his mercy!" he cried. "That's not my way, nor--I
-should think, if all you have told me be the truth--the way of Mr.
-Bannister. This matter shall never rest where it now stands. I am here
-to learn two things, though I am no better than a simple sailor, and it
-will want a wiser head than mine before we're safe in port. Come, tell
-me, lad, where did you hide the map you snatched from Baverstock? John
-Bannister may want it."
-
-"In a rabbit-hole," said I; and I went on to describe, as best I could,
-how that rabbit-hole might be found.
-
-"There's a warren," said I, "about two hundred yards to the west of
-Bannister's cabin----"
-
-"And how am I to find that?" Rushby took me up.
-
-I thought for a moment; and then I got a bright idea when most I needed
-it, for I realised there was little time to spare and that Amos, at any
-moment, might enter and find Rushby at the port-hole.
-
-I gave him my mother's address; for I had little doubt that Bannister
-had gone, long before this, to her. With my life in danger, he would--I
-knew--soon get the better of his natural dread of women.
-
-"That's all I want," said he.
-
-And a moment after he was gone. It so happened that many months were to
-elapse before I set eyes upon him again--a true man and an honest, big
-of heart and strong of hand, the type that has made the very name of
-British sailor to rank so highly all the world across, from the old
-three-decker to the battle-cruiser of to-day. And I speak of the men
-without whose cutlasses and courage Blake and Drake, or even Nelson
-himself, had never been the famous admirals that they were.
-
-For, when we were come to Caracas, I was discharged from that poisonous
-vessel like a worthless bale of freight. Unshipped by night into a
-broken-down two-wheeled cart, and conveyed through the narrow streets of
-an evil-smelling city, where men talked loudly in a foreign tongue, with
-quarrelsome voices and much waving of the hands, and then I found myself
-in a dirty hovel upon the slopes of tree-clad hills, where I could see
-the round moon through a great hole in the roof, and lie listening to
-the singing of millions of crickets, wondering what would be the end of
-it all.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII--INTO THE WILDERNESS
-
-
-For these few days, it happened that I was left in the charge of Joshua
-Trust. In other words, he was the watch-dog that guarded me, day and
-night; and a dull dog he was. He never opened his mouth, save to
-grumble at everything--the heat, the insects, the very food he cooked
-himself. Now and again, he would sigh; which puzzled me, until I solved
-the problem for myself: he was inclined to regret the idle days aboard
-the _Mary Greenfield_ when he had naught to think about except his grog
-and cards.
-
-So, in this man's company, I learned nothing concerning what was afoot.
-But I was free to use my eyes, and I could scarce fail to observe that
-they were turning by degrees that ruined habitation into a kind of
-depot. For, day and night, came stores and arms and ammunition to the
-place--all manner of such things as might be required upon an expedition
-into the wild hinterland of that strange country, where there were few
-roads, but many bridle-paths and broad rivers to be crossed.
-
-Amos came often to the hut, and Mr. Forsyth was always with him; and, as
-I knew, it was the last-named who had paid for all. That, however, was
-all one to me. I was safely caught, thousands of miles from dear, silly
-Sussex; and even if I was so fortunate as to escape from Joshua Trust,
-what was I to do in that foreign land, where I could not speak a word of
-the language and had no friend to whom to go?
-
-On the fourth day of my captivity came six mules, and with them three
-men whom I took to be half-castes of a sort, for they were no more than
-two parts black and spoke Spanish, shouting at one another when they
-conversed. But I was more interested in the mules, which were of a kind
-that I had never seen before; for they were small animals, little larger
-than donkeys, with mouse-grey woolly coats like sheep. Each of these
-was provided with a pack-saddle; and when they were loaded for the
-inspection of Amos Baverstock and Forsyth, I was amazed at the great
-weight that such slender and seemingly fragile beasts could carry.
-
-On the fifth day after we had left the ship, we set forth upon our great
-march towards the south. Our party numbered eight in all: Amos,
-Forsyth, and Trust (the first the acknowledged leader of the
-expedition); myself and the three mulemen, whilst the other was a
-guide--a lean, cadaverous Spaniard, black as a raven, whom I never heard
-called by any other name than that of Vasco. I do not think this fellow
-was an evil man by nature, except in so far as he was capable of doing
-almost anything for money. In that, at any rate, he was honest: he
-served his masters faithfully, no matter who they were.
-
-And now we come to the march itself that, step by step, led me farther
-and farther from the confines of civilisation and into the heart of a
-cruel and magic wilderness where things happened that I should not
-believe, had I not seen them with my eyes.
-
-The first stage of our journey was uneventful enough; and the
-scenery--especially on the mountains we were obliged to
-cross--surprisingly beautiful. We first climbed to a great height,
-following a zig-zag road, along which the little mules struggled
-gallantly with their heavy loads. I had thought that, on gaining the
-crestline, we must again descend to something approaching the level of
-the sea. But this was not so; for the mountains proved to consist of a
-series of parallel chains, and no sooner had we negotiated one valley
-than we found ourselves upon the watershed of another.
-
-These valleys were thickly populated. We were seldom out of sight of
-villages and towns, many of which contained considerable buildings. The
-country had the aspect of being extremely fertile and prosperous. There
-were plantations of coffee and cocoa, tobacco and cotton, but a far
-greater area of the valley regions was given over to the cultivation of
-manioc and maize. For all I could ever learn, there was no flour in the
-land, for I never tasted bread, but subsisted upon hot maize cakes, made
-by Vasco, the guide, which I found as good as hot-cross buns.
-
-When we were clear of the mountains, we began to descend into the valley
-of a great river which, had I learned more geography when I was at
-school, I would have known to be the Orinoco. The course of this great
-stream we followed for many days, marching in a south-westerly
-direction, against the current. The climate was now a great deal hotter
-than it had been near the coast, and towns and villages were few and far
-between. One thing that I observed was the courteous behaviour of the
-inhabitants, who seldom failed to wave their hands to us and pass the
-time of day.
-
-We came to a vast sea of grass where, here and there, were scattered
-woods; and finally, after crossing a river of some importance, a
-tributary of the Orinoco, we sighted a great mountain that overtopped
-the surrounding hills like a giant in the midst of pygmies.
-
-Amos, who had been unusually reticent upon the line-of-march, now became
-talkative, almost hilarious. He carried constantly a grin upon his
-fox-like countenance, and would often chuckle to himself.
-
-For the great mountain in front of us might be described as the gateway
-of the road to the Treasure we were seeking, and was marked upon the
-left-hand top corner of the map. It was called Mount Tigro, but by that
-name I have never been able to trace it upon any modern map, though it
-was shown to be about twenty miles south of the Rio Guaviare.
-
-We were now--though I did not know it at the time--close upon the
-frontier of Colombia, and, I think, for a time our route lay through
-that little-known country, until we turned eastward again into the
-territories of the Amazonas.
-
-We were now in a mountainous and savage land, where we could make but
-the slowest progress. For not only were the hills steep and pathless,
-but in places clothed in such luxuriant vegetation that we had often to
-break a way with hatchets for the mules.
-
-We were marching by the map, and Amos had become our guide. He and
-Forsyth--who never seemed to tire--would lead our little column, myself
-walking in company of Joshua, and the pack-mules bringing up the rear.
-
-We were soon to bid good-bye to these faithful, dumb companions; for,
-after we had climbed the slopes of another range of mountains, we
-followed the course of a river valley that led us rapidly downward, to
-land us into the very heart of such a forest as I did not dream to be
-possible.
-
-The mulemen were paid off--by no means too handsomely, I thought--to
-return upon that long and tedious journey to the coast. And we five
-went on alone--Amos and his two confederates, Vasco and myself--carrying
-our stores and provisions in knapsacks on our backs, and all armed as
-though we were like to meet with savage men.
-
-In the first place, I must tell you that the heat was insufferable, for
-all this while we had been approaching the equator. The forest swarmed
-with myriads of stinging insects, and sometimes I saw great tree snakes
-of a magnitude that even now makes my blood run cold when I think of
-them. We came upon one, lying half coiled upon the bank of a woodland
-pool, and I am ready to swear that he was longer than a cricket-pitch,
-and of a thickness almost equal to my own waist.
-
-But I marvelled most at the forest trees, the names of some of which I
-learned from Vasco, who had a little English, of which he was
-exceedingly vain. One of these was a palm-tree, the very leaves of
-which were forty feet in length, standing almost erect, all bunched
-together--a magnificent sight to behold. And these forest giants were
-intertwined and intermingled with thousands of creepers, parasites, and
-climbers, so that in places, even at mid-day, when the tropic sun was at
-its height, it was dark as night in the vast Region of the Woods.
-
-For weeks we struggled onward, literally fighting our way through that
-all but impenetrable wilderness. I saw that Amos had more than he could
-do to trace our route upon the map; and there were times, I am
-convinced, when even Vasco and Baverstock himself truly believed that we
-were lost.
-
-He told us he was looking for a certain landmark; and in that dark and
-endless forest he might as well have searched for a pin. At one time,
-there was not a living soul within hundreds of miles of us. There were
-great alligators in the rivers that we crossed by means of rough dug-out
-canoes, which we made upon one bank and left upon the other; the jungle
-teemed with snakes, many of the venomous kind besides the great
-loathsome pythons, in whose coils an ox might have been crushed to
-death; thousands of gaily-coloured birds were among the tree-tops high
-above us, and the dead leaves about our pathway swarmed with little
-things that crept and crawled and stung so vilely that we were covered
-from head to foot with painful swellings. But never a sign did we see
-of any human being. Nature reigned in that black wilderness,
-untrammelled and supreme.
-
-And then, as one steps on a sudden from a darkened room, we came forth
-one morning from the forest into the blazing light of the sun. And
-there was such a wonder as I had never seen before.
-
-Before us was a plain upon which was growing a tall, reed-like grass;
-and in the centre of this plain was a long, hog-backed hillock, bare of
-trees. Remember, we were in the very heart of the Unknown, for months
-we had seen no sign or trace of humanity, and I, at least, judged myself
-to be hundreds of miles from the very outposts of the civilised world;
-and yet, upon the summit of this hillock was a great ruined palace or a
-temple, encircled by a colonnade of vast stone pillars, no less in their
-proportions than those of Stonehenge, on Salisbury Plain in England,
-only they were there by the score, and stood perpendicular and massive,
-not one having fallen from its place.
-
-I stood rooted in amazement, when my attention was attracted by Amos,
-whose behaviour was now that of a madman. He threw both his arms into
-the air, which action--in view of his hunched back and his pig-like,
-glittering eyes--made him look more evil and gleeful than ever, and
-shouted at the top of his voice:
-
-"Found!" he cried. "The Temple of Cahazaxa, who fled from Cuzco with
-the Treasure! And now, boy, the matter rests with you!"
-
-He changed as in a flash from unbounded joy to passion. He seized me by
-the shoulders, gripping me so tightly that it was as if his fingers
-burned into my flesh like red-hot irons.
-
-"I'll have the truth from you!" he shrieked, dancing like a maniac on
-his feet. "The truth, and nothing but the truth! Or else, I swear as
-I'm a living man, you die here and now."
-
-"What truth?" I asked.
-
-My voice was trembling; for so terrible did the man seem that a cold
-sweat had broken out upon my forehead. He drew nearer to me still,
-peering into my face and whispering.
-
-"Henceforward," said he, "you guide us. Either you have seen the map or
-Bannister has told you all he knows. In any case, you guide us from
-here to the place where the Greater Treasure is hid. Refuse, and you
-die, here and now, in the midst of this almighty desert."
-
-One glance at the man was enough to tell me that he meant every word he
-said. And yet, I do not think I was any longer afraid.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX--I AM LEFT TO MY DOOM
-
-
-I was now, it was apparent, in such a situation that my life was of
-little worth. Without doubt, Amos did believe that I was capable of
-guiding our little column to the place where the Greater Treasure was
-hidden.
-
-He thought, perhaps, that I had looked at the fragment of the map I had
-snatched from his hand, or else that John Bannister had told me the full
-story.
-
-As a matter of fact, I knew nothing. When flying for my very life from
-Amos, I had had other things to think of than to gratify a very natural
-curiosity, and had never so much as cast a glance at the map. And as
-for Bannister, I have said already this was the one subject upon which
-he could never or seldom be induced to talk.
-
-Amos, however, held a contrary opinion. Somehow, he must have learned
-that for several months John Bannister had been a good friend to me, and
-in his own mind had never questioned that I knew all there was to know.
-
-In either case, it was all the same to him; for my life was worth
-nothing if I could not help him in the furtherance of his purpose, and I
-was but a fifth mouth to feed in a wild, tropic region where food was
-difficult to find.
-
-That day I had a stormy scene with Amos, who was supported by Mr.
-Forsyth, whose questions I found even more difficult to answer; whilst
-Joshua Trust stood by, tugging at his red beard, which had now become
-more untidy and unkempt than ever. As for Vasco, he sat at a little
-distance, cross-legged, looking in a puzzled manner from Amos Baverstock
-to me.
-
-I swore on my oath to them that Bannister had told me nothing; but they
-would not believe me. Then, for the first time, I was shown the map
-which Amos had brought with him all the way from Sussex; and at once I
-observed a singular coincidence.
-
-For the parchment had been rent across the very place where was marked
-the great ruined building even then before us; and all Amos had of it
-was the following inscription: THE ANCIENT TEMPLE OF C---- and then came
-the torn edge, where I had held the parchment tightly between my thumb
-and forefinger.
-
-But this information, slight as it was, had been enough for Amos, who
-knew well the story of Cahazaxa, the Peruvian prince, of whom I will
-tell in the proper place. Both Bannister and Amos had heard often of
-Cahazaxa's Temple, which might be regarded as a kind of half-way house
-upon our treasure hunt. And upon the other portion of the map, which I
-had hidden in a rabbit-hole, were the letters "AHAZAXA," plain enough to
-any one who had ever heard of the temple, and thence the route marked
-plainly to the secret place where the Greater Treasure lay.
-
-Had Bannister ever shown me the map, I should in all probability have
-remembered the names of some of the places marked thereon; but he had
-never done so--which, after all, saved me a world of trouble at one of
-the most critical moments in my life.
-
-For, had I known, I trust I would never have confessed to these unholy
-scoundrels. I like to think that my courage would not have failed me at
-the eleventh hour. As it was, being wholly ignorant, I had nothing to
-tell, and boldly declared as much, though both the hunchback and Mr.
-Forsyth thought me to be lying.
-
-The former worked himself into a kind of frenzied passion. Gripping me
-by a wrist, he jerked me first in one direction, then in another,
-sometimes so violently that my head flew backward and forward like a
-weather-cock in the wind.
-
-"We'll have the truth from you!" he shouted. "I'll have it, though I
-must tear it from you with red-hot irons."
-
-"I know nothing," I persisted.
-
-"You'll speak or die," he answered. "And I'll see to it that death does
-not come easy!"
-
-All that day, they badgered me and persecuted me with questions. And in
-the end, when the sun was setting, they gave it up, and decided to put
-me to death.
-
-Mine was a strange fate, in very truth; and now, when I look back upon
-that hour, I marvel that I took it all so calmly. For it was my destiny
-to sit by the camp-fire, whilst our evening meal of maize and manioc was
-cooking, and hear them discuss among themselves how I should be done to
-death.
-
-Trust was all for rough-and-ready methods, in keeping with the blunt
-character of the man; Amos, for cold, deliberate torture; whereas
-Forsyth would bind me to a tree and leave me in the midst of that great
-wilderness to starve.
-
-It was Mr. Forsyth's vote that was carried; and now that I knew the
-manner of my death, I was filled with cold fear, though till then I had
-borne my ordeal with a fortitude that surprised even myself.
-
-And bound I was, then and there, to a stout palm-tree that stood by
-itself a little distance from the margin of the forest. For rope they
-used a kind of creeper that was common in the woods, and not only was
-this as strong as a ship's hawser, but so hard and tied so tightly that
-it cut into my legs and arms like bands of steel.
-
-[Illustration: "AND BOUND I WAS, THEN AND THERE, TO A STOUT PALM TREE, A
-LITTLE DISTANCE FROM THE MARGIN OF THE FOREST."]
-
-In such a manner was I doomed. For an hour or so I watched those three
-dread men, all so different, alike in nothing but their devilry, sitting
-together around the fire, talking in low voices, even pleasantly, as if
-to do murder were an every-day affair.
-
-Then they lay down to sleep, and both Trust and Amos were soon snoring;
-whereas I was left, already athirst and hungry, to await the approach of
-a terrible and lingering death.
-
-That night and those which followed will live always in my memory. I
-watched the moon rise, wondrous round and white and large, behind the
-rounded hill upon which stood Cahazaxa's Temple. The stars, which had
-been shining in their millions, faded in the moonshine, all save one
-bright planet in the sky above me. And there arose a mist, in which I
-thought there was something ghostly, upon the plain where the long grass
-stood like corn ready for the cutting. And behind me, as if striving to
-enfold me in an overpowering, stifling embrace, was the dark, deadly
-forest that cut me off from all and everything I loved.
-
-Long before dawn, Amos Baverstock was stirring. I watched him kindle
-the embers of the camp-fire into a blaze, and, sitting with his crooked
-back, he looked just like a monkey. I noticed that even at that hour he
-was chewing one of his foul, black cigars, his stock of which was
-running low. Presently, he awakened Trust and Forsyth. They ate their
-breakfast in silence; never a word was said. And then they packed their
-knapsacks and set forward upon the march, in the gloaming, with never a
-word or a glance at me.
-
-They marched in a bee-line upon the ruins of the ancient temple, and
-were soon lost both to sound and sight, for the plain lay even yet in
-the shadow of the night.
-
-The dawn--the great heat at midday--the majesty and grandeur of the
-wilderness in the heart of which I was doomed and lost for ever--and,
-above all else, the grave-like silence of that place--it were better I
-made no attempt to describe these things than fail in the endeavour. I
-know no more than that my loneliness was overpowering. It was as if I
-was the only living atom, save the insects and the butterflies that
-fluttered round about me, in all that world of gorgeous vegetation.
-
-I could not move a fraction of an inch. I would gaze by the hour at the
-great stones of the ruins before me, small in the distance and yet plain
-to see in that clear atmosphere, and wonder what manner of men had lived
-there in bygone days--what had been their hopes, their interests, their
-mode of life. And then my thirst would consume me; my tongue would
-cleave to the roof of my mouth, and I would suck my lips to find them
-dry as bones.
-
-One day of it had been more than I could bear; and that second night, I
-prayed that death might come speedily, for I saw that in death only
-would I find release from all my sufferings. But I lived on, like the
-Ancient Mariner himself; and on the third day, as on that tragic ship,
-there came a rain--a blessed rain from Heaven itself for me. Clouds
-appeared as if by magic, a dark canopy cast across the forest like a
-curtain; and the skies on a sudden opened and the rain came down in
-torrents.
-
-I was wetted in an instant to the skin, but I cared nothing for that. I
-threw back my head with opened mouth, and the water streaming down my
-face was life and strength and hope to me.
-
-And that night I no longer prayed for death; I prayed to the great God
-of Right and Justice for deliverance. And yet, how weak is human
-nature, how little is our faith! For before morning I was struggling
-like a madman to free myself from my bonds.
-
-The more violently I fought for liberty, the greater pain I suffered;
-for the hard fibre cut into my flesh until I gave it up, and, overcome
-by sheer exhaustion, I fell asleep, held upright by my bonds.
-
-I awoke to behold the half-light of approaching day. The plain of grass
-before me was lost in the mist which, in that weird place, came always
-at sunset and at dawn.
-
-I looked about me as if I yet were dreaming. The giant forest trees had
-taken upon themselves the shape of ugly spectres. The tall grass swayed
-in the wind of the dawn with a soft, rustling sound that reminded me of
-my mother's silken dresses. I watched a lizard, the length of a
-foot-rule, run swiftly down the trunk of a tree and make off into the
-grass.
-
-I endeavoured in vain to trace its passage, wondering whither the little
-creature was going so swiftly; and when I looked up I beheld to my
-astonishment--a man!
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X--HOW THE WILD MEN CAME AND LOOKED AT ME
-
-
-I have called him a man, and so he was, though, in very truth, at that
-time I had never seen his like. He was small in stature, little taller
-than myself; and there was something about him that was more animal than
-human. I cannot account for this, unless the explanation be found in
-the scared look upon his face, especially in the eyes--the eyes of a
-hunted beast.
-
-He was not black, but light brown of skin, though there was so much dirt
-about him that I was not even sure of that. His hair was lank and long.
-All matted with mud, it fell about his ears. He wore no clothing, save
-the skin of some small, wild animal hung loosely round his waist; and he
-held in one hand a long bamboo rod, which I took to be a blow-pipe.
-
-Now, I believed that this savage would kill me out of hand, defenceless
-as I was. But he stood staring at me for a long time, with his wild
-eyes and his mouth widely opened.
-
-So, by degrees, my courage returned to me, and with it something of
-hope. I tried to think--and it is no simple matter to be reasonable
-when one is exhausted by starvation and tortured both in body and in
-mind.
-
-It was manifest, in the first place, that I had no means of
-communicating with this man. I could neither speak to him nor sign,
-since I knew no word of any barbarous language, and my hands were bound
-fast to my sides. But I did the only thing I could do--I moved my mouth
-as if I were eating, hoping against hope that he would take my meaning:
-that I was starving and begged for food.
-
-And the more I mouthed at him and made grimaces, the more he stared at
-me, and the more frightened did he seem. For the better part of five
-minutes I swear he never moved an inch, and then, quite suddenly, he
-took to his heels and dived into the woods.
-
-For a little time I could scarce credit it that he had left me to my
-fate. But when a full hour had passed, and I realised that it was
-possible that the wild man might not return, my sense of loneliness
-became even more oppressive than before, and to tell the truth I cried.
-
-I am, in the evening of a long, adventurous life, at times of a
-reflective disposition, and I have considered often the strange
-complexities of human nature, for I have seen many men and places in my
-time. When I first beheld the savage, I was alarmed beyond measure that
-he would put the life out of me by means of his murderous-looking
-blow-pipe. I would, at that moment, gladly have had him on the other
-side of the world. And when he left me so suddenly, without sign or
-signal of either hostility or friendship, I felt no less dismayed.
-
-I was so utterly alone in that great silence, in the shadow of those
-mute, majestic trees. Not even the wild inhabitants of that
-inhospitable region would come and have done with it and kill me.
-
-And thus, indeed, I burst into tears, and cried as children cry. I
-think sheer weakness and the pain that I had suffered had much to do
-with it; and in any case it all seemed to me so pitiful and hopeless,
-for I was over-young to undergo such cruel privations.
-
-I slept again until the evening, when I was awakened of a sudden by a
-strange noise like the chuckling of a hen.
-
-I opened my eyes and looked upon the same wild man who had regarded me
-before. But this time he had brought three others with him--all four as
-like to one another as so many beans. And there they stood, in a row,
-immediately before me, one of them--as I have just expressed
-it--chuckling like a hen.
-
-I could not for the life of me make out whether or not he was laughing.
-He might have been amused, amazed, or angered. There was no expression
-upon his face. The noise seemed to come from somewhere out of his
-throat. When I opened my eyes and looked at him, he ceased at once; so
-I am inclined to think he had behaved thus in order to awaken me.
-
-I judged that the man I had seen earlier in the day had stood at a
-distance of about twenty paces from me; but now, made bolder by
-companionship, he had approached to within about twelve yards from the
-palm-tree to which I was bound. They were all armed with blowpipes, but
-they made no hostile movement; they just stood staring at me with their
-mad eyes, speechless and looking more afraid than I was.
-
-All on a sudden, I was impelled to cry out. I shouted as a dog yelps
-when trodden on, asleep upon a mat.
-
-"Give me food!" I cried. "Have pity on me! I am starving!"
-
-And at that they vanished, all the four of them. They scattered like
-birds, swiftly and in silence. At one moment, I beheld them; at the
-next, they were nowhere: they might have been spirited away.
-
-They did not return that night, which was the most miserable of all.
-Hunger was now gnawing at my vitals. There was a foul taste in my
-mouth, and I felt so weak and lifeless that it was as if the slow
-beating of my heart shook my whole frame, making it hard for me to
-breathe. Also, I was again consumed by a raging thirst; but the worst
-of the whole matter was the seeming hopelessness of my situation; for
-now I verity believed that my end was drawing near.
-
-Though often our endurance is strained to the utmost, and there are
-times when we are weighed down by grief and trouble, I know that the
-good God is merciful, that it is well to bear the ills we have so
-bravely as we may, in the firm conviction that faith and a stout heart
-to hope will conquer in the end.
-
-The sun rose in that lone place upon my misery; and a little after, came
-the wild men again; and this time they were nine in number, for I
-counted them as they stepped in single file forth from the darkness of
-the woods.
-
-They stood gazing at me as before; and now I was wise enough to hold my
-peace, though by then--if the truth be told--there was little strength
-within me; for, even as I looked at them, my eyelids dropped and my head
-nodded on my shoulders like that of a drunken man.
-
-They came closer than ever, to within an arm's length of me, and one
-timidly extended an arm and touched me, and then drew back quickly as if
-he had burned his fingers.
-
-[Illustration: "THEY CAME CLOSER THAN EVER, TO WITHIN AN ARM'S LENGTH OF
-ME."]
-
-I saw now that I had nothing to fear from them, that it was a keen
-struggle in their untutored minds as to whether fear or curiosity should
-win. I did my best to smile.
-
-It was a senseless, mirthless smile, forced upon lips that were dry and
-burning and eyes grown dim throughout long hours of watching and
-despair; and yet--by the grace of Providence--it achieved its simple
-purpose.
-
-For, forthwith, like a tribe of monkeys, they set to talking among
-themselves; and never had I heard such gibberish. They waved their
-hands, and made mouths and faces at one another that were astonishing to
-behold. They touched me repeatedly, fingering my tattered clothes; and
-one tugged so violently at the sleeve of my shirt, which had been torn
-to ribbons upon the thorn trees in the forest, that he pulled it off
-almost from the shoulder--and then began the monkey-house again.
-
-The very sight of my white skin, where it had not been tanned by the
-sun, set them jabbering for the space of half-an-hour; and all that time
-I kept my silence, fearing that, if I should speak, they would disperse
-like Sussex rooks at the sound of a farmer's gun.
-
-I had read and heard of fierce savage black men, cannibals and the like,
-who regarded as their natural foes all of alien race, whom they put
-horribly to death. But these wild people were shy as antelopes; and
-though they might have been dangerous if handled wrongly, there was
-nothing to fear from them in the case of one placed at so great a
-disadvantage as myself.
-
-I did nothing, then, but let them talk it out; and in the end, one of
-them took a bone knife with an edge like a saw, and cut through the
-fibre that bound me to the tree.
-
-The others stood a little apart with their long blow-pipes, ready to
-riddle me with darts that I learned afterwards were poisoned. But no
-sooner were my hands freed than I pointed a finger straight down my
-opened mouth--a gesture which no one could mistake.
-
-That set them talking once again; and when they were through with it,
-they took me with them back into the woods. In single file we wormed
-our way through the thick undergrowth of the forest, until at length we
-hit upon a footpath where they travelled fast and silently, these
-strange men of the woods. By then my strength was well-nigh exhausted.
-Both in mind and in body I was come to the end of my powers of
-endurance; and I could go no farther.
-
-And so, thereupon, they carried me, taking it in turns among themselves
-to bear my weight, for they were not strong men, but thin of limb and
-short in stature.
-
-We journeyed until nightfall, and then camped in the forest. They gave
-me food--roasted manioc and crushed bananas; and then I fell asleep.
-
-At daybreak--though in those dark places we saw little of the sun, and
-there was small difference betwixt night and morning--we were on the
-march again, and about midday struck the course of a considerable river
-which we followed up-stream for a distance of many miles. From this
-valley we turned into that of a tributary, and reached our destination
-in the evening.
-
-This was a small village of rude huts, inhabited--as I afterwards
-discovered--by the various members of a single family. I had walked
-many miles upon the second day, and found myself on arrival at the
-village as greatly fatigued as ever, suffering also from a stiffness in
-the joints, due to the cramped position I had been forced to assume when
-bound by the liana to the tree. So that after my simple meal that
-night, I again fell asleep, and slept, I verily believe, as I never did
-before or since. For not only was I spent and weary, but I had now the
-comfortable assurance that these wild people would do me no bodily harm.
-For the time being, at least, I was safe.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI--I BURN MY BOATS
-
-
-You may scarce credit it when I say that I sojourned for many months
-with these savage, yet simple, people, and whilst with them received
-neither hurt nor insult, but passed my days in pleasant idleness in the
-heart of those awe-inspiring woods.
-
-I have since described their ways and mode of living to a famous
-ethnologist, one whose business it was to study the sundry races of
-mankind; and he believed that I fell into the hands of a tribe of
-Caishana aborigines, one of the most primitive races in the world.
-
-Of this, however, no one can be sure; for I learned little of their
-language, and of that remembered nothing. Besides, there are so many
-hordes of Indians and tribes in the valleys of the Upper Amazon, and of
-so few of these is anything definite known, even at the present day,
-that a question of such slight importance, for the time being, may
-remain unanswered.
