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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #54068 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/54068)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook, Hearts of Three, by Jack London
-
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world 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
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-
-Title: Hearts of Three
-
-
-Author: Jack London
-
-
-
-Release Date: January 28, 2017 [eBook #54068]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-
-***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HEARTS OF THREE***
-
-
-E-text prepared by Richard Tonsing and the Online Distributed Proofreading
-Team (http://www.pgdp.net) from page images generously made available by
-Internet Archive (https://archive.org)
-
-
-
-Nore: Images of the original pages are available through
- Internet Archive. See
- https://archive.org/details/heartsofthreejack00londrich
-
-
-
-
-
-HEARTS OF THREE
-
-by
-
-JACK LONDON
-
-Author of “The Valley of the Moon,”
-“Jerry of the Islands,”
-“Michael, Brother of Jerry,” &c., &c.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Mills & Boon, Limited
-49 Rupert Street
-London, W.
-
-Copyright in the United States of America by Jack London.
-
-
-
-
- FOREWORD
-
-
-I hope the reader will forgive me for beginning this foreword with a
-brag. In truth, this yarn is a celebration. By its completion I
-celebrate my fortieth birthday, my fiftieth book, my sixteenth year in
-the writing game, and a new departure. “Hearts of Three” is a new
-departure. I have certainly never done anything like it before; I am
-pretty certain never to do anything like it again. And I haven’t the
-least bit of reticence in proclaiming my pride in having done it. And
-now, for the reader who likes action, I advise him to skip the rest of
-this brag and foreword, and plunge into the narrative, and tell me if it
-just doesn’t read along.
-
-For the more curious let me explain a bit further. With the rise of
-moving pictures into the overwhelmingly most popular form of amusement
-in the entire world, the stock of plots and stories in the world’s
-fiction fund began rapidly to be exhausted. In a year a single producing
-company, with a score of directors, is capable of filming the entire
-literary output of the entire lives of Shakespeare, Balzac, Dickens,
-Scott, Zola, Tolstoy, and of dozens of less voluminous writers. And
-since there are hundreds of moving pictures producing companies, it can
-be readily grasped how quickly they found themselves face to face with a
-shortage of the raw material of which moving pictures are fashioned.
-
-The film rights in all novels, short stories, and plays that were still
-covered by copyright, were bought or contracted for, while all similar
-raw material on which copyright had expired was being screened as
-swiftly as sailors on a placer beach would pick up nuggets. Thousands of
-scenario writers—literally tens of thousands, for no man, nor woman, nor
-child was too mean not to write scenarios—tens of thousands of scenario
-writers pirated through all literature (copyright or otherwise), and
-snatched the magazines hot from the press to steal any new scene or plot
-or story hit upon by their writing brethren.
-
-In passing, it is only fair to point out that, though only the other
-day, it was in the days ere scenario writers became respectable, in the
-days when they worked overtime for rough-neck directors for fifteen and
-twenty a week or freelanced their wares for from ten to twenty dollars
-per scenario and half the time were beaten out of the due payment, or
-had their stolen goods stolen from them by their equally graceless and
-shameless fellows who slaved by the week. But to-day, which is only a
-day since the other day, I know scenario writers who keep their three
-machines, their two chauffeurs, send their children to the most
-exclusive prep schools, and maintain an unwavering solvency.
-
-It was largely because of the shortage in raw material that scenario
-writers appreciated in value and esteem. They found themselves in
-demand, treated with respect, better remunerated, and, in return,
-expected to deliver a higher grade of commodity. One phase of this new
-quest for material was the attempt to enlist known authors in the work.
-But because a man had written a score of novels was no guarantee that he
-could write a good scenario. Quite to the contrary, it was quickly
-discovered that the surest guarantee of failure was a previous record of
-success in novel-writing.
-
-But the moving pictures producers were not to be denied. Division of
-labor was the thing. Allying themselves with powerful newspaper
-organisations, or, in the case of “Hearts of Three,” the very reverse,
-they had highly-skilled writers of scenario (who couldn’t write novels
-to save themselves) make scenarios, which, in turn, were translated into
-novels by novel-writers (who couldn’t, to save themselves, write
-scenarios).
-
-Comes now Mr. Charles Goddard to one, Jack London, saying: “The time,
-the place, and the men are met; the moving pictures producers, the
-newspapers, and the capital, are ready: let us get together.” And we
-got. Result: “Hearts of Three.” When I state that Mr. Goddard has been
-responsible for “The Perils of Pauline,” “The Exploits of Elaine,” “The
-Goddess,” the “Get Rich Quick Wallingford” series, etc., no question of
-his skilled fitness can be raised. Also, the name of the present
-heroine, Leoncia, is of his own devising.
-
-On the ranch, in the “Valley of the Moon,” he wrote his first several
-episodes. But he wrote faster than I, and was done with his fifteen
-episodes weeks ahead of me. Do not be misled by the word “episode.” The
-first episode covers three thousand feet of film. The succeeding
-fourteen episodes cover each two thousand feet of film. And each episode
-contains about ninety scenes, which makes a total of some thirteen
-hundred scenes. Nevertheless, we worked simultaneously at our respective
-tasks. I could not build for what was going to happen next or a dozen
-chapters away, because I did not know. Neither did Mr. Goddard know. The
-inevitable result was that “Hearts of Three” may not be very vertebrate,
-although it is certainly consecutive.
-
-Imagine my surprise, down here in Hawaii and toiling at the novelization
-of the tenth episode, to receive by mail from Mr. Goddard in New York
-the scenario of the fourteenth episode, and glancing therein, to find my
-hero married to the wrong woman!—and with only one more episode in which
-to get rid of the wrong woman and duly tie my hero up with the right and
-only woman. For all of which please see last chapter of fifteenth
-episode. Trust Mr. Goddard to show me how.
-
-For Mr. Goddard is the master of action and lord of speed. Action
-doesn’t bother him at all. “Register,” he calmly says in a film
-direction to the moving picture actor. Evidently the actor registers,
-for Mr. Goddard goes right on with more action. “Register grief,” he
-commands, or “sorrow,” or “anger,” or “melting sympathy,” or “homicidal
-intent,” or “suicidal tendency.” That’s all. It has to be all, or how
-else would he ever accomplish the whole thirteen hundred scenes?
-
-But imagine the poor devil of a me, who can’t utter the talismanic
-“register” but who must describe, and at some length inevitably, these
-moods and modes so airily created in passing by Mr. Goddard! Why,
-Dickens thought nothing of consuming a thousand words or so in
-describing and subtly characterizing the particular grief of a
-particular person. But Mr. Goddard says, “Register,” and the slaves of
-the camera obey.
-
-And action! I have written some novels of adventure in my time, but
-never, in all of the many of them, have I perpetrated a totality of
-action equal to what is contained in “Hearts of Three.”
-
-But I know, now, why moving pictures are popular. I know, now, why
-Messrs. “Barnes of New York” and “Potter of Texas” sold by the millions
-of copies. I know, now, why one stump speech of high-falutin’ is a more
-efficient vote-getter than a finest and highest act or thought of
-statesmanship. It has been an interesting experience, this novelization
-by me of Mr. Goddard’s scenario; and it has been instructive. It has
-given me high lights, foundation lines, cross-bearings, and illumination
-on my anciently founded sociological generalizations. I have come, by
-this adventure in writing, to understand the mass mind of the people
-more thoroughly than I thought I had understood it before, and to
-realize, more fully than ever, the graphic entertainment delivered by
-the demagogue who wins the vote of the mass out of his mastery of its
-mind. I should be surprised if this book does not have a large sale.
-(“Register surprise,” Mr. Goddard would say; or “Register large sale”).
-
-If this adventure of “Hearts of Three” be collaboration, I am
-transported by it. But alack!—I fear me Mr. Goddard must then be the one
-collaborator in a million. We have never had a word, an argument, nor a
-discussion. But then, I must be a jewel of a collaborator myself. Have I
-not, without whisper or whimper of complaint, let him “register” through
-fifteen episodes of scenario, through thirteen hundred scenes and
-thirty-one thousand feet of film, through one hundred and eleven
-thousand words of novelization? Just the same, having completed the
-task, I wish I’d never written it—for the reason that I’d like to read
-it myself to see if it reads along. I am curious to know. I am curious
-to know.
-
- JACK LONDON.
-
- Waikiki, Hawaii,
- _March 23, 1916_.
-
-
-
-
- Back to Back Against the Mainmast
-
-
- Do ye seek for fun and fortune?
- Listen, rovers, now to me!
- Look ye for them on the ocean:
- Ye shall find them on the sea.
-
-
- CHORUS:
-
- Roaring wind and deep blue water!
- We’re the jolly devils who,
- Back to back against the mainmast,
- Held at bay the entire crew.
-
- Bring the dagger, bring the pistols!
- We will have our own to-day!
- Let the cannon smash the bulwarks!
- Let the cutlass clear the way!
-
-
- CHORUS:
-
- Roaring wind and deep blue water!
- We’re the jolly devils who,
- Back to back against the mainmast,
- Held at bay the entire crew.
-
- Here’s to rum and here’s to plunder!
- Here’s to all the gales that blow!
- Let the seamen cry for mercy!
- Let the blood of captains flow!
-
-
- CHORUS:
-
- Roaring wind and deep blue water!
- We’re the jolly devils who,
- Back to back against the mainmast,
- Held at bay the entire crew.
-
- Here’s to ships that we have taken!
- They have seen which men were best.
- We have lifted maids and cargo,
- And the sharks have had the rest.
-
- CHORUS:
-
- Roaring wind and deep blue water!
- We’re the jolly devils who,
- Back to back against the mainmast,
- Held at bay the entire crew.
-
- —_George Sterling._
-
-
-
-
- HEARTS OF THREE
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER I.
-
-
-Events happened very rapidly with Francis Morgan that late spring
-morning. If ever a man leaped across time into the raw, red drama and
-tragedy of the primitive and the medieval melodrama of sentiment and
-passion of the New World Latin, Francis Morgan was destined to be that
-man, and Destiny was very immediate upon him.
-
-Yet he was lazily unaware that aught in the world was stirring, and was
-scarcely astir himself. A late night at bridge had necessitated a late
-rising. A late breakfast of fruit and cereal had occurred along the
-route to the library—the austerely elegant room from which his father,
-toward the last, had directed vast and manifold affairs.
-
-“Parker,” he said to the valet who had been his father’s before him,
-“did you ever notice any signs of fat on R.H.M. in his last days?”
-
-“Oh, no, sir,” was the answer, uttered with all the due humility of the
-trained servant, but accompanied by an involuntarily measuring glance
-that scanned the young man’s splendid proportions. “Your father, sir,
-never lost his leanness. His figure was always the same,
-broad-shouldered, deep in the chest, big-boned, but lean, always lean,
-sir, in the middle. When he was laid out, sir, and bathed, his body
-would have shamed most of the young men about town. He always took good
-care of himself; it was those exercises in bed, sir. Half an hour every
-morning. Nothing prevented. He called it religion.”
-
-“Yes, he was a fine figure of a man,” the young man responded idly,
-glancing to the stock-ticker and the several telephones his father had
-installed.
-
-“He was that,” Parker agreed eagerly. “He was lean and aristocratic in
-spite of his shoulders and bone and chest. And you’ve inherited it, sir,
-only on more generous lines.”
-
-Young Francis Morgan, inheritor of many millions as well as brawn,
-lolled back luxuriously in a huge leather chair, stretched his legs
-after the manner of a full-vigored menagerie lion that is overspilling
-with vigor, and glanced at a headline of the morning paper which
-informed him of a fresh slide in the Culebra Cut at Panama.
-
-“If I didn’t know we Morgans didn’t run that way,” he yawned, “I’d be
-fat already from this existence.... Eh, Parker?”
-
-The elderly valet, who had neglected prompt reply, startled at the
-abrupt interrogative interruption of the pause.
-
-“Oh, yes, sir,” he said hastily. “I mean, no, sir. You are in the pink
-of condition.”
-
-“Not on your life,” the young man assured him. “I may not be getting
-fat, but I am certainly growing soft.... Eh, Parker?”
-
-“Yes, sir. No, sir; no, I mean no, sir. You’re just the same as when you
-came home from college three years ago.”
-
-“And took up loafing as a vocation,” Francis laughed. “Parker!”
-
-Parker was alert attention. His master debated with himself ponderously,
-as if the problem were of profound importance, rubbing the while the
-bristly thatch of the small toothbrush moustache he had recently begun
-to sport on his upper lip.
-
-“Parker, I’m going fishing.”
-
-“Yes, sir!”
-
-“I ordered some rods sent up. Please joint them and let me give them the
-once over. The idea drifts through my mind that two weeks in the woods
-is what I need. If I don’t, I’ll surely start laying on flesh and
-disgrace the whole family tree. You remember Sir Henry?—the old original
-Sir Henry, the buccaneer old swashbuckler?”
-
-“Yes, sir; I’ve read of him, sir.”
-
-Parker had paused in the doorway until such time as the ebbing of his
-young master’s volubility would permit him to depart on the errand.
-
-“Nothing to be proud of, the old pirate.”
-
-“Oh, no, sir,” Parker protested. “He was Governor of Jamaica. He died
-respected.”
-
-“It was a mercy he didn’t die hanged,” Francis laughed. “As it was, he’s
-the only disgrace in the family that he founded. But what I was going to
-say is that I’ve looked him up very carefully. He kept his figure and he
-died lean in the middle, thank God. It’s a good inheritance he passed
-down. We Morgans never found his treasure; but beyond rubies is the
-lean-in-the-middle legacy he bequeathed us. It’s what is called a fixed
-character in the breed—that’s what the profs taught me in the biology
-course.”
-
-Parker faded out of the room in the ensuing silence, during which
-Francis Morgan buried himself in the Panama column and learned that the
-canal was not expected to be open for traffic for three weeks to come.
-
-A telephone buzzed, and, through the electric nerves of a consummate
-civilization, Destiny made the first out-reach of its tentacles and
-contacted with Francis Morgan in the library of the mansion his father
-had builded on Riverside Drive.
-
-“But my dear Mrs. Carruthers,” was his protest into the transmitter.
-“Whatever it is, it is a mere local flurry. Tampico Petroleum is all
-right. It is not a gambling proposition. It is legitimate investment.
-Stay with. Tie to it.... Some Minnesota farmer’s come to town and is
-trying to buy a block or two because it looks as solid as it really
-is.... What if it is up two points? Don’t sell. Tampico Petroleum is not
-a lottery or a roulette proposition. It’s bona fide industry. I wish it
-hadn’t been so almighty big or I’d have financed it all myself....
-Listen, please, it’s not a flyer. Our present contracts for tanks is
-over a million. Our railroad and our three pipe-lines are costing more
-than five millions. Why, we’ve a hundred millions in producing wells
-right now, and our problem is to get it down country to the
-oil-steamers. This is the sober investment time. A year from now, or two
-years, and your shares will make government bonds look like something
-the cat brought in....”
-
-“Yes, yes, please. Never mind how the market goes. Also, please, I
-didn’t advise you to go in in the first place. I never advised a friend
-to that. But now that they are in, stick. It’s as solid as the Bank of
-England.... Yes, Dicky and I divided the spoils last night. Lovely
-party, though Dicky’s got too much temperament for bridge.... Yes, bull
-luck.... Ha! ha! My temperament? Ha! Ha!... Yes?... Tell Harry I’m off
-and away for a couple of weeks.... Fishing, troutlets, you know, the
-springtime and the streams, the rise of sap, the budding and the
-blossoming and all the rest.... Yes, good-bye, and hold on to Tampico
-Petroleum. If it goes down, after that Minnesota farmer’s bulled it, buy
-a little more. I’m going to. It’s finding money.... Yes.... Yes,
-surely.... It’s too good to dare sell on a flyer now, because it mayn’t
-ever again go down.... Of course I know what I’m talking about. I’ve
-just had eight hours’ sleep, and haven’t had a drink.... Yes, yes....
-Good-bye.”
-
-He pulled the ticker tape into the comfort of his chair and languidly
-ran over it, noting with mildly growing interest the message it
-conveyed.
-
-Parker returned with several slender rods, each a glittering gem of
-artisanship and art. Francis was out of his chair, ticker flung aside
-and forgotten as with the exultant joy of a boy he examined the toys
-and, one after another, began trying them, switching them through the
-air till they made shrill whip-like noises, moving them gently with
-prudence and precision under the lofty ceiling as he made believe to
-cast across the floor into some unseen pool of trout-lurking mystery.
-
-A telephone buzzed. Irritation was swift on his face.
-
-“For heaven’s sake answer it, Parker,” he commanded. “If it is some
-silly stock-gambling female, tell her I’m dead, or drunk, or down with
-typhoid, or getting married, or anything calamitous.”
-
-After a moment’s dialogue, conducted on Parker’s part, in the discreet
-and modulated tones that befitted absolutely the cool, chaste, noble
-dignity of the room, with a “One moment, sir,” into the transmitter, he
-muffled the transmitter with his hand and said:
-
-“It’s Mr. Bascom, sir. He wants you.”
-
-“Tell Mr. Bascom to go to hell,” said Francis, simulating so long a
-cast, that, had it been in verity a cast, and had it pursued the course
-his fascinated gaze indicated, it would have gone through the window and
-most likely startled the gardener outside kneeling over the rose bush he
-was planting.
-
-“Mr. Bascom says it’s about the market, sir, and that he’d like to talk
-with you only a moment,” Parker urged, but so delicately and subduedly
-as to seem to be merely repeating an immaterial and unnecessary message.
-
-“All right.” Francis carefully leaned the rod against a table and went
-to the ‘phone.
-
-“Hello,” he said into the telephone. “Yes, this is I, Morgan. Shoot,
-What is it?”
-
-He listened for a minute, then interrupted irritably: “Sell—hell.
-Nothing of the sort.... Of course, I’m glad to know. Even if it goes up
-ten points, which it won’t, hold on to everything. It may be a
-legitimate rise, and it mayn’t ever come down. It’s solid. It’s worth
-far more than it’s listed. I know, if the public doesn’t. A year from
-now it’ll list at two hundred ... that is, if Mexico can cut the
-revolution stuff.... Whenever it drops you’ll have buying orders from
-me.... Nonsense. Who wants control? It’s purely sporadic ... eh? I beg
-your pardon. I mean it’s merely temporary. Now I’m going off fishing for
-a fortnight. If it goes down five points, buy. Buy all that’s offered.
-Say, when a fellow’s got a real bona fide property, being bulled is
-almost as bad as having the bears after one ... yes.... Sure ... yes.
-Good-bye.”
-
-And while Francis returned delightedly to his fishing-rods, Destiny, in
-Thomas Regan’s down-town private office, was working overtime. Having
-arranged with his various brokers to buy, and, through his divers
-channels of secret publicity having let slip the cryptic tip that
-something was wrong with Tampico Petroleum’s concessions from the
-Mexican government, Thomas Regan studied a report of his own oil-expert
-emissary who had spent two months on the spot spying out what Tampico
-Petroleum really had in sight and prospect.
-
-A clerk brought in a card with the information that the visitor was
-importunate and foreign. Regan listened, glanced at the card, and said:
-
-“Tell this Mister Senor Alvarez Torres of Ciodad de Colon that I can’t
-see him.”
-
-Five minutes later the clerk was back, this time with a message
-pencilled on the card. Regan grinned as he read it:
-
- “_Dear Mr. Regan_,
- “_Honoured Sir_:—
-
- “_I have the honour to inform you that I have a tip on the location
- of the treasure Sir Henry Morgan buried in old pirate days._
-
- “_Alvarez Torres._”
-
-Regan shook his head, and the clerk was nearly out of the room when his
-employer suddenly recalled him.
-
-“Show him in—at once.”
-
-In the interval of being alone, Regan chuckled to himself as he rolled
-the new idea over in his mind. “The unlicked cub!” he muttered through
-the smoke of the cigar he was lighting. “Thinks he can play the lion
-part old R.H.M. played. A trimming is what he needs, and old Grayhead
-Thomas R. will see that he gets it.”
-
-Senor Alvarez Torres’ English was as correct as his modish spring suit,
-and though the bleached yellow of his skin advertised his Latin-American
-origin, and though his black eyes were eloquent of the mixed lustres of
-Spanish and Indian long compounded, nevertheless he was as thoroughly
-New Yorkish as Thomas Regan could have wished.
-
-“By great effort, and years of research, I have finally won to the clue
-to the buccaneer gold of Sir Henry Morgan,” he preambled. “Of course
-it’s on the Mosquito Coast. I’ll tell you now that it’s not a thousand
-miles from the Chiriqui Lagoon, and that Bocas del Toro, within reason,
-may be described as the nearest town. I was born there—educated in
-Paris, however—and I know the neighbourhood like a book. A small
-schooner—the outlay is cheap, most very cheap—but the returns, the
-reward—the treasure!”
-
-Senor Torres paused in eloquent inability to describe more definitely,
-and Thomas Regan, hard man used to dealing with hard men, proceeded to
-bore into him and his data like a cross-examining criminal lawyer.
-
-“Yes,” Senor Torres quickly admitted, “I am somewhat embarrassed—how
-shall I say?—for immediate funds.”
-
-“You need the money,” the stock operator assured him brutally, and he
-bowed pained acquiescence.
-
-Much more he admitted under the rapid-fire interrogation. It was true,
-he had but recently left Bocas del Toro, but he hoped never again to go
-back. And yet he would go back if possibly some arrangement....
-
-But Regan shut him off with the abrupt way of the master-man dealing
-with lesser fellow-creatures. He wrote a check, in the name of Alvarez
-Torres, and when that gentleman glanced at it he read the figures of a
-thousand dollars.
-
-“Now here’s the idea,” said Regan. “I put no belief whatsoever in your
-story. But I have a young friend—my heart is bound up in the boy but he
-is too much about town, the white lights and the white-lighted ladies,
-and the rest—you understand?” And Senor Alvarez Torres bowed as one man
-of the world to another. “Now, for the good of his health, as well as
-his wealth and the saving of his soul, the best thing that could happen
-to him is a trip after treasure, adventure, exercise, and ... you
-readily understand, I am sure.”
-
-Again Alvarez Torres bowed.
-
-“You need the money,” Regan continued. “Strive to interest him. That
-thousand is for your effort. Succeed in interesting him so that he
-departs after old Morgan’s gold, and two thousand more is yours. So
-thoroughly succeed in interesting him that he remains away three months,
-two thousand more—six months, five thousand. Oh, believe me, I knew his
-father. We were comrades, partners, I—I might say, almost brothers. I
-would sacrifice any sum to win his son to manhood’s wholesome path. What
-do you say? The thousand is yours to begin with. Well?”
-
-With trembling fingers Senor Alvarez Torres folded and unfolded the
-check.
-
-“I ... I accept,” he stammered and faltered in his eagerness. “I ... I
-... How shall I say?... I am yours to command.”
-
-Five minutes later, as he arose to go, fully instructed in the part he
-was to play and with his story of Morgan’s treasure revised to
-convincingness by the brass-tack business acumen of the stock-gambler,
-he blurted out, almost facetiously, yet even more pathetically:
-
-“And the funniest thing about it, Mr. Regan, is that it is true. Your
-advised changes in my narrative make it sound more true, but true it is
-under it all. I need the money. You are most munificent, and I shall do
-my best.... I ... I pride myself that I am an artist. But the real and
-solemn truth is that the clue to Morgan’s buried loot is genuine. I have
-had access to records inaccessible to the public, which is neither here
-nor there, for the men of my own family—they are family records—have had
-similar access, and have wasted their lives before me in the futile
-search. Yet were they on the right clue—except that their wits made them
-miss the spot by twenty miles. It was there in the records. They missed
-it, because it was, I think, a deliberate trick, a conundrum, a puzzle,
-a disguisement, a maze, which I, and I alone, have penetrated and
-solved. The early navigators all played such tricks on the charts they
-drew. My Spanish race so hid the Hawaiian Islands by five degrees of
-longitude.”
-
-All of which was in turn Greek to Thomas Regan, who smiled his
-acceptance of listening and with the same smile conveyed his busy
-business-man’s tolerant unbelief.
-
-Scarcely was Senor Torres gone, when Francis Morgan was shown in.
-
-“Just thought I’d drop around for a bit of counsel,” he said, greetings
-over. “And to whom but you should I apply, who so closely played the
-game with my father? You and he were partners, I understand, on some of
-the biggest deals. He always told me to trust your judgment. And, well,
-here I am, and I want to go fishing. What’s up with Tampico Petroleum?”
-
-“What _is_ up?” Regan countered, with fine simulation of ignorance of
-the very thing of moment he was responsible for precipitating. “Tampico
-Petroleum?”
-
-Francis nodded, dropped into a chair, and lighted a cigarette, while
-Regan consulted the ticker.
-
-“Tampico Petroleum is up—two points—you should worry,” he opined.
-
-“That’s what I say,” Francis concurred. “I should worry. But just the
-same, do you think some bunch, onto the inside value of it—and it’s
-big—I speak under the rose, you know, I mean in absolute confidence?”
-Regan nodded. “It is big. It is right. It is the real thing. It is
-legitimate. Now this activity—would you think that somebody, or some
-bunch, is trying to get control?”
-
-His father’s associate, with the reverend gray of hair thatching his
-roof of crooked brain, shook the thatch.
-
-“Why,” he amplified, “it may be just a flurry, or it may be a hunch on
-the stock public that it’s really good. What do you say?”
-
-“Of course it’s good,” was Francis’ warm response. “I’ve got reports,
-Regan, so good they’d make your hair stand up. As I tell all my friends,
-this is the real legitimate. It’s a damned shame I had to let the public
-in on it. It was so big, I just had to. Even all the money my father
-left me, couldn’t swing it—I mean, free money, not the stuff tied
-up—money to work with.”
-
-“Are you short?” the older man queried.
-
-“Oh, I’ve got a tidy bit to operate with,” was the airy reply of youth.
-
-“You mean...?”
-
-“Sure. Just that. If she drops, I’ll buy. It’s finding money.”
-
-“Just about how far would you buy?” was the next searching
-interrogation, masked by an expression of mingled good humor and
-approbation.
-
-“All I’ve got,” came Francis Morgan’s prompt answer. “I tell you, Regan,
-it’s immense.”
-
-“I haven’t looked into it to amount to anything, Francis; but I will say
-from the little I know that it listens good.”
-
-“Listens! I tell you, Regan, it’s the Simon-pure, straight legitimate,
-and it’s a shame to have it listed at all. I don’t have to wreck anybody
-or anything to pull it across. The world will be better for my shooting
-into it I am afraid to say how many hundreds of millions of barrels of
-real oil——say, I’ve got one well alone, in the Huasteca field, that’s
-gushed 27,000 barrels a day for seven months. And it’s still doing it.
-That’s the drop in the bucket we’ve got piped to market now. And it’s
-twenty-two gravity, and carries less than two-tenths of one per cent. of
-sediment. And there’s one gusher—sixty miles of pipe to build to it, and
-pinched down to the limit of safety, that’s pouring out all over the
-landscape just about seventy thousand barrels a day.—Of course, all in
-confidence, you know. We’re doing nicely, and I don’t want Tampico
-Petroleum to skyrocket.”
-
-“Don’t you worry about that, my lad. You’ve got to get your oil piped,
-and the Mexican revolution straightened out before ever Tampico
-Petroleum soars. You go fishing and forget it.” Regan paused, with
-finely simulated sudden recollection, and picked up Alvarez Torres’ card
-with the pencilled note. “Look, who’s just been to see me.” Apparently
-struck with an idea, Regan retained the card a moment. “Why go fishing
-for mere trout? After all, it’s only recreation. Here’s a thing to go
-fishing after that there’s real recreation in, full-size man’s
-recreation, and not the Persian-palace recreation of an Adirondack camp,
-with ice and servants and electric push-buttons. Your father always was
-more than a mite proud of that old family pirate. He claimed to look
-like him, and you certainly look like your dad.”
-
-“Sir Henry,” Francis smiled, reaching for the card. “So am I a mite
-proud of the old scoundrel.”
-
-He looked up questioningly from the reading of the card.
-
-“He’s a plausible cuss,” Regan explained. “Claims to have been born
-right down there on the Mosquito Coast, and to have got the tip from
-private papers in his family. Not that I believe a word of it. I haven’t
-time or interest to get started believing in stuff outside my own
-field.”
-
-“Just the same, Sir Henry died practically a poor man,” Francis
-asserted, the lines of the Morgan stubbornness knitting themselves for a
-flash on his brows. “And they never did find any of his buried
-treasure.”
-
-“Good fishing,” Regan girded good-humoredly.
-
-“I’d like to meet this Alvarez Torres just the same,” the young man
-responded.
-
-“Fool’s gold,” Regan continued. “Though I must admit that the cuss is
-most exasperatingly plausible. Why, if I were younger—but oh, the devil,
-my work’s cut out for me here.”
-
-“Do you know where I can find him?” Francis was asking the next moment,
-all unwittingly putting his neck into the net of tentacles that Destiny,
-in the visible incarnation of Thomas Regan, was casting out to snare
-him.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The next morning the meeting took place in Regan’s office. Senor Alvarez
-Torres startled and controlled himself at first sight of Francis’ face.
-This was not missed by Regan, who grinningly demanded:
-
-“Looks like the old pirate himself, eh?”
-
-“Yes, the resemblance is most striking,” Torres lied, or half-lied, for
-he did recognize the resemblance to the portraits he had seen of Sir
-Henry Morgan; although at the same time under his eyelids he saw the
-vision of another and living man who, no less than Francis and Sir
-Henry, looked as much like both of them as either looked like the other.
-
-Francis was youth that was not to be denied. Modern maps and ancient
-charts were pored over, as well as old documents, handwritten in faded
-ink on time-yellowed paper, and at the end of half an hour he announced
-that the next fish he caught would be on either the Bull or the Calf—the
-two islets off the Lagoon of Chiriqui, on one or the other of which
-Torres averred the treasure lay.
-
-“I’ll catch to-night’s train for New Orleans,” Francis announced. “That
-will just make connection with one of the United Fruit Company’s boats
-for Colon—oh, I had it all looked up before I slept last night.”
-
-“But don’t charter a schooner at Colon,” Torres advised. “Take the
-overland trip by horseback to Belen. There’s the place to charter, with
-unsophisticated native sailors and everything else unsophisticated.”
-
-“Listens good!” Francis agreed. “I always wanted to see that country
-down there. You’ll be ready to catch to-night’s train, Senor Torres?...
-Of course, you understand, under the circumstances, I’ll be the
-treasurer and foot the expenses.”
-
-But at a privy glance from Regan, Alvarez Torres lied with swift
-efficientness.
-
-“I must join you later, I regret, Mr. Morgan. Some little business that
-presses—how shall I say?—an insignificant little lawsuit that must be
-settled first. Not that the sum at issue is important. But it is a
-family matter, and therefore gravely important. We Torres have our
-pride, which is a silly thing, I acknowledge, in this country, but which
-with us is very serious.”
-
-“He can join afterward, and straighten you out if you’ve missed the
-scent,” Regan assured Francis. “And, before it slips your mind, it might
-be just as well to arrange with Senor Torres some division of the loot
-... if you ever find it.”
-
-“What would you say?” Francis asked.
-
-“Equal division, fifty-fifty,” Regan answered, magnificently arranging
-the apportionment between the two men of something he was certain did
-not exist.
-
-“And you will follow after as soon as you can?” Francis asked the Latin
-American. “Regan, take hold of his little law affair yourself and
-expedite it, won’t you?”
-
-“Sure, boy,” was the answer. “And, if it’s needed, shall I advance cash
-to Senor Alvarez?”
-
-“Fine!” Francis shook their hands in both of his. “It will save me
-bother. And I’ve got to rush to pack and break engagements and catch
-that train. So long, Regan. Good-bye, Senor Torres, until we meet
-somewhere around Bocas del Toro, or in a little hole in the ground on
-the Bull or the Calf—you say you think it’s the Calf? Well, until
-then—adios!”
-
-And Senor Alvarez Torres remained with Regan some time longer, receiving
-explicit instructions for the part he was to play, beginning with
-retardation and delay of Francis’ expedition, and culminating in similar
-retardation and delay always to be continued.
-
-“In short,” Regan concluded, “I don’t almost care if he never comes
-back—if you can keep him down there for the good of his health that long
-and longer.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER II
-
-
-Money, like youth, will not be denied, and Francis Morgan, who was the
-man-legal and nature-certain representative of both youth and money,
-found himself one afternoon, three weeks after he had said good-bye to
-Regan, becalmed close under the land on board his schooner, the
-_Angelique_. The water was glassy, the smooth roll scarcely perceptible,
-and, in sheer ennui and overplus of energy that likewise declined to be
-denied, he asked the captain, a breed, half Jamaica negro and half
-Indian, to order a small skiff over the side.
-
-“Looks like I might shoot a parrot or a monkey or something,” he
-explained, searching the jungle-clad shore, half a mile away, through a
-twelve-power Zeiss glass.
-
-“Most problematic, sir, that you are bitten by a _labarri_, which is
-deadly viper in these parts,” grinned the breed skipper and owner of the
-_Angelique_, who, from his Jamaica father had inherited the gift of
-tongues.
-
-But Francis was not to be deterred; for at the moment, through his
-glass, he had picked out, first, in the middle ground, a white hacienda,
-and second, on the beach, a white-clad woman’s form, and further, had
-seen that she was scrutinising him and the schooner through a pair of
-binoculars.
-
-“Put the skiff over, skipper,” he ordered. “Who lives around here?—white
-folks?”
-
-“The Enrico Solano family, sir,” was the answer. “My word, they are
-important gentlefolk, old Spanish, and they own the entire general
-landscape from the sea to the Cordilleras and half of the Chiriqui
-Lagoon as well. They are very poor, most powerful rich ... in
-landscape—and they are prideful and fiery as cayenne pepper.”
-
-As Francis, in the tiny skiff, rowed shoreward, the skipper’s alert eye
-noted that he had neglected to take along either rifle or shotgun for
-the contemplated parrot or monkey. And, next, the skipper’s eye picked
-up the white-clad woman’s figure against the dark edge of the jungle.
-
-Straight to the white beach of coral sand Francis rowed, not trusting
-himself to look over his shoulder to see if the woman remained or had
-vanished. In his mind was merely a young man’s healthy idea of
-encountering a bucolic young lady, or a half-wild white woman for that
-matter, or at the best a very provincial one, with whom he could fool
-and fun away a few minutes of the calm that fettered the _Angelique_ to
-immobility. When the skiff grounded, he stepped out, and with one sturdy
-arm lifted its nose high enough up the sand to fasten it by its own
-weight. Then he turned around. The beach to the jungle was bare. He
-strode forward confidently. Any traveller, on so strange a shore, had a
-right to seek inhabitants for information on his way—was the idea he was
-acting out.
-
-And he, who had anticipated a few moments of diversion merely, was
-diverted beyond his fondest expectations. Like a jack-in-the-box, the
-woman, who, in the flash of vision vouchsafed him demonstrated that she
-was a girl-woman, ripely mature and yet mostly girl, sprang out of the
-green wall of jungle and with both hands seized his arm. The hearty
-weight of grip in the seizure surprised him. He fumbled his hat off with
-his free hand and bowed to the strange woman with the imperturbableness
-of a Morgan, New York trained and disciplined to be surprised at
-nothing, and received another surprise, or several surprises compounded.
-Not alone was it her semi-brunette beauty that impacted upon him with
-the weight of a blow, but it was her gaze, driven into him, that was all
-of sternness. Almost it seemed to him that he must know her. Strangers,
-in his experience, never so looked at one another.
-
-The double grip on his arm became a draw, as she muttered tensely:
-
-“Quick! Follow me!”
-
-A moment he resisted. She shook him in the fervor of her desire, and
-strove to pull him toward her and after her. With the feeling that it
-was some unusual game, such as one might meet up with on the coast of
-Central America, he yielded, smilingly, scarcely knowing whether he
-followed voluntarily or was being dragged into the jungle by her
-impetuosity.
-
-“Do as I do,” she shot back at him over her shoulder, by this time
-leading him with one hand of hers in his.
-
-He smiled and obeyed, crouching when she crouched, doubling over when
-she doubled, while memories of John Smith and Pocahontas glimmered up in
-his fancy.
-
-Abruptly she checked him and sat down, her hand directing him to sit
-beside her ere she released him, and pressed it to her heart while she
-panted:
-
-“Thank God! Oh, merciful Virgin!”
-
-In imitation, such having been her will of him, and such seeming to be
-the cue of the game, he smilingly pressed his own hand to his heart,
-although he called neither on God nor the Virgin.
-
-“Won’t you ever be serious?” she flashed at him, noting his action.
-
-And Francis was immediately and profoundly, as well as naturally,
-serious.
-
-“My dear lady...” he began.
-
-But an abrupt gesture checked him; and, with growing wonder, he watched
-her bend and listen, and heard the movement of bodies padding down some
-runway several yards away.
-
-With a soft warm palm pressed commandingly to his to be silent, she left
-him with the abruptness that he had already come to consider as
-customary with her, and slipped away down the runway. Almost he whistled
-with astonishment. He might have whistled it, had he not heard her
-voice, not distant, in Spanish, sharply interrogate men whose Spanish
-voices, half-humbly, half-insistently and half-rebelliously, answered
-her.
-
-He heard them move on, still talking, and, after five minutes of dead
-silence, heard her call for him peremptorily to come out.
-
-“Gee! I wonder what Regan would do under such circumstances!” he smiled
-to himself as he obeyed.
-
-He followed her, no longer hand in hand, through the jungle to the
-beach. When she paused, he came beside her and faced her, still under
-the impress of the fantasy which possessed him that it was a game.
-
-“Tag!” he laughed, touching her on the shoulder. “Tag!” he reiterated.
-“You’re It!”
-
-The anger of her blazing dark eyes scorched him.
-
-“You fool!” she cried, lifting her finger with what he considered undue
-intimacy to his toothbrush moustache. “As if that could disguise you!”
-
-“But my dear lady...” he began to protest his certain unacquaintance
-with her.
-
-Her retort, which broke off his speech, was as unreal and bizarre as
-everything else which had gone before. So quick was it, that he failed
-to see whence the tiny silver revolver had been drawn, the muzzle of
-which was not presented merely toward his abdomen, but pressed closely
-against it.
-
-“My dear lady...” he tried again.
-
-“I won’t talk with you,” she shut him off. “Go back to your schooner,
-and go away....” He guessed the inaudible sob of the pause, ere she
-concluded, “Forever.”
-
-This time his mouth opened to speech that was aborted on his lips by the
-stiff thrust of the muzzle of the weapon into his abdomen.
-
-“If you ever come back—the Madonna forgive me—I shall shoot myself.”
-
-“Guess I’d better go, then,” he uttered airily, as he turned to the
-skiff, toward which he walked in stately embarrassment, half-filled with
-laughter for himself and for the ridiculous and incomprehensible figure
-he was cutting.
-
-Endeavoring to retain a last shred of dignity, he took no notice that
-she had followed him. As he lifted the skiff’s nose from the sand, he
-was aware that a faint wind was rustling the palm fronds. A long breeze
-was darkening the water close at hand, while, far out across the
-mirrored water the outlying keys of Chiriqui Lagoon shimmered like a
-mirage above the dark-crisping water.
-
-A sob compelled him to desist from stepping into the skiff, and to turn
-his head. The strange young woman, revolver dropped to her side, was
-crying. His step back to her was instant, and the touch of his hand on
-her arm was sympathetic and inquiring. She shuddered at his touch, drew
-away from him, and gazed at him reproachfully through her tears. With a
-shrug of shoulders to her many moods and of surrender to the
-incomprehensibleness of the situation, he was about to turn to the boat,
-when she stopped him.
-
-“At least you...” she began, then faltered and swallowed, “you might
-kiss me good-bye.”
-
-She advanced impulsively, with outstretched arms, the revolver dangling
-incongruously from her right hand. Francis hesitated a puzzled moment,
-then gathered her in to receive an astounding passionate kiss on his
-lips ere she dropped her head on his shoulder in a breakdown of tears.
-Despite his amazement he was aware of the revolver pressing flat-wise
-against his back between the shoulders. She lifted her tear-wet face and
-kissed him again and again, and he wondered to himself if he were a cad
-for meeting her kisses with almost equal and fully as mysterious
-impulsiveness.
-
-With a feeling that he did not in the least care how long the tender
-episode might last, he was startled by her quick drawing away from him,
-as anger and contempt blazed back in her face, and as she menacingly
-directed him with the revolver to get into the boat.
-
-He shrugged his shoulders as if to say that he could not say no to a
-lovely lady, and obeyed, sitting to the oars and facing her as he began
-rowing away.
-
-“The Virgin save me from my wayward heart,” she cried, with her free
-hand tearing a locket from her bosom, and, in a shower of golden beads,
-flinging the ornament into the waterway midway between them.
-
-From the edge of the jungle he saw three men, armed with rifles, run
-toward her where she had sunk down in the sand. In the midst of lifting
-her up, they caught sight of Francis, who had begun rowing a strong
-stroke. Over his shoulder he glimpsed the _Angelique_, close hauled and
-slightly heeling, cutting through the water toward him. The next moment,
-one of the trio on the beach, a bearded elderly man, was directing the
-girl’s binoculars on him. And the moment after, dropping the glasses, he
-was taking aim with his rifle.
-
-The bullet spat on the water within a yard of the skiff’s side, and
-Francis saw the girl spring to her feet, knock up the rifle with her
-arm, and spoil the second shot. Next, pulling lustily, he saw the men
-separate from her to sight their rifles, and saw her threatening them
-with the revolver into lowering their weapons.
-
-The _Angelique_, thrown up into the wind to stop way, foamed alongside,
-and with an agile leap Francis was aboard, while already, the skipper
-putting the wheel up, the schooner was paying off and filling. With
-boyish zest, Francis wafted a kiss of farewell to the girl, who was
-staring toward him, and saw her collapse on the shoulders of the bearded
-elderly man.
-
-“Cayenne pepper, eh—those damned, horrible, crazy-proud Solanos,” the
-breed skipper flashed at Francis with white teeth of laughter.
-
-“Just bugs—clean crazy, nobody at home,” Francis laughed back, as he
-sprang to the rail to waft further kisses to the strange damsel.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Before the land wind, the _Angelique_ made the outer rim of Chiriqui
-Lagoon and the Bull and Calf, some fifty miles farther along on the rim,
-by midnight, when the skipper hove to to wait for daylight. After
-breakfast, rowed by a Jamaica negro sailor in the skiff, Francis landed
-to reconnoiter on the Bull, which was the larger island and which the
-skipper had told him he might find occupied at that season of the year
-by turtle-catching Indians from the mainland.
-
-And Francis very immediately found that he had traversed not merely
-thirty degrees of latitude from New York but thirty hundred years, or
-centuries for that matter, from the last word of civilisation to almost
-the first word of the primeval. Naked, except for breech-clouts of
-gunny-sacking, armed with cruelly heavy hacking blades of machetes, the
-turtle-catchers were swift in proving themselves arrant beggars and
-dangerous man-killers. The Bull belonged to them, they told him through
-the medium of his Jamaican sailor’s interpreting; but the Calf, which
-used to belong to them for the turtle season now was possessed by a
-madly impossible Gringo, whose reckless, dominating ways had won from
-them the respect of fear for a two-legged human creature who was more
-fearful than themselves.
-
-While Francis, for a silver dollar, dispatched one of them with a
-message to the mysterious Gringo that he desired to call on him, the
-rest of them clustered about Francis’ skiff, whining for money,
-glowering upon him, and even impudently stealing his pipe, yet warm from
-his lips, which he had laid beside him in the sternsheets. Promptly he
-had laid a blow on the ear of the thief, and the next thief who seized
-it, and recovered the pipe. Machetes out and sun-glistening their
-clean-slicing menace, Francis covered and controlled the gang with an
-automatic pistol; and, while they drew apart in a group and whispered
-ominously, he made the discovery that his lone sailor-interpreter was a
-weak brother and received his returned messenger.
-
-The negro went over to the turtle-catchers and talked with a
-friendliness and subservience, the tones of which Francis did not like.
-The messenger handed him his note, across which was scrawled in pencil:
-
-“Vamos.”
-
-“Guess I’ll have to go across myself,” Francis told the negro whom he
-had beckoned back to him.
-
-“Better be very careful and utmostly cautious, sir,” the negro warned
-him. “These animals without reason are very problematically likely to
-act most unreasonably, sir.”
-
-“Get into the boat and row me over,” Francis commanded shortly.
-
-“No, sir, I regret much to say, sir,” was the black sailor’s answer. “I
-signed on, sir, as a sailor to Captain Trefethen, but I didn’t sign on
-for no suicide, and I can’t see my way to rowin’ you over, sir, to
-certain death. Best thing we can do is to get out of this hot place
-that’s certainly and without peradventure of a doubt goin’ to get hotter
-for us if we remain, sir.”
-
-In huge disgust and scorn Francis pocketed his automatic, turned his
-back on the sacking-clad savages, and walked away through the palms.
-Where a great boulder of coral rock had been upthrust by some ancient
-restlessness of the earth, he came down to the beach. On the shore of
-the Calf, across the narrow channel, he made out a dinghy drawn up.
-Drawn up on his own side was a crank-looking and manifestly leaky dugout
-canoe. As he tilted the water out of it, he noticed that the
-turtle-catchers had followed and were peering at him from the edge of
-the coconuts, though his weak-hearted sailor was not in sight.
-
-To paddle across the channel was a matter of moments, but scarcely was
-he on the beach of the Calf when further inhospitality greeted him on
-the part of a tall, barefooted young man, who stepped from behind a
-palm, automatic pistol in hand, and shouted:
-
-“Vamos! Get out! Scut!”
-
-“Ye gods and little fishes!” Francis grinned, half-humorously,
-half-seriously. “A fellow can’t move in these parts without having a gun
-shoved in his face. And everybody says get out pronto.”
-
-“Nobody invited you,” the stranger retorted. “You’re intruding. Get off
-my island. I’ll give you half a minute.”
-
-“I’m getting sore, friend,” Francis assured him truthfully, at the same
-time, out of the corner of his eye, measuring the distance to the
-nearest palm-trunk. “Everybody I meet around here is crazy and
-discourteous, and peevishly anxious to be rid of my presence, and
-they’ve just got me feeling that way myself. Besides, just because you
-tell me it’s your island is no proof——”
-
-The swift rush he made to the shelter of the palm left his sentence
-unfinished. His arrival behind the trunk was simultaneous with the
-arrival of a bullet that thudded into the other side of it.
-
-“Now, just for that!” he called out, as he centered a bullet into the
-trunk of the other man’s palm.
-
-The next few minutes they blazed away, or waited for calculated shots,
-and when Francis’ eighth and last had been fired, he was unpleasantly
-certain that he had counted only seven shots for the stranger. He
-cautiously exposed part of his sun-helmet, held in his hand, and had it
-perforated.
-
-“What gun are you using?” he asked with cool politeness.
-
-“Colt’s,” came the answer.
-
-Francis stepped boldly into the open, saying: “Then you’re all out. I
-counted ‘em. Eight. Now we can talk.”
-
-The stranger stepped out, and Francis could not help admiring the fine
-figure of him, despite the fact that a dirty pair of canvas pants, a
-cotton undershirt, and a floppy sombrero constituted his garmenting.
-Further, it seemed he had previously known him, though it did not enter
-his mind that he was looking at a replica of himself.
-
-“Talk!” the stranger sneered, throwing down his pistol and drawing a
-knife. “Now we’ll just cut off your ears, and maybe scalp you.”
-
-“Gee! You’re sweet-natured and gentle animals in this neck of the
-woods,” Francis retorted, his anger and disgust increasing. He drew his
-own hunting knife, brand new from the shop and shining. “Say, let’s
-wrestle, and cut out this ten-twenty-and-thirty knife stuff.”
-
-“I want your ears,” the stranger answered pleasantly, as he slowly
-advanced.
-
-“Sure. First down, and the man who wins the fall gets the other fellow’s
-ears.”
-
-“Agreed.” The young man in the canvas trousers sheathed his knife.
-
-“Too bad there isn’t a moving picture camera to film this,” Francis
-girded, sheathing his own knife. “I’m sore as a boil. I feel like a heap
-bad Injun. Watch out! I’m coming in a rush! Anyway and everyway for the
-first fall!”
-
-Action and word went together, and his glorious rush ended
-ignominiously, for the stronger, apparently braced for the shock,
-yielded the instant their bodies met and fell over on his back, at the
-same time planting his foot in Francis’ abdomen and, from the back
-purchase on the ground, transforming Francis’ rush into a wild forward
-somersault.
-
-The fall on the sand knocked most of Francis’ breath out of him, and the
-flying body of his foe, impacting on him, managed to do for what little
-breath was left him. As he lay speechless on his back, he observed the
-man on top of him gazing down at him with sudden curiosity.
-
-“What d’ you want to wear a mustache for?” the stranger muttered.
-
-“Go on and cut ‘em off,” Francis gasped, with the first of his returning
-breath. “The ears are yours, but the mustache is mine. It is not in the
-bond. Besides, that fall was straight jiu jiutsu.”
-
-“You said ‘anyway and everyway for the first fall,’” the other quoted
-laughingly. “As for your ears, keep them. I never intended to cut them
-off, and now that I look at them closely the less I want them. Get up
-and get out of here. I’ve licked you. _Vamos!_ And don’t come sneaking
-around here again! Git! Scut!”
-
-In greater disgust than ever, to which was added the humiliation of
-defeat, Francis turned down to the beach toward his canoe.
-
-“Say, Little Stranger, do you mind leaving your card?” the victor called
-after him.
-
-“Visiting cards and cut-throating don’t go together,” Francis shot back
-across his shoulder, as he squatted in the canoe and dipped his paddle.
-“My name’s Morgan.”
-
-Surprise and startlement were the stranger’s portion, as he opened his
-mouth to speak, then changed his mind and murmured to himself, “Same
-stock—no wonder we look alike.”
-
-Still in the throes of disgust, Francis regained the shore of the Bull,
-sat down on the edge of the dugout, filled and lighted his pipe, and
-gloomily meditated. Crazy, everybody, was the run of his thought. Nobody
-acts with reason. “I’d like to see old Regan try to do business with
-these people. They’d get his ears.”
-
-Could he have seen, at that moment, the young man of the canvas pants
-and of familiar appearance, he would have been certain that naught but
-lunacy resided in Latin America; for the young man in question, inside a
-grass-thatched hut in the heart of his island, grinning to himself as he
-uttered aloud, “I guess I put the fear of God into that particular
-member of the Morgan family,” had just begun to stare at a photographic
-reproduction of an oil painting on the wall of the original Sir Henry
-Morgan.
-
-“Well, Old Pirate,” he continued grinning, “two of your latest
-descendants came pretty close to getting each other with automatics that
-would make your antediluvian horse-pistols look like thirty cents.”
-
-He bent to a battered and worm-eaten sea-chest, lifted the lid that was
-monogramed with an “M,” and again addressed the portrait:
-
-“Well, old pirate Welshman of an ancestor, all you’ve left me is the old
-duds and a face that looks like yours. And I guess, if I was really
-fired up, I could play your Port-au-Prince stunt about as well as you
-played it yourself.”
-
-A moment later, beginning to dress himself in the age-worn and
-moth-eaten garments of the chest, he added: “Well, here’s the old duds
-on my back. Come, Mister Ancestor, down out of your frame, and dare to
-tell me a point of looks in which we differ.”
-
-Clad in Sir Henry Morgan’s ancient habiliments, a cutlass strapped on
-around the middle and two flintlock pistols of huge and ponderous design
-thrust into his waist-scarf, the resemblance between the living man and
-the pictured semblance of the old buccaneer who had been long since
-resolved to dust, was striking.
-
- “Back to back against the mainmast,
- Held at bay the entire crew....”
-
-As the young man, picking the strings of a guitar, began to sing the old
-buccaneer rouse, it seemed to him that the picture of his forebear faded
-into another picture and that he saw:
-
-The old forebear himself, back to a mainmast, cutlass out and flashing,
-facing a semi-circle of fantastically clad sailor cutthroats, while
-behind him, on the opposite side of the mast, another similarly garbed
-and accoutred man, with cutlass flashing, faced the other semi-circle of
-cutthroats that completed the ring about the mast.
-
-The vivid vision of his fancy was broken by the breaking of a
-guitar-string which he had thrummed too passionately. And in the sharp
-pause of silence, it seemed that a fresh vision of old Sir Henry came to
-him, down out of the frame and beside him, real in all seeming, plucking
-at his sleeve to lead him out of the hut and whispering a ghostly
-repetition of:
-
- “Back to back against the mainmast
- Held at bay the entire crew.”
-
-The young man obeyed his shadowy guide, or some prompting of his own
-profound of intuition, and went out the door and down to the beach,
-where, gazing across the narrow channel, on the beach of the Bull, he
-saw his late antagonist, backed up against the great boulder of coral
-rock, standing off an attack of sack-clouted, machete-wielding Indians
-with wide sweeping strokes of a driftwood timber.
-
- * * * * *
-
-And Francis, in extremity, swaying dizzily from the blow of a rock on
-his head, saw the apparition, that almost convinced him he was already
-dead and in the realm of the shades, of Sir Henry Morgan himself,
-cutlass in hand, rushing up the beach to his rescue. Further, the
-apparition, brandishing the cutlass and laying out Indians right and
-left, was bellowing:
-
- “Back to back against the mainmast,
- Held at bay the entire crew.”
-
-As Francis’ knees gave under him and he slowly crumpled and sank down,
-he saw the Indians scatter and flee before the onslaught of the weird
-pirate figure and heard their cries of:
-
-“Heaven help us!” “The Virgin protect us!” “It’s the ghost of old
-Morgan!”
-
- * * * * *
-
-Francis next opened his eyes inside the grass hut in the midmost center
-of the Calf. First, in the glimmering of sight of returning
-consciousness, he beheld the pictured lineaments of Sir Henry Morgan
-staring down at him from the wall. Next, it was a younger edition of the
-same, in three dimensions of living, moving flesh, who thrust a mug of
-brandy to his lips and bade him drink. Francis was on his feet ere he
-touched lips to the mug; and both he and the stranger man, moved by a
-common impulse, looked squarely into each other’s eyes, glanced at the
-picture on the wall and touched mugs in a salute to the picture and to
-each other ere they drank.
-
-“You told me you were a Morgan,” the stranger said. “I am a Morgan. That
-man on the wall fathered my breed. Your breed?”
-
-“The old buccaneer’s,” Francis returned. “My first name is Francis. And
-yours?”
-
-“Henry—straight from the original. We must be remote cousins or
-something or other. I’m after the foxy old niggardly old Welshman’s
-loot.”
-
-“So’m I,” said Francis, extending his hand. “But to hell with sharing.”
-
-“The old blood talks in you,” Henry smiled approbation. “For him to have
-who finds. I’ve turned most of this island upside down in the last six
-months, and all I’ve found are these old duds. I’m with you to beat you
-if I can, but to put my back against the mainmast with you any time the
-needed call goes out.”
-
-“That song’s a wonder,” Francis urged. “I want to learn it. Lift the
-stave again.”
-
-And together, clanking their mugs, they sang:
-
- “Back to back against the mainmast,
- Held at bay the entire crew....”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER III
-
-
-But a splitting headache put a stop to Francis’ singing and made him
-glad to be swung in a cool hammock by Henry, who rowed off to the
-_Angelique_ with orders from his visitor to the skipper to stay at
-anchor but not to permit any of his sailors to land on the Calf. Not
-until late in the morning of the following day, after hours of heavy
-sleep, did Francis get on his feet and announce that his head was clear
-again.
-
-“I know what it is—got bucked off a horse once,” his strange relative
-sympathised, as he poured him a huge cup of fragrant black coffee.
-“Drink that down. It will make a new man of you. Can’t offer you much
-for breakfast except bacon, sea biscuit, and some scrambled turtle eggs.
-They’re fresh. I guarantee that, for I dug them out this morning while
-you slept.”
-
-“That coffee is a meal in itself,” Francis praised, meanwhile studying
-his kinsman and ever and anon glancing at the portrait of their
-relative.
-
-“You’re just like him, and in more than mere looks,” Henry laughed,
-catching him in his scrutiny. “When you refused to share yesterday, it
-was old Sir Henry to the life. He had a deep-seated antipathy against
-sharing, even with his own crews. It’s what caused most of his troubles.
-And he’s certainly never shared a penny of his treasure with any of his
-descendants. Now I’m different. Not only will I share the Calf with you;
-but I’ll present you with my half as well, lock, stock, and barrel, this
-grass hut, all these nice furnishings, tenements, hereditaments, and
-everything, and what’s left of the turtle eggs. When do you want to move
-in?”
-
-“You mean...?” Francis asked.
-
-“Just that. There’s nothing here. I’ve just about dug the island upside
-down and all I found was the chest there full of old clothes.”
-
-“It must have encouraged you.”
-
-“Mightily. I thought I had a hammerlock on it. At any rate, it showed
-I’m on the right track.”
-
-“What’s the matter with trying the Bull?” Francis queried.
-
-“That’s my idea right now,” was the answer, “though I’ve got another
-clue for over on the mainland. Those old-timers had a way of noting down
-their latitude and longitude whole degrees out of the way.”
-
-“Ten North and Ninety East on the chart might mean Twelve North and
-Ninety-two East,” Francis concurred. “Then again it might mean Eight
-North and Eighty-eight East. They carried the correction in their heads,
-and if they died unexpectedly, which was their custom, it seems, the
-secret died with them.”
-
-“I’ve half a notion to go over to the Bull and chase those
-turtle-catchers back to the mainland,” Henry went on. “And then again
-I’d almost like to tackle the mainland clue first. I suppose you’ve got
-a stock of clues, too?”
-
-“Sure thing,” Francis nodded. “But say, I’d like to take back what I
-said about not sharing.”
-
-“Say the word,” the other encouraged.
-
-“Then I do say it.”
-
-Their hands extended and gripped in ratification.
-
-“Morgan and Morgan strictly limited,” chortled Francis.
-
-“Assets, the whole Caribbean Sea, the Spanish Main, most of Central
-America, one chest full of perfectly no good old clothes, and a lot of
-holes in the ground,” Henry joined in the other’s humor. “Liabilities,
-snake-bite, thieving Indians, malaria, yellow fever——”
-
-“And pretty girls with a habit of kissing total strangers one moment,
-and of sticking up said total strangers with shiny silver revolvers the
-next moment,” Francis cut in. “Let me tell you about it. Day before
-yesterday, I rowed ashore over on the mainland. The moment I landed, the
-prettiest girl in the world pounced out upon me and dragged me away into
-the jungle. Thought she was going to eat me or marry me. I didn’t know
-which. And before I could find out, what’s the pretty damsel do but pass
-uncomplimentary remarks on my mustache and chase me back to the boat
-with a revolver. Told me to beat it and never come back, or words to
-that effect.”
-
-“Whereabouts on the mainland was this?” Henry demanded, with a tenseness
-which Francis, chuckling his reminiscence of the misadventure, did not
-notice.
-
-“Down toward the other end of Chiriqui Lagoon,” he replied. “It was the
-stamping ground of the Solano family, I learned; and they are a red
-peppery family, as I found out. But I haven’t told you all. Listen.
-First she dragged me into the vegetation and insulted my mustache; next
-she chased me to the boat with a drawn revolver; and then she wanted to
-know why I didn’t kiss her. Can you beat that?”
-
-“And did you?” Henry demanded, his hand unconsciously clinching by his
-side.
-
-“What could a poor stranger in a strange land do? It was some armful of
-pretty girl——”
-
-The next fraction of a second Francis had sprung to his feet and blocked
-before his jaw a crushing blow of Henry’s fist.
-
-“I ... I beg your pardon,” Henry mumbled, and slumped down on the
-ancient sea chest. “I’m a fool, I know, but I’ll be hanged if I can
-stand for——”
-
-“There you go again,” Francis interrupted resentfully. “As crazy as
-everybody else in this crazy country. One moment you bandage up my
-cracked head, and the next moment you want to knock that same head clean
-off of me. As bad as the girl taking turns at kissing me and shoving a
-gun into my midrif.”
-
-“That’s right, fire away, I deserve it,” Henry admitted ruefully, but
-involuntarily began to fire up as he continued with: “Confound you, that
-was Leoncia.”
-
-“What if it was Leoncia? Or Mercedes? Or Dolores? Can’t a fellow kiss a
-pretty girl at a revolver’s point without having his head knocked off by
-the next ruffian he meets in dirty canvas pants on a notorious sand-heap
-of an island?”
-
-“When the pretty girl is engaged to marry the ruffian in the dirty
-canvas pants——”
-
-“You don’t mean to tell me——” the other broke in excitedly.
-
-“It isn’t particularly amusing to said ruffian to be told that his
-sweetheart has been kissing a ruffian she never saw before from off a
-disreputable Jamaica nigger’s schooner,” Henry completed his sentence.
-
-“And she took me for you,” Francis mused, glimpsing the situation. “I
-don’t blame you for losing your temper, though you must admit it’s a
-nasty one. Wanted to cut off my ears yesterday, didn’t you?”
-
-“Yours is just as nasty, Francis, my boy. The way you insisted that I
-cut them off when I had you down—ha! ha!”
-
-Both young men laughed in hearty amity.
-
-“It’s the old Morgan temper,” Henry said. “He was by all the accounts a
-peppery old cuss.”
-
-“No more peppery than those Solanos you’re marrying into. Why, most of
-the family came down on the beach and peppered me with rifles on my
-departing way. And your Leoncia pulled her little popgun on a
-long-bearded old fellow who might have been her father and gave him to
-understand she’d shoot him full of holes if he didn’t stop plugging away
-at me.”
-
-“It was her father, I’ll wager, old Enrico himself,” Henry exclaimed.
-“And the other chaps were her brothers.”
-
-“Lovely lizards!” ejaculated Francis. “Say, don’t you think life is
-liable to become a trifle monotonous when you’re married into such a
-peaceful, dove-like family as that!” He broke off, struck by a new idea.
-“By the way, Henry, since they all thought it was you, and not I, why in
-thunderation did they want to kill _you_? Some more of your crusty
-Morgan temper that peeved your prospective wife’s relatives?”
-
-Henry looked at him a moment, as if debating with himself, and then
-answered.
-
-“I don’t mind telling you. It is a nasty mess, and I suppose my temper
-was to blame. I quarreled with her uncle. He was her father’s youngest
-brother——”
-
-“_Was?_” interrupted Francis with significant stress on the past tense.
-
-“_Was_, I said,” Henry nodded. “He _isn’t_ now. His name was Alfaro
-Solano, and he had some temper himself. They claim to be descended from
-the Spanish _conquistadores_, and they are prouder than hornets. He’d
-made money in logwood, and he had just got a big henequen plantation
-started farther down the coast. And then we quarreled. It was in the
-little town over there—San Antonio. It may have been a misunderstanding,
-though I still maintain he was wrong. He always was looking for trouble
-with me—didn’t want me to marry Leoncia, you see.
-
-“Well, it was a hot time. It started in a _pulqueria_ where Alfaro had
-been drinking more mescal than was good for him. He insulted me all
-right. They had to hold us apart and take our guns away, and we
-separated swearing death and destruction. That was the trouble—our
-quarrel and our threats were heard by a score of witnesses.
-
-“Within two hours the Comisario himself and two gendarmes found me
-bending over Alfaro’s body in a back street in the town. He’d been
-knifed in the back, and I’d stumbled over him on the way to the beach.
-Explain? No such thing. There were the quarrel and the threats of
-vengeance, and there I was, not two hours afterward, caught dead to
-right with his warm corpse. I haven’t been back in San Antonio since,
-and I didn’t waste any time in getting away. Alfaro was very
-popular,—you know the dashing type that catches the rabble’s fancy. Why,
-they couldn’t have been persuaded to give me even the semblance of a
-trial. Wanted my blood there and then, and I departed very pronto.
-
-“Next, up at Bocas del Toro, a messenger from Leoncia delivered back the
-engagement ring. And there you are. I developed a real big disgust, and,
-since I didn’t dare go back with all the Solanos and the rest of the
-population thirsting for my life, I came over here to play hermit for a
-while and dig for Morgan’s treasure.... Just the same, I wonder who did
-stick that knife into Alfaro. If ever I find him, then I clear myself
-with Leoncia and the rest of the Solanos and there isn’t a doubt in the
-world that there’ll be a wedding. And now that it’s all over I don’t
-mind admitting that Alfaro was a good scout, even if his temper did go
-off at half-cock.”
-
-“Clear as print,” Francis murmured. “No wonder her father and brothers
-wanted to perforate me.—Why, the more I look at you, the more I see
-we’re as like as two peas, except for my mustache——”
-
-“And for this....” Henry rolled up his sleeve, and on the left forearm
-showed a long, thin white scar. “Got that when I was a boy. Fell off a
-windmill and through the glass roof of a hothouse.”
-
-“Now listen to me,” Francis said, his face beginning to light with the
-project forming in his mind. “Somebody’s got to straighten you out of
-this mess, and the chap’s name is Francis, partner in the firm of Morgan
-and Morgan. You stick around here, or go over and begin prospecting on
-the Bull, while I go back and explain things to Leoncia and her
-people——”
-
-“If only they don’t shoot you first before you can explain you are not
-I,” Henry muttered bitterly. “That’s the trouble with those Solanos.
-They shoot first and talk afterward. They won’t listen to reason unless
-it’s post mortem.”
-
-“Guess I’ll take a chance, old man,” Francis assured the other, himself
-all fire with the plan of clearing up the distressing situation between
-Henry and the girl.
-
-But the thought of her perplexed him. He experienced more than a twinge
-of regret that the lovely creature belonged of right to the man who
-looked so much like him, and he saw again the vision of her on the
-beach, when, with conflicting emotions, she had alternately loved him
-and yearned toward him and blazed her scorn and contempt on him. He
-sighed involuntarily.
-
-“What’s that for?” Henry demanded quizzically.
-
-“Leoncia is an exceedingly pretty girl,” Francis answered with
-transparent frankness. “Just the same, she’s yours, and I’m going to
-make it my business to see that you get her. Where’s that ring she
-returned? If I don’t put it on her finger for you and be back here in a
-week with the good news, you can cut off my mustache along with my
-ears.”
-
-An hour later, Captain Trefethen having sent a boat to the beach from
-the _Angelique_ in response to signal, the two young men were saying
-good-bye.
-
-“Just two things more, Francis. First, and I forgot to tell you, Leoncia
-is not a Solano at all, though she thinks she is. Alfaro told me
-himself. She is an adopted child, and old Enrico fairly worships her,
-though neither his blood nor his race runs in her veins. Alfaro never
-told me the ins and outs of it, though he did say she wasn’t Spanish at
-all. I don’t even know whether she’s English or American. She talks good
-enough English, though she got that at convent. You see, she was adopted
-when she was a wee thing, and she’s never known anything else than that
-Enrico is her father.”
-
-“And no wonder she scorned and hated me for you,” Francis laughed,
-“believing, as she did, as she still does, that you knifed her full
-blood-uncle in the back.”
-
-Henry nodded, and went on.
-
-“The other thing is fairly important. And that’s the law. Or the absence
-of it, rather. They make it whatever they want it, down in this
-out-of-the-way hole. It’s a long way to Panama, and the gobernador of
-this state, or district, or whatever they call it, is a sleepy old
-Silenus. The Jefe Politico at San Antonio is the man to keep an eye on.
-He’s the little czar of that neck of the woods, and he’s some crooked
-_hombre_, take it from yours truly. Graft is too weak a word to apply to
-some of his deals, and he’s as cruel and blood-thirsty as a weasel. And
-his one crowning delight is an execution. He dotes on a hanging. Keep
-your weather eye on him, whatever you do.... And, well, so long. And
-half of whatever I find on the Bull is yours: ... and see you get that
-ring back on Leoncia’s finger.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-Two days later, after the half-breed skipper had reconnoitered ashore
-and brought back the news that all the men of Leoncia’s family were
-away, Francis had himself landed on the beach where he had first met
-her. No maidens with silver revolvers nor men with rifles were manifest.
-All was placid, and the only person on the beach was a ragged little
-Indian boy who at sight of a coin readily consented to carry a note up
-to the young senorita of the big hacienda. As Francis scrawled on a
-sheet of paper from his notebook, “I am the man whom you mistook for
-Henry Morgan, and I have a message for you from him,” he little dreamed
-that untoward happenings were about to occur with as equal rapidity and
-frequence as on his first visit.
-
-For that matter, could he have peeped over the out-jut of rock against
-which he leaned his back while composing the note to Leoncia, he would
-have been startled by a vision of the young lady herself, emerging like
-a sea-goddess fresh from a swim in the sea. But he wrote calmly on, the
-Indian lad even more absorbed than himself in the operation, so that it
-was Leoncia, coming around the rock from behind, who first caught sight
-of him. Stifling an exclamation, she turned and fled blindly into the
-green screen of jungle.
-
-His first warning of her proximity was immediately thereafter, when a
-startled scream of fear aroused him. Note and pencil fell to the sand as
-he sprang toward the direction of the cry and collided with a wet and
-scantily dressed young woman who was recoiling backward from whatever
-had caused her scream. The unexpectedness of the collision was
-provocative of a second startled scream from her ere she could turn and
-recognize that it was not a new attack but a rescuer.
-
-She darted past him, her face colorless from the fright, stumbled over
-the Indian boy, nor paused until she was out on the open sand.
-
-“What is it?” Francis demanded. “Are you hurt? What’s happened?”
-
-She pointed at her bare knee, where two tiny drops of blood oozed forth
-side by side from two scarcely perceptible lacerations.
-
-“It was a viperine,” she said. “A deadly viperine. I shall be a dead
-woman in five minutes, and I am glad, glad, for then my heart will be
-tormented no more by you.”
-
-She leveled an accusing finger at him, gasped the beginning of
-denunciation she could not utter, and sank down in a faint.
-
-Francis knew about the snakes of Central America merely by hearsay, but
-the hearsay was terrible enough. Men talked of even mules and dogs dying
-in horrible agony five to ten minutes after being struck by tiny
-reptiles fifteen to twenty inches long. Small wonder she had fainted,
-was his thought, with so terribly rapid a poison doubtlessly beginning
-to work. His knowledge of the treatment of snake-bite was likewise
-hearsay, but flashed through his mind the recollection of the need of a
-tourniquet to shut off the circulation above the wound and prevent the
-poison from reaching the heart.
-
-He pulled out his handkerchief and tied it loosely around her leg above
-the knee, thrust in a short piece of driftwood stick, and twisted the
-handkerchief to savage tightness. Next, and all by hearsay, working
-swiftly, he opened the small blade of his pocket-knife, burned it with
-several matches to make sure against germs, and cut carefully but
-remorsely into the two lacerations made by the snake’s fangs.
-
-He was in a fright himself, working with feverish deftness and
-apprehending at any moment that the pangs of dissolution would begin to
-set in on the beautiful form before him. From all he had heard, the
-bodies of snake-victims began to swell quickly and prodigiously. Even as
-he finished excoriating the fang-wounds, his mind was made up to his
-next two acts. First, he would suck out all poison he possibly could;
-and, next, light a cigarette and with its live end proceed to cauterize
-the flesh.
-
-But while he was still making light, criss-cross cuts with the point of
-his knife-blade, she began to move restlessly.
-
-“Lie down,” he commanded, as she sat up, and just when he was bending
-his lips to the task.
-
-In response, he received a resounding slap alongside of his face from
-her little hand. At the same instant the Indian lad danced out of the
-jungle, swinging a small dead snake by the tail and crying exultingly:
-
-“Labarri! Labarri!”
-
-At which Francis assumed the worst.
-
-“Lie down, and be quiet!” he repeated harshly. “You haven’t a second to
-lose.”
-
-But she had eyes only for the dead snake. Her relief was patent; but
-Francis was no witness to it, for he was bending again to perform the
-classic treatment of snake-bite.
-
-“You dare!” she threatened him. “It’s only a baby labarri, and its bite
-is harmless. I thought it was a viperine. They look alike when the
-labarri is small.”
-
-The constriction of the circulation by the tourniquet pained her, and
-she glanced down and discovered his handkerchief knotted around her leg.
-
-“Oh, what have you done?”
-
-A warm blush began to suffuse her face.
-
-“But it was only a baby labarri,” she reproached him.
-
-“You told me it was a viperine,” he retorted.
-
-She hid her face in her hands, although the pink of flush burned
-furiously in her ears. Yet he could have sworn, unless it were hysteria,
-that she was laughing; and he knew for the first time how really hard
-was the task he had undertaken to put the ring of another man on her
-finger. So he deliberately hardened his heart against the beauty and
-fascination of her, and said bitterly:
-
-“And now, I suppose some of your gentry will shoot me full of holes
-because I don’t know a labarri from a viperine. You might call some of
-the farm hands down to do it. Or maybe you’d like to take a shot at me
-yourself.”
-
-But she seemed not to have heard, for she had arisen with the quick
-litheness to be expected of so gloriously fashioned a creature, and was
-stamping her foot on the sand.
-
-“It’s asleep—my foot,” she explained with laughter unhidden this time by
-her hands.
-
-“You’re acting perfectly disgracefully,” he assured her wickedly, “when
-you consider that I am the murderer of your uncle.”
-
-Thus reminded, the laughter ceased and the color receded from her face.
-She made no reply, but bending, with fingers that trembled with anger
-she strove to unknot the handkerchief as if it were some loathsome
-thing.
-
-“Better let me help,” he suggested pleasantly.
-
-“You beast!” she flamed at him. “Step aside. Your shadow falls upon me.”
-
-“Now you are delicious, charming,” he girded, belying the desire that
-stirred compellingly within him to clasp her in his arms. “You quite
-revive my last recollection of you here on the beach, one second
-reproaching me for not kissing you, the next second kissing me—yes, you
-did, too—and the third second threatening to destroy my digestion
-forever with that little tin toy pistol of yours. No; you haven’t
-changed an iota from last time. You’re the same spitfire of a Leoncia.
-You’d better let me untie that for you. Don’t you see the knot is
-jammed? Your little fingers can never manage it.”
-
-She stamped her foot in sheer inarticulateness of rage.
-
-“Lucky for me you don’t make a practice of taking your tin toy pistol in
-swimming with you,” he teased on, “or else there’d be a funeral right
-here on the beach pretty pronto of a perfectly nice young man whose
-intentions are never less than the best.”
-
-The Indian boy returned at this moment running with her bathing wrap,
-which she snatched from him and put on hastily. Next, with the boy’s
-help, she attacked the knot again. When the handkerchief came off she
-flung it from her as if in truth it were a viperine.
-
-“It was contamination,” she flashed, for his benefit.
-
-But Francis, still engaged in hardening his heart against her, shook his
-head slowly and said:
-
-“It doesn’t save you, Leoncia. I’ve left my mark on you that never will
-come off.”
-
-He pointed to the excoriations he had made on her knee and laughed.
-
-“The mark of the beast,” she came back, turning to go. “I warn you to
-take yourself off, Mr. Henry Morgan.”
-
-But he stepped in her way.
-
-“And now we’ll talk business, Miss Solano,” he said in changed tones.
-“And you will listen. Let your eyes flash all they please, but don’t
-interrupt me.” He stooped and picked up the note he had been engaged in
-writing. “I was just sending that to you by the boy when you screamed.
-Take it. Read it. It won’t bite you. It isn’t a viperine.”
-
-Though she refused to receive it, her eyes involuntarily scanned the
-opening line:
-
-_I am the man whom you mistook for Henry Morgan_...
-
-She looked at him with startled eyes that could not comprehend much but
-which were guessing many vague things.
-
-“On my honor,” he said gravely.
-
-“You ... are ... not ... Henry?” she gasped.
-
-“No, I am not. Won’t you please take it and read.”
-
-This time she complied, while he gazed with all his eyes upon the golden
-pallor of the sun on her tropic-touched blonde face which colored the
-blood beneath, or which was touched by the blood beneath, to the
-amazingly beautiful golden pallor.
-
-Almost in a dream he discovered himself looking into her startled,
-questioning eyes of velvet brown.
-
-“And who should have signed this?” she repeated.
-
-He came to himself and bowed.
-
-“But the name?—your name?”
-
-“Morgan, Francis Morgan. As I explained there, Henry and I are some sort
-of distant relatives—forty-fifth cousins, or something like that.”
-
-To his bewilderment, a great doubt suddenly dawned in her eyes, and the
-old familiar anger flashed.
-
-“Henry,” she accused him. “This is a ruse, a devil’s trick you’re trying
-to play on me. Of course you are Henry.”
-
-Francis pointed to his mustache.
-
-“You’ve grown that since,” she challenged.
-
-He pulled up his sleeve and showed her his left arm from wrist to elbow.
-But she only looked her incomprehension of the meaning of his action.
-
-“Do you remember the scar?” he asked.
-
-She nodded.
-
-“Then find it.”
-
-She bent her head in swift vain search, then shook it slowly as she
-faltered:
-
-“I ... I ask your forgiveness. I was terribly mistaken, and when I think
-of the way I ... I’ve treated you ...”
-
-“That kiss was delightful,” he naughtily disclaimed.
-
-She recollected more immediate passages, glanced down at her knee and
-stifled what he adjudged was a most adorable giggle.
-
-“You say you have a message from Henry,” she changed the subject
-abruptly. “And that he is innocent...? This is true? Oh, I do want to
-believe you!”
-
-“I am morally certain that Henry no more killed your uncle than did I——”
-
-“Then say no more, at least not now,” she interrupted joyfully. “First
-of all I must make amends to you, though you must confess that some of
-the things you have done and said were abominable. You had no right to
-kiss me.”
-
-“If you will remember,” he contended, “I did it at the pistol point. How
-was I to know but what I would get shot if I didn’t.”
-
-“Oh, hush, hush,” she begged. “You must go with me now to the house. And
-you can tell me about Henry on the way.”
-
-Her eyes chanced upon the handkerchief she had flung so contemptuously
-aside. She ran to it and picked it up.
-
-“Poor, ill-treated kerchief,” she crooned to it. “To you also must I
-make amends. I shall myself launder you, and....” Her eyes lifted to
-Francis as she addressed him. “And return it to you, sir, fresh and
-sweet and all wrapped around my heart of gratitude....”
-
-“And the mark of the beast?” he queried.
-
-“I am so sorry,” she confessed penitently.
-
-“And may I be permitted to rest my shadow upon you?”
-
-“Do! Do!” she cried gaily. “There! I am in your shadow now. And we must
-start.”
-
-Francis tossed a peso to the grinning Indian boy, and, in high elation,
-turned and followed her into the tropic growth on the path that led up
-to the white hacienda.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Seated on the broad piazza of the Solano Hacienda, Alvarez Torres saw
-through the tropic shrubs the couple approaching along the winding
-driveway. And he saw what made him grit his teeth and draw very
-erroneous conclusions. He muttered imprecations to himself and forgot
-his cigarette.
-
-What he saw was Leoncia and Francis in such deep and excited talk as to
-be oblivious of everything else. He saw Francis grow so urgent of speech
-and gesture as to cause Leoncia to stop abruptly and listen further to
-his pleading. Next—and Torres could scarcely believe the evidence of his
-eyes, he saw Francis produce a ring, and Leoncia, with averted face,
-extend her left hand and receive the ring upon her third finger.
-Engagement finger it was, and Torres could have sworn to it.
-
-What had really occurred was the placing of Henry’s engagement ring back
-on Leoncia’s hand. And Leoncia, she knew not why, had been vaguely
-averse to receiving it.
-
-Torres tossed the dead cigarette away, twisted his mustache fiercely, as
-if to relieve his own excitement, and advanced to meet them across the
-piazza. He did not return the girl’s greeting at the first. Instead,
-with the wrathful face of the Latin, he burst out at Francis:
-
-“One does not expect shame in a murderer, but at least one does expect
-simple decency.”
-
-Francis smiled whimsically.
-
-“There it goes again,” he said. “Another lunatic in this lunatic land.
-The last time, Leoncia, that I saw this gentleman was in New York. He
-was really anxious to do business with me. Now I meet him here and the
-first thing he tells me is that I am an indecent, shameless murderer.”
-
-“Senor Torres, you must apologize,” she declared angrily. “The house of
-Solano is not accustomed to having its guests insulted.”
-
-“The house of Solano, I then understand, is accustomed to having its men
-murdered by transient adventurers,” he retorted. “No sacrifice is too
-great when it is in the name of hospitality.”
-
-“Get off your foot, Senor Torres,” Francis advised him pleasantly. “You
-are standing on it. I know what your mistake is. You think I am Henry
-Morgan. I am Francis Morgan, and you and I, not long ago, transacted
-business together in Regan’s office in New York. There’s my hand. Your
-shaking of it will be sufficient apology under the circumstances.”
-
-Torres, overwhelmed for the moment by his mistake, took the extended
-hand and uttered apologies both to Francis and Leoncia.
-
-“And now,” she beamed through laughter, clapping her hands to call a
-house-servant, “I must locate Mr. Morgan, and go and get some clothes
-on. And after that, Senor Torres, if you will pardon us, we will tell
-you about Henry.”
-
-While she departed, and while Francis followed away to his room on the
-heels of a young and pretty _mestiza_ woman, Torres, his brain resuming
-its functions, found he was more amazed and angry than ever. This, then,
-was a newcomer and stranger to Leoncia whom he had seen putting a ring
-on her engagement finger. He thought quickly and passionately for a
-moment. Leoncia, whom to himself he always named the queen of his
-dreams, had, on an instant’s notice, engaged herself to a strange Gringo
-from New York. It was unbelievable, monstrous.
-
-He clapped his hands, summoned his hired carriage from San Antonio, and
-was speeding down the drive when Francis strolled forth to have a talk
-with him about further details of the hiding place of old Morgan’s
-treasure.
-
- * * * * *
-
-After lunch, when a land-breeze sprang up, which meant fair wind and a
-quick run across Chiriqui Lagoon and along the length of it to the Bull
-and the Calf, Francis, eager to bring to Henry the good word that his
-ring adorned Leoncia’s finger, resolutely declined her proffered
-hospitality to remain for the night and meet Enrico Solano and his tall
-sons. Francis had a further reason for hasty departure. He could not
-endure the presence of Leoncia—and this in no sense uncomplimentary to
-her. She charmed him, drew him, to such extent that he dared not endure
-her charm and draw if he were to remain man-faithful to the man in the
-canvas pants even then digging holes in the sands of the Bull.
-
-So Francis departed, a letter to Henry from Leoncia in his pocket. The
-last moment, ere he departed, was abrupt. With a sigh so quickly
-suppressed that Leoncia wondered whether or not she had imagined it, he
-tore himself away. She gazed after his retreating form down the driveway
-until it was out of sight, then stared at the ring on her finger with a
-vaguely troubled expression.
-
-From the beach, Francis signaled the _Angelique_, riding at anchor, to
-send a boat ashore for him. But before it had been swung into the water,
-half a dozen horsemen, revolver-belted, rifles across their pommels,
-rode down the beach upon him at a gallop. Two men led. The following
-four were hang-dog half-castes. Of the two leaders, Francis recognized
-Torres. Every rifle came to rest on Francis, and he could not but obey
-the order snarled at him by the unknown leader to throw up his hands.
-And Francis opined aloud:
-
-“To think of it! Once, only the other day—or was it a million years
-ago?—I thought auction bridge, at a dollar a point, was some excitement.
-Now, sirs, you on your horses, with your weapons threatening the violent
-introduction of foreign substances into my poor body, tell me what is
-doing now. Don’t I ever get off this beach without gunpowder
-complications? Is it my ears, or merely my mustache, you want?”
-
-“We want you,” answered the stranger leader, whose mustache bristled as
-magnetically as his crooked black eyes.
-
-“And in the name of original sin and of all lovely lizards, who might
-you be?”
-
-“He is the honorable Senor Mariano Vercara è Hijos, Jefe Politico of San
-Antonio,” Torres replied.
-
-“Good night,” Francis laughed, remembering the man’s description as
-given to him by Henry. “I suppose you think I’ve broken some harbor rule
-or sanitary regulation by anchoring here. But you must settle such
-things with my captain, Captain Trefethen, a very estimable gentleman. I
-am only the charterer of the schooner—just a passenger. You will find
-Captain Trefethen right up in maritime law and custom.”
-
-“You are wanted for the murder of Alfaro Solano,” was Torres’ answer.
-“You didn’t fool me, Henry Morgan, with your talk up at the hacienda
-that you were some one else. I know that some one else. His name is
-Francis Morgan, and I do not hesitate to add that he is not a murderer,
-but a gentleman.”
-
-“Ye gods and little fishes!” Francis exclaimed. “And yet you shook hands
-with me, Senor Torres.”
-
-“I was fooled,” Torres admitted sadly. “But only for a moment. Will you
-come peaceably?”
-
-“As if——” Francis shrugged his shoulders eloquently at the six rifles.
-“I suppose you’ll give me a pronto trial and hang me at daybreak.”
-
-“Justice is swift in Panama,” the Jefe Politico replied, his English
-queerly accented but understandable. “But not so quick as that. We will
-not hang you at daybreak. Ten o’clock in the morning is more comfortable
-all around, don’t you think?”
-
-“Oh, by all means,” Francis retorted. “Make it eleven, or twelve noon—I
-won’t mind.”
-
-“You will kindly come with us, Senor,” Mariano Vercara è Hijos, said,
-the suavity of his diction not masking the iron of its intention. “Juan!
-Ignacio!” he ordered in Spanish. “Dismount! Take his weapons. No, it
-will not be necessary to tie his hands. Put him on the horse behind
-Gregorio.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-Francis, in a venerably whitewashed adobe cell with walls five feet
-thick, its earth floor carpeted with the forms of half a dozen sleeping
-peon prisoners, listened to a dim hammering not very distant, remembered
-the trial from which he had just emerged, and whistled long and low. The
-hour was half-past eight in the evening. The trial had begun at eight.
-The hammering was the hammering together of the scaffold beams, from
-which place of eminence he was scheduled at ten next morning to swing
-off into space supported from the ground by a rope around his neck. The
-trial had lasted half an hour by his watch. Twenty minutes would have
-covered it had Leoncia not burst in and prolonged it by the ten minutes
-courteously accorded her as the great lady of the Solano family.
-
-“The Jefe was right,” Francis acknowledged to himself in a matter of
-soliloquy. “Panama justice does move swiftly.”
-
-The very possession of the letter given him by Leoncia and addressed to
-Henry Morgan had damned him. The rest had been easy. Half a dozen
-witnesses had testified to the murder and identified him as the
-murderer. The Jefe Politico himself had so testified. The one cheerful
-note had been the eruption on the scene of Leoncia, chaperoned by a
-palsied old aunt of the Solano family. That had been sweet—the fight the
-beautiful girl had put up for his life, despite the fact that it was
-foredoomed to futility.
-
-When she had made Francis roll up the sleeve and expose his left
-forearm, he had seen the Jefe Politico shrug his shoulders
-contemptuously. And he had seen Leoncia fling a passion of Spanish
-words, too quick for him to follow, at Torres. And he had seen and heard
-the gesticulation and the roar of the mob-filled courtroom as Torres had
-taken the stand.
-
-But what he had not seen was the whispered colloquy between Torres and
-the Jefe, as the former was in the thick of forcing his way through the
-press to the witness box. He no more saw this particular side-play than
-did he know that Torres was in the pay of Regan to keep him away from
-New York as long as possible, and as long as ever if possible, nor than
-did he know that Torres himself, in love with Leoncia, was consumed with
-a jealousy that knew no limit to its ire.
-
-All of which had blinded Francis to the play under the interrogation of
-Torres by Leoncia, which had compelled Torres to acknowledge that he had
-never seen a scar on Francis Morgan’s left forearm. While Leoncia had
-looked at the little old judge in triumph, the Jefe Politico had
-advanced and demanded of Torres in stentorian tones:
-
-“Can you swear that you ever saw a scar on Henry Morgan’s arm?”
-
-Torres had been baffled and embarrassed, had looked bewilderment to the
-judge and pleadingness to Leoncia, and, in the end, without speech,
-shaken his head that he could not so swear.
-
-The roar of triumph had gone up from the crowd of ragamuffins. The judge
-had pronounced sentence, the roar had doubled on itself, and Francis had
-been hustled out and to his cell, not entirely unresistingly, by the
-gendarmes and the Comisario, all apparently solicitous of saving him
-from the mob that was unwilling to wait till ten next morning for his
-death.
-
-“That poor dub, Torres, who fell down on the scar on Henry!” Francis was
-meditating sympathetically, when the bolts of his cell door shot back
-and he arose to greet Leoncia.
-
-But she declined to greet him for the moment, as she flared at the
-Comisario in rapid-fire Spanish, with gestures of command to which he
-yielded when he ordered the jailer to remove the peons to other cells,
-and himself, with a nervous and apologetic bowing, went out and closed
-the door.
-
-And then Leoncia broke down, sobbing on his shoulder, in his arms: “It
-is a cursed country, a cursed country. There is no fair play.”
-
-And as Francis held her pliant form, meltingly exquisite in its
-maddeningness of woman, he remembered Henry, in his canvas pants,
-barefooted, under his floppy sombrero, digging holes in the sand of the
-Bull.
-
-He tried to draw away from the armful of deliciousness, and only half
-succeeded. Still, at such slight removal of distance, he essayed the
-intellectual part, rather than the emotional part he desired all too
-strongly to act.
-
-“And now I know at last what a frame-up is,” he assured her, farthest
-from the promptings of his heart. “If these Latins of your country
-thought more coolly instead of acting so passionately, they might be
-building railroads and developing their country. That trial was a
-straight passionate frame-up. They just _knew_ I was guilty and were so
-eager to punish me that they wouldn’t even bother for mere evidence or
-establishment of identity. Why delay? They _knew_ Henry Morgan had
-knifed Alfaro. They _knew_ I was Henry Morgan. When one knows, why
-bother to find out?”
-
-Deaf to his words, sobbing and struggling to cling closer while he
-spoke, the moment he had finished she was deep again in his arms,
-against him, to him, her lips raised to his; and, ere he was aware, his
-own lips to hers.
-
-“I love you, I love you,” she whispered brokenly.
-
-“No, no,” he denied what he most desired. “Henry and I are too alike. It
-is Henry you love, and I am not Henry.”
-
-She tore herself away from her own clinging, drew Henry’s ring from her
-finger, and threw it on the floor. Francis was so beyond himself that he
-knew not what was going to happen the next moment, and was only saved
-from whatever it might be by the entrance of the Comisario, watch in
-hand, with averted face striving to see naught else than the moments
-registered by the second-hand on the dial.
-
-She stiffened herself proudly, and all but broke down again as Francis
-slipped Henry’s ring back on her finger and kissed her hand in farewell.
-Just ere she passed out the door she turned and with a whispered
-movement of the lips that was devoid of sound told him: “I love you.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-Promptly as the stroke of the clock, at ten o’clock Francis was led out
-into the jail patio where stood the gallows. All San Antonio was
-joyously and shoutingly present, including much of the neighboring
-population and Leoncia, Enrico Solano, and his five tall sons. Enrico
-and his sons fumed and strutted, but the Jefe Politico, backed by the
-Comisario and his gendarmes, was adamant. In vain, as Francis was forced
-to the foot of the scaffold, did Leoncia strive to get to him and did
-her men strive to persuade her to leave the patio. In vain, also, did
-her father and brothers protest that Francis was not the man. The Jefe
-Politico smiled contemptuously and ordered the execution to proceed.
-
-On top the scaffold, standing on the trap, Francis declined the
-ministrations of the priest, telling him in Spanish that no innocent man
-being hanged needed intercessions with the next world, but that the men
-who were doing the hanging were in need of just such intercessions.
-
-They had tied Francis’ legs, and were in the act of tying his arms, with
-the men who held the noose and the black cap hovering near to put them
-on him, when the voice of a singer was heard approaching from without;
-and the song he sang was:
-
- “Back to back against the mainmast,
- Held at bay the entire crew....”
-
-Leoncia, almost fainting, recovered at the sound of the voice, and cried
-out with sharp delight as she descried Henry Morgan entering, thrusting
-aside the guards at the gate who tried to bar his way.
-
-At sight of him the only one present who suffered chagrin was Torres,
-which passed unnoticed in the excitement. The populace was in accord
-with the Jefe, who shrugged his shoulders and announced that one man was
-as good as another so long as the hanging went on. And here arose hot
-contention from the Solano men that Henry was likewise innocent of the
-murder of Alfaro. But it was Francis, from the scaffold, while his arms
-and legs were being untied, who shouted through the tumult:
-
-“You tried me! You have not tried him! You cannot hang a man without
-trial! He must have his trial!”
-
-And when Francis had descended from the scaffold and was shaking Henry’s
-hand in both his own, the Comisario, with the Jefe at his back, duly
-arrested Henry Morgan for the murder of Alfaro Solano.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IV
-
-
-“We must work quickly—that is the one thing sure,” Francis said to the
-little conclave of Solanos on the piazza of the Solano hacienda.
-
-“One thing sure!” Leoncia cried out scornfully ceasing from her
-anguished pacing up and down. “The one thing sure is that we must save
-him.”
-
-As she spoke, she shook a passionate finger under Francis’ nose to
-emphasize her point. Not content, she shook her finger with equal
-emphasis under the noses of all and sundry of her father and brothers.
-
-“Quick!” she flamed on. “Of course we must be quick. It is that, or....”
-Her voice trailed off into the unvoiceable horror of what would happen
-to Henry if they were not quick.
-
-“All Gringos look alike to the Jefe,” Francis nodded sympathetically.
-She was splendidly beautiful and wonderful, he thought. “He certainly
-runs all San Antonio, and short shrift is his motto. He’ll give Henry no
-more time than he gave us. We must get him out to-night.”
-
-“Now listen,” Leoncia began again. “We Solanos cannot permit this ...
-this execution. Our pride ... our honor. We cannot permit it. Speak! any
-of you. Father—you. Suggest something....”
-
-And while the discussion went on, Francis, for the time being silent,
-wrestled deep in the throes of sadness. Leoncia’s fervor was
-magnificent, but it was for another man and it did not precisely
-exhilarate him. Strong upon him was the memory of the jail patio after
-he had been released and Henry had been arrested. He could still see,
-with the same stab at the heart, Leoncia in Henry’s arms, Henry seeking
-her hand to ascertain if his ring was on it, and the long kiss of the
-embrace that followed.
-
-Ah, well, he sighed to himself, he had done his best. After Henry had
-been led away, had he not told Leoncia, quite deliberately and coldly,
-that Henry was her man and lover, and the wisest of choices for the
-daughter of the Solanos?
-
-But the memory of it did not make him a bit happy. Nor did the rightness
-of it. Right it was. That he never questioned, and it strengthened him
-into hardening his heart against her. Yet the right, he found in his
-case, to be the sorriest of consolation.
-
-And yet what else could he expect? It was his misfortune to have arrived
-too late in Central America, that was all, and to find this flower of
-woman already annexed by a previous comer—a man as good as himself, and,
-his heart of fairness prompted, even better. And his heart of fairness
-compelled loyalty to Henry from him—to Henry Morgan, of the breed and
-blood; to Henry Morgan, the wild-fire descendant of a wild-fire
-ancestor, in canvas pants, and floppy sombrero, with a penchant for the
-ears of strange young men, living on sea biscuit and turtle eggs and
-digging up the Bull and the Calf for old Sir Henry’s treasure.
-
- * * * * *
-
-And while Enrico Solano and his sons talked plans and projects on their
-broad piazza, to which Francis lent only half an ear, a house servant
-came, whispered in Leoncia’s ear, and led her away around the ell of the
-piazza, where occurred a scene that would have excited Francis’
-risibilities and wrath.
-
-Around the ell, Alvarez Torres, in all the medieval Spanish splendor of
-dress of a great haciendado-owner, such as still obtains in Latin
-America, greeted her, bowed low with doffed sombrero in hand, and seated
-her in a rattan settee. Her own greeting was sad, but shot through with
-curiousness, as if she hoped he brought some word of hope.
-
-“The trial is over, Leoncia,” he said softly, tenderly, as one speaks of
-the dead. “He is sentenced. To-morrow at ten o’clock is the time. It is
-all very sad, most very sad. But....” He shrugged his shoulders. “No, I
-shall not speak harshly of him. He was an honorable man. His one fault
-was his temper. It was too quick, too fiery. It led him into a mischance
-of honor. Never, in a cool moment of reasonableness, would he have
-stabbed Alfaro——”
-
-“He never killed my uncle!” Leoncia cried, raising her averted face.
-
-“And it is regrettable,” Torres proceeded gently and sadly, avoiding any
-disagreement. “The judge, the people, the Jefe Politico, unfortunately,
-are all united in believing that he did. Which is most regrettable. But
-which is not what I came to see you about. I came to offer my service in
-any and all ways you may command. My life, my honor, are at your
-disposal. Speak. I am your slave.”
-
-Dropping suddenly and gracefully on one knee before her, he caught her
-hand from her lap, and would have instantly flooded on with his speech,
-had not his eyes lighted on the diamond ring on her engagement finger.
-He frowned, but concealed the frown with bent face until he could drive
-it from his features and begin to speak.
-
-“I knew you when you were small, Leoncia, so very, very charmingly
-small, and I loved you always.—No, listen! Please. My heart must speak.
-Hear me out. I loved you always. But when you returned from your
-convent, from schooling abroad, a woman, a grand and noble lady fit to
-rule in the house of the Solanos, I was burnt by your beauty. I have
-been patient. I refrained from speaking. But you may have guessed. You
-surely must have guessed. I have been on fire for you ever since. I have
-been consumed by the flame of your beauty, by the flame of you that is
-deeper than your beauty.”
-
-He was not to be stopped, as she well knew, and she listened patiently,
-gazing down on his bent head and wondering idly why his hair was so
-unbecomingly cut, and whether it had been last cut in New York or San
-Antonio.
-
-“Do you know what you have been to me ever since your return?”
-
-She did not reply, nor did she endeavour to withdraw her hand, although
-his was crushing and bruising her flesh against Henry Morgan’s ring. She
-forgot to listen, led away by a chain of thought that linked far. Not in
-such rhodomontade of speech had Henry Morgan loved and won her, was the
-beginning of the chain. Why did those of Spanish blood always voice
-their emotions so exaggeratedly? Henry had been so different. Scarcely
-had he spoken a word. He had acted. Under her glamor, himself glamoring
-her, without warning, so certain was he not to surprise and frighten
-her, he had put his arms around her and pressed his lips to hers. And
-hers had been neither too startled nor altogether unresponsive. Not
-until after that first kiss, arms still around her, had Henry begun to
-speak at all.
-
-And what plan was being broached around the corner of the ell by her men
-and Francis Morgan? Her mind strayed on, deaf to the suitor at her feet.
-Francis! Ah—she almost sighed, and marveled, what of her self-known love
-for Henry, why this stranger Gringo so enamored her heart. Was she a
-wanton? Was it one man? Or another man? Or any man? No! No! She was not
-fickle nor unfaithful. And yet?... Perhaps it was because Francis and
-Henry were so much alike, and her poor stupid loving woman’s heart
-failed properly to distinguish between them. And yet—while it had seemed
-she would have followed Henry anywhere over the world, in any luck or
-fortune, it seemed to her now that she would follow Francis even
-farther. She did _love_ Henry, her heart solemnly proclaimed. But also
-did she love Francis, and almost did she divine that Francis loved
-her—the fervor of his lips on hers in his prison cell was inerasable;
-and there was a difference in her love for the two men that confuted her
-powers of reason and almost drove her to the shameful conclusion that
-she, the latest and only woman of the house of Solano, was a wanton.
-
-A severe pinch of her flesh against Henry’s ring, caused by the
-impassioned grasp of Torres, brought her back to him, so that she could
-hear the spate of his speech pouring on:
-
-“You have been the delicious thorn in my side, the spiked rowel of the
-spur forever prodding the sweetest and most poignant pangs of love into
-my breast. I have dreamed of you ... and for you. And I have my own name
-for you. Ever the one name I have had for you: the Queen of my Dreams.
-And you will marry me, my Leoncia. We will forget this mad Gringo who is
-as already dead. I shall be gentle, kind. I shall love you always. And
-never shall any vision of him arise between us. For myself, I shall not
-permit it. For you ... I shall love you so that it will be impossible
-for the memory of him to arise between us and give you one moment’s
-heart-hurt.”
-
-Leoncia debated in a long pause that added fuel to Torres’ hopes. She
-felt the need to temporise. If Henry were to be saved ... and had not
-Torres offered his services? Not lightly could she turn him away when a
-man’s life might depend upon him.
-
-“Speak!—I am consuming!” Torres urged in a choking voice.
-
-“Hush! Hush!” she said softly. “How can I listen to love from a live
-man, when the man I loved is yet alive?”
-
-_Loved!_ The past tense of it startled her. Likewise it startled Torres,
-fanning his hopes to fairer flames. Almost was she his. She had said
-_loved_. She no longer bore love for Henry. She _had_ loved him, but no
-longer. And she, a maid and woman of delicacy and sensibility, could
-not, of course, give name to her love for him while the other man still
-lived. It was subtle of her. He prided himself on his own subtlety, and
-he flattered himself that he had interpreted her veiled thought aright.
-And ... well, he resolved, he would see to it that the man who was to
-die at ten next morning should have neither reprieve nor rescue. The one
-thing clear, if he were to win Leoncia quickly, was that Henry Morgan
-should die quickly.
-
-“We will speak of it no more ... now,” he said with chivalric
-gentleness, as he gently pressed her hand, rose to his feet, and gazed
-down on her.
-
-She returned a soft pressure of thanks with her own hand ere she
-released it and stood up.
-
-“Come,” she said. “We will join the others. They are planning now, or
-trying to find some plan, to save Henry Morgan.”
-
-The conversation of the group ebbed away as they joined it, as if out of
-half-suspicion of Torres.
-
-“Have you hit upon anything yet?” Leoncia asked.
-
-Old Enrico, straight and slender and graceful as any of his sons despite
-his age, shook his head.
-
-“I have a plan, if you will pardon me,” Torres began, but ceased at a
-warning glance from Alesandro, the eldest son.
-
-On the walk, below the piazza, had appeared two scarecrows of beggar
-boys. Not more than ten years of age, by their size, they seemed much
-older when judged by the shrewdness of their eyes and faces. Each wore a
-single marvelous garment, so that between them it could be said they
-shared a shirt and pants. But such a shirt! And such pants! The latter,
-man-size, of ancient duck, were buttoned around the lad’s neck, the
-waistband reefed with knotted twine so as not to slip down over his
-shoulders. His arms were thrust through the holes where the side-pockets
-had been. The legs of the pants had been hacked off with a knife to suit
-his own diminutive length of limb. The tails of the man’s shirt on the
-other boy dragged on the ground.
-
-“Vamos!” Alesandro shouted fiercely at them to be gone.
-
-But the boy in the pants gravely removed a stone which he had been
-carrying on top of his bare head, exposing a letter which had been thus
-carried. Alesandro leaned over, took the letter, and with a glance at
-the inscription passed it to Leoncia, while the boys began whining for
-money. Francis, smiling despite himself at the spectacle of them, tossed
-them a few pieces of small silver, whereupon the shirt and the pants
-toddled away down the path.
-
-The letter was from Henry, and Leoncia scanned it hurriedly. It was not
-precisely in farewell, for he wrote in the tenour of a man who never
-expected to die save by some inconceivable accident. Nevertheless, on
-the chance of such inconceivable thing becoming possible, Henry did
-manage to say good-bye and to include a facetious recommendation to
-Leoncia not to forget Francis, who was well worth remembering because he
-was so much like himself, Henry.
-
-Leoncia’s first impulse was to show the letter to the others, but the
-portion about Francis with-strained her.
-
-“It’s from Henry,” she said, tucking the note into her bosom. “There is
-nothing of importance. He seems to have not the slightest doubt that he
-will escape somehow.”
-
-“We shall see that he does,” Francis declared positively.
-
-With a grateful smile to him, and with one of interrogation to Torres,
-Leoncia said:
-
-“You were speaking of a plan, Senor Torres?”
-
-Torres smiled, twisted his mustache, and struck an attitude of
-importance.
-
-“There is one way, the Gringo, Anglo-Saxon way, and it is simple,
-straight to the point. That is just what it is, straight to the point.
-We will go and take Henry out of jail in forthright, brutal and direct
-Gringo fashion. It is the one thing they will not expect. Therefore, it
-will succeed. There are enough unhung rascals on the beach with which to
-storm the jail. Hire them, pay them well, but only partly in advance,
-and the thing is accomplished.”
-
-Leoncia nodded eager agreement. Old Enrico’s eyes flashed and his
-nostrils distended as if already sniffing gunpowder. The young men were
-taking fire from his example. And all looked to Francis for his opinion
-or agreement. He shook his head slowly, and Leoncia uttered a sharp cry
-of disappointment in him.
-
-“That way is hopeless,” he said. “Why should all of you risk your necks
-in a madcap attempt like that, doomed to failure from the start?” As he
-talked, he strode across from Leoncia’s side to the railing in such way
-as to be for a moment between Torres and the other men, and at the same
-time managed a warning look to Enrico and his sons. “As for Henry, it
-looks as if it were all up with him——”
-
-“You mean you doubt me?” Torres bristled.
-
-“Heavens, man,” Francis protested.
-
-But Torres dashed on: “You mean that I am forbidden by you, a man I have
-scarcely met, from the councils of the Solanos who are my oldest and
-most honored friends.”
-
-Old Enrico, who had not missed the rising wrath against Francis in
-Leoncia’s face, succeeded in conveying a warning to her, ere, with a
-courteous gesture, he hushed Torres and began to speak.
-
-“There are no councils of the Solanos from which you are barred, Senor
-Torres. You are indeed an old friend of the family. Your late father and
-I were comrades, almost brothers. But that—and you will pardon an old
-man’s judgment—does not prevent Senor Morgan from being right when he
-says your plan is hopeless. To storm the jail is truly madness. Look at
-the thickness of the walls. They could stand a siege of weeks. And yet,
-and I confess it, almost was I tempted when you first broached the idea.
-Now when I was a young man, fighting the Indians in the high
-Cordilleras, there was a very case in point. Come, let us all be seated
-and comfortable, and I will tell you the tale....”
-
-But Torres, busy with many things, declined to wait, and with soothed
-amicable feelings shook hands all around, briefly apologized to Francis,
-and departed astride his silver-saddled and silver-bridled horse for San
-Antonio. One of the things that busied him was the cable correspondence
-maintained between him and Thomas Regan’s Wall Street office. Having
-secret access to the Panamanian government wireless station at San
-Antonio, he was thus able to relay messages to the cable station at Vera
-Cruz. Not alone was his relationship with Regan proving lucrative, but
-it was jibing in with his own personal plans concerning Leoncia and the
-Morgans.
-
-“What have you against Senor Torres, that you should reject his plan and
-anger him?” Leoncia demanded of Francis.
-
-“Nothing,” was the answer, “except that we do not need him, and that I’m
-not exactly infatuated with him. He is a fool and would spoil any plan.
-Look at the way he fell down on testifying at my trial. Maybe he can’t
-be trusted. I don’t know. Anyway, what’s the good of trusting him when
-we don’t need him? Now his plan is all right. We’ll go straight to the
-jail and take Henry out, if all you are game for it. And we don’t need
-to trust to a mob of unhung rascals and beach-sweepings. If the six men
-of us can’t do it, we might as well quit.”
-
-“There must be at least a dozen guards always hanging out at the jail,”
-Ricardo, Leoncia’s youngest brother, a lad of eighteen, objected.
-
-Leoncia, her eagerness alive again, frowned at him; but Francis took his
-part.
-
-“Well taken,” he agreed. “But we will eliminate the guards.”
-
-“The five-foot walls,” said Martinez Solano, twin brother to Alvarado.
-
-“Go through them,” Francis answered.
-
-“But how?” Leoncia cried.
-
-“That’s what I am arriving at. You, Senor Solano, have plenty of saddle
-horses? Good. And you, Alesandro, does it chance you could procure me a
-couple of sticks of dynamite from around the plantation? Good, and
-better than good. And you, Leoncia, as the lady of the hacienda, should
-know whether you have in your store-room a plentiful supply of that
-three-star rye whiskey?”
-
-“Ah, the plot thickens,” he laughed, on receiving her assurance. “We’ve
-all the properties for a Rider Haggard or Rex Beach adventure tale. Now
-listen. But wait. I want to talk to you, Leoncia, about private
-theatricals....”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER V.
-
-
-It was in the mid-afternoon, and Henry, at his barred cell-window,
-stared out into the street and wondered if any sort of breeze would ever
-begin to blow from off Chiriqui Lagoon and cool the stagnant air. The
-street was dusty and filthy—filthy, because the only scavengers it had
-ever known since the town was founded centuries before were the carrion
-dogs and obscene buzzards even then prowling and hopping about in the
-debris. Low, whitewashed buildings of stone and adobe made the street a
-furnace.
-
-The white of it all, and the dust, was almost achingly intolerable to
-the eyes, and Henry would have withdrawn his gaze, had not the several
-ragged _mosos_, dozing in a doorway opposite, suddenly aroused and
-looked interestedly up the street. Henry could not see, but he could
-hear the rattling spokes of some vehicle coming at speed. Next, it
-surged into view, a rattletrap light wagon drawn by a runaway horse. In
-the seat a gray-headed, gray-bearded ancient strove vainly to check the
-animal.
-
-Henry smiled and marveled that the rickety wagon could hold together, so
-prodigious were the bumps imparted to it by the deep ruts. Every wheel,
-half-dished and threatening to dish, wobbled and revolved out of line
-with every other wheel. And if the wagon held intact, Henry judged, it
-was a miracle that the crazy harness did not fly to pieces. When
-directly opposite the window, the old man made a last effort,
-half-standing up from the seat as he pulled on the reins. One was
-rotten, and broke. As the driver fell backward into the seat, his weight
-on the remaining rein caused the horse to swerve sharply to the right.
-What happened then—whether a wheel dished, or whether a wheel had come
-off first and dished afterward—Henry could not determine. The one
-incontestable thing was that the wagon was a wreck. The old man,
-dragging in the dust and stubbornly hanging on to the remaining rein,
-swung the horse in a circle until it stopped, facing him and snorting at
-him.
-
-By the time he gained his feet a crowd of _mosos_ was forming about him.
-These were roughly shouldered right and left by the gendarmes who
-erupted from the jail. Henry remained at the window and, for a man with
-but a few hours to live, was an amused spectator and listener to what
-followed.
-
-Giving his horse to a gendarme to hold, not stopping to brush the filth
-from his person, the old man limped hurriedly to the wagon and began an
-examination of the several packing cases, large and small, which
-composed its load. Of one case he was especially solicitous, even trying
-to lift it and seeming to listen as he lifted.
-
-He straightened up, on being addressed by one of the gendarmes, and made
-voluble reply.
-
-“Me? Alas senors, I am an old man, and far from home. I am Leopoldo
-Narvaez. It is true, my mother was German, may the Saints preserve her
-rest; but my father was Baltazar de Jesus y Cervallos é Narvaez, son of
-General Narvaez of martial memory, who fought under the great Bolivar
-himself. And now I am half ruined and far from home.”
-
-Prompted by other questions, interlarded with the courteous expressions
-of sympathy with which even the humblest _moso_ is over generously
-supplied, he managed to be polite-fully grateful and to run on with his
-tale.
-
-“I have driven from Bocas del Toro. It has taken me five days, and
-business has been poor. My home is in Colon, and I wish I were safely
-there. But even a noble Narvaez may be a peddler, and even a peddler
-must live, eh, senors, is it not so? But tell me, is there not a Tomas
-Romero who dwells in this pleasant city of San Antonio?”
-
-“There are any God’s number of Tomas Romeros who dwell everywhere in
-Panama,” laughed Pedro Zurita, the assistant jailer. “One would need
-fuller description.”
-
-“He is the cousin of my second wife,” the ancient answered hopefully,
-and seemed bewildered by the roar of laughter from the crowd.
-
-“And a dozen Tomas Romeros live in and about San Antonio,” the assistant
-jailer went on, “any one of which may be your second wife’s cousin,
-Senor. There is Tomas Romero, the drunkard. There is Tomas Romero, the
-thief. There is Tomas Romero—but no, he was hanged a month back for
-murder and robbery. There is the rich Tomas Romero who owns many cattle
-on the hills. There is....”
-
-To each suggested one, Leopoldo Narvaez had shaken his head dolefully,
-until the cattle-owner was mentioned. At this he had become hopeful and
-broke in:
-
-“Pardon me, senor, it must be he, or some such a one as he. I shall find
-him. If my precious stock-in-trade can be safely stored, I shall seek
-him now. It is well my misfortune came upon me where it did. I shall be
-able to trust it with you, who are, one can see with half an eye, an
-honest and an honorable man.” As he talked, he fumbled forth from his
-pocket two silver pesos and handed them to the jailer. “There, I wish
-you and your men to have some pleasure of assisting me.”
-
-Henry grinned to himself as he noted the access of interest in the old
-man and of consideration for him, on the part of Pedro Zurita and the
-gendarmes, caused by the present of the coins. They shoved the more
-curious of the crowd roughly back from the wrecked wagon and began to
-carry the boxes into the jail.
-
-“Careful, senors, careful,” the old one pleaded, greatly anxious, as
-they took hold of the big box. “Handle it gently. It is of value, and it
-is fragile, most fragile.”
-
-While the contents of the wagon were being carried into the jail, the
-old man removed and deposited in the wagon all harness from the horse
-save the bridle.
-
-Pedro Zurita ordered the harness taken in as well, explaining, with a
-glare at the miserable crowd: “Not a strap or buckle would remain the
-second after our backs were turned.”
-
-Using what was left of the wagon for a stepping block, and ably assisted
-by the jailer and his crew, the peddler managed to get astride his
-animal.
-
-“It is well,” he said, and added gratefully: “A thousand thanks, senors.
-It has been my good fortune to meet with honest men with whom my goods
-will be safe—only poor goods, peddler’s goods, you understand; but to
-me, everything, my way upon the road. The pleasure has been mine to meet
-you. To-morrow I shall return with my kinsman, whom I certainly shall
-find, and relieve from you the burden of safeguarding my inconsiderable
-property.” He doffed his hat. “Adios, senors, adios!”
-
-He rode away at a careful walk, timid of the animal he bestrode which
-had caused his catastrophe. He halted and turned his head at a call from
-Pedro Zurita.
-
-“Search the graveyard, Senor Narvaez,” the jailer advised. “Full a
-hundred Tomas Romeros lie there.”
-
-“And be vigilant, I beg of you, senor, of the heavy box,” the peddler
-called back.
-
-Henry watched the street grow deserted as the gendarmes and the populace
-fled from the scorch of the sun. Small wonder, he thought to himself,
-that the old peddler’s voice had sounded vaguely familiar. It had been
-because he had possessed only half a Spanish tongue to twist around the
-language—the other half being the German tongue of the mother. Even so,
-he talked like a native, and he would be robbed like a native if there
-was anything of value in the heavy box deposited with the jailers, Henry
-concluded, ere dismissing the incident from his mind.
-
- * * * * *
-
-In the guardroom, a scant fifty feet away from Henry’s cell, Leopoldo
-Narvaez was being robbed. It had begun by Pedro Zurita making a profound
-and wistful survey of the large box. He lifted one end of it to sample
-its weight, and sniffed like a hound at the crack of it as if his nose
-might give him some message of its contents.
-
-“Leave it alone, Pedro,” one of the gendarmes laughed at him. “You have
-been paid two pesos to be honest.”
-
-The assistant jailer sighed, walked away and sat down, looked back at
-the box, and sighed again. Conversation languished. Continually the eyes
-of the men roved to the box. A greasy pack of cards could not divert
-them. The game languished. The gendarme who had twitted Pedro himself
-went to the box and sniffed.
-
-“I smell nothing,” he announced. “Absolutely in the box there is nothing
-to smell. Now what can it be? The caballero said that it was of value!”
-
-“Caballero!” sniffed another of the gendarmes. “The old man’s father was
-more like to have been peddler of rotten fish on the streets of Colon
-and his father before him. Every lying beggar claims descent from the
-conquistadores.”
-
-“And why not, Rafael?” Pedro Zurita retorted. “Are we not all so
-descended?”
-
-“Without doubt,” Rafael readily agreed. “The conquistadores slew many——”
-
-“And were the ancestors of those that survived,” Pedro completed for him
-and aroused a general laugh. “Just the same, almost would I give one of
-these pesos to know what is in that box.”
-
-“There is Ignacio,” Rafael greeted the entrance of a turnkey whose heavy
-eyes tokened he was just out of his siesta. “He was not paid to be
-honest. Come, Ignacio, relieve our curiosity by letting us know what is
-in the box.”
-
-“How should I know?” Ignacio demanded, blinking at the object of
-interest. “Only now have I awakened.”
-
-“You have not been paid to be honest, then?” Rafael asked.
-
-“Merciful Mother of God, who is the man who would pay me to be honest?”
-the turnkey demanded.
-
-“Then take the hatchet there and open the box,” Rafael drove his point
-home. “We may not, for as surely as Pedro is to share the two pesos with
-us, that surely have we been paid to be honest. Open the box, Ignacio,
-or we shall perish of our curiosity.”
-
-“We will look, we will only look,” Pedro muttered nervously, as the
-turnkey prized off a board with the blade of the hatchet. “Then we will
-close the box again and——Put your hand in, Ignacio. What is it you
-find?... eh? what does it feel like? Ah!”
-
-After pulling and tugging, Ignacio’s hand had reappeared, clutching a
-cardboard carton.
-
-“Remove it carefully, for it must be replaced,” the jailer cautioned.
-
-And when the wrappings of paper and tissue paper were removed, all eyes
-focused on a quart bottle of rye whiskey.
-
-“How excellently is it composed,” Pedro murmured in tones of awe. “It
-must be very good that such care be taken of it.”
-
-“It is Americano whiskey,” sighed a gendarme. “Once, only, have I drunk
-Americano whiskey. It was wonderful. Such was the courage of it, that I
-leaped into the bull-ring at Santos and faced a wild bull with my hands.
-It is true, the bull rolled me, but did I not leap into the ring?”
-
-Pedro took the bottle and prepared to knock its neck off.
-
-“Hold!” cried Rafael. “You were paid to be honest.”
-
-“By a man who was not himself honest,” came the retort. “The stuff is
-contraband. It has never paid duty. The old man was in possession of
-smuggled goods. Let us now gratefully and with clear conscience invest
-ourselves in its possession. We will confiscate it. We will destroy it.”
-
-Not waiting for the bottle to pass, Ignacio and Rafael unwrapped fresh
-ones and broke off the necks.
-
-“Three stars—most excellent,” Pedro Zurita orated in a pause, pointing
-to the trade mark. “You see, all Gringo whiskey is good. One star shows
-that it is very good; two stars that it is excellent; three stars that
-it is superb, the best, and better than beyond that. Ah, I know. The
-Gringos are strong on strong drink. No pulque for them.”
-
-“And four stars?” queried Ignacio, his voice husky from the liquor, the
-moisture glistening in his eyes.
-
-“Four stars? Friend Ignacio, four stars would be either sudden death or
-translation into paradise.”
-
-In not many minutes, Rafael, his arm around another gendarme, was
-calling him brother and proclaiming that it took little to make men
-happy here below.
-
-“The old man was a fool, three times a fool, and thrice that,”
-volunteered Augustino, a sullen-faced gendarme, who for the first time
-gave tongue to speech.
-
-“Viva Augustino!” cheered Rafael. “The three stars have worked a
-miracle. Behold! Have they not unlocked Augustino’s mouth?”
-
-“And thrice times thrice again was the old man a fool!” Augustino
-bellowed fiercely. “The very drink of the gods was his, all his, and he
-has been five days alone with it on the road from Bocas del Toro, and
-never taken one little sip. Such fools as he should be stretched out
-naked on an ant-heap, say I.”
-
-“The old man was a rogue,” quoth Pedro. “And when he comes back
-to-morrow for his three stars I shall arrest him for a smuggler. It will
-be a feather in all our caps.”
-
-“If we destroy the evidence—thus?” queried Augustino, knocking off
-another neck.
-
-“We will save the evidence—thus!” Pedro replied, smashing an empty
-bottle on the stone flags. “Listen, comrades. The box was very heavy—we
-are all agreed. It fell. The bottles broke. The liquor ran out, and so
-were we made aware of the contraband. The box and the broken bottles
-will be evidence sufficient.”
-
-The uproar grew as the liquor diminished. One gendarme quarreled with
-Ignacio over a forgotten debt of ten centavos. Two others sat upon the
-floor, arms around each other’s necks, and wept over the miseries of
-their married lot. Augustino, like a very spendthrift of speech,
-explained his philosophy that silence was golden. And Pedro Zurita
-became sentimental on brotherhood.
-
-“Even my prisoners,” he maundered. “I love them as brothers. Life is
-sad.” A gush of tears in his eyes made him desist while he took another
-drink. “My prisoners are my very children. My heart bleeds for them.
-Behold! I weep. Let us share with them. Let them have a moment’s
-happiness. Ignacio, dearest brother of my heart. Do me a favor. See, I
-weep on your hand. Carry a bottle of this elixir to the Gringo Morgan.
-Tell him my sorrow that he must hang to-morrow. Give him my love and bid
-him drink and be happy to-day.”
-
-And as Ignacio passed out on the errand, the gendarme who had once leapt
-into the bull-ring at Santos, began roaring:
-
-“I want a bull! I want a bull!”
-
-“He wants it, dear soul, that he may put his arms around it and love
-it,” Pedro Zurita explained, with a fresh access of weeping. “I, too,
-love bulls. I love all things. I love even mosquitoes. All the world is
-love. That is the secret of the world. I should like to have a lion to
-play with....”
-
- * * * * *
-
-The unmistakable air of “Back to Back Against the Mainmast” being
-whistled openly in the street, caught Henry’s attention, and he was
-crossing his big cell to the window when the grating of a key in the
-door made him lie down quickly on the floor and feign sleep. Ignacio
-staggered drunkenly in, bottle in hand, which he gravely presented to
-Henry.
-
-“With the high compliments of our good jailer, Pedro Zurita,” he
-mumbled. “He says to drink and forget that he must stretch your neck
-to-morrow.”
-
-“My high compliments to Senor Pedro Zurita, and tell him from me to go
-to hell along with his whiskey,” Henry replied.
-
-The turnkey straightened up and ceased swaying, as if suddenly become
-sober.
-
-“Very well, senor,” he said, then passed out and locked the door.
-
-In a rush Henry was at the window just in time to encounter Francis face
-to face and thrusting a revolver to him through the bars.
-
-“Greetings, camarada,” Francis said. “We’ll have you out of here in a
-jiffy.” He held up two sticks of dynamite, with fuse and caps complete.
-“I have brought this pretty crowbar to pry you out. Stand well back in
-your cell, because real pronto there’s going to be a hole in this wall
-that we could sail the _Angelique_ through. And the _Angelique_ is right
-off the beach waiting for you.—Now, stand back. I’m going to touch her
-off. It’s a short fuse.”
-
-Hardly had Henry backed into a rear corner of his cell, when the door
-was clumsily unlocked and opened to a babel of cries and imprecations,
-chiefest among which he could hear the ancient and invariable war-cry of
-Latin-America, “Kill the Gringo!”
-
-Also, he could hear Rafael and Pedro, as they entered, babbling, the
-one: “He is the enemy of brotherly love”; and the other, “He said I was
-to go to hell—is not that what he said, Ignacio?”
-
-In their hands they carried rifles, and behind them urged the drunken
-rabble, variously armed, from cutlasses and horse-pistols to hatchets
-and bottles. At sight of Henry’s revolver, they halted, and Pedro,
-fingering his rifle unsteadily, maundered solemnly:
-
-“Senor Morgan, you are about to take up your rightful abode in hell.”
-
-But Ignacio did not wait. He fired wildly and widely from his hip,
-missing Henry by half the width of the cell and going down the next
-moment under the impact of Henry’s bullet. The rest retreated
-precipitately into the jail corridor, where, themselves unseen, they
-began discharging their weapons into the room.
-
-Thanking his fortunate stars for the thickness of the walls, and hoping
-no ricochet would get him, Henry sheltered in a protecting angle and
-waited for the explosion.
-
-It came. The window and the wall beneath it became all one aperture.
-Struck on the head by a flying fragment, Henry sank down dizzily, and,
-as the dust of the mortar and the powder cleared, with wavering eyes he
-saw Francis apparently swim through the hole. By the time he had been
-dragged out through the hole, Henry was himself again. He could see
-Enrico Solano and Ricardo, his youngest born, rifles in hand, holding
-back the crowd forming up the street, while the twins, Alvarado and
-Martinez, similarly held back the crowd forming down the street.
-
-But the populace was merely curious, having its lives to lose and
-nothing to gain if it attempted to block the way of such masterful men
-as these who blew up walls and stormed jails in open day. And it gave
-back respectfully before the compact group as it marched down the
-street.
-
-“The horses are waiting up the next alley,” Francis told Henry, as they
-gripped hands. “And Leoncia is waiting with them. Fifteen minutes’
-gallop will take us to the beach, where the boat is waiting.”
-
-“Say, that was some song I taught you,” Henry grinned. “It sounded like
-the very best little bit of all right when I heard you whistling it. The
-dogs were so previous they couldn’t wait till to-morrow to hang me. They
-got full of whiskey and decided to finish me off right away. Funny thing
-that whiskey. An old caballero turned peddler wrecked a wagon-load of it
-right in front of the jail——”
-
-“For even a noble Narvaez, son of Baltazar de Jesus y Cervallos è
-Narvaez, son of General Narvaez of martial memory, may be a peddler, and
-even a peddler must live, eh, senors, is it not so?” Francis mimicked.
-
-Henry looked his gleeful recognition, and added soberly:
-
-“Francis, I’m glad for one thing, most damn glad....”
-
-“Which is?” Francis queried in the pause, just as they swung around the
-corner to the horses.
-
-“That I didn’t cut off your ears that day on the Calf when I had you
-down and you insisted.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VI
-
-
-Mariano Vercara e Hijos, Jefe Politico of San Antonio, leaned back in
-his chair in the courtroom and with a quiet smile of satisfaction
-proceeded to roll a cigarette. The case had gone through as prearranged.
-He had kept the little old judge away from his _mescal_ all day, and had
-been rewarded by having the judge try the case and give judgment
-according to program. He had not made a slip. The six peons, fined
-heavily, were ordered back to the plantation at Santos. The working out
-of the fines was added to the time of their contract slavery. And the
-Jefe was two hundred dollars good American gold richer for the
-transaction. Those Gringos at Santos, he smiled to himself, were men to
-tie to. True, they were developing the country with their _henequen_
-plantation. But, better than that, they possessed money in untold
-quantity and paid well for such little services as he might be able to
-render.
-
-His smile was even broader as he greeted Alvarez Torres.
-
-“Listen,” said the latter, whispering low in his ear. “We can get both
-these devils of Morgans. The Henry pig hangs to-morrow. There is no
-reason that the Francis pig should not go out to-day.”
-
-The Jefe remained silent, questioning with a lift of his eyebrows.
-
-“I have advised him to storm the jail. The Solanos have listened to his
-lies and are with him. They will surely attempt to do it this evening.
-They could not do it sooner. It is for you to be ready for the event,
-and to see to it that Francis Morgan is especially shot and killed in
-the fight.”
-
-“For what and for why?” the Jefe temporised. “It is Henry I want to see
-out of the way. Let the Francis one go back to his beloved New York.”
-
-“He must go out to-day, and for reasons you will appreciate. As you
-know, from reading my telegrams through the government wireless——”
-
-“Which was our agreement for my getting you your permission to use the
-government station,” the Jefe reminded.
-
-“And of which I do not complain,” Torres assured him. “But as I was
-saying, you know my relations with the New York Regan are confidential
-and important.” He touched his hand to his breast pocket. “I have just
-received another wire. It is imperative that the Francis pig be kept
-away from New York for a month—if forever, and I do not misunderstand
-Senor Regan, so much the better. In so far as I succeed in this, will
-you fare well.”
-
-“But you have not told me how much you have received, nor how much you
-will receive,” the Jefe probed.
-
-“It is a private agreement, and it is not so much as you may fancy. He
-is a hard man, this Senor Regan, a hard man. Yet will I divide fairly
-with you out of the success of our venture.”
-
-The Jefe nodded acquiescence, then said:
-
-“Will it be as much as a thousand gold you will get?”
-
-“I think so. Surely the pig of an Irish stock-gambler could pay me no
-less a sum, and five hundred is yours if pig Francis leaves his bones in
-San Antonio.”
-
-“Will it be as much as a hundred thousand gold?” was the Jefe’s next
-query.
-
-Torres laughed as if at a joke.
-
-“It must be more than a thousand,” the other persisted.
-
-“And he may be generous,” Torres responded. “He may even give me five
-hundred over the thousand, half of which, naturally, as I have said,
-will be yours as well.”
-
-“I shall go from here immediately to the jail,” the Jefe announced. “You
-may trust me, Senor Torres, as I trust you. Come. We will go at once,
-now, you and I, and you may see for yourself the preparation I shall
-make for this Francis Morgan’s reception. I have not yet lost my cunning
-with a rifle. And, as well, I shall tell off three of the gendarmes to
-fire only at him. So this Gringo dog would storm our jail, eh? Come. We
-will depart at once.”