-
-It makes, in any case, no difference to my story. I do but state mere
-facts, leaving footnotes, queries and the like to scientists and
-students. For five months--as I can guess--I lived with this woodland
-people; and it pleases me to remember that, in return for their
-hospitality and kindness, I was able to render them some service. I
-taught them novel methods of catching the fish that abounded in the
-rivers, creeks and pools; and I gave them gladly the few belongings that
-I had upon me, even a large jack-knife, which the chief of the village
-received with unfeigned delight--for they were so uncivilised as to be
-altogether unacquainted with the use of iron.
-
-On my side, I learned many things from them, becoming, for instance,
-skilled in the use of the blow-pipe--a very deadly weapon, since it made
-no more noise than a pop-gun, and the arrows were invariably dipped in
-the juice of a poisonous herb that grew plentifully in the forest.
-
-I was much interested in the manufacture of these instruments. Many
-were of bamboo, but those of the better quality of a hard wood, from
-which the inside had been patiently scraped by means of a bone knife,
-until the surface was smooth as glass. Needless to say, to accomplish
-this, the shaft had to be split into two pieces, which were afterwards
-joined together. It took a skilled worker weeks to make a blow-pipe. A
-good specimen was always coveted, and he who possessed one was regarded
-as a person of importance. I was instructed also in the craft of making
-the darts or arrows; and this was an accomplishment that, more than once
-in the course of the next few months, stood me in good stead.
-
-Of the people themselves, of their strange ways and customs, I might
-write a full chapter, were I so disposed. I have no reason to think
-that they varied greatly from the majority of the wilder tribes in the
-great forests of the Amazon. They were small in stature, short-lived,
-and very dirty. They went well-nigh naked, and many suffered from a
-particularly loathsome disease, the character of which I know not, save
-that it left their skin marked black in patches. I feared, at first,
-that this would prove contagious; but, either my nationality or else my
-cleanly habits--for I bathed daily in the river--preserved my health and
-personal appearance.
-
-In regard to my bathing, I can relate a strange thing. It being the
-rainy season, the river was alive with alligators. I was at first
-considerably frightened of these horrid reptiles; but I soon discovered
-that all that was necessary was to beat the surface of the water
-violently with a stick in order to scare them away. Of course, it was
-needful to exercise a certain amount of discretion, to keep one's eyes
-open whilst in the water; and I do not say that there was no danger
-present. But the fact remains that the South American cayman, one of
-the most formidable-looking brutes in all the world, is a cowardly beast
-and by no means greatly to be feared.
-
-If that be so, I have another story to tell concerning the snakes of
-that dark region; for these I never ceased to fear, and not without good
-cause. My boots had long since ceased to be of the least practical use,
-and I had presented them, not without ceremony, to the head man of the
-village where I stayed. I was obliged therefore to go bare of foot in
-the forest, like the natives themselves, and day and night I walked in
-constant peril of my life.
-
-For the underwoods were populous with serpents of all kinds, many of
-which were venomous. They were usually to be found in the vicinity of
-water, and amongst them I cannot fail to mention the gigantic tree and
-water snakes, in whose deadly coils a full-grown man might well be
-crushed to death. More than once I set eyes upon these great, evil,
-stealthy monsters; and on each occasion my very blood ran cold. But I
-have yet to write of what I have called--for no better reason than that
-there is melodrama in the name--the Glade of Silent Death, where in part
-the tragedy of all my narrative attains some sort of a crisis--a crisis,
-at least, for one of whom I dare say more than I would of any other:
-that he well deserved his fate.
-
-Now, had I been content to eke out the remainder of my years with these
-untutored people, I should never have beheld the wonders of which I have
-to tell. I think I realised that if I continued to live as a savage, I
-must eventually myself become a savage, forgetting all I had ever
-learned of Christian civilisation. So I made up my mind to take my life
-into my hands, and set forth alone into the Wild.
-
-Beyond doubt, my ulterior motive was to regain the confines of the
-civilised world, to hear again the voices of men speaking my own
-language--even the lazy Sussex twang. But I was moved firstly not so
-much by a desire for liberty, as by the spirit of adventure. For I had
-caught something of the rover from John Bannister, as I sat listening to
-his stories to the soft accompaniment of the wash of the English sea;
-and I would find out all I could concerning the quest of Amos Baverstock
-and the secret of the Greater Treasure of the Incas, which the more
-civilised of the Indians called the "Big Fish."
-
-And so I asked the savages to guide me back to the place where they had
-found me, within sight of Cahazaxa's ruined temple. Though I never knew
-but a score of words of their language, I was now proficient in the art
-of conversing by signs and the drawing of pictures in the mud, as I was
-also something of a woodsman and--though but a few months older than
-when I had been kidnapped--no longer a boy, but the beginnings of a man,
-who was like to have a hard part to play. Life in the wilderness had
-made me self-reliant. To the wanderer in savage places peril comes
-naturally enough, and death itself is all in the work of the day.
-
-But it was one thing to ask, and another to receive. The chief man of
-the community--for it was hardly a village--was all against the project.
-In the first place, he and the rest of them had grown to be fond of
-me--I was regarded as both a curiosity and something of an acquisition.
-Secondly, I soon discovered that they stood in fear and trembling of the
-ruins, which they firmly believed to be haunted.
-
-Though they might have restrained me by force, we argued the matter out,
-and it came to a question of will-power--or obstinacy, if the word suit
-you better--and I had my way.
-
-Accordingly, one morning I set forth into the forest, accompanied by a
-guide. I was dressed in the remnants of my shirt, tied like a kilt
-about my waist, and carried a ten-foot blow-pipe and a score of darts;
-and beyond these I had neither arms nor clothing. I was just a white
-savage in a great dark wilderness, with my life in my own hands and all
-Nature at war against me. And I doubt if I can even say that I was
-white, for I was now tanned almost to the colour of the wild men amongst
-whom I had lived.
-
-In three days, by easy journeys, my companion and I came to the margin
-of the woods, to the great plain of waving grass, in the midst of which
-the Temple of Cahazaxa stood upon a hill-top.
-
-I begged of the man to come with me, to serve me as a servant, making
-vague promises of reward which I am sure he did not understand; and
-though, as I could see, the spirit was willing, the flesh was weak; for
-he fell down upon his knees before me, trembling in all his limbs,
-craving permission to return.
-
-I could not be heartless. From the tribe I had never received anything
-but kindness. But permission to be gone was not all the simple fellow
-wanted; for, when he saw that I was determined to go alone upon my way
-to the ruins on the hill-top, he again fell down upon his knees, and
-implored me to return with him.
-
-In so far as I could take his meaning, the old temple was infested by
-ghosts and evil spirits. Singular things for centuries had been known
-to happen among those grey, worn stones: weird singing had been heard
-and strange coloured lights had been seen of nights, and no man of the
-forest who had ever ventured to the hillock had as yet returned alive.
-
-To speak true, these fables--though I believed no word of them--did but
-whet my appetite for action. I had a taste for danger. For the first
-time in my life, I was conscious of my own individuality. Man or boy, I
-was free. I had a part to play upon the stage of life, and the wide
-world was my scene. I, too, was upon the same quest as Amos: the hunt
-for the Greater Treasure. It was as if something within me urged me to
-go forward, like a knight-errant of old, placing my firm trust in
-Providence; and I now have little doubt that it was the voice of Destiny
-that spoke within me.
-
-And so I bade farewell to the forest tribesman, whom I left upon the
-verge of tears, believing in his heart of hearts that I was as good as
-doomed; and with a light heart and my blow-pipe, I went my way across
-the plain, towards the hill upon which stood the ancient Temple of
-Cahazaxa, whilst the sun was sinking in the sky.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII--THE PATH OF THE TIGER
-
-
-It was near upon the time of sunset when I slowly climbed the hill. I
-could not take my eyes from the great stones before me, many of which
-must have been at least ten square yards in surface area, and cut so
-straight and square that, without cement or mortar, they fitted one
-against the other as nicely as a child's wooden bricks. I wondered how
-they had come there, by what means they had been transported and lifted
-into position; and I marvelled that an ancient people should have been
-masters of such science.
-
-But it was not this alone that caused my footsteps to become slower and
-slower as I approached the ruin. Despite myself, I could not help
-remembering much that the wild man had said to me of ghosts and evil
-spirits.
-
-In the dim evening light, wreathed in the mist that rose from the
-surrounding plain, those great pillars of cold, silent stone looked not
-to belong to this world of common things. Towering, as they did, above
-the tree-tops of the forest, they made me think of the enchanted palaces
-of which in childhood my mother had read to me from fairy tales. If
-there were ghosts anywhere in all the world, they were here--and I was
-sure of that.
-
-This notion got the strongest hold of me; and presently, a cold sweat
-broke out upon my forehead, and I wished that I were back with the wild
-men in their woodland village. However, I had more pride than to
-retreat, and that at the eleventh hour; and I continued to go forward,
-though something after the manner of a condemned man towards the
-gallows.
-
-As it grew darker I became more afraid. Night in those tropic latitudes
-comes suddenly; darkness falls like a curtain upon a stage; and when I
-had gained the outer pillars, which formed together an encircling
-colonnade, there was scarce light enough for me to see a distance of
-thirty yards.
-
-Within the circumference of these outer pillars--which attained upon an
-average a height of about fifty feet--was a great roofless building with
-a floor of flagstones, where the silence quite unnerved me. It was more
-oppressive than the silence of the forest, where I had always been
-conscious that one was surrounded by Life in a million forms: plants,
-insects, and animals--all at war that they might live.
-
-But this place seemed dead, save for vast colonies of small red ants
-whose bite was poisonous; for I had not been there a full minute before
-I was bitten from head to foot, and there were painful weals all over
-me.
-
-It was plain I could not sleep amid the ruins as I had intended. Not
-only would the ants torture me almost to distraction, but the place was
-uncanny, and I could now well understand how those ignorant woodlanders
-believed it to be haunted.
-
-I was about to go, and had actually turned towards the main entrance,
-which I could see quite clearly in the light of the newly-risen stars,
-when a sound came to my ears that was so like a groan that I felt my
-blood run cold.
-
-I stood transfixed, more frightened than bewildered. Looking about me
-on every side, straining my eyes in the semi-darkness, I could see
-nothing. I was convinced that there was no one in that vast chamber
-save myself and the red ants. And yet the groan came again, louder than
-before.
-
-I tip-toed across the room, my heart throbbing like an engine. And like
-a frightened child, I hid myself in a corner; for I had no convictions
-any longer, and I wished only to be somewhere where I could not be seen.
-
-Then a spider descended upon me from somewhere high up the wall. And
-you may laugh at me when I say that I sprang to my feet and dropped my
-blow-pipe and let out a cry that was very near a shriek. But you would
-never have laughed had you been placed as I was, seen that spider, and
-felt upon your shoulders his restless, furry legs. For this was no
-common spider that eats flies and gnats, but a bird-devouring brute, the
-size of a saucer; and this is no exaggeration when one takes into
-account the full extension of his legs.
-
-As I fled, I picked it from off me with my hand, and threw it away;
-whereupon I found that it had covered my fingers with a disgusting and
-sticky saliva. I am only thankful that it had no time to bite me, for I
-believe the bite of these terrible insects has been known to prove
-fatal. They build webs of such strength and solidity that birds as
-large as sparrows are caught in the toils and killed; and I have heard
-it said that these monsters also ascend trees, drive hens from their
-nests and then devour their eggs.
-
-However, this is no treatise upon Natural History. He who wishes to
-know more of this horrid creature may read of it in recognised works of
-science. For myself, to have felt once its quick, hairy legs upon my
-bare neck and shoulders is enough for many a day, and the thing may
-belong to any species and genus that it likes, so long as I never set
-eyes upon one again.
-
-For I was thoroughly scared; I had become as jumpy as a bean on a hot
-plate. I trust that I am not by nature a coward; but the atmosphere of
-that ghostly, misty place, the mysterious groans that I had heard, which
-had seemed to come from nowhere, and the long-legged, furry spider, had
-all so played upon my nerves that I knew neither what I was doing nor
-what would happen next.
-
-I had made, in any case, as much noise as a harlequinade. I had cried
-out at the top of my voice and had sent my wooden blow-pipe rattling to
-the ground. And then I stood motionless, breathless, waiting--as it
-seemed--for some new calamity.
-
-This time it was no groan I heard, but a human voice calling, at first
-loudly, and then more softly, in a strange foreign tongue.
-
-I listened, and I dared not move. The silence that followed endured for
-minutes, during which the seconds were punctuated by the violent beating
-of my heart. And, presently, I began to think. As I mastered my fears,
-I became capable of reasoning.
-
-It was folly to consider ghosts. Such superstitions were well enough
-for untutored savages, wild men of the forests, but they would never do
-for Richard Treadgold, who had lived his years in Sussex--though, of a
-certainty, I had heard of more than one so-called haunted house between
-Beachy Head and Selsey Bill.
-
-I was convinced that I had heard a human voice. I had been able even to
-distinguish words, howbeit in a language that I did not comprehend. And
-if that were so, it must follow that I was not the only human soul
-within that gloomy ruin.
-
-I looked about me, and saw in the starlight my blow-pipe, lying on the
-floor. I picked it up, and placing a dart within the mouthpiece, began
-to explore the place, starting at the wide entrance and making a tour of
-the walls.
-
-It was not long before I came upon a square hole in the ground, edged
-with shallow coping stones to keep out the water when the place was
-flooded by the rains. It reminded me of a hatchway on board a ship.
-
-Below it was quite dark. I lay down upon the floor at full length with
-the idea of listening: for I was now sure that I was on the track of the
-secret of the place. But presently my eyes grew accustomed to the
-darkness, and I saw before me a flight of narrow steps, leading
-downward--as it seemed--into the very bowels of the earth.
-
-I had now mastered my fears. I was determined to be a fool no longer,
-but to conduct myself like the man I wished I were. I would have
-descended without a second's thought had it not been for two grave
-considerations: firstly, I had no means of striking a light; and
-secondly, the stairway was so narrow that I must leave behind my long
-Indian blow-pipe, the only means of self-defence I had.
-
-I have set down already much by no means favourable to myself; and
-therefore I have the less hesitation in recording an incident which goes
-far to prove that there were moments when I was a worthy pupil and
-admirer of John Bannister himself. For I went down that black and
-shallow staircase, half naked as I was and quite unarmed, not knowing
-what would befall me at the end of it.
-
-Half-way down, the staircase turned, when to my surprise I saw below me
-the dim reflection of a light. And presently I found myself in a long
-shallow chamber, where I stood bewildered.
-
-In the centre of the room was a rough stone altar upon which burned an
-oil lamp of a quaint design and wrought in bronze. Of other such lamps,
-similar in all respects, I counted five, lying upon the stone flooring,
-each surrounded by its own pool of oil.
-
-The whole place indeed was in great disorder. Curtains of finely woven
-hair had been wrenched from the walls and cast upon the ground. Benches
-and short-legged tables had been overturned, and in some cases broken.
-Here lay a sword, and there a spear, and here again a pistol, broken at
-the small of the butt. Nor was all this the worst of it, by any means;
-for immediately before me, lying in stiff, huddled attitudes--a pathetic
-and a tragic thing to see--were three stone-dead men, as sure as I first
-saw the light of day in Sussex.
-
-Dead they were, for they neither moved nor even breathed. And when I
-sighed aloud at the wonder of it all, a fourth man whom I had not
-noticed, lying upon the floor at the other end of the room, struggled
-upon an elbow and cried out to me, and afterwards pointed a finger down
-his throat.
-
-I was no such fool as to mistake his meaning. He wanted water to drink,
-and I looked about me to find it. At the foot of the altar was a pool
-of clear, crystal water, a spring that bubbled from out of the crust of
-the earth, the overflow being conducted to the far end of the chamber by
-means of a shallow, wooden trough. I found a drinking vessel which, to
-my amazement, was of gold; and this I filled in haste, and brought to
-the wounded man.
-
-For wounded he was, a leg being broken at the thighbone, so that he
-could not move an inch without suffering the greatest pain. It was this
-pain I daresay, as much as loss of blood, which had thrown him in a
-fever; for his skin was burning to the touch.
-
-Three times I filled the cup, and each time he emptied it; and as he
-drank, he thanked me with his eyes.
-
-Then he lay back and rested, whilst I gazed upon that shambles; for a
-shambles it was--blood was everywhere.
-
-I went to the dead men, to each in turn, to make sure that there was no
-spark of life in any. And this was the second time that I looked upon
-the cold face of death; for, sure enough, each one was dead. And they
-were shot; they had been killed by leaden bullets: one in the head,
-another in the heart, whereas the third, poor wretch! had died in agony,
-with a great wound in his stomach.
-
-But dead though they were, I could not regard them without noticing how
-different they were in features and in figure from the wild men of the
-woods.
-
-The savages with whom I had sojourned for so long, for whose simple
-kindness I shall be ever grateful, were of a Mongolian cast of
-countenance: they had high cheek-bones, lips thinner than a negro's, and
-yet thick and loose, and their eyes were almond-shaped, inclining
-downwards to the nose. Also, their greatly receding foreheads and chins
-suggested that they belonged to one of the lower and least intelligent
-species of mankind.
-
-But the three dead men, as well as he who was yet alive, had aquiline
-noses, thin lips, and rounded eyes. Also they were fully dressed in
-long tunics of some woven material, open at the throat, and girdled at
-the waist. They wore their hair long, but cut straight, level with the
-eyebrows; and above this fringe a broad metal band encircled the head
-above the ears.
-
-I looked from them to the altar, and saw thereon a graven disc from
-which rays extended to the extremities of the stone. Beyond doubt this
-was meant to be the sun; and of a sudden I remembered that the
-inhabitants of Old Peru had been wont to worship the sun.
-
-So these, perhaps, were those same Peruvian priests of whom Amos
-Baverstock had spoken, they who shared with John Bannister the secret of
-the Greater Treasure of the Incas.
-
-And then the truth burst upon me as in a flash--I had struck the pathway
-traversed by the tiger. The death and destruction by which I was
-surrounded was the work of Amos Baverstock himself.
-
-I picked up the broken pistol, looked at it in the lamplight, and knew
-straightway that I had guessed aright. For I recognised it at once. It
-had belonged to Joshua Trust. It was the same pistol I had seen often
-in his hands, the one with which he had fired at me upon the
-Littlehampton road. And if I had had any doubts upon the matter, they
-would have been dispelled at once; for there were the man's initials,
-"J.T.," carved with his sailor's jack-knife on the wood.
-
-I just let the broken pistol fall to the ground at my feet; and at the
-noise, the wounded man, to whom I had given water, struggled again upon
-an elbow, and spoke to me--_in English_.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII--THE STORY OF ATUPO
-
-
-"Friend?" said he; and though he pronounced the word in the strangest
-fashion, I at once took his meaning.
-
-I assured him of my good intentions, that I was no friend of those who
-had committed so dastardly an outrage. And at that, though in the
-greatest pain--as I could see--he smiled and thanked me.
-
-I will not repeat word for word the childish broken English that he
-talked. He knew nouns enough to express his meaning, but this was all
-of our language that he had, and for verbs he was obliged to fall back
-upon grimaces and gesticulations. These, however, were so forcible and
-graphic that I was never at a loss to understand him: and during the six
-weeks that this man and I lived together in the ruins, whilst his broken
-leg was mending, he came to speak quite fluently in my language,
-whereas--to my shame, be it confessed--I learned not a dozen words of
-his.
-
-I asked him how he had picked up his English; and since I had already
-guessed his answer, the familiar sound of that fond name was no less
-pleasant in my ears.
-
-"John Bannister," said he; and then asked me eagerly where Bannister now
-was.
-
-I shook my head, telling him as simply and as briefly as I could the
-whole of my adventures, from the time when I was kidnapped a few miles
-from my home beyond the seas to the day when I took my departure from
-the habitations of the wild men of the woods.
-
-His story I got from him by degrees, after I had tended to his wounds. I
-had no knowledge of surgery, but I knew that a broken leg must be made
-fast to a splint; and, borrowing a knife, I returned that very evening
-to the forest, and cut a straight branch from a tree, as well as a long
-coil of liana, which I wound about my shoulders like a garden-hose.
-
-I peeled the bark from two sides of the branch to make it as smooth as
-possible, and then bound it tightly to the poor man's leg by means of
-the liana. I bathed his wound daily with the clean water from the
-spring within the vault; and in a few days the blood ceased to flow and
-the wound--a rough, ugly rent from a leaden bullet--began to heal.
-
-There was a plentiful supply of food within the chamber--bananas, dried
-berries, and manioc; and together we lived, this man and I, in
-uneventful idleness, he flat upon his back on a bed of rushes, I
-attending to his daily wants.
-
-He claimed direct descent from the _incas_ of Old Peru. He told me much
-that I already knew: that in the great land which had been discovered by
-Pizarro there had been two races, the common Peruvians and those of
-_inca_ stock. The latter was the nobility of the land, being of royal
-blood; and it was they who had held the important offices of state and
-formed the priesthood.
-
-Centuries ago, upon the fall of Cuzco, Cahazaxa, one of the greatest
-nobles in the kingdom, escorted by an army of priests and soldiers,
-conveyed the Greater Treasure across the mountains, and hid it in the
-forest that extends across the whole valley of the Upper Amazon and its
-tributaries. The Spaniards got wind of this, and some years afterwards,
-in the year 1541, an expedition led by the redoubtable Orellano, a
-lieutenant of Gonzalo Pizarro, crossed the eastern chain of the Andes in
-search of El Dorado, or that country which was then but vaguely known as
-the Land of the Gilded King.
-
-This "Gilded King" was Cahazaxa himself, who, at the time of Orellano's
-famed expedition, had been for some months dead. But the little
-civilised colony that he had established in the wilderness survived, and
-continued to survive until the middle of the last century, when I myself
-beheld the last of it.
-
-Now, in the narration of historical and other facts, I have the greatest
-regard for a certain principle, established by the Greeks: the habit of
-reserving for its proper place each item of information, whether it be
-of primary or secondary importance. On that account, I ask you,
-therefore, for the space of a chapter or so, to bear in mind the famous
-name of Orellano and his search for the Land of the Gilded King--an
-affair to which I must soon refer again. I set down now only that which
-the _inca_ himself told me, together with such historical facts as were
-known to me at the time.
-
-Cahazaxa was dead; and he was buried in a cavern, high amidst the
-cloud-wrapped mountains, where his soul might rest in peace the nearer
-to the God he worshipped--the life-giving and almighty Sun, who, as he
-held, in the very dawn of the ages had sent Manco Copac and Mama Oello
-Huaco to earth, to make the Incas of Peru glorious and great.
-
-Orellano, the Spaniard, failed to find the Treasure. Undergoing the
-most terrible privations, he and his gallant followers pierced the
-forest, and, making one of the most remarkable journeys in the whole
-history of exploration, descended into the main stream of the great
-River of Mystery--as I call the Amazon--and, finally, after eight months
-of hardship and of peril, came within sight of the Atlantic.
-
-The courage of these men is much to be commended. The modern explorer
-has at his service breech-loading magazine rifles, invaluable
-geographical and scientific knowledge, and an adequate supply of
-suitable food and drugs. But these bold Spaniards of the sixteenth
-century had nothing, save their own stout hearts and strong Toledo
-blades. Enough has been written concerning their greed, their bigotry
-and cruelty. The story might be told again and again of their
-indomitable bravery. Orellano knew not whither he was going. When he
-decided to shoot the rapids, taking his life in his hands, he might as
-well have thrown dice with Death. How can we do aught but honour the
-land that has produced such sons as Cortez and Pizarro, Orellano, Vasco
-Nunez, and Alonzo de Ojeda?
-
-But, for the present, we are more concerned with Cahazaxa, a hero no
-less than these doughty Spaniards. He and his followers hid themselves
-in the wilderness, and there both Orellano and Pizarro himself failed to
-find them; and in this there is little to wonder at, when we consider
-the immensity of the great Forest of the Amazon.
-
-They built for themselves a massive temple after the fashion of the
-sacred palaces of Quito and Cuzco, dedicated to the Sun; and in course
-of time they constructed roads and bridges across the rivers, founding
-for themselves a colony where the civilisation of the _incas_ lived for
-a century or more after their own country across the mountains had
-fallen under the dominion of the hated Spaniard.
-
-This was the land of the Gilded King, the country of El Dorado. Word of
-its existence came to Quito, from the lips of savage aborigines prone
-naturally to exaggeration; but, though party after party of avaricious,
-bold adventurers crossed the mountains, the Peruvian settlement remained
-undisturbed. The secret of the "Big Fish" was never discovered either
-by the Spaniards or the Portuguese, who in the next century came up the
-great river from the east, traversing the country that is now called
-Brazil.
-
-I did not learn all this from the _inca_ priest himself; but so much of
-it as he could not tell me I knew already from what I had read of those
-golden days when the New World was a land of Mystery and Romance, and
-men thought and talked of doubloons instead of dollars.
-
-It is true, I never beheld with my own eyes the actual civilisation of
-ancient Peru as it had existed in Cahazaxa's time, because, many years
-before, it had died a natural death. The Peruvians, born and bred upon
-the western sea-board or the great tablelands beyond the Andes, were not
-able to survive in the humid atmosphere of the tropic forest. In course
-of time, a colony of several thousands, whom Cahazaxa had led across the
-mountains, had dwindled to a community of a few families of the old
-_inca_ stock, the majority of whom served as priests of the Sun in the
-great ruined temple, constructed by their forefathers, which they were
-not able to keep in repair.
-
-It was these men, descended in a direct line from the _incas_ whom the
-Spanish conquerors had driven forth from Cuzco and Quito, who guarded
-the secret of the Greater Treasure. It was they who were treacherously
-attacked and foully done to death by Amos Baverstock. And I will now
-relate the full story of that brutal enterprise as I got it from the
-lips of the man whom I befriended.
-
-Baverstock, with his three companions, had come to the temple some weeks
-before, on the day they had tied me to the tree and left me to starve to
-death.
-
-The priests had been greatly alarmed at the sight of the intruder, whom
-they recognised at once. They remembered the time when Baverstock and
-Trust had attacked the temple, and they had been obliged to fight for
-their lives, and would then and there have been slaughtered, had it not
-been for John Bannister, who placed himself at their head and drove Amos
-forth.
-
-But Bannister was no longer with them to fortify them with his courage,
-to preside at their councils, and to deal death to their enemies with
-his swift, unerring aim. And they were terrified at the very sight of
-Amos, as I myself had been when I first set eyes on the man upon the
-Sussex shore.
-
-He demanded to know where the Greater Treasure was hidden. He reminded
-them that they had lied to him once, and held forth threats that made
-their blood run cold. If they lied to him again, he would return, and
-no man of them would live to fool Amos Baverstock a third time.
-
-Now, they dared not speak the truth, for they were sworn to secrecy
-before the Sun, which they believed to be the Creator of the Universe;
-and yet, they dared not lie, for they knew Amos would be as good, or as
-evil, as his word.
-
-So, swearing upon all things they looked upon as holy, they set Amos and
-his friends upon the right road to the "Big Fish." They told him to
-follow a certain track across the grassland, until he came to a range of
-down-like, grass-clad hills. Thence, to the west, lay a wood in
-mid-valley, and in a glade in this wood the Treasure was buried, the
-place being marked by a great red stone, standing forth in the form of a
-monster fish in the act of leaping from the water. Here, clearly, was
-the origin of the legend, current among the natives even to this day, of
-the Big and Little Fishes. And when I heard the story as it was told me
-by the _inca_ priest, I confess I was conscious that my heart beat more
-rapidly and the warm blood of my youth was stirred within me.
-
-But Amos Baverstock cared nothing for legend. He lived only to lay
-hands upon a horde of untold gold; and that same day he left the Temple
-of Cahazaxa and set forth to the west upon his treasure hunt.
-
-And when he was gone, the priests held conference, demanding of Atupo
-why he had told their enemy so much of their cherished secret--for Atupo
-was the name of the surviving priest with whom I talked among the temple
-ruins. For he it was who devised the scheme whereby he hoped both to
-save the lives of his friends and to preserve the Greater Treasure; and
-now that all had failed so dreadfully, to the great pain he suffered
-from his wound was added anguish and remorse, inasmuch as the blame was
-his.
-
-He advised them to arm themselves, and took with him ten of the best
-archers of the little community, ordering them to steep the heads of
-their arrows in the juice of the venomous weed that grows in the
-forest--which is nothing more or less than strychnine, one of the most
-virulent of poisons.
-
-Atupo, with these ten men, who were all young and fleet of foot,
-traversed the grassland by a series of forced marches by night, so that
-they outdistanced Amos and reached first the Wood of the Red Fish--for
-so, with a little latitude, may be translated the old Peruvian name. And
-there they laid an ambush by a pathway along which Amos, and those with
-him, would be obliged to pass, and each archer was instructed to pick
-out his man. Four were detailed to shoot at Amos, three at Trust, and
-two each at Forsyth and the Spaniard, Vasco.