-
-He stood up, tossing his cigarette away with a show of determined
-energy. But, half way across the room, a ragged boy, panting and
-sweating, plucked his sleeve and whined:
-
-“I have information. You will pay me for it, most high Senor? I have run
-all the way.”
-
-“I’ll have you sent to San Juan for the buzzards to peck your carcass
-for the worthless carrion that you are,” was the reply.
-
-The boy quailed at the threat, then summoned courage from his emptiness
-of belly and meagerness of living and from his desire for the price of a
-ticket to the next bull-fight.
-
-“You will remember I brought you the information, Senor. I ran all the
-way until I am almost dead, as you can behold, Senor. I will tell you,
-but you will remember it was I who ran all the way and told you first.”
-
-“Yes, yes, animal, I will remember. But woe to you if I remember too
-well. What is the trifling information? It may not be worth a centavo.
-And if it isn’t I’ll make you sorry the sun ever shone on you. And
-buzzard-picking of you at San Juan will be paradise compared with what I
-shall visit on you.”
-
-“The jail,” the boy quavered. “The strange Gringo, the one who was to be
-hanged yesterday, has blown down the side of the jail. Merciful Saints!
-The hole is as big as the steeple of the cathedral! And the other
-Gringo, the one who looks like him, the one who was to hang to-morrow,
-has escaped with him out of the hole. He dragged him out of the hole
-himself. This I saw, myself, with my two eyes, and then I ran here to
-you all the way, and you will remember....”
-
-But the Jefe Politico had already turned on Torres witheringly.
-
-“And if this Senor Regan be princely generous, he may give you and me
-the munificent sum that was mentioned, eh? Five times the sum, or ten
-times, with this Gringo tiger blowing down law and order and our good
-jail-walls, would be nearer the mark.”
-
-“At any rate, the thing must be a false alarm, merely the straw that
-shows which way blows the wind of this Francis Morgan’s intention,”
-Torres murmured with a sickly smile. “Remember, the suggestion was mine
-to him to storm the jail.”
-
-“In which case you and Senor Regan will pay for the good jail wall?” the
-Jefe demanded, then, with a pause, added: “Not that I believe it has
-been accomplished. It is not possible. Even a fool Gringo would not
-dare.”
-
-Rafael, the gendarme, rifle in hand, the blood still oozing down his
-face from a scalp-wound, came through the courtroom door and shouldered
-aside the curious ones who had begun to cluster around Torres and the
-Jefe.
-
-“We are devastated,” were Rafael’s first words. “The jail is ‘most
-destroyed. Dynamite! A hundred pounds of it! A thousand! We came bravely
-to save the jail. But it exploded—the thousand pounds of dynamite. I
-fell unconscious, rifle in hand. When sense came back to me, I looked
-about. All others, the brave Pedro, the brave Ignacio, the brave
-Augustino—all, all, lay around me dead!” Almost could he have added,
-“drunk”; but, his Latin-American nature so compounded, he sincerely
-stated the catastrophe as it most valiantly and tragically presented
-itself to his imagination. “They lay dead. They may not be dead, but
-merely stunned. I crawled. The cell of the Gringo Morgan was empty.
-There was a huge and monstrous hole in the wall. I crawled through the
-hole into the street. There was a great crowd. But the Gringo Morgan was
-gone. I talked with a moso who had seen and who knew. They had horses
-waiting. They rode toward the beach. There is a schooner that is not
-anchored. It sails back and forth waiting for them. The Francis Morgan
-rides with a sack of gold on his saddle. The moso saw it. It is a large
-sack.”
-
-“And the hole?” the Jefe demanded. “The hole in the wall?”
-
-“Is larger than the sack, much larger,” was Rafael’s reply. “But the
-sack is large. So the moso said. And he rides with it on his saddle.”
-
-“My jail!” the Jefe cried. He slipped a dagger from inside his coat
-under the left arm-pit and held it aloft by the blade so that the hilt
-showed as a true cross on which a finely modeled Christ hung crucified.
-“I swear by all the Saints the vengeance I shall have. My jail! Our
-justice! Our law!——Horses! Horses! Gendarme, horses!” He whirled about
-upon Torres as if the latter had spoken, shouting: “To hell with Senor
-Regan! I am after my own! I have been defied! My jail is desolated! My
-law—our law, good friends—has been mocked. Horses! Horses! Commandeer
-them on the streets. Haste! Haste!”
-
- * * * * *
-
-Captain Trefethen, owner of the _Angelique_, son of a Maya Indian mother
-and a Jamaica negro father, paced the narrow after-deck of his schooner,
-stared shoreward toward San Antonio, where he could make out his crowded
-long-boat returning, and meditated flight from his mad American
-charterer. At the same time he meditated remaining in order to break his
-charter and give a new one at three times the price; for he was
-strangely torn by his conflicting bloods. The negro portion counseled
-prudence and observance of Panamanian law. The Indian portion was urgent
-to unlawfulness and the promise of conflict.
-
-It was the Indian mother who decided the issue and made him draw his
-jib, ease his mainsheet, and begin to reach in-shore the quicker to pick
-up the oncoming boat. When he made out the rifles carried by the Solanos
-and the Morgans, almost he put up his helm to run for it and leave them.
-When he made out a woman in the boat’s sternsheets, romance and thrift
-whispered in him to hang on and take the boat on board. For he knew
-wherever women entered into the transactions of men that peril and pelf
-as well entered hand in hand.
-
-And aboard came the woman, the peril and the pelf—Leoncia, the rifles,
-and a sack of money—all in a scramble; for, the wind being light, the
-captain had not bothered to stop way on the schooner.
-
-“Glad to welcome you on board, sir,” Captain Trefethen greeted Francis
-with a white slash of teeth between his smiling lips. “But who is this
-man?” He nodded his head to indicate Henry.
-
-“A friend, captain, a guest of mine, in fact, a kinsman.”
-
-“And who, sir, may I make bold to ask, are those gentlemen riding along
-the beach in fashion so lively?”
-
-Henry looked quickly at the group of horsemen galloping along the sand,
-unceremoniously took the binoculars from the skipper’s hand, and gazed
-through them.
-
-“It’s the Jefe himself in the lead,” he reported to Leoncia and her
-menfolk, “with a bunch of gendarmes.” He uttered a sharp exclamation,
-stared through the glasses intently, then shook his head. “Almost I
-thought I made out our friend Torres.”
-
-“With our enemies!” Leoncia cried incredulously, remembering Torres’
-proposal of marriage and proffer of service and honor that very day on
-the hacienda piazza.
-
-“I must have been mistaken,” Francis acknowledged. “They are riding so
-bunched together. But it’s the Jefe all right, two jumps ahead of the
-outfit.”
-
-“Who is this Torres duck?” Henry asked harshly. “I’ve never liked his
-looks from the first, yet he seems always welcome under your roof,
-Leoncia.”
-
-“I beg your parson, sir, most gratifiedly, and with my humilius
-respects,” Captain Trefethen interrupted suavely. “But I must call your
-attention to the previous question, sir, which is: who and what is that
-cavalcade disporting itself with such earnestness along the sand?”
-
-“They tried to hang me yesterday,” Francis laughed. “And to-morrow they
-were going to hang my kinsman there. Only we beat them to it. And here
-we are. Now, Mr. Skipper, I call your attention to your head-sheets
-flapping in the wind. You are standing still. How much longer do you
-expect to stick around here?”
-
-“Mr. Morgan, sir,” came the answer, “it is with dumbfounded respect that
-I serve you as the charterer of my vessel. Nevertheless, I must inform
-you that I am a British subject. King George is my king, sir, and I owe
-obedience first of all to him and to his laws of maritime between all
-nations, sir. It is lucid to my comprehension that you have broken laws
-ashore, or else the officers ashore would not be so assiduously in quest
-of you, sir. And it is also lucid to clarification that it is now your
-wish to have me break the laws of maritime by enabling you to escape.
-So, in honor bound, I must stick around here until this little
-difficulty that you may have appertained ashore is adjusted to the
-satisfaction of all parties concerned, sir, and to the satisfaction of
-my lawful sovereign.”
-
-“Fill away and get out of this, skipper!” Henry broke in angrily.
-
-“Sir, assuring you of your gratification of pardon, it is my unpleasant
-task to inform you of two things. Neither are you my charterer; nor are
-you the noble King George to whom I give ambitious allegiance.”
-
-“Well, I’m your charterer, skipper,” Francis said pleasantly, for he had
-learned to humor the man of mixed words and parentage. “So just kindly
-put up your helm and sail us out of this Chiriqui Lagoon as fast as God
-and this failing wind will let you.”
-
-“It is not in the charter, sir, that my _Angelique_ shall break the laws
-of Panama and King George.”
-
-“I’ll pay you well,” Francis retorted, beginning to lose his temper.
-“Get busy.”
-
-“You will then recharter, sir, at three times the present charter?”
-
-Francis nodded shortly.
-
-“Then wait, sir, I entreat. I must procure pen and paper from the cabin
-and make out the document.”
-
-“Oh, Lord,” Francis groaned. “Square away and get a move on first. We
-can make out the paper just as easily while we are running as standing
-still. Look! They are beginning to fire.”
-
-The half-breed captain heard the report, and, searching his spread
-canvas, discovered the hole of the bullet high up near the peak of the
-mainsail.
-
-“Very well, sir,” he conceded. “You are a gentleman and an honorable
-man. I trust you to affix your signature to the document at your early
-convenience——Hey, you nigger! Put up your wheel! Hard up! Jump, you
-black rascals, and slack away mainsheet! Take a hand there, you,
-Percival, on the boom-tackle!”
-
-All obeyed, as did Percival, a grinning shambling Kingston negro who was
-as black as his name was white, and as did another, addressed more
-respectfully as Juan, who was more Spanish and Indian than negro, as his
-light yellow skin attested, and whose fingers, slacking the foresheet,
-were as slim and delicate as a girl’s.
-
-“Knock the nigger on the head if he keeps up this freshness,” Henry
-growled in an undertone to Francis. “For two cents I’ll do it right
-now.”
-
-But Francis shook his head.
-
-“He’s all right, but he’s a Jamaica nigger, and you know what they are.
-And he’s Indian as well. We might as well humor him, since it’s the
-nature of the beast. He means all right, but he wants the money, he’s
-risking his schooner against confiscation, and he’s afflicted with
-_vocabularitis_. He just must get those long words out of his system or
-else bust.”
-
-Here Enrico Solano, with quivering nostrils and fingers restless on his
-rifle as with half an eye he kept track of the wild shots being fired
-from the beach, approached Henry and held out his hand.
-
-“I have been guilty of a grave mistake, Senor Morgan,” he said. “In the
-first hurt of my affliction at the death of my beloved brother, Alfaro,
-I was guilty of thinking you guilty of his murder.” Here old Enrico’s
-eyes flashed with anger consuming but unconsumable. “For murder it was,
-dastardly and cowardly, a thrust in the dark in the back. I should have
-known better. But I was overwhelmed, and the evidence was all against
-you. I did not take pause of thought to consider that my dearly beloved
-and only daughter was betrothed to you; to remember that all I had known
-of you was straightness and man-likeness and courage such as never stabs
-from behind the shield of the dark. I regret. I am sorry. And I am proud
-once again to welcome you into my family as the husband-to-be of my
-Leoncia.”
-
-And while this whole-hearted restoration of Henry Morgan into the Solano
-family went on, Leoncia was irritated because her father, in
-Latin-American fashion, must use so many fine words and phrases, when a
-single phrase, a handgrip, and a square look in the eyes were all that
-was called for and was certainly all that either Henry or Francis would
-have vouchsafed had the situation been reversed. Why, why, she asked of
-herself, must her Spanish stock, in such extravagance of diction, seem
-to emulate the similar extravagance of the Jamaica negro?
-
-While this reiteration of the betrothal of Henry and Leoncia was taking
-place, Francis, striving to appear uninterested, could not help taking
-note of the pale-yellow sailor called Juan, conferring for’ard with
-others of the crew, shrugging his shoulders significantly, gesticulating
-passionately with his hands.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VII
-
-
-“And now we’ve lost both the Gringo pigs,” Alvarez Torres lamented on
-the beach as, with a slight freshening of the breeze and with booms
-winged out to port and starboard, the _Angelique_ passed out of range of
-their rifles.
-
-“Almost would I give three bells to the cathedral,” Mariano Vercara è
-Hijos proclaimed, “to have them within a hundred yards of this rifle.
-And if I had will of all Gringos they would depart so fast that the
-devil in hell would be compelled to study English.”
-
-Alvarez Torres beat the saddle pommel with his hand in sheer impotence
-of rage and disappointment.
-
-“The Queen of my Dreams!” he almost wept. “She is gone and away, off
-with the two Morgans. I saw her climb up the side of the schooner. And
-there is the New York Regan. Once out of Chiriqui Lagoon, the schooner
-may sail directly to New York. And the Francis pig will not have been
-delayed a month, and the Senor Regan will remit no money.”
-
-“They will not get out of Chiriqui Lagoon,” the Jefe said solemnly. “I
-am no animal without reason. I am a man. I know they will not get out.
-Have I not sworn eternal vengeance? The sun is setting, and the promise
-is for a night of little wind. The sky tells it to one with half an eye.
-Behold those trailing wisps of clouds. What wind may be, and little
-enough of that, will come from the north-east. It will be a head beat to
-the Chorrera Passage. They will not attempt it. That nigger captain
-knows the lagoon like a book. He will try to make the long tack and go
-out past Bocas del Toro, or through the Cartago Passage. Even so, we
-will outwit him. I have brains, reason. Reason. Listen. It is a long
-ride. We will make it—straight down the coast to Las Palmas. Captain
-Rosaro is there with the _Dolores_.”
-
-“The second-hand old tugboat?—that cannot get out of her own way?”
-Torres queried.
-
-“But this night of calm and morrow of calm she will capture the
-_Angelique_,” the Jefe replied. “On, comrades! We will ride! Captain
-Rosaro is my friend. Any favor is but mine to ask.”
-
-At daylight, the worn-out men, on beaten horses, straggled through the
-decaying village of Las Palmas and down to the decaying pier, where a
-very decayed-looking tugboat, sadly in need of paint, welcomed their
-eyes. Smoke rising from the stack advertised that steam was up, and the
-Jefe was wearily elated.
-
-“A happy morning, Senor Capitan Rosaro, and well met,” he greeted the
-hard-bitten Spanish skipper, who was reclined on a coil of rope and who
-sipped black coffee from a mug that rattled against his teeth.
-
-“It would be a happier morning if the cursed fever had not laid its
-chill upon me,” Captain Rosaro grunted sourly, the hand that held the
-mug, the arm, and all his body shivering so violently as to spill the
-hot liquid down his chin and into the black-and-gray thatch of hair that
-covered his half-exposed chest. “Take that, you animal of hell!” he
-cried, flinging mug and contents at a splinter of a half-breed boy,
-evidently his servant, who had been unable to repress his glee.
-
-“But the sun will rise and the fever will work its will and shortly
-depart,” said the Jefe, politely ignoring the display of spleen. “And
-you are finished here, and you are bound for Bocas del Toro, and we
-shall go with you, all of us, on a rare adventure. We will pick up the
-schooner _Angelique_, calm-bound all last night in the lagoon, and I
-shall make many arrests, and all Panama will so ring with your courage
-and ability, Capitan, that you will forget that the fever ever whispered
-in you.”
-
-“How much?” Capitan Rosaro demanded bluntly.
-
-“Much?” the Jefe countered in surprise. “This is an affair of
-government, good friend. And it is right on your way to Bocas del Toro.
-It will not cost you an extra shovelful of coal.”
-
-“Muchacho! More coffee!” the tug-skipper roared at the boy.
-
-A pause fell, wherein Torres and the Jefe and all the draggled following
-yearned for the piping hot coffee brought by the boy. Captain Rosaro
-played the rim of the mug against his teeth like a rattling of
-castanets, but managed to sip without spilling and so to burn his mouth.
-
-A vacant-faced Swede, in filthy overalls, with a soiled cap on which
-appeared “Engineer,” came up from below, lighted a pipe, and seemingly
-went into a trance as he sat on the tug’s low rail.
-
-“How much?” Captain Rosaro repeated.
-
-“Let us get under way, dear friend,” said the Jefe. “And then, when the
-fever-shock has departed, we will discuss the matter with reason, being
-reasonable creatures ourselves and not animals.”
-
-“How much?” Captain Rosaro repeated again. “I am never an animal. I
-always am a creature of reason, whether the sun is up or not up, or
-whether this thrice-accursed fever is upon me. How much?”
-
-“Well, let us start, and for how much?” the Jefe conceded wearily.
-
-“Fifty dollars gold,” was the prompt answer.
-
-“You are starting anyway, are you not, Capitan?” Torres queried softly.
-
-“Fifty——gold, as I have said.”
-
-The Jefe Politico threw up his hands with a hopeless gesture and turned
-on his heel to depart.
-
-“Yet you swore eternal vengeance for the crime committed on your jail,”
-Torres reminded him.
-
-“But not if it costs fifty dollars,” the Jefe snapped back, out of the
-corner of his eye watching the shivering captain for some sign of
-relenting.
-
-“Fifty gold,” said the Captain, as he finished draining the mug and with
-shaking fingers strove to roll a cigarette. He nodded his head in the
-direction of the Swede, and added, “and five gold extra for my engineer.
-It is our custom.”
-
-Torres stepped closer to the Jefe and whispered:
-
-“I will pay for the tug myself and charge the Gringo Regan a hundred,
-and you and I will divide the difference. We lose nothing. We shall
-make. For this Regan pig instructed me well not to mind expense.”
-
-As the sun slipped brazenly above the eastern horizon, one gendarme went
-back into Las Palmas with the jaded horses, the rest of the party
-descended to the deck of the tug, the Swede dived down into the
-engine-room, and Captain Rosaro, shaking off his chill in the sun’s
-beneficent rays, ordered the deck-hands to cast off the lines, and put
-one of them at the wheel in the pilot-house.
-
- * * * * *
-
-And the same day-dawn found the _Angelique_, after a night of almost
-perfect calm, off the mainland from which she had failed to get away,
-although she had made sufficient northing to be midway between San
-Antonio and the passages of Bocas del Toro and Cartago. These two
-passages to the open sea still lay twenty-five miles away, and the
-schooner truly slept on the mirror surface of the placid lagoon. Too
-stuffy below for sleep in the steaming tropics, the deck was littered
-with the sleepers. On top the small house of the cabin, in solitary
-state, lay Leoncia. On the narrow runways of deck on either side lay her
-brothers and her father. Aft, between the cabin companionway and the
-wheel, side by side, Francis’ arm across Henry’s shoulder, as if still
-protecting him, were the two Morgans. On one side of the wheel, sitting,
-with arms on knees and head on arms, the negro-Indian skipper slept, and
-just as precisely postured, on the other side of the wheel, slept the
-helmsman, who was none other than Percival, the black Kingston negro.
-The waist of the schooner was strewn with the bodies of the mixed-breed
-seamen, while for’ard, on the tiny forecastlehead, prone, his face
-buried upon his folded arms, slept the lookout.
-
-Leoncia, in her high place on the cabin-top, awoke first. Propping her
-head on her hand, the elbow resting on a bit of the poncho on which she
-lay, she looked down past one side of the hood of the companionway upon
-the two young men. She yearned over them, who were so alike, and knew
-love for both of them, remembered the kisses of Henry on her mouth,
-thrilled till the blush of her own thoughts mantled her cheek at memory
-of the kisses of Francis, and was puzzled and amazed that she should
-have it in her to love two men at the one time. As she had already
-learned of herself, she would follow Henry to the end of the world and
-Francis even farther. And she could not understand such wantonness of
-inclination.
-
-Fleeing from her own thoughts, which frightened her, she stretched out
-her arm and dangled the end of her silken scarf to a tickling of
-Francis’ nose, who, after restless movements, still in the heaviness of
-sleep, struck with his hand at what he must have thought to be a
-mosquito or a fly, and hit Henry on the chest. So it was Henry who was
-first awakened. He sat up with such abruptness as to awaken Francis.
-
-“Good morning, merry kinsman,” Francis greeted. “Why such violence?”
-
-“Morning, morning, and the morning’s morning, comrade,” Henry muttered.
-“Such was the violence of your sleep that it was you who awakened me
-with a buffet on my breast. I thought it was the hangman, for this is
-the morning they planned to kink my neck.” He yawned, stretched his
-arms, gazed out over the rail at the sleeping sea, and nudged Francis to
-observance of the sleeping skipper and helmsman.
-
-They looked so bonny, the pair of Morgans, Leoncia thought; and at the
-same time wondered why the English word had arisen unsummoned in her
-mind rather than a Spanish equivalent. Was it because her heart went out
-so generously to the two Gringos that she must needs think of them in
-their language instead of her own?
-
-To escape the perplexity of her thoughts, she dangled the scarf again,
-was discovered, and laughingly confessed that it was she who had caused
-their violence of waking.
-
-Three hours later, breakfast of coffee and fruit over, she found herself
-at the wheel taking her first lesson of steering and of the compass
-under Francis’ tuition. The _Angelique_, under a crisp little breeze
-which had hauled around well to north’ard, was for the moment heeling it
-through the water at a six-knot clip. Henry, swaying on the weather side
-of the after-deck and searching the sea through the binoculars, was
-striving to be all unconcerned at the lesson, although secretly he was
-mutinous with himself for not having first thought of himself
-introducing her to the binnacle and the wheel. Yet he resolutely
-refrained from looking around or from even stealing a corner-of-the-eye
-glance at the other two.
-
-But Captain Trefethen, with the keen cruelty of Indian curiosity and the
-impudence of a negro subject of King George, knew no such delicacy. He
-stared openly and missed nothing of the chemic drawing together of his
-charterer and the pretty Spanish girl. When they leaned over the wheel
-to look into the binnacle, they leaned toward each other and Leoncia’s
-hair touched Francis’ cheek. And the three of them, themselves and the
-breed skipper, knew the thrill induced by such contact. But the man and
-woman knew immediately what the breed skipper did not know, and what
-they knew was embarrassment. Their eyes lifted to each other in a flash
-of mutual startlement, and drooped away and down guiltily. Francis
-talked very fast and loud enough for half the schooner to hear, as he
-explained the lubber’s point of the compass. But Captain Trefethen
-grinned.
-
-A rising puff of breeze made Francis put the wheel up. His hand to the
-spoke rested on her hand already upon it. Again they thrilled, and again
-the skipper grinned.
-
-Leoncia’s eyes lifted to Francis’, then dropped in confusion. She
-slipped her hand out from under and terminated the lesson by walking
-slowly away with a fine assumption of casualness, as if the wheel and
-the binnacle no longer interested her. But she had left Francis afire
-with what he knew was lawlessness and treason as he glanced at Henry’s
-shoulder and profile and hoped he had not seen what had occurred.
-Leoncia, apparently gazing off across the lagoon to the jungle-clad
-shore, was seeing nothing as she thoughtfully turned her engagement ring
-around and around on her finger.
-
-But Henry, turning to tell them of the smudge of smoke he had discovered
-on the horizon, had inadvertently seen. And the negro-Indian captain had
-seen him see. So the captain lurched close to him, the cruelty of the
-Indian dictating the impudence of the negro, as he said in a low voice:
-
-“Ah, be not downcast, sir. The senorita is generously hearted. There is
-room for both you gallant gentlemen in her heart.”
-
-And the next fraction of a second he learned the inevitable and
-invariable lesson that white men must have their privacy of intimate
-things; for he lay on his back, the back of his head sore from contact
-with the deck, the front of his head, between the eyes, sore from
-contact with the knuckles of Henry Morgan’s right hand.
-
-But the Indian in the skipper was up and raging as he sprang to his
-feet, knife in hand. Juan, the pale-yellow mixed breed, leaped to the
-side of his skipper flourishing another knife, while several of the
-nearer sailors joined in forming a semi-circle of attack on Henry, who,
-with a quick step back and an upward slap of his hand, under the
-pin-rail, caused an iron belaying pin to leap out and up into the air.
-Catching it in mid-flight, he was prepared to defend himself. Francis,
-abandoning the wheel and drawing his automatic as he sprang, was through
-the circle and by the side of Henry.
-
-“What did he say?” Francis demanded of his kinsman.
-
-“I’ll say what I said,” the breed skipper threatened, the negro side of
-him dominant as he built for a compromise of blackmail. “I said——”
-
-“Hold on, skipper!” Henry interrupted. “I’m sorry I struck you. Hold
-your hush. Put a stopper on your jaw. Saw wood. Forget. I’m sorry I
-struck you. I....” Henry Morgan could not help the pause in speech
-during which he swallowed his gorge rising at what he was about to say.
-And it was because of Leoncia, and because she was looking on and
-listening, that he said it. “I ... I apologize, skipper.”
-
-“It is an injury,” Captain Trefethen stated aggrievedly. “It is a
-physical damage. No man can perpetrate a physical damage on a subject of
-King George’s, God bless him, without furnishing a money requital.”
-
-At this crass statement of the terms of the blackmail, Henry was for
-forgetting himself and for leaping upon the creature. But, restrained by
-Francis’ hand on his shoulder, he struggled to self-control, made a
-noise like hearty laughter, dipped into his pocket for two ten-dollar
-gold-pieces, and, as if they stung him, thrust them into Captain
-Trefethen’s palm.
-
-“Cheap at the price,” he could not help muttering aloud.
-
-“It is a good price,” the skipper averred. “Twenty gold is always a good
-price for a sore head. I am yours to command, sir. You are a sure-enough
-gentleman. You may hit me any time for the price.”
-
-“Me, sir, me!” the Kingston black named Percival volunteered with broad
-and prideless chucklings of subservience. “Take a swat at me, sir, for
-the same price, any time, now. And you may swat me as often as you
-please to pay....”
-
-But the episode was destined to terminate at that instant, for at that
-instant a sailor called from amidships:
-
-“Smoke! A steamer-smoke dead aft!”
-
-The passage of an hour determined the nature and import of the smoke,
-for the _Angelique_, falling into a calm, was overhauled with such
-rapidity that the tugboat _Dolores_, at half a mile distance through the
-binoculars, was seen fairly to bristle with armed men crowded on her
-tiny for’ard deck. Both Henry and Francis could recognize the faces of
-the Jefe Politico and of several of the gendarmes.
-
-Old Enrico Solano’s nostrils began to dilate, as, with his four sons who
-were aboard, he stationed them aft with him and prepared for the battle.
-Leoncia, divided between Henry and Francis, was secretly distracted,
-though outwardly she joined in laughter at the unkemptness of the little
-tug, and in glee at a flaw of wind that tilted the _Angelique’s_ port
-rail flush to the water and foamed her along at a nine-knot clip.
-
-But weather and wind were erratic. The face of the lagoon was vexed with
-squalls and alternate streaks of calm.
-
-“We cannot escape, sir, I regret to inform you,” Captain Trefethen
-informed Francis. “If the wind would hold, sir, yes. But the wind
-baffles and breaks. We are crowded down upon the mainland. We are
-cornered, sir, and as good as captured.”
-
-Henry, who had been studying the near shore through the glasses, lowered
-them and looked at Francis.
-
-“Shout!” cried the latter. “You have a scheme. It’s sticking out all
-over you. Name it.”
-
-“Right there are the two _Tigres_ islands,” Henry elucidated. “They
-guard the narrow entrance to Juchitan Inlet, which is called El Tigre.
-Oh, it has the teeth of a tiger, believe me. On either side of them,
-between them and the shore, it is too shoal to float a whaleboat unless
-you know the winding channels, which I do know. But between them is deep
-water, though the El Tigre Passage is so pinched that there is no room
-to come about. A schooner can only run it with the wind abaft or abeam.
-Now, the wind favors. We will run it. Which is only half my scheme——”
-
-“And if the wind baffles or fails, sir—and the tide of the inlet runs
-out and in like a race, as I well know—my beautiful schooner will go on
-the rocks,” Captain Trefethen protested.
-
-“For which, if it happens, I will pay you full value,” Francis assured
-him shortly and brushed him aside. “—And now, Henry, what’s the other
-half of your scheme?”
-
-“I’m ashamed to tell you,” Henry laughed. “But it will be provocative of
-more Spanish swearing than has been heard in Chiriqui Lagoon since old
-Sir Henry sacked San Antonio and Bocas del Toro. You just watch.”
-
-Leoncia clapped her hands, as with sparkling eyes she cried:
-
-“It must be good, Henry. I can see it by your face. You must tell _me_.”
-
-And, aside, his arm around her to steady her on the reeling deck, Henry
-whispered closely in her ear, while Francis, to hide his perturbation at
-the sight of them, made shift through the binoculars to study the faces
-on the pursuing tug. Captain Trefethen grinned maliciously and exchanged
-significant glances with the pale-yellow sailor.
-
-“Now, skipper,” said Henry, returning. “We’re just opposite El Tigre.
-Put up your helm and run for the passage. Also, and pronto, I want a
-coil of half-inch, old, soft, manila rope, plenty of rope-yarns and sail
-twine, that case of beer from the lazarette, that five-gallon kerosene
-can that was emptied last night, and the coffee-pot from the galley.”
-
-“But I am distrained to remark to your attention that that rope is worth
-good money, sir,” Captain Trefethen complained, as Henry set to work on
-the heterogeneous gear.
-
-“You will be paid,” Francis hushed him.
-
-“And the coffee-pot—it is almost new.”
-
-“You will be paid.”
-
-The skipper sighed and surrendered, although he sighed again at Henry’s
-next act, which was to uncork the bottles and begin emptying the beer
-out into the scuppers.
-
-“Please, sir,” begged Percival. “If you must empty the beer please empty
-it into me.”
-
-No further beer was wasted, and the crew swiftly laid the empty bottles
-beside Henry. At intervals of six feet he fastened the recorked bottles
-to the half-inch line. Also, he cut off two-fathom lengths of the line
-and attached them like streamers between the beer bottles. The
-coffee-pot and two empty coffee tins were likewise added among the
-bottles. To one end of the main-line he made fast the kerosene can, to
-the other end the empty beer-case, and looked up to Francis, who
-replied:
-
-“Oh, I got you five minutes ago. El Tigre must be narrow, or else the
-tug will go around that stuff.”
-
-“El Tigre is just that narrow,” was the response. “There’s one place
-where the channel isn’t forty feet between the shoals. If the skipper
-misses our trap, he’ll go around, aground. Say, they’ll be able to wade
-ashore from the tug if that happens.—Come on, now, we’ll get the stuff
-aft and ready to toss out. You take starboard and I’ll take port, and
-when I give the word you shoot that beer case out to the side as far as
-you can.”
-
-Though the wind eased down, the _Angelique_, square before it, managed
-to make five knots, while the _Dolores_, doing six, slowly overhauled
-her. As the rifles began to speak from the _Dolores_, the skipper, under
-the direction of Henry and Francis, built up on the schooner’s stern a
-low barricade of sacks of potatoes and onions, of old sails, and of
-hawser coils. Crouching low in the shelter of this, the helmsman,
-managed to steer. Leoncia refused to go below as the firing became more
-continuous, but compromised by lying down behind the cabin-house. The
-rest of the sailors sought similar shelter in nooks and corners, while
-the Solano men, lying aft, returned the fire of the tug.
-
-Henry and Francis, in their chosen positions and waiting until the
-narrowness of El Tigre was reached, took a hand in the free and easy
-battle.
-
-“My congratulations, sir,” Captain Trefethen said to Francis, the Indian
-of him compelling him to raise his head to peer across the rail, the
-negro of him flattening his body down until almost it seemed to bore
-into the deck. “That was Captain Rosaro himself that was steering, and
-the way he jumped and grabbed his hand would lead one to conclude that
-you had very adequately put a bullet through it. That Captain Rosaro is
-a very hot-tempered hombre, sir. I can almost hear him blaspheming now.”
-
-“Stand ready for the word, Francis,” Henry said, laying down his rifle
-and carefully studying the low shores of the islands of El Tigre on
-either side of them. “We’re almost ready. Take your time when I give the
-word, and at ‘three’ let her go.”
-
-The tug was two hundred yards away and overtaking fast, when Henry gave
-the word. He and Francis stood up, and at “three” made their fling. To
-either side can and beer-case flew, dragging behind them through the air
-the beaded rope of pots and cans and bottles and rope-streamers.
-
-In their interest, Henry and Francis remained standing in order to watch
-the maw of their trap as denoted by the spread of miscellaneous objects
-on the surface of their troubled wake. A fusillade of rifle shots from
-the tug made them drop back flat to the deck; but, peering over the
-rail, they saw the tug’s forefoot press the floated rope down and under.
-A minute later they saw the tug slow down to a stop.
-
-“Some mess wrapped around that propeller,” Francis applauded. “Henry,
-salute.”
-
-“Now, if the wind holds ...” said Henry modestly.
-
-The _Angelique_ sailed on, leaving the motionless tug to grow smaller in
-the distance, but not so small that they could not see her drift
-helplessly onto the shoal, and see men going over the side and wading
-about.
-
-“We just must sing our little song,” Henry cried jubilantly, starting up
-the stave of “Back to Back Against the Mainmast.”
-
-“Which is all very nice, sir,” Captain Trefethen interrupted at the
-conclusion of the first chorus, his eyes glistening and his shoulders
-still jiggling to the rhythm of the song. “But the wind has ceased, sir.
-We are becalmed. How are we to get out of Juchitan Inlet without wind?
-The _Dolores_ is not wrecked. She is merely delayed. Some nigger will go
-down and clear her propeller, and then she has us right where she wants
-us.”
-
-“It’s not so far to shore,” Henry adjudged with a measuring eye as he
-turned to Enrico.
-
-“What kind of a shore have they got ashore here, Senor Solano?” he
-queried. “Maya Indians and haciendados—which?”
-
-“Haciendados and Mayas, both,” Enrico answered. “But I know the country
-well. If the schooner is not safe, we should be safe ashore. We can get
-horses and saddles and beef and corn. The Cordilleras are beyond. What
-more should we want?”
-
-“But Leoncia?” Francis asked solicitously.
-
-“Was born in the saddle, and in the saddle there are few Americanos she
-would not weary,” came Enrico’s answer. “It would be well, with your
-acquiescence, to swing out the long boat in case the _Dolores_ appears
-upon us.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VIII
-
-
-“It’s all right, skipper, it’s all right,” Henry assured the breed
-captain, who, standing on the beach with them, seemed loath to say
-farewell and pull back to the _Angelique_ adrift half a mile away in the
-dead calm which had fallen on Juchitan Inlet.
-
-“It is what we call a diversion,” Francis explained. “That is a nice
-word—_diversion_. And it is even nicer when you see it work.”
-
-“But if it don’t work,” Captain Trefethen protested, “then will it spell
-a confounded word, which I may name as _catastrophe_.”
-
-“That is what happened to the _Dolores_ when we tangled her propeller,”
-Henry laughed. “But we do not know the meaning of that word. We use
-_diversion_ instead. The proof that it will work is that we are leaving
-Senor Solano’s two sons with you. Alvarado and Martinez know the
-passages like a book. They will pilot you out with the first favoring
-breeze. The Jefe is not interested in you. He is after us, and when we
-take to the hills he’ll be on our trail with every last man of his.”
-
-“Don’t you see!” Francis broke in. “The _Angelique_ is trapped. If we
-remain on board he will capture us and the _Angelique_ as well. But we
-make the diversion of taking to the hills. He pursues us. The
-_Angelique_ goes free. And of course he won’t catch us.”
-
-“But suppose I do lose the schooner!” the swarthy skipper persisted. “If
-she goes on the rocks I will lose her, and the passages are very
-perilous.”
-
-“Then you will be paid for her, as I’ve told you before,” Francis said,
-with a show of rising irritation.
-
-“Also are there my numerous expenses——”
-
-Francis pulled out a pad and pencil, scribbled a note, and passed it
-over, saying:
-
-“Present that to Senor Melchor Gonzales at Bocas del Toro. It is for a
-thousand gold. He is the banker; he is my agent, and he will pay it to
-you.”
-
-Captain Trefethen stared incredulously at the scrawled bit of paper.
-
-“Oh, he’s good for it,” Henry said.
-
-“Yes, sir, I know, sir, that Mr. Francis Morgan is a wealthy gentleman
-of renown. But how wealthy is he? Is he as wealthy as I modestly am? I
-own the _Angelique_, free of all debt. I own two town lots, unimproved,
-in Colon. And I own four water-front lots in Belen that will make me
-very wealthy when the Union Fruit Company begins the building of the
-warehouses——”
-
-“How much, Francis, did your father leave you?” Henry quipped teasingly.
-“Or, rather, how many?”
-
-Francis shrugged his shoulders as he answered vaguely: “More than I have
-fingers and toes.”
-
-“Dollars, sir?” queried the captain.
-
-Henry shook his head sharply.
-
-“Thousands, sir?”
-
-Again Henry shook his head.
-
-“Millions, sir?”
-
-“Now you’re talking,” Henry answered. “Mr. Francis Morgan is rich enough
-to buy almost all of the Republic of Panama, with the Canal cut out of
-the deal.”
-
-The negro-Indian mariner looked his unbelief to Enrico Solano, who
-replied:
-
-“He is an honorable gentleman. I know. I have cashed his paper, drawn on
-Senor Melchor Gonzales at Bocas del Toro, for a thousand pesos. There it
-is in the bag there.”
-
-He nodded his head up the beach to where Leoncia, in the midst of the
-dunnage landed with them, was toying with trying to slip cartridges into
-a Winchester rifle. The bag, which the skipper had long since noted, lay
-at her feet in the sand.
-
-“I do hate to travel strapped,” Francis explained embarrassedly to the
-white men of the group. “One never knows when a dollar mayn’t come in
-handy. I got caught with a broken machine at Smith River Comers, up New
-York way, one night, with nothing but a check book, and, d’you know, I
-couldn’t get even a cigarette in the town.”
-
-“I trusted a white gentleman in Barbadoes once, who chartered my boat to
-go fishing flying fish——” the captain began.
-
-“Well, so long, skipper,” Henry shut him off. “You’d better be getting
-on board, because we’re going to hike.”
-
-And for Captain Trefethen, staring at the backs of his departing
-passengers, remained naught but to obey. Helping to shove the boat off,
-he climbed in, took the steering sweep, and directed his course toward
-the _Angelique_. Glancing back from time to time, he saw the party on
-the beach shoulder the baggage and disappear into the dense green wall
-of vegetation.
-
- * * * * *
-
-They came out upon an inchoate clearing, and saw gangs of peons at work
-chopping down and grubbing out the roots of the virgin tropic forest so
-that rubber trees for the manufacture of automobile tires might be
-planted to replace it. Leoncia, beside her father, walked in the lead.
-Her brothers, Ricardo and Alesandro, in the middle, were burdened with
-the dunnage, as were Francis and Henry, who brought up the rear. And
-this strange procession was met by a slender, straight-backed,
-hidalgo-appearing, elderly gentleman, who leaped his horse across
-tree-trunks and stump-holes in order to gain to them.
-
-He was off his horse, at sight of Enrico, sombrero in hand in
-recognition of Leoncia, his hand extended to Enrico in greeting of
-ancient friendship, his lips wording words and his eyes expressing
-admiration to Enrico’s daughter.
-
-The talk was in rapid-fire Spanish, and the request for horses preferred
-and qualifiedly granted, ere the introduction of the two Morgans took
-place. The haciendado’s horse, after the Latin fashion, was immediately
-Leoncia’s, and, without ado, he shortened the stirrups and placed her
-astride in the saddle. A murrain, he explained, had swept his plantation
-of riding animals; but his chief overseer still possessed a
-fair-conditioned one which was Enrico’s as soon as it could be procured.
-
-His handshake to Henry and Francis was hearty as well as dignified, as
-he took two full minutes ornately to state that any friend of his dear
-friend Enrico was his friend. When Enrico asked the haciendado about the
-trails up toward the Cordilleras and mentioned oil, Francis pricked up
-his ears.
-
-“Don’t tell me, Senor,” he began, “that they have located oil in
-Panama?”
-
-“They have,” the haciendado nodded gravely. “We knew of the oil ooze,
-and had known of it for generations. But it was the Hermosillo Company
-that sent its Gringo engineers in secretly and then bought up the land.
-They say it is a great field. But I know nothing of oil myself. They
-have many wells, and have bored much, and so much oil have they that it
-is running away over the landscape. They say they cannot choke it
-entirely down, such is the volume and pressure. What they need is the
-pipe-line to ocean-carriage, which they have begun to build. In the
-meantime it flows away down the canyons, an utter loss of incredible
-proportion.”
-
-“Have they built any tanks?” Francis demanded, his mind running eagerly
-on Tampico Petroleum, to which most of his own fortune was pledged, and
-of which, despite the rising stock-market, he had heard nothing since
-his departure from New York.
-
-The haciendado shook his head.
-
-“Transportation,” he explained. “The freight from tide-water to the
-gushers by mule-back has been prohibitive. But they have impounded much
-of it. They have lakes of oil, great reservoirs in the hollows of the
-hills, earthen-dammed, and still they cannot choke down the flow, and
-still the precious substance flows down the canyons.”
-
-“Have they roofed these reservoirs?” Francis inquired, remembering a
-disastrous fire in the early days of Tampico Petroleum.
-
-“No, Senor.”
-
-Francis shook his head disapprovingly.
-
-“They should be roofed,” he said. “A match from the drunken or
-revengeful hand of any peon could set the whole works off. It’s poor
-business, poor business.”
-
-“But I am not the Hermosillo,” the haciendado said.
-
-“For the Hermosillo Company, I meant, Senor,” Francis explained. “I am
-an oil-man. I have paid through the nose to the tune of hundreds of
-thousands for similar accidents or crimes. One never knows just how they
-happen. What one does know is that they do happen——”
-
-What more Francis might have said about the expediency of protecting oil
-reservoirs from stupid or wilful peons, was never to be known; for, at
-the moment, the chief overseer of the plantation, stick in hand, rode
-up, half his interest devoted to the newcomers, the other half to the
-squad of peons working close at hand.
-
-“Senor Ramirez, will you favor me by dismounting,” his employer, the
-haciendado, politely addressed him, at the same time introducing him to
-the strangers as soon as he had dismounted.
-
-“The animal is yours, friend Enrico,” the haciendado said. “If it dies,
-please return at your easy convenience the saddle and gear. And if your
-convenience be not easy, please do not remember that there is to be any
-return, save ever and always, of your love for me. I regret that you and
-your party cannot now partake of my hospitality. But the Jefe is a
-bloodhound, I know. We shall do our best to send him astray.”
-
-With Leoncia and Enrico mounted, and the gear made fast to the saddles
-by leather thongs, the cavalcade started, Alesandro and Ricardo clinging
-each to a stirrup of their father’s saddle and trotting alongside. This
-was for making greater haste, and was emulated by Francis and Henry, who
-clung to Leoncia’s stirrups. Fast to the pommel of her saddle was the
-bag of silver dollars.
-
-“It is some mistake,” the haciendado was explaining to his overseer.
-“Enrico Solano is an honorable man. Anything to which he pledges himself
-is honorable. He has pledged himself to this, whatever it may be, and
-yet is Mariano Vercara é Hijos on their trail. We shall mislead him if
-he comes this way.”
-
-“And here he comes,” the overseer remarked, “without luck so far in
-finding horses.” Casually he turned on the laboring peons and with
-horrible threats urged them to do at least half a day’s decent work in a
-day.
-
-From the corner of his eye, the haciendado observed the fast-walking
-group of men, with Alvarez Torres in the lead; but, as if he had not
-noticed, he conferred with his overseer about the means of grubbing out
-the particular stump the peons were working on.
-
-He returned the greeting of Torres pleasantly, and inquired politely,
-with a touch of devilry, if he led the party of men on some
-oil-prospecting adventure.
-
-“No, Senor,” Torres answered. “We are in search of Senor Enrico Solano,
-his daughter, his sons, and two tall Gringos with them. It is the
-Gringos we want. They have passed this way, Senor?”
-
-“Yes, they have passed. I imagined they, too, were in some oil
-excitement, such was their haste that prevented them from courteously
-passing the time of day and stating their destination. Have they
-committed some offence? But I should not ask. Senor Enrico Solano is too
-honorable a man——”
-
-“Which way did they go?” the Jefe demanded, thrusting himself
-breathlessly forward from the rear of his gendarmes with whom he had
-just caught up.
-
-And while the haciendado and his overseer temporized and prevaricated,
-and indicated an entirely different direction, Torres noted one of the
-peons, leaning on his spade, listen intently. And still while the Jefe
-was being misled and was giving orders to proceed on the false scent,
-Torres flashed a silver dollar privily to the listening peon. The peon
-nodded his head in the right direction, caught the coin unobserved, and
-applied himself to his digging at the root of the huge stump.
-
-Torres countermanded the Jefe’s order.
-
-“We will go the other way,” Torres said, with a wink to the Jefe. “A
-little bird has told me that our friend here is mistaken and that they
-have gone the other way.”
-
-As the posse departed on the hot trail, the haciendado and his overseer
-looked at each other in consternation and amazement. The overseer made a
-movement of his lips for silence, and looked swiftly at the group of
-laborers. The offending peon was working furiously and absorbedly, but
-another peon, with a barely perceptible nod of head, indicated him to
-the overseer.
-
-“There’s the little bird,” the overseer cried, striding to the traitor
-and shaking him violently.
-
-Out of the peon’s rags flew the silver dollar.
-
-“Ah, ha,” said the haciendado, grasping the situation. “He has become
-suddenly affluent. This is horrible, that my peons should be wealthy.
-Doubtless, he has murdered some one for all that sum. Beat him, and make
-him confess.”
-
-The creature, on his knees, the stick of the overseer raining blows on
-his head and back, made confession of what he had done to earn the
-dollar.
-
-“Beat him, beat him some more, beat him to death, the beast who betrayed
-my dearest friends,” the haciendado urged placidly. “But no——caution. Do
-not beat him to death, but nearly so. We are short of labor now and
-cannot afford the full measure of our just resentment. Beat him to hurt
-him much, but that he shall be compelled to lay off work no more than a
-couple of days.”
-
-Of the immediately subsequent agonies, adventures, and misadventures of
-the peon, a volume might be written which would be the epic of his life.
-Besides, to be beaten nearly to death is not nice to contemplate or
-dwell upon. Let it suffice to tell that when he had received no more
-than part of his beating; he wrenched free, leaving half his rags in the
-overseer’s grasp, and fled madly for the jungle, outfooting the overseer
-who was unused to rapid locomotion save when on a horse’s back.
-
-Such was the speed of the wretched creature’s flight, spurred on by the
-pain of his lacerations and the fear of the overseer, that, plunging
-wildly on, he overtook the Solano party and plunged out of the jungle
-and into them as they were crossing a shallow stream, and fell upon his
-knees, whimpering for mercy. He whimpered because of his betrayal of
-them. But this they did not know, and Francis, seeing his pitiable
-condition, lingered behind long enough to unscrew the metal top from a
-pocket flask and revive him with a drink of half the contents. Then
-Francis hastened on, leaving the poor devil muttering inarticulate
-thanks ere he dived off into the sheltering jungle in a different
-direction. But, underfed, overworked, his body gave way, and he sank
-down in collapse in the green covert.
-
-Next, Alvarez Torres in the lead and tracking like a hound, the
-gendarmes at his back, the Jefe panting in the rear from shortness of
-breath, the pursuit arrived at the stream. The foot-marks of the peon,
-still wet on the dry stones beyond the margin of the stream, caught
-Torres’ eye. In a trice, by what little was left of his garments, the
-peon was dragged out. On his knees, which portion of his anatomy he was
-destined to occupy much this day, he begged for mercy and received his
-interrogation. And he denied knowledge of the Solano party. He, who had
-betrayed and been beaten, but who had received only succor from those he
-had betrayed, felt stir in him some atom of gratitude and good. He
-denied knowledge of the Solanos since in the clearing where he had sold
-them for the silver dollar. Torres’ stick fell upon his head, five
-times, ten times, and went on falling with the certitude that in all
-eternity there would be no cessation unless he told the truth. And,
-after all, he was a miserable and wretched thing, spirit-broken by
-beatings from the cradle, and the sting of Torres’ stick, with the
-threat of the plenitude of the stick that meant the death his own owner,
-the haciendado, could not afford, made him give in and point the way of
-the chase.
-
-But his day of tribulation had only begun. Scarcely had he betrayed the
-Solanos the second time, and still on his knees, when the haciendado,
-with the posse of neighboring haciendados and overseers he had called to
-his help, burst upon the scene astride sweating horses.
-
-“My peon, senors,” announced the haciendado, itching to be at him. “You
-maltreat him.”
-
-“And why not?” demanded the Jefe.
-
-“Because he is mine to maltreat, and I wish to do it myself.”
-
-The peon crawled and squirmed to the Jefe’s feet and begged and
-entreated not to be given up. But he begged for mercy where was no
-mercy.
-
-“Certainly, senor,” the Jefe said to the haciendado. “We give him back
-to you. We must uphold the law, and he is your property. Besides, we
-have no further use for him. Yet is he a most excellent peon, senor. He
-has done what no peon has ever done in the history of Panama. He has
-told the truth twice in one day.”
-
-His hands tied together in front of him and hitched by a rope to the
-horn of the overseer’s saddle, the peon was towed away on the back-track
-with a certain apprehension that the worst of his beatings for that day
-was very imminent. Nor was he mistaken. Back at the plantation, he was
-tied like an animal to a post of a barbed wire fence, while his owner
-and the friends of his owner who had helped in the capture went into the
-hacienda to take their twelve o’clock breakfast. After that, he knew
-what he was to receive. But the barbed wire of the fence, and the lame
-mare in the paddock behind it, built an idea in the desperate mind of
-the peon. Though the sharp barbs of the wire again and again cut his
-wrist, he quickly sawed through his bonds, free save for the law,
-crawled under the fence, led the lame mare through the gate, mounted her
-barebacked, and, with naked heels tattooing her ribs, galloped her away
-toward the safety of the Cordilleras.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IX
-
-
-In the meantime the Solanos were being overtaken, and Henry teased
-Francis with:
-
-“Here in the jungle is where dollars are worthless. They can buy neither
-fresh horses, nor can they repair these two spineless creatures, which
-must likewise be afflicted with the murrain that carried off the rest of
-the haciendado’s riding animals.”
-
-“I’ve never been in a place yet where money wouldn’t work,” Francis
-replied.
-
-“I suppose it could even buy a drink of water in hell,” was Henry’s
-retort.
-
-Leoncia clapped her hands.
-
-“I don’t know,” Francis observed. “I have never been there.”
-
-Again Leoncia clapped her hands.
-
-“Just the same I have an idea I can make dollars work in the jungle, and
-I am going to try it right now,” Francis continued, at the same time
-untying the coin-sack from Leoncia’s pommel. “You go ahead and ride on.”
-
-“But you must tell _me_,” Leoncia insisted; and, aside, in her ear as
-she leaned to him from the saddle, he whispered what made her laugh
-again, while Henry, conferring with Enrico and his sons, inwardly
-berated himself for being a jealous fool.
-
-Before they were out of sight, looking back, they saw Francis, with pad
-and pencil out, writing something. What he wrote was eloquently brief,
-merely the figure “50.” Tearing off the sheet, he laid it conspicuously
-in the middle of the trail and weighted it down with a silver dollar.
-Counting out forty-nine other dollars from the bag, he sowed them very
-immediately about the first one and ran up the trail after his party.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Augustino, the gendarme who rarely spoke when he was sober, but who when
-drunk preached volubly the wisdom of silence, was in the lead, with bent
-head nosing the track of the quarry, when his keen eyes lighted on the
-silver dollar holding down the sheet of paper. The first he
-appropriated; the second he turned over to the Jefe. Torres looked over
-his shoulder, and together they read the mystic “50.” The Jefe tossed
-the scrap of paper aside as of little worth, and was for resuming the
-chase, but Augustino picked up and pondered the “50” thoughtfully. Even
-as he pondered it, a shout from Rafael advertised the finding of another
-dollar. Then Augustino knew. There were fifty of the coins to be had for
-the picking up. Flinging the note to the wind, he was on hands and knees
-overhauling the ground. The rest of the party joined in the scramble,
-while Torres and the Jefe screamed curses on them in a vain effort to
-make them proceed.
-
-When the gendarmes could find no more, they counted up what they had
-recovered. The toll came to forty-seven.
-
-“There are three more,” cried Rafael, whereupon all flung themselves
-into the search again. Five minutes more were lost, ere the three other
-coins were found. Each pocketed what he had retrieved and obediently
-swung into the pursuit at the heels of Torres and the Jefe.
-
-A mile farther on, Torres tried to trample a shining dollar into the
-dirt, but Augustino’s ferret eyes had been too quick, and his eager
-fingers dug it out of the soft earth. Where was one dollar, as they had
-already learned, there were more dollars. The posse came to a halt, and
-while the two leaders fumed and imprecated, the rest of the members cast
-about right and left from the trail.
-
-Vicente, a moon-faced gendarme, who looked more like a Mexican Indian
-than a Maya or a Panamanian “breed,” lighted first on the clue. All
-gathered about, like hounds around a tree into which the ‘possum has
-been run. In truth, it was a tree, or a rotten and hollow stump of one,
-a dozen feet in height and a third as many feet in diameter. Five feet
-from the ground was an opening. Above the opening, pinned on by a thorn,
-was a sheet of paper the same size as the first they had found. On it
-was written “100.”
-
-In the scramble that ensued, half a dozen minutes were lost as half a
-dozen right arms strove to be first in dipping into the hollow heart of
-the stump to the treasure. But the hollow extended deeper than their
-arms were long.
-
-“We will chop down the stump,” Rafael cried, sounding with the back of
-his machete against the side of it to locate the base of the hollow. “We
-will all chop, and we will count what we find inside and divide
-equally.”
-
-By this time their leaders were frantic, and the Jefe had begun
-threatening, the moment they were back in San Antonio, to send them to
-San Juan where their carcasses would be picked by the buzzards.
-
-“But we are not back in San Antonio, thank God,” said Augustino,
-breaking his sober seal of silence in order to enunciate wisdom.
-
-“We are poor men, and we will divide in fairness,” spoke up Rafael.
-“Augustino is right, and thank God for it that we are not back in San
-Antonio. This rich Gringo scatters more money along the way in a day for
-us to pick up than could we earn in a year where we come from. I, for
-one, am for revolution, where money is so plentiful.”
-
-“With the rich Gringo for a leader,” Augustino supplemented. “For as
-long as he leads this way could I follow forever.”
-
-“If,” Rafael nodded agreement, with a pitch of his head toward Torres
-and the Jefe, “if they do not give us opportunity to gather what the
-gods have spread for us, then to the last and deepest of the roasting
-hells of hell for them. We are men, not slaves. The world is wide. The
-Cordilleras are just beyond. We will all be rich, and free men, and live
-in the Cordilleras where the Indian maidens are wildly beautiful and
-desirable——”
-
-“And we will be well rid of our wives, back in San Antonio,” said
-Vicente. “Let us now chop down this treasure tree.”
-
-Swinging their machetes with heavy, hacking blows, the wood, so rotten
-that it was spongy, gave way readily before their blades. And when the
-stump fell over, they counted and divided, in equity, not one hundred
-silver dollars, but one hundred and forty-seven.
-
-“He is generous, this Gringo,” quoth Vicente. “He leaves more than he
-says. May there not be still more?”
-
-And, from the debris of rotten wood, much of it crumbled to powder under
-their blows, they recovered five more coins, in the doing of which they
-lost ten more minutes that drove Torres and Jefe to the verge of
-madness.
-
-“He does not stop to count, the wealthy Gringo,” said Rafael. “He must
-merely open that sack and pour it out. And that is the sack with which
-he rode to the beach of San Antonio when he blew up with dynamite the
-wall of our jail.”
-
-The chase was resumed, and all went well for half an hour, when they
-came upon an abandoned freehold, already half-overrun with the returning
-jungle. A dilapidated, straw-thatched house, a fallen-in labor barracks,
-a broken-down corral the very posts of which had sprouted and leaved
-into growing trees, and a well showing recent use by virtue of a fresh
-length of riata attaching bucket to well-sweep, showed where some man
-had failed to tame the wild. And, conspicuously on the well-sweep, was
-pinned a familiar sheet of paper on which was written “300.”
-
-“Mother of God!—a fortune!” cried Rafael.
-
-“May the devil forever torture him in the last and deepest hell!” was
-Torres’ contribution.
-
-“He pays better than your Senor Regan,” the Jefe sneered in his despair
-and disgust.
-
-“His bag of silver is only so large,” Torres retorted. “It seems we must
-pick it all up before we catch him. But when we have picked it all up,
-and his bag is empty, then will we catch him.”
-
-“We will go on now, comrades,” the Jefe addressed his posse
-ingratiatingly. “Afterwards, we will return at our leisure and recover
-the silver.”
-
-Augustino broke his seal of silence again.
-
-“One never knows the way of one’s return, if one ever returns,” he
-enunciated pessimistically. Elated by the pearl of wisdom he had
-dropped, he essayed another. “Three hundred in hand is better than three
-million in the bottom of a well we may never see again.”
-
-“Some one must descend into the well,” spoke Rafael, testing the braided
-rope with his weight. “See! The riata is strong. We will lower a man by
-it. Who is the brave one who will go down?”
-
-“I,” said Vicente. “I will be the brave one to go down——”
-
-“And steal half that you find,” Rafael uttered his instant suspicion.
-“If you go down, first must you count over to us the pesos you already
-possess. Then, when you come up, we can search you for all you have
-found. After that, when we have divided equitably, will your other pesos
-be returned to you.”
-
-“Then will I not go down for comrades who have no trust in me,” Vicente
-said stubbornly. “Here, beside the well, I am as wealthy as any of you.
-Then why should I go down? I have heard of men dying in the bottom of
-wells.”
-
-“In God’s name go down!” stormed the Jefe. “Haste! Haste!”
-
-“I am too fat, the rope is not strong, and I shall not go down,” said
-Vicente.
-
-All looked to Augustino, the silent one, who had already spoken more
-than he was accustomed to speak in a week.
-
-“Guillermo is the thinnest and lightest,” said Augustino.
-
-“Guillermo will go down!” the rest chorused.
-
-But Guillermo, glaring apprehensively at the mouth of the well, backed
-away, shaking his head and crossing himself.
-
-“Not for the sacred treasure in the secret city of the Mayas,” he
-muttered.
-
-The Jefe pulled his revolver and glanced to the remainder of the posse
-for confirmation. With eyes and head-nods they gave it.
-
-“In heaven’s name go down,” he threatened the little gendarme. “And make
-haste, or I shall put you in such a fix that never again will you go up
-or down, but you will remain here and rot forever beside this hole of
-perdition.—Is it well, comrades, that I kill him if he does not go
-down?”
-
-“It is well,” they shouted.
-
-And Guillermo, with trembling fingers, counted out the coins he had
-already retrieved, and, in the throes of fear, crossing himself
-repeatedly and urged on by the hand-thrusts of his companions, stepped
-upon the bucket, sat down on it with legs wrapped about it, and was
-lowered away out of the light of day.
-
-“Stop!” he screamed up the shaft. “Stop! Stop! The water! I am upon it!”
-
-Those on the sweep held it with their weight.
-
-“I should receive ten pesos extra above my share,” he called up.
-
-“You shall receive baptism,” was called down to him, and, variously:
-“You will have your fill of water this day”; “We will let go”; “We will
-cut the rope”; “There will be one less with whom to share.”
-
-“The water is not nice,” he replied, his voice rising like a ghost’s out
-of the dark depth. “There are sick lizards, and a dead bird that stinks.
-And there may be snakes. It is well worth ten pesos extra what I must
-do.”
-
-“We will drown you!” Rafael shouted.
-
-“I shall shoot down upon you and kill you!” the Jefe bullied.
-
-“Shoot or drown me,” Guillermo’s voice floated up; “but it will buy you
-nothing, for the treasure will still be in the well.”
-
-There was a pause, in which those at the surface questioned each other
-with their eyes as to what they should do.
-
-“And the Gringos are running away farther and farther,” Torres fumed. “A
-fine discipline you have, Senor Mariano Vercara è Hijos, over your
-gendarmes!”
-
-“This is not San Antonio,” the Jefe flared back. “This is the bush of
-Juchitan. My dogs are good dogs in San Antonio. In the bush they must be
-handled gently, else may they become wild dogs, and what then will
-happen to you and me?”
-
-“It is the curse of gold,” Torres surrendered sadly. “It is almost
-enough to make one become a socialist, with a Gringo thus tying the
-hands of justice with ropes of gold.”
-
-“Of silver,” the Jefe corrected.
-
-“You go to hell,” said Torres. “As you have pointed out, this is not San
-Antonio but the bush of Juchitan, and here I may well tell you to go to
-hell. Why should you and I quarrel because of your bad temper, when our
-prosperity depends on standing together?”
-
-“Besides,” the voice of Guillermo drifted up, “the water is not two feet
-deep. You cannot drown me in it. I have just felt the bottom and I have
-four round silver pesos in my hand right now. The bottom is carpeted
-with pesos. Do you want to let go? Or do I get ten pesos extra for the
-filthy job? The water stinks like a fresh graveyard.”
-
-“Yes! Yes!” they shouted down.
-
-“Which? Let go? Or the extra ten?”
-
-“The extra ten!” they chorused.
-
-“In God’s name, haste! haste!” cried the Jefe.
-
-They heard splashings and curses from the bottom of the well, and, from
-the lightening of the strain on the riata, knew that Guillermo had left
-the bucket and was floundering for the coin.
-
-“Put it in the bucket, good Guillermo,” Rafael called down.
-
-“I am putting it in my pockets,” up came the reply. “Did I put it in the
-bucket you might haul it up first and well forget to haul me up
-afterward.”
-
-“The double weight might break the riata,” Rafael cautioned.
-
-“The riata may not be so strong as my will, for my will in this matter
-is most strong,” said Guillermo.
-
-“If the riata should break ...” Rafael began again.
-
-“I have a solution,” said Guillermo. “Do you come down. Then shall I go
-up first. Second, the treasure shall go up in the bucket. And, third and
-last, shall you go up. Thus will justice be triumphant.”
-
-Rafael, with dropped jaw of dismay, did not reply.
-
-“Are you coming, Rafael?”
-
-“No,” he answered. “Put all the silver in your pockets and come up
-together with it.”
-
-“I could curse the race that bore me,” was the impatient observation of
-the Jefe.
-
-“I have already cursed it,” said Torres.
-
-“Haul away!” shouted Guillermo. “I have everything in my pockets save
-the stench; and I am suffocating. Haul quick, or I shall perish, and the
-three hundred pesos will perish with me. And there are more than three
-hundred. He must have emptied his bag.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-Ahead, on the trail, where the way grew steep and the horses without
-stamina rested and panted, Francis overtook his party.
-
-“Never again shall I travel without minted coin of the realm,” he
-exulted, as he described what he had remained behind to see from the
-edge of the deserted plantation. “Henry, when I die and go to heaven, I
-shall have a stout bag of cash along with me. Even there could it redeem
-me from heaven alone knows what scrapes. Listen! They fought like cats
-and dogs about the mouth of the well. Nobody would trust anybody to
-descend into the well unless he deposited what he had previously picked
-up with those that remained at the top. They were out of hand. The Jefe,
-at the point of his gun, had to force the littlest and leanest of them
-to go down. And when he was down he blackmailed them before he would
-come up. And when he came up they broke their promises and gave him a
-beating. They were still beating him when I left.”
-
-“But now your sack is empty,” said Henry.
-
-“Which is our present and most pressing trouble,” Francis agreed. “Had I
-sufficient pesos I could keep the pursuit well behind us forever. I’m
-afraid I was too generous. I did not know how cheap the poor devils
-were. But I’ll tell you something that will make your hair stand up.
-Torres, Senor Torres, Senor Alvarez Torres, the elegant gentleman and
-old-time friend of you Solanos, is leading the pursuit along with the
-Jefe. He is furious at the delay. They almost had a rupture because the
-Jefe couldn’t keep his men in hand. Yes, sir, and he told the Jefe to go
-to hell. I distinctly heard him tell the Jefe to go to hell.”
-
-Five miles farther on, the horses of Leoncia and her father in collapse,
-where the trail plunged into and ascended a dark ravine, Francis urged
-the others on and dropped behind. Giving them a few minutes’ start, he
-followed on behind, a self-constituted rearguard. Part way along, in an
-open space where grew only a thick sod of grass, he was dismayed to find
-the hoof-prints of the two horses staring at him as large as dinner
-plates from out of the sod. Into the hoof-prints had welled a dark,
-slimy fluid that his eye told him was crude oil. This was but the
-beginning, a sort of seepage from a side stream above off from the main
-flow. A hundred yards beyond he came upon the flow itself, a river of
-oil that on such a slope would have been a cataract had it been water.
-But being crude oil, as thick as molasses, it oozed slowly down the hill
-like so much molasses. And here, preferring to make his stand rather
-than to wade through the sticky mess, Francis sat down on a rock, laid
-his rifle on one side of him, his automatic pistol on the other side,
-rolled a cigarette, and kept his ears pricked for the first sounds of
-the pursuit.
-
- * * * * *
-
-And the beaten peon, threatened with more beatings and belaboring his
-over-ridden mare, rode across the top of the ravine above Francis, and,
-at the oil-well itself, had his exhausted animal collapse under him.
-With his heels he kicked her back to her feet, and with a stick
-belabored her to stagger away from him and on and into the jungle. And
-the first day of his adventures, although he did not know it, was not
-yet over. He, too, squatted on a stone, his feet out of the oil, rolled
-a cigarette, and, as he smoked it, contemplated the flowing oil-well.
-The noise of approaching men startled him, and he fled into the
-immediately adjacent jungle, from which he peered forth and saw two
-strange men appear. They came directly to the well, and, by an iron
-wheel turning the valve, choked down the flow still further.
-
-“No more,” commanded the one who seemed to be leader. “Another turn, and
-the pressure will blow out the pipes—for so the Gringo engineer has
-warned me most carefully.”
-
-And a slight flow, beyond the limited safety, continued to run from the
-mouth of the gusher down the mountain side. Scarcely had the two men
-accomplished this, when a body of horsemen rode up, whom the peon in
-hiding recognized as the haciendado who owned him and the overseers and
-haciendados of neighboring plantations who delighted in running down a
-fugitive laborer in much the same way that the English delight in
-chasing the fox.
-
-No, the two oil-men had seen nobody. But the haciendado who led saw the
-footprints of the mare, and spurred his horse to follow, his crowd at
-his heels.
-
-The peon waited, smoked his cigarette quite to the finish, and
-cogitated. When all was clear, he ventured forth, turned the mechanism
-controlling the well wide open, watched the oil fountaining upward under
-the subterranean pressure and flowing down the mountain in a veritable
-river. Also, he listened to and noted the sobbing, and gasping, and
-bubbling of the escaping gas. This he did not comprehend, and all that
-saved him for his further adventures was the fact that he had used his
-last match to light his cigarette. In vain he searched his rags, his
-ears, and his hair. He was out of matches.
-
-So, chuckling at the river of oil he was wantonly running to waste, and,
-remembering the canyon trail below, he plunged down the mountainside and
-upon Francis, who received him with extended automatic. Down went the
-peon on his frayed and frazzled knees in terror and supplication to the
-man he had twice betrayed that day. Francis studied him, at first
-without recognition, because of the bruised and lacerated face and head
-on which the blood had dried like a mask.
-
-“Amigo, amigo,” chattered the peon.
-
-But at that moment, from below on the ravine trail, Francis heard the
-clatter of a stone dislodged by some man’s foot. The next moment he
-identified what was left of the peon as the pitiable creature to whom he
-had given half the contents of his whiskey flask.
-
-“Well, amigo,” Francis said in the native language, “it looks as if they
-are after you.”
-
-“They will kill me, they will beat me to death, they are very angry,”
-the wretch quavered. “You are my only friend, my father and my mother,
-save me.”
-
-“Can you shoot?” Francis demanded.
-
-“I was a hunter in the Cordilleras before I was sold into slavery,
-Senor,” was the reply.
-
-Francis passed him the automatic, motioned him to take shelter, and told
-him not to fire until sure of a hit. And to himself he mused: The
-golfers are out on the links right now at Tarrytown. And Mrs. Bellingham
-is on the clubhouse veranda wondering how she is going to pay the three
-thousand points she’s behind and praying for a change of luck. And——here
-am I,—Lord! Lord——backed up to a river of oil....
-
-His musing ceased as abruptly as appeared the Jefe, Torres, and the
-gendarmes down the trail. As abruptly he fired his rifle, and as
-abruptly they fell back out of sight. He could not tell whether he had
-hit one, or whether the man had merely fallen in precipitate retreat.
-The pursuers did not care to make a rush of it, contenting themselves
-with bushwhacking. Francis and the peon did the same, sheltering behind
-rocks and bushes and frequently changing their positions.
-
-At the end of an hour, the last cartridge in Francis’ rifle was all that
-remained. The peon, under his warnings and threats, still retained two
-cartridges in the automatic. But the hour had been an hour saved for
-Leoncia and her people, and Francis was contentedly aware that at any
-moment he could turn and escape by wading across the river of oil. So
-all was well, and would have been well, had not, from above, come an
-eruption of another body of men, who, from behind trees, fired as they
-descended. This was the haciendado and his fellow haciendados, in chase
-of the fugitive peon—although Francis did not know it. His conclusion
-was that it was another posse that was after him. The shots they fired
-at him were strongly confirmative.
-
-The peon crawled to his side, showed him that two shots remained in the
-automatic he was returning to him, and impressively begged from him his
-box of matches. Next, the peon motioned him to cross the bottom of the
-canyon and climb the other side. With half a guess of the creature’s
-intention, Francis complied, from his new position of vantage emptying
-his last rifle cartridge at the advancing posse and sending it back into
-shelter down the ravine.
-
-The next moment, the river of oil flared into flame from where the peon
-had touched a match to it. In the following moment, clear up the
-mountainside, the well itself sent a fountain of ignited gas a hundred
-feet into the air. And, in the moment after, the ravine itself poured a
-torrent of flame down upon the posse of Torres and the Jefe.
-
-Scorched by the heat of the conflagration, Francis and the peon clawed
-up the opposite side of the ravine, circled around and past the blazing
-trail, and, at a dog-trot, raced up the recovered trail.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER X
-
-
-While Francis and the peon hurried up the ravine-trail in safety, the
-ravine itself, below where the oil flowed in, had become a river of
-flame, which drove the Jefe, Torres, and the gendarmes to scale the
-steep wall of the ravine. At the same time the party of haciendados in
-pursuit of the peon was compelled to claw back and up to escape out of
-the roaring canyon.
-
-Ever the peon glanced back over his shoulder, until, with a cry of joy,
-he indicated a second black-smoke pillar rising in the air beyond the
-first burning well.
-
-“More,” he chuckled. “There are more wells. They will all burn. And so
-shall they and all their race pay for the many blows they have beaten on
-me. And there is a lake of oil there, like the sea, like Juchitan Inlet
-it is so big.”
-
-And Francis recollected the lake of oil about which the haciendado had
-told him—that, containing at least five million barrels which could not
-yet be piped to sea transport, lay open to the sky, merely in a natural
-depression in the ground and contained by an earth dam.
-
-“How much are you worth?” he demanded of the peon with apparent
-irrelevance.
-
-But the peon could not understand.
-
-“How much are your clothes worth—all you’ve got on?”
-
-“Half a peso, nay, half of a half peso,” the peon admitted ruefully,
-surveying what was left of his tattered rags.
-
-“And other property?”
-
-The wretched creature shrugged his shoulders in token of his utter
-destitution, then added bitterly:
-
-“I possess nothing but a debt. I owe two hundred and fifty pesos. I am
-tied to it for life, damned with it for life like a man with a cancer.
-That is why I am a slave to the haciendado.”
-
-“Huh!” Francis could not forbear to grin. “Worth two hundred and fifty
-pesos less than nothing, not even a cipher, a sheer abstraction of a
-minus quantity without existence save in the mathematical imagination of
-man, and yet here you are burning up not less than millions of pesos’
-worth of oil. And if the strata is loose and erratic and the oil leaks
-up outside the tubing, the chances are that the oil-body of the entire
-field is ignited—say a billion dollars’ worth. Say, for an abstraction
-enjoying two hundred and fifty dollars’ worth of non-existence, you are
-some hombre, believe me.”
-
-Nothing of which the peon understood save the word “hombre.”
-
-“I am a man,” he proclaimed, thrusting out his chest and straightening
-up his bruised head. “I am a hombre and I am a Maya.”
-
-“Maya Indian—you?” Francis scoffed.
-
-“Half Maya,” was the reluctant admission. “My father is pure Maya. But
-the Maya women of the Cordilleras did not satisfy him. He must love a
-mixed-breed woman of the _tierra caliente_. I was so born; but she
-afterward betrayed him for a Barbadoes nigger, and he went back to the
-Cordilleras to live. And, like my father, I was born to love a mixed
-breed of the _tierra caliente_. She wanted money, and my head was
-fevered with want of her, and I sold myself to be a peon for two hundred
-pesos. And I saw never her nor the money again. For five years I have
-been a peon. For five years I have slaved and been beaten, and behold,
-at the end of five years my debt is not two hundred but two hundred and
-fifty pesos.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-And while Francis Morgan and the long-suffering Maya half-breed plodded
-on deeper into the Cordilleras to overtake their party, and while the
-oil fields of Juchitan continued to go up in increasing smoke, still
-farther on, in the heart of the Cordilleras, were preparing other events
-destined to bring together all pursuers and all pursued—Francis and
-Henry and Leoncia and their party; the peon; the party of the
-haciendados; and the gendarmes of the Jefe, and, along with them,
-Alvarez Torres, eager to win for himself not only the promised reward of
-Thomas Regan but the possession of Leoncia Solano.
-
-In a cave sat a man and a woman. Pretty the latter was, and young, a
-_mestiza_, or half-caste woman. By the light of a cheap kerosene lamp
-she read aloud from a calf-bound tome which was a Spanish translation of
-Blackstone. Both were barefooted and bare-armed, clad in hooded
-gabardines of sackcloth. Her hood lay back on her shoulders, exposing
-her black and generous head of hair. But the old man’s hood was cowled
-about his head after the fashion of a monk. The face, lofty and ascetic,
-beaked with power, was pure Spanish. Don Quixote might have worn
-precisely a similar face. But there was a difference. The eyes of this
-old man were closed in the perpetual dark of the blind. Never could he
-behold a windmill at which to tilt.
-
-He sat, while the pretty _mestiza_ read to him, listening and brooding,
-for all the world in the pose of Rodin’s “Thinker.” Nor was he a
-dreamer, nor a tilter of windmills, like Don Quixote. Despite his
-blindness, that ever veiled the apparent face of the world in
-invisibility, he was a man of action, and his soul was anything but
-blind, penetrating unerringly beneath the show of things to the heart
-and the soul of the world and reading its inmost sins and rapacities and
-noblenesses and virtues.
-
-He lifted his hand and put a pause in the reading, while he thought
-aloud from the context of the reading.
-
-“The law of man,” he said with slow certitude, “is to-day a game of
-wits. Not equity, but wit, is the game of law to-day. The law in its
-inception was good; but the way of the law, the practice of it, has led
-men off into false pursuits. They have mistaken the way for the goal,
-the means for the end. Yet is law law, and necessary, and good. Only,
-law, in its practice to-day, has gone astray. Judges and lawyers engage
-in competitions and affrays of wit and learning, quite forgetting the
-plaintiffs and defendants, before them and paying them, who are seeking
-equity and justice and not wit and learning.
-
-“Yet is old Blackstone right. Under it all, at the bottom of it all, at
-the beginning of the building of the edifice of the law, is the quest,
-the earnest and sincere quest of righteous men, for justice and equity.
-But what is it that the Preacher said? ‘They made themselves many
-inventions.’ And the law, good in its beginning, has been invented out
-of all its intent, so that it serves neither litigants nor injured ones,
-but merely the fatted judges and the lean and hungry lawyers who achieve
-names and paunches if they prove themselves cleverer than their
-opponents and than the judges who render decision.”
-
-He paused, still posed as Rodin’s “Thinker,” and meditated, while the
-_mestiza_ woman waited his customary signal to resume the reading. At
-last, as out of a profound of thought in which universes had been
-weighed in the balance, he spoke:
-
-“But we have law, here in the Cordilleras of Panama, that is just and
-right and all of equity. We work for no man and serve not even paunches.
-Sack-cloth and not broadcloth conduces to the equity of judicial
-decision. Read on, Mercedes. Blackstone is always right if always
-rightly read—which is what is called a paradox, and is what modern law
-ordinarily is, a paradox. Read on. Blackstone is the very foundation of
-human law—but, oh, how many wrongs are cleverly committed by clever men
-in his name!”
-
-Ten minutes later, the blind thinker raised his head, sniffed the air,
-and gestured the girl to pause. Taking her cue from him, she, too,
-sniffed:
-
-“Perhaps it is the lamp, O Just One,” she suggested.
-
-“It is burning oil,” he said. “But it is not the lamp. It is from far
-away. Also, have I heard shooting in the canyons.”
-
-“I heard nothing——” she began.
-
-“Daughter, you who see have not the need to hear that I have. There have
-been many shots fired in the canyons. Order my children to investigate
-and make report.”
-
-Bowing reverently to the old man who could not see but who, by
-keen-trained hearing and conscious timing of her every muscular action,
-knew that she had bowed, the young woman lifted the curtain of blankets
-and passed out into the day. At either side the cave-mouth sat a man of
-the peon class. Each was armed with rifle and machete, while through
-their girdles were thrust naked-bladed knives. At the girl’s order, both
-arose and bowed, not to her, but to the command and the invisible source
-of the command. One of them tapped with the back of his machete against
-the stone upon which he had been sitting, then laid his ear to the stone
-and listened. In truth, the stone was but the out-jut of a vein of
-metalliferous ore that extended across and through the heart of the
-mountain. And beyond, on the opposite slope, in an eyrie commanding the
-magnificent panorama of the descending slopes of the Cordilleras, sat
-another peon who first listened with his ear pressed to similar
-metalliferous quartz, and next tapped response with his machete. After
-that, he stepped half a dozen paces to a tall tree, half-dead, reached
-into the hollow heart of it, and pulled on the rope within as a man
-might pull who was ringing a steeple bell.
-
-But no sound was evoked. Instead, a lofty branch, fifty feet above his
-head, sticking out from the main-trunk like a semaphore arm, moved up
-and down like the semaphore arm it was. Two miles away, on a mountain
-crest, the branch of a similar semaphore tree replied. Still beyond
-that, and farther down the slopes, the flashing of a hand-mirror in the
-sun heliographed the relaying of the blind man’s message from the cave.
-And all that portion of the Cordilleras became voluble with coded speech
-of vibrating ore-veins, sun-flashings, and waving tree-branches.
-
- * * * * *
-
-While Enrico Solano, slenderly erect on his horse as an Indian youth and
-convoyed on either side by his sons, Alesandro and Ricardo, hanging to
-his saddle trappings, made the best of the time afforded them by
-Francis’ rearguard battle with the gendarmes, Leoncia, on her mount, and
-Henry Morgan, lagged behind. One or the other was continually glancing
-back for the sight of Francis overtaking them. Watching his opportunity,
-Henry took the back-trail. Five minutes afterward, Leoncia, no less
-anxious than he for Francis’ safety, tried to turn her horse about. But
-the animal, eager for the companionship of its mate ahead, refused to
-obey the rein, cut up and pranced, and then deliberately settled into a
-balk. Dismounting and throwing her reins on the ground in the Panamanian
-method of tethering a saddle horse, Leoncia took the back-trail on foot.
-So rapidly did she follow Henry, that she was almost treading on his
-heels when he encountered Francis and the peon. The next moment, both
-Henry and Francis were chiding her for her conduct; but in both their
-voices was the involuntary tenderness of love, which pleased neither to
-hear the other uttering.
-
-Their hearts more active than their heads, they were caught in total
-surprise by the party of haciendados that dashed out upon them with
-covering rifles from the surrounding jungle. Despite the fact that they
-had thus captured the runaway peon, whom they proceeded to kick and
-cuff, all would have been well with Leoncia and the two Morgans had the
-owner of the peon, the old-time friend of the Solano family, been
-present. But an attack of the malarial fever, which was his due every
-third day, had stretched him out in a chill near the burning oilfield.
-
-Nevertheless, though by their blows they reduced the peon to weepings
-and pleadings on his knees, the haciendados were courteously gentle to
-Leoncia and quite decent to Francis and Henry, even though they tied the
-hands of the latter two behind them in preparation for the march up the
-ravine slope to where the horses had been left. But upon the peon, with
-Latin-American cruelty, they continued to reiterate their rage.
-
-Yet were they destined to arrive nowhere, by themselves, with their
-captives. Shouts of joy heralded the debouchment upon the scene of the
-Jefe’s gendarmes and of the Jefe and Alvarez Torres. Arose at once the
-rapid-fire, staccato, bastard-Latin of all men of both parties of
-pursuers, trying to explain and demanding explanation at one and the
-same time. And while the farrago of all talking simultaneously and of no
-one winning anywhere in understanding, made anarchy of speech, Torres,
-with a nod to Francis and a sneer of triumph to Henry, ranged before
-Leoncia and bowed low to her in true and deep hidalgo courtesy and
-respect.
-
-“Listen!” he said, low-voiced, as she rebuffed him with an arm movement
-of repulsion. “Do not misunderstand me. Do not mistake me. I am here to
-save you, and, no matter what may happen, to protect you. You are the
-lady of my dreams. I will die for you—yes, and gladly, though far more
-gladly would I live for you.”
-
-“I do not understand,” she replied curtly. “I do not see life or death
-in the issue. We have done no wrong. I have done no wrong, nor has my
-father. Nor has Francis Morgan, nor has Henry Morgan. Therefore, sir,
-the matter is not a question of life or death.”
-
-Henry and Francis, shouldering close to Leoncia, on either side,
-listened and caught through the hubble-bubble of many voices the
-conversation of Leoncia and Torres.
-
-“It is a question absolute of certain death by execution for Henry
-Morgan,” Torres persisted. “Proven beyond doubt is his conviction for
-the murder of Alfaro Solano, who was your own full-blood uncle and your
-father’s own full-blood brother. There is no chance to save Henry
-Morgan. But Francis Morgan can I save in all surety, if——”
-
-“If?” Leoncia queried, with almost the snap of jaws of a she-leopard.
-
-“If ... you prove kind to me, and marry me,” Torres said with
-magnificent steadiness, although two Gringos, helpless, their hands tied
-behind their backs, glared at him through their eyes their common desire
-for his immediate extinction.
-
-Torres, in a genuine outburst of his passion, though his rapid glances
-had assured him of the helplessness of the two Morgans, seized her hands
-in his and urged:
-
-“Leoncia, as your husband I might be able to do something for Henry.
-Even may it be possible for me to save his life and his neck, if he will
-yield to leaving Panama immediately.”
-
-“You Spanish dog!” Henry snarled at him, struggling with his tied hands
-behind his back in an effort to free them.
-
-“Gringo cur!” Torres retorted, as, with an open backhanded blow, he
-struck Henry on the mouth.
-
-On the instant Henry’s foot shot out, and the kick in Torres’ side drove
-him staggering in the direction of Francis, who was no less quick with a
-kick of his own. Back and forth like a shuttlecock between the
-battledores, Torres was kicked from one man to the other, until the
-gendarmes seized the two Gringos and began to beat them in their
-helplessness. Torres not only urged the gendarmes on, but himself drew a
-knife; and a red tragedy might have happened with offended
-Latin-American blood up and raging, had not a score or more of armed men
-silently appeared and silently taken charge of the situation. Some of
-the mysterious newcomers were clad in cotton singlets and trousers, and
-others were in cowled gabardines of sackcloth.
-
-The gendarmes and haciendados recoiled in fear, crossing themselves,
-muttering prayers and ejaculating: “The Blind Brigand!” “The Cruel Just
-One!” “They are his people!” “We are lost.”
-
-But the much-beaten peon sprang forward and fell on his bleeding knees
-before a stern-faced man who appeared to be the leader of the Blind
-Brigand’s men. From the mouth of the peon poured forth a stream of loud
-lamentation and outcry for justice.
-
-“You know that justice to which you appeal?” the leader spoke
-gutturally.
-
-“Yes, the Cruel Justice,” the peon replied. “I know what it means to
-appeal to the Cruel Justice, yet do I appeal, for I seek justice and my
-cause is just.”
-
-“I, too, demand the Cruel Justice!” Leoncia cried with flashing eyes,
-although she added in an undertone to Francis and Henry: “Whatever the
-Cruel Justice is.”
-
-“It will have to go some to be unfairer than the justice we can expect
-from Torres and the Jefe,” Henry replied in similar undertones, then
-stepped forward boldly before the cowled leader and said loudly: “And I
-demand the Cruel Justice.”
-
-The leader nodded.
-
-“Me, too,” Francis murmured low, and then made loud demand.
-
-The gendarmes did not seem to count in the matter, while the haciendados
-signified their willingness to abide by whatever justice the Blind
-Brigand might mete out to them. Only the Jefe objected.
-
-“Maybe you don’t know who I am,” he blustered. “I am Mariano Vercara è
-Hijos, of long illustrious name and long and honorable career. I am Jefe
-Politico of San Antonio, the highest friend of the governor, and high in
-the confidence of the government of the Republic of Panama. I am the
-law. There is but one law and one justice, which is of Panama and not
-the Cordilleras. I protest against this mountain law you call the Cruel
-Justice. I shall send an army against your Blind Brigand, and the
-buzzards will peck his bones in San Juan.”
-
-“Remember,” Torres sarcastically warned the irate Jefe, “that this is
-not San Antonio, but the bush of Juchitan. Also, you have no army.”
-
-“Have these two men been unjust to any one who has appealed to the Cruel
-Justice?” the leader asked abruptly.
-
-“Yes,” asseverated the peon. “They have beaten me. Everybody has beaten
-me. They, too, have beaten me and without cause. My hand is bloody. My
-body is bruised and torn. Again I appeal to the Cruel Justice, and I
-charge these two men with injustice.”
-
-The leader nodded and to his own men indicated the disarming of the
-prisoners and the order of the march.
-
-“Justice!—I demand equal justice!” Henry cried out. “My hands are tied
-behind my back. All hands should be so tied, or no hands be so tied.
-Besides, it is very difficult to walk when one is so tied.”
-
-The shadow of a smile drifted the lips of the leader as he directed his
-men to cut the lashings that invidiously advertised the inequality
-complained of.
-
-“Huh!” Francis grinned to Leoncia and Henry. “I have a vague memory that
-somewhere around a million years ago I used to live in a quiet little
-old burg called New York, where we foolishly thought we were the wildest
-and wickedest that ever cracked at a golf ball, electrocuted an
-Inspector of Police, battled with Tammany, or bid four nullos with five
-sure tricks in one’s own hand.”
-
-“Huh!” Henry vouchsafed half an hour later, as the trail, from a lesser
-crest, afforded a view of higher crests beyond. “Huh! and hell’s bells!
-These gunny-sack chaps are not animals of savages. Look, Henry! They are
-semaphoring! See that near tree there, and that big one across the
-canyon. Watch the branches wave.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-Blindfold for a number of miles at the last, the prisoners, still
-blindfolded, were led into the cave where the Cruel Justice reigned.
-When the bandages were removed, they found themselves in a vast and
-lofty cavern, lighted by many torches, and, confronting them, a blind
-and white-haired man in sackcloth seated on a rock-hewn throne, with,
-beneath him, her shoulder at his knees, a pretty mestiza woman.
-
-The blind man spoke, and in his voice was the thin and bell-like silver
-of age and weary wisdom.
-
-“The Cruel Justice has been invoked. Speak! Who demands decision and
-equity?”
-
-All held back, and not even the Jefe could summon heart of courage to
-protest against Cordilleras law.
-
-“There is a woman present,” continued the Blind Brigand. “Let her speak
-first. All mortal men and women are guilty of something or else are
-charged by their fellows with some guilt.”
-
-Henry and Francis were for with-straining her, but with an equal smile
-to them she addressed the Cruel Just One in clear and ringing tones:
-
-“I only have aided the man I am engaged to marry to escape from death
-for a murder he did not commit.”
-
-“You have spoken,” said the Blind Brigand. “Come forward to me.”
-
-Piloted by sackcloth men, while the two Morgans who loved her were
-restless and perturbed, she was made to kneel at the blind man’s knees.
-The mestiza girl placed his hand on Leoncia’s head. For a full and
-solemn minute silence obtained, while the steady fingers of the Blind
-One rested about her forehead and registered the pulse-beats of her
-temples. Then he removed his hand and leaned back to decision.
-
-“Arise, Senorita,” he pronounced. “Your heart is clean of evil. You go
-free.—Who else appeals to the Cruel Justice?”
-
-Francis immediately stepped forward.
-
-“I likewise helped the man to escape from an undeserved death. The man
-and I are of the same name, and, distantly, of the same blood.”
-
-He, too, knelt, and felt the soft finger-lobes play delicately over his
-brows and temples and come to rest finally on the pulse of his wrist.
-
-“It is not all clear to me,” said the Blind One. “You are not at rest
-nor at peace with your soul. There is trouble within you that vexes
-you.”
-
-Suddenly the peon stepped forth and spoke unbidden, his voice evoking a
-thrill as of the shock of blasphemy from the sackcloth men.
-
-“Oh, Just One, let this man go,” said the peon passionately. “Twice was
-I weak and betrayed him to his enemy this day, and twice this day has he
-protected me from my enemy and saved me.”
-
-And the peon, once again on his knees, but this time at the knees of
-justice, thrilled and shivered with superstitious awe, as he felt wander
-over him the light but firm finger-touches of the strangest judge man
-ever knelt before. Bruises and lacerations were swiftly explored even to
-the shoulders and down the back.
-
-“The other man goes free,” the Cruel Just One announced. “Yet is there
-trouble and unrest within him. Is one here who knows and will speak up?”
-
-And Francis knew on the instant the trouble the blind man had divined
-within him—the full love that burned in him for Leoncia and that
-threatened to shatter the full loyalty he must ever bear to Henry. No
-less quick was Leoncia in knowing, and could the blind man have beheld
-the involuntary glance of knowledge the man and woman threw at each
-other and the immediate embarrassment of averted eyes, he could have
-unerringly diagnosed Francis’ trouble. The mestiza girl saw, and with a
-leap at her heart scented a love affair. Likewise had Henry seen and
-unconsciously scowled.
-
-The Just One spoke:
-
-“An affair of heart undoubtedly,” he dismissed the matter. “The eternal
-vexation of woman in the heart of man. Nevertheless, this man stands
-free. Twice, in the one day, has he succored the man who twice betrayed
-him. Nor has the trouble within him aught to do with the aid he rendered
-the man said to be sentenced to death undeserved. Remains to question
-this last man; also to settle for this beaten creature before me who
-twice this day has proved weak out of selfishness, and who has just now
-proved bravely strong out of unselfishness for another.”
-
-He leaned forward and played his fingers searchingly over the face and
-brows of the peon.
-
-“Are you afraid to die?” he asked suddenly.
-
-“Great and Holy One, I am sore afraid to die,” was the peon’s reply.
-
-“Then say that you have lied about this man, say that his twice
-succoring of you was a lie, and you shall live.”
-
-Under the Blind One’s fingers the peon cringed and wilted.
-
-“Think well,” came the solemn warning. “Death is not good. To be forever
-unmoving, as the clod and rock, is not good. Say that you have lied and
-life is yours. Speak!”
-
-But, although his voice shook from the exquisiteness of his fear, the
-peon rose to the full spiritual stature of a man.
-
-“Twice this day did I betray him, Holy One. But my name is not Peter.
-Not thrice in this day will I betray him. I am sore afraid, but I cannot
-betray him thrice.”
-
-The blind judge leaned back and his face beamed and glowed as if
-transfigured.
-
-“Well spoken,” he said. “You have the makings of a man. I now lay my
-sentence upon you: From now on, through all your days under the sun, you
-shall always think like a man, act like a man, be a man. Better to die a
-man any time, than live a beast forever in time. The Ecclesiast was
-wrong. A dead lion is always better than a live dog. Go free, regenerate
-son, go free.”
-
-But, as the peon, at a signal from the mestiza, started to rise, the
-blind judge stopped him.
-
-“In the beginning, O man who but this day has been born man, what was
-the cause of all your troubles?”
-
-“My heart was weak and hungry, O Holy One, for a mixed-breed woman of
-the tierra caliente. I myself am mountain born. For her I put myself in
-debt to the haciendado for the sum of two hundred pesos. She fled with
-the money and another man. I remained the slave of the haciendado, who
-is not a bad man, but who, first and always, is a haciendado. I have
-toiled, been beaten, and have suffered for five long years, and my debt
-is now become two hundred and fifty pesos, and yet I possess naught but
-these rags and a body weak from insufficient food.”
-
-“Was she wonderful?—this woman of the tierra caliente?” the blind judge
-queried softly.
-
-“I was mad for her, Holy One. I do not think now that she was wonderful.
-But she was wonderful then. The fever of her burned my heart and brain
-and made a task-slave of me, though she fled in the night and I knew her
-never again.”
-
-The peon waited, on his knees, with bowed head, while, to the amazement
-of all, the Blind Brigand sighed deeply and seemed to forget time and
-place. His hand strayed involuntarily and automatically to the head of
-the mestiza, caressed the shining black hair and continued to caress it
-while he spoke.
-
-“The woman,” he said, with such gentleness that his voice, still clear
-and bell-like, was barely above a whisper. “Ever the woman wonderful.
-All women are wonderful ... to man. They love our fathers; they birth
-us; we love them; they birth our sons to love their daughters and to
-call their daughters wonderful; and this has always been and shall
-continue always to be until the end of man’s time and man’s loving on
-earth.”
-
-A profound of silence fell within the cavern, while the Cruel Just One
-meditated for a space. At the last, with a touch dared of familiarity,
-the pretty mestiza touched him and roused him to remembrance of the peon
-still crouching at his feet.
-
-“I pronounce judgment,” he spoke. “You have received many blows. Each
-blow on your body is quittance in full of the entire debt to the
-haciendado. Go free. But remain in the mountains, and next time love a
-mountain woman, since woman you must have, and since woman is inevitable
-and eternal in the affairs of men. Go free. You are half Maya?”
-
-“I am half Maya,” the peon murmured. “My father is a Maya.”
-
-“Arise and go free. And remain in the mountains with your Maya father.
-The tierra caliente is no place for the Cordilleras-born. The haciendado
-is not present, and therefore cannot be judged. And after all he is but
-a haciendado. His fellow haciendados, too, go free.”
-
-The Cruel Just One waited, and, without waiting, Henry stepped forward.
-
-“I am the man,” he stated boldly, “sentenced to the death undeserved for
-the killing of a man I did not kill. He was the blood-uncle of the girl
-I love, whom I shall marry if there be true justice here in this cave in
-the Cordilleras.”
-
-But the Jefe interrupted.
-
-“Before a score of witnesses he threatened to his face to kill the man.
-Within the hour we found him bending over the man’s dead body that was
-yet warm and limber with departing life.”
-
-“He speaks true,” Henry affirmed. “I did threaten the man, both of us
-heady from strong drink and hot blood. I was so found, bending over his
-dead warm body. Yet did I not kill him. Nor do I know, nor can I guess,
-the coward hand in the dark that knifed out his life through the back
-from behind.”
-
-“Kneel both of you, that I may interrogate you,” the Blind Brigand
-commanded.
-
-Long he interrogated with his sensitive, questioning fingers. Long, and
-still longer, unable to attain decision, his fingers played over the
-faces and pulses of the two men.
-
-“Is there a woman?” he asked Henry Morgan pointedly.
-
-“A woman wonderful. I love her.”
-
-“It is good to be so vexed, for a man unvexed by woman is only half a
-man,” the blind judge vouchsafed. He addressed the Jefe. “No woman vexes
-you, yet are you troubled. But this man”—indicating Henry—“I cannot tell
-if all his vexation be due to woman. Perhaps, in part, it may be due to
-you, or to what some prompting of evil may make him meditate against
-you. Stand up, both men of you. I cannot judge between you. Yet is there
-the test infallible, the test of the Snake and the Bird. Infallible it
-is, as God is infallible, for by such ways does God still maintain truth
-in the affairs of men. As well does Blackstone mention just such methods
-of determining the truth by trial and ordeal.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XI
-
-
-To all intents it might have been a tiny bull-ring, that pit in the
-heart of the Blind Brigand’s domain. Ten feet in depth and thirty in
-diameter, with level floor and perpendicular wall, its natural formation
-had required little work at the hands of man to complete its symmetry.
-The sackcloth men, the haciendados, the gendarmes—all were present, save
-for the Cruel Just One and the mestiza, and all were lined about the rim
-of the pit, as an audience, to gaze down upon some bull-fight or
-gladiatorial combat within the pit.
-
-At command of the stern-faced leader of the sackcloth men who had
-captured them, Henry and the Jefe descended down a short ladder into the
-pit. The leader and several of the brigands accompanied them.
-
-“Heaven alone knows what’s going to happen,” Henry laughed up in English
-to Leoncia and Francis. “But if it’s rough and tumble, bite and gouge,
-or Marquis of Queensbury or London Prize Ring, Mister Fat Jefe is my
-meat. But that old blind one is clever, and the chances are he’s going
-to put us at each other on some basis of evenness. In which case, do
-you, my audience, if he gets me down, stick your thumbs up and make all
-the noise you can. Depend upon it, if it’s he that’s down, all his crowd
-will be thumbs up.”
-
-The Jefe, overcome by the trap into which he had descended, in Spanish
-addressed the leader.
-
-“I shall not fight with this man. He is younger than I, and has better
-wind. Also, the affair is illegal. It is not according to the law of the
-Republic of Panama. It is extra-territorial and entirely unjudicial.”
-
-“It is the Snake and the Bird,” the leader shut him off. “You shall be
-the Snake. This rifle shall be in your hands. The other man shall be the
-Bird. In his hand shall be the bell. Behold! Thus may you understand the
-ordeal.”
-
-At his command, one of the brigands was given the rifle and was
-blindfolded. To another brigand, not blindfolded, was given a silver
-bell.
-
-“The man with the rifle is the Snake,” said the leader. “He has one shot
-at the Bird who carries the bell.”
-
-At signal to begin, the bandit with the bell, tinkled it at extended
-arm’s length and sprang swiftly aside. The man with the rifle lowered it
-as if to fire at the space just vacated and pretended to fire.
-
-“You understand?” the leader demanded of Henry and the Jefe.
-
-The former nodded, but the latter cried exultantly:
-
-“And I am the Snake?”
-
-“You are the Snake,” affirmed the leader.
-
-And the Jefe was eager for the rifle, making no further protests against
-the extra-territoriality of the proceedings.
-
-“Are you going to try to get me?” Henry warned the Jefe.
-
-“No, Senor Morgan. I am merely going to get you. I am one of the two
-best shots in Panama. I have two score and more of medals. I can shoot
-with my eyes shut. I can shoot in the dark. I have often shot, and with
-precision, in the dark. Already may you count yourself a dead man.”
-
-Only one cartridge was put into the rifle, ere it was handed to the Jefe
-after he was blindfolded. Next, while Henry, equipped with the tell-tale
-bell, was stationed directly across the pit, the Jefe was faced to the
-wall and kept there while the brigands climbed out of the pit and drew
-the ladder up after them. The leader, from above, spoke down:
-
-“Listen carefully, Senor Snake, and make no move until you have heard.
-The Snake has but one shot. The Snake cannot tamper with his blindfold.
-If he so tampers it is our duty to see that he immediately dies. The
-Snake has no time limit. He may take the rest of the day, and all of the
-night, and the remainder of eternity ere he fires his one shot. As for
-the Bird, the one rule is that never must the bell leave his hand, and
-never may he stop the clapper of it from making the full noise intended
-of the clapper against the sides of the bell. Should he do so, then will
-he immediately die. We are here above you, both of you Senors, rifles in
-hand, to see that you die the second you infract any of the rules. And
-now, God be with the right, proceed!”
-
-The Jefe turned slowly about and listened, while Henry, essaying
-gingerly to move with the bell, caused it to tinkle.
-
-The rifle was quick to bear upon the sound, and to pursue it as Henry
-ran. With a quick shift he transferred the bell to the other extended
-hand and ran back in the opposite direction, the rifle sweeping after
-him in inexorable pursuit. But the Jefe was too cunning to risk all on a
-chance shot, and slowly advanced across the arena. Henry stood still,
-and the bell made no sound.
-
-So unerringly had the Jefe’s ear located the last silvery tinkle, and so
-straightly did he walk despite his blindfold, that he advanced just to
-the right of Henry and directly at the bell. With infinite caution,
-provoking no tinkle, Henry slightly raised his arm and permitted the
-Jefe’s head to go under the bell with a bare inch of margin.
-
-His rifle pointed, and within a foot of the pit-wall, the Jefe halted in
-indecision, listened vainly for a moment, then made a further stride
-that collided the rifle muzzle with the wall. He whirled about, and,
-with the rifle extended, like any blind man felt out the air-space for
-his enemy. The muzzle would have touched Henry had he not sprung away on
-a noisy and zig-zag course.
-
-In the center of the pit he came to a frozen pause. The Jefe stalked
-past a yard to the side and collided with the opposite wall. He circled
-the wall, walking cat-footed, his rifle forever feeling out into the
-empty air. Next he ventured across the pit. After several such
-crossings, during which the stationary bell gave him no clue, he adopted
-a clever method. Tossing his hat on the ground for the mark of his
-starting point, he crossed the edge of the pit on a shallow chord,
-extended the chord by a pace farther along the wall, and felt his way
-back along the new and longer chord. Again against the wall, he verified
-the correctness of the parallelness of the two chords, by pacing back to
-his hat. This time, with three paces along the wall from the hat, he
-initiated his third chord.
-
-Thus he combed the area of the pit, and Henry saw that he could not
-escape such combing. Nor did he wait to be discovered. Tinkling the bell
-as he ran and zigzagged and exchanging it from one hand to the other, he
-froze into immobility in a new place.
-
-The Jefe repeated the laborious combing out process; but Henry was not
-minded longer to prolong the tension. He waited till the Jefe’s latest
-chord brought him directly upon him. He waited till the rifle muzzle,
-breast high, was within half a dozen inches of his heart. Then he
-exploded into two simultaneous actions. He ducked lower than the rifle
-and yelled “Fire!” in stentorian command.
-
-So startled, the Jefe pulled the trigger, and the bullet sped above
-Henry’s head. From above, the sackcloth men applauded wildly. The Jefe
-tore off his blindfold and saw the smiling face of his foe.
-
-“It is well—God has spoken,” announced the sackcloth leader, as he
-descended into the pit. “The man uninjured is innocent. Remains now to
-test the other man.”
-
-“Me?” the Jefe almost shouted in his surprise and consternation.
-
-“Greetings, Jefe,” Henry grinned. “You _did_ try to get me. It’s my turn
-now. Pass over that rifle.”
-
-But the Jefe, with a curse, in his disappointment and rage forgetting
-that the rifle had contained only one cartridge, thrust the muzzle
-against Henry’s heart and pulled the trigger. The hammer fell with a
-metallic click.
-
-“It is well,” said the leader, taking away the rifle and recharging it.
-“Your conduct shall be reported. The test for you remains, yet must it
-appear that you are not acting like God’s chosen man.”
-
-Like a beaten bull in the ring seeking a way to escape and gazing up at
-the amphitheatre of pitiless faces, so the Jefe looked up and saw only
-the rifles of the sackcloth men, the triumphing faces of Leoncia and
-Francis, the curious looks of his own gendarmes, and the blood-eager
-faces of the haciendados that were like the faces of any bull-fight
-audience.
-
-The shadowy smile drifted the stern lips of the leader as he handed the
-rifle to Henry and started to blindfold him.
-
-“Why don’t you make him face the wall until I’m ready?” the Jefe
-demanded, as the silver bell tinkled in his passion-convulsed hand.
-
-“Because he is proven God’s man,” was the reply. “He has stood the test.
-Therefore he cannot do a treacherous deed. You now must stand the test
-of God. If you are true and honest, no harm can befall you from the
-Snake. For such is God’s way.”
-
-Far more successful as the hunter than as the hunted one, did the Jefe
-prove. Across the pit from Henry, he strove to stand motionless; but out
-of nervousness, as Henry’s rifle swept around on him, his hand trembled
-and the bell tinkled. The rifle came almost to rest and wavered
-ominously about the sound. In vain the Jefe tried to control his flesh
-and still the bell.
-
-But the bell tinkled on, and, in despair, he flung it away and threw
-himself on the ground. But Henry, following the sound of his enemy’s
-fall, lowered the rifle and pulled trigger. The Jefe yelled out in sharp
-pain as the bullet perforated his shoulder, rose to his feet, cursed,
-sprawled back on the ground, and lay there cursing.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Again in the cave, with the mestiza beside him at his knee, the Blind
-Brigand gave judgment.
-
-“This man who is wounded and who talks much of the law of the tierra
-caliente, shall now learn Cordilleras law. By the test of the Snake and
-the Bird has he been proven guilty. For his life a ransom of ten
-thousand dollars gold shall be paid, or else shall he remain here, a
-hewer of wood and a carrier of water, for the remainder of the time God
-shall grant him to draw breath on earth. I have spoken, and I know that
-my voice is God’s voice, and I know that God will not grant him long to
-draw breath if the ransom be not forthcoming.”
-
-A long silence obtained, during which even Henry, who could slay a foe
-in the heat of combat, advertised that such cold-blooded promise of
-murder was repugnant to him.
-
-“The law is pitiless,” said the Cruel Just One; and again silence fell.
-
-“Let him die for want of a ransom,” spoke one of the haciendados. “He
-has proved a treacherous dog. Let him die a dog’s death.”
-
-“What say you?” the Blind Brigand asked solemnly. “What say you, peon of
-the many beatings, man new-born this day, half-Maya that you are and
-lover of the woman wonderful? Shall this man die the dog’s death for
-want of a ransom?”
-
-“This man is a hard man,” spoke the peon. “Yet is my heart strangely
-soft this day. Had I ten thousand gold I would pay his ransom myself.
-Yea, O Holy One and Just, and had I two hundred and fifty pesos, even
-would I pay off my debt to the haciendado of which I am absolved.”
-
-The old man’s blind face lighted up to transfiguration.
-
-“You, too, speak with God’s voice this day, regenerate one,” he
-approved.
-
-But Francis, who had been scribbling hurriedly in his check book, handed
-a check, still wet with the ink, to the mestiza.
-
-“I, too, speak,” he said. “Let not the man die the dog’s death he
-deserves, proven treacherous hound that he is.”
-
-The mestiza read the check aloud.
-
-“It is not necessary to explain,” the Blind Brigand shut Francis off. “I
-am a creature of reason, and have not lived always in the Cordilleras. I
-was trained in business in Barcelona. I know the Chemical National Bank
-of New York, and through my agents have had dealings with it aforetime.
-The sum is for ten thousand dollars gold. This man who writes it has
-told the truth already this day. The check is good. Further, I know he
-will not stop payment. This man who thus pays the ransom of a foe is one
-of three things: a very good man; a fool; or a very rich man. Tell me, O
-Man, is there a woman wonderful?”
-
-And Francis, not daring to glance to right or left, at Leoncia or Henry,
-but gazing straight before him on the Blind Brigand’s face, answered
-because he felt he must so answer:
-
-“Yes, O Cruel Just One, there is a woman wonderful.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XII
-
-
-At the precise spot where they had been first blindfolded by the
-sackcloth men, the cavalcade halted. It was composed of a number of the
-sackcloth men; of Leoncia, Henry, and Francis, blindfolded and mounted
-on mules; and of the peon, blindfolded and on foot. Similarly escorted,
-the haciendados, and the Jefe and Torres with their gendarmes, had
-preceded by half an hour.
-
-At permission given by the stern-faced leader, the captives, about to be
-released, removed their blindfolds.
-
-“Seems I’ve been here before,” Henry laughed, looking about and
-identifying the place.
-
-“Seems the oil-wells are still burning,” Francis said, pointing out half
-the field of day that was eaten up by the black smoke-pall. “Peon, look
-upon your handiwork. For a man who possesses nothing, you are the
-biggest spender I ever met. I have heard of drunken oil-kings lighting
-cigars with thousand dollar bank-notes, but here are you burning up a
-million dollars a minute.”
-
-“I am not a poor man,” the peon boasted in proud mysteriousness.
-
-“A millionaire in disguise!” Henry twitted.
-
-“Where do you deposit?” was Leoncia’s contribution. “In the Chemical
-National Bank?”
-
-The peon did not understand the allusions, but knew that he was being
-made fun of, and drew himself up in proud silence.
-
-The stern leader spoke:
-
-“From this point you may now go your various ways. The Just One has so
-commanded. You, senors, will dismount and turn over to me your mules. As
-for the senorita, she may retain her mule as a present from the Just
-One, who would not care to be responsible for compelling any senorita to
-walk. The two senors, without hardship, may walk. Especially has the
-Just One recommended walking for the rich senor. The possession of
-riches, he advised, leads to too little walking. Too little walking
-leads to stoutness; and stoutness does not lead to the woman wonderful.
-Such is the wisdom of the Just One.”
-
-“Further, he has repeated his advice to the peon to remain in the
-mountains. In the mountains he will find his woman wonderful, since
-woman he must have; and it is wisest that such woman be of his own
-breed. The woman of the tierra caliente are for the men of the tierra
-caliente. The Cordilleras women are for the Cordilleras men. God
-dislikes mixed breeds. A mule is abhorrent under the sun. The world was
-not intended for mixed breeds, but man has made for himself many
-inventions. Pure races interbred leads to impurity. Neither will oil nor
-water congenially intermingle. Since kind begets kind, only kind should
-mate. Such are the words of the Just One which I have repeated as
-commanded. And he has especially impressed upon me to add that he knows
-whereof he speaks, for he, too, has sinned in just such ways.”
-
-And Henry and Francis, of Anglo-Saxon stock, and Leoncia of the Latin,
-knew perturbation and embarrassment as the vicarious judgment of the
-Blind Brigand sank home. And Leoncia, with her splendid eyes of woman,
-would have appealed protest to either man she loved, had the other been
-absent; while both Henry and Francis would have voiced protest to
-Leoncia had either of them been alone with her. And yet, under it all,
-deep down, uncannily, was a sense of the correctness of the Blind
-Brigand’s thought. And heavily, on the heart of each, rested the burden
-of the conscious oppression of sin.
-
-A crashing and scrambling in the brush diverted their train of thought,
-as descending the canyon slope on desperately slipping and sliding
-horses, appeared on the scene the haciendado with several followers. His
-greeting of the daughter of the Solanos was hidalgo-like and profound,
-and only less was the heartiness of his greeting to the two men for whom
-Enrico Solano had stood sponsor.
-
-“Where is your noble father?” he asked Leoncia. “I have good news for
-him. In the week since I last saw you, I have been sick with fever and
-encamped. But by swift messengers, and favoring winds across Chiriqui
-Lagoon to Bocas del Toro, I have used the government wireless—the Jefe
-of Bocas del Toro is my friend—and have communicated with the President
-of Panama—who is my ancient comrade whose nose I rubbed as often in the
-dirt as did he mine in the boyhood days when we were schoolmates and
-cubicle-mates together at Colon. And the word has come back that all is
-well; that justice has miscarried in the court at San Antonio from the
-too great but none the less worthy zeal of the Jefe Politico; and that
-all is forgiven, pardoned, and forever legally and politically forgotten
-against all of the noble Solano family and their two noble Gringo
-friends——”
-
-Here, the haciendado bowed low to Henry and Francis. And here, skulking
-behind Leoncia’s uncle, his eyes chanced to light on the peon; and, so
-lighting, his eyes blazed with triumph.
-
-“Mother of God, thou has not forgotten me!” he breathed fervently, then
-turned to the several friends who accompanied him. “There he is, the
-creature without reason or shame who has fled his debt of me. Seize him!
-I shall put him on his back for a month from the beating he shall
-receive!”
-
-So speaking, the haciendado sprang around the rump of Leoncia’s mule;
-and the peon, ducking under the mule’s nose, would have won to the
-freedom of the jungle, had not another of the haciendados, with quick
-spurs to his horse’s sides, cut him off and run him down. In a trice,
-used to just such work, the haciendados had the luckless wight on his
-feet, his hands tied behind him, a lead-rope made fast around his neck.
-
-In one voice Francis and Henry protested.
-
-“Senors,” the haciendado replied, “my respect and consideration and
-desire to serve you are as deep as for the noble Solano family under
-whose protection you are. Your safety and comfort are sacred to me. I
-will defend you from harm with my life. I am yours to command. My
-hacienda is yours, likewise all I possess. But this matter of this peon
-is entirely another matter. He is none of yours. He is _my_ peon, in
-_my_ debt, who has run away from _my_ hacienda. You will understand and
-forgive me, I trust. This is a mere matter of property. He is _my_
-property.”
-
-Henry and Francis glanced at each other in mutual perplexity and
-indecision. It was the law of the land, as they thoroughly knew.
-
-“The Cruel Just One did remit my debt, as all here will witness,” the
-peon whispered.
-
-“It is true, the Cruel Justice remitted his debt,” Leoncia verified.
-
-The haciendado smiled and bowed low.
-
-“But the peon contracted with me,” he smiled. “And who is the Blind
-Brigand that his foolish law shall operate on my plantation and rob me
-of my rightful two hundred and fifty pesos?”
-
-“He’s right, Leoncia,” Henry admitted.
-
-“Then will I go back to the high Cordilleras,” the peon asserted. “Oh,
-you men of the Cruel Just One, take me back to the Cordilleras.”
-
-But the stern leader shook his head.
-
-“Here you were released. Our orders went no further. No further
-jurisdiction have we over you. We shall now bid farewell and depart.”
-
-“Hold on!” Francis cried, pulling out his check book and beginning to
-write. “Wait a moment. I must settle for this peon now. Next, before you
-depart, I have a favor to ask of you.”
-
-He passed the check to the haciendado, saying:
-
-“I have allowed ten pesos for the exchange.”
-
-The haciendado glanced at the check, folded it away in his pocket, and
-placed the end of the rope around the wretched creature’s neck in
-Francis’ hand.
-
-“The peon is now yours,” he said.
-
-Francis looked at the rope and laughed.
-
-“Behold! I now own a human chattel. Slave, you are mine, my property
-now, do you understand?”
-
-“Yes, Senor,” the peon muttered humbly. “It seems, when I became mad for
-the woman I gave up my freedom for, that God destined me always
-afterward to be the property of some man. The Cruel Just One is right.
-It is God’s punishment for mating outside my race.”
-
-“You made a slave of yourself for what the world has always considered
-the best of all causes, a woman,” Francis observed, cutting the thongs
-that bound the peon’s hands. “And so, I make a present of you to
-yourself.” So saying, he placed the neck-rope in the peon’s hand.
-“Henceforth, lead yourself, and put not that rope in any man’s hand.”
-
-While the foregoing had been taking place, a lean old man, on foot, had
-noiselessly joined the circle. Maya Indian he was, pure-blooded, with
-ribs that corrugated plainly through his parchment-like skin. Only a
-breech-clout covered his nakedness. His unkempt hair hung in dirty-gray
-tangles about his face, which was high-cheeked and emaciated to
-cadaverousness. Strings of muscles showed for his calves and biceps. A
-few scattered snags of teeth were visible between his withered lips. The
-hollows under his cheek-bones were prodigious. While his eyes, beads of
-black, deep-sunk in their sockets, burned with the wild light of a
-patient in fever.
-
-He slipped eel-like through the circle and clasped the peon in his
-skeleton-like arms.
-
-“He is my father,” proclaimed the peon proudly. “Look at him. He is pure
-Maya, and he knows the secrets of the Mayas.”
-
-And while the two re-united ones talked endless explanations, Francis
-preferred his request to the sackcloth leader to find Enrico Solano and
-his two sons, wandering somewhere in the mountains, and to tell them
-that they were free of all claims of the law and to return home.
-
-“They have done no wrong?” the leader demanded.
-
-“No; they have done no wrong,” Francis assured him.
-
-“Then it is well. I promise you to find them immediately, for we know
-the direction of their wandering, and to send them down to the coast to
-join you.”
-
-“And in the meantime shall you be my guests while you wait,” the
-haciendado invited eagerly. “There is a freight schooner at anchor in
-Juchitan Inlet now off my plantation, and sailing for San Antonio. I can
-hold her until the noble Enrico and his sons come down from the
-Cordilleras.”
-
-“And Francis will pay the demurrage, of course,” Henry interpolated with
-a sly sting that Leoncia caught, although it missed Francis, who cried
-joyously:
-
-“Of course I will. And it proves my contention that a checkbook is
-pretty good to have anywhere.”
-
-To their surprise, when they had parted from the sackcloth men, the peon
-and his Indian father attached themselves to the Morgans, and journeyed
-down through the burning oil-fields to the plantation which had been the
-scene of the peon’s slavery. Both father and son were unremitting in
-their devotion, first of all to Francis, and, next, to Leoncia and
-Henry. More than once they noted father and son in long and earnest
-conversations; and, after Enrico and his sons had arrived, when the
-party went down to the beach to board the waiting schooner, the peon and
-his Maya parent followed along. Francis essayed to say farewell to them
-on the beach, but the peon stated that the pair of them were likewise
-journeying on the schooner.
-
-“I have told you that I was not a poor man,” the peon explained, after
-they had drawn the party aside from the waiting sailors. “This is true.
-The hidden treasure of the Mayas, which the conquistadores and the
-priests of the Inquisition could never find, is in my keeping. Or, to be
-very true, is in my father’s keeping. He is the descendant, in the
-straight line, from the ancient high priest of the Mayas. He is the last
-high priest. He and I have talked much and long. And we are agreed that
-riches do not make life. You bought me for two hundred and fifty pesos,
-yet you made me free, gave me back to myself. The gift of a man’s life
-is greater than all the treasure in the world. So are we agreed, my
-father and I. And so, since it is the way of Gringos and Spaniards to
-desire treasure, we will lead you to the Maya treasure, my father and I,
-my father knowing the way. And the way into the mountains begins from
-San Antonio and not from Juchitan.”
-
-“Does your father know the location of the treasure?—just where it is?”
-Henry demanded, with an aside to Francis that this was the very Maya
-treasure that had led him to abandon the quest for Morgan’s gold on the
-Calf and to take to the mainland.
-
-The peon shook his head.
-
-“My father has never been to it. He was not interested in it, caring not
-for wealth for himself. Father, bring forth the tale written in our
-ancient language which you alone of living Mayas can read.”
-
-From within his loin-cloth the old man drew forth a dirty and
-much-frayed canvas bag. Out of this he pulled what looked like a snarl
-of knotted strings. But the strings were twisted sennit of some fibrous
-forest bark, so ancient that they threatened to crumble as he handled
-them, while from under the touch and manipulation of his fingers a fine
-powder of decay arose. Muttering and mumbling prayers in the ancient
-Maya tongue, he held up the snarl of knots, and bowed reverently before
-it ere he shook it out.
-
-“The knot-writing, the lost written language of the Mayas,” Henry
-breathed softly. “This is the real thing, if only the old geezer hasn’t
-forgotten how to read it.”
-
-All heads bent curiously toward it as it was handed to Francis. It was
-in the form of a crude tassel, composed of many thin, long strings. Not
-alone were the knots, and various kinds of knots, tied at irregular
-intervals in the strings, but the strings themselves were of varying
-lengths and diameters. He ran them through his fingers, mumbling and
-muttering.
-
-“He reads!” cried the peon triumphantly. “All our old language is there
-in those knots, and he reads them as any man may read a book.”
-
-Bending closer to observe, Francis and Leoncia’s hair touched, and, in
-the thrill of the immediately broken contact, their eyes met, producing
-the second thrill as they separated. But Henry, all eagerness, did not
-observe. He had eyes only for the mystic tassel.
-
-“What d’you say, Francis?” he murmured. “It’s big! It’s big!”
-
-“But New York is beginning to call,” Francis demurred. “Oh, not its
-people and its fun, but its business,” he added hastily, as he sensed
-Leoncia’s unuttered reproach and hurt. “Don’t forget, I’m mixed up in
-Tampico Petroleum and the stock market, and I hate to think how many
-millions are involved.”
-
-“Hell’s bells!” Henry ejaculated. “The Maya treasure, if a tithe of what
-they say about its immensity be true, could be cut three ways between
-Enrico, you and me, and make each of us richer than you are now.”
-
-Still Francis was undecided, and, while Enrico expanded on the
-authenticity of the treasure, Leoncia managed to query in an undertone
-in Francis’ ear:
-
-“Have you so soon tired of ... of treasure-hunting?”
-
-He looked at her keenly, and down at her engagement ring, as he answered
-in the same low tones:
-
-“How can I stay longer in this country, loving you as I do, while you
-love Henry?”
-
-It was the first time he had openly avowed his love, and Leoncia knew
-the swift surge of joy, followed by the no less swift surge of mantling
-shame that she, a woman who had always esteemed herself good, could love
-two men at the same time. She glanced at Henry, as if to verify her
-heart, and her heart answered yes. As truly did she love Henry as she
-did Francis, and the emotion seemed similar where the two were similar,
-different where they were different.
-
-“I’m afraid I’ll have to connect up with the _Angelique_, most likely at
-Bocas del Toro, and get away,” Francis told Henry. “You and Enrico can
-find the treasure and split it two ways.”
-
-But the peon, having heard, broke into quick speech with his father,
-and, next, with Henry.
-
-“You hear what he says, Francis,” the latter said, holding up the sacred
-tassel. “You’ve got to go with us. It is you he feels grateful to for
-his son. He isn’t giving the treasure to us, but to you. And if you
-don’t go, he won’t read a knot of the writing.”
-
-But it was Leoncia, looking at Francis with quiet wistfulness of
-pleading, seeming all but to say, “Please, for my sake,” who really
-caused Francis to reverse his decision.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIII
-
-
-A week later, out of San Antonio on a single day, three separate
-expeditions started for the Cordilleras. The first, mounted on mules,
-was composed of Henry, Francis, the peon and his ancient parent, and of
-several of the Solano peons, each leading a pack-mule, burdened with
-supplies and outfit. Old Enrico Solano, at the last moment, had been
-prevented from accompanying the party because of the bursting open of an
-old wound received in the revolutionary fighting of his youth.
-
-Up the main street of San Antonio the cavalcade proceeded, passing the
-jail, the wall of which Francis had dynamited, and which was only even
-then being tardily rebuilt by the Jefe’s prisoners. Torres, sauntering
-down the street, the latest wire from Regan tucked in his pocket, saw
-the Morgan outfit with surprise.
-
-“Whither away, senors?” he called.
-
-So spontaneous that it might have been rehearsed, Francis pointed to the
-sky, Henry straight down at the earth, the peon to the right, and his
-father to the left. The curse from Torres at such impoliteness, caused
-all to burst into laughter, in which the mule-peons joined as they rode
-along.
-
-Within the morning, at the time of the siesta hour, while all the town
-slept, Torres received a second surprise. This time it was the sight of
-Leoncia and her youngest brother, Ricardo, on mules, leading a third
-that was evidently loaded with a camping outfit.
-
-The third expedition was Torres’ own, neither more nor less meager than
-Leoncia’s, for it was composed only of himself and one, José Mancheno, a
-notorious murderer of the place whom Torres, for private reasons, had
-saved from the buzzards of San Juan. But Torres’ plans, in the matter of
-an expedition, were more ambitious than they appeared. Not far up the
-slopes of the Cordilleras dwelt the strange tribe of the Caroos.
-Originally founded by runaway negro slaves of Africa and Carib slaves of
-the Mosquito Coast, the renegades had perpetuated themselves with stolen
-women of the tierra caliente and with fled women slaves like themselves.
-Between the Mayas beyond, and the government of the coast, this unique
-colony had maintained itself in semi-independence. Added to, in later
-days, by runaway Spanish prisoners, the Caroos had become a hotchpotch
-of bloods and breeds, possessing a name and a taint so bad that the then
-governing power of Colombia, had it not been too occupied with its own
-particular political grafts, would have sent armies to destroy the
-pest-hole. And in this pest-hole of the Caroos José Mancheno had been
-born of a Spanish-murderer father and a mestiza-murderess mother. And to
-this pest-hole José Mancheno was leading Torres in order that the
-commands of Thomas Regan of Wall Street might be carried out.
-
- * * * * *
-
-“Lucky we found him when we did,” Francis told Henry, as they rode at
-the rear of the last Maya priest.
-
-“He’s pretty senile,” Henry nodded. “Look at him.”
-
-The old man, as he led the way, was forever pulling out the sacred
-tassel and mumbling and muttering as he fingered it.
-
-“Hope the old gentleman doesn’t wear it out,” was Henry’s fervent wish.
-“You’d think he’d read the directions once and remember them for a
-little while instead of continually pawing them over.”
-
-They rode out through the jungle into a clear space that looked as if at
-some time man had hewn down the jungle and fought it back. Beyond, by
-the vista afforded by the clearing, the mountain called Blanco Rovalo
-towered high in the sunny sky. The old Maya halted his mule, ran over
-certain strings in the tassel, pointed at the mountain, and spoke in
-broken Spanish:
-
-“It says: _In the foot-steps of the God wait till the eyes of Chia
-flash._”
-
-He indicated the particular knots of a particular string as the source
-of his information.
-
-“Where are the foot-steps, old priest?” Henry demanded, staring about
-him at the unbroken sward.
-
-But the old man started his mule, and, with a tattoo of bare heels on
-the creature’s ribs, hastened it on across the clearing and into the
-jungle beyond.
-
-“He’s like a hound on the scent, and it looks as if the scent is getting
-hot,” Francis remarked.
-
-At the end of half a mile, where the jungle turned to grass-land on
-swift-rising slopes the old man forced his mule into a gallop which he
-maintained until he reached a natural depression in the ground. Three
-feet or more in depth, of area sufficient to accommodate a dozen persons
-in comfort, its form was strikingly like that which some colossal human
-foot could have made.
-
-“The foot-step of the God,” the old priest proclaimed solemnly, ere he
-slid off his mule and prostrated himself in prayer. “_In the foot-step
-of the God must we wait till the eyes of Chia flash_——so say the sacred
-knots.”
-
-“Pretty good place for a meal,” Henry vouchsafed, looking down into the
-depression. “While waiting for the mumbo-jumbo foolery to come off, we
-might as well stay our stomachs.”
-
-“If Chia doesn’t object,” laughed Francis.
-
-And Chia did not object, at least the old priest could not find any
-objection written in the knots.
-
-While the mules were being tethered on the edge of the first break of
-woods, water was fetched from a nearby spring and a fire built in the
-foot-step. The old Maya seemed oblivious of everything, as he mumbled
-endless prayers and ran the knots over and over.
-
-“If only he doesn’t blow up,” Francis said.
-
-“I thought he was wild-eyed the first day we met him up in Juchitan,”
-concurred Henry. “But it’s nothing to the way his eyes are now.”
-
-Here spoke the peon, who, unable to understand a word of their English,
-nevertheless sensed the drift of it.
-
-“This is very religious, very dangerous, to have anything to do with the
-old Maya sacred things. It is the death-road. My father knows. Many men
-have died. The deaths are sudden and horrible. Even Maya priests have
-died. My father’s father so died. He, too, loved a woman of the tierra
-caliente. And for love of her, for gold, he sold the Maya secret and by
-the knot-writing led tierra caliente men to the treasure. He died. They
-all died. My father does not like the women of the tierra caliente now
-that he is old. He liked them too well in his youth, which was his sin.
-And he knows the danger of leading you to the treasure. Many men have
-sought during the centuries. Of those who found it, not one came back.
-It is said that even conquistadores and pirates of the English Morgan
-have won to the hiding-place and decorated it with their bones.”
-
-“And when your father dies,” Francis queried, “then, being his son, you
-will be the Maya high priest?”
-
-“No, senor,” the peon shook his head. “I am only half-Maya. I cannot
-read the knots. My father did not teach me because I was not of the pure
-Maya blood.”
-
-“And if he should die, right now, is there any other Maya who can read
-the knots?”
-
-“No, senor. My father is the last living man who knows that ancient
-language.”
-
-But the conversation was broken in upon by Leoncia and Ricardo, who,
-having tethered their mules with the others, were gazing sheepishly down
-from the rim of the depression. The faces of Henry and Francis lighted
-with joy at the sight of Leoncia, while their mouths opened and their
-tongues articulated censure and scolding. Also, they insisted on her
-returning with Ricardo.
-
-“But you cannot send me away before giving me something to eat,” she
-persisted, slipping down the slope of the depression with pure feminine
-cunning in order to place the discussion on a closer and more intimate
-basis.
-
-Aroused by their voices, the old Maya came out of a trance of prayer and
-observed her with wrath. And in wrath he burst upon her, intermingling
-occasional Spanish words and phrases with the flood of denunciation in
-Maya.
-
-“He says that women are no good,” the peon interpreted in the first
-pause. “He says women bring quarrels among men, the quick steel, the
-sudden death. Bad luck and God’s wrath are ever upon them. Their ways
-are not God’s ways, and they lead men to destruction. He says women are
-the eternal enemy of God and man, forever keeping God and man apart. He
-says women have ever cluttered the foot-steps of God and have kept men
-away from travelling the path of God to God. He says this woman must go
-back.”
-
-With laughing eyes, Francis whistled his appreciation of the diatribe,
-while Henry said:
-
-“Now will you be good, Leoncia? You see what a Maya thinks of your sex.
-This is no place for you. California’s the place. Women vote there.”
-
-“The trouble is that the old man is remembering the woman who brought
-misfortune upon him in the heyday of his youth,” Francis said. He turned
-to the peon. “Ask your father to read the knot-writing and see what it
-says for or against women traveling in the foot-steps of God.”
-
-In vain the ancient high priest fumbled the sacred writing. There was
-not to be found the slightest authoritative objection to woman.
-
-“He’s mixing his own experiences up with his mythology,” Francis grinned
-triumphantly. “So I guess it’s pretty near all right, Leoncia, for you
-to stay for a bite to eat. The coffee’s made. After that....”
-
-But “after that” came before. Scarcely had they seated themselves on the
-ground and begun to eat, when Francis, standing up to serve Leoncia with
-tortillas, had his hat knocked off.
-
-“My word!” he said, sitting down. “That was sudden. Henry, take a squint
-and see who tried to pot-shoot me.”
-
-The next moment, save for the peon’s father, all eyes were peeping
-across the rim of the foot-step. What they saw, creeping upon them from
-every side, was a nondescript and bizarrely clad horde of men who seemed
-members of no particular race but composed of all races. The breeds of
-the entire human family seemed to have moulded their lineaments and
-vari-colored their skins.
-
-“The mangiest bunch I ever laid eyes on,” was Francis’ comment.
-
-“They are the Caroos,” the peon muttered, betraying fear.
-
-“And who in——” Francis began. Instantly he amended. “And who in Paradise
-are the Caroos?”
-
-“They come from hell,” was the peon’s answer. “They are more savage than
-the Spaniard, more terrible than the Maya. They neither give nor take in
-marriage, nor does a priest reside among them. They are the devil’s own
-spawn, and their ways are the devil’s ways, only worse.”
-
-Here the Maya arose, and, with accusing finger, denounced Leoncia for
-being the cause of this latest trouble. A bullet creased his shoulder
-and half-whirled him about.
-
-“Drag him down!” Henry shouted to Francis. “He’s the only man who knows
-the knot-language; and the eyes of Chia, whatever that may mean, have
-not yet flashed.”
-
-Francis obeyed, with an out-reach of arm to the old fellow’s legs,
-jerking him down in a crumpled, skeleton-like fall.
-
-Henry loosed his rifle, and elicited a fusillade in response. Next,
-Ricardo, Francis, and the peon joined in. But the old man, still running
-his knots, fixed his gaze across the far rim of the foot-step upon a
-rugged wall of mountain beyond.
-
-“Hold on!” shouted Francis, in a vain attempt to make himself heard
-above the shooting.
-
-He was compelled to crawl from one to another and shake them into
-ceasing from firing. And to each, separately, he had to explain that all
-their ammunition was with the mules, and that they must be sparing with
-the little they had in their magazines and belts.
-
-“And don’t let them hit you,” Henry warned. “They’ve got old muskets and
-blunderbusses that will drive holes through you the size of
-dinner-plates.”
-
-An hour later, the last cartridge, save several in Francis’ automatic
-pistol, was gone; and to the irregular firing of the Caroos the pit
-replied with silence. José Mancheno was the first to guess the
-situation. He cautiously crept up to the edge of the pit to make sure,
-then signaled to the Caroos that the ammunition of the besieged was
-exhausted and to come on.
-
-“Nicely trapped, senors,” he exulted down at the defenders, while from
-all around the rim laughter arose from the Caroos.
-
-But the next moment the change that came over the situation was as
-astounding as a transformation scene in a pantomime. With wild cries of
-terror the Caroos were fleeing. Such was their disorder and haste that
-numbers of them dropped their muskets and machetes.
-
-“Anyway, I’ll get you, Senor Buzzard,” Francis pleasantly assured
-Mancheno, at the same time flourishing his pistol at him.
-
-He leveled his weapon as Mancheno fled, but reconsidered and did not
-draw trigger.
-
-“I’ve only three shots left,” he explained to Henry, half in apology.
-“And in this country one can never tell when three shots will come in
-handiest, ‘as I’ve found out, beyond a doubt, beyond a doubt.’”
-
-“Look!” the peon cried, pointing to his father and to the distant
-mountainside. “That is why they ran away. They have learned the peril of
-the sacred things of Maya.”
-
-The old priest, running over the knots of the tassel in an ecstasy that
-was almost trance-like, was gazing fixedly at the distant mountainside,
-from which, side by side and close together, two bright flashes of light
-were repeating themselves.
-
-“Twin mirrors could do it in the hands of a man,” was Henry’s comment.
-
-“They are the eyes of Chia,” the peon repeated. “It is so written in the
-knots as you have heard my father say. _Wait in the foot-steps of the
-God till the eyes of Chia flash._”
-
-The old man rose to his feet and wildly proclaimed: “_To find the
-treasure we must find the eyes!_”
-
-“All right, old top,” Henry soothed him, as, with his small traveler’s
-compass he took the bearings of the flashes.
-
- * * * * *
-
-“He’s got a compass inside his head,” Henry remarked an hour later of
-the old priest, who led on the foremost mule. “I check him by the
-compass, and, no matter how the natural obstacles compel him to deviate,
-he comes back to the course as if he were himself a magnetic needle.”
-
-Not since leaving the foot-step, had the flashings been visible. Only
-from that one spot, evidently, did the rugged landscape permit the
-seeing of them. Rugged the country was, broken into arroyos and cliffs,
-interspersed with forest patches and stretches of sand and of volcanic
-ash.
-
-At last the way became impassable for their mounts, and Ricardo was left
-behind to keep charge of the mules and mule-peons and to make a camp.
-The remainder of the party continued on, scaling the jungle-clad steep
-that blocked their way by hoisting themselves and one another up from
-root to root. The old Maya, still leading, was oblivious to Leoncia’s
-presence.
-
-Suddenly, half a mile farther on, he halted and shrank back as if stung
-by a viper. Francis laughed, and across the wild landscape came back a
-discordant, mocking echo. The last priest of the Mayas ran the knots
-hurriedly, picked out a particular string, ran its knots twice, and then
-announced:
-
-“_When the God laughs, beware!—so say the knots._”
-
-Fifteen minutes were lost ere Henry and Francis succeeded in only partly
-convincing him, by repeated trials of their voices, that the thing was
-an echo.
-
-Half an hour later, they debouched on a series of abrupt-rolling
-sand-dunes. Again the old man shrank back. From the sand in which they
-strode, arose a clamor of noise. When they stood still, all was still. A
-single step, and all the sand about them became vocal.
-
-“_When the God laughs, beware!_” the old Maya warned.
-
-Drawing a circle in the sand with his finger, which shouted at him as he
-drew it, he sank down within it on his knees, and as his knees contacted
-on the sand arose a very screaming and trumpeting of sound. The peon
-joined his father inside the noisy circle, where, with his forefinger,
-the old man was tracing screeching cabalistic figures and designs.
-
-Leoncia was overcome, and clung both to Henry and Francis. Even Francis
-was perturbed.
-
-“The echo was an echo,” he said. “But here is no echo. I don’t
-understand it. Frankly, it gets my goat.”
-
-“Piffle!” Henry retorted, stirring the sand with his foot till it
-shouted again. “It’s the barking sand. On the island of Kauai, down in
-the Hawaiian Islands, I have been across similar barking sands——quite a
-place for tourists, I assure you. Only this is a better specimen, and
-much noisier. The scientists have a score of high-brow theories to
-account for the phenomenon. It occurs in several other places in the
-world, as I have heard. There’s only one thing to do, and that is to
-follow the compass bearing which leads straight across. Such sands do
-bark, but they have never been known to bite.”
-
-But the last of the priests could not be persuaded out of his circle,
-although they succeeded in disturbing him from his prayers long enough
-to spout a flood of impassioned Maya speech.
-
-“He says,” the son interpreted, “that we are bent on such sacrilege that
-the very sands cry out against us. He will go no nearer to the dread
-abode of Chia. Nor will I. His father died there, as is well known
-amongst the Mayas. He says he will not die there. He says he is not old
-enough to die.”
-
-“The miserable octogenarian!” Francis laughed, and was startled by the
-ghostly, mocking laugh of the echo, while all about them the sand-dunes
-bayed in chorus. “Too youthful to die! How about you, Leoncia? Are you
-too young to die yet a while?”
-
-“Say,” she smiled back, moving her foot slightly so as to bring a moan
-of reproach from the sand beneath it. “On the contrary, I am too old to
-die just because the cliffs echo our laughter back at us and because the
-sandhills bark at us. Come, let us go on. We are very close to those
-flashings. Let the old man wait within his circle until we come back.”
-
-She cast off their hands and stepped forward, and as they followed, all
-the dunes became inarticulate, while one, near to them, down the sides
-of which ran a slide of sand, rumbled and thundered. Fortunately for
-them, as they were soon to learn, Francis, at abandoning the mules, had
-equipped himself with a coil of thin, strong rope.
-
-Once across the sands they encountered more echoes. On trials, they
-found their halloes distinctly repeated as often as six or eight times.
-
-“Hell’s bells,” said Henry. “No wonder the natives fight shy of such a
-locality!”
-
-“Wasn’t it Mark Twain who wrote about a man whose hobby was making a
-collection of echoes?” Francis queried.
-
-“Never heard of him. But this is certainly some fine collection of Maya
-echoes. They chose the region wisely for a hiding place. Undoubtedly it
-was always sacred, even before the Spaniards came. The old priests knew
-the natural causes of the mysteries, and passed them over to the herd as
-mystery with a capital ‘M’ and supernatural in origin.”
-
-Not many minutes afterward they emerged on an open, level space, close
-under a crannied and ledge-ribbed cliff, and exchanged their single-file
-mode of progression to three-abreast. The ground was a hard, brittle
-crust of surface, so crystalline and dry as never to suggest that it was
-aught else but crystalline and dry all the way down. In an ebullition of
-spirits, desiring to keep both men on an equality of favor, Leoncia
-seized their hands and started them into a run. At the end of half a
-dozen strides the disaster happened. Simultaneously Henry and Francis
-broke through the crust, sinking to their thighs, and Leoncia was only a
-second behind them in breaking through and sinking almost as deep.
-
-“Hell’s bells!” Henry muttered. “It’s the very devil’s own landscape.”
-
-And his low-spoken words were whispered back to him from the nearby
-cliffs on all sides and endlessly and sibilantly repeated.
-
-Not at first did they fully apprehend their danger. It was when, by
-their struggles, they found themselves waist-deep and steadily sinking,
-that the two men grasped the gravity of the situation. Leoncia still
-laughed at the predicament, for it seemed no more than that to her.
-
-“Quicksand,” Francis gasped.
-
-“Quicksand!” all the landscape gasped back at him, and continued to gasp
-it in fading ghostly whispers, repeating it and gossiping about it with
-gleeful unction.
-
-“It’s a pot-hole filled with quicksand,” Henry corroborated.
-
-“Maybe the old boy was right in sticking back there on the barking
-sands,” observed Francis.
-
-The ghostly whispering redoubled upon itself and was a long time in
-dying away.
-
-By this time they were midway between waist and arm-pits and sinking as
-methodically as ever.
-
-“Well, somebody’s got to get out of the scrape alive,” Henry remarked.
-
-And, even without discussing the choice, both men began to hoist Leoncia
-up, although the effort and her weight thrust them more quickly down.
-When she stood, free and clear, a foot on the nearest shoulder of each
-of the two men she loved, Francis said, though the landscape mocked him:
-
-“Now, Leoncia, we’re going to toss you out of this. At the word ‘Go!’
-let yourself go. And you must strike full length and softly on the
-crust. You’ll slide a little. But don’t let yourself stop. Keep on
-going. Crawl out to the solid land on your hands and knees. And,
-whatever you do, don’t stand up until you reach the solid land.—Ready,
-Henry?”
-
-Between them, though it hastened their sinking, they swung her back and
-forth, free in the air, and, the third swing, at Francis’ “Go!” heaved
-her shoreward.
-
-Her obedience to their instructions was implicit, and, on hands and
-knees, she gained the solid rocks of the shore.
-
-“Now for the rope!” she called to them.
-
-But by this time Francis was too deep to be able to remove the coil from
-around his neck and under one arm. Henry did it for him, and, though the
-exertion sank him to an equal deepness, managed to fling one end of the
-rope to Leoncia.
-
-At first she pulled on it. Next, she fastened a turn around a boulder
-the size of a motor car, and let Henry pull. But it was in vain. The
-strain or purchase was so lateral that it seemed only to pull him
-deeper. The quicksand was sucking and rising over his shoulders when
-Leoncia cried out, precipitating a very Bedlam of echoes:
-
-“Wait! Stop pulling! I have an idea! Give me all the slack! Just save
-enough of the end to tie under your shoulders!”
-
-The next moment, dragging the rope after her by the other end, she was
-scaling the cliff. Forty feet up, where a gnarled and dwarfed tree
-rooted in the crevices, she paused. Passing the rope across the
-tree-trunk, as over a hook, she drew in the slack and made fast to a
-boulder of several hundredweight.
-
-“Good for the girl!” Francis applauded to Henry.
-
-Both men had grasped her plan, and success depended merely on her
-ability to dislodge the boulder and topple it off the ledge. Five
-precious minutes were lost, until she could find a dead branch of
-sufficient strength to serve as a crowbar. Attacking the boulder from
-behind and working with tense coolness while her two lovers continued to
-sink, she managed at the last to topple it over the brink.
-
-As it fell, the rope tautened with a jerk that fetched an involuntary
-grunt from Henry’s suddenly constricted chest. Slowly, he arose out of
-the quicksand, his progress being accompanied by loud sucking reports as
-the sand reluctantly released him. But, when he cleared the surface, the
-boulder so outweighed him that he shot shoreward across the crust until
-directly under the purchase above, when the boulder came to rest on the
-ground beside him.
-
-Only Francis’ head, arms, and tops of shoulders were visible above the
-quicksand when the end of the rope was flung to him. And, when he stood
-beside them on terra firma, and when he shook his fist at the quicksand
-he had escaped by so narrow a shave, they joined with him in deriding
-it. And a myriad ghosts derided them back, and all the air about them
-was woven by whispering shuttles into an evil texture of mockery.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIV
-
-
-“We can’t be a million miles away from it,” Henry said, as the trio came
-to pause at the foot of a high steep cliff. “If it’s any farther on,
-then the course lies right straight over the cliff, and, since we can’t
-climb it and from the extent of it it must be miles around, the source
-of those flashes ought to be right here.”
-
-“Now could it have been a man with looking-glasses?” Leoncia ventured.
-
-“Most likely some natural phenomenon,” Francis answered. “I’m strong on
-natural phenomena since those barking sands.”
-
-Leoncia, who chanced to be glancing along the face of the cliff farther
-on, suddenly stiffened with attention and cried, “Look!”
-
-Their eyes followed hers, and rested on the same point. What they saw
-was no flash, but a steady persistence of white light that blazed and
-burned like the sun. Following the base of the cliff at a scramble, both
-men remarked, from the density of vegetation, that there had been no
-travel of humans that way in many years. Breathless from their
-exertions, they broke out through the brush upon an open-space where a
-not-ancient slide of rock from the cliff precluded the growth of
-vegetable life.
-
-Leoncia clapped her hands. There was no need for her to point. Thirty
-feet above, on the face of the cliff, were two huge eyes. Fully a fathom
-across was each of the eyes, their surfaces brazen with some white
-reflecting substance.
-
-“The eyes of Chia!” she cried.
-
-Henry scratched his head with sudden recollection.
-
-“I’ve a shrewd suspicion I can tell you what they’re composed of,” he
-said. “I’ve never seen it before, but I’ve heard old-timers mention it.
-It’s an old Maya trick. My share of the treasure, Francis, against a
-perforated dime, that I can tell you what the reflecting stuff is.”
-
-“Done!” cried Francis. “A man’s a fool not to take odds like that, even
-if it’s a question of the multiplication table. Possibly millions of
-dollars against a positive bad dime! I’d bet two times two made five on
-the chance that a miracle could prove it. Name it? What is it? The bet
-is on.”
-
-“Oysters,” Henry smiled. “Oyster shells, or, rather, pearl-oyster
-shells. It’s mother-of-pearl, cunningly mosaicked and cemented in so as
-to give a continuous reflecting surface. Now you have to prove me wrong,
-so climb up and see.”
-
-Beneath the eyes, extending a score of feet up and down the cliff, was a
-curious, triangular out-jut of rock. Almost was it like an excrescence
-on the face of the cliff. The apex of it reached within a yard of the
-space that intervened between the eyes. Rough inequalities of surface,
-and cat-like clinging on Francis’ part, enabled him to ascend the ten
-feet to the base of the excrescence. Thence, up to the ridge of it, the
-way was easier. But a twenty-five-foot fall and a broken arm or leg in
-the midst of such isolation was no pleasant thing to consider, and
-Leoncia, causing an involuntary jealous gleam to light Henry’s eyes,
-called up:
-
-“Oh, do be careful, Francis!”
-
-Standing on the tip of the triangle he was gazing, now into one, and
-then into the other, of the eyes. He drew his hunting knife and began to
-dig and pry at the right-hand eye.
-
-“If the old gentleman were here he’d have a fit at such sacrilege,”
-Henry commented.
-
-“The perforated dime is yours,” Francis called down, at the same time
-dropping into Henry’s outstretched palm the fragment he had dug loose.
-
-Mother-of-pearl it was, a flat piece cut with definite purpose to fit in
-with the many other pieces to form the eye.
-
-“Where there’s smoke there’s fire,” Henry adjudged. “Not for nothing did
-the Mayas select this God-forsaken spot and stick these eyes of Chia on
-the cliff.”
-
-“Looks as if we’d made a mistake in leaving the old gentleman and his
-sacred knots behind,” Francis said.
-
-“The knots should tell all about it and what our next move should be.”
-
-“Where there are eyes there should be a nose,” Leoncia contributed.
-
-“And there is!” exclaimed Francis. “Heavens! That was the nose I just
-climbed up. We’re too close up against it to have perspective. At a
-hundred yards’ distance it would look like a colossal face.”
-
-Leoncia advanced gravely and kicked at a decaying deposit of leaves and
-twigs evidently blown there by tropic gales.
-
-“Then the mouth ought to be where a mouth belongs, here under the nose,”
-she said.
-
-In a trice Henry and Francis had kicked the rubbish aside and exposed an
-opening too small to admit a man’s body. It was patent that the
-rock-slide had partly blocked the way. A few rocks heaved aside gave
-space for Francis to insert his head and shoulders and gaze about with a
-lighted match.
-
-“Watch out for snakes,” warned Leoncia.
-
-Francis grunted acknowledgment and reported:
-
-“This is no natural cavern. It’s all hewn rock, and well done, if I’m
-any judge.” A muttered expletive announced the burning of his fingers by
-the expiring match-stub. And next they heard his voice, in accents of
-surprise: “Don’t need any matches. It’s got a lighting system of its
-own——from somewhere above——regular concealed lighting, though it’s
-daylight all right. Those old Mayas were certainly some goers. Wouldn’t
-be surprised if we found an elevator, hot and cold water, a furnace, and
-a Swede janitor.—Well, so long.”
-
-His trunk, and legs, and feet disappeared, and then his voice issued
-forth:
-
-“Come on in. The cave is fine.”
-
-“And now aren’t you glad you let me come along?” Leoncia twitted, as she
-joined the two men on the level floor of the rock-hewn chamber, where,
-their eyes quickly accustoming to the mysterious gray-percolation of
-daylight, they could see about them with surprising distinctness.
-“First, I found the eyes for you, and, next, the mouth. If I hadn’t been
-along, most likely, by this time, you’d have been half a mile away,
-going around the cliff and going farther and farther every step you
-took.
-
-“But the place is bare as old Mother Hubbard’s cupboard,” she added, the
-next moment.
-
-“Naturally,” said Henry. “This is only the antechamber. Not so sillily
-would the Mayas hide the treasure the conquistadores were so mad after.
-I’m willing to wager right now that we’re almost as far from finding the
-actual treasure as we would be if we were not here but in San Antonio.”
-
-Twelve or fifteen feet in width and of an unascertainable height, the
-passage led them what Henry judged forty paces, or well over a hundred
-feet. Then it abruptly narrowed, turned at a right angle to the right,
-and, with a similar right angle to the left, made an elbow into another
-spacious chamber.
-
-Still the mysterious percolation of daylight guided the way for their
-eyes, and Francis, in the lead, stopped so suddenly that Leoncia and
-Henry, in a single file behind, collided with him. Leoncia in the
-center, and Henry on her left, they stood abreast and gazed down a long
-avenue of humans, long dead, but not dust.
-
-“Like the Egyptians, the Mayas knew embalming and mummifying,” Henry
-said, his voice unconsciously sinking to a whisper in the presence of so
-many unburied dead, who stood erect and at gaze, as if still alive.
-
-All were European-clad, and all exposed the impassive faces of
-Europeans. About them, as to the life, were draped the ages-rotten
-habiliments of the conquistadores and of the English pirates. Two of
-them, with visors raised, were encased in rusty armor. Their swords and
-cutlasses were belted to them or held in their shriveled hands, and
-through their belts were thrust huge flintlock pistols of archaic model.
-
-“The old Maya was right,” Francis whispered. “They’ve decorated the
-hiding place with their mortal remains and been stuck up in the lobby as
-a warning to trespassers.—Say! If that chap isn’t a real Iberian! I’ll
-bet he played haia-lai, and his fathers before him.”
-
-“And that’s a Devonshire man if ever I saw one,” Henry whispered back.
-“Perforated dimes to pieces-of-eight that he poached the fallow deer and
-fled the king’s wrath in the first forecastle for the Spanish Main.”
-
-“Br-r-r!” Leoncia shivered, clinging to both men. “The sacred things of
-the Mayas are deadly and ghastly. And there is a classic vengeance about
-it. The would-be robbers of the treasure-house have become its
-defenders, guarding it with their unperishing clay.”
-
-They were loath to proceed. The garmented spectres of the ancient dead
-held them temporarily spell-bound. Henry grew melodramatic.
-
-“Even to this far, mad place,” he said, “as early as the beginning of
-the Conquest, their true-hound noses led them on the treasure-scent.
-Even though they could not get away with it, they won unerringly to
-it.—My hat is off to you, pirates and conquistadores! I salute you, old
-gallant plunderers, whose noses smelt out gold, and whose hearts were
-brave sufficient to fight for it!”
-
-“Huh!” Francis concurred, as he urged the other two to traverse the
-avenue of the ancient adventurers. “Old Sir Henry himself ought to be
-here at the head of the procession.”
-
-Thirty paces they took, ere the passage elbowed as before, and, at the
-very end of the double-row of mummies, Henry brought his companions to a
-halt as he pointed and said:
-
-“I don’t know about Sir Henry, but there’s Alvarez Torres.”
-
-Under a Spanish helmet, in decapitated medieval Spanish dress, a big
-Spanish sword in its brown and withered hand, stood a mummy whose lean
-brown face for all the world was the lean brown face of Alvarez Torres.
-Leoncia gasped, shrank back, and crossed herself at the sight.
-
-Francis released her to Henry, advanced, and fingered the cheeks and
-lips and forehead of the thing, and laughed reassuringly:
-
-“I only wish Alvarez Torres were as dead as this dead one is. I haven’t
-the slightest doubt, however, but what Torres descended from him——I mean
-before he came here to take up his final earthly residence as a member
-of the Maya Treasure Guard.”
-
-Leoncia passed the grim figure shudderingly. This time, the elbow
-passage was very dark, compelling Henry, who had changed into the lead,
-to light numerous matches.
-
-“Hello!” he said, as he paused at the end of a couple of hundred feet.
-“Gaze on that for workmanship! Look at the dressing of that stone!”
-
-From beyond, gray light streamed into the passage, making matches
-unnecessary to see. Half into a niche was thrust a stone the size of the
-passage. It was apparent that it had been used to block the passage. The
-dressing was exquisite, the sides and edges of the block precisely
-aligned with the place in the wall into which it was made to dovetail.
-
-“I’ll wager here’s where the old Maya’s father died,” Francis exclaimed.
-“He knew the secret of the balances and leverages that pivoted the
-stone, and it was only partly pivoted, as you’ll observe——”
-
-“Hell’s bells!” Henry interrupted, pointing before him on the floor at a
-scattered skeleton. “It must be what’s left of him. It’s fairly recent,
-or he would have been mummified. Most likely he was the last visitor
-before us.”
-
-“The old priest said his father led men of the tierra caliente here,”
-Leoncia reminded Henry.
-
-“Also,” Francis supplemented, “he said that none returned.”
-
-Henry, who had located the skull and picked it up, uttered another
-exclamation and lighted a match to show the others what he had
-discovered: Not only was the skull dented with what must have been a
-blow from a sword or a machete, but a shattered hole in the back of the
-skull showed the unmistakable entrance of a bullet. Henry shook the
-skull, was rewarded by an interior rattling, shook again, and shook out
-a partly flattened bullet. Francis examined it.
-
-“From a horse-pistol,” he concluded aloud. “With weak or greatly
-deteriorated powder, because, in a place like this, it must have been
-fired pretty close to point blank range and yet failed to go all the way
-through. And it’s an aboriginal skull all right.”
-
-A right-angled turn completed the elbow and gave them access to a small
-but well-lighted rock chamber. From a window, high up and barred with
-vertical bars of stone a foot thick and half as wide, poured gray
-daylight. The floor of the place was littered with white-picked bones of
-men. An examination of the skulls showed them to be those of Europeans.
-Scattered among them were rifles, pistols, and knives, with, here and
-there, a machete.
-
-“Thus far they won, across the very threshold to the treasure,” Francis
-said, “and, from the looks, began to fight for its possession before
-they laid hands on it. Too bad the old man isn’t here to see what
-happened to his father.”
-
-“Might there not have been survivors who managed to get away with the
-loot?” suggested Henry.
-
-But at that moment, casting, his eyes from the bones to a survey of the
-chamber, Francis saw what made him say:
-
-“Without doubt, no. See those gems in those eyes. Rubies, or I never saw
-a ruby!”
-
-They followed his gaze to the stone statue of a squat and heavy female
-who stared at them red-eyed and open-mouthed. So large was the mouth
-that it made a caricature of the rest of the face. Beside it, carved
-similarly of stone, and on somewhat more heroic lines, was a more
-obscene and hideous male statue, with one ear of proportioned size and
-the other ear as grotesquely large as the female’s mouth.
-
-“The beauteous dame must be Chia all right,” Henry grinned. “But who’s
-her gentleman friend with the elephant ear and the green eyes?”
-
-“Search me,” Francis laughed. “But this I do know: those green eyes of
-the elephant-eared one are the largest emeralds I’ve ever seen or
-dreamed of. Each of them is really too large to possess fair carat
-value. They should be crown jewels or nothing.”
-
-“But a couple of emeralds and a couple of rubies, no matter what size,
-should not constitute the totality of the Maya treasure,” Henry
-contended. “We’re across the threshold of it, and yet we lack the key——”
-
-“Which the old Maya, back on the barking sands, undoubtedly holds in
-that sacred tassel of his,” Leoncia said. “Except for these two statues
-and the bones on the floor, the place is bare.”
-
-As she spoke, she advanced to look the male statue over more closely.
-The grotesque ear centered her attention, and she pointed into it as she
-added: “I don’t know about the key, but there is the key-hole.”
-
-True enough, the elephantine ear, instead of enfolding an orifice as an
-ear of such size should, was completely blocked up save for a small
-aperture that not too remotely resembled a key-hole. They wandered
-vainly about the chamber, tapping the walls and floor, seeking for
-cunningly-hidden passageways or unguessable clues to the hiding place of
-the treasure.
-
-“Bones of tierra caliente men, two idols, two emeralds of enormous size,
-two rubies ditto, and ourselves, are all the place contains,” Francis
-summed up. “Only a couple of things remain for us to do: go back and
-bring up Ricardo and the mules to make camp outside; and bring up the
-old gentleman and his sacred knots if we have to carry him.”
-
-“You wait with Leoncia, and I’ll go back and bring them up,” Henry
-volunteered, when they had threaded the long passages and the avenues of
-the erect dead and won to the sunshine and the sky outside the face of
-the cliff.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Back on the barking sands the peon and his father knelt in the circle so
-noisily drawn by the old man’s forefinger. A local rain squall beat upon
-them, and, though the peon shivered, the old man prayed on oblivious to
-what might happen to his skin in the way of wind and water. It was
-because the peon shivered and was uncomfortable that he observed two
-things which his father missed. First, he saw Alvarez Torres and José
-Mancheno cautiously venture out from the jungle upon the sand. Next, he
-saw a miracle. The miracle was that the pair of them trudged steadily
-across the sand without causing the slightest sound to arise from their
-progress. When they had disappeared ahead, he touched his finger
-tentatively to the sand, and aroused no ghostly whisperings. He thrust
-his finger into the sand, yet all was silent, as was it silent when he
-buffeted the sand heartily with the flat of his palm. The passing shower
-had rendered the sand dumb.
-
-He shook his father out of his prayers, announcing:
-
-“The sand no longer is noisy. It is as silent as the grave. And I have
-seen the enemy of the rich Gringo pass across the sand without sound. He
-is not devoid of sin, this Alvarez Torres, yet did the sand make no
-sound. The sand has died. The voice of the sand is not. Where the sinful
-may walk, you and I, old father, may walk.”
-
-Inside the circle, the old Maya, with trembling forefinger in the sand,
-traced further cabalistic characters; and the sand did not shout back at
-him. Outside the circle it was the same——because the sand had become
-wet, and because it was the way of the sand to be vocal only when it was
-bone-dry under the sun. He fingered the knots of the sacred writing
-tassel.
-
-“It says,” he reported, “that when the sand no longer talks it is safe
-to proceed. So far I have obeyed all instruction. In order to obey
-further instruction, let us now proceed.”
-
-So well did they proceed, that, shortly beyond the barking sands, they
-overtook Torres and Mancheno, which worthy pair slunk off into the brush
-on one side, watched the priest and his son go by, and took up their
-trail well in the rear. While Henry, taking a short cut, missed both
-couples of men.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XV
-
-
-“Even so, it was a mistake and a weakness on my part to remain in
-Panama,” Francis was saying to Leoncia, as they sat side by side on the
-rocks outside the cave entrance, waiting Henry’s return.
-
-“Does the stock market of New York then mean so much to you?” Leoncia
-coquettishly teased; yet only part of it was coquetry, the major portion
-of it being temporization. She was afraid of being alone with this man
-whom she loved so astoundingly and terribly.
-
-Francis was impatient.
-
-“I am ever a straight talker, Leoncia. I say what I mean, in the
-directest, shortest way——”
-
-“Wherein you differ from us Spaniards,” she interpolated, “who must
-garnish and dress the simplest thoughts with all decorations of speech.”
-
-But he continued undeterred what he had started to say.
-
-“There you are a baffler, Leoncia, which was just what I was going to
-call you. I speak straight talk and true talk, which is a man’s way. You
-baffle in speech, and flutter like a butterfly——which, I grant, is a
-woman’s way and to be expected. Nevertheless, it is not fair ... to me.
-I tell you straight out the heart of me, and you understand. You do not
-tell me your heart. You flutter and baffle, and I do not understand.
-Therefore, you have me at a disadvantage. You know I love you. I have
-told you plainly. I? What do I know about you?”
-
-With downcast eyes and rising color in her cheeks, she sat silent,
-unable to reply.
-
-“You see!” he insisted. “You do not answer. You look warmer and more
-beautiful and desirable than ever, more enticing, in short; and yet you
-baffle me and tell me nothing of your heart or intention. Is it because
-you are woman? Or because you are Spanish?”
-
-She felt herself stirred profoundly. Beyond herself, yet in cool control
-of herself, she raised her eyes and looked steadily in his as steadily
-she said:
-
-“I can be Anglo-Saxon, or English, or American, or whatever you choose
-to name the ability to look things squarely in the face and to talk
-squarely into the face of things.” She paused and debated coolly with
-herself, and coolly resumed. “You complain that while you have told me
-that you love me, I have not told you whether or not I love you. I shall
-settle that forever and now. I do love you——”
-
-She thrust his eager arms away from her.
-
-“Wait!” she commanded. “Who is the woman now? Or the Spaniard? I had not
-finished. I love you. I am proud that I love you. Yet there is more. You
-have asked me for my heart and intention. I have told you part of the
-one. I now tell you all of the other: I _intend_ to marry Henry.”
-
-Such Anglo-Saxon directness left Francis breathless.
-
-“In heaven’s name, why?” was all he could utter.
-
-“Because I love Henry,” she answered, her eyes still unshrinkingly on
-his.
-
-“And you ... you say you love _me_?” he quavered.
-
-“And I love you, too. I love both of you. I am a good woman, at least I
-always used to think so. I still think so, though my reason tells me
-that I cannot love two men at the same time and be a good woman. I don’t
-care about that. If I am bad, it is I, and I cannot help myself for
-being what I was born to be.”
-
-She paused and waited, but her lover was still speechless.
-
-“And who’s the Anglo-Saxon now?” she queried, with a slight smile, half
-of bravery, half of amusement at the dumbness of consternation her words
-had produced in him. “I have told you, without baffling, without
-fluttering, my full heart and my full intention.”
-
-“But you can’t!” he protested wildly. “You can’t love me and marry
-Henry.”
-
-“Perhaps you have not understood,” she chided gravely. “I intend to
-marry Henry. I love you. I love Henry. But I cannot marry both of you.
-The law will not permit. Therefore I shall marry only one of you. It is
-my intention that that one be Henry.”
-
-“Then why, why,” he demanded, “did you persuade me into remaining?”
-
-“Because I loved you. I have already so told you.”
-
-“If you keep this up I shall go mad!” he cried.
-
-“I have felt like going mad over it myself many times,” she assured him.
-“If you think it is easy for me thus to play the Anglo-Saxon, you are
-mistaken. But no Anglo-Saxon, not even you whom I love so dearly, can
-hold me in contempt because I hide the shameful secrets of the impulses
-of my being. Less shameful I find it, for me to tell them, right out in
-meeting, to you. If this be Anglo-Saxon, make the most of it. If it be
-Spanish, and woman, and Solano, still make the most of it, for I am
-Spanish, and woman——a Spanish woman of the Solanos——”
-
-“But I don’t talk with my hands,” she added with a wan smile in the
-silence that fell.
-
-Just as he was about to speak, she hushed him, and both listened to a
-crackling and rustling from the underbrush that advertised the passage
-of humans.
-
-“Listen,” she whispered hurriedly, laying her hand suddenly on his arm,
-as if pleading. “I shall be finally Anglo-Saxon, and for the last time,
-when I tell you what I am going to tell you. Afterward, and for always,
-I shall be the baffling, fluttering, female Spaniard you have chosen for
-my description. Listen: I love Henry, it is true, very true. I love you
-more, much more. I shall marry Henry ... because I love him and am
-pledged to him. Yet always shall I love you more.”
-
-Before he could protest, the old Maya priest and his peon son emerged
-from the underbrush close upon them. Scarcely noticing their presence,
-the priest went down on his knees, exclaiming, in Spanish:
-
-“For the first time have my eyes beheld the eyes of Chia.”
-
-He ran the knots of the sacred tassel and began a prayer in Maya, which,
-could they have understood, ran as follows:
-
-“O immortal Chia, great spouse of the divine Hzatzl who created all
-things out of nothingness! O immortal spouse of Hzatzl, thyself the
-mother of the corn, the divinity of the heart of the husked grain,
-goddess of the rain and the fructifying sun-rays, nourisher of all the
-grains and roots and fruits for the sustenance of man! O glorious Chia,
-whose mouth ever commands the ear of Hzatzl, to thee humbly, thy priest,
-I make my prayer. Be kind to me, and forgiving. From thy mouth let issue
-forth the golden key that opens the ear of Hzatzl. Let thy faithful
-priest gain to Hzatzl’s treasure——Not for himself, O Divinity, but for
-the sake of his son whom the Gringo saved. Thy children, the Mayas,
-pass. There is no need for them of the treasure. I am thy last priest.
-With me passes all understanding of thee and of thy great spouse, whose
-name I breathe only with my forehead on the stones. Hear me, O Chia,
-hear me! My head is on the stones before thee!”
-
-For all of five minutes the old Maya lay prone, quivering and jerking as
-if in a catalepsy, while Leoncia and Francis looked curiously on,
-themselves half-swept by the unmistakable solemnity of the old man’s
-prayer, non-understandable though it was.
-
-Without waiting for Henry, Francis entered the cave a second time. With
-Leoncia beside him, he felt quite like a guide as he showed the old
-priest over the place. The latter, ever reading the knots and mumbling,
-followed behind, while the peon was left on guard outside. In the avenue
-of mummies the priest halted reverently——not so much for the mummies as
-for the sacred tassel.
-
-“It is so written,” he announced, holding out a particular string of
-knots. “These men were evil, and robbers. Their doom here is to wait
-forever outside the inner room of Maya mystery.”
-
-Francis hurried him past the heap of bones of his father before him, and
-led him into the inner chamber, where first of all, he prostrated
-himself before the two idols and prayed long and earnestly. After that,
-he studied certain of the strings very carefully. Then he made an
-announcement, first in Maya, which Francis gave him to know was
-unintelligible, and next in broken Spanish:
-
-“_From the mouth of Chia to the ear of Hzatzl_——so is it written.”
-
-Francis listened to the cryptic utterance, glanced into the dark cavity
-of the goddess’ mouth, stuck the blade of his hunting-knife into the
-key-hole of the god’s monstrous ear, then tapped the stone with the hilt
-of his knife and declared the statue to be hollow. Back to Chia, he was
-tapping her to demonstrate her hollowness, when the old Maya muttered:
-
-“_The feet of Chia rest upon nothingness._”
-
-Francis caught by the idea, made the old man verify the message by the
-knots.
-
-“Her feet _are_ large,” Leoncia laughed, “but they rest on the solid
-rock-floor and not on nothingness.”
-
-Francis pushed against the female deity with his hand and found that she
-moved easily. Gripping her with both hands, he began to wrestle, moving
-her with quick jerks and twists.
-
-“_For the strong men and unafraid will Chia walk_,” the priest read.
-“But the next three knots declare: _Beware! Beware! Beware!_”
-
-“Well, I guess, that nothingness, whatever it is, won’t bite me,”
-Francis chuckled, as he released the statue after shifting it a yard
-from its original position.
-
-“There, old lady, stand there for a while, or sit down if that will rest
-your feet. They ought to be tired after standing on nothing for so many
-centuries.”
-
-A cry from Leoncia drew his gaze to the portion of the floor just
-vacated by the large feet of Chia. Stepping backward from the displaced
-goddess, he had been just about to fall into the rock-hewn hole her feet
-had concealed. It was circular, and a full yard in diameter. In vain he
-tested the depth by dropping lighted matches. They fell burning, and,
-without reaching bottom, still falling, were extinguished by the draught
-of their flight.
-
-“It looks very much like nothingness without a bottom,” he adjudged, as
-he dropped a tiny stone fragment.
-
-Many seconds they listened ere they heard it strike.
-
-“Even that may not be the bottom,” Leoncia suggested. “It may have been
-struck against some projection from the side and even lodged there.”
-
-“Well, this will determine it,” Francis cried, seizing an ancient musket
-from among the bones on the floor and preparing to drop it.
-
-But the old man stopped him.
-
-“The message of the sacred knots is: _whoso violates the nothingness
-beneath the feet of Chia shall quickly and terribly die_.”
-
-“Far be it from me to make a stir in the void,” Francis grinned, tossing
-the musket aside. “But what are we to do now, old Maya man? From the
-mouth of Chia to the ear of Hzatzl sounds easy——but how?—and what? Run
-the sacred knots with thy fingers, old top, and find for us _how_ and
-_what_.”
-
-For the son of the priest, the peon with the frayed knees, the clock had
-struck. All unaware, he had seen his last sun-rise. No matter what
-happened this day, no matter what blind efforts he might make to escape,
-the day was to be his last day. Had he remained on guard at the
-cave-entrance, he would surely have been killed by Torres and Mancheno,
-who had arrived close on his heels.
-
-But, instead of so remaining, it entered his cautious, timid soul to
-make a scout out and beyond for possible foes. Thus, he missed death in
-the daylight under the sky. Yet the pace of the hands of the clock was
-unalterable, and neither nearer nor farther was his destined end from
-him.
-
-While he scouted, Alvarez Torres and José Mancheno arrived at the
-cave-opening. The colossal, mother-of-pearl eyes of Chia on the wall of
-the cliff were too much for the superstition-reared Caroo.
-
-“Do you go in,” he told Torres. “I will wait here and watch and guard.”
-
-And Torres, with strong in him the blood of the ancient forebear who
-stood faithfully through the centuries in the avenue of the mummy dead,
-entered the Maya cave as courageously as that forebear had entered.
-
-And the instant he was out of sight, José Mancheno, unafraid to murder
-treacherously any living, breathing man, but greatly afraid of the
-unseen world behind unexplainable phenomena, forgot the trust of watch
-and ward and stole away through the jungle. Thus, the peon, returning
-reassured from his scout and curious to learn the Maya secrets of his
-father and of the sacred tassel, found nobody at the cave mouth and
-himself entered into it close upon the heels of Torres.
-
-The latter trod softly and cautiously, for fear of disclosing his
-presence to those he trailed. Also his progress was still further
-delayed by the spectacle of the ancient dead in the hall of mummies.
-Curiously he examined these men whom history had told about, and for
-whom history had stopped there in the antechamber of the Maya gods.
-Especially curious was he at the sight of the mummy at the end of the
-line. The resemblance to him was too striking for him not to see, and he
-could not but believe that he was looking upon some direct
-great-ancestor of his.
-
-Still gazing and speculating, he was warned by approaching foot-steps,
-and glanced about for some place to hide. A sardonic humor seized him.
-Taking the helmet from the head of his ancient kin, he placed it on his
-own head. Likewise did he drape the rotten mantle about his form, and
-equip himself with the great sword and the great floppy boots that
-almost fell to pieces as he pulled them on. Next, half tenderly, he
-deposited the nude mummy on its back in the dark shadows behind the
-other mummies. And, finally, in the same spot at the end of the line,
-his hand resting on the sword-hilt, he assumed the same posture he had
-observed of the mummy.
-
-Only his eyes moved as he observed the peon venturing slowly and
-fearfully along the avenue of upright corpses. At sight of Torres he
-came to an abrupt stop and with wide eyes of dread muttered a succession
-of Maya prayers. Torres, so confronted, could only listen with closed
-eyes and conjecture. When he heard the peon move on he stole a look and
-saw him pause with apprehension at the narrow elbow-turn of the passage
-which he must venture next. Torres saw his chance and swung the sword
-aloft for the blow that would split the peon’s head in twain.
-
-Though this was the day and the very hour for the peon, the last second
-had not yet ticked. Not there, in the thoroughfare of the dead, was he
-destined to die under the hand of Torres. For Torres held his hand and
-slowly lowered the point of the sword to the floor, while the peon
-passed on into the elbow.
-
-The latter met up with his father, Leoncia, and Francis, just as Francis
-was demanding the priest to run the knots again for fuller information
-of the how and what that would open the ear of Hzatzl.
-
-“Put your hand into the mouth of Chia and draw forth the key,” the old
-man commanded his reluctant son, who went about obeying him most
-gingerly.
-
-“She won’t bite you——she’s stone,” Francis laughed at him in Spanish.
-
-“The Maya gods are never stone,” the old man reproved him. “They seem to
-be stone, but they are alive, and ever alive, and under the stone, and
-through the stone, and by the stone, as always, work their everlasting
-will.”
-
-Leoncia shuddered away from him and clung against Francis, her hand on
-his arm, as if for protection.
-
-“I know that something terrible is going to happen,” she gasped. “I
-don’t like this place in the heart of a mountain among all these dead
-old things. I like the blue of the sky and the balm of the sunshine, and
-the widespreading sea. Something terrible is going to happen. I know
-that something terrible is going to happen.”
-
-While Francis reassured her, the last seconds of the last minute for the
-peon were ticking off. And when, summoning all his courage, he thrust
-his hand into the mouth of the goddess, the last second ticked and the
-clock struck. With a scream of terror he pulled back his hand and gazed
-at the wrist where a tiny drop of blood exuded directly above an artery.
-The mottled head of a snake thrust forth like a mocking, derisive tongue
-and drew back and disappeared in the darkness of the mouth of the
-goddess.
-
-“A viperine!” screamed Leoncia, recognising the reptile.
-
-And the peon, likewise recognising the viperine and knowing his certain
-death by it, recoiled backward in horror, stepped into the hole, and
-vanished down the nothingness which Chia had guarded with her feet for
-so many centuries.
-
-For a full minute nobody spoke, then the old priest said: “I have
-angered Chia, and she has slain my son.”
-
-“Nonsense,” Francis was comforting Leoncia. “The whole thing is natural
-and explainable. What more natural than that a viperine should choose a
-hole in a rock for a lair? It is the way of snakes. What more natural
-than that a man, bitten by a viperine, should step backward? And what
-more natural, with a hole behind him, than that he should fall into
-it——”
-
-“That is then just natural!” she cried, pointing to a stream of crystal
-water which boiled up over the lips of the hole and fountained up in the
-air like a geyser. “He is right. Through stone itself the gods work
-their everlasting will. He warned us. He knew from reading the knots of
-the sacred tassel.”
-
-“Piffle!” Francis snorted. “Not the will of the gods, but of the ancient
-Maya priests who invented their gods as well as this particular device.
-Somewhere down that hole the peon’s body struck the lever that opened
-stone flood-gates. And thus was released some subterranean body of water
-in the mountain. This is that water. No goddess with a monstrous mouth
-like that could ever have existed save in the monstrous imaginations of
-men. Beauty and divinity are one. A real and true goddess is always
-beautiful. Only man creates devils in all their ugliness.”
-
-So large was the stream that already the water was about their ankles.
-
-“It’s all right,” Francis said. “I noticed, all the way from the
-entrance, the steady inclined plane of the floors of the rooms and
-passages. Those old Mayas were engineers, and they built with an eye on
-drainage. See how the water rushes away out through the passage.—Well,
-old man, read your knots, where is the treasure?”
-
-“Where is my son?” the old man counter-demanded in dull and hopeless
-tones. “Chia has slain my only born. For his mother I broke the Maya law
-and stained the pure Maya blood with the mongrel blood of a woman of the
-tierra caliente. Because I sinned for him that he might be, is he thrice
-precious to me. What care I for treasure? My son is gone. The wrath of
-the Maya gods is upon me.”
-
-With gurglings and burblings and explosive air-bubblings that advertised
-the pressure behind, the water fountained high as ever into the air.
-Leoncia was the first to notice the rising depth of the water on the
-chamber floor.
-
-“It is half way to my knees,” she drew Francis’ attention.
-
-“And time to get out,” he agreed, grasping the situation. “The drainage
-was excellently planned, perhaps. But that slide of rocks at the cliff
-entrance has evidently blocked the planned way of the water. In the
-other passages, being lower, the water is deeper, of course, than here.
-Yet is it already rising here on the general level. And that way lies
-the only way out. Come!”
-
-Thrusting Leoncia to lead in the place of safety, he caught the
-apathetic priest by the hand and dragged him after. At the entrance of
-the elbow turn the water was boiling above their knees. It was to their
-waists as they emerged into the chamber of mummies.
-
-And out of the water, confronting Leoncia’s astounded gaze, arose the
-helmeted head and ancient-mantled body of a mummy. Not this alone would
-have astounded her, for other mummies were over-toppling, falling and
-being washed about in the swirling waters. But this mummy moved and made
-gasping noises for breath, and with eyes of life stared into her eyes.
-
-It was too much for ordinary human nature to bear——a four-centuries old
-corpse dying the second death by drowning. Leoncia screamed, sprang
-forward, and fled the way she had come, while Francis, in his own way
-equally startled, let her go past as he drew his automatic pistol. But
-the mummy, finding footing in the swift rush of the current, cried out:
-
-“Don’t shoot! It is I—Torres! I have just come back from the entrance.
-Something has happened. The way is blocked. The water is over one’s head
-and higher than the entrance, and rocks are falling.”
-
-“And your way is blocked in this direction,” Francis said, aiming the
-revolver at him.
-
-“This is no time for quarreling,” Torres replied. “We must save all our
-lives, and, afterwards, if quarrel we must, then quarrel we will.”
-
-Francis hesitated.
-
-“What is happening to Leoncia?” Torres demanded slyly. “I saw her run
-back. May she not be in danger by herself?”
-
-Letting Torres live and dragging the old man by the arm, Francis waded
-back to the chamber of the idols, followed by Torres. Here, at sight of
-him, Leoncia screamed her horror again.
-
-“It’s only Torres,” Francis reassured her. “He gave me a devil of a
-fright myself when I first saw him. But he’s real flesh. He’ll bleed if
-a knife is stuck into him.—Come, old man! We don’t want to drown here
-like rats in a trap. This is not all of the Maya mysteries. Read the
-tale of the knots and get us out of this!”
-
-“The way is not _out_ but _in_,” the priest quavered.
-
-“And we’re not particular so long as we get away. But how can we get
-in?”
-
-“From the mouth of Chia to the ear of Hzatzl,” was the answer.
-
-Francis was struck by a sudden grotesque and terrible thought.
-
-“Torres,” he said, “there is a key or something inside that stone lady’s
-mouth there. You’re the nearest. Stick your hand in and get it.”
-
-Leoncia gasped with horror as she divined Francis’ vengeance. Of this
-Torres took no notice, and gaily waded toward the goddess, saying: “Only
-too glad to be of service.”
-
-And then Francis’ sense of fair play betrayed him.
-
-“Stop!” he commanded harshly, himself wading to the idol’s side.
-
-And Torres, at first looking on in puzzlement, saw what he had escaped.
-Several times Francis fired his pistol into the stone mouth, while the
-old priest moaned “Sacrilege!” Next, wrapping his coat around his arm
-and hand, he groped into the mouth and pulled out the wounded viper by
-the tail. With quick swings in the air he beat its head to a jelly
-against the goddess’ side.
-
-Wrapping his hand and arm against the possibility of a second snake,
-Francis thrust his hand into the mouth and drew forth a piece of worked
-gold of the shape and size of the hole in Hzatzl’s ear. The old man
-pointed to the ear, and Francis inserted the key.
-
-“Like a nickle-in-the-slot machine,” he remarked, as the key disappeared
-from sight. “Now what’s going to happen? Let’s watch for the water to
-drain suddenly away.”
-
-But the great stream continued to spout unabated out of the hole. With
-an exclamation, Torres pointed to the wall, an apparently solid portion
-of which was slowly rising.
-
-“The way out,” said Torres.
-
-“_In_, as the old man said,” Francis corrected. “Well, anyway, let’s
-start.”
-
-All were through and well along the narrow passage beyond, when the old
-Maya, crying, “My son!” turned and ran back.
-
-The section of wall was already descending into its original place, and
-the priest had to crouch low in order to pass it. A moment later, it
-stopped in its old position. So accurately was it contrived and fitted
-that it immediately shut off the stream of water which had been flowing
-out of the idol room.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Outside, save for a small river of water that flowed out of the base of
-the cliff, there were no signs of what was vexing the interior of the
-mountain. Henry and Ricardo, arriving, noted the stream, and Henry
-observed:
-
-“That’s something new. There wasn’t any stream of water here when I
-left.”
-
-A minute later he was saying, as he looked at a fresh slide of rock:
-“This was the entrance to the cave. Now there is no entrance. I wonder
-where the others are.”
-
-As if in answer, out of the mountain, borne by the spouting stream, shot
-the body of a man. Henry and Ricardo pounced upon it and dragged it
-clear. Recognizing it for the priest, Henry laid him face downward,
-squatted astride of him, and proceeded to give him the first aid for the
-drowned.
-
-Not for ten minutes did the old man betray signs of life, and not until
-after another ten minutes did he open his eyes and look wildly about.
-
-“Where are they?” Henry asked.
-
-The old priest muttered in Maya, until Henry shook more thorough
-consciousness into him.
-
-“Gone——all gone,” he gasped in Spanish.
-
-“Who?” Henry demanded, shook memory into the resuscitated one, and
-demanded again.
-
-“My son; Chia slew him. Chia slew my son, as she slew them all.”
-
-“Who are the rest?”
-
-Followed more shakings and repetitions of the question.
-
-“The rich young Gringo who befriended my son, the enemy of the rich
-young Gringo whom men call Torres, and the young woman of the Solanos
-who was the cause of all that happened. I warned you. She should not
-have come. Women are always a curse in the affairs of men. By her
-presence, Chia, who is likewise a woman, was made angry. The tongue of
-Chia is a viperine. By her tongue Chia struck and slew my son, and the
-mountain vomited the ocean upon us there in the heart of the mountain,
-and all are dead, slain by Chia. Woe is me! I have angered the gods. Woe
-is me! Woe is me! And woe upon all who would seek the sacred treasure to
-filch it from the gods of Maya!”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVI
-
-
-Midway between the out-bursting stream of water and the rock-slide,
-Henry and Ricardo stood in hurried debate. Beside them, crouched on the
-ground, moaned and prayed the last priest of the Mayas. From him, by
-numerous shakings that served to clear his addled old head, Henry had
-managed to extract a rather vague account of what had occurred inside
-the mountain.
-
-“Only his son was bitten and fell into that hole,” Henry reasoned
-hopefully.
-
-“That’s right,” Ricardo concurred. “He never saw any damage, beyond a
-wetting, happen to the rest of them.”
-
-“And they may be, right now, high up above the floor in some chamber,”
-Henry went on. “Now, if we could attack the slide, we might open up the
-cave and drain the water off. If they’re alive they can last for many
-days, for lack of water is what kills quickly, and they’ve certainly
-more water than they know what to do with. They can get along without
-food for a long time. But what gets me is how Torres got inside with
-them.”
-
-“Wonder if he wasn’t responsible for that attack of the Caroos upon us,”
-Ricardo suggested.
-
-But Henry scouted the idea.
-
-“Anyway,” he said, “that isn’t the present proposition——which
-proposition is: how to get inside that mountain on the chance that they
-are still alive. You and I couldn’t go through that slide in a month. If
-we could get fifty men to help, night and day shifts, we might open her
-up in forty-eight hours. So, the primary thing is to get the men. Here’s
-what we must do. I’ll take a mule and beat it back to that Caroo
-community and promise them the contents of one of Francis’ check-books
-if they will come and help. Failing that, I can get up a crowd in San
-Antonio. So here’s where I pull out on the run. In the meantime, you can
-work out trails and bring up all the mules, peons, grub and camp
-equipment. Also, keep your ears to the cliff——they might start
-signalling through it with tappings.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-Into the village of the Caroos Henry forced his mule——much to the
-reluctance of the mule, and equally as much to the astonishment of the
-Caroos, who thus saw their stronghold invaded single-handed by one of
-the party they had attempted to annihilate. They squatted about their
-doors and loafed in the sunshine, under a show of lethargy hiding the
-astonishment that tingled through them and almost put them on their
-toes. As has been ever the way, the very daring of the white man, over
-savage and mongrel breeds, in this instance stunned the Caroos to
-inaction. Only a man, they could not help but reason in their slow way,
-a superior man, a noble or over-riding man, equipped with potencies
-beyond their dreaming, could dare to ride into their strength of numbers
-on a fagged and mutinous mule.
-
-They spoke a mongrel Spanish which he could understand, and, in turn,
-they understood his Spanish; but what he told them concerning the
-disaster in the sacred mountain had no effect of rousing them. With
-impassive faces, shrugging shoulders of utmost indifference, they
-listened to his proposition of a rescue and promise of high pay for
-their time.
-
-“If a mountain has swallowed up the Gringos, then is it the will of God,
-and who are we to interfere between God and His will?” they replied. “We
-are poor men, but we care not to work for any man, nor do we care to
-make war upon God. Also, it was the Gringos’ fault. This is not their
-country. They have no right here playing pranks on our mountains. Their
-troubles are between them and God. We have troubles enough of our own,
-and our wives are unruly.”
-
-Long after the siesta hour, on his third and most reluctant mule, Henry
-rode into sleepy San Antonio. In the main street, midway between the
-court and the jail, he pulled up at sight of the Jefe Politico and the
-little fat old judge, with, at their heels, a dozen gendarmes and a
-couple of wretched prisoners——runaway peons from the henequen
-plantations at Santos. While the judge and the Jefe listened to Henry’s
-tale and appeal for help, the Jefe gave one slow wink to the judge, who
-was his judge, his creature, body and soul of him.
-
-“Yes, certainly we will help you,” the Jefe said at the end, stretching
-his arms and yawning.
-
-“How soon can we get the men together and start?” Henry demanded
-eagerly.
-
-“As for that, we are very busy——are we not, honorable judge?” the Jefe
-replied with lazy insolence.
-
-“We are very busy,” the judge yawned into Henry’s face.
-
-“Too busy for a time,” the Jefe went on. “We regret that not to-morrow
-nor next day shall we be able to try and rescue your Gringos. Now, a
-little later——”
-
-“Say next Christmas,” the judge suggested.
-
-“Yes,” concurred the Jefe with a grateful bow. “About next Christmas
-come around and see us, and, if the pressure of our affairs has somewhat
-eased, then, maybe possibly, we shall find it convenient to go about
-beginning to attempt to raise the expedition you have requested. In the
-meantime, good day to you, Senor Morgan.”
-
-“You mean that?” Henry demanded with wrathful face.
-
-“The very face he must have worn when he slew Senor Alfaro Solano
-treacherously from the back,” the Jefe soliloquized ominously.
-
-But Henry ignored the later insult.
-
-“I’ll tell you what you are,” he flamed in righteous wrath.
-
-“Beware!” the judge cautioned him.
-
-“I snap my fingers at you,” Henry retorted. “You have no power over me.
-I am a full-pardoned man by the President of Panama himself. And this is
-what you are. You are half-breeds. You are mongrel pigs.”
-
-“Pray proceed, Senor,” said the Jefe, with the suave politeness of
-deathly rage.
-
-“You’ve neither the virtues of the Spaniard nor of the Carib, but the
-vices of both thrice compounded. Mongrel pigs, that’s what you are and
-all you are, the pair of you.”
-
-“Are you through Senor?—quite through?” the Jefe queried softly.
-
-At the same moment he gave a signal to the gendarmes, who sprang upon
-Henry from behind and disarmed him.
-
-“Even the President of the Republic of Panama cannot pardon in
-anticipation of a crime not yet committed——am I right, judge?” said the
-Jefe.
-
-“This is a fresh offense,” the judge took the cue promptly. “This Gringo
-dog has blasphemed against the law.”
-
-“Then shall he be tried, and tried now, right here, immediately. We will
-not bother to go back and reopen court. We shall try him, and when we
-have disposed of him, we shall proceed. I have a very good bottle of
-wine——”
-
-“I care not for wine,” the judge disclaimed hastily. “Mine shall be
-mescal. And in the meantime, and now, having been both witness and
-victim of the offense and there being no need of evidence further than
-what I already possess, I find the prisoner guilty. Is there anything
-you would suggest, Senor Mariano Vercara é Hijos?”
-
-“Twenty-four hours in the stocks to cool his heated Gringo head,” the
-Jefe answered.
-
-“Such is the sentence,” the judge affirmed, “to begin at once. Take the
-prisoner away, gendarmes, and put him in the stocks.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-Daybreak found Henry in the stocks, with a dozen hours of such
-imprisonment already behind him, lying on his back asleep. But the sleep
-was restless, being vexed subjectively by nightmare dreams of his
-mountain-imprisoned companions, and, objectively, by the stings of
-countless mosquitoes. So it was, twisting and squirming and striking at
-the winged pests, he awoke to full consciousness of his predicament. And
-this awoke the full expression of his profanity. Irritated beyond
-endurance by the poison from a thousand mosquito-bites, he filled the
-dawn so largely with his curses as to attract the attention of a man
-carrying a bag of tools. This was a trim-figured, eagle-faced young man,
-clad in the military garb of an aviator of the United States Army. He
-deflected his course so as to come by the stocks, and paused, and
-listened, and stared with quizzical admiration.
-
-“Friend,” he said, when Henry ceased to catch breath. “Last night, when
-I found myself marooned here with half my outfit left on board, I did a
-bit of swearing myself. But it was only a trifle compared with yours. I
-salute you, sir. You’ve an army teamster skinned a mile. Now if you
-don’t mind running over the string again, I shall be better equipped the
-next time I want to do any cussing.”
-
-“And who in hell are you?” Henry demanded. “And what in hell are you
-doing here?”
-
-“I don’t blame you,” the aviator grinned. “With a face swollen like that
-you’ve got a right to be rude. And who beat you up? In hell, I haven’t
-ascertained my status yet. But here on earth I am known as Parsons,
-Lieutenant Parsons. I am not doing anything in hell as yet; but here in
-Panama I am scheduled to fly across this day from the Atlantic to the
-Pacific. Is there any way I may serve you before I start?”
-
-“Sure,” Henry nodded. “Take a tool out of that bag of yours and smash
-this padlock. I’ll get rheumatism if I have to stick here much longer.
-My name’s Morgan, and no man has beaten me up. Those are
-mosquito-bites.”
-
-With several blows of a wrench, Lieutenant Parsons smashed the ancient
-padlock and helped Henry to his feet. Even while rubbing the circulation
-back into his feet and ankles, Henry, in a rush, was telling the army
-aviator of the predicament and possibly tragic disaster to Leoncia and
-Francis.
-
-“I love that Francis,” he concluded. “He is the dead spit of myself.
-We’re more like twins, and we must be distantly related. As for the
-senorita, not only do I love her but I am engaged to marry her. Now will
-you help? Where’s the machine? It takes a long time to get to the Maya
-Mountain on foot or mule-back; but if you give me a lift in your machine
-I’d be there in no time, along with a hundred sticks of dynamite, which
-you could procure for me and with which I could blow the side out of
-that mountain and drain off the water.”
-
-Lieutenant Parsons hesitated.
-
-“Say yes, say yes,” Henry pleaded.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Back in the heart of the sacred mountain, the three imprisoned ones
-found themselves in total darkness the instant the stone that blocked
-the exit from the idol chamber had settled into place. Francis and
-Leoncia groped for each other and touched hands. In another moment his
-arm was around her, and the deliciousness of the contact robbed the
-situation of half its terror. Near them they could hear Torres breathing
-heavily. At last he muttered:
-
-“Mother of God, but that was a close shave! What next, I wonder?”
-
-“There’ll be many nexts before we get out of this neck of the woods,”
-Francis assured him. “And we might as well start getting out.”
-
-The method of procedure was quickly arranged. Placing Leoncia behind
-him, her hand clutching the hem of his jacket so as to be guided by him,
-he moved ahead with his left hand in contact with the wall. Abreast of
-him, Torres felt his way along the right-hand wall. By their voices they
-could thus keep track of each other, measure the width of the passage,
-and guard against being separated into forked passages. Fortunately, the
-tunnel, for tunnel it truly was, had a smooth floor, so that, while they
-groped their way, they did not stumble. Francis refused to use his
-matches unless extremity arose, and took precaution against falling into
-a possible pit by cautiously advancing one foot at a time and
-ascertaining solid stone under it ere putting on his weight. As a
-result, their progress was slow. At no greater speed than half a mile an
-hour did they proceed.
-
-Once only did they encounter branching passages. Here he lighted a
-precious match from his waterproof case, and found that between the two
-passages there was nothing to choose. They were as like as two peas.
-
-“The only way is to try one,” he concluded, “and, if it gets us nowhere,
-to retrace and try the other. There’s one thing certain: these passages
-lead somewhere, or the Mayas wouldn’t have gone to all the trouble of
-making them.”
-
-Ten minutes later he halted suddenly and cried warning. The foot he had
-advanced was suspended in emptiness where the floor should have been.
-Another match was struck, and they found themselves on the edge of a
-natural cavern of such proportions that neither to right nor left, nor
-up nor down, nor across, could the tiny flame expose any limits to it.
-But they did manage to make out a rough sort of stairway, half-natural,
-half-improved by man, which fell away beneath them into the pit of
-black.
-
-In another hour, having followed the path down the length of the floor
-of the cavern, they were rewarded by a feeble glimmer of daylight, which
-grew stronger as they advanced. Before they knew it, they had come to
-the source of it——being much nearer than they had judged; and Francis,
-tearing away vines and shrubbery, crawled out into the blaze of the
-afternoon sun. In a moment Leoncia and Torres were beside him, gazing
-down into a valley from an eyrie on a cliff. Nearly circular was the
-valley, a full league in diameter, and it appeared to be mountain-walled
-and cliff-walled for its entire circumference.
-
-“It is the Valley of Lost Souls,” Torres utterly solemnly. “I have heard
-of it, but never did I believe.”
-
-“So have I heard of it and never believed,” Leoncia gasped.
-
-“And what of it?” demanded Francis. “We’re not lost souls, but good
-flesh-and-blood persons. We should worry.”
-
-“But Francis, listen,” Leoncia said. “The tales I have heard of it, ever
-since I was a little girl, all agreed that no person who ever got into
-it ever got out again.”
-
-“Granting that that is so,” Francis could not help smiling, “then how
-did the tales come out? If nobody ever came out again to tell about it,
-how does it happen that everybody outside knows about it?”
-
-“I don’t know,” Leoncia admitted. “I only tell you what I have heard.
-Besides, I never believed. But this answers all the descriptions of the
-tales.”
-
-“Nobody ever got out,” Torres affirmed with the same solemn utterance.
-
-“Then how do you know that anybody got in?” Francis persisted.
-
-“All the lost souls live here,” was the reply. “That is why we’ve never
-seen them, because they never got out. I tell you, Mr. Francis Morgan,
-that I am no creature without reason. I have been educated. I have
-studied in Europe, and I have done business in your own New York. I know
-science and philosophy; and yet do I know that this is the valley, once
-in, from which no one emerges.”
-
-“Well, we’re not in yet, are we?” retorted Francis with a slight
-manifestation of impatience. “And we don’t have to go in, do we?” He
-crawled forward to the verge of the shelf of loose soil and crumbling
-stone in order to get a better view of the distant object his eye had
-just picked out. “If that isn’t a grass-thatched roof——”
-
-At that moment the soil broke away under his hands. In a flash, the
-whole soft slope on which they rested broke away, and all three were
-sliding and rolling down the steep slope in the midst of a miniature
-avalanche of soil, gravel, and grass-tufts.
-
-The two men picked themselves up first, in the thicket of bushes which
-had arrested them; but, before they could get to Leoncia, she, too, was
-up and laughing.
-
-“Just as you were saying we didn’t have to go into the valley!” she
-gurgled at Francis. “Now will you believe?”
-
-But Francis was busy. Reaching out his hand, he caught and stopped a
-familiar object bounding down the steep slope after them. It was Torres’
-helmet purloined from the chamber of mummies, and to Torres he tossed
-it.
-
-“Throw it away,” Leoncia said.
-
-“It’s the only protection against the sun I possess,” was his reply, as,
-turning it over in his hands, his eyes lighted upon an inscription on
-the inside. He showed it to his companions, reading it aloud:
-
-“DA VASCO.”
-
-“I have heard,” Leoncia breathed.
-
-“And you heard right,” Torres nodded. “Da Vasco was my direct ancestor.
-My mother was a Da Vasco. He came over the Spanish Main with Cortez.”
-
-“He mutinied,” Leoncia took up the tale. “I remember it well from my
-father and from my Uncle Alfaro. With a dozen comrades he sought the
-Maya treasure. They led a sea-tribe of Caribs, a hundred strong
-including their women, as auxiliaries. Mendoza, under Cortez’s
-instructions, pursued; and his report, in the archives, so Uncle Alfaro
-told me, says that they were driven into the Valley of the Lost Souls
-where they were left to perish miserably.”
-
-“And he evidently tried to get out by the way we’ve just come in,”
-Torres continued, “and the Mayas caught him and made a mummy of him.”
-
-He jammed the ancient helmet down on his head, saying:
-
-“Low as the sun is in the afternoon sky, it bites my crown like acid.”
-
-“And famine bites at me like acid,” Francis confessed. “Is the valley
-inhabited?”
-
-“I should know, Senor,” Torres replied. “There is the narrative of
-Mendoza, in which he reported that Da Vasco and his party were left
-there ‘to perish miserably.’ This I do know: they were never seen again
-of men.”
-
-“Looks as though plenty of food could be grown in a place like this——”
-Francis began, but broke off at sight of Leoncia picking berries from a
-bush. “Here! Stop that, Leoncia! We’ve got enough troubles without
-having a very charming but very much poisoned young woman on our hands.”
-
-“They’re all right,” she said, calmly eating. “You can see where the
-birds have been pecking and eating them.”
-
-“In which case I apologize and join you,” Francis cried, filling his
-mouth with the luscious fruit. “And if I could catch the birds that did
-the pecking, I’d eat them too.”
-
-By the time they had eased the sharpest of their hunger-pangs, the sun
-was so low that Torres removed the helmet of Da Vasco.
-
-“We might as well stop here for the night,” he said. “I left my shoes in
-the cave with the mummies, and lost Da Vasco’s old boots during the
-swimming. My feet are cut to ribbons, and there’s plenty of seasoned
-grass here out of which I can plait a pair of sandals.”
-
-While occupied with this task, Francis built a fire and gathered a
-supply of wood, for, despite the low latitude, the high altitude made
-fire a necessity for a night’s lodging. Ere he had completed the supply,
-Leoncia, curled up on her side, her head in the hollow of her arm, was
-sound asleep. Against the side of her away from the fire, Francis
-thoughtfully packed a mound of dry leaves and dry forest mould.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVII
-
-
-Daybreak in the Valley of the Lost Souls, and the Long House in the
-village of the Tribe of the Lost Souls. Fully eighty feet in length was
-the Long House, with half as much in width, built of adobe bricks, and
-rising thirty feet to a gable roof thatched with straw. Out of the house
-feebly walked the Priest of the Sun——an old man, tottery on his legs,
-sandal-footed, clad in a long robe of rude home-spun cloth, in whose
-withered Indian face were haunting reminiscences of the racial
-lineaments of the ancient conquistadores. On his head was a curious cap
-of gold, arched over by a semi-circle of polished golden spikes. The
-effect was obvious, namely, the rising sun and the rays of the rising
-sun.
-
-He tottered across the open space to where a great hollow log swung
-suspended between two posts carved with totemic and heraldic devices. He
-glanced at the eastern horizon, already red with the dawning, to
-reassure himself that he was on time, lifted a stick, the end of which
-was fiber-woven into a ball, and struck the hollow log. Feeble as he
-was, and light as was the blow, the hollow log boomed and reverberated
-like distant thunder.
-
-Almost immediately, while he continued slowly to beat, from the
-grass-thatched dwellings that formed the square about the Long House,
-emerged the Lost Souls. Men and women, old and young, and children and
-babes in arms, they all came out and converged upon the Sun Priest. No
-more archaic spectacle could be witnessed in the twentieth-century
-world. Indians, indubitably they were, yet in many of their faces were
-the racial reminiscences of the Spaniard. Some faces, to all appearance,
-were all Spanish. Others, by the same token, were all Indian. But
-betwixt and between, the majority of them betrayed the inbred blend of
-both races. But more bizarre was their costume——unremarkable in the
-women, who were garbed in long, discreet robes of home-spun cloth, but
-most remarkable in the men, whose home-spun was grotesquely fashioned
-after the style of Spanish dress that obtained in Spain at the time of
-Columbus’ first voyage. Homely and sad-looking were the men and women—as
-of a breed too closely interbred to retain joy of life. This was true of
-the youths and maidens, of the children, and of the very babes against
-breasts——true, with the exception of two, one, a child-girl of ten, in
-whose face was fire, and spirit, and intelligence. Amongst the sodden
-faces of the sodden and stupid Lost Souls, her face stood out like a
-flaming flower. Only like hers was the face of the old Sun Priest,
-cunning, crafty, intelligent.
-
-While the priest continued to beat the resounding log, the entire tribe
-formed about him in a semi-circle, facing the east. As the sun showed
-the edge of its upper rim, the priest greeted it and hailed it with a
-quaint and medieval Spanish, himself making low obeisance thrice
-repeated, while the tribe prostrated itself. And, when the full sun
-shone clear of the horizon, all the tribe, under the direction of the
-priest, arose and uttered a joyful chant. Just as he had dismissed his
-people, a thin pillar of smoke, rising in the quiet air across the
-valley, caught the priest’s eye. He pointed it out, and commanded
-several of the young men.
-
-“It rises in the Forbidden Place of Fear where no member of the tribe
-may wander. It is some devil of a pursuer sent out by our enemies who
-have vainly sought our hiding-place through the centuries. He must not
-escape to make report, for our enemies are powerful, and we shall be
-destroyed. Go. Kill him that we may not be killed.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-About the fire, which had been replenished at intervals throughout the
-night, Leoncia, Francis, and Torres lay asleep, the latter with his
-new-made sandals on his feet and with the helmet of Da Vasco pulled
-tightly down on his head to keep off the dew. Leoncia was the first to
-awaken, and so curious was the scene that confronted her, that she
-watched quietly through her down-dropped lashes. Three of the strange
-Lost Tribe men, bows still stretched and arrows drawn in what was
-evident to her as the interrupted act of slaying her and her companions,
-were staring with amazement at the face of the unconscious Torres. They
-looked at each other in doubt, let their bows straighten, and shook
-their heads in patent advertisement that they were not going to kill.
-Closer they crept upon Torres, squatting on their hams the better to
-scrutinize his face and the helmet, which latter seemed to arouse their
-keenest interest.
-
-From where she lay, Leoncia was able privily to nudge Francis’ shoulder
-with her foot. He awoke quietly, and quietly sat up, attracting the
-attention of the strangers. Immediately they made the universal peace
-sign, laying down their bows and extending their palms outward in token
-of being weaponless.
-
-“Good morning, merry strangers,” Francis addressed them in English,
-which made them shake their heads while it aroused Torres.
-
-“They must be Lost Souls,” Leoncia whispered to Francis.
-
-“Or real estate agents,” he smiled back. “At least the valley is
-inhabited.—Torres, who’re your friends? From the way they regard you,
-one would think they were relatives of yours.”
-
-Quite ignoring them, the three Lost Souls drew apart a slight distance
-and debated in low sibilant tones.
-
-“Sounds like a queer sort of Spanish,” Francis observed.
-
-“It’s medieval, to say the least,” Leoncia confirmed.
-
-“It’s the Spanish of the conquistadores pretty badly gone to seed,”
-Torres contributed. “You see I was right. The Lost Souls never get
-away.”
-
-“At any rate they must give and be given in marriage,” Francis quipped,
-“else how explain these three young huskies?”
-
-But by this time the three huskies, having reached agreement, were
-beckoning them with encouraging gestures to follow across the valley.
-
-“They’re good-natured and friendly cusses, to say the least, despite
-their sorrowful mug,” said Francis, as they prepared to follow. “But did
-you ever see a sadder-faced aggregation in your life? They must have
-been born in the dark of the moon, or had all their sweet gazelles die,
-or something or other worse.”
-
-“It’s just the kind of faces one would expect of lost souls,” Leoncia
-answered.
-
-“And if we never get out of here, I suppose we’ll get to looking a whole
-lot sadder than they do,” he came back. “Anyway, I hope they’re leading
-us to breakfast. Those berries were better than nothing, but that is not
-saying much.”
-
-An hour or more afterward, still obediently following their guides, they
-emerged upon the clearings, the dwelling places, and the Long House of
-the tribe.
-
-“These are descendants of Da Vasco’s party and the Caribs,” Torres
-affirmed, as he glanced over the assembled faces. “That is
-incontrovertible on the face of it.”
-
-“And they’ve relapsed from the Christian religion of Da Vasco to old
-heathen worship,” added Francis. “Look at that altar——there. It’s a
-stone altar, and, from the smell of it, that is no breakfast, but a
-sacrifice that is cooking, in spite of the fact that it smells like
-mutton.”
-
-“Thank heaven it’s only a lamb,” Leoncia breathed. “The old Sun Worship
-included human sacrifice. And this is Sun Worship. See that old man
-there in the long shroud with the golden-rayed cap of gold. He’s a sun
-priest. Uncle Alfaro has told me all about the sun-worshipers.”
-
-Behind and above the altar, was a great metal image of the sun.
-
-“Gold, all gold,” Francis whispered, “and without alloy. Look at those
-spikes, the size of them, yet so pure is the metal that I wager a child
-could bend them any way it wished and even tie knots in them.”
-
-“Merciful God!—look at that!” Leoncia gasped, indicating with her eyes a
-crude stone bust that stood to one side of the altar and slightly lower.
-“It is the face of Torres. It is the face of the mummy in the Maya
-cave.”
-
-“And there is an inscription——” Francis stepped closer to see and was
-peremptorily waved back by the priest. “It says, ‘Da Vasco.’ Notice that
-it has the same sort of helmet that Torres is wearing.—And, say! Glance
-at the priest! If he doesn’t look like Torres’ full brother, I’ve never
-fancied a resemblance in my life!”
-
-The priest, with angry face and imperative gesture, motioned Francis to
-silence, and made obeisance to the cooking sacrifice. As if in response,
-a flaw of wind put out the flame of the cooking.
-
-“The Sun God is angry,” the priest announced with great solemnity, his
-queer Spanish nevertheless being intelligible to the newcomers.
-“Strangers have come among us and remain unslain. That is why the Sun
-God is angry. Speak, you young men who have brought the strangers alive
-to our altar. Was not my bidding, which is ever and always the bidding
-of the Sun God, that you should slay them?”
-
-One of the three young men stepped tremblingly forth, and with trembling
-forefingers pointed at the face of Torres and at the face of the stone
-bust.
-
-“We recognised him,” he quavered, “and we could not slay him for we
-remembered prophecy and that our great ancestor would some day return.
-Is this stranger he? We do not know. We dare not know nor judge. Yours,
-O priest, is the knowledge, and yours be the judgment. Is this he?”
-
-The priest looked closely at Torres and exclaimed incoherently. Turning
-his back abruptly, he rekindled the sacred cooking fire from a pot of
-fire at the base of an altar. But the fire flamed up, flickered down,
-and died.
-
-“The Sun God is angry,” the priest reiterated; whereat the Lost Souls
-beat their breasts and moaned and lamented. “The sacrifice is
-unacceptable, for the fire will not burn. Strange things are afoot. This
-is a matter of the deeper mysteries which I alone may know. We shall not
-sacrifice the strangers ... now. I must take time to inform myself of
-the Sun God’s will.”
-
-With his hands he waved the tribespeople away, ceasing the ceremonial
-half-completed, and directed that the three captives be taken into the
-Long House.
-
-“I can’t follow the play,” Francis whispered in Leoncia’s ear, “but just
-the same I hope here’s where we eat.”
-
-“Look at that pretty little girl,” said Leoncia, indicating with her
-eyes the child with the face of fire and spirit.
-
-“Torres has already spotted her,” Francis whispered back. “I caught him
-winking at her. He doesn’t know the play, nor which way the cat will
-jump, but he isn’t missing a chance to make friends. We’ll have to keep
-an eye on him, for he’s a treacherous hound and capable of throwing us
-over any time if it would serve to save his skin.”
-
-Inside the Long House, seated on rough-plaited mats of grass, they found
-themselves quickly served with food. Clear drinking water and a thick
-stew of meat and vegetables were served in generous quantity in queer,
-unglazed pottery jars. Also, they were given hot cakes of ground Indian
-corn that were not altogether unlike tortillas.
-
-After the women who served had departed, the little girl, who had led
-them and commanded them, remained. Torres resumed his overtures, but
-she, graciously ignoring him, devoted herself to Leoncia who seemed to
-fascinate her.
-
-“She’s a sort of hostess, I take it,” Francis explained. “You know—like
-the maids of the village in Samoa, who entertain all travellers and all
-visitors of no matter how high rank, and who come pretty close to
-presiding at all functions and ceremonials. They are selected by the
-high chiefs for their beauty, their virtue, and their intelligence. And
-this one reminds me very much of them, except that she’s so awfully
-young.”
-
-Closer she came to Leoncia, and, fascinated though she patently was by
-the beautiful strange woman, in her bearing of approach there was no
-hint of servility nor sense of inferiority.
-
-“Tell me,” she said, in the quaint archaic Spanish of the valley, “is
-that man really Capitan Da Vasco returned from his home in the sun in
-the sky?”
-
-Torres smirked and bowed, and proclaimed proudly: “I am a Da Vasco.”
-
-“Not _a_ Da Vasco, but Da Vasco himself,” Leoncia coached him in
-English.
-
-“It’s a good bet—play it!” Francis commanded, likewise in English. “It
-may pull us all out of a hole. I’m not particularly stuck on that
-priest, and he seems the high-cockalorum over these Lost Souls.”
-
-“I have at last come back from the sun,” Torres told the little maid,
-taking his cue.
-
-She favored him with a long and unwavering look, in which they could see
-her think, and judge, and appraise. Then, with expressionless face, she
-bowed to him respectfully, and, with scarcely a glance at Francis,
-turned to Leoncia and favored her with a friendly smile that was an
-illumination.
-
-“I did not know that God made women so beautiful as you,” the little
-maid said softly, ere she turned to go out. At the door she paused to
-add, “The Lady Who Dreams is beautiful, but she is strangely different
-from you.”
-
-But hardly had she gone, when the Sun Priest, followed by a number of
-young men, entered, apparently for the purpose of removing the dishes
-and the uneaten food. Even as some of them were in the act of bending
-over to pick up the dishes, at a signal from the priest they sprang upon
-the three guests, bound their hands and arms securely behind them, and
-led them out to the Sun God’s altar before the assembled tribe. Here,
-where they observed a crucible on a tripod over a fierce fire, they were
-tied to fresh-sunken posts, while many eager hands heaped fuel about
-them to their knees.
-
-“Now buck up—be as haughty as a real Spaniard!” Francis at the same time
-instructed and insulted Torres. “You’re Da Vasco himself. Hundreds of
-years before, you were here on earth in this very valley with the
-ancestors of these mongrels.”
-
-“You must die,” the Sun Priest was now addressing them, while the Lost
-Souls nodded unanimously. “For four hundred years, as we count our
-sojourn in this valley, have we slain all strangers. You were not slain,
-and behold the instant anger of the Sun God: _our altar fire went out_.”
-The Lost Souls moaned and howled and pounded their chests. “Therefore,
-to appease the Sun God, you shall now die.”
-
-“Beware!” Torres proclaimed, prompted in whispers, sometimes by Francis,
-sometimes by Leoncia. “I am Da Vasco. I have just come from the sun.” He
-nodded with his head, because of his tied hands, at the stone bust. “I
-am that Da Vasco. I led your ancestors here four hundred years ago, and
-I left you here, commanding you to remain until my return.”
-
-The Sun Priest hesitated.
-
-“Well, priest, speak up and answer the divine Da Vasco,” Francis spoke
-harshly.
-
-“How do I know that he is divine?” the priest countered quickly. “Do I
-not look much like him myself? Am I therefore divine? Am I Da Vasco? Is
-he Da Vasco? Or may not Da Vasco be yet in the sun?—for truly I know
-that I am man born of woman three-score and eighteen years ago and that
-I am not Da Vasco.”
-
-“You have not spoken to Da Vasco!” Francis threatened, as he bowed in
-vast humility to Torres and hissed at him in English: “Be haughty, damn
-you, be haughty.”
-
-The priest wavered for the moment, and then addressed Torres.
-
-“I am the faithful priest of the sun. Not lightly can I relinquish my
-trust. If you are the divine Da Vasco, then answer me one question.”
-
-Torres nodded with magnificent haughtiness.
-
-“Do you love gold?”
-
-“Love gold!” Torres jeered. “I am a great captain in the sun, and the
-sun is made of gold. Gold? It is like to me this dirt beneath my feet
-and the rock of which your mighty mountains are composed.”
-
-“Bravo,” Leoncia whispered approval.
-
-“Then, O divine Da Vasco,” the Sun Priest said humbly, although he could
-not quite muffle the ring of triumph in his voice, “are you fit to pass
-the ancient and usual test. When you have drunk the drink of gold, and
-can still say that you are Da Vasco, then will I, and all of us, bow
-down and worship you. We have had occasional intruders in this valley.
-Always did they come athirst for gold. But when we had satisfied their
-thirst, inevitably they thirsted no more, for they were dead.”
-
-As he spoke, while the Lost Souls looked on eagerly, and while the three
-strangers looked on with no less keenness of apprehension, the priest
-thrust his hand into the open mouth of a large leather bag and began
-dropping handfuls of gold nuggets into the heated crucible of the
-tripod. So near were they, that they could see the gold melt into fluid
-and rise up in the crucible like the drink it was intended to be.
-
-The little maid, daring on her extraordinary position in the Lost Souls
-Tribe, came up to the Sun Priest and spoke that all might hear.
-
-“That is Da Vasco, the Capitan Da Vasco, the divine Capitan Da Vasco,
-who led our ancestors here the long long time ago.”
-
-The priest tried to silence her with a frown. But the maid repeated her
-statement, pointing eloquently from the bust to Torres and back again;
-and the priest felt his grip on the situation slipping, while inwardly
-he cursed the sinful love of the mother of the little girl which had
-made her his daughter.
-
-“Hush!” he commanded sternly. “These are things of which you know
-nothing. If he be the Capitan Da Vasco, being divine he will drink the
-gold and be unharmed.”
-
-Into a rude pottery pitcher, which had been heated in the pot of fire at
-the base of the altar, he poured the molten gold. At a signal, several
-of the young men laid aside their spears, and, with the evident
-intention of prying her teeth apart, advanced on Leoncia.
-
-“Hold, priest!” Francis shouted stentoriously. “She is not divine as Da
-Vasco is divine. Try the golden drink on Da Vasco.”
-
-Whereat Torres bestowed upon Francis a look of malignant anger.
-
-“Stand on your haughty pride,” Francis instructed him. “Decline the
-drink. Show them the inside of your helmet.”
-
-“I will not drink!” Torres cried, half in a panic as the priest turned
-to him.
-
-“You shall drink. If you are Da Vasco, the divine capitan from the sun,
-we will then know it and we will fall down and worship you.”
-
-Torres looked appeal at Francis, which the priest’s narrow eyes did not
-fail to catch.
-
-“Looks as though you’ll have to drink it,” Francis said dryly. “Anyway,
-do it for the lady’s sake and die like a hero.”
-
-With a sudden violent strain at the cords that bound him, Torres jerked
-one hand free, pulled off his helmet, and held it so that the priest
-could gaze inside.
-
-“Behold what is graven therein,” Torres commanded.
-
-Such was the priest’s startlement at sight of the inscription, DA VASCO,
-that the pitcher fell from his hand. The molten gold, spilling forth,
-set the dry debris on the ground afire, while one of the spearmen,
-spattered on the foot, danced away with wild yells of pain. But the Sun
-Priest quickly recovered himself. Seizing the fire pot, he was about to
-set fire to the faggots heaped about his three victims, when the little
-maid intervened.
-
-“The Sun God would not let the great captain drink the drink,” she said.
-“The Sun God spilled it from your hand.”
-
-And when all the Lost Souls began to murmur that there was more in the
-matter than appeared to their priest, the latter was compelled to hold
-his hand. Nevertheless was he resolved on the destruction of the three
-intruders. So, craftily, he addressed his people.
-
-“We shall wait for a sign.—Bring oil. We will give the Sun God time for
-a sign.——Bring a candle.”
-
-Pouring the jar of oil over the faggots to make them more inflammable,
-he set the lighted stub of a candle in the midst of the saturated fuel,
-and said:
-
-“The life of the candle will be the duration of the time for the sign.
-Is it well, O People?”
-
-And all the Lost Souls murmured, “It is well.”
-
-Torres looked appeal to Francis, who replied:
-
-“The old brute certainly pinched on the length of the candle. It won’t
-last five minutes at best, and, maybe, inside three minutes we’ll be
-going up in smoke.”
-
-“What can we do?” Torres demanded frantically, while Leoncia looked
-bravely, with a sad brave smile of love, into Francis’ eyes.
-
-“Pray for rain,” Francis answered. “And the sky is as clear as a bell.
-After that, die game. Don’t squeal too loud.”
-
-And his eyes returned to Leoncia’s and expressed what he had never dared
-express to her before——his full heart of love. Apart, by virtue of the
-posts to which they were tied and which separated them, they had never
-been so close together, and the bond that drew them and united them was
-their eyes.
-
-First of all, the little maid, gazing into the sky for the sign, saw it.
-Torres, who had eyes only for the candle stub, nearly burned to its
-base, heard the maid’s cry and looked up. And at the same time he heard,
-as all of them heard, the droning flight as of some monstrous insect in
-the sky.
-
-“An aeroplane,” Francis muttered. “Torres, claim it for the sign.”
-
-But no need to claim was necessary. Above them not more than a hundred
-feet, it swooped and circled, the first aeroplane the Lost Souls had
-ever seen, while from it, like a benediction from heaven, descended the
-familiar:
-
- “Back to back against the mainmast,
- Held at bay the entire crew.”
-
-Completing the circle and rising to an elevation of nearly a thousand
-feet, they saw an object detach itself directly overhead, fall like a
-plummet for three hundred feet, then expand into a spread parachute,
-with beneath it like a spider suspended on a web, the form of a man,
-which last, as it neared the ground, again began to sing:
-
- “Back to back against the mainmast,
- Held at bay the entire crew.”
-
-And then event crowded on event with supremest rapidity. The stub of the
-candle fell apart, the flaming wick fell into the tiny lake of molten
-fat, the lake flamed, and the oil-saturated faggots about it flamed. And
-Henry, landing in the thick of the Lost Souls, blanketing a goodly
-portion of them under his parachute, in a couple of leaps was beside his
-friends and kicking the blazing faggots right and left. Only for a
-second did he desist. This was when the Sun Priest interfered. A right
-hook to the jaw put that aged confidant of God down on his back, and,
-while he slowly recuperated and crawled to his feet, Henry slashed clear
-the lashings that bound Leoncia, Francis, and Torres. His arms were out
-to embrace Leoncia, when she thrust him away with:
-
-“Quick! There is no time for explanation. Down on your knees to Torres
-and pretend you are his slave——and don’t talk Spanish; talk English.”
-
-Henry could not comprehend, and, while Leoncia reassured him with her
-eyes, he saw Francis prostrate himself at the feet of their common
-enemy.
-
-“Gee!” Henry muttered, as he joined Francis. “Here goes. But it’s worse
-than rat poison.”
-
-Leoncia followed him, and all the Lost Souls went down prone before the
-Capitan Da Vasco who received in their midst celestial messengers direct
-from the sun. All went down, except the priest, who, mightily shaken,
-was meditating doing it, when the mocking devil of melodrama in Torres’
-soul prompted him to overdo his part.
-
-As haughtily as Francis had coached him, he lifted his right foot and
-placed it down on Henry’s neck, incidentally covering and pinching most
-of his ear.
-
-And Henry literally went up in the air.
-
-“You can’t step on my ear, Torres!” he shouted, at the same time
-dropping him, as he had dropped the priest with his right hook.
-
-“And now the beans are spilled,” Francis commented in dry and spiritless
-disgust. “The Sun God stuff is finished right here and now.”
-
-The Sun Priest, exultantly signaling his spearmen, grasped the
-situation. But Henry dropped the muzzle of his automatic pistol to the
-old priest’s midrif; and the priest, remembering the legends of deadly
-missiles propelled by the mysterious substance called “gunpowder,”
-smiled appeasingly and waved back his spearmen.
-
-“This is beyond my powers of wisdom and judgment,” he addressed his
-tribespeople, while ever his wavering glance returned to the muzzle of
-Henry’s pistol. “I shall appeal to the last resort. Let the messenger be
-sent to wake the Lady Who Dreams. Tell her that strangers from the sky,
-and, mayhap, the sun, are here in our valley. And that only the wisdom
-of her far dreams will make clear to us what we do not understand, and
-what even I do not understand.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVIII
-
-
-Convoyed by the spearmen, the party of Leoncia, the two Morgans, and
-Torres, was led through the pleasant fields, all under a high state of
-primitive cultivation, and on across running streams and through
-woodland stretches and knee deep pastures where grazed cows of so
-miniature a breed that, full-grown, they were no larger than young
-calves.
-
-“They’re milch cows without mistake,” Henry commented. “And they’re
-perfect beauties. But did you ever see such dwarfs! A strong man could
-lift up the biggest specimen and walk off with it.”
-
-“Don’t fool yourself,” Francis spoke up. “Take that one over there, the
-black one. I’ll wager it’s not an ounce under three hundredweight.”
-
-“How much will you wager?” Henry challenged.
-
-“Name the bet,” was the reply.
-
-“Then a hundred even,” Henry stated, “that I can lift it up and walk
-away with it.”
-
-“Done.”
-
-But the bet was never to be decided, for the instant Henry left the path
-he was poked back by the spearmen, who scowled and made signs that they
-were to proceed straight ahead.
-
-Where the way came to lead past the foot of a very rugged cliff, they
-saw above them many goats.
-
-“Domesticated,” said Francis. “Look at the herd boys.”
-
-“I was sure it was goat-meat in that stew,” Henry nodded. “I always did
-like goats. If the Lady Who Dreams, whoever she may be, vetoes the
-priest and lets us live, and if we have to stay with the Lost Souls for
-the rest of our days, I’m going to petition to be made master goatherd
-of the realm, and I’ll build you a nice little cottage, Leoncia, and you
-can become the Exalted Cheese-maker to the Queen.”
-
-But he did not whimsically wander farther, for, at that moment, they
-emerged upon a lake so beautiful as to bring a long whistle from
-Francis, a hand-clap from Leoncia, and a muttered ejaculation of
-appreciation from Torres. Fully a mile in length it stretched, with more
-than half the same in width, and was a perfect oval. With one exception,
-no habitation broke the fringe of trees, bamboo thickets, and rushes
-that circled its shore, even along the foot of the cliff where the
-bamboo was exceptionally luxuriant. On the placid surface was so vividly
-mirrored the surrounding mountains that the eye could scarcely discern
-where reality ended and reflection began.
-
-In the midst of her rapture over the perfect reflection, Leoncia broke
-off to exclaim her disappointment in that the water was not crystal
-clear:
-
-“What a pity it is so muddy!”
-
-“That’s because of the wash of the rich soil of the valley floor,” Henry
-elucidated. “It’s hundreds of feet deep, that soil.”
-
-“The whole valley must have been a lake at some time,” Francis
-concurred. “Run your eye along the cliff and see the old water-lines. I
-wonder what made it shrink.”
-
-“Earthquake, most likely—opened up some subterranean exit and drained it
-off to its present level—and keeps on draining it, too. Its rich
-chocolate color shows the amount of water that flows in all the time,
-and that it doesn’t have much chance to settle. It’s the catch-basin for
-the entire circling watershed of the valley.”
-
-“Well, there’s one house at least,” Leoncia was saying five minutes
-later, as they rounded an angle of the cliff and saw, tucked against the
-cliff and extending out over the water, a low-roofed bungalow-like
-dwelling.
-
-The piles were massive tree-trunks, but the walls of the house were of
-bamboo, and the roof was thatched with grass-straw. So isolated was it,
-that the only access, except by boat, was a twenty-foot bridge so narrow
-that two could not walk on it abreast. At either end of the bridge,
-evidently armed guards or sentries, stood two young men of the tribe.
-They moved aside, at a gesture of command from the Sun Priest, and let
-the party pass, although the two Morgans did not fail to notice that the
-spearmen who had accompanied them from the Long House remained beyond
-the bridge.
-
-Across the bridge and entered into the bungalow-like dwelling on stilts,
-they found themselves in a large room better furnished, crude as the
-furnishings were, than they would have expected in the Valley of Lost
-Souls. The grass mats on the floor were of fine and careful weave, and
-the shades of split bamboo that covered the window-openings were of
-patient workmanship. At the far end, against the wall, was a huge golden
-emblem of the rising sun similar to the one before the altar by the Long
-House. But by far most striking, were two living creatures who strangely
-inhabited the place and who scarcely moved. Beneath the rising sun,
-raised above the floor on a sort of dais, was a many-pillowed divan that
-was half-throne. And on the divan, among the pillows, clad in a
-softly-shimmering robe of some material no one of them had seen before,
-reclined a sleeping woman. Only her breast softly rose and softly fell
-to her breathing. No Lost Soul was she, of the inbred and degenerate
-mixture of Carib and Spaniard. On her head was a tiara of beaten gold
-and sparkling gems so large that almost it seemed a crown.
-
-Before her, on the floor, were two tripods of gold——the one containing
-smouldering fire, the other, vastly larger, a golden bowl fully a fathom
-in diameter. Between the tripods, resting with outstretched paws like
-the Sphinx, with unblinking eyes and without a quiver, a great dog,
-snow-white of coat and resembling a Russian wolf-hound, stedfastly
-regarded the intruders.
-
-“She looks like a lady, and seems like a queen, and certainly dreams to
-the queen’s taste,” Henry whispered, and earned a scowl from the Sun
-Priest.
-
-Leoncia was breathless, but Torres shuddered and crossed himself, and
-said:
-
-“This I have never heard of the Valley of Lost Souls. This woman who
-sleeps is a Spanish lady. She is of the pure Spanish blood. She is
-Castilian. I am as certain, as that I stand here, that her eyes are
-blue. And yet that pallor!” Again he shuddered. “It is an unearthly
-sleep. It is as if she tampered with drugs, and had long tampered with
-drugs——”
-
-“The very thing!” Francis broke in with excited whispers. “The Lady Who
-Dreams drug dreams. They must keep her here doped up as a sort of
-super-priestess or super-oracle.—That’s all right, old priest,” he broke
-off to say in Spanish. “If we wake her up, what of it? We have been
-brought here to meet her, and, I hope, awake.”
-
-The Lady stirred, as if the whispering had penetrated her profound of
-sleep, and, for the first time, the dog moved, turning his head toward
-her so that her down-dropping hand rested on his neck caressingly. The
-priest was imperative, now, in his scowls and gestured commands for
-silence. And in absolute silence they stood and watched the awakening of
-the oracle.
-
-Slowly she drew herself half upright, paused, and re-caressed the happy
-wolf hound, whose cruel fangs were exposed in a formidable, long-jawed
-laugh of joy. Awesome the situation was to them, yet more awesome it
-became to them when she turned her eyes full upon them for the first
-time. Never had they seen such eyes, in which smouldered the world and
-all the worlds. Half way did Leoncia cross herself, while Torres, swept
-away by his own awe, completed his own crossing of himself and with
-moving lips of silence enunciated his favorite prayer to the Virgin.
-Even Francis and Henry looked, and could not take their gaze away from
-the twin wells of blue that seemed almost dark in the shade of the long
-black eyelashes.
-
-“A blue-eyed brunette,” Francis managed to whisper.
-
-But such eyes! Round they were, rather than long. And yet they were not
-round. Square they might have been, had they not been more round than
-square. Such shape had they that they were as if blocked off in the
-artist’s swift and sketchy way of establishing circles out of the sums
-of angles. The long, dark lashes veiled them and perpetuated the
-illusion of their darkness. Yet was there no surprise nor startlement in
-them at first sight of her visitors. Dreamily incurious were they, yet
-were they languidly certain of comprehension of what they beheld. Still
-further, to awe those who so beheld, her eyes betrayed a complicated
-totality of paradoxical alivenesses. Pain trembled its quivering anguish
-perpetually impending. Sensitiveness moistly hinted of itself like a
-spring rain-shower on the distant sea-horizon or a dew-fall of a
-mountain morning. Pain—ever pain—resided in the midst of languorous
-slumberousness. The fire of immeasurable courage threatened to glint
-into the electric spark of action and fortitude. Deep slumber, like a
-palpitant, tapestried background, seemed ever ready to obliterate all in
-sleep. And over all, through all, permeating all, brooded ageless
-wisdom. This was accentuated by cheeks slightly hollowed, hinting of
-asceticism. Upon them was a flush, either hectic or of the paint-box.
-
-When she stood up, she showed herself to be slender and fragile as a
-fairy. Tiny were her bones, not too-generously flesh-covered; yet the
-lines of her were not thin. Had either Henry or Francis registered his
-impression aloud, he would have proclaimed her the roundest thin woman
-he had ever seen.
-
-The Sun Priest prostrated his aged frame till he lay stretched flat out
-on the floor, his old forehead burrowing into the grass mat. The rest
-remained upright, although Torres evidenced by a crumpling at the knees
-that he would have followed the priest’s action had his companions shown
-signs of accompanying him. As it was, his knees did partly crumple, but
-straightened again and stiffened under the controlled example of Leoncia
-and the Morgans.
-
-At first the Lady had no eyes for aught but Leoncia; and, after a
-careful looking over of her, with a curt upward lift of head she
-commanded her to approach. Too imperative by far was it, in Leoncia’s
-thought, to proceed from so etherially beautiful a creature, and she
-sensed with immediacy an antagonism that must exist between them. So she
-did not move, until the Sun Priest muttered harshly that she must obey.
-She approached, regardless of the huge, long-haired hound, threading
-between the tripods and past the beast, nor would stop until commanded
-by a second nod as curt as the first. For a long minute the two women
-gazed steadily into each other’s eyes, at the end of which, with a
-flicker of triumph, Leoncia observed the other’s eyes droop. But the
-flicker was temporary, for Leoncia saw that the Lady was studying her
-dress with haughty curiosity. She even reached out her slender, pallid
-hand and felt the texture of the cloth and caressed it as only a woman
-can.
-
-“Priest!” she summoned sharply. “This is the third day of the Sun in the
-House of Manco. Long ago I told you something concerning this day.
-Speak.”
-
-Writhing in excess of servility, the Sun Priest quavered:
-
-“That on this day strange events were to occur. They have occurred, O
-Queen.”
-
-Already had the Queen forgotten. Still caressing the cloth of Leoncia’s
-dress, her eyes were bent upon it in curious examination.
-
-“You are very fortunate,” the Queen said, at the same time motioning her
-back to rejoin the others. “You are well loved of men. All is not clear,
-yet does it seem that you are too well loved of men.”
-
-Her voice, mellow and low, tranquil as silver, modulated in exquisite
-rhythms of sound, was almost as a distant temple bell calling believers
-to worship or sad souls to quiet judgment. But to Leoncia it was not
-given to appreciate the wonderful voice. Instead, only was she aware of
-anger flaming up to her cheeks and burning in her pulse.
-
-“I have seen you before, and often,” the Queen went on.
-
-“Never!” Leoncia cried out.
-
-“Hush!” the Sun Priest hissed at her.
-
-“There,” the Queen said, pointing at the great golden bowl. “Before, and
-often, have I seen you there.
-
-“You——also, there,” she addressed Henry.
-
-“And you,” she confirmed to Francis, although her great blue eyes opened
-wider and she gazed at him long——too long to suit Leoncia, who knew the
-stab of jealousy that only a woman can thrust into a woman’s heart.
-
-The Queen’s eyes glinted when they had moved on to rest on Torres.
-
-“And who are you, stranger, so strangely appareled, the helmet of a
-knight upon your head, upon your feet the sandals of a slave?”
-
-“I am Da Vasco,” he answered stoutly.
-
-“The name has an ancient ring,” she smiled.
-
-“I am the ancient Da Vasco,” he pursued, advancing unsummoned. She
-smiled at his temerity but did not stay him. “This is the helmet I wore
-four hundred years ago when I led the ancestors of the Lost Souls into
-this valley.”
-
-The Queen smiled quiet unbelief, as she quietly asked:
-
-“Then you were born four hundred years ago?”
-
-“Yes, and never. I was never born. I am Da Vasco. I have always been. My
-home is in the sun.”
-
-Her delicately stenciled brows drew quizzically to interrogation, though
-she said nothing. From a gold-wrought box beside her on the divan she
-pinched what seemed a powder between a fragile and almost transparent
-thumb and forefinger, and her thin beautiful lips curved to gentle
-mockery as she casually tossed the powder into the great tripod. A sheen
-of smoke arose and in a moment was lost to sight.
-
-“Look!” she commanded.
-
-And Torres, approaching the great bowl, gazed into it. What he saw, the
-rest of his party never learned. But the Queen herself leaned forward
-and gazing down from above, saw with him, her face a beautiful
-advertisement of gentle and pitying mockery. And what Torres himself saw
-was a bedroom and a birth in the second story of the Bocas del Toro
-house he had inherited. Pitiful it was, with its last secrecy exposed,
-as was the gently smiling pity in the Queen’s face. And, in that
-flashing glimpse of magic vision, Torres saw confirmed about himself
-what he had always guessed and suspected.
-
-“Would you see more,” the Queen softly mocked. “I have shown you the
-beginning of you. Look now, and behold your ending.”
-
-But Torres, too deeply impressed by what he had already seen, shuddered
-away in recoil.
-
-“Forgive me, Beautiful Woman,” he pleaded. “And let me pass. Forget, as
-I shall hope ever to forget.”
-
-“It is gone,” she said, with a careless wave of her hand over the bowl.
-“But I cannot forget. The record will persist always in my mind. But
-you, O Man, so young of life, so ancient of helmet, have I beheld before
-this day, there in my Mirror of the World. You have vexed me much of
-late with your portending. Yet not with the helmet.” She smiled with
-quiet wisdom. “Always, it seems to me, I saw a chamber of the dead, of
-the long dead, upright on their unmoving legs and guarding through
-eternity mysteries alien to their faith and race. And in that dolorous
-company did it seem that I saw one who wore your ancient helmet....
-Shall I speak further?”
-
-“No, no,” Torres implored.
-
-She bowed and nodded him back. Next, her scrutiny centred on Francis,
-whom she nodded forward. She stood up upon the dais as if to greet him,
-and, as if troubled by the fact that she must gaze down on him, stepped
-from the dais to the floor so that she might gaze up into his face as
-she extended her hand. Hesitatingly he took her hand in his, then knew
-not what next to do. Almost did it appear that she read his thought, for
-she said:
-
-“Do it. I have never had it done to me before. I have never seen it
-done, save in my dreams and in the visions shown me in my Mirror of the
-World.”
-
-And Francis bent and kissed her hand. And, because she did not signify
-to withdraw it, he continued to hold it, while, against his palm, he
-felt the faint but steady pulse of her pink finger-tips. And so they
-stood in pose, neither speaking, Francis embarrassed, the Queen sighing
-faintly, while the sex anger of woman tore at Leoncia’s heart, until
-Henry blurted out in gleeful English:
-
-“Do it again, Francis! She likes it!”
-
-The Sun Priest hissed silencing command at him. But the Queen, half
-withdrawing her hand with a startle like a maiden’s, returned it as
-deeply as before into Francis’ clasp, and addressed herself to Henry.
-
-“I, too, know the language you speak,” she admonished. “Yet am I
-unashamed, I, who have never known a man, do admit that I like it. It is
-the first kiss that I have ever had. Francis——for such your friend calls
-you——obey your friend. I like it. I do like it. Once again kiss my
-hand.”
-
-Francis obeyed, waited while her hand still lingered in his, and while
-she, oblivious to all else, as if toying with some beautiful thought,
-gazed lingeringly up into his eyes. By a visible effort she pulled
-herself together, released his hand abruptly, gestured him back to the
-others, and addressed the Sun Priest.
-
-“Well, priest,” she said, with a return of the sharpness in her voice,
-“You have brought these captives here for a reason which I already know.
-Yet would I hear you state it yourself.”
-
-“O Lady Who Dreams, shall we not kill these intruders as has ever been
-our custom? The people are mystified and in doubt of my judgment, and
-demand decision from you.”
-
-“And you would kill?”
-
-“Such is my judgment. I seek now your judgment that yours and mine may
-be one.”
-
-She glanced over the faces of the four captives. For Torres, her
-brooding expression portrayed only pity. To Leoncia she extended a
-frown; to Henry, doubt. And upon Francis she gazed a full minute, her
-face growing tender, at least to Leoncia’s angry observation.
-
-“Are any of you unmarried?” the Queen asked suddenly. “Nay,” she
-anticipated them. “It is given me to know that you are all unmarried.”
-She turned quickly to Leoncia. “Is it well,” she demanded, “that a woman
-should have two husbands?”
-
-Both Henry and Francis could not refrain from smiling their amusement at
-so absurdly irrelevant a question. But to Leoncia it was neither absurd
-nor irrelevant, and in her cheeks arose the flush of anger again. This
-was a woman, she knew, with whom she had to deal, and who was dealing
-with her like a woman.
-
-“It is not well,” Leoncia answered, with clear, ringing voice.
-
-“It is very strange,” the Queen pondered aloud. “It is very strange. Yet
-is it not fair. Since there are equal numbers of men and women in the
-world, it cannot be fair for one woman to have two husbands, for, if so,
-it means that another woman shall have no husband.”
-
-Another pinch of dust she tossed into the great bowl of gold. The sheen
-of smoke arose and vanished as before.
-
-“The Mirror of the World will tell me, priest, what disposition shall be
-made of our captives.”
-
-Just ere she leaned over to gaze into the bowl, a fresh thought
-deflected her. With an embracing wave of arm she invited them all up to
-the bowl.
-
-“We may all look,” she said. “I do not promise you we will see the same
-visions of our dreams. Nor shall I know what you will have seen. Each
-for himself will see and know.——You, too, priest.”
-
-They found the bowl, six feet in diameter that it was, half-full of some
-unknown metal liquid.
-
-“It might be quicksilver, but it isn’t,” Henry whispered to Francis. “I
-have never seen the like of any similar metal. It strikes me as hotly
-molten.”
-
-“It is very cold,” the Queen corrected him in English. “Yet is it
-fire.—You, Francis, feel the bowl outside.”
-
-He obeyed, laying his full palm unhesitatingly to the yellow outer
-surface.
-
-“Colder than the atmosphere of the room,” he adjudged.
-
-“But look!” the Queen cried, tossing more powder upon the contents. “It
-is fire that remains cold.”
-
-“It is the powder that smokes with the heat of its own containment,”
-Torres blurted out, at the same time feeling into the bottom of his coat
-pocket. He drew forth a pinch of crumbs of tobacco, match splinters, and
-cloth-fluff. “This will not burn,” he challenged, inviting invitation by
-extending the pinch of rubbish over the bowl as if to drop it in.
-
-The Queen nodded consent, and all saw the rubbish fall upon the liquid
-metal surface. The particles made no indentation on that surface. Only
-did they transform into smoke that sheened upward and was gone. No
-remnant of ash remained.
-
-“Still is it cold,” said Torres, imitating Francis and feeling the
-outside of the bowl.
-
-“Thrust your finger into the contents,” the Queen suggested to Torres.
-
-“No,” he said.
-
-“You are right,” she confirmed. “Had you done so, you would now be with
-one finger less than the number with which you were born.” She tossed in
-more powder. “Now shall each behold what he alone will behold.”
-
-And it was so.
-
-To Leoncia was it given to see an ocean separate her and Francis. To
-Henry was it given to see the Queen and Francis married by so strange a
-ceremony, that scarcely did he realise, until at the close, that it was
-a wedding taking place. The Queen, from a flying gallery in a great
-house, looked down into a magnificent drawing-room that Francis would
-have recognized as builded by his father had her vision been his. And,
-beside her, his arm about her, she saw Francis. Francis saw but one
-thing, vastly perturbing, the face of Leoncia, immobile as death, with
-thrust into it, squarely between the eyes, a slender-bladed dagger. Yet
-he did not see any blood flowing from the wound of the dagger. Torres
-glimpsed the beginning of what he knew must be his end, crossed himself,
-and alone of all of them shrank back, refusing to see further. While the
-Sun Priest saw the vision of his secret sin, the face and form of the
-woman for whom he had betrayed the Worship of the Sun, and the face and
-form of the maid of the village at the Long House.
-
-As all drew back by common consent when the visions faded, Leoncia
-turned like a tigress, with flashing eyes, upon the Queen, crying:
-
-“Your mirror lies! Your Mirror of the World lies!”
-
-Francis and Henry, still under the heavy spell of what they had
-themselves beheld, were startled and surprised by Leoncia’s outburst.
-But the Queen, speaking softly, replied:
-
-“My Mirror of the World has never lied. I know not what you saw. But I
-do know, whatever it was, that it is truth.”
-
-“You are a monster!” Leoncia cried on. “You are a vile witch that lies!”
-
-“You and I are women,” the Queen chided with sweet gentleness, “and may
-not know of ourselves, being women. Men will decide whether or not I am
-a witch that lies or a woman with a woman’s heart of love. In the
-meanwhile, being women and therefore weak, let us be kind to each
-other.”
-
-“——And now, Priest of the Sun, to judgment. You, as priest under the Sun
-God, know more of the ancient rule and procedure than do I. You know
-more than do I about myself and how I came to be here. You know that
-always, mother and daughter, and by mother and daughter, has the tribe
-maintained a Queen of Mystery, a Lady of Dreams. The time has come when
-we must consider the future generations. The strangers have come, and
-they are unmarried. This must be the wedding day decreed, if the
-generations to come after of the tribe are to possess a Queen to dream
-for them. It is well, and time and need and place are met. I have
-dreamed to judgment. And the judgment is that I shall marry, of these
-strangers, the stranger allotted to me before the foundations of the
-world were laid. The test is this: If no one of these will marry, then
-shall they die and their warm blood be offered up by you before the
-altar of the Sun. If one will marry me, then all shall live, and Time
-hereafter will register our futures.”
-
-The Sun Priest, trembling with anger, strove to protest, but she
-commanded:
-
-“Silence, priest! By me only do you rule the people. At a word from me
-to the people—well, you know. It is not any easy way to die.”
-
-She turned to the three men, saying:
-
-“And who will marry me?”
-
-They looked embarrassment and consternation at one another, but none
-spoke.
-
-“I am a woman,” the Queen went on teasingly. “And therefore am I not
-desirable to men? Is it that I am not young? Is it, as women go, that I
-am not beautiful? Is it that men’s tastes are so strange that no man
-cares to clasp the sweet of me in his arms and press his lips on mine as
-good Francis there did on my hand?”
-
-She turned her eyes on Leoncia.
-
-“You be judge. You are a woman well loved of men. Am I not such a woman
-as you, and shall I not be loved?”
-
-“You will ever be kinder to men than to women,” Leoncia
-answered——cryptically as regarded the three men who heard, but clearly
-to the woman’s brain of the Queen. “And as a woman,” Leoncia continued,
-“you are strangely beautiful and luring; and there are men in this
-world, many men, who could be made mad to clasp you in their arms. But I
-warn you, Queen, that in this world are men, and men, and men.”
-
-Having heard and debated this, the Queen turned abruptly to the priest.
-
-“You have heard, priest. This day a man shall marry me. If no man
-marries me, these three men shall be offered up on your altar. So shall
-be offered up this woman, who, it would seem, would put shame upon me by
-having me less than she.”
-
-Still she addressed the priest, although her message was for the others.
-
-“There are three men of them, one of whom, long cycles before he was
-born, was destined to marry me. So, priest, I say, take the captives
-away into some other apartment, and let them decide among themselves
-which is the man.”
-
-“Since it has been so long destined,” Leoncia flamed forth, “then why
-put it to the chance of their decision? You know the man. Why put it to
-the risk? Name the man, Queen, and name him now.”
-
-“The man shall be selected in the way I have indicated,” the Queen
-replied, as, at the same time, absently she tossed a pinch of powder
-into the great bowl and absently glanced therein. “So now depart, and
-let the inevitable choice be made.”
-
-They were already moving away out of the room, when a cry from the Queen
-stopped them.
-
-“Wait!” she ordered. “Come, Francis. I have seen something that concerns
-you. Come, gaze with me upon the Mirror of the World.”
-
-And while the others paused, Francis gazed with her upon the strange
-liquid metal surface. He saw himself in the library of his New York
-house, and he saw beside him the Lady Who Dreams, his arm around her.
-Next, he saw her curiosity at sight of the stock-ticker. As he tried to
-explain it to her, he glanced at the tape and read such disturbing
-information thereon that he sprang to the nearest telephone and, as the
-vision faded, saw himself calling up his broker.
-
-“What was it you saw?” Leoncia questioned, as they passed out.
-
-And Francis lied. He did not mention seeing the Lady Who Dreams in his
-New York library. Instead, he replied:
-
-“It was a stock-ticker, and it showed a bear market on Wall Street
-somersaulting into a panic. Now how did she know I was interested in
-Wall Street and stock-tickers?”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIX
-
-
-“Somebody’s got to marry that crazy woman,” Leoncia spoke up, as they
-lolled upon the mats of the room to which the priest had taken them.
-“Not only will he be a hero by saving our lives, but he will save his
-own life as well. Now, Senor Torres, is your chance to save all our
-lives and your own.”
-
-“Br-r-r!” Torres shivered. “I would not marry her for ten million gold.
-She is too wise. She is terrible. She—how shall I say?—she, as you
-Americans say, gets my goat. I am a brave man. But before her I am not
-brave. The flesh of me melts in a sweat of fear. Not for less than ten
-million would I dare to overcome my fear. Now Henry and Francis are
-braver than I. Let one of them marry her.”
-
-“But I am engaged to marry Leoncia,” Henry spoke up promptly.
-“Therefore, I cannot marry the Queen.”
-
-And their eyes centered on Francis, but, before he could reply, Leoncia
-broke in.
-
-“It is not fair,” she said. “No one of you wants to marry her. The only
-equitable way to settle it will be by drawing lots.” As she spoke, she
-pulled three straws from the mat on which she sat and broke one off very
-short. “The man who draws the short straw shall be the victim. You,
-Senor Torres, draw first.”
-
-“Wedding bells for the short straw,” Henry grinned.
-
-Torres crossed himself, shivered, and drew. So patently long was the
-straw, that he executed a series of dancing steps as he sang:
-
- “No wedding bells for me,
- I’m as happy as can be ...”
-
-Francis drew next, and an equally long straw was his portion. To Henry
-there was no choice. The remaining straw in Leoncia’s hand was the fatal
-one. All tragedy was in his face as he looked instantly at Leoncia. And
-she, observing, melted in pity, while Francis saw her pity and did some
-rapid thinking. It was the way out. All the perplexity of the situation
-could be thus easily solved. Great as was his love for Leoncia, greater
-was his man’s loyalty to Henry. Francis did not hesitate. With a merry
-slap of his hand on Henry’s shoulder, he cried:
-
-“Well, here’s the one unattached bachelor who isn’t afraid of matrimony.
-I’ll marry her.”
-
-Henry’s relief was as if he had been reprieved from impending death. His
-hand shot out to Francis’ hand, and, while they clasped, their eyes
-gazed squarely into each other’s as only decent, honest men’s may gaze.
-Nor did either see the dismay registered in Leoncia’s face at this
-unexpected denouement. The Lady Who Dreams had been right. Leoncia, as a
-woman, was unfair, loving two men and denying the Lady her fair share of
-men.
-
-But any discussion that might have taken place, was prevented by the
-little maid of the village, who entered with women to serve them the
-midday meal. It was Torres’ sharp eyes that first lighted upon the
-string of gems about the maid’s neck. Rubies they were, and magnificent.
-
-“The Lady Who Dreams just gave them to me,” the maid said, pleased with
-their pleasure in her new possession.
-
-“Has she any more?” Torres asked.
-
-“Of course,” was the reply. “Only just now did she show me a great chest
-of them. And they were all kinds, and much larger; but they were not
-strung. They were like so much shelled corn.”
-
-While the others ate and talked, Torres nervously smoked a cigarette.
-After that, he arose and claimed a passing indisposition that prevented
-him from eating.
-
-“Listen,” he quoth impressively. “I speak better Spanish than either of
-you two Morgans. Also, I know, I am confident, the Spanish woman
-character better. To show you my heart’s in the right place, I’ll go in
-to her now and see if I can talk her out of this matrimonial
-proposition.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-One of the spearmen barred Torres’ way, but, after going within,
-returned and motioned him to enter. The Queen, reclined on the divan,
-nodded him to her graciously.
-
-“You do not eat?” she queried solicitously; and added, after he had
-reaffirmed his loss of appetite, “Then will you drink?”
-
-Torres’ eyes sparkled. Between the excitement he had gone through for
-the past several days, and the new adventure he was resolved upon, he
-knew not how, to achieve, he felt the important need of a drink. The
-Queen clapped her hands, and issued commands to the waiting woman who
-responded.
-
-“It is very ancient, centuries old, as you will recognize, Da Vasco, who
-brought it here yourself four centuries ago,” she said, as a man carried
-in and broached a small wooden keg.
-
-About the age of the keg there could be no doubt, and Torres, knowing
-that it had crossed the Western Ocean twelve generations before, felt
-his throat tickle with desire to taste its contents. The drink poured by
-the waiting woman was a big one, yet was Torres startled by the mildness
-of it. But quickly the magic of four-centuries-old spirits began to
-course through his veins and set the maggots crawling in his brain.
-
-The Queen bade him sit on the edge of the divan at her feet, where she
-could observe him, and asked:
-
-“You came unsummoned. What is it you have to tell me or ask of me?”
-
-“I am the one selected,” he replied, twisting his moustache and striving
-to look the enticingness of a male man on love adventure bent.
-
-“Strange,” she said. “I saw not your face in the Mirror of the World.
-There is ... some mistake, eh?”
-
-“A mistake,” he acknowledged readily, reading certain knowledge in her
-eyes. “It was the drink. There is magic in it that made me speak the
-message of my heart to you, I want you so.”
-
-Again, with laughing eyes, she summoned the waiting woman and had his
-pottery mug replenished.
-
-“A second mistake, perhaps will now result, eh?” she teased, when he had
-downed the drink.
-
-“No, O Queen,” he replied. “Now all is clarity. My true heart I can
-master. Francis Morgan, the one who kissed your hand, is the man
-selected to be your husband.”
-
-“It is true,” she said solemnly. “His was the face I saw, and knew from
-the first.”
-
-Thus encouraged, Torres continued.
-
-“I am his friend, his very good best friend. You, who know all things,
-know the custom of the marriage dowry. He has sent me, his best friend,
-to inquire into and examine the dowry of his bride. You must know that
-he is among the richest of men in his own country, where men are very
-rich.”
-
-So suddenly did she arise on the divan that Torres cringed and half
-shrank down, in his panic expectance of a knife-blade between his
-shoulders. Instead, the Queen walked swiftly, or, rather, glided, to the
-doorway to an inner apartment.
-
-“Come!” she summoned imperiously.
-
-Once inside, at the first glance around, Torres knew the room for what
-it was, her sleeping chamber. But his eyes had little space for such
-details. Lifting the lid of a heavy chest of ironwood, brass-bound, she
-motioned him to look in. He obeyed, and saw the amazement of the world.
-The little maid had spoken true. Like so much shelled corn, the chest
-was filled with an incalculable treasure of gems——diamonds, rubies,
-emeralds, sapphires, the most precious, the purest and largest of their
-kinds.
-
-“Thrust in your arms to the shoulders,” she said, “and make sure that
-these baubles be real and of the adamant of flint, rather than illusions
-and reflections of unreality dreamed real in a dream. Thus may you make
-certain report to your very rich friend who is to marry me.”
-
-And Torres, the madness of the ancient drink like fire in his brain, did
-as he was told.
-
-“These trifles of glass are such an astonishment?” she plagued. “Your
-eyes are as if they were witnessing great wonders.”
-
-“I never dreamed in all the world there was such a treasure,” he
-muttered in his drunkenness.
-
-“They are beyond price?”
-
-“They are beyond price.”
-
-“They are beyond the value of valor, and love, and honor?”
-
-“They are beyond all things. They are a madness.”
-
-“Can a woman’s or a man’s true love be purchased by them?”
-
-“They can purchase all the world.”
-
-“Come,” the Queen said. “You are a man. You have held women in your
-arms. Will they purchase women?”
-
-“Since the beginning of time women have been bought and sold for them,
-and for them women have sold themselves.”
-
-“Will they buy me the heart of your good friend Francis?”
-
-For the first time Torres looked at her, and nodded and muttered, his
-eyes swimming with drink and wild-eyed with sight of such array of gems.
-
-“Will good Francis so value them?”
-
-Torres nodded speechlessly.
-
-“Do all persons so value them?”
-
-Again he nodded emphatically.
-
-She began to laugh in silvery derision. Bending, at haphazard she
-clutched a priceless handful of the pretties.
-
-“Come,” she commanded. “I will show you how I value them.”
-
-She led him across the room and out on a platform that extended around
-three sides of a space of water, the fourth side being the perpendicular
-cliff. At the base of the cliff the water formed a whirlpool that
-advertised the drainage exit for the lake which Torres had heard the
-Morgans speculate about.
-
-With another silvery tease of laughter, the Queen tossed the handful of
-priceless gems into the heart of the whirlpool.
-
-“Thus I value them,” she said.
-
-Torres was aghast, and, for the nonce, well-nigh sobered by such
-wantonness.
-
-“And they never come back,” she laughed on. “Nothing ever comes back.
-Look!”
-
-She flung in a handful of flowers that raced around and around the whirl
-and quickly sucked down from sight in the center of it.
-
-“If nothing comes back, where does everything go?” Torres asked thickly.
-
-The Queen shrugged her shoulders, although he knew that she knew the
-secret of the waters.
-
-“More than one man has gone that way,” she said dreamily. “No one of
-them has ever returned. My mother went that way, after she was dead. I
-was a girl then.” She roused. “But you, helmeted one, go now. Make
-report to your master——your friend, I mean. Tell him what I possess for
-dowry. And, if he be half as mad as you about the bits of glass, swiftly
-will his arms surround me. I shall remain here and in dreams await his
-coming. The play of the water fascinates me.”
-
-Dismissed, Torres entered the sleeping chamber, crept back to steal a
-glimpse of the Queen, and saw her sunk down on the platform, head on
-hand, and gazing into the whirlpool. Swiftly he made his way to the
-chest, lifted the lid, and stowed a scooping handful into his trousers’
-pocket. Ere he could scoop a second handful, the mocking laughter of the
-Queen was at his back.
-
-Fear and rage mastered him to such extent, that he sprang toward her,
-and pursuing her out upon the platform, was only prevented from seizing
-her by the dagger she threatened him with.
-
-“Thief,” she said quietly. “Without honor are you. And the way of all
-thieves in this valley is death. I shall summon my spearmen and have you
-thrown into the whirling water.”
-
-And his extremity gave Torres cunning. Glancing apprehensively at the
-water that threatened him, he ejaculated a cry of horror as if at what
-strange thing he had seen, sank down on one knee, and buried his
-convulsed face of simulated fear in his hands. The Queen looked sidewise
-to see what he had seen. Which was his moment. He rose in the air upon
-her like a leaping tiger, clutching her wrists and wresting the dagger
-from her.
-
-He wiped the sweat from his face and trembled while he slowly recovered
-himself. Meanwhile she gazed upon him curiously, without fear.
-
-“You are a woman of evil,” he snarled at her, still shaking with rage,
-“a witch that traffics with the powers of darkness and all devilish
-things. Yet are you woman, born of woman, and therefore mortal. The
-weakness of mortality and of woman is yours, wherefore I give you now
-your choice of two things. Either you shall be thrown into the whirl of
-water and perish, or ...”
-
-“Or?” she prompted.
-
-“Or....” He paused, licked his dry lips, and burst forth. “No! By the
-Mother of God, I am not afraid. Or marry me this day, which is the other
-choice.”
-
-“You would marry me for me? Or for the treasure?”
-
-“For the treasure,” he admitted brazenly.
-
-“But it is written in the Book of Life that I shall marry Francis,” she
-objected.
-
-“Then will we rewrite that page in the Book of Life.”
-
-“As if it could be done!” she laughed.
-
-“Then will I prove your mortality there in the whirl, whither I shall
-fling you as you flung the flowers.”
-
-Truly intrepid Torres was for the time—intrepid because of the ancient
-drink that burned in his blood and brain, and because he was master of
-the situation. Also, like a true Latin-American, he loved a scene
-wherein he could strut and elocute.
-
-Yet she startled him by emitting a hiss similar to the Latin way of
-calling a servitor. He regarded her suspiciously, glanced at the doorway
-to the sleeping chamber, then returned his gaze to her.
-
-Like a ghost, seeing it only vaguely out of the corner of his eye, the
-great white hound erupted through the doorway. Startled again, Torres
-involuntarily stepped to the side. But his foot failed to come to rest
-on the emptiness of air it encountered, and the weight of his body
-toppled him down off the platform into the water. Even as he fell and
-screamed his despair, he saw the hound in mid-air leaping after him.
-
-Swimmer that he was, Torres was like a straw in the grip of the current;
-and the Lady Who Dreams, gazing down upon him fascinated from the edge
-of the platform, saw him disappear, and the hound after him, into the
-heart of the whirlpool from which there was no return.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XX
-
-
-Long the Lady Who Dreams gazed down at the playing waters. At last, with
-a sighed “My poor dog,” she arose. The passing of Torres had meant
-nothing to her. Accustomed from girlhood to exercise the high powers of
-life and death over her semi-savage and degenerate people, human life,
-per se, had no sacredness to her. If life were good and lovely, then,
-naturally, it was the right thing to let it live. But if life were evil,
-ugly, and dangerous to other lives, then the thing was to let it die or
-make it die. Thus, to her, Torres had been an episode——unpleasant, but
-quickly over. But it was too bad about the dog.
-
-Clapping her hands loudly as she entered her chamber, to summon one of
-her women, she made sure that the lid of the jewel chest was raised. To
-the woman she gave a command, and herself returned to the platform, from
-where she could look into the room unobserved.