-
-Now, it seems not possible that a plan so well thought out could fail;
-and yet, it would seem also that here, at least, the devil helped his
-own.
-
-For Mr. Forsyth, and not Amos, came first to the ambuscade; and of the
-two arrows, one struck a silver tobacco tin that he chanced to be
-carrying that day in the pocket over his heart, and the other sheared
-off his right ear as cleanly as a tailor snips his cloth with a pair of
-scissors. And in the fraction of a second, Forsyth, all bleeding from
-the head, had his revolver from its holster, and had shot down two of
-the priests.
-
-Thus was the alarm given to Amos and those who followed him; and there
-was no question of a surprise. It came to a hand-to-hand affair, and
-then a running fight amid the woodland undergrowth, in which the bow and
-arrow had but a small chance against modern firearms. One by one, the
-priests were dropped in their tracks, and only Atupo himself escaped
-with life, though sorely wounded in the leg.
-
-He got clear of the wood, and lay hidden, day after day, in the long
-grass of the plain, journeying by night towards the forest, endeavouring
-to reach the ruined Temple of Cahazaxa. Though his leg was not then
-broken, he could do no more than crawl a few miles at a time, so that he
-was long weeks upon the road.
-
-And during all these days, Amos beat the wood from west to east, from
-south to north, and failing to find the "Red Fish," believed that he had
-again been sent upon a wild-goose chase; and the more firm was he in
-this conviction since there had been such treachery on the part of the
-_inca_ priests.
-
-I heard afterwards that his wrath was like that of a madman; he stamped
-and raved, and swore that he would return to the temple and put every
-living soul to death. And yet, they could not move a yard upon their
-backward journey, until Forsyth's life was out of danger.
-
-Without doubt, Mr. Gilbert Forsyth would have died in torture, there
-amid the foothills of the distant Andes, had it not been for his own
-promptitude and courage. For no sooner did he feel the poison working
-inward from the wound where the arrow had cut off an ear, than he thrust
-the blade of a hunting-knife into a glowing charcoal camp-fire, and
-himself placed the red-hot steel upon the lacerated flesh.
-
-And though he fainted at the time, and fell afterwards into a raging
-fever, this action saved, perhaps, his life. In the wilderness,
-rough-and-ready methods are often unavoidable; only he who is bold and
-strong can survive, whilst the weakling falls by the way. That Forsyth,
-despite his affectations and his London ways, was a man of action who
-could face pain as well as danger, this deed of his was in itself enough
-to prove. With his own hand he burned the poison from his flesh.
-
-For all that, he lingered for many days betwixt life and death; and it
-was the delay caused thereby that gave Atupo time to regain the temple.
-
-He had intended to give warning to his brother priests, and for this
-purpose he arrived none too soon. Many were so alarmed at the news of
-the disaster that they departed instantly, seeking shelter in the forest
-and taking with them their wives and families. But three remained, to
-collect the sacred lamps and vessels that were within the Temple,
-meaning to set forth the following day. And these were caught at
-midnight by Amos, who turned assassin then and there; for it was he who
-killed them with his own hands, in the great vault beneath the ruins.
-
-Atupo, too, he shot, though the man lay wounded on the ground, exhausted
-after the effort of his long journey across the grassland, and left him
-there for dead, his already wounded leg fractured a few inches below the
-hip.
-
-All this I learned from the man himself, while I nursed him under the
-Temple--all save the story of the fortitude of Mr. Forsyth, of which I
-heard afterwards, as in due time I will tell.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV--THE GLADE OF SILENT DEATH
-
-
-When I had heard the story of Atupo, it seemed to me that I knew all
-there was to know concerning the "Big Fish." And a feeling of
-restlessness at once possessed me; I desired to be up and doing, to
-venture myself across the grassland, to find the Wood of the Red Fish,
-for which the bold Spaniards of a bygone century had searched so often
-and in vain.
-
-But I stood in the debt of charity and honour, and in consequence I felt
-for all the world like a kennelled dog that tugs barking on his chain.
-For some weeks, at least, I must stay by the side of the wounded man,
-whom I could now call my friend. And if those days were something idle,
-we were by no means out of danger; for any day Amos Baverstock might
-return when, of a certainty, it would go ill with Atupo and myself.
-
-I found ample time throughout this period of my adventuring to explore
-the neighbourhood of the Temple, and many things I found of the greatest
-interest. About a mile distant from the ruins was the village where the
-Peruvians had lived, and here also was a great convent built of stone
-and thatched with straw, after the fashion of the palaces in ancient
-Quito. In this convent--so Atupo told me--had dwelt some score of nuns,
-vestal virgins, whose lives were dedicated to the Sun, just as there had
-been such maidens in the service of Jupiter and Mars in the great
-temples of Rome; for in many respects did the ancient Peruvians resemble
-the Romans: they were great builders of roads, bridges, and forts; every
-man must serve the state; and the Inca, on returning from his victories,
-would march in public triumph through the chief city of the land.
-
-I found both the village and the convent quite deserted; for--as I have
-said--on hearing of the approach of Amos and his friends, the Peruvians
-had fled into the forest, preferring to run the risk of death at the
-hands of the wild men with their poisoned arrows, or from starvation in
-the midst of that unending wilderness, to finding themselves once again
-face to face with that implacable and murderous villain who had sworn to
-put them all--woman, man, and child--relentlessly to death.
-
-I learned afterwards that few of these poor fugitives survived; for Amos
-burned their homes to the ground and left not one stone upon another;
-and this he did in wrath and malice, since it served him no better
-purpose than to waste his time, and that at a moment when his fate was
-jeopardised and he himself stood betwixt life and death.
-
-When I saw the convent and the village, the place was just as the
-inhabitants had left it; and in such haste had they departed that I even
-found cooking-pots containing stews, all cold and jellified, standing in
-the ashes of burnt-out fires. The only sign of life to be seen was a
-number of llamas, long-necked Peruvian sheep, grazing in the shadow of
-the convent walls.
-
-And now I am arrived at that part of my story when I came within an ace
-of losing life itself, and was only delivered at the eleventh hour by
-what was little short of the miraculous. For, in course of time, Atupo
-was healed of his wound, and well able, with the help of a staff, to
-hobble about the temple. It was then that I told him of my plans, of
-how I longed to journey to the Wood of the Red Fish, if for nothing else
-than to gaze upon the treasure of the Incas.
-
-He listened patiently to all I had to say, and then sighed deeply.
-
-"As you will," said he. "Of what use now is all this gold? My brother
-priests are slain, my people are scattered broadcast; the children of
-Cahazaxa are no more. Find your way, if you will, to the 'Big Fish.' I
-have told you where it lies. Feast your eyes upon the wealth that was
-once the glory of Peru. The race of the Incas is ended; the blood of
-kings is cold; even our gods are dead."
-
-I knew that he referred to certain images in the Temple which Amos had
-wantonly destroyed; and I was sorry for the man.
-
-"You will come with me?" I asked.
-
-But he shook his head.
-
-"That is not possible," he answered. "And even were it so, there would
-be naught to gain. I am already too greatly in your debt, and were I to
-accompany you, I should be a hindrance and a danger."
-
-I could not deny the truth of this, though I was loth to leave him, weak
-and crippled as he was. And yet, it was manifest that we could not
-remain for an indefinite time within the Temple: sooner or later, our
-provisions would run out, and, any day, Amos might return.
-
-"Where will you go?" I asked.
-
-He pointed towards the forest.
-
-"Thither," said he; and there was a certain nobility in his manner when
-he added, "to find my own people; for find them I will, in this world or
-beyond the grave. Death holds no fears for the sons of Cahazaxa."
-
-And so, some days afterwards, we parted: he, to the east, to the dark,
-spreading forest; I, to the west, across the grassland, upon my treasure
-quest, to search for the Wood of the Ked Fish and the lost Treasure of
-Kings.
-
-I set forth upon my great adventure all naked like a savage, save for a
-loin-cloth of woven hair that Atupo, the priest, had given me. I was
-armed with my long Indian blow-pipe and a quiverful of darts. And I
-went into that strange, romantic land alone, without guide, compass or
-companion, never knowing at night-time, when I lay down to sleep, what
-calamity or fortune the morrow held in store for me. And this, I stand
-convinced even to this day, when my hairs are white and shoulders bowed,
-is the only way to live and to die.
-
-For three days I traversed a great plain of rolling, down-like country,
-that reminded me somewhat of my own dear Sussex, save that the grass was
-coarse and longer. Some miles before me was a high ridge that stood
-forth at sunset like a battlement across the sky; and I knew that I must
-gain the crest of this before I could find the Wood of the Red Fish.
-
-Presently, however, I found my progress impeded by a river that had
-worked its way throughout the centuries deep into the rock, so that it
-flowed between almost perpendicular cliffs.
-
-I could neither see nor devise any manner of crossing. I sat down upon
-the edge of the canon and ate some of the manioc I had brought with me
-from the temple. I remembered that both Amos and Atupo had somehow
-crossed the river; and this thought was not a little encouraging. Across
-the grassland I had followed no track or pathway, so that when I had
-found a means of crossing the canon, I must know that I was once again
-upon the right road to the wood that I was seeking.
-
-That night, in full moonshine, I worked up-stream for many miles upon
-the left bank of the ravine. I slept for a few hours, and at daybreak
-continued my journey, and a little after, came quite suddenly upon one
-of the most wondrous things that I have ever seen.
-
-For there before me was a great and magnificent suspension bridge,
-spanning the width of the ravine--a distance, I should say, of thirty or
-forty yards. The cables of this bridge were made of the twisted fibre
-of maguey, a kind of osier, and were at least three feet in diameter.
-It was hard to realise that the whole structure stood there more or less
-as it had been erected, centuries before; but it seemed to me an even
-more wonderful thing that, in the midst of such a desolate and barren
-region, I should so suddenly have come across evidence of the greatest
-skill in engineering. I could scarce believe that I had passed through
-an almost impenetrable tropical forest to traverse a ravine as easily as
-I might have walked along the familiar dyke from Sidlesham to Pagham.
-
-The bridge itself was no more than a footbridge, but it served its
-purpose well enough; and, crossing over, I hit almost at once upon a
-pathway through the grass. This I lost at nightfall, but I continued on
-my way in the moonlight, working upward upon a slope that rapidly became
-steeper.
-
-In the small hours of the morning, sheer fatigue brought me to a halt by
-the side of a spring of clear water, bubbling forth from the earth. And
-here I drank and ate, breathing deeply of the cool fresh air of the
-uplands, which was like strong wine to me after the humid atmosphere of
-the forest; so that I slumbered as I had not slept for months, since I
-had left my home in Sussex, nor did I awaken until the morning sun was
-high.
-
-I saw that I had but a little way to go to reach the crestline of the
-hills--an hour's climb would do it; and I set forward gleefully, in high
-anticipation, wondering what lay beyond the watershed, and whether I
-would sight the Wood of the Red Fish, but little dreaming what would
-there befall me.
-
-I reached the summit hot and out of breath; and then I stood stock
-still, breathless in wonderment and all amazed.
-
-I cast not one glance towards the wide valley at my feet. I stood
-staring before me, like one dumbfounded, at the gorgeous panorama I
-beheld. For yonder, more than a hundred miles away, but clear in the
-morning sun at the back of me, stood the mighty and majestic Andes.
-Snow-crowned they were, rugged as a wild sea, and yet bold and still and
-massive as the thrones of gods. And I, who had never seen such
-mountains in my life, was awed and wonder-struck; and I realised, I am
-sure, the glory of the works of God.
-
-I gazed--it may have been, for an hour, sitting cross-legged, naked as
-the wild men of the woods, with my blow-pipe on my knees--at that great
-range of mountains that spans near half the world, extending almost from
-pole to pole. And then I looked down into the valley, and the thought
-that I was now within a day's march of my goal banished from my mind all
-loftier thoughts, and I found myself wondering whether it was I who was
-to find, at last, the lost land of El Dorado.
-
-For the valley was cut up into marshland, plains and hillocks, in and
-out of which a river wandered, now and again to open out into a lake or
-swamp, in which there were little tree-clad islands. But to the north
-was a wood, diamond-shaped, flanked to the east by a spur of the hills,
-and to the west by a morass where I could see the water glittering in
-the sunlight.
-
-On the foothills across the valley was a considerable forest, extending
-as far as the eye could reach; but I could not doubt that the wood in
-mid-valley, to the right of me, being so like the description which
-Atupo, the priest, had given me, was the Wood of the Red Fish.
-
-And then and there I set forward running, for I was young and
-hot-headed, and had not yet learned that time is but the slave of man,
-and that patience and caution are of more worth than eager haste.
-
-So I came, that evening, hot and thirsty to the wood, and then, in the
-darkness of the trees, whilst the sun was setting, I stood like a fool,
-irresolute and wearied, not knowing what next that I should do.
-
-I was hungry as well, for I had eaten all the food I had carried with me
-from the temple, and saw now that I must trust to my blow-pipe for
-sustenance, and kill what came my way that might be fit to eat.
-Fortunately, during my sojourn with the wild men, I had learned
-something of Indian woodcraft; and setting about my business without
-further loss of time, I searched at random in the wood until I found a
-glade where there was a pool of water, and here I crouched under cover,
-lying motionless, with my blow-pipe ready for whatsoever animal might
-come down to the pool to drink whilst the evening light still lasted.
-
-This place--though I then knew it not--was the Glade of Silent Death;
-and I have given it that name for a certain reason, which was in very
-truth a tragedy.
-
-There came, as I waited, to the woodland pool a small kind of deer; and
-he waded knee-deep into the water that he might drink. As he did so, I
-thought that I perceived some movement on the surface, as it might have
-been a rat swimming swiftly a distance of a few yards. I took no heed
-of it at the time, my attention being taken up with my blow-pipe, that I
-might strike the deer stone-dead, beneath the point of the left
-shoulder, placing my arrow deep in the poor beast's heart.
-
-I was about to shoot, when suddenly he kicked, and then endeavoured with
-a jerk to throw himself backward on his haunches. To my astonishment I
-observed that he was held fast by the nose, which might have been
-gripped in a vice, and that in spite of all his efforts he was being
-dragged steadily and slowly deeper into the pool.
-
-It was as if I were smitten by a cold rush of ice, when the truth was
-made quite plain to me. It was that half-light of evening, which is
-neither day nor night, when the early moon vies with the dying sunlight.
-And I saw the monster writhing coils of a great serpent rise dripping
-from the water and enfold the broken stump of a tree.
-
-I knew now that the deer was doomed; and so illogical is human nature
-that I experienced two emotions: terror of the reptile and pity for the
-beast that but a moment since I myself would have gladly slain for food.
-
-No doubt the anaconda stood in need of nourishment as much as I, and
-wanted more of it, to boot. But snakes were accursed things since Eden,
-and this vile, stealthy giant more so than most, because of his great
-bulk and strength. I know now that he was nearer thirty than twenty
-feet in length, and that his girth about the middle was greater than
-that of my own chest, though I was a strong lad for my years.
-
-And now that he had lashed himself to the tree-stump, the deer was lost.
-Its head was already under water, so that in a few moments the animal
-must be drowned. It would then be crushed to a pulp in the powerful,
-band-like coils of the constrictor, covered all over with a loathsome
-saliva, to be swallowed slowly and gradually, and yet in bulk.
-
-I could see the head of the snake, for the light was fading and the deer
-in its death struggle lashed the water into foam. But I could see the
-great glistening body of the reptile but a few yards away from me, and
-into the thickest part of this I drove one of the darts from my Indian
-blow-pipe, and as I did so, shuddered, more revolted than afraid.
-
-The effect was instantaneous and surprising. My dart must have struck
-the snake in the region of the spinal cord, for the great length of the
-brute curled backward like the lash of a whip; and the deer, released
-from those murderous coils, scrambled from the water, panting and
-exhausted, with its red tongue hanging from its mouth.
-
-And then the animal fell dead upon the ground, but a few feet from where
-I lay. I could feel my own heart beating within me like a
-sledge-hammer. For some minutes I gazed at the pool that rocked and
-swelled like a sea in miniature. There came ripples, one after the
-other, to the water's edge, where they lipped and splashed like little
-waves. And then, at last, all was still--still as glass in the
-moonlight. But I knew that the great snake was somewhere near me, and
-my sole desire was to escape from that dread, silent place, and that as
-quickly as I might. And yet, the primal instinct of mankind was strong
-within me, the love of life that is sustained by food; and as I drew
-back into the thickets of the underwoods, I dragged with me by the horns
-the lifeless body of the deer.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV--HOW I BEHELD A MIRACLE
-
-
-I found a place where I could rest and eat; and there I cut steaks from
-the deer with a quaint knife which had been given me by Atupo--for I now
-prided myself on being a hunter of experience--and made a fire of dried
-sticks and leaves.
-
-The heat of the night was excessive, and I had little need of the
-warmth; but I was glad of the light of the flames, for I was still much
-shaken by my adventure with the great constrictor, and had imagined
-vague, savage enemies amid the dark thickets that hedged me in.
-
-It will be noted that I have referred to the snake as a "constrictor";
-but, from this, it must not be thought that the monster was a boa. The
-family of the boas, known scientifically as the _boidae_, contains many
-species which are to be found in all parts of the world: the diamond
-snake of Australia, the rock python of Natal, the Indian python, and the
-great South American genera--the anaconda and the true boa-constrictor.
-
-All these reptiles are remarkable for the partial development of hinder
-limbs, proving conclusively that the snakes and lizards are nearly
-related to one another. These rudimentary limbs, however, are not
-visible in the living animals, being covered by the skin, but are quite
-evident in their skeletons. It is also of interest to remember that
-birds have evolved from reptiles, the forelegs having been converted
-into wings.
-
-All the constrictors kill their prey by crushing, and none have
-poison-fangs; and though these species are, with one or two exceptions,
-the largest snakes in the world, they move, whether in the water or
-among the tree-tops, in absolute silence. That which I myself attacked
-was undoubtedly an anaconda; and I know this for sure, because, though
-the light was bad, I distinctly saw two rows of great, dark spots upon
-his back, and not a black chain, which is the distinguishing mark of the
-boa-constrictor. Besides, the anaconda is essentially a water-snake,
-whereas the boa, though he will take readily to water, lives as a rule
-among the trees.
-
-Well, though I shudder when I think of the brute, I had no real cause at
-the time to abuse him, for I might not have slain the deer with my
-blow-pipe, and I was now supplied with food so long as the meat would
-keep in that steaming hothouse of a jungle.
-
-I did not sleep so well that night, weary though I was. I think I was
-not so much afraid as oppressed by an almost overwhelming sense of
-loneliness.
-
-Quite suddenly I realised, as I sat by my camp-fire, chewing the venison
-steaks--which were inordinately tough--that I was utterly alone. For
-weeks I had enjoyed the company of Atupo, and before that of the wild
-men; and even Amos and his companions, my sworn enemies, had human
-voices to which I had been wont to listen of an evening by the fire when
-the day's march was ended. But here was I indeed, alone in the dark
-wilderness, and I could not but recognise that the woods around me were
-alive, that life in a thousand shapes and forms was all about me,
-unseen, but not unheard.
-
-For I listened to strange and little noises everywhere--upon the ground,
-in the thick undergrowth, among the great trees that towered above me.
-My strained ears heard, perhaps, sounds that never were; but I know that
-great moths came fluttering to my fire, and leaves moved where insects
-crept and crawled, and now and again some kind of cricket would begin to
-sing, only to cease quite suddenly, I should think, on the approach of
-danger.
-
-They all lived, thought I, on sufferance, by the grace of the great God
-who made them all, and me as well. For I was one with them, even these
-little living things of the endless wilderness, encompassed by so many
-dangers, at the mercy of the great forces of Nature that might at any
-moment rise against us and stamp out our little lives.
-
-And I thought, too, of Amos. In the silence and the darkness, my old
-dread of the man returned; and I asked myself where was he all these
-months, and what were he and his companions doing?
-
-I knew that, like myself, he had been searching for the Treasure in this
-same Wood of the Red Fish; but I could not think that he was still in
-the neighbourhood. At the time, of course, I knew nothing of Forsyth's
-wound, which had delayed Baverstock so long; and when I afterwards came
-to work the matter out, I arrived at the conclusion that Amos must have
-left the wood on the very night when I encountered the anaconda. He
-then returned to the temple, and, finding both the ruins and the village
-quite deserted, gave unholy vent to his wrath by burning everything that
-fire could touch. He then came back upon his own tracks, by way of the
-suspension bridge, drawn to the Red Fish like steel to a magnet, for the
-man's soul itself was magnetised by gold.
-
-And all this time was I searching in the wood. For ten days I roamed
-here and there, living upon wild fruits and berries, and the birds I
-slew with my blow-pipe. Atupo had given me certain vague directions,
-which had seemed clear enough to me at the time. However, the man's
-knowledge of our language was but imperfect, and the wood itself a
-veritable maze, a labyrinth of shallow, twisting tunnels, from which the
-sunlight was eternally shut out.
-
-I wandered daily, lost in very truth, and came often to the Glade of
-Silent Death, near which place I would never venture to sleep for fear
-of the great serpent that I knew lay somewhere in the pool.
-
-On the tenth night of my wanderings, I received something in the nature
-of a shock. I had made my camp-fire somewhat earlier than was my wont,
-and a small, gay-feathered bird that I had shot and plucked was roasting
-over the red-hot charcoal, when, of a sudden, a shot from a rifle rang
-out in the woods not far from where I was.
-
-I sprang to my feet, in a high state of alarm, and kicked the fire
-broadcast, for I had gone barefooted for so long that the soles of my
-feet were like leather. And even as I did so, several other shots were
-fired in quick succession.
-
-I ate my bird half cooked--for I was hungry--and sat in the darkness for
-hour upon hour, certain that Amos himself was near at hand, and filled
-with apprehension.
-
-I had a good mind that night to give up my quest, to return to the
-grassland, where I could breathe the open air and feel the warmth of
-Heaven's sun upon me, hoping that thence I might somehow find my way
-back to the abodes of civilised men. I was sick at heart for want of
-the sound of a human voice and the sight of those I loved.
-
-What would be my fate in that dark wilderness, armed only with my
-blow-pipe, if I should fall into the hands of men like Amos Baverstock
-and Trust? In my thinking, the shots that I had heard could have been
-fired by no one else. And yet, of my own free will, for three days
-longer I delayed within the wood; and now, when I can look back upon
-those wild, adventurous days, I am devoutly thankful that I did.
-
-My own audacity can be explained, I think, by the fact that I was now
-three parts a savage. I was, as one might say, on friendly terms with
-danger. Peril and I had sojourned together for so long that I had come
-to regard even grim Death itself as no such weighty matter. Life was no
-more to me than to the little wild things that I daily slew for food.
-And so, for three days, I continued my searching in the jungle, howbeit
-acting more cautiously than before, making little noise and pausing
-frequently to listen.
-
-And then, by chance, I made a great discovery. At the time, in very
-truth, I did believe that I beheld the manifestation of a miracle; and I
-warrant that he that reads this will think the same, when I have set
-down the facts as they occurred.
-
-I came, late of an afternoon, upon an open place where there were rocks
-among the trees; and between these rocks the ground was soft, the soil
-quite black, being composed of the decayed vegetation of many tropic
-seasons. Here I found footmarks of living men, and, moreover, men who
-were no strangers to leather boots.
-
-That more than one of them had visited this very place, I was well
-convinced, since the footmarks bore evidence of at least two pairs of
-boots--one with great hobnails, and the other without. I never doubted
-that I had hit upon the trail of Amos and his friends; and I had--as I
-thought--sure proof of this, a little after, when I came upon an empty
-cartridge-case.
-
-The most of us believe that we have latent abilities, little suspected
-by our friends, that we are never called upon to use. I have heard it
-said that the great Duke of Wellington thought little of himself as
-soldier, but far too much of his reputation as a politician. And on
-this occasion it was something pleasing to my vanity to play the part of
-a detective, though I knew not the very alphabet of the business. I
-examined the footmarks, and made quite sure that I had found the trail
-of Joshua Trust, who wore, I knew, a pair of heavy boots with hobnails;
-and the brass cartridge-case--which I have kept to this day as a
-memento--had, I surmised, once been the property of Amos. So I went
-down on hands and knees, groping in the half-light of the woods to see
-what else I could discover. And whilst thus employed, I hit upon the
-miracle that all but cost me life itself.
-
-I found a place beneath the rocks where there was a smooth stone slab,
-fashioned plainly by the hand of man. And this rocked gently when I
-pressed my weight upon it, which suggested that it had been moved quite
-recently.
-
-In any case, both the shape and the size of the thing bewildered me, for
-it was all the world like a tombstone. And one would not think to find
-tombstones in the tropic wilderness beneath the Andes.
-
-I found the stone quite easy to lift, for it was thin as a plank, and
-had a hole in the middle, through which I could place a hand. And then
-I stood gazing into the cavity below.
-
-And as I gazed, I gasped. I drew back a little, with a quick catch of
-the breath, and then came forward once again, to stand staring, like one
-who is entirely daft, at what lay at my feet.
-
-For the round moon, of a surety, shone down into a tomb; and there
-before me was a corpse--or what had been a corpse, four hundred years
-ago. There lay a skeleton, white-boned and horrible--moreover, a
-skeleton that was encased in armour.
-
-He who lay there before me in the moonlight had once been a man and a
-soldier of old Spain; for his bony hands were crossed upon his chest and
-held between them the handle of a naked sword. And at his head was a
-steel helmet, and the trunk of his body was enclosed in a breastplate;
-so that I could see naught but his grinning skull and the white bones of
-his legs and arms.
-
-I stood and looked, and wondered. I wondered who he was, how he had
-come there, and of the tales that he could tell, were life to return to
-this bold adventurer of four hundred years ago. Though I do not fear
-death more than most men, I dread even to this day to look upon the face
-of it; and it took me time to gather my courage in both hands and to
-light a fire by the graveside, that I might see the better and solve so
-much of the mystery as I could.
-
-I have no proof--for we can seldom prove the past--but must weigh what
-evidence there is. For all that, I am convinced--now that I have
-thought and talked of it all to John Bannister and others--that I looked
-then upon the remnants of one of the soldiers of the gallant Orellano.
-I could not judge of the quality of the rusted steel of his breastplate
-and his sword; but I should think that he had been an officer of some
-distinction; since, on close inspection, I discovered that the long
-blade had been damascened in silver, a metal that will never rust. And
-that set my mind a-thinking of the great and gallant men who had been
-the first to cross to the Pacific, to whom to-day--in spite of all their
-bigotry and cruelty--the world owes so much.
-
-If one of Orellano's followers had lain buried in this place for all
-this time, how nearly had the Spaniards come to finding the Greater
-Treasure! I was not far, I knew, from the Big Fish, though I had
-searched the Wood for days and never found it. And Orellano had crossed
-the mountains to the west in search of El Dorado, and, having failed in
-his purpose, had gone on down to the great river, and thence to the
-Atlantic. And here lay one of his stout-hearted lieutenants, buried
-like a Christian warrior, with the arms he had fought with, within a few
-miles from where the Treasure lay.
-
-Wonder-struck, and not without great reverence, I put back the sword
-between those bony hands, and then lifted the helmet to see if that,
-too, could tell me anything concerning this tragedy of long ago.
-Besides, I was curious to know how the man had met his death. Had he
-been slain by a savage Indian? Or had he died of some fell, tropical
-disease? And so I took the helmet in my hands; and when I did so,
-something white fell out.
-
-I stooped and picked it up, and then examined it by the fire that I had
-lighted. It was parchment--it was a fragment of a map--a piece torn
-from the corner of a larger sheet. I looked at it and rubbed my eyes,
-and looked again, to be sure that I was not dreaming.
-
-If I did not dream, then I was wholly mad. The thought came to me that
-I had fallen into a fever, and now suffered one of those delusions which
-are common enough when the heart is racing and the brow dry and burning.
-
-I felt my pulse and the skin upon my forearm, and found that I was wet
-with sweat. Nor was I mad or dreaming, for I was Dick Treadgold, and my
-home lay far away, upon the Sussex shore. And yet, that which I held in
-my hand was the very fragment of John Bannister's map which I myself had
-torn from the hands of Amos Baverstock--that same fragment which I had
-thrust, to the full length of my arm, down a rabbit-hole, by Middleton,
-for fear that it should fall into the possession of that scoundrel,
-Joshua Trust.
-
-There can be no disputing the testimony of a torn piece of paper. There
-is, I believe, a celebrated murder trial, quoted in books of law as an
-example of irrefutable circumstantial evidence, wherein the murderer and
-the murdered man are each found in possession of a torn piece of
-newspaper, these two fragments fitting together line for line without a
-letter missing.
-
-You will never tear a sheet of paper twice in precisely the same way,
-though you try a million times. In this case, I had the evidence of my
-eyes and of my memory. It was the very fragment I had snatched from the
-hands of Amos; I remembered the shape of it; I remembered the shape also
-of the torn edge of the map that Amos himself had carried into the
-wilderness; and, above all, there were the letters "AHAZAXA," the
-rending of the parchment having decapitated the name "Cahazaxa."