-
-A few minutes later, guided by the woman, Francis entered the chamber
-and was left alone. He was not in a happy mood. Fine as had been his
-giving up of Leoncia, he got no pleasure from the deed. Nor was there
-any pleasure in looking forward to marrying the strange lady who ruled
-over the Lost Souls and resided in this weird lake-dwelling. Unlike
-Torres, however, she did not arouse in him fear or animosity. Quite to
-the contrary, Francis’ feeling toward her was largely that of pity. He
-could not help but be impressed by the tragic pathos of the ripe and
-lovely woman desperately seeking love and a mate, despite her imperious
-and cavalier methods.
-
-At a glance he recognized the room for what it was, and idly wondered if
-he were already considered the bridegroom, sans discussion, sans
-acquiescence, sans ceremony. In his brown study, the chest scarcely
-caught his attention. The Queen, watching, saw him evidently waiting for
-her, and, after a few minutes, walk over to the chest. He gathered up a
-handful of the gems, dropped them one by one carelessly back as if they
-had been so many marbles, and turned and strolled over to examine the
-leopard skins on her couch. Next, he sat down upon it, oblivious equally
-of couch or treasure. All of which was provocative of such delight to
-the Queen that she could no longer with-strain herself to mere spying.
-Entering the room and greeting him, she laughed:
-
-“Was Senor Torres a liar?”
-
-“_Was?_” Francis queried, for the need of saying something, as he arose
-before her.
-
-“He no longer is,” she assured him. “Which is neither here nor there,”
-she hastened on as Francis began to betray interest in the matter of
-Torres’ end. “He is gone, and it is well that he is gone, for he can
-never come back. But he did lie, didn’t he?”
-
-“Undoubtedly,” Francis replied. “He is a confounded liar.”
-
-He could not help noticing the way her face fell when he so heartily
-agreed with her concerning Torres’ veracity.
-
-“What did he say?” Francis questioned.
-
-“That he was the one selected to marry me.”
-
-“A liar,” Francis commented dryly.
-
-“Next he said that you were the selected one—which was also a lie,” her
-voice trailed off.
-
-Francis shook his head.
-
-The involuntary cry of joy the Queen uttered touched his heart to such
-tenderness of pity that almost did he put his arms around her to soothe
-her. She waited for him to speak.
-
-“I am the one to marry you,” he went on steadily. “You are very
-beautiful. When shall we be married?”
-
-The wild joy in her face was such that he swore to himself that never
-would he willingly mar that face with marks of sorrow. She might be
-ruler over the Lost Souls, with the wealth of Ind and with supernatural
-powers of mirror-gazing; but most poignantly she appealed to him as a
-lonely and naïve woman, overspilling of love and totally unversed in
-love.
-
-“And I shall tell you of another lie this Torres animal told to me,” she
-burst forth exultantly. “He told me that you were rich, and that, before
-you married me, you desired to know what wealth was mine. He told me you
-had sent him to inquire into what riches I possessed. This I know was a
-lie. You are not marrying me for that!”—with a scornful gesture at the
-jewel chest.
-
-Francis shook his head.
-
-“You are marrying me for myself,” she rushed on in triumph.
-
-“For yourself,” Francis could not help but lie.
-
-And then he beheld an amazing thing. The Queen, this Queen who was the
-sheerest autocrat, who said come here and go there, who dismissed the
-death of Torres with its mere announcement, and who selected her royal
-spouse without so much as consulting his prenuptial wishes, this Queen
-began to blush. Up her neck, flooding her face to her ears and forehead,
-welled the pink tide of maidenly modesty and embarrassment. And such
-sight of faltering made Francis likewise falter. He knew not what to do,
-and felt a warmth of blood rising under the sun-tan of his own face.
-Never, he thought, had there been a man-and-woman situation like it in
-all the history of men and women. The mutual embarrassment of the pair
-of them was appalling, and to save his life he could not have summoned a
-jot of initiative. Thus, the Queen was compelled to speak first.
-
-“And now,” she said, blushing still more furiously, “you must make love
-to me.”
-
-Francis strove to speak, but his lips were so dry that he licked them
-and succeeded only in stammering incoherently.
-
-“I never have been loved,” the Queen continued bravely. “The affairs of
-my people are not love. My people are animals without reason. But we,
-you and I, are man and woman. There must be wooing, and tenderness——that
-much I have learned from my Mirror of the World. But I am unskilled. I
-know not how. But you, from out of the great world, must surely know. I
-wait. You must love me.”
-
-She sank down upon the couch, drawing Francis beside her, and true to
-her word, proceeded to wait. While he, bidden to love at command, was
-paralyzed by the preposterous impossibility of so obeying.
-
-“Am I not beautiful?” the Queen queried after another pause. “Are not
-your arms as mad to be about me as I am mad to have them about me? Never
-have a man’s lips touched my lips. What is a kiss like——on the lips, I
-mean? Your lips on my hand were ecstasy. You kissed then, not alone my
-hand, but my soul. My heart was there, throbbing against the press of
-your lips. Did you not feel it?”
-
- * * * * *
-
-“And so,” she was saying, half an hour later, as they sat on the couch
-hand in hand, “I have told you the little I know of myself. I do not
-know the past, except what I have been told of it. The present I see
-clearly in my Mirror of the World. The future I can likewise see, but
-vaguely; nor can I always understand what I see. I was born here. So was
-my mother, and her mother. How it chanced is that always into the life
-of each queen came a lover. Sometimes, as you, they came here. My
-mother’s mother, so it was told me, left the valley to find her lover
-and was gone a long time——for years. So did my mother go forth. The
-secret way is known to me, where the long dead conquistadores guard the
-Maya mysteries, and where Da Vasco himself stands whose helmet this
-Torres animal had the impudence to steal and claim for his own. Had you
-not come, I should have been compelled to go forth and find you, for you
-were my appointed one and had to be.”
-
-A woman entered, followed by a spearman, and Francis could scarce make
-his way through the quaint antiquated Spanish of the conversation that
-ensued. In commingled anger and joy, the Queen epitomized it to him.
-
-“We are to depart now to the Long House for our wedding. The Priest of
-the Sun is stubborn, I know not why, save that he has been balked of the
-blood of all of you on his altar. He is very blood-thirsty. He is the
-Sun Priest, but he is possessed of little reason. I have report that he
-is striving to turn the people against our wedding——the dog!” She
-clinched her hands, her face set, and her eyes blazed with royal fury.
-“He shall marry us, by the ancient custom, before the Long House, at the
-Altar of the Sun.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-“It’s not too late, Francis, to change your mind,” Henry urged.
-“Besides, it is not fair. The short straw was mine. Am I not right,
-Leoncia?”
-
-Leoncia could not reply. They stood in a group, at the forefront of the
-assembled Lost Souls, before the altar. Inside the Long House the Queen
-and the Sun Priest were closeted.
-
-“You wouldn’t want to see Henry marry her, would you, Leoncia?” Francis
-argued.
-
-“Nor you, either,” Leoncia countered. “Torres is the only one I’d like
-to have seen marry her. I don’t like her. I would not care to see any
-friend of mine her husband.”
-
-“You’re almost jealous,” commented Henry. “Just the same, Francis
-doesn’t seem so very cast down over his fate.”
-
-“She’s not at all bad,” Francis retorted. “And I can accept my fate with
-dignity, if not with equanimity. And I’ll tell you something else,
-Henry, now that you are harping on this strain: she wouldn’t marry you
-if you asked her.”
-
-“Oh, I don’t know,” Henry began.
-
-“Then ask her,” was the challenge. “Here she comes now. Look at her
-eyes. There’s trouble brewing. And the priest’s black as thunder. You
-just propose to her and see what chance you’ve got while I’m around.”
-
-Henry nodded his head stubbornly.
-
-“I will——but not to show you what kind of a woman-conqueror I am, but
-for the sake of fair play. I wasn’t playing the game when I accepted
-your sacrifice of yourself, but I am going to play the game now.”
-
-Before they could prevent him, he had thrust his way to the Queen,
-shouldered in between her and the priest, and began to speak earnestly.
-And the Queen laughed as she listened. But her laughter was not for
-Henry. With shining triumph she laughed across at Leoncia.
-
-Not many moments were required to say no to Henry’s persuasions,
-whereupon the Queen joined Leoncia and Francis, the priest tagging at
-her heels, and Henry, following more slowly, trying to conceal the
-gladness that was his at being rejected.
-
-“What do you think,” the Queen addressed Leoncia directly. “Good Henry
-has just asked me to marry him, which makes the fourth this day. Am I
-not well loved? Have you ever had four lovers, all desiring to marry you
-on your wedding day?”
-
-“Four!” Francis exclaimed.
-
-The Queen looked at him tenderly.
-
-“Yourself, and Henry whom I have just declined. And, before either of
-you, this day, the insolent Torres; and, just now, in the Long House,
-the priest here.” Wrath began to fire her eyes and cheeks at the
-recollection. “This Priest of the Sun, this priest long since renegade
-to his vows, this man who is only half a man, wanted me to marry him!
-The dog! The beast! And he had the insolence to say, at the end, that I
-should not marry Francis. Come. I will show him.”
-
-She nodded her own private spearmen up about the group, and with her
-eyes directed two of them behind the priest to include him. At sight of
-this, murmurs began to arise in the crowd.
-
-“Proceed, priest,” the Queen commanded harshly. “Else will my men kill
-you now.”
-
-He turned sharply about, as if to appeal to the people, but the speech
-that trembled to his lips died unuttered at sight of the spear-points at
-his breast. He bowed to the inevitable, and led the way close to the
-altar, placing the Queen and Francis facing him, while he stood above on
-the platform of the altar, looking at them and over them at the Lost
-Souls.
-
-“I am the Priest of the Sun,” he began. “My vows are holy. As the vowed
-priest I am to marry this woman, the Lady Who Dreams, to this stranger
-and intruder, whose blood is already forfeit to our altar. My vows are
-holy. I cannot be false to them. I refuse to marry this woman to this
-man. In the name of the Sun God I refuse to perform this ceremony——”
-
-“Then shall you die, priest, here and now,” the Queen hissed at him,
-nodding the near spearmen to lift their spears against him, and nodding
-the other spearmen to face the murmuring and semi-mutinous Lost Souls.
-
-Followed a pregnant pause. For less than a minute, but for nearly a
-minute, no word was uttered, no thought was betrayed by a restless
-movement. All stood, like so many statues; and all gazed upon the priest
-against whose heart the poised spears rested.
-
-He, whose blood of heart and life was nearest at stake in the issue, was
-the first to act. He gave in. Calmly he turned his back to the
-threatening spears, knelt, and, in archaic Spanish, prayed an invocation
-of fruitfulness to the Sun. Returning to the Queen and Francis, with a
-gesture he made them fully bow and almost half kneel before him. As he
-touched their hands with his finger-tips he could not forbear the
-involuntary scowl that convulsed his features.
-
-As the couple arose, at his indication, he broke a small corn-cake in
-two, handing a half to each.
-
-“The Eucharist,” Henry whispered to Leoncia, as the pair crumbled and
-ate their portions of cake.
-
-“The Roman Catholic worship Da Vasco must have brought in with him,
-twisted about until it is now the marriage ceremony,” she whispered back
-comprehension, although, at sight of Francis thus being lost to her, she
-was holding herself tightly for control, her lips bloodless and
-stretched to thinness, her nails hurting into her palms.
-
-From the altar the priest took and presented to the Queen a tiny dagger
-and a tiny golden cup. She spoke to Francis, who rolled up his sleeve
-and presented to her his bared left forearm. About to scarify his flesh,
-she paused, considered till all could see her visibly think, and,
-instead of breaking his skin, she touched the dagger point carefully to
-her tongue.
-
-And then arose rage. At the taste of the blade she threw the weapon from
-her, half sprang at the priest, half gave command to her spearmen for
-the death of him, and shook and trembled in the violence of her effort
-for self-possession. Following with her eyes the flight of the dagger to
-assure herself that its poisoned point should not strike the flesh of
-another and wreak its evilness upon it, she drew from the breast-fold of
-her dress another tiny dagger. This, too, she tested with her tongue,
-ere she broke Francis’ skin with the point of it and caught in the cup
-of gold the several red blood-drops that exuded from the incision.
-Francis repeated the same for her and on her, whereupon, under her
-flashing eyes, the priest took the cup and offered the commingled blood
-upon the altar.
-
-Came a pause. The Queen frowned.
-
-“If blood is to be shed this day on the altar of the Sun God——” she
-began threateningly.
-
-And the priest, as if recollecting what he was loath to do, turned to
-the people and made solemn pronouncement that the twain were man and
-wife. The Queen turned to Francis with glowing invitation to his arms.
-As he folded her to him and kissed her eager lips, Leoncia gasped and
-leaned closely to Henry for support. Nor did Francis fail to observe and
-understand her passing indisposition, although when the flush-faced
-Queen next sparkled triumph at her sister woman, Leoncia was to all
-appearance proudly indifferent.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXI
-
-
-Two thoughts flickered in Torres’ mind as he was sucked down. The first
-was of the great white hound which had leaped after him. The second was
-that the Mirror of the World told lies. That this was his end he was
-certain, yet the little he had dared permit himself to glimpse in the
-Mirror had given no hint of an end anything like this.
-
-A good swimmer, as he was engulfed and sucked on in rapid, fluid
-darkness, he knew fear that he might have his brains knocked out by the
-stone walls or roof of the subterranean passage through which he was
-being swept. But the freak of the currents was such that not once did he
-collide with any part of his anatomy. Sometimes he was aware of being
-banked against water-cushions that tokened the imminence of a wall or
-boulder, at which times he shrank as it were into smaller compass, like
-a sea-turtle drawing in its head before the onslaught of sharks.
-
-Less than a minute, as he measured the passage of time by the holding of
-his breath, elapsed, ere, in an easier-flowing stream, his head emerged
-above the surface and he refreshed his lungs with great inhalations of
-cool air. Instead of swimming, he contented himself with keeping afloat,
-and with wondering what had happened to the hound and with what next
-excitement would vex his underground adventure.
-
-Soon he glimpsed light ahead, the dim but unmistakable light of day;
-and, as the way grew brighter, he turned his face back and saw what made
-him proceed to swim with a speed-stroke. What he saw was the hound,
-swimming high, with the teeth of its huge jaws gleaming in the
-increasing light. Under the source of the light, he saw a shelving bank
-and climbed out. His first thought, which he half carried out, was to
-reach into his pocket for the gems he had stolen from the Queen’s chest.
-But a reverberant barking that grew to thunder in the cavern reminded
-him of his fanged pursuer, and he drew forth the Queen’s dagger instead.
-
-Again two thoughts divided his judgment for action. Should he try to
-kill the swimming brute ere it landed? Or should he retreat up the rocks
-toward the light on the chance that the stream might carry the hound
-past him? His judgment settled on the second course of action, and he
-fled upward along a narrow ledge. But the dog landed and followed with
-such four-footed certainty of speed that it swiftly overtook him. Torres
-turned at bay on the cramped footing, crouched, and brandished the
-dagger against the brute’s leap.
-
-But the hound did not leap. Instead, playfully, with jaws widespread of
-laughter, it sat down and extended its right paw in greeting. As he took
-the paw in his hand and shook it, Torres almost collapsed in the
-revulsion of relief. He laughed with exuberant shrillness that
-advertised semi-hysteria, and continued to pump the hound’s leg up and
-down, while the hound, with wide jaws and gentle eyes, laughed as
-exuberantly back.
-
-Pursuing the shelf, the hound contentedly at heel and occasionally
-sniffing his calves, Torres found that the narrow track, paralleling the
-river, after an ascent descended to it again. And then Torres saw two
-things, one that made him pause and shudder, and one that made his heart
-beat high with hope. The first was the underground river. Rushing
-straight at the wall of rock, it plunged into it in a chaos of foam and
-turbulence, with stiffly serrated and spitefully spitting waves that
-advertised its swiftness and momentum. The second was an opening to one
-side, through which streamed white daylight. Possibly fifteen feet in
-diameter was this opening, but across it was stretched a spider web more
-monstrous than any product of a madman’s fancy. Most ominous of all was
-the debris of bones that lay beneath. The threads of the web were of
-silver and of the thickness of a lead pencil. He shuddered as he touched
-a thread with his hand. It clung to his flesh like glue, and only by an
-effort that agitated the entire web did he succeed in freeing his hand.
-Upon his clothes and upon the coat of the dog he rubbed off the
-stickiness from his skin.
-
-Between two of the lower guys of the great web he saw that there was
-space for him to crawl through the opening to the day; but, ere he
-attempted it, caution led him to test the opening by helping and shoving
-the hound ahead of him. The white beast crawled and scrambled out of
-sight, and Torres was about to follow when it returned. Such was the
-panic haste of its return that it collided with him and both fell. But
-the man managed to save himself by clinging with his hands to the rocks,
-while the four-footed brute, not able so to check itself, fell into the
-churning water. Even as Torres reached a hand out to try to save it, the
-dog was carried under the rock.
-
-Long Torres debated. That farther subterranean plunge of the river was
-dreadful to contemplate. Above was the open way to the day, and the life
-of him yearned towards the day as a bee or a flower toward the sun. Yet
-what had the hound encountered to drive it back in such precipitate
-retreat? As he pondered, he became aware that his hand was resting on a
-rounded surface. He picked the object up, and gazed into the eyeless,
-noseless features of a human skull. His frightened glances played over
-the carpet of bones, and, beyond all doubt, he made out the ribs and
-spinal columns and thigh bones of what had once been men. This inclined
-him toward the water as the way out, but at sight of the foaming madness
-of it plunging through solid rock he recoiled.
-
-Drawing the Queen’s dagger, he crawled up between the web-guys with
-infinite carefulness, saw what the hound had seen, and came back in such
-vertigo of retreat that he, too, fell into the water, and, with but time
-to fill his lungs with air, was drawn into the opening and into
-darkness.
-
- * * * * *
-
-In the meanwhile, back at the lake dwelling of the Queen, events no less
-portentous were occurring with no less equal rapidity. Just returned
-from the ceremony at the Long House, the wedding party was in the action
-of seating itself for what might be called the wedding breakfast, when
-an arrow, penetrating an interstice in the bamboo wall, flashed between
-the Queen and Francis and transfixed the opposite wall, where its
-feathered shaft vibrated from the violence of its suddenly arrested
-flight. A rush to the windows looking out upon the narrow bridge, showed
-Henry and Francis the gravity of the situation. Even as they looked,
-they saw the Queen’s spearman who guarded the approach to the bridge,
-midway across it in flight, falling into the water with the shaft of an
-arrow vibrating out of his back in similar fashion to the one in the
-wall of the room. Beyond the bridge, on the shore, headed by their
-priest and backed by their women and children, all the male Lost Souls
-were arching the air full with feathered bolts from their bows.
-
-A spearman of the Queen tottered into the apartment, his limbs spreading
-vainly to support him, his eyes glazing, his lips beating a soundless
-message which his fading life could not utter, as he fell prone, his
-back bristling with arrow shafts like a porcupine. Henry sprang to the
-door that gave entrance from the bridge, and, with his automatic, swept
-it clear of the charging Lost Souls who could advance only in single
-file and who fell as they advanced before his fire.
-
-The siege of the frail house was brief. Though Francis, protected by
-Henry’s automatic, destroyed the bridge, by no method could the besieged
-put out the blazing thatch of roof ignited in a score of places by the
-fire-arrows discharged under the Sun Priest’s directions.
-
-“There is but one way to escape,” the Queen panted, on the platform
-overlooking the whirl of waters, as she clasped one hand of Francis in
-hers and threatened to precipitate herself clingingly into his arms. “It
-wins to the world.” She pointed to the sucking heart of the whirlpool.
-“No one has ever returned from that. In my Mirror I have beheld them
-pass, dead always, and out to the wider world. Except for Torres, I have
-never seen the living go. Only the dead. And they never returned. Nor
-has Torres returned.”
-
-All eyes looked to all eyes at sight of the dreadfulness of the way.
-
-“There is no other way?” Henry demanded, as he drew Leoncia close to
-him.
-
-The Queen shook her head. About them already burning portions of the
-thatch were falling, while their ears were deafened by the blood-lust
-chantings of the Lost Souls on the lake-shore. The Queen disengaged her
-hand from Francis’, with the evident intention of dashing into her
-sleeping room, then caught his hand and led him in. As he stood
-wonderingly beside her, she slammed down the lid on the chest of jewels
-and fastened it. Next, she kicked aside the floor matting and lifted a
-trap door that opened down to the water. At her indication, Francis
-dragged over the chest and dropped it through.
-
-“Even the Sun Priest does not know that hiding place,” she whispered,
-ere she caught his hand again, and, running, led him back to the others
-on the platform.
-
-“It is now time to depart from this place,” she announced.
-
-“Hold me in your arms, good Francis, husband of mine, and lift me and
-leap with me,” she commanded. “We will lead the way.”
-
-And so they leapt. As the roof was crashing down in a wrath of fire and
-flying embers, Henry caught Leoncia to him, and sprang after into the
-whirl of waters wherein Francis and the Queen had already disappeared.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Like Torres, the four fugitives escaped injury against the rocks and
-were borne onward by the underground river to the daylight opening where
-the great spider-web guarded the way. Henry had an easier time of it,
-for Leoncia knew how to swim. But Francis’ swimming prowess enabled him
-to keep the Queen up. She obeyed him implicitly, floating low in the
-water, nor clutched at his arms nor acted as a drag on him in any way.
-At the ledge, all four drew out of the water and rested. The two women
-devoted themselves to wringing out their hair, which had been flung
-adrift all about them by the swirling currents.
-
-“It is not the first mountain I have been in the heart of with you two,”
-Leoncia laughed to the Morgans, although more than for them was her
-speech intended for the Queen.
-
-“It is the first time I have been in the heart of a mountain with my
-husband,” the Queen laughed back, and the barb of her dart sank deep
-into Leoncia.
-
-“Seems as though your wife, Francis, and my wife-to-be, aren’t going to
-hit it off too well together,” Henry said, with the sharpness of censure
-that man is wont to employ to conceal the embarrassment caused by his
-womankind.
-
-And, as inevitable result of such male men’s ways, all that Henry gained
-was a silence more awkward and more embarrassing. The two women almost
-enjoyed the situation. Francis cudgeled his brains vainly for some
-remark that would ameliorate matters; while Henry, in desperation, arose
-suddenly with the observation that he was going to “explore a bit,” and
-invited, by his hand out to help her to her feet, the Queen to accompany
-him. Francis and Leoncia sat on for a moment in stubborn silence. He was
-the first to break it.
-
-“For two cents I’d give you a thorough shaking, Leoncia.”
-
-“And what have I done now?” she countered.
-
-“As if you didn’t know. You’ve been behaving abominably.”
-
-“It is you who have behaved abominably,” she half-sobbed, in spite of
-her determination to betray no such feminine signs of weakness. “Who
-asked you to marry her? You did not draw the short straw. Yet you must
-volunteer, must rush in where even angels would fear to tread? Did I ask
-you to? Almost did my heart stop beating when I heard you tell Henry you
-would marry her. I thought I was going to faint. You had not even
-consulted me; yet it was on my suggestion, in order to save you from
-her, that the straws were drawn——yes, and I am not too little shameless
-to admit that it was because I wanted to save you for myself. Henry does
-not love me as you led me to believe you loved me. I never loved Henry
-as I loved you, as I do love you even now, God forgive me.”
-
-Francis was swept beyond himself. He caught her and pressed her to him
-in a crushing embrace.
-
-“And on your very wedding day,” she gasped reproachfully in the midmost
-of his embrace.
-
-His arm died away from about her.
-
-“And this from you, Leoncia, at such a moment,” he murmured sadly.
-
-“And why not?” she flared. “You loved me. You gave me to understand,
-beyond all chance of misunderstanding, that you loved me; yet here,
-to-day, you went out of your way, went eagerly and gladly, and married
-yourself to the first woman with a white skin who presented herself.”
-
-“You are jealous,” he charged, and knew a heart-throb of joy as she
-nodded. “And I grant you are jealous; but at the same time, exercising
-the woman’s prerogative of lying, you are lying now. What I did, was not
-done eagerly nor gladly. I did it for your sake and my sake——or for
-Henry’s sake, rather. Thank God, I have a man’s honor still left to me!”
-
-“Man’s honour does not always satisfy woman,” she replied.
-
-“Would you prefer me dishonorable?” he was swift on the uptake.
-
-“I am only a woman who loves,” she pleaded.
-
-“You are a stinging, female wasp,” he raged, “and you are not fair.”
-
-“Is any woman fair when she loves?” she made the great confession and
-acknowledgment. “Men may succeed in living in their heads of honor; but
-know, and as a humble woman I humbly state my womanhood, that woman
-lives only in her heart of love.”
-
-“Perhaps you are right. Honor, like arithmetic, can be reasoned and
-calculated. Which leaves a woman no morality, but only ...”
-
-“Only moods,” Leoncia completed abjectly for him.
-
-Calls from Henry and the Queen put an end to the conversation, for
-Leoncia and Francis quickly joined the others in gazing at the great
-web.
-
-“Did you ever see so monstrous a web!” Leoncia exclaimed.
-
-“I’d like to see the monster that made it,” said Henry.
-
-“And I’d rather see than be it,” Francis paraphrased from the “Purple
-Cow.”
-
-“It is our good fortune that we do not have to go that way,” the Queen
-said.
-
-All looked inquiry at her, and she pointed down to the stream.
-
-“That is the way,” she said. “I know it. Often and often, in my Mirror
-of the World, have I seen the way. When my mother died and was buried in
-the whirlpool, I followed her body in the Mirror, and I saw it come to
-this place and go by this place still in the water.”
-
-“But she was dead,” Leoncia objected quickly.
-
-The rivalry between them fanned instantly.
-
-“One of my spearmen,” the Queen went on quietly, “a handsome youth,
-alas, dared to look at me as a lover. He was flung in alive. I watched
-him, too, in the Mirror. When he came to this place he climbed out. I
-saw him crawl under the web to the day, and I saw him retreat backward
-from the day and throw himself into the stream.”
-
-“Another dead one,” Henry commented grimly.
-
-“No; for I followed him on in the Mirror, and though all was darkness
-for a time and I could see nothing, in the end, and shortly, under the
-sun he emerged into the bosom of a large river, and swam to the shore,
-and climbed the bank——it was the left hand bank as I remember well——and
-disappeared among large trees such as do not grow in the Valley of the
-Lost Souls.”
-
-But, like Torres, the rest of them recoiled from thought of the dark
-plunge through the living rock.
-
-“These are the bones of animals and of men,” the Queen warned, “who were
-daunted by the way of the water and who strove to gain the sun. Men
-there are there——behold! Or at least what remains of them for a space,
-the bones, ere, in time, the bones, too, pass into nothingness.”
-
-“Even so,” said Francis, “I suddenly discover a pressing need to look
-into the eye of the sun. Do the rest of you remain here while I
-investigate.”
-
-Drawing his automatic, the water-tightness of the cartridges a
-guarantee, he crawled under the web. The moment he had disappeared from
-view beyond the web, they heard him begin to shoot. Next, they saw him
-retreating backward, still shooting. And, next, falling upon him, two
-yards across from black-haired leg-tip to black-haired leg-tip, the
-denizen of the web, a monstrous spider, still wriggling with departing
-life, shot through and through again and again. The solid center of its
-body, from which the legs radiated, was the size of a normal
-waste-basket, and the substantial density of it crunched audibly as it
-struck on Francis’ shoulders and back, rebounded, the hairy legs still
-helplessly quivering, and pitched down into the wave-crisping water. All
-four pair of eyes watched the corpse of it plunge against the wall of
-rock, suck down, and disappear.
-
-“Where there’s one, there are two,” said Henry, looking dubiously up
-toward the daylight.
-
-“It is the only way,” said the Queen. “Come, my husband, each in the
-other’s arms let us win through the darkness to the sun-bright world.
-Remember, I have never seen it, and soon, with you, shall I for the
-first time see it.”
-
-Her arms open in invitation, Francis could not decline.
-
-“It is a hole in the sheer wall of a precipice a thousand feet deep,” he
-explained to the others the glimpse he had caught from beyond the spider
-web, as he clasped the Queen in his arms and leaped off.
-
-Henry had gathered Leoncia to him and was about to leap, when she
-stopped him.
-
-“Why did you accept Francis’ sacrifice?” she demanded.
-
-“Because ...” He paused and looked at her wonderingly.
-
-“Because I wanted you,” he completed. “Because I was engaged to you as
-well, while Francis was unattached. Besides, if I’m not greatly
-mistaken, Francis appears to be a pretty well satisfied bridegroom.”
-
-“No,” she shook her head emphatically. “He has a chivalrous spirit, and
-he is acting his part in order not to hurt her feelings.”
-
-“Oh, I don’t know. Remember, before the altar, at the Long House, when I
-said I was going to ask the Queen to marry me, that he bragged she
-wouldn’t marry me if I did ask? Well, the conclusion’s pretty obvious
-that he wanted her himself. And why shouldn’t he? He’s a bachelor. And
-she’s some nice woman herself.”
-
-But Leoncia scarcely heard. With a quick movement, leaning back in his
-arms away from him so that she could look him squarely in the eyes, she
-demanded:
-
-“How do you love me? Do you love me madly? Do you love me badly madly?
-Do I mean that to you, and more, and more, and more?”
-
-He could only look his bewilderment.
-
-“Do you?—do you?” she urged passionately.
-
-“Of course I do,” he made slow answer, “but it would never have entered
-my head to describe it that way. Why, you’re the one woman for me.
-Rather would I describe it as loving you deeply, and greatly, and
-enduringly. Why, you seem so much a part of me that I feel almost as if
-I had always known you. It was that way from the first.”
-
-“She is an abominable woman!” Leoncia broke forth irrelevantly. “I hated
-her from the first.”
-
-“My! What a spitfire! I hate to think how much you would have hated her
-had I married her instead of Francis.”
-
-“We’d better follow them,” she put an end to the discussion.
-
-And Henry, very much be-puzzled, clasped her tightly and leaped off into
-the white turmoil of water.
-
- * * * * *
-
-On the bank of the Gualaca River sat two Indian girls fishing. Just
-up-stream from them arose the precipitous cliff of one of the buttresses
-of the lofty mountains. The main stream flowed past in chocolate-colored
-spate; but, directly beneath them, where they fished, was a quiet eddy.
-No less quiet was the fishing. No bites jerked their rods in token that
-the bait was enticing. One of them, Nicoya, yawned, ate a banana, yawned
-again, and held the skin she was about to cast aside suspended in her
-hand.
-
-“We have been very quiet, Concordia,” she observed to her companion,
-“and it has won us no fish. Now shall I make a noise and a splash. Since
-they say ‘what goes up must come down,’ why should not something come up
-after something has gone down? I am going to try. There!”
-
-She threw the banana peel into the water and lazily watched the point
-where it had struck.
-
-“If anything comes up I hope it will be big,” Concordia murmured with
-equal laziness.
-
-And upon their astonished gaze, even as they looked, arose up out of the
-brown depths a great white hound. They jerked their poles up and behind
-them on the bank, threw their arms about each other, and watched the
-hound gain the shore at the lower end of the eddy, climb the sloping
-bank, pause to shake himself, and then disappear among the trees.
-
-Nicoya and Concordia giggled.
-
-“Try it again,” Concordia urged.
-
-“No; you this time. And see what you can bring up.”
-
-Quite unbelieving, Concordia tossed in a clod of earth. And almost
-immediately a helmeted head arose on the flood. Clutching each other
-very tightly, they watched the man under the helmet gain the shore where
-the hound had landed and disappear into the forest.
-
-Again the two Indian girls giggled; but this time, urge as they would,
-neither could raise the courage to throw anything into the water.
-
-Some time later, still giggling over the strange occurrences, they were
-espied by two young Indian men, who were hugging the bank as they
-paddled their canoe up against the stream.
-
-“What makes you laugh,” one of them greeted.
-
-“We have been seeing things,” Nicoya gurgled down to them.
-
-“Then have you been drinking pulque,” the young man charged.
-
-Both girls shook their heads, and Concordia said:
-
-“We don’t have to drink to see things. First, when Nicoya threw in a
-banana skin, we saw a dog come up out of the water——a white dog that was
-as big as a tiger of the mountains——”
-
-“And when Concordia threw in a clod,” the other girl took up the tale,
-“up came a man with a head of iron. It is magic. Concordia and I can
-work magic.”
-
-“José,” one of the Indians addressed his mate, “this merits a drink.”
-
-And each, in turn, while the other with his paddle held the canoe in
-place, took a swig from a square-face Holland gin bottle part full of
-pulque.
-
-“No,” said José, when the girls had begged him for a drink. “One drink
-of pulque and you might see more white dogs as big as tigers or more
-iron-headed men.”
-
-“All right,” Nicoya accepted the rebuff. “Then do you throw in your
-pulque bottle and see what you will see. We drew a dog and a man. Your
-prize may be the devil.”
-
-“I should like to see the devil,” said José, taking another drain at the
-bottle. “The pulque is a true fire of bravery. I should very much like
-to see the devil.”
-
-He passed the bottle to his companion with a gesture to finish it.
-
-“Now throw it into the water,” José commanded.
-
-The empty bottle struck with a forceful splash, and the evoking was
-realized with startling immediacy, for up to the surface floated the
-monstrous, hairy body of the slain spider. Which was too much for
-ordinary Indian flesh and blood. So suddenly did both young men recoil
-from the sight that they capsized the canoe. When their heads emerged
-from the water they struck out for the swift current, and were swiftly
-borne away down stream, followed more slowly by the swamped canoe.
-
-Nicoya and Concordia had been too frightened to giggle. They held on to
-each other and waited, watching the magic water and out of the tails of
-their eyes observing the frightened young men capture the canoe, tow it
-to shore, and run out and hide on the bank.
-
-The afternoon sun was getting low in the sky ere the girls summoned
-courage again to evoke the magic water. Only after much discussion did
-they agree both to fling in clods of earth at the same time. And up
-arose a man and a woman——Francis and the Queen. The girls fell over
-backward into the bushes, and were themselves unobserved as they watched
-Francis swim with the Queen to shore.
-
-“It may just have happened——all these things may just have happened at
-the very times we threw things into the water,” Nicoya whispered to
-Concordia five minutes later.
-
-“But when we threw one thing in, only one came up,” Concordia argued.
-“And when we threw two, two came up.”
-
-“Very well,” said Nicoya. “Let us now prove it. Let us try again, both
-of us. If nothing comes up, then have we no power of magic.”
-
-Together they threw in clods, and uprose another man and woman. But this
-pair, Henry and Leoncia, could swim, and they swam side by side to the
-natural landing place, and, like the rest that had preceded them, passed
-on out of sight among the trees.
-
-Long the two Indian girls lingered. For they had agreed to throw
-nothing, and, if something arose, then would coincidence be proved. But
-if nothing arose, because nothing further was by them evoked, they could
-only conclude that the magic was truly theirs. They lay hidden and
-watched the water until darkness hid it from their eyes; and, slowly and
-soberly, they took the trail back to their village, overcome by an
-awareness of having been blessed by the gods.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXII
-
-
-Not until the day following his escape from the subterranean river, did
-Torres reach San Antonio. He arrived on foot, jaded and dirty, a small
-Indian boy at his heels carrying the helmet of Da Vasco. For Torres
-wanted to show the helmet to the Jefe and the Judge in evidence of the
-narrative of strange adventure he chuckled to tell them.
-
-First on the main street he encountered the Jefe, who cried out loudly
-at his appearance.
-
-“Is it truly you, Senor Torres?” The Jefe crossed himself solemnly ere
-he shook hands.
-
-The solid flesh, and, even more so, the dirt and grit of the other’s
-hand, convinced the Jefe of reality and substance.
-
-Whereupon the Jefe became wrathful.
-
-“And here I’ve been looking upon you as dead!” he exclaimed. “That Caroo
-dog of a José Mancheno! He came back and reported you dead——dead and
-buried until the Day of Judgment in the heart of the Maya Mountain.”
-
-“He is a fool, and I am possibly the richest man in Panama,” Torres
-replied grandiosely. “At least, like the ancient and heroic
-conquistadores, I have braved all dangers and penetrated to the
-treasure. I have seen it. Nay——”
-
-Torres’ hand had been sunk into his trousers’ pocket to bring forth the
-filched gems of the Lady Who Dreams; but he withdrew the hand empty. Too
-many curious eyes of the street were already centered upon him and the
-draggled figure he cut.
-
-“I have much to say to you,” he told the Jefe, “that cannot well be said
-now. I have knocked on the doors of the dead and worn the shrouds of
-corpses. And I have consorted with men four centuries dead but who were
-not dust, and I have beheld them drown in the second death. I have gone
-through mountains, as well as over them, and broken bread with lost
-souls, and gazed into the Mirror of the World. All of which I shall tell
-you, my best friend, and the honorable Judge, in due time, for I shall
-make you rich along with me.”
-
-“Have you looked upon the pulque when it was sour?” the Jefe quipped
-incredulously.
-
-“I have not had drink stronger than water since I last departed from San
-Antonio,” was the reply. “And I shall go now to my house and drink a
-long long drink, and after that I shall bathe the filth from me, and put
-on garments whole and decent.”
-
-Not immediately, as he proceeded, did Torres gain his house. A ragged
-urchin exclaimed out at sight of him, ran up to him, and handed him an
-envelope that he knew familiarly to be from the local government
-wireless, and that he was certain had been sent by Regan.
-
- _You are doing well. Imperative you keep party away from New York
- for three weeks more. Fifty thousand if you succeed._
-
-Borrowing a pencil from the boy, Torres wrote a reply on the back of the
-envelope:
-
- _Send the money. Party will never come back from mountains where he
- is lost._
-
-Two other occurrences delayed Torres’ long drink and bath. Just as he
-was entering the jewelry store of old Rodriguez Fernandez, he was
-intercepted by the old Maya priest with whom he had last parted in the
-Maya mountain. He recoiled as from an apparition, for sure he was that
-the old man was drowned in the Room of the Gods. Like the Jefe at sight
-of Torres, so Torres, at sight of the priest, drew back in startled
-surprise.
-
-“Go away,” he said. “Depart, restless old man. You are a spirit. Thy
-body lies drowned and horrible in the heart of the mountain. You are an
-appearance, a ghost. Go away, nothing corporeal resides in this illusion
-of you, else would I strike you. You are a ghost. Depart at once. I
-should not like to strike a ghost.”
-
-But the ghost seized his hands and clung to them with such beseeching
-corporality as to unconvince him.
-
-“Money,” the ancient one babbled. “Let me have money. Lend me money. I
-will repay——I who know the secrets of the Maya treasure. My son is lost
-in the mountain with the treasure. The Gringos also are lost in the
-mountain. Help me to rescue my son. With him alone will I be satisfied,
-while the treasure shall all be yours. But we must take men, and much of
-the white man’s wonderful powder and tear a hole out of the mountain so
-that the water will run away. He is not drowned. He is a prisoner of the
-water in the room where stand the jewel-eyed Chia and Hzatzl. Their eyes
-of green and red alone will pay for all the wonderful powder in the
-world. So let me have the money with which to buy the wonderful powder.”
-
-But Alvarez Torres was a strangely constituted man. Some warp or slant
-or idiosyncrasy of his nature always raised insuperable obstacles to his
-parting with money when such parting was unavoidable. And the richer he
-got the more positively this idiosyncrasy asserted itself.
-
-“Money!” he asserted harshly, as he thrust the old priest aside and
-pulled open the door of Fernandez’s store. “Is it I who should have
-money—. I who am all rags and tatters as a beggar. I have no money for
-myself, much less for you, old man. Besides, it was you, and not I, who
-led your son to the Maya mountain. On your head be it, not on mine, the
-death of your son who fell into the pit under the feet of Chia that was
-digged by your ancestors and not by mine.”
-
-Again the ancient one clutched at him and yammered for money with which
-to buy dynamite. So roughly did Torres thrust him aside that his old
-legs failed to perform their wonted duty and he fell upon the
-flagstones.
-
-The shop of Rodriguez Fernandez was small and dirty, and contained
-scarcely more than a small and dirty showcase that rested upon an
-equally small and dirty counter. The place was grimy with the undusted
-and unswept filth of a generation. Lizards and cockroaches crawled along
-the walls. Spiders webbed in every corner, and Torres saw, crossing the
-ceiling above, what made him step hastily to the side. It was a
-seven-inch centipede which he did not care to have fall casually upon
-his head or down his back between shirt and skin. And, when he appeared
-crawling out like a huge spider himself from some inner den of an
-unventilated cubicle, Fernandez looked like an Elizabethan
-stage-representation of Shylock——withal he was a dirtier Shylock than
-even the Elizabethan stage could have stomached.
-
-The jeweler fawned to Torres and in a cracked falsetto humbled himself
-even beneath the dirt of his shop. Torres pulled from his pocket a
-haphazard dozen or more of the gems filched from the Queen’s chest,
-selected the smallest, and, without a word, while at the same time
-returning the rest to his pocket, passed it over to the jeweler.
-
-“I am a poor man,” he cackled, the while Torres could not fail to see
-how keenly he scrutinised the gem.
-
-He dropped it on the top of the show case as of little worth, and looked
-inquiringly at his customer. But Torres waited in a silence which he
-knew would compel the garrulity of covetous age to utterance.
-
-“Do I understand that the honorable Senor Torres seeks advice about the
-quality of the stone?” the old jeweler finally quavered.
-
-Torres did no more than nod curtly.
-
-“It is a natural gem. It is small. It, as you can see for yourself, is
-not perfect. And it is clear that much of it will be lost in the
-cutting.”
-
-“How much is it worth?” Torres demanded with impatient bluntness.
-
-“I am a poor man,” Fernandez reiterated.
-
-“I have not asked you to buy it, old fool. But now that you bring the
-matter up, how much will you give for it?”
-
-“As I was saying, craving your patience, honorable senor, as I was
-saying, I am a very poor man. There are days when I cannot spend ten
-centavos for a morsel of spoiled fish. There are days when I cannot
-afford a sip of the cheap red wine I learned was tonic to my system when
-I was a lad, far from Barcelona, serving my apprenticeship in Italy. I
-am so very poor that I do not buy costly pretties——”
-
-“Not to sell again at a profit?” Torres cut in.
-
-“If I am sure of my profit,” the old man cackled. “Yes, then will I buy;
-but, being poor, I cannot pay more than little.” He picked up the gem
-and studied it long and carefully. “I would give,” he began
-hesitatingly, “I would give——but, please, honorable senor, know that I
-am a very poor man. This day only a spoonful of onion soup, with my
-morning coffee and a mouthful of crust, passed my lips——”
-
-“In God’s name, old fool, what will you give?” Torres thundered.
-
-“Five hundred dollars—but I doubt the profit that will remain to me.”
-
-“Gold?”
-
-“Mex.,” came the reply, which cut the offer in half and which Torres
-knew was a lie. “Of course, Mex., only Mex., all our transactions are in
-Mex.”
-
-Despite his elation at so large a price for so small a gem, Torres
-play-acted impatience as he reached to take back the gem. But the old
-man jerked his hand away, loath to let go of the bargain it contained.
-
-“We are old friends,” he cackled shrilly. “I first saw you, when, a boy,
-you came to San Antonio from Boca del Toros. And, as between old
-friends, we will say the sum is gold.”
-
-And Torres caught a sure but vague glimpse of the enormousness, as well
-as genuineness, of the Queen’s treasure which at some remote time the
-Lost Souls had ravished from its hiding place in the Maya Mountain.
-
-“Very good,” said Torres, with a quick, cavalier action recovering the
-stone. “It belongs to a friend of mine. He wanted to borrow money from
-me on it. I can now lend him up to five hundred gold on it, thanks to
-your information. And I shall be grateful to buy for you, the next time
-we meet in the pulqueria, a drink—yes, as many drinks as you can care to
-carry—of the thin, red, tonic wine.”
-
-And as Torres passed out of the shop, not in any way attempting to hide
-the scorn and contempt he felt for the fool he had made of the jeweler,
-he knew elation in that Fernandez, the Spanish fox, must have cut his
-estimate of the gem’s value fully in half when he uttered it.
-
- * * * * *
-
-In the meanwhile, descending the Gualaca River by canoe, Leoncia, the
-Queen, and the two Morgans, had made better time than Torres to the
-coast. But ere their arrival and briefly pending it, a matter of moment
-that was not appreciated at the time, had occurred at the Solano
-hacienda. Climbing the winding pathway to the hacienda, accompanied by a
-decrepit old crone whose black shawl over head and shoulders could not
-quite hide the lean and withered face of blasted volcanic fire, came as
-strange a caller as the hacienda had ever received.
-
-He was a Chinaman, middle-aged and fat, whose moon-face beamed the
-beneficent good nature that seems usual with fat persons. By name, Yi
-Poon, meaning “the Cream of the Custard Apple,” his manners were as
-softly and richly oily as his name. To the old crone, who tottered
-beside him and was half-supported by him, he was the quintessence of
-gentleness and consideration. When she faltered from sheer physical
-weakness and would have fallen, he paused and gave her chance to gain
-strength and breath. Thrice, at such times, on the climb to the
-hacienda, he fed her a spoonful of French brandy from a screw-cap pocket
-flask.
-
-Seating the old woman in a selected, shady corner of the piazza, Yi Poon
-boldly knocked for admittance at the front door. To him, and in his
-business, back-stairs was the accustomed way; but his business and his
-wit had taught him the times when front entrances were imperative.
-
-The Indian maid who answered his knock, took his message into the living
-room where sat the disconsolate Enrico Solano among his
-sons—disconsolate at the report Ricardo had brought in of the loss of
-Leoncia in the Maya Mountain. The Indian maid returned to the door. The
-Senor Solano was indisposed and would see nobody, was her report, humbly
-delivered, even though the recipient was a Chinese.
-
-“Huh!” observed Yi Poon, with braggart confidence for the purpose of
-awing the maid to carrying a second message. “I am no coolie. I am smart
-Chinaman. I go to school plenty much. I speak Spanish. I speak English.
-I write Spanish. I write English. See—I write now in Spanish for the
-Senor Solano. You cannot write, so you cannot read what I write. I write
-that I am Yi Poon. I belong Colon. I come this place to see Senor
-Solano. Big business. Much important. Very secret. I write all this here
-on paper which you cannot read.”
-
-But he did not say that he had further written:
-
-“_The Senorita Solano. I have great secret._”
-
-It was Alesandro, the eldest of the tall sons of Solano, who evidently
-had received the note, for he came bounding to the door, far
-outstripping the returning maid.
-
-“Tell me your business!” he almost shouted at the fat Chinese. “What is
-it? Quick!”
-
-“Very good business,” was the reply, Yi Poon noting the other’s
-excitement with satisfaction. “I make much money. I buy—what you
-call—secrets. I sell secrets. Very nice business.”
-
-“What do you know about the Senorita Solano?” Alesandro shouted,
-gripping him by the shoulder.
-
-“Everything. Very important information——”
-
-But Alesandro could no longer control himself. He almost hurled the
-Chinaman into the house, and, not relaxing his grip, rushed him on into
-the living room and up to Enrico.
-
-“He has news of Leoncia!” Alesandro shouted.
-
-“Where is she?” Enrico and his sons shouted in chorus.
-
-Hah!—was Yi Poon’s thought. Such excitement, although it augured well
-for his business, was rather exciting for him as well.
-
-Mistaking his busy thinking for fright, Enrico stilled his sons back
-with an upraised hand, and addressed the visitor quietly.
-
-“Where is she?” Enrico asked.
-
-Hah!—thought Yi Poon. The senorita was lost. That was a new secret. It
-might be worth something some day, or any day. A nice girl, of high
-family and wealth such as the Solanos, lost in a Latin-American country,
-was information well worth possessing. Some day she might be
-married—there was that gossip he had heard in Colon—and some later day
-she might have trouble with her husband or her husband have trouble with
-her——at which time, she or her husband, it mattered not which, might be
-eager to pay high for the secret.
-
-“This Senorita Leoncia,” he said, finally, with sleek suavity. “She is
-not your girl. She has other papa and mama.”
-
-But Enrico’s present grief at her loss was too great to permit
-startlement at this explicit statement of an old secret.
-
-“Yes,” he nodded. “Though it is not known outside my family, I adopted
-her when she was a baby. It is strange that you should know this. But I
-am not interested in having you tell me what I have long since known.
-What I want to know now is: _where is she now_?”
-
-Yi Poon gravely and sympathetically shook his head.
-
-“That is different secret,” he explained. “Maybe I find that secret.
-Then I sell it to you. But I have old secret. You do not know the name
-of the Senorita Leoncia’s papa and mama. I know.”
-
-And old Enrico Solano could not hide his interest at the temptation of
-such information.
-
-“Speak,” he commanded. “Name the names, and prove them, and I shall
-reward.”
-
-“No,” Yi Poon shook his head. “Very poor business. I no do business that
-way. You pay me I tell you. My secrets good secrets. I prove my secrets.
-You give me five hundred pesos and big expenses from Colon to San
-Antonio and back to Colon and I tell you name of papa and mama.”
-
-Enrico Solano bowed acquiescence, and was just in the act of ordering
-Alesandro to go and fetch the money, when the quiet, spirit-subdued
-Indian maid created a diversion. Running into the room and up to Enrico
-as they had never seen her run before, she wrung her hands and wept so
-incoherently that they knew her paroxysm was of joy, not of sadness.
-
-“The Senorita!” she was finally able to whisper hoarsely, as she
-indicated the side piazza with a nod of head and glance of eyes. “The
-Senorita!”
-
-And Yi Poon and his secret were forgotten. Enrico and his sons streamed
-out to the side piazza to behold Leoncia and the Queen and the two
-Morgans, dropping dust-covered off the backs of riding mules
-recognizable as from the pastures of the mouth of the Gualaca River. At
-the same time two Indian man-servants, summoned by the maid, cleared the
-house and grounds of the fat Chinaman and his old crone of a companion.
-
-“Come some other time,” they told him. “Just now the Senor Solano is
-very importantly busy.”
-
-“Sure, I come some other time,” Yi Poon assured them pleasantly, without
-resentment and without betrayal of the disappointment that was his at
-his deal interrupted just ere the money was paid into his hand.
-
-But he departed reluctantly. The place was good for his business. It was
-sprouting secrets. Never was there a riper harvest in Canaan out of
-which, sickle in hand, a husbandman was driven! Had it not been for the
-zealous Indian attendants, Yi Poon would have darted around the corner
-of the hacienda to note the newcomers. As it was, half way down the
-hill, finding the weight of the crone too fatiguing, he put into her the
-life and ability to carry her own weight a little farther by feeding her
-a double teaspoonful of brandy from his screw-top flask.
-
-Enrico swept Leoncia off her mule ere she could dismount, so
-passionately eager was he to fold her in his arms. For several minutes
-ensued naught but noisy Latin affection as her brothers all strove to
-greet and embrace her at once. When they recollected themselves, Francis
-had already helped the Lady Who Dreams from her mount, and beside her,
-her hand in his, was waiting recognition.
-
-“This is my wife,” Francis told Enrico. “I went into the Cordilleras
-after treasure, and behold what I found. Was there ever better fortune?”
-
-“And she sacrificed a great treasure herself,” Leoncia murmured bravely.
-
-“She was queen of a little kingdom,” Francis added, with a grateful and
-admiring flash of eyes to Leoncia, who quickly added:
-
-“And she saved all our lives but sacrificed her little kingdom in so
-doing.”
-
-And Leoncia, in an exaltation of generousness, put her arm around the
-Queen’s waist, took her away from Francis, and led the way into the
-hacienda.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXIII
-
-
-In all the magnificence of medieval Spanish and New World costume such
-as was still affected by certain of the great haciendados of Panama,
-Torres rode along the beach-road to the home of the Solanos. Running
-with him, at so easy a lope that it promised an extension that would
-outspeed the best of Torres’ steed, was the great white hound that had
-followed him down the subterranean river. As Torres turned to take the
-winding road up the hill to the hacienda, he passed Yi Poon, who had
-paused to let the old crone gather strength. He merely noticed the
-strange couple as dirt of the common people. The hauteur that he put on
-with his magnificence of apparel forbade that he should betray any
-interest further than an unseeing glance.
-
-But him Yi Poon noted with slant Oriental eyes that missed no details.
-And Yi Poon thought: He looks very rich. He is a friend of the Solanos.
-He rides to the house. He may even be a lover of the Senorita
-Leoncia.—Or a worsted rival for her love. In almost any case, he might
-be expected to buy the secret of the Senorita Leoncia’s birth, and he
-certainly looks rich, most rich.
-
-Inside the hacienda, assembled in the living room, were the returned
-adventurers and all the Solanos. The Queen, taking her turn in piecing
-out the narrative of all that had occurred, with flashing eyes was
-denouncing Torres for his theft of her jewels and describing his fall
-into the whirlpool before the onslaught of the hound, when Leoncia, at
-the window with Henry, uttered a sharp exclamation.
-
-“Speak of the devil!” said Henry. “Here comes Torres himself.”
-
-“Me first!” Francis cried, doubling his fist and flexing his biceps
-significantly.
-
-“No,” decreed Leoncia. “He is a wonderful liar. He is a very wonderful
-liar, as we’ve all found out. Let us have some fun. He is dismounting
-now. Let the four of us disappear.—Father!” With a wave of hand she
-indicated Enrico and all his sons. “You will sit around desolated over
-the loss of me. This scoundrel Torres will enter. You will be thirsty
-for information. He will tell you no one can guess what astounding lies
-about us. As for us, we’ll hide behind the screen there.—Come! All of
-you!”
-
-And, catching the Queen by the hand and leading the way, with her eyes
-she commanded Francis and Henry to follow to the hiding place.
-
-And Torres entered upon a scene of sorrow which had been so recently
-real that Enrico and his sons had no difficulty in acting it. Enrico
-started up from his chair in eagerness of welcome and sank weakly back.
-Torres caught the other’s hand in both his own and manifested deep
-sympathy and could not speak from emotion.
-
-“Alas!” he finally managed heart-brokenly. “They are dead. She is dead,
-your beautiful daughter, Leoncia. And the two Gringo Morgans are dead
-with her. As Ricardo, there, must know, they died in the heart of the
-Maya Mountain.
-
-“It is the home of mystery,” he continued, after giving due time for the
-subsidence of the first violent outburst of Enrico’s grief. “I was with
-them when they died. Had they followed my counsel, they would all have
-lived. But not even Leoncia would listen to the old friend of the
-Solanos. No, she must listen to the two Gringos. After incredible
-dangers I won my way out through the heart of the mountain, gazed down
-into the Valley of Lost Souls, and returned into the mountain to find
-them dying——”
-
-Here, pursued by an Indian man-servant, the white hound bounded into the
-room, trembling and whining in excitement as with its nose it quested
-the multitudinous scents of the room that advertised his mistress.
-Before he could follow up to where the Queen hid behind the screen,
-Torres caught him by the neck and turned him over to a couple of the
-Indian house-men to hold.
-
-“Let the brute remain,” said Torres. “I will tell you about him
-afterward. But first look at this.” He pulled forth a handful of gems.
-“I knocked on the doors of the dead, and, behold, the Maya treasure is
-mine. I am the richest man in Panama, in all the Americas. I shall be
-powerful——”
-
-“But you were with my daughter when she died,” Enrico interrupted to
-sob. “Had she no word for me?”
-
-“Yes,” Torres sobbed back, genuinely affected by the death-scene of his
-fancy. “She died with your name on her lips. Her last words were——”
-
-But, with bulging eyes, he failed to complete his sentence, for he was
-watching Henry and Leoncia, in the most natural, casual manner in the
-world stroll down the room, immersed in quiet conversation. Not noticing
-Torres, they crossed over to the window still deep in talk.
-
-“You were telling me her last words were ...?” Enrico prompted.
-
-“I ... I have lied to you,” Torres stammered, while he sparred for time
-in which to get himself out of the scrape. “I was confident that they
-were as good as dead and would never find their way to the world again.
-And I thought to soften the blow to you, Senor Solano, by telling what I
-am confident would be her last words were she dying. Also, this man
-Francis, whom you have elected to like. I thought it better for you to
-believe him dead than know him for the Gringo cur he is.”
-
-Here the hound barked joyfully at the screen, giving the two Indians all
-they could do to hold him back. But Torres, instead of suspecting,
-blundered on to his fate.
-
-“In the Valley there is a silly weak demented creature who pretends to
-read the future by magic. An altogether atrocious and blood-thirsty
-female is she. I am not denying that in physical beauty she is
-beautiful. For beautiful she is, as a centipede is beautiful to those
-who think centipedes are beautiful. You see what has happened. She has
-sent Henry and Leoncia out of the Valley by some secret way, while
-Francis has elected to remain there with her in sin——for sin it is,
-since there exists in the valley no Catholic priest to make their
-relation lawful. Oh, not that Francis is infatuated with the terrible
-creature. But he is infatuated with a paltry treasure the creature
-possesses. And this is the Gringo Francis you have welcomed into the
-bosom of your family, the slimy snake of a Gringo Francis who has even
-dared to sully the fair Leoncia by casting upon her the looks of a
-lover. Oh, I know of what I speak. I have seen——”
-
-A joyous outburst from the hound drowned his voice, and he beheld
-Francis and the Queen, as deep in conversation as the two who had
-preceded them, walk down the room. The Queen paused to caress the hound,
-who stood so tall against her that his forepaws, on her shoulders,
-elevated his head above hers; while Torres licked his suddenly dry lips
-and vainly cudgeled his brains for some fresh lie with which to
-extricate himself from the impossible situation.
-
-Enrico Solano was the first to break down in mirth. All his sons joined
-him, while tears of sheer delight welled out of his eyes.
-
-“I could have married her myself,” Torres sneered malignantly. “She
-begged me on her knees.”
-
-“And now,” said Francis, “I shall save you all a dirty job by throwing
-him out.”
-
-But Henry, advancing swiftly, asserted:
-
-“I like dirty jobs equally. And this is a dirty job particularly to my
-liking.”
-
-Both the Morgans were about to fall on Torres, when the Queen held up
-her hand.
-
-“First,” she said, “let him return to me, from there in his belt, the
-dagger he stole from me.”
-
-“Ah,” said Enrico, when this had been accomplished. “Should he not also
-return to you, lovely lady, the gems he filched?”
-
-Torres did not hesitate. Dipping into his pocket, he laid a handful of
-the jewels on the table. Enrico glanced at the Queen, who merely waited
-expectantly.
-
-“More,” said Enrico.
-
-And three more of the beautiful uncut stones Torres added to the others
-on the table.
-
-“Would you search me like a common pickpocket?” he demanded in frantic
-indignation, turning both trousers’ pockets emptily inside out.
-
-“Me,” said Francis.
-
-“I insist,” said Henry.
-
-“Oh, all very well,” Francis conceded. “Then we’ll do it together. We
-can throw him farther off the steps.”
-
-Acting as one, they clutched Torres by collar and trousers and started
-in a propulsive rush for the door.
-
-All others in the room ran to the windows to behold Torres’ exit; but
-Enrico, quickest of all, gained a window first. And, afterward, into the
-middle of the room, the Queen scooped the gems from the table into both
-her hands, and gave the double handful to Leoncia, saying:
-
-“From Francis and me to you and Henry——your wedding present.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-Yi Poon, having left the crone by the beach and crept back to peer at
-the house from the bushes, chuckled gratifiedly to himself when he saw
-the rich caballero thrown off the steps with such a will as to be sent
-sprawling far out into the gravel. But Yi Poon was too clever to let on
-that he had seen. Hurrying away, he was half down the hill ere overtaken
-by Torres on his horse.
-
-The celestial addressed him humbly, and Torres, in his general rage,
-lifted his riding whip savagely to slash him across the face. But Yi
-Poon did not quail.
-
-“The Senorita Leoncia,” he said quickly, and arrested the blow. “I have
-great secret.” Torres waited, the whip still lifted as a threat. “You
-like ‘m some other man marry that very nice Senorita Leoncia?”
-
-Torres dropped the whip to his side.
-
-“Go on,” he commanded harshly. “What is the secret?”
-
-“You no want ‘m other man marry that Senorita Leoncia?”
-
-“Suppose I don’t?”
-
-“Then, suppose you have secret, you can stop other man.”
-
-“Well, what is it? Spit it out.”
-
-“But first,” Yi Poon shook his head, “you pay me six hundred dollars
-gold. Then I tell you secret.”
-
-“I’ll pay you,” Torres said readily, although without the slightest
-thought of keeping his word. “You tell me first, then, if no lie, I’ll
-pay you.—See!”
-
-From his breast pocket he drew a wallet bulging with paper bills; and Yi
-Poon, uneasily acquiescing, led him down the road to the crone on the
-beach.
-
-“This old woman,” he explained, “she no lie. She sick woman. Pretty soon
-she die. She is afraid. She talk to priest along Colon. Priest say she
-must tell secret, or die and go to hell. So she no lie.”
-
-“Well, if she doesn’t lie, what is it she must tell?”
-
-“You pay me?”
-
-“Sure. Six hundred gold.”
-
-“Well, she born Cadiz in old country. She number one servant, number one
-baby nurse. One time she take job with English family that come
-traveling in her country. Long time she work with that family. She go
-back along England. Then, bime by——you know Spanish blood very hot——she
-get very mad. That family have one little baby girl. She steal little
-baby girl and run away to Panama. That little baby girl Senor Solano he
-adopt just the same his own daughter. He have plenty sons and no
-daughter. So that little baby girl he make his daughter. But that old
-woman she no tell what name belong little girl’s family. That family
-very high blood, very rich, everybody in England know that family. That
-family’s name ‘Morgan.’ You know that name? In Colon comes San Antonio
-men who say Senor Solano’s daughter marry English Gringo named Morgan.
-That Gringo Morgan the Senorita Leoncia’s brother.”
-
-“Ah!” said Torres with maleficent delight.
-
-“You pay me now six hundred gold,” said Yi Poon.
-
-“Thank you for the fool you are,” said Torres with untold mockery in his
-voice. “You will learn better perhaps some day the business of selling
-secrets. Secrets are not shoes or mahogany timber. A secret told is no
-more than a whisper in the air. It comes. It goes. It is gone. It is a
-ghost. Who has seen it? You can claim back shoes or mahogany timber. You
-can never claim back a secret when you have told it.”
-
-“We talk of ghosts, you and I,” said Yi Poon calmly. “And the ghosts are
-gone. I have told you no secret. You have dreamed a dream. When you tell
-men they will ask you who told you. And you will say, ‘Yi Poon.’ But Yi
-Poon will say, ‘No.’ And they will say, ‘Ghosts,’ and laugh at you.”
-
-Yi Poon, feeling the other yield to his superior subtlety of thought,
-deliberately paused.
-
-“We have talked whispers,” he resumed after a few seconds. “You speak
-true when you say whispers are ghosts. When I sell secrets I do not sell
-ghosts. I sell shoes. I sell mahogany timber. My proofs are what I sell.
-They are solid. On the scales they will weigh weight. You can tear the
-paper of them, which is legal paper of record, on which they are
-written. Some of them, not paper, you can bite with your teeth and break
-your teeth upon. For the whispers are already gone like morning mists. I
-have proofs. You will pay me six hundred gold for the proofs, or men
-will laugh at you for lending your ears to ghosts.”
-
-“All right,” Torres capitulated, convinced. “Show me the proofs that I
-can tear and bite.”
-
-“Pay me the six hundred gold.”
-
-“When you have shown me the proofs.”
-
-“The proofs you can tear and bite are yours after you have put the six
-hundred gold into my hand. You promise. A promise is a whisper, a ghost.
-I do not do business with ghost money. You pay me real money I can tear
-or bite.”
-
-And in the end Torres surrendered, paying in advance for what did
-satisfy him when he had examined the documents, the old letters, the
-baby locket and the baby trinkets. And Torres not only assured Yi Poon
-that he was satisfied, but paid him in advance, on the latter’s
-insistence, an additional hundred gold to execute a commission for him.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Meanwhile, in the bathroom which connected their bedrooms, clad in fresh
-underlinen and shaving with safety razors, Henry and Francis were
-singing:
-
- “Back to back against the mainmast,
- Held at bay the entire crew....”
-
-In her charming quarters, aided and abetted by a couple of Indian
-seamstresses, Leoncia, half in mirth, half in sadness, and in all
-sweetness and wholesomeness of generosity, was initiating the Queen into
-the charmingness of civilized woman’s dress. The Queen, a true woman to
-her heart’s core, was wild with delight in the countless pretties of
-texture and adornment with which Leoncia’s wardrobe was stored. It was a
-maiden frolic for the pair of them, and a stitch here and a take-up
-there modified certain of Leoncia’s gowns to the Queen’s slenderness.
-
-“No,” said Leoncia judicially. “You will not need a corset. You are the
-one woman in a hundred for whom a corset is not necessary. You have the
-roundest lines for a thin woman that I ever saw. You ...” Leoncia
-paused, apparently deflected by her need for a pin from her dressing
-table, for which she turned; but at the same time she swallowed the
-swelling that choked in her throat, so that she was able to continue:
-“You are a beautiful bride, and Francis can only grow prouder of you.”
-
-In the bathroom, Francis, finished shaving first, broke off the song to
-respond to the knock at his bedroom door and received a telegram from
-Fernando, the next to the youngest of the Solano brothers. And Francis
-read:
-
- _Important your immediate return. Need more margins. While market
- very weak but a strong attack on all your stocks except Tampico
- Petroleum, which is strong as ever. Wire me when to expect you.
- Situation is serious. Think I can hold out if you start to return at
- once. Wire me at once._
-
- _Bascom._
-
-In the living room the two Morgans found Enrico and his sons opening
-wine.
-
-“Having but had my daughter restored to me,” Enrico said, “I now lose
-her again. But it is an easier loss, Henry. To-morrow shall be the
-wedding. It cannot take place too quickly. It is sure, right now, that
-that scoundrel Torres is whispering all over San Antonio Leoncia’s
-latest unprotected escapade with you.”
-
-Ere Henry could express his gratification, Leoncia and the Queen
-entered. He held up his glass and toasted:
-
-“To the bride!”
-
-Leoncia, not understanding, raised a glass from the table and glanced to
-the Queen.
-
-“No, no,” Henry said, taking her glass with the intention of passing it
-to the Queen.
-
-“No, no,” said Enrico. “Neither shall drink the toast which is
-incomplete. Let me make it:
-
-“To the brides!”
-
-“You and Henry are to be married to-morrow,” Alesandro explained to
-Leoncia.
-
-Unexpected and bitter though the news was, Leoncia controlled herself,
-and dared with assumed jollity to look Francis in the eyes while she
-cried:
-
-“Another toast! To the bridegrooms!”
-
-Difficult as Francis had found it to marry the Queen and maintain
-equanimity, he now found equanimity impossible at the announcement of
-the immediate marriage of Leoncia. Nor did Leoncia fail to observe how
-hard he struggled to control himself. His suffering gave her secret joy,
-and with a feeling almost of triumph she watched him take advantage of
-the first opportunity to leave the room.
-
-Showing them his telegram and assuring them that his fortune was at
-stake, he said he must get off an answer and asked Fernando to arrange
-for a rider to carry it to the government wireless at San Antonio.
-
-Nor was Leoncia long in following him. In the library she came upon him,
-seated at the reading table, his telegram unwritten, while his gaze was
-fixed upon a large photograph of her which he had taken from its place
-on top the low bookshelves. All of which was too much for her. Her
-involuntary gasping sob brought him to his feet in time to catch her as
-she swayed into his arms. And before either knew it their lips were
-together in fervent expression.
-
-Leoncia struggled and tore herself away, gazing upon her lover with
-horror.
-
-“This must stop, Francis!” she cried. “More: you cannot remain here for
-my wedding. If you do, I shall not be responsible for my actions. There
-is a steamer leaves San Antonio for Colon. You and your wife must sail
-on it. You can easily catch passage on the fruit boats to New Orleans
-and take train to New York. I love you!—you know it.”
-
-“The Queen and I are not married!” Francis pleaded, beside himself,
-overcome by what had taken place. “That heathen marriage before the
-Altar of the Sun was no marriage. In neither deed nor ceremony are we
-married. I assure you of that, Leoncia. It is not too late——”
-
-“That heathen marriage has lasted you thus far,” she interrupted him
-with quiet firmness. “Let it last you to New York, or, at least, to ...
-Colon.”
-
-“The Queen will not have any further marriage after our forms,” Francis
-said. “She insists that all her female line before her has been so
-married and that the Sun Altar ceremony is sacredly binding.”
-
-Leoncia shrugged her shoulders non-committally, although her face was
-stern with resolution.
-
-“Marriage or no,” she replied, “you must go—to-night—the pair of you.
-Else I shall go mad. I warn you: I shall not be able to withstand the
-presence of you. I cannot, I know I cannot, be able to stand the sight
-of you while I am being married to Henry and after I am married to
-Henry.—Oh, please, please, do not misunderstand me. I do love Henry, but
-not in the ... not in that way ... not in the way I love you. I—and I am
-not ashamed of the boldness with which I say it—I love Henry about as
-much as you love the Queen; but I love you as I should love Henry, as
-you should love the Queen, as I know you do love me.”
-
-She caught his hand and pressed it against her heart.
-
-“There! For the last time! Now go!”
-
-But his arms were around her, and she could not help but yield her lips.
-Again she tore herself away, this time fleeing to the doorway. Francis
-bowed his head to her decision, then picked up her picture.
-
-“I shall keep this,” he announced.
-
-“You oughtn’t to,” she flashed a last fond smile at him. “You may,” she
-added, as she turned and was gone.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Yet Yi Poon had a commission to execute, for which Torres had paid him
-one hundred gold in advance. Next morning, with Francis and the Queen
-hours departed on their way to Colon, Yi Poon arrived at the Solano
-hacienda. Enrico, smoking a cigar on the veranda and very much pleased
-with himself and all the world and the way the world was going,
-recognized and welcomed Yi Poon as his visitor of the day before. Even
-ere they talked, Leoncia’s father had dispatched Alesandro for the five
-hundred pesos agreed upon. And Yi Poon, whose profession was trafficking
-in secrets, was not averse to selling his secret the second time. Yet
-was he true to his salt, in so far as he obeyed Torres’ instructions in
-refusing to tell the secret save in the presence of Leoncia and Henry.
-
-“That secret has the string on it,” Yi Poon apologized, after the couple
-had been summoned, as he began unwrapping the parcel of proofs. “The
-Senorita Leoncia and the man she is going to marry must first, before
-anybody else, look at these things. Afterward, all can look.”
-
-“Which is fair, since they are more interested than any of us,” Enrico
-conceded grandly, although at the same time he betrayed his eagerness by
-the impatience with which he motioned his daughter and Henry to take the
-evidence to one side for examination.
-
-He tried to appear uninterested, but his side-glances missed nothing of
-what they did. To his amazement, he saw Leoncia suddenly cast down a
-legal-appearing document, which she and Henry had read through, and
-throw her arms, whole-heartedly and freely about his neck, and
-whole-heartedly and freely kiss him on the lips. Next, Enrico saw Henry
-step back and exclaim in a dazed, heart-broken way:
-
-“But, my God, Leoncia! This is the end of everything. Never can we be
-husband and wife!”
-
-“Eh?” Enrico snorted. “When everything was arranged! What do you mean,
-sir? This is an insult! Marry you shall, and marry to-day!”
-
-Henry, almost in stupefaction, looked to Leoncia to speak for him.
-
-“It is against God’s law and man’s,” she said, “for a man to marry his
-sister. Now I understand my strange love for Henry. He is my brother. We
-are full brother and sister, unless these documents lie.”
-
-And Yi Poon knew that he could take report to Torres that the marriage
-would not take place and would never take place.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXIV
-
-
-Catching a United Fruit Company boat at Colon within fifteen minutes
-after landing from the small coaster, the Queen’s progress with Francis
-to New York had been a swift rush of fortunate connections. At New
-Orleans a taxi from the wharf to the station and a racing of porters
-with hand luggage had barely got them aboard the train just as it
-started. Arrived at New York, Francis had been met by Bascom, in
-Francis’ private machine, and the rush had continued to the rather
-ornate palace R.H.M. himself, Francis’ father, had built out of his
-millions on Riverside Drive.
-
-So it was that the Queen knew scarcely more of the great world than when
-she first started her travels by leaping into the subterranean river.
-Had she been a lesser creature, she would have been stunned by this vast
-civilisation around her. As it was, she was royally inconsequential,
-accepting such civilization as an offering from her royal spouse. Royal
-he was, served by many slaves. Had she not, on steamer and train,
-observed it? And here, arrived at his palace, she took as a matter of
-course the showing of house servants that greeted them. The chauffeur
-opened the door of the limousine. Other servants carried in the hand
-baggage. Francis touched his hand to nothing, save to her arm to assist
-her to alight. Even Bascom—a man she divined was no servitor—she also
-divined as one who served Francis. And she could not but observe Bascom
-depart in Francis’ limousine, under instruction and command of Francis.
-
-She had been a queen, in an isolated valley, over a handful of savages.
-Yet here, in this mighty land of kings, her husband ruled kings. It was
-all very wonderful, and she was deliciously aware that her queenship had
-suffered no diminishing by her alliance with Francis.
-
-Her delight in the interior of the mansion was naïve and childlike.
-Forgetting the servants, or, rather, ignoring them as she ignored her
-own attendants in her lake dwelling, she clapped her hands in the great
-entrance hall, glanced at the marble stairway, tripped in a little run
-to the nearest apartment, and peeped in. It was the library, which she
-had visioned in the Mirror of the World the first day she saw Francis.
-And the vision realized itself, for Francis entered with her into the
-great room of books, his arm about her, just as she had seen him on the
-fluid-metal surface of the golden bowl. The telephones, and the
-stock-ticker, too, she remembered; and, just as she had foreseen herself
-do, she crossed over to the ticker curiously to examine, and Francis,
-his arm still about her, stood by her side.
-
-Hardly had he begun an attempted explanation of the instrument, and just
-as he realized the impossibility of teaching her in several minutes all
-the intricacies of the stock market institution, when his eyes noted on
-the tape that Frisco Consolidated was down twenty points—a thing
-unprecedented in that little Iowa railroad which R.H.M. had financed and
-builded and to the day of his death maintained proudly as so legitimate
-a creation, that, though half the banks and all of Wall Street crashed,
-it would weather any storm.
-
-The Queen viewed with alarm the alarm that grew on Francis’ face.
-
-“It is magic—like my Mirror of the World?” she half-queried,
-half-stated.
-
-Francis nodded.
-
-“It tells you secrets, I know,” she continued. “Like my golden bowl, it
-brings all the world, here within this very room, to you. It brings you
-trouble. That is very plain. But what trouble can this world bring you,
-who are one of its great kings?”
-
-He opened his mouth to reply to her last question, halted, and said
-nothing, realizing the impossibility of conveying comprehension to her,
-the while, under his eyelids, or at the foreground of his brain, burned
-pictures of great railroad and steamship lines, of teeming terminals and
-noisy docks; of miners toiling in Alaska, in Montana, in Death Valley;
-of bridled rivers, and harnessed waterfalls, and of power-lines stilting
-across lowlands and swamps and marshes on two-hundred-foot towers; and
-of all the mechanics and economics and finances of the twentieth century
-machine-civilization.
-
-“It brings you trouble,” she repeated. “And, alas! I cannot help you. My
-golden bowl is no more. Never again shall I see the world in it. I am no
-longer a ruler of the future. I am a woman merely, and helpless in this
-strange, colossal world to which you have brought me. I am a woman
-merely, and your wife, Francis, your proud wife.”
-
-Almost did he love her, as, dropping the tape, he pressed her closely
-for a moment ere going over to the battery of telephones. She is
-delightful, was his thought. There is neither guile nor malice in her,
-only woman, all woman, lovely and lovable——alas, that Leoncia should
-ever and always arise in my thought between her whom I have and herself
-whom I shall never have!
-
-“More magic,” the Queen murmured, as Francis, getting Bascom’s office,
-said:
-
-“Mr. Bascom will undoubtedly arrive back in half an hour. This is Morgan
-talking——Francis Morgan. Mr. Bascom left for his office not five minutes
-ago. When he arrives, tell him that I have started for his office and
-shall not be more than five minutes behind him. This is important. Tell
-him I am on the way. Thank you. Good bye.”
-
-Very naturally, with all the wonders of the great house yet to be shown
-her, the Queen betrayed her disappointment when Francis told her he must
-immediately depart for a place called Wall Street.
-
-“What is it,” she asked, with a pout of displeasure, “that drags you
-away from me like a slave?”
-
-“It is business——and very important,” he told her with a smile and a
-kiss.
-
-“And what is Business that it should have power over you who are a king?
-Is business the name of your god whom all of you worship as the Sun God
-is worshipped by my people?”
-
-He smiled at the almost perfect appositeness of her idea, saying:
-
-“It is the great American god. Also, is it a very terrible god, and when
-it slays it slays terribly and swiftly.”
-
-“And you have incurred its displeasure?” she queried.
-
-“Alas, yes, though I know not how. I must go to Wall Street——”
-
-“Which is its altar?” she broke in to ask.
-
-“Which is its altar,” he answered, “and where I must find out wherein I
-have offended and wherein I may placate and make amends.”
-
-His hurried attempt to explain to her the virtues and functions of the
-maid he had wired for from Colon, scarcely interested her, and she broke
-him off by saying that evidently the maid was similar to the Indian
-women who had attended her in the Valley of Lost Souls, and that she had
-been accustomed to personal service ever since she was a little girl
-learning English and Spanish from her mother in the house on the lake.
-
-But when Francis caught up his hat and kissed her, she relented and
-wished him luck before the altar.
-
-After several hours of amazing adventures in her own quarters, where the
-maid, a Spanish-speaking Frenchwoman, acted as guide and mentor, and
-after being variously measured and gloated over by a gorgeous woman who
-seemed herself a queen and who was attended by two young women, and who,
-in the Queen’s mind, was without doubt summoned to serve her and
-Francis, she came back down the grand stairway to investigate the
-library with its mysterious telephones and ticker.
-
-Long she gazed at the ticker and listened to its irregular chatter. But
-she, who could read and write English and Spanish, could make nothing of
-the strange hieroglyphics that grew miraculously on the tape. Next, she
-explored the first of the telephones. Remembering how Francis had
-listened, she put her ear to the transmitter. Then, recollecting his use
-of the receiver, she took it off its hook and placed it to her ear. The
-voice, unmistakably a woman’s, sounded so near to her that in her
-startled surprise she dropped the receiver and recoiled. At this moment,
-Parker, Francis’ old valet, chanced to enter the room. She had not
-observed him before, and, so immaculate was his dress, so dignified his
-carriage, that she mistook him for a friend of Francis rather than a
-servitor——a friend similar to Bascom who had met them at the station
-with Francis’ machine, ridden inside with them as an equal, yet departed
-with Francis’ commands in his ears which it was patent he was to obey.
-
-At sight of Parker’s solemn face she laughed with embarrassment and
-pointed inquiringly to the telephone. Solemnly he picked up the
-receiver, murmured “A mistake,” into the transmitter, and hung up. In
-those several seconds the Queen’s thought underwent revolution. No god’s
-nor spirit’s voice had been that which she had heard, but a woman’s
-voice.
-
-“Where is that woman?” she demanded.
-
-Parker merely stiffened up more stiffly, assumed a solemner expression,
-and bowed.
-
-“There is a woman concealed in the house,” she charged with quick words.
-“Her voice speaks there in that thing. She must be in the next room——”
-
-“It was Central,” Parker attempted to stem the flood of her utterance.
-
-“I care not what her name is,” the Queen dashed on. “I shall have no
-other woman but myself in my house. Bid her begone. I am very angry.”
-
-Parker was even stiller and solemner, and a new mood came over her.
-Perhaps this dignified gentleman was higher than she had suspected in
-the hierarchy of the lesser kings, she thought. Almost might he be an
-equal king with Francis, and she had treated him peremptorily as less,
-as much less.
-
-She caught him by the hand, in her impetuousness noting his reluctance,
-drew him over to a sofa, and made him sit beside her. To add to Parker’s
-discomfiture, she dipped into a box of candy and began to feed him
-chocolates, closing his mouth with the sweets every time he opened it to
-protest.
-
-“Come,” she said, when she had almost choked him, “is it the custom of
-the men of this country to be polygamous?”
-
-Parker was aghast at such rawness of frankness.
-
-“Oh, I know the meaning of the word,” she assured him. “So I repeat: is
-it the custom of the men of this country to be polygamous?”
-
-“There is no woman in this house, besides yourself, madam, except
-servant women,” he managed to enunciate. “That voice you heard is not
-the voice of a woman in this house, but the voice of a woman miles away
-who is your servant, or is anybody’s servant who desires to talk over
-the telephone.”
-
-“She is the slave of the mystery?” the Queen questioned, beginning to
-get a dim glimmer of the actuality of the matter.
-
-“Yes,” her husband’s valet admitted. “She is a slave of the telephone.”
-
-“Of the flying speech?”
-
-“Yes, madam, call it that, of the flying speech.” He was desperate to
-escape from a situation unprecedented in his entire career. “Come, I
-will show you, madam. This slave of the flying speech is yours to
-command both by night and day. If you wish, the slave will enable you to
-talk with your husband, Mr. Morgan——”
-
-“Now?”
-
-Parker nodded, arose, and led her to the telephone.
-
-“First of all,” he instructed, “you will speak to the slave. The instant
-you take this down and put it to your ear, the slave will respond. It is
-the slave’s invariable way of saying ‘Number?’ Sometimes she says it,
-‘Number? Number?’ And sometimes she is very irritable.
-
-“When the slave has said ‘Number,’ then do you say ‘Eddystone 1292,’
-whereupon the slave will say ‘Eddystone 1292?’ and then you will say,
-‘Yes, please——‘”
-
-“To a slave I shall say ‘please’?” she interrupted.
-
-“Yes, madam, for these slaves of the flying speech are peculiar slaves
-that one never sees. I am not a young man, yet I have never seen a
-Central in all my life.—Thus, next, after a moment, another slave, a
-woman, who is miles away from the first one, will say to you, ‘This is
-Eddystone 1292,’ and you will say, ‘I am Mrs. Morgan. I wish to speak
-with Mr. Morgan, who is, I think, in Mr. Bascom’s private office.’ And
-then you wait, maybe for half a minute, or for a minute, and then Mr.
-Morgan will begin to talk to you.”
-
-“From miles and miles away?”
-
-“Yes, madam——just as if he were in the next room. And when Mr. Morgan
-says ‘Good-bye,’ you will say ‘Good-bye,’ and hang up as you have seen
-me do.”
-
-And all that Parker had told her came to pass as she carried out his
-instructions. The two different slaves obeyed the magic of the number
-she gave them, and Francis talked and laughed with her, begged her not
-to be lonely, and promised to be home not later than five that
-afternoon.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Meanwhile, and throughout the day, Francis was a very busy and perturbed
-man.
-
-“What secret enemy have you?” Bascom again and again demanded, while
-Francis shook his head in futility of conjecture.
-
-“For see, except where your holdings are concerned, the market is
-reasonable and right. But take your holdings. There’s Frisco
-Consolidated. There is neither sense nor logic that it should be beared
-this way. Only your holdings are being beared. New York, Vermont and
-Connecticut, paid fifteen per cent. the last four quarters and is as
-solid as Gibraltar. Yet it’s down, and down hard. The same with Montana
-Lode, Death Valley Copper, Imperial Tungsten, Northwestern Electric.
-Take Alaska Trodwell——as solid as the everlasting rock. The movement
-against it started only yesterday late. It closed eight points down, and
-to-day has slumped twice as much more. Every one, stock in which you are
-heavily interested. And no other stocks involved. The rest of the market
-is firm.”
-
-“So is Tampico Petroleum firm,” Francis said, “and I’m interested in it
-heaviest of all.”
-
-Bascom shrugged his shoulders despairingly.
-
-“Are you sure you cannot think of somebody who is doing this and who may
-be your enemy?”
-
-“Not for the life of me, Bascom. Can’t think of a soul. I haven’t made
-any enemies, because, since my father died, I have not been active.
-Tampico Petroleum is the only thing I ever got busy with, and even now
-it’s all right.” He strolled over to the ticker. “There. Half a point up
-for five hundred shares.”
-
-“Just the same, somebody’s after you,” Bascom assured him. “The thing is
-clear as the sun at midday. I have been going over the reports of the
-different stocks at issue. They are colored, artfully and delicately
-colored, and the coloring matter is pessimistic and official. Why did
-Northwestern Electric pass its dividend? Why did they put that black-eye
-stuff into Mulhaney’s report on Montana Lode? Oh, never mind the rest of
-the black-eying, but why all this activity of unloading? It’s clear.
-There’s a raid on, and it seems on you, and it’s not a sudden rush raid.
-It’s been slowly and steadily growing. And it’s ripe to break at the
-first rumor of war, at a big strike, or a financial panic——at anything
-that will bear the entire market.
-
-“Look at the situation you’re in now, when all holdings except your own
-are normal. I’ve covered your margins, and covered them. A grave
-proportion of your straight collateral is already up. And your margins
-keep on shrinking. You can scarcely throw them overboard. It might start
-a break. It’s too ticklish.”
-
-“There’s Tampico Petroleum, smiling as pretty as you please——it’s
-collateral enough to cover everything,” Francis suggested. “Though I’ve
-been chary of touching it,” he amended.
-
-Bascom shook his head.
-
-“There’s the Mexican revolution, and our own spineless administration.
-If we involved Tampico Petroleum, and anything serious should break down
-there, you’d be finished, cleaned out, broke.
-
-“And yet,” Bascom resumed, “I see no other way out than to use Tampico
-Petroleum. You see, I have almost exhausted what you have placed in my
-hands. And this is no whirlwind raid. It’s slow and steady as an
-advancing glacier. I’ve only handled the market for you all these years,
-and this is the first tight place we’ve got into. Now your general
-business affairs? Collins has the handling and knows. You must know.
-What securities can you let me have? Now? And to-morrow? And next week?
-And the next three weeks?”
-
-“How much do you want?” Francis questioned back.
-
-“A million before closing time to-day.” Bascom pointed eloquently at the
-ticker. “At least twenty million more in the next three weeks, if——and
-mark you that _if_ well——if the world remains at peace, and if the
-general market remains as normal as it has been for the past six
-months.”
-
-Francis stood up with decision and reached for his hat.
-
-“I’m going to Collins at once. He knows far more about my outside
-business than I know myself. I shall have at least the million in your
-hands before closing time, and I’ve a shrewd suspicion that I’ll cover
-the rest during the next several weeks.”
-
-“Remember,” Bascom warned him, as they shook hands, “it’s the very
-slowness of this raid that is ominous. It’s directed against you, and
-it’s no fly-by-night affair. Whoever is making it, is doing it big, and
-must be big.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-Several times, late that afternoon and evening, the Queen was called up
-by the slave of the flying speech and enabled to talk with her husband.
-To her delight, in her own room, by her bedside, she found a telephone,
-through which, by calling up Collins’ office, she gave her good night to
-Francis. Also, she essayed to kiss her heart to him, and received back,
-queer and vague of sound, his answering kiss.
-
-She knew not how long she had slept, when she awoke. Not moving, through
-her half-open eyes she saw Francis peer into the room and across to her.
-When he had gone softly away, she leapt out of bed and ran to the door
-in time to see him start down the staircase.
-
-More trouble with the great god Business——was her surmise. He was going
-down to that wonderful room, the library, to read more of the dread
-god’s threats and warnings that were so mysteriously made to take form
-of written speech to the clicking of the ticker. She looked at herself
-in the mirror, adjusted her hair, and with a little love-smile of
-anticipation on her lips put on a dressing-gown——another of the
-marvelous pretties of Francis’ forethought and providing.
-
-At the entrance of the library she paused, hearing the voice of another
-than Francis. At first thought she decided it was the flying speech, but
-immediately afterward she knew it to be too loud and near and different.
-Peeping in, she saw two men drawn up in big leather chairs near to each
-other and facing. Francis, tired of face from the day’s exertions, still
-wore his business suit; but the other was clad in evening dress. And she
-heard him call her husband “Francis,” who, in turn, called him “Johnny.”
-That, and the familiarity of their conversation, conveyed to her that
-they were old, close friends.
-
-“And don’t tell me, Francis,” the other was saying, “that you’ve
-frivoled through Panama all this while without losing your heart to the
-senoritas a dozen times.”
-
-“Only once,” Francis replied, after a pause, in which the Queen noted
-that he gazed steadily at his friend.
-
-“Further,” he went on, after another pause, “I really lost my heart——but
-not my head. Johnny Pathmore, O Johnny Pathmore, you are a mere
-flirtatious brute, but I tell you that you’ve lots to learn. I tell you
-that in Panama I found the most wonderful woman in the world——a woman
-that I was glad I had lived to know, a woman that I would gladly die
-for; a woman of fire, of passion, of sweetness, of nobility, a very
-queen of women.”
-
-And the Queen, listening and looking upon the intense exaltation of his
-face, smiled with proud fondness and certitude to herself, for had she
-not won a husband who remained a lover?
-
-“And did the lady, er——ah——did she reciprocate?” Johnny Pathmore
-ventured.
-
-The Queen saw Francis nod as he solemnly replied.
-
-“She loves me as I love her——this I know in all absoluteness.” He stood
-up suddenly. “Wait. I will show her to you.”
-
-And as he started toward the door, the Queen, in roguishness of a very
-extreme of happiness at her husband’s confession she had overheard, fled
-trippingly to hide in the wide doorway of a grand room which the maid
-had informed her was the drawing room, whatever such room might be.
-Deliciously imagining Francis’ surprise at not finding her in bed, she
-watched him go up the wide marble staircase. In a few moments he
-descended. With a slight chill at the heart she observed that he
-betrayed no perturbation at not having found her. In his hand he carried
-a scroll or roll of thin, white cardboard. Looking neither to right nor
-left, he re-entered the library.
-
-Peeping in, she saw him unroll the scroll, present it before Johnny
-Pathmore’s eyes, and heard him say:
-
-“Judge for yourself. There she is.”
-
-“But why be so funereal about it, old man?” Johnny Pathmore queried,
-after a prolonged examination of the photograph.
-
-“Because we met too late. I was compelled to marry another. And I left
-her forever just a few hours before she was to marry another, which
-marriage had been compelled before either of us ever knew the other
-existed. And the woman I married, please know, is a good and splendid
-woman. She will have my devotion forever. Unfortunately, she will never
-possess my heart.”
-
-In a great instant of revulsion, the entire truth came to the Queen.
-Clutching at her heart with clasped hands, she nearly fainted of the
-vertigo that assailed her. Although they still talked inside the
-library, she heard no further word of their utterance as she strove with
-slow success to draw herself together. Finally, with indrawn shoulders,
-a little forlorn sort of a ghost of the resplendent woman and wife she
-had been but minutes before, she staggered across the hall and slowly,
-as if in a nightmare wherein speed never resides, dragged herself
-upstairs. In her room, she lost all control. Francis’ ring was torn from
-her finger and stamped upon. Her boudoir cap and her turtle-shell
-hairpins joined the general havoc under her feet. Convulsed, shuddering,
-muttering to herself in her extremity, she threw herself upon her bed
-and only managed, in an ecstasy of anguish, to remain perfectly quiet
-when Francis peeped in on his way to bed.
-
-An hour, that seemed a thousand centuries, she gave him to go to sleep.
-Then she arose, took in hand the crude jeweled dagger which had been
-hers in the Valley of the Lost Souls, and softly tiptoed into his room.
-There on the dresser it was, the large photograph of Leoncia. In
-thorough indecision, clutching the dagger until the cramp of her palm
-and fingers hurt her, she debated between her husband and Leoncia. Once,
-beside his bed, her hand raised to strike, an effusion of tears into her
-dry eyes obscured her seeing so that her dagger-hand dropped as she
-sobbed audibly.
-
-Stiffening herself with changed resolve, she crossed over to the
-dresser. A pad and pencil lying handy, caught her attention. She
-scribbled two words, tore off the sheet, and placed it upon the face of
-Leoncia as it lay flat and upturned on the surface of polished wood.
-Next, with an unerring drive of the dagger, she pinned the note between
-the pictured semblance of Leoncia’s eyes, so that the point of the blade
-penetrated the wood and left the haft quivering and upright.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXV
-
-
-Meanwhile, after the manner of cross purposes in New York, wherein Regan
-craftily proceeded with his gigantic raid on all Francis’ holdings while
-Francis and Bascom vainly strove to find his identity, so in Panama were
-at work cross purposes which involved Leoncia and the Solanos, Torres
-and the Jefe, and, not least in importance, one, Yi Poon, the rotund and
-moon-faced Chinese.
-
-The little old judge, who was the Jefe’s creature, sat asleep in court
-in San Antonio. He had slept placidly for two hours, occasionally
-nodding his head and muttering profoundly, although the case was a grave
-one, involving twenty years in San Juan, where the strongest could not
-survive ten years. But there was no need for the judge to consider
-evidence or argument. Before the case was called, decision and sentence
-were in his mind, having been put there by the Jefe. The prisoner’s
-lawyer ceased his perfunctory argument, the clerk of the court sneezed,
-and the judge woke up. He looked about him briskly and said:
-
-“Guilty.”
-
-No one was surprised, not even the prisoner.
-
-“Appear to-morrow morning for sentence.——Next case.”
-
-Having so ordered, the judge prepared to settle down into another nap,
-when he saw Torres and the Jefe enter the courtroom. A gleam in the
-Jefe’s eye was his cue, and he abruptly dismissed court for the day.
-
-“I have been to Rodriguez Fernandez,” the Jefe was explaining five
-minutes later, in the empty courtroom. “He says it was a natural gem,
-and that much would be lost in the cutting, but that nevertheless he
-would still give five hundred gold for it.——Show it to the judge, Senor
-Torres, and the rest of the handful of big ones.”
-
-And Torres began to lie. He had to lie, because he could not confess the
-shame of having had the gems taken away from him by the Solanos and the
-Morgans when they threw him out of the hacienda. And so convincingly did
-he lie that even the Jefe he convinced, while the judge, except in the
-matter of brands of strong liquor, accepted everything the Jefe wanted
-him to believe. In brief, shorn of the multitude of details that Torres
-threw in, his tale was that he was so certain of the jeweler’s
-under-appraisal that he had despatched the gems by special messenger to
-his agent in Colon with instructions to forward to New York to Tiffany’s
-for appraisement that might lead to sale.
-
-As they emerged from the courtroom and descended the several steps that
-were flanked by single adobe pillars marred by bullet scars from
-previous revolutions, the Jefe was saying:
-
-“And so, needing the ægis of the law for our adventure after these gems,
-and, more than that, both of us loving our good friend the judge, we
-will let him in for a modest share of whatever we shall gain. He shall
-represent us in San Antonio while we are gone, and, if needs be, furnish
-us with the law’s protection.”
-
-Now it happened that behind one of the pillars, hat pulled over his
-face, Yi Poon half-sat, half-reclined. Nor was he there by mere
-accident. Long ago he had learned that secrets of value, which always
-connoted the troubles of humans, were markedly prevalent around
-courtrooms, which were the focal points for the airing of such troubles
-when they became acute. One could never tell. At any moment a secret
-might leap at one or brim over to one. Therefore it was like a fisherman
-casting his line into the sea for Yi Poon to watch the defendant and the
-plaintiff, the witnesses for and against, and even the court hanger-on
-or casual-seeming onlooker.
-
-So, on this morning, the one person of promise that Yi Poon had picked
-out was a ragged old peon who looked as if he had been drinking too much
-and yet would perish in his condition of reaction if he did not get
-another drink very immediately. Bleary-eyed he was, and red-lidded, with
-desperate resolve painted on all his haggard, withered lineaments. When
-the courtroom had emptied, he had taken up his stand outside on the
-steps close to a pillar.
-
-And why? Yi Poon had asked himself. Inside remained only the three chief
-men of San Antonio——the Jefe, Torres, and the judge. What connection
-between them, or any of them, and the drink-sodden creature that shook
-as if freezing in the scorching blaze of the direct sun-rays? Yi Poon
-did not know, but he did know that it was worth while waiting on a
-chance, no matter how remote, of finding out. So, behind the pillar,
-where no atom of shade protected him from the cooking sun which he
-detested, he lolled on the steps with all the impersonation of one
-placidly infatuated with sun-baths. The old peon tottered a step, swayed
-as if about to fall, yet managed to deflect Torres from his companions,
-who paused to wait for him on the pavement a dozen paces on, restless
-and hot-footed as if they stood on a grid, though deep in earnest
-conversation. And Yi Poon missed no word nor gesture, nor glint of eye
-nor shifting face-line, of the dialogue that took place between the
-grand Torres and the wreck of a peon.
-
-“What now?” Torres demanded harshly.
-
-“Money, a little money, for the love of God, senor, a little money,” the
-ancient peon whined.
-
-“You have had your money,” Torres snarled. “When I went away I gave you
-double the amount to last you twice as long. Not for two weeks yet is
-there a centavo due you.”
-
-“I am in debt,” was the old man’s whimper, the while all the flesh of
-him quivered and trembled from the nerve-ravishment of the drink so
-palpably recently consumed.
-
-“On the pulque slate at Peter and Paul’s,” Torres, with a sneer,
-diagnosed unerringly.
-
-“On the pulque slate at Peter and Paul’s,” was the frank acknowledgment.
-“And the slate is full. No more pulque can I get credit for. I am
-wretched and suffer a thousand torments without my pulque.”
-
-“You are a pig creature without reason!”
-
-A strange dignity, as of wisdom beyond wisdom, seemed suddenly to
-animate the old wreck as he straightened up, for the nonce ceased from
-trembling, and gravely said:
-
-“I am old. There is no vigor left in the veins or the heart of me. The
-desires of my youth are gone. Not even may I labor with this broken body
-of mine, though well I know that labor is an easement and a forgetting.
-Not even may I labor and forget. Food is a distaste in my mouth and a
-pain in my belly. Women—they are a pest that it is a vexation to
-remember ever having desired. Children—I buried my last a dozen years
-gone. Religion—it frightens me. Death—I sleep with the terror of it.
-Pulque—ah, dear God! the one tickle and taste of living left to me!
-
-“What if I drink over much? It is because I have much to forget, and
-have but a little space yet to linger in the sun, ere the Darkness, for
-my old eyes, blots out the sun forever.”
-
-Impervious to the old man’s philosophy, Torres made an impatient threat
-of movement that he was going.
-
-“A few pesos, just a handful of pesos,” the old peon pleaded.
-
-“Not a centavo,” Torres said with finality.
-
-“Very well,” said the old man with equal finality.
-
-“What do you mean?” Torres rasped with swift suspicion.
-
-“Have you forgotten?” was the retort, with such emphasis of significance
-as to make Yi Poon wonder for what reason Torres gave the peon what
-seemed a pension or an allowance.
-
-“I pay you, according to agreement, to forget,” said Torres.
-
-“I shall never forget that my old eyes saw you stab the Senor Alfaro
-Solano in the back,” the peon replied.
-
-Although he remained hidden and motionless in his posture of repose
-behind the pillar, Yi Poon metaphorically sat up. The Solanos were
-persons of place and wealth. That Torres should have murdered one of
-them was indeed a secret of price.
-
-“Beast! Pig without reason! Animal of the dirt!” Torres’ hands clenched
-in his rage. “Because I am kind do you treat me thus! One blabbing of
-your tongue and I will send you to San Juan. You know what that means.
-Not only will you sleep with the terror of death, but never for a moment
-of waking will you be free of the terror of living as you stare upon the
-buzzards that will surely and shortly pick your bones. And there will be
-no pulque in San Juan. There is never any pulque in San Juan for the men
-I send there. So? Eh? I thought so. You will wait two weeks for the
-proper time when I shall again give you money. If you do not wait, then
-never, this side of your interment in the bellies of buzzards, will you
-drink pulque again.”
-
-Torres whirled on his heel and was gone. Yi Poon watched him and his two
-companions go down the street, then rounded the pillar to find the old
-peon sunk down in collapse at his disappointment of not getting any
-pulque, groaning and moaning and making sharp little yelping cries, his
-body quivering as dying animals quiver in the final throes, his fingers
-picking at his flesh and garments as if picking off centipedes. Down
-beside him sat Yi Poon, who began a remarkable performance of his own.
-Drawing gold coins and silver ones from his pockets he began to count
-over his money with chink and clink that was mellow and liquid and that
-to the distraught peon’s ear was as the sound of the rippling and
-riffling of fountains of pulque.
-
-“We are wise,” Yi Poon told him in grandiloquent Spanish, still clinking
-the money, while the peon whined and yammered for the few centavos
-necessary for one drink of pulque. “We are wise, you and I, old man, and
-we will sit here and tell each other what we know about men and women,
-and life and love, and anger and sudden death, the rage red in the heart
-and the steel bitter cold in the back; and if you tell me what pleases
-me, then shall you drink pulque till your ears run out with it, and your
-eyes are drowned in it. You like that pulque, eh? You like one drink
-now, _now_, soon, very quick?”
-
- * * * * *
-
-The night, while the Jefe Politico and Torres organized their expedition
-under cover of the dark, was destined to be a momentous one in the
-Solano hacienda. Things began to happen early. Dinner over, drinking
-their coffee and smoking their cigarettes, the family, of which Henry
-was accounted one by virtue of his brotherhood to Leoncia, sat on the
-wide front veranda. Through the moonlight, up the steps, they saw a
-strange figure approach.
-
-“It is like a ghost,” said Alvarado Solano.
-
-“A fat ghost,” Martinez, his twin brother, amended.
-
-“A Chink ghost you couldn’t poke your finger through,” Ricardo laughed.
-
-“The very Chink who saved Leoncia and me from marrying,” said Henry
-Morgan, with recognition.
-
-“The seller of secrets,” Leoncia gurgled. “And if he hasn’t brought a
-new secret, I shall be disappointed.”
-
-“What do you want, Chinaman?” Alesandro, the eldest of the Solano
-brothers, demanded sharply.
-
-“Nice new secret, very nice new secret maybe you buy,” Yi Poon murmured
-proudly.
-
-“Your secrets are too expensive, Chinaman,” said Enrico discouragingly.
-
-“This nice new secret very expensive,” Yi Poon assured him complacently.
-
-“Go away,” old Enrico ordered. “I shall live a long time, yet to the day
-of my death I care to hear no more secrets.”
-
-But Yi Poon was suavely certain of himself.
-
-“One time you have very fine brother,” he said. “One time your very fine
-brother, the Senor Alfaro Solano, die with knife in his back. Very well.
-Some secret, eh?”
-
-But Enrico was on his feet quivering.
-
-“You know?” he almost screamed his eager interrogation.
-
-“How much?” said Yi Poon.
-
-“All I possess!” Enrico cried, ere turning to Alesandro to add: “You
-deal with him, son. Pay him well if he can prove by witness of the eye.”
-
-“You bet,” quoth Yi Poon. “I got witness. He got good eye-sight. He see
-man stick knife in the Senor Alfaro’s back in the dark. His name ...”
-
-“Yes, yes,” Enrico breathed his suspense.
-
-“One thousand dollars his name,” said Yi Poon, hesitating to make up his
-mind to what kind of dollars he could dare to claim. “One thousand
-dollars gold,” he concluded.
-
-Enrico forgot that he had deputed the transaction to his eldest son.
-
-“Where is your witness?” he shouted.
-
-And Yi Poon, calling softly down the steps into the shrubbery, evoked
-the pulque-ravaged peon, a real-looking ghost who slowly advanced and
-tottered up the steps.
-
- * * * * *
-
-At the same time, on the edge of town, twenty mounted men, among whom
-were the gendarmes Rafael, Ignacio, Augustino, and Vicente, herded a
-pack train of more than twenty mules and waited the command of the Jefe
-to depart on they knew not what mysterious adventure into the
-Cordilleras. What they did know was that, herded carefully apart from
-all other animals, was a strapping big mule loaded with two hundred and
-fifty pounds of dynamite. Also, they knew that the delay was due to the
-Senor Torres, who had ridden away along the beach with the dreaded Caroo
-murderer, José Mancheno, who, only by the grace of God and of the Jefe
-Politico, had been kept for years from expiating on the scaffold his
-various offenses against life and law.
-
-And, while Torres waited on the beach and held the Caroo’s horse and an
-extra horse, the Caroo ascended on foot the winding road that led to the
-hacienda of the Solanos. Little did Torres guess that twenty feet away,
-in the jungle that encroached on the beach, lay a placid-sleeping,
-pulque-drunken, old peon, with, crouching beside him, a very alert and
-very sober Chinese with a recently acquired thousand dollars stowed
-under his belt. Yi Poon had had barely time to drag the peon into hiding
-when Torres rode along in the sand and stopped almost beside him.
-
-Up at the hacienda, all members of the household were going to bed.
-Leoncia, just starting to let down her hair, stopped when she heard the
-rattle of tiny pebbles against her windows. Warning her in low whispers
-to make no noise, José Mancheno handed her a crumpled note which Torres
-had written, saying mysteriously:
-
-“From a strange Chinaman who waits not a hundred feet away on the edge
-of the shrubbery.”
-
-And Leoncia read, in execrable Spanish:
-
- “First time, I tell you secret about Henry Morgan. This time I have
- secret about Francis. You come along and talk with me now.”
-
-Leoncia’s heart leaped at mention of Francis, and as she slipped on a
-mantle and accompanied the Caroo it never entered her head to doubt that
-Yi Poon was waiting for her.
-
-And Yi Poon, down on the beach and spying upon Torres, had no doubts
-when he saw the Caroo murderer appear with the Solano senorita, bound
-and gagged, slung across his shoulder like a sack of meal. Nor did Yi
-Poon have any doubts about his next action, when he saw Leoncia tied
-into the saddle of the spare horse and taken away down the beach at a
-gallop, with Torres and the Caroo riding on either side of her. Leaving
-the pulque-sodden peon to sleep, the fat Chinaman took the road up the
-hill at so stiff a pace that he arrived breathless at the hacienda. Not
-content with knocking at the door, he beat upon it with his fists and
-feet and prayed to his Chinese gods that no peevish Solano should take a
-shot at him before he could explain the urgency of his errand.
-
-“O go to hell,” Alesandro said, when he had opened the door and flashed
-a light on the face of the importunate caller.
-
-“I have big secret,” Yi Poon panted. “Very big brand new secret.”
-
-“Come around to-morrow in business hours,” Alesandro growled as he
-prepared to kick the Chinaman off the premises.
-
-“I don’t sell secret,” Yi Poon stammered and gasped. “I make you
-present. I give secret now. The Senorita, your sister, she is stolen.
-She is tied upon a horse that runs fast down the beach.”
-
-But Alesandro, who had said good night to Leoncia, not half an hour
-before, laughed loudly his unbelief, and prepared again to boot off the
-trafficker in secrets. Yi Poon was desperate. He drew forth the thousand
-dollars and placed it in Alesandro’s hand, saying:
-
-“You go look quick. If the Senorita stop in this house now, you keep all
-that money. If the Senorita no stop, then you give money back....”
-
-And Alesandro was convinced. A minute later he was rousing the house.
-Five minutes later the horse-peons, their eyes hardly open from sound
-sleep, were roping and saddling horses and pack-mules in the corrals,
-while the Solano tribe was pulling on riding gear and equipping itself
-with weapons.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Up and down the coast, and on the various paths leading back to the
-Cordilleras, the Solanos scattered, questing blindly in the blind dark
-for the trail of the abductors. As chance would have it, thirty hours
-afterward, Henry alone caught the scent and followed it, so that, camped
-in the very Footstep of God where first the old Maya priest had sighted
-the eyes of Chia, he found the entire party of twenty men and Leoncia
-cooking and eating breakfast. Twenty to one, never fair and always
-impossible, did not appeal to Henry Morgan’s Anglo-Saxon mind. What did
-appeal to him was the dynamite-loaded mule, tethered apart from the
-off-saddled forty-odd animals and left to stand by the careless peons
-with its load still on its back. Instead of attempting the patently
-impossible rescue of Leoncia, and recognising that in numbers her
-woman’s safety lay, he stole the dynamite-mule.
-
-Not far did he take it. In the shelter of the low woods, he opened the
-pack and filled all his pockets with sticks of dynamite, a box of
-detonators, and a short coil of fuse. With a regretful look at the rest
-of the dynamite which he would have liked to explode but dared not, he
-busied himself along the line of retreat he would have to take if he
-succeeded in stealing Leoncia from her captors. As Francis, on a
-previous occasion at Juchitan, had sown the retreat with silver dollars,
-so, this time, did Henry sow the retreat with dynamite——the sticks in
-small bundles and the fuses, no longer than the length of a detonator,
-and with detonators fast to each end.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Three hours Henry devoted to lurking around the camp in the Footstep of
-God, ere he got his opportunity to signal his presence to Leoncia; and
-another precious two hours were wasted ere she found her opportunity to
-steal away to him. Which would not have been so bad, had not her escape
-almost immediately been discovered and had not the gendarmes and the
-rest of Torres’ party, mounted, been able swiftly to overtake them on
-foot.
-
-When Henry drew Leoncia down to hide beside him in the shelter of a
-rock, and at the same time brought his rifle into action ready for play,
-she protested.
-
-“We haven’t a chance, Henry,” she said. “They are too many. If you fight
-you will be killed. And then what will become of me? Better that you
-make your own escape, and bring help, leaving me to be retaken, than
-that you die and let me be retaken anyway.”
-
-But he shook his head.
-
-“We are not going to be taken, dearest sister. Put your trust in me and
-watch. Here they come now. You just watch.”
-
-Variously mounted, on horses and pack mules—whichever had come handiest
-in their haste—Torres, the Jefe, and their men clattered into sight.
-Henry drew a sight, not on them, but on the point somewhat nearer where
-he had made his first plant of dynamite. When he pulled trigger, the
-intervening distance rose up in a cloud of smoke and earth dust that
-obscured them. As the cloud slowly dissipated, they could be seen, half
-of them, animals and men, overthrown, and all of them dazed and shocked
-by the explosion.
-
-Henry seized Leoncia’s hand, jerked her to her feet, and ran on side by
-side with her. Conveniently beyond his second planting, he drew her down
-beside him to rest and catch breath.
-
-“They won’t come on so fast this time,” he hissed exultantly. “And the
-longer they pursue us the slower they’ll come on.”
-
-True to his forecast, when the pursuit appeared, it moved very
-cautiously and very slowly.
-
-“They ought to be killed,” Henry said. “But they have no chance, and I
-haven’t the heart to do it. But I’ll surely shake them up some.”
-
-Again he fired into his planted dynamite, and again, turning his back on
-the confusion, he fled to his third planting.
-
-After he had fired off the third explosion, he raced Leoncia to his
-tethered horse, put her in the saddle, and ran on beside her, hanging on
-to her stirrup.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXVI
-
-
-Francis had left orders for Parker to call him at eight o’clock, and
-when Parker softly entered he found his master still asleep. Turning on
-the water in the bathroom and preparing the shaving gear, the valet
-re-entered the bedroom. Still moving softly about so that his master
-would have the advantage of the last possible second of sleep, Parker’s
-eyes lighted on the strange dagger that stood upright, its point pinning
-through a note and a photograph and into the hard wood of the
-dresser-top. For a long time he gazed at the strange array, then,
-without hesitation, carefully opened the door to Mrs. Morgan’s room and
-peeped in. Next, he firmly shook Francis by the shoulder.
-
-The latter’s eyes opened, for a second betraying the incomprehension of
-the sleeper suddenly awakened, then lighting with recognition and memory
-of the waking order he had left the previous night.
-
-“Time to get up, sir,” the valet murmured.
-
-“Which is ever an ill time,” Francis yawned with a smile.
-
-He closed his eyes with a, “Let me lie a minute, Parker. If I doze,
-shake me.”
-
-But Parker shook him immediately.
-
-“You must get up right away, sir. I think something has happened to Mrs.
-Morgan. She is not in her room, and there is a queer note and a knife
-here that may explain. I don’t know, sir——”
-
-Francis was out of bed in a bound, staring one moment at the dagger, and
-next, drawing it out, reading the note over and over as if its simple
-meaning, contained in two simple words, were too abstruse for his
-comprehension.
-
-“Adios forever,” said the note.
-
-What shocked him even more, was the dagger thrust between Leoncia’s
-eyes, and, as he stared at the wound made in the thin cardboard, it came
-to him that he had seen this very thing before, and he remembered back
-to the lake-dwelling of the Queen when all had gazed into the golden
-bowl and seen variously, and when he had seen Leoncia’s face on the
-strange liquid metal with the knife thrust between the eyes. He even put
-the dagger back into the cardboard wound and stared at it some more.
-
-The explanation was obvious. The Queen had betrayed jealousy against
-Leoncia from the first, and here, in New York, finding her rival’s
-photograph on her husband’s dresser, had no more missed the true
-conclusion than had she missed the pictured features with her point of
-steel. But where was she? Where had she gone?——she who was the veriest
-stranger that had ever entered the great city, who called the telephone
-the magic of the flying speech, who thought of Wall Street as a temple,
-and regarded Business as the New York man’s god. For all the world she
-was as unsophisticated and innocent of a great city as had she been a
-traveler from Mars. Where and how had she passed the night? Where was
-she now? Was she even alive?
-
-Visions of the Morgue with its unidentified dead, and of bodies drifting
-out to sea on the ebb, rushed into his brain. It was Parker who steadied
-him back to himself.
-
-“Is there anything I can do, sir? Shall I call up the detective bureau?
-Your father always——”
-
-“Yes, yes,” Francis interrupted quickly. “There was one man he employed
-more than all others, a young man with the Pinkertons——do you remember
-his name?”
-
-“Birchman, sir,” Parker answered promptly, moving away. “I shall send
-for him to come at once.”
-
-And thereupon, in the quest after his wife, Francis entered upon a
-series of adventures that were to him, a born New Yorker, a liberal
-education in conditions and phases of New York of which, up to that
-time, he had been profoundly ignorant. Not alone did Birchman search,
-but he had at work a score of detectives under him who fine-tooth-combed
-the city, while in Chicago and Boston, he directed the activities of
-similar men.
-
-Between his battle with the unguessed enemy of Wall Street, and the
-frequent calls he received to go here and there and everywhere, on the
-spur of the moment, to identify what might possibly be his wife, Francis
-led anything but a boresome existence. He forgot what regular hours of
-sleep were, and grew accustomed to being dragged from luncheon or
-dinner, or of being routed out of his bed, to respond to hurry calls to
-come and look over new-found missing ladies. No trace of one answering
-her description, who had left the city by train or steamer had been
-discovered, and Birchman assiduously pursued his fine-tooth combing,
-convinced that she was still in the city.
-
-Thus, Francis took trips to Mattenwan and down Blackwell’s, and the
-Tombs and the All-Night court knew his presence. Nor did he escape being
-dragged to countless hospitals nor to the Morgue. Once, a fresh-caught
-shoplifter, of whom there was no criminal record and to whom there was
-no clew of identity, was brought to his notice. He had adventures with
-mysterious women cornered by Birchman’s satellites in the back rooms of
-Raines’ Hotels, and, on the West Side, in the Fifties, was guilty of
-trespassing upon two comparatively innocent love-idyls, to the
-embarrassment of all concerned including himself.
-
-Perhaps his most interesting and tragic adventure was in the
-ten-million-dollar mansion of Philip January, the Telluride mining king.
-The strange woman, a lady slender, had wandered in upon the Januarys a
-week before, ere Francis came to see her. And, as she had
-heartbreakingly done for the entire week, so she heartbreakingly did for
-Francis, wringing her hands, perpetually weeping, and murmuring
-beseechingly: “Otho, you are wrong. On my knees I tell you you are
-wrong. Otho, you, and you only, do I love. There is no one but you,
-Otho. There has never been any one but you. It is all a dreadful
-mistake. Believe me, Otho, believe me, or I shall die....”
-
-And through it all, the Wall Street battle went on against the
-undiscoverable and powerful enemy who had launched what Francis and
-Bascom could not avoid acknowledging was a catastrophic,
-war-to-the-death raid on his fortune.
-
-“If only we can avoid throwing Tampico Petroleum into the whirlpool,”
-Bascom prayed.
-
-“I look to Tampico Petroleum to save me,” Francis replied. “When every
-security I can lay hand to has been engulfed, then, throwing in Tampico
-Petroleum will be like the eruption of a new army upon a losing field.”
-
-“And suppose your unknown foe is powerful enough to swallow down that
-final, splendid asset and clamor for more?” Bascom queried.
-
-Francis shrugged his shoulders.
-
-“Then I shall be broke. But my father went broke half a dozen times
-before he won out. Also was he born broke. I should worry about a little
-thing like that.”
-
-For a time, in the Solano hacienda, events had been moving slowly. In
-fact, following upon the rescue of Leoncia by Henry along his
-dynamite-sown trail, there had been no events. Not even had Yi Poon
-appeared with a perfectly fresh and entirely brand new secret to sell.
-Nothing had happened, save that Leoncia drooped and was apathetic, that
-neither Enrico nor Henry, her full brother, nor her Solano brothers who
-were not her brothers at all, could cheer her.
-
-But, while Leoncia drooped, Henry and the tall sons of Enrico worried
-and perplexed themselves about the treasure in the Valley of the Lost
-Souls, into which Torres was even then dynamiting his way. One thing
-they did know, namely, that the Torres’ expedition had sent Augustino
-and Vicente back to San Antonio to get two more mule-loads of dynamite.
-
-It was Henry, after conferring with Enrico and obtaining his permission,
-who broached the matter to Leoncia.
-
-“Sweet sister,” had been his way, “we’re going to go up and see what the
-scoundrel Torres and his gang are doing. We do know, thanks to you,
-their objective. The dynamite is to blow an entrance into the Valley. We
-know where the Lady Who Dreams sank her treasure when her house burned.
-Torres does not know this. The idea is that we can follow them into the
-Valley, when they have drained the Maya caves, and have as good a
-chance, if not a better chance than they in getting possession of that
-marvelous chest of gems. And the very tip of the point is that we’d like
-to take you along on the expedition. I fancy, if we managed to get the
-treasure ourselves, that you wouldn’t mind repeating that journey down
-the subterranean river.”
-
-But Leoncia shook her head wearily.
-
-“No,” she said, after further urging. “I never want to see the Valley of
-the Lost Souls again, nor ever to hear it mentioned. There is where I
-lost Francis to that woman.”
-
-“It was all a mistake, darling sister. But who was to know? I did not.
-You did not. Nor did Francis. He played the man’s part fairly and
-squarely. Not knowing that you and I were brother and sister, believing
-that we were truly betrothed——as we were at the time——he refrained from
-trying to win you from me, and he rendered further temptation impossible
-and saved the lives of all of us by marrying the Queen.”
-
-“I miss you and Francis singing your everlasting ‘Back to back against
-the mainmast,’” she murmured sadly and irrelevantly.
-
-Quiet tears welled into her eyes and brimmed over as she turned away,
-passed down the steps of the veranda, crossed the grounds, and aimlessly
-descended the hill. For the twentieth time since she had last seen
-Francis she pursued the same course, covering the same ground from the
-time she first espied him rowing to the beach from the _Angelique_,
-through her dragging him into the jungle to save him from her irate
-menfolk, to the moment, with drawn revolver, when she had kissed him and
-urged him into the boat and away. This had been his first visit.
-
-Next, she covered every detail of his second visit from the moment,
-coming from behind the rock after her swim in the lagoon, she had gazed
-upon him leaning against the rock as he scribbled his first note to her,
-through her startled flight into the jungle, the bite on her knee of the
-labarri (which she had mistaken for a deadly viperine), to her recoiling
-collision against Francis and her faint on the sand. And, under her
-parasol, she sat down on the very spot where she had fainted and come
-to, to find him preparing to suck the poison from the wound which he had
-already excoriated. As she remembered back, she realized that it had
-been the pain of the excoriation which brought her to her senses.
-
-Deep she was in the sweet recollections of how she had slapped his cheek
-even as his lips approached her knee, blushed with her face hidden in
-her hands, laughed because her foot had been made asleep by his
-too-efficient tourniquet, turned white with anger when he reminded her
-that she considered him the murderer of her uncle, and repulsed his
-offer to untie the tourniquet. So deep was she in such fond
-recollections of only the other day that yet seemed separated from the
-present by half a century, such was the wealth of episode, adventure,
-and tender passages which had intervened, that she did not see the
-rattletrap rented carriage from San Antonio drive up the beach road. Nor
-did she see a lady, fashionably clad in advertisement that she was from
-New York, dismiss the carriage and proceed toward her on foot. This
-lady, who was none other than the Queen, Francis’ wife, likewise
-sheltered herself beneath a parasol from the tropic sun.
-
-Standing directly behind Leoncia, she did not realize that she had
-surprised the girl in a moment of high renunciation. All that she did
-know was that she saw Leoncia draw from her breast and gaze long at a
-tiny photograph. Over her shoulder the Queen made it out to be a
-snapshot of Francis, whereupon her mad jealousy raged anew. A poniard
-flashed to her hand from its sheath within the bosom of her dress. The
-quickness of this movement was sufficient to warn Leoncia, who tilted
-her parasol forward so as to look up at whatever person stood at her
-back. Too utterly dreary even to feel surprise, she greeted the wife of
-Francis Morgan as casually as if she had parted from her an hour before.
-Even the poniard failed to arouse in her curiosity or fear. Perhaps, had
-she displayed startlement and fear, the Queen might have driven the
-steel home to her. As it was, she could only cry out.
-
-“You are a vile woman! A vile, vile woman!”
-
-To which Leoncia merely shrugged her shoulders, and said:
-
-“You would better keep your parasol between you and the sun.”
-
-The Queen passed round in front of her, facing her and staring down at
-her with woman’s wrath compounded of such jealousy as to be speechless.
-
-“Why?” Leoncia was the first to speak, after a long pause. “Why am I a
-vile woman?”
-
-“Because you are a thief,” the Queen flamed. “Because you are a stealer
-of men, yourself married. Because you are unfaithful to your husband——in
-heart, at least, since more than that has so far been impossible.”
-
-“I have no husband,” Leoncia answered quietly.
-
-“Husband to be, then——I thought you were to be married the day after our
-departure.”
-
-“I have no husband to be,” Leoncia continued with the same quietness.
-
-So swiftly tense did the other woman become that Leoncia idly thought of
-her as a tigress.
-
-“Henry Morgan!” the Queen cried.
-
-“He is my brother.”
-
-“A word which I have discovered is of wide meaning, Leoncia Solano. In
-New York there are worshippers at certain altars who call all men in the
-world ‘brothers,’ all women ‘sisters.’”
-
-“His father was my father,” Leoncia explained with patient explicitness.
-“His mother was my mother. We are full brother and sister.”
-
-“And Francis?” the other queried, convinced, with sudden access of
-interest. “Are you, too, his sister?”
-
-Leoncia shook her head.
-
-“Then you do love Francis!” the Queen charged, smarting with
-disappointment.
-
-“You have him,” said Leoncia.
-
-“No; for you have taken him from me.”
-
-Leoncia slowly and sadly shook her head and sadly gazed out over the
-heat-shimmering surface of Chiriqui Lagoon.
-
-After a long lapse of silence, she said, wearily, “Believe that. Believe
-anything.”
-
-“I divined it in you from the first,” the Queen cried. “You have a
-strange power over men. I am a woman not unbeautiful. Since I have been
-out in the world I have watched the eyes of men looking at me. I know I
-am not all undesirable. Even have the wretched males of my Lost Valley
-with downcast eyes looked love at me. One dared more than look, and he
-died for me, or because of me, and was flung into the whirl of waters to
-his fate. And yet you, with this woman’s power of yours, strangely
-exercise it over my Francis so that in my very arms he thinks of you. I
-know it. I know that even then he thinks of you!”
-
-Her last words were the cry of a passion-stricken and breaking heart.
-And the next moment, though very little to Leoncia’s surprise, being too
-hopelessly apathetic to be surprised at anything, the Queen dropped her
-knife in the sand and sank down, buried her face in her hands, and
-surrendered to the weakness of hysteric grief. Almost idly, and quite
-mechanically, Leoncia put her arm around her and comforted her. For many
-minutes this continued, when the Queen, growing more calm, spoke with
-sudden determination.
-
-“I left Francis the moment I knew he loved you,” she said. “I drove my
-knife into the photograph of you he keeps in his bedroom, and returned
-here to do the same to you in person. But I was wrong. It is not your
-fault, nor Francis’. It is my fault that I have failed to win his love.
-Not you, but I it is who must die. But first, I must go back to my
-valley and recover my treasure. In the temple called Wall Street,
-Francis is in great trouble. His fortune may be taken away from him, and
-he requires another fortune to save his fortune. I have that fortune,
-and there is no time to lose. Will you and yours help me? It is for
-Francis’ sake.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXVII
-
-
-So it came about that the Valley of the Lost Souls was invaded
-subterraneously from opposite directions by two parties of
-treasure-seekers. From one side, and quickly, came the Queen and
-Leoncia, Henry Morgan, and the Solanos. Far more slowly, although they
-had started long in advance, did Torres and the Jefe progress. The first
-attack on the mountain had proved the chiefest obstacle. To blow open an
-entrance to the Maya caves had required more dynamite than they had
-originally brought, while the rock had proved stubborner than they
-expected. Further, when they had finally made a way, it had proved to be
-above the cave floor, so that more blasting had been required to drain
-off the water. And, having blasted their way in to the water-logged
-mummies of the conquistadores and to the Room of the Idols, they had to
-blast their way out again and on into the heart of the mountain. But
-first, ere they continued on, Torres looted the ruby eyes of Chia and
-the emerald eyes of Hzatzl.
-
-Meanwhile, with scarcely any delays, the Queen and her party penetrated
-to the Valley through the mountain on the opposite side. Nor did they
-entirely duplicate the course of their earlier traverse. The Queen,
-through long gazing into her Mirror, knew every inch of the way. Where
-the underground river plunged through the passage and out into the bosom
-of the Gualaca River it was impossible to take in their boats. But, by
-assiduous search under her directions, they found the tiny mouth of a
-cave on the steep wall of the cliff, so shielded by a growth of mountain
-berries that only by knowing for what they sought could they have found
-it. By main strength, applied to the coils of rope which they had
-brought along, they hoisted their canoes up the cliff, portaged them on
-their shoulders through the winding passage, and launched them on the
-subterranean river itself where it ran so broadly and placidly between
-wide banks that they paddled easily against its slack current. At other
-times, where the river proved too swift, they lined the canoes up by
-towing from the bank; and wherever the river made a plunge through the
-solid tie-ribs of mountain, the Queen showed them the obviously hewn and
-patently ancient passages through which to portage their light crafts
-around.
-
-“Here we leave the canoes,” the Queen directed at last, and the men
-began securely mooring them to the bank in the light of the flickering
-torches. “It is but a short distance through the last passage. Then we
-will come to a small opening in the cliff, shielded by climbing vines
-and ferns, and look down upon the spot where my house once stood beside
-the whirl of waters. The ropes will be necessary in order to descend the
-cliff, but it is only about fifty feet.”
-
-Henry, with an electric torch, led the way, the Queen beside him, while
-old Enrico and Leoncia brought up the rear, vigilant to see that no
-possible half-hearted peon or Indian boatman should slip back and run
-away. But when the party came to where the mouth of the passage ought to
-have been, there was no mouth. The passage ceased, being blocked off
-solidly from floor to roof by a debris of crumbled rocks that varied in
-size from paving stones to native houses.
-
-“Who could have done this?” the Queen exclaimed angrily.
-
-But Henry, after a cursory examination, reassured her.
-
-“It’s just a slide of rock,” he said, “a superficial fault in the outer
-skin of the mountain that has slipped; and it won’t take us long with
-our dynamite to remedy it. Lucky we fetched a supply along.”
-
-But it did take long. For what was the remainder of the day and
-throughout the night they toiled. Large charges of explosive were not
-used because of Henry’s fear of exciting a greater slip along the fault
-overhead. What dynamite was used was for the purpose of loosening up the
-rubble so that they could shift it back along the passage. At eight the
-following morning the charge was exploded that opened up to them the
-first glimmer of daylight ahead. After that they worked carefully, being
-apprehensive of jarring down fresh slides. At the last, they were
-baffled by a ten-ton block of rock in the very mouth of the passage.
-Through crevices on either side of it they could squeeze their arms into
-the blazing sunshine, yet the stone-block thwarted them. No leverage
-they applied could more than quiver it, and Henry decided on one final
-blast that would topple it out and down into the Valley.
-
-“They’ll certainly know visitors are coming, the way we’ve been knocking
-on their back door for the last fifteen hours,” he laughed, as he
-prepared to light the fuse.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Assembled before the altar of the Sun God at the Long House, the entire
-population was indeed aware, and anxiously aware, of the coming of
-visitors. So disastrous had been their experiences with their last ones,
-when the lake dwelling had been burned and their Queen lost to them,
-that they were now begging the Sun God to send no more visitors. But
-upon one thing, having been passionately harangued by their priest, they
-were resolved; namely, to kill at sight and without parley whatever
-newcomers did descend upon them.
-
-“Even Da Vasco himself,” the priest had cried.
-
-“Even Da Vasco!” the Lost Souls had responded.
-
-All were armed with spears, war-clubs, and bows and arrows; and while
-they waited they continued to pray before the altar. Every few minutes
-runners arrived from the lake, making the same reports that while the
-mountain still labored thunderously nothing had emerged from it.
-
-The little girl of ten, the Maid of the Long House who had entertained
-Leoncia, was the first to spy out new arrivals. This was made possible
-because of the tribe’s attention being fixed on the rumbling mountain
-beside the lake. No one expected visitors out of the mountain on the
-opposite side of the valley.
-
-“Da Vasco!” she cried. “Da Vasco!”
-
-All looked and saw, not fifty yards away, Torres, the Jefe, and their
-gang of followers, emerging into the open clearing. Torres wore again
-the helmet he had filched from his withered ancestor in the Chamber of
-the Mummies. Their greeting was instant and warm, taking the form of a
-flight of arrows that arched into them and stretched two of the
-followers on the ground. Next, the Lost Souls, men and women, charged;
-while the rifles of Torres’ men began to speak. So unexpected was this
-charge, so swiftly made and with so short a distance to cover, that,
-though many fell before the bullets, a number reached the invaders and
-engaged in a desperate hand-to-hand conflict. Here the advantage of
-firearms was minimized, and gendarmes and others were thrust through by
-spears or had their skulls cracked under the ponderous clubs.
-
-In the end, however, the Lost Souls were outfought, thanks chiefly to
-the revolvers that could kill in the thickest of the scuffling. The
-survivors fled, but of the invaders half were down and down forever. The
-women having in drastic fashion attended to every man who fell wounded.
-The Jefe was spluttering with pain and rage at an arrow which had
-perforated his arm; nor could he be appeased until Vicente cut off the
-barbed head and pulled out the shaft.
-
-Torres, beyond an aching shoulder where a club had hit him, was
-uninjured; and he became jubilant when he saw the old priest dying on
-the ground with his head resting on the little maid’s knees.
-
-Since there were no wounded of their own to be attended to with rough
-and ready surgery, Torres and the Jefe led the way to the lake, skirted
-its shores, and came to the ruins of the Queen’s dwelling. Only charred
-stumps of piles, projecting above the water, showed where it had once
-stood. Torres was nonplussed, but the Jefe was furious.
-
-“Here, right in this house that was, the treasure chest stood,” he
-stammered.
-
-“A wild goose chase!” the Jefe grunted. “Senor Torres, I always
-suspected you were a fool.”
-
-“How was I to know the place had been burned down?”
-
-“You ought to have known, you who are so very wise in all things,” the
-Jefe bickered back. “But you can’t fool me. I had my eye on you. I saw
-you rob the emeralds and rubies from the eye-sockets of the Maya gods.
-That much you shall divide with me, and now.”
-
-“Wait, wait, be a trifle patient,” Torres begged. “Let us first
-investigate. Of course, I shall divide the four gems with you——but what
-are they compared with a whole chest-full? It was a light, fragile
-house. The chest may have fallen into the water undamaged by fire when
-the roof fell in. And water will not damage precious stones.”
-
-In amongst the burnt piling the Jefe sent his men to investigate, and
-they waded and swam about in the shoal water, being careful to avoid
-being caught by the outlying suck of the whirlpool. Augustino, the
-Silent, made the find, close in to shore.
-
-“I am standing on something,” he announced, the level of the lake barely
-to his knees.
-
-Torres plunged in, and, reaching under till he buried his head and
-shoulders, felt out the object.
-
-“It is the chest, I am certain,” he declared. “—Come! All of you! Drag
-this out to the dry land so that we may examine into it!”
-
-But when this was accomplished, and just as he bent to open the lid, the
-Jefe stopped him.
-
-“Go back into the water, the lot of you,” he commanded his men. “There
-are a number of chests like this, and the expedition will be a failure
-if we don’t find them. One chest would not pay the expenses.”
-
-Not until all the men were floundering and groping in the water, did
-Torres raise the lid. The Jefe stood transfixed. He could only gaze and
-mutter inarticulate mouthings.
-
-“Now will you believe?” Torres queried. “It is beyond price. We are the
-richest two men in Panama, in South America, in the world. This is the
-Maya treasure. We heard of it when we were boys. Our fathers and our
-grandfathers dreamed of it. The Conquistadores failed to find it. And it
-is ours——ours!”
-
-And, while the two men, almost stupefied, stood and stared, one by one
-their followers crept out of the water, formed a silent semi-circle at
-their backs, and likewise stared. Neither did the Jefe and Torres know
-their men stood at their backs, nor did the men know of the Lost Souls
-that were creeping stealthily upon them from the rear. As it was, all
-were staring at the treasure with fascinated amazement when the attack
-was sprung.
-
-Bows and arrows, at ten yards distance, are deadly, especially when due
-time is taken to make certain of aim. Two-thirds of the treasure-seekers
-went down simultaneously. Through Vicente, who had chanced to be
-standing directly behind Torres, no less than two spears and five arrows
-had perforated. The handful of survivors had barely time to seize their
-rifles and whirl, when the club attack was upon them. In this Rafael and
-Ignacio, two of the gendarmes who had been on the adventure to the
-Juchitan oil fields, almost immediately had their skulls cracked. And,
-as usual, the Lost Souls women saw to it that the wounded did not remain
-wounded long.
-
-The end for Torres and the Jefe was but a matter of moments, when a loud
-roar from the mountain followed by a crashing avalanche of rock, created
-a diversion. The few Lost Souls that remained alive, darted back
-terror-stricken into the shelter of the bushes. The Jefe and Torres, who
-alone stood on their feet and breathed, cast their eyes up the cliff to
-where the smoke still issued from the new-made hole, and saw Henry
-Morgan and the Queen step into the sunshine on the lip of the cliff.
-
-“You take the lady,” the Jefe snarled. “I shall get the Gringo Morgan if
-it’s the last act of what seems a life that isn’t going to be much
-longer.”
-
-Both lifted their rifles and fired. Torres, never much of a shot, sent
-his bullet fairly centered into the Queen’s breast. But the Jefe, master
-marksman and possessor of many medals, made a clean miss of his target.
-The next instant, a bullet from Henry’s rifle struck his wrist and
-traveled up the forearm to the elbow, whence it escaped and passed on.
-And as his rifle clattered to the ground he knew that never again would
-that right arm, its bone pulped from wrist to elbow, have use for a
-rifle.
-
-But Henry was not shooting well. Just emerged from twenty-four hours of
-darkness in the cave, not at once could his eyes adjust themselves to
-the blinding dazzle of the sun. His first shot had been lucky. His
-succeeding shots merely struck in the immediate neighbourhood of the
-Jefe and Torres as they turned and fled madly for the brush.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Ten minutes later, the wounded Jefe in the lead, Torres saw a woman of
-the Lost Souls spring out from behind a tree and brain him with a huge
-stone wielded in both her hands. Torres shot her first, then crossed
-himself with horror, and stumbled on. From behind arose distant calls of
-Henry and the Solano brothers in pursuit, and he remembered the vision
-of his end he had glimpsed but refused to see in the Mirror of the World
-and wondered if this end was near upon him. Yet it had not resembled
-this place of trees and ferns and jungle. From the glimpse he remembered
-nothing of vegetation——only solid rock and blazing sun and bones of
-animals. Hope sprang up afresh at the thought. Perhaps that end was not
-for this day, maybe not for this year. Who knew? Twenty years might yet
-pass ere that end came.
-
-Emerging from the jungle, he came upon a queer ridge of what looked like
-long disintegrated lava rock. Here he left no trail, and he proceeded
-carefully on beyond it through further jungle, believing once again in
-his star that would enable him to elude pursuit. His plan of escape took
-shape. He would find a safe hiding place until after dark. Then he would
-circle back to the lake and the whirl of waters. That gained, nothing
-and nobody could stop him. He had but to leap in. The subterranean
-journey had no terrors for him because he had done it before. And in his
-fancy he saw once more the pleasant picture of the Gualaca River
-flashing under the open sky on its way to the sea. Besides, did he not
-carry with him the two great emeralds and two great rubies that had been
-the eyes of Chia and Hzatzl? Fortune enough, and vast good fortune, were
-they for any man. What if he had failed by the Maya Treasure to become
-the richest man in the world? He was satisfied. All he wanted now was
-darkness and one last dive into the heart of the mountain and through
-the heart of the mountain to the Gualaca flowing to the sea.
-
-And just then, the assured vision of his escape so vividly filling his
-eyes that he failed to observe the way of his feet, he dived. Nor was it
-a dive into swirling waters. It was a head-foremost, dry-land dive down
-a slope of rock. So slippery was it that he continued to slide down,
-although he managed to turn around, with face and stomach to the
-surface, and to claw wildly up with hands and feet. Such effort merely
-slowed his descent, but could not stop it.
-
-For a while, at the bottom, he lay breathless and dazed. When his senses
-came back to him, he became aware first of all of something unusual upon
-which his hand rested. He could have sworn that he felt teeth. At
-length, opening his eyes with a shudder and summoning his resolution, he
-dared to look at the object. And relief was immediate. Teeth they were,
-in an indubitable, weather-white jaw-bone; but they were pig’s teeth and
-the jaw was a pig’s jaw. Other bones lay about, on which his body
-rested, which, on examination, proved to be the bones of pigs and of
-smaller animals.
-
-Where had he glimpsed such an arrangement of bones? He thought, and
-remembered the Queen’s great golden bowl. He looked up. Ah! Mother of
-God! The very place! He knew it at first sight, as he gazed up what was
-a funnel at the far spectacle of day. Fully two hundred feet above him
-was the rim of the funnel. The sides of hard, smooth rock sloped steeply
-in and down to him, and his eyes and judgment told him that no man born
-of woman could ever scale that slope.
-
-The fancy that came to his mind caused him to spring to his feet in
-sudden panic and look hastily round about him. Only on a more colossal
-scale, the funnel in which he was trapped had reminded him of the
-funnel-pits dug in the sand by hunting spiders that lurked at the bottom
-for such prey that tumbled in upon them. And, his vivid fancy leaping,
-he had been frightened by the thought that some spider monster, as
-colossal as the funnel-pit, might possibly be lurking there to devour
-him. But no such denizen occurred. The bottom of the pit, circular in
-form, was a good ten feet across and carpeted, he knew not how deep, by
-a debris of small animals’ bones. Now for what had the Mayas of old time
-made so tremendous an excavation? he questioned; for he was more than
-half-convinced that the funnel was no natural phenomenon.
-
-Before nightfall he made sure, by a dozen attempts, that the funnel was
-unscalable. Between attempts, he crouched in the growing shadow of the
-descending sun and panted dry-lipped with heat and thirst. The place was
-a very furnace, and the juices of his body were wrung from him in
-profuse perspiration. Throughout the night, between dozes, he vainly
-pondered the problem of escape. The only way out was up, nor could his
-mind devise any method of getting up. Also, he looked forward with
-terror to the coming of the day, for he knew that no man could survive a
-full ten hours of the baking heat that would be his. Ere the next
-nightfall the last drop of moisture would have evaporated from his body
-leaving him a withered and already half-sun-dried mummy.
-
-With the coming of daylight his growing terror added wings to his
-thought, and he achieved a new and profoundly simple theory of escape.
-Since he could not climb up, and since he could not get out through the
-sides themselves, then the only possible remaining way was down. Fool
-that he was! He might have been working through the cool night hours,
-and now he must labour in the quickly increasing heat. He applied
-himself in an ecstasy of energy to digging down through the mass of
-crumbling bones. Of course, there was a way out. Else how did the funnel
-drain? Otherwise it would have been full or part full of water from the
-rains. Fool! And thrice times thrice a fool!
-
-He dug down one side of the wall, flinging the rubbish into a mound
-against the opposite side. So desperately did he apply himself that he
-broke his finger-nails to the quick and deeper, while every finger-tip
-was lacerated to bleeding. But love of life was strong in him, and he
-knew it was a life-and-death race with the sun. As he went deeper, the
-rubbish became more compact, so that he used the muzzle of his rifle
-like a crowbar to loosen it, ere tossing it up in single and double
-handfuls.
-
-By mid-forenoon, his senses beginning to reel in the heat, he made a
-discovery. Upon the wall which he had uncovered, he came upon the
-beginning of an inscription, evidently rudely scratched in the rock by
-the point of a knife. With renewed hope, his head and shoulders down in
-the hole, he dug and scratched for all the world like a dog, throwing
-the rubbish out and between his legs in true dog-fashion. Some of it
-fell clear, but most of it fell back and down upon him. Yet had he
-become too frantic to note the inefficiency of his effort.
-
-At last the inscription was cleared, so that he was able to read:
-
- Peter McGill, of Glasgow. On March 12, 1820,
- I escaped from the Pit of Hell by this passage by
- digging down and finding it.
-
-A passage! The passage must be beneath the inscription! Torres now
-toiled in a fury. So dirt-soiled was he that he was like some huge,
-four-legged, earth-burrowing animal. The dirt got into his eyes, and, on
-occasion, into his nostrils and air passages so as to suffocate him and
-compel him to back up out of the hole and sneeze and cough his breathing
-apparatus clear. Twice he fainted. But the sun, by then almost directly
-overhead, drove him on.
-
-He found the upper rim of the passage. He did not dig down to the lower
-rim; for the moment the aperture was large enough to accommodate his
-lean shape, he writhed and squirmed into it and away from the destroying
-sun-rays. The cool and the dark soothed him, but his joy and the
-reaction from what he had undergone sent his pulse giddily up, so that
-for the third time he fainted.
-
-Recovered, mouthing with black and swollen lips a half-insane chant of
-gratefulness and thanksgiving, he crawled on along the passage. Perforce
-he crawled, because it was so low that a dwarf could not have stood
-erect in it. The place was a charnel house. Bones crunched and crumbled
-under his hands and knees, and he knew that his knees were being worn to
-the bone. At the end of a hundred feet he caught his first glimmering of
-light. But the nearer he approached freedom, the slower he progressed,
-for the final stages of exhaustion were coming upon him. He knew that it
-was not physical exhaustion, nor food exhaustion, but thirst exhaustion.
-Water, a few ounces of water, was all he needed to make him strong
-again. And there was no water.
-
-But the light was growing stronger and nearer. He noted, toward the
-last, that the floor of the passage pitched down at an angle of fully
-thirty degrees. This made the way easier. Gravity drew him on, and
-helped every failing effort of him, toward the source of light. Very
-close to it, he encountered an increase in the deposit of bones. Yet
-they bothered him little, for they had become an old story, while he was
-too exhausted to mind them.
-
-He did observe, with swimming eyes and increasing numbness of touch,
-that the passage was contracting both vertically and horizontally.
-Slanting downward at thirty degrees, it gave him an impression of a
-rat-trap, himself the rat, descending head foremost toward he knew not
-what. Even before he reached it, he apprehended that the slit of bright
-day that advertised the open world beyond was too narrow for the egress
-of his body. And his apprehension was verified. Crawling unconcernedly
-over a skeleton that the blaze of day showed him to be a man’s, he
-managed, by severely and painfully squeezing his ears flat back, to
-thrust his head through the slitted aperture. The sun beat down upon his
-head, while his eyes drank in the openness of the freedom of the world
-that the unyielding rock denied to the rest of his body.
-
-Most maddening of all was a running stream not a hundred yards away,
-tree-fringed beyond, with lush meadow-grass leading down to it from his
-side. And in the tree-shadowed water, knee-deep and drowsing, stood
-several cows of the dwarf breed peculiar to the Valley of Lost Souls.
-Occasionally they flicked their tails lazily at flies, or changed the
-distribution of their weight on their legs. He glared at them to see
-them drink, but they were evidently too sated with water. Fools! Why
-should they not drink, with all that wealth of water flowing idly by!
-
-They betrayed alertness, turning their heads toward the far bank and
-pricking their ears forward. Then, as a big antlered buck came out from
-among the trees to the water’s edge, they flattened their ears back and
-shook their heads and pawed the water till he could hear the splashing.
-But the stag disdained their threats, lowered his head, and drank. This
-was too much for Torres, who emitted a maniacal scream which, had he
-been in his senses, he would not have recognised as proceeding from his
-own throat and larynx.
-
-The stag sprang away. The cattle turned their heads in Torres’
-direction, drowsed, their eyes shut, and resumed the flicking of flies.
-With a violent effort, scarcely knowing that he had half-torn off his
-ears, he drew his head back through the slitted aperture and fainted on
-top of the skeleton.
-
-Two hours later, though he did not know the passage of time, he regained
-consciousness, and found his own head cheek by jowl with the skull of
-the skeleton on which he lay. The descending sun was already shining
-into the narrow opening, and his gaze chanced upon a rusty knife. The
-point of it was worn and broken, and he established the connection. This
-was the knife that had scratched the inscription on the rock at the base
-of the funnel at the other end of the passage, and this skeleton was the
-bony framework of the man who had done the scratching. And Alvarez
-Torres went immediately mad.
-
-“Ah, Peter McGill, my enemy,” he muttered. “Peter McGill of Glasgow who
-betrayed me to this end.—This for you!—And this!—And this!”
-
-So speaking, he drove the heavy knife into the fragile front of the
-skull. The dust of the bone which had once been the tabernacle of Peter
-McGill’s brain arose in his nostrils and increased his frenzy. He
-attacked the skeleton with his hands, tearing at it, disrupting it,
-filling the pent space about him with flying bones. It was like a
-battle, in which he destroyed what was left of the mortal remains of the
-one time resident of Glasgow.
-
-Once again Torres squeezed his head through the slit to gaze at the
-fading glory of the world. Like a rat in the trap caught by the neck in
-the trap of ancient Maya devising, he saw the bright world and day dim
-to darkness as his final consciousness drowned in the darkness of death.
-
-But still the cattle stood in the water and drowsed and flicked at
-flies, and, later, the stag returned, disdainful of the cattle, to
-complete its interrupted drink.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXVIII
-
-
-Not for nothing had Regan been named by his associates, The Wolf of Wall
-Street! While usually no more than a conservative, large-scale player,
-ever so often, like a periodical drinker, he had to go on a rampage of
-wild and daring stock-gambling. At least five times in his long career
-had he knocked the bottom out of the market or lifted the roof off, and
-each time to the tune of a personal gain of millions. He never went on a
-small rampage, and he never went too often.
-
-He would let years of quiescence slip by, until suspicion of him was
-lulled asleep and his world deemed that the Wolf was at last grown old
-and peaceable. And then, like a thunderbolt, he would strike at the men
-and interests he wished to destroy. But, though the blow always fell
-like a thunderbolt, not like a thunderbolt was it in its inception. Long
-months, and even years, were spent in deviously preparing for the day
-and painstakingly maturing the plans and conditions for the battle.
-
-Thus had it been in the outlining and working up of the impending
-Waterloo for Francis Morgan. Revenge lay back of it, but it was revenge
-against a dead man. Not Francis, but Francis’ father, was the one he
-struck against, although he struck through the living into the heart of
-the grave to accomplish it. Eight years he had waited and sought his
-chance ere old R.H.M.——Richard Henry Morgan——had died. But no chance had
-he found. He was, truly, the Wolf of Wall Street, but never by any luck
-had he found an opportunity against the Lion—for to his death R.H.M. had
-been known as the Lion of Wall Street.
-
-So, from father to son, always under a show of fair appearance, Regan
-had carried the feud over. Yet Regan’s very foundation on which he built
-for revenge was meretricious and wrongly conceived. True, eight years
-before R.H.M.’s death, he had tried to double-cross him and failed; but
-he never dreamed that R.H.M. had guessed. Yet R.H.M. had not only
-guessed but had ascertained beyond any shadow of doubt, and had promptly
-and cleverly double-crossed his treacherous associate. Thus, had Regan
-known that R.H.M. knew of his perfidy, Regan would have taken his
-medicine without thought of revenge. As it was, believing that R.H.M.
-was as bad as himself, believing that R.H.M., out of meanness as mean as
-his own, without provocation or suspicion, had done this foul thing to
-him, he saw no way to balance the account save by ruining him, or, in
-lieu of him, by ruining his son.
-
-And Regan had taken his time. At first Francis had left the financial
-game alone, content with letting his money remain safely in the safe
-investments into which it had been put by his father. Not until Francis
-had become for the first time active in undertaking Tampico Petroleum to
-the tune of millions of investment, with an assured many millions of
-ultimate returns, had Regan had the ghost of a chance to destroy him.
-But, the chance given, Regan had not wasted time, though his slow and
-thorough campaign had required many months to develop. Ere he was done,
-he came very close to knowing every share of whatever stock Francis
-carried on margin or owned outright.
-
-It had really taken two years and more for Regan to prepare. In some of
-the corporations in which Francis owned heavily, Regan was himself a
-director and no inconsiderable arbiter of destiny. In Frisco
-Consolidated he was president. In New York, Vermont and Connecticut he
-was vice-president. From controlling one director in Northwestern
-Electric, he had played kitchen politics until he controlled the
-two-thirds majority. And so with all the rest, either directly, or
-indirectly through corporation and banking ramifications, he had his
-hand in the secret springs and levers of the financial and business
-mechanism which gave strength to Francis’ fortune.
-
-Yet no one of these was more than a bagatelle compared with the biggest
-thing of all——Tampico Petroleum. In this, beyond a paltry twenty
-thousand shares bought on the open market, Regan owned nothing,
-controlled nothing, though the time was growing ripe for him to sell and
-deal and juggle in inordinate quantities. Tampico Petroleum was
-practically Francis’ private preserve. A number of his friends were, for
-them, deeply involved, Mrs. Carruthers even gravely so. She worried him,
-and was not even above pestering him over the telephone. There were
-others, like Johnny Pathmore, who never bothered him at all, and who,
-when they met, talked carelessly and optimistically about the condition
-of the market and financial things in general. All of which was harder
-to bear than Mrs. Carruthers’ perpetual nervousness.
-
-Northwestern Electric, thanks to Regan’s machinations, had actually
-dropped thirty points and remained there. Those on the outside who
-thought they knew, regarded it as positively shaky. Then there was the
-little, old, solid-as-the-rock-of-Gibraltar Frisco Consolidated. The
-nastiest of rumors were afloat, and the talk of a receivership was
-growing emphatic. Montana Lode was still sickly under Mulhaney’s
-unflattering and unmodified report, and Weston, the great expert sent
-out by the English investors, had failed to report anything reassuring.
-For six months, Imperial Tungsten, earning nothing, had been put to
-disastrous expense in the great strike which seemed only just begun. Nor
-did anybody, save the several labor leaders who knew, dream that it was
-Regan’s gold that was at the bottom of the affair.
-
-The secrecy and the deadliness of the attack was what unnerved Bascom.
-All properties in which Francis was interested were being pressed down
-as if by a slow-moving glacier. There was nothing spectacular about the
-movement, merely a steady persistent decline that made Francis’ large
-fortune shrink horribly. And, along with what he owned outright, what he
-held on margin suffered even greater shrinkage.
-
-Then had come rumors of war. Ambassadors were receiving their passports
-right and left, and half the world seemed mobilizing. This was the
-moment, with the market shaken and panicky, and with the world powers
-delaying in declaring moratoriums, that Regan selected to strike. The
-time was ripe for a bear raid, and with him were associated half a dozen
-other big bears who tacitly accepted his leadership. But even they did
-not know the full extent of his plans, nor guess at the specific
-direction of them. They were in the raid for what they could make, and
-thought he was in it for the same reason, in their simple directness of
-pecuniary vision catching no glimpse of Francis Morgan nor of his
-ghostly father at whom the big blow was being struck.
-
-Regan’s rumor factory began working overtime, and the first to drop and
-the fastest to drop in the dropping market were the stocks of Francis,
-which had already done considerable dropping ere the bear market began.
-Yet Regan was careful to bring no pressure on Tampico Petroleum. Proudly
-it held up its head in the midst of the general slump, and eagerly Regan
-waited for the moment of desperation when Francis would be forced to
-dump it on the market to cover his shrunken margins in other lines.
-
- * * * * *
-
-“Lord! Lord!”
-
-Bascom held the side of his face in the palm of one hand and grimaced as
-if he had a jumping toothache.
-
-“Lord! Lord!” he reiterated. “The market’s gone to smash and Tampico Pet
-along with it. How she slumped! Who’d have dreamed it!”
-
-Francis, puffing steadily away at a cigarette and quite oblivious that
-it was unlighted, sat with Bascom in the latter’s private office.
-
-“It looks like a fire-sale,” he vouchsafed.
-
-“That won’t last longer than this time to-morrow morning——then you’ll be
-sold out, and me with you,” his broker simplified, with a swift glance
-at the clock.
-
-It marked twelve, as Francis’ swiftly automatic glance verified.
-
-“Dump in the rest of Tampico Pet,” he said wearily. “That ought to hold
-back until to-morrow.”
-
-“Then what to-morrow?” his broker demanded, “with the bottom out and
-everybody including the office boys selling short.”
-
-Francis shrugged his shoulders. “You know I’ve mortgaged the house,
-Dreamwold, and the Adirondack Camp to the limit.”
-
-“Have you any friends?”
-
-“At such a time!” Francis countered bitterly.
-
-“Well, it’s the very time,” Bascom retorted. “Look here, Morgan. I know
-the set you ran with at college. There’s Johnny Pathmore——”
-
-“And he’s up to his eyes already. When I smash he smashes. And Dave
-Donaldson will have to readjust his life to about one hundred and sixty
-a month. And as for Chris Westhouse, he’ll have to take to the movies
-for a livelihood. He always was good at theatricals, and I happen to
-know he’s got the ideal ‘film’ face.”
-
-“There’s Charley Tippery,” Bascom suggested, though it was patent that
-he was hopeless about it.
-
-“Yes,” Francis agreed with equal hopelessness. “There’s only one thing
-the matter with him——his father still lives.”
-
-“The old cuss never took a flyer in his life,” Bascom supplemented.
-“There’s never a time he can’t put his hand on millions. And he still
-lives, worse luck.”
-
-“Charley could get him to do it, and would, except the one thing that’s
-the matter with me.”
-
-“No securities left?” his broker queried.
-
-Francis nodded.
-
-“Catch the old man parting with a dollar without due security.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-Nevertheless, a few minutes later, hoping to find Charley Tippery in his
-office during the noon hour, Francis was sending in his card. Of all
-jewelers and gem merchants in New York, the Tippery establishment was
-the greatest. Not only that. It was esteemed the greatest in the world.
-More of the elder Tippery’s money was invested in the great Diamond
-Corner, than even those in the know of most things knew of this
-particular thing.
-
-The interview was as Francis had forecast. The old man still held tight
-reins on practically everything, and the son had little hope of winning
-his assistance.
-
-“I know him,” he told Francis. “And though I’m going to wrestle with
-him, don’t pin an iota of faith on the outcome. I’ll go to the mat with
-him, but that will be about all. The worst of it is that he has the
-ready cash, to say nothing of oodles and oodles of safe securities and
-United States bonds. But you see, Grandfather Tippery, when he was young
-and struggling and founding the business, once loaned a friend a
-thousand. He never got it back, and he never got over it. Nor did Father
-Tippery ever get over it either. The experience seared both of them.
-Why, father wouldn’t lend a penny on the North Pole unless he got the
-Pole for security after having had it expertly appraised. And you
-haven’t any security, you see. But I’ll tell you what. I’ll wrestle with
-the old man to-night after dinner. That’s his most amiable mood of the
-day,. And I’ll hustle around on my own and see what I can do. Oh, I know
-a few hundred thousand won’t mean anything, and I’ll do my darnedest for
-something big. Whatever happens, I’ll be at your house at nine
-to-morrow——”
-
-“Which will be my busy day,” Francis smiled wanly, as they shook hands.
-“I’ll be out of the house by eight.”
-
-“And I’ll be there by eight then,” Charley Tippery responded, again
-wringing his hand heartily. “And in the meantime I’ll get busy. There
-are ideas already beginning to sprout....”
-
- * * * * *
-
-Another interview Francis had that afternoon. Arrived back at his
-broker’s office, Bascom told him that Regan had called up and wanted to
-see Francis, saying that he had some interesting information for him.
-
-“I’ll run around right away,” Francis said, reaching for his hat, while
-his face lighted up with hope. “He was an old friend of father’s, and if
-anybody could pull me through, he could.”
-
-“Don’t be too sure,” Bascom shook his head, and paused reluctantly a
-moment before making confession. “I called him up just before you
-returned from Panama. I was very frank. I told him of your absence and
-of your perilous situation here, and——oh, yes, flatly and flat
-out——asked him if I could rely on him in case of need. And he baffled.
-You know anybody can baffle when asked a favor. That was all right. But
-I thought I sensed more ... no, I won’t dare to say enmity; but I will
-say that I was impressed ... how shall I say?—well, that he struck me as
-being particularly and peculiarly cold-blooded and non-committal.”
-
-“Nonsense,” Francis laughed. “He was too good a friend of my father’s.”
-
-“Ever heard of the Conmopolitan Railways Merger?” Bascom queried with
-significant irrelevance.
-
-Francis nodded promptly, then said:
-
-“But that was before my time. I merely have heard of it, that’s all.
-Shoot. Tell me about it. Give me the weight of your mind.”
-
-“Too long a story, but take this one word of advice. If you see Regan,
-don’t put your cards on the table. Let him play first, and, if he
-offers, let him offer without solicitation from you. Of course, I may be
-all wrong, but it won’t damage you to hold up your hand and get his play
-first.”
-
-At the end of another half hour, Francis was closeted with Regan, and
-the stress of his peril was such that he controlled his natural
-impulses, remembering Bascom’s instruction, and was quite fairly
-nonchalant about the state of his affairs. He even bluffed.
-
-“In pretty deep, eh?” was Regan’s beginning.
-
-“Oh, not so deep that my back-teeth are awash yet,” Francis replied
-airily. “I can still breathe, and it will be a long time before I begin
-swallowing.”
-
-Regan did not immediately reply. Instead, pregnantly, he ran over the
-last few yards of the ticker tape.
-
-“You’re dumping Tampico Pet pretty heavily, just the same.”
-
-“And they’re snapping it up,” Francis came back, and for the first time,
-in a maze of wonderment, he considered the possibility of Bascom’s
-intuition being right. “Sure, I’ve got _them_ swallowing.”
-
-“Just the same, you’ll note that Tampico Pet is tumbling at the same
-time it’s being snapped up, which is a very curious phenomenon,” Regan
-urged.
-
-“In a bear market all sorts of curious phenomena occur,” Francis bluffed
-with a mature show of wisdom. “And when they’ve swallowed enough of my
-dumpings they’ll be ripe to roll on a barrel. Somebody will pay
-something to get my dumpings out of their system. I fancy they’ll pay
-through the nose before I’m done with them.”
-
-“But you’re all in, boy. I’ve been watching your fight, even before your
-return. Tampico Pet is your last.”
-
-Francis shook his head.
-
-“I’d scarcely say that,” he lied. “I’ve got assets my market enemies
-never dream of. I’m luring them on, that’s all, just luring them on. Of
-course, Regan, I’m telling you this in confidence. You were my father’s
-friend. Mine is going to be some clean up, and, if you’ll take my tip,
-in this short market you start buying. You’ll be sure to settle with the
-sellers long in the end.”
-
-“What are your other assets?”
-
-Francis shrugged his shoulders.
-
-“That’s what they’re going to find out when they’re full up with my
-stuff.”
-
-“It’s a bluff!” Regan admired explosively. “You’ve got the old man’s
-nerve, all right. But you’ve got to show me it isn’t bluff.”
-
-Regan waited, and Francis was suddenly inspired.
-
-“It is,” he muttered. “You’ve named it. I’m drowning over my back-teeth
-now, and they’re the highest out of the wash. But I won’t drown if you
-will help me. All you’ve got to do is to remember my father and put out
-your hand to save his son. If you’ll back me up, we’ll make them all
-sick....”
-
-And right there the Wolf of Wall Street showed his teeth. He pointed to
-Richard Henry Morgan’s picture.
-
-“Why do you think I kept that hanging on the wall all these years?” he
-demanded.
-
-Francis nodded as if the one accepted explanation was their tried and
-ancient friendship.
-
-“Guess again,” Regan sneered grimly.
-
-Francis shook his head in perplexity.
-
-“So I shouldn’t ever forget him,” the Wolf went on. “And never a waking
-moment have I forgotten him.——Remember the Conmopolitan Railways Merger?
-Well, old R.H.M. double-crossed me in that deal. And it was some
-double-cross, believe me. But he was too cunning ever to let me get a
-come-back on him. So there his picture has hung, and here I’ve sat and
-waited. And now the time has come.”
-
-“You mean?” Francis queried quietly.
-
-“Just that,” Regan snarled. “I’ve waited and worked for this day, and
-the day has come. I’ve got the whelp where I want him at any rate.” He
-glanced up maliciously at the picture. “And if that don’t make the old
-gent turn in his grave....”
-
-Francis rose to his feet and regarded his enemy curiously.
-
-“No,” he said, as if in soliloquy, “it isn’t worth it.”
-
-“What isn’t worth what?” the other demanded with swift suspicion.
-
-“Beating you up,” was the cool answer. “I could kill you with my hands
-in five minutes. You’re no Wolf. You’re just mere yellow dog, the part
-of you that isn’t plain skunk. They told me to expect this of you; but I
-didn’t believe, and I came to see. They were right. You were all that
-they said. Well, I must get along out of this. It smells like a den of
-foxes. It stinks.”
-
-He paused with his hand on the door knob and looked back. He had not
-succeeded in making Regan lose his temper.
-
-“And what are you going to do about it?” the latter jeered.
-
-“If you’ll permit me to get my broker on your ‘phone maybe you’ll
-learn,” Francis replied.
-
-“Go to it, my laddy buck,” Regan conceded, then, with a wave of
-suspicion, “—I’ll get him for you myself.”
-
-And, having ascertained that Bascom was really at the other end of the
-line, he turned the receiver over to Francis.
-
-“You were right,” the latter assured Bascom. “Regan’s all you said and
-worse. Go right on with your plan of campaign. We’ve got him where we
-want him, though the old fox won’t believe it for a moment. He thinks
-he’s going to strip me, clean me out.” Francis paused to think up the
-strongest way of carrying on his bluff, then continued. “I’ll tell you
-something you don’t know. He’s the one who manœuvred the raid from the
-beginning. So now you know who we’re going to bury.”
-
-And, after a little more of similar talk, he hung up.
-
-“You see,” he explained, again from the door, “you were so crafty that
-we couldn’t make out who it was. Why hell, Regan, we were prepared to
-give a walloping to some unknown that had several times your strength.
-And now that it’s you, it’s easy. We were prepared to strain. But with
-you it will be a walk-over. To-morrow, around this time, there’s going
-to be a funeral right here in your office and you’re not going to be one
-of the mourners. You’re going to be the corpse——and a not-nice looking
-financial corpse you’ll be when we get done with you.”
-
-“The dead spit of R.H.M.,” the Wolf grinned. “Lord, how he could pull
-off a bluff!”
-
-“It’s a pity he didn’t bury you and save me all the trouble,” was
-Francis’ parting shot.
-
-“And all the expense,” Regan flung after him. “It’s going to be pretty
-expensive for you, and there isn’t going to be any funeral from this
-place.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-“Well, to-morrow’s the day,” Francis delivered to Bascom, as they parted
-that evening. “This time to-morrow I’ll be a perfectly nice scalped and
-skinned and sun-dried and smoke-cured specimen for Regan’s private
-collection. But who’d have believed the old skunk had it in for me! I
-never harmed him. On the contrary, I always considered him father’s best
-friend.——If Charley Tippery could only come through with some of the
-Tippery surplus coin....”
-
-“Or if the United States would only declare a moratorium,” Bascom hoped
-equally hopelessly.
-
-And Regan, at that moment, was saying to his assembled agents and
-rumor-factory specialists:
-
-“Sell! Sell! Sell all you’ve got and then sell short. I see no bottom to
-this market!”
-
-And Francis, on his way up town, buying the last extra, scanned the
-five-inch-lettered headline:
-
- “I SEE NO BOTTOM TO THIS MARKET.—THOMAS REGAN.”
-
-But Francis was not at his house at eight next morning to meet Charley
-Tippery. It had been a night in which official Washington had not slept,
-and the night-wires had carried the news out over the land that the
-United States, though not at war, had declared its moratorium. Wakened
-out of his bed at seven by Bascom in person, who brought the news,
-Francis had accompanied him down town. The moratorium had given them
-hope, and there was much to do.
-
-Charles Tippery, however, was not the first to arrive at the Riverside
-Drive palace. A few minutes before eight, Parker was very much disturbed
-and perturbed when Henry and Leoncia, much the worse for sunburn and
-travel-stain, brushed past the second butler who had opened the door.
-
-“It’s no use you’re coming in this way,” Parker assured them. “Mr.
-Morgan is not at home.”
-
-“Where’s he gone?” Henry demanded, shifting the suit-case he carried to
-the other hand. “We’ve got to see him _pronto_, and I’ll have you know
-that _pronto_ means quick. And who in hell are you?”
-
-“I am Mr. Morgan’s confidential valet,” Parker answered solemnly. “And
-who are you?”
-
-“My name’s Morgan,” Henry answered shortly, looking about in quest of
-something, striding to the library, glancing in, and discovering the
-telephones. “Where’s Francis? With what number can I call him up?”
-
-“Mr. Morgan left express instructions that nobody was to telephone him
-except on important business.”
-
-“Well, my business is important. What’s the number?”
-
-“Mr. Morgan is very busy to-day,” Parker reiterated stubbornly.
-
-“He’s in a pretty bad way, eh?” Henry quizzed.
-
-The valet’s face remained expressionless.
-
-“Looks as though he was going to be cleaned out to-day, eh?”
-
-Parker’s face betrayed neither emotion nor intelligence.
-
-“For a second time I tell you he is very busy——” he began.
-
-“Hell’s bells!” Henry interrupted. “It’s no secret. The market’s got him
-where the hair is short. Everybody knows that. A lot of it was in the
-morning papers. Now come across, Mr. Confidential Valet. I want his
-number. I’ve got important business with him myself.”
-
-But Parker remained obdurate.
-
-“What’s his lawyer’s name? Or the name of his agent? Or of any of his
-representatives?”
-
-Parker shook his head.
-
-“If you will tell me the nature of your business with him,” the valet
-essayed.
-
-Henry dropped the suit-case and made as if about to leap upon the other
-and shake Francis’ number out of him. But Leoncia intervened.
-
-“Tell him,” she said.
-
-“Tell him!” Henry shouted, accepting her suggestion. “I’ll do better
-than that. I’ll show him.—Here, come on, you.” He strode into the
-library, swung the suit-case on the reading table, and began opening it.
-“Listen to me, Mr. Confidential Valet. Our business is the real
-business. We’re going to save Francis Morgan. We’re going to pull him
-out of the hole. We’ve got millions for him, right here inside of this
-thing——”
-
-Parker, who had been looking on with cold, disapproving eyes, recoiled
-in alarm at the last words. Either the strange callers were lunatics, or
-cunning criminals. Even at that moment, while they held him here with
-their talk of millions, confederates might be ransacking the upper parts
-of the house. As for the suit-case, for all he knew it might be filled
-with dynamite.
-
-“Here!”
-
-With a quick reach Henry had caught him by the collar as he turned to
-flee. With his other hand, Henry lifted the cover, exposing a bushel of
-uncut gems. Parker showed plainly that he was overcome, although Henry
-failed to guess the nature of his agitation.
-
-“Thought I’d convince you,” Henry exulted. “Now be a good dog and give
-me his number.”
-
-“Be seated, sir ... and madame,” Parker murmured, with polite bows and a
-successful effort to control himself. “Be seated, please. I have left
-the private number in Mr. Morgan’s bedroom, which he gave to me this
-morning when I helped him dress. I shall be gone but a moment to get it.
-In the meantime please be seated.”
-
-Once outside the library, Parker became a most active, clear-thinking
-person. Stationing the second footman at the front door, he placed the
-first one to watch at the library door. Several other servants he sent
-scouting into the upper regions on the chance of surprising possible
-confederates at their nefarious work. Himself he addressed, via the
-butler’s telephone, to the nearest police station.
-
-“Yes, sir,” he repeated to the desk sergeant. “They are either a couple
-of lunatics or criminals. Send a patrol wagon at once, please, sir. Even
-now I do not know what horrible crimes are being committed under this
-roof ...”
-
-In the meantime, in response at the front door, the second footman, with
-visible relief, admitted Charley Tippery, clad in evening dress at that
-early hour, as a known and tried friend of the master. The first butler,
-with similar relief, to which he added sundry winks and warnings,
-admitted him into the library.
-
-Expecting he knew not what nor whom, Charley Tippery advanced across the
-large room to the strange man and woman. Unlike Parker, their sunburn
-and travel-stain caught his eye, not as insignia suspicious, but as
-tokens worthy of wider consideration than average New York accords its
-more or less average visitors. Leoncia’s beauty was like a blow between
-the eyes, and he knew she was a lady. Henry’s bronze, brazed upon
-features unmistakably reminiscent of Francis and of R.H.M., drew his
-admiration and respect.
-
-“Good morning,” he addressed Henry, although he subtly embraced Leoncia
-with his greeting. “Friends of Francis?”
-
-“Oh, sir,” Leoncia cried out. “We are more than friends. We are here to
-save him. I have read the morning papers. If only it weren’t for the
-stupidity of the servants ...”
-
-And Charley Tippery was immediately unaware of any slightest doubt. He
-extended his hand to Henry.
-
-“I am Charley Tippery,” he said.
-
-“And my name’s Morgan, Henry Morgan,” Henry met him warmly, like a
-drowning man clutching at a life preserver. “And this is Miss Solano—the
-Senorita Solano—Mr. Tippery. In fact, Miss Solano is my sister.”
-
-“I came on the same errand,” Charley Tippery announced, introductions
-over. “The saving of Francis, as I understand it, must consist of hard
-cash or of securities indisputably negotiable. I have brought with me
-what I have hustled all night to get, and what I am confident is not
-sufficient——”
-
-“How much have you brought?” Henry asked bluntly.
-
-“Eighteen hundred thousand—what have you brought?”
-
-“Piffle,” said Henry, pointing to the open suit-case, unaware that he
-talked to a three-generations’ gem expert.
-
-A quick examination of a dozen of the gems picked at random, and an even
-quicker eye-estimate of the quantity, put wonder and excitement into
-Charley Tippery’s face.
-
-“They’re worth millions! millions!” he exclaimed. “What are you going to
-do with them?”
-
-“Negotiate them, so as to help Francis out,” Henry answered. “They’re
-security for any amount, aren’t they?”
-
-“Close up the suit-case,” Charley Tippery cried, “while I telephone!—I
-want to catch my father before he leaves the house,” he explained over
-his shoulder, while waiting for his switch. “It’s only five minutes’ run
-from here.”
-
-Just as he concluded the brief words with his father, Parker, followed
-by a police lieutenant and two policemen, entered.
-
-“There’s the gang, lieutenant—arrest them,” Parker said.—“Oh, sir, I beg
-your pardon, Mr. Tippery. Not you, of course.—Only the other two,
-lieutenant. I don’t know what the charge will be—crazy, anyway, if not
-worse, which is more likely.”
-
-“How do you do, Mr. Tippery,” the lieutenant greeted familiarly.
-
-“You’ll arrest nobody, Lieutenant Burns,” Charley Tippery smiled to him.
-“You can send the wagon back to the station. I’ll square it with the
-Inspector. For you’re coming along with me, and this suit-case, and
-these suspicious characters, to my house. You’ll have to be
-bodyguard—oh, not for me, but for this suit-case. There are millions in
-it, cold millions, hard millions, beautiful millions. When I open it
-before my father, you’ll see a sight given to few men in this world to
-see.—And now, come on everybody. We’re wasting time.”
-
-He made a grab at the suit-case simultaneously with Henry, and, as both
-their hands clutched it, Lieutenant Burns sprang to interfere.
-
-“I fancy I’ll carry it until it’s negotiated,” Henry asserted.
-
-“Surely, surely,” Charley Tippery conceded, “as long as we don’t lose
-any more precious time. It will take time to do the negotiating. Come
-on! Hustle!”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXIX
-
-
-Helped tremendously by the moratorium, the sagging market had ceased
-sagging, and some stocks were even beginning to recover. This was true
-for practically every line save those lines in which Francis owned and
-which Regan was bearing. He continued bearing and making them
-reluctantly fall, and he noted with joy the huge blocks of Tampico
-Petroleum which were being dumped obviously by no other person than
-Francis.
-
-“Now’s the time,” Regan informed his bear conspirators. “Play her coming
-and going. It’s a double ruff. Remember the list I gave you. Sell these,
-and sell short. For them there is no bottom. As for all the rest, buy
-and buy now, and deliver all that you sold. You can’t lose, you see, and
-by continuing to hammer the list you’ll make a double killing.”
-
-“How about yourself?” one of his bear crowd queried.
-
-“I’ve nothing to buy,” came the answer. “That will show you how square I
-have been in my tip, and how confident I am. I haven’t sold a share
-outside the list, so I have nothing to deliver. I am still selling short
-and hammering down the list, and the list only. There’s my killing, and
-you can share in it by as much as you continue to sell short.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-“There you are!” Bascom, in despair in his private office, cried to
-Francis at ten-thirty. “Here’s the whole market rising, except your
-lines. Regan’s out for blood. I never dreamed he could show such
-strength. We can’t stand this. We’re finished. We’re smashed now——you,
-me, all of us——everything.”
-
-Never had Francis been cooler. Since all was lost, why worry?—was his
-attitude; and, a mere layman in the game, he caught a glimpse of
-possibilities that were veiled to Bascom who too thoroughly knew too
-much about the game.
-
-“Take it easy,” Francis counseled, his new vision assuming form and
-substance with each tick of a second. “Let’s have a smoke and talk it
-over for a few minutes.”
-
-Bascom made a gesture of infinite impatience.
-
-“But wait,” Francis urged. “Stop! Look! Listen! I’m finished, you say?”
-
-His broker nodded.
-
-“You’re finished?”
-
-Again the nod.
-
-“Which means that we’re busted, flat busted,” Francis went on to the
-exposition of his new idea. “Now it is perfectly clear, then, to your
-mind and mine, that a man can never be worse than a complete, perfect,
-hundred-percent., entire, total bust.”
-
-“We’re wasting valuable time,” Bascom protested as he nodded
-affirmation.
-
-“Not if we’re busted as completely as you’ve agreed we are,” smiled
-Francis. “Being thoroughly busted, time, sales, purchases, nothing can
-be of any value to us. Values have ceased, don’t you see.”
-
-“Go on, what is it?” Bascom said, with the momentarily assumed patience
-of abject despair. “I’m busted higher than a kite now, and, as you say,
-they can’t bust me any higher.”
-
-“Now you get the idea!” Francis jubilated. “You’re a member of the
-Exchange. Then go ahead, sell or buy, do anything your and my merry
-hearts decide. We can’t lose. Anything from zero always leaves zero.
-We’ve shot all we’ve got, and more. Let’s shoot what we haven’t got.”
-
-Bascom still struggled feebly to protest, but Francis beat him down with
-a final:
-
-“Remember, anything from zero leaves zero.”
-
-And for the next hour, as in a nightmare, no longer a free agent, Bascom
-yielded to Francis’ will in the maddest stock adventure of his life.
-
-“Oh, well,” Francis laughed at half-past eleven, “we might as well quit
-now. But remember, we’re no worse off than we were an hour ago. We were
-zero then. We’re zero now. You can hang up the auctioneer’s flag any
-time now.”
-
-Bascom, heavily and wearily taking down the receiver, was about to
-transmit the orders that would stop the battle by acknowledgment of
-unconditional defeat, when the door opened and through it came the
-familiar ring of a pirate stave that made Francis flash his hand out in
-peremptory stoppage of his broker’s arm.
-
-“Stop!” Francis cried. “Listen!”
-
-And they listened to the song preceding the singer:
-
- “Back to back against the mainmast,
- Held at bay the entire crew.”
-
-As Henry swaggered in, carrying a huge and different suit-case, Francis
-joined with him in the stave.
-
-“What’s doing?” Bascom queried of Charley Tippery, who, still in evening
-dress, looked very jaded and worn from his exertions.
-
-From his breast pocket he drew and passed over three certified checks
-that totaled eighteen hundred thousand dollars. Bascom shook his head
-sadly.
-
-“Too late,” he said. “That’s only a drop in the bucket. Put them back in
-your pocket. It would be only throwing them away.”
-
-“But wait,” Charley Tippery cried, taking the suit-case from his singing
-companion and proceeding to open it. “Maybe that will help.”
-
-“That” consisted of a great mass of orderly bundles of gold bonds and
-gilt edge securities.
-
-“How much is it?” Bascom gasped, his courage springing up like
-wild-fire.
-
-But Francis, overcome by the sight of such plethora of ammunition,
-ceased singing to gasp. And both he and Bascom gasped again when Henry
-drew from his inside pocket a bundle of a dozen certified checks. They
-could only stare at the prodigious sum, for each was written for a
-million dollars.
-
-“And plenty more where that came from,” Henry announced airily. “All you
-have to do is say the word, Francis, and we’ll knock this bear gang to
-smithereens. Now suppose you get busy. The rumors are around everywhere
-that you’re gone and done for. Pitch in and show them, that’s all. Bust
-every last one of them that jumped you. Shake ‘m down to their gold
-watches and the fillings out of their teeth.”
-
-“You found old Sir Henry’s treasure after all,” Francis congratulated.
-
-“No,” Henry shook his head. “That represents part of the old Maya
-treasure——about a third of it. We’ve got another third down with Enrico
-Solano, and the last third’s safe right here in the Jewelers and
-Traders’ National Bank.—Say, I’ve got news for you when you’re ready to
-listen.”
-
-And Francis was quickly ready. Bascom knew even better than he what was
-to be done, and was already giving his orders to his staff over the
-telephone—buying orders of such prodigious size that all of Regan’s
-fortune would not enable him to deliver what he had sold short.
-
-“Torres is dead,” Henry told him.
-
-“Hurrah!” was Francis’ way of receiving it.
-
-“Died like a rat in a trap. I saw his head sticking out. It wasn’t
-pretty. And the Jefe’s dead. And ... and somebody else is dead——”
-
-“Not Leoncia!” Francis cried out.
-
-Henry shook his head.
-
-“Some one of the Solanos——old Enrico?”
-
-“No; your wife, Mrs. Morgan. Torres shot her, deliberately shot her. I
-was beside her when she fell. Now hold on, I’ve got other news.
-Leoncia’s right there in that other office, and she’s waiting for you to
-come to her.—Can’t you wait till I’m through? I’ve got more news that
-will give you the right steer before you go in to her. Why, hell’s
-bells, if I were a certain Chinaman that I know, I’d make you pay me a
-million for all the information I’m giving you for nothing.”
-
-“Shoot——what is it?” Francis demanded impatiently.
-
-“Good news, of course, unadulterated good news. Best news you ever
-heard. I—now don’t laugh, or knock my block off——for the good news is
-that I’ve got a sister.”
-
-“What of it?” was Francis’ brusque response. “I always knew you had
-sisters in England.”
-
-“But you don’t get me,” Henry dragged on. “This is a perfectly brand new
-sister, all grown up, and the most beautiful woman you ever laid eyes
-on.”
-
-“And what of it?” growled Francis. “That may be good news for you, but I
-don’t see how it affects me.”
-
-“Ah, now we’re coming to it,” Henry grinned. “You’re going to marry her.
-I give you my full permission——”
-
-“Not if she were ten times your sister, nor if she were ten times as
-beautiful,” Francis broke in. “The woman doesn’t exist I’d marry.”
-
-“Just the same, Francis boy, you’re going to marry this one. I know it.
-I feel it in my bones. I’d bet on it.”
-
-“I’ll bet you a thousand I don’t.”
-
-“Aw, go on and make it a real bet,” Henry drawled.
-
-“Any amount you want.”
-
-“Done, then, for a thousand and fifty dollars.—Now go right into the
-office there and take a look at her.”
-
-“She’s with Leoncia?”
-
-“Nope; she’s by herself.”
-
-“I thought you said Leoncia was in there.”
-
-“So I did, so I did. And so Leoncia _is_ in there. And she isn’t with
-another soul, and she’s waiting to talk with you.”
-
-By this time Francis was growing peevish.
-
-“What are you stringing me for?” he demanded. “I can’t make head nor
-tale of your foolery. One moment it’s your brand new sister in there,
-and the next moment it’s your wife.”
-
-“Who said I ever had a wife?” Henry came back.
-
-“I give up!” Francis cried. “I’m going on in and see Leoncia. I’ll talk
-with you later on when you’re back in your right mind.”
-
-He started for the door, but was stopped by Henry.
-
-“Just a second more, Francis, and I’m done,” he said. “I want to give
-you that steer. I am not married. There is only one woman waiting for
-you in there. That one woman is my sister. Also is she Leoncia.”
-
-It required a dazed half minute for Francis to get it clearly into his
-head. Again, and in a rush, he was starting for the door, when Henry
-stopped him.
-
-“Do I win?” queried Henry.
-
-But Francis shook him off, dashed through the door, and slammed it after
-him.
-
-
- THE END.
-
-
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-Transcriber’s note:
-
- 1. Moved the ad page to the end.
-
- 2. Changed ‘broken’ to ‘broke’ on p. 53.
-
- 3. Changed ‘woman’ to ‘women on p. 64.
-
- 4. Added ‘of’ to p. 71.
-
- 5. Added ‘an’ to p. 148.
-
- 6. Changed ‘thy’ to ‘they’ on p. 181.
-
- 7. Changed ‘posses’ to ‘possess’ on p. 244.
-
- 8. Added ‘a’ to p. 284.
-
- 9. Silently corrected typographical errors.
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-10. Retained anachronistic and non-standard spellings as printed.
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-11. Enclosed italics font in _underscores_.
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-<h1 class="pg">The Project Gutenberg eBook, Hearts of Three, by Jack London</h1>
-<p>This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States
-and most other parts of the world 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 <a
-href="http://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you are not
-located in the United States, you'll have to check the laws of the
-country where you are located before using this ebook.</p>
-<p>Title: Hearts of Three</p>
-<p>Author: Jack London</p>
-<p>Release Date: January 28, 2017 [eBook #54068]</p>
-<p>Language: English</p>
-<p>Character set encoding: UTF-8</p>
-<p>***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HEARTS OF THREE***</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<h4>E-text prepared by Richard Tonsing<br />
- and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team<br />
- (<a href="http://www.pgdp.net">http://www.pgdp.net</a>)<br />
- from page images generously made available by<br />
- Internet Archive<br />
- (<a href="https://archive.org">https://archive.org</a>)</h4>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<table border="0" style="background-color: #ccccff;margin: 0 auto;" cellpadding="10">
- <tr>
- <td valign="top">
- Note:
- </td>
- <td>
- Images of the original pages are available through
- Internet Archive. See
- <a href="https://archive.org/details/heartsofthreejack00londrich">
- https://archive.org/details/heartsofthreejack00londrich</a>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<div class='tnotes covernote'>
-<p class='c000'><strong>Transcriber's Note:</strong></p>
-<p class='c000'>The cover image was created by the transcriber and is placed in the public domain.</p>
-</div>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<hr class="full" />
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<div>
- <h1 class='c001'>HEARTS OF THREE</h1>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div>BY</div>
- <div class='c003'><span class='xlarge'>JACK LONDON</span></div>
- <div class='c003'><span class='sc'>Author of “The Valley of the Moon,”</span></div>
- <div>“<span class='sc'>Jerry of the Islands</span>,”</div>
- <div><span class='sc'>“Michael, Brother of Jerry,” &amp;c., &amp;c.</span></div>
- <div class='c002'><span class='xlarge'>MILLS &amp; BOON, LIMITED</span></div>
- <div class='c003'><span class='large'>49 RUPERT STREET</span></div>
- <div class='c003'><span class='large'>LONDON, W.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div>Copyright in the United States of America by Jack London.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_viii'>viii</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>FOREWORD</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>I hope the reader will forgive me for beginning this foreword
-with a brag. In truth, this yarn is a celebration. By its
-completion I celebrate my fortieth birthday, my fiftieth book,
-my sixteenth year in the writing game, and a new departure.
-“Hearts of Three” is a new departure. I have certainly
-never done anything like it before; I am pretty certain
-never to do anything like it again. And I haven’t the least
-bit of reticence in proclaiming my pride in having done it.
-And now, for the reader who likes action, I advise him to
-skip the rest of this brag and foreword, and plunge into the
-narrative, and tell me if it just doesn’t read along.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>For the more curious let me explain a bit further. With
-the rise of moving pictures into the overwhelmingly most
-popular form of amusement in the entire world, the stock
-of plots and stories in the world’s fiction fund began rapidly
-to be exhausted. In a year a single producing company,
-with a score of directors, is capable of filming the entire
-literary output of the entire lives of Shakespeare, Balzac,
-Dickens, Scott, Zola, Tolstoy, and of dozens of less voluminous
-writers. And since there are hundreds of moving pictures
-producing companies, it can be readily grasped how quickly
-they found themselves face to face with a shortage of the raw
-material of which moving pictures are fashioned.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The film rights in all novels, short stories, and plays that
-were still covered by copyright, were bought or contracted
-for, while all similar raw material on which copyright had
-expired was being screened as swiftly as sailors on a placer
-beach would pick up nuggets. Thousands of scenario writers—literally
-tens of thousands, for no man, nor woman, nor
-child was too mean not to write scenarios—tens of
-thousands of scenario writers pirated through all literature
-(copyright or otherwise), and snatched the magazines hot
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_ix'>ix</span>from the press to steal any new scene or plot or story hit
-upon by their writing brethren.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In passing, it is only fair to point out that, though only the
-other day, it was in the days ere scenario writers became
-respectable, in the days when they worked overtime for
-rough-neck directors for fifteen and twenty a week or freelanced
-their wares for from ten to twenty dollars per scenario
-and half the time were beaten out of the due payment, or had
-their stolen goods stolen from them by their equally graceless
-and shameless fellows who slaved by the week. But to-day,
-which is only a day since the other day, I know scenario
-writers who keep their three machines, their two chauffeurs,
-send their children to the most exclusive prep schools,
-and maintain an unwavering solvency.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It was largely because of the shortage in raw material
-that scenario writers appreciated in value and esteem. They
-found themselves in demand, treated with respect, better
-remunerated, and, in return, expected to deliver a higher
-grade of commodity. One phase of this new quest for
-material was the attempt to enlist known authors in the
-work. But because a man had written a score of novels was
-no guarantee that he could write a good scenario. Quite to
-the contrary, it was quickly discovered that the surest
-guarantee of failure was a previous record of success in novel-writing.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But the moving pictures producers were not to be denied.
-Division of labor was the thing. Allying themselves with
-powerful newspaper organisations, or, in the case of “Hearts
-of Three,” the very reverse, they had highly-skilled writers
-of scenario (who couldn’t write novels to save themselves)
-make scenarios, which, in turn, were translated into novels
-by novel-writers (who couldn’t, to save themselves, write
-scenarios).</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Comes now Mr. Charles Goddard to one, Jack London,
-saying: “The time, the place, and the men are met; the
-moving pictures producers, the newspapers, and the capital,
-are ready: let us get together.” And we got. Result:
-“Hearts of Three.” When I state that Mr. Goddard has
-been responsible for “The Perils of Pauline,” “The Exploits
-of Elaine,” “The Goddess,” the “Get Rich Quick
-Wallingford” series, etc., no question of his skilled fitness
-can be raised. Also, the name of the present heroine,
-Leoncia, is of his own devising.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>On the ranch, in the “Valley of the Moon,” he wrote his first
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_x'>x</span>several episodes. But he wrote faster than I, and was done
-with his fifteen episodes weeks ahead of me. Do not be
-misled by the word “episode.” The first episode covers
-three thousand feet of film. The succeeding fourteen
-episodes cover each two thousand feet of film. And each
-episode contains about ninety scenes, which makes a total
-of some thirteen hundred scenes. Nevertheless, we worked
-simultaneously at our respective tasks. I could not build for
-what was going to happen next or a dozen chapters away,
-because I did not know. Neither did Mr. Goddard know.
-The inevitable result was that “Hearts of Three” may not be
-very vertebrate, although it is certainly consecutive.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Imagine my surprise, down here in Hawaii and toiling at
-the novelization of the tenth episode, to receive by mail
-from Mr. Goddard in New York the scenario of the fourteenth
-episode, and glancing therein, to find my hero married to the
-wrong woman!—and with only one more episode in
-which to get rid of the wrong woman and duly tie my hero
-up with the right and only woman. For all of which please
-see last chapter of fifteenth episode. Trust Mr. Goddard
-to show me how.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>For Mr. Goddard is the master of action and lord of speed.
-Action doesn’t bother him at all. “Register,” he calmly
-says in a film direction to the moving picture actor.
-Evidently the actor registers, for Mr. Goddard goes right on
-with more action. “Register grief,” he commands, or
-“sorrow,” or “anger,” or “melting sympathy,” or
-“homicidal intent,” or “suicidal tendency.” That’s all.
-It has to be all, or how else would he ever accomplish the
-whole thirteen hundred scenes?</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But imagine the poor devil of a me, who can’t utter the
-talismanic “register” but who must describe, and at some
-length inevitably, these moods and modes so airily created
-in passing by Mr. Goddard! Why, Dickens thought nothing
-of consuming a thousand words or so in describing and subtly
-characterizing the particular grief of a particular person.
-But Mr. Goddard says, “Register,” and the slaves of the
-camera obey.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And action! I have written some novels of adventure in
-my time, but never, in all of the many of them, have I perpetrated
-a totality of action equal to what is contained in
-“Hearts of Three.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But I know, now, why moving pictures are popular. I
-know, now, why Messrs. “Barnes of New York” and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_xi'>xi</span>“Potter of Texas” sold by the millions of copies. I know,
-now, why one stump speech of high-falutin’ is a more
-efficient vote-getter than a finest and highest act or thought
-of statesmanship. It has been an interesting experience,
-this novelization by me of Mr. Goddard’s scenario; and it
-has been instructive. It has given me high lights, foundation
-lines, cross-bearings, and illumination on my anciently
-founded sociological generalizations. I have come, by this
-adventure in writing, to understand the mass mind of the
-people more thoroughly than I thought I had understood it
-before, and to realize, more fully than ever, the graphic
-entertainment delivered by the demagogue who wins the vote
-of the mass out of his mastery of its mind. I should be surprised
-if this book does not have a large sale. (“Register
-surprise,” Mr. Goddard would say; or “Register large
-sale”).</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>If this adventure of “Hearts of Three” be collaboration,
-I am transported by it. But alack!—I fear me Mr. Goddard
-must then be the one collaborator in a million. We have
-never had a word, an argument, nor a discussion. But then,
-I must be a jewel of a collaborator myself. Have I not,
-without whisper or whimper of complaint, let him “register”
-through fifteen episodes of scenario, through thirteen hundred
-scenes and thirty-one thousand feet of film, through one
-hundred and eleven thousand words of novelization? Just
-the same, having completed the task, I wish I’d never
-written it—for the reason that I’d like to read it myself
-to see if it reads along. I am curious to know. I am curious
-to know.</p>
-
-<div class='c007'><span class='sc'>Jack London.</span></div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Waikiki, Hawaii,</div>
- <div class='line in8'><em>March 23, 1916</em>.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_xii'>xii</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>Back to Back Against the Mainmast</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c002'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Do ye seek for fun and fortune?</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Listen, rovers, now to me!</div>
- <div class='line'>Look ye for them on the ocean:</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Ye shall find them on the sea.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in16 c002'><span class='sc'>Chorus</span>:</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in4'>Roaring wind and deep blue water!</div>
- <div class='line in6'>We’re the jolly devils who,</div>
- <div class='line in4'>Back to back against the mainmast,</div>
- <div class='line in6'>Held at bay the entire crew.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Bring the dagger, bring the pistols!</div>
- <div class='line in2'>We will have our own to-day!</div>
- <div class='line'>Let the cannon smash the bulwarks!</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Let the cutlass clear the way!</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in16 c002'><span class='sc'>Chorus</span>:</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in4'>Roaring wind and deep blue water!</div>
- <div class='line in6'>We’re the jolly devils who,</div>
- <div class='line in3'>Back to back against the mainmast,</div>
- <div class='line in6'>Held at bay the entire crew.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Here’s to rum and here’s to plunder!</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Here’s to all the gales that blow!</div>
- <div class='line'>Let the seamen cry for mercy!</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Let the blood of captains flow!</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in16 c002'><span class='sc'>Chorus</span>:</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in2'>Roaring wind and deep blue water!</div>
- <div class='line in4'>We’re the jolly devils who,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Back to back against the mainmast,</div>
- <div class='line in4'>Held at bay the entire crew.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_xiii'>xiii</span>Here’s to ships that we have taken!</div>
- <div class='line in2'>They have seen which men were best.</div>
- <div class='line'>We have lifted maids and cargo,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>And the sharks have had the rest.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in16'><span class='sc'>Chorus</span>:</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in2'>Roaring wind and deep blue water!</div>
- <div class='line in4'>We’re the jolly devils who,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Back to back against the mainmast,</div>
- <div class='line in4'>Held at bay the entire crew.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>—<em>George Sterling.</em></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='ph1'>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div>HEARTS OF THREE</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_1'>1</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER I.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>Events happened very rapidly with Francis Morgan that
-late spring morning. If ever a man leaped across time into
-the raw, red drama and tragedy of the primitive and the
-medieval melodrama of sentiment and passion of the New
-World Latin, Francis Morgan was destined to be that man,
-and Destiny was very immediate upon him.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Yet he was lazily unaware that aught in the world was
-stirring, and was scarcely astir himself. A late night at
-bridge had necessitated a late rising. A late breakfast of
-fruit and cereal had occurred along the route to the library—the
-austerely elegant room from which his father, toward the
-last, had directed vast and manifold affairs.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Parker,” he said to the valet who had been his father’s
-before him, “did you ever notice any signs of fat on R.H.M.
-in his last days?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Oh, no, sir,” was the answer, uttered with all the due
-humility of the trained servant, but accompanied by an
-involuntarily measuring glance that scanned the young man’s
-splendid proportions. “Your father, sir, never lost his leanness.
-His figure was always the same, broad-shouldered,
-deep in the chest, big-boned, but lean, always lean, sir, in
-the middle. When he was laid out, sir, and bathed, his body
-would have shamed most of the young men about town.
-He always took good care of himself; it was those exercises
-in bed, sir. Half an hour every morning. Nothing prevented.
-He called it religion.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Yes, he was a fine figure of a man,” the young man
-responded idly, glancing to the stock-ticker and the several
-telephones his father had installed.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“He was that,” Parker agreed eagerly. “He was lean
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_2'>2</span>and aristocratic in spite of his shoulders and bone and chest.
-And you’ve inherited it, sir, only on more generous lines.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Young Francis Morgan, inheritor of many millions as well
-as brawn, lolled back luxuriously in a huge leather chair,
-stretched his legs after the manner of a full-vigored
-menagerie lion that is overspilling with vigor, and glanced
-at a headline of the morning paper which informed him of a
-fresh slide in the Culebra Cut at Panama.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“If I didn’t know we Morgans didn’t run that way,” he
-yawned, “I’d be fat already from this existence.... Eh,
-Parker?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The elderly valet, who had neglected prompt reply, startled
-at the abrupt interrogative interruption of the pause.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Oh, yes, sir,” he said hastily. “I mean, no, sir. You
-are in the pink of condition.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Not on your life,” the young man assured him. “I may
-not be getting fat, but I am certainly growing soft.... Eh,
-Parker?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Yes, sir. No, sir; no, I mean no, sir. You’re just the
-same as when you came home from college three years ago.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And took up loafing as a vocation,” Francis laughed.
-“Parker!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Parker was alert attention. His master debated with himself
-ponderously, as if the problem were of profound importance,
-rubbing the while the bristly thatch of the small toothbrush
-moustache he had recently begun to sport on his upper
-lip.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Parker, I’m going fishing.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Yes, sir!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I ordered some rods sent up. Please joint them and let
-me give them the once over. The idea drifts through my
-mind that two weeks in the woods is what I need. If I don’t,
-I’ll surely start laying on flesh and disgrace the whole family
-tree. You remember Sir Henry?—the old original Sir
-Henry, the buccaneer old swashbuckler?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Yes, sir; I’ve read of him, sir.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Parker had paused in the doorway until such time as the
-ebbing of his young master’s volubility would permit him to
-depart on the errand.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Nothing to be proud of, the old pirate.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Oh, no, sir,” Parker protested. “He was Governor of
-Jamaica. He died respected.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“It was a mercy he didn’t die hanged,” Francis laughed.
-“As it was, he’s the only disgrace in the family that he
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_3'>3</span>founded. But what I was going to say is that I’ve looked
-him up very carefully. He kept his figure and he died lean
-in the middle, thank God. It’s a good inheritance he passed
-down. We Morgans never found his treasure; but beyond
-rubies is the lean-in-the-middle legacy he bequeathed us.
-It’s what is called a fixed character in the breed—that’s
-what the profs taught me in the biology course.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Parker faded out of the room in the ensuing silence, during
-which Francis Morgan buried himself in the Panama column
-and learned that the canal was not expected to be open for
-traffic for three weeks to come.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>A telephone buzzed, and, through the electric nerves of
-a consummate civilization, Destiny made the first out-reach
-of its tentacles and contacted with Francis Morgan in the
-library of the mansion his father had builded on Riverside
-Drive.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“But my dear Mrs. Carruthers,” was his protest into the
-transmitter. “Whatever it is, it is a mere local flurry.
-Tampico Petroleum is all right. It is not a gambling proposition.
-It is legitimate investment. Stay with. Tie to
-it.... Some Minnesota farmer’s come to town and is trying
-to buy a block or two because it looks as solid as it really
-is.... What if it is up two points? Don’t sell. Tampico
-Petroleum is not a lottery or a roulette proposition. It’s
-bona fide industry. I wish it hadn’t been so almighty big or
-I’d have financed it all myself.... Listen, please, it’s not
-a flyer. Our present contracts for tanks is over a million.
-Our railroad and our three pipe-lines are costing more than
-five millions. Why, we’ve a hundred millions in producing
-wells right now, and our problem is to get it down country
-to the oil-steamers. This is the sober investment time. A
-year from now, or two years, and your shares will make
-government bonds look like something the cat brought
-in....”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Yes, yes, please. Never mind how the market goes.
-Also, please, I didn’t advise you to go in in the first place.
-I never advised a friend to that. But now that they are in,
-stick. It’s as solid as the Bank of England.... Yes, Dicky
-and I divided the spoils last night. Lovely party, though
-Dicky’s got too much temperament for bridge.... Yes,
-bull luck.... Ha! ha! My temperament? Ha! Ha!...
-Yes?... Tell Harry I’m off and away for a couple of
-weeks.... Fishing, troutlets, you know, the springtime
-and the streams, the rise of sap, the budding and the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_4'>4</span>blossoming and all the rest.... Yes, good-bye, and hold
-on to Tampico Petroleum. If it goes down, after that
-Minnesota farmer’s bulled it, buy a little more. I’m going
-to. It’s finding money.... Yes.... Yes, surely....
-It’s too good to dare sell on a flyer now, because it mayn’t
-ever again go down.... Of course I know what I’m talking
-about. I’ve just had eight hours’ sleep, and haven’t had
-a drink.... Yes, yes.... Good-bye.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>He pulled the ticker tape into the comfort of his chair and
-languidly ran over it, noting with mildly growing interest the
-message it conveyed.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Parker returned with several slender rods, each a glittering
-gem of artisanship and art. Francis was out of his chair,
-ticker flung aside and forgotten as with the exultant joy of a
-boy he examined the toys and, one after another, began
-trying them, switching them through the air till they made
-shrill whip-like noises, moving them gently with prudence and
-precision under the lofty ceiling as he made believe to cast
-across the floor into some unseen pool of trout-lurking
-mystery.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>A telephone buzzed. Irritation was swift on his face.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“For heaven’s sake answer it, Parker,” he commanded.
-“If it is some silly stock-gambling female, tell her I’m dead,
-or drunk, or down with typhoid, or getting married, or anything
-calamitous.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>After a moment’s dialogue, conducted on Parker’s part, in
-the discreet and modulated tones that befitted absolutely
-the cool, chaste, noble dignity of the room, with a “One
-moment, sir,” into the transmitter, he muffled the transmitter
-with his hand and said:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“It’s Mr. Bascom, sir. He wants you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Tell Mr. Bascom to go to hell,” said Francis, simulating
-so long a cast, that, had it been in verity a cast, and had it
-pursued the course his fascinated gaze indicated, it would
-have gone through the window and most likely startled the
-gardener outside kneeling over the rose bush he was planting.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Mr. Bascom says it’s about the market, sir, and that
-he’d like to talk with you only a moment,” Parker urged,
-but so delicately and subduedly as to seem to be merely
-repeating an immaterial and unnecessary message.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“All right.” Francis carefully leaned the rod against a
-table and went to the ‘phone.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Hello,” he said into the telephone. “Yes, this is I,
-Morgan. Shoot, What is it?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_5'>5</span>He listened for a minute, then interrupted irritably: “Sell—hell.
-Nothing of the sort.... Of course, I’m glad to
-know. Even if it goes up ten points, which it won’t, hold on
-to everything. It may be a legitimate rise, and it mayn’t
-ever come down. It’s solid. It’s worth far more than it’s
-listed. I know, if the public doesn’t. A year from now it’ll
-list at two hundred ... that is, if Mexico can cut the revolution
-stuff.... Whenever it drops you’ll have buying orders
-from me.... Nonsense. Who wants control? It’s purely
-sporadic ... eh? I beg your pardon. I mean it’s merely
-temporary. Now I’m going off fishing for a fortnight. If it
-goes down five points, buy. Buy all that’s offered. Say,
-when a fellow’s got a real bona fide property, being bulled
-is almost as bad as having the bears after one ... yes....
-Sure ... yes. Good-bye.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And while Francis returned delightedly to his fishing-rods,
-Destiny, in Thomas Regan’s down-town private office, was
-working overtime. Having arranged with his various brokers
-to buy, and, through his divers channels of secret publicity
-having let slip the cryptic tip that something was wrong with
-Tampico Petroleum’s concessions from the Mexican government,
-Thomas Regan studied a report of his own oil-expert
-emissary who had spent two months on the spot spying out
-what Tampico Petroleum really had in sight and prospect.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>A clerk brought in a card with the information that the
-visitor was importunate and foreign. Regan listened, glanced
-at the card, and said:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Tell this Mister Senor Alvarez Torres of Ciodad de Colon
-that I can’t see him.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Five minutes later the clerk was back, this time with a
-message pencilled on the card. Regan grinned as he read it:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l c008'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“<em>Dear Mr. Regan</em>,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>“<em>Honoured Sir</em>:—</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c009'>“<em>I have the honour to inform you that I have a tip
-on the location of the treasure Sir Henry Morgan
-buried in old pirate days.</em></p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r c008'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“<em>Alvarez Torres.</em>”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>Regan shook his head, and the clerk was nearly out of the
-room when his employer suddenly recalled him.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Show him in—at once.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In the interval of being alone, Regan chuckled to himself
-as he rolled the new idea over in his mind. “The unlicked
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_6'>6</span>cub!” he muttered through the smoke of the cigar he was
-lighting. “Thinks he can play the lion part old R.H.M.
-played. A trimming is what he needs, and old Grayhead
-Thomas R. will see that he gets it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Senor Alvarez Torres’ English was as correct as his modish
-spring suit, and though the bleached yellow of his skin advertised
-his Latin-American origin, and though his black eyes
-were eloquent of the mixed lustres of Spanish and Indian
-long compounded, nevertheless he was as thoroughly New
-Yorkish as Thomas Regan could have wished.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“By great effort, and years of research, I have finally
-won to the clue to the buccaneer gold of Sir Henry Morgan,”
-he preambled. “Of course it’s on the Mosquito Coast. I’ll
-tell you now that it’s not a thousand miles from the Chiriqui
-Lagoon, and that Bocas del Toro, within reason, may be
-described as the nearest town. I was born there—educated
-in Paris, however—and I know the neighbourhood like a
-book. A small schooner—the outlay is cheap, most very
-cheap—but the returns, the reward—the treasure!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Senor Torres paused in eloquent inability to describe more
-definitely, and Thomas Regan, hard man used to dealing
-with hard men, proceeded to bore into him and his data like
-a cross-examining criminal lawyer.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Yes,” Senor Torres quickly admitted, “I am somewhat
-embarrassed—how shall I say?—for immediate funds.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“You need the money,” the stock operator assured him
-brutally, and he bowed pained acquiescence.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Much more he admitted under the rapid-fire interrogation.
-It was true, he had but recently left Bocas del Toro, but he
-hoped never again to go back. And yet he would go back if
-possibly some arrangement....</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But Regan shut him off with the abrupt way of the master-man
-dealing with lesser fellow-creatures. He wrote a check,
-in the name of Alvarez Torres, and when that gentleman
-glanced at it he read the figures of a thousand dollars.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Now here’s the idea,” said Regan. “I put no belief
-whatsoever in your story. But I have a young friend—my
-heart is bound up in the boy but he is too much about town,
-the white lights and the white-lighted ladies, and the rest—you
-understand?” And Senor Alvarez Torres bowed as one
-man of the world to another. “Now, for the good of his
-health, as well as his wealth and the saving of his soul, the
-best thing that could happen to him is a trip after treasure,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_7'>7</span>adventure, exercise, and ... you readily understand, I am
-sure.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Again Alvarez Torres bowed.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“You need the money,” Regan continued. “Strive to
-interest him. That thousand is for your effort. Succeed in
-interesting him so that he departs after old Morgan’s gold,
-and two thousand more is yours. So thoroughly succeed in
-interesting him that he remains away three months, two
-thousand more—six months, five thousand. Oh, believe me,
-I knew his father. We were comrades, partners, I—I might
-say, almost brothers. I would sacrifice any sum to win his
-son to manhood’s wholesome path. What do you say? The
-thousand is yours to begin with. Well?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>With trembling fingers Senor Alvarez Torres folded and
-unfolded the check.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I ... I accept,” he stammered and faltered in his
-eagerness. “I ... I ... How shall I say?... I am
-yours to command.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Five minutes later, as he arose to go, fully instructed in
-the part he was to play and with his story of Morgan’s
-treasure revised to convincingness by the brass-tack business
-acumen of the stock-gambler, he blurted out, almost facetiously,
-yet even more pathetically:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And the funniest thing about it, Mr. Regan, is that it
-is true. Your advised changes in my narrative make it sound
-more true, but true it is under it all. I need the money.
-You are most munificent, and I shall do my best.... I
- ... I pride myself that I am an artist. But the real and
-solemn truth is that the clue to Morgan’s buried loot is
-genuine. I have had access to records inaccessible to the
-public, which is neither here nor there, for the men of my
-own family—they are family records—have had similar
-access, and have wasted their lives before me in the futile
-search. Yet were they on the right clue—except that their
-wits made them miss the spot by twenty miles. It was there
-in the records. They missed it, because it was, I think, a
-deliberate trick, a conundrum, a puzzle, a disguisement, a
-maze, which I, and I alone, have penetrated and solved.
-The early navigators all played such tricks on the charts
-they drew. My Spanish race so hid the Hawaiian Islands by
-five degrees of longitude.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>All of which was in turn Greek to Thomas Regan, who
-smiled his acceptance of listening and with the same smile
-conveyed his busy business-man’s tolerant unbelief.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_8'>8</span>Scarcely was Senor Torres gone, when Francis Morgan was
-shown in.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Just thought I’d drop around for a bit of counsel,” he
-said, greetings over. “And to whom but you should I apply,
-who so closely played the game with my father? You and
-he were partners, I understand, on some of the biggest deals.
-He always told me to trust your judgment. And, well, here
-I am, and I want to go fishing. What’s up with Tampico
-Petroleum?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“What <em>is</em> up?” Regan countered, with fine simulation of
-ignorance of the very thing of moment he was responsible for
-precipitating. “Tampico Petroleum?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Francis nodded, dropped into a chair, and lighted a cigarette,
-while Regan consulted the ticker.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Tampico Petroleum is up—two points—you should
-worry,” he opined.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“That’s what I say,” Francis concurred. “I should
-worry. But just the same, do you think some bunch, onto
-the inside value of it—and it’s big—I speak under the rose,
-you know, I mean in absolute confidence?” Regan nodded.
-“It is big. It is right. It is the real thing. It is legitimate.
-Now this activity—would you think that somebody, or some
-bunch, is trying to get control?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>His father’s associate, with the reverend gray of hair
-thatching his roof of crooked brain, shook the thatch.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Why,” he amplified, “it may be just a flurry, or it may
-be a hunch on the stock public that it’s really good. What do
-you say?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Of course it’s good,” was Francis’ warm response.
-“I’ve got reports, Regan, so good they’d make your hair
-stand up. As I tell all my friends, this is the real legitimate.
-It’s a damned shame I had to let the public in on it. It
-was so big, I just had to. Even all the money my father
-left me, couldn’t swing it—I mean, free money, not the
-stuff tied up—money to work with.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Are you short?” the older man queried.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Oh, I’ve got a tidy bit to operate with,” was the airy
-reply of youth.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“You mean...?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Sure. Just that. If she drops, I’ll buy. It’s finding
-money.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Just about how far would you buy?” was the next
-searching interrogation, masked by an expression of mingled
-good humor and approbation.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_9'>9</span>“All I’ve got,” came Francis Morgan’s prompt answer.
-“I tell you, Regan, it’s immense.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I haven’t looked into it to amount to anything, Francis;
-but I will say from the little I know that it listens good.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Listens! I tell you, Regan, it’s the Simon-pure, straight
-legitimate, and it’s a shame to have it listed at all. I
-don’t have to wreck anybody or anything to pull it across.
-The world will be better for my shooting into it I am afraid
-to say how many hundreds of millions of barrels of real
-oil——say, I’ve got one well alone, in the Huasteca field,
-that’s gushed 27,000 barrels a day for seven months. And
-it’s still doing it. That’s the drop in the bucket we’ve
-got piped to market now. And it’s twenty-two gravity, and
-carries less than two-tenths of one per cent. of sediment.
-And there’s one gusher—sixty miles of pipe to build to it,
-and pinched down to the limit of safety, that’s pouring out
-all over the landscape just about seventy thousand barrels
-a day.—Of course, all in confidence, you know. We’re
-doing nicely, and I don’t want Tampico Petroleum to skyrocket.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Don’t you worry about that, my lad. You’ve got to
-get your oil piped, and the Mexican revolution straightened
-out before ever Tampico Petroleum soars. You go fishing
-and forget it.” Regan paused, with finely simulated sudden
-recollection, and picked up Alvarez Torres’ card with the
-pencilled note. “Look, who’s just been to see me.” Apparently
-struck with an idea, Regan retained the card a moment.
-“Why go fishing for mere trout? After all, it’s only recreation.
-Here’s a thing to go fishing after that there’s real
-recreation in, full-size man’s recreation, and not the Persian-palace
-recreation of an Adirondack camp, with ice and servants
-and electric push-buttons. Your father always was
-more than a mite proud of that old family pirate. He
-claimed to look like him, and you certainly look like your
-dad.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Sir Henry,” Francis smiled, reaching for the card.
-“So am I a mite proud of the old scoundrel.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>He looked up questioningly from the reading of the card.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“He’s a plausible cuss,” Regan explained. “Claims to
-have been born right down there on the Mosquito Coast,
-and to have got the tip from private papers in his family.
-Not that I believe a word of it. I haven’t time or interest
-to get started believing in stuff outside my own field.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Just the same, Sir Henry died practically a poor man,”
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_10'>10</span>Francis asserted, the lines of the Morgan stubbornness knitting
-themselves for a flash on his brows. “And they never
-did find any of his buried treasure.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Good fishing,” Regan girded good-humoredly.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I’d like to meet this Alvarez Torres just the same,”
-the young man responded.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Fool’s gold,” Regan continued. “Though I must
-admit that the cuss is most exasperatingly plausible. Why,
-if I were younger—but oh, the devil, my work’s cut out for
-me here.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Do you know where I can find him?” Francis was
-asking the next moment, all unwittingly putting his neck
-into the net of tentacles that Destiny, in the visible incarnation
-of Thomas Regan, was casting out to snare him.</p>
-
-<hr class='c010' />
-
-<p class='c000'>The next morning the meeting took place in Regan’s
-office. Senor Alvarez Torres startled and controlled himself
-at first sight of Francis’ face. This was not missed by
-Regan, who grinningly demanded:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Looks like the old pirate himself, eh?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Yes, the resemblance is most striking,” Torres lied,
-or half-lied, for he did recognize the resemblance to the
-portraits he had seen of Sir Henry Morgan; although at the
-same time under his eyelids he saw the vision of another
-and living man who, no less than Francis and Sir Henry,
-looked as much like both of them as either looked like the
-other.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Francis was youth that was not to be denied. Modern
-maps and ancient charts were pored over, as well as old
-documents, handwritten in faded ink on time-yellowed
-paper, and at the end of half an hour he announced that
-the next fish he caught would be on either the Bull or
-the Calf—the two islets off the Lagoon of Chiriqui, on one
-or the other of which Torres averred the treasure lay.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I’ll catch to-night’s train for New Orleans,” Francis
-announced. “That will just make connection with one of
-the United Fruit Company’s boats for Colon—oh, I had it
-all looked up before I slept last night.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“But don’t charter a schooner at Colon,” Torres advised.
-“Take the overland trip by horseback to Belen. There’s
-the place to charter, with unsophisticated native sailors and
-everything else unsophisticated.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Listens good!” Francis agreed. “I always wanted to
-see that country down there. You’ll be ready to catch to-night’s
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_11'>11</span>train, Senor Torres?... Of course, you understand,
-under the circumstances, I’ll be the treasurer and
-foot the expenses.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But at a privy glance from Regan, Alvarez Torres lied
-with swift efficientness.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I must join you later, I regret, Mr. Morgan. Some
-little business that presses—how shall I say?—an insignificant
-little lawsuit that must be settled first. Not that
-the sum at issue is important. But it is a family matter,
-and therefore gravely important. We Torres have our pride,
-which is a silly thing, I acknowledge, in this country, but
-which with us is very serious.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“He can join afterward, and straighten you out if you’ve
-missed the scent,” Regan assured Francis. “And, before
-it slips your mind, it might be just as well to arrange with
-Senor Torres some division of the loot ... if you ever find
-it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“What would you say?” Francis asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Equal division, fifty-fifty,” Regan answered, magnificently
-arranging the apportionment between the two men
-of something he was certain did not exist.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And you will follow after as soon as you can?” Francis
-asked the Latin American. “Regan, take hold of his
-little law affair yourself and expedite it, won’t you?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Sure, boy,” was the answer. “And, if it’s needed,
-shall I advance cash to Senor Alvarez?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Fine!” Francis shook their hands in both of his.
-“It will save me bother. And I’ve got to rush to pack
-and break engagements and catch that train. So long,
-Regan. Good-bye, Senor Torres, until we meet somewhere
-around Bocas del Toro, or in a little hole in the ground
-on the Bull or the Calf—you say you think it’s the Calf?
-Well, until then—adios!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And Senor Alvarez Torres remained with Regan some
-time longer, receiving explicit instructions for the part he
-was to play, beginning with retardation and delay of Francis’
-expedition, and culminating in similar retardation and delay
-always to be continued.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“In short,” Regan concluded, “I don’t almost care if
-he never comes back—if you can keep him down there for
-the good of his health that long and longer.”</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_12'>12</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER II</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>Money, like youth, will not be denied, and Francis Morgan,
-who was the man-legal and nature-certain representative
-of both youth and money, found himself one afternoon,
-three weeks after he had said good-bye to Regan, becalmed
-close under the land on board his schooner, the <em>Angelique</em>.
-The water was glassy, the smooth roll scarcely perceptible,
-and, in sheer ennui and overplus of energy that likewise
-declined to be denied, he asked the captain, a breed, half
-Jamaica negro and half Indian, to order a small skiff over
-the side.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Looks like I might shoot a parrot or a monkey or
-something,” he explained, searching the jungle-clad shore,
-half a mile away, through a twelve-power Zeiss glass.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Most problematic, sir, that you are bitten by a <em>labarri</em>,
-which is deadly viper in these parts,” grinned the breed
-skipper and owner of the <em>Angelique</em>, who, from his Jamaica
-father had inherited the gift of tongues.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But Francis was not to be deterred; for at the moment,
-through his glass, he had picked out, first, in the middle
-ground, a white hacienda, and second, on the beach, a
-white-clad woman’s form, and further, had seen that she
-was scrutinising him and the schooner through a pair of
-binoculars.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Put the skiff over, skipper,” he ordered. “Who lives
-around here?—white folks?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“The Enrico Solano family, sir,” was the answer. “My
-word, they are important gentlefolk, old Spanish, and they
-own the entire general landscape from the sea to the Cordilleras
-and half of the Chiriqui Lagoon as well. They are
-very poor, most powerful rich ... in landscape—and they
-are prideful and fiery as cayenne pepper.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>As Francis, in the tiny skiff, rowed shoreward, the
-skipper’s alert eye noted that he had neglected to take along
-either rifle or shotgun for the contemplated parrot or
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_13'>13</span>monkey. And, next, the skipper’s eye picked up the white-clad
-woman’s figure against the dark edge of the jungle.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Straight to the white beach of coral sand Francis rowed,
-not trusting himself to look over his shoulder to see if the
-woman remained or had vanished. In his mind was merely
-a young man’s healthy idea of encountering a bucolic
-young lady, or a half-wild white woman for that matter,
-or at the best a very provincial one, with whom he could fool
-and fun away a few minutes of the calm that fettered
-the <em>Angelique</em> to immobility. When the skiff grounded, he
-stepped out, and with one sturdy arm lifted its nose high
-enough up the sand to fasten it by its own weight. Then
-he turned around. The beach to the jungle was bare. He
-strode forward confidently. Any traveller, on so strange
-a shore, had a right to seek inhabitants for information on
-his way—was the idea he was acting out.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And he, who had anticipated a few moments of diversion
-merely, was diverted beyond his fondest expectations. Like
-a jack-in-the-box, the woman, who, in the flash of vision
-vouchsafed him demonstrated that she was a girl-woman,
-ripely mature and yet mostly girl, sprang out of the green
-wall of jungle and with both hands seized his arm. The
-hearty weight of grip in the seizure surprised him. He
-fumbled his hat off with his free hand and bowed to the
-strange woman with the imperturbableness of a Morgan,
-New York trained and disciplined to be surprised at nothing,
-and received another surprise, or several surprises
-compounded. Not alone was it her semi-brunette beauty
-that impacted upon him with the weight of a blow, but it
-was her gaze, driven into him, that was all of sternness.
-Almost it seemed to him that he must know her. Strangers,
-in his experience, never so looked at one another.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The double grip on his arm became a draw, as she
-muttered tensely:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Quick! Follow me!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>A moment he resisted. She shook him in the fervor
-of her desire, and strove to pull him toward her and after
-her. With the feeling that it was some unusual game,
-such as one might meet up with on the coast of Central
-America, he yielded, smilingly, scarcely knowing whether
-he followed voluntarily or was being dragged into the jungle
-by her impetuosity.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Do as I do,” she shot back at him over her shoulder,
-by this time leading him with one hand of hers in his.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_14'>14</span>He smiled and obeyed, crouching when she crouched,
-doubling over when she doubled, while memories of John
-Smith and Pocahontas glimmered up in his fancy.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Abruptly she checked him and sat down, her hand directing
-him to sit beside her ere she released him, and pressed
-it to her heart while she panted:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Thank God! Oh, merciful Virgin!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In imitation, such having been her will of him, and
-such seeming to be the cue of the game, he smilingly pressed
-his own hand to his heart, although he called neither on
-God nor the Virgin.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Won’t you ever be serious?” she flashed at him, noting
-his action.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And Francis was immediately and profoundly, as well as
-naturally, serious.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“My dear lady...” he began.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But an abrupt gesture checked him; and, with growing
-wonder, he watched her bend and listen, and heard the
-movement of bodies padding down some runway several
-yards away.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>With a soft warm palm pressed commandingly to his to
-be silent, she left him with the abruptness that he had
-already come to consider as customary with her, and slipped
-away down the runway. Almost he whistled with astonishment.
-He might have whistled it, had he not heard her
-voice, not distant, in Spanish, sharply interrogate men
-whose Spanish voices, half-humbly, half-insistently and
-half-rebelliously, answered her.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>He heard them move on, still talking, and, after five
-minutes of dead silence, heard her call for him peremptorily
-to come out.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Gee! I wonder what Regan would do under such circumstances!”
-he smiled to himself as he obeyed.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>He followed her, no longer hand in hand, through the
-jungle to the beach. When she paused, he came beside her
-and faced her, still under the impress of the fantasy which
-possessed him that it was a game.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Tag!” he laughed, touching her on the shoulder.
-“Tag!” he reiterated. “You’re It!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The anger of her blazing dark eyes scorched him.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“You fool!” she cried, lifting her finger with what he
-considered undue intimacy to his toothbrush moustache.
-“As if that could disguise you!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“But my dear lady...” he began to protest his
-certain unacquaintance with her.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_15'>15</span>Her retort, which broke off his speech, was as unreal
-and bizarre as everything else which had gone before. So
-quick was it, that he failed to see whence the tiny silver
-revolver had been drawn, the muzzle of which was not presented
-merely toward his abdomen, but pressed closely
-against it.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“My dear lady...” he tried again.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I won’t talk with you,” she shut him off. “Go back
-to your schooner, and go away....” He guessed the inaudible
-sob of the pause, ere she concluded, “Forever.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>This time his mouth opened to speech that was aborted
-on his lips by the stiff thrust of the muzzle of the weapon
-into his abdomen.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“If you ever come back—the Madonna forgive me—I
-shall shoot myself.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Guess I’d better go, then,” he uttered airily, as he
-turned to the skiff, toward which he walked in stately embarrassment,
-half-filled with laughter for himself and for
-the ridiculous and incomprehensible figure he was cutting.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Endeavoring to retain a last shred of dignity, he took
-no notice that she had followed him. As he lifted the skiff’s
-nose from the sand, he was aware that a faint wind was
-rustling the palm fronds. A long breeze was darkening the
-water close at hand, while, far out across the mirrored
-water the outlying keys of Chiriqui Lagoon shimmered like
-a mirage above the dark-crisping water.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>A sob compelled him to desist from stepping into the
-skiff, and to turn his head. The strange young woman,
-revolver dropped to her side, was crying. His step back to
-her was instant, and the touch of his hand on her arm
-was sympathetic and inquiring. She shuddered at his touch,
-drew away from him, and gazed at him reproachfully
-through her tears. With a shrug of shoulders to her many
-moods and of surrender to the incomprehensibleness of the
-situation, he was about to turn to the boat, when she stopped
-him.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“At least you...” she began, then faltered and swallowed,
-“you might kiss me good-bye.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>She advanced impulsively, with outstretched arms, the
-revolver dangling incongruously from her right hand.
-Francis hesitated a puzzled moment, then gathered her in
-to receive an astounding passionate kiss on his lips ere she
-dropped her head on his shoulder in a breakdown of tears.
-Despite his amazement he was aware of the revolver pressing
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_16'>16</span>flat-wise against his back between the shoulders. She
-lifted her tear-wet face and kissed him again and again,
-and he wondered to himself if he were a cad for meeting
-her kisses with almost equal and fully as mysterious impulsiveness.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>With a feeling that he did not in the least care how
-long the tender episode might last, he was startled by her
-quick drawing away from him, as anger and contempt
-blazed back in her face, and as she menacingly directed
-him with the revolver to get into the boat.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>He shrugged his shoulders as if to say that he could
-not say no to a lovely lady, and obeyed, sitting to the oars
-and facing her as he began rowing away.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“The Virgin save me from my wayward heart,” she
-cried, with her free hand tearing a locket from her bosom,
-and, in a shower of golden beads, flinging the ornament
-into the waterway midway between them.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>From the edge of the jungle he saw three men, armed
-with rifles, run toward her where she had sunk down in
-the sand. In the midst of lifting her up, they caught sight
-of Francis, who had begun rowing a strong stroke. Over
-his shoulder he glimpsed the <em>Angelique</em>, close hauled and
-slightly heeling, cutting through the water toward him. The
-next moment, one of the trio on the beach, a bearded elderly
-man, was directing the girl’s binoculars on him. And the
-moment after, dropping the glasses, he was taking aim
-with his rifle.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The bullet spat on the water within a yard of the skiff’s
-side, and Francis saw the girl spring to her feet, knock up the
-rifle with her arm, and spoil the second shot. Next, pulling
-lustily, he saw the men separate from her to sight their
-rifles, and saw her threatening them with the revolver
-into lowering their weapons.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The <em>Angelique</em>, thrown up into the wind to stop way,
-foamed alongside, and with an agile leap Francis was
-aboard, while already, the skipper putting the wheel up,
-the schooner was paying off and filling. With boyish zest,
-Francis wafted a kiss of farewell to the girl, who was staring
-toward him, and saw her collapse on the shoulders
-of the bearded elderly man.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Cayenne pepper, eh—those damned, horrible, crazy-proud
-Solanos,” the breed skipper flashed at Francis with
-white teeth of laughter.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Just bugs—clean crazy, nobody at home,” Francis
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_17'>17</span>laughed back, as he sprang to the rail to waft further kisses
-to the strange damsel.</p>
-
-<hr class='c010' />
-
-<p class='c000'>Before the land wind, the <em>Angelique</em> made the outer rim
-of Chiriqui Lagoon and the Bull and Calf, some fifty miles
-farther along on the rim, by midnight, when the skipper
-hove to to wait for daylight. After breakfast, rowed by a
-Jamaica negro sailor in the skiff, Francis landed to reconnoiter
-on the Bull, which was the larger island and
-which the skipper had told him he might find occupied at
-that season of the year by turtle-catching Indians from the
-mainland.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And Francis very immediately found that he had traversed
-not merely thirty degrees of latitude from New
-York but thirty hundred years, or centuries for that matter,
-from the last word of civilisation to almost the first word
-of the primeval. Naked, except for breech-clouts of gunny-sacking,
-armed with cruelly heavy hacking blades of
-machetes, the turtle-catchers were swift in proving themselves
-arrant beggars and dangerous man-killers. The Bull
-belonged to them, they told him through the medium of
-his Jamaican sailor’s interpreting; but the Calf, which used
-to belong to them for the turtle season now was possessed
-by a madly impossible Gringo, whose reckless, dominating
-ways had won from them the respect of fear for a two-legged
-human creature who was more fearful than themselves.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>While Francis, for a silver dollar, dispatched one of them
-with a message to the mysterious Gringo that he desired
-to call on him, the rest of them clustered about Francis’
-skiff, whining for money, glowering upon him, and even
-impudently stealing his pipe, yet warm from his lips, which
-he had laid beside him in the sternsheets. Promptly
-he had laid a blow on the ear of the thief, and the next
-thief who seized it, and recovered the pipe. Machetes out
-and sun-glistening their clean-slicing menace, Francis
-covered and controlled the gang with an automatic pistol;
-and, while they drew apart in a group and whispered ominously,
-he made the discovery that his lone sailor-interpreter
-was a weak brother and received his returned messenger.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The negro went over to the turtle-catchers and talked
-with a friendliness and subservience, the tones of which
-Francis did not like. The messenger handed him his note,
-across which was scrawled in pencil:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_18'>18</span>“Vamos.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Guess I’ll have to go across myself,” Francis told the
-negro whom he had beckoned back to him.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Better be very careful and utmostly cautious, sir,” the
-negro warned him. “These animals without reason are
-very problematically likely to act most unreasonably, sir.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Get into the boat and row me over,” Francis commanded
-shortly.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“No, sir, I regret much to say, sir,” was the black
-sailor’s answer. “I signed on, sir, as a sailor to Captain
-Trefethen, but I didn’t sign on for no suicide, and I can’t
-see my way to rowin’ you over, sir, to certain death. Best
-thing we can do is to get out of this hot place that’s certainly
-and without peradventure of a doubt goin’ to get hotter
-for us if we remain, sir.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In huge disgust and scorn Francis pocketed his automatic,
-turned his back on the sacking-clad savages, and walked
-away through the palms. Where a great boulder of coral
-rock had been upthrust by some ancient restlessness of the
-earth, he came down to the beach. On the shore of the
-Calf, across the narrow channel, he made out a dinghy
-drawn up. Drawn up on his own side was a crank-looking
-and manifestly leaky dugout canoe. As he tilted the
-water out of it, he noticed that the turtle-catchers had followed
-and were peering at him from the edge of the coconuts,
-though his weak-hearted sailor was not in sight.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>To paddle across the channel was a matter of moments,
-but scarcely was he on the beach of the Calf when further
-inhospitality greeted him on the part of a tall, barefooted
-young man, who stepped from behind a palm, automatic
-pistol in hand, and shouted:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Vamos! Get out! Scut!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Ye gods and little fishes!” Francis grinned, half-humorously,
-half-seriously. “A fellow can’t move in these parts
-without having a gun shoved in his face. And everybody
-says get out pronto.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Nobody invited you,” the stranger retorted. “You’re
-intruding. Get off my island. I’ll give you half a minute.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I’m getting sore, friend,” Francis assured him truthfully,
-at the same time, out of the corner of his eye, measuring
-the distance to the nearest palm-trunk. “Everybody
-I meet around here is crazy and discourteous, and peevishly
-anxious to be rid of my presence, and they’ve just got
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_19'>19</span>me feeling that way myself. Besides, just because you
-tell me it’s your island is no proof——”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The swift rush he made to the shelter of the palm left
-his sentence unfinished. His arrival behind the trunk was
-simultaneous with the arrival of a bullet that thudded into
-the other side of it.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Now, just for that!” he called out, as he centered a
-bullet into the trunk of the other man’s palm.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The next few minutes they blazed away, or waited for calculated
-shots, and when Francis’ eighth and last had been
-fired, he was unpleasantly certain that he had counted only
-seven shots for the stranger. He cautiously exposed part
-of his sun-helmet, held in his hand, and had it perforated.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“What gun are you using?” he asked with cool politeness.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Colt’s,” came the answer.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Francis stepped boldly into the open, saying: “Then
-you’re all out. I counted ‘em. Eight. Now we can talk.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The stranger stepped out, and Francis could not help
-admiring the fine figure of him, despite the fact that a
-dirty pair of canvas pants, a cotton undershirt, and a
-floppy sombrero constituted his garmenting. Further, it
-seemed he had previously known him, though it did not
-enter his mind that he was looking at a replica of himself.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Talk!” the stranger sneered, throwing down his pistol
-and drawing a knife. “Now we’ll just cut off your ears,
-and maybe scalp you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Gee! You’re sweet-natured and gentle animals in this
-neck of the woods,” Francis retorted, his anger and disgust
-increasing. He drew his own hunting knife, brand new
-from the shop and shining. “Say, let’s wrestle, and cut
-out this ten-twenty-and-thirty knife stuff.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I want your ears,” the stranger answered pleasantly,
-as he slowly advanced.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Sure. First down, and the man who wins the fall gets
-the other fellow’s ears.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Agreed.” The young man in the canvas trousers
-sheathed his knife.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Too bad there isn’t a moving picture camera to film
-this,” Francis girded, sheathing his own knife. “I’m sore
-as a boil. I feel like a heap bad Injun. Watch out! I’m
-coming in a rush! Anyway and everyway for the first fall!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Action and word went together, and his glorious rush
-ended ignominiously, for the stronger, apparently braced for
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_20'>20</span>the shock, yielded the instant their bodies met and fell
-over on his back, at the same time planting his foot in
-Francis’ abdomen and, from the back purchase on the
-ground, transforming Francis’ rush into a wild forward
-somersault.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The fall on the sand knocked most of Francis’ breath
-out of him, and the flying body of his foe, impacting on
-him, managed to do for what little breath was left him.
-As he lay speechless on his back, he observed the man on
-top of him gazing down at him with sudden curiosity.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“What d’ you want to wear a mustache for?” the
-stranger muttered.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Go on and cut ‘em off,” Francis gasped, with the first
-of his returning breath. “The ears are yours, but the
-mustache is mine. It is not in the bond. Besides, that fall
-was straight jiu jiutsu.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“You said ‘anyway and everyway for the first fall,’”
-the other quoted laughingly. “As for your ears, keep them.
-I never intended to cut them off, and now that I look at
-them closely the less I want them. Get up and get out
-of here. I’ve licked you. <i><span lang="es" xml:lang="es">Vamos!</span></i> And don’t come sneaking
-around here again! Git! Scut!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In greater disgust than ever, to which was added the
-humiliation of defeat, Francis turned down to the beach
-toward his canoe.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Say, Little Stranger, do you mind leaving your card?”
-the victor called after him.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Visiting cards and cut-throating don’t go together,”
-Francis shot back across his shoulder, as he squatted in the
-canoe and dipped his paddle. “My name’s Morgan.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Surprise and startlement were the stranger’s portion, as
-he opened his mouth to speak, then changed his mind and
-murmured to himself, “Same stock—no wonder we look
-alike.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Still in the throes of disgust, Francis regained the shore
-of the Bull, sat down on the edge of the dugout, filled and
-lighted his pipe, and gloomily meditated. Crazy, everybody,
-was the run of his thought. Nobody acts with reason.
-“I’d like to see old Regan try to do business with these
-people. They’d get his ears.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Could he have seen, at that moment, the young man of
-the canvas pants and of familiar appearance, he would have
-been certain that naught but lunacy resided in Latin
-America; for the young man in question, inside a grass-thatched
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_21'>21</span>hut in the heart of his island, grinning to himself
-as he uttered aloud, “I guess I put the fear of God into that
-particular member of the Morgan family,” had just begun
-to stare at a photographic reproduction of an oil painting on
-the wall of the original Sir Henry Morgan.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Well, Old Pirate,” he continued grinning, “two of your
-latest descendants came pretty close to getting each other
-with automatics that would make your antediluvian horse-pistols
-look like thirty cents.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>He bent to a battered and worm-eaten sea-chest, lifted
-the lid that was monogramed with an “M,” and again
-addressed the portrait:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Well, old pirate Welshman of an ancestor, all you’ve
-left me is the old duds and a face that looks like yours. And
-I guess, if I was really fired up, I could play your Port-au-Prince
-stunt about as well as you played it yourself.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>A moment later, beginning to dress himself in the age-worn
-and moth-eaten garments of the chest, he added:
-“Well, here’s the old duds on my back. Come, Mister
-Ancestor, down out of your frame, and dare to tell me a point
-of looks in which we differ.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Clad in Sir Henry Morgan’s ancient habiliments, a cutlass
-strapped on around the middle and two flintlock pistols of
-huge and ponderous design thrust into his waist-scarf, the
-resemblance between the living man and the pictured
-semblance of the old buccaneer who had been long since
-resolved to dust, was striking.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Back to back against the mainmast,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Held at bay the entire crew....”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>As the young man, picking the strings of a guitar, began
-to sing the old buccaneer rouse, it seemed to him that the
-picture of his forebear faded into another picture and that he
-saw:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The old forebear himself, back to a mainmast, cutlass out
-and flashing, facing a semi-circle of fantastically clad sailor
-cutthroats, while behind him, on the opposite side of the
-mast, another similarly garbed and accoutred man, with
-cutlass flashing, faced the other semi-circle of cutthroats
-that completed the ring about the mast.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The vivid vision of his fancy was broken by the breaking
-of a guitar-string which he had thrummed too passionately.
-And in the sharp pause of silence, it seemed that a fresh
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_22'>22</span>vision of old Sir Henry came to him, down out of the frame
-and beside him, real in all seeming, plucking at his sleeve to
-lead him out of the hut and whispering a ghostly repetition
-of:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Back to back against the mainmast</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Held at bay the entire crew.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>The young man obeyed his shadowy guide, or some
-prompting of his own profound of intuition, and went out
-the door and down to the beach, where, gazing across the
-narrow channel, on the beach of the Bull, he saw his late
-antagonist, backed up against the great boulder of coral
-rock, standing off an attack of sack-clouted, machete-wielding
-Indians with wide sweeping strokes of a driftwood
-timber.</p>
-
-<hr class='c010' />
-
-<p class='c000'>And Francis, in extremity, swaying dizzily from the blow
-of a rock on his head, saw the apparition, that almost
-convinced him he was already dead and in the realm of the
-shades, of Sir Henry Morgan himself, cutlass in hand,
-rushing up the beach to his rescue. Further, the apparition,
-brandishing the cutlass and laying out Indians right
-and left, was bellowing:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Back to back against the mainmast,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Held at bay the entire crew.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>As Francis’ knees gave under him and he slowly crumpled
-and sank down, he saw the Indians scatter and flee before
-the onslaught of the weird pirate figure and heard their cries
-of:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Heaven help us!” “The Virgin protect us!” “It’s the
-ghost of old Morgan!”</p>
-
-<hr class='c010' />
-
-<p class='c000'>Francis next opened his eyes inside the grass hut in the
-midmost center of the Calf. First, in the glimmering of
-sight of returning consciousness, he beheld the pictured
-lineaments of Sir Henry Morgan staring down at him from
-the wall. Next, it was a younger edition of the same, in
-three dimensions of living, moving flesh, who thrust a mug
-of brandy to his lips and bade him drink. Francis was on
-his feet ere he touched lips to the mug; and both he and the
-stranger man, moved by a common impulse, looked squarely
-into each other’s eyes, glanced at the picture on the wall
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_23'>23</span>and touched mugs in a salute to the picture and to each
-other ere they drank.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“You told me you were a Morgan,” the stranger said.
-“I am a Morgan. That man on the wall fathered my
-breed. Your breed?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“The old buccaneer’s,” Francis returned. “My first
-name is Francis. And yours?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Henry—straight from the original. We must be remote
-cousins or something or other. I’m after the foxy old
-niggardly old Welshman’s loot.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“So’m I,” said Francis, extending his hand. “But to
-hell with sharing.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“The old blood talks in you,” Henry smiled approbation.
-“For him to have who finds. I’ve turned most of this
-island upside down in the last six months, and all I’ve found
-are these old duds. I’m with you to beat you if I can, but
-to put my back against the mainmast with you any time the
-needed call goes out.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“That song’s a wonder,” Francis urged. “I want to
-learn it. Lift the stave again.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And together, clanking their mugs, they sang:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Back to back against the mainmast,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Held at bay the entire crew....”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_24'>24</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER III</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>But a splitting headache put a stop to Francis’ singing and
-made him glad to be swung in a cool hammock by Henry,
-who rowed off to the <em>Angelique</em> with orders from his visitor
-to the skipper to stay at anchor but not to permit any of his
-sailors to land on the Calf. Not until late in the morning
-of the following day, after hours of heavy sleep, did Francis
-get on his feet and announce that his head was clear again.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I know what it is—got bucked off a horse once,” his
-strange relative sympathised, as he poured him a huge cup
-of fragrant black coffee. “Drink that down. It will make
-a new man of you. Can’t offer you much for breakfast
-except bacon, sea biscuit, and some scrambled turtle eggs.
-They’re fresh. I guarantee that, for I dug them out this
-morning while you slept.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“That coffee is a meal in itself,” Francis praised, meanwhile
-studying his kinsman and ever and anon glancing at
-the portrait of their relative.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“You’re just like him, and in more than mere looks,”
-Henry laughed, catching him in his scrutiny. “When you
-refused to share yesterday, it was old Sir Henry to the life.
-He had a deep-seated antipathy against sharing, even with
-his own crews. It’s what caused most of his troubles.
-And he’s certainly never shared a penny of his treasure with
-any of his descendants. Now I’m different. Not only will
-I share the Calf with you; but I’ll present you with my half
-as well, lock, stock, and barrel, this grass hut, all these nice
-furnishings, tenements, hereditaments, and everything, and
-what’s left of the turtle eggs. When do you want to move
-in?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“You mean...?” Francis asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Just that. There’s nothing here. I’ve just about dug
-the island upside down and all I found was the chest there
-full of old clothes.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“It must have encouraged you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_25'>25</span>“Mightily. I thought I had a hammerlock on it. At
-any rate, it showed I’m on the right track.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“What’s the matter with trying the Bull?” Francis
-queried.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“That’s my idea right now,” was the answer, “though
-I’ve got another clue for over on the mainland. Those old-timers
-had a way of noting down their latitude and longitude
-whole degrees out of the way.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Ten North and Ninety East on the chart might mean
-Twelve North and Ninety-two East,” Francis concurred.
-“Then again it might mean Eight North and Eighty-eight
-East. They carried the correction in their heads, and if
-they died unexpectedly, which was their custom, it seems,
-the secret died with them.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I’ve half a notion to go over to the Bull and chase those
-turtle-catchers back to the mainland,” Henry went on.
-“And then again I’d almost like to tackle the mainland clue
-first. I suppose you’ve got a stock of clues, too?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Sure thing,” Francis nodded. “But say, I’d like to
-take back what I said about not sharing.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Say the word,” the other encouraged.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Then I do say it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Their hands extended and gripped in ratification.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Morgan and Morgan strictly limited,” chortled Francis.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Assets, the whole Caribbean Sea, the Spanish Main,
-most of Central America, one chest full of perfectly no good
-old clothes, and a lot of holes in the ground,” Henry joined
-in the other’s humor. “Liabilities, snake-bite, thieving
-Indians, malaria, yellow fever——”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And pretty girls with a habit of kissing total strangers
-one moment, and of sticking up said total strangers with
-shiny silver revolvers the next moment,” Francis cut in.
-“Let me tell you about it. Day before yesterday, I rowed
-ashore over on the mainland. The moment I landed, the
-prettiest girl in the world pounced out upon me and dragged
-me away into the jungle. Thought she was going to eat me
-or marry me. I didn’t know which. And before I could
-find out, what’s the pretty damsel do but pass uncomplimentary
-remarks on my mustache and chase me back to the
-boat with a revolver. Told me to beat it and never come
-back, or words to that effect.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Whereabouts on the mainland was this?” Henry
-demanded, with a tenseness which Francis, chuckling his
-reminiscence of the misadventure, did not notice.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_26'>26</span>“Down toward the other end of Chiriqui Lagoon,” he
-replied. “It was the stamping ground of the Solano
-family, I learned; and they are a red peppery family, as I
-found out. But I haven’t told you all. Listen. First she
-dragged me into the vegetation and insulted my mustache;
-next she chased me to the boat with a drawn revolver; and
-then she wanted to know why I didn’t kiss her. Can you
-beat that?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And did you?” Henry demanded, his hand unconsciously
-clinching by his side.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“What could a poor stranger in a strange land do? It
-was some armful of pretty girl——”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The next fraction of a second Francis had sprung to his
-feet and blocked before his jaw a crushing blow of Henry’s
-fist.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I ... I beg your pardon,” Henry mumbled, and
-slumped down on the ancient sea chest. “I’m a fool, I
-know, but I’ll be hanged if I can stand for——”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“There you go again,” Francis interrupted resentfully.
-“As crazy as everybody else in this crazy country. One
-moment you bandage up my cracked head, and the next
-moment you want to knock that same head clean off of me.
-As bad as the girl taking turns at kissing me and shoving a
-gun into my midrif.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“That’s right, fire away, I deserve it,” Henry admitted
-ruefully, but involuntarily began to fire up as he continued
-with: “Confound you, that was Leoncia.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“What if it was Leoncia? Or Mercedes? Or Dolores?
-Can’t a fellow kiss a pretty girl at a revolver’s point without
-having his head knocked off by the next ruffian he meets in
-dirty canvas pants on a notorious sand-heap of an island?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“When the pretty girl is engaged to marry the ruffian in
-the dirty canvas pants——”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“You don’t mean to tell me——” the other broke in
-excitedly.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“It isn’t particularly amusing to said ruffian to be told
-that his sweetheart has been kissing a ruffian she never saw
-before from off a disreputable Jamaica nigger’s schooner,”
-Henry completed his sentence.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And she took me for you,” Francis mused, glimpsing
-the situation. “I don’t blame you for losing your temper,
-though you must admit it’s a nasty one. Wanted to cut off
-my ears yesterday, didn’t you?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_27'>27</span>“Yours is just as nasty, Francis, my boy. The way you
-insisted that I cut them off when I had you down—ha! ha!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Both young men laughed in hearty amity.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“It’s the old Morgan temper,” Henry said. “He was
-by all the accounts a peppery old cuss.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“No more peppery than those Solanos you’re marrying
-into. Why, most of the family came down on the beach
-and peppered me with rifles on my departing way. And
-your Leoncia pulled her little popgun on a long-bearded old
-fellow who might have been her father and gave him to
-understand she’d shoot him full of holes if he didn’t stop
-plugging away at me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“It was her father, I’ll wager, old Enrico himself,”
-Henry exclaimed. “And the other chaps were her
-brothers.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Lovely lizards!” ejaculated Francis. “Say, don’t you
-think life is liable to become a trifle monotonous when you’re
-married into such a peaceful, dove-like family as that!” He
-broke off, struck by a new idea. “By the way, Henry,
-since they all thought it was you, and not I, why in thunderation
-did they want to kill <em>you</em>? Some more of your crusty
-Morgan temper that peeved your prospective wife’s
-relatives?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Henry looked at him a moment, as if debating with himself,
-and then answered.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I don’t mind telling you. It is a nasty mess, and I
-suppose my temper was to blame. I quarreled with her
-uncle. He was her father’s youngest brother——”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“<em>Was?</em>” interrupted Francis with significant stress on
-the past tense.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“<em>Was</em>, I said,” Henry nodded. “He <em>isn’t</em> now. His
-name was Alfaro Solano, and he had some temper himself.
-They claim to be descended from the Spanish <i><span lang="es" xml:lang="es">conquistadores</span></i>,
-and they are prouder than hornets. He’d made money in
-logwood, and he had just got a big henequen plantation
-started farther down the coast. And then we quarreled.
-It was in the little town over there—San Antonio. It may
-have been a misunderstanding, though I still maintain he
-was wrong. He always was looking for trouble with me—didn’t
-want me to marry Leoncia, you see.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Well, it was a hot time. It started in a <i><span lang="es" xml:lang="es">pulqueria</span></i>
-where Alfaro had been drinking more mescal than was good
-for him. He insulted me all right. They had to hold us
-apart and take our guns away, and we separated swearing
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_28'>28</span>death and destruction. That was the trouble—our quarrel
-and our threats were heard by a score of witnesses.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Within two hours the Comisario himself and two gendarmes
-found me bending over Alfaro’s body in a back street
-in the town. He’d been knifed in the back, and I’d stumbled
-over him on the way to the beach. Explain? No such
-thing. There were the quarrel and the threats of vengeance,
-and there I was, not two hours afterward, caught dead to
-right with his warm corpse. I haven’t been back in San
-Antonio since, and I didn’t waste any time in getting away.
-Alfaro was very popular,—you know the dashing type that
-catches the rabble’s fancy. Why, they couldn’t have been
-persuaded to give me even the semblance of a trial. Wanted
-my blood there and then, and I departed very pronto.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Next, up at Bocas del Toro, a messenger from Leoncia
-delivered back the engagement ring. And there you are. I
-developed a real big disgust, and, since I didn’t dare go back
-with all the Solanos and the rest of the population thirsting
-for my life, I came over here to play hermit for a while and
-dig for Morgan’s treasure.... Just the same, I wonder
-who did stick that knife into Alfaro. If ever I find him,
-then I clear myself with Leoncia and the rest of the Solanos
-and there isn’t a doubt in the world that there’ll be a
-wedding. And now that it’s all over I don’t mind admitting
-that Alfaro was a good scout, even if his temper did go
-off at half-cock.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Clear as print,” Francis murmured. “No wonder her
-father and brothers wanted to perforate me.—Why, the more
-I look at you, the more I see we’re as like as two peas,
-except for my mustache——”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And for this....” Henry rolled up his sleeve, and
-on the left forearm showed a long, thin white scar. “Got
-that when I was a boy. Fell off a windmill and through the
-glass roof of a hothouse.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Now listen to me,” Francis said, his face beginning to
-light with the project forming in his mind. “Somebody’s
-got to straighten you out of this mess, and the chap’s name
-is Francis, partner in the firm of Morgan and Morgan. You
-stick around here, or go over and begin prospecting on the
-Bull, while I go back and explain things to Leoncia and her
-people——”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“If only they don’t shoot you first before you can explain
-you are not I,” Henry muttered bitterly. “That’s the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_29'>29</span>trouble with those Solanos. They shoot first and talk afterward.
-They won’t listen to reason unless it’s post mortem.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Guess I’ll take a chance, old man,” Francis assured
-the other, himself all fire with the plan of clearing up the
-distressing situation between Henry and the girl.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But the thought of her perplexed him. He experienced
-more than a twinge of regret that the lovely creature
-belonged of right to the man who looked so much like him,
-and he saw again the vision of her on the beach, when, with
-conflicting emotions, she had alternately loved him and
-yearned toward him and blazed her scorn and contempt on
-him. He sighed involuntarily.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“What’s that for?” Henry demanded quizzically.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Leoncia is an exceedingly pretty girl,” Francis
-answered with transparent frankness. “Just the same,
-she’s yours, and I’m going to make it my business to see
-that you get her. Where’s that ring she returned? If I
-don’t put it on her finger for you and be back here in a week
-with the good news, you can cut off my mustache along with
-my ears.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>An hour later, Captain Trefethen having sent a boat to
-the beach from the <em>Angelique</em> in response to signal, the two
-young men were saying good-bye.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Just two things more, Francis. First, and I forgot to
-tell you, Leoncia is not a Solano at all, though she thinks
-she is. Alfaro told me himself. She is an adopted child,
-and old Enrico fairly worships her, though neither his blood
-nor his race runs in her veins. Alfaro never told me the
-ins and outs of it, though he did say she wasn’t Spanish at
-all. I don’t even know whether she’s English or American.
-She talks good enough English, though she got that at
-convent. You see, she was adopted when she was a wee
-thing, and she’s never known anything else than that Enrico
-is her father.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And no wonder she scorned and hated me for you,”
-Francis laughed, “believing, as she did, as she still does,
-that you knifed her full blood-uncle in the back.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Henry nodded, and went on.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“The other thing is fairly important. And that’s the
-law. Or the absence of it, rather. They make it whatever
-they want it, down in this out-of-the-way hole. It’s a long
-way to Panama, and the gobernador of this state, or district,
-or whatever they call it, is a sleepy old Silenus. The Jefe
-Politico at San Antonio is the man to keep an eye on. He’s
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_30'>30</span>the little czar of that neck of the woods, and he’s some
-crooked <i><span lang="es" xml:lang="es">hombre</span></i>, take it from yours truly. Graft is too weak
-a word to apply to some of his deals, and he’s as cruel and
-blood-thirsty as a weasel. And his one crowning delight is
-an execution. He dotes on a hanging. Keep your weather
-eye on him, whatever you do.... And, well, so long.
-And half of whatever I find on the Bull is yours: ... and
-see you get that ring back on Leoncia’s finger.”</p>
-
-<hr class='c010' />
-
-<p class='c000'>Two days later, after the half-breed skipper had reconnoitered
-ashore and brought back the news that all the men
-of Leoncia’s family were away, Francis had himself landed
-on the beach where he had first met her. No maidens with
-silver revolvers nor men with rifles were manifest. All was
-placid, and the only person on the beach was a ragged little
-Indian boy who at sight of a coin readily consented to carry
-a note up to the young senorita of the big hacienda. As
-Francis scrawled on a sheet of paper from his notebook, “I
-am the man whom you mistook for Henry Morgan, and I
-have a message for you from him,” he little dreamed that
-untoward happenings were about to occur with as equal
-rapidity and frequence as on his first visit.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>For that matter, could he have peeped over the out-jut of
-rock against which he leaned his back while composing the
-note to Leoncia, he would have been startled by a vision of
-the young lady herself, emerging like a sea-goddess fresh
-from a swim in the sea. But he wrote calmly on, the
-Indian lad even more absorbed than himself in the operation,
-so that it was Leoncia, coming around the rock from behind,
-who first caught sight of him. Stifling an exclamation, she
-turned and fled blindly into the green screen of jungle.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>His first warning of her proximity was immediately thereafter,
-when a startled scream of fear aroused him. Note
-and pencil fell to the sand as he sprang toward the direction
-of the cry and collided with a wet and scantily dressed young
-woman who was recoiling backward from whatever had
-caused her scream. The unexpectedness of the collision
-was provocative of a second startled scream from her ere she
-could turn and recognize that it was not a new attack but a
-rescuer.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>She darted past him, her face colorless from the fright,
-stumbled over the Indian boy, nor paused until she was out
-on the open sand.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_31'>31</span>“What is it?” Francis demanded. “Are you hurt?
-What’s happened?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>She pointed at her bare knee, where two tiny drops of
-blood oozed forth side by side from two scarcely perceptible
-lacerations.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“It was a viperine,” she said. “A deadly viperine. I
-shall be a dead woman in five minutes, and I am glad, glad,
-for then my heart will be tormented no more by you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>She leveled an accusing finger at him, gasped the beginning
-of denunciation she could not utter, and sank down in a
-faint.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Francis knew about the snakes of Central America merely
-by hearsay, but the hearsay was terrible enough. Men
-talked of even mules and dogs dying in horrible agony five
-to ten minutes after being struck by tiny reptiles fifteen to
-twenty inches long. Small wonder she had fainted, was
-his thought, with so terribly rapid a poison doubtlessly
-beginning to work. His knowledge of the treatment of
-snake-bite was likewise hearsay, but flashed through his
-mind the recollection of the need of a tourniquet to shut off
-the circulation above the wound and prevent the poison from
-reaching the heart.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>He pulled out his handkerchief and tied it loosely around
-her leg above the knee, thrust in a short piece of driftwood
-stick, and twisted the handkerchief to savage tightness.
-Next, and all by hearsay, working swiftly, he opened the
-small blade of his pocket-knife, burned it with several
-matches to make sure against germs, and cut carefully but
-remorsely into the two lacerations made by the snake’s
-fangs.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>He was in a fright himself, working with feverish deftness
-and apprehending at any moment that the pangs of dissolution
-would begin to set in on the beautiful form before him.
-From all he had heard, the bodies of snake-victims began to
-swell quickly and prodigiously. Even as he finished excoriating
-the fang-wounds, his mind was made up to his next
-two acts. First, he would suck out all poison he possibly
-could; and, next, light a cigarette and with its live end
-proceed to cauterize the flesh.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But while he was still making light, criss-cross cuts with
-the point of his knife-blade, she began to move restlessly.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Lie down,” he commanded, as she sat up, and just
-when he was bending his lips to the task.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In response, he received a resounding slap alongside of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_32'>32</span>his face from her little hand. At the same instant the
-Indian lad danced out of the jungle, swinging a small dead
-snake by the tail and crying exultingly:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Labarri! Labarri!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>At which Francis assumed the worst.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Lie down, and be quiet!” he repeated harshly. “You
-haven’t a second to lose.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But she had eyes only for the dead snake. Her relief
-was patent; but Francis was no witness to it, for he was
-bending again to perform the classic treatment of snake-bite.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“You dare!” she threatened him. “It’s only a baby
-labarri, and its bite is harmless. I thought it was a viperine.
-They look alike when the labarri is small.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The constriction of the circulation by the tourniquet
-pained her, and she glanced down and discovered his handkerchief
-knotted around her leg.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Oh, what have you done?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>A warm blush began to suffuse her face.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“But it was only a baby labarri,” she reproached him.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“You told me it was a viperine,” he retorted.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>She hid her face in her hands, although the pink of flush
-burned furiously in her ears. Yet he could have sworn,
-unless it were hysteria, that she was laughing; and he knew
-for the first time how really hard was the task he had undertaken
-to put the ring of another man on her finger. So he
-deliberately hardened his heart against the beauty and
-fascination of her, and said bitterly:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And now, I suppose some of your gentry will shoot me
-full of holes because I don’t know a labarri from a viperine.
-You might call some of the farm hands down to do it. Or
-maybe you’d like to take a shot at me yourself.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But she seemed not to have heard, for she had arisen
-with the quick litheness to be expected of so gloriously
-fashioned a creature, and was stamping her foot on the sand.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“It’s asleep—my foot,” she explained with laughter unhidden
-this time by her hands.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“You’re acting perfectly disgracefully,” he assured her
-wickedly, “when you consider that I am the murderer of
-your uncle.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Thus reminded, the laughter ceased and the color receded
-from her face. She made no reply, but bending, with
-fingers that trembled with anger she strove to unknot the
-handkerchief as if it were some loathsome thing.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Better let me help,” he suggested pleasantly.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_33'>33</span>“You beast!” she flamed at him. “Step aside. Your
-shadow falls upon me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Now you are delicious, charming,” he girded, belying
-the desire that stirred compellingly within him to clasp her
-in his arms. “You quite revive my last recollection of you
-here on the beach, one second reproaching me for not kissing
-you, the next second kissing me—yes, you did, too—and the
-third second threatening to destroy my digestion forever
-with that little tin toy pistol of yours. No; you haven’t
-changed an iota from last time. You’re the same spitfire of
-a Leoncia. You’d better let me untie that for you. Don’t
-you see the knot is jammed? Your little fingers can never
-manage it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>She stamped her foot in sheer inarticulateness of rage.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Lucky for me you don’t make a practice of taking your
-tin toy pistol in swimming with you,” he teased on, “or
-else there’d be a funeral right here on the beach pretty
-pronto of a perfectly nice young man whose intentions are
-never less than the best.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The Indian boy returned at this moment running with her
-bathing wrap, which she snatched from him and put on
-hastily. Next, with the boy’s help, she attacked the knot
-again. When the handkerchief came off she flung it from
-her as if in truth it were a viperine.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“It was contamination,” she flashed, for his benefit.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But Francis, still engaged in hardening his heart against
-her, shook his head slowly and said:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“It doesn’t save you, Leoncia. I’ve left my mark on
-you that never will come off.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>He pointed to the excoriations he had made on her knee
-and laughed.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“The mark of the beast,” she came back, turning to go.