-
-At first sight, what could look more like a miracle? There was no
-question of coincidence. Here were two facts that, normally, could in
-no way be related to one another: a rabbit burrows a hole for himself
-upon the sandhills by the English Channel, and in the sixteenth century
-a brave Spanish soldier lays down his life, and is buried in the
-wilderness of South America. It will be readily understood that it took
-me time to realise what I could certainly not explain.
-
-How came that fragment there? And why? I regarded the stained and
-yellow parchment that I held in my hand as I sat by the side of the
-fire, and felt even a trifle afraid of it. I had heard stories of
-mummies coming to life, of inanimate objects--such as jasper scarabaei,
-totems, and wooden, heathen gods--becoming active agencies for good or
-evil. Had this thing taken wings upon itself, and flown across half the
-world? Fate or luck--call it what you will--had guided me to find it.
-But why should a document so precious have sought a refuge in the rusted
-helmet of a soldier of fortune, who once, perhaps, had clinked his sword
-in the gay courts of Granada or the narrow streets of old Cadiz, who lay
-now amid the silence of the tropic jungle--a few blanched and silly
-bones?
-
-I had no answer for these questions of my own, though I sat long into
-the night and racked my brains for a solution of the problem. It was,
-in consequence, an hour, as I should guess, before I could look the bare
-fact in the countenance, before I could acknowledge the situation as it
-was.
-
-No matter how it came there, by means comprehensible or supernatural,
-there it was. And then, quite suddenly, I realised what it was. _I had
-as good as found the Treasure_.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI--I FIND THE "BIG FISH"
-
-
-For a considerable time I had regarded this small piece of parchment in
-the light of a mystery, a species of conjuring trick, just as one
-regards the billiard-ball, the rabbit, or the eggs that a conjuror
-produces from the upturned sleeve of his shirt. But now I saw quite
-clearly that the thing had an intrinsic value, a significance of its
-own; it bore a certain definite message--a message that most nearly
-concerned myself.
-
-Eagerly, with hands that trembled somewhat, I studied the map. It will
-be remembered that the portion which Amos possessed had been torn across
-the place where was marked the Temple of Cahazaxa. Upon the fragment
-that had come into my hands by so strange and mysterious a chance, I was
-able to trace the route that I myself had taken from the temple ruins to
-the Wood of the Red Fish. The ravine was shown, and that wonderful
-suspension-bridge that had so amazed me when I saw it. From the hills to
-the east--from the crestline of which I bad viewed the distant glory of
-the Andes--a track was marked, leading towards the south; whereas I, in
-hot haste at the time, had continued upon my way due westward.
-
-Now, this track was shown to lead to a certain stream that came forth
-from the Wood of the Red Fish upon the south. And it was called the
-Brook of Scarlet Pebbles, an Indian name being thus translated in red
-ink in the handwriting of John Bannister.
-
-The map had been drawn to no scale. Like many ancient and mediaeval
-documents, it was entirely without proportion or perspective. For
-instance, the Wood itself--which was never more than fifteen miles
-across--appeared to be of area equal to that vast tract of country that
-lay between the great mountain to the north of the forest and the Temple
-of Cahazaxa--a journey that had taken us many weeks.
-
-There was some sense in this; for in regard to the Wood of the Red Fish,
-where the Treasure itself was hidden, it was necessary to be precise, if
-the map were to be of any value. I saw that one must follow the Brook
-of Scarlet Pebbles, until it entered a pool, where Bannister had written
-the words: "Electric Eels." There, it appeared, the stream flowed
-underground, for its course was dotted, and these dots ended at a cross,
-bearing the words: "THE RED FISH IS HERE."
-
-This cross referred, as I could see at a glance, to certain marginal
-notes, written in such minute handwriting that it was all that I could
-do to read them, especially in view of the fact that Bannister's red ink
-had faded. At last, however, I managed to make out the following
-inscription:
-
- "_The tail of the Fish. A blow-pipe from the nose of the Fish.
- Twenty yards across the Brook. Three feet, below the ground--a
- Ring._"
-
-This I read to myself over and over again. At one moment I thought it
-clear enough, and at the next, too vague. At all events, thought I, I
-will find out when I get there, for thither I intended to go.
-
-I could not sleep that night, and I will not go so far as to say that I
-tried to. I was so thrilled and mystified that my thoughts were running
-riot; and surely there is little to wonder at in this. The bones of the
-Spanish warrior lay in the ground beneath me, together with his armour
-and his sword, for I had put back the tombstone in its place and covered
-it again with a thin layer of soil. That brave adventurer slept in
-tranquillity in the silent chamber of the heart of the tropic jungle.
-He and the sword I have little doubt he had wielded with such subtlety
-and skill were now alike at rest. His treasure-hunt, at least, was
-ended; but mine was only just begun.
-
-For I was determined to set forward when the daylight came, to search
-for the Brook of Scarlet Pebbles. If I found the margin of the Wood,
-and followed this towards the south, I must sooner or later hit upon the
-stream--if the map had any claim to accuracy. I could then follow the
-brook, until eventually I found the Red Fish itself; and, if I could not
-then associate any definite meaning with the queer, disjointed words in
-the margin of the map, my own intelligence must alone be held to blame.
-
-One of the reasons why I could not sleep was that I had committed these
-words to memory and kept repeating them to myself, just like a parrot,
-without any idea as to their meaning. That they had a meaning I never
-doubted, for John Bannister himself had written them; and though I was
-now grown older and had had many strange adventures of my own, I had
-still my ancient and profound respect for the wisdom of my hero.
-
-I thought of him that night, but more of Amos Baverstock, whom I
-believed to be somewhere near at hand, upon the same quest as I. On
-that account, I realised that I must make haste upon the morrow. I had
-risked so much already, I had undergone so many hardships, that I was
-determined--now that I thought myself within reach of my goal--to see
-the business through. From the hills to the east I had looked down upon
-the Wood, and knew that it was not three days' march from one side to
-the other, though the undergrowth was thick and tangled; and therefore I
-knew also that the Red Fish could not be far away.
-
-I think I slept a little in the early hours of the morning, to be
-awakened by the birds stirring in the trees, and the daylight streaming
-from above through that same gap by means of which my nightly task had
-been illumined by the moon. I ate such food as I had left, and then set
-forth towards the east, guiding my footsteps as well as I was able by
-the light of the rising sun.
-
-I came, at about midday, to the eastern side of the Wood, and looked out
-towards the hills whither I had journeyed from the plain. Thence, I
-turned towards the south and, walking once again in open country,
-progressed at a fair pace, and never once sat down to rest, until the
-daylight waned. I went then into the Wood, and searched for berries
-that I knew were fit to eat; and when I had eaten these, I lay down
-beneath a great tree and immediately fell fast asleep.
-
-The following morning, I continued my journey along the margin of the
-Wood. My naked body was now burned by the sun to the colour of an
-Indian's skin. Indeed, I am not sure that I was not even darker of
-complexion than the wild woodland people with whom I had lived. My hair
-was long, like that of a savage, for it had not been cut for months. I
-had a leather girdle over a shoulder from which depended an Indian
-quiver filled with darts. And there was something of the joy of life
-within me, as I swung upon my way. I had health, at least, if I wore no
-clothes upon my back. I felt convinced that my footsteps were leading
-me to the hidden Treasure of the Incas; and I tossed my blow-pipe in the
-air and caught it, time and again.
-
-The joy of life was in me, and the spirit of adventure. The sun shone
-down upon me, and I breathed deeply of the open air; for the wind was
-from the east, and the rank smell of decaying vegetation--so general
-throughout the Wood--was no longer in my nostrils.
-
-And, presently, I came upon the Brook of Scarlet Pebbles. The water was
-clear as crystal, and I went down upon my knees to drink my fill, for I
-was thirsty. There was no question that I had found the stream for
-which I had been searching, since the water flowed over a bed of little
-rounded stones, every one of which was in colouring some tone or tint of
-red. They ranged from pink to crimson; and they were all of granite,
-though worn as smooth as marbles.
-
-Here was the brook that I must follow; so I turned into the Wood again,
-and all that day followed the course of the stream, which winded and
-twisted in so many directions that I wondered I had never seen it
-before.
-
-That afternoon, being hungry for the taste of meat, I killed with my
-blow-pipe a great bird that I found sitting on a branch, blinking like
-an owl. I think he was some kind of bustard. At any rate, he was good
-to eat, when roasted, and I sat long by my camp-fire, picking his bones
-with my fingers. Then I pulled out my fragment of the map and looked at
-it.
-
-It was manifest that I was not yet come to that part of the brook where
-its course was marked by means of little dots; but, knowing the full
-extent of the Wood, I had a good reason to suppose that I was not far
-from my destination. And then I read again the queer marginal
-instructions: _The tail of the Fish_--I must see that for myself; _a
-blow-pipe from the nose of the Fish_--whatever that might mean, at all
-events I had a blow-pipe, and a good one, too. As for the rest, I gave
-it up. It was a riddle that I would solve when I got there--I felt
-quite sure of that. I folded up the map and placed it in my quiver, the
-nearest thing to a pocket that I possessed.
-
-And the next day I continued on my way, following the course of the
-Brook of Scarlet Pebbles. I noticed that these pebbles were now larger
-than before, and were so deep red in the shadow under the trees that the
-clear water had the look of blood. Then I came to the pool, and thought
-at first that the brook was come to an end.
-
-There were no pebbles here, but mud; and in my eagerness I waded in, to
-be made at once painfully conscious of a tingling sensation in my legs.
-Now and again something touched me--something quick and slimy; and each
-time I received a shock. I had forgotten, for the moment, all about the
-electric eels; but, when I remembered it, I was more pleased than
-startled, for I knew that, so far, I was on the right track and that the
-map could be relied upon.
-
-All about the pool was dense and tangled underwood, the branches of
-which dipped here and there into the water. And there were also water
-plants, some with flat, floating leaves, others tall reeds with
-plume-like heads.
-
-I knew that this pool was not the termination of the brook; and yet,
-though I searched for a long time, I could find no continuation of the
-stream, until an idea occurred to me which at once solved the problem. I
-plucked the little down-like feathers from one of my blow-pipe darts.
-And these, at intervals of a few yards, I dropped upon the surface of
-the water, all around the bank of the pool, until I found the stream
-itself, flowing through a dense clump of thickets.
-
-Through this I broke my way, and as I did so, I remembered the anaconda,
-and was filled with my old fear of snakes. It was plain already that my
-surmise had been wrong. The brook did not flow underground, but, for
-about a hundred yards or so, through a dark and narrow tunnel, formed of
-low-growing creepers.
-
-So dense were these that I was obliged to break my way, almost every
-inch; and, though my skin was now near as hard as leather, I was
-scratched so badly by the thorn-trees that I was bleeding from a score
-of places upon my chest and shoulders, when I came forth once more into
-the half-light of the woods.
-
-I could not see at first, for my eyes had grown accustomed to the
-darkness, and I found myself in an open glade, where the trees were thin
-and the rays of the sun no more than broken by the leaves above me.
-
-Then I looked, and I saw the brook before me, here flowing straight upon
-a rocky bed. Indeed, there were rocks everywhere, with rich soil
-between them, in which were growing many strange and beautiful plants.
-It was a natural rock-garden, far more wonderful to see than any yet
-designed by man. The rocks were of dark-red granite, and the flowers
-there in bloom were all the colours of the rainbow. But I looked not
-once at them. I gazed, like one hypnotised, upon a great stone to my
-right; for I had seen at once that this stone was the very shape and
-image of a fish.
-
-How it stood there I cannot say, for, like the famous toadstone at
-Tunbridge Wells, which I myself had seen when my mother took me there in
-childhood, it looked as if it would topple over. For the fish, as
-fishes are, was big in the head and narrow in the tail; and he stood
-forth from the ground at an angle of about sixty degrees, and his mouth
-was open, and there was a hole--on my side, at any rate--near where his
-eye should be.
-
-The more I looked at it, the more wonderful I thought it. It might have
-been graven by the hand of man, and cleverly at that; save that this
-fish was devoid of fins, and the semblance, as I afterwards discovered,
-was not so striking from any other point of view.
-
-Stepping from the water, I scrambled over the rocks, where I sat me
-down, and heaved a great sigh, which I do not pretend to be able to
-explain. Relief, joy, victory--all were mixed up in it, I do not doubt.
-Here was I, at the end of all my travels; I had reached the conclusion
-of my journey. The Big Fish was there.
-
-[Illustration: "I HAD REACHED THE CONCLUSION OF MY JOURNEY. THE BIG
-FISH WAS THERE."]
-
-To achieve anything is a conquest, great or small. I had sojourned in
-the wilderness, it seemed, for years; I had stood in constant peril of
-my life; I had journeyed in company of cut-throats; I had lived with
-savage men; I had seen something of the glories of old Peru, the Temple
-of Cahazaxa; I had marched for days and days alone, naked and carrying
-my Indian blow-pipe in my hand. And there was the Big Fish--the very
-sign-post, as one might call it, to the Greater Treasure of the Incas.
-
-And as these thoughts jangled in my brain, a shot rang out--how far away
-I could not tell, but somewhere in the Wood.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII--THE GREATER TREASURE
-
-
-I held my breath and listened, thinking that I would hear other shots,
-as I had done before. But no sound came to break the stillness. Save
-for the birds among the tops of the trees, and a big, solitary monkey
-that swung himself from branch to branch, chattering as he went, I was
-surrounded by the silence of the woods.
-
-It was no news to me that I stood in the gravest peril. Such had been
-the case for many a day; and--as I have said--I had come to look upon
-life as of little worth. Amos I knew to be somewhere in the
-neighbourhood; and I knew also that if he found me it would go ill with
-me; I should not live for long if I fell again into that great villain's
-clutches.
-
-And yet I did no more than shrug my shoulders. I had sublime faith in
-myself, in my youth, and the Divine Providence that, so far, had kept me
-from the way of harm. I had my blow-pipe, too; and, if the worst should
-happen, I could use it well enough to drive one of my feathered arrows
-straight into the heart of Amos Baverstock.
-
-One learns, in the everlasting twilight of the woods, where danger lurks
-on every hand, to live for the moment only, to let the future look after
-itself. And so did I now; for Amos was no more to me than the jaguar
-and the anaconda--brutes of prey, all three of them, and the mortal man
-the vilest. Death in many forms and shapes was all about me--sharp
-fangs, the serpent's coils, poison, and disease. There was no need to
-scent from afar such dangers as might never come my way.
-
-And so, once again, I turned my thoughts to the Red Fish, standing forth
-before me in the sunlight--a quaint and humorous-looking thing, had I
-been able for a moment to forget its wonderful significance.
-
-I sat and looked at it; it may have been for half an hour, or even more.
-And my memory took me back to that sunny August morning by the Sussex
-shore, where I had first heard Amos speak of the Greater Treasure of the
-Incas; and I remembered, word for word, what he had said: "Gold! It is
-there knee-deep in a cavern, large as a cathedral." And here was I, Dick
-Treadgold, in the very place myself, after a series of most strange and
-unbelievable adventures, thousands of miles from Sussex. My very name,
-I thought, was to prove a kind of analogue with my destiny and actions;
-for I was fated, so it seemed, to tread on gold.
-
-And at that, I pulled out my fragment of the map, and looked at it,
-reading again and again the passage that had puzzled me so often:
-
- "_The tail of the Fish. A blow-pipe from the nose of the Fish.
- Twenty yards across the Brook. Three feet, below the ground--a
- Ring._"
-
-There, sure enough, was the tail of the Fish--or, at least, the upper
-part of it, a sharp spur of rock protruding from the ground. I got to
-my feet and approached, taking my blow-pipe with me.
-
-"_A blow-pipe from the nose of the Fish._" That clause had always
-puzzled me. It seemed possible that I should use my blow-pipe as a kind
-of measuring-rod; but I could not think in what direction I should place
-it. Besides, the nose of the Fish was at least six feet from the
-ground. And then I observed for the first time what I had not perceived
-before; namely, that the body of the Fish was curved; and it was this
-that gave me the very clue I wanted. What if I were to use the
-blow-pipe as a plumb-line?
-
-At all events, I would try. So I drove the blow-pipe into the soft
-ground, as near the perpendicular as I could judge, in such a manner
-that it just touched the tip of the Fish's nose.
-
-I read my instructions again--though I already knew them by heart, and
-tried to guess their meaning. I crossed the brook, which in that place
-was very shallow, the water reaching little above my ankles; and no
-sooner did I find myself upon the other side than I observed that my
-wooden blow-pipe and the sharp, upright spur of rock that formed the
-Fish's tail were in the same alignment.
-
-"_Twenty yards across the Brook_" could have but a single meaning. Since
-the Red Fish itself was not that distance from the water, twenty yards
-must be measured upon the other side; and this I at once resolved to do.
-
-I already had an imaginary line, extending an indefinite distance. If I
-held to this line--or if, in other words, I kept my blow-pipe
-immediately between myself and the Fish's tail--I could not go far wrong
-by stepping the prescribed twenty yards from the margin of the brook.
-
-This I did, and, to verify my position, looked to see that I still had
-my two fixed points in line with one another. I had verged a little to
-the left, but soon put this right by taking a short pace in the other
-direction. And then I repeated to myself the last sentence of my
-instructions: "_Three feet, below the ground--a Ring_."
-
-Down I went upon all-fours, and began to scrape up the earth in my
-hands. For the soil was soft, though now and again I hit upon a rock,
-which, without great difficulty, I loosened with my knife, to cast aside
-and continue with my work.
-
-It was nightfall by the time that I had gained a depth of three feet or
-more; but, by then, I had come upon a great, smooth slab of stone; and
-this discovery set my heart so wildly beating that I was obliged to
-leave my task and rest awhile, drinking deeply of the water of the
-brook.
-
-In the moonlight I laboured still, and a slow business it was,
-displacing the earth a handful at a time, and scratching with the Indian
-knife that Atupo, the priest, had given me. I was hot and weary, and my
-finger-tips were painful; and yet I could not desist, but worked on till
-midnight, to be at last rewarded. I came across a metal ring, fastened
-to the slab, about eight inches in diameter. And when I had washed the
-earth away, bringing water in my quiver from the brook, I discovered
-that this ring was made of gold.
-
-I tugged at it and pulled with all my might, but could not move the
-stone an inch; so back I went to my work again, grubbing with my hands,
-for all the world like a dog that smells a rat. Sheer fatigue at length
-quite overcame me, and I was obliged to lie down and rest, and fell
-sound asleep, though I had intended no such thing.
-
-I awoke suddenly, at the first sign of daybreak, and went to the great
-hole I had made in the ground, and wondered at myself that I had done so
-much. The stone slab, I saw, was almost clear of earth.
-
-In less than an hour the great slab was free. I cut round the edges of
-it with my knife, to loosen it, and then looked down upon my work, to
-see how I might approach the conclusion of my task with the greatest
-prospect of success.
-
-The stone slab was about three feet wide and twice as long. And the
-gold ring, I could not fail to notice, was much nearer one end than the
-other. As the handle is never to be found in the middle of a door, this
-seemed to suggest that the slab opened upon hinges. It remained to be
-seen, however, whether or not I had the strength to lift it.
-
-I tried more than once, and failed, though I moved the stone an inch or
-so. Finally, I went into the Wood and cut a length of liana, one end of
-which I tied to the golden ring. And then I tugged with all my might;
-and the stone slab uprose like a derrick on a ship, attained a vertical
-position, and there remained stationary and upright.
-
-I stepped to the hole and looked down upon a narrow flight of steps all
-covered with the earth that had fallen from above. Down these I
-hastened, presently to find myself in utter darkness, so that there was
-nothing for it but for me to return and look about me for some means of
-making a torch.
-
-I was now as skilled as any forest Indian in the art of making fire. For
-months I had journeyed without matches, tinder-box or magnifying-glass.
-I knew where to find touch-wood in the forest, and could strike sparks
-from pieces of flint. For an hour I laboured in the making of a torch,
-which I constructed of touchwood bound about by reeds. And whilst I was
-thus employed I realised for the first time how hungry I was--for I had
-eaten nothing for twenty-four hours, though I had consumed great
-quantities of water.
-
-And now I did a strange thing, in view of the fact that I have always
-been somewhat impetuous by nature and was then but a boy in years.
-Though I was actually trembling with excitement, all eagerness to behold
-the interior of the vault that I knew to be at the foot of the steps, I
-went deliberately into the jungle in search of food.
-
-Finding no living thing that I could kill but monkeys, I was obliged to
-content myself with wild nuts and berries; and then I returned to the
-Red Fish, drank again from the brook, took up my torch and lit it from
-the fire that I had kindled. And then down I went into the vault, to
-feast my eyes upon the buried Treasure of the Incas.
-
-The stairway was at first so shallow that I must stoop as I descended;
-but presently I found myself in a little chamber, hollowed out of the
-living rock, the walls of which were of the same red granite as the
-strange stone above. And weird and almost magic did the whole place
-look in the light of my burning torch.
-
-For the very walls sparkled as with diamonds. Everywhere were little
-grains of felspar, mica, or quartz, which caught the reflection of the
-light. And when I looked upon the floor I saw that Amos had been right.
-I trod upon bars of gold, all of the same length and size, and laid with
-such regularity and neatness that they might have been the palings of a
-fence--or many fences--spread flat upon the ground.
-
-How deep these ingots went I could not say, and was not then disposed to
-inquire, for my attention was attracted by an arched opening, like the
-doorway of a church, on the other side of the room. Through this I
-passed, and found myself at the head of another flight of stone steps,
-much broader and wider than the others--a gigantic stairway that
-descended into the middle of a chamber so vast that my torch did no more
-than throw a kind of halo all around me.
-
-I rushed down these steps with a loud, glad cry, and below I hastened
-like a madman, here and there, passing along the walls, crossing at
-random that wide, gloomy subterranean room.
-
-Everywhere was gold, stacked upon the floor, piled against the walls. I
-saw golden chalices and cups, bracelets, rings and girdles; great jugs
-of gold and golden basins, besides bars and ingots that one might have
-counted by the thousand.
-
-I know not why it was, but the very sight of it made me dizzy, as I
-staggered blindly about that wondrous place. At times I slipped and
-stumbled, and at other times I fell between those glittering stacks, to
-find myself--as Amos Baverstock had said in my hearing--knee-deep in the
-very stuff that has made the world as wicked as it is.
-
-And then, at last, I sat down upon I know not what, save that it was
-gold. The very sight that I had seen had exhausted me far more than all
-my travels and privations. I felt sick at heart and weary. I looked
-about me with tired and dreamy eyes.
-
-It seemed to me strange--now that I had beheld this wonder--that I had
-endured so much for sake of it. How had it come to pass that men prized
-so highly what after all is no more than yellow metal? Here was enough
-of it, in very truth, to serve the needs of a nation; and here it had
-lain for four hundred years--and the world was none the worse. How
-little of this vast treasure would be enough for me, or even Amos
-Baverstock, in spite of all his greed!
-
-It frightened me--and that is the truth of it. I could not think what I
-should do if all this precious wealth were mine. And then I wondered if
-I had any right to call it mine just because it was mine for the moment
-to gaze upon, to regard in breathless bewilderment and fear.
-
-You may behold that which you never own, as you may own that which you
-never see. Boy though I was, so much was clear to me as daylight. Nor
-had I any reason to suppose that I was the first to look upon this
-marvel, since the fugitives from Cuzco, centuries ago, had carried it
-across the mountains to hide it in this secret place. John Bannister
-himself, perhaps, had looked upon it, though he had never told me so. If
-it belonged to any living man, all this wealth was his.
-
-I felt by now as if I were about to faint; and besides, my torch was
-burning low. And therefore I got unsteadily upon my feet and walked
-into the little outer room, and thence ascended the steps in the broad
-light of day. And there I stood breathing deeply, with my eyes closed
-and my mouth parched as if by thirst.
-
-On a sudden I cast my burning torch into the brook before me, and fell
-upon my knees and prayed to God. I prayed aloud, as if the living trees
-and running water and the red stones about me could all hear my prayer.
-And it was the Lord's Prayer that I had learned at my mother's knee;
-for, boy though I was, I felt that which I had looked upon was the very
-pith and kernel of all temptation to which, since Eden, humanity was
-heir.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVIII--I FALL IN WITH A FRIEND
-
-
-I sat for many hours that morning, idle and oppressed by a feeling as of
-emptiness. What use to me was all the wealth that I had seen--or, for
-the matter of that, to any one? I had no means at my disposal to take a
-millionth part of it away.
-
-And then I remembered Amos, and thought it my duty to take what steps I
-could to see that that dread man should never solve the riddle of the
-Red Fish, though it was unlikely he would find the place without the aid
-of my fragment of the map.
-
-The sight of all that gold had, as it were, unnerved me--filled me with
-a kind of weariness of life. I cannot say exactly how it was, but I
-know that I had lost, on a sudden, all my energy and enthusiasm; and it
-was late in the afternoon before I bestirred myself and got to work.
-
-I lowered the great slab and covered it with earth, which I trampled
-down with my bare feet. Then I went into the woods and dug up plants
-with my Indian knife, and these I stuck in the ground so that I made a
-little garden. One shower of tropic rain and they would take root and
-grow, and thus hide all trace of how the soil had been disturbed. And
-looking up at the sky, where it was visible here and there between the
-branches of the trees above me, I saw that such a shower was coming.
-
-The rain fell that evening, when I was camped once more in the woods
-towards the east, having gone back the way that I had come, following
-the course of the Brook of Scarlet Pebbles. I took shelter from the
-rain beneath a tree, the great leaves of which formed a veritable roof
-above me, so that not one drop of water fell upon the fire that I had
-kindled.
-
-I ate my simple meal, and then lay down, not to sleep, but to think and
-to listen to the rain, beating with a noise like many drums upon the
-leaves.
-
-Well, I had seen the Treasure of the Incas. With my own eyes I had
-beheld it. And I asked myself if I were any the better for it, and
-could not see that I was. For gold is mud, and part of man is mud; and
-yet there is a great God who is above, around and within us all. And
-that night, as I lay awake in the woods, listening to the drumming of
-the rain, I tried to think out such problems as man has not yet begun to
-understand--problems that, perhaps, he may never solve on this side of
-the grave.
-
-No doubt, the constant propinquity of danger had made me serious for my
-years. I had lived for many months in the wilderness, and my pulse now
-beat in rhythm with the earth. The forest, the majestic mountains I had
-seen at sunrise, the sky of stars above the plain--all these were
-mysteries to me, wondrous and eternal. But there was neither eternity
-nor mystery in the work of man; in gold, in the rusted sword of
-Orellano's soldier, or Cahazaxa's Temple.
-
-I saw quite clearly now that this hidden treasure was no affair of mine.
-I had lived happily for months as Nature meant me to, and the sum total
-of my wealth had been my blow-pipe and the knife that Atupo, the priest,
-had given me. I now understood--far better than I had done at the
-time--all John Bannister had told me of his dread of cities and of
-people. I, too, would like to live my life far from the abodes of men,
-with the little shy things as my friends, in the chamber of the Wild.
-For the very sight of the Treasure of Kings had frightened me. Four
-hundred years it had lain there, beneath the ground, like a great,
-harmful dragon; and it seemed to me that to let this monster loose upon
-the world would be a bold thing to do--to saddle my conscience with a
-load of responsibility such as I was never strong enough to bear. I
-wished now that I was not one of the few who had solved this precious
-riddle.
-
-And yet I was not sure of anything, for the gold tempted me sorely. I
-was tempted more than I can say. If I had now learned to understand
-something of John Bannister's ideals, I saw also, with alarming clarity,
-the motives that swayed the deeds of Amos Baverstock. Gold to him was a
-living force, the origin of all his strength and evil, the prompter of
-his actions. Once or twice that night was I tempted to return to the
-Red Fish that I might feast my eyes again upon the Treasure.
-
-I told myself that I had not seen enough of it. I was like a drunkard
-who had tasted wine. I wondered what worth it had in coinage that I
-knew, and I set to thinking how I would spend so vast a sum.
-
-But these were thoughts only of the night-time, in the darkness and the
-silence of the woods. I fell asleep at last, sick at heart and
-wretched; but dawning day came to me with comfort, and I continued on my
-journey with new hopes and prospects.
-
-The dragon was behind my back, buried once again. For all I cared, it
-might lie there for ever, untouched by mortal hand, unseen by mortal
-eye, to be smothered in the dust of endless ages.
-
-As for myself, when I came forth from the undergrowth of the wood into
-the warm light of the evening sun, I turned to the south, and continued
-on my way until long after dark. I had made up my mind, and that was
-something; I would pass round the Wood of the Red Fish, and journey
-westward towards the great mountains. These I would cross, and come
-down upon the tableland beyond, where I knew that I would find men who
-were as civilised as I. Thence, as best I could, I must find my way
-back to England. I had little doubt that I might be able to work a
-passage for myself on board a ship that sailed from Callao or Guayaquil.
-
-But I was a fool to think my adventures so nearly at an end. My destiny
-was no more in my own hands than that of a withered leaf, carried here
-and there by the wind.
-
-I found the western side of the Wood to be very different from the
-other. It was a country broken up by rocky spurs that descended from
-the foothills just above me; and the ravines or little valleys that lay
-between these spurs were densely choked with undergrowth, similar in all
-respects to the thickets in the wood.
-
-It was no easy travelling, and yet there was no other road for me to
-take, for to the north lay the big morass that I had observed from the
-hill-top on the morning when I first looked down upon the Wood.
-
-So I made my way along the crestline of a rocky ridge, setting forth
-upon my journey to the Andes early in the morning with the whole day
-before me. Though the rays of the sun were powerful, the day was cool,
-for a soft breeze was blowing from the mountains. I had not yet
-breakfasted, since I thought it likely that in this more open country I
-might kill with my blow-pipe some animal that was good to eat; and,
-therefore, as I marched upon the way, I kept my eyes open, looking into
-the ravines on either side of me, to see if I could catch a glimpse of
-any living thing. And I had not gone far before--to my bewilderment--I
-set eyes upon the solitary figure of _a man_.
-
-I dropped, on the instant, flat upon my face--for I was now a savage in
-more ways than one. I had all the instincts of the wild man who knows
-that danger may lurk behind every tree and shrub and rock. I lay upon
-the ground, still as a lizard, with my eyes upon the stranger. And the
-more I looked at him the more I wondered.
-
-The Forest Indians were small in stature, as I have observed in the
-proper place. But this man was six feet in height. He was as brown as
-I; and yet he wore clothes--clothes which were all in rags and tatters,
-and a pair of boots, split open at the toe-caps and bound with string
-about his ankles. Moreover, he carried in his hand a rifle; and this
-rifle he used as a staff, placing the butt upon the ground and leaning
-with his whole weight upon it as he limped slowly and painfully upon his
-way down the ravine immediately beneath me.
-
-I have said that I had the instincts of a wild man. I was cautious, shy
-and cunning. I had learned to trust no one, to be suspicious of every
-one. And so I lay and watched him.
-
-It occurred to me, by degrees, that I had seen him before. I could not
-for the life of me remember where. Then he sat down, with his face
-toward me.
-
-He had a rough, weather-beaten, and yet a kindly, face. He had
-steel-grey eyes, and a rough, tangled beard. He was so close to me that
-I could see that his bare arms were tattooed; and it was this, perhaps,
-that gave me the clue I wanted. I looked at his beard again, and,
-unkempt as it was, it reminded me somehow of the beard of a Russian
-Czar. This man was William Rushby.
-
-I was not sure of it at first. He was greatly changed from the honest
-sailor who had befriended me on board the _Mary Greenfield_. But when
-my mind was made up, and I was well-nigh carried away by mingled
-feelings of astonishment and gladness, I got to my feet and went towards
-him with my blow-pipe in my hand.
-
-Without any ado, he whipped the butt of his rifle into the hollow of his
-shoulder, and I saw the sights were directed straight upon my heart.
-
-"Hands up!" he cried to me in English. "Hands up, you brown barbarian,
-or else I shoot you dead!"
-
-[Illustration: "'HANDS UP!' HE CRIED. 'HANDS UP, YOU BROWN BARBARIAN,
-OR ELSE I SHOOT YOU DEAD!'"]
-
-I grasped the truth in an instant; and it is well I did, for I have
-little doubt that he would have shot me where I stood. If William
-Rushby had changed in personal appearance since last we met, of a
-certainty I myself had changed still more. He took me for a wild man of
-the woods, though he yelled at me in English, and would have killed me
-out of hand, had I not lifted my arms and answered him, and laughed.
-
-"Rushby!" I cried. "Do you not know me? It is I--Dick Treadgold."
-
-He brought down his rifle, and stared at me like one who sees a ghost.
-
-"Dick!" said he, and then came forward, holding out his great hand, into
-which I placed my own.
-
-And there we stood, and shook hands with one another, as though we had
-met at Charing Cross. And he was near as naked as I, and we were both
-so burned by the sun that the whites of our eyes were almost comical,
-and our hair was long like that of gipsies, and the skin upon our legs
-and arms had been scratched in scores of places by the thorn-trees in
-the forest.
-
-"Dick!" he cried again. "I can see it now, though I would never have
-believed it."
-
-"It is I who am asked to believe the most," said I. "How came you here,
-of all people in the world?"
-
-"There's a yarn at the back of that," said he. "But, first, you must
-tell me how you escaped from Amos."
-
-He seated himself, as he spoke, upon a boulder that lay in the ravine;
-and when he moved I was reminded of a fact I had perceived
-already--Rushby was badly wounded and lame of a leg.
-
-For all that, I saw that he would glean little in the way of information
-if we did nothing but ask one another questions; so I mastered my own
-curiosity, and replied to him.
-
-"Why," I told him, "Amos tied me to a tree, and left me in the
-wilderness to starve. And then I fell into the hands of savage men, to
-whom I shall be ever grateful. From their dwellings in the forest I
-journeyed alone to Cahazaxa's Temple, and thence across the plain to the
-Wood of the Red Fish, where I find an old friend, and still believe that
-I am dreaming. It is months now since I last set eyes upon a white man,
-and that was Amos Baverstock himself."
-
-"Months!" cried Rushby in amazement. "You've not seen Baverstock--for
-months!"
-
-He looked at me as if he thought that I was lying. I was at a loss to
-know what he was driving at, though I assured him that I spoke the
-truth.
-
-"Months!" he repeated, holding his head between his hands, as if his
-puzzled brains were paining him. "But we were told, two days ago, that
-Amos held you prisoner."
-
-"Who told you?" I demanded.
-
-I was now as surprised as he, and even more astonished when I heard his
-answer.
-
-"Baverstock himself," said Rushby.
-
-"Amos!" I exclaimed. "You have seen him, then?"
-
-"He lied to me!" cried Rushby, driving his clenched fist into the palm
-of a hand. "He lied to me! And Bannister was right."
-
-"Bannister!" I echoed.
-
-But Rushby, rocking his shoulders from side to side like a man who
-suffers anguish, stamped a foot upon the ground.
-
-"Oh, but I have done a fool's thing!" he cried. "I have been fooled,
-and I have sent John Bannister to death!"
-
-I stood before him, speechless, gasping. Though I could make neither
-head nor tail of what he had told me, I could see with my eyes that the
-man was suffering torture in his soul. If Bannister was in danger, if
-it was possible to save anything from the fire, it was I myself--and I
-alone--who was capable of action, since Rushby was dead lame. And yet I
-must first know the truth of the matter, for I was wholly in the dark.
-
-I went to Rushby and laid a hand upon his shoulder.
-
-"Come, tell me what it all means," said I. "Tell me your story from the
-first."
-
-He looked up at me, and then for the first time smiled--a sad smile,
-none the less.
-
-"Sit down," he answered, in a calmer voice. "I will tell you all from
-the beginning, as quickly as I can."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIX--THE BOATSWAIN TELLS HIS STORY
-
-
-This that follows is the story that was told to me by William Rushby,
-sometime boatswain of the _Mary Greenfield_, as we sat together side by
-side in the ravine, the while John Bannister had gone forth alone in
-peril of his life.
-
-To begin with, he reminded me of that evening when he had spoken to me
-through the porthole on the ship, when I was held a prisoner in the
-cabin that I shared with Amos Baverstock. After that--it will be
-remembered--I never saw him again; for when the ship arrived at Caracas,
-I was transported by night to the hills beyond the town.
-
-As for Rushby, he fell in with a friend--and that is the best of being a
-sailor, who is never at a loss for a handshake and a word of greeting in
-every port in all the world. For the boatswain, when the ship was
-alongside the wharf, had seized the opportunity to desert, and lay in
-hiding in the town, until news was brought him that Amos and his party
-had set forth across the mountains. He then worked his way to Rio, and
-a month later turned up in Southampton, where by the merest chance he
-found John Bannister, about to set forth in quest of me across the
-Western Ocean.
-
-The boatswain told Bannister all he knew, and together they searched in
-the warren for the rabbit-hole in which I had hidden my fragment of the
-map. This they found at last, not much the worse for wear; and having
-set my mother's fears at rest, so far as they were able, they started
-forth together for the port of Colon; for Bannister, knowing whither
-Amos Baverstock was bound, deemed that the shortest route.
-
-From Colon they crossed the Isthmus to Panama, and thence sailed--as
-Pizarro himself had done--down the coast to Guayaquil, the port of
-Equador. From this place they journeyed inland, passed the great height
-of Chimborazo, the summit of the Andes, and thence eastward, a march of
-many weeks, into the Wild Region of the Woods.
-
-Bannister realised from the first that his task was well-nigh
-impossible. He might as well hope to find me in the forest as a needle
-in a haystack; and so, knowing where the treasure was, he went straight
-to the Wood of the Red Fish, there to await the arrival of Amos and the
-others.
-
-He had started some months after us, but he had taken the shorter route
-and had been delayed by nothing. For all that, he arrived in the
-neighbourhood of the Red Fish some weeks after Amos; for he and Rushby
-heard nothing of the fight which took place when Atupo laid his ambush
-and Forsyth was so badly wounded.
-
-Amos--as we know--returned across the plain to wreak his vengeance upon
-the Peruvian priests in the Temple of Cahazaxa. Then the man's greed of
-gold drew him westward once again to search for the Big Fish, as the
-natives called the treasure.
-
-It was then that Vasco, the Spaniard, struck by the merest chance the
-trail of John Bannister and Rushby. A fight took place between them,
-and those were the shots which I myself had heard, one of which had
-sorely wounded the boatswain in the leg.
-
-John Bannister had saved his comrade's life. William Rushby was a big
-man, broadly made and heavy; but Bannister had whipped him up as though
-he were a child and carried him all night throughout the jungle, with
-the result that Amos, for the time being, lost all trace of them, though
-he was searching in all directions in the Wood.
-
-It is a wonder, indeed, and something to be thankful for, that Amos and
-his friends never stumbled across myself, whilst I was wandering about
-with my blow-pipe and my arrows in search of the Red Fish, not knowing
-where to look. For I was not then in possession of the map, of which I
-have now to tell, and how it was that I found it in so singular a place.
-
-Rushby was a wounded man and weak from loss of blood, and now Bannister
-himself--great as was his strength--being overcome by his exertions,
-fell into a raging fever. Knowing the Wood of old, he had carried
-Rushby to the place of the Tomb of Orellano's soldier; and whilst in
-hiding there he became so ill that for three days he raved, delirious.
-And he had no one but a wounded man to tend him.
-
-They had no food, and were without means of getting any; for the
-boatswain could not walk a dozen yards, but from time to time must drag
-himself on all-fours to the stream to fetch his companion water to
-drink.
-
-Rushby, left to his own resources, and suffering the greatest pain, had
-little doubt that they were lost. Look at the affair which way he
-might, he could see no way out of their difficulties; they must either
-be found by Baverstock or else starve to death. For himself, he cared
-not which way it ended; but upon one thing he was determined--the
-fragment of the map which they had brought with them from my rabbit-hole
-in Sussex should never fall into the hands of Amos Baverstock.
-
-And so it was William Rushby himself who opened the tomb, and hid the
-map in the helmet of the Spanish soldier. And that was how I found it,
-a few days afterwards; for the earth had been disturbed and trampled
-underfoot.
-
-The night after that, when John Bannister was a little recovered of his
-fever, though still terribly weak, they heard the report of a shot-gun,
-fired not far from where they were; and Rushby, realising that Amos was
-still upon their track, made the supreme effort of his life, hoping
-thereby to save both Bannister and himself.
-
-It was the old case of the blind leading the blind; for the one was so
-weak that he tottered when he walked, and the other was lame of a leg,
-with an open, septic wound that would not heal. But together, with
-their arms around each other, they made good their escape, only to be
-caught later in the great morass that lay upon the northern side of the
-Wood, and being at the end of their resources and well-nigh starved to
-death, they had no option but to surrender and without condition.
-
-There is no question Amos would have killed John Bannister then and
-there had it not been for one potent circumstance: Bannister knew the
-secret of the Big Fish. Both Baverstock and Trust regarded my friend as
-their arch-enemy, who had foiled them more than once; and Rushby told me
-of the look of unutterable hatred that was stamped upon every evil
-feature of the face of Amos whenever he looked at Bannister--which he
-did, by the same token, no more often than he had to, since it was plain
-to see that he found it hard to meet the eyes of one stronger than
-himself both in mind and body, and a thousand times more honest.
-
-And here, in his narrative, the boatswain became, on a sudden, wildly
-excited, and pointed to a palm-tree that stood not far away from where
-we both were seated, about a hundred yards down the ravine.
-
-"You see that tree?" he cried; and I nodded in reply. "Well, then,"
-Rushby continued, "the villain bound Bannister to that--bound him hand
-and foot, and stood before him with a loaded rifle in his hands. He
-cursed him; he threatened and blasphemed. He said that if Bannister
-would not tell him where the treasure was, he would shoot him on the
-spot. But he might as well have tried to frighten those white bones in
-the tomb where I myself had hid the map."
-
-William Rushby paused, and ran his fingers through his beard. I never
-saw a man who looked more miserable than he. And yet, so foolish was I,
-indeed, that I did naught but ask him silly questions, when time was of
-as much account as the life of the most heroic man that ever lived.
-
-"And Bannister would not speak?" said I.
-
-"Speak!" the boatswain cried. "Speak he did, and to the point. He told
-Baverstock to shoot."
-
-He was silent for a moment, and sat looking at the open wound in his
-leg.
-
-"I never saw any one more angry," he continued, "and I have served in my
-day under many men of the same stamp as James Dagg, if not so bad as he.
-All that night I lay awake, dead sure that Baverstock would murder
-Bannister, if on the following morning he still refused to speak."
-
-"And you were camped in this ravine?" I asked.
-
-"In this same place," said Rushby; "for I have not moved since a hundred
-yards."
-
-"And where are the others?" I asked.
-
-"Listen!" said the boatswain. "I can do no more than spin a yarn from
-the beginning. I am coming to what you want to know. Baverstock, his
-threats having failed with Bannister, played his trump-card upon me, and
-won the trick. Leaving Bannister still weak from fever, bound hand and
-foot, he came to me by night and talked in whispers. He told me that he
-held you a prisoner, and, like a fool, I believed him. He said that if
-he did not learn the truth in regard to the exact position of the Big
-Fish he would put not only Bannister and myself to death, but also you,
-whose life he had purposely preserved throughout all these months."
-
-"He lied!" I interrupted.
-
-"I know he did," said Rushby. "But I swallowed all those lies as a
-shark takes a baited hook. I was neither strong nor wise like
-Bannister. For my own life I cared not greatly, but I was loth to
-behold John Bannister put to death, and I knew how much he cared for
-you, and how he would grieve if you were to die through any fault of
-mine. And thus it was that I told Amos Baverstock the truth. I told
-him that we had brought with us from Sussex your little fragment of the
-map; and I told him that I had hidden it within the helmet in the Tomb
-of the Spanish soldier.
-
-"He said no more to me that night, but posted Vasco, the Spaniard, as a
-sentry, with orders to see that Bannister and I did not communicate. And
-at daybreak the next morning, in the utmost haste, he and his three
-companions went back into the Wood to find the map in the Spaniard's
-Tomb, and thence to discover the Red Fish itself, where the gold of Peru
-is hidden."
-
-When I heard that, I burst into loud laughter. Rushby looked at me,
-surprised, and asked me why I laughed.
-
-"He will never find it," I cried. "He will never find the map! For it
-is no longer in the Tomb."
-
-"Not in the Tomb!" he burst forth. "Then, where is it? And how do you
-know where it is?"
-
-"Because it is here," said I. And as I said the words, I pulled forth
-the little piece of parchment from the quiver in which I kept my
-blow-pipe arrows.
-
-Rushby looked at it, recognised it at once, and sat staring at me, as
-if, on a sudden, he had been bereft of his senses.
-
-"How did you get this?" he blurted out.
-
-I told him in a few words how I had found it.
-
-"Merciful powers!" he groaned. "What have I done? Bannister is on a
-wild-goose chase after all!"
-
-He again carried his hands to his head, and sat rocking from side to
-side, as he had done before. I got to my feet, and shook him violently;
-for--though as yet I understood no more than half the matter--I saw that
-there had been some great mistake that was like to cost us dearly.
-
-"What is it?" I cried. "Tell me the truth! Even now, it may not be too
-late to make amends. Tell me what has happened."
-
-He looked up at me with a sad face. I am inclined to think that there
-were even teardrops in his eyes.
-
-"When Baverstock and those with him were gone," said he; "when they were
-returned to the Wood and lost to view, I picked up my jack-knife, and
-limped to the tree, where I cut Bannister's bonds. You must understand
-that Amos departed that morning in such hot haste that he left behind
-our knives and rifles, as well as much of his own equipment. However,
-that is neither here nor there. I was obliged to tell Bannister the
-truth; and, no sooner had I done so, than he made me realise what a
-simpleton I was.
-
-"He told me that I had been a fool to hide the map in any place where it
-could afterwards be found. It had been better had I torn it to shreds.
-Nor would he believe that you were still in the hands of Amos
-Baverstock. And the very thought that this unholy villain was to solve
-at last the riddle of the Big Fish gave, upon the instant, new strength
-to Bannister. For then and there he rose to his feet, and said that he
-was going himself into the Wood, that he would reach the Tomb in advance
-of Amos and take possession of the map."
-
-"He has gone there!" I shouted, like a maniac, springing to my feet and
-pointing towards the Wood.
-
-"Yes," said Rushby. "He said that he would rather die a thousand times
-than that Amos should find the Treasure."
-
-I felt as if I had received a violent blow. I knew not, for the moment,
-what to do. And then I saw my course quite clear before me.
-
-"I'll go to him!" I cried. "Take that, and keep it safe."
-
-And I flung at him my portion of the map, and then snatched up my
-blow-pipe and my quiver filled with darts, and set off running down the
-ravine, as fast as my legs would carry me, towards the Wood.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XX--I RETURN TO THE SOLDIER'S TOMB
-
-
-I had every reason to be filled with apprehension. I was going, of a
-certainty, into danger greater than any I had yet encountered. Whilst
-searching in the Wood for John Bannister, my friend, I was like as not
-to fall in with Amos Baverstock; and if that should happen, I could hope
-for little mercy.
-
-Bannister--as Rushby had told me--was weak from illness and half
-starved,, so that much of his great strength of former days must have
-deserted him, when most he had a need of it. Besides, I knew not
-whether he were armed, for that was a question I had not stayed to ask
-when I hurried forth from the ravine upon my quest.
-
-I had therefore some cause to be afraid. And yet, in my heart, I was
-glad as I had never been for months, as I raced upon my way into the
-darkness of the Wood.
-
-I was journeying towards my friend, the great man whom I had learned to
-honour and admire upon the beach in Sussex. And I believed that the
-Fates would not be so cruel to me that I should fail to find him. I
-felt that I would soon look upon him once again, feel the iron grasp of
-his hand, and behold the light of recognition in his kindly eyes.
-
-Many hours of daylight were before me, when I entered the Wood of the
-Red Fish; and then, for the first time I think, I realised that my task
-was not an easy one. Had I started from the other side of the Wood, I
-believe that I could have found the Spaniard's Tomb without much loss of
-time; for I was by now well acquainted with that portion of the jungle.
-
-But in this neighbourhood I was an utter stranger, though I had the sun
-to guide me whenever I caught glimpses of the daylight between the
-overhanging branches of the trees. Also, I carried in my mind a very
-perfect recollection of the map.
-
-I saw that it was necessary above all else to calm myself, to think the
-matter out, instead of plunging into the business like a bolting horse.
-My destination was the Spaniard's Tomb, and I was in possession of
-certain valuable information, the most of which was quite unknown to
-Amos. The Wood of the Red Fish itself was diamond-shaped, the four
-angles approximately directed towards the north, south, east, and west.
-Now, the Big Fish lay somewhere in the very centre of the Wood; and I
-had formerly journeyed to the place from the south, following the Brook
-of Scarlet Pebbles. This brook--as I had observed--flowed in a
-north-westerly direction, towards the morass, which I had passed at the
-end of the ravine in which I had just left William Rushby.
-
-During the earlier days when I had adventured all alone, when I had
-discovered both the Glade of Silent Death and the Tomb of Orellano's
-soldier, I am convinced that I had never crossed the Brook of Scarlet
-Pebbles. Indeed, I could scarce have done so without noticing at once
-the singular character of the stream. I had become, during these months
-extraordinarily observant; and my attention would certainly have been
-attracted by the peculiar red stones with which the bed of the brook was
-strewn. Hence, by a simple process of deduction, I was forced to the
-conclusion that the Spaniard's Tomb must be somewhere in the
-north-westerly part of the Wood; and the reader will the better
-understand me if he glances at the map which I myself have made, and
-which he must not think a facsimile of the real parchment map whereon
-the Tomb was not even mentioned.
-
-[Illustration: Map of the Wood of the Red Fish]
-
-I was now, as I knew, somewhere on the southern side of the brook; and
-that was the wrong side, if I was to find the Tomb with as little delay
-as possible. Aided, therefore, by the position of the morning sun, I
-directed my footsteps in a northerly direction, and came early in the
-afternoon upon the Brook of Scarlet Pebbles, to the north of the Big
-Fish. Thence, I decided to journey due eastward, hoping, sooner or
-later, to come upon some place that I would recognise, which would
-inform me of my whereabouts.
-
-Sunset overtook me when I was in the very heart of the jungle. There
-was just time to search for food before the darkness came; and then I
-lay down to rest without venturing to light a fire.
-
-I remember well that, at the time, I was surprised that I did not find
-myself oppressed by the almost overwhelming sense of loneliness that
-hitherto had always come upon me when I journeyed by myself in the midst
-of the silent woods. But, now that I am old, and have thought much upon
-many things, I have an explanation--howbeit somewhat mystical--to
-account for the happiness I then experienced. I knew that I was near my
-friend.
-
-I was fortified by memory. Thus it was with me. And more than that;
-for it looked as if I was to give a helping hand to the great strong man
-whom I had seen first upon the Sussex coast, who had told me of the
-hooded crows, and to whose tales of travel I had listened eagerly, day
-after day, before ever Amos Baverstock and the like of him had stepped
-across my path. I would find the Tomb--upon that I was determined. And
-I would find Bannister as well. Perhaps he was sleeping, even then, not
-two hundred yards away from me, in that tangled, tropic wilderness.
-With so pleasant a reflection I fell sound asleep, and slept until
-daylight wakened me and the birds and monkeys were stirring in the
-trees.
-
-I walked many miles that day, looking everywhere in vain for some tree
-or stream that I should recognise, for the burnt-out embers of an old
-camp-fire or the feathers of some bird that I myself had plucked and
-eaten. But I found nothing, until late in the afternoon, when I came,
-of a sudden, upon the dried-up skin of a small woodland deer.
-
-There also were his bones, dried and whitened, all the flesh therefrom
-devoured by creeping insects. And, thinking it more than likely that
-this was the same deer that had served me for many a meal, when I first
-was come into the Wood--the same poor beast that had been crushed to
-death by the great serpent that had lain in hiding beneath the water of
-the pool--I cast about me, and soon found the Glade of Silent Death. And
-now, I knew, I was on the right track to the Tomb, which from this place
-lay towards the south; for I had a first-hand knowledge of all this
-portion of the Wood, where I had sojourned for many days.
-
-Then an idea came to me whereby valuable time might be saved. I was not
-far from the edge of the Wood, and if I could gain this before the
-darkness came I might travel some distance southward by night, to
-continue my searching in the morning. Keeping, therefore, the setting
-sun at my back, I journeyed eastward, and came presently to open
-country, when I travelled a good two miles to the south by the light of
-the rising moon.
-
-Late at night I rested, sleeping till daybreak; and then, entering the
-Wood again, I found by chance one of my old camping-places, and
-following my old trail for several hours came at last--as I
-expected--upon the Tomb of Orellano's soldier.
-
-As it was then almost dark, I hastened immediately to the Tomb, and
-threw back the stone slab. There was light enough for me to see at a
-glance that nothing had been touched. There were the white bones, the
-breast-plate, sword and helmet--exactly as I had left them. I stood
-irresolute a moment, looking down into the grave; and all at once, a
-great fear possessed me that some calamity had overtaken Bannister.
-
-I was here in advance of both him and Amos--which was more than I had
-ever hoped for. The next thing to decide was what to do, and--as will
-be seen, in a moment--I was given no choice in the matter.
-
-Fear spreads, I think, like fire. I was solicitous, at first, for
-Bannister; and then I feared for myself. Or there may be something in
-the notion that the evil that is in a man taints the very atmosphere in
-which he moves. At any rate, even as I thought of Amos Baverstock, I
-became filled, on a sudden, with my old dread of him. I stood
-shivering, as if from cold, beneath the trees, by the side of that
-ancient grave, whilst the darkness spread around me.
-
-And then it was that the voice of Amos Baverstock himself came to my
-ears with such startling suddenness that I was taken unawares. It was
-just as if I had received some kind of electric shock. I straightened
-with a jerk, and I verily believe that my heart itself stood still.
-
-I had not been able to hear the exact words he used; but I knew only too
-well the hard, strident tones of his voice. I think he called upon
-Joshua Trust to make haste and not to lag behind, and the language that
-he used was vile as always.
-
-I stood where I was, stock-still, like one transfixed. And then I heard
-the breaking of the undergrowth, as someone rapidly approached.
-
-I felt much as a mouse must feel, when the trapdoor closes after him. I
-was spurred into sudden action. And yet there was nothing I could do.
-
-If I rushed into the thickets, my enemies must hear me. And what chance
-had my blow-pipe against a leaden bullet? I looked up at the trees
-around me, and saw at once that there was not one that I could climb
-without a deal of trouble. And yet, Amos himself was coming nearer and
-nearer, as I could tell by the breaking of the underwoods and the dead
-sticks upon the ground. On a sudden, without a thought, I jumped down
-into the Tomb, and pulled the stone slab into its place above me.
-
-It is easy to say that this was the action of a fool. I attempt no more
-than to relate what happened. That no man in a calm moment would have
-done anything so rash and stupid, I would never for a moment deny. I
-was, however, very far from calm. If the truth be told, I was afraid.
-I hid my face like an ostrich--for that is all it comes to.
-
-And as soon as I found myself lying at full length upon those white and
-aged bones in the darkness of the grave, I realised that I was
-lost--that it had been far better for me had I fled into the jungle.
-Amos himself must shift the slab to search the Tomb for the map that he
-believed he would find within.
-
-And presently, through the opening in the slab, I heard, with a
-distinctness that was indeed alarming, the voice of the man himself.
-
-"It is here!" he cried. "We've found it, as I said we would!"
-
-From the certain fact that no one answered him, I judged that Baverstock
-was alone; and I was the more sure of this, since I could hear the
-footsteps of but a single man upon the thin stone above me. And I began
-to reckon what my chances would amount to, if it came to a square fight
-between the two of us, with no one to intervene.
-
-Then I remembered that I was unarmed; for I had left my blow-pipe above
-ground, though the chances were that it was now so dark that he might
-not notice it. By the noise he made, his grunting and his muttered
-oaths, I judged that he was searching for the means to lift the slab.
-
-I touched the stone above me with my fingers; and when I felt it moving,
-I knew that the hour of my ordeal was come. I must fight and defend
-myself, or die--and very likely both. I rose as the stone was lifted,
-and, as I did so, placed the Spaniard's helmet on my head and took up
-the rusted sword.
-
-Amos threw aside the slab, and then jumped backward, as I stood up in
-the grave, waist-deep in mother earth.
-
-It was that half-light which is neither night nor day--a weird and
-ghostly light, pervading like a mist the shadows of the Wood. Small
-wonder that that evil man thought that he beheld the resurrection of a
-corpse!
-
-He let out a shriek--such a shriek as I never heard before or
-since--that seemed as if it must have been audible for miles throughout
-the evening silence of the jungle. It was the shriek of one whose hair
-stands upright on his head. He stood before me quaking at the knees;
-and then he found his voice again.
-
-"Mercy!" he cried.
-
-And at that I rushed upon him with my sword.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXI--I AM MADE A GHOST, AND THEN A FOOL
-
-
-I sprang at him with my sword, the rusty blade that I had filched from
-those grim and whitened bones.
-
-The man was at my mercy. He was unarmed, having laid aside his rifle
-before he approached the Tomb. He trembled in every limb as he fled
-before my onslaught, and cried out aloud for pity, as I jabbed at him in
-a kind of vicious frenzy.
-
-In the twilight his face looked pale-green in colouring, and his little
-pig-like eyes seemed in danger of springing from his head. It would be
-difficult to conceive an expression upon which abject terror was more
-strongly marked.