-“I warn you to take yourself off, Mr. Henry Morgan.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But he stepped in her way.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And now we’ll talk business, Miss Solano,” he said in
-changed tones. “And you will listen. Let your eyes flash
-all they please, but don’t interrupt me.” He stooped and
-picked up the note he had been engaged in writing. “I was
-just sending that to you by the boy when you screamed.
-Take it. Read it. It won’t bite you. It isn’t a viperine.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Though she refused to receive it, her eyes involuntarily
-scanned the opening line:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><em>I am the man whom you mistook for Henry Morgan</em>...</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>She looked at him with startled eyes that could not comprehend
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_34'>34</span>much but which were guessing many vague things.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“On my honor,” he said gravely.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“You ... are ... not ... Henry?” she gasped.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“No, I am not. Won’t you please take it and read.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>This time she complied, while he gazed with all his eyes
-upon the golden pallor of the sun on her tropic-touched
-blonde face which colored the blood beneath, or which was
-touched by the blood beneath, to the amazingly beautiful
-golden pallor.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Almost in a dream he discovered himself looking into her
-startled, questioning eyes of velvet brown.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And who should have signed this?” she repeated.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>He came to himself and bowed.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“But the name?—your name?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Morgan, Francis Morgan. As I explained there, Henry
-and I are some sort of distant relatives—forty-fifth cousins,
-or something like that.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>To his bewilderment, a great doubt suddenly dawned in
-her eyes, and the old familiar anger flashed.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Henry,” she accused him. “This is a ruse, a devil’s
-trick you’re trying to play on me. Of course you are
-Henry.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Francis pointed to his mustache.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“You’ve grown that since,” she challenged.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>He pulled up his sleeve and showed her his left arm from
-wrist to elbow. But she only looked her incomprehension
-of the meaning of his action.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Do you remember the scar?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>She nodded.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Then find it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>She bent her head in swift vain search, then shook it
-slowly as she faltered:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I ... I ask your forgiveness. I was terribly mistaken,
-and when I think of the way I ... I’ve treated
-you ...”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“That kiss was delightful,” he naughtily disclaimed.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>She recollected more immediate passages, glanced down
-at her knee and stifled what he adjudged was a most
-adorable giggle.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“You say you have a message from Henry,” she changed
-the subject abruptly. “And that he is innocent...?
-This is true? Oh, I do want to believe you!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I am morally certain that Henry no more killed your
-uncle than did I——”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_35'>35</span>“Then say no more, at least not now,” she interrupted
-joyfully. “First of all I must make amends to you, though
-you must confess that some of the things you have done and
-said were abominable. You had no right to kiss me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“If you will remember,” he contended, “I did it at the
-pistol point. How was I to know but what I would get shot
-if I didn’t.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Oh, hush, hush,” she begged. “You must go with me
-now to the house. And you can tell me about Henry on the
-way.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Her eyes chanced upon the handkerchief she had flung so
-contemptuously aside. She ran to it and picked it up.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Poor, ill-treated kerchief,” she crooned to it. “To you
-also must I make amends. I shall myself launder you,
-and....” Her eyes lifted to Francis as she addressed
-him. “And return it to you, sir, fresh and sweet and all
-wrapped around my heart of gratitude....”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And the mark of the beast?” he queried.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I am so sorry,” she confessed penitently.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And may I be permitted to rest my shadow upon you?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Do! Do!” she cried gaily. “There! I am in your
-shadow now. And we must start.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Francis tossed a peso to the grinning Indian boy, and, in
-high elation, turned and followed her into the tropic growth
-on the path that led up to the white hacienda.</p>
-
-<hr class='c010' />
-
-<p class='c000'>Seated on the broad piazza of the Solano Hacienda,
-Alvarez Torres saw through the tropic shrubs the couple
-approaching along the winding driveway. And he saw what
-made him grit his teeth and draw very erroneous conclusions.
-He muttered imprecations to himself and forgot his
-cigarette.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>What he saw was Leoncia and Francis in such deep and
-excited talk as to be oblivious of everything else. He saw
-Francis grow so urgent of speech and gesture as to cause
-Leoncia to stop abruptly and listen further to his pleading.
-Next—and Torres could scarcely believe the evidence of his
-eyes, he saw Francis produce a ring, and Leoncia, with
-averted face, extend her left hand and receive the ring upon
-her third finger. Engagement finger it was, and Torres
-could have sworn to it.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>What had really occurred was the placing of Henry’s
-engagement ring back on Leoncia’s hand. And Leoncia,
-she knew not why, had been vaguely averse to receiving it.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_36'>36</span>Torres tossed the dead cigarette away, twisted his
-mustache fiercely, as if to relieve his own excitement, and
-advanced to meet them across the piazza. He did not
-return the girl’s greeting at the first. Instead, with the
-wrathful face of the Latin, he burst out at Francis:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“One does not expect shame in a murderer, but at least
-one does expect simple decency.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Francis smiled whimsically.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“There it goes again,” he said. “Another lunatic in
-this lunatic land. The last time, Leoncia, that I saw this
-gentleman was in New York. He was really anxious to do
-business with me. Now I meet him here and the first thing
-he tells me is that I am an indecent, shameless murderer.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Senor Torres, you must apologize,” she declared angrily.
-“The house of Solano is not accustomed to having its guests
-insulted.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“The house of Solano, I then understand, is accustomed
-to having its men murdered by transient adventurers,” he
-retorted. “No sacrifice is too great when it is in the name
-of hospitality.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Get off your foot, Senor Torres,” Francis advised him
-pleasantly. “You are standing on it. I know what your
-mistake is. You think I am Henry Morgan. I am Francis
-Morgan, and you and I, not long ago, transacted business
-together in Regan’s office in New York. There’s my hand.
-Your shaking of it will be sufficient apology under the circumstances.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Torres, overwhelmed for the moment by his mistake, took
-the extended hand and uttered apologies both to Francis
-and Leoncia.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And now,” she beamed through laughter, clapping her
-hands to call a house-servant, “I must locate Mr. Morgan,
-and go and get some clothes on. And after that, Senor
-Torres, if you will pardon us, we will tell you about Henry.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>While she departed, and while Francis followed away to
-his room on the heels of a young and pretty <i><span lang="es" xml:lang="es">mestiza</span></i> woman,
-Torres, his brain resuming its functions, found he was more
-amazed and angry than ever. This, then, was a newcomer
-and stranger to Leoncia whom he had seen putting a ring on
-her engagement finger. He thought quickly and passionately
-for a moment. Leoncia, whom to himself he always named
-the queen of his dreams, had, on an instant’s notice, engaged
-herself to a strange Gringo from New York. It was unbelievable,
-monstrous.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_37'>37</span>He clapped his hands, summoned his hired carriage from
-San Antonio, and was speeding down the drive when Francis
-strolled forth to have a talk with him about further details of
-the hiding place of old Morgan’s treasure.</p>
-
-<hr class='c010' />
-
-<p class='c000'>After lunch, when a land-breeze sprang up, which meant
-fair wind and a quick run across Chiriqui Lagoon and along
-the length of it to the Bull and the Calf, Francis, eager to
-bring to Henry the good word that his ring adorned Leoncia’s
-finger, resolutely declined her proffered hospitality to remain
-for the night and meet Enrico Solano and his tall sons.
-Francis had a further reason for hasty departure. He could
-not endure the presence of Leoncia—and this in no sense
-uncomplimentary to her. She charmed him, drew him, to
-such extent that he dared not endure her charm and draw if
-he were to remain man-faithful to the man in the canvas
-pants even then digging holes in the sands of the Bull.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>So Francis departed, a letter to Henry from Leoncia in
-his pocket. The last moment, ere he departed, was abrupt.
-With a sigh so quickly suppressed that Leoncia wondered
-whether or not she had imagined it, he tore himself away.
-She gazed after his retreating form down the driveway until
-it was out of sight, then stared at the ring on her finger with
-a vaguely troubled expression.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>From the beach, Francis signaled the <em>Angelique</em>, riding at
-anchor, to send a boat ashore for him. But before it had
-been swung into the water, half a dozen horsemen, revolver-belted,
-rifles across their pommels, rode down the beach
-upon him at a gallop. Two men led. The following four
-were hang-dog half-castes. Of the two leaders, Francis
-recognized Torres. Every rifle came to rest on Francis, and
-he could not but obey the order snarled at him by the
-unknown leader to throw up his hands. And Francis opined
-aloud:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“To think of it! Once, only the other day—or was it a
-million years ago?—I thought auction bridge, at a dollar a
-point, was some excitement. Now, sirs, you on your horses,
-with your weapons threatening the violent introduction of
-foreign substances into my poor body, tell me what is doing
-now. Don’t I ever get off this beach without gunpowder
-complications? Is it my ears, or merely my mustache, you
-want?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“We want you,” answered the stranger leader, whose
-mustache bristled as magnetically as his crooked black eyes.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_38'>38</span>“And in the name of original sin and of all lovely lizards,
-who might you be?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“He is the honorable Senor Mariano Vercara è Hijos,
-Jefe Politico of San Antonio,” Torres replied.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Good night,” Francis laughed, remembering the man’s
-description as given to him by Henry. “I suppose you
-think I’ve broken some harbor rule or sanitary regulation by
-anchoring here. But you must settle such things with my
-captain, Captain Trefethen, a very estimable gentleman. I
-am only the charterer of the schooner—just a passenger.
-You will find Captain Trefethen right up in maritime law
-and custom.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“You are wanted for the murder of Alfaro Solano,” was
-Torres’ answer. “You didn’t fool me, Henry Morgan, with
-your talk up at the hacienda that you were some one else. I
-know that some one else. His name is Francis Morgan,
-and I do not hesitate to add that he is not a murderer, but
-a gentleman.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Ye gods and little fishes!” Francis exclaimed. “And
-yet you shook hands with me, Senor Torres.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I was fooled,” Torres admitted sadly. “But only for
-a moment. Will you come peaceably?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“As if——” Francis shrugged his shoulders eloquently
-at the six rifles. “I suppose you’ll give me a pronto trial
-and hang me at daybreak.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Justice is swift in Panama,” the Jefe Politico replied,
-his English queerly accented but understandable. “But
-not so quick as that. We will not hang you at daybreak.
-Ten o’clock in the morning is more comfortable all around,
-don’t you think?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Oh, by all means,” Francis retorted. “Make it eleven,
-or twelve noon—I won’t mind.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“You will kindly come with us, Senor,” Mariano Vercara
-è Hijos, said, the suavity of his diction not masking the iron
-of its intention. “Juan! Ignacio!” he ordered in Spanish.
-“Dismount! Take his weapons. No, it will not be necessary
-to tie his hands. Put him on the horse behind
-Gregorio.”</p>
-
-<hr class='c010' />
-
-<p class='c000'>Francis, in a venerably whitewashed adobe cell with walls
-five feet thick, its earth floor carpeted with the forms of half
-a dozen sleeping peon prisoners, listened to a dim hammering
-not very distant, remembered the trial from which he had
-just emerged, and whistled long and low. The hour was
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_39'>39</span>half-past eight in the evening. The trial had begun at eight.
-The hammering was the hammering together of the scaffold
-beams, from which place of eminence he was scheduled at
-ten next morning to swing off into space supported from the
-ground by a rope around his neck. The trial had lasted
-half an hour by his watch. Twenty minutes would have
-covered it had Leoncia not burst in and prolonged it by the
-ten minutes courteously accorded her as the great lady of
-the Solano family.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“The Jefe was right,” Francis acknowledged to himself
-in a matter of soliloquy. “Panama justice does move
-swiftly.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The very possession of the letter given him by Leoncia
-and addressed to Henry Morgan had damned him. The rest
-had been easy. Half a dozen witnesses had testified to the
-murder and identified him as the murderer. The Jefe
-Politico himself had so testified. The one cheerful note had
-been the eruption on the scene of Leoncia, chaperoned by a
-palsied old aunt of the Solano family. That had been sweet—the
-fight the beautiful girl had put up for his life, despite
-the fact that it was foredoomed to futility.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>When she had made Francis roll up the sleeve and expose
-his left forearm, he had seen the Jefe Politico shrug his
-shoulders contemptuously. And he had seen Leoncia fling
-a passion of Spanish words, too quick for him to follow, at
-Torres. And he had seen and heard the gesticulation and
-the roar of the mob-filled courtroom as Torres had taken the
-stand.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But what he had not seen was the whispered colloquy
-between Torres and the Jefe, as the former was in the thick
-of forcing his way through the press to the witness box. He
-no more saw this particular side-play than did he know that
-Torres was in the pay of Regan to keep him away from New
-York as long as possible, and as long as ever if possible, nor
-than did he know that Torres himself, in love with Leoncia,
-was consumed with a jealousy that knew no limit to its ire.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>All of which had blinded Francis to the play under the
-interrogation of Torres by Leoncia, which had compelled
-Torres to acknowledge that he had never seen a scar on
-Francis Morgan’s left forearm. While Leoncia had looked at
-the little old judge in triumph, the Jefe Politico had advanced
-and demanded of Torres in stentorian tones:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Can you swear that you ever saw a scar on Henry
-Morgan’s arm?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_40'>40</span>Torres had been baffled and embarrassed, had looked
-bewilderment to the judge and pleadingness to Leoncia, and,
-in the end, without speech, shaken his head that he could
-not so swear.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The roar of triumph had gone up from the crowd of ragamuffins.
-The judge had pronounced sentence, the roar had
-doubled on itself, and Francis had been hustled out and to
-his cell, not entirely unresistingly, by the gendarmes and
-the Comisario, all apparently solicitous of saving him from
-the mob that was unwilling to wait till ten next morning for
-his death.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“That poor dub, Torres, who fell down on the scar on
-Henry!” Francis was meditating sympathetically, when the
-bolts of his cell door shot back and he arose to greet Leoncia.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But she declined to greet him for the moment, as she
-flared at the Comisario in rapid-fire Spanish, with gestures of
-command to which he yielded when he ordered the jailer to
-remove the peons to other cells, and himself, with a nervous
-and apologetic bowing, went out and closed the door.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And then Leoncia broke down, sobbing on his shoulder, in
-his arms: “It is a cursed country, a cursed country. There
-is no fair play.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And as Francis held her pliant form, meltingly exquisite
-in its maddeningness of woman, he remembered Henry, in
-his canvas pants, barefooted, under his floppy sombrero,
-digging holes in the sand of the Bull.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>He tried to draw away from the armful of deliciousness,
-and only half succeeded. Still, at such slight removal of
-distance, he essayed the intellectual part, rather than the
-emotional part he desired all too strongly to act.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And now I know at last what a frame-up is,” he assured
-her, farthest from the promptings of his heart. “If these
-Latins of your country thought more coolly instead of acting
-so passionately, they might be building railroads and developing
-their country. That trial was a straight passionate
-frame-up. They just <em>knew</em> I was guilty and were so eager
-to punish me that they wouldn’t even bother for mere
-evidence or establishment of identity. Why delay? They
-<em>knew</em> Henry Morgan had knifed Alfaro. They <em>knew</em> I was
-Henry Morgan. When one knows, why bother to find out?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Deaf to his words, sobbing and struggling to cling closer
-while he spoke, the moment he had finished she was deep
-again in his arms, against him, to him, her lips raised to
-his; and, ere he was aware, his own lips to hers.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_41'>41</span>“I love you, I love you,” she whispered brokenly.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“No, no,” he denied what he most desired. “Henry
-and I are too alike. It is Henry you love, and I am not
-Henry.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>She tore herself away from her own clinging, drew Henry’s
-ring from her finger, and threw it on the floor. Francis was
-so beyond himself that he knew not what was going to
-happen the next moment, and was only saved from whatever
-it might be by the entrance of the Comisario, watch in hand,
-with averted face striving to see naught else than the
-moments registered by the second-hand on the dial.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>She stiffened herself proudly, and all but broke down
-again as Francis slipped Henry’s ring back on her finger and
-kissed her hand in farewell. Just ere she passed out the
-door she turned and with a whispered movement of the lips
-that was devoid of sound told him: “I love you.”</p>
-
-<hr class='c010' />
-
-<p class='c000'>Promptly as the stroke of the clock, at ten o’clock Francis
-was led out into the jail patio where stood the gallows. All
-San Antonio was joyously and shoutingly present, including
-much of the neighboring population and Leoncia, Enrico
-Solano, and his five tall sons. Enrico and his sons fumed
-and strutted, but the Jefe Politico, backed by the Comisario
-and his gendarmes, was adamant. In vain, as Francis was
-forced to the foot of the scaffold, did Leoncia strive to get
-to him and did her men strive to persuade her to leave the
-patio. In vain, also, did her father and brothers protest
-that Francis was not the man. The Jefe Politico smiled
-contemptuously and ordered the execution to proceed.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>On top the scaffold, standing on the trap, Francis declined
-the ministrations of the priest, telling him in Spanish that
-no innocent man being hanged needed intercessions with
-the next world, but that the men who were doing the
-hanging were in need of just such intercessions.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>They had tied Francis’ legs, and were in the act of tying
-his arms, with the men who held the noose and the black
-cap hovering near to put them on him, when the voice of a
-singer was heard approaching from without; and the song
-he sang was:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Back to back against the mainmast,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Held at bay the entire crew....”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>Leoncia, almost fainting, recovered at the sound of the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_42'>42</span>voice, and cried out with sharp delight as she descried Henry
-Morgan entering, thrusting aside the guards at the gate who
-tried to bar his way.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>At sight of him the only one present who suffered chagrin
-was Torres, which passed unnoticed in the excitement. The
-populace was in accord with the Jefe, who shrugged his
-shoulders and announced that one man was as good as
-another so long as the hanging went on. And here arose hot
-contention from the Solano men that Henry was likewise
-innocent of the murder of Alfaro. But it was Francis, from
-the scaffold, while his arms and legs were being untied, who
-shouted through the tumult:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“You tried me! You have not tried him! You cannot
-hang a man without trial! He must have his trial!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And when Francis had descended from the scaffold and
-was shaking Henry’s hand in both his own, the Comisario,
-with the Jefe at his back, duly arrested Henry Morgan for
-the murder of Alfaro Solano.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_43'>43</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER IV</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>“We must work quickly—that is the one thing sure,”
-Francis said to the little conclave of Solanos on the piazza
-of the Solano hacienda.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“One thing sure!” Leoncia cried out scornfully ceasing
-from her anguished pacing up and down. “The one thing
-sure is that we must save him.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>As she spoke, she shook a passionate finger under Francis’
-nose to emphasize her point. Not content, she shook her
-finger with equal emphasis under the noses of all and sundry
-of her father and brothers.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Quick!” she flamed on. “Of course we must be quick.
-It is that, or....” Her voice trailed off into the unvoiceable
-horror of what would happen to Henry if they were
-not quick.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“All Gringos look alike to the Jefe,” Francis nodded
-sympathetically. She was splendidly beautiful and wonderful,
-he thought. “He certainly runs all San Antonio,
-and short shrift is his motto. He’ll give Henry no more
-time than he gave us. We must get him out to-night.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Now listen,” Leoncia began again. “We Solanos cannot
-permit this ... this execution. Our pride ... our
-honor. We cannot permit it. Speak! any of you. Father—you.
-Suggest something....”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And while the discussion went on, Francis, for the time
-being silent, wrestled deep in the throes of sadness.
-Leoncia’s fervor was magnificent, but it was for another man
-and it did not precisely exhilarate him. Strong upon him
-was the memory of the jail patio after he had been released
-and Henry had been arrested. He could still see, with the
-same stab at the heart, Leoncia in Henry’s arms, Henry
-seeking her hand to ascertain if his ring was on it, and the
-long kiss of the embrace that followed.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Ah, well, he sighed to himself, he had done his best.
-After Henry had been led away, had he not told Leoncia,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_44'>44</span>quite deliberately and coldly, that Henry was her man and
-lover, and the wisest of choices for the daughter of the
-Solanos?</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But the memory of it did not make him a bit happy.
-Nor did the rightness of it. Right it was. That he never
-questioned, and it strengthened him into hardening his heart
-against her. Yet the right, he found in his case, to be the
-sorriest of consolation.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And yet what else could he expect? It was his misfortune
-to have arrived too late in Central America, that was
-all, and to find this flower of woman already annexed by a
-previous comer—a man as good as himself, and, his heart
-of fairness prompted, even better. And his heart of fairness
-compelled loyalty to Henry from him—to Henry Morgan, of
-the breed and blood; to Henry Morgan, the wild-fire descendant
-of a wild-fire ancestor, in canvas pants, and floppy
-sombrero, with a penchant for the ears of strange young
-men, living on sea biscuit and turtle eggs and digging up
-the Bull and the Calf for old Sir Henry’s treasure.</p>
-
-<hr class='c010' />
-
-<p class='c000'>And while Enrico Solano and his sons talked plans and
-projects on their broad piazza, to which Francis lent only
-half an ear, a house servant came, whispered in Leoncia’s
-ear, and led her away around the ell of the piazza, where
-occurred a scene that would have excited Francis’ risibilities
-and wrath.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Around the ell, Alvarez Torres, in all the medieval
-Spanish splendor of dress of a great haciendado-owner, such
-as still obtains in Latin America, greeted her, bowed low with
-doffed sombrero in hand, and seated her in a rattan settee.
-Her own greeting was sad, but shot through with curiousness,
-as if she hoped he brought some word of hope.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“The trial is over, Leoncia,” he said softly, tenderly, as
-one speaks of the dead. “He is sentenced. To-morrow at
-ten o’clock is the time. It is all very sad, most very sad.
-But....” He shrugged his shoulders. “No, I shall
-not speak harshly of him. He was an honorable man. His
-one fault was his temper. It was too quick, too fiery. It
-led him into a mischance of honor. Never, in a cool moment
-of reasonableness, would he have stabbed Alfaro——”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“He never killed my uncle!” Leoncia cried, raising her
-averted face.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And it is regrettable,” Torres proceeded gently and
-sadly, avoiding any disagreement. “The judge, the people,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_45'>45</span>the Jefe Politico, unfortunately, are all united in believing
-that he did. Which is most regrettable. But which is not
-what I came to see you about. I came to offer my service
-in any and all ways you may command. My life, my honor,
-are at your disposal. Speak. I am your slave.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Dropping suddenly and gracefully on one knee before her,
-he caught her hand from her lap, and would have instantly
-flooded on with his speech, had not his eyes lighted on the
-diamond ring on her engagement finger. He frowned, but
-concealed the frown with bent face until he could drive it
-from his features and begin to speak.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I knew you when you were small, Leoncia, so very,
-very charmingly small, and I loved you always.—No, listen!
-Please. My heart must speak. Hear me out. I loved
-you always. But when you returned from your convent,
-from schooling abroad, a woman, a grand and noble lady fit
-to rule in the house of the Solanos, I was burnt by your
-beauty. I have been patient. I refrained from speaking.
-But you may have guessed. You surely must have guessed.
-I have been on fire for you ever since. I have been consumed
-by the flame of your beauty, by the flame of you
-that is deeper than your beauty.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>He was not to be stopped, as she well knew, and she
-listened patiently, gazing down on his bent head and wondering
-idly why his hair was so unbecomingly cut, and
-whether it had been last cut in New York or San Antonio.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Do you know what you have been to me ever since your
-return?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>She did not reply, nor did she endeavour to withdraw her
-hand, although his was crushing and bruising her flesh
-against Henry Morgan’s ring. She forgot to listen, led
-away by a chain of thought that linked far. Not in such
-rhodomontade of speech had Henry Morgan loved and won
-her, was the beginning of the chain. Why did those of
-Spanish blood always voice their emotions so exaggeratedly?
-Henry had been so different. Scarcely had he spoken a
-word. He had acted. Under her glamor, himself glamoring
-her, without warning, so certain was he not to surprise
-and frighten her, he had put his arms around her and pressed
-his lips to hers. And hers had been neither too startled nor
-altogether unresponsive. Not until after that first kiss, arms
-still around her, had Henry begun to speak at all.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And what plan was being broached around the corner of
-the ell by her men and Francis Morgan? Her mind strayed
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_46'>46</span>on, deaf to the suitor at her feet. Francis! Ah—she
-almost sighed, and marveled, what of her self-known love for
-Henry, why this stranger Gringo so enamored her heart.
-Was she a wanton? Was it one man? Or another man?
-Or any man? No! No! She was not fickle nor unfaithful.
-And yet?... Perhaps it was because Francis and
-Henry were so much alike, and her poor stupid loving
-woman’s heart failed properly to distinguish between them.
-And yet—while it had seemed she would have followed
-Henry anywhere over the world, in any luck or fortune, it
-seemed to her now that she would follow Francis even
-farther. She did <em>love</em> Henry, her heart solemnly proclaimed.
-But also did she love Francis, and almost did
-she divine that Francis loved her—the fervor of his lips on
-hers in his prison cell was inerasable; and there was a
-difference in her love for the two men that confuted her
-powers of reason and almost drove her to the shameful
-conclusion that she, the latest and only woman of the house
-of Solano, was a wanton.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>A severe pinch of her flesh against Henry’s ring, caused
-by the impassioned grasp of Torres, brought her back to him,
-so that she could hear the spate of his speech pouring on:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“You have been the delicious thorn in my side, the
-spiked rowel of the spur forever prodding the sweetest and
-most poignant pangs of love into my breast. I have dreamed
-of you ... and for you. And I have my own name for
-you. Ever the one name I have had for you: the Queen of
-my Dreams. And you will marry me, my Leoncia. We
-will forget this mad Gringo who is as already dead. I shall
-be gentle, kind. I shall love you always. And never shall
-any vision of him arise between us. For myself, I shall not
-permit it. For you ... I shall love you so that it will be
-impossible for the memory of him to arise between us and
-give you one moment’s heart-hurt.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Leoncia debated in a long pause that added fuel to Torres’
-hopes. She felt the need to temporise. If Henry were to
-be saved ... and had not Torres offered his services?
-Not lightly could she turn him away when a man’s life might
-depend upon him.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Speak!—I am consuming!” Torres urged in a choking
-voice.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Hush! Hush!” she said softly. “How can I listen
-to love from a live man, when the man I loved is yet alive?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><em>Loved!</em> The past tense of it startled her. Likewise it
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_47'>47</span>startled Torres, fanning his hopes to fairer flames. Almost
-was she his. She had said <em>loved</em>. She no longer bore love
-for Henry. She <em>had</em> loved him, but no longer. And she,
-a maid and woman of delicacy and sensibility, could not, of
-course, give name to her love for him while the other man
-still lived. It was subtle of her. He prided himself on his
-own subtlety, and he flattered himself that he had interpreted
-her veiled thought aright. And ... well, he resolved,
-he would see to it that the man who was to die at
-ten next morning should have neither reprieve nor rescue.
-The one thing clear, if he were to win Leoncia quickly, was
-that Henry Morgan should die quickly.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“We will speak of it no more ... now,” he said with
-chivalric gentleness, as he gently pressed her hand, rose to
-his feet, and gazed down on her.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>She returned a soft pressure of thanks with her own hand
-ere she released it and stood up.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Come,” she said. “We will join the others. They
-are planning now, or trying to find some plan, to save Henry
-Morgan.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The conversation of the group ebbed away as they joined
-it, as if out of half-suspicion of Torres.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Have you hit upon anything yet?” Leoncia asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Old Enrico, straight and slender and graceful as any of his
-sons despite his age, shook his head.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I have a plan, if you will pardon me,” Torres began, but
-ceased at a warning glance from Alesandro, the eldest son.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>On the walk, below the piazza, had appeared two scarecrows
-of beggar boys. Not more than ten years of age, by
-their size, they seemed much older when judged by the
-shrewdness of their eyes and faces. Each wore a single
-marvelous garment, so that between them it could be said
-they shared a shirt and pants. But such a shirt! And
-such pants! The latter, man-size, of ancient duck, were
-buttoned around the lad’s neck, the waistband reefed with
-knotted twine so as not to slip down over his shoulders. His
-arms were thrust through the holes where the side-pockets
-had been. The legs of the pants had been hacked off with
-a knife to suit his own diminutive length of limb. The tails
-of the man’s shirt on the other boy dragged on the ground.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Vamos!” Alesandro shouted fiercely at them to be
-gone.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But the boy in the pants gravely removed a stone which
-he had been carrying on top of his bare head, exposing a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_48'>48</span>letter which had been thus carried. Alesandro leaned over,
-took the letter, and with a glance at the inscription passed
-it to Leoncia, while the boys began whining for money.
-Francis, smiling despite himself at the spectacle of them,
-tossed them a few pieces of small silver, whereupon the shirt
-and the pants toddled away down the path.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The letter was from Henry, and Leoncia scanned it hurriedly.
-It was not precisely in farewell, for he wrote in the
-tenour of a man who never expected to die save by some
-inconceivable accident. Nevertheless, on the chance of such
-inconceivable thing becoming possible, Henry did manage to
-say good-bye and to include a facetious recommendation to
-Leoncia not to forget Francis, who was well worth remembering
-because he was so much like himself, Henry.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Leoncia’s first impulse was to show the letter to the
-others, but the portion about Francis with-strained her.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“It’s from Henry,” she said, tucking the note into her
-bosom. “There is nothing of importance. He seems to
-have not the slightest doubt that he will escape somehow.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“We shall see that he does,” Francis declared positively.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>With a grateful smile to him, and with one of interrogation
-to Torres, Leoncia said:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“You were speaking of a plan, Senor Torres?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Torres smiled, twisted his mustache, and struck an attitude
-of importance.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“There is one way, the Gringo, Anglo-Saxon way, and it
-is simple, straight to the point. That is just what it is,
-straight to the point. We will go and take Henry out of
-jail in forthright, brutal and direct Gringo fashion. It is the
-one thing they will not expect. Therefore, it will succeed.
-There are enough unhung rascals on the beach with which
-to storm the jail. Hire them, pay them well, but only
-partly in advance, and the thing is accomplished.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Leoncia nodded eager agreement. Old Enrico’s eyes
-flashed and his nostrils distended as if already sniffing gunpowder.
-The young men were taking fire from his example.
-And all looked to Francis for his opinion or agreement. He
-shook his head slowly, and Leoncia uttered a sharp cry of
-disappointment in him.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“That way is hopeless,” he said. “Why should all of
-you risk your necks in a madcap attempt like that, doomed
-to failure from the start?” As he talked, he strode across
-from Leoncia’s side to the railing in such way as to be for a
-moment between Torres and the other men, and at the same
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_49'>49</span>time managed a warning look to Enrico and his sons. “As
-for Henry, it looks as if it were all up with him——”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“You mean you doubt me?” Torres bristled.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Heavens, man,” Francis protested.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But Torres dashed on: “You mean that I am forbidden
-by you, a man I have scarcely met, from the councils of the
-Solanos who are my oldest and most honored friends.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Old Enrico, who had not missed the rising wrath against
-Francis in Leoncia’s face, succeeded in conveying a warning
-to her, ere, with a courteous gesture, he hushed Torres and
-began to speak.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“There are no councils of the Solanos from which you are
-barred, Senor Torres. You are indeed an old friend of the
-family. Your late father and I were comrades, almost
-brothers. But that—and you will pardon an old man’s
-judgment—does not prevent Senor Morgan from being right
-when he says your plan is hopeless. To storm the jail is
-truly madness. Look at the thickness of the walls. They
-could stand a siege of weeks. And yet, and I confess it,
-almost was I tempted when you first broached the idea.
-Now when I was a young man, fighting the Indians in the
-high Cordilleras, there was a very case in point. Come, let
-us all be seated and comfortable, and I will tell you the
-tale....”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But Torres, busy with many things, declined to wait, and
-with soothed amicable feelings shook hands all around,
-briefly apologized to Francis, and departed astride his silver-saddled
-and silver-bridled horse for San Antonio. One of
-the things that busied him was the cable correspondence
-maintained between him and Thomas Regan’s Wall Street
-office. Having secret access to the Panamanian government
-wireless station at San Antonio, he was thus able to relay
-messages to the cable station at Vera Cruz. Not alone was
-his relationship with Regan proving lucrative, but it was
-jibing in with his own personal plans concerning Leoncia
-and the Morgans.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“What have you against Senor Torres, that you should
-reject his plan and anger him?” Leoncia demanded of
-Francis.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Nothing,” was the answer, “except that we do not
-need him, and that I’m not exactly infatuated with him.
-He is a fool and would spoil any plan. Look at the way he
-fell down on testifying at my trial. Maybe he can’t be
-trusted. I don’t know. Anyway, what’s the good of trusting
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_50'>50</span>him when we don’t need him? Now his plan is all
-right. We’ll go straight to the jail and take Henry out,
-if all you are game for it. And we don’t need to trust
-to a mob of unhung rascals and beach-sweepings. If the
-six men of us can’t do it, we might as well quit.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“There must be at least a dozen guards always hanging
-out at the jail,” Ricardo, Leoncia’s youngest brother, a lad
-of eighteen, objected.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Leoncia, her eagerness alive again, frowned at him; but
-Francis took his part.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Well taken,” he agreed. “But we will eliminate the
-guards.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“The five-foot walls,” said Martinez Solano, twin brother
-to Alvarado.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Go through them,” Francis answered.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“But how?” Leoncia cried.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“That’s what I am arriving at. You, Senor Solano,
-have plenty of saddle horses? Good. And you, Alesandro,
-does it chance you could procure me a couple of sticks
-of dynamite from around the plantation? Good, and better
-than good. And you, Leoncia, as the lady of the hacienda,
-should know whether you have in your store-room a plentiful
-supply of that three-star rye whiskey?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Ah, the plot thickens,” he laughed, on receiving her
-assurance. “We’ve all the properties for a Rider Haggard
-or Rex Beach adventure tale. Now listen. But wait. I
-want to talk to you, Leoncia, about private theatricals....”</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_51'>51</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER V.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>It was in the mid-afternoon, and Henry, at his barred
-cell-window, stared out into the street and wondered if
-any sort of breeze would ever begin to blow from off Chiriqui
-Lagoon and cool the stagnant air. The street was dusty
-and filthy—filthy, because the only scavengers it had ever
-known since the town was founded centuries before were
-the carrion dogs and obscene buzzards even then prowling
-and hopping about in the debris. Low, whitewashed buildings
-of stone and adobe made the street a furnace.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The white of it all, and the dust, was almost achingly
-intolerable to the eyes, and Henry would have withdrawn
-his gaze, had not the several ragged <i><span lang="ht" xml:lang="ht">mosos</span></i>, dozing in a
-doorway opposite, suddenly aroused and looked interestedly
-up the street. Henry could not see, but he could hear the
-rattling spokes of some vehicle coming at speed. Next, it
-surged into view, a rattletrap light wagon drawn by a runaway
-horse. In the seat a gray-headed, gray-bearded
-ancient strove vainly to check the animal.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Henry smiled and marveled that the rickety wagon could
-hold together, so prodigious were the bumps imparted to it
-by the deep ruts. Every wheel, half-dished and threatening
-to dish, wobbled and revolved out of line with every
-other wheel. And if the wagon held intact, Henry judged,
-it was a miracle that the crazy harness did not fly to pieces.
-When directly opposite the window, the old man made a
-last effort, half-standing up from the seat as he pulled on
-the reins. One was rotten, and broke. As the driver fell
-backward into the seat, his weight on the remaining rein
-caused the horse to swerve sharply to the right. What happened
-then—whether a wheel dished, or whether a wheel
-had come off first and dished afterward—Henry could not
-determine. The one incontestable thing was that the wagon
-was a wreck. The old man, dragging in the dust and
-stubbornly hanging on to the remaining rein, swung the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_52'>52</span>horse in a circle until it stopped, facing him and snorting
-at him.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>By the time he gained his feet a crowd of <i><span lang="ht" xml:lang="ht">mosos</span></i> was
-forming about him. These were roughly shouldered right
-and left by the gendarmes who erupted from the jail. Henry
-remained at the window and, for a man with but a few
-hours to live, was an amused spectator and listener to
-what followed.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Giving his horse to a gendarme to hold, not stopping to
-brush the filth from his person, the old man limped hurriedly
-to the wagon and began an examination of the several packing
-cases, large and small, which composed its load. Of
-one case he was especially solicitous, even trying to lift it
-and seeming to listen as he lifted.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>He straightened up, on being addressed by one of the
-gendarmes, and made voluble reply.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Me? Alas senors, I am an old man, and far from home.
-I am Leopoldo Narvaez. It is true, my mother was German,
-may the Saints preserve her rest; but my father was Baltazar
-de Jesus y Cervallos é Narvaez, son of General Narvaez
-of martial memory, who fought under the great Bolivar
-himself. And now I am half ruined and far from home.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Prompted by other questions, interlarded with the courteous
-expressions of sympathy with which even the humblest
-<i><span lang="ht" xml:lang="ht">moso</span></i> is over generously supplied, he managed to be
-polite-fully grateful and to run on with his tale.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I have driven from Bocas del Toro. It has taken
-me five days, and business has been poor. My home is in
-Colon, and I wish I were safely there. But even a noble
-Narvaez may be a peddler, and even a peddler must live,
-eh, senors, is it not so? But tell me, is there not a Tomas
-Romero who dwells in this pleasant city of San Antonio?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“There are any God’s number of Tomas Romeros who
-dwell everywhere in Panama,” laughed Pedro Zurita, the
-assistant jailer. “One would need fuller description.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“He is the cousin of my second wife,” the ancient
-answered hopefully, and seemed bewildered by the roar of
-laughter from the crowd.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And a dozen Tomas Romeros live in and about San
-Antonio,” the assistant jailer went on, “any one of which
-may be your second wife’s cousin, Senor. There is Tomas
-Romero, the drunkard. There is Tomas Romero, the thief.
-There is Tomas Romero—but no, he was hanged a month
-back for murder and robbery. There is the rich Tomas
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_53'>53</span>Romero who owns many cattle on the hills. There is....”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>To each suggested one, Leopoldo Narvaez had shaken his
-head dolefully, until the cattle-owner was mentioned. At
-this he had become hopeful and broke<a id='t53'></a> in:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Pardon me, senor, it must be he, or some such a one
-as he. I shall find him. If my precious stock-in-trade
-can be safely stored, I shall seek him now. It is well my
-misfortune came upon me where it did. I shall be able to
-trust it with you, who are, one can see with half an eye,
-an honest and an honorable man.” As he talked, he
-fumbled forth from his pocket two silver pesos and handed
-them to the jailer. “There, I wish you and your men to
-have some pleasure of assisting me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Henry grinned to himself as he noted the access of interest
-in the old man and of consideration for him, on the
-part of Pedro Zurita and the gendarmes, caused by the
-present of the coins. They shoved the more curious of the
-crowd roughly back from the wrecked wagon and began to
-carry the boxes into the jail.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Careful, senors, careful,” the old one pleaded, greatly
-anxious, as they took hold of the big box. “Handle it
-gently. It is of value, and it is fragile, most fragile.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>While the contents of the wagon were being carried
-into the jail, the old man removed and deposited in the
-wagon all harness from the horse save the bridle.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Pedro Zurita ordered the harness taken in as well, explaining,
-with a glare at the miserable crowd: “Not a strap
-or buckle would remain the second after our backs were
-turned.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Using what was left of the wagon for a stepping block,
-and ably assisted by the jailer and his crew, the peddler
-managed to get astride his animal.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“It is well,” he said, and added gratefully: “A thousand
-thanks, senors. It has been my good fortune to meet
-with honest men with whom my goods will be safe—only
-poor goods, peddler’s goods, you understand; but to me,
-everything, my way upon the road. The pleasure has been
-mine to meet you. To-morrow I shall return with my kinsman,
-whom I certainly shall find, and relieve from you
-the burden of safeguarding my inconsiderable property.” He
-doffed his hat. “Adios, senors, adios!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>He rode away at a careful walk, timid of the animal he
-bestrode which had caused his catastrophe. He halted and
-turned his head at a call from Pedro Zurita.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_54'>54</span>“Search the graveyard, Senor Narvaez,” the jailer advised.
-“Full a hundred Tomas Romeros lie there.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And be vigilant, I beg of you, senor, of the heavy box,”
-the peddler called back.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Henry watched the street grow deserted as the gendarmes
-and the populace fled from the scorch of the sun. Small
-wonder, he thought to himself, that the old peddler’s voice
-had sounded vaguely familiar. It had been because he had
-possessed only half a Spanish tongue to twist around the
-language—the other half being the German tongue of the
-mother. Even so, he talked like a native, and he would be
-robbed like a native if there was anything of value in the
-heavy box deposited with the jailers, Henry concluded, ere
-dismissing the incident from his mind.</p>
-
-<hr class='c010' />
-
-<p class='c000'>In the guardroom, a scant fifty feet away from Henry’s
-cell, Leopoldo Narvaez was being robbed. It had begun
-by Pedro Zurita making a profound and wistful survey of
-the large box. He lifted one end of it to sample its weight,
-and sniffed like a hound at the crack of it as if his nose
-might give him some message of its contents.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Leave it alone, Pedro,” one of the gendarmes laughed
-at him. “You have been paid two pesos to be honest.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The assistant jailer sighed, walked away and sat down,
-looked back at the box, and sighed again. Conversation
-languished. Continually the eyes of the men roved to the
-box. A greasy pack of cards could not divert them. The
-game languished. The gendarme who had twitted Pedro
-himself went to the box and sniffed.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I smell nothing,” he announced. “Absolutely in the
-box there is nothing to smell. Now what can it be? The
-caballero said that it was of value!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Caballero!” sniffed another of the gendarmes. “The
-old man’s father was more like to have been peddler of
-rotten fish on the streets of Colon and his father before him.
-Every lying beggar claims descent from the conquistadores.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And why not, Rafael?” Pedro Zurita retorted. “Are
-we not all so descended?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Without doubt,” Rafael readily agreed. “The conquistadores
-slew many——”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And were the ancestors of those that survived,” Pedro
-completed for him and aroused a general laugh. “Just the
-same, almost would I give one of these pesos to know what
-is in that box.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_55'>55</span>“There is Ignacio,” Rafael greeted the entrance of a
-turnkey whose heavy eyes tokened he was just out of his
-siesta. “He was not paid to be honest. Come, Ignacio,
-relieve our curiosity by letting us know what is in the box.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“How should I know?” Ignacio demanded, blinking at
-the object of interest. “Only now have I awakened.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“You have not been paid to be honest, then?” Rafael
-asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Merciful Mother of God, who is the man who would
-pay me to be honest?” the turnkey demanded.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Then take the hatchet there and open the box,” Rafael
-drove his point home. “We may not, for as surely as
-Pedro is to share the two pesos with us, that surely have we
-been paid to be honest. Open the box, Ignacio, or we shall
-perish of our curiosity.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“We will look, we will only look,” Pedro muttered nervously,
-as the turnkey prized off a board with the blade of
-the hatchet. “Then we will close the box again and——Put
-your hand in, Ignacio. What is it you find?... eh?
-what does it feel like? Ah!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>After pulling and tugging, Ignacio’s hand had reappeared,
-clutching a cardboard carton.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Remove it carefully, for it must be replaced,” the
-jailer cautioned.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And when the wrappings of paper and tissue paper were
-removed, all eyes focused on a quart bottle of rye whiskey.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“How excellently is it composed,” Pedro murmured in
-tones of awe. “It must be very good that such care be
-taken of it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“It is Americano whiskey,” sighed a gendarme. “Once,
-only, have I drunk Americano whiskey. It was wonderful.
-Such was the courage of it, that I leaped into the bull-ring
-at Santos and faced a wild bull with my hands. It is
-true, the bull rolled me, but did I not leap into the ring?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Pedro took the bottle and prepared to knock its neck off.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Hold!” cried Rafael. “You were paid to be honest.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“By a man who was not himself honest,” came the retort.
-“The stuff is contraband. It has never paid duty.
-The old man was in possession of smuggled goods. Let us
-now gratefully and with clear conscience invest ourselves
-in its possession. We will confiscate it. We will destroy
-it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Not waiting for the bottle to pass, Ignacio and Rafael unwrapped
-fresh ones and broke off the necks.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_56'>56</span>“Three stars—most excellent,” Pedro Zurita orated in
-a pause, pointing to the trade mark. “You see, all Gringo
-whiskey is good. One star shows that it is very good; two
-stars that it is excellent; three stars that it is superb, the
-best, and better than beyond that. Ah, I know. The
-Gringos are strong on strong drink. No pulque for them.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And four stars?” queried Ignacio, his voice husky from
-the liquor, the moisture glistening in his eyes.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Four stars? Friend Ignacio, four stars would be either
-sudden death or translation into paradise.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In not many minutes, Rafael, his arm around another
-gendarme, was calling him brother and proclaiming that it
-took little to make men happy here below.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“The old man was a fool, three times a fool, and thrice
-that,” volunteered Augustino, a sullen-faced gendarme, who
-for the first time gave tongue to speech.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Viva Augustino!” cheered Rafael. “The three stars
-have worked a miracle. Behold! Have they not unlocked
-Augustino’s mouth?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And thrice times thrice again was the old man a fool!”
-Augustino bellowed fiercely. “The very drink of the gods
-was his, all his, and he has been five days alone with it
-on the road from Bocas del Toro, and never taken one little
-sip. Such fools as he should be stretched out naked on
-an ant-heap, say I.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“The old man was a rogue,” quoth Pedro. “And when
-he comes back to-morrow for his three stars I shall arrest
-him for a smuggler. It will be a feather in all our caps.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“If we destroy the evidence—thus?” queried Augustino,
-knocking off another neck.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“We will save the evidence—thus!” Pedro replied,
-smashing an empty bottle on the stone flags. “Listen,
-comrades. The box was very heavy—we are all agreed.
-It fell. The bottles broke. The liquor ran out, and so were
-we made aware of the contraband. The box and the broken
-bottles will be evidence sufficient.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The uproar grew as the liquor diminished. One gendarme
-quarreled with Ignacio over a forgotten debt of ten centavos.
-Two others sat upon the floor, arms around each other’s
-necks, and wept over the miseries of their married lot.
-Augustino, like a very spendthrift of speech, explained his
-philosophy that silence was golden. And Pedro Zurita became
-sentimental on brotherhood.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Even my prisoners,” he maundered. “I love them as
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_57'>57</span>brothers. Life is sad.” A gush of tears in his eyes made
-him desist while he took another drink. “My prisoners are
-my very children. My heart bleeds for them. Behold! I
-weep. Let us share with them. Let them have a moment’s
-happiness. Ignacio, dearest brother of my heart.
-Do me a favor. See, I weep on your hand. Carry a bottle
-of this elixir to the Gringo Morgan. Tell him my sorrow
-that he must hang to-morrow. Give him my love and bid
-him drink and be happy to-day.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And as Ignacio passed out on the errand, the gendarme
-who had once leapt into the bull-ring at Santos, began
-roaring:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I want a bull! I want a bull!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“He wants it, dear soul, that he may put his arms
-around it and love it,” Pedro Zurita explained, with a fresh
-access of weeping. “I, too, love bulls. I love all things.
-I love even mosquitoes. All the world is love. That is the
-secret of the world. I should like to have a lion to play
-with....”</p>
-
-<hr class='c010' />
-
-<p class='c000'>The unmistakable air of “Back to Back Against the
-Mainmast” being whistled openly in the street, caught
-Henry’s attention, and he was crossing his big cell to the
-window when the grating of a key in the door made him
-lie down quickly on the floor and feign sleep. Ignacio staggered
-drunkenly in, bottle in hand, which he gravely presented
-to Henry.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“With the high compliments of our good jailer, Pedro
-Zurita,” he mumbled. “He says to drink and forget that
-he must stretch your neck to-morrow.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“My high compliments to Senor Pedro Zurita, and tell
-him from me to go to hell along with his whiskey,” Henry
-replied.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The turnkey straightened up and ceased swaying, as if
-suddenly become sober.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Very well, senor,” he said, then passed out and locked
-the door.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In a rush Henry was at the window just in time to encounter
-Francis face to face and thrusting a revolver to him
-through the bars.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Greetings, <span lang="es" xml:lang="es">camarada</span>,” Francis said. “We’ll have you
-out of here in a jiffy.” He held up two sticks of dynamite,
-with fuse and caps complete. “I have brought this pretty
-crowbar to pry you out. Stand well back in your cell,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_58'>58</span>because real pronto there’s going to be a hole in this wall that
-we could sail the <em>Angelique</em> through. And the <em>Angelique</em> is
-right off the beach waiting for you.—Now, stand back. I’m
-going to touch her off. It’s a short fuse.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Hardly had Henry backed into a rear corner of his cell,
-when the door was clumsily unlocked and opened to a babel
-of cries and imprecations, chiefest among which he could
-hear the ancient and invariable war-cry of Latin-America,
-“Kill the Gringo!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Also, he could hear Rafael and Pedro, as they entered,
-babbling, the one: “He is the enemy of brotherly love”;
-and the other, “He said I was to go to hell—is not that
-what he said, Ignacio?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In their hands they carried rifles, and behind them urged
-the drunken rabble, variously armed, from cutlasses and
-horse-pistols to hatchets and bottles. At sight of Henry’s
-revolver, they halted, and Pedro, fingering his rifle unsteadily,
-maundered solemnly:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Senor Morgan, you are about to take up your rightful
-abode in hell.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But Ignacio did not wait. He fired wildly and widely
-from his hip, missing Henry by half the width of the cell
-and going down the next moment under the impact of
-Henry’s bullet. The rest retreated precipitately into the
-jail corridor, where, themselves unseen, they began discharging
-their weapons into the room.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Thanking his fortunate stars for the thickness of the walls,
-and hoping no ricochet would get him, Henry sheltered in a
-protecting angle and waited for the explosion.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It came. The window and the wall beneath it became
-all one aperture. Struck on the head by a flying fragment,
-Henry sank down dizzily, and, as the dust of the mortar and
-the powder cleared, with wavering eyes he saw Francis
-apparently swim through the hole. By the time he had
-been dragged out through the hole, Henry was himself again.
-He could see Enrico Solano and Ricardo, his youngest born,
-rifles in hand, holding back the crowd forming up the street,
-while the twins, Alvarado and Martinez, similarly held back
-the crowd forming down the street.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But the populace was merely curious, having its lives to
-lose and nothing to gain if it attempted to block the way of
-such masterful men as these who blew up walls and stormed
-jails in open day. And it gave back respectfully before the
-compact group as it marched down the street.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_59'>59</span>“The horses are waiting up the next alley,” Francis told
-Henry, as they gripped hands. “And Leoncia is waiting
-with them. Fifteen minutes’ gallop will take us to the
-beach, where the boat is waiting.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Say, that was some song I taught you,” Henry grinned.
-“It sounded like the very best little bit of all right when I
-heard you whistling it. The dogs were so previous they
-couldn’t wait till to-morrow to hang me. They got full of
-whiskey and decided to finish me off right away. Funny
-thing that whiskey. An old caballero turned peddler
-wrecked a wagon-load of it right in front of the jail——”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“For even a noble Narvaez, son of Baltazar de Jesus y
-Cervallos è Narvaez, son of General Narvaez of martial
-memory, may be a peddler, and even a peddler must live,
-eh, senors, is it not so?” Francis mimicked.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Henry looked his gleeful recognition, and added soberly:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Francis, I’m glad for one thing, most damn glad....”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Which is?” Francis queried in the pause, just as they
-swung around the corner to the horses.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“That I didn’t cut off your ears that day on the Calf when
-I had you down and you insisted.”</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_60'>60</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER VI</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>Mariano Vercara e Hijos, Jefe Politico of San Antonio,
-leaned back in his chair in the courtroom and with a quiet
-smile of satisfaction proceeded to roll a cigarette. The case
-had gone through as prearranged. He had kept the little old
-judge away from his <i><span lang="pt" xml:lang="pt">mescal</span></i> all day, and had been rewarded
-by having the judge try the case and give judgment according
-to program. He had not made a slip. The six peons,
-fined heavily, were ordered back to the plantation at Santos.
-The working out of the fines was added to the time of their
-contract slavery. And the Jefe was two hundred dollars
-good American gold richer for the transaction. Those
-Gringos at Santos, he smiled to himself, were men to tie to.
-True, they were developing the country with their <em>henequen</em>
-plantation. But, better than that, they possessed money
-in untold quantity and paid well for such little services as he
-might be able to render.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>His smile was even broader as he greeted Alvarez Torres.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Listen,” said the latter, whispering low in his ear.
-“We can get both these devils of Morgans. The Henry
-pig hangs to-morrow. There is no reason that the Francis
-pig should not go out to-day.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The Jefe remained silent, questioning with a lift of his
-eyebrows.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I have advised him to storm the jail. The Solanos
-have listened to his lies and are with him. They will surely
-attempt to do it this evening. They could not do it sooner.
-It is for you to be ready for the event, and to see to it that
-Francis Morgan is especially shot and killed in the fight.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“For what and for why?” the Jefe temporised. “It is
-Henry I want to see out of the way. Let the Francis one
-go back to his beloved New York.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“He must go out to-day, and for reasons you will appreciate.
-As you know, from reading my telegrams through
-the government wireless——”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_61'>61</span>“Which was our agreement for my getting you your
-permission to use the government station,” the Jefe
-reminded.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And of which I do not complain,” Torres assured him.
-“But as I was saying, you know my relations with the
-New York Regan are confidential and important.” He
-touched his hand to his breast pocket. “I have just
-received another wire. It is imperative that the Francis
-pig be kept away from New York for a month—if forever,
-and I do not misunderstand Senor Regan, so much the
-better. In so far as I succeed in this, will you fare well.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“But you have not told me how much you have received,
-nor how much you will receive,” the Jefe probed.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“It is a private agreement, and it is not so much as you
-may fancy. He is a hard man, this Senor Regan, a hard
-man. Yet will I divide fairly with you out of the success
-of our venture.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The Jefe nodded acquiescence, then said:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Will it be as much as a thousand gold you will get?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I think so. Surely the pig of an Irish stock-gambler
-could pay me no less a sum, and five hundred is yours if pig
-Francis leaves his bones in San Antonio.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Will it be as much as a hundred thousand gold?” was
-the Jefe’s next query.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Torres laughed as if at a joke.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“It must be more than a thousand,” the other persisted.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And he may be generous,” Torres responded. “He
-may even give me five hundred over the thousand, half of
-which, naturally, as I have said, will be yours as well.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I shall go from here immediately to the jail,” the Jefe
-announced. “You may trust me, Senor Torres, as I trust
-you. Come. We will go at once, now, you and I, and you
-may see for yourself the preparation I shall make for this
-Francis Morgan’s reception. I have not yet lost my cunning
-with a rifle. And, as well, I shall tell off three of the
-gendarmes to fire only at him. So this Gringo dog would
-storm our jail, eh? Come. We will depart at once.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>He stood up, tossing his cigarette away with a show of
-determined energy. But, half way across the room, a ragged
-boy, panting and sweating, plucked his sleeve and whined:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I have information. You will pay me for it, most high
-Senor? I have run all the way.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I’ll have you sent to San Juan for the buzzards to peck
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_62'>62</span>your carcass for the worthless carrion that you are,” was the
-reply.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The boy quailed at the threat, then summoned courage
-from his emptiness of belly and meagerness of living and
-from his desire for the price of a ticket to the next bull-fight.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“You will remember I brought you the information, Senor.
-I ran all the way until I am almost dead, as you can behold,
-Senor. I will tell you, but you will remember it was I who
-ran all the way and told you first.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Yes, yes, animal, I will remember. But woe to you if
-I remember too well. What is the trifling information? It
-may not be worth a centavo. And if it isn’t I’ll make you
-sorry the sun ever shone on you. And buzzard-picking of
-you at San Juan will be paradise compared with what I shall
-visit on you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“The jail,” the boy quavered. “The strange Gringo,
-the one who was to be hanged yesterday, has blown down
-the side of the jail. Merciful Saints! The hole is as big
-as the steeple of the cathedral! And the other Gringo, the
-one who looks like him, the one who was to hang to-morrow,
-has escaped with him out of the hole. He dragged him out
-of the hole himself. This I saw, myself, with my two eyes,
-and then I ran here to you all the way, and you will
-remember....”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But the Jefe Politico had already turned on Torres witheringly.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And if this Senor Regan be princely generous, he may
-give you and me the munificent sum that was mentioned,
-eh? Five times the sum, or ten times, with this Gringo
-tiger blowing down law and order and our good jail-walls,
-would be nearer the mark.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“At any rate, the thing must be a false alarm, merely the
-straw that shows which way blows the wind of this Francis
-Morgan’s intention,” Torres murmured with a sickly smile.
-“Remember, the suggestion was mine to him to storm the
-jail.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“In which case you and Senor Regan will pay for the
-good jail wall?” the Jefe demanded, then, with a pause,
-added: “Not that I believe it has been accomplished. It is
-not possible. Even a fool Gringo would not dare.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Rafael, the gendarme, rifle in hand, the blood still oozing
-down his face from a scalp-wound, came through the courtroom
-door and shouldered aside the curious ones who had
-begun to cluster around Torres and the Jefe.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_63'>63</span>“We are devastated,” were Rafael’s first words. “The
-jail is ‘most destroyed. Dynamite! A hundred pounds of
-it! A thousand! We came bravely to save the jail. But
-it exploded—the thousand pounds of dynamite. I fell unconscious,
-rifle in hand. When sense came back to me, I
-looked about. All others, the brave Pedro, the brave
-Ignacio, the brave Augustino—all, all, lay around me dead!”
-Almost could he have added, “drunk”; but, his Latin-American
-nature so compounded, he sincerely stated the
-catastrophe as it most valiantly and tragically presented
-itself to his imagination. “They lay dead. They may not
-be dead, but merely stunned. I crawled. The cell of the
-Gringo Morgan was empty. There was a huge and monstrous
-hole in the wall. I crawled through the hole into
-the street. There was a great crowd. But the Gringo
-Morgan was gone. I talked with a moso who had seen and
-who knew. They had horses waiting. They rode toward
-the beach. There is a schooner that is not anchored. It
-sails back and forth waiting for them. The Francis Morgan
-rides with a sack of gold on his saddle. The moso saw it.
-It is a large sack.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And the hole?” the Jefe demanded. “The hole in the
-wall?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Is larger than the sack, much larger,” was Rafael’s
-reply. “But the sack is large. So the moso said. And
-he rides with it on his saddle.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“My jail!” the Jefe cried. He slipped a dagger from
-inside his coat under the left arm-pit and held it aloft by the
-blade so that the hilt showed as a true cross on which a finely
-modeled Christ hung crucified. “I swear by all the Saints
-the vengeance I shall have. My jail! Our justice! Our
-law!——Horses! Horses! Gendarme, horses!” He
-whirled about upon Torres as if the latter had spoken,
-shouting: “To hell with Senor Regan! I am after my
-own! I have been defied! My jail is desolated! My law—our
-law, good friends—has been mocked. Horses!
-Horses! Commandeer them on the streets. Haste!
-Haste!”</p>
-
-<hr class='c010' />
-
-<p class='c000'>Captain Trefethen, owner of the <em>Angelique</em>, son of a Maya
-Indian mother and a Jamaica negro father, paced the narrow
-after-deck of his schooner, stared shoreward toward San
-Antonio, where he could make out his crowded long-boat
-returning, and meditated flight from his mad American
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_64'>64</span>charterer. At the same time he meditated remaining in
-order to break his charter and give a new one at three times
-the price; for he was strangely torn by his conflicting bloods.
-The negro portion counseled prudence and observance of
-Panamanian law. The Indian portion was urgent to unlawfulness
-and the promise of conflict.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It was the Indian mother who decided the issue and made
-him draw his jib, ease his mainsheet, and begin to reach
-in-shore the quicker to pick up the oncoming boat. When
-he made out the rifles carried by the Solanos and the
-Morgans, almost he put up his helm to run for it and leave
-them. When he made out a woman in the boat’s sternsheets,
-romance and thrift whispered in him to hang on and
-take the boat on board. For he knew wherever women<a id='t64'></a>
-entered into the transactions of men that peril and pelf as
-well entered hand in hand.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And aboard came the woman, the peril and the pelf—Leoncia,
-the rifles, and a sack of money—all in a scramble;
-for, the wind being light, the captain had not bothered to
-stop way on the schooner.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Glad to welcome you on board, sir,” Captain Trefethen
-greeted Francis with a white slash of teeth between his
-smiling lips. “But who is this man?” He nodded his
-head to indicate Henry.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“A friend, captain, a guest of mine, in fact, a kinsman.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And who, sir, may I make bold to ask, are those gentlemen
-riding along the beach in fashion so lively?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Henry looked quickly at the group of horsemen galloping
-along the sand, unceremoniously took the binoculars from
-the skipper’s hand, and gazed through them.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“It’s the Jefe himself in the lead,” he reported to
-Leoncia and her menfolk, “with a bunch of gendarmes.”
-He uttered a sharp exclamation, stared through the glasses
-intently, then shook his head. “Almost I thought I made
-out our friend Torres.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“With our enemies!” Leoncia cried incredulously, remembering
-Torres’ proposal of marriage and proffer of service
-and honor that very day on the hacienda piazza.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I must have been mistaken,” Francis acknowledged.
-“They are riding so bunched together. But it’s the Jefe all
-right, two jumps ahead of the outfit.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Who is this Torres duck?” Henry asked harshly.
-“I’ve never liked his looks from the first, yet he seems
-always welcome under your roof, Leoncia.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_65'>65</span>“I beg your parson, sir, most gratifiedly, and with my
-humilius respects,” Captain Trefethen interrupted suavely.
-“But I must call your attention to the previous question,
-sir, which is: who and what is that cavalcade disporting
-itself with such earnestness along the sand?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“They tried to hang me yesterday,” Francis laughed.
-“And to-morrow they were going to hang my kinsman there.
-Only we beat them to it. And here we are. Now, Mr.
-Skipper, I call your attention to your head-sheets flapping
-in the wind. You are standing still. How much longer
-do you expect to stick around here?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Mr. Morgan, sir,” came the answer, “it is with dumbfounded
-respect that I serve you as the charterer of my
-vessel. Nevertheless, I must inform you that I am a
-British subject. King George is my king, sir, and I owe
-obedience first of all to him and to his laws of maritime
-between all nations, sir. It is lucid to my comprehension
-that you have broken laws ashore, or else the officers ashore
-would not be so assiduously in quest of you, sir. And it is
-also lucid to clarification that it is now your wish to have
-me break the laws of maritime by enabling you to escape.
-So, in honor bound, I must stick around here until this little
-difficulty that you may have appertained ashore is adjusted
-to the satisfaction of all parties concerned, sir, and to the
-satisfaction of my lawful sovereign.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Fill away and get out of this, skipper!” Henry broke
-in angrily.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Sir, assuring you of your gratification of pardon, it is
-my unpleasant task to inform you of two things. Neither
-are you my charterer; nor are you the noble King George to
-whom I give ambitious allegiance.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Well, I’m your charterer, skipper,” Francis said pleasantly,
-for he had learned to humor the man of mixed words
-and parentage. “So just kindly put up your helm and sail
-us out of this Chiriqui Lagoon as fast as God and this failing
-wind will let you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“It is not in the charter, sir, that my <em>Angelique</em> shall
-break the laws of Panama and King George.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I’ll pay you well,” Francis retorted, beginning to lose
-his temper. “Get busy.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“You will then recharter, sir, at three times the present
-charter?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Francis nodded shortly.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_66'>66</span>“Then wait, sir, I entreat. I must procure pen and
-paper from the cabin and make out the document.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Oh, Lord,” Francis groaned. “Square away and get a
-move on first. We can make out the paper just as easily
-while we are running as standing still. Look! They are
-beginning to fire.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The half-breed captain heard the report, and, searching
-his spread canvas, discovered the hole of the bullet high up
-near the peak of the mainsail.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Very well, sir,” he conceded. “You are a gentleman
-and an honorable man. I trust you to affix your signature
-to the document at your early convenience——Hey, you
-nigger! Put up your wheel! Hard up! Jump, you black
-rascals, and slack away mainsheet! Take a hand there,
-you, Percival, on the boom-tackle!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>All obeyed, as did Percival, a grinning shambling Kingston
-negro who was as black as his name was white, and as did
-another, addressed more respectfully as Juan, who was more
-Spanish and Indian than negro, as his light yellow skin
-attested, and whose fingers, slacking the foresheet, were as
-slim and delicate as a girl’s.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Knock the nigger on the head if he keeps up this
-freshness,” Henry growled in an undertone to Francis.
-“For two cents I’ll do it right now.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But Francis shook his head.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“He’s all right, but he’s a Jamaica nigger, and you know
-what they are. And he’s Indian as well. We might as
-well humor him, since it’s the nature of the beast. He
-means all right, but he wants the money, he’s risking his
-schooner against confiscation, and he’s afflicted with
-<em>vocabularitis</em>. He just must get those long words out of his
-system or else bust.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Here Enrico Solano, with quivering nostrils and fingers
-restless on his rifle as with half an eye he kept track of the
-wild shots being fired from the beach, approached Henry and
-held out his hand.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I have been guilty of a grave mistake, Senor Morgan,”
-he said. “In the first hurt of my affliction at the death of
-my beloved brother, Alfaro, I was guilty of thinking you
-guilty of his murder.” Here old Enrico’s eyes flashed with
-anger consuming but unconsumable. “For murder it was,
-dastardly and cowardly, a thrust in the dark in the back. I
-should have known better. But I was overwhelmed, and
-the evidence was all against you. I did not take pause of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_67'>67</span>thought to consider that my dearly beloved and only
-daughter was betrothed to you; to remember that all I had
-known of you was straightness and man-likeness and courage
-such as never stabs from behind the shield of the dark. I
-regret. I am sorry. And I am proud once again to welcome
-you into my family as the husband-to-be of my Leoncia.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And while this whole-hearted restoration of Henry Morgan
-into the Solano family went on, Leoncia was irritated
-because her father, in Latin-American fashion, must use so
-many fine words and phrases, when a single phrase, a handgrip,
-and a square look in the eyes were all that was called
-for and was certainly all that either Henry or Francis would
-have vouchsafed had the situation been reversed. Why,
-why, she asked of herself, must her Spanish stock, in such
-extravagance of diction, seem to emulate the similar extravagance
-of the Jamaica negro?</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>While this reiteration of the betrothal of Henry and
-Leoncia was taking place, Francis, striving to appear uninterested,
-could not help taking note of the pale-yellow sailor
-called Juan, conferring for’ard with others of the crew,
-shrugging his shoulders significantly, gesticulating passionately
-with his hands.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_68'>68</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER VII</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>“And now we’ve lost both the Gringo pigs,” Alvarez Torres
-lamented on the beach as, with a slight freshening of the
-breeze and with booms winged out to port and starboard, the
-<em>Angelique</em> passed out of range of their rifles.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Almost would I give three bells to the cathedral,”
-Mariano Vercara è Hijos proclaimed, “to have them within
-a hundred yards of this rifle. And if I had will of all Gringos
-they would depart so fast that the devil in hell would be
-compelled to study English.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Alvarez Torres beat the saddle pommel with his hand in
-sheer impotence of rage and disappointment.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“The Queen of my Dreams!” he almost wept. “She is
-gone and away, off with the two Morgans. I saw her climb
-up the side of the schooner. And there is the New York
-Regan. Once out of Chiriqui Lagoon, the schooner may
-sail directly to New York. And the Francis pig will not have
-been delayed a month, and the Senor Regan will remit no
-money.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“They will not get out of Chiriqui Lagoon,” the Jefe said
-solemnly. “I am no animal without reason. I am a man.
-I know they will not get out. Have I not sworn eternal
-vengeance? The sun is setting, and the promise is for a
-night of little wind. The sky tells it to one with half an eye.
-Behold those trailing wisps of clouds. What wind may be,
-and little enough of that, will come from the north-east. It
-will be a head beat to the Chorrera Passage. They will not
-attempt it. That nigger captain knows the lagoon like a
-book. He will try to make the long tack and go out past
-Bocas del Toro, or through the Cartago Passage. Even so,
-we will outwit him. I have brains, reason. Reason.
-Listen. It is a long ride. We will make it—straight down
-the coast to Las Palmas. Captain Rosaro is there with the
-<em>Dolores</em>.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_69'>69</span>“The second-hand old tugboat?—that cannot get out of
-her own way?” Torres queried.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“But this night of calm and morrow of calm she will
-capture the <em>Angelique</em>,” the Jefe replied. “On, comrades!
-We will ride! Captain Rosaro is my friend. Any favor is
-but mine to ask.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>At daylight, the worn-out men, on beaten horses,
-straggled through the decaying village of Las Palmas and
-down to the decaying pier, where a very decayed-looking
-tugboat, sadly in need of paint, welcomed their eyes. Smoke
-rising from the stack advertised that steam was up, and the
-Jefe was wearily elated.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“A happy morning, Senor Capitan Rosaro, and well met,”
-he greeted the hard-bitten Spanish skipper, who was reclined
-on a coil of rope and who sipped black coffee from a mug
-that rattled against his teeth.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“It would be a happier morning if the cursed fever had
-not laid its chill upon me,” Captain Rosaro grunted sourly,
-the hand that held the mug, the arm, and all his body
-shivering so violently as to spill the hot liquid down his chin
-and into the black-and-gray thatch of hair that covered his
-half-exposed chest. “Take that, you animal of hell!” he
-cried, flinging mug and contents at a splinter of a half-breed
-boy, evidently his servant, who had been unable to repress
-his glee.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“But the sun will rise and the fever will work its will
-and shortly depart,” said the Jefe, politely ignoring the
-display of spleen. “And you are finished here, and you are
-bound for Bocas del Toro, and we shall go with you, all of
-us, on a rare adventure. We will pick up the schooner
-<em>Angelique</em>, calm-bound all last night in the lagoon, and I shall
-make many arrests, and all Panama will so ring with your
-courage and ability, Capitan, that you will forget that the
-fever ever whispered in you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“How much?” Capitan Rosaro demanded bluntly.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Much?” the Jefe countered in surprise. “This is an
-affair of government, good friend. And it is right on your
-way to Bocas del Toro. It will not cost you an extra
-shovelful of coal.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“<span lang="es" xml:lang="es">Muchacho!</span> More coffee!” the tug-skipper roared at
-the boy.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>A pause fell, wherein Torres and the Jefe and all the
-draggled following yearned for the piping hot coffee brought
-by the boy. Captain Rosaro played the rim of the mug
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_70'>70</span>against his teeth like a rattling of castanets, but managed to
-sip without spilling and so to burn his mouth.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>A vacant-faced Swede, in filthy overalls, with a soiled cap
-on which appeared “Engineer,” came up from below,
-lighted a pipe, and seemingly went into a trance as he sat on
-the tug’s low rail.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“How much?” Captain Rosaro repeated.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Let us get under way, dear friend,” said the Jefe.
-“And then, when the fever-shock has departed, we will
-discuss the matter with reason, being reasonable creatures
-ourselves and not animals.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“How much?” Captain Rosaro repeated again. “I am
-never an animal. I always am a creature of reason, whether
-the sun is up or not up, or whether this thrice-accursed fever
-is upon me. How much?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Well, let us start, and for how much?” the Jefe
-conceded wearily.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Fifty dollars gold,” was the prompt answer.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“You are starting anyway, are you not, Capitan?” Torres
-queried softly.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Fifty——gold, as I have said.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The Jefe Politico threw up his hands with a hopeless
-gesture and turned on his heel to depart.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Yet you swore eternal vengeance for the crime committed
-on your jail,” Torres reminded him.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“But not if it costs fifty dollars,” the Jefe snapped back,
-out of the corner of his eye watching the shivering captain
-for some sign of relenting.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Fifty gold,” said the Captain, as he finished draining
-the mug and with shaking fingers strove to roll a cigarette.
-He nodded his head in the direction of the Swede, and
-added, “and five gold extra for my engineer. It is our
-custom.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Torres stepped closer to the Jefe and whispered:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I will pay for the tug myself and charge the Gringo
-Regan a hundred, and you and I will divide the difference.
-We lose nothing. We shall make. For this Regan pig
-instructed me well not to mind expense.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>As the sun slipped brazenly above the eastern horizon,
-one gendarme went back into Las Palmas with the jaded
-horses, the rest of the party descended to the deck of the tug,
-the Swede dived down into the engine-room, and Captain
-Rosaro, shaking off his chill in the sun’s beneficent rays,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_71'>71</span>ordered the deck-hands to cast off the lines, and put one of
-them at the wheel in the pilot-house.</p>
-
-<hr class='c010' />
-
-<p class='c000'>And the same day-dawn found the <em>Angelique</em>, after a night
-of almost perfect calm, off the mainland from which she had
-failed to get away, although she had made sufficient northing
-to be midway between San Antonio and the passages of
-Bocas del Toro and Cartago. These two passages to the
-open sea still lay twenty-five miles away, and the schooner
-truly slept on the mirror surface of the placid lagoon. Too
-stuffy below for sleep in the steaming tropics, the deck was
-littered with the sleepers. On top the small house of the
-cabin, in solitary state, lay Leoncia. On the narrow runways
-of deck on either side lay her brothers and her father.
-Aft, between the cabin companionway and the wheel, side
-by side, Francis’ arm across Henry’s shoulder, as if still
-protecting him, were the two Morgans. On one side of<a id='t71'></a> the
-wheel, sitting, with arms on knees and head on arms, the
-negro-Indian skipper slept, and just as precisely postured, on
-the other side of the wheel, slept the helmsman, who was
-none other than Percival, the black Kingston negro. The
-waist of the schooner was strewn with the bodies of the
-mixed-breed seamen, while for’ard, on the tiny forecastlehead,
-prone, his face buried upon his folded arms, slept the
-lookout.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Leoncia, in her high place on the cabin-top, awoke first.
-Propping her head on her hand, the elbow resting on a bit of
-the poncho on which she lay, she looked down past one side
-of the hood of the companionway upon the two young men.
-She yearned over them, who were so alike, and knew love
-for both of them, remembered the kisses of Henry on her
-mouth, thrilled till the blush of her own thoughts mantled
-her cheek at memory of the kisses of Francis, and was
-puzzled and amazed that she should have it in her to love
-two men at the one time. As she had already learned of
-herself, she would follow Henry to the end of the world and
-Francis even farther. And she could not understand such
-wantonness of inclination.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Fleeing from her own thoughts, which frightened her, she
-stretched out her arm and dangled the end of her silken scarf
-to a tickling of Francis’ nose, who, after restless movements,
-still in the heaviness of sleep, struck with his hand at what
-he must have thought to be a mosquito or a fly, and hit
-Henry on the chest. So it was Henry who was first awakened.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_72'>72</span>He sat up with such abruptness as to awaken
-Francis.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Good morning, merry kinsman,” Francis greeted.
-“Why such violence?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Morning, morning, and the morning’s morning, comrade,”
-Henry muttered. “Such was the violence of your
-sleep that it was you who awakened me with a buffet on my
-breast. I thought it was the hangman, for this is the
-morning they planned to kink my neck.” He yawned,
-stretched his arms, gazed out over the rail at the sleeping
-sea, and nudged Francis to observance of the sleeping
-skipper and helmsman.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>They looked so bonny, the pair of Morgans, Leoncia
-thought; and at the same time wondered why the English
-word had arisen unsummoned in her mind rather than a
-Spanish equivalent. Was it because her heart went out so
-generously to the two Gringos that she must needs think of
-them in their language instead of her own?</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>To escape the perplexity of her thoughts, she dangled the
-scarf again, was discovered, and laughingly confessed that
-it was she who had caused their violence of waking.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Three hours later, breakfast of coffee and fruit over, she
-found herself at the wheel taking her first lesson of steering
-and of the compass under Francis’ tuition. The <em>Angelique</em>,
-under a crisp little breeze which had hauled around well to
-north’ard, was for the moment heeling it through the water
-at a six-knot clip. Henry, swaying on the weather side of
-the after-deck and searching the sea through the binoculars,
-was striving to be all unconcerned at the lesson, although
-secretly he was mutinous with himself for not having first
-thought of himself introducing her to the binnacle and the
-wheel. Yet he resolutely refrained from looking around or
-from even stealing a corner-of-the-eye glance at the other
-two.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But Captain Trefethen, with the keen cruelty of Indian
-curiosity and the impudence of a negro subject of King
-George, knew no such delicacy. He stared openly and
-missed nothing of the chemic drawing together of his charterer
-and the pretty Spanish girl. When they leaned over
-the wheel to look into the binnacle, they leaned toward each
-other and Leoncia’s hair touched Francis’ cheek. And the
-three of them, themselves and the breed skipper, knew the
-thrill induced by such contact. But the man and woman
-knew immediately what the breed skipper did not know, and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_73'>73</span>what they knew was embarrassment. Their eyes lifted to
-each other in a flash of mutual startlement, and drooped
-away and down guiltily. Francis talked very fast and loud
-enough for half the schooner to hear, as he explained the
-lubber’s point of the compass. But Captain Trefethen
-grinned.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>A rising puff of breeze made Francis put the wheel up.
-His hand to the spoke rested on her hand already upon it.
-Again they thrilled, and again the skipper grinned.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Leoncia’s eyes lifted to Francis’, then dropped in confusion.
-She slipped her hand out from under and terminated
-the lesson by walking slowly away with a fine assumption of
-casualness, as if the wheel and the binnacle no longer interested
-her. But she had left Francis afire with what he
-knew was lawlessness and treason as he glanced at Henry’s
-shoulder and profile and hoped he had not seen what had
-occurred. Leoncia, apparently gazing off across the lagoon
-to the jungle-clad shore, was seeing nothing as she thoughtfully
-turned her engagement ring around and around on her
-finger.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But Henry, turning to tell them of the smudge of smoke
-he had discovered on the horizon, had inadvertently seen.
-And the negro-Indian captain had seen him see. So the
-captain lurched close to him, the cruelty of the Indian
-dictating the impudence of the negro, as he said in a low
-voice:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Ah, be not downcast, sir. The senorita is generously
-hearted. There is room for both you gallant gentlemen in
-her heart.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And the next fraction of a second he learned the inevitable
-and invariable lesson that white men must have their privacy
-of intimate things; for he lay on his back, the back of his
-head sore from contact with the deck, the front of his head,
-between the eyes, sore from contact with the knuckles of
-Henry Morgan’s right hand.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But the Indian in the skipper was up and raging as he
-sprang to his feet, knife in hand. Juan, the pale-yellow
-mixed breed, leaped to the side of his skipper flourishing
-another knife, while several of the nearer sailors joined in
-forming a semi-circle of attack on Henry, who, with a quick
-step back and an upward slap of his hand, under the pin-rail,
-caused an iron belaying pin to leap out and up into the air.
-Catching it in mid-flight, he was prepared to defend himself.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_74'>74</span>Francis, abandoning the wheel and drawing his automatic as
-he sprang, was through the circle and by the side of Henry.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“What did he say?” Francis demanded of his kinsman.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I’ll say what I said,” the breed skipper threatened, the
-negro side of him dominant as he built for a compromise of
-blackmail. “I said——”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Hold on, skipper!” Henry interrupted. “I’m sorry I
-struck you. Hold your hush. Put a stopper on your jaw.
-Saw wood. Forget. I’m sorry I struck you. I....”
-Henry Morgan could not help the pause in speech during
-which he swallowed his gorge rising at what he was about
-to say. And it was because of Leoncia, and because she
-was looking on and listening, that he said it. “I ... I
-apologize, skipper.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“It is an injury,” Captain Trefethen stated aggrievedly.
-“It is a physical damage. No man can perpetrate a
-physical damage on a subject of King George’s, God bless
-him, without furnishing a money requital.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>At this crass statement of the terms of the blackmail,
-Henry was for forgetting himself and for leaping upon the
-creature. But, restrained by Francis’ hand on his shoulder,
-he struggled to self-control, made a noise like hearty laughter,
-dipped into his pocket for two ten-dollar gold-pieces,
-and, as if they stung him, thrust them into Captain Trefethen’s
-palm.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Cheap at the price,” he could not help muttering aloud.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“It is a good price,” the skipper averred. “Twenty
-gold is always a good price for a sore head. I am yours to
-command, sir. You are a sure-enough gentleman. You
-may hit me any time for the price.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Me, sir, me!” the Kingston black named Percival volunteered
-with broad and prideless chucklings of subservience.
-“Take a swat at me, sir, for the same price, any time, now.
-And you may swat me as often as you please to pay....”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But the episode was destined to terminate at that instant,
-for at that instant a sailor called from amidships:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Smoke! A steamer-smoke dead aft!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The passage of an hour determined the nature and import
-of the smoke, for the <em>Angelique</em>, falling into a calm, was
-overhauled with such rapidity that the tugboat <em>Dolores</em>, at
-half a mile distance through the binoculars, was seen fairly
-to bristle with armed men crowded on her tiny for’ard deck.
-Both Henry and Francis could recognize the faces of the
-Jefe Politico and of several of the gendarmes.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_75'>75</span>Old Enrico Solano’s nostrils began to dilate, as, with his
-four sons who were aboard, he stationed them aft with him
-and prepared for the battle. Leoncia, divided between
-Henry and Francis, was secretly distracted, though outwardly
-she joined in laughter at the unkemptness of the
-little tug, and in glee at a flaw of wind that tilted the
-<em>Angelique’s</em> port rail flush to the water and foamed her along
-at a nine-knot clip.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But weather and wind were erratic. The face of the
-lagoon was vexed with squalls and alternate streaks of calm.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“We cannot escape, sir, I regret to inform you,” Captain
-Trefethen informed Francis. “If the wind would hold, sir,
-yes. But the wind baffles and breaks. We are crowded
-down upon the mainland. We are cornered, sir, and as good
-as captured.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Henry, who had been studying the near shore through the
-glasses, lowered them and looked at Francis.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Shout!” cried the latter. “You have a scheme. It’s
-sticking out all over you. Name it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Right there are the two <i><span lang="es" xml:lang="es">Tigres</span></i> islands,” Henry elucidated.
-“They guard the narrow entrance to Juchitan Inlet,
-which is called El Tigre. Oh, it has the teeth of a tiger,
-believe me. On either side of them, between them and the
-shore, it is too shoal to float a whaleboat unless you know
-the winding channels, which I do know. But between them
-is deep water, though the El Tigre Passage is so pinched that
-there is no room to come about. A schooner can only run
-it with the wind abaft or abeam. Now, the wind favors.
-We will run it. Which is only half my scheme——”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And if the wind baffles or fails, sir—and the tide of the
-inlet runs out and in like a race, as I well know—my beautiful
-schooner will go on the rocks,” Captain Trefethen
-protested.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“For which, if it happens, I will pay you full value,”
-Francis assured him shortly and brushed him aside. “—And
-now, Henry, what’s the other half of your scheme?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I’m ashamed to tell you,” Henry laughed. “But it
-will be provocative of more Spanish swearing than has been
-heard in Chiriqui Lagoon since old Sir Henry sacked San
-Antonio and Bocas del Toro. You just watch.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Leoncia clapped her hands, as with sparkling eyes she
-cried:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“It must be good, Henry. I can see it by your face.
-You must tell <em>me</em>.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_76'>76</span>And, aside, his arm around her to steady her on the
-reeling deck, Henry whispered closely in her ear, while
-Francis, to hide his perturbation at the sight of them, made
-shift through the binoculars to study the faces on the pursuing
-tug. Captain Trefethen grinned maliciously and exchanged
-significant glances with the pale-yellow sailor.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Now, skipper,” said Henry, returning. “We’re just
-opposite El Tigre. Put up your helm and run for the
-passage. Also, and pronto, I want a coil of half-inch, old,
-soft, manila rope, plenty of rope-yarns and sail twine, that
-case of beer from the lazarette, that five-gallon kerosene can
-that was emptied last night, and the coffee-pot from the
-galley.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“But I am distrained to remark to your attention that
-that rope is worth good money, sir,” Captain Trefethen
-complained, as Henry set to work on the heterogeneous gear.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“You will be paid,” Francis hushed him.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And the coffee-pot—it is almost new.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“You will be paid.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The skipper sighed and surrendered, although he sighed
-again at Henry’s next act, which was to uncork the bottles
-and begin emptying the beer out into the scuppers.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Please, sir,” begged Percival. “If you must empty
-the beer please empty it into me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>No further beer was wasted, and the crew swiftly laid the
-empty bottles beside Henry. At intervals of six feet he
-fastened the recorked bottles to the half-inch line. Also, he
-cut off two-fathom lengths of the line and attached them like
-streamers between the beer bottles. The coffee-pot and two
-empty coffee tins were likewise added among the bottles.
-To one end of the main-line he made fast the kerosene can,
-to the other end the empty beer-case, and looked up to
-Francis, who replied:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Oh, I got you five minutes ago. El Tigre must be
-narrow, or else the tug will go around that stuff.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“El Tigre is just that narrow,” was the response.
-“There’s one place where the channel isn’t forty feet
-between the shoals. If the skipper misses our trap, he’ll go
-around, aground. Say, they’ll be able to wade ashore from
-the tug if that happens.—Come on, now, we’ll get the stuff
-aft and ready to toss out. You take starboard and I’ll take
-port, and when I give the word you shoot that beer case out
-to the side as far as you can.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Though the wind eased down, the <em>Angelique</em>, square before
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_77'>77</span>it, managed to make five knots, while the <em>Dolores</em>, doing six,
-slowly overhauled her. As the rifles began to speak from the
-<em>Dolores</em>, the skipper, under the direction of Henry and
-Francis, built up on the schooner’s stern a low barricade of
-sacks of potatoes and onions, of old sails, and of hawser
-coils. Crouching low in the shelter of this, the helmsman,
-managed to steer. Leoncia refused to go below as the firing
-became more continuous, but compromised by lying down
-behind the cabin-house. The rest of the sailors sought
-similar shelter in nooks and corners, while the Solano men,
-lying aft, returned the fire of the tug.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Henry and Francis, in their chosen positions and waiting
-until the narrowness of El Tigre was reached, took a hand in
-the free and easy battle.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“My congratulations, sir,” Captain Trefethen said to
-Francis, the Indian of him compelling him to raise his head
-to peer across the rail, the negro of him flattening his body
-down until almost it seemed to bore into the deck. “That
-was Captain Rosaro himself that was steering, and the way
-he jumped and grabbed his hand would lead one to conclude
-that you had very adequately put a bullet through it. That
-Captain Rosaro is a very hot-tempered hombre, sir. I can
-almost hear him blaspheming now.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Stand ready for the word, Francis,” Henry said, laying
-down his rifle and carefully studying the low shores of the
-islands of El Tigre on either side of them. “We’re almost
-ready. Take your time when I give the word, and at
-‘three’ let her go.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The tug was two hundred yards away and overtaking fast,
-when Henry gave the word. He and Francis stood up, and
-at “three” made their fling. To either side can and beer-case
-flew, dragging behind them through the air the beaded
-rope of pots and cans and bottles and rope-streamers.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In their interest, Henry and Francis remained standing in
-order to watch the maw of their trap as denoted by the
-spread of miscellaneous objects on the surface of their
-troubled wake. A fusillade of rifle shots from the tug made
-them drop back flat to the deck; but, peering over the rail,
-they saw the tug’s forefoot press the floated rope down and
-under. A minute later they saw the tug slow down to a
-stop.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Some mess wrapped around that propeller,” Francis
-applauded. “Henry, salute.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Now, if the wind holds ...” said Henry modestly.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_78'>78</span>The <em>Angelique</em> sailed on, leaving the motionless tug to grow
-smaller in the distance, but not so small that they could not
-see her drift helplessly onto the shoal, and see men going
-over the side and wading about.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“We just must sing our little song,” Henry cried jubilantly,
-starting up the stave of “Back to Back Against the
-Mainmast.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Which is all very nice, sir,” Captain Trefethen interrupted
-at the conclusion of the first chorus, his eyes glistening
-and his shoulders still jiggling to the rhythm of the
-song. “But the wind has ceased, sir. We are becalmed.
-How are we to get out of Juchitan Inlet without wind?
-The <em>Dolores</em> is not wrecked. She is merely delayed. Some
-nigger will go down and clear her propeller, and then she has
-us right where she wants us.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“It’s not so far to shore,” Henry adjudged with a measuring
-eye as he turned to Enrico.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“What kind of a shore have they got ashore here, Senor
-Solano?” he queried. “Maya Indians and haciendados—which?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Haciendados and Mayas, both,” Enrico answered.
-“But I know the country well. If the schooner is not safe,
-we should be safe ashore. We can get horses and saddles
-and beef and corn. The Cordilleras are beyond. What
-more should we want?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“But Leoncia?” Francis asked solicitously.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Was born in the saddle, and in the saddle there are few
-Americanos she would not weary,” came Enrico’s answer.
-“It would be well, with your acquiescence, to swing out the
-long boat in case the <em>Dolores</em> appears upon us.”</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_79'>79</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER VIII</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>“It’s all right, skipper, it’s all right,” Henry assured the breed
-captain, who, standing on the beach with them, seemed loath
-to say farewell and pull back to the <em>Angelique</em> adrift half a
-mile away in the dead calm which had fallen on Juchitan
-Inlet.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“It is what we call a diversion,” Francis explained.
-“That is a nice word—<em>diversion</em>. And it is even nicer when
-you see it work.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“But if it don’t work,” Captain Trefethen protested,
-“then will it spell a confounded word, which I may name as
-<em>catastrophe</em>.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“That is what happened to the <em>Dolores</em> when we tangled
-her propeller,” Henry laughed. “But we do not know the
-meaning of that word. We use <em>diversion</em> instead. The
-proof that it will work is that we are leaving Senor Solano’s
-two sons with you. Alvarado and Martinez know the passages
-like a book. They will pilot you out with the first
-favoring breeze. The Jefe is not interested in you. He is
-after us, and when we take to the hills he’ll be on our trail
-with every last man of his.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Don’t you see!” Francis broke in. “The <em>Angelique</em> is
-trapped. If we remain on board he will capture us and the
-<em>Angelique</em> as well. But we make the diversion of taking to
-the hills. He pursues us. The <em>Angelique</em> goes free. And
-of course he won’t catch us.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“But suppose I do lose the schooner!” the swarthy
-skipper persisted. “If she goes on the rocks I will lose her,
-and the passages are very perilous.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Then you will be paid for her, as I’ve told you before,”
-Francis said, with a show of rising irritation.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Also are there my numerous expenses——”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Francis pulled out a pad and pencil, scribbled a note, and
-passed it over, saying:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Present that to Senor Melchor Gonzales at Bocas del
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_80'>80</span>Toro. It is for a thousand gold. He is the banker; he is
-my agent, and he will pay it to you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Captain Trefethen stared incredulously at the scrawled bit
-of paper.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Oh, he’s good for it,” Henry said.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Yes, sir, I know, sir, that Mr. Francis Morgan is a
-wealthy gentleman of renown. But how wealthy is he? Is
-he as wealthy as I modestly am? I own the <em>Angelique</em>, free
-of all debt. I own two town lots, unimproved, in Colon.
-And I own four water-front lots in Belen that will make me
-very wealthy when the Union Fruit Company begins the
-building of the warehouses——”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“How much, Francis, did your father leave you?” Henry
-quipped teasingly. “Or, rather, how many?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Francis shrugged his shoulders as he answered vaguely:
-“More than I have fingers and toes.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Dollars, sir?” queried the captain.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Henry shook his head sharply.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Thousands, sir?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Again Henry shook his head.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Millions, sir?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Now you’re talking,” Henry answered. “Mr. Francis
-Morgan is rich enough to buy almost all of the Republic of
-Panama, with the Canal cut out of the deal.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The negro-Indian mariner looked his unbelief to Enrico
-Solano, who replied:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“He is an honorable gentleman. I know. I have cashed
-his paper, drawn on Senor Melchor Gonzales at Bocas del
-Toro, for a thousand pesos. There it is in the bag there.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>He nodded his head up the beach to where Leoncia, in
-the midst of the dunnage landed with them, was toying with
-trying to slip cartridges into a Winchester rifle. The bag,
-which the skipper had long since noted, lay at her feet in
-the sand.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I do hate to travel strapped,” Francis explained embarrassedly
-to the white men of the group. “One never
-knows when a dollar mayn’t come in handy. I got caught
-with a broken machine at Smith River Comers, up New York
-way, one night, with nothing but a check book, and, d’you
-know, I couldn’t get even a cigarette in the town.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I trusted a white gentleman in Barbadoes once, who
-chartered my boat to go fishing flying fish——” the captain
-began.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Well, so long, skipper,” Henry shut him off. “You’d
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_81'>81</span>better be getting on board, because we’re going to hike.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And for Captain Trefethen, staring at the backs of his
-departing passengers, remained naught but to obey. Helping
-to shove the boat off, he climbed in, took the steering sweep,
-and directed his course toward the <em>Angelique</em>. Glancing back
-from time to time, he saw the party on the beach shoulder
-the baggage and disappear into the dense green wall of
-vegetation.</p>
-
-<hr class='c010' />
-
-<p class='c000'>They came out upon an inchoate clearing, and saw gangs
-of peons at work chopping down and grubbing out the roots
-of the virgin tropic forest so that rubber trees for the
-manufacture of automobile tires might be planted to replace
-it. Leoncia, beside her father, walked in the lead. Her
-brothers, Ricardo and Alesandro, in the middle, were burdened
-with the dunnage, as were Francis and Henry, who
-brought up the rear. And this strange procession was met
-by a slender, straight-backed, hidalgo-appearing, elderly
-gentleman, who leaped his horse across tree-trunks and
-stump-holes in order to gain to them.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>He was off his horse, at sight of Enrico, sombrero in hand
-in recognition of Leoncia, his hand extended to Enrico in
-greeting of ancient friendship, his lips wording words and his
-eyes expressing admiration to Enrico’s daughter.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The talk was in rapid-fire Spanish, and the request for
-horses preferred and qualifiedly granted, ere the introduction
-of the two Morgans took place. The haciendado’s horse,
-after the Latin fashion, was immediately Leoncia’s, and,
-without ado, he shortened the stirrups and placed her astride
-in the saddle. A murrain, he explained, had swept his
-plantation of riding animals; but his chief overseer still
-possessed a fair-conditioned one which was Enrico’s as soon
-as it could be procured.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>His handshake to Henry and Francis was hearty as well
-as dignified, as he took two full minutes ornately to state that
-any friend of his dear friend Enrico was his friend. When
-Enrico asked the haciendado about the trails up toward the
-Cordilleras and mentioned oil, Francis pricked up his ears.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Don’t tell me, Senor,” he began, “that they have
-located oil in Panama?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“They have,” the haciendado nodded gravely. “We
-knew of the oil ooze, and had known of it for generations.
-But it was the Hermosillo Company that sent its Gringo
-engineers in secretly and then bought up the land. They
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_82'>82</span>say it is a great field. But I know nothing of oil myself.
-They have many wells, and have bored much, and so much
-oil have they that it is running away over the landscape.
-They say they cannot choke it entirely down, such is the
-volume and pressure. What they need is the pipe-line to
-ocean-carriage, which they have begun to build. In the
-meantime it flows away down the canyons, an utter loss of
-incredible proportion.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Have they built any tanks?” Francis demanded, his
-mind running eagerly on Tampico Petroleum, to which most
-of his own fortune was pledged, and of which, despite the
-rising stock-market, he had heard nothing since his departure
-from New York.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The haciendado shook his head.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Transportation,” he explained. “The freight from
-tide-water to the gushers by mule-back has been prohibitive.
-But they have impounded much of it. They have lakes of
-oil, great reservoirs in the hollows of the hills, earthen-dammed,
-and still they cannot choke down the flow, and
-still the precious substance flows down the canyons.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Have they roofed these reservoirs?” Francis inquired,
-remembering a disastrous fire in the early days of Tampico
-Petroleum.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“No, Senor.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Francis shook his head disapprovingly.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“They should be roofed,” he said. “A match from the
-drunken or revengeful hand of any peon could set the whole
-works off. It’s poor business, poor business.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“But I am not the Hermosillo,” the haciendado said.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“For the Hermosillo Company, I meant, Senor,” Francis
-explained. “I am an oil-man. I have paid through the
-nose to the tune of hundreds of thousands for similar accidents
-or crimes. One never knows just how they happen.
-What one does know is that they do happen——”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>What more Francis might have said about the expediency
-of protecting oil reservoirs from stupid or wilful peons, was
-never to be known; for, at the moment, the chief overseer
-of the plantation, stick in hand, rode up, half his interest
-devoted to the newcomers, the other half to the squad of
-peons working close at hand.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Senor Ramirez, will you favor me by dismounting,” his
-employer, the haciendado, politely addressed him, at the
-same time introducing him to the strangers as soon as he
-had dismounted.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_83'>83</span>“The animal is yours, friend Enrico,” the haciendado
-said. “If it dies, please return at your easy convenience
-the saddle and gear. And if your convenience be not easy,
-please do not remember that there is to be any return, save
-ever and always, of your love for me. I regret that you and
-your party cannot now partake of my hospitality. But the
-Jefe is a bloodhound, I know. We shall do our best to send
-him astray.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>With Leoncia and Enrico mounted, and the gear made
-fast to the saddles by leather thongs, the cavalcade started,
-Alesandro and Ricardo clinging each to a stirrup of their
-father’s saddle and trotting alongside. This was for making
-greater haste, and was emulated by Francis and Henry, who
-clung to Leoncia’s stirrups. Fast to the pommel of her
-saddle was the bag of silver dollars.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“It is some mistake,” the haciendado was explaining to
-his overseer. “Enrico Solano is an honorable man. Anything
-to which he pledges himself is honorable. He has
-pledged himself to this, whatever it may be, and yet is
-Mariano Vercara é Hijos on their trail. We shall mislead
-him if he comes this way.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And here he comes,” the overseer remarked, “without
-luck so far in finding horses.” Casually he turned on the
-laboring peons and with horrible threats urged them to do
-at least half a day’s decent work in a day.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>From the corner of his eye, the haciendado observed the
-fast-walking group of men, with Alvarez Torres in the lead;
-but, as if he had not noticed, he conferred with his overseer
-about the means of grubbing out the particular stump the
-peons were working on.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>He returned the greeting of Torres pleasantly, and inquired
-politely, with a touch of devilry, if he led the party
-of men on some oil-prospecting adventure.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“No, Senor,” Torres answered. “We are in search of
-Senor Enrico Solano, his daughter, his sons, and two tall
-Gringos with them. It is the Gringos we want. They have
-passed this way, Senor?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Yes, they have passed. I imagined they, too, were
-in some oil excitement, such was their haste that prevented
-them from courteously passing the time of day and stating
-their destination. Have they committed some offence?
-But I should not ask. Senor Enrico Solano is too honorable
-a man——”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Which way did they go?” the Jefe demanded, thrusting
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_84'>84</span>himself breathlessly forward from the rear of his gendarmes
-with whom he had just caught up.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And while the haciendado and his overseer temporized
-and prevaricated, and indicated an entirely different direction,
-Torres noted one of the peons, leaning on his spade,
-listen intently. And still while the Jefe was being misled
-and was giving orders to proceed on the false scent, Torres
-flashed a silver dollar privily to the listening peon. The
-peon nodded his head in the right direction, caught the coin
-unobserved, and applied himself to his digging at the root
-of the huge stump.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Torres countermanded the Jefe’s order.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“We will go the other way,” Torres said, with a wink
-to the Jefe. “A little bird has told me that our friend
-here is mistaken and that they have gone the other way.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>As the posse departed on the hot trail, the haciendado
-and his overseer looked at each other in consternation and
-amazement. The overseer made a movement of his lips
-for silence, and looked swiftly at the group of laborers.
-The offending peon was working furiously and absorbedly,
-but another peon, with a barely perceptible nod of head,
-indicated him to the overseer.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“There’s the little bird,” the overseer cried, striding
-to the traitor and shaking him violently.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Out of the peon’s rags flew the silver dollar.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Ah, ha,” said the haciendado, grasping the situation.
-“He has become suddenly affluent. This is horrible, that
-my peons should be wealthy. Doubtless, he has murdered
-some one for all that sum. Beat him, and make him confess.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The creature, on his knees, the stick of the overseer
-raining blows on his head and back, made confession of
-what he had done to earn the dollar.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Beat him, beat him some more, beat him to death,
-the beast who betrayed my dearest friends,” the haciendado
-urged placidly. “But no——caution. Do not beat him to
-death, but nearly so. We are short of labor now and
-cannot afford the full measure of our just resentment.
-Beat him to hurt him much, but that he shall be compelled
-to lay off work no more than a couple of days.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Of the immediately subsequent agonies, adventures, and
-misadventures of the peon, a volume might be written
-which would be the epic of his life. Besides, to be beaten
-nearly to death is not nice to contemplate or dwell upon.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_85'>85</span>Let it suffice to tell that when he had received no more
-than part of his beating; he wrenched free, leaving half his
-rags in the overseer’s grasp, and fled madly for the jungle,
-outfooting the overseer who was unused to rapid locomotion
-save when on a horse’s back.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Such was the speed of the wretched creature’s flight,
-spurred on by the pain of his lacerations and the fear of
-the overseer, that, plunging wildly on, he overtook the
-Solano party and plunged out of the jungle and into them
-as they were crossing a shallow stream, and fell upon his
-knees, whimpering for mercy. He whimpered because of
-his betrayal of them. But this they did not know, and
-Francis, seeing his pitiable condition, lingered behind long
-enough to unscrew the metal top from a pocket flask and
-revive him with a drink of half the contents. Then Francis
-hastened on, leaving the poor devil muttering inarticulate
-thanks ere he dived off into the sheltering jungle in a
-different direction. But, underfed, overworked, his body
-gave way, and he sank down in collapse in the green covert.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Next, Alvarez Torres in the lead and tracking like a
-hound, the gendarmes at his back, the Jefe panting in the
-rear from shortness of breath, the pursuit arrived at the
-stream. The foot-marks of the peon, still wet on the dry
-stones beyond the margin of the stream, caught Torres’
-eye. In a trice, by what little was left of his garments,
-the peon was dragged out. On his knees, which portion
-of his anatomy he was destined to occupy much this day,
-he begged for mercy and received his interrogation. And
-he denied knowledge of the Solano party. He, who had
-betrayed and been beaten, but who had received only
-succor from those he had betrayed, felt stir in him some
-atom of gratitude and good. He denied knowledge of the
-Solanos since in the clearing where he had sold them for
-the silver dollar. Torres’ stick fell upon his head, five
-times, ten times, and went on falling with the certitude
-that in all eternity there would be no cessation unless he
-told the truth. And, after all, he was a miserable and
-wretched thing, spirit-broken by beatings from the cradle,
-and the sting of Torres’ stick, with the threat of the plenitude
-of the stick that meant the death his own owner, the
-haciendado, could not afford, made him give in and point
-the way of the chase.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But his day of tribulation had only begun. Scarcely
-had he betrayed the Solanos the second time, and still on
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_86'>86</span>his knees, when the haciendado, with the posse of neighboring
-haciendados and overseers he had called to his help,
-burst upon the scene astride sweating horses.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“My peon, senors,” announced the haciendado, itching
-to be at him. “You maltreat him.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And why not?” demanded the Jefe.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Because he is mine to maltreat, and I wish to do it
-myself.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The peon crawled and squirmed to the Jefe’s feet and
-begged and entreated not to be given up. But he begged
-for mercy where was no mercy.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Certainly, senor,” the Jefe said to the haciendado.
-“We give him back to you. We must uphold the law,
-and he is your property. Besides, we have no further use
-for him. Yet is he a most excellent peon, senor. He
-has done what no peon has ever done in the history of
-Panama. He has told the truth twice in one day.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>His hands tied together in front of him and hitched
-by a rope to the horn of the overseer’s saddle, the peon
-was towed away on the back-track with a certain apprehension
-that the worst of his beatings for that day was
-very imminent. Nor was he mistaken. Back at the plantation,
-he was tied like an animal to a post of a barbed wire
-fence, while his owner and the friends of his owner who
-had helped in the capture went into the hacienda to take
-their twelve o’clock breakfast. After that, he knew what
-he was to receive. But the barbed wire of the fence, and
-the lame mare in the paddock behind it, built an idea
-in the desperate mind of the peon. Though the sharp barbs
-of the wire again and again cut his wrist, he quickly sawed
-through his bonds, free save for the law, crawled under the
-fence, led the lame mare through the gate, mounted her
-barebacked, and, with naked heels tattooing her ribs, galloped
-her away toward the safety of the Cordilleras.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_87'>87</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER IX</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>In the meantime the Solanos were being overtaken, and
-Henry teased Francis with:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Here in the jungle is where dollars are worthless. They
-can buy neither fresh horses, nor can they repair these two
-spineless creatures, which must likewise be afflicted with
-the murrain that carried off the rest of the haciendado’s
-riding animals.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I’ve never been in a place yet where money wouldn’t
-work,” Francis replied.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I suppose it could even buy a drink of water in hell,”
-was Henry’s retort.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Leoncia clapped her hands.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I don’t know,” Francis observed. “I have never been
-there.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Again Leoncia clapped her hands.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Just the same I have an idea I can make dollars work
-in the jungle, and I am going to try it right now,” Francis
-continued, at the same time untying the coin-sack from
-Leoncia’s pommel. “You go ahead and ride on.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“But you must tell <em>me</em>,” Leoncia insisted; and, aside,
-in her ear as she leaned to him from the saddle, he whispered
-what made her laugh again, while Henry, conferring
-with Enrico and his sons, inwardly berated himself for
-being a jealous fool.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Before they were out of sight, looking back, they saw
-Francis, with pad and pencil out, writing something. What
-he wrote was eloquently brief, merely the figure “50.”
-Tearing off the sheet, he laid it conspicuously in the middle
-of the trail and weighted it down with a silver dollar.
-Counting out forty-nine other dollars from the bag, he
-sowed them very immediately about the first one and ran
-up the trail after his party.</p>
-
-<hr class='c010' />
-
-<p class='c000'>Augustino, the gendarme who rarely spoke when he was
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_88'>88</span>sober, but who when drunk preached volubly the wisdom
-of silence, was in the lead, with bent head nosing the track
-of the quarry, when his keen eyes lighted on the silver
-dollar holding down the sheet of paper. The first he
-appropriated; the second he turned over to the Jefe. Torres
-looked over his shoulder, and together they read the mystic
-“50.” The Jefe tossed the scrap of paper aside as of
-little worth, and was for resuming the chase, but Augustino
-picked up and pondered the “50” thoughtfully. Even as
-he pondered it, a shout from Rafael advertised the finding
-of another dollar. Then Augustino knew. There were fifty
-of the coins to be had for the picking up. Flinging the note
-to the wind, he was on hands and knees overhauling the
-ground. The rest of the party joined in the scramble,
-while Torres and the Jefe screamed curses on them in a
-vain effort to make them proceed.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>When the gendarmes could find no more, they counted
-up what they had recovered. The toll came to forty-seven.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“There are three more,” cried Rafael, whereupon all
-flung themselves into the search again. Five minutes more
-were lost, ere the three other coins were found. Each
-pocketed what he had retrieved and obediently swung into
-the pursuit at the heels of Torres and the Jefe.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>A mile farther on, Torres tried to trample a shining
-dollar into the dirt, but Augustino’s ferret eyes had been
-too quick, and his eager fingers dug it out of the soft earth.
-Where was one dollar, as they had already learned, there
-were more dollars. The posse came to a halt, and while
-the two leaders fumed and imprecated, the rest of the
-members cast about right and left from the trail.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Vicente, a moon-faced gendarme, who looked more like
-a Mexican Indian than a Maya or a Panamanian “breed,”
-lighted first on the clue. All gathered about, like hounds
-around a tree into which the ‘possum has been run. In
-truth, it was a tree, or a rotten and hollow stump of one,
-a dozen feet in height and a third as many feet in diameter.
-Five feet from the ground was an opening. Above the
-opening, pinned on by a thorn, was a sheet of paper the
-same size as the first they had found. On it was written
-“100.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In the scramble that ensued, half a dozen minutes were
-lost as half a dozen right arms strove to be first in dipping
-into the hollow heart of the stump to the treasure. But
-the hollow extended deeper than their arms were long.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_89'>89</span>“We will chop down the stump,” Rafael cried, sounding
-with the back of his machete against the side of it to
-locate the base of the hollow. “We will all chop, and we
-will count what we find inside and divide equally.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>By this time their leaders were frantic, and the Jefe had
-begun threatening, the moment they were back in San
-Antonio, to send them to San Juan where their carcasses
-would be picked by the buzzards.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“But we are not back in San Antonio, thank God,” said
-Augustino, breaking his sober seal of silence in order to
-enunciate wisdom.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“We are poor men, and we will divide in fairness,”
-spoke up Rafael. “Augustino is right, and thank God for
-it that we are not back in San Antonio. This rich Gringo
-scatters more money along the way in a day for us to pick
-up than could we earn in a year where we come from. I,
-for one, am for revolution, where money is so plentiful.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“With the rich Gringo for a leader,” Augustino supplemented.
-“For as long as he leads this way could I follow
-forever.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“If,” Rafael nodded agreement, with a pitch of his
-head toward Torres and the Jefe, “if they do not give us
-opportunity to gather what the gods have spread for us,
-then to the last and deepest of the roasting hells of hell
-for them. We are men, not slaves. The world is wide.
-The Cordilleras are just beyond. We will all be rich, and
-free men, and live in the Cordilleras where the Indian
-maidens are wildly beautiful and desirable——”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And we will be well rid of our wives, back in San
-Antonio,” said Vicente. “Let us now chop down this
-treasure tree.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Swinging their machetes with heavy, hacking blows, the
-wood, so rotten that it was spongy, gave way readily before
-their blades. And when the stump fell over, they counted
-and divided, in equity, not one hundred silver dollars, but
-one hundred and forty-seven.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“He is generous, this Gringo,” quoth Vicente. “He
-leaves more than he says. May there not be still more?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And, from the debris of rotten wood, much of it crumbled
-to powder under their blows, they recovered five more coins,
-in the doing of which they lost ten more minutes that drove
-Torres and Jefe to the verge of madness.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“He does not stop to count, the wealthy Gringo,” said
-Rafael. “He must merely open that sack and pour it
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_90'>90</span>out. And that is the sack with which he rode to the beach
-of San Antonio when he blew up with dynamite the wall
-of our jail.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The chase was resumed, and all went well for half an
-hour, when they came upon an abandoned freehold, already
-half-overrun with the returning jungle. A dilapidated, straw-thatched
-house, a fallen-in labor barracks, a broken-down
-corral the very posts of which had sprouted and leaved into
-growing trees, and a well showing recent use by virtue of
-a fresh length of riata attaching bucket to well-sweep,
-showed where some man had failed to tame the wild. And,
-conspicuously on the well-sweep, was pinned a familiar sheet
-of paper on which was written “300.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Mother of God!—a fortune!” cried Rafael.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“May the devil forever torture him in the last and
-deepest hell!” was Torres’ contribution.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“He pays better than your Senor Regan,” the Jefe
-sneered in his despair and disgust.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“His bag of silver is only so large,” Torres retorted.
-“It seems we must pick it all up before we catch him.
-But when we have picked it all up, and his bag is empty,
-then will we catch him.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“We will go on now, comrades,” the Jefe addressed his
-posse ingratiatingly. “Afterwards, we will return at our
-leisure and recover the silver.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Augustino broke his seal of silence again.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“One never knows the way of one’s return, if one ever
-returns,” he enunciated pessimistically. Elated by the pearl
-of wisdom he had dropped, he essayed another. “Three
-hundred in hand is better than three million in the bottom
-of a well we may never see again.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Some one must descend into the well,” spoke Rafael,
-testing the braided rope with his weight. “See! The riata
-is strong. We will lower a man by it. Who is the brave
-one who will go down?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I,” said Vicente. “I will be the brave one to go
-down——”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And steal half that you find,” Rafael uttered his
-instant suspicion. “If you go down, first must you count
-over to us the pesos you already possess. Then, when you
-come up, we can search you for all you have found. After
-that, when we have divided equitably, will your other pesos
-be returned to you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Then will I not go down for comrades who have no
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_91'>91</span>trust in me,” Vicente said stubbornly. “Here, beside the
-well, I am as wealthy as any of you. Then why should I
-go down? I have heard of men dying in the bottom of
-wells.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“In God’s name go down!” stormed the Jefe. “Haste!
-Haste!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I am too fat, the rope is not strong, and I shall not go
-down,” said Vicente.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>All looked to Augustino, the silent one, who had already
-spoken more than he was accustomed to speak in a week.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Guillermo is the thinnest and lightest,” said Augustino.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Guillermo will go down!” the rest chorused.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But Guillermo, glaring apprehensively at the mouth of
-the well, backed away, shaking his head and crossing himself.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Not for the sacred treasure in the secret city of the
-Mayas,” he muttered.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The Jefe pulled his revolver and glanced to the remainder
-of the posse for confirmation. With eyes and head-nods
-they gave it.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“In heaven’s name go down,” he threatened the little
-gendarme. “And make haste, or I shall put you in such a
-fix that never again will you go up or down, but you will
-remain here and rot forever beside this hole of perdition.—Is
-it well, comrades, that I kill him if he does not go down?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“It is well,” they shouted.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And Guillermo, with trembling fingers, counted out the
-coins he had already retrieved, and, in the throes of fear,
-crossing himself repeatedly and urged on by the hand-thrusts
-of his companions, stepped upon the bucket, sat
-down on it with legs wrapped about it, and was lowered
-away out of the light of day.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Stop!” he screamed up the shaft. “Stop! Stop!
-The water! I am upon it!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Those on the sweep held it with their weight.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I should receive ten pesos extra above my share,” he
-called up.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“You shall receive baptism,” was called down to him,
-and, variously: “You will have your fill of water this day”;
-“We will let go”; “We will cut the rope”; “There will
-be one less with whom to share.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“The water is not nice,” he replied, his voice rising like
-a ghost’s out of the dark depth. “There are sick lizards,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_92'>92</span>and a dead bird that stinks. And there may be snakes. It
-is well worth ten pesos extra what I must do.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“We will drown you!” Rafael shouted.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I shall shoot down upon you and kill you!” the Jefe
-bullied.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Shoot or drown me,” Guillermo’s voice floated up;
-“but it will buy you nothing, for the treasure will still be
-in the well.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>There was a pause, in which those at the surface questioned
-each other with their eyes as to what they should do.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And the Gringos are running away farther and farther,”
-Torres fumed. “A fine discipline you have, Senor Mariano
-Vercara è Hijos, over your gendarmes!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“This is not San Antonio,” the Jefe flared back. “This
-is the bush of Juchitan. My dogs are good dogs in San
-Antonio. In the bush they must be handled gently, else
-may they become wild dogs, and what then will happen to
-you and me?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“It is the curse of gold,” Torres surrendered sadly. “It
-is almost enough to make one become a socialist, with a
-Gringo thus tying the hands of justice with ropes of gold.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Of silver,” the Jefe corrected.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“You go to hell,” said Torres. “As you have pointed
-out, this is not San Antonio but the bush of Juchitan, and
-here I may well tell you to go to hell. Why should you and
-I quarrel because of your bad temper, when our prosperity
-depends on standing together?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Besides,” the voice of Guillermo drifted up, “the water
-is not two feet deep. You cannot drown me in it. I have
-just felt the bottom and I have four round silver pesos in
-my hand right now. The bottom is carpeted with pesos.
-Do you want to let go? Or do I get ten pesos extra for the
-filthy job? The water stinks like a fresh graveyard.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Yes! Yes!” they shouted down.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Which? Let go? Or the extra ten?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“The extra ten!” they chorused.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“In God’s name, haste! haste!” cried the Jefe.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>They heard splashings and curses from the bottom of the
-well, and, from the lightening of the strain on the riata,
-knew that Guillermo had left the bucket and was floundering
-for the coin.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Put it in the bucket, good Guillermo,” Rafael called
-down.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I am putting it in my pockets,” up came the reply.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_93'>93</span>“Did I put it in the bucket you might haul it up first and
-well forget to haul me up afterward.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“The double weight might break the riata,” Rafael
-cautioned.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“The riata may not be so strong as my will, for my will
-in this matter is most strong,” said Guillermo.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“If the riata should break ...” Rafael began again.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I have a solution,” said Guillermo. “Do you come
-down. Then shall I go up first. Second, the treasure shall
-go up in the bucket. And, third and last, shall you go up.
-Thus will justice be triumphant.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Rafael, with dropped jaw of dismay, did not reply.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Are you coming, Rafael?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“No,” he answered. “Put all the silver in your pockets
-and come up together with it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I could curse the race that bore me,” was the impatient
-observation of the Jefe.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I have already cursed it,” said Torres.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Haul away!” shouted Guillermo. “I have everything
-in my pockets save the stench; and I am suffocating. Haul
-quick, or I shall perish, and the three hundred pesos will
-perish with me. And there are more than three hundred.
-He must have emptied his bag.”</p>
-
-<hr class='c010' />
-
-<p class='c000'>Ahead, on the trail, where the way grew steep and the
-horses without stamina rested and panted, Francis overtook
-his party.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Never again shall I travel without minted coin of the
-realm,” he exulted, as he described what he had remained
-behind to see from the edge of the deserted plantation.
-“Henry, when I die and go to heaven, I shall have a stout
-bag of cash along with me. Even there could it redeem me
-from heaven alone knows what scrapes. Listen! They
-fought like cats and dogs about the mouth of the well.
-Nobody would trust anybody to descend into the well unless
-he deposited what he had previously picked up with those
-that remained at the top. They were out of hand. The
-Jefe, at the point of his gun, had to force the littlest and
-leanest of them to go down. And when he was down he
-blackmailed them before he would come up. And when he
-came up they broke their promises and gave him a beating.
-They were still beating him when I left.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“But now your sack is empty,” said Henry.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Which is our present and most pressing trouble,”
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_94'>94</span>Francis agreed. “Had I sufficient pesos I could keep the
-pursuit well behind us forever. I’m afraid I was too
-generous. I did not know how cheap the poor devils were.
-But I’ll tell you something that will make your hair stand
-up. Torres, Senor Torres, Senor Alvarez Torres, the elegant
-gentleman and old-time friend of you Solanos, is leading
-the pursuit along with the Jefe. He is furious at the delay.
-They almost had a rupture because the Jefe couldn’t keep
-his men in hand. Yes, sir, and he told the Jefe to go to
-hell. I distinctly heard him tell the Jefe to go to hell.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Five miles farther on, the horses of Leoncia and her father
-in collapse, where the trail plunged into and ascended a dark
-ravine, Francis urged the others on and dropped behind.
-Giving them a few minutes’ start, he followed on behind, a
-self-constituted rearguard. Part way along, in an open
-space where grew only a thick sod of grass, he was dismayed
-to find the hoof-prints of the two horses staring at him as
-large as dinner plates from out of the sod. Into the hoof-prints
-had welled a dark, slimy fluid that his eye told him
-was crude oil. This was but the beginning, a sort of seepage
-from a side stream above off from the main flow. A hundred
-yards beyond he came upon the flow itself, a river of
-oil that on such a slope would have been a cataract had it
-been water. But being crude oil, as thick as molasses, it
-oozed slowly down the hill like so much molasses. And
-here, preferring to make his stand rather than to wade
-through the sticky mess, Francis sat down on a rock, laid
-his rifle on one side of him, his automatic pistol on the other
-side, rolled a cigarette, and kept his ears pricked for the first
-sounds of the pursuit.</p>
-
-<hr class='c010' />
-
-<p class='c000'>And the beaten peon, threatened with more beatings and
-belaboring his over-ridden mare, rode across the top of the
-ravine above Francis, and, at the oil-well itself, had his
-exhausted animal collapse under him. With his heels he
-kicked her back to her feet, and with a stick belabored her
-to stagger away from him and on and into the jungle. And
-the first day of his adventures, although he did not know it,
-was not yet over. He, too, squatted on a stone, his feet out
-of the oil, rolled a cigarette, and, as he smoked it, contemplated
-the flowing oil-well. The noise of approaching
-men startled him, and he fled into the immediately adjacent
-jungle, from which he peered forth and saw two strange men
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_95'>95</span>appear. They came directly to the well, and, by an iron
-wheel turning the valve, choked down the flow still further.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“No more,” commanded the one who seemed to be
-leader. “Another turn, and the pressure will blow out the
-pipes—for so the Gringo engineer has warned me most
-carefully.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And a slight flow, beyond the limited safety, continued to
-run from the mouth of the gusher down the mountain side.
-Scarcely had the two men accomplished this, when a body
-of horsemen rode up, whom the peon in hiding recognized as
-the haciendado who owned him and the overseers and
-haciendados of neighboring plantations who delighted in
-running down a fugitive laborer in much the same way that
-the English delight in chasing the fox.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>No, the two oil-men had seen nobody. But the haciendado
-who led saw the footprints of the mare, and spurred
-his horse to follow, his crowd at his heels.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The peon waited, smoked his cigarette quite to the finish,
-and cogitated. When all was clear, he ventured forth,
-turned the mechanism controlling the well wide open,
-watched the oil fountaining upward under the subterranean
-pressure and flowing down the mountain in a veritable river.
-Also, he listened to and noted the sobbing, and gasping, and
-bubbling of the escaping gas. This he did not comprehend,
-and all that saved him for his further adventures was the
-fact that he had used his last match to light his cigarette.
-In vain he searched his rags, his ears, and his hair. He was
-out of matches.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>So, chuckling at the river of oil he was wantonly running
-to waste, and, remembering the canyon trail below, he
-plunged down the mountainside and upon Francis, who
-received him with extended automatic. Down went the
-peon on his frayed and frazzled knees in terror and supplication
-to the man he had twice betrayed that day. Francis
-studied him, at first without recognition, because of the
-bruised and lacerated face and head on which the blood had
-dried like a mask.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Amigo, amigo,” chattered the peon.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But at that moment, from below on the ravine trail,
-Francis heard the clatter of a stone dislodged by some man’s
-foot. The next moment he identified what was left of the
-peon as the pitiable creature to whom he had given half the
-contents of his whiskey flask.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_96'>96</span>“Well, amigo,” Francis said in the native language, “it
-looks as if they are after you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“They will kill me, they will beat me to death, they are
-very angry,” the wretch quavered. “You are my only
-friend, my father and my mother, save me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Can you shoot?” Francis demanded.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I was a hunter in the Cordilleras before I was sold into
-slavery, Senor,” was the reply.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Francis passed him the automatic, motioned him to take
-shelter, and told him not to fire until sure of a hit. And to
-himself he mused: The golfers are out on the links right
-now at Tarrytown. And Mrs. Bellingham is on the clubhouse
-veranda wondering how she is going to pay the three
-thousand points she’s behind and praying for a change of
-luck. And——here am I,—Lord! Lord——backed up to
-a river of oil....</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>His musing ceased as abruptly as appeared the Jefe,
-Torres, and the gendarmes down the trail. As abruptly he
-fired his rifle, and as abruptly they fell back out of sight.
-He could not tell whether he had hit one, or whether the
-man had merely fallen in precipitate retreat. The pursuers
-did not care to make a rush of it, contenting themselves
-with bushwhacking. Francis and the peon did the same,
-sheltering behind rocks and bushes and frequently changing
-their positions.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>At the end of an hour, the last cartridge in Francis’ rifle
-was all that remained. The peon, under his warnings and
-threats, still retained two cartridges in the automatic. But
-the hour had been an hour saved for Leoncia and her people,
-and Francis was contentedly aware that at any moment he
-could turn and escape by wading across the river of oil. So
-all was well, and would have been well, had not, from above,
-come an eruption of another body of men, who, from behind
-trees, fired as they descended. This was the haciendado and
-his fellow haciendados, in chase of the fugitive peon—although
-Francis did not know it. His conclusion was that
-it was another posse that was after him. The shots they
-fired at him were strongly confirmative.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The peon crawled to his side, showed him that two shots
-remained in the automatic he was returning to him, and
-impressively begged from him his box of matches. Next,
-the peon motioned him to cross the bottom of the canyon
-and climb the other side. With half a guess of the creature’s
-intention, Francis complied, from his new position of vantage
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_97'>97</span>emptying his last rifle cartridge at the advancing posse and
-sending it back into shelter down the ravine.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The next moment, the river of oil flared into flame from
-where the peon had touched a match to it. In the following
-moment, clear up the mountainside, the well itself sent a
-fountain of ignited gas a hundred feet into the air. And, in
-the moment after, the ravine itself poured a torrent of flame
-down upon the posse of Torres and the Jefe.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Scorched by the heat of the conflagration, Francis and
-the peon clawed up the opposite side of the ravine, circled
-around and past the blazing trail, and, at a dog-trot, raced
-up the recovered trail.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_98'>98</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER X</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>While Francis and the peon hurried up the ravine-trail in
-safety, the ravine itself, below where the oil flowed in, had
-become a river of flame, which drove the Jefe, Torres, and
-the gendarmes to scale the steep wall of the ravine. At the
-same time the party of haciendados in pursuit of the peon
-was compelled to claw back and up to escape out of the
-roaring canyon.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Ever the peon glanced back over his shoulder, until, with
-a cry of joy, he indicated a second black-smoke pillar rising
-in the air beyond the first burning well.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“More,” he chuckled. “There are more wells. They
-will all burn. And so shall they and all their race pay for
-the many blows they have beaten on me. And there is a
-lake of oil there, like the sea, like Juchitan Inlet it is so big.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And Francis recollected the lake of oil about which the
-haciendado had told him—that, containing at least five million
-barrels which could not yet be piped to sea transport,
-lay open to the sky, merely in a natural depression in the
-ground and contained by an earth dam.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“How much are you worth?” he demanded of the peon
-with apparent irrelevance.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But the peon could not understand.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“How much are your clothes worth—all you’ve got on?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Half a peso, nay, half of a half peso,” the peon admitted
-ruefully, surveying what was left of his tattered rags.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And other property?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The wretched creature shrugged his shoulders in token
-of his utter destitution, then added bitterly:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I possess nothing but a debt. I owe two hundred and
-fifty pesos. I am tied to it for life, damned with it for life
-like a man with a cancer. That is why I am a slave to the
-haciendado.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Huh!” Francis could not forbear to grin. “Worth two
-hundred and fifty pesos less than nothing, not even a cipher,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_99'>99</span>a sheer abstraction of a minus quantity without existence
-save in the mathematical imagination of man, and yet here
-you are burning up not less than millions of pesos’ worth of
-oil. And if the strata is loose and erratic and the oil leaks
-up outside the tubing, the chances are that the oil-body of
-the entire field is ignited—say a billion dollars’ worth. Say,
-for an abstraction enjoying two hundred and fifty dollars’
-worth of non-existence, you are some hombre, believe me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Nothing of which the peon understood save the word
-“hombre.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I am a man,” he proclaimed, thrusting out his chest
-and straightening up his bruised head. “I am a hombre
-and I am a Maya.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Maya Indian—you?” Francis scoffed.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Half Maya,” was the reluctant admission. “My
-father is pure Maya. But the Maya women of the Cordilleras
-did not satisfy him. He must love a mixed-breed woman
-of the <i><span lang="es" xml:lang="es">tierra caliente</span></i>. I was so born; but she afterward
-betrayed him for a Barbadoes nigger, and he went back to
-the Cordilleras to live. And, like my father, I was born to
-love a mixed breed of the <i><span lang="es" xml:lang="es">tierra caliente</span></i>. She wanted
-money, and my head was fevered with want of her, and I
-sold myself to be a peon for two hundred pesos. And I saw
-never her nor the money again. For five years I have been
-a peon. For five years I have slaved and been beaten, and
-behold, at the end of five years my debt is not two hundred
-but two hundred and fifty pesos.”</p>
-
-<hr class='c010' />
-
-<p class='c000'>And while Francis Morgan and the long-suffering Maya
-half-breed plodded on deeper into the Cordilleras to overtake
-their party, and while the oil fields of Juchitan continued to
-go up in increasing smoke, still farther on, in the heart of
-the Cordilleras, were preparing other events destined to
-bring together all pursuers and all pursued—Francis and
-Henry and Leoncia and their party; the peon; the party of
-the haciendados; and the gendarmes of the Jefe, and, along
-with them, Alvarez Torres, eager to win for himself not only
-the promised reward of Thomas Regan but the possession of
-Leoncia Solano.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In a cave sat a man and a woman. Pretty the latter was,
-and young, a <i><span lang="es" xml:lang="es">mestiza</span></i>, or half-caste woman. By the light of
-a cheap kerosene lamp she read aloud from a calf-bound tome
-which was a Spanish translation of Blackstone. Both were
-barefooted and bare-armed, clad in hooded gabardines of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_100'>100</span>sackcloth. Her hood lay back on her shoulders, exposing
-her black and generous head of hair. But the old man’s
-hood was cowled about his head after the fashion of a monk.
-The face, lofty and ascetic, beaked with power, was pure
-Spanish. Don Quixote might have worn precisely a similar
-face. But there was a difference. The eyes of this old
-man were closed in the perpetual dark of the blind. Never
-could he behold a windmill at which to tilt.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>He sat, while the pretty <i><span lang="es" xml:lang="es">mestiza</span></i> read to him, listening
-and brooding, for all the world in the pose of Rodin’s
-“Thinker.” Nor was he a dreamer, nor a tilter of windmills,
-like Don Quixote. Despite his blindness, that ever
-veiled the apparent face of the world in invisibility, he was
-a man of action, and his soul was anything but blind, penetrating
-unerringly beneath the show of things to the heart
-and the soul of the world and reading its inmost sins and
-rapacities and noblenesses and virtues.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>He lifted his hand and put a pause in the reading, while
-he thought aloud from the context of the reading.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“The law of man,” he said with slow certitude, “is
-to-day a game of wits. Not equity, but wit, is the game of
-law to-day. The law in its inception was good; but the way
-of the law, the practice of it, has led men off into false
-pursuits. They have mistaken the way for the goal, the
-means for the end. Yet is law law, and necessary, and
-good. Only, law, in its practice to-day, has gone astray.
-Judges and lawyers engage in competitions and affrays of
-wit and learning, quite forgetting the plaintiffs and defendants,
-before them and paying them, who are seeking equity
-and justice and not wit and learning.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Yet is old Blackstone right. Under it all, at the bottom
-of it all, at the beginning of the building of the edifice of the
-law, is the quest, the earnest and sincere quest of righteous
-men, for justice and equity. But what is it that the Preacher
-said? ‘They made themselves many inventions.’ And the
-law, good in its beginning, has been invented out of all its
-intent, so that it serves neither litigants nor injured ones,
-but merely the fatted judges and the lean and hungry
-lawyers who achieve names and paunches if they prove
-themselves cleverer than their opponents and than the
-judges who render decision.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>He paused, still posed as Rodin’s “Thinker,” and meditated,
-while the <i><span lang="es" xml:lang="es">mestiza</span></i> woman waited his customary signal
-to resume the reading. At last, as out of a profound of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_101'>101</span>thought in which universes had been weighed in the balance,
-he spoke:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“But we have law, here in the Cordilleras of Panama,
-that is just and right and all of equity. We work for no
-man and serve not even paunches. Sack-cloth and not
-broadcloth conduces to the equity of judicial decision. Read
-on, Mercedes. Blackstone is always right if always rightly
-read—which is what is called a paradox, and is what modern
-law ordinarily is, a paradox. Read on. Blackstone is the
-very foundation of human law—but, oh, how many wrongs
-are cleverly committed by clever men in his name!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Ten minutes later, the blind thinker raised his head,
-sniffed the air, and gestured the girl to pause. Taking her
-cue from him, she, too, sniffed:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Perhaps it is the lamp, O Just One,” she suggested.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“It is burning oil,” he said. “But it is not the lamp.
-It is from far away. Also, have I heard shooting in the
-canyons.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I heard nothing——” she began.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Daughter, you who see have not the need to hear that
-I have. There have been many shots fired in the canyons.
-Order my children to investigate and make report.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Bowing reverently to the old man who could not see but
-who, by keen-trained hearing and conscious timing of her
-every muscular action, knew that she had bowed, the young
-woman lifted the curtain of blankets and passed out into the
-day. At either side the cave-mouth sat a man of the peon
-class. Each was armed with rifle and machete, while
-through their girdles were thrust naked-bladed knives. At
-the girl’s order, both arose and bowed, not to her, but to the
-command and the invisible source of the command. One of
-them tapped with the back of his machete against the stone
-upon which he had been sitting, then laid his ear to the
-stone and listened. In truth, the stone was but the out-jut
-of a vein of metalliferous ore that extended across and
-through the heart of the mountain. And beyond, on the
-opposite slope, in an eyrie commanding the magnificent
-panorama of the descending slopes of the Cordilleras, sat
-another peon who first listened with his ear pressed to
-similar metalliferous quartz, and next tapped response with
-his machete. After that, he stepped half a dozen paces to
-a tall tree, half-dead, reached into the hollow heart of it,
-and pulled on the rope within as a man might pull who was
-ringing a steeple bell.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_102'>102</span>But no sound was evoked. Instead, a lofty branch, fifty
-feet above his head, sticking out from the main-trunk like a
-semaphore arm, moved up and down like the semaphore arm
-it was. Two miles away, on a mountain crest, the branch of
-a similar semaphore tree replied. Still beyond that, and
-farther down the slopes, the flashing of a hand-mirror in the
-sun heliographed the relaying of the blind man’s message
-from the cave. And all that portion of the Cordilleras
-became voluble with coded speech of vibrating ore-veins,
-sun-flashings, and waving tree-branches.</p>
-
-<hr class='c010' />
-
-<p class='c000'>While Enrico Solano, slenderly erect on his horse as an
-Indian youth and convoyed on either side by his sons,
-Alesandro and Ricardo, hanging to his saddle trappings,
-made the best of the time afforded them by Francis’ rearguard
-battle with the gendarmes, Leoncia, on her mount,
-and Henry Morgan, lagged behind. One or the other was
-continually glancing back for the sight of Francis overtaking
-them. Watching his opportunity, Henry took the back-trail.
-Five minutes afterward, Leoncia, no less anxious
-than he for Francis’ safety, tried to turn her horse about.
-But the animal, eager for the companionship of its mate
-ahead, refused to obey the rein, cut up and pranced, and
-then deliberately settled into a balk. Dismounting and
-throwing her reins on the ground in the Panamanian method
-of tethering a saddle horse, Leoncia took the back-trail on
-foot. So rapidly did she follow Henry, that she was almost
-treading on his heels when he encountered Francis and the
-peon. The next moment, both Henry and Francis were
-chiding her for her conduct; but in both their voices was the
-involuntary tenderness of love, which pleased neither to hear
-the other uttering.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Their hearts more active than their heads, they were
-caught in total surprise by the party of haciendados that
-dashed out upon them with covering rifles from the surrounding
-jungle. Despite the fact that they had thus
-captured the runaway peon, whom they proceeded to kick
-and cuff, all would have been well with Leoncia and the two
-Morgans had the owner of the peon, the old-time friend of
-the Solano family, been present. But an attack of the
-malarial fever, which was his due every third day, had
-stretched him out in a chill near the burning oilfield.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Nevertheless, though by their blows they reduced the peon
-to weepings and pleadings on his knees, the haciendados were
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_103'>103</span>courteously gentle to Leoncia and quite decent to Francis
-and Henry, even though they tied the hands of the latter
-two behind them in preparation for the march up the ravine
-slope to where the horses had been left. But upon the
-peon, with Latin-American cruelty, they continued to
-reiterate their rage.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Yet were they destined to arrive nowhere, by themselves,
-with their captives. Shouts of joy heralded the debouchment
-upon the scene of the Jefe’s gendarmes and of the Jefe
-and Alvarez Torres. Arose at once the rapid-fire, staccato,
-bastard-Latin of all men of both parties of pursuers, trying
-to explain and demanding explanation at one and the same
-time. And while the farrago of all talking simultaneously
-and of no one winning anywhere in understanding, made
-anarchy of speech, Torres, with a nod to Francis and a sneer
-of triumph to Henry, ranged before Leoncia and bowed low
-to her in true and deep hidalgo courtesy and respect.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Listen!” he said, low-voiced, as she rebuffed him with
-an arm movement of repulsion. “Do not misunderstand
-me. Do not mistake me. I am here to save you, and, no
-matter what may happen, to protect you. You are the lady
-of my dreams. I will die for you—yes, and gladly, though
-far more gladly would I live for you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I do not understand,” she replied curtly. “I do not
-see life or death in the issue. We have done no wrong. I
-have done no wrong, nor has my father. Nor has Francis
-Morgan, nor has Henry Morgan. Therefore, sir, the matter
-is not a question of life or death.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Henry and Francis, shouldering close to Leoncia, on either
-side, listened and caught through the hubble-bubble of many
-voices the conversation of Leoncia and Torres.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“It is a question absolute of certain death by execution
-for Henry Morgan,” Torres persisted. “Proven beyond
-doubt is his conviction for the murder of Alfaro Solano, who
-was your own full-blood uncle and your father’s own full-blood
-brother. There is no chance to save Henry Morgan.
-But Francis Morgan can I save in all surety, if——”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“If?” Leoncia queried, with almost the snap of jaws of
-a she-leopard.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“If ... you prove kind to me, and marry me,” Torres
-said with magnificent steadiness, although two Gringos,
-helpless, their hands tied behind their backs, glared at him
-through their eyes their common desire for his immediate
-extinction.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_104'>104</span>Torres, in a genuine outburst of his passion, though his
-rapid glances had assured him of the helplessness of the two
-Morgans, seized her hands in his and urged:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Leoncia, as your husband I might be able to do something
-for Henry. Even may it be possible for me to save
-his life and his neck, if he will yield to leaving Panama
-immediately.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“You Spanish dog!” Henry snarled at him, struggling
-with his tied hands behind his back in an effort to free them.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Gringo cur!” Torres retorted, as, with an open backhanded
-blow, he struck Henry on the mouth.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>On the instant Henry’s foot shot out, and the kick in
-Torres’ side drove him staggering in the direction of Francis,
-who was no less quick with a kick of his own. Back and
-forth like a shuttlecock between the battledores, Torres was
-kicked from one man to the other, until the gendarmes
-seized the two Gringos and began to beat them in their
-helplessness. Torres not only urged the gendarmes on, but
-himself drew a knife; and a red tragedy might have happened
-with offended Latin-American blood up and raging,
-had not a score or more of armed men silently appeared and
-silently taken charge of the situation. Some of the mysterious
-newcomers were clad in cotton singlets and trousers,
-and others were in cowled gabardines of sackcloth.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The gendarmes and haciendados recoiled in fear, crossing
-themselves, muttering prayers and ejaculating: “The Blind
-Brigand!” “The Cruel Just One!” “They are his people!”
-“We are lost.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But the much-beaten peon sprang forward and fell on his
-bleeding knees before a stern-faced man who appeared to be
-the leader of the Blind Brigand’s men. From the mouth of
-the peon poured forth a stream of loud lamentation and
-outcry for justice.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“You know that justice to which you appeal?” the
-leader spoke gutturally.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Yes, the Cruel Justice,” the peon replied. “I know
-what it means to appeal to the Cruel Justice, yet do I
-appeal, for I seek justice and my cause is just.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I, too, demand the Cruel Justice!” Leoncia cried with
-flashing eyes, although she added in an undertone to Francis
-and Henry: “Whatever the Cruel Justice is.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“It will have to go some to be unfairer than the justice
-we can expect from Torres and the Jefe,” Henry replied in
-similar undertones, then stepped forward boldly before the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_105'>105</span>cowled leader and said loudly: “And I demand the Cruel
-Justice.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The leader nodded.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Me, too,” Francis murmured low, and then made loud
-demand.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The gendarmes did not seem to count in the matter, while
-the haciendados signified their willingness to abide by whatever
-justice the Blind Brigand might mete out to them.
-Only the Jefe objected.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Maybe you don’t know who I am,” he blustered. “I
-am Mariano Vercara è Hijos, of long illustrious name and
-long and honorable career. I am Jefe Politico of San
-Antonio, the highest friend of the governor, and high in the
-confidence of the government of the Republic of Panama.
-I am the law. There is but one law and one justice, which
-is of Panama and not the Cordilleras. I protest against this
-mountain law you call the Cruel Justice. I shall send an
-army against your Blind Brigand, and the buzzards will
-peck his bones in San Juan.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Remember,” Torres sarcastically warned the irate Jefe,
-“that this is not San Antonio, but the bush of Juchitan.
-Also, you have no army.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Have these two men been unjust to any one who has
-appealed to the Cruel Justice?” the leader asked abruptly.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Yes,” asseverated the peon. “They have beaten me.
-Everybody has beaten me. They, too, have beaten me and
-without cause. My hand is bloody. My body is bruised
-and torn. Again I appeal to the Cruel Justice, and I
-charge these two men with injustice.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The leader nodded and to his own men indicated the
-disarming of the prisoners and the order of the march.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Justice!—I demand equal justice!” Henry cried out.
-“My hands are tied behind my back. All hands should be
-so tied, or no hands be so tied. Besides, it is very difficult
-to walk when one is so tied.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The shadow of a smile drifted the lips of the leader as
-he directed his men to cut the lashings that invidiously
-advertised the inequality complained of.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Huh!” Francis grinned to Leoncia and Henry. “I
-have a vague memory that somewhere around a million years
-ago I used to live in a quiet little old burg called New York,
-where we foolishly thought we were the wildest and
-wickedest that ever cracked at a golf ball, electrocuted an
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_106'>106</span>Inspector of Police, battled with Tammany, or bid four
-nullos with five sure tricks in one’s own hand.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Huh!” Henry vouchsafed half an hour later, as the
-trail, from a lesser crest, afforded a view of higher crests
-beyond. “Huh! and hell’s bells! These gunny-sack chaps
-are not animals of savages. Look, Henry! They are
-semaphoring! See that near tree there, and that big one
-across the canyon. Watch the branches wave.”</p>
-
-<hr class='c010' />
-
-<p class='c000'>Blindfold for a number of miles at the last, the prisoners,
-still blindfolded, were led into the cave where the Cruel
-Justice reigned. When the bandages were removed, they
-found themselves in a vast and lofty cavern, lighted by many
-torches, and, confronting them, a blind and white-haired
-man in sackcloth seated on a rock-hewn throne, with, beneath
-him, her shoulder at his knees, a pretty <span lang="es" xml:lang="es">mestiza</span>
-woman.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The blind man spoke, and in his voice was the thin and
-bell-like silver of age and weary wisdom.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“The Cruel Justice has been invoked. Speak! Who
-demands decision and equity?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>All held back, and not even the Jefe could summon heart
-of courage to protest against Cordilleras law.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“There is a woman present,” continued the Blind Brigand.
-“Let her speak first. All mortal men and women
-are guilty of something or else are charged by their fellows
-with some guilt.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Henry and Francis were for with-straining her, but with
-an equal smile to them she addressed the Cruel Just One in
-clear and ringing tones:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I only have aided the man I am engaged to marry to
-escape from death for a murder he did not commit.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“You have spoken,” said the Blind Brigand. “Come
-forward to me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Piloted by sackcloth men, while the two Morgans who
-loved her were restless and perturbed, she was made to
-kneel at the blind man’s knees. The <span lang="es" xml:lang="es">mestiza</span> girl placed his
-hand on Leoncia’s head. For a full and solemn minute
-silence obtained, while the steady fingers of the Blind One
-rested about her forehead and registered the pulse-beats of
-her temples. Then he removed his hand and leaned back
-to decision.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Arise, Senorita,” he pronounced. “Your heart is clean
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_107'>107</span>of evil. You go free.—Who else appeals to the Cruel
-Justice?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Francis immediately stepped forward.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I likewise helped the man to escape from an undeserved
-death. The man and I are of the same name, and, distantly,
-of the same blood.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>He, too, knelt, and felt the soft finger-lobes play delicately
-over his brows and temples and come to rest finally on the
-pulse of his wrist.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“It is not all clear to me,” said the Blind One. “You
-are not at rest nor at peace with your soul. There is trouble
-within you that vexes you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Suddenly the peon stepped forth and spoke unbidden, his
-voice evoking a thrill as of the shock of blasphemy from the
-sackcloth men.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Oh, Just One, let this man go,” said the peon passionately.
-“Twice was I weak and betrayed him to his enemy
-this day, and twice this day has he protected me from my
-enemy and saved me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And the peon, once again on his knees, but this time at
-the knees of justice, thrilled and shivered with superstitious
-awe, as he felt wander over him the light but firm finger-touches
-of the strangest judge man ever knelt before.
-Bruises and lacerations were swiftly explored even to the
-shoulders and down the back.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“The other man goes free,” the Cruel Just One announced.
-“Yet is there trouble and unrest within him. Is
-one here who knows and will speak up?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And Francis knew on the instant the trouble the blind
-man had divined within him—the full love that burned in
-him for Leoncia and that threatened to shatter the full
-loyalty he must ever bear to Henry. No less quick was
-Leoncia in knowing, and could the blind man have beheld
-the involuntary glance of knowledge the man and woman
-threw at each other and the immediate embarrassment of
-averted eyes, he could have unerringly diagnosed Francis’
-trouble. The <span lang="es" xml:lang="es">mestiza</span> girl saw, and with a leap at her heart
-scented a love affair. Likewise had Henry seen and unconsciously
-scowled.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The Just One spoke:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“An affair of heart undoubtedly,” he dismissed the matter.
-“The eternal vexation of woman in the heart of man.
-Nevertheless, this man stands free. Twice, in the one day,
-has he succored the man who twice betrayed him. Nor has
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_108'>108</span>the trouble within him aught to do with the aid he rendered
-the man said to be sentenced to death undeserved. Remains
-to question this last man; also to settle for this beaten
-creature before me who twice this day has proved weak out
-of selfishness, and who has just now proved bravely strong
-out of unselfishness for another.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>He leaned forward and played his fingers searchingly over
-the face and brows of the peon.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Are you afraid to die?” he asked suddenly.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Great and Holy One, I am sore afraid to die,” was the
-peon’s reply.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Then say that you have lied about this man, say that
-his twice succoring of you was a lie, and you shall live.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Under the Blind One’s fingers the peon cringed and wilted.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Think well,” came the solemn warning. “Death is
-not good. To be forever unmoving, as the clod and rock, is
-not good. Say that you have lied and life is yours. Speak!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But, although his voice shook from the exquisiteness of
-his fear, the peon rose to the full spiritual stature of a man.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Twice this day did I betray him, Holy One. But my
-name is not Peter. Not thrice in this day will I betray him.
-I am sore afraid, but I cannot betray him thrice.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The blind judge leaned back and his face beamed and
-glowed as if transfigured.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Well spoken,” he said. “You have the makings of a
-man. I now lay my sentence upon you: From now on,
-through all your days under the sun, you shall always think
-like a man, act like a man, be a man. Better to die a man
-any time, than live a beast forever in time. The Ecclesiast
-was wrong. A dead lion is always better than a live dog.
-Go free, regenerate son, go free.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But, as the peon, at a signal from the <span lang="es" xml:lang="es">mestiza</span>, started to
-rise, the blind judge stopped him.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“In the beginning, O man who but this day has been
-born man, what was the cause of all your troubles?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“My heart was weak and hungry, O Holy One, for a
-mixed-breed woman of the tierra caliente. I myself am
-mountain born. For her I put myself in debt to the haciendado
-for the sum of two hundred pesos. She fled with the
-money and another man. I remained the slave of the
-haciendado, who is not a bad man, but who, first and
-always, is a haciendado. I have toiled, been beaten, and
-have suffered for five long years, and my debt is now become
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_109'>109</span>two hundred and fifty pesos, and yet I possess naught but
-these rags and a body weak from insufficient food.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Was she wonderful?—this woman of the tierra
-caliente?” the blind judge queried softly.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I was mad for her, Holy One. I do not think now
-that she was wonderful. But she was wonderful then. The
-fever of her burned my heart and brain and made a task-slave
-of me, though she fled in the night and I knew her
-never again.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The peon waited, on his knees, with bowed head, while,
-to the amazement of all, the Blind Brigand sighed deeply
-and seemed to forget time and place. His hand strayed
-involuntarily and automatically to the head of the <span lang="es" xml:lang="es">mestiza</span>,
-caressed the shining black hair and continued to caress it
-while he spoke.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“The woman,” he said, with such gentleness that his
-voice, still clear and bell-like, was barely above a whisper.
-“Ever the woman wonderful. All women are wonderful ...
-to man. They love our fathers; they birth us; we
-love them; they birth our sons to love their daughters and
-to call their daughters wonderful; and this has always been
-and shall continue always to be until the end of man’s time
-and man’s loving on earth.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>A profound of silence fell within the cavern, while the
-Cruel Just One meditated for a space. At the last, with a
-touch dared of familiarity, the pretty <span lang="es" xml:lang="es">mestiza</span> touched him
-and roused him to remembrance of the peon still crouching
-at his feet.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I pronounce judgment,” he spoke. “You have received
-many blows. Each blow on your body is quittance in
-full of the entire debt to the haciendado. Go free. But
-remain in the mountains, and next time love a mountain
-woman, since woman you must have, and since woman is
-inevitable and eternal in the affairs of men. Go free. You
-are half Maya?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I am half Maya,” the peon murmured. “My father is
-a Maya.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Arise and go free. And remain in the mountains with
-your Maya father. The tierra caliente is no place for the
-Cordilleras-born. The haciendado is not present, and therefore
-cannot be judged. And after all he is but a haciendado.
-His fellow haciendados, too, go free.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The Cruel Just One waited, and, without waiting, Henry
-stepped forward.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_110'>110</span>“I am the man,” he stated boldly, “sentenced to the
-death undeserved for the killing of a man I did not kill. He
-was the blood-uncle of the girl I love, whom I shall marry
-if there be true justice here in this cave in the Cordilleras.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But the Jefe interrupted.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Before a score of witnesses he threatened to his face to
-kill the man. Within the hour we found him bending over
-the man’s dead body that was yet warm and limber with
-departing life.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“He speaks true,” Henry affirmed. “I did threaten the
-man, both of us heady from strong drink and hot blood. I
-was so found, bending over his dead warm body. Yet did
-I not kill him. Nor do I know, nor can I guess, the coward
-hand in the dark that knifed out his life through the back
-from behind.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Kneel both of you, that I may interrogate you,” the
-Blind Brigand commanded.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Long he interrogated with his sensitive, questioning fingers.
-Long, and still longer, unable to attain decision, his
-fingers played over the faces and pulses of the two men.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Is there a woman?” he asked Henry Morgan pointedly.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“A woman wonderful. I love her.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“It is good to be so vexed, for a man unvexed by woman
-is only half a man,” the blind judge vouchsafed. He addressed
-the Jefe. “No woman vexes you, yet are you
-troubled. But this man”—indicating Henry—“I cannot
-tell if all his vexation be due to woman. Perhaps, in part,
-it may be due to you, or to what some prompting of evil may
-make him meditate against you. Stand up, both men of
-you. I cannot judge between you. Yet is there the test
-infallible, the test of the Snake and the Bird. Infallible it
-is, as God is infallible, for by such ways does God still
-maintain truth in the affairs of men. As well does Blackstone
-mention just such methods of determining the truth
-by trial and ordeal.”</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_111'>111</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER XI</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>To all intents it might have been a tiny bull-ring, that pit in
-the heart of the Blind Brigand’s domain. Ten feet in depth
-and thirty in diameter, with level floor and perpendicular
-wall, its natural formation had required little work at the
-hands of man to complete its symmetry. The sackcloth
-men, the haciendados, the gendarmes—all were present, save
-for the Cruel Just One and the <span lang="es" xml:lang="es">mestiza</span>, and all were lined
-about the rim of the pit, as an audience, to gaze down upon
-some bull-fight or gladiatorial combat within the pit.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>At command of the stern-faced leader of the sackcloth
-men who had captured them, Henry and the Jefe descended
-down a short ladder into the pit. The leader and several of
-the brigands accompanied them.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Heaven alone knows what’s going to happen,” Henry
-laughed up in English to Leoncia and Francis. “But if it’s
-rough and tumble, bite and gouge, or Marquis of Queensbury
-or London Prize Ring, Mister Fat Jefe is my meat. But
-that old blind one is clever, and the chances are he’s going
-to put us at each other on some basis of evenness. In
-which case, do you, my audience, if he gets me down, stick
-your thumbs up and make all the noise you can. Depend
-upon it, if it’s he that’s down, all his crowd will be thumbs
-up.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The Jefe, overcome by the trap into which he had
-descended, in Spanish addressed the leader.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I shall not fight with this man. He is younger than I,
-and has better wind. Also, the affair is illegal. It is not
-according to the law of the Republic of Panama. It is
-extra-territorial and entirely unjudicial.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“It is the Snake and the Bird,” the leader shut him off.
-“You shall be the Snake. This rifle shall be in your hands.
-The other man shall be the Bird. In his hand shall be the
-bell. Behold! Thus may you understand the ordeal.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>At his command, one of the brigands was given the rifle
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_112'>112</span>and was blindfolded. To another brigand, not blindfolded,
-was given a silver bell.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“The man with the rifle is the Snake,” said the leader.
-“He has one shot at the Bird who carries the bell.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>At signal to begin, the bandit with the bell, tinkled it at
-extended arm’s length and sprang swiftly aside. The man
-with the rifle lowered it as if to fire at the space just vacated
-and pretended to fire.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“You understand?” the leader demanded of Henry and
-the Jefe.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The former nodded, but the latter cried exultantly:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And I am the Snake?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“You are the Snake,” affirmed the leader.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And the Jefe was eager for the rifle, making no further
-protests against the extra-territoriality of the proceedings.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Are you going to try to get me?” Henry warned the
-Jefe.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“No, Senor Morgan. I am merely going to get you. I
-am one of the two best shots in Panama. I have two score
-and more of medals. I can shoot with my eyes shut. I
-can shoot in the dark. I have often shot, and with precision,
-in the dark. Already may you count yourself a dead
-man.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Only one cartridge was put into the rifle, ere it was handed
-to the Jefe after he was blindfolded. Next, while Henry,
-equipped with the tell-tale bell, was stationed directly across
-the pit, the Jefe was faced to the wall and kept there while
-the brigands climbed out of the pit and drew the ladder up
-after them. The leader, from above, spoke down:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Listen carefully, Senor Snake, and make no move until
-you have heard. The Snake has but one shot. The Snake
-cannot tamper with his blindfold. If he so tampers it is our
-duty to see that he immediately dies. The Snake has no
-time limit. He may take the rest of the day, and all of the
-night, and the remainder of eternity ere he fires his one shot.
-As for the Bird, the one rule is that never must the bell
-leave his hand, and never may he stop the clapper of it
-from making the full noise intended of the clapper against
-the sides of the bell. Should he do so, then will he immediately
-die. We are here above you, both of you Senors,
-rifles in hand, to see that you die the second you infract any
-of the rules. And now, God be with the right, proceed!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The Jefe turned slowly about and listened, while Henry,
-essaying gingerly to move with the bell, caused it to tinkle.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_113'>113</span>The rifle was quick to bear upon the sound, and to pursue
-it as Henry ran. With a quick shift he transferred the bell
-to the other extended hand and ran back in the opposite
-direction, the rifle sweeping after him in inexorable pursuit.
-But the Jefe was too cunning to risk all on a chance shot,
-and slowly advanced across the arena. Henry stood still,
-and the bell made no sound.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>So unerringly had the Jefe’s ear located the last silvery
-tinkle, and so straightly did he walk despite his blindfold,
-that he advanced just to the right of Henry and directly at
-the bell. With infinite caution, provoking no tinkle, Henry
-slightly raised his arm and permitted the Jefe’s head to go
-under the bell with a bare inch of margin.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>His rifle pointed, and within a foot of the pit-wall, the
-Jefe halted in indecision, listened vainly for a moment, then
-made a further stride that collided the rifle muzzle with the
-wall. He whirled about, and, with the rifle extended, like
-any blind man felt out the air-space for his enemy. The
-muzzle would have touched Henry had he not sprung away
-on a noisy and zig-zag course.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In the center of the pit he came to a frozen pause. The
-Jefe stalked past a yard to the side and collided with the
-opposite wall. He circled the wall, walking cat-footed, his
-rifle forever feeling out into the empty air. Next he ventured
-across the pit. After several such crossings, during
-which the stationary bell gave him no clue, he adopted a
-clever method. Tossing his hat on the ground for the mark
-of his starting point, he crossed the edge of the pit on a
-shallow chord, extended the chord by a pace farther along
-the wall, and felt his way back along the new and longer
-chord. Again against the wall, he verified the correctness
-of the parallelness of the two chords, by pacing back to his
-hat. This time, with three paces along the wall from the
-hat, he initiated his third chord.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Thus he combed the area of the pit, and Henry saw that
-he could not escape such combing. Nor did he wait to be
-discovered. Tinkling the bell as he ran and zigzagged and
-exchanging it from one hand to the other, he froze into
-immobility in a new place.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The Jefe repeated the laborious combing out process; but
-Henry was not minded longer to prolong the tension. He
-waited till the Jefe’s latest chord brought him directly upon
-him. He waited till the rifle muzzle, breast high, was
-within half a dozen inches of his heart. Then he exploded
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_114'>114</span>into two simultaneous actions. He ducked lower than the
-rifle and yelled “Fire!” in stentorian command.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>So startled, the Jefe pulled the trigger, and the bullet
-sped above Henry’s head. From above, the sackcloth men
-applauded wildly. The Jefe tore off his blindfold and saw
-the smiling face of his foe.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“It is well—God has spoken,” announced the sackcloth
-leader, as he descended into the pit. “The man uninjured
-is innocent. Remains now to test the other man.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Me?” the Jefe almost shouted in his surprise and consternation.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Greetings, Jefe,” Henry grinned. “You <em>did</em> try to get
-me. It’s my turn now. Pass over that rifle.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But the Jefe, with a curse, in his disappointment and rage
-forgetting that the rifle had contained only one cartridge,
-thrust the muzzle against Henry’s heart and pulled the
-trigger. The hammer fell with a metallic click.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“It is well,” said the leader, taking away the rifle and
-recharging it. “Your conduct shall be reported. The test
-for you remains, yet must it appear that you are not acting
-like God’s chosen man.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Like a beaten bull in the ring seeking a way to escape
-and gazing up at the amphitheatre of pitiless faces, so the
-Jefe looked up and saw only the rifles of the sackcloth men,
-the triumphing faces of Leoncia and Francis, the curious
-looks of his own gendarmes, and the blood-eager faces of
-the haciendados that were like the faces of any bull-fight
-audience.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The shadowy smile drifted the stern lips of the leader as
-he handed the rifle to Henry and started to blindfold him.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Why don’t you make him face the wall until I’m
-ready?” the Jefe demanded, as the silver bell tinkled in his
-passion-convulsed hand.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Because he is proven God’s man,” was the reply. “He
-has stood the test. Therefore he cannot do a treacherous
-deed. You now must stand the test of God. If you are
-true and honest, no harm can befall you from the Snake.
-For such is God’s way.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Far more successful as the hunter than as the hunted one,
-did the Jefe prove. Across the pit from Henry, he strove
-to stand motionless; but out of nervousness, as Henry’s
-rifle swept around on him, his hand trembled and the bell
-tinkled. The rifle came almost to rest and wavered ominously
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_115'>115</span>about the sound. In vain the Jefe tried to control his
-flesh and still the bell.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But the bell tinkled on, and, in despair, he flung it away
-and threw himself on the ground. But Henry, following
-the sound of his enemy’s fall, lowered the rifle and pulled
-trigger. The Jefe yelled out in sharp pain as the bullet
-perforated his shoulder, rose to his feet, cursed, sprawled
-back on the ground, and lay there cursing.</p>
-
-<hr class='c010' />
-
-<p class='c000'>Again in the cave, with the <span lang="es" xml:lang="es">mestiza</span> beside him at his
-knee, the Blind Brigand gave judgment.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“This man who is wounded and who talks much of the
-law of the tierra caliente, shall now learn Cordilleras law.
-By the test of the Snake and the Bird has he been proven
-guilty. For his life a ransom of ten thousand dollars gold
-shall be paid, or else shall he remain here, a hewer of wood
-and a carrier of water, for the remainder of the time God
-shall grant him to draw breath on earth. I have spoken,
-and I know that my voice is God’s voice, and I know that
-God will not grant him long to draw breath if the ransom be
-not forthcoming.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>A long silence obtained, during which even Henry, who
-could slay a foe in the heat of combat, advertised that such
-cold-blooded promise of murder was repugnant to him.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“The law is pitiless,” said the Cruel Just One; and again
-silence fell.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Let him die for want of a ransom,” spoke one of the
-haciendados. “He has proved a treacherous dog. Let
-him die a dog’s death.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“What say you?” the Blind Brigand asked solemnly.
-“What say you, peon of the many beatings, man new-born
-this day, half-Maya that you are and lover of the woman
-wonderful? Shall this man die the dog’s death for want of
-a ransom?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“This man is a hard man,” spoke the peon. “Yet is my
-heart strangely soft this day. Had I ten thousand gold I
-would pay his ransom myself. Yea, O Holy One and Just,
-and had I two hundred and fifty pesos, even would I pay off
-my debt to the haciendado of which I am absolved.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The old man’s blind face lighted up to transfiguration.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“You, too, speak with God’s voice this day, regenerate
-one,” he approved.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But Francis, who had been scribbling hurriedly in his
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_116'>116</span>check book, handed a check, still wet with the ink, to the
-<span lang="es" xml:lang="es">mestiza</span>.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I, too, speak,” he said. “Let not the man die the
-dog’s death he deserves, proven treacherous hound that he
-is.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The <span lang="es" xml:lang="es">mestiza</span> read the check aloud.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“It is not necessary to explain,” the Blind Brigand shut
-Francis off. “I am a creature of reason, and have not lived
-always in the Cordilleras. I was trained in business in
-Barcelona. I know the Chemical National Bank of New
-York, and through my agents have had dealings with it
-aforetime. The sum is for ten thousand dollars gold. This
-man who writes it has told the truth already this day. The
-check is good. Further, I know he will not stop payment.
-This man who thus pays the ransom of a foe is one of three
-things: a very good man; a fool; or a very rich man. Tell
-me, O Man, is there a woman wonderful?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And Francis, not daring to glance to right or left, at
-Leoncia or Henry, but gazing straight before him on the
-Blind Brigand’s face, answered because he felt he must so
-answer:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Yes, O Cruel Just One, there is a woman wonderful.”</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_117'>117</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER XII</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>At the precise spot where they had been first blindfolded by
-the sackcloth men, the cavalcade halted. It was composed
-of a number of the sackcloth men; of Leoncia, Henry, and
-Francis, blindfolded and mounted on mules; and of the
-peon, blindfolded and on foot. Similarly escorted, the
-haciendados, and the Jefe and Torres with their gendarmes,
-had preceded by half an hour.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>At permission given by the stern-faced leader, the captives,
-about to be released, removed their blindfolds.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Seems I’ve been here before,” Henry laughed, looking
-about and identifying the place.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Seems the oil-wells are still burning,” Francis said,
-pointing out half the field of day that was eaten up by the
-black smoke-pall. “Peon, look upon your handiwork. For
-a man who possesses nothing, you are the biggest spender
-I ever met. I have heard of drunken oil-kings lighting
-cigars with thousand dollar bank-notes, but here are you
-burning up a million dollars a minute.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I am not a poor man,” the peon boasted in proud
-mysteriousness.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“A millionaire in disguise!” Henry twitted.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Where do you deposit?” was Leoncia’s contribution.
-“In the Chemical National Bank?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The peon did not understand the allusions, but knew that
-he was being made fun of, and drew himself up in proud
-silence.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The stern leader spoke:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“From this point you may now go your various ways.
-The Just One has so commanded. You, senors, will dismount
-and turn over to me your mules. As for the senorita,
-she may retain her mule as a present from the Just One,
-who would not care to be responsible for compelling any
-senorita to walk. The two senors, without hardship, may
-walk. Especially has the Just One recommended walking
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_118'>118</span>for the rich senor. The possession of riches, he advised,
-leads to too little walking. Too little walking leads to
-stoutness; and stoutness does not lead to the woman wonderful.
-Such is the wisdom of the Just One.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Further, he has repeated his advice to the peon to
-remain in the mountains. In the mountains he will find
-his woman wonderful, since woman he must have; and it is
-wisest that such woman be of his own breed. The woman
-of the tierra caliente are for the men of the tierra caliente.
-The Cordilleras women are for the Cordilleras men. God
-dislikes mixed breeds. A mule is abhorrent under the sun.
-The world was not intended for mixed breeds, but man has
-made for himself many inventions. Pure races interbred
-leads to impurity. Neither will oil nor water congenially
-intermingle. Since kind begets kind, only kind should mate.
-Such are the words of the Just One which I have repeated as
-commanded. And he has especially impressed upon me to
-add that he knows whereof he speaks, for he, too, has sinned
-in just such ways.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And Henry and Francis, of Anglo-Saxon stock, and
-Leoncia of the Latin, knew perturbation and embarrassment
-as the vicarious judgment of the Blind Brigand sank home.
-And Leoncia, with her splendid eyes of woman, would have
-appealed protest to either man she loved, had the other been
-absent; while both Henry and Francis would have voiced
-protest to Leoncia had either of them been alone with her.
-And yet, under it all, deep down, uncannily, was a sense of
-the correctness of the Blind Brigand’s thought. And heavily,
-on the heart of each, rested the burden of the conscious
-oppression of sin.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>A crashing and scrambling in the brush diverted their
-train of thought, as descending the canyon slope on desperately
-slipping and sliding horses, appeared on the scene the
-haciendado with several followers. His greeting of the
-daughter of the Solanos was hidalgo-like and profound, and
-only less was the heartiness of his greeting to the two men
-for whom Enrico Solano had stood sponsor.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Where is your noble father?” he asked Leoncia. “I
-have good news for him. In the week since I last saw you,
-I have been sick with fever and encamped. But by swift
-messengers, and favoring winds across Chiriqui Lagoon to
-Bocas del Toro, I have used the government wireless—the
-Jefe of Bocas del Toro is my friend—and have communicated
-with the President of Panama—who is my ancient
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_119'>119</span>comrade whose nose I rubbed as often in the dirt as did he
-mine in the boyhood days when we were schoolmates and
-cubicle-mates together at Colon. And the word has come
-back that all is well; that justice has miscarried in the court
-at San Antonio from the too great but none the less worthy
-zeal of the Jefe Politico; and that all is forgiven, pardoned,
-and forever legally and politically forgotten against all of the
-noble Solano family and their two noble Gringo friends——”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Here, the haciendado bowed low to Henry and Francis.
-And here, skulking behind Leoncia’s uncle, his eyes chanced
-to light on the peon; and, so lighting, his eyes blazed with
-triumph.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Mother of God, thou has not forgotten me!” he
-breathed fervently, then turned to the several friends who
-accompanied him. “There he is, the creature without
-reason or shame who has fled his debt of me. Seize him!
-I shall put him on his back for a month from the beating he
-shall receive!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>So speaking, the haciendado sprang around the rump of
-Leoncia’s mule; and the peon, ducking under the mule’s
-nose, would have won to the freedom of the jungle, had not
-another of the haciendados, with quick spurs to his horse’s
-sides, cut him off and run him down. In a trice, used to
-just such work, the haciendados had the luckless wight on
-his feet, his hands tied behind him, a lead-rope made fast
-around his neck.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In one voice Francis and Henry protested.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Senors,” the haciendado replied, “my respect and consideration
-and desire to serve you are as deep as for the
-noble Solano family under whose protection you are. Your
-safety and comfort are sacred to me. I will defend you from
-harm with my life. I am yours to command. My hacienda
-is yours, likewise all I possess. But this matter of this
-peon is entirely another matter. He is none of yours. He
-is <em>my</em> peon, in <em>my</em> debt, who has run away from <em>my</em>
-hacienda. You will understand and forgive me, I trust.
-This is a mere matter of property. He is <em>my</em> property.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Henry and Francis glanced at each other in mutual perplexity
-and indecision. It was the law of the land, as they
-thoroughly knew.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“The Cruel Just One did remit my debt, as all here will
-witness,” the peon whispered.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“It is true, the Cruel Justice remitted his debt,” Leoncia
-verified.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_120'>120</span>The haciendado smiled and bowed low.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“But the peon contracted with me,” he smiled. “And
-who is the Blind Brigand that his foolish law shall operate
-on my plantation and rob me of my rightful two hundred
-and fifty pesos?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“He’s right, Leoncia,” Henry admitted.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Then will I go back to the high Cordilleras,” the peon
-asserted. “Oh, you men of the Cruel Just One, take me
-back to the Cordilleras.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But the stern leader shook his head.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Here you were released. Our orders went no further.
-No further jurisdiction have we over you. We shall now
-bid farewell and depart.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Hold on!” Francis cried, pulling out his check book
-and beginning to write. “Wait a moment. I must settle
-for this peon now. Next, before you depart, I have a favor
-to ask of you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>He passed the check to the haciendado, saying:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I have allowed ten pesos for the exchange.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The haciendado glanced at the check, folded it away in
-his pocket, and placed the end of the rope around the
-wretched creature’s neck in Francis’ hand.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“The peon is now yours,” he said.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Francis looked at the rope and laughed.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Behold! I now own a human chattel. Slave, you
-are mine, my property now, do you understand?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Yes, Senor,” the peon muttered humbly. “It seems,
-when I became mad for the woman I gave up my freedom
-for, that God destined me always afterward to be the
-property of some man. The Cruel Just One is right. It
-is God’s punishment for mating outside my race.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“You made a slave of yourself for what the world has
-always considered the best of all causes, a woman,”
-Francis observed, cutting the thongs that bound the peon’s
-hands. “And so, I make a present of you to yourself.”
-So saying, he placed the neck-rope in the peon’s hand.
-“Henceforth, lead yourself, and put not that rope in any
-man’s hand.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>While the foregoing had been taking place, a lean old
-man, on foot, had noiselessly joined the circle. Maya
-Indian he was, pure-blooded, with ribs that corrugated
-plainly through his parchment-like skin. Only a breech-clout
-covered his nakedness. His unkempt hair hung in
-dirty-gray tangles about his face, which was high-cheeked
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_121'>121</span>and emaciated to cadaverousness. Strings of muscles
-showed for his calves and biceps. A few scattered snags
-of teeth were visible between his withered lips. The hollows
-under his cheek-bones were prodigious. While his eyes,
-beads of black, deep-sunk in their sockets, burned with the
-wild light of a patient in fever.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>He slipped eel-like through the circle and clasped the
-peon in his skeleton-like arms.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“He is my father,” proclaimed the peon proudly.
-“Look at him. He is pure Maya, and he knows the
-secrets of the Mayas.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And while the two re-united ones talked endless explanations,
-Francis preferred his request to the sackcloth leader
-to find Enrico Solano and his two sons, wandering somewhere
-in the mountains, and to tell them that they were
-free of all claims of the law and to return home.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“They have done no wrong?” the leader demanded.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“No; they have done no wrong,” Francis assured him.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Then it is well. I promise you to find them immediately,
-for we know the direction of their wandering, and
-to send them down to the coast to join you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And in the meantime shall you be my guests while
-you wait,” the haciendado invited eagerly. “There is a
-freight schooner at anchor in Juchitan Inlet now off my
-plantation, and sailing for San Antonio. I can hold her
-until the noble Enrico and his sons come down from the
-Cordilleras.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And Francis will pay the demurrage, of course,” Henry
-interpolated with a sly sting that Leoncia caught, although
-it missed Francis, who cried joyously:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Of course I will. And it proves my contention that a
-checkbook is pretty good to have anywhere.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>To their surprise, when they had parted from the sackcloth
-men, the peon and his Indian father attached themselves
-to the Morgans, and journeyed down through the
-burning oil-fields to the plantation which had been the scene
-of the peon’s slavery. Both father and son were unremitting
-in their devotion, first of all to Francis, and, next,
-to Leoncia and Henry. More than once they noted father
-and son in long and earnest conversations; and, after Enrico
-and his sons had arrived, when the party went down to
-the beach to board the waiting schooner, the peon and
-his Maya parent followed along. Francis essayed to say
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_122'>122</span>farewell to them on the beach, but the peon stated that
-the pair of them were likewise journeying on the schooner.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I have told you that I was not a poor man,” the peon
-explained, after they had drawn the party aside from the
-waiting sailors. “This is true. The hidden treasure of
-the Mayas, which the conquistadores and the priests of the
-Inquisition could never find, is in my keeping. Or, to be
-very true, is in my father’s keeping. He is the descendant,
-in the straight line, from the ancient high priest of the
-Mayas. He is the last high priest. He and I have talked
-much and long. And we are agreed that riches do not
-make life. You bought me for two hundred and fifty pesos,
-yet you made me free, gave me back to myself. The gift
-of a man’s life is greater than all the treasure in the world.
-So are we agreed, my father and I. And so, since it is the
-way of Gringos and Spaniards to desire treasure, we will
-lead you to the Maya treasure, my father and I, my father
-knowing the way. And the way into the mountains begins
-from San Antonio and not from Juchitan.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Does your father know the location of the treasure?—just
-where it is?” Henry demanded, with an aside to
-Francis that this was the very Maya treasure that had led
-him to abandon the quest for Morgan’s gold on the Calf
-and to take to the mainland.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The peon shook his head.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“My father has never been to it. He was not interested
-in it, caring not for wealth for himself. Father, bring forth
-the tale written in our ancient language which you alone of
-living Mayas can read.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>From within his loin-cloth the old man drew forth a
-dirty and much-frayed canvas bag. Out of this he pulled
-what looked like a snarl of knotted strings. But the strings
-were twisted sennit of some fibrous forest bark, so ancient
-that they threatened to crumble as he handled them, while
-from under the touch and manipulation of his fingers a fine
-powder of decay arose. Muttering and mumbling prayers
-in the ancient Maya tongue, he held up the snarl of knots,
-and bowed reverently before it ere he shook it out.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“The knot-writing, the lost written language of the
-Mayas,” Henry breathed softly. “This is the real thing,
-if only the old geezer hasn’t forgotten how to read it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>All heads bent curiously toward it as it was handed to
-Francis. It was in the form of a crude tassel, composed
-of many thin, long strings. Not alone were the knots, and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_123'>123</span>various kinds of knots, tied at irregular intervals in the
-strings, but the strings themselves were of varying lengths
-and diameters. He ran them through his fingers, mumbling
-and muttering.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“He reads!” cried the peon triumphantly. “All our
-old language is there in those knots, and he reads them
-as any man may read a book.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Bending closer to observe, Francis and Leoncia’s hair
-touched, and, in the thrill of the immediately broken contact,
-their eyes met, producing the second thrill as they
-separated. But Henry, all eagerness, did not observe. He
-had eyes only for the mystic tassel.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“What d’you say, Francis?” he murmured. “It’s big!
-It’s big!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“But New York is beginning to call,” Francis demurred.
-“Oh, not its people and its fun, but its business,” he
-added hastily, as he sensed Leoncia’s unuttered reproach
-and hurt. “Don’t forget, I’m mixed up in Tampico Petroleum
-and the stock market, and I hate to think how many
-millions are involved.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Hell’s bells!” Henry ejaculated. “The Maya treasure,
-if a tithe of what they say about its immensity be true,
-could be cut three ways between Enrico, you and me, and
-make each of us richer than you are now.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Still Francis was undecided, and, while Enrico expanded
-on the authenticity of the treasure, Leoncia managed to
-query in an undertone in Francis’ ear:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Have you so soon tired of ... of treasure-hunting?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>He looked at her keenly, and down at her engagement
-ring, as he answered in the same low tones:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“How can I stay longer in this country, loving you as
-I do, while you love Henry?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It was the first time he had openly avowed his love, and
-Leoncia knew the swift surge of joy, followed by the no
-less swift surge of mantling shame that she, a woman who
-had always esteemed herself good, could love two men
-at the same time. She glanced at Henry, as if to verify
-her heart, and her heart answered yes. As truly did she
-love Henry as she did Francis, and the emotion seemed
-similar where the two were similar, different where they
-were different.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I’m afraid I’ll have to connect up with the <em>Angelique</em>,
-most likely at Bocas del Toro, and get away,” Francis told
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_124'>124</span>Henry. “You and Enrico can find the treasure and split
-it two ways.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But the peon, having heard, broke into quick speech
-with his father, and, next, with Henry.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“You hear what he says, Francis,” the latter said,
-holding up the sacred tassel. “You’ve got to go with us.
-It is you he feels grateful to for his son. He isn’t giving
-the treasure to us, but to you. And if you don’t go, he
-won’t read a knot of the writing.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But it was Leoncia, looking at Francis with quiet wistfulness
-of pleading, seeming all but to say, “Please, for
-my sake,” who really caused Francis to reverse his decision.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_125'>125</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER XIII</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>A week later, out of San Antonio on a single day, three
-separate expeditions started for the Cordilleras. The
-first, mounted on mules, was composed of Henry, Francis,
-the peon and his ancient parent, and of several of the
-Solano peons, each leading a pack-mule, burdened with
-supplies and outfit. Old Enrico Solano, at the last moment,
-had been prevented from accompanying the party because
-of the bursting open of an old wound received in the revolutionary
-fighting of his youth.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Up the main street of San Antonio the cavalcade proceeded,
-passing the jail, the wall of which Francis had
-dynamited, and which was only even then being tardily
-rebuilt by the Jefe’s prisoners. Torres, sauntering down
-the street, the latest wire from Regan tucked in his pocket,
-saw the Morgan outfit with surprise.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Whither away, senors?” he called.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>So spontaneous that it might have been rehearsed, Francis
-pointed to the sky, Henry straight down at the earth, the
-peon to the right, and his father to the left. The curse
-from Torres at such impoliteness, caused all to burst into
-laughter, in which the mule-peons joined as they rode along.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Within the morning, at the time of the siesta hour, while
-all the town slept, Torres received a second surprise. This
-time it was the sight of Leoncia and her youngest brother,
-Ricardo, on mules, leading a third that was evidently
-loaded with a camping outfit.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The third expedition was Torres’ own, neither more nor
-less meager than Leoncia’s, for it was composed only of
-himself and one, José Mancheno, a notorious murderer of
-the place whom Torres, for private reasons, had saved from
-the buzzards of San Juan. But Torres’ plans, in the
-matter of an expedition, were more ambitious than they
-appeared. Not far up the slopes of the Cordilleras dwelt
-the strange tribe of the Caroos. Originally founded by runaway
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_126'>126</span>negro slaves of Africa and Carib slaves of the Mosquito
-Coast, the renegades had perpetuated themselves with
-stolen women of the tierra caliente and with fled women
-slaves like themselves. Between the Mayas beyond, and
-the government of the coast, this unique colony had maintained
-itself in semi-independence. Added to, in later days,
-by runaway Spanish prisoners, the Caroos had become a
-hotchpotch of bloods and breeds, possessing a name and
-a taint so bad that the then governing power of Colombia,
-had it not been too occupied with its own particular political
-grafts, would have sent armies to destroy the pest-hole.
-And in this pest-hole of the Caroos José Mancheno had
-been born of a Spanish-murderer father and a <span lang="es" xml:lang="es">mestiza</span>-murderess
-mother. And to this pest-hole José Mancheno
-was leading Torres in order that the commands of Thomas
-Regan of Wall Street might be carried out.</p>
-
-<hr class='c010' />
-
-<p class='c000'>“Lucky we found him when we did,” Francis told
-Henry, as they rode at the rear of the last Maya priest.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“He’s pretty senile,” Henry nodded. “Look at him.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The old man, as he led the way, was forever pulling out
-the sacred tassel and mumbling and muttering as he fingered
-it.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Hope the old gentleman doesn’t wear it out,” was
-Henry’s fervent wish. “You’d think he’d read the directions
-once and remember them for a little while instead of
-continually pawing them over.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>They rode out through the jungle into a clear space that
-looked as if at some time man had hewn down the jungle
-and fought it back. Beyond, by the vista afforded by the
-clearing, the mountain called Blanco Rovalo towered high
-in the sunny sky. The old Maya halted his mule, ran
-over certain strings in the tassel, pointed at the mountain,
-and spoke in broken Spanish:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“It says: <em>In the foot-steps of the God wait till the eyes
-of Chia flash.</em>”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>He indicated the particular knots of a particular string
-as the source of his information.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Where are the foot-steps, old priest?” Henry demanded,
-staring about him at the unbroken sward.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But the old man started his mule, and, with a tattoo
-of bare heels on the creature’s ribs, hastened it on across
-the clearing and into the jungle beyond.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_127'>127</span>“He’s like a hound on the scent, and it looks as if the
-scent is getting hot,” Francis remarked.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>At the end of half a mile, where the jungle turned to
-grass-land on swift-rising slopes the old man forced his
-mule into a gallop which he maintained until he reached
-a natural depression in the ground. Three feet or more
-in depth, of area sufficient to accommodate a dozen persons
-in comfort, its form was strikingly like that which some
-colossal human foot could have made.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“The foot-step of the God,” the old priest proclaimed
-solemnly, ere he slid off his mule and prostrated himself in
-prayer. “<em>In the foot-step of the God must we wait till
-the eyes of Chia flash</em>——so say the sacred knots.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Pretty good place for a meal,” Henry vouchsafed,
-looking down into the depression. “While waiting for the
-mumbo-jumbo foolery to come off, we might as well stay
-our stomachs.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“If Chia doesn’t object,” laughed Francis.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And Chia did not object, at least the old priest could
-not find any objection written in the knots.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>While the mules were being tethered on the edge of the
-first break of woods, water was fetched from a nearby
-spring and a fire built in the foot-step. The old Maya
-seemed oblivious of everything, as he mumbled endless
-prayers and ran the knots over and over.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“If only he doesn’t blow up,” Francis said.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I thought he was wild-eyed the first day we met him
-up in Juchitan,” concurred Henry. “But it’s nothing
-to the way his eyes are now.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Here spoke the peon, who, unable to understand a word
-of their English, nevertheless sensed the drift of it.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“This is very religious, very dangerous, to have anything
-to do with the old Maya sacred things. It is the
-death-road. My father knows. Many men have died.
-The deaths are sudden and horrible. Even Maya priests
-have died. My father’s father so died. He, too, loved
-a woman of the tierra caliente. And for love of her, for
-gold, he sold the Maya secret and by the knot-writing led
-tierra caliente men to the treasure. He died. They all
-died. My father does not like the women of the tierra
-caliente now that he is old. He liked them too well in
-his youth, which was his sin. And he knows the danger
-of leading you to the treasure. Many men have sought
-during the centuries. Of those who found it, not one
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_128'>128</span>came back. It is said that even conquistadores and pirates
-of the English Morgan have won to the hiding-place and
-decorated it with their bones.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And when your father dies,” Francis queried, “then,
-being his son, you will be the Maya high priest?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“No, senor,” the peon shook his head. “I am only
-half-Maya. I cannot read the knots. My father did not
-teach me because I was not of the pure Maya blood.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And if he should die, right now, is there any other
-Maya who can read the knots?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“No, senor. My father is the last living man who
-knows that ancient language.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But the conversation was broken in upon by Leoncia
-and Ricardo, who, having tethered their mules with the
-others, were gazing sheepishly down from the rim of the
-depression. The faces of Henry and Francis lighted with
-joy at the sight of Leoncia, while their mouths opened and
-their tongues articulated censure and scolding. Also, they
-insisted on her returning with Ricardo.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“But you cannot send me away before giving me something
-to eat,” she persisted, slipping down the slope of
-the depression with pure feminine cunning in order to place
-the discussion on a closer and more intimate basis.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Aroused by their voices, the old Maya came out of a
-trance of prayer and observed her with wrath. And in
-wrath he burst upon her, intermingling occasional Spanish
-words and phrases with the flood of denunciation in Maya.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“He says that women are no good,” the peon interpreted
-in the first pause. “He says women bring quarrels among
-men, the quick steel, the sudden death. Bad luck and
-God’s wrath are ever upon them. Their ways are not
-God’s ways, and they lead men to destruction. He says
-women are the eternal enemy of God and man, forever
-keeping God and man apart. He says women have ever
-cluttered the foot-steps of God and have kept men away
-from travelling the path of God to God. He says this
-woman must go back.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>With laughing eyes, Francis whistled his appreciation
-of the diatribe, while Henry said:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Now will you be good, Leoncia? You see what a
-Maya thinks of your sex. This is no place for you. California’s
-the place. Women vote there.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“The trouble is that the old man is remembering the
-woman who brought misfortune upon him in the heyday of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_129'>129</span>his youth,” Francis said. He turned to the peon. “Ask
-your father to read the knot-writing and see what it says
-for or against women traveling in the foot-steps of God.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In vain the ancient high priest fumbled the sacred writing.
-There was not to be found the slightest authoritative objection
-to woman.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“He’s mixing his own experiences up with his
-mythology,” Francis grinned triumphantly. “So I guess
-it’s pretty near all right, Leoncia, for you to stay for a
-bite to eat. The coffee’s made. After that....”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But “after that” came before. Scarcely had they
-seated themselves on the ground and begun to eat, when
-Francis, standing up to serve Leoncia with tortillas, had
-his hat knocked off.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“My word!” he said, sitting down. “That was sudden.
-Henry, take a squint and see who tried to pot-shoot me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The next moment, save for the peon’s father, all eyes
-were peeping across the rim of the foot-step. What they
-saw, creeping upon them from every side, was a nondescript
-and bizarrely clad horde of men who seemed members of
-no particular race but composed of all races. The breeds
-of the entire human family seemed to have moulded their
-lineaments and vari-colored their skins.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“The mangiest bunch I ever laid eyes on,” was Francis’
-comment.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“They are the Caroos,” the peon muttered, betraying
-fear.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And who in——” Francis began. Instantly he
-amended. “And who in Paradise are the Caroos?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“They come from hell,” was the peon’s answer. “They
-are more savage than the Spaniard, more terrible than
-the Maya. They neither give nor take in marriage, nor
-does a priest reside among them. They are the devil’s
-own spawn, and their ways are the devil’s ways, only
-worse.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Here the Maya arose, and, with accusing finger, denounced
-Leoncia for being the cause of this latest trouble.
-A bullet creased his shoulder and half-whirled him about.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Drag him down!” Henry shouted to Francis. “He’s
-the only man who knows the knot-language; and the eyes
-of Chia, whatever that may mean, have not yet flashed.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Francis obeyed, with an out-reach of arm to the old
-fellow’s legs, jerking him down in a crumpled, skeleton-like
-fall.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_130'>130</span>Henry loosed his rifle, and elicited a fusillade in response.
-Next, Ricardo, Francis, and the peon joined in. But the
-old man, still running his knots, fixed his gaze across the
-far rim of the foot-step upon a rugged wall of mountain
-beyond.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Hold on!” shouted Francis, in a vain attempt to make
-himself heard above the shooting.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>He was compelled to crawl from one to another and
-shake them into ceasing from firing. And to each, separately,
-he had to explain that all their ammunition was
-with the mules, and that they must be sparing with the
-little they had in their magazines and belts.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And don’t let them hit you,” Henry warned.
-“They’ve got old muskets and blunderbusses that will drive
-holes through you the size of dinner-plates.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>An hour later, the last cartridge, save several in Francis’
-automatic pistol, was gone; and to the irregular firing of
-the Caroos the pit replied with silence. José Mancheno
-was the first to guess the situation. He cautiously crept
-up to the edge of the pit to make sure, then signaled to
-the Caroos that the ammunition of the besieged was exhausted
-and to come on.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Nicely trapped, senors,” he exulted down at the defenders,
-while from all around the rim laughter arose from
-the Caroos.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But the next moment the change that came over the
-situation was as astounding as a transformation scene in
-a pantomime. With wild cries of terror the Caroos were
-fleeing. Such was their disorder and haste that numbers
-of them dropped their muskets and machetes.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Anyway, I’ll get you, Senor Buzzard,” Francis pleasantly
-assured Mancheno, at the same time flourishing his
-pistol at him.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>He leveled his weapon as Mancheno fled, but reconsidered
-and did not draw trigger.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I’ve only three shots left,” he explained to Henry,
-half in apology. “And in this country one can never
-tell when three shots will come in handiest, ‘as I’ve found
-out, beyond a doubt, beyond a doubt.’”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Look!” the peon cried, pointing to his father and to
-the distant mountainside. “That is why they ran away.
-They have learned the peril of the sacred things of Maya.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The old priest, running over the knots of the tassel in
-an ecstasy that was almost trance-like, was gazing fixedly
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_131'>131</span>at the distant mountainside, from which, side by side and
-close together, two bright flashes of light were repeating
-themselves.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Twin mirrors could do it in the hands of a man,” was
-Henry’s comment.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“They are the eyes of Chia,” the peon repeated. “It
-is so written in the knots as you have heard my father say.
-<em>Wait in the foot-steps of the God till the eyes of Chia
-flash.</em>”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The old man rose to his feet and wildly proclaimed:
-“<em>To find the treasure we must find the eyes!</em>”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“All right, old top,” Henry soothed him, as, with his
-small traveler’s compass he took the bearings of the flashes.</p>
-
-<hr class='c010' />
-
-<p class='c000'>“He’s got a compass inside his head,” Henry remarked
-an hour later of the old priest, who led on the foremost
-mule. “I check him by the compass, and, no matter
-how the natural obstacles compel him to deviate, he comes
-back to the course as if he were himself a magnetic needle.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Not since leaving the foot-step, had the flashings been
-visible. Only from that one spot, evidently, did the rugged
-landscape permit the seeing of them. Rugged the country
-was, broken into arroyos and cliffs, interspersed with forest
-patches and stretches of sand and of volcanic ash.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>At last the way became impassable for their mounts,
-and Ricardo was left behind to keep charge of the mules
-and mule-peons and to make a camp. The remainder of
-the party continued on, scaling the jungle-clad steep that
-blocked their way by hoisting themselves and one another
-up from root to root. The old Maya, still leading, was oblivious
-to Leoncia’s presence.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Suddenly, half a mile farther on, he halted and shrank
-back as if stung by a viper. Francis laughed, and across
-the wild landscape came back a discordant, mocking echo.
-The last priest of the Mayas ran the knots hurriedly,
-picked out a particular string, ran its knots twice, and
-then announced:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“<em>When the God laughs, beware!—so say the knots.</em>”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Fifteen minutes were lost ere Henry and Francis succeeded
-in only partly convincing him, by repeated trials of
-their voices, that the thing was an echo.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Half an hour later, they debouched on a series of abrupt-rolling
-sand-dunes. Again the old man shrank back. From
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_132'>132</span>the sand in which they strode, arose a clamor of noise.
-When they stood still, all was still. A single step, and
-all the sand about them became vocal.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“<em>When the God laughs, beware!</em>” the old Maya warned.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Drawing a circle in the sand with his finger, which
-shouted at him as he drew it, he sank down within it on
-his knees, and as his knees contacted on the sand arose
-a very screaming and trumpeting of sound. The peon
-joined his father inside the noisy circle, where, with his
-forefinger, the old man was tracing screeching cabalistic
-figures and designs.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Leoncia was overcome, and clung both to Henry and
-Francis. Even Francis was perturbed.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“The echo was an echo,” he said. “But here is no
-echo. I don’t understand it. Frankly, it gets my goat.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Piffle!” Henry retorted, stirring the sand with his foot
-till it shouted again. “It’s the barking sand. On the
-island of Kauai, down in the Hawaiian Islands, I have been
-across similar barking sands——quite a place for tourists,
-I assure you. Only this is a better specimen, and much
-noisier. The scientists have a score of high-brow theories
-to account for the phenomenon. It occurs in several other
-places in the world, as I have heard. There’s only one
-thing to do, and that is to follow the compass bearing
-which leads straight across. Such sands do bark, but
-they have never been known to bite.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But the last of the priests could not be persuaded out
-of his circle, although they succeeded in disturbing him
-from his prayers long enough to spout a flood of impassioned
-Maya speech.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“He says,” the son interpreted, “that we are bent on
-such sacrilege that the very sands cry out against us. He
-will go no nearer to the dread abode of Chia. Nor will I.
-His father died there, as is well known amongst the Mayas.
-He says he will not die there. He says he is not old
-enough to die.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“The miserable octogenarian!” Francis laughed, and
-was startled by the ghostly, mocking laugh of the echo,
-while all about them the sand-dunes bayed in chorus.
-“Too youthful to die! How about you, Leoncia? Are
-you too young to die yet a while?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Say,” she smiled back, moving her foot slightly so as
-to bring a moan of reproach from the sand beneath it.
-“On the contrary, I am too old to die just because the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_133'>133</span>cliffs echo our laughter back at us and because the sandhills
-bark at us. Come, let us go on. We are very close
-to those flashings. Let the old man wait within his circle
-until we come back.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>She cast off their hands and stepped forward, and as
-they followed, all the dunes became inarticulate, while
-one, near to them, down the sides of which ran a slide
-of sand, rumbled and thundered. Fortunately for them,
-as they were soon to learn, Francis, at abandoning the
-mules, had equipped himself with a coil of thin, strong
-rope.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Once across the sands they encountered more echoes.
-On trials, they found their halloes distinctly repeated as
-often as six or eight times.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Hell’s bells,” said Henry. “No wonder the natives
-fight shy of such a locality!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Wasn’t it Mark Twain who wrote about a man whose
-hobby was making a collection of echoes?” Francis
-queried.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Never heard of him. But this is certainly some fine
-collection of Maya echoes. They chose the region wisely
-for a hiding place. Undoubtedly it was always sacred,
-even before the Spaniards came. The old priests knew the
-natural causes of the mysteries, and passed them over to
-the herd as mystery with a capital ‘M’ and supernatural
-in origin.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Not many minutes afterward they emerged on an open,
-level space, close under a crannied and ledge-ribbed cliff,
-and exchanged their single-file mode of progression to three-abreast.
-The ground was a hard, brittle crust of surface,
-so crystalline and dry as never to suggest that it was
-aught else but crystalline and dry all the way down. In
-an ebullition of spirits, desiring to keep both men on an
-equality of favor, Leoncia seized their hands and started
-them into a run. At the end of half a dozen strides the
-disaster happened. Simultaneously Henry and Francis
-broke through the crust, sinking to their thighs,
-and Leoncia was only a second behind them in breaking
-through and sinking almost as deep.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Hell’s bells!” Henry muttered. “It’s the very devil’s
-own landscape.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And his low-spoken words were whispered back to him
-from the nearby cliffs on all sides and endlessly and
-sibilantly repeated.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_134'>134</span>Not at first did they fully apprehend their danger. It
-was when, by their struggles, they found themselves waist-deep
-and steadily sinking, that the two men grasped the
-gravity of the situation. Leoncia still laughed at the predicament,
-for it seemed no more than that to her.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Quicksand,” Francis gasped.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Quicksand!” all the landscape gasped back at him, and
-continued to gasp it in fading ghostly whispers, repeating
-it and gossiping about it with gleeful unction.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“It’s a pot-hole filled with quicksand,” Henry corroborated.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Maybe the old boy was right in sticking back there on
-the barking sands,” observed Francis.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The ghostly whispering redoubled upon itself and was
-a long time in dying away.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>By this time they were midway between waist and
-arm-pits and sinking as methodically as ever.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Well, somebody’s got to get out of the scrape alive,”
-Henry remarked.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And, even without discussing the choice, both men began
-to hoist Leoncia up, although the effort and her weight
-thrust them more quickly down. When she stood, free
-and clear, a foot on the nearest shoulder of each of the
-two men she loved, Francis said, though the landscape
-mocked him:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Now, Leoncia, we’re going to toss you out of this.
-At the word ‘Go!’ let yourself go. And you must strike
-full length and softly on the crust. You’ll slide a little.
-But don’t let yourself stop. Keep on going. Crawl out
-to the solid land on your hands and knees. And, whatever
-you do, don’t stand up until you reach the solid land.—Ready,
-Henry?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Between them, though it hastened their sinking, they
-swung her back and forth, free in the air, and, the third
-swing, at Francis’ “Go!” heaved her shoreward.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Her obedience to their instructions was implicit, and,
-on hands and knees, she gained the solid rocks of the shore.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Now for the rope!” she called to them.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But by this time Francis was too deep to be able to
-remove the coil from around his neck and under one arm.
-Henry did it for him, and, though the exertion sank him
-to an equal deepness, managed to fling one end of the rope
-to Leoncia.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>At first she pulled on it. Next, she fastened a turn
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_135'>135</span>around a boulder the size of a motor car, and let Henry
-pull. But it was in vain. The strain or purchase was so
-lateral that it seemed only to pull him deeper. The quicksand
-was sucking and rising over his shoulders when
-Leoncia cried out, precipitating a very Bedlam of echoes:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Wait! Stop pulling! I have an idea! Give me all the
-slack! Just save enough of the end to tie under your
-shoulders!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The next moment, dragging the rope after her by the
-other end, she was scaling the cliff. Forty feet up, where
-a gnarled and dwarfed tree rooted in the crevices, she
-paused. Passing the rope across the tree-trunk, as over
-a hook, she drew in the slack and made fast to a boulder
-of several hundredweight.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Good for the girl!” Francis applauded to Henry.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Both men had grasped her plan, and success depended
-merely on her ability to dislodge the boulder and topple it
-off the ledge. Five precious minutes were lost, until she
-could find a dead branch of sufficient strength to serve
-as a crowbar. Attacking the boulder from behind and
-working with tense coolness while her two lovers continued
-to sink, she managed at the last to topple it over the
-brink.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>As it fell, the rope tautened with a jerk that fetched
-an involuntary grunt from Henry’s suddenly constricted
-chest. Slowly, he arose out of the quicksand, his progress
-being accompanied by loud sucking reports as the sand
-reluctantly released him. But, when he cleared the
-surface, the boulder so outweighed him that he shot shoreward
-across the crust until directly under the purchase
-above, when the boulder came to rest on the ground beside
-him.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Only Francis’ head, arms, and tops of shoulders were
-visible above the quicksand when the end of the rope
-was flung to him. And, when he stood beside them on
-terra firma, and when he shook his fist at the quicksand
-he had escaped by so narrow a shave, they joined with
-him in deriding it. And a myriad ghosts derided them
-back, and all the air about them was woven by whispering
-shuttles into an evil texture of mockery.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_136'>136</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER XIV</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>“We can’t be a million miles away from it,” Henry said,
-as the trio came to pause at the foot of a high steep
-cliff. “If it’s any farther on, then the course lies right
-straight over the cliff, and, since we can’t climb it and
-from the extent of it it must be miles around, the source
-of those flashes ought to be right here.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Now could it have been a man with looking-glasses?”
-Leoncia ventured.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Most likely some natural phenomenon,” Francis
-answered. “I’m strong on natural phenomena since those
-barking sands.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Leoncia, who chanced to be glancing along the face of
-the cliff farther on, suddenly stiffened with attention and
-cried, “Look!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Their eyes followed hers, and rested on the same point.
-What they saw was no flash, but a steady persistence of
-white light that blazed and burned like the sun. Following
-the base of the cliff at a scramble, both men remarked,
-from the density of vegetation, that there had been no
-travel of humans that way in many years. Breathless
-from their exertions, they broke out through the brush
-upon an open-space where a not-ancient slide of rock from
-the cliff precluded the growth of vegetable life.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Leoncia clapped her hands. There was no need for
-her to point. Thirty feet above, on the face of the cliff,
-were two huge eyes. Fully a fathom across was each of
-the eyes, their surfaces brazen with some white reflecting
-substance.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“The eyes of Chia!” she cried.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Henry scratched his head with sudden recollection.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I’ve a shrewd suspicion I can tell you what they’re
-composed of,” he said. “I’ve never seen it before, but
-I’ve heard old-timers mention it. It’s an old Maya trick.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_137'>137</span>My share of the treasure, Francis, against a perforated
-dime, that I can tell you what the reflecting stuff is.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Done!” cried Francis. “A man’s a fool not to take
-odds like that, even if it’s a question of the multiplication
-table. Possibly millions of dollars against a positive bad
-dime! I’d bet two times two made five on the chance
-that a miracle could prove it. Name it? What is it? The
-bet is on.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Oysters,” Henry smiled. “Oyster shells, or, rather,
-pearl-oyster shells. It’s mother-of-pearl, cunningly
-mosaicked and cemented in so as to give a continuous reflecting
-surface. Now you have to prove me wrong, so
-climb up and see.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Beneath the eyes, extending a score of feet up and down
-the cliff, was a curious, triangular out-jut of rock. Almost
-was it like an excrescence on the face of the cliff. The
-apex of it reached within a yard of the space that intervened
-between the eyes. Rough inequalities of surface,
-and cat-like clinging on Francis’ part, enabled him to ascend
-the ten feet to the base of the excrescence. Thence,
-up to the ridge of it, the way was easier. But a twenty-five-foot
-fall and a broken arm or leg in the midst of such
-isolation was no pleasant thing to consider, and Leoncia,
-causing an involuntary jealous gleam to light Henry’s eyes,
-called up:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Oh, do be careful, Francis!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Standing on the tip of the triangle he was gazing, now
-into one, and then into the other, of the eyes. He drew his
-hunting knife and began to dig and pry at the right-hand
-eye.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“If the old gentleman were here he’d have a fit at
-such sacrilege,” Henry commented.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“The perforated dime is yours,” Francis called down,
-at the same time dropping into Henry’s outstretched palm
-the fragment he had dug loose.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Mother-of-pearl it was, a flat piece cut with definite
-purpose to fit in with the many other pieces to form the
-eye.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Where there’s smoke there’s fire,” Henry adjudged.
-“Not for nothing did the Mayas select this God-forsaken
-spot and stick these eyes of Chia on the cliff.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Looks as if we’d made a mistake in leaving the old
-gentleman and his sacred knots behind,” Francis said.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_138'>138</span>“The knots should tell all about it and what our next
-move should be.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Where there are eyes there should be a nose,” Leoncia
-contributed.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And there is!” exclaimed Francis. “Heavens! That
-was the nose I just climbed up. We’re too close up against
-it to have perspective. At a hundred yards’ distance it
-would look like a colossal face.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Leoncia advanced gravely and kicked at a decaying deposit
-of leaves and twigs evidently blown there by tropic
-gales.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Then the mouth ought to be where a mouth belongs,
-here under the nose,” she said.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In a trice Henry and Francis had kicked the rubbish
-aside and exposed an opening too small to admit a man’s
-body. It was patent that the rock-slide had partly blocked
-the way. A few rocks heaved aside gave space for Francis
-to insert his head and shoulders and gaze about with a
-lighted match.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Watch out for snakes,” warned Leoncia.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Francis grunted acknowledgment and reported:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“This is no natural cavern. It’s all hewn rock, and
-well done, if I’m any judge.” A muttered expletive announced
-the burning of his fingers by the expiring match-stub.
-And next they heard his voice, in accents of surprise:
-“Don’t need any matches. It’s got a lighting system of
-its own——from somewhere above——regular concealed
-lighting, though it’s daylight all right. Those old Mayas
-were certainly some goers. Wouldn’t be surprised if we
-found an elevator, hot and cold water, a furnace, and a
-Swede janitor.—Well, so long.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>His trunk, and legs, and feet disappeared, and then
-his voice issued forth:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Come on in. The cave is fine.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And now aren’t you glad you let me come along?”
-Leoncia twitted, as she joined the two men on the level
-floor of the rock-hewn chamber, where, their eyes quickly
-accustoming to the mysterious gray-percolation of daylight,
-they could see about them with surprising distinctness.
-“First, I found the eyes for you, and, next, the mouth.
-If I hadn’t been along, most likely, by this time, you’d
-have been half a mile away, going around the cliff and
-going farther and farther every step you took.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_139'>139</span>“But the place is bare as old Mother Hubbard’s cupboard,”
-she added, the next moment.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Naturally,” said Henry. “This is only the antechamber.
-Not so sillily would the Mayas hide the treasure
-the conquistadores were so mad after. I’m willing to wager
-right now that we’re almost as far from finding the actual
-treasure as we would be if we were not here but in San
-Antonio.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Twelve or fifteen feet in width and of an unascertainable
-height, the passage led them what Henry judged forty
-paces, or well over a hundred feet. Then it abruptly narrowed,
-turned at a right angle to the right, and, with a
-similar right angle to the left, made an elbow into another
-spacious chamber.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Still the mysterious percolation of daylight guided the
-way for their eyes, and Francis, in the lead, stopped so suddenly
-that Leoncia and Henry, in a single file behind,
-collided with him. Leoncia in the center, and Henry on
-her left, they stood abreast and gazed down a long avenue
-of humans, long dead, but not dust.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Like the Egyptians, the Mayas knew embalming and
-mummifying,” Henry said, his voice unconsciously sinking
-to a whisper in the presence of so many unburied dead, who
-stood erect and at gaze, as if still alive.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>All were European-clad, and all exposed the impassive
-faces of Europeans. About them, as to the life, were draped
-the ages-rotten habiliments of the conquistadores and of the
-English pirates. Two of them, with visors raised, were
-encased in rusty armor. Their swords and cutlasses were
-belted to them or held in their shriveled hands, and through
-their belts were thrust huge flintlock pistols of archaic model.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“The old Maya was right,” Francis whispered.
-“They’ve decorated the hiding place with their mortal
-remains and been stuck up in the lobby as a warning to
-trespassers.—Say! If that chap isn’t a real Iberian! I’ll
-bet he played haia-lai, and his fathers before him.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And that’s a Devonshire man if ever I saw one,”
-Henry whispered back. “Perforated dimes to pieces-of-eight
-that he poached the fallow deer and fled the king’s
-wrath in the first forecastle for the Spanish Main.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Br-r-r!” Leoncia shivered, clinging to both men. “The
-sacred things of the Mayas are deadly and ghastly. And
-there is a classic vengeance about it. The would-be
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_140'>140</span>robbers of the treasure-house have become its defenders,
-guarding it with their unperishing clay.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>They were loath to proceed. The garmented spectres of
-the ancient dead held them temporarily spell-bound. Henry
-grew melodramatic.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Even to this far, mad place,” he said, “as early as
-the beginning of the Conquest, their true-hound noses led
-them on the treasure-scent. Even though they could not
-get away with it, they won unerringly to it.—My hat
-is off to you, pirates and conquistadores! I salute you,
-old gallant plunderers, whose noses smelt out gold, and
-whose hearts were brave sufficient to fight for it!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Huh!” Francis concurred, as he urged the other two
-to traverse the avenue of the ancient adventurers. “Old
-Sir Henry himself ought to be here at the head of the procession.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Thirty paces they took, ere the passage elbowed as
-before, and, at the very end of the double-row of mummies,
-Henry brought his companions to a halt as he pointed and
-said:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I don’t know about Sir Henry, but there’s Alvarez
-Torres.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Under a Spanish helmet, in decapitated medieval
-Spanish dress, a big Spanish sword in its brown and withered
-hand, stood a mummy whose lean brown face for all the
-world was the lean brown face of Alvarez Torres. Leoncia
-gasped, shrank back, and crossed herself at the sight.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Francis released her to Henry, advanced, and fingered
-the cheeks and lips and forehead of the thing, and laughed
-reassuringly:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I only wish Alvarez Torres were as dead as this dead one
-is. I haven’t the slightest doubt, however, but what Torres
-descended from him——I mean before he came here to take
-up his final earthly residence as a member of the Maya
-Treasure Guard.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Leoncia passed the grim figure shudderingly. This time,
-the elbow passage was very dark, compelling Henry, who
-had changed into the lead, to light numerous matches.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Hello!” he said, as he paused at the end of a couple
-of hundred feet. “Gaze on that for workmanship! Look
-at the dressing of that stone!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>From beyond, gray light streamed into the passage,
-making matches unnecessary to see. Half into a niche
-was thrust a stone the size of the passage. It was apparent
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_141'>141</span>that it had been used to block the passage. The dressing
-was exquisite, the sides and edges of the block precisely
-aligned with the place in the wall into which it was made to
-dovetail.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I’ll wager here’s where the old Maya’s father died,”
-Francis exclaimed. “He knew the secret of the balances
-and leverages that pivoted the stone, and it was only partly
-pivoted, as you’ll observe——”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Hell’s bells!” Henry interrupted, pointing before him
-on the floor at a scattered skeleton. “It must be what’s
-left of him. It’s fairly recent, or he would have been
-mummified. Most likely he was the last visitor before us.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“The old priest said his father led men of the tierra
-caliente here,” Leoncia reminded Henry.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Also,” Francis supplemented, “he said that none returned.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Henry, who had located the skull and picked it up,
-uttered another exclamation and lighted a match to show
-the others what he had discovered: Not only was the
-skull dented with what must have been a blow from a
-sword or a machete, but a shattered hole in the back of
-the skull showed the unmistakable entrance of a bullet.
-Henry shook the skull, was rewarded by an interior rattling,
-shook again, and shook out a partly flattened bullet.
-Francis examined it.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“From a horse-pistol,” he concluded aloud. “With
-weak or greatly deteriorated powder, because, in a place
-like this, it must have been fired pretty close to point
-blank range and yet failed to go all the way through. And
-it’s an aboriginal skull all right.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>A right-angled turn completed the elbow and gave them
-access to a small but well-lighted rock chamber. From a
-window, high up and barred with vertical bars of stone a
-foot thick and half as wide, poured gray daylight. The
-floor of the place was littered with white-picked bones of
-men. An examination of the skulls showed them to be
-those of Europeans. Scattered among them were rifles,
-pistols, and knives, with, here and there, a machete.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Thus far they won, across the very threshold to the
-treasure,” Francis said, “and, from the looks, began to
-fight for its possession before they laid hands on it. Too
-bad the old man isn’t here to see what happened to his
-father.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_142'>142</span>“Might there not have been survivors who managed to
-get away with the loot?” suggested Henry.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But at that moment, casting, his eyes from the bones to a
-survey of the chamber, Francis saw what made him say:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Without doubt, no. See those gems in those eyes.
-Rubies, or I never saw a ruby!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>They followed his gaze to the stone statue of a squat
-and heavy female who stared at them red-eyed and open-mouthed.
-So large was the mouth that it made a caricature
-of the rest of the face. Beside it, carved similarly
-of stone, and on somewhat more heroic lines, was a more
-obscene and hideous male statue, with one ear of proportioned
-size and the other ear as grotesquely large as the
-female’s mouth.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“The beauteous dame must be Chia all right,” Henry
-grinned. “But who’s her gentleman friend with the elephant
-ear and the green eyes?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Search me,” Francis laughed. “But this I do know:
-those green eyes of the elephant-eared one are the largest
-emeralds I’ve ever seen or dreamed of. Each of them is
-really too large to possess fair carat value. They should
-be crown jewels or nothing.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“But a couple of emeralds and a couple of rubies, no
-matter what size, should not constitute the totality of the
-Maya treasure,” Henry contended. “We’re across the
-threshold of it, and yet we lack the key——”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Which the old Maya, back on the barking sands, undoubtedly
-holds in that sacred tassel of his,” Leoncia
-said. “Except for these two statues and the bones on the
-floor, the place is bare.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>As she spoke, she advanced to look the male statue over
-more closely. The grotesque ear centered her attention,
-and she pointed into it as she added: “I don’t know about
-the key, but there is the key-hole.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>True enough, the elephantine ear, instead of enfolding
-an orifice as an ear of such size should, was completely
-blocked up save for a small aperture that not too remotely
-resembled a key-hole. They wandered vainly about the
-chamber, tapping the walls and floor, seeking for cunningly-hidden
-passageways or unguessable clues to the hiding place
-of the treasure.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Bones of tierra caliente men, two idols, two emeralds
-of enormous size, two rubies ditto, and ourselves, are all
-the place contains,” Francis summed up. “Only a couple
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_143'>143</span>of things remain for us to do: go back and bring up
-Ricardo and the mules to make camp outside; and bring
-up the old gentleman and his sacred knots if we have to
-carry him.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“You wait with Leoncia, and I’ll go back and bring
-them up,” Henry volunteered, when they had threaded
-the long passages and the avenues of the erect dead and
-won to the sunshine and the sky outside the face of the
-cliff.</p>
-
-<hr class='c010' />
-
-<p class='c000'>Back on the barking sands the peon and his father knelt
-in the circle so noisily drawn by the old man’s forefinger.
-A local rain squall beat upon them, and, though the peon
-shivered, the old man prayed on oblivious to what might
-happen to his skin in the way of wind and water. It was
-because the peon shivered and was uncomfortable that he
-observed two things which his father missed. First, he
-saw Alvarez Torres and José Mancheno cautiously venture
-out from the jungle upon the sand. Next, he saw a miracle.
-The miracle was that the pair of them trudged steadily
-across the sand without causing the slightest sound to
-arise from their progress. When they had disappeared
-ahead, he touched his finger tentatively to the sand, and
-aroused no ghostly whisperings. He thrust his finger into
-the sand, yet all was silent, as was it silent when he
-buffeted the sand heartily with the flat of his palm. The
-passing shower had rendered the sand dumb.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>He shook his father out of his prayers, announcing:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“The sand no longer is noisy. It is as silent as the
-grave. And I have seen the enemy of the rich Gringo
-pass across the sand without sound. He is not devoid of
-sin, this Alvarez Torres, yet did the sand make no sound.
-The sand has died. The voice of the sand is not. Where
-the sinful may walk, you and I, old father, may walk.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Inside the circle, the old Maya, with trembling forefinger
-in the sand, traced further cabalistic characters; and the
-sand did not shout back at him. Outside the circle it was
-the same——because the sand had become wet, and because
-it was the way of the sand to be vocal only when
-it was bone-dry under the sun. He fingered the knots of
-the sacred writing tassel.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“It says,” he reported, “that when the sand no longer
-talks it is safe to proceed. So far I have obeyed all instruction.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_144'>144</span>In order to obey further instruction, let us now
-proceed.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>So well did they proceed, that, shortly beyond the
-barking sands, they overtook Torres and Mancheno,
-which worthy pair slunk off into the brush on one side,
-watched the priest and his son go by, and took up their
-trail well in the rear. While Henry, taking a short cut,
-missed both couples of men.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_145'>145</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER XV</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>“Even so, it was a mistake and a weakness on my part
-to remain in Panama,” Francis was saying to Leoncia, as
-they sat side by side on the rocks outside the cave entrance,
-waiting Henry’s return.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Does the stock market of New York then mean so much
-to you?” Leoncia coquettishly teased; yet only part of it
-was coquetry, the major portion of it being temporization.
-She was afraid of being alone with this man whom she
-loved so astoundingly and terribly.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Francis was impatient.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I am ever a straight talker, Leoncia. I say what I
-mean, in the directest, shortest way——”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Wherein you differ from us Spaniards,” she interpolated,
-“who must garnish and dress the simplest thoughts
-with all decorations of speech.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But he continued undeterred what he had started to say.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“There you are a baffler, Leoncia, which was just what
-I was going to call you. I speak straight talk and true talk,
-which is a man’s way. You baffle in speech, and flutter
-like a butterfly——which, I grant, is a woman’s way and
-to be expected. Nevertheless, it is not fair ... to me.
-I tell you straight out the heart of me, and you understand.
-You do not tell me your heart. You flutter and baffle,
-and I do not understand. Therefore, you have me at a
-disadvantage. You know I love you. I have told you
-plainly. I? What do I know about you?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>With downcast eyes and rising color in her cheeks, she
-sat silent, unable to reply.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“You see!” he insisted. “You do not answer. You
-look warmer and more beautiful and desirable than ever,
-more enticing, in short; and yet you baffle me and tell me
-nothing of your heart or intention. Is it because you are
-woman? Or because you are Spanish?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>She felt herself stirred profoundly. Beyond herself, yet
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_146'>146</span>in cool control of herself, she raised her eyes and looked
-steadily in his as steadily she said:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I can be Anglo-Saxon, or English, or American, or
-whatever you choose to name the ability to look things
-squarely in the face and to talk squarely into the face of
-things.” She paused and debated coolly with herself, and
-coolly resumed. “You complain that while you have
-told me that you love me, I have not told you whether
-or not I love you. I shall settle that forever and now. I
-do love you——”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>She thrust his eager arms away from her.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Wait!” she commanded. “Who is the woman now?
-Or the Spaniard? I had not finished. I love you. I am
-proud that I love you. Yet there is more. You have
-asked me for my heart and intention. I have told you
-part of the one. I now tell you all of the other: I <em>intend</em>
-to marry Henry.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Such Anglo-Saxon directness left Francis breathless.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“In heaven’s name, why?” was all he could utter.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Because I love Henry,” she answered, her eyes still
-unshrinkingly on his.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And you ... you say you love <em>me</em>?” he quavered.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And I love you, too. I love both of you. I am a good
-woman, at least I always used to think so. I still think
-so, though my reason tells me that I cannot love two men
-at the same time and be a good woman. I don’t care
-about that. If I am bad, it is I, and I cannot help myself
-for being what I was born to be.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>She paused and waited, but her lover was still speechless.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And who’s the Anglo-Saxon now?” she queried, with
-a slight smile, half of bravery, half of amusement at the
-dumbness of consternation her words had produced in him.
-“I have told you, without baffling, without fluttering, my
-full heart and my full intention.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“But you can’t!” he protested wildly. “You can’t
-love me and marry Henry.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Perhaps you have not understood,” she chided
-gravely. “I intend to marry Henry. I love you. I love
-Henry. But I cannot marry both of you. The law will
-not permit. Therefore I shall marry only one of you.
-It is my intention that that one be Henry.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Then why, why,” he demanded, “did you persuade
-me into remaining?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_147'>147</span>“Because I loved you. I have already so told you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“If you keep this up I shall go mad!” he cried.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I have felt like going mad over it myself many times,”
-she assured him. “If you think it is easy for me thus to
-play the Anglo-Saxon, you are mistaken. But no Anglo-Saxon,
-not even you whom I love so dearly, can hold
-me in contempt because I hide the shameful secrets of
-the impulses of my being. Less shameful I find it, for
-me to tell them, right out in meeting, to you. If this be
-Anglo-Saxon, make the most of it. If it be Spanish,
-and woman, and Solano, still make the most of it, for
-I am Spanish, and woman——a Spanish woman of the
-Solanos——”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“But I don’t talk with my hands,” she added with a
-wan smile in the silence that fell.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Just as he was about to speak, she hushed him, and both
-listened to a crackling and rustling from the underbrush
-that advertised the passage of humans.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Listen,” she whispered hurriedly, laying her hand
-suddenly on his arm, as if pleading. “I shall be finally
-Anglo-Saxon, and for the last time, when I tell you what
-I am going to tell you. Afterward, and for always, I shall
-be the baffling, fluttering, female Spaniard you have
-chosen for my description. Listen: I love Henry, it is
-true, very true. I love you more, much more. I shall
-marry Henry ... because I love him and am pledged
-to him. Yet always shall I love you more.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Before he could protest, the old Maya priest and his
-peon son emerged from the underbrush close upon them.
-Scarcely noticing their presence, the priest went down
-on his knees, exclaiming, in Spanish:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“For the first time have my eyes beheld the eyes of
-Chia.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>He ran the knots of the sacred tassel and began a
-prayer in Maya, which, could they have understood, ran
-as follows:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“O immortal Chia, great spouse of the divine Hzatzl
-who created all things out of nothingness! O immortal
-spouse of Hzatzl, thyself the mother of the corn, the divinity
-of the heart of the husked grain, goddess of the rain and
-the fructifying sun-rays, nourisher of all the grains and
-roots and fruits for the sustenance of man! O glorious
-Chia, whose mouth ever commands the ear of Hzatzl, to
-thee humbly, thy priest, I make my prayer. Be kind to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_148'>148</span>me, and forgiving. From thy mouth let issue forth the
-golden key that opens the ear of Hzatzl. Let thy faithful
-priest gain to Hzatzl’s treasure——Not for himself, O
-Divinity, but for the sake of his son whom the Gringo
-saved. Thy children, the Mayas, pass. There is no need
-for them of the treasure. I am thy last priest. With me
-passes all understanding of thee and of thy great spouse,
-whose name I breathe only with my forehead on the stones.
-Hear me, O Chia, hear me! My head is on the stones
-before thee!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>For all of five minutes the old Maya lay prone, quivering
-and jerking as if in a catalepsy, while Leoncia and Francis
-looked curiously on, themselves half-swept by the unmistakable
-solemnity of the old man’s prayer, non-understandable
-though it was.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Without waiting for Henry, Francis entered the cave a
-second time. With Leoncia beside him, he felt quite like
-a guide as he showed the old priest over the place. The
-latter, ever reading the knots and mumbling, followed behind,
-while the peon was left on guard outside. In the
-avenue of mummies the priest halted reverently——not
-so much for the mummies as for the sacred tassel.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“It is so written,” he announced, holding out a particular
-string of knots. “These men were evil, and robbers.
-Their doom here is to wait forever outside the inner room
-of Maya mystery.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Francis hurried him past the heap of bones of his father
-before him, and led him into the inner chamber, where first
-of all, he prostrated himself before the two idols and
-prayed long and earnestly. After that, he studied certain
-of the strings very carefully. Then he made an<a id='t148'></a> announcement,
-first in Maya, which Francis gave him to know
-was unintelligible, and next in broken Spanish:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“<em>From the mouth of Chia to the ear of Hzatzl</em>——so is
-it written.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Francis listened to the cryptic utterance, glanced into
-the dark cavity of the goddess’ mouth, stuck the blade of
-his hunting-knife into the key-hole of the god’s monstrous
-ear, then tapped the stone with the hilt of his knife and
-declared the statue to be hollow. Back to Chia, he was
-tapping her to demonstrate her hollowness, when the old
-Maya muttered:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“<em>The feet of Chia rest upon nothingness.</em>”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_149'>149</span>Francis caught by the idea, made the old man verify
-the message by the knots.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Her feet <em>are</em> large,” Leoncia laughed, “but they rest
-on the solid rock-floor and not on nothingness.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Francis pushed against the female deity with his hand
-and found that she moved easily. Gripping her with both
-hands, he began to wrestle, moving her with quick jerks
-and twists.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“<em>For the strong men and unafraid will Chia walk</em>,”
-the priest read. “But the next three knots declare:
-<em>Beware! Beware! Beware!</em>”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Well, I guess, that nothingness, whatever it is, won’t
-bite me,” Francis chuckled, as he released the statue after
-shifting it a yard from its original position.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“There, old lady, stand there for a while, or sit down
-if that will rest your feet. They ought to be tired after
-standing on nothing for so many centuries.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>A cry from Leoncia drew his gaze to the portion of the
-floor just vacated by the large feet of Chia. Stepping
-backward from the displaced goddess, he had been just
-about to fall into the rock-hewn hole her feet had concealed.
-It was circular, and a full yard in diameter. In vain he
-tested the depth by dropping lighted matches. They fell
-burning, and, without reaching bottom, still falling, were
-extinguished by the draught of their flight.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“It looks very much like nothingness without a bottom,”
-he adjudged, as he dropped a tiny stone fragment.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Many seconds they listened ere they heard it strike.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Even that may not be the bottom,” Leoncia suggested.
-“It may have been struck against some projection from
-the side and even lodged there.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Well, this will determine it,” Francis cried, seizing an
-ancient musket from among the bones on the floor and
-preparing to drop it.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But the old man stopped him.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“The message of the sacred knots is: <em>whoso violates
-the nothingness beneath the feet of Chia shall quickly and
-terribly die</em>.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Far be it from me to make a stir in the void,”
-Francis grinned, tossing the musket aside. “But what
-are we to do now, old Maya man? From the mouth of
-Chia to the ear of Hzatzl sounds easy——but how?—and
-what? Run the sacred knots with thy fingers, old top,
-and find for us <em>how</em> and <em>what</em>.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_150'>150</span>For the son of the priest, the peon with the frayed knees,
-the clock had struck. All unaware, he had seen his last
-sun-rise. No matter what happened this day, no matter
-what blind efforts he might make to escape, the day was
-to be his last day. Had he remained on guard at the cave-entrance,
-he would surely have been killed by Torres and
-Mancheno, who had arrived close on his heels.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But, instead of so remaining, it entered his cautious,
-timid soul to make a scout out and beyond for possible foes.
-Thus, he missed death in the daylight under the sky. Yet
-the pace of the hands of the clock was unalterable, and
-neither nearer nor farther was his destined end from him.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>While he scouted, Alvarez Torres and José Mancheno
-arrived at the cave-opening. The colossal, mother-of-pearl
-eyes of Chia on the wall of the cliff were too much for the
-superstition-reared Caroo.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Do you go in,” he told Torres. “I will wait here and
-watch and guard.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And Torres, with strong in him the blood of the ancient
-forebear who stood faithfully through the centuries in the
-avenue of the mummy dead, entered the Maya cave as
-courageously as that forebear had entered.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And the instant he was out of sight, José Mancheno,
-unafraid to murder treacherously any living, breathing
-man, but greatly afraid of the unseen world behind unexplainable
-phenomena, forgot the trust of watch and ward
-and stole away through the jungle. Thus, the peon, returning
-reassured from his scout and curious to learn the
-Maya secrets of his father and of the sacred tassel, found
-nobody at the cave mouth and himself entered into it
-close upon the heels of Torres.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The latter trod softly and cautiously, for fear of disclosing
-his presence to those he trailed. Also his progress was
-still further delayed by the spectacle of the ancient dead
-in the hall of mummies. Curiously he examined these
-men whom history had told about, and for whom history
-had stopped there in the antechamber of the Maya gods.
-Especially curious was he at the sight of the mummy at
-the end of the line. The resemblance to him was too
-striking for him not to see, and he could not but believe
-that he was looking upon some direct great-ancestor of his.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Still gazing and speculating, he was warned by approaching
-foot-steps, and glanced about for some place to hide.
-A sardonic humor seized him. Taking the helmet from
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_151'>151</span>the head of his ancient kin, he placed it on his own head.
-Likewise did he drape the rotten mantle about his form,
-and equip himself with the great sword and the great
-floppy boots that almost fell to pieces as he pulled them
-on. Next, half tenderly, he deposited the nude mummy
-on its back in the dark shadows behind the other mummies.
-And, finally, in the same spot at the end of the line, his
-hand resting on the sword-hilt, he assumed the same posture
-he had observed of the mummy.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Only his eyes moved as he observed the peon venturing
-slowly and fearfully along the avenue of upright corpses.
-At sight of Torres he came to an abrupt stop and with
-wide eyes of dread muttered a succession of Maya prayers.
-Torres, so confronted, could only listen with closed eyes
-and conjecture. When he heard the peon move on he
-stole a look and saw him pause with apprehension at the
-narrow elbow-turn of the passage which he must venture
-next. Torres saw his chance and swung the sword aloft
-for the blow that would split the peon’s head in twain.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Though this was the day and the very hour for the peon,
-the last second had not yet ticked. Not there, in the thoroughfare
-of the dead, was he destined to die under the
-hand of Torres. For Torres held his hand and slowly
-lowered the point of the sword to the floor, while the peon
-passed on into the elbow.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The latter met up with his father, Leoncia, and Francis,
-just as Francis was demanding the priest to run the knots
-again for fuller information of the how and what that
-would open the ear of Hzatzl.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Put your hand into the mouth of Chia and draw forth
-the key,” the old man commanded his reluctant son, who
-went about obeying him most gingerly.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“She won’t bite you——she’s stone,” Francis laughed
-at him in Spanish.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“The Maya gods are never stone,” the old man reproved
-him. “They seem to be stone, but they are alive, and
-ever alive, and under the stone, and through the stone, and
-by the stone, as always, work their everlasting will.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Leoncia shuddered away from him and clung against
-Francis, her hand on his arm, as if for protection.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I know that something terrible is going to happen,”
-she gasped. “I don’t like this place in the heart of a
-mountain among all these dead old things. I like the blue
-of the sky and the balm of the sunshine, and the widespreading
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_152'>152</span>sea. Something terrible is going to happen.
-I know that something terrible is going to happen.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>While Francis reassured her, the last seconds of the last
-minute for the peon were ticking off. And when, summoning
-all his courage, he thrust his hand into the mouth
-of the goddess, the last second ticked and the clock
-struck. With a scream of terror he pulled back his hand
-and gazed at the wrist where a tiny drop of blood exuded
-directly above an artery. The mottled head of a snake
-thrust forth like a mocking, derisive tongue and drew back
-and disappeared in the darkness of the mouth of the
-goddess.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“A viperine!” screamed Leoncia, recognising the reptile.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And the peon, likewise recognising the viperine and
-knowing his certain death by it, recoiled backward in
-horror, stepped into the hole, and vanished down the nothingness
-which Chia had guarded with her feet for so
-many centuries.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>For a full minute nobody spoke, then the old priest said:
-“I have angered Chia, and she has slain my son.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Nonsense,” Francis was comforting Leoncia. “The
-whole thing is natural and explainable. What more natural
-than that a viperine should choose a hole in a rock for a lair?
-It is the way of snakes. What more natural than that a
-man, bitten by a viperine, should step backward? And what
-more natural, with a hole behind him, than that he should
-fall into it——”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“That is then just natural!” she cried, pointing to a
-stream of crystal water which boiled up over the lips of
-the hole and fountained up in the air like a geyser. “He
-is right. Through stone itself the gods work their everlasting
-will. He warned us. He knew from reading the
-knots of the sacred tassel.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Piffle!” Francis snorted. “Not the will of the gods,
-but of the ancient Maya priests who invented their gods
-as well as this particular device. Somewhere down that
-hole the peon’s body struck the lever that opened stone
-flood-gates. And thus was released some subterranean body
-of water in the mountain. This is that water. No goddess
-with a monstrous mouth like that could ever have existed
-save in the monstrous imaginations of men. Beauty and
-divinity are one. A real and true goddess is always beautiful.
-Only man creates devils in all their ugliness.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_153'>153</span>So large was the stream that already the water was
-about their ankles.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“It’s all right,” Francis said. “I noticed, all the
-way from the entrance, the steady inclined plane of the
-floors of the rooms and passages. Those old Mayas were
-engineers, and they built with an eye on drainage. See how
-the water rushes away out through the passage.—Well, old
-man, read your knots, where is the treasure?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Where is my son?” the old man counter-demanded
-in dull and hopeless tones. “Chia has slain my only born.
-For his mother I broke the Maya law and stained the
-pure Maya blood with the mongrel blood of a woman of
-the tierra caliente. Because I sinned for him that he
-might be, is he thrice precious to me. What care I for
-treasure? My son is gone. The wrath of the Maya gods
-is upon me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>With gurglings and burblings and explosive air-bubblings
-that advertised the pressure behind, the water fountained
-high as ever into the air. Leoncia was the first to notice
-the rising depth of the water on the chamber floor.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“It is half way to my knees,” she drew Francis’ attention.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And time to get out,” he agreed, grasping the situation.
-“The drainage was excellently planned, perhaps.
-But that slide of rocks at the cliff entrance has evidently
-blocked the planned way of the water. In the other
-passages, being lower, the water is deeper, of course, than
-here. Yet is it already rising here on the general level.
-And that way lies the only way out. Come!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Thrusting Leoncia to lead in the place of safety, he
-caught the apathetic priest by the hand and dragged him
-after. At the entrance of the elbow turn the water was
-boiling above their knees. It was to their waists as they
-emerged into the chamber of mummies.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And out of the water, confronting Leoncia’s astounded
-gaze, arose the helmeted head and ancient-mantled body
-of a mummy. Not this alone would have astounded her,
-for other mummies were over-toppling, falling and being
-washed about in the swirling waters. But this mummy
-moved and made gasping noises for breath, and with eyes
-of life stared into her eyes.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It was too much for ordinary human nature to bear——a
-four-centuries old corpse dying the second death by
-drowning. Leoncia screamed, sprang forward, and fled
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_154'>154</span>the way she had come, while Francis, in his own way
-equally startled, let her go past as he drew his automatic
-pistol. But the mummy, finding footing in the swift rush
-of the current, cried out:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Don’t shoot! It is I—Torres! I have just come back
-from the entrance. Something has happened. The way
-is blocked. The water is over one’s head and higher than
-the entrance, and rocks are falling.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And your way is blocked in this direction,” Francis
-said, aiming the revolver at him.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“This is no time for quarreling,” Torres replied. “We
-must save all our lives, and, afterwards, if quarrel we
-must, then quarrel we will.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Francis hesitated.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“What is happening to Leoncia?” Torres demanded
-slyly. “I saw her run back. May she not be in danger
-by herself?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Letting Torres live and dragging the old man by the
-arm, Francis waded back to the chamber of the idols, followed
-by Torres. Here, at sight of him, Leoncia screamed
-her horror again.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“It’s only Torres,” Francis reassured her. “He gave
-me a devil of a fright myself when I first saw him. But
-he’s real flesh. He’ll bleed if a knife is stuck into him.—Come,
-old man! We don’t want to drown here like rats
-in a trap. This is not all of the Maya mysteries. Read the
-tale of the knots and get us out of this!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“The way is not <em>out</em> but <em>in</em>,” the priest quavered.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And we’re not particular so long as we get away. But
-how can we get in?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“From the mouth of Chia to the ear of Hzatzl,” was the
-answer.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Francis was struck by a sudden grotesque and terrible
-thought.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Torres,” he said, “there is a key or something inside
-that stone lady’s mouth there. You’re the nearest. Stick
-your hand in and get it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Leoncia gasped with horror as she divined Francis’ vengeance.
-Of this Torres took no notice, and gaily waded
-toward the goddess, saying: “Only too glad to be of
-service.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And then Francis’ sense of fair play betrayed him.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Stop!” he commanded harshly, himself wading to the
-idol’s side.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_155'>155</span>And Torres, at first looking on in puzzlement, saw what
-he had escaped. Several times Francis fired his pistol
-into the stone mouth, while the old priest moaned “Sacrilege!”
-Next, wrapping his coat around his arm and hand,
-he groped into the mouth and pulled out the wounded viper
-by the tail. With quick swings in the air he beat its
-head to a jelly against the goddess’ side.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Wrapping his hand and arm against the possibility of
-a second snake, Francis thrust his hand into the mouth
-and drew forth a piece of worked gold of the shape and size
-of the hole in Hzatzl’s ear. The old man pointed to the
-ear, and Francis inserted the key.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Like a nickle-in-the-slot machine,” he remarked, as
-the key disappeared from sight. “Now what’s going to
-happen? Let’s watch for the water to drain suddenly
-away.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But the great stream continued to spout unabated out
-of the hole. With an exclamation, Torres pointed to the
-wall, an apparently solid portion of which was slowly rising.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“The way out,” said Torres.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“<em>In</em>, as the old man said,” Francis corrected. “Well,
-anyway, let’s start.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>All were through and well along the narrow passage beyond,
-when the old Maya, crying, “My son!” turned and
-ran back.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The section of wall was already descending into its original
-place, and the priest had to crouch low in order to pass it.
-A moment later, it stopped in its old position. So accurately
-was it contrived and fitted that it immediately shut off the
-stream of water which had been flowing out of the idol room.</p>
-
-<hr class='c010' />
-
-<p class='c000'>Outside, save for a small river of water that flowed out of
-the base of the cliff, there were no signs of what was vexing
-the interior of the mountain. Henry and Ricardo, arriving,
-noted the stream, and Henry observed:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“That’s something new. There wasn’t any stream of
-water here when I left.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>A minute later he was saying, as he looked at a fresh slide
-of rock: “This was the entrance to the cave. Now there is
-no entrance. I wonder where the others are.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>As if in answer, out of the mountain, borne by the spouting
-stream, shot the body of a man. Henry and Ricardo pounced
-upon it and dragged it clear. Recognizing it for the priest,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_156'>156</span>Henry laid him face downward, squatted astride of him, and
-proceeded to give him the first aid for the drowned.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Not for ten minutes did the old man betray signs of life,
-and not until after another ten minutes did he open his eyes
-and look wildly about.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Where are they?” Henry asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The old priest muttered in Maya, until Henry shook more
-thorough consciousness into him.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Gone——all gone,” he gasped in Spanish.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Who?” Henry demanded, shook memory into the resuscitated
-one, and demanded again.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“My son; Chia slew him. Chia slew my son, as she slew
-them all.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Who are the rest?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Followed more shakings and repetitions of the question.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“The rich young Gringo who befriended my son, the
-enemy of the rich young Gringo whom men call Torres, and
-the young woman of the Solanos who was the cause of all
-that happened. I warned you. She should not have come.
-Women are always a curse in the affairs of men. By her
-presence, Chia, who is likewise a woman, was made angry.
-The tongue of Chia is a viperine. By her tongue Chia struck
-and slew my son, and the mountain vomited the ocean upon
-us there in the heart of the mountain, and all are dead, slain
-by Chia. Woe is me! I have angered the gods. Woe is me!
-Woe is me! And woe upon all who would seek the sacred
-treasure to filch it from the gods of Maya!”</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_157'>157</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER XVI</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>Midway between the out-bursting stream of water and the
-rock-slide, Henry and Ricardo stood in hurried debate. Beside
-them, crouched on the ground, moaned and prayed the
-last priest of the Mayas. From him, by numerous shakings
-that served to clear his addled old head, Henry had managed
-to extract a rather vague account of what had occurred inside
-the mountain.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Only his son was bitten and fell into that hole,” Henry
-reasoned hopefully.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“That’s right,” Ricardo concurred. “He never saw any
-damage, beyond a wetting, happen to the rest of them.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And they may be, right now, high up above the floor in
-some chamber,” Henry went on. “Now, if we could attack
-the slide, we might open up the cave and drain the water
-off. If they’re alive they can last for many days, for lack of
-water is what kills quickly, and they’ve certainly more water
-than they know what to do with. They can get along without
-food for a long time. But what gets me is how Torres
-got inside with them.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Wonder if he wasn’t responsible for that attack of the
-Caroos upon us,” Ricardo suggested.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But Henry scouted the idea.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Anyway,” he said, “that isn’t the present proposition——which
-proposition is: how to get inside that mountain on
-the chance that they are still alive. You and I couldn’t go
-through that slide in a month. If we could get fifty men to
-help, night and day shifts, we might open her up in forty-eight
-hours. So, the primary thing is to get the men. Here’s
-what we must do. I’ll take a mule and beat it back to that
-Caroo community and promise them the contents of one of
-Francis’ check-books if they will come and help. Failing
-that, I can get up a crowd in San Antonio. So here’s where
-I pull out on the run. In the meantime, you can work out
-trails and bring up all the mules, peons, grub and camp
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_158'>158</span>equipment. Also, keep your ears to the cliff——they might
-start signalling through it with tappings.”</p>
-
-<hr class='c010' />
-
-<p class='c000'>Into the village of the Caroos Henry forced his mule——much
-to the reluctance of the mule, and equally as much to
-the astonishment of the Caroos, who thus saw their stronghold
-invaded single-handed by one of the party they had
-attempted to annihilate. They squatted about their doors
-and loafed in the sunshine, under a show of lethargy hiding
-the astonishment that tingled through them and almost put
-them on their toes. As has been ever the way, the very
-daring of the white man, over savage and mongrel breeds,
-in this instance stunned the Caroos to inaction. Only a
-man, they could not help but reason in their slow way, a
-superior man, a noble or over-riding man, equipped with
-potencies beyond their dreaming, could dare to ride into their
-strength of numbers on a fagged and mutinous mule.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>They spoke a mongrel Spanish which he could understand,
-and, in turn, they understood his Spanish; but what he told
-them concerning the disaster in the sacred mountain had no
-effect of rousing them. With impassive faces, shrugging
-shoulders of utmost indifference, they listened to his proposition
-of a rescue and promise of high pay for their time.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“If a mountain has swallowed up the Gringos, then is it
-the will of God, and who are we to interfere between God
-and His will?” they replied. “We are poor men, but we
-care not to work for any man, nor do we care to make war
-upon God. Also, it was the Gringos’ fault. This is not their
-country. They have no right here playing pranks on our
-mountains. Their troubles are between them and God. We
-have troubles enough of our own, and our wives are unruly.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Long after the siesta hour, on his third and most reluctant
-mule, Henry rode into sleepy San Antonio. In the main
-street, midway between the court and the jail, he pulled up
-at sight of the Jefe Politico and the little fat old judge, with,
-at their heels, a dozen gendarmes and a couple of wretched
-prisoners——runaway peons from the henequen plantations
-at Santos. While the judge and the Jefe listened to Henry’s
-tale and appeal for help, the Jefe gave one slow wink to the
-judge, who was his judge, his creature, body and soul of him.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Yes, certainly we will help you,” the Jefe said at the
-end, stretching his arms and yawning.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_159'>159</span>“How soon can we get the men together and start?”
-Henry demanded eagerly.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“As for that, we are very busy——are we not, honorable
-judge?” the Jefe replied with lazy insolence.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“We are very busy,” the judge yawned into Henry’s face.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Too busy for a time,” the Jefe went on. “We regret
-that not to-morrow nor next day shall we be able to try and
-rescue your Gringos. Now, a little later——”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Say next Christmas,” the judge suggested.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Yes,” concurred the Jefe with a grateful bow. “About
-next Christmas come around and see us, and, if the pressure
-of our affairs has somewhat eased, then, maybe possibly, we
-shall find it convenient to go about beginning to attempt to
-raise the expedition you have requested. In the meantime,
-good day to you, Senor Morgan.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“You mean that?” Henry demanded with wrathful face.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“The very face he must have worn when he slew Senor
-Alfaro Solano treacherously from the back,” the Jefe soliloquized
-ominously.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But Henry ignored the later insult.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I’ll tell you what you are,” he flamed in righteous wrath.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Beware!” the judge cautioned him.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I snap my fingers at you,” Henry retorted. “You
-have no power over me. I am a full-pardoned man by the
-President of Panama himself. And this is what you are.
-You are half-breeds. You are mongrel pigs.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Pray proceed, Senor,” said the Jefe, with the suave
-politeness of deathly rage.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“You’ve neither the virtues of the Spaniard nor of the
-Carib, but the vices of both thrice compounded. Mongrel
-pigs, that’s what you are and all you are, the pair of you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Are you through Senor?—quite through?” the Jefe
-queried softly.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>At the same moment he gave a signal to the gendarmes,
-who sprang upon Henry from behind and disarmed him.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Even the President of the Republic of Panama cannot
-pardon in anticipation of a crime not yet committed——am I
-right, judge?” said the Jefe.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“This is a fresh offense,” the judge took the cue promptly.
-“This Gringo dog has blasphemed against the law.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Then shall he be tried, and tried now, right here, immediately.
-We will not bother to go back and reopen court.
-We shall try him, and when we have disposed of him, we
-shall proceed. I have a very good bottle of wine——”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_160'>160</span>“I care not for wine,” the judge disclaimed hastily.
-“Mine shall be mescal. And in the meantime, and now,
-having been both witness and victim of the offense and there
-being no need of evidence further than what I already
-possess, I find the prisoner guilty. Is there anything you
-would suggest, Senor Mariano Vercara é Hijos?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Twenty-four hours in the stocks to cool his heated Gringo
-head,” the Jefe answered.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Such is the sentence,” the judge affirmed, “to begin at
-once. Take the prisoner away, gendarmes, and put him in
-the stocks.”</p>
-
-<hr class='c010' />
-
-<p class='c000'>Daybreak found Henry in the stocks, with a dozen hours
-of such imprisonment already behind him, lying on his back
-asleep. But the sleep was restless, being vexed subjectively
-by nightmare dreams of his mountain-imprisoned companions,
-and, objectively, by the stings of countless mosquitoes.
-So it was, twisting and squirming and striking at
-the winged pests, he awoke to full consciousness of his predicament.
-And this awoke the full expression of his profanity.
-Irritated beyond endurance by the poison from a
-thousand mosquito-bites, he filled the dawn so largely with
-his curses as to attract the attention of a man carrying a bag
-of tools. This was a trim-figured, eagle-faced young man,
-clad in the military garb of an aviator of the United States
-Army. He deflected his course so as to come by the stocks,
-and paused, and listened, and stared with quizzical admiration.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Friend,” he said, when Henry ceased to catch breath.
-“Last night, when I found myself marooned here with half
-my outfit left on board, I did a bit of swearing myself. But
-it was only a trifle compared with yours. I salute you, sir.
-You’ve an army teamster skinned a mile. Now if you don’t
-mind running over the string again, I shall be better equipped
-the next time I want to do any cussing.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And who in hell are you?” Henry demanded. “And
-what in hell are you doing here?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I don’t blame you,” the aviator grinned. “With a face
-swollen like that you’ve got a right to be rude. And who
-beat you up? In hell, I haven’t ascertained my status yet.
-But here on earth I am known as Parsons, Lieutenant Parsons.
-I am not doing anything in hell as yet; but here in
-Panama I am scheduled to fly across this day from the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_161'>161</span>Atlantic to the Pacific. Is there any way I may serve you
-before I start?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Sure,” Henry nodded. “Take a tool out of that bag of
-yours and smash this padlock. I’ll get rheumatism if I have
-to stick here much longer. My name’s Morgan, and no man
-has beaten me up. Those are mosquito-bites.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>With several blows of a wrench, Lieutenant Parsons
-smashed the ancient padlock and helped Henry to his feet.
-Even while rubbing the circulation back into his feet and
-ankles, Henry, in a rush, was telling the army aviator of the
-predicament and possibly tragic disaster to Leoncia and
-Francis.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I love that Francis,” he concluded. “He is the dead
-spit of myself. We’re more like twins, and we must be distantly
-related. As for the senorita, not only do I love her but
-I am engaged to marry her. Now will you help? Where’s
-the machine? It takes a long time to get to the Maya Mountain
-on foot or mule-back; but if you give me a lift in your
-machine I’d be there in no time, along with a hundred sticks
-of dynamite, which you could procure for me and with which
-I could blow the side out of that mountain and drain off the
-water.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Lieutenant Parsons hesitated.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Say yes, say yes,” Henry pleaded.</p>
-
-<hr class='c010' />
-
-<p class='c000'>Back in the heart of the sacred mountain, the three imprisoned
-ones found themselves in total darkness the instant
-the stone that blocked the exit from the idol chamber had
-settled into place. Francis and Leoncia groped for each other
-and touched hands. In another moment his arm was around
-her, and the deliciousness of the contact robbed the situation
-of half its terror. Near them they could hear Torres
-breathing heavily. At last he muttered:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Mother of God, but that was a close shave! What next,
-I wonder?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“There’ll be many nexts before we get out of this neck of
-the woods,” Francis assured him. “And we might as well
-start getting out.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The method of procedure was quickly arranged. Placing
-Leoncia behind him, her hand clutching the hem of his
-jacket so as to be guided by him, he moved ahead with his
-left hand in contact with the wall. Abreast of him, Torres
-felt his way along the right-hand wall. By their voices
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_162'>162</span>they could thus keep track of each other, measure the width
-of the passage, and guard against being separated into forked
-passages. Fortunately, the tunnel, for tunnel it truly was,
-had a smooth floor, so that, while they groped their way,
-they did not stumble. Francis refused to use his matches
-unless extremity arose, and took precaution against falling
-into a possible pit by cautiously advancing one foot at a time
-and ascertaining solid stone under it ere putting on his weight.
-As a result, their progress was slow. At no greater speed
-than half a mile an hour did they proceed.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Once only did they encounter branching passages. Here
-he lighted a precious match from his waterproof case, and
-found that between the two passages there was nothing to
-choose. They were as like as two peas.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“The only way is to try one,” he concluded, “and, if it
-gets us nowhere, to retrace and try the other. There’s one
-thing certain: these passages lead somewhere, or the Mayas
-wouldn’t have gone to all the trouble of making them.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Ten minutes later he halted suddenly and cried warning.
-The foot he had advanced was suspended in emptiness where
-the floor should have been. Another match was struck, and
-they found themselves on the edge of a natural cavern of
-such proportions that neither to right nor left, nor up nor
-down, nor across, could the tiny flame expose any limits to
-it. But they did manage to make out a rough sort of stairway,
-half-natural, half-improved by man, which fell away
-beneath them into the pit of black.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In another hour, having followed the path down the length
-of the floor of the cavern, they were rewarded by a feeble
-glimmer of daylight, which grew stronger as they advanced.
-Before they knew it, they had come to the source of it——being
-much nearer than they had judged; and Francis, tearing
-away vines and shrubbery, crawled out into the blaze of
-the afternoon sun. In a moment Leoncia and Torres were
-beside him, gazing down into a valley from an eyrie on a
-cliff. Nearly circular was the valley, a full league in diameter,
-and it appeared to be mountain-walled and cliff-walled for
-its entire circumference.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“It is the Valley of Lost Souls,” Torres utterly solemnly.
-“I have heard of it, but never did I believe.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“So have I heard of it and never believed,” Leoncia
-gasped.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And what of it?” demanded Francis. “We’re not lost
-souls, but good flesh-and-blood persons. We should worry.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_163'>163</span>“But Francis, listen,” Leoncia said. “The tales I have
-heard of it, ever since I was a little girl, all agreed that no
-person who ever got into it ever got out again.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Granting that that is so,” Francis could not help smiling,
-“then how did the tales come out? If nobody ever
-came out again to tell about it, how does it happen that
-everybody outside knows about it?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I don’t know,” Leoncia admitted. “I only tell you
-what I have heard. Besides, I never believed. But this
-answers all the descriptions of the tales.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Nobody ever got out,” Torres affirmed with the same
-solemn utterance.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Then how do you know that anybody got in?” Francis
-persisted.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“All the lost souls live here,” was the reply. “That is
-why we’ve never seen them, because they never got out. I
-tell you, Mr. Francis Morgan, that I am no creature without
-reason. I have been educated. I have studied in Europe,
-and I have done business in your own New York. I know
-science and philosophy; and yet do I know that this is the
-valley, once in, from which no one emerges.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Well, we’re not in yet, are we?” retorted Francis with
-a slight manifestation of impatience. “And we don’t have
-to go in, do we?” He crawled forward to the verge of the
-shelf of loose soil and crumbling stone in order to get a better
-view of the distant object his eye had just picked out. “If
-that isn’t a grass-thatched roof——”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>At that moment the soil broke away under his hands. In
-a flash, the whole soft slope on which they rested broke
-away, and all three were sliding and rolling down the steep
-slope in the midst of a miniature avalanche of soil, gravel,
-and grass-tufts.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The two men picked themselves up first, in the thicket of
-bushes which had arrested them; but, before they could get
-to Leoncia, she, too, was up and laughing.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Just as you were saying we didn’t have to go into the
-valley!” she gurgled at Francis. “Now will you believe?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But Francis was busy. Reaching out his hand, he caught
-and stopped a familiar object bounding down the steep slope
-after them. It was Torres’ helmet purloined from the chamber
-of mummies, and to Torres he tossed it.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Throw it away,” Leoncia said.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“It’s the only protection against the sun I possess,” was
-his reply, as, turning it over in his hands, his eyes lighted
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_164'>164</span>upon an inscription on the inside. He showed it to his companions,
-reading it aloud:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“DA VASCO.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I have heard,” Leoncia breathed.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And you heard right,” Torres nodded. “Da Vasco was
-my direct ancestor. My mother was a Da Vasco. He came
-over the Spanish Main with Cortez.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“He mutinied,” Leoncia took up the tale. “I remember
-it well from my father and from my Uncle Alfaro. With a
-dozen comrades he sought the Maya treasure. They led a
-sea-tribe of Caribs, a hundred strong including their women,
-as auxiliaries. Mendoza, under Cortez’s instructions, pursued;
-and his report, in the archives, so Uncle Alfaro told
-me, says that they were driven into the Valley of the Lost
-Souls where they were left to perish miserably.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And he evidently tried to get out by the way we’ve just
-come in,” Torres continued, “and the Mayas caught him
-and made a mummy of him.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>He jammed the ancient helmet down on his head, saying:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Low as the sun is in the afternoon sky, it bites my
-crown like acid.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And famine bites at me like acid,” Francis confessed.
-“Is the valley inhabited?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I should know, Senor,” Torres replied. “There is the
-narrative of Mendoza, in which he reported that Da Vasco
-and his party were left there ‘to perish miserably.’ This I
-do know: they were never seen again of men.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Looks as though plenty of food could be grown in a place
-like this——” Francis began, but broke off at sight of Leoncia
-picking berries from a bush. “Here! Stop that, Leoncia!
-We’ve got enough troubles without having a very charming
-but very much poisoned young woman on our hands.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“They’re all right,” she said, calmly eating. “You can
-see where the birds have been pecking and eating them.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“In which case I apologize and join you,” Francis cried,
-filling his mouth with the luscious fruit. “And if I could
-catch the birds that did the pecking, I’d eat them too.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>By the time they had eased the sharpest of their hunger-pangs,
-the sun was so low that Torres removed the helmet
-of Da Vasco.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“We might as well stop here for the night,” he said. “I
-left my shoes in the cave with the mummies, and lost Da
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_165'>165</span>Vasco’s old boots during the swimming. My feet are cut to
-ribbons, and there’s plenty of seasoned grass here out of
-which I can plait a pair of sandals.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>While occupied with this task, Francis built a fire and
-gathered a supply of wood, for, despite the low latitude, the
-high altitude made fire a necessity for a night’s lodging. Ere
-he had completed the supply, Leoncia, curled up on her side,
-her head in the hollow of her arm, was sound asleep. Against
-the side of her away from the fire, Francis thoughtfully
-packed a mound of dry leaves and dry forest mould.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_166'>166</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER XVII</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>Daybreak in the Valley of the Lost Souls, and the Long
-House in the village of the Tribe of the Lost Souls. Fully
-eighty feet in length was the Long House, with half as much
-in width, built of adobe bricks, and rising thirty feet to a
-gable roof thatched with straw. Out of the house feebly
-walked the Priest of the Sun——an old man, tottery on his
-legs, sandal-footed, clad in a long robe of rude home-spun
-cloth, in whose withered Indian face were haunting reminiscences
-of the racial lineaments of the ancient conquistadores.
-On his head was a curious cap of gold, arched over by a
-semi-circle of polished golden spikes. The effect was obvious,
-namely, the rising sun and the rays of the rising sun.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>He tottered across the open space to where a great hollow
-log swung suspended between two posts carved with totemic
-and heraldic devices. He glanced at the eastern horizon,
-already red with the dawning, to reassure himself that he
-was on time, lifted a stick, the end of which was fiber-woven
-into a ball, and struck the hollow log. Feeble as he was, and
-light as was the blow, the hollow log boomed and reverberated
-like distant thunder.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Almost immediately, while he continued slowly to beat,
-from the grass-thatched dwellings that formed the square
-about the Long House, emerged the Lost Souls. Men and
-women, old and young, and children and babes in arms, they
-all came out and converged upon the Sun Priest. No more
-archaic spectacle could be witnessed in the twentieth-century
-world. Indians, indubitably they were, yet in many of their
-faces were the racial reminiscences of the Spaniard. Some
-faces, to all appearance, were all Spanish. Others, by the
-same token, were all Indian. But betwixt and between, the
-majority of them betrayed the inbred blend of both races.
-But more bizarre was their costume——unremarkable in
-the women, who were garbed in long, discreet robes of home-spun
-cloth, but most remarkable in the men, whose home-spun
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_167'>167</span>was grotesquely fashioned after the style of Spanish
-dress that obtained in Spain at the time of Columbus’ first
-voyage. Homely and sad-looking were the men and women—as
-of a breed too closely interbred to retain joy of life.
-This was true of the youths and maidens, of the children,
-and of the very babes against breasts——true, with the
-exception of two, one, a child-girl of ten, in whose face was
-fire, and spirit, and intelligence. Amongst the sodden faces
-of the sodden and stupid Lost Souls, her face stood out like
-a flaming flower. Only like hers was the face of the old Sun
-Priest, cunning, crafty, intelligent.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>While the priest continued to beat the resounding log,
-the entire tribe formed about him in a semi-circle, facing the
-east. As the sun showed the edge of its upper rim, the priest
-greeted it and hailed it with a quaint and medieval Spanish,
-himself making low obeisance thrice repeated, while the
-tribe prostrated itself. And, when the full sun shone clear of
-the horizon, all the tribe, under the direction of the priest,
-arose and uttered a joyful chant. Just as he had dismissed
-his people, a thin pillar of smoke, rising in the quiet air
-across the valley, caught the priest’s eye. He pointed it out,
-and commanded several of the young men.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“It rises in the Forbidden Place of Fear where no member
-of the tribe may wander. It is some devil of a pursuer
-sent out by our enemies who have vainly sought our hiding-place
-through the centuries. He must not escape to make
-report, for our enemies are powerful, and we shall be destroyed.
-Go. Kill him that we may not be killed.”</p>
-
-<hr class='c010' />
-
-<p class='c000'>About the fire, which had been replenished at intervals
-throughout the night, Leoncia, Francis, and Torres lay
-asleep, the latter with his new-made sandals on his feet and
-with the helmet of Da Vasco pulled tightly down on his head
-to keep off the dew. Leoncia was the first to awaken, and
-so curious was the scene that confronted her, that she
-watched quietly through her down-dropped lashes. Three
-of the strange Lost Tribe men, bows still stretched and
-arrows drawn in what was evident to her as the interrupted
-act of slaying her and her companions, were staring with
-amazement at the face of the unconscious Torres. They
-looked at each other in doubt, let their bows straighten, and
-shook their heads in patent advertisement that they were not
-going to kill. Closer they crept upon Torres, squatting on
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_168'>168</span>their hams the better to scrutinize his face and the helmet,
-which latter seemed to arouse their keenest interest.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>From where she lay, Leoncia was able privily to nudge
-Francis’ shoulder with her foot. He awoke quietly, and
-quietly sat up, attracting the attention of the strangers.
-Immediately they made the universal peace sign, laying
-down their bows and extending their palms outward in token
-of being weaponless.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Good morning, merry strangers,” Francis addressed
-them in English, which made them shake their heads while
-it aroused Torres.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“They must be Lost Souls,” Leoncia whispered to
-Francis.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Or real estate agents,” he smiled back. “At least the
-valley is inhabited.—Torres, who’re your friends? From
-the way they regard you, one would think they were relatives
-of yours.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Quite ignoring them, the three Lost Souls drew apart a
-slight distance and debated in low sibilant tones.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Sounds like a queer sort of Spanish,” Francis observed.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“It’s medieval, to say the least,” Leoncia confirmed.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“It’s the Spanish of the conquistadores pretty badly gone
-to seed,” Torres contributed. “You see I was right. The
-Lost Souls never get away.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“At any rate they must give and be given in marriage,”
-Francis quipped, “else how explain these three young
-huskies?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But by this time the three huskies, having reached agreement,
-were beckoning them with encouraging gestures to
-follow across the valley.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“They’re good-natured and friendly cusses, to say the
-least, despite their sorrowful mug,” said Francis, as they
-prepared to follow. “But did you ever see a sadder-faced
-aggregation in your life? They must have been born in the
-dark of the moon, or had all their sweet gazelles die, or something
-or other worse.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“It’s just the kind of faces one would expect of lost
-souls,” Leoncia answered.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And if we never get out of here, I suppose we’ll get to
-looking a whole lot sadder than they do,” he came back.