-
-Amos Baverstock was an evil man in many ways, and a brave man in others;
-else he had never risked his life so often amid the dangers of the
-tropic wilderness. Courage of a sort he had in plenty, but, because he
-was evil in his nature, he feared death and all connected with the
-grave, though I had never thought to find him as superstitious as he
-was. He had always struck me as a hard, calculating man, who looked
-upon the practical side of all things. And yet, without a doubt, he now
-took me for a ghost.
-
-And after all--when the full facts are considered--his mistake was
-excusable; even to-day, when I call to mind that scene which was enacted
-in the half-light of the woods, I am inclined to laugh at it all, for
-there was something ludicrous about it.
-
-I wore the helmet of the dead man, and had sprung at Amos out of the
-Tomb, without giving him time to think. Assuredly, in his eyes, what
-else could I have been but an infuriated ghost, dangerous and active
-because my peace and solitude had been disturbed.
-
-I thrust at him savagely in the darkness, whilst he hurried here and
-there, in and out among the trees, yelling like a fiend. How hideous he
-was! I can see him now, with his hunchback, his green face, his staring
-eyes, his mouth contorted in terror. For all that he was quick and
-agile, and once or twice eluded a sword-thrust that would have pierced
-him to the heart.
-
-And then, at last, I had him. I carried my sword in my right hand, and,
-as I lunged, he jumped aside, towards the left. As quick as thought I
-caught him by the throat. Whereat he fell down before me on his quaking
-knees, and clasped his hands in the attitude of one who pleads for
-mercy.
-
-He was in my power. I said not a word, but clenched my teeth, and
-looked into those eyes that even then I feared. I drew back my sword,
-and then paused a moment; for I had no liking for the work, which was
-the hangman's job.
-
-"Mercy!" he groaned.
-
-I took in a deep breath, like a man about to dive. I felt that I must
-brace myself for this red task of common justice. I looked at his body,
-clothed in tatters, to select a spot most vulnerable where I might
-plunge my rusted sword.
-
-"Mercy!" he cried again.
-
-I clenched my teeth. I was on the point of speaking, but fortunately
-did not.
-
-I could hear him breathing heavily.
-
-And thereupon, on a sudden, I was felled by some one who had crept upon
-me from behind. I was felled like an ox. A single blow upon the back
-of the head sent me over like a ninepin, and I lay stretched at my full
-length upon the ground, but half-conscious, with a singing sensation in
-my head.
-
-Presently I sat up and looked about me. There was Amos, still upon his
-knees, as green as ever. And immediately above me stood one whom I did
-well to recognise as Mr. Gilbert Forsyth.
-
-That place was dimly illumined by the white light of the newly-risen
-moon, turning the leaves upon the trees above us to a glistening silver.
-
-Forsyth was wearing the remnants of a pair of trousers, the legs of
-which ended in a tattered fringe a little below his knees. He was naked
-to the waist, around which was a belt, crammed with knives and pistols.
-
-I remembered his curled whiskers and his pomaded moustache on the
-morning when I had first set eyes upon him, when I lay hidden in the
-gorse-bush. His fair hair now had grown so long that it reached to his
-shoulders; and his whiskers had spread into a short, shaggy beard, which
-was divided somewhat in the middle like that of a Frenchman or a Sikh.
-I had thought of him always as a very immaculate gentleman; but here was
-a desperate, piratical blade who, one might easily believe, chewed glass
-and compelled his unhappy victims to walk the plank.
-
-He looked at me and folded his arms; and then spoke in a voice quite
-calm.
-
-"And who the blazes are you?" he asked.
-
-I was wise enough not to answer. Ghosts--so far as I knew--could never
-speak. And was I not a ghost?
-
-If I had been a fool to go down into the Tomb, I showed at least a
-little wisdom in now holding my tongue. For this, however, I take no
-credit. I could not foresee the course that events would take. I had
-been surprised and mastered, and cursed myself because I had not killed
-Amos out of hand, when the man was in my power. Disappointed, disgusted
-with myself, I was stubborn as a mule. They might do what they would,
-they might torture me, but still I would not speak.
-
-Forsyth repeated his question; and for answer, I rushed again at Amos,
-and even then would have killed him, had not the other caught me in his
-arms and held me fast.
-
-The man was stronger than I thought; for, though I kicked and struggled,
-I could not free myself. Amos, as he watched us, regained a little of
-his commonsense, and got slowly upon his feet.
-
-"No ghost," said he. "No ghost." And he went on repeating the words as
-if he were a parrot.
-
-"Ghost!" laughed Forsyth. "If this is a ghost, he is a warm-blooded
-one, and as vicious as they make 'em."
-
-"Then, who is he?" asked Baverstock. "I swear to you, he came out of
-the Tomb, as I'm a living man."
-
-"And he's another," added Forsyth. "Who he is, or what business he has
-in such a place as this, I can no more say than you can. None the less,
-the circumstantial evidence is all against mortality. I am reminded, my
-friend, of the Carthaginian Queen: '_Exoriare aliquis nostris ex ossibus
-ultor_'--(May some avenger arise from my bones). I call this individual
-'Hannibal,' on that account."
-
-"Who wants your Latin gibberish!" cried Amos. "Look plain facts in the
-face; call a spade a spade."
-
-"Also," said Forsyth, in his usual sing-song voice, "call a man a man,
-and not a ghost."
-
-"If he's alive," said Amos, coming even nearer, "then, who is he? I
-tell you, when I lifted the tombstone, he sprang forth like a
-Jack-in-a-box, and, had it not been for you, I would never have escaped
-with life."
-
-"I have told you already," said the other, "I know no more of him than
-you do."
-
-It was then that they were joined by the Spaniard, Vasco, and Joshua
-Trust, who came together from the darkness of the thickets into the full
-light of the moon. And when they saw me, they also were afraid; for I
-still wore the helmet on my head and stood at no great distance from the
-open grave.
-
-Forsyth explained the situation in a few words, with many a wave of the
-hand, as if he introduced us. Baverstock, in the meantime, was rapidly
-becoming his normal self. He seemed to have forgotten, for the time
-being, the very object of his journey.
-
-"There's some mischief here!" on a sudden he exclaimed. "Rushby told us
-we would find the map beneath the helmet of the Spaniard."
-
-At this, Forsyth laughed, and pointed straight at me.
-
-"And since our Hannibal," he observed, "wears such a headgear somewhat
-out of fashion, we may safely presume that he could tell us where the
-map is, if he had the power to make us understand--which, for myself, I
-doubt."
-
-The truth then dawned upon me on the instant. Mr. Gilbert Forsyth, for
-all his cleverness and calmness, was as fully in the wrong as Amos
-Baverstock had been; for he believed me to be a savage, whereas the
-other had taken me for a ghost, the awful apparition of a bygone Spanish
-soldier. If I had refused to speak before from sheer pigheadedness, I
-was now resolved to play the part that I was cast for, putting my trust
-in Providence and fortified by resolution. Though they burnt my flesh
-with red-hot irons, I was determined I would never speak.
-
-They questioned me in every barbarous language that they knew. Vasco
-and Amos himself were my inquisitors, for Trust was no scholar, and
-Forsyth's learning went no further than the dead classic tongues, and, I
-believe, a little French. But I just gaped at them like a fool, and at
-last they gave it up as a bad business; and Amos, by now well convinced
-that I was human, struck me a cowardly blow across the mouth.
-
-They looked in the Tomb; they searched everywhere for the map. They
-made a great fire of brushwood that they might see the better, and
-neglected no possible hiding-place where that little strip of parchment
-might be hidden. They looked inside my quiver, and even in the hollow
-of my blow-pipe. And then, at length, quite late at night, they gave it
-up. And in an ill mood they were, especially Trust and Amos.
-
-They must have thought, however, that I was likely to be of some use to
-them, for they bound me hand and foot before I was permitted to lie down
-to rest. They were evidently not disposed to set me free, until they
-had solved the riddle I presented. They were altogether at a loss to
-explain who I was or why--apparently of my own free will--I had gone
-down into that grim and ancient vault. I think, even then, they
-connected me in some way or other with Bannister himself.
-
-Left alone, I was given time to think, and I lay awake that night for
-many hours, wondering what would happen.
-
-There were exactly three reasons why they should not have recognised me:
-firstly, I was so altered in appearance, so brown and wrinkled by the
-sun, with my hair all long and shaggy, that I do not think my own mother
-herself would have known me; secondly, my face had been half-hidden by
-the helmet I had worn; and, thirdly--the most potent fact of all--they
-never dreamed for a moment that I was yet alive. Months before, they had
-tied me to a tree, and left me to starve to death in the great forest
-many miles away across the plain beyond Cahazaxa's Temple. And, as I
-remembered this, it occurred to me that, even if they were to recognise
-me, they might again believe me to be a ghost, since for so long they
-had been certain I was dead.
-
-These were my thoughts as I lay awake, too near the fire for comfort;
-and as I was thinking, I observed a singular phenomenon, which at first
-gave me cause for new alarm.
-
-Amos, Forsyth, and Vasco were sound asleep, and Joshua Trust was on
-watch, seated on the ground a little way from me. He was not
-particularly alert. Indeed, he was occupied in the kind of pastime that
-amused him. With a red-hot firebrand in his hand, he was killing, one
-by one, the little insects that crawled upon the ground.
-
-I looked past him into the thickets, and at once I could have sworn that
-I observed a pair of eyes in which the firelight was reflected--eyes
-that steadily regarded me. Now, I might have believed these eyes to be
-those of a jaguar, were it not that they resembled the eyes of a man,
-and I knew for a fact that John Bannister was on the trail.
-
-I made neither sound nor movement, but at once set out upon this new
-train of thought. Were a jaguar prowling around the camp, and I had
-seen in his eyes the reflection of the firelight, it had been of a
-certainty but a few inches from the ground; for I knew well the habits
-and the nature of this most beautiful of beasts. But these eyes were
-four feet at least above the ground, and, being too large for those of a
-monkey, must belong to a human being--who could be none other than John
-Bannister himself.
-
-Sure of my facts, I was resolved to take no action, though my life
-itself were in the greatest danger. I knew that I might safely leave
-the matter in the hands of an older, wiser, and a stronger man than I.
-
-I saw those eyes for no longer than a few seconds, and then they
-disappeared. I heard no sound, not so much as the stirring of a leaf,
-for the night was strangely still. There was not a breath of wind.
-
-How can I describe the emotions that then swayed me! I knew that I must
-possess my soul in patience, leaving what was best to do to Bannister
-himself. And yet I longed with all my heart to grasp the hand of my
-friend. I knew now, for certain, that he was near to me, watching over
-me, ready to strike a strong blow in my defence when the opportunity
-should offer. And for that reason--so great was my faith in him--I was
-conscious of a sense of security that I had not known for months.
-
-I remembered that I had not seen him since that day when I beheld him
-running across the Sussex fields, with his brown paper parcel under his
-arm, when Forsyth had struck me down with his whip and carried me away,
-to begin my series of adventures. I remembered him, too, as I had seen
-him, standing in the white road looking after us. And he was now quite
-near to me, thousands of miles away from where I had caught my last
-glimpse of him; for it is a long march, in very truth, from the South
-Downs of England to the shadow of the Andes; and much lies between that
-is strange and wonderful and savage--the great ocean, the mystery of
-those broad and endless rivers, and the forest with its eternal twilight
-and dark, silent places where death lies in wait. John Bannister had
-gone forth to find me; and he had found me, at last, after all these
-dreadful days.
-
-How was it possible for me to sleep? I lay awake for hours with quickly
-beating heart, and thought of all that had been and all that might be
-yet to come. I saw Vasco take the watch from Trust, and then Mr.
-Forsyth post himself as sentry towards the early hours of morning. And
-when at length the daylight came, Forsyth looked at me and saw that I
-was awake. We sat for a while, looking straight into one another's
-eyes.
-
-"Friend Hannibal," said he.
-
-But I made no answer. At which he thought--for he was a strange man in
-many ways--to test me with the classics.
-
-"'_Tutum silentii praemium_,'" said he; "or, as we have it, 'Silence is
-ever golden.' However, I believe that you could tell us much, were you
-so disposed."
-
-Still I never answered. He could think what he liked; I was determined
-to hold my peace. For all that, I was considerably disconcerted; for he
-continued to look at me for a long time in a very searching manner, the
-while the daylight grew and the woods became flooded with that faint,
-evanescent twilight that fades and seems to drift, even when the sun is
-at its height.
-
-At last he gave a start, and sat bolt upright, rubbing both his eyes.
-
-"A strange thing!" said he, and continued to look at me, but this time
-with a frown.
-
-"A strange thing, indeed!" he repeated.
-
-There was another pause, during which I had not the courage to look him
-in the face. I had some presentiment of what was now to come; in spite
-of which the suddenness with which he had made it manifest that my
-secret was out, quite took away my breath.
-
-"Allow me," said he, "to offer you my most hearty congratulations. We
-have every reason to presume that Master Richard Treadgold is unloved by
-the gods."
-
-And at that, he held out a hand, and I was obliged to shake with him,
-though I felt at once frightened and a fool.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXII--MR. FORSYTH AND I BECOME BETTER ACQUAINTED
-
-
-Forsyth got to his feet, and to my horror, immediately awakened Amos.
-Then was I certain that my last hour was at hand. I never thought for a
-moment that protection would come to me from a quarter whence I had no
-reason to expect it.
-
-I had always suspected Amos to be a kind of madman; and that grey
-morning in the woods I was, for the first time, convinced of it. He
-behaved like no sane man, but cursed and raved and stamped upon the
-ground, upon which at last he flung himself writhing as if in pain.
-
-He had been both foiled and fooled, and recognised it, too. Months
-before, he had left me in the woods to die, and now beheld me as alive
-as ever, and still standing betwixt him and the goal that he would gain.
-Twice, it appeared, had he lost possession of the map--or that part of
-it which was of the greatest value to him--and on both occasions it was
-through me that he had failed. Besides that, he had taken me for a
-ghost, an apparition; he had fallen down upon his knees before me; and
-had I had the heart in cold blood to plunge my sword into the half naked
-and defenceless body of a living man, Amos Baverstock would now have
-been as dead as the Spanish warrior himself.
-
-Make no mistake in thinking that he felt a shade of gratitude for that.
-It was bitter disappointment and blind, livid fury that mastered what
-sanity was his. He rolled in his wrath here and there about the ground,
-biting the withered leaves and the dead sticks, like the mad dog he was.
-
-Then he got to his feet and swore that he would kill me, and this time
-there would be no muddling in connection with a matter so inordinately
-simple. For this dreadful purpose he took into his hands a long
-hunting-knife, and with this he came toward me. And as he did so, I
-looked over his shoulder, and saw in the midst of the thickets the
-gleaming barrel of a rifle.
-
-I knew then for certain that I was not to die, and smiled into the evil
-face of Amos. John Bannister himself was near at hand, my guardian and
-my friend. Had Amos taken another step, or raised his hand to strike, I
-know he would have dropped stone-dead upon the spot; for Bannister, at
-such a moment, would have counted his own life as nothing. But now I
-come to the strangest part of all my story: it was Mr. Gilbert Forsyth
-who intervened.
-
-"You cannot do this," he drawled.
-
-He had stepped between us. Without violence, almost politely, with an
-arm extended, he pushed Amos aside.
-
-"Why not?" gasped Baverstock, gaping at the other.
-
-"Mainly, my good friend," answered Forsyth, "because it will profit you
-nothing. But there are other reasons. In the first place, last night
-he might have killed you, and did no such thing. Secondly, I am already
-disposed to admire this youth, and to think that it would have been the
-better for us had he been upon our side from the beginning. Thirdly, to
-kill him as you propose would be a foul and dirty business, such as I
-refuse to countenance."
-
-Amos turned upon him like a wild beast.
-
-"You!" he cried. "Who are you to dictate terms to me? Who brought you
-here?"
-
-"I brought myself," said Forsyth, very calmly, "and I brought you and
-Trust as well; for money makes the world go round, and without my worthy
-banker you were still kicking your heels in England. So the less you
-speak of that the better."
-
-I never saw a man more self-possessed; and, on the other hand, I never
-saw one more livid with rage than Amos. On the instant, forgetting me,
-he turned the full current of his wrath upon Mr. Forsyth.
-
-It would be irksome to repeat, word for word, the altercation that took
-place between them; for they fought with words and argued for many hours
-that morning. And whilst this was happening, now and again I shot a
-glance toward the thickets, where I had seen the barrel of the rifle I
-was sure belonged to Bannister. But I saw no further sign of him, and
-heard no sound. I did not know, therefore, whether he was still at
-hand; for as yet I had no experience of his great skill as a woodsman.
-I did not know that, in spite of his bulk, he could move in the
-undergrowth as silently as a snake, and when he struck, he did so with
-the suddenness with which the jaguar springs upon his prey.
-
-For nearly all that morning Forsyth and Amos wrangled, the one to save
-me, and the other to do murder--the one, quiet and calm; the other,
-raving mad.
-
-It was a question, I suppose, of will-power only; and Forsyth conquered
-in the end. Amos, I could see, was utterly exhausted. The fire within
-him had consumed the better part of his vitality and the violence of his
-nature. He was at last reduced to utter speechlessness. He stood
-before us, panting, his shallow chest heaving greatly like a man who has
-run a race. He could not stand steadily upon his feet, but swayed
-about, from one side to the other. I observed, also, a strange
-difference in his eyes. They were no longer glistening and pig-like;
-they were just the wild, staring eyes of a lunatic. And, sure enough, a
-lunatic he was.
-
-He seated himself upon the trunk of a fallen tree, and there he sat for
-many minutes, shivering as if from cold. At last he turned and spoke in
-a weak voice--quite unlike his own--to Joshua Trust.
-
-"Get me water, you dog," he ordered, "and be quick about it."
-
-Trust went to a stream that was not far away; and even as the man
-entered the thickets, I thought that I heard something move beneath the
-trees, a little to his right.
-
-He came back with the water, and Amos drained it at a gulp.
-
-"I would know this," said Trust, standing before them both with folded
-arms. "Who's master now? Who takes the bridge? Whose orders am I
-expected to obey?"
-
-"That's a matter for yourself to settle," answered Mr. Forsyth. "Here
-we are, in the midst of this almighty wilderness; and if we don't hold
-together, as like as not we die. For myself, I am not one who, once he
-has decided on a certain course of action, is easily turned aside. I
-have come this distance to behold the Greater Treasure, and I do not go
-back again until my quest is ended."
-
-At that, Amos brightened up in a manner truly wonderful. The very
-thought of gold was to him a kind of tonic. He got again upon his feet.
-
-"Why, there you speak some sense!" he cried. "I am the last man in the
-world to go back upon my friends. But we can do nothing without the
-map."
-
-"Leave that to me," said Forsyth; "and, sooner or later, I will find it.
-A little subtlety and sense may very well succeed where cold-blooded
-murder must have failed."
-
-And thereupon Forsyth turned to me and, taking me by both shoulders,
-held me at arm's length.
-
-"Dick Hannibal," said he--for he had a singular sense of humour, quite
-his own--"I would have you, as you love me, and are greatly in my debt,
-tell us the whole truth; for I am convinced in my mind that you know all
-there is to know."
-
-I shook my head. I was resolved to be as stubborn as before. And
-besides, I had every reason now to think that John Bannister was
-hovering on the outskirts of the camp, and might at any moment hasten to
-my aid.
-
-Forsyth waited for some minutes. Then he shrugged his shoulders.
-
-"I see," said he, "that neither threats nor violence will be of much
-avail. You may think differently, however, when I prove to you that I
-am neither such a fool, nor yet so soft of heart, as you appear to think
-me.
-
-"We find you in the Tomb," he went on, in his slow, deliberate voice,
-"where we believe the map to have been hidden. You knew, therefore,
-that it was there; and, therefore, also, you have fallen in with Rushby.
-Very well, then, we all go back to Rushby; and what is more, we start
-without delay. We know where we left him, and we know that he cannot
-escape. The question, so far as I can see, presents no difficulty at
-all."
-
-He appeared so confident that I was considerably alarmed, and not
-without some reason, for I knew that I had left William Rushby in
-possession of the map. Yet, Forsyth himself could never have known
-this. He had, however, some definite plan at the back of his mind, and
-appeared so cock-sure of himself that I wished more than ever that I had
-some one with whom I might take counsel.
-
-I had no chance that day to attempt to satisfy my curiosity; for, so
-soon as we had eaten a meal, we packed up what little equipment Amos had
-brought with him from the ravine, and set forward on our march towards
-the west. I calculated that it would not take us more than two days to
-reach the other side of the Wood; for we followed the trail by which
-Amos and the others had come, and it was seldom necessary for him, who
-led the little column, to make use of either axe or bill-hook.
-
-On the first night, I had the privilege of being enlightened by Mr.
-Forsyth, who now appeared to have taken me to some extent into his
-heart--though upon that long march across the Great Forest, when we had
-travelled in one another's company for many months, he had never deigned
-to speak to me on more than one or two occasions.
-
-Amos, on the other hand, gave me as wide a berth as possible, and sat
-regarding me with scowls which--to tell the truth--I could not fail to
-see I shared with Mr. Forsyth. Indeed, I trusted Baverstock so little
-that, when sheer fatigue compelled me to fall asleep, I did so in the
-firm conviction that the man might plunge a knife into my heart at any
-moment. He was sullen and morose, addressing himself only to Trust and
-the Spaniard, Vasco, and then never without an oath, and in the voice of
-one who gives orders to a dog.
-
-But the case was very different with Mr. Forsyth, whose demeanour was
-scrupulously polite.
-
-"I would delight to hear your story from the first," he said to me; "for
-I cannot believe that you have arrived so far as this without some very
-exceptional adventures."
-
-"I did not know," said I, "that my affairs meant anything to you."
-
-"On the contrary, you interest me vastly," he replied. "Consider, had
-it not been for my humble self, you had now been lying with your throat
-cut beside the open grave--or, perhaps, we might have buried you, with
-some pretence of decent feelings."
-
-And so I told him as much as I thought it would do him no harm to
-hear--of how I had been found by the wild men of the woods, and had
-journeyed by myself to Cahazaxa's Temple. Thence, I told him, I had
-found my way to the Wood of the Red Fish, where I had had the good
-fortune to fall in with William Rushby. But I told him nothing of
-Atupo, the Peruvian priest, or of the map which I myself had found by so
-singular a chance, or of the Treasure that my living eyes had looked
-upon.
-
-"And this is all your story?" he asked.
-
-I thought it best not to answer him; but I saw by the sly, half-amused
-expression upon his face that he knew well enough that I would keep him
-half in the dark.
-
-He said nothing for a long time. And then quite suddenly, he slapped a
-hand upon a knee.
-
-"Upon my life and soul," he cried, "you are a lad of spirit, such as I
-myself once was, until I learned that in this world it is best to assume
-a pose! Let me explain to you. There are certain commodities upon the
-earth that all men are ever after, and money is the first of these. We
-are, therefore, all enemies of one another; we scramble in the same
-gutter--to such heights has civilisation attained. Be set down for a
-fool, a lazy rascal and a fop, and it is easy enough to take by surprise
-those who think they have the whip-hand of you. You have had an example
-of this yourself in your own brief experience of Gilbert Forsyth. When
-you made off from John Bannister's cabin, on the morning when you saw us
-first, you never suspected that I was the one who would catch you. And
-so now. It is I who will outwit you, where friend Amos, with his knife
-and oaths, has failed already."
-
-I pricked my ears at that; for my curiosity was roused.
-
-"And where are we going?" I asked.
-
-"To William Rushby," he answered, "sometime boatswain of the _Mary
-Greenfield_."
-
-"And why?" I asked.
-
-He laughed outright.
-
-"You must learn to see things," he observed, "from the point of view of
-others. Remember that I am well aware of this: Rushby and you, when you
-met, compared notes and hatched a plot together. John Bannister himself
-may, or may not, have been a party to your mild conspiracy. That is a
-point that does not affect the issue. I am not so sure Rushby spoke the
-truth when he told us he had hidden the map in the Spaniard's Tomb;
-otherwise, I cannot see why we did not find it. I go back to Rushby,
-and I take you with me, to learn the real truth."
-
-"How will you do that?" I asked.
-
-I thought, at first, that he had ignored the question; for he answered
-in a round-about way.
-
-"There is a game of cards called Poker," he observed, "at which I myself
-am tolerably proficient. In this game--with which you are too young to
-be well acquainted--there is a method of gaining by what is known as
-Bluff. Amos played the game of Bluff on Bannister, and failed. He
-tried it again on Rushby, and was singularly successful. In other words,
-Baverstock pretended that he held you in his power, and he was never
-asked to show his cards. To bluff, therefore is a risky business, which
-should be practised only in moments of emergency or urgent need. I go
-now to William Rushby, to lay my hand upon the table, knowing for a
-certainty that I hold the best card in the pack."
-
-"I quite fail to understand you," said I, shaking my head; for all this
-was so much double Dutch to me.
-
-"You," said Forsyth, "are the best card in the pack. There is no
-occasion for us to bluff. We have you in our power, as we have also
-Rushby. Between you, you know the truth. If one will not speak, the
-other will. If neither speaks, Amos can have his way, and both of you
-can leave your bones in this savage country, where you have ventured of
-your own free will."
-
-I saw now there was nothing about the matter so subtle as I had thought.
-After all, it was no more than the old game they had played from the
-beginning.
-
-"I see," said I, quite slowly.
-
-"I am glad of that," said Forsyth.
-
-Whereupon he lay down upon his side, and almost immediately fell sound
-asleep.
-
-And for a long time I watched him slumbering, and wondered greatly upon
-the strange complexity of the man's character. He was polished and
-refined, and something of a scholar, too, if there was real learning
-behind his tags of Latin. He was also not without humanity and a sense
-of justice; else I had now been dead for a whole day and night--and that
-I was still alive I was profoundly grateful. And still, he was a
-villain, as cold-blooded as Amos himself, and more dangerous in the
-sense that he was saner.
-
-These were the thoughts that carried me far into the night. Trust was
-again on sentry; and as I watched the man, I observed that he was
-nodding by the fire. Plainly, he was three parts asleep. Were my hands
-not bound behind my back, it would be a simple matter to escape. And as
-this thought came into my head--lo and behold!--_I was free_!
-
-Someone had approached quite silently from behind me, from the direction
-of the thickets. In a trice, a sharp knife had cut my bonds. And--as I
-have stated--I was free.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIII--HOW AMOS GAINED POSSESSION OF THE MAP
-
-
-The thing was done so swiftly that I had no time even to look round. I
-sat regarding the burly figure of Joshua Trust, very definitely outlined
-before the red glow of the fire; and I know that the man never suspected
-for a moment what had happened.
-
-Someone whispered in my ear:
-
-"Keep an eye on Trust. Draw back into the thickets as silently as you
-can. There you will find me waiting for you."
-
-I had no need to look at him. I knew the voice of John Bannister, even
-though he did no more than whisper. I was resolved to carry out his
-instructions to the word.
-
-Bannister withdrew. I neither heard nor saw him go, but I felt
-instinctively that he was no longer at my back.
-
-I sat watching Joshua Trust, and saw that the man's chin had dropped
-upon his chest. It was plain to see that, though he tried his best to
-keep awake, he was so sleepy that he could not do so. But, knowing that
-there would be trouble of a certainty if Amos caught him sleeping on his
-post, he might awaken with a start at any moment, and for that reason I
-thought that I had best take the chance that offered.
-
-I had been sitting upright, and still kept my hands behind my back,
-though they were no longer bound together. Moving my attitude as little
-as possible, I drew myself backwards, inch by inch. By this cautious
-method it took me the better part of three minutes to gain the margin of
-the undergrowth--a distance of ten yards at the very most. There I was
-suddenly lifted off my feet, carried a short distance and released, to
-grasp my old friend by the hand.
-
-And so he had found me at last, though it seemed to me for all the world
-as if it was I who had discovered him. He had fulfilled the oath he had
-sworn to my mother many months before; and from this moment we were
-never again to be parted throughout our great adventure.
-
-His story I had learned from William Rushby; but Bannister as yet knew
-nothing of what had happened to me, since he had not seen me from the
-day when I was kidnapped upon the Littlehampton road. But there was no
-time then to talk to one another. With as small delay as possible, we
-must get well beyond the reach of Amos and his friends.
-
-That night we journeyed in one another's company for several hours
-through the darkness of the woods. We could not see where we were
-going, for it was not possible to see a hand before one's face, and we
-were scratched most painfully and often upon the thorn-trees that were
-plentiful amid the underwoods. But this was of no great account, if our
-own safety were ensured; for, sooner or later, Joshua must see that I
-was gone, and would at once give the alarm; and if we were not well out
-of the way by then, it was quite possible that we might be overtaken,
-and our plight would be as bad as ever.
-
-So we hurried blindly on our way, until at last John Bannister deemed
-that we were safe. Then it was that I learned for the first time how
-utterly exhausted he was. He had had no sleep, he told me, for two
-nights, and he was still weak from the fever which had robbed him of
-more than half his strength.
-
-"Let us sleep, Dick," said he. "To-morrow there will be time enough for
-you to tell me all I want to know."
-
-And thereupon we lay down to sleep together, side by side, in the dense
-wood in which I had wandered for so long alone; and, strange as it may
-seem, we slept hand in hand.
-
-I experienced a sense of security and peace such as I had never known,
-it seemed to me, for years. He and I were at last together; and on the
-morrow he must hear all my story, just as I myself had once been wont to
-listen to his wondrous tales of enterprise and daring. I know that I
-was happy, and I also know the reason: I had often dreamed--as boys will
-let their fancy run away with them--that he and I were sojourning
-together in some savage place, beset by many dangers. And I always knew
-that, if he were with me, there would be naught to fear; we would come
-forth unscathed from every peril that threatened life or limb.
-
-In all conscience, we had enough of danger now, on every side of us, in
-the darkness of the Wood. And yet I slept, contented and at peace.
-
-Daylight awoke us, for we were both creatures of the Wild. Marking the
-position of the sun, we set forward towards the west, hoping to gain
-that night the ravine where we had left William Rushby.
-
-Bannister told me that he feared for Rushby's life, since he was sure
-that Amos and the others would return to the ravine with all possible
-speed, so soon as ever they discovered that I had escaped from their
-clutches. I thought by now that I had a fair knowledge of the
-topography of the Wood; but I soon found that Bannister knew as much, or
-even more, than I. In the night we must have fled towards the south;
-for we had not gone far upon the route that we had chosen before we came
-upon the Brook of Scarlet Pebbles.
-
-"I know where we are," cried Bannister, at once. "We are about five
-miles to the south of the Big Fish itself. I can tell that by the size
-of the stones in the stream. We had better change our course towards
-the south."
-
-"But that will take us away from the ravine," said I, "which lies due
-west of the Wood, some distance to the north of the Spaniard's Tomb!"
-
-"You're right, there," said Bannister. "It may be a long way round; but
-the longest way is often the quickest, Dick. In a few hours we should
-be clear of the Wood, although too far to the south. But we shall have
-open country before us, and should march four miles an hour."
-
-I had, by now, told Bannister my story of all that had happened to me
-since I first fell into the hands of Amos Baverstock. He asked few
-questions, though these were always to the point; and when I had told
-him everything, he said nothing, but just placed one of his great hands
-upon my shoulder, and patted me so affectionately that the action
-conveyed far more to me than any words he might have used. I knew that
-he cared for me more than he dared trust himself to say, and, moreover,
-he approved of all that I had done.
-
-So we journeyed towards the north-west, and came, full early in the
-afternoon, to open country. Before us we could see the rocky spurs and
-ridges--which were, in fact, the beginning of the foothills of the
-Andes--running northward for several miles, to end quite suddenly at the
-morass.
-
-John Bannister had changed greatly since the days when I knew him first.
-He looked as big and strong as ever, but had become pitifully thin; and
-I thought his hair was greyer, and there were deeper lines upon his
-forehead. His mouth I could not see, for he had grown a great beard,
-more than touched with grey. And this beard, merged into his long
-moustache, was spread like the beard of a paladin upon his chest.
-
-We directed our way northward in a bee-line, so far as we could judge,
-towards the ravine where we had left William Rushby; and this compelled
-us to clamber over the rocky hillocks and to cross the gullies and
-declivities that intervened. It was hard work, and the sun was baking
-hot. And yet Bannister would not halt, even for food, for we both knew
-well enough that the boatswain's life was in the greatest danger.
-
-"If Baverstock gets there before us," said he, "not only will he gain
-possession of the map, and thereby learn the secret of the Treasure, but
-there is very little doubt that he will put Rushby to death."
-
-"I think so, too," said I. "He has been baulked so often that he will
-not care to take further risks. However, I now believe the man to be
-quite mad. Last evening I saw him look for a long time at Forsyth, and
-I swear there was murder in his eye."
-
-"No such criminals are wholly sane," said Bannister. "Amos has done
-murder more than once, and he will never hesitate to do it again, if he
-thinks that he sees profit in the business. Rushby is defenceless. His
-wound has become septic, though I have dressed it often with what skill
-I have. There is a chance that the evil may spread; and in that case
-nothing can save his life but amputation of the leg. And that, of
-course, we have neither the means of doing, nor the skill to do it if we
-had."
-
-We were silent for a long time after that, though we hastened our
-footsteps, knowing that life and death were in the scales.
-
-I was soon utterly fatigued, and could not fail to see that Bannister as
-well was well-nigh at the end of all his strength. For all that, we
-would not give in; for William Rushby was an honest man, to whom we both
-owed much, and we were determined, if we could, to save his life.
-
-Presently, we began to doubt whether we would reach the ravine before
-nightfall; for the sun, as we could see, was descending rapidly towards
-the crestline of the Andes. Once only did Bannister pause, and then he
-stood stock-still upon a hill-top, shading his eyes with the palm of a
-hand and looking towards the west.
-
-"Was ever anything more wonderful!" said he. "I can never look upon a
-mountain without thinking of Coleridge's _Hymn before Sunrise_: 'Earth
-with her thousand voices, praises God.'"
-
-He stood for a while like a man in a dream; and I, also shading my eyes,
-followed the direction of his gaze, and saw again the great and glorious
-mountains in the distance, like a rugged battlement, scarred and
-crumbled throughout aeons of old Time, rising thousands of feet before
-the red sky of evening. And I, too, though I knew naught of the poet,
-felt within me a sense of great awe and reverence for the most mighty
-works of God.
-
-I would have lingered there, I cannot say how long, had not Bannister
-taken me by a hand and led me forcibly away with such long strides that
-I was obliged to run. He looked straight in front of him as he walked.
-I could see that he was preoccupied with his thoughts, and I did not
-care to interrupt them. Looking about me, I thought I recognised the
-country. I was certain we could not be far from the ravine.
-
-And a little after, on a sudden, we heard a shot, fired but a little
-distance to the front of us, towards the right.
-
-Without a word we both began to run, and came, unexpectedly, upon the
-very head of the ravine.
-
-The sun was now behind us; and we could see clearly all there was to
-see. Far down the ravine was the solitary tree to which Bannister had
-been bound when Amos had threatened him with death. And a few yards
-from this, near where the old camping-ground had been, were the figures
-of three men hastening in our direction; and these we recognised at once
-as Forsyth, Trust, and Amos Baverstock himself. Vasco we saw a little
-after come forth from the shadows of the Wood, so laden with cooking
-utensils and the like that he might have been a pack-mule, for he was
-doubled almost in half.
-
-However, we took little notice of him; for our eyes were fixed upon the
-pathetic figure of poor Rushby, who was limping in great agony as he
-tried to run. It was clear from the first that he had little chance of
-escaping. It was inevitable that he must be overtaken almost at once.
-Suddenly he pitched forward upon his face, and lay quite still upon the
-ground; and, since no shot had been fired, we guessed that he had
-fainted from pain and exhaustion. Amos pounced upon him as a cat
-springs upon a mouse.
-
-I was, of course, unarmed, for I had left my blow-pipe by the Tomb. But
-Bannister, who carried his rifle, hesitated to shoot, for a very natural
-reason: at that range, if he fired at Amos, as like as not he might hit
-William Rushby. So, together, we set forward running, hoping that even
-yet we might not be too late to save the boatswain's life.
-
-Amos was on his hands and knees by the side of Rushby; and as we
-approached he sprang to his feet, waving something in his hand.
-
-"He has got the map!" cried Bannister, who at once brought his rifle to
-his shoulder and fired straight at Amos.
-
-The singing of the bullet must have made Baverstock realise that he was
-not by any means as safe as he would like. For the man cast no more
-than a glance in our direction, and then turned upon his heel, to set
-off running down the ravine as fast as his legs could carry him.
-
-Trust followed his example; and Vasco, the Spaniard, turned at once back
-into the Wood. I saw that Forsyth hesitated for a moment; and then,
-knowing full well that his strength was as nothing when compared to that
-of Bannister, he also turned and fled.
-
-Bannister fired two more shots; but, as he was out of breath from
-running, neither of these had any effect upon Amos, at whom they were
-directed, save that they were near enough to make him run the faster.
-
-Our first care, at any rate, was for William Rushby, who--as we
-guessed--had fainted from his great efforts to escape. He regained
-consciousness as soon as ever his face was bathed with water; and then,
-sitting up, he looked at us and groaned.
-
-"He has taken it?" he asked.
-
-Bannister tugged at his beard and shot a glance towards the Wood.
-
-"Yes," said he. "At last Amos has the map. By to-morrow evening he
-will have found the Big Fish. After all these years he will be able to
-feast his eyes upon the Greater Treasure of the Incas."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIV--HOW AMOS WAS POSSESSED OF SEVEN DEVILS
-
-
-I felt, at that moment, so despondent that I was disposed to burst into
-tears, to cry like a child through utter disappointment. For a minute
-we discussed the matter between ourselves, and tried in vain to see one
-ray of daylight. Look at it as we might, from every aspect, the
-situation seemed just about as bad as it could be.
-
-Bannister himself was too exhausted to continue the pursuit, and Rushby
-was a wounded man, whom, in any case, we dared not again leave alone in
-the ravine.
-
-"What is to be done?" I asked. And there was something so woeful in my
-expression that Bannister smiled.
-
-"We must make the best of a bad business, Dick," said he. "After all,
-Rushby's life is of more account than the Treasure. Clearly, it is not
-safe for us to remain here in open country. We must return to the Wood,
-and find a place where we can hide. A few hours' rest, and I shall have
-strength enough to go on; but I am not disposed to leave my comrade
-until his life is out of danger."
-
-As he spoke, he placed a hand upon Rushby's shoulder; and I saw by the
-look in the boatswain's face that he thought no less of John Bannister
-than I.
-
-"You'll not wait for me, sir," the boatswain answered. "I want nothing
-better than to see Amos run to earth; for I have not forgotten the
-voyage of the _Mary Greenfield_, when mainly through him I was cast into
-irons. Besides, it's my fault that he has now got the map, and I'll
-never cease to blame myself for that."
-
-"Forget it all!" said Bannister. "And as for future plans, they can
-wait till we are rested. The sooner we are out of this place the
-better; for we know not what Baverstock may do."
-
-Then and there we gathered together what little baggage we possessed, as
-well as everything that Amos had left behind him when he had hurried
-from the camp. There were two rifles between us--and we wanted no more,
-since Rushby was a casualty; but we could find only ten rounds of
-ammunition, and I was without my blow-pipe.
-
-I loaded myself with the rifles and equipment, whereas Bannister picked
-up Rushby in his arms and carried him into the Wood. There we had not
-long to search before we found a good hiding-place, a little hollow in
-the midst of the thickets, where, Bannister told us, a jaguar had reared
-her cubs. There was a stream near by, that connected, beyond doubt,
-with the Brook of Scarlet Pebbles, and we were therefore well supplied
-with water.
-
-Almost at once the three of us fell fast asleep. For myself, I had
-never been so fatigued; and yet I awoke at daybreak, and immediately,
-without disturbing my companions, went forth in search of food, and did
-not return until I had as many wild fruits and berries as I could
-conveniently carry in Bannister's haversack. I then made a fire; and
-whilst I was thus employed the other two awakened.
-
-Bannister's first office was to attend to the boatswain's wound. This
-he washed and dressed--very skilfully, I thought--and then ordered
-Rushby to lie quite still and to make no attempt to move.
-
-Whilst we were eating we talked of what was best to do; and in this
-argument the boatswain took a leading part. He had a mind of his own,
-and was determined, from the first, to have his way.
-
-He told us that he was well enough where he was, if we left him food to
-eat and a pannikin of water within reach, so that there would be no need
-for him to move. As for John Bannister and me, we must take the two
-rifles and what ammunition there was, and set forward without delay
-towards the Big Fish, to find Baverstock and his three companions.
-
-"Though the odds are two to one against you," he added, "that will make
-no difference. Stalk him, as you would a wild beast, and put a bullet
-through the scoundrel, as he comes up from the vault. This evening he
-will be there or thereabouts. Our one consolation is that he has no
-means of taking the Treasure away. But you must be quick, sir; for I'm
-open to a wager that Baverstock goes back across the plain, to find
-forest Indians to work for him under the whip, that he may carry all
-this gold to one of the rivers, and thence down-stream in more than one
-canoe."
-
-There was little question that William Rushby had got the hang of the
-affair. Indeed, all that he predicted was, or might have been, the
-truth. It was not so much, I think, because Bannister wished to thwart
-his ancient enemy, as because he desired to see for himself how the
-whole business would end, that we set forward into the Wood at about
-midday, our destination being the Red Fish itself.
-
-Bannister told me that you could not reach the Treasure from the
-northern side, because the brook there opened out into a swamp, where
-you could sink to the neck in mud, to be eaten alive by leeches. It was
-therefore necessary for us to journey by a circuitous route towards the
-west, until we came upon the Brook of Scarlet Pebbles, somewhere to the
-south of the tunnel that led to the Fish. However, we had the sun to
-guide us, and both Bannister and I were well acquainted with the Wood.
-
-And now, for once, I must tell my story from a point of view other than
-my own, and follow, for a few hours, the fortunes of Amos Baverstock.
-Afterwards, I was destined to behold with my own eyes the raving lunacy
-of that unhappy man, and to witness the spectacle of a tragedy, at once
-gruesome and fantastic. But first, I tell the story as I heard it from
-the lips of Mr. Forsyth; and very weird it is.
-
-With the map in his possession, Amos set forth without delay to feast
-his eyes upon the Treasure. Though his three companions were overcome
-by fatigue, and there was but half an hour that evening before sunset,
-the hunchback would not halt until darkness compelled him to do so; and
-that night the excited and disordered condition of his mind would not
-allow him to sleep.
-
-He had them up in the small hours that they might be ready to start at
-daybreak; and they struck the Brook of Scarlet Pebbles early that
-morning, but a few miles to the north of the Big Fish.
-
-Forsyth afterwards told us that all that day Amos never spoke, but
-forged ahead with the map in his hand, the others following as best they
-could. The man was now blinded by his own greed and avarice. He seemed
-alike incapable of fatigue and insensible to physical pain; for he
-rushed forward with such mad impetuosity that he was cut to pieces on
-the thorns, and was soon bleeding profusely from a score of places.
-
-He came, on a sudden, upon the swamp, into which he plunged so
-recklessly that he was waist-deep before he knew it. Then, to his great
-alarm, he found that he was unable to move. He was held tight in the
-mud, and was at once attacked by scores of little leeches.
-
-He threw up his arms into the air like a drowning man, crying out
-piteously for help. Forsyth, as cool as ever--as I can well imagine--at
-once cut down a long bamboo, and held this out to Amos, who was
-eventually hauled back to safety, though covered from head to foot in
-mud.
-
-The leeches they were obliged to cut away from him with knives; and all
-the time the man reviled them for not making greater haste, telling them
-repeatedly that they were but a short distance from the Treasure, upon
-which he was determined to set eyes that very day.
-
-It was then that his companions, for the first time, suspected that the
-man's mind was disordered; for Amos talked like a lunatic, and there was
-a strange look in his eyes. For instance, he whipped round upon Forsyth
-and told him that he had ever been a stumbling-block, with his refined
-manners and his London airs, since the expedition started from Caracas.
-At which Forsyth laughed aloud.
-
-"Your memory is something short," said he. "Less than five minutes ago
-I saved your life. You were sinking even as I pulled you out. Had it
-not been for me, you would have been drowned in black, stinking mud, and
-your corpse devoured by leeches."
-
-At that, Amos burst into the wild and hideous laughter of a madman.
-
-"Liar!" he shrieked. "You saved the map! It was not me you saved; it
-was the map--and without risk to yourself. Much good may it do you! I
-shall see to it that you profit nothing. Trust Amos Baverstock for
-that!"
-
-And then he laughed again, and again called Forsyth "Liar!"
-
-At the time they thought little or nothing of all this, the high talk of
-an excited man. They believed him to be in one of his fits of
-uncontrollable anger, when he could never rightly be held responsible
-for either his actions or his words. But they left him as he was,
-sticky with the black mud, with many horrid little leeches still glued
-upon his skin, that was already all blood-stained from the thorns. And
-they made a circuit of the swamp towards the east, and came suddenly
-upon the open place where the Red Fish stood forth from the ground, with
-opened mouth, as if in the act of leaping from the water.
-
-They had no need to cast about them, as I had done, in order to find the
-entrance to the vault; for I had left traces as plain as any printed
-book to read, and the flowers and ferns that I had planted were not yet
-so well established that they looked quite natural.
-
-Amos rushed in like a mad dog, and in feverish haste fell to working
-with his knife, scattering broadcast the soft, rich soil that lay
-between the rocks. In this task he was assisted by the others--for now
-they were all near as wild with excitement as Amos himself. In a little
-time they had the slab laid bare; then they threw it backwards, so that
-they beheld the stone steps leading downward to the vault.
-
-They had no need to make a torch, as I had done, since they had always
-carried with them a small collapsible lantern, and with this in one hand
-and the map in the other, Amos led the way down the steps, through the
-ante-chamber where the floor was paved with ingots, and thence into the
-great vault below.
-
-And, thereupon, there is little doubt that Amos Baverstock went wholly
-mad. He rushed here and there, yelling like a fiend. He snatched up
-the gold in handfuls--the drinking vessels, the rings and bracelets and
-the ingots--and cast them, in a kind of frenzy, right and left, all the
-time shouting and dancing and filling that great chamber with the echoes
-of his laughter.
-
-Then he filled his arms with ingots, and tied these together with a
-rifle-sling, so that they resembled a great golden faggot, and weighed
-far more than any normal man could carry. For the time being, he knew
-not what he did; but was possessed of seven devils that were brothers,
-and more like to one another than in general brothers are; and their
-names were Avarice, Violence, Jealousy, Cruelty, Revenge, Cowardice, and
-Cunning. Forsyth and the others regarded him amazed.
-
-Amos dashed up the stairway, carrying his great load upon his crooked
-back. When he reached the open air, he threw his bundle down upon the
-ground, and then turned an ear to listen at the stairhead.
-
-He heard Forsyth, Trust, and Vasco ascending in pursuit of him; and then
-again he burst into his madman's laughter, and, laying hold of the slab,
-hurled it back into its place, and rolled a great boulder upon the top
-of it; for his strength was not his own, but that of all the seven
-devils that were brothers who possessed him.
-
-"Lie there and rot!" he shouted. And they below heard his footsteps as
-he danced upon the stone.
-
-[Illustration: "'LIE THERE AND ROT!' HE SHOUTED. AND THEY BELOW HEARD
-HIS FOOTSTEPS AS HE DANCED UPON THE STONE."]
-
-They cried out to him to be merciful and to release them; but he only
-laughed the more, telling them that he was going alone across the plain
-to find Indian porters to carry the Treasure through the wilderness, and
-that he would not return for months--by which time they three would be
-dead--dead as Orellano's soldier--starved to death in the very midst of
-the gold they had endured so much to gain.
-
-And then Amos Baverstock set forward, laughing loudly, with his heavy
-burden on his back, and a heavier burden still upon his soul. He went
-alone into the woods, whilst the daylight faded and the shadows flooded
-the undergrowth; and his loud, mad laughter scared the monkeys and the
-birds amid the tree-tops; even the jaguar slunk away in fear at the
-sound of that unholy mirth. The very Wild was filled with terror--all
-save the great and stealthy snake that lay coiled in silence in the cool
-woodland pool, more evil even than Amos, more strong than all his seven
-devils, more cruel than Death itself.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXV--HOW THE SHEEP WERE SHORN
-
-
-In the meantime, John Bannister and I journeyed together through the
-Wood, and came in a few hours to the Brook of Scarlet Pebbles. This we
-crossed, and took up our westerly route, in order to avoid the swamp of
-which we knew. This was a far longer march than that accomplished by
-Amos; and that night we camped in the jungle--so far as we could tell--a
-mile or two to the west of the Red Fish.
-
-Early the following morning we continued on our way, and soon struck the
-Brook, as chance had it, at the pool of the electric eels, into which we
-waded without a moment's hesitation. We found the tunnel without
-difficulty, and through this advanced stealthily towards the open place
-where we knew the Red Fish to be. We took good care to make as little
-noise as possible; for we expected to find Amos and his friends encamped
-above the vault. And then Bannister ordered me to remain behind, whilst
-he went forward to get what news he could.
-
-I should say that half an hour elapsed before he returned; and that was
-an anxious time for me. Expecting every moment to hear a rifle-shot, I
-waited, knee-deep in water, in the impenetrable darkness of the tunnel.
-So dark was it, indeed, that I never knew that Bannister had returned,
-until I heard his voice quite close to me.
-
-He told me what he had seen. There was little doubt that the vault had
-been visited since my departure, several days before; but there was one
-circumstance which he could not by any means explain.
-
-"A great boulder has been rolled upon the slab," said he, "as if to
-weigh it down. It looks as if Amos meant to keep the Treasure safe."
-
-"I know nothing of that," said I.
-
-"Then, you had best come with me," said Bannister. "The road's clear
-enough, though something extraordinary has happened."
-
-We came forth together from the tunnel, and I was at once half-blinded
-by the sudden daylight, just as I had been before, when I first beheld
-the red rock standing forth from the ground in the very semblance of a
-fish with opened mouth. But when I could use my eyes again, I saw that
-everything in that strange place was just as I had left it, with the
-exception that the stone slab was no longer covered with earth, and a
-great boulder, round as a snowball, lay upon the top of it.
-
-"Who placed this here?" I asked; and that was more than Bannister could
-answer.
-
-We went together to the slab, and there he lay down and listened, with
-his ear upon the stone.
-
-"I can hear nothing," said he. "It will be safe enough to enter."
-
-At this we removed the boulder, lifted the slab, and went down the stone
-steps into the Treasure-chamber below.
-
-It was quite dark, for we had neither torch nor lantern. We had made
-certain that the place would be deserted, and it therefore came to us
-something in the nature of a shock, when we beard a jingling sound--as
-if some one, who had been asleep upon the gold, had sprung on a sudden
-to his feet. And then a human voice cried out to us; and this was so
-loud and unexpected that I confess I jumped as if I had been pricked
-with the point of a knife. For all that, I recognised the voice at once
-as that of Joshua Trust.
-
-"You've come back!" he cried. "Stand clear of me, or else I'll wring
-your neck! Who's he who swore that he never yet went back upon his
-friends?"
-
-There followed a pause, during which I tried my best to make head and
-tail of what the man had said. It speaks much for John Bannister's
-intelligence that he tumbled to the truth at once. To my bewilderment,
-he answered in a voice that was like enough to that of Amos Baverstock.
-
-"I've come back all right," said he. "But I'm here to offer terms,
-which you may accept or not, as you wish."
-
-And thereupon, for some reason or other, the Spaniard, Vasco, burst
-forth into such a rapid stream of language that it seemed to me--who
-understood not a word of what he said--that he swore with the most
-amazing fluency and violence. At all events, when at last he ended,
-apparently for want of breath, it came as a kind of relief to us to hear
-the lazy drawl of Mr. Forsyth.
-
-"_Amicus certus in re incerta_," he observed. "Sure friend in doubtful
-circumstances. Amos, we welcome you. We greet you as Joseph received
-his brethren."
-
-It was then that Bannister spoke in his natural voice; and, as I
-listened, I tried to imagine the feelings of those others whom his words
-took so wholly by surprise.
-
-"Amos Baverstock has not returned," said he; "and I am prepared to take
-my oath he never will. A certain friend, in very truth, was he who led
-you here, and then entrapped you that you all might starve to death!"
-
-"Who's that?" cried Trust.
-
-"My name's John Bannister. And it was you, Joshua Trust, who once tried
-to kill me--who, indeed, left me for dead. Do you remember that day in
-the mountains, when Amos caught me in Cahazaxa's Tomb? Well, now he has
-done the same for you. He has buried you alive; and when he comes back
-for the gold he covets, he will think to find it strewn with the bones
-of those who were fools enough to believe he was their friend."
-
-I heard Trust groan in the darkness; or, I think, perhaps, a growl
-describes it better. Forsyth, judging by the tones of his voice, was
-just as calm as ever.
-
-"Bannister!" he exclaimed. "So this is the end of it all! We are to
-owe our lives to you!"
-
-"That's a matter," answered Bannister, "for yourselves to settle. How
-long have you been here?"
-
-"Not many hours," said Forsyth; "but it seems like days and nights. We
-have had time enough in which to consider the misery of our end--without
-water, food, or light, in the midst of all this gold."
-
-Bannister was silent a moment. He had not descended the stairs into the
-chamber, but stood upon a step about midway down with myself close
-behind him.
-
-"I'll have no treachery," said he. "It is very needful that you
-understand the situation as it is. I am a man of my word, as you may or
-may not know, and I set you free on certain conditions only."
-
-"Fire ahead," said Forsyth. "State your terms. Anything for daylight
-and for freedom--for the certain knowledge that we have been granted a
-new lease of life."
-
-"Good!" said Bannister. "I go before you up the staircase, and wait for
-you above. Whatever arms you have you leave behind you. If any one of
-you comes forth with a rifle in his possession, I shoot him dead upon
-the spot."
-
-"We share the gold with you?" asked Joshua Trust.
-
-"Not an ounce of it, you fool!" cried Bannister. "Years ago I might
-have had it for myself, had I wished to play the robber. All this
-treasure is not yours or mine or anyone's; it belongs by right to the
-Government of the country. I am neither a smuggler nor a thief. Were
-it worth less, I might not be so honest; but here are millions, such as
-to release would be to let loose a great force of evil that would profit
-no one, and ourselves least of all. Here this gold has lain for ages,
-and here let it lie. That is one of my conditions."
-
-"Let us out!" cried Trust. "All night I have dreamed that I must eat
-bars of gold to live. I have sucked golden ingots with parched, dry
-lips. I have slept upon gold, and never before had I a couch so
-uninviting. Let us out, I say! I agree to anything."
-
-At that, Bannister bade me ascend the stairs, and followed close upon my
-heels. When we reached the top, we waited both with our rifles at the
-ready, prepared to fire upon the first sign of trouble. But the three
-of them, one behind the other, came forth out of the vault as meek as
-shorn lambs--first Trust; then Vasco; and finally, Mr. Gilbert Forsyth,
-who, swaggering into the daylight in no particular haste, had the
-audacity to hold out a hand to Bannister, as if he greeted an old
-acquaintance.
-
-John Bannister, however, did no more than shrug his shoulders, and then
-went to the stone slab and threw it back into its place.
-
-"When did Amos leave here?" he asked, turning again to Forsyth.
-
-"Last night."
-
-"Did he say anything before he went?"
-
-"Yes, he was so gracious as to tell us we could die where he had left
-us. As for himself, he was going back into the forest to find native
-porters to carry the gold away."
-
-"Just as we thought!" said Bannister. "Rushby was in the right."
-
-And, thereupon, our attention was immediately attracted by the strange
-conduct of Joshua Trust, who looked up at the little patch of blue sky
-just visible between the overhanging branches of the trees, clenched
-both his fists in an amazing burst of passion, and shook them above his
-head.
-
-"He shall pay for this!" he cried, with an oath that can never be
-repeated. "And I have served him faithfully for years! He has gone
-back upon me, when he saw that he had gained everything he wanted! By
-thunder, he shall pay for it!"
-
-Bannister looked at him, and smiled.
-
-"Have more sense, man," said he. "What use is all this anger? Amos
-Baverstock is mad."
-
-"Mad or sane," cried Trust, "he shall answer for what he has done. Come,
-tell me, what's the time?"
-
-"I should think no more than ten," said Bannister. "We started at
-daybreak, and we were not two hours upon the march before we found the
-brook."
-
-When I looked at Joshua, I was reminded of the man whom I had known on
-board the _Mary Greenfield_, who was wont to sit drinking at his cards.
-He was red of eye and flushed of countenance, and I saw that his lips
-trembled with a passion he was quite unable to contain. He was a rough
-man, in any case; and now that he had lived for months in the
-wilderness, and had been saved from death as it were at the eleventh
-hour, he was the greatest savage of the five of us.
-
-"Ten o'clock," he repeated. "Four bells, by Christopher! Then, he
-can't be far away. He can never have travelled far by night, for he
-took with him a hundredweight of gold. I'll go after him," he cried.
-"He shall answer yet for what he tried to do."
-
-Bannister stretched out an arm to detain the man; but Trust sprang aside
-and, with another oath, dived into the thickets.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVI--A NIGHT OF TERROR
-
-
-I was about to follow in pursuit of Trust, and had even taken a few
-steps towards the undergrowth upon the right bank of the brook, when
-Bannister called me back.
-
-"What's the use?" said he. "Let dogs delight. We have our own friends
-to think of."
-
-"Our own friends?" said I.
-
-"Have you forgotten Rushby? We have left him alone too long as it is.
-His life is more to us than the fate of either Trust or Baverstock; and
-he is in danger just as great."
-
-At those words, I felt something of shame that I had indeed forgotten
-one who had proved himself so loyal and true a comrade.
-
-"Then, what's to be done?" I asked.
-
-"That's not so easy to decide," said Bannister. "I take it," he added,
-turning again to Forsyth, "that you are now willing to cast in your lot
-with us, to give up all thought of plunder?"
-
-Forsyth actually yawned.
-
-"Have it your own way," said he. "I have made a promise which I will
-faithfully keep. I have always believed that there was honour among
-thieves; but, even here, I find I was mistaken. To speak the truth, I
-am heartily sick of the whole business, which has cost me a pretty penny
-with nothing to show for it, save a scratched skin and a score of
-bruises, and the loss of an ear. You may count me as one of yourselves.
-I have little enough, perhaps, upon which to flatter myself, but if
-there is skill in gaining, there is at least an art in losing. It can
-be done gracefully. Do you not agree?"
-
-"Moralise as much as you like," laughed Bannister. "It amounts to no
-more than this: you have failed dismally, and are glad enough to find
-yourself alive. You are wise to accept the situation as it is. That's
-all the same to me. Henceforward, you are under my orders, and I expect
-prompt obedience."
-
-"I shall be charmed," said Forsyth, with a mock bow. "And what of
-Rushby?"
-
-"He lies some way to the north," said Bannister. "I am alarmed at his
-condition. The wound in his leg is septic, and it is very doubtful
-whether he will recover."
-
-"I am distressed to hear it," answered the other, to whose effrontery
-there seemed no end; for he added, "If the truth be told, it was I
-myself who shot him--with the best intentions in the world."
-
-"No doubt," said Bannister grimly. "There has been give and take on
-both sides; and I am the more glad to have saved your life, since I know
-for a fact that you stood between Dick, here, and certain death, when
-Amos would have killed him. But we waste time in useless talk. Before
-we leave this place, I propose to cover the slab with earth, to hide all
-traces of an intrusion so utterly worthless, doomed to failure from the
-start."
-
-And thereupon the four of us set to work, scraping the soft earth back
-upon the stone slab; for Bannister, who had enough of Spanish to express
-his meaning, soon found another ally in Vasco, who, after all, was a
-weak, shiftless kind of fellow, with few opinions of his own. Though the
-man had been bewildered by the sight of so much gold, the Treasure had
-had much the same effect on him as on myself when I first went down into
-that vast, amazing chamber. He was frightened of it all; and as well as
-that, he now realised for the first time that he had served for all
-these months one who was both treacherous and mad; and had it not been
-for Bannister and me, he would not have escaped with life.
-
-We were all hard at work upon our hands and knees, when we were
-surprised by the sound of a rifle-shot, fired at no great distance in
-the Wood, in a northerly direction.
-
-Bannister got slowly to his feet, and stood listening; and then,
-although he turned in my direction, it was as if he spoke quietly to
-himself.
-
-"One shot," said he. "And one shot only."
-
-That was all he said.
-
-"Trust was never armed," said I.
-
-"That signifies nothing," answered Bannister. "Amos is loaded down by
-gold. If he carried a rifle, Trust may have wrenched it from his
-hands."
-
-We waited for some minutes, expecting to hear another shot, or perhaps
-some other sound. But the whole Wood was silent--the silence of midday,
-when the sun is at its height and all the wilderness is resting, the
-wild things seeking refuge from the fierce rays of the tropic sun.
-
-"Come," said Bannister, "we had best see to this."
-
-He led the way into the undergrowth, and we followed him in single file.
-The trail of Amos was broad as a road, for, in his madness, he had
-rushed forward, breaking down all obstacles that stood in his path by
-the sheer weight of the gold he carried and the impetuous, headlong
-nature of his flight.
-
-There could be little doubt that Joshua Trust had followed him with as
-little difficulty as we. Certain it was that they could not be far
-ahead, since Trust himself had not yet been absent half an hour. In all
-probability, the night before, Amos himself, overtaken by the darkness,
-had fallen sound asleep, and, being exhausted by his frenzied efforts,
-had slumbered on until long after daybreak.
-
-In any case, we had not journeyed far before we came upon the still,
-huddled form of him who had once been known as Joshua Trust, who now lay
-a corpse, in a pool of his own blood, upon the trail that he had
-followed.
-
-John Bannister kneeled down upon the ground beside the body, but
-presently got sharply to his feet.
-
-"Stone-dead," said he, and nodded sagely, as if to signify that hither
-in the end go all things weak and mortal.
-
-"Shot?" I asked.
-
-"By Amos. Through the heart."
-
-We stood in silence around the body, and I know that I was thinking that
-it would be no more than common decency to bury this poor, misguided man
-where he had fallen, when there came to my ears a sound that made my
-very blood run cold.
-
-It was a sound of laughter, faint and far away. Never in my wildest
-nightmares had I heard laughter to compare to that. It was the laughter
-of a fiend, terrible to listen to, for there was something in it of the
-chuckling of an old, demented man, the cry of a new-born child, and the
-senseless mirth of one who is delirious.
-
-In that half-light we looked at one another. There was cold fear in the
-eyes of us all, even in the eyes of John Bannister, who I did not know
-had fear of anything that lived upon the earth.
-
-"Amos!" he exclaimed. But his voice was no more than a whisper.
-
-I saw that Forsyth shuddered. And then that man, as a rule so calm and
-nonchalant, who had always seemed to me to dread nothing so much as that
-he might show his feelings, burst forth in the hottest indignation. I
-shall never forget that moment, for it was the only occasion upon which
-I saw John Bannister afraid, and Mr. Forsyth alive--a living, sentient
-being--in every fibre of his body.
-
-"This madman must not live!" he shouted.
-
-Bannister answered slowly, in the same quiet voice in which he had
-spoken before.
-
-"I am inclined to think you right," said he. "His very existence upon
-the face of the earth is a blot upon Creation. The sound of that
-hideous laughter robs the wilderness of all its beauty."
-
-"Then, after him!" cried Forsyth.
-
-"Leave that to me," said Bannister.
-
-He opened his rifle, and slipped a cartridge into the breech. I heard
-the click of the lock, and I saw how tightly his right hand gripped the
-small of the butt. And I knew that death was still in the pot, that we
-were not yet at the end of all this strife and horrid bloodshed.
-
-We went forward in pursuit, Bannister leading, hot upon the trail, the
-other three of us following at his heels.
-
-All that afternoon we journeyed in a direction north-eastward, so far as
-we could judge. And from time to time we heard the shrill, savage
-laughter of that maniac, but a little way before us. And each time we
-heard it, we were filled with dread--the dread that comes naturally to
-one who finds himself confronted by the supernatural--the same dread
-that is believed to make the human hair to stand on end in the presence
-of a ghost.
-
-For Amos Baverstock, body, mind, and soul, was still in the possession
-of his seven raging devils; and it was as if these evil spirits infested
-the humid, stifling atmosphere of the very jungle through which we
-passed in hot pursuit. Hitherto, we had been adventurers in a savage
-land; we had walked in the midst of dangers that were material and real.
-But now, with that unearthly laughter for ever in our ears, we felt that
-we were wayfarers in the dark nether regions, that not only our lives,
-but our very souls as well, were in peril of perdition, of everlasting
-death. The fleeting shadows of the Wood were to us the twilight of the
-Underworld. We were opposed by forces stronger and more evil than wild
-beasts and wicked men.
-
-Darkness caught us before we had overtaken the madman whom we chased.
-How he had managed to elude us for so long is little short of a miracle;
-for he was weighed down by the gold he carried on his back. There were
-times when he was quite near to us, when we could distinctly hear him
-breaking his way through the thickets, rushing blindly onward. And at
-such times he was silent--ominously silent. But he would always, quite
-suddenly, shoot ahead again--how, we could not tell--and presently, we
-would hear his wild laughter as before, far away from us--laughter in
-which there was something of triumphant glee, as well as lunacy and
-senseless mirth, incomprehensible and terrible to hear.
-
-All that night, during which we rested twice--on each occasion for an
-hour or more--we heard his laughter in the Wood, throughout the length
-and breadth of which it was as if fear of the man had spread. I verily
-believe the monkeys sat shivering above us in the tree-tops, and the
-great beasts of prey, who were wont to hunt by night, crouched with
-flattened ears like frightened cats in the dark places of the jungle.
-
-Speaking for myself, I know that I experienced a most novel and insecure
-sensation. I felt that the constant sound of this demoniacal laughter
-would in the end drive me also mad; and Vasco, I am certain, felt the
-same, though I cannot speak for the others.
-
-For all that, I had never seen an expression of such invincible
-determination as the daylight disclosed upon the face of Bannister. His
-jaw was set: his lips tight pressed, and there was a look in his eyes as
-hard as steel.
-
-He said not a word to any one of us; and we had no thought of food,
-though we all four drank deeply of water at the first stream to which we
-came.
-
-Then we went on, following the trail, with the sound of that maniac's
-laughter to guide us like the siren of a ship in a fog at sea.
-
-Never was a journey more strange, more ghostly. We were haunted men,
-though we found upon the road evidence of the material. For, here and
-there, lay golden ingots that had fallen from his arms, and there was
-blood, too, upon the dead leaves upon the ground, where he had torn his
-flesh upon the thorns.
-
-And then, at last, we sighted him, in a place where the undergrowth was
-sparse and the trees a little way apart. For no longer than an instant
-did we see him, else John Bannister had shot him dead; for it was a mad
-dog we hunted, and it was not right that he should live. Strange as it
-may seem--since they had sojourned for so many months in one another's
-company--it was Mr. Gilbert Forsyth who was most keen upon the chase. He
-was like a bloodhound on the trail. It was as much as Bannister could
-do to keep him back.
-
-"Have at him!" he cried. "There he is! Shoot, man! Shoot him down!"
-
-But--as I have said--we caught no more than a glimpse of him. That
-glimpse, however, was enough. If it had been terrible to hear his
-laughter, it was even more terrible to behold him with our eyes. Every
-shred of clothing had been torn from his back. He was plastered with
-black mud from the swamp in which he had waded; and this mud--though we
-could not see that--was still alive with little leeches that were
-draining the life's blood in his veins. His hair was all ragged and
-dirty; and without clothes he was more hideous than ever. We could see
-the ingots, tied in a great bundle upon his back; and we marvelled that
-any human being could carry so great a load. He shot a look at us
-before he dived again into the undergrowth; and in that look there was
-that for which we could not fail to pity him, vile and evil though the
-man had been all the days of his life.
-
-His eyes were bright as ever, yet seemed to have grown larger, and, at
-the same time, to have sunk deep into his head. His mouth, which was
-never straight, was twisted to a degree that was alarming. He had
-always the thinnest of lips, which he kept as a rule pressed tight
-together; but now his mouth was opened wide, and he was slobbering. As
-for his eyebrows, they reminded me of Satan himself as I have seen him
-pictured, for they met upon the bridge of his nose, to slant upward,
-arrow-shaped.
-
-John Bannister dashed forward. I saw that he meant to make a supreme
-effort to overtake the man. We all wanted it to end, for the whole
-affair was ghastly; and yet we dreaded the end, just as a hangman must
-have no liking for his duty. And ours--we thought--was the very
-hangman's work.
-
-It so happened that in this place the Wood was dense. Amos did not
-laugh again, but we could hear him just in front of us; though, strive
-as we might, we could not overtake him, until the pursuit had lasted,
-perhaps, another twenty minutes--for, in such a case as this, it is
-impossible to keep account of time.
-
-Bannister, who was still leading, of a sudden caught his foot in the
-root of a tree, and pitched forward on his face. Without pausing an
-instant, Forsyth rushed past him; and I, knowing that Forsyth was
-unarmed, and fearing that he might come to the same violent end as
-Joshua Trust, hastened after him, without looking to see if Bannister
-were hurt.
-
-Almost at once I caught sight of Amos, but dared not fire at him,
-because Forsyth was in front of me. And then, suddenly and
-unaccountably, to my amazement Amos stopped, and looked back at us with
-a face hideously contorted.
-
-I carried my rifle to my shoulder, and I believe I would have pressed
-the trigger, had I not then seen what it was that had brought the
-fugitive to a standstill. He had broken his way headlong through the
-thickets, and now found himself upon the bank of a wide, dark pool, and
-we were so close upon his heels that he had no time to turn either to
-the right or to the left.
-
-It is my great regret that I did not fire; but I may be excused,
-inasmuch as I did not at once recognise the place, and had then not the
-least suspicion of what was about to happen. No sooner was my rifle to
-my shoulder than Amos turned away from me, and, without a sound, with
-his great load of gold upon his back, plunged straight into the pool.
-
-He sank so low at first that we thought he must be well beyond his
-depth; but, almost at once, his feet found something firm--I think the
-fallen trunk of a tree buried beneath the water. He rose to his full
-height with the water no higher than his knees, and began to stumble
-onward, when the whole of this uncanny business reached its tragic and
-terrible conclusion.
-
-I saw something move upon the surface of the water--something that shot
-across the pool in utter silence and with the rapidity of an arrow.
-Right round Amos it swerved, and passed so close to us--who stood gaping
-on the bank--that we could not fail to recognise what this horror was.
-It was the flat and evil head of a gigantic, loathsome serpent.
-
-Then the truth burst upon me like a sudden rush of ice, and I realised
-that Amos Baverstock was come to that place which I myself had named the
-Glade of Silent Death.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVII--HOW AMOS MET HIS END
-
-
-We stood horror-stricken upon the bank of that dark pool--mute, impotent
-spectators of a tragedy we were powerless to prevent.
-
-Vasco, the Spaniard, stood beside me; and I heard his teeth chattering
-in his head like castanets. As for Forsyth, before that gruesome
-spectacle was ended he turned away with a kind of sickening sob, at the
-same time passing a hand across his eyes, by which I knew that the man
-was human after all. Bannister--who had soon caught us up--said
-nothing, but stood rigid at the back of us, his rifle in his hands,
-ready to fire so soon as an opportunity should offer. As for myself, it
-was as if I was transfixed in petrified amazement. I was hypnotised by
-the terror of the thing I saw, and could not look away, but must watch
-the tragic business to the last.
-
-With a great splash of water, the immense body of the snake arose from
-out the middle of the pool, the surface of which forthwith became
-agitated by scores of little waves, forming a series of concentric
-circles, spreading outward to the bank.
-
-We saw the glistening coils of the terrific reptile wind themselves,
-swiftly and yet stealthily, around the frail body of the doomed, unhappy
-Amos. He let out a piercing shriek, far more terrifying to hear than
-the uncanny laughter with which he had disturbed the silence of the
-woods--it was freezing in its shrillness. And at the same time he threw
-both his arms above his head, so that his heavy bundle of golden ingots
-fell into the water and at once disappeared from view.
-
-He made--so far as we could see--no effort of resistance. Terror, it
-seemed, had mastered every muscle, nerve, and sinew in his body. He was
-paralysed by fear. We could see, in that dim, religious light, the huge
-head of the snake swaying backward and forward in front of him, whilst
-its long forked tongue darted swiftly in and out. We saw the man's
-face, too, livid with fright, and his wide, staring eyes. For a moment
-all his features worked spasmodically. I think he tried to cry out once
-more; but the breath had already been driven from his slender frame by
-the colossal strength of the relentless serpent that, even as we looked,
-broke down the slender bulwark of his ribs.
-
-It was then that John Bannister fired. He told me afterwards that he
-meant to put Baverstock out of the torture he was suffering both of body
-and of mind. If that were so, it was a lucky shot; for it killed at
-once the reptile and the man.
-
-The bullet drilled the anaconda, breaking its spine, and thence pierced
-the heart of Amos Baverstock. The unhappy wretch vanished from sight
-upon the instant beneath the water of the pool; but the dying struggles
-of that gigantic snake were amazing to behold.
-
-It lashed right and left, twisting all ways, writhing like a worm; so
-that we, who looked on, were drenched in flying water. It made the most
-frantic efforts to drag itself from the pool. The lower part of its
-body seemed to be paralysed and quite useless; but at last it succeeded
-in half twining itself around the trunk of a tree, where its head swayed
-from side to side quite aimlessly. What surprised--and I think
-horrified--us most of all was the silence of the brute.
-
-I fired, and missed; for my hand trembled violently. And, thereby, it
-was left to Bannister to end the work he had begun. With his second
-shot he smashed in the reptile's head; and the great snake at last lay
-motionless, as loathsome in death as it had been terrible in life. I am
-ready to believe that five minutes elapsed before any one of us spake or
-even moved.
-
-"I shall never cease to dream of this," said Forsyth, in a weak voice,
-at last. "No such nightmare ever was!"
-
-I saw that he wiped a hand across his forehead; and I did the same.
-Though I was splashed all over with the water from the pool, a great
-sweat had broken out upon me, and I experienced, in quick succession,
-alternate sensations of extreme heat and cold.
-
-Vasco seized Bannister by an arm.
-
-"We go away!" he cried, in broken English. "We go now! It is no good
-stay here."
-
-The man turned back into the Wood as if he would retreat by the way we
-had come; but Bannister called him back.
-
-"Not that way," said he, in Spanish. "It is but a little way from here
-to the end of the Wood, and we can pass round to the north across open
-country. I know a way to the south of the morass."
-
-We were under Bannister's orders. And thankful we were that we had such
-a man to follow. We knew there was an urgent need to go back to Rushby
-as quickly as we might.
-
-We were obliged to pass round the pool, and this brought us to within a
-few yards of the great body of the snake.
-
-"I never knew," said Bannister, "that such a monster could exist. He
-must be over thirty feet in length. But, come; we can do nothing here."
-
-In single file, as before, we followed him, and presently came forth
-into the open air upon the skirting of the Wood.
-
-There we regarded one another in shocked surprise; for the faces of us
-all were white, and Vasco was still trembling. We said nothing; not a
-word passed between us; but we all breathed deeply, like men who had
-been for a long time under water.
-
-I looked up at the blue sky and the hills in the distance, to the east,
-whence I had first looked down upon the Wood of the Red Fish, after my
-journey across the plain. And I remembered what I had then thought; how
-I was filled with the restless spirit of adventure; how the joy of life
-was strong within me, whilst I ran the danger of my life, all naked as I
-was, with my Indian blow-pipe in my hand and my quiver full of arrows.
-But now I had seen the very face of death. I had beheld a living
-terror. The mask of Romance had been removed from the forbidding face
-of Tragedy. And that Wood was now to me a dread, unholy place, wherein,
-I knew, I would never dare to venture again, in spite of the great
-Treasure that lay hidden in its midst.
-
-"I would not go back," I cried to Bannister, "for all the Treasure of
-the Incas, for all the treasure in the world!"
-
-My old friend looked at me, and smiled.
-
-"You are right," he answered. "And there never will be a need to, Dick.
-As soon as we are rested, we must find our honest Rushby, and do what we
-can for him."
-
-We camped that night in the open air, a mile or so to the south of the
-morass; and the following morning continued our journey, keeping the
-Wood to our left.
-
-We had not gone far before we discovered the figure of a man, who came
-running towards us from the direction of the hills. I noticed that he
-advanced with a peculiar limp, and on this account, for the moment, I
-believed it to be Rushby, most marvellously recovered of his wound.
-
-But when the runner had drawn quite near to us, I was surprised beyond
-measure to recognise my old friend, Atupo, the Peruvian priest, whom I
-had befriended in the vault beneath the Temple of Cahazaxa.
-
-Though I called him by his name, he cast never so much as a glance at me
-or any of the others, save Bannister, at whose feet he threw himself, as
-pagans prostrate themselves before the idols that they worship.
-
-"My master!" he exclaimed, and went on, in his quaint, broken English,
-in some such strain as this: "I never thought to live to set eyes on you
-again."
-
-Bannister lifted him to his feet and, laying a hand affectionately upon
-his shoulder, asked him what news he had of his friends and brethren,
-who had fled from their dwellings before the wrath of Amos.
-
-Atupo told him that the majority had sought refuge in the woods, where
-many of their number had been treacherously murdered by the wild men. He
-himself, however, had founded a small colony of some score of persons
-who were living by the side of the ravine that crossed the plain, not so
-far beyond the hills that we could see. All these, he said, were
-anxious to return to Cahazaxa's Temple, but dared not do so, believing
-Amos to be still abroad.
-
-Bannister at once set the man's mind at rest, assuring him that it was
-not only safe for them to return, but that Amos himself was dead and the
-Greater Treasure undisturbed.
-
-At that, Atupo threw up his hands by way of a gesture of delight; and
-then, looking about him, for the first time recognised both Mr. Forsyth
-and myself. And it is doubtful which of the two of us he was most
-surprised to see.
-
-Myself he regarded as a trusted friend; but he knew that Forsyth had
-been one of Baverstock's party, and he was astounded to behold that
-gentleman alive. Being told by Bannister that he had naught to fear, he
-pointed straight at Forsyth.
-
-"But that man should be dead!" he cried. "With my own eyes I saw him
-shot with an arrow, the point of which was steeped in deadly poison."
-
-And then it was that Mr. Gilbert Forsyth told us the truth, which I have
-set down already: how, with a fortitude that one cannot but admire, he
-had burned the poison from his flesh, and thus saved his life, though he
-had fallen into a fever.
-
-Atupo, soon afterwards, expressed himself anxious to return to his own
-friends; but Bannister was one whose custom it was to look well ahead,
-and he knew that the ancient Peruvians had been well skilled in
-medicine.
-
-"Friend Atupo," said he, "we have need of your assistance; for there is
-one of our number who is sorely wounded. You and your comrades owe not
-a little to us; and I will, therefore, ask you to go back to the Temple,
-and there await our coming. Prepare such drugs as you may have for a
-man who has a wound in the leg that will not heal."
-
-"Does the sun ask the moon to shine?" inquired the Peruvian. "What of
-the white man's medicines?"
-
-Bannister threw out his hands.
-
-"Alas!" he exclaimed. "We have none; we have used all we had."
-
-And so the matter was settled; Atupo, the priest, returning to the
-Temple, and ourselves veering round to the west, between the Wood and
-the morass, towards the place where we had left William Rushby.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVIII--CONCLUSION
-
-
-Early that afternoon we arrived at our destination, and found that we
-were none too soon. For Rushby had long since consumed all the water we
-had left him, but had managed somehow to move himself, though in the
-greatest pain, to the bank of the stream that flowed near at hand, where
-he was able, from time to time, to fill his pannikin with water. Also,
-that very morning, he had eaten the last of the food that we had left
-him. So it was well we came no later.
-
-He told us that he had slept daily for many hours; and on one occasion
-he had awakened quite suddenly, to find one of those small deer that
-were numerous in the Wood staring at him with its soft, mild eyes, from
-a distance of not more than ten yards.
-
-I asked him if he had not been afraid that some wild beast of prey might
-find him in the night. But he told me that he had never bothered
-himself about such matters, since both by day and night he had kept a
-fire alight. He had heard the report of the first shot, that which had
-brought about the death of Joshua Trust, though he had heard nothing of
-the other shots, upon the far side of the Wood, fired in the glade where
-Amos Baverstock had met his tragic end.
-
-"I have lain here for days," said he, "wondering what was happening, and
-whether I would ever set eyes upon any one of you again."
-
-When we told him the story of the death of Amos, he seemed little enough
-impressed; for he was a rough-and-ready seaman, without the gift of
-imagination, and he had not been there himself to behold with his own
-eyes the terror of that incident or to hear the wild laughter of the
-fugitive as he fled before us through the Wood.
-
-"A fit end for such a man," said he. "He himself was as evil as any
-snake, though he had courage of a sort; for I remember him well, when he
-faced the mutineers on board the _Mary Greenfield_. And what of the
-map?" he asked, turning suddenly to Bannister, who shrugged his
-shoulders.
-
-"We do not know," he answered; "but in default of certain evidence we
-must presume that that little fragment which we brought with us all the
-way from Sussex went down into the water when Amos was crushed to
-death."
-
-"So then," said William Rushby, who was of a practical turn of mind, "no
-one is any the wiser, so far as the Big Fish is concerned?"
-
-"No one," said Bannister, "save we five, and I do not suppose that any
-one of us will ever care again to undertake such an expedition."
-
-I looked at Mr. Gilbert Forsyth; for I was inclined to think that he was
-the only member of our party who was likely to persevere upon the quest
-of the Greater Treasure in spite of any promise he had made.
-
-I was surprised at the attitude he had assumed; for there was something
-in it that jogged my memory, that took me back to the day when I had
-first seen him and Baverstock and Joshua Trust. For he lay upon his
-back, with his hands clasped behind his head, and one knee thrown
-carelessly across the other. But how different was he now! He no
-longer wore his highly polished boots, his double-breasted waistcoat,
-and his hat tilted at a jaunty angle on his head. He was in rags and
-tatters, burnt and blistered by the sun, deprived of an ear where the
-skin was all white and scarred owing to his having burnt it. And yet he
-yawned in the same lazy fashion.
-
-"I've had enough of it," said he. "I want nothing better than a land of
-chimney-pots and gas-pipes. I shall rejoice at the sight of a
-policeman."
-
-And he yawned again.
-
-Rushby, we found, was in no better plight than before. It was quite
-impossible for him to walk. We saw at once that we must carry him; and
-as delay would profit us nothing, we set forward that very afternoon,
-heading in the direction of the hills towards the east.
-
-It was a silent, almost a saddened, party that crossed the plain to
-Cahazaxa's Temple. We took it in turns, two at a time, to carry Rushby;
-and on that account we could not make many miles a day. We crossed the
-suspension bridge, and at last came within sight of the great ruin,
-whence from the hill-top we looked down upon the forest, wherein we had
-all risked our lives so often, in the heart of which I had lived for
-weeks with the wild men of the woods.
-
-I asked Bannister how it was that they had treated me so kindly, when it
-was these same people who had murdered Atupo's friends.
-
-"Curiosity," said he; for he could explain most things. "The South
-American savage is not by any means as curious as the African; but you
-must remember that the men who found you had never before set eyes upon
-a white man. They probably looked upon you as a kind of god. With the
-Peruvians, it was different. Though the forest folk never ventured to
-the Temple, they had regarded the priests for years as their natural
-foes."
-
-We remained for two weeks at the Temple, during which time Atupo
-personally attended to Rushby's wound, bathing it with a decoction made
-from a herb that he procured in the forest. Whatever this was it
-proved, at any rate, effective; for the wound soon healed, and the
-boatswain was at last able to walk with the aid of a stick.
-
-We then set forward upon our journey towards the west, bidding good-bye
-to the quaint people whom we had already learned to love. We crossed
-the plain and that marvellous suspension bridge that had existed for
-centuries, and stands--for all I know--to this day, as evidence of the
-bygone civilisation of a great and ancient people. We came to the
-valley in which lay the Wood of the Red Fish; but we passed so far to
-the south that we did no more than see it dimly through the thick
-morning haze that lay between the hills. And after that we entered into
-a country very different from any we had yet seen--a land of high
-mountains and deep valleys, clothed with trees.
-
-We were days upon our march across the Andes. We were obliged to
-progress by easy stages, because Rushby was half a cripple. There, in
-the highlands, we found a mild, simple people, engaged in agricultural
-pursuits, tending large flocks of llamas, or Peruvian sheep. From
-village to village we went, like beggars, and were always treated with
-hospitality and kindness.
-
-At last we gained the crestline of those immortal mountains, and could
-see, both to the north and to the south of us, peak upon peak, rugged
-and inaccessible, towering like giants into the sky. Thence we
-descended to the narrow tableland, where the grass was knee-deep and
-native villages were many.
-
-All this was a journey of several weeks, and yet, in more ways than one,
-something in the nature of a pleasant picnic after the hardships and the
-perils we had been called upon to face.
-
-Sleeping night by night beneath the stars, wayfarers among the glorious
-and rugged hills, we had learned the art of comradeship. We found that
-there was good even in Forsyth and the sleepy, idle Vasco; and
-fortunate, indeed, is he who never travels in worse company than that of
-men like Bannister and Rushby.
-
-And so, upon a certain day at sunset, I was strangely conscious of a
-feeling of sadness when I knew that we were come to the end of our
-adventures, and that we soon must part. We stood then on a steep bluff,
-and looked down upon a narrow strip of sea-board, populous with towns
-and hamlets, with fertile fields between; and so we came to the
-seashore, and saw the sun go down upon the wide and golden Pacific
-Ocean.
-
-[Illustration: "AND SO WE CAME TO THE SHORE AND SAW THE SUN GO DOWN UPON
-THE WIDE AND GOLDEN PACIFIC OCEAN."]
-
-And now my story is told. Since those days I have ventured often in the
-wild places of the world--upon great open spaces, amid the summits of
-unknown mountains, in dense, steaming forests--but never again have I
-journeyed to the Wood of the Red Fish. Nor, to my certain knowledge,
-did any of the others.
-
-In that, as in much else, we thought alike. Let the Inca gold lie in
-the dust, where it has lain for above four hundred years. He who will
-may yet go forth to find it. As for me, whenever I remember that dread
-Wood I see the gold, stacked and glimmering in the torch-light, and I
-hear the wild, mad laughter of Amos Baverstock as he fled before us, and
-see him once again and hear his piercing shriek, when he was caught in
-the silent, stealthy coils that crushed that evil man to death before
-our very eyes. And I ask God to have mercy on us who are yet alive, and
-to save us from a like living and ending.
-
-
-
- THE END.
-
-
-
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