-“Anyway, I hope they’re leading us to breakfast. Those
-berries were better than nothing, but that is not saying
-much.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>An hour or more afterward, still obediently following their
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_169'>169</span>guides, they emerged upon the clearings, the dwelling places,
-and the Long House of the tribe.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“These are descendants of Da Vasco’s party and the
-Caribs,” Torres affirmed, as he glanced over the assembled
-faces. “That is incontrovertible on the face of it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And they’ve relapsed from the Christian religion of
-Da Vasco to old heathen worship,” added Francis. “Look
-at that altar——there. It’s a stone altar, and, from the
-smell of it, that is no breakfast, but a sacrifice that is
-cooking, in spite of the fact that it smells like mutton.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Thank heaven it’s only a lamb,” Leoncia breathed.
-“The old Sun Worship included human sacrifice. And
-this is Sun Worship. See that old man there in the long
-shroud with the golden-rayed cap of gold. He’s a sun
-priest. Uncle Alfaro has told me all about the sun-worshipers.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Behind and above the altar, was a great metal image of
-the sun.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Gold, all gold,” Francis whispered, “and without
-alloy. Look at those spikes, the size of them, yet so pure
-is the metal that I wager a child could bend them any way
-it wished and even tie knots in them.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Merciful God!—look at that!” Leoncia gasped, indicating
-with her eyes a crude stone bust that stood to one
-side of the altar and slightly lower. “It is the face
-of Torres. It is the face of the mummy in the Maya
-cave.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And there is an inscription——” Francis stepped
-closer to see and was peremptorily waved back by the
-priest. “It says, ‘Da Vasco.’ Notice that it has the
-same sort of helmet that Torres is wearing.—And, say!
-Glance at the priest! If he doesn’t look like Torres’ full
-brother, I’ve never fancied a resemblance in my life!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The priest, with angry face and imperative gesture, motioned
-Francis to silence, and made obeisance to the cooking
-sacrifice. As if in response, a flaw of wind put out the
-flame of the cooking.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“The Sun God is angry,” the priest announced with
-great solemnity, his queer Spanish nevertheless being intelligible
-to the newcomers. “Strangers have come among
-us and remain unslain. That is why the Sun God is angry.
-Speak, you young men who have brought the strangers
-alive to our altar. Was not my bidding, which is ever
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_170'>170</span>and always the bidding of the Sun God, that you should
-slay them?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>One of the three young men stepped tremblingly forth,
-and with trembling forefingers pointed at the face of Torres
-and at the face of the stone bust.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“We recognised him,” he quavered, “and we could
-not slay him for we remembered prophecy and that our
-great ancestor would some day return. Is this stranger
-he? We do not know. We dare not know nor judge.
-Yours, O priest, is the knowledge, and yours be the judgment.
-Is this he?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The priest looked closely at Torres and exclaimed incoherently.
-Turning his back abruptly, he rekindled the
-sacred cooking fire from a pot of fire at the base of an
-altar. But the fire flamed up, flickered down, and died.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“The Sun God is angry,” the priest reiterated; whereat
-the Lost Souls beat their breasts and moaned and lamented.
-“The sacrifice is unacceptable, for the fire will not burn.
-Strange things are afoot. This is a matter of the deeper
-mysteries which I alone may know. We shall not sacrifice
-the strangers ... now. I must take time to inform
-myself of the Sun God’s will.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>With his hands he waved the tribespeople away, ceasing
-the ceremonial half-completed, and directed that the three
-captives be taken into the Long House.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I can’t follow the play,” Francis whispered in Leoncia’s
-ear, “but just the same I hope here’s where we eat.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Look at that pretty little girl,” said Leoncia, indicating
-with her eyes the child with the face of fire and spirit.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Torres has already spotted her,” Francis whispered
-back. “I caught him winking at her. He doesn’t know
-the play, nor which way the cat will jump, but he isn’t
-missing a chance to make friends. We’ll have to keep
-an eye on him, for he’s a treacherous hound and capable of
-throwing us over any time if it would serve to save his
-skin.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Inside the Long House, seated on rough-plaited mats of
-grass, they found themselves quickly served with food.
-Clear drinking water and a thick stew of meat and vegetables
-were served in generous quantity in queer, unglazed
-pottery jars. Also, they were given hot cakes of ground
-Indian corn that were not altogether unlike tortillas.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>After the women who served had departed, the little
-girl, who had led them and commanded them, remained.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_171'>171</span>Torres resumed his overtures, but she, graciously ignoring
-him, devoted herself to Leoncia who seemed to fascinate
-her.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“She’s a sort of hostess, I take it,” Francis explained.
-“You know—like the maids of the village in Samoa, who
-entertain all travellers and all visitors of no matter how
-high rank, and who come pretty close to presiding at all
-functions and ceremonials. They are selected by the high
-chiefs for their beauty, their virtue, and their intelligence.
-And this one reminds me very much of them, except that
-she’s so awfully young.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Closer she came to Leoncia, and, fascinated though she
-patently was by the beautiful strange woman, in her
-bearing of approach there was no hint of servility nor sense
-of inferiority.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Tell me,” she said, in the quaint archaic Spanish of
-the valley, “is that man really Capitan Da Vasco returned
-from his home in the sun in the sky?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Torres smirked and bowed, and proclaimed proudly: “I
-am a Da Vasco.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Not <em>a</em> Da Vasco, but Da Vasco himself,” Leoncia
-coached him in English.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“It’s a good bet—play it!” Francis commanded, likewise
-in English. “It may pull us all out of a hole. I’m
-not particularly stuck on that priest, and he seems the
-high-cockalorum over these Lost Souls.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I have at last come back from the sun,” Torres told
-the little maid, taking his cue.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>She favored him with a long and unwavering look, in
-which they could see her think, and judge, and appraise.
-Then, with expressionless face, she bowed to him respectfully,
-and, with scarcely a glance at Francis, turned to
-Leoncia and favored her with a friendly smile that was an
-illumination.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I did not know that God made women so beautiful
-as you,” the little maid said softly, ere she turned to go
-out. At the door she paused to add, “The Lady Who
-Dreams is beautiful, but she is strangely different from
-you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But hardly had she gone, when the Sun Priest, followed
-by a number of young men, entered, apparently for the purpose
-of removing the dishes and the uneaten food. Even
-as some of them were in the act of bending over to pick
-up the dishes, at a signal from the priest they sprang upon
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_172'>172</span>the three guests, bound their hands and arms securely
-behind them, and led them out to the Sun God’s altar
-before the assembled tribe. Here, where they observed
-a crucible on a tripod over a fierce fire, they were tied to
-fresh-sunken posts, while many eager hands heaped fuel
-about them to their knees.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Now buck up—be as haughty as a real Spaniard!”
-Francis at the same time instructed and insulted Torres.
-“You’re Da Vasco himself. Hundreds of years before, you
-were here on earth in this very valley with the ancestors
-of these mongrels.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“You must die,” the Sun Priest was now addressing
-them, while the Lost Souls nodded unanimously. “For
-four hundred years, as we count our sojourn in this valley,
-have we slain all strangers. You were not slain, and
-behold the instant anger of the Sun God: <em>our altar fire
-went out</em>.” The Lost Souls moaned and howled and
-pounded their chests. “Therefore, to appease the Sun
-God, you shall now die.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Beware!” Torres proclaimed, prompted in whispers,
-sometimes by Francis, sometimes by Leoncia. “I am Da
-Vasco. I have just come from the sun.” He nodded with
-his head, because of his tied hands, at the stone bust. “I
-am that Da Vasco. I led your ancestors here four hundred
-years ago, and I left you here, commanding you to remain
-until my return.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The Sun Priest hesitated.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Well, priest, speak up and answer the divine Da
-Vasco,” Francis spoke harshly.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“How do I know that he is divine?” the priest countered
-quickly. “Do I not look much like him myself?
-Am I therefore divine? Am I Da Vasco? Is he Da Vasco?
-Or may not Da Vasco be yet in the sun?—for truly I know
-that I am man born of woman three-score and eighteen
-years ago and that I am not Da Vasco.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“You have not spoken to Da Vasco!” Francis threatened,
-as he bowed in vast humility to Torres and hissed
-at him in English: “Be haughty, damn you, be haughty.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The priest wavered for the moment, and then addressed
-Torres.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I am the faithful priest of the sun. Not lightly can
-I relinquish my trust. If you are the divine Da Vasco, then
-answer me one question.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Torres nodded with magnificent haughtiness.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_173'>173</span>“Do you love gold?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Love gold!” Torres jeered. “I am a great captain
-in the sun, and the sun is made of gold. Gold? It is like
-to me this dirt beneath my feet and the rock of which your
-mighty mountains are composed.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Bravo,” Leoncia whispered approval.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Then, O divine Da Vasco,” the Sun Priest said humbly,
-although he could not quite muffle the ring of triumph in
-his voice, “are you fit to pass the ancient and usual
-test. When you have drunk the drink of gold, and can
-still say that you are Da Vasco, then will I, and all of
-us, bow down and worship you. We have had occasional
-intruders in this valley. Always did they come athirst for
-gold. But when we had satisfied their thirst, inevitably
-they thirsted no more, for they were dead.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>As he spoke, while the Lost Souls looked on eagerly,
-and while the three strangers looked on with no less keenness
-of apprehension, the priest thrust his hand into the
-open mouth of a large leather bag and began dropping
-handfuls of gold nuggets into the heated crucible of the
-tripod. So near were they, that they could see the gold
-melt into fluid and rise up in the crucible like the drink it
-was intended to be.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The little maid, daring on her extraordinary position in
-the Lost Souls Tribe, came up to the Sun Priest and spoke
-that all might hear.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“That is Da Vasco, the Capitan Da Vasco, the divine
-Capitan Da Vasco, who led our ancestors here the long long
-time ago.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The priest tried to silence her with a frown. But the
-maid repeated her statement, pointing eloquently from the
-bust to Torres and back again; and the priest felt his grip
-on the situation slipping, while inwardly he cursed the
-sinful love of the mother of the little girl which had made
-her his daughter.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Hush!” he commanded sternly. “These are things
-of which you know nothing. If he be the Capitan Da
-Vasco, being divine he will drink the gold and be unharmed.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Into a rude pottery pitcher, which had been heated in the
-pot of fire at the base of the altar, he poured the molten
-gold. At a signal, several of the young men laid aside their
-spears, and, with the evident intention of prying her teeth
-apart, advanced on Leoncia.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_174'>174</span>“Hold, priest!” Francis shouted stentoriously. “She
-is not divine as Da Vasco is divine. Try the golden drink
-on Da Vasco.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Whereat Torres bestowed upon Francis a look of malignant
-anger.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Stand on your haughty pride,” Francis instructed him.
-“Decline the drink. Show them the inside of your
-helmet.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I will not drink!” Torres cried, half in a panic as the
-priest turned to him.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“You shall drink. If you are Da Vasco, the divine capitan
-from the sun, we will then know it and we will fall
-down and worship you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Torres looked appeal at Francis, which the priest’s narrow
-eyes did not fail to catch.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Looks as though you’ll have to drink it,” Francis said
-dryly. “Anyway, do it for the lady’s sake and die like a
-hero.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>With a sudden violent strain at the cords that bound
-him, Torres jerked one hand free, pulled off his helmet,
-and held it so that the priest could gaze inside.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Behold what is graven therein,” Torres commanded.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Such was the priest’s startlement at sight of the inscription,
-DA VASCO, that the pitcher fell from his hand. The
-molten gold, spilling forth, set the dry debris on the ground
-afire, while one of the spearmen, spattered on the foot,
-danced away with wild yells of pain. But the Sun Priest
-quickly recovered himself. Seizing the fire pot, he was
-about to set fire to the faggots heaped about his three
-victims, when the little maid intervened.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“The Sun God would not let the great captain drink
-the drink,” she said. “The Sun God spilled it from your
-hand.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And when all the Lost Souls began to murmur that there
-was more in the matter than appeared to their priest, the
-latter was compelled to hold his hand. Nevertheless was he
-resolved on the destruction of the three intruders. So,
-craftily, he addressed his people.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“We shall wait for a sign.—Bring oil. We will give the
-Sun God time for a sign.——Bring a candle.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Pouring the jar of oil over the faggots to make them
-more inflammable, he set the lighted stub of a candle in
-the midst of the saturated fuel, and said:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_175'>175</span>“The life of the candle will be the duration of the
-time for the sign. Is it well, O People?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And all the Lost Souls murmured, “It is well.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Torres looked appeal to Francis, who replied:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“The old brute certainly pinched on the length of
-the candle. It won’t last five minutes at best, and, maybe,
-inside three minutes we’ll be going up in smoke.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“What can we do?” Torres demanded frantically, while
-Leoncia looked bravely, with a sad brave smile of love,
-into Francis’ eyes.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Pray for rain,” Francis answered. “And the sky is
-as clear as a bell. After that, die game. Don’t squeal too
-loud.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And his eyes returned to Leoncia’s and expressed what
-he had never dared express to her before——his full heart
-of love. Apart, by virtue of the posts to which they were
-tied and which separated them, they had never been so
-close together, and the bond that drew them and united
-them was their eyes.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>First of all, the little maid, gazing into the sky for the
-sign, saw it. Torres, who had eyes only for the candle
-stub, nearly burned to its base, heard the maid’s cry and
-looked up. And at the same time he heard, as all of them
-heard, the droning flight as of some monstrous insect in
-the sky.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“An aeroplane,” Francis muttered. “Torres, claim it
-for the sign.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But no need to claim was necessary. Above them not
-more than a hundred feet, it swooped and circled, the
-first aeroplane the Lost Souls had ever seen, while from it,
-like a benediction from heaven, descended the familiar:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Back to back against the mainmast,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Held at bay the entire crew.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>Completing the circle and rising to an elevation of nearly
-a thousand feet, they saw an object detach itself directly
-overhead, fall like a plummet for three hundred feet, then
-expand into a spread parachute, with beneath it like a
-spider suspended on a web, the form of a man, which last,
-as it neared the ground, again began to sing:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Back to back against the mainmast,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Held at bay the entire crew.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_176'>176</span>And then event crowded on event with supremest
-rapidity. The stub of the candle fell apart, the flaming
-wick fell into the tiny lake of molten fat, the lake flamed,
-and the oil-saturated faggots about it flamed. And Henry,
-landing in the thick of the Lost Souls, blanketing a goodly
-portion of them under his parachute, in a couple of leaps
-was beside his friends and kicking the blazing faggots
-right and left. Only for a second did he desist. This was
-when the Sun Priest interfered. A right hook to the jaw
-put that aged confidant of God down on his back, and,
-while he slowly recuperated and crawled to his feet, Henry
-slashed clear the lashings that bound Leoncia, Francis, and
-Torres. His arms were out to embrace Leoncia, when she
-thrust him away with:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Quick! There is no time for explanation. Down on
-your knees to Torres and pretend you are his slave——and
-don’t talk Spanish; talk English.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Henry could not comprehend, and, while Leoncia reassured
-him with her eyes, he saw Francis prostrate himself
-at the feet of their common enemy.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Gee!” Henry muttered, as he joined Francis. “Here
-goes. But it’s worse than rat poison.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Leoncia followed him, and all the Lost Souls went down
-prone before the Capitan Da Vasco who received in their
-midst celestial messengers direct from the sun. All went
-down, except the priest, who, mightily shaken, was meditating
-doing it, when the mocking devil of melodrama in
-Torres’ soul prompted him to overdo his part.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>As haughtily as Francis had coached him, he lifted his
-right foot and placed it down on Henry’s neck, incidentally
-covering and pinching most of his ear.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And Henry literally went up in the air.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“You can’t step on my ear, Torres!” he shouted, at
-the same time dropping him, as he had dropped the priest
-with his right hook.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And now the beans are spilled,” Francis commented
-in dry and spiritless disgust. “The Sun God stuff is
-finished right here and now.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The Sun Priest, exultantly signaling his spearmen,
-grasped the situation. But Henry dropped the muzzle of
-his automatic pistol to the old priest’s midrif; and the
-priest, remembering the legends of deadly missiles propelled
-by the mysterious substance called “gunpowder,” smiled
-appeasingly and waved back his spearmen.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_177'>177</span>“This is beyond my powers of wisdom and judgment,”
-he addressed his tribespeople, while ever his wavering glance
-returned to the muzzle of Henry’s pistol. “I shall appeal
-to the last resort. Let the messenger be sent to wake the
-Lady Who Dreams. Tell her that strangers from the sky,
-and, mayhap, the sun, are here in our valley. And that
-only the wisdom of her far dreams will make clear to us
-what we do not understand, and what even I do not understand.”</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_178'>178</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER XVIII</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>Convoyed by the spearmen, the party of Leoncia, the two
-Morgans, and Torres, was led through the pleasant fields,
-all under a high state of primitive cultivation, and on across
-running streams and through woodland stretches and knee
-deep pastures where grazed cows of so miniature a breed
-that, full-grown, they were no larger than young calves.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“They’re milch cows without mistake,” Henry commented.
-“And they’re perfect beauties. But did you ever
-see such dwarfs! A strong man could lift up the biggest
-specimen and walk off with it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Don’t fool yourself,” Francis spoke up. “Take that
-one over there, the black one. I’ll wager it’s not an ounce
-under three hundredweight.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“How much will you wager?” Henry challenged.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Name the bet,” was the reply.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Then a hundred even,” Henry stated, “that I can lift it
-up and walk away with it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Done.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But the bet was never to be decided, for the instant Henry
-left the path he was poked back by the spearmen, who
-scowled and made signs that they were to proceed straight
-ahead.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Where the way came to lead past the foot of a very rugged
-cliff, they saw above them many goats.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Domesticated,” said Francis. “Look at the herd boys.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I was sure it was goat-meat in that stew,” Henry
-nodded. “I always did like goats. If the Lady Who
-Dreams, whoever she may be, vetoes the priest and lets us
-live, and if we have to stay with the Lost Souls for the rest
-of our days, I’m going to petition to be made master goatherd
-of the realm, and I’ll build you a nice little cottage,
-Leoncia, and you can become the Exalted Cheese-maker to
-the Queen.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But he did not whimsically wander farther, for, at that
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_179'>179</span>moment, they emerged upon a lake so beautiful as to bring
-a long whistle from Francis, a hand-clap from Leoncia, and
-a muttered ejaculation of appreciation from Torres. Fully
-a mile in length it stretched, with more than half the same
-in width, and was a perfect oval. With one exception, no
-habitation broke the fringe of trees, bamboo thickets, and
-rushes that circled its shore, even along the foot of the cliff
-where the bamboo was exceptionally luxuriant. On the
-placid surface was so vividly mirrored the surrounding
-mountains that the eye could scarcely discern where reality
-ended and reflection began.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In the midst of her rapture over the perfect reflection,
-Leoncia broke off to exclaim her disappointment in that the
-water was not crystal clear:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“What a pity it is so muddy!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“That’s because of the wash of the rich soil of the valley
-floor,” Henry elucidated. “It’s hundreds of feet deep, that
-soil.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“The whole valley must have been a lake at some time,”
-Francis concurred. “Run your eye along the cliff and see
-the old water-lines. I wonder what made it shrink.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Earthquake, most likely—opened up some subterranean
-exit and drained it off to its present level—and keeps on
-draining it, too. Its rich chocolate color shows the amount
-of water that flows in all the time, and that it doesn’t have
-much chance to settle. It’s the catch-basin for the entire
-circling watershed of the valley.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Well, there’s one house at least,” Leoncia was saying
-five minutes later, as they rounded an angle of the cliff and
-saw, tucked against the cliff and extending out over the
-water, a low-roofed bungalow-like dwelling.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The piles were massive tree-trunks, but the walls of the
-house were of bamboo, and the roof was thatched with grass-straw.
-So isolated was it, that the only access, except by
-boat, was a twenty-foot bridge so narrow that two could not
-walk on it abreast. At either end of the bridge, evidently
-armed guards or sentries, stood two young men of the tribe.
-They moved aside, at a gesture of command from the Sun
-Priest, and let the party pass, although the two Morgans did
-not fail to notice that the spearmen who had accompanied
-them from the Long House remained beyond the bridge.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Across the bridge and entered into the bungalow-like
-dwelling on stilts, they found themselves in a large room
-better furnished, crude as the furnishings were, than they
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_180'>180</span>would have expected in the Valley of Lost Souls. The grass
-mats on the floor were of fine and careful weave, and the
-shades of split bamboo that covered the window-openings
-were of patient workmanship. At the far end, against the
-wall, was a huge golden emblem of the rising sun similar to
-the one before the altar by the Long House. But by far
-most striking, were two living creatures who strangely inhabited
-the place and who scarcely moved. Beneath the
-rising sun, raised above the floor on a sort of dais, was a
-many-pillowed divan that was half-throne. And on the
-divan, among the pillows, clad in a softly-shimmering robe
-of some material no one of them had seen before, reclined
-a sleeping woman. Only her breast softly rose and softly fell
-to her breathing. No Lost Soul was she, of the inbred and
-degenerate mixture of Carib and Spaniard. On her head was
-a tiara of beaten gold and sparkling gems so large that almost
-it seemed a crown.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Before her, on the floor, were two tripods of gold——the
-one containing smouldering fire, the other, vastly larger, a
-golden bowl fully a fathom in diameter. Between the
-tripods, resting with outstretched paws like the Sphinx, with
-unblinking eyes and without a quiver, a great dog, snow-white
-of coat and resembling a Russian wolf-hound, stedfastly
-regarded the intruders.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“She looks like a lady, and seems like a queen, and certainly
-dreams to the queen’s taste,” Henry whispered, and
-earned a scowl from the Sun Priest.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Leoncia was breathless, but Torres shuddered and crossed
-himself, and said:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“This I have never heard of the Valley of Lost Souls.
-This woman who sleeps is a Spanish lady. She is of the pure
-Spanish blood. She is Castilian. I am as certain, as that I
-stand here, that her eyes are blue. And yet that pallor!”
-Again he shuddered. “It is an unearthly sleep. It is as if
-she tampered with drugs, and had long tampered with
-drugs——”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“The very thing!” Francis broke in with excited whispers.
-“The Lady Who Dreams drug dreams. They must keep
-her here doped up as a sort of super-priestess or super-oracle.—That’s
-all right, old priest,” he broke off to say in Spanish.
-“If we wake her up, what of it? We have been brought
-here to meet her, and, I hope, awake.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The Lady stirred, as if the whispering had penetrated her
-profound of sleep, and, for the first time, the dog moved,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_181'>181</span>turning his head toward her so that her down-dropping
-hand rested on his neck caressingly. The priest was imperative,
-now, in his scowls and gestured commands for silence.
-And in absolute silence they stood and watched the awakening
-of the oracle.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Slowly she drew herself half upright, paused, and re-caressed
-the happy wolf hound, whose cruel fangs were
-exposed in a formidable, long-jawed laugh of joy. Awesome
-the situation was to them, yet more awesome it became to
-them when she turned her eyes full upon them for the first
-time. Never had they seen such eyes, in which smouldered
-the world and all the worlds. Half way did Leoncia cross
-herself, while Torres, swept away by his own awe, completed
-his own crossing of himself and with moving lips
-of silence enunciated his favorite prayer to the Virgin. Even
-Francis and Henry looked, and could not take their gaze
-away from the twin wells of blue that seemed almost dark
-in the shade of the long black eyelashes.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“A blue-eyed brunette,” Francis managed to whisper.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But such eyes! Round they were, rather than long.
-And yet they<a id='t181'></a> were not round. Square they might have
-been, had they not been more round than square. Such
-shape had they that they were as if blocked off in the
-artist’s swift and sketchy way of establishing circles out
-of the sums of angles. The long, dark lashes veiled them
-and perpetuated the illusion of their darkness. Yet was
-there no surprise nor startlement in them at first sight
-of her visitors. Dreamily incurious were they, yet were
-they languidly certain of comprehension of what they
-beheld. Still further, to awe those who so beheld, her
-eyes betrayed a complicated totality of paradoxical alivenesses.
-Pain trembled its quivering anguish perpetually
-impending. Sensitiveness moistly hinted of itself like a
-spring rain-shower on the distant sea-horizon or a dew-fall
-of a mountain morning. Pain—ever pain—resided in the
-midst of languorous slumberousness. The fire of immeasurable
-courage threatened to glint into the electric spark of
-action and fortitude. Deep slumber, like a palpitant, tapestried
-background, seemed ever ready to obliterate all in
-sleep. And over all, through all, permeating all, brooded
-ageless wisdom. This was accentuated by cheeks slightly
-hollowed, hinting of asceticism. Upon them was a flush,
-either hectic or of the paint-box.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>When she stood up, she showed herself to be slender
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_182'>182</span>and fragile as a fairy. Tiny were her bones, not too-generously
-flesh-covered; yet the lines of her were not thin.
-Had either Henry or Francis registered his impression
-aloud, he would have proclaimed her the roundest thin
-woman he had ever seen.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The Sun Priest prostrated his aged frame till he lay
-stretched flat out on the floor, his old forehead burrowing
-into the grass mat. The rest remained upright, although
-Torres evidenced by a crumpling at the knees that he would
-have followed the priest’s action had his companions shown
-signs of accompanying him. As it was, his knees did partly
-crumple, but straightened again and stiffened under the
-controlled example of Leoncia and the Morgans.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>At first the Lady had no eyes for aught but Leoncia;
-and, after a careful looking over of her, with a curt upward
-lift of head she commanded her to approach. Too imperative
-by far was it, in Leoncia’s thought, to proceed from
-so etherially beautiful a creature, and she sensed with immediacy
-an antagonism that must exist between them.
-So she did not move, until the Sun Priest muttered harshly
-that she must obey. She approached, regardless of the
-huge, long-haired hound, threading between the tripods and
-past the beast, nor would stop until commanded by a second
-nod as curt as the first. For a long minute the two women
-gazed steadily into each other’s eyes, at the end of which,
-with a flicker of triumph, Leoncia observed the other’s eyes
-droop. But the flicker was temporary, for Leoncia saw that
-the Lady was studying her dress with haughty curiosity.
-She even reached out her slender, pallid hand and felt
-the texture of the cloth and caressed it as only a woman
-can.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Priest!” she summoned sharply. “This is the third
-day of the Sun in the House of Manco. Long ago I told
-you something concerning this day. Speak.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Writhing in excess of servility, the Sun Priest quavered:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“That on this day strange events were to occur. They
-have occurred, O Queen.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Already had the Queen forgotten. Still caressing the
-cloth of Leoncia’s dress, her eyes were bent upon it in
-curious examination.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“You are very fortunate,” the Queen said, at the same
-time motioning her back to rejoin the others. “You are
-well loved of men. All is not clear, yet does it seem that
-you are too well loved of men.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_183'>183</span>Her voice, mellow and low, tranquil as silver, modulated
-in exquisite rhythms of sound, was almost as a distant
-temple bell calling believers to worship or sad souls to quiet
-judgment. But to Leoncia it was not given to appreciate
-the wonderful voice. Instead, only was she aware of anger
-flaming up to her cheeks and burning in her pulse.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I have seen you before, and often,” the Queen went
-on.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Never!” Leoncia cried out.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Hush!” the Sun Priest hissed at her.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“There,” the Queen said, pointing at the great golden
-bowl. “Before, and often, have I seen you there.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“You——also, there,” she addressed Henry.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And you,” she confirmed to Francis, although her
-great blue eyes opened wider and she gazed at him long——too
-long to suit Leoncia, who knew the stab of jealousy
-that only a woman can thrust into a woman’s heart.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The Queen’s eyes glinted when they had moved on to
-rest on Torres.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And who are you, stranger, so strangely appareled, the
-helmet of a knight upon your head, upon your feet the
-sandals of a slave?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I am Da Vasco,” he answered stoutly.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“The name has an ancient ring,” she smiled.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I am the ancient Da Vasco,” he pursued, advancing
-unsummoned. She smiled at his temerity but did not stay
-him. “This is the helmet I wore four hundred years ago
-when I led the ancestors of the Lost Souls into this valley.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The Queen smiled quiet unbelief, as she quietly asked:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Then you were born four hundred years ago?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Yes, and never. I was never born. I am Da Vasco.
-I have always been. My home is in the sun.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Her delicately stenciled brows drew quizzically to interrogation,
-though she said nothing. From a gold-wrought
-box beside her on the divan she pinched what seemed a
-powder between a fragile and almost transparent thumb
-and forefinger, and her thin beautiful lips curved to gentle
-mockery as she casually tossed the powder into the great
-tripod. A sheen of smoke arose and in a moment was
-lost to sight.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Look!” she commanded.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And Torres, approaching the great bowl, gazed into it.
-What he saw, the rest of his party never learned. But
-the Queen herself leaned forward and gazing down from
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_184'>184</span>above, saw with him, her face a beautiful advertisement
-of gentle and pitying mockery. And what Torres himself
-saw was a bedroom and a birth in the second story of the
-Bocas del Toro house he had inherited. Pitiful it was,
-with its last secrecy exposed, as was the gently smiling pity
-in the Queen’s face. And, in that flashing glimpse of magic
-vision, Torres saw confirmed about himself what he had
-always guessed and suspected.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Would you see more,” the Queen softly mocked. “I
-have shown you the beginning of you. Look now, and
-behold your ending.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But Torres, too deeply impressed by what he had already
-seen, shuddered away in recoil.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Forgive me, Beautiful Woman,” he pleaded. “And
-let me pass. Forget, as I shall hope ever to forget.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“It is gone,” she said, with a careless wave of her hand
-over the bowl. “But I cannot forget. The record will persist
-always in my mind. But you, O Man, so young of life,
-so ancient of helmet, have I beheld before this day, there in
-my Mirror of the World. You have vexed me much of late
-with your portending. Yet not with the helmet.” She
-smiled with quiet wisdom. “Always, it seems to me, I saw
-a chamber of the dead, of the long dead, upright on their
-unmoving legs and guarding through eternity mysteries alien
-to their faith and race. And in that dolorous company did
-it seem that I saw one who wore your ancient helmet....
-Shall I speak further?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“No, no,” Torres implored.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>She bowed and nodded him back. Next, her scrutiny
-centred on Francis, whom she nodded forward. She stood
-up upon the dais as if to greet him, and, as if troubled by
-the fact that she must gaze down on him, stepped from the
-dais to the floor so that she might gaze up into his face as
-she extended her hand. Hesitatingly he took her hand in
-his, then knew not what next to do. Almost did it appear
-that she read his thought, for she said:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Do it. I have never had it done to me before. I have
-never seen it done, save in my dreams and in the visions
-shown me in my Mirror of the World.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And Francis bent and kissed her hand. And, because she
-did not signify to withdraw it, he continued to hold it, while,
-against his palm, he felt the faint but steady pulse of her
-pink finger-tips. And so they stood in pose, neither speaking,
-Francis embarrassed, the Queen sighing faintly, while
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_185'>185</span>the sex anger of woman tore at Leoncia’s heart, until Henry
-blurted out in gleeful English:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Do it again, Francis! She likes it!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The Sun Priest hissed silencing command at him. But
-the Queen, half withdrawing her hand with a startle like a
-maiden’s, returned it as deeply as before into Francis’ clasp,
-and addressed herself to Henry.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I, too, know the language you speak,” she admonished.
-“Yet am I unashamed, I, who have never known a man,
-do admit that I like it. It is the first kiss that I have ever
-had. Francis——for such your friend calls you——obey
-your friend. I like it. I do like it. Once again kiss my
-hand.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Francis obeyed, waited while her hand still lingered in
-his, and while she, oblivious to all else, as if toying with
-some beautiful thought, gazed lingeringly up into his eyes.
-By a visible effort she pulled herself together, released his
-hand abruptly, gestured him back to the others, and addressed
-the Sun Priest.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Well, priest,” she said, with a return of the sharpness
-in her voice, “You have brought these captives here for a
-reason which I already know. Yet would I hear you state
-it yourself.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“O Lady Who Dreams, shall we not kill these intruders
-as has ever been our custom? The people are mystified and
-in doubt of my judgment, and demand decision from you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And you would kill?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Such is my judgment. I seek now your judgment that
-yours and mine may be one.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>She glanced over the faces of the four captives. For
-Torres, her brooding expression portrayed only pity. To
-Leoncia she extended a frown; to Henry, doubt. And upon
-Francis she gazed a full minute, her face growing tender,
-at least to Leoncia’s angry observation.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Are any of you unmarried?” the Queen asked suddenly.
-“Nay,” she anticipated them. “It is given me to know
-that you are all unmarried.” She turned quickly to Leoncia.
-“Is it well,” she demanded, “that a woman should have
-two husbands?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Both Henry and Francis could not refrain from smiling
-their amusement at so absurdly irrelevant a question. But
-to Leoncia it was neither absurd nor irrelevant, and in her
-cheeks arose the flush of anger again. This was a woman,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_186'>186</span>she knew, with whom she had to deal, and who was dealing
-with her like a woman.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“It is not well,” Leoncia answered, with clear, ringing
-voice.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“It is very strange,” the Queen pondered aloud. “It is
-very strange. Yet is it not fair. Since there are equal numbers
-of men and women in the world, it cannot be fair for
-one woman to have two husbands, for, if so, it means that
-another woman shall have no husband.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Another pinch of dust she tossed into the great bowl of
-gold. The sheen of smoke arose and vanished as before.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“The Mirror of the World will tell me, priest, what disposition
-shall be made of our captives.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Just ere she leaned over to gaze into the bowl, a fresh
-thought deflected her. With an embracing wave of arm she
-invited them all up to the bowl.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“We may all look,” she said. “I do not promise you we
-will see the same visions of our dreams. Nor shall I know
-what you will have seen. Each for himself will see and
-know.——You, too, priest.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>They found the bowl, six feet in diameter that it was, half-full
-of some unknown metal liquid.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“It might be quicksilver, but it isn’t,” Henry whispered
-to Francis. “I have never seen the like of any similar metal.
-It strikes me as hotly molten.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“It is very cold,” the Queen corrected him in English.
-“Yet is it fire.—You, Francis, feel the bowl outside.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>He obeyed, laying his full palm unhesitatingly to the
-yellow outer surface.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Colder than the atmosphere of the room,” he adjudged.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“But look!” the Queen cried, tossing more powder upon
-the contents. “It is fire that remains cold.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“It is the powder that smokes with the heat of its own
-containment,” Torres blurted out, at the same time feeling
-into the bottom of his coat pocket. He drew forth a pinch
-of crumbs of tobacco, match splinters, and cloth-fluff.
-“This will not burn,” he challenged, inviting invitation by
-extending the pinch of rubbish over the bowl as if to drop
-it in.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The Queen nodded consent, and all saw the rubbish fall
-upon the liquid metal surface. The particles made no indentation
-on that surface. Only did they transform into smoke
-that sheened upward and was gone. No remnant of ash
-remained.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_187'>187</span>“Still is it cold,” said Torres, imitating Francis and feeling
-the outside of the bowl.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Thrust your finger into the contents,” the Queen suggested
-to Torres.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“No,” he said.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“You are right,” she confirmed. “Had you done so,
-you would now be with one finger less than the number with
-which you were born.” She tossed in more powder. “Now
-shall each behold what he alone will behold.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And it was so.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>To Leoncia was it given to see an ocean separate her and
-Francis. To Henry was it given to see the Queen and Francis
-married by so strange a ceremony, that scarcely did he
-realise, until at the close, that it was a wedding taking place.
-The Queen, from a flying gallery in a great house, looked
-down into a magnificent drawing-room that Francis would
-have recognized as builded by his father had her vision been
-his. And, beside her, his arm about her, she saw Francis.
-Francis saw but one thing, vastly perturbing, the face of
-Leoncia, immobile as death, with thrust into it, squarely
-between the eyes, a slender-bladed dagger. Yet he did not
-see any blood flowing from the wound of the dagger. Torres
-glimpsed the beginning of what he knew must be his end,
-crossed himself, and alone of all of them shrank back, refusing
-to see further. While the Sun Priest saw the vision of
-his secret sin, the face and form of the woman for whom
-he had betrayed the Worship of the Sun, and the face and
-form of the maid of the village at the Long House.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>As all drew back by common consent when the visions
-faded, Leoncia turned like a tigress, with flashing eyes, upon
-the Queen, crying:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Your mirror lies! Your Mirror of the World lies!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Francis and Henry, still under the heavy spell of what
-they had themselves beheld, were startled and surprised by
-Leoncia’s outburst. But the Queen, speaking softly, replied:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“My Mirror of the World has never lied. I know not
-what you saw. But I do know, whatever it was, that it is
-truth.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“You are a monster!” Leoncia cried on. “You are a
-vile witch that lies!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“You and I are women,” the Queen chided with sweet
-gentleness, “and may not know of ourselves, being women.
-Men will decide whether or not I am a witch that lies or a
-woman with a woman’s heart of love. In the meanwhile,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_188'>188</span>being women and therefore weak, let us be kind to each
-other.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“——And now, Priest of the Sun, to judgment. You, as
-priest under the Sun God, know more of the ancient rule and
-procedure than do I. You know more than do I about myself
-and how I came to be here. You know that always,
-mother and daughter, and by mother and daughter, has the
-tribe maintained a Queen of Mystery, a Lady of Dreams.
-The time has come when we must consider the future generations.
-The strangers have come, and they are unmarried.
-This must be the wedding day decreed, if the generations to
-come after of the tribe are to possess a Queen to dream for
-them. It is well, and time and need and place are met. I
-have dreamed to judgment. And the judgment is that I
-shall marry, of these strangers, the stranger allotted to me
-before the foundations of the world were laid. The test is
-this: If no one of these will marry, then shall they die and
-their warm blood be offered up by you before the altar of the
-Sun. If one will marry me, then all shall live, and Time
-hereafter will register our futures.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The Sun Priest, trembling with anger, strove to protest,
-but she commanded:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Silence, priest! By me only do you rule the people.
-At a word from me to the people—well, you know. It is
-not any easy way to die.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>She turned to the three men, saying:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And who will marry me?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>They looked embarrassment and consternation at one
-another, but none spoke.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I am a woman,” the Queen went on teasingly. “And
-therefore am I not desirable to men? Is it that I am not
-young? Is it, as women go, that I am not beautiful? Is it
-that men’s tastes are so strange that no man cares to clasp
-the sweet of me in his arms and press his lips on mine as
-good Francis there did on my hand?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>She turned her eyes on Leoncia.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“You be judge. You are a woman well loved of men.
-Am I not such a woman as you, and shall I not be loved?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“You will ever be kinder to men than to women,” Leoncia
-answered——cryptically as regarded the three men who
-heard, but clearly to the woman’s brain of the Queen. “And
-as a woman,” Leoncia continued, “you are strangely beautiful
-and luring; and there are men in this world, many men,
-who could be made mad to clasp you in their arms. But I
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_189'>189</span>warn you, Queen, that in this world are men, and men, and
-men.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Having heard and debated this, the Queen turned abruptly
-to the priest.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“You have heard, priest. This day a man shall marry
-me. If no man marries me, these three men shall be offered
-up on your altar. So shall be offered up this woman, who,
-it would seem, would put shame upon me by having me less
-than she.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Still she addressed the priest, although her message was
-for the others.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“There are three men of them, one of whom, long cycles
-before he was born, was destined to marry me. So, priest, I
-say, take the captives away into some other apartment, and
-let them decide among themselves which is the man.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Since it has been so long destined,” Leoncia flamed
-forth, “then why put it to the chance of their decision? You
-know the man. Why put it to the risk? Name the man,
-Queen, and name him now.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“The man shall be selected in the way I have indicated,”
-the Queen replied, as, at the same time, absently she tossed
-a pinch of powder into the great bowl and absently glanced
-therein. “So now depart, and let the inevitable choice be
-made.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>They were already moving away out of the room, when a
-cry from the Queen stopped them.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Wait!” she ordered. “Come, Francis. I have seen
-something that concerns you. Come, gaze with me upon the
-Mirror of the World.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And while the others paused, Francis gazed with her upon
-the strange liquid metal surface. He saw himself in the
-library of his New York house, and he saw beside him the
-Lady Who Dreams, his arm around her. Next, he saw her
-curiosity at sight of the stock-ticker. As he tried to explain
-it to her, he glanced at the tape and read such disturbing
-information thereon that he sprang to the nearest telephone
-and, as the vision faded, saw himself calling up his broker.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“What was it you saw?” Leoncia questioned, as they
-passed out.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And Francis lied. He did not mention seeing the Lady
-Who Dreams in his New York library. Instead, he replied:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“It was a stock-ticker, and it showed a bear market on
-Wall Street somersaulting into a panic. Now how did she
-know I was interested in Wall Street and stock-tickers?”</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_190'>190</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER XIX</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>“Somebody’s got to marry that crazy woman,” Leoncia spoke
-up, as they lolled upon the mats of the room to which the
-priest had taken them. “Not only will he be a hero by
-saving our lives, but he will save his own life as well. Now,
-Senor Torres, is your chance to save all our lives and your
-own.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Br-r-r!” Torres shivered. “I would not marry her
-for ten million gold. She is too wise. She is terrible. She—how
-shall I say?—she, as you Americans say, gets my goat.
-I am a brave man. But before her I am not brave. The
-flesh of me melts in a sweat of fear. Not for less than ten
-million would I dare to overcome my fear. Now Henry and
-Francis are braver than I. Let one of them marry her.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“But I am engaged to marry Leoncia,” Henry spoke up
-promptly. “Therefore, I cannot marry the Queen.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And their eyes centered on Francis, but, before he could
-reply, Leoncia broke in.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“It is not fair,” she said. “No one of you wants to marry
-her. The only equitable way to settle it will be by drawing
-lots.” As she spoke, she pulled three straws from the mat
-on which she sat and broke one off very short. “The man
-who draws the short straw shall be the victim. You, Senor
-Torres, draw first.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Wedding bells for the short straw,” Henry grinned.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Torres crossed himself, shivered, and drew. So patently
-long was the straw, that he executed a series of dancing steps
-as he sang:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“No wedding bells for me,</div>
- <div class='line in6'>I’m as happy as can be ...”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>Francis drew next, and an equally long straw was his
-portion. To Henry there was no choice. The remaining
-straw in Leoncia’s hand was the fatal one. All tragedy was
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_191'>191</span>in his face as he looked instantly at Leoncia. And she,
-observing, melted in pity, while Francis saw her pity and
-did some rapid thinking. It was the way out. All the perplexity
-of the situation could be thus easily solved. Great
-as was his love for Leoncia, greater was his man’s loyalty to
-Henry. Francis did not hesitate. With a merry slap of his
-hand on Henry’s shoulder, he cried:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Well, here’s the one unattached bachelor who isn’t
-afraid of matrimony. I’ll marry her.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Henry’s relief was as if he had been reprieved from impending
-death. His hand shot out to Francis’ hand, and,
-while they clasped, their eyes gazed squarely into each
-other’s as only decent, honest men’s may gaze. Nor did
-either see the dismay registered in Leoncia’s face at this
-unexpected denouement. The Lady Who Dreams had been
-right. Leoncia, as a woman, was unfair, loving two men and
-denying the Lady her fair share of men.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But any discussion that might have taken place, was prevented
-by the little maid of the village, who entered with
-women to serve them the midday meal. It was Torres’
-sharp eyes that first lighted upon the string of gems about
-the maid’s neck. Rubies they were, and magnificent.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“The Lady Who Dreams just gave them to me,” the
-maid said, pleased with their pleasure in her new possession.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Has she any more?” Torres asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Of course,” was the reply. “Only just now did she
-show me a great chest of them. And they were all kinds,
-and much larger; but they were not strung. They were like
-so much shelled corn.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>While the others ate and talked, Torres nervously smoked
-a cigarette. After that, he arose and claimed a passing indisposition
-that prevented him from eating.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Listen,” he quoth impressively. “I speak better
-Spanish than either of you two Morgans. Also, I know, I
-am confident, the Spanish woman character better. To show
-you my heart’s in the right place, I’ll go in to her now and
-see if I can talk her out of this matrimonial proposition.”</p>
-
-<hr class='c010' />
-
-<p class='c000'>One of the spearmen barred Torres’ way, but, after going
-within, returned and motioned him to enter. The Queen,
-reclined on the divan, nodded him to her graciously.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“You do not eat?” she queried solicitously; and added,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_192'>192</span>after he had reaffirmed his loss of appetite, “Then will you
-drink?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Torres’ eyes sparkled. Between the excitement he had
-gone through for the past several days, and the new adventure
-he was resolved upon, he knew not how, to achieve, he
-felt the important need of a drink. The Queen clapped her
-hands, and issued commands to the waiting woman who
-responded.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“It is very ancient, centuries old, as you will recognize,
-Da Vasco, who brought it here yourself four centuries ago,”
-she said, as a man carried in and broached a small wooden
-keg.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>About the age of the keg there could be no doubt, and
-Torres, knowing that it had crossed the Western Ocean
-twelve generations before, felt his throat tickle with desire to
-taste its contents. The drink poured by the waiting woman
-was a big one, yet was Torres startled by the mildness of it.
-But quickly the magic of four-centuries-old spirits began to
-course through his veins and set the maggots crawling in his
-brain.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The Queen bade him sit on the edge of the divan at her
-feet, where she could observe him, and asked:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“You came unsummoned. What is it you have to tell
-me or ask of me?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I am the one selected,” he replied, twisting his moustache
-and striving to look the enticingness of a male man on
-love adventure bent.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Strange,” she said. “I saw not your face in the Mirror
-of the World. There is ... some mistake, eh?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“A mistake,” he acknowledged readily, reading certain
-knowledge in her eyes. “It was the drink. There is magic
-in it that made me speak the message of my heart to you, I
-want you so.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Again, with laughing eyes, she summoned the waiting
-woman and had his pottery mug replenished.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“A second mistake, perhaps will now result, eh?” she
-teased, when he had downed the drink.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“No, O Queen,” he replied. “Now all is clarity. My
-true heart I can master. Francis Morgan, the one who kissed
-your hand, is the man selected to be your husband.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“It is true,” she said solemnly. “His was the face I
-saw, and knew from the first.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Thus encouraged, Torres continued.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I am his friend, his very good best friend. You, who
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_193'>193</span>know all things, know the custom of the marriage dowry.
-He has sent me, his best friend, to inquire into and examine
-the dowry of his bride. You must know that he is among the
-richest of men in his own country, where men are very
-rich.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>So suddenly did she arise on the divan that Torres cringed
-and half shrank down, in his panic expectance of a knife-blade
-between his shoulders. Instead, the Queen walked
-swiftly, or, rather, glided, to the doorway to an inner apartment.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Come!” she summoned imperiously.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Once inside, at the first glance around, Torres knew the
-room for what it was, her sleeping chamber. But his eyes
-had little space for such details. Lifting the lid of a heavy
-chest of ironwood, brass-bound, she motioned him to look in.
-He obeyed, and saw the amazement of the world. The little
-maid had spoken true. Like so much shelled corn, the chest
-was filled with an incalculable treasure of gems——diamonds,
-rubies, emeralds, sapphires, the most precious, the purest
-and largest of their kinds.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Thrust in your arms to the shoulders,” she said, “and
-make sure that these baubles be real and of the adamant of
-flint, rather than illusions and reflections of unreality
-dreamed real in a dream. Thus may you make certain report
-to your very rich friend who is to marry me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And Torres, the madness of the ancient drink like fire in
-his brain, did as he was told.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“These trifles of glass are such an astonishment?” she
-plagued. “Your eyes are as if they were witnessing great
-wonders.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I never dreamed in all the world there was such a
-treasure,” he muttered in his drunkenness.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“They are beyond price?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“They are beyond price.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“They are beyond the value of valor, and love, and
-honor?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“They are beyond all things. They are a madness.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Can a woman’s or a man’s true love be purchased by
-them?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“They can purchase all the world.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Come,” the Queen said. “You are a man. You have
-held women in your arms. Will they purchase women?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Since the beginning of time women have been bought
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_194'>194</span>and sold for them, and for them women have sold themselves.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Will they buy me the heart of your good friend Francis?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>For the first time Torres looked at her, and nodded and
-muttered, his eyes swimming with drink and wild-eyed with
-sight of such array of gems.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Will good Francis so value them?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Torres nodded speechlessly.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Do all persons so value them?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Again he nodded emphatically.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>She began to laugh in silvery derision. Bending, at haphazard
-she clutched a priceless handful of the pretties.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Come,” she commanded. “I will show you how I value
-them.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>She led him across the room and out on a platform that
-extended around three sides of a space of water, the fourth
-side being the perpendicular cliff. At the base of the cliff
-the water formed a whirlpool that advertised the drainage
-exit for the lake which Torres had heard the Morgans speculate
-about.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>With another silvery tease of laughter, the Queen tossed
-the handful of priceless gems into the heart of the whirlpool.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Thus I value them,” she said.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Torres was aghast, and, for the nonce, well-nigh sobered
-by such wantonness.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And they never come back,” she laughed on. “Nothing
-ever comes back. Look!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>She flung in a handful of flowers that raced around and
-around the whirl and quickly sucked down from sight in the
-center of it.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“If nothing comes back, where does everything go?”
-Torres asked thickly.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The Queen shrugged her shoulders, although he knew that
-she knew the secret of the waters.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“More than one man has gone that way,” she said
-dreamily. “No one of them has ever returned. My mother
-went that way, after she was dead. I was a girl then.” She
-roused. “But you, helmeted one, go now. Make report to
-your master——your friend, I mean. Tell him what I possess
-for dowry. And, if he be half as mad as you about the bits
-of glass, swiftly will his arms surround me. I shall remain
-here and in dreams await his coming. The play of the water
-fascinates me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Dismissed, Torres entered the sleeping chamber, crept
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_195'>195</span>back to steal a glimpse of the Queen, and saw her sunk down
-on the platform, head on hand, and gazing into the whirlpool.
-Swiftly he made his way to the chest, lifted the lid,
-and stowed a scooping handful into his trousers’ pocket. Ere
-he could scoop a second handful, the mocking laughter of the
-Queen was at his back.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Fear and rage mastered him to such extent, that he sprang
-toward her, and pursuing her out upon the platform, was only
-prevented from seizing her by the dagger she threatened him
-with.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Thief,” she said quietly. “Without honor are you.
-And the way of all thieves in this valley is death. I shall
-summon my spearmen and have you thrown into the whirling
-water.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And his extremity gave Torres cunning. Glancing apprehensively
-at the water that threatened him, he ejaculated a
-cry of horror as if at what strange thing he had seen, sank
-down on one knee, and buried his convulsed face of simulated
-fear in his hands. The Queen looked sidewise to see what
-he had seen. Which was his moment. He rose in the air
-upon her like a leaping tiger, clutching her wrists and wresting
-the dagger from her.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>He wiped the sweat from his face and trembled while he
-slowly recovered himself. Meanwhile she gazed upon him
-curiously, without fear.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“You are a woman of evil,” he snarled at her, still shaking
-with rage, “a witch that traffics with the powers of darkness
-and all devilish things. Yet are you woman, born of woman,
-and therefore mortal. The weakness of mortality and of
-woman is yours, wherefore I give you now your choice of two
-things. Either you shall be thrown into the whirl of water
-and perish, or ...”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Or?” she prompted.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Or....” He paused, licked his dry lips, and burst
-forth. “No! By the Mother of God, I am not afraid. Or
-marry me this day, which is the other choice.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“You would marry me for me? Or for the treasure?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“For the treasure,” he admitted brazenly.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“But it is written in the Book of Life that I shall marry
-Francis,” she objected.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Then will we rewrite that page in the Book of Life.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“As if it could be done!” she laughed.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Then will I prove your mortality there in the whirl,
-whither I shall fling you as you flung the flowers.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_196'>196</span>Truly intrepid Torres was for the time—intrepid because
-of the ancient drink that burned in his blood and brain, and
-because he was master of the situation. Also, like a true
-Latin-American, he loved a scene wherein he could strut and
-elocute.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Yet she startled him by emitting a hiss similar to the Latin
-way of calling a servitor. He regarded her suspiciously,
-glanced at the doorway to the sleeping chamber, then
-returned his gaze to her.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Like a ghost, seeing it only vaguely out of the corner of
-his eye, the great white hound erupted through the doorway.
-Startled again, Torres involuntarily stepped to the side. But
-his foot failed to come to rest on the emptiness of air it
-encountered, and the weight of his body toppled him down off
-the platform into the water. Even as he fell and screamed
-his despair, he saw the hound in mid-air leaping after him.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Swimmer that he was, Torres was like a straw in the grip
-of the current; and the Lady Who Dreams, gazing down upon
-him fascinated from the edge of the platform, saw him disappear,
-and the hound after him, into the heart of the whirlpool
-from which there was no return.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_197'>197</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER XX</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>Long the Lady Who Dreams gazed down at the playing
-waters. At last, with a sighed “My poor dog,” she arose.
-The passing of Torres had meant nothing to her. Accustomed
-from girlhood to exercise the high powers of life and
-death over her semi-savage and degenerate people, human
-life, per se, had no sacredness to her. If life were good and
-lovely, then, naturally, it was the right thing to let it live.
-But if life were evil, ugly, and dangerous to other lives, then
-the thing was to let it die or make it die. Thus, to her,
-Torres had been an episode——unpleasant, but quickly over.
-But it was too bad about the dog.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Clapping her hands loudly as she entered her chamber, to
-summon one of her women, she made sure that the lid of the
-jewel chest was raised. To the woman she gave a command,
-and herself returned to the platform, from where she could
-look into the room unobserved.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>A few minutes later, guided by the woman, Francis entered
-the chamber and was left alone. He was not in a
-happy mood. Fine as had been his giving up of Leoncia, he
-got no pleasure from the deed. Nor was there any pleasure
-in looking forward to marrying the strange lady who ruled
-over the Lost Souls and resided in this weird lake-dwelling.
-Unlike Torres, however, she did not arouse in him fear or
-animosity. Quite to the contrary, Francis’ feeling toward
-her was largely that of pity. He could not help but be impressed
-by the tragic pathos of the ripe and lovely woman
-desperately seeking love and a mate, despite her imperious
-and cavalier methods.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>At a glance he recognized the room for what it was, and
-idly wondered if he were already considered the bridegroom,
-sans discussion, sans acquiescence, sans ceremony. In his
-brown study, the chest scarcely caught his attention. The
-Queen, watching, saw him evidently waiting for her, and,
-after a few minutes, walk over to the chest. He gathered
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_198'>198</span>up a handful of the gems, dropped them one by one carelessly
-back as if they had been so many marbles, and turned
-and strolled over to examine the leopard skins on her couch.
-Next, he sat down upon it, oblivious equally of couch or
-treasure. All of which was provocative of such delight to the
-Queen that she could no longer with-strain herself to mere
-spying. Entering the room and greeting him, she laughed:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Was Senor Torres a liar?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“<em>Was?</em>” Francis queried, for the need of saying something,
-as he arose before her.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“He no longer is,” she assured him. “Which is neither
-here nor there,” she hastened on as Francis began to betray
-interest in the matter of Torres’ end. “He is gone, and it is
-well that he is gone, for he can never come back. But he
-did lie, didn’t he?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Undoubtedly,” Francis replied. “He is a confounded
-liar.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>He could not help noticing the way her face fell when he
-so heartily agreed with her concerning Torres’ veracity.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“What did he say?” Francis questioned.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“That he was the one selected to marry me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“A liar,” Francis commented dryly.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Next he said that you were the selected one—which was
-also a lie,” her voice trailed off.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Francis shook his head.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The involuntary cry of joy the Queen uttered touched his
-heart to such tenderness of pity that almost did he put his
-arms around her to soothe her. She waited for him to speak.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I am the one to marry you,” he went on steadily. “You
-are very beautiful. When shall we be married?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The wild joy in her face was such that he swore to himself
-that never would he willingly mar that face with marks of
-sorrow. She might be ruler over the Lost Souls, with the
-wealth of Ind and with supernatural powers of mirror-gazing;
-but most poignantly she appealed to him as a lonely
-and naïve woman, overspilling of love and totally unversed
-in love.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And I shall tell you of another lie this Torres animal
-told to me,” she burst forth exultantly. “He told me that
-you were rich, and that, before you married me, you desired
-to know what wealth was mine. He told me you had sent
-him to inquire into what riches I possessed. This I know
-was a lie. You are not marrying me for that!”—with a
-scornful gesture at the jewel chest.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_199'>199</span>Francis shook his head.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“You are marrying me for myself,” she rushed on in
-triumph.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“For yourself,” Francis could not help but lie.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And then he beheld an amazing thing. The Queen, this
-Queen who was the sheerest autocrat, who said come here
-and go there, who dismissed the death of Torres with its
-mere announcement, and who selected her royal spouse
-without so much as consulting his prenuptial wishes, this
-Queen began to blush. Up her neck, flooding her face to her
-ears and forehead, welled the pink tide of maidenly modesty
-and embarrassment. And such sight of faltering made
-Francis likewise falter. He knew not what to do, and felt
-a warmth of blood rising under the sun-tan of his own face.
-Never, he thought, had there been a man-and-woman situation
-like it in all the history of men and women. The mutual
-embarrassment of the pair of them was appalling, and to save
-his life he could not have summoned a jot of initiative.
-Thus, the Queen was compelled to speak first.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And now,” she said, blushing still more furiously, “you
-must make love to me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Francis strove to speak, but his lips were so dry that he
-licked them and succeeded only in stammering incoherently.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I never have been loved,” the Queen continued bravely.
-“The affairs of my people are not love. My people are
-animals without reason. But we, you and I, are man and
-woman. There must be wooing, and tenderness——that
-much I have learned from my Mirror of the World. But I
-am unskilled. I know not how. But you, from out of the
-great world, must surely know. I wait. You must love me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>She sank down upon the couch, drawing Francis beside
-her, and true to her word, proceeded to wait. While he,
-bidden to love at command, was paralyzed by the preposterous
-impossibility of so obeying.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Am I not beautiful?” the Queen queried after another
-pause. “Are not your arms as mad to be about me as I am
-mad to have them about me? Never have a man’s lips
-touched my lips. What is a kiss like——on the lips, I mean?
-Your lips on my hand were ecstasy. You kissed then, not
-alone my hand, but my soul. My heart was there, throbbing
-against the press of your lips. Did you not feel it?”</p>
-
-<hr class='c010' />
-
-<p class='c000'>“And so,” she was saying, half an hour later, as they sat
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_200'>200</span>on the couch hand in hand, “I have told you the little I
-know of myself. I do not know the past, except what I have
-been told of it. The present I see clearly in my Mirror of
-the World. The future I can likewise see, but vaguely; nor
-can I always understand what I see. I was born here. So
-was my mother, and her mother. How it chanced is that
-always into the life of each queen came a lover. Sometimes,
-as you, they came here. My mother’s mother, so it was
-told me, left the valley to find her lover and was gone a long
-time——for years. So did my mother go forth. The secret
-way is known to me, where the long dead conquistadores
-guard the Maya mysteries, and where Da Vasco himself
-stands whose helmet this Torres animal had the impudence
-to steal and claim for his own. Had you not come, I should
-have been compelled to go forth and find you, for you were
-my appointed one and had to be.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>A woman entered, followed by a spearman, and Francis
-could scarce make his way through the quaint antiquated
-Spanish of the conversation that ensued. In commingled
-anger and joy, the Queen epitomized it to him.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“We are to depart now to the Long House for our wedding.
-The Priest of the Sun is stubborn, I know not why,
-save that he has been balked of the blood of all of you on his
-altar. He is very blood-thirsty. He is the Sun Priest, but
-he is possessed of little reason. I have report that he is
-striving to turn the people against our wedding——the
-dog!” She clinched her hands, her face set, and her eyes
-blazed with royal fury. “He shall marry us, by the ancient
-custom, before the Long House, at the Altar of the Sun.”</p>
-
-<hr class='c010' />
-
-<p class='c000'>“It’s not too late, Francis, to change your mind,” Henry
-urged. “Besides, it is not fair. The short straw was mine.
-Am I not right, Leoncia?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Leoncia could not reply. They stood in a group, at the
-forefront of the assembled Lost Souls, before the altar. Inside
-the Long House the Queen and the Sun Priest were
-closeted.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“You wouldn’t want to see Henry marry her, would you,
-Leoncia?” Francis argued.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Nor you, either,” Leoncia countered. “Torres is the
-only one I’d like to have seen marry her. I don’t like her.
-I would not care to see any friend of mine her husband.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“You’re almost jealous,” commented Henry. “Just
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_201'>201</span>the same, Francis doesn’t seem so very cast down over his
-fate.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“She’s not at all bad,” Francis retorted. “And I can
-accept my fate with dignity, if not with equanimity. And
-I’ll tell you something else, Henry, now that you are harping
-on this strain: she wouldn’t marry you if you asked her.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Oh, I don’t know,” Henry began.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Then ask her,” was the challenge. “Here she comes
-now. Look at her eyes. There’s trouble brewing. And the
-priest’s black as thunder. You just propose to her and see
-what chance you’ve got while I’m around.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Henry nodded his head stubbornly.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I will——but not to show you what kind of a woman-conqueror
-I am, but for the sake of fair play. I wasn’t playing
-the game when I accepted your sacrifice of yourself,
-but I am going to play the game now.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Before they could prevent him, he had thrust his way to
-the Queen, shouldered in between her and the priest, and
-began to speak earnestly. And the Queen laughed as she
-listened. But her laughter was not for Henry. With shining
-triumph she laughed across at Leoncia.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Not many moments were required to say no to Henry’s
-persuasions, whereupon the Queen joined Leoncia and
-Francis, the priest tagging at her heels, and Henry, following
-more slowly, trying to conceal the gladness that was his at
-being rejected.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“What do you think,” the Queen addressed Leoncia
-directly. “Good Henry has just asked me to marry him,
-which makes the fourth this day. Am I not well loved?
-Have you ever had four lovers, all desiring to marry you on
-your wedding day?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Four!” Francis exclaimed.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The Queen looked at him tenderly.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Yourself, and Henry whom I have just declined. And,
-before either of you, this day, the insolent Torres; and, just
-now, in the Long House, the priest here.” Wrath began
-to fire her eyes and cheeks at the recollection. “This Priest
-of the Sun, this priest long since renegade to his vows, this
-man who is only half a man, wanted me to marry him! The
-dog! The beast! And he had the insolence to say, at the
-end, that I should not marry Francis. Come. I will show
-him.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>She nodded her own private spearmen up about the group,
-and with her eyes directed two of them behind the priest
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_202'>202</span>to include him. At sight of this, murmurs began to arise in
-the crowd.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Proceed, priest,” the Queen commanded harshly.
-“Else will my men kill you now.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>He turned sharply about, as if to appeal to the people,
-but the speech that trembled to his lips died unuttered at
-sight of the spear-points at his breast. He bowed to the
-inevitable, and led the way close to the altar, placing the
-Queen and Francis facing him, while he stood above on the
-platform of the altar, looking at them and over them at the
-Lost Souls.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I am the Priest of the Sun,” he began. “My vows are
-holy. As the vowed priest I am to marry this woman, the
-Lady Who Dreams, to this stranger and intruder, whose
-blood is already forfeit to our altar. My vows are holy. I
-cannot be false to them. I refuse to marry this woman to
-this man. In the name of the Sun God I refuse to perform
-this ceremony——”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Then shall you die, priest, here and now,” the Queen
-hissed at him, nodding the near spearmen to lift their spears
-against him, and nodding the other spearmen to face the
-murmuring and semi-mutinous Lost Souls.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Followed a pregnant pause. For less than a minute, but
-for nearly a minute, no word was uttered, no thought was
-betrayed by a restless movement. All stood, like so many
-statues; and all gazed upon the priest against whose heart
-the poised spears rested.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>He, whose blood of heart and life was nearest at stake in
-the issue, was the first to act. He gave in. Calmly he
-turned his back to the threatening spears, knelt, and, in
-archaic Spanish, prayed an invocation of fruitfulness to the
-Sun. Returning to the Queen and Francis, with a gesture
-he made them fully bow and almost half kneel before him.
-As he touched their hands with his finger-tips he could not
-forbear the involuntary scowl that convulsed his features.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>As the couple arose, at his indication, he broke a small
-corn-cake in two, handing a half to each.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“The Eucharist,” Henry whispered to Leoncia, as the
-pair crumbled and ate their portions of cake.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“The Roman Catholic worship Da Vasco must have
-brought in with him, twisted about until it is now the
-marriage ceremony,” she whispered back comprehension,
-although, at sight of Francis thus being lost to her, she was
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_203'>203</span>holding herself tightly for control, her lips bloodless and
-stretched to thinness, her nails hurting into her palms.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>From the altar the priest took and presented to the Queen
-a tiny dagger and a tiny golden cup. She spoke to Francis,
-who rolled up his sleeve and presented to her his bared left
-forearm. About to scarify his flesh, she paused, considered
-till all could see her visibly think, and, instead of breaking
-his skin, she touched the dagger point carefully to her
-tongue.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And then arose rage. At the taste of the blade she threw
-the weapon from her, half sprang at the priest, half gave
-command to her spearmen for the death of him, and shook
-and trembled in the violence of her effort for self-possession.
-Following with her eyes the flight of the dagger to assure
-herself that its poisoned point should not strike the flesh of
-another and wreak its evilness upon it, she drew from the
-breast-fold of her dress another tiny dagger. This, too, she
-tested with her tongue, ere she broke Francis’ skin with the
-point of it and caught in the cup of gold the several red blood-drops
-that exuded from the incision. Francis repeated the
-same for her and on her, whereupon, under her flashing eyes,
-the priest took the cup and offered the commingled blood
-upon the altar.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Came a pause. The Queen frowned.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“If blood is to be shed this day on the altar of the Sun
-God——” she began threateningly.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And the priest, as if recollecting what he was loath to do,
-turned to the people and made solemn pronouncement that
-the twain were man and wife. The Queen turned to Francis
-with glowing invitation to his arms. As he folded her to him
-and kissed her eager lips, Leoncia gasped and leaned closely
-to Henry for support. Nor did Francis fail to observe and
-understand her passing indisposition, although when the
-flush-faced Queen next sparkled triumph at her sister
-woman, Leoncia was to all appearance proudly indifferent.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_204'>204</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER XXI</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>Two thoughts flickered in Torres’ mind as he was sucked
-down. The first was of the great white hound which had
-leaped after him. The second was that the Mirror of the
-World told lies. That this was his end he was certain, yet
-the little he had dared permit himself to glimpse in the
-Mirror had given no hint of an end anything like this.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>A good swimmer, as he was engulfed and sucked on in
-rapid, fluid darkness, he knew fear that he might have his
-brains knocked out by the stone walls or roof of the subterranean
-passage through which he was being swept. But
-the freak of the currents was such that not once did he
-collide with any part of his anatomy. Sometimes he was
-aware of being banked against water-cushions that tokened
-the imminence of a wall or boulder, at which times he
-shrank as it were into smaller compass, like a sea-turtle
-drawing in its head before the onslaught of sharks.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Less than a minute, as he measured the passage of time
-by the holding of his breath, elapsed, ere, in an easier-flowing
-stream, his head emerged above the surface and he
-refreshed his lungs with great inhalations of cool air. Instead
-of swimming, he contented himself with keeping afloat, and
-with wondering what had happened to the hound and with
-what next excitement would vex his underground adventure.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Soon he glimpsed light ahead, the dim but unmistakable
-light of day; and, as the way grew brighter, he turned his
-face back and saw what made him proceed to swim with a
-speed-stroke. What he saw was the hound, swimming high,
-with the teeth of its huge jaws gleaming in the increasing
-light. Under the source of the light, he saw a shelving bank
-and climbed out. His first thought, which he half carried
-out, was to reach into his pocket for the gems he had stolen
-from the Queen’s chest. But a reverberant barking that
-grew to thunder in the cavern reminded him of his fanged
-pursuer, and he drew forth the Queen’s dagger instead.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_205'>205</span>Again two thoughts divided his judgment for action.
-Should he try to kill the swimming brute ere it landed? Or
-should he retreat up the rocks toward the light on the chance
-that the stream might carry the hound past him? His
-judgment settled on the second course of action, and he fled
-upward along a narrow ledge. But the dog landed and
-followed with such four-footed certainty of speed that it
-swiftly overtook him. Torres turned at bay on the cramped
-footing, crouched, and brandished the dagger against the
-brute’s leap.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But the hound did not leap. Instead, playfully, with jaws
-widespread of laughter, it sat down and extended its right
-paw in greeting. As he took the paw in his hand and shook
-it, Torres almost collapsed in the revulsion of relief. He
-laughed with exuberant shrillness that advertised semi-hysteria,
-and continued to pump the hound’s leg up and
-down, while the hound, with wide jaws and gentle eyes,
-laughed as exuberantly back.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Pursuing the shelf, the hound contentedly at heel and
-occasionally sniffing his calves, Torres found that the narrow
-track, paralleling the river, after an ascent descended to it
-again. And then Torres saw two things, one that made him
-pause and shudder, and one that made his heart beat high
-with hope. The first was the underground river. Rushing
-straight at the wall of rock, it plunged into it in a chaos of
-foam and turbulence, with stiffly serrated and spitefully
-spitting waves that advertised its swiftness and momentum.
-The second was an opening to one side, through which
-streamed white daylight. Possibly fifteen feet in diameter
-was this opening, but across it was stretched a spider web
-more monstrous than any product of a madman’s fancy.
-Most ominous of all was the debris of bones that lay beneath.
-The threads of the web were of silver and of the thickness of
-a lead pencil. He shuddered as he touched a thread with
-his hand. It clung to his flesh like glue, and only by an
-effort that agitated the entire web did he succeed in freeing
-his hand. Upon his clothes and upon the coat of the dog he
-rubbed off the stickiness from his skin.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Between two of the lower guys of the great web he saw
-that there was space for him to crawl through the opening
-to the day; but, ere he attempted it, caution led him to test
-the opening by helping and shoving the hound ahead of him.
-The white beast crawled and scrambled out of sight, and
-Torres was about to follow when it returned. Such was the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_206'>206</span>panic haste of its return that it collided with him and both
-fell. But the man managed to save himself by clinging with
-his hands to the rocks, while the four-footed brute, not able
-so to check itself, fell into the churning water. Even as
-Torres reached a hand out to try to save it, the dog was
-carried under the rock.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Long Torres debated. That farther subterranean plunge
-of the river was dreadful to contemplate. Above was the
-open way to the day, and the life of him yearned towards the
-day as a bee or a flower toward the sun. Yet what had the
-hound encountered to drive it back in such precipitate
-retreat? As he pondered, he became aware that his hand was
-resting on a rounded surface. He picked the object up, and
-gazed into the eyeless, noseless features of a human skull.
-His frightened glances played over the carpet of bones, and,
-beyond all doubt, he made out the ribs and spinal columns
-and thigh bones of what had once been men. This inclined
-him toward the water as the way out, but at sight of the
-foaming madness of it plunging through solid rock he
-recoiled.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Drawing the Queen’s dagger, he crawled up between the
-web-guys with infinite carefulness, saw what the hound had
-seen, and came back in such vertigo of retreat that he, too,
-fell into the water, and, with but time to fill his lungs with
-air, was drawn into the opening and into darkness.</p>
-
-<hr class='c010' />
-
-<p class='c000'>In the meanwhile, back at the lake dwelling of the Queen,
-events no less portentous were occurring with no less equal
-rapidity. Just returned from the ceremony at the Long
-House, the wedding party was in the action of seating itself
-for what might be called the wedding breakfast, when an
-arrow, penetrating an interstice in the bamboo wall, flashed
-between the Queen and Francis and transfixed the opposite
-wall, where its feathered shaft vibrated from the violence of
-its suddenly arrested flight. A rush to the windows looking
-out upon the narrow bridge, showed Henry and Francis the
-gravity of the situation. Even as they looked, they saw the
-Queen’s spearman who guarded the approach to the bridge,
-midway across it in flight, falling into the water with the
-shaft of an arrow vibrating out of his back in similar fashion
-to the one in the wall of the room. Beyond the bridge, on
-the shore, headed by their priest and backed by their women
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_207'>207</span>and children, all the male Lost Souls were arching the air
-full with feathered bolts from their bows.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>A spearman of the Queen tottered into the apartment,
-his limbs spreading vainly to support him, his eyes glazing,
-his lips beating a soundless message which his fading life
-could not utter, as he fell prone, his back bristling with
-arrow shafts like a porcupine. Henry sprang to the door that
-gave entrance from the bridge, and, with his automatic,
-swept it clear of the charging Lost Souls who could advance
-only in single file and who fell as they advanced before his
-fire.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The siege of the frail house was brief. Though Francis,
-protected by Henry’s automatic, destroyed the bridge, by no
-method could the besieged put out the blazing thatch of roof
-ignited in a score of places by the fire-arrows discharged
-under the Sun Priest’s directions.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“There is but one way to escape,” the Queen panted, on
-the platform overlooking the whirl of waters, as she clasped
-one hand of Francis in hers and threatened to precipitate
-herself clingingly into his arms. “It wins to the world.”
-She pointed to the sucking heart of the whirlpool. “No
-one has ever returned from that. In my Mirror I have beheld
-them pass, dead always, and out to the wider world. Except
-for Torres, I have never seen the living go. Only the dead.
-And they never returned. Nor has Torres returned.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>All eyes looked to all eyes at sight of the dreadfulness of
-the way.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“There is no other way?” Henry demanded, as he drew
-Leoncia close to him.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The Queen shook her head. About them already burning
-portions of the thatch were falling, while their ears were
-deafened by the blood-lust chantings of the Lost Souls on
-the lake-shore. The Queen disengaged her hand from
-Francis’, with the evident intention of dashing into her sleeping
-room, then caught his hand and led him in. As he stood
-wonderingly beside her, she slammed down the lid on the
-chest of jewels and fastened it. Next, she kicked aside the
-floor matting and lifted a trap door that opened down to the
-water. At her indication, Francis dragged over the chest
-and dropped it through.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Even the Sun Priest does not know that hiding place,”
-she whispered, ere she caught his hand again, and, running,
-led him back to the others on the platform.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“It is now time to depart from this place,” she announced.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_208'>208</span>“Hold me in your arms, good Francis, husband of mine, and
-lift me and leap with me,” she commanded. “We will lead
-the way.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And so they leapt. As the roof was crashing down in a
-wrath of fire and flying embers, Henry caught Leoncia to
-him, and sprang after into the whirl of waters wherein
-Francis and the Queen had already disappeared.</p>
-
-<hr class='c010' />
-
-<p class='c000'>Like Torres, the four fugitives escaped injury against the
-rocks and were borne onward by the underground river to
-the daylight opening where the great spider-web guarded the
-way. Henry had an easier time of it, for Leoncia knew how
-to swim. But Francis’ swimming prowess enabled him to
-keep the Queen up. She obeyed him implicitly, floating low
-in the water, nor clutched at his arms nor acted as a drag
-on him in any way. At the ledge, all four drew out of the
-water and rested. The two women devoted themselves to
-wringing out their hair, which had been flung adrift all about
-them by the swirling currents.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“It is not the first mountain I have been in the heart of
-with you two,” Leoncia laughed to the Morgans, although
-more than for them was her speech intended for the Queen.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“It is the first time I have been in the heart of a mountain
-with my husband,” the Queen laughed back, and the barb of
-her dart sank deep into Leoncia.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Seems as though your wife, Francis, and my wife-to-be,
-aren’t going to hit it off too well together,” Henry said, with
-the sharpness of censure that man is wont to employ to
-conceal the embarrassment caused by his womankind.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And, as inevitable result of such male men’s ways, all that
-Henry gained was a silence more awkward and more embarrassing.
-The two women almost enjoyed the situation.
-Francis cudgeled his brains vainly for some remark that
-would ameliorate matters; while Henry, in desperation, arose
-suddenly with the observation that he was going to “explore
-a bit,” and invited, by his hand out to help her to her feet,
-the Queen to accompany him. Francis and Leoncia sat on
-for a moment in stubborn silence. He was the first to break
-it.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“For two cents I’d give you a thorough shaking, Leoncia.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And what have I done now?” she countered.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“As if you didn’t know. You’ve been behaving abominably.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_209'>209</span>“It is you who have behaved abominably,” she half-sobbed,
-in spite of her determination to betray no such
-feminine signs of weakness. “Who asked you to marry
-her? You did not draw the short straw. Yet you must
-volunteer, must rush in where even angels would fear to
-tread? Did I ask you to? Almost did my heart stop beating
-when I heard you tell Henry you would marry her. I thought
-I was going to faint. You had not even consulted me; yet
-it was on my suggestion, in order to save you from her, that
-the straws were drawn——yes, and I am not too little
-shameless to admit that it was because I wanted to save you
-for myself. Henry does not love me as you led me to believe
-you loved me. I never loved Henry as I loved you, as I do
-love you even now, God forgive me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Francis was swept beyond himself. He caught her and
-pressed her to him in a crushing embrace.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And on your very wedding day,” she gasped reproachfully
-in the midmost of his embrace.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>His arm died away from about her.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And this from you, Leoncia, at such a moment,” he
-murmured sadly.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And why not?” she flared. “You loved me. You gave
-me to understand, beyond all chance of misunderstanding,
-that you loved me; yet here, to-day, you went out of your
-way, went eagerly and gladly, and married yourself to the
-first woman with a white skin who presented herself.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“You are jealous,” he charged, and knew a heart-throb of
-joy as she nodded. “And I grant you are jealous; but at
-the same time, exercising the woman’s prerogative of lying,
-you are lying now. What I did, was not done eagerly nor
-gladly. I did it for your sake and my sake——or for Henry’s
-sake, rather. Thank God, I have a man’s honor still left to
-me!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Man’s honour does not always satisfy woman,” she
-replied.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Would you prefer me dishonorable?” he was swift on the
-uptake.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I am only a woman who loves,” she pleaded.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“You are a stinging, female wasp,” he raged, “and you
-are not fair.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Is any woman fair when she loves?” she made the great
-confession and acknowledgment. “Men may succeed in living
-in their heads of honor; but know, and as a humble woman
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_210'>210</span>I humbly state my womanhood, that woman lives only in
-her heart of love.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Perhaps you are right. Honor, like arithmetic, can be
-reasoned and calculated. Which leaves a woman no morality,
-but only ...”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Only moods,” Leoncia completed abjectly for him.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Calls from Henry and the Queen put an end to the conversation,
-for Leoncia and Francis quickly joined the others
-in gazing at the great web.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Did you ever see so monstrous a web!” Leoncia exclaimed.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I’d like to see the monster that made it,” said Henry.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And I’d rather see than be it,” Francis paraphrased from
-the “Purple Cow.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“It is our good fortune that we do not have to go that
-way,” the Queen said.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>All looked inquiry at her, and she pointed down to the
-stream.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“That is the way,” she said. “I know it. Often and
-often, in my Mirror of the World, have I seen the way.
-When my mother died and was buried in the whirlpool, I
-followed her body in the Mirror, and I saw it come to this
-place and go by this place still in the water.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“But she was dead,” Leoncia objected quickly.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The rivalry between them fanned instantly.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“One of my spearmen,” the Queen went on quietly, “a
-handsome youth, alas, dared to look at me as a lover. He
-was flung in alive. I watched him, too, in the Mirror. When
-he came to this place he climbed out. I saw him crawl under
-the web to the day, and I saw him retreat backward from the
-day and throw himself into the stream.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Another dead one,” Henry commented grimly.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“No; for I followed him on in the Mirror, and though
-all was darkness for a time and I could see nothing, in the
-end, and shortly, under the sun he emerged into the bosom
-of a large river, and swam to the shore, and climbed the
-bank——it was the left hand bank as I remember well——and
-disappeared among large trees such as do not grow in
-the Valley of the Lost Souls.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But, like Torres, the rest of them recoiled from thought of
-the dark plunge through the living rock.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“These are the bones of animals and of men,” the Queen
-warned, “who were daunted by the way of the water and
-who strove to gain the sun. Men there are there——behold!
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_211'>211</span>Or at least what remains of them for a space, the bones, ere,
-in time, the bones, too, pass into nothingness.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Even so,” said Francis, “I suddenly discover a pressing
-need to look into the eye of the sun. Do the rest of you
-remain here while I investigate.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Drawing his automatic, the water-tightness of the cartridges
-a guarantee, he crawled under the web. The moment
-he had disappeared from view beyond the web, they heard
-him begin to shoot. Next, they saw him retreating backward,
-still shooting. And, next, falling upon him, two yards
-across from black-haired leg-tip to black-haired leg-tip, the
-denizen of the web, a monstrous spider, still wriggling with
-departing life, shot through and through again and again.
-The solid center of its body, from which the legs radiated,
-was the size of a normal waste-basket, and the substantial
-density of it crunched audibly as it struck on Francis’
-shoulders and back, rebounded, the hairy legs still helplessly
-quivering, and pitched down into the wave-crisping water.
-All four pair of eyes watched the corpse of it plunge against
-the wall of rock, suck down, and disappear.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Where there’s one, there are two,” said Henry, looking
-dubiously up toward the daylight.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“It is the only way,” said the Queen. “Come, my
-husband, each in the other’s arms let us win through the
-darkness to the sun-bright world. Remember, I have never
-seen it, and soon, with you, shall I for the first time see it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Her arms open in invitation, Francis could not decline.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“It is a hole in the sheer wall of a precipice a thousand
-feet deep,” he explained to the others the glimpse he had
-caught from beyond the spider web, as he clasped the Queen
-in his arms and leaped off.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Henry had gathered Leoncia to him and was about to leap,
-when she stopped him.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Why did you accept Francis’ sacrifice?” she demanded.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Because ...” He paused and looked at her wonderingly.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Because I wanted you,” he completed. “Because I
-was engaged to you as well, while Francis was unattached.
-Besides, if I’m not greatly mistaken, Francis appears to be a
-pretty well satisfied bridegroom.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“No,” she shook her head emphatically. “He has a
-chivalrous spirit, and he is acting his part in order not to
-hurt her feelings.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Oh, I don’t know. Remember, before the altar, at the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_212'>212</span>Long House, when I said I was going to ask the Queen to
-marry me, that he bragged she wouldn’t marry me if I did
-ask? Well, the conclusion’s pretty obvious that he wanted
-her himself. And why shouldn’t he? He’s a bachelor. And
-she’s some nice woman herself.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But Leoncia scarcely heard. With a quick movement,
-leaning back in his arms away from him so that she could
-look him squarely in the eyes, she demanded:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“How do you love me? Do you love me madly? Do you
-love me badly madly? Do I mean that to you, and more,
-and more, and more?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>He could only look his bewilderment.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Do you?—do you?” she urged passionately.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Of course I do,” he made slow answer, “but it would
-never have entered my head to describe it that way. Why,
-you’re the one woman for me. Rather would I describe it
-as loving you deeply, and greatly, and enduringly. Why,
-you seem so much a part of me that I feel almost as if I had
-always known you. It was that way from the first.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“She is an abominable woman!” Leoncia broke forth
-irrelevantly. “I hated her from the first.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“My! What a spitfire! I hate to think how much you
-would have hated her had I married her instead of Francis.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“We’d better follow them,” she put an end to the discussion.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And Henry, very much be-puzzled, clasped her tightly and
-leaped off into the white turmoil of water.</p>
-
-<hr class='c010' />
-
-<p class='c000'>On the bank of the Gualaca River sat two Indian girls
-fishing. Just up-stream from them arose the precipitous
-cliff of one of the buttresses of the lofty mountains. The main
-stream flowed past in chocolate-colored spate; but, directly
-beneath them, where they fished, was a quiet eddy. No less
-quiet was the fishing. No bites jerked their rods in token
-that the bait was enticing. One of them, Nicoya, yawned,
-ate a banana, yawned again, and held the skin she was
-about to cast aside suspended in her hand.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“We have been very quiet, Concordia,” she observed to
-her companion, “and it has won us no fish. Now shall I
-make a noise and a splash. Since they say ‘what goes up
-must come down,’ why should not something come up after
-something has gone down? I am going to try. There!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_213'>213</span>She threw the banana peel into the water and lazily
-watched the point where it had struck.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“If anything comes up I hope it will be big,” Concordia
-murmured with equal laziness.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And upon their astonished gaze, even as they looked, arose
-up out of the brown depths a great white hound. They
-jerked their poles up and behind them on the bank, threw
-their arms about each other, and watched the hound gain
-the shore at the lower end of the eddy, climb the sloping
-bank, pause to shake himself, and then disappear among
-the trees.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Nicoya and Concordia giggled.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Try it again,” Concordia urged.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“No; you this time. And see what you can bring up.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Quite unbelieving, Concordia tossed in a clod of earth.
-And almost immediately a helmeted head arose on the flood.
-Clutching each other very tightly, they watched the man
-under the helmet gain the shore where the hound had landed
-and disappear into the forest.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Again the two Indian girls giggled; but this time, urge as
-they would, neither could raise the courage to throw anything
-into the water.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Some time later, still giggling over the strange occurrences,
-they were espied by two young Indian men, who were hugging
-the bank as they paddled their canoe up against the
-stream.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“What makes you laugh,” one of them greeted.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“We have been seeing things,” Nicoya gurgled down to
-them.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Then have you been drinking pulque,” the young man
-charged.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Both girls shook their heads, and Concordia said:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“We don’t have to drink to see things. First, when
-Nicoya threw in a banana skin, we saw a dog come up out
-of the water——a white dog that was as big as a tiger of the
-mountains——”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And when Concordia threw in a clod,” the other girl
-took up the tale, “up came a man with a head of iron. It
-is magic. Concordia and I can work magic.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“José,” one of the Indians addressed his mate, “this
-merits a drink.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And each, in turn, while the other with his paddle held
-the canoe in place, took a swig from a square-face Holland
-gin bottle part full of pulque.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_214'>214</span>“No,” said José, when the girls had begged him for a
-drink. “One drink of pulque and you might see more white
-dogs as big as tigers or more iron-headed men.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“All right,” Nicoya accepted the rebuff. “Then do you
-throw in your pulque bottle and see what you will see. We
-drew a dog and a man. Your prize may be the devil.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I should like to see the devil,” said José, taking another
-drain at the bottle. “The pulque is a true fire of bravery.
-I should very much like to see the devil.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>He passed the bottle to his companion with a gesture to
-finish it.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Now throw it into the water,” José commanded.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The empty bottle struck with a forceful splash, and the
-evoking was realized with startling immediacy, for up to
-the surface floated the monstrous, hairy body of the slain
-spider. Which was too much for ordinary Indian flesh and
-blood. So suddenly did both young men recoil from the
-sight that they capsized the canoe. When their heads
-emerged from the water they struck out for the swift current,
-and were swiftly borne away down stream, followed
-more slowly by the swamped canoe.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Nicoya and Concordia had been too frightened to giggle.
-They held on to each other and waited, watching the magic
-water and out of the tails of their eyes observing the
-frightened young men capture the canoe, tow it to shore,
-and run out and hide on the bank.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The afternoon sun was getting low in the sky ere the
-girls summoned courage again to evoke the magic water.
-Only after much discussion did they agree both to fling in
-clods of earth at the same time. And up arose a man and a
-woman——Francis and the Queen. The girls fell over backward
-into the bushes, and were themselves unobserved as
-they watched Francis swim with the Queen to shore.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“It may just have happened——all these things may just
-have happened at the very times we threw things into the
-water,” Nicoya whispered to Concordia five minutes later.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“But when we threw one thing in, only one came up,”
-Concordia argued. “And when we threw two, two came
-up.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Very well,” said Nicoya. “Let us now prove it. Let
-us try again, both of us. If nothing comes up, then have
-we no power of magic.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Together they threw in clods, and uprose another man
-and woman. But this pair, Henry and Leoncia, could swim,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_215'>215</span>and they swam side by side to the natural landing place,
-and, like the rest that had preceded them, passed on out of
-sight among the trees.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Long the two Indian girls lingered. For they had agreed
-to throw nothing, and, if something arose, then would coincidence
-be proved. But if nothing arose, because nothing
-further was by them evoked, they could only conclude that
-the magic was truly theirs. They lay hidden and watched
-the water until darkness hid it from their eyes; and, slowly
-and soberly, they took the trail back to their village, overcome
-by an awareness of having been blessed by the gods.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_216'>216</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER XXII</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>Not until the day following his escape from the subterranean
-river, did Torres reach San Antonio. He arrived on foot,
-jaded and dirty, a small Indian boy at his heels carrying the
-helmet of Da Vasco. For Torres wanted to show the helmet
-to the Jefe and the Judge in evidence of the narrative
-of strange adventure he chuckled to tell them.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>First on the main street he encountered the Jefe, who
-cried out loudly at his appearance.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Is it truly you, Senor Torres?” The Jefe crossed himself
-solemnly ere he shook hands.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The solid flesh, and, even more so, the dirt and grit of the
-other’s hand, convinced the Jefe of reality and substance.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Whereupon the Jefe became wrathful.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And here I’ve been looking upon you as dead!” he exclaimed.
-“That Caroo dog of a José Mancheno! He came back
-and reported you dead——dead and buried until the Day
-of Judgment in the heart of the Maya Mountain.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“He is a fool, and I am possibly the richest man in
-Panama,” Torres replied grandiosely. “At least, like the
-ancient and heroic conquistadores, I have braved all dangers
-and penetrated to the treasure. I have seen it. Nay——”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Torres’ hand had been sunk into his trousers’ pocket to
-bring forth the filched gems of the Lady Who Dreams; but
-he withdrew the hand empty. Too many curious eyes of
-the street were already centered upon him and the draggled
-figure he cut.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I have much to say to you,” he told the Jefe, “that
-cannot well be said now. I have knocked on the doors of
-the dead and worn the shrouds of corpses. And I have consorted
-with men four centuries dead but who were not dust,
-and I have beheld them drown in the second death. I have
-gone through mountains, as well as over them, and broken
-bread with lost souls, and gazed into the Mirror of the
-World. All of which I shall tell you, my best friend, and the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_217'>217</span>honorable Judge, in due time, for I shall make you rich
-along with me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Have you looked upon the pulque when it was sour?”
-the Jefe quipped incredulously.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I have not had drink stronger than water since I last
-departed from San Antonio,” was the reply. “And I shall
-go now to my house and drink a long long drink, and after
-that I shall bathe the filth from me, and put on garments
-whole and decent.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Not immediately, as he proceeded, did Torres gain his
-house. A ragged urchin exclaimed out at sight of him,
-ran up to him, and handed him an envelope that he knew
-familiarly to be from the local government wireless, and
-that he was certain had been sent by Regan.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'><em>You are doing well. Imperative you keep party away
-from New York for three weeks more. Fifty thousand
-if you succeed.</em></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Borrowing a pencil from the boy, Torres wrote a reply
-on the back of the envelope:</p>
-
-<p class='c009'><em>Send the money. Party will never come back from
-mountains where he is lost.</em></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Two other occurrences delayed Torres’ long drink and
-bath. Just as he was entering the jewelry store of old
-Rodriguez Fernandez, he was intercepted by the old Maya
-priest with whom he had last parted in the Maya mountain.
-He recoiled as from an apparition, for sure he was that the
-old man was drowned in the Room of the Gods. Like the
-Jefe at sight of Torres, so Torres, at sight of the priest,
-drew back in startled surprise.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Go away,” he said. “Depart, restless old man. You
-are a spirit. Thy body lies drowned and horrible in the
-heart of the mountain. You are an appearance, a ghost.
-Go away, nothing corporeal resides in this illusion of you,
-else would I strike you. You are a ghost. Depart at once.
-I should not like to strike a ghost.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But the ghost seized his hands and clung to them with
-such beseeching corporality as to unconvince him.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Money,” the ancient one babbled. “Let me have
-money. Lend me money. I will repay——I who know the
-secrets of the Maya treasure. My son is lost in the mountain
-with the treasure. The Gringos also are lost in the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_218'>218</span>mountain. Help me to rescue my son. With him alone
-will I be satisfied, while the treasure shall all be yours. But
-we must take men, and much of the white man’s wonderful
-powder and tear a hole out of the mountain so that the water
-will run away. He is not drowned. He is a prisoner of the
-water in the room where stand the jewel-eyed Chia and
-Hzatzl. Their eyes of green and red alone will pay for
-all the wonderful powder in the world. So let me have the
-money with which to buy the wonderful powder.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But Alvarez Torres was a strangely constituted man.
-Some warp or slant or idiosyncrasy of his nature always
-raised insuperable obstacles to his parting with money when
-such parting was unavoidable. And the richer he got the
-more positively this idiosyncrasy asserted itself.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Money!” he asserted harshly, as he thrust the old priest
-aside and pulled open the door of Fernandez’s store. “Is
-it I who should have money—. I who am all rags and
-tatters as a beggar. I have no money for myself, much less
-for you, old man. Besides, it was you, and not I, who led
-your son to the Maya mountain. On your head be it, not
-on mine, the death of your son who fell into the pit under
-the feet of Chia that was digged by your ancestors and not
-by mine.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Again the ancient one clutched at him and yammered for
-money with which to buy dynamite. So roughly did Torres
-thrust him aside that his old legs failed to perform their
-wonted duty and he fell upon the flagstones.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The shop of Rodriguez Fernandez was small and dirty,
-and contained scarcely more than a small and dirty showcase
-that rested upon an equally small and dirty counter.
-The place was grimy with the undusted and unswept filth
-of a generation. Lizards and cockroaches crawled along
-the walls. Spiders webbed in every corner, and Torres saw,
-crossing the ceiling above, what made him step hastily to
-the side. It was a seven-inch centipede which he did not
-care to have fall casually upon his head or down his back
-between shirt and skin. And, when he appeared crawling
-out like a huge spider himself from some inner den of an
-unventilated cubicle, Fernandez looked like an Elizabethan
-stage-representation of Shylock——withal he was a dirtier
-Shylock than even the Elizabethan stage could have
-stomached.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The jeweler fawned to Torres and in a cracked falsetto
-humbled himself even beneath the dirt of his shop. Torres
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_219'>219</span>pulled from his pocket a haphazard dozen or more of the
-gems filched from the Queen’s chest, selected the smallest,
-and, without a word, while at the same time returning the
-rest to his pocket, passed it over to the jeweler.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I am a poor man,” he cackled, the while Torres could
-not fail to see how keenly he scrutinised the gem.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>He dropped it on the top of the show case as of little
-worth, and looked inquiringly at his customer. But Torres
-waited in a silence which he knew would compel the garrulity
-of covetous age to utterance.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Do I understand that the honorable Senor Torres seeks
-advice about the quality of the stone?” the old jeweler finally
-quavered.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Torres did no more than nod curtly.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“It is a natural gem. It is small. It, as you can see
-for yourself, is not perfect. And it is clear that much
-of it will be lost in the cutting.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“How much is it worth?” Torres demanded with impatient
-bluntness.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I am a poor man,” Fernandez reiterated.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I have not asked you to buy it, old fool. But now that
-you bring the matter up, how much will you give for
-it?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“As I was saying, craving your patience, honorable senor,
-as I was saying, I am a very poor man. There are days
-when I cannot spend ten centavos for a morsel of spoiled
-fish. There are days when I cannot afford a sip of the
-cheap red wine I learned was tonic to my system when I
-was a lad, far from Barcelona, serving my apprenticeship
-in Italy. I am so very poor that I do not buy costly
-pretties——”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Not to sell again at a profit?” Torres cut in.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“If I am sure of my profit,” the old man cackled. “Yes,
-then will I buy; but, being poor, I cannot pay more than
-little.” He picked up the gem and studied it long and carefully.
-“I would give,” he began hesitatingly, “I would
-give——but, please, honorable senor, know that I am a
-very poor man. This day only a spoonful of onion soup,
-with my morning coffee and a mouthful of crust, passed
-my lips——”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“In God’s name, old fool, what will you give?” Torres
-thundered.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Five hundred dollars—but I doubt the profit that will
-remain to me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_220'>220</span>“Gold?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Mex.,” came the reply, which cut the offer in half
-and which Torres knew was a lie. “Of course, Mex., only
-Mex., all our transactions are in Mex.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Despite his elation at so large a price for so small a
-gem, Torres play-acted impatience as he reached to take
-back the gem. But the old man jerked his hand away, loath
-to let go of the bargain it contained.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“We are old friends,” he cackled shrilly. “I first saw
-you, when, a boy, you came to San Antonio from Boca del
-Toros. And, as between old friends, we will say the sum is
-gold.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And Torres caught a sure but vague glimpse of the enormousness,
-as well as genuineness, of the Queen’s treasure
-which at some remote time the Lost Souls had ravished from
-its hiding place in the Maya Mountain.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Very good,” said Torres, with a quick, cavalier action
-recovering the stone. “It belongs to a friend of mine. He
-wanted to borrow money from me on it. I can now lend him
-up to five hundred gold on it, thanks to your information.
-And I shall be grateful to buy for you, the next time we meet
-in the pulqueria, a drink—yes, as many drinks as you can
-care to carry—of the thin, red, tonic wine.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And as Torres passed out of the shop, not in any way
-attempting to hide the scorn and contempt he felt for the fool
-he had made of the jeweler, he knew elation in that Fernandez,
-the Spanish fox, must have cut his estimate of the gem’s
-value fully in half when he uttered it.</p>
-
-<hr class='c010' />
-
-<p class='c000'>In the meanwhile, descending the Gualaca River by canoe,
-Leoncia, the Queen, and the two Morgans, had made better
-time than Torres to the coast. But ere their arrival and
-briefly pending it, a matter of moment that was not appreciated
-at the time, had occurred at the Solano hacienda.
-Climbing the winding pathway to the hacienda, accompanied
-by a decrepit old crone whose black shawl over head and
-shoulders could not quite hide the lean and withered face of
-blasted volcanic fire, came as strange a caller as the hacienda
-had ever received.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>He was a Chinaman, middle-aged and fat, whose moon-face
-beamed the beneficent good nature that seems usual with
-fat persons. By name, Yi Poon, meaning “the Cream of
-the Custard Apple,” his manners were as softly and richly
-oily as his name. To the old crone, who tottered beside him
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_221'>221</span>and was half-supported by him, he was the quintessence of
-gentleness and consideration. When she faltered from sheer
-physical weakness and would have fallen, he paused and gave
-her chance to gain strength and breath. Thrice, at such
-times, on the climb to the hacienda, he fed her a spoonful of
-French brandy from a screw-cap pocket flask.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Seating the old woman in a selected, shady corner of the
-piazza, Yi Poon boldly knocked for admittance at the front
-door. To him, and in his business, back-stairs was the
-accustomed way; but his business and his wit had taught him
-the times when front entrances were imperative.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The Indian maid who answered his knock, took his message
-into the living room where sat the disconsolate Enrico Solano
-among his sons—disconsolate at the report Ricardo had
-brought in of the loss of Leoncia in the Maya Mountain. The
-Indian maid returned to the door. The Senor Solano was
-indisposed and would see nobody, was her report, humbly
-delivered, even though the recipient was a Chinese.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Huh!” observed Yi Poon, with braggart confidence for
-the purpose of awing the maid to carrying a second message.
-“I am no coolie. I am smart Chinaman. I go to school
-plenty much. I speak Spanish. I speak English. I write
-Spanish. I write English. See—I write now in Spanish for
-the Senor Solano. You cannot write, so you cannot read
-what I write. I write that I am Yi Poon. I belong Colon.
-I come this place to see Senor Solano. Big business. Much
-important. Very secret. I write all this here on paper
-which you cannot read.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But he did not say that he had further written:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“<em>The Senorita Solano. I have great secret.</em>”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It was Alesandro, the eldest of the tall sons of Solano, who
-evidently had received the note, for he came bounding to
-the door, far outstripping the returning maid.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Tell me your business!” he almost shouted at the fat
-Chinese. “What is it? Quick!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Very good business,” was the reply, Yi Poon noting the
-other’s excitement with satisfaction. “I make much money.
-I buy—what you call—secrets. I sell secrets. Very nice
-business.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“What do you know about the Senorita Solano?” Alesandro
-shouted, gripping him by the shoulder.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Everything. Very important information——”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But Alesandro could no longer control himself. He almost
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_222'>222</span>hurled the Chinaman into the house, and, not relaxing his
-grip, rushed him on into the living room and up to Enrico.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“He has news of Leoncia!” Alesandro shouted.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Where is she?” Enrico and his sons shouted in chorus.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Hah!—was Yi Poon’s thought. Such excitement, although
-it augured well for his business, was rather exciting for him
-as well.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Mistaking his busy thinking for fright, Enrico stilled his
-sons back with an upraised hand, and addressed the visitor
-quietly.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Where is she?” Enrico asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Hah!—thought Yi Poon. The senorita was lost. That
-was a new secret. It might be worth something some day,
-or any day. A nice girl, of high family and wealth such as
-the Solanos, lost in a Latin-American country, was information
-well worth possessing. Some day she might be married—there
-was that gossip he had heard in Colon—and some
-later day she might have trouble with her husband or her
-husband have trouble with her——at which time, she or her
-husband, it mattered not which, might be eager to pay high
-for the secret.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“This Senorita Leoncia,” he said, finally, with sleek
-suavity. “She is not your girl. She has other papa and
-mama.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But Enrico’s present grief at her loss was too great to
-permit startlement at this explicit statement of an old secret.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Yes,” he nodded. “Though it is not known outside
-my family, I adopted her when she was a baby. It is
-strange that you should know this. But I am not interested
-in having you tell me what I have long since known. What
-I want to know now is: <em>where is she now</em>?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Yi Poon gravely and sympathetically shook his head.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“That is different secret,” he explained. “Maybe I find
-that secret. Then I sell it to you. But I have old secret.
-You do not know the name of the Senorita Leoncia’s papa
-and mama. I know.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And old Enrico Solano could not hide his interest at the
-temptation of such information.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Speak,” he commanded. “Name the names, and prove
-them, and I shall reward.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“No,” Yi Poon shook his head. “Very poor business. I
-no do business that way. You pay me I tell you. My
-secrets good secrets. I prove my secrets. You give me five
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_223'>223</span>hundred pesos and big expenses from Colon to San Antonio
-and back to Colon and I tell you name of papa and mama.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Enrico Solano bowed acquiescence, and was just in the act
-of ordering Alesandro to go and fetch the money, when the
-quiet, spirit-subdued Indian maid created a diversion. Running
-into the room and up to Enrico as they had never seen
-her run before, she wrung her hands and wept so incoherently
-that they knew her paroxysm was of joy, not of sadness.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“The Senorita!” she was finally able to whisper hoarsely,
-as she indicated the side piazza with a nod of head and glance
-of eyes. “The Senorita!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And Yi Poon and his secret were forgotten. Enrico and
-his sons streamed out to the side piazza to behold Leoncia
-and the Queen and the two Morgans, dropping dust-covered
-off the backs of riding mules recognizable as from the pastures
-of the mouth of the Gualaca River. At the same time two
-Indian man-servants, summoned by the maid, cleared the
-house and grounds of the fat Chinaman and his old crone of
-a companion.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Come some other time,” they told him. “Just now
-the Senor Solano is very importantly busy.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Sure, I come some other time,” Yi Poon assured them
-pleasantly, without resentment and without betrayal of the
-disappointment that was his at his deal interrupted just ere
-the money was paid into his hand.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But he departed reluctantly. The place was good for his
-business. It was sprouting secrets. Never was there a
-riper harvest in Canaan out of which, sickle in hand, a husbandman
-was driven! Had it not been for the zealous
-Indian attendants, Yi Poon would have darted around the
-corner of the hacienda to note the newcomers. As it was,
-half way down the hill, finding the weight of the crone too
-fatiguing, he put into her the life and ability to carry her own
-weight a little farther by feeding her a double teaspoonful of
-brandy from his screw-top flask.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Enrico swept Leoncia off her mule ere she could dismount,
-so passionately eager was he to fold her in his arms. For
-several minutes ensued naught but noisy Latin affection as
-her brothers all strove to greet and embrace her at once.
-When they recollected themselves, Francis had already helped
-the Lady Who Dreams from her mount, and beside her, her
-hand in his, was waiting recognition.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“This is my wife,” Francis told Enrico. “I went into
-the Cordilleras after treasure, and behold what I found. Was
-there ever better fortune?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_224'>224</span>“And she sacrificed a great treasure herself,” Leoncia
-murmured bravely.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“She was queen of a little kingdom,” Francis added, with
-a grateful and admiring flash of eyes to Leoncia, who quickly
-added:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And she saved all our lives but sacrificed her little
-kingdom in so doing.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And Leoncia, in an exaltation of generousness, put her arm
-around the Queen’s waist, took her away from Francis, and
-led the way into the hacienda.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_225'>225</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER XXIII</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>In all the magnificence of medieval Spanish and New World
-costume such as was still affected by certain of the great
-haciendados of Panama, Torres rode along the beach-road
-to the home of the Solanos. Running with him, at so easy
-a lope that it promised an extension that would outspeed
-the best of Torres’ steed, was the great white hound that had
-followed him down the subterranean river. As Torres turned
-to take the winding road up the hill to the hacienda, he
-passed Yi Poon, who had paused to let the old crone gather
-strength. He merely noticed the strange couple as dirt of
-the common people. The hauteur that he put on with his
-magnificence of apparel forbade that he should betray any
-interest further than an unseeing glance.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But him Yi Poon noted with slant Oriental eyes that
-missed no details. And Yi Poon thought: He looks very
-rich. He is a friend of the Solanos. He rides to the house.
-He may even be a lover of the Senorita Leoncia.—Or a
-worsted rival for her love. In almost any case, he might be
-expected to buy the secret of the Senorita Leoncia’s birth,
-and he certainly looks rich, most rich.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Inside the hacienda, assembled in the living room, were
-the returned adventurers and all the Solanos. The Queen,
-taking her turn in piecing out the narrative of all that had
-occurred, with flashing eyes was denouncing Torres for his
-theft of her jewels and describing his fall into the whirlpool
-before the onslaught of the hound, when Leoncia, at the
-window with Henry, uttered a sharp exclamation.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Speak of the devil!” said Henry. “Here comes Torres
-himself.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Me first!” Francis cried, doubling his fist and flexing his
-biceps significantly.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“No,” decreed Leoncia. “He is a wonderful liar. He
-is a very wonderful liar, as we’ve all found out. Let us have
-some fun. He is dismounting now. Let the four of us disappear.—Father!”
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_226'>226</span>With a wave of hand she indicated
-Enrico and all his sons. “You will sit around desolated
-over the loss of me. This scoundrel Torres will enter. You
-will be thirsty for information. He will tell you no one can
-guess what astounding lies about us. As for us, we’ll hide
-behind the screen there.—Come! All of you!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And, catching the Queen by the hand and leading the way,
-with her eyes she commanded Francis and Henry to follow
-to the hiding place.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And Torres entered upon a scene of sorrow which had been
-so recently real that Enrico and his sons had no difficulty in
-acting it. Enrico started up from his chair in eagerness of
-welcome and sank weakly back. Torres caught the other’s
-hand in both his own and manifested deep sympathy and
-could not speak from emotion.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Alas!” he finally managed heart-brokenly. “They are
-dead. She is dead, your beautiful daughter, Leoncia. And
-the two Gringo Morgans are dead with her. As Ricardo,
-there, must know, they died in the heart of the Maya Mountain.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“It is the home of mystery,” he continued, after giving
-due time for the subsidence of the first violent outburst of
-Enrico’s grief. “I was with them when they died. Had
-they followed my counsel, they would all have lived. But
-not even Leoncia would listen to the old friend of the Solanos.
-No, she must listen to the two Gringos. After incredible
-dangers I won my way out through the heart of the mountain,
-gazed down into the Valley of Lost Souls, and returned
-into the mountain to find them dying——”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Here, pursued by an Indian man-servant, the white hound
-bounded into the room, trembling and whining in excitement
-as with its nose it quested the multitudinous scents of the
-room that advertised his mistress. Before he could follow
-up to where the Queen hid behind the screen, Torres caught
-him by the neck and turned him over to a couple of the
-Indian house-men to hold.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Let the brute remain,” said Torres. “I will tell you
-about him afterward. But first look at this.” He pulled
-forth a handful of gems. “I knocked on the doors of the
-dead, and, behold, the Maya treasure is mine. I am the
-richest man in Panama, in all the Americas. I shall be
-powerful——”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“But you were with my daughter when she died,” Enrico
-interrupted to sob. “Had she no word for me?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_227'>227</span>“Yes,” Torres sobbed back, genuinely affected by the
-death-scene of his fancy. “She died with your name on her
-lips. Her last words were——”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But, with bulging eyes, he failed to complete his sentence,
-for he was watching Henry and Leoncia, in the most natural,
-casual manner in the world stroll down the room, immersed
-in quiet conversation. Not noticing Torres, they crossed
-over to the window still deep in talk.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“You were telling me her last words were ...?” Enrico
-prompted.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I ... I have lied to you,” Torres stammered, while he
-sparred for time in which to get himself out of the scrape.
-“I was confident that they were as good as dead and would
-never find their way to the world again. And I thought to
-soften the blow to you, Senor Solano, by telling what I am
-confident would be her last words were she dying. Also,
-this man Francis, whom you have elected to like. I thought
-it better for you to believe him dead than know him for the
-Gringo cur he is.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Here the hound barked joyfully at the screen, giving the
-two Indians all they could do to hold him back. But Torres,
-instead of suspecting, blundered on to his fate.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“In the Valley there is a silly weak demented creature
-who pretends to read the future by magic. An altogether
-atrocious and blood-thirsty female is she. I am not denying
-that in physical beauty she is beautiful. For beautiful she
-is, as a centipede is beautiful to those who think centipedes
-are beautiful. You see what has happened. She has sent
-Henry and Leoncia out of the Valley by some secret way,
-while Francis has elected to remain there with her in sin——for
-sin it is, since there exists in the valley no Catholic priest
-to make their relation lawful. Oh, not that Francis is infatuated
-with the terrible creature. But he is infatuated
-with a paltry treasure the creature possesses. And this is
-the Gringo Francis you have welcomed into the bosom of your
-family, the slimy snake of a Gringo Francis who has even
-dared to sully the fair Leoncia by casting upon her the looks
-of a lover. Oh, I know of what I speak. I have seen——”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>A joyous outburst from the hound drowned his voice, and
-he beheld Francis and the Queen, as deep in conversation as
-the two who had preceded them, walk down the room. The
-Queen paused to caress the hound, who stood so tall against
-her that his forepaws, on her shoulders, elevated his head
-above hers; while Torres licked his suddenly dry lips and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_228'>228</span>vainly cudgeled his brains for some fresh lie with which to
-extricate himself from the impossible situation.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Enrico Solano was the first to break down in mirth. All
-his sons joined him, while tears of sheer delight welled out of
-his eyes.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I could have married her myself,” Torres sneered malignantly.
-“She begged me on her knees.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And now,” said Francis, “I shall save you all a dirty
-job by throwing him out.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But Henry, advancing swiftly, asserted:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I like dirty jobs equally. And this is a dirty job particularly
-to my liking.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Both the Morgans were about to fall on Torres, when the
-Queen held up her hand.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“First,” she said, “let him return to me, from there in
-his belt, the dagger he stole from me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Ah,” said Enrico, when this had been accomplished.
-“Should he not also return to you, lovely lady, the gems he
-filched?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Torres did not hesitate. Dipping into his pocket, he laid a
-handful of the jewels on the table. Enrico glanced at the
-Queen, who merely waited expectantly.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“More,” said Enrico.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And three more of the beautiful uncut stones Torres added
-to the others on the table.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Would you search me like a common pickpocket?” he
-demanded in frantic indignation, turning both trousers’
-pockets emptily inside out.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Me,” said Francis.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I insist,” said Henry.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Oh, all very well,” Francis conceded. “Then we’ll do
-it together. We can throw him farther off the steps.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Acting as one, they clutched Torres by collar and trousers
-and started in a propulsive rush for the door.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>All others in the room ran to the windows to behold Torres’
-exit; but Enrico, quickest of all, gained a window first. And,
-afterward, into the middle of the room, the Queen scooped
-the gems from the table into both her hands, and gave the
-double handful to Leoncia, saying:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“From Francis and me to you and Henry——your
-wedding present.”</p>
-
-<hr class='c010' />
-
-<p class='c000'>Yi Poon, having left the crone by the beach and crept back
-to peer at the house from the bushes, chuckled gratifiedly to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_229'>229</span>himself when he saw the rich caballero thrown off the steps
-with such a will as to be sent sprawling far out into the
-gravel. But Yi Poon was too clever to let on that he had
-seen. Hurrying away, he was half down the hill ere overtaken
-by Torres on his horse.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The celestial addressed him humbly, and Torres, in his
-general rage, lifted his riding whip savagely to slash him
-across the face. But Yi Poon did not quail.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“The Senorita Leoncia,” he said quickly, and arrested the
-blow. “I have great secret.” Torres waited, the whip still
-lifted as a threat. “You like ‘m some other man marry that
-very nice Senorita Leoncia?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Torres dropped the whip to his side.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Go on,” he commanded harshly. “What is the secret?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“You no want ‘m other man marry that Senorita
-Leoncia?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Suppose I don’t?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Then, suppose you have secret, you can stop other
-man.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Well, what is it? Spit it out.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“But first,” Yi Poon shook his head, “you pay me six
-hundred dollars gold. Then I tell you secret.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I’ll pay you,” Torres said readily, although without the
-slightest thought of keeping his word. “You tell me first,
-then, if no lie, I’ll pay you.—See!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>From his breast pocket he drew a wallet bulging with paper
-bills; and Yi Poon, uneasily acquiescing, led him down the
-road to the crone on the beach.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“This old woman,” he explained, “she no lie. She sick
-woman. Pretty soon she die. She is afraid. She talk to
-priest along Colon. Priest say she must tell secret, or die
-and go to hell. So she no lie.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Well, if she doesn’t lie, what is it she must tell?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“You pay me?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Sure. Six hundred gold.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Well, she born Cadiz in old country. She number one
-servant, number one baby nurse. One time she take job
-with English family that come traveling in her country.
-Long time she work with that family. She go back along England.
-Then, bime by——you know Spanish blood very hot——she
-get very mad. That family have one little baby girl.
-She steal little baby girl and run away to Panama. That
-little baby girl Senor Solano he adopt just the same his own
-daughter. He have plenty sons and no daughter. So that
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_230'>230</span>little baby girl he make his daughter. But that old woman
-she no tell what name belong little girl’s family. That
-family very high blood, very rich, everybody in England
-know that family. That family’s name ‘Morgan.’ You
-know that name? In Colon comes San Antonio men who
-say Senor Solano’s daughter marry English Gringo named
-Morgan. That Gringo Morgan the Senorita Leoncia’s
-brother.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Ah!” said Torres with maleficent delight.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“You pay me now six hundred gold,” said Yi Poon.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Thank you for the fool you are,” said Torres with untold
-mockery in his voice. “You will learn better perhaps some
-day the business of selling secrets. Secrets are not shoes or
-mahogany timber. A secret told is no more than a whisper
-in the air. It comes. It goes. It is gone. It is a ghost.
-Who has seen it? You can claim back shoes or mahogany
-timber. You can never claim back a secret when you have
-told it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“We talk of ghosts, you and I,” said Yi Poon calmly.
-“And the ghosts are gone. I have told you no secret. You
-have dreamed a dream. When you tell men they will ask
-you who told you. And you will say, ‘Yi Poon.’ But Yi
-Poon will say, ‘No.’ And they will say, ‘Ghosts,’ and
-laugh at you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Yi Poon, feeling the other yield to his superior subtlety of
-thought, deliberately paused.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“We have talked whispers,” he resumed after a few
-seconds. “You speak true when you say whispers are
-ghosts. When I sell secrets I do not sell ghosts. I sell
-shoes. I sell mahogany timber. My proofs are what I sell.
-They are solid. On the scales they will weigh weight. You
-can tear the paper of them, which is legal paper of record,
-on which they are written. Some of them, not paper, you
-can bite with your teeth and break your teeth upon. For
-the whispers are already gone like morning mists. I have
-proofs. You will pay me six hundred gold for the proofs, or
-men will laugh at you for lending your ears to ghosts.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“All right,” Torres capitulated, convinced. “Show me
-the proofs that I can tear and bite.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Pay me the six hundred gold.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“When you have shown me the proofs.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“The proofs you can tear and bite are yours after you
-have put the six hundred gold into my hand. You promise.
-A promise is a whisper, a ghost. I do not do business with
-ghost money. You pay me real money I can tear or bite.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_231'>231</span>And in the end Torres surrendered, paying in advance for
-what did satisfy him when he had examined the documents,
-the old letters, the baby locket and the baby trinkets. And
-Torres not only assured Yi Poon that he was satisfied, but
-paid him in advance, on the latter’s insistence, an additional
-hundred gold to execute a commission for him.</p>
-
-<hr class='c010' />
-
-<p class='c000'>Meanwhile, in the bathroom which connected their bedrooms,
-clad in fresh underlinen and shaving with safety
-razors, Henry and Francis were singing:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Back to back against the mainmast,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Held at bay the entire crew....”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>In her charming quarters, aided and abetted by a couple
-of Indian seamstresses, Leoncia, half in mirth, half in sadness,
-and in all sweetness and wholesomeness of generosity,
-was initiating the Queen into the charmingness of civilized
-woman’s dress. The Queen, a true woman to her heart’s
-core, was wild with delight in the countless pretties of texture
-and adornment with which Leoncia’s wardrobe was stored.
-It was a maiden frolic for the pair of them, and a stitch here
-and a take-up there modified certain of Leoncia’s gowns to
-the Queen’s slenderness.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“No,” said Leoncia judicially. “You will not need a
-corset. You are the one woman in a hundred for whom a
-corset is not necessary. You have the roundest lines for a
-thin woman that I ever saw. You ...” Leoncia paused,
-apparently deflected by her need for a pin from her dressing
-table, for which she turned; but at the same time she swallowed
-the swelling that choked in her throat, so that she was
-able to continue: “You are a beautiful bride, and Francis
-can only grow prouder of you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In the bathroom, Francis, finished shaving first, broke off
-the song to respond to the knock at his bedroom door and
-received a telegram from Fernando, the next to the youngest
-of the Solano brothers. And Francis read:</p>
-
-<p class='c009'><em>Important your immediate return. Need more margins.
-While market very weak but a strong attack on
-all your stocks except Tampico Petroleum, which is
-strong as ever. Wire me when to expect you. Situation
-is serious. Think I can hold out if you start to return
-at once. Wire me at once.</em></p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r c008'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>Bascom.</em></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_232'>232</span>In the living room the two Morgans found Enrico and his
-sons opening wine.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Having but had my daughter restored to me,” Enrico
-said, “I now lose her again. But it is an easier loss, Henry.
-To-morrow shall be the wedding. It cannot take place too
-quickly. It is sure, right now, that that scoundrel Torres is
-whispering all over San Antonio Leoncia’s latest unprotected
-escapade with you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Ere Henry could express his gratification, Leoncia and the
-Queen entered. He held up his glass and toasted:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“To the bride!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Leoncia, not understanding, raised a glass from the table
-and glanced to the Queen.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“No, no,” Henry said, taking her glass with the intention
-of passing it to the Queen.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“No, no,” said Enrico. “Neither shall drink the toast
-which is incomplete. Let me make it:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“To the brides!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“You and Henry are to be married to-morrow,” Alesandro
-explained to Leoncia.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Unexpected and bitter though the news was, Leoncia controlled
-herself, and dared with assumed jollity to look Francis
-in the eyes while she cried:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Another toast! To the bridegrooms!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Difficult as Francis had found it to marry the Queen and
-maintain equanimity, he now found equanimity impossible
-at the announcement of the immediate marriage of Leoncia.
-Nor did Leoncia fail to observe how hard he struggled to
-control himself. His suffering gave her secret joy, and with
-a feeling almost of triumph she watched him take advantage
-of the first opportunity to leave the room.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Showing them his telegram and assuring them that his
-fortune was at stake, he said he must get off an answer and
-asked Fernando to arrange for a rider to carry it to the
-government wireless at San Antonio.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Nor was Leoncia long in following him. In the library she
-came upon him, seated at the reading table, his telegram
-unwritten, while his gaze was fixed upon a large photograph
-of her which he had taken from its place on top the low bookshelves.
-All of which was too much for her. Her involuntary
-gasping sob brought him to his feet in time to catch her
-as she swayed into his arms. And before either knew it their
-lips were together in fervent expression.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_233'>233</span>Leoncia struggled and tore herself away, gazing upon her
-lover with horror.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“This must stop, Francis!” she cried. “More: you
-cannot remain here for my wedding. If you do, I shall not
-be responsible for my actions. There is a steamer leaves San
-Antonio for Colon. You and your wife must sail on it. You
-can easily catch passage on the fruit boats to New Orleans
-and take train to New York. I love you!—you know it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“The Queen and I are not married!” Francis pleaded,
-beside himself, overcome by what had taken place. “That
-heathen marriage before the Altar of the Sun was no marriage.
-In neither deed nor ceremony are we married. I
-assure you of that, Leoncia. It is not too late——”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“That heathen marriage has lasted you thus far,” she
-interrupted him with quiet firmness. “Let it last you to
-New York, or, at least, to ... Colon.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“The Queen will not have any further marriage after our
-forms,” Francis said. “She insists that all her female line
-before her has been so married and that the Sun Altar ceremony
-is sacredly binding.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Leoncia shrugged her shoulders non-committally, although
-her face was stern with resolution.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Marriage or no,” she replied, “you must go—to-night—the
-pair of you. Else I shall go mad. I warn you: I shall
-not be able to withstand the presence of you. I cannot, I
-know I cannot, be able to stand the sight of you while I am
-being married to Henry and after I am married to Henry.—Oh,
-please, please, do not misunderstand me. I do love
-Henry, but not in the ... not in that way ... not in the
-way I love you. I—and I am not ashamed of the boldness
-with which I say it—I love Henry about as much as you love
-the Queen; but I love you as I should love Henry, as you
-should love the Queen, as I know you do love me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>She caught his hand and pressed it against her heart.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“There! For the last time! Now go!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But his arms were around her, and she could not help but
-yield her lips. Again she tore herself away, this time fleeing
-to the doorway. Francis bowed his head to her decision,
-then picked up her picture.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I shall keep this,” he announced.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“You oughtn’t to,” she flashed a last fond smile at him.
-“You may,” she added, as she turned and was gone.</p>
-
-<hr class='c010' />
-
-<p class='c000'>Yet Yi Poon had a commission to execute, for which Torres
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_234'>234</span>had paid him one hundred gold in advance. Next morning,
-with Francis and the Queen hours departed on their way to
-Colon, Yi Poon arrived at the Solano hacienda. Enrico,
-smoking a cigar on the veranda and very much pleased with
-himself and all the world and the way the world was going,
-recognized and welcomed Yi Poon as his visitor of the day
-before. Even ere they talked, Leoncia’s father had dispatched
-Alesandro for the five hundred pesos agreed upon.
-And Yi Poon, whose profession was trafficking in secrets,
-was not averse to selling his secret the second time. Yet
-was he true to his salt, in so far as he obeyed Torres’ instructions
-in refusing to tell the secret save in the presence of
-Leoncia and Henry.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“That secret has the string on it,” Yi Poon apologized,
-after the couple had been summoned, as he began unwrapping
-the parcel of proofs. “The Senorita Leoncia and the
-man she is going to marry must first, before anybody else,
-look at these things. Afterward, all can look.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Which is fair, since they are more interested than any
-of us,” Enrico conceded grandly, although at the same time
-he betrayed his eagerness by the impatience with which he
-motioned his daughter and Henry to take the evidence to one
-side for examination.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>He tried to appear uninterested, but his side-glances
-missed nothing of what they did. To his amazement, he
-saw Leoncia suddenly cast down a legal-appearing document,
-which she and Henry had read through, and throw her arms,
-whole-heartedly and freely about his neck, and whole-heartedly
-and freely kiss him on the lips. Next, Enrico saw
-Henry step back and exclaim in a dazed, heart-broken way:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“But, my God, Leoncia! This is the end of everything.
-Never can we be husband and wife!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Eh?” Enrico snorted. “When everything was
-arranged! What do you mean, sir? This is an insult!
-Marry you shall, and marry to-day!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Henry, almost in stupefaction, looked to Leoncia to speak
-for him.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“It is against God’s law and man’s,” she said, “for a
-man to marry his sister. Now I understand my strange love
-for Henry. He is my brother. We are full brother and
-sister, unless these documents lie.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And Yi Poon knew that he could take report to Torres that
-the marriage would not take place and would never take
-place.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_235'>235</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER XXIV</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>Catching a United Fruit Company boat at Colon within
-fifteen minutes after landing from the small coaster, the
-Queen’s progress with Francis to New York had been a swift
-rush of fortunate connections. At New Orleans a taxi from
-the wharf to the station and a racing of porters with hand
-luggage had barely got them aboard the train just as it
-started. Arrived at New York, Francis had been met by
-Bascom, in Francis’ private machine, and the rush had continued
-to the rather ornate palace R.H.M. himself, Francis’
-father, had built out of his millions on Riverside Drive.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>So it was that the Queen knew scarcely more of the great
-world than when she first started her travels by leaping into
-the subterranean river. Had she been a lesser creature, she
-would have been stunned by this vast civilisation around her.
-As it was, she was royally inconsequential, accepting such
-civilization as an offering from her royal spouse. Royal he
-was, served by many slaves. Had she not, on steamer and
-train, observed it? And here, arrived at his palace, she took
-as a matter of course the showing of house servants that
-greeted them. The chauffeur opened the door of the limousine.
-Other servants carried in the hand baggage. Francis
-touched his hand to nothing, save to her arm to assist her to
-alight. Even Bascom—a man she divined was no servitor—she
-also divined as one who served Francis. And she could
-not but observe Bascom depart in Francis’ limousine, under
-instruction and command of Francis.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>She had been a queen, in an isolated valley, over a handful
-of savages. Yet here, in this mighty land of kings, her
-husband ruled kings. It was all very wonderful, and she
-was deliciously aware that her queenship had suffered no
-diminishing by her alliance with Francis.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Her delight in the interior of the mansion was naïve and
-childlike. Forgetting the servants, or, rather, ignoring them
-as she ignored her own attendants in her lake dwelling, she
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_236'>236</span>clapped her hands in the great entrance hall, glanced at the
-marble stairway, tripped in a little run to the nearest apartment,
-and peeped in. It was the library, which she had
-visioned in the Mirror of the World the first day she saw
-Francis. And the vision realized itself, for Francis entered
-with her into the great room of books, his arm about her,
-just as she had seen him on the fluid-metal surface of the
-golden bowl. The telephones, and the stock-ticker, too, she
-remembered; and, just as she had foreseen herself do, she
-crossed over to the ticker curiously to examine, and Francis,
-his arm still about her, stood by her side.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Hardly had he begun an attempted explanation of the
-instrument, and just as he realized the impossibility of
-teaching her in several minutes all the intricacies of the stock
-market institution, when his eyes noted on the tape that
-Frisco Consolidated was down twenty points—a thing unprecedented
-in that little Iowa railroad which R.H.M. had
-financed and builded and to the day of his death maintained
-proudly as so legitimate a creation, that, though half the
-banks and all of Wall Street crashed, it would weather any
-storm.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The Queen viewed with alarm the alarm that grew on
-Francis’ face.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“It is magic—like my Mirror of the World?” she half-queried,
-half-stated.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Francis nodded.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“It tells you secrets, I know,” she continued. “Like my
-golden bowl, it brings all the world, here within this very
-room, to you. It brings you trouble. That is very plain.
-But what trouble can this world bring you, who are one of its
-great kings?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>He opened his mouth to reply to her last question, halted,
-and said nothing, realizing the impossibility of conveying
-comprehension to her, the while, under his eyelids, or at the
-foreground of his brain, burned pictures of great railroad and
-steamship lines, of teeming terminals and noisy docks; of
-miners toiling in Alaska, in Montana, in Death Valley; of
-bridled rivers, and harnessed waterfalls, and of power-lines
-stilting across lowlands and swamps and marshes on two-hundred-foot
-towers; and of all the mechanics and economics
-and finances of the twentieth century machine-civilization.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“It brings you trouble,” she repeated. “And, alas! I
-cannot help you. My golden bowl is no more. Never again
-shall I see the world in it. I am no longer a ruler of the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_237'>237</span>future. I am a woman merely, and helpless in this strange,
-colossal world to which you have brought me. I am a woman
-merely, and your wife, Francis, your proud wife.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Almost did he love her, as, dropping the tape, he pressed
-her closely for a moment ere going over to the battery of
-telephones. She is delightful, was his thought. There is
-neither guile nor malice in her, only woman, all woman,
-lovely and lovable——alas, that Leoncia should ever and
-always arise in my thought between her whom I have and
-herself whom I shall never have!</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“More magic,” the Queen murmured, as Francis, getting
-Bascom’s office, said:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Mr. Bascom will undoubtedly arrive back in half an hour.
-This is Morgan talking——Francis Morgan. Mr. Bascom left
-for his office not five minutes ago. When he arrives, tell him
-that I have started for his office and shall not be more than
-five minutes behind him. This is important. Tell him I am
-on the way. Thank you. Good bye.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Very naturally, with all the wonders of the great house yet
-to be shown her, the Queen betrayed her disappointment
-when Francis told her he must immediately depart for a
-place called Wall Street.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“What is it,” she asked, with a pout of displeasure, “that
-drags you away from me like a slave?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“It is business——and very important,” he told her with
-a smile and a kiss.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And what is Business that it should have power over
-you who are a king? Is business the name of your god whom
-all of you worship as the Sun God is worshipped by my
-people?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>He smiled at the almost perfect appositeness of her idea,
-saying:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“It is the great American god. Also, is it a very terrible
-god, and when it slays it slays terribly and swiftly.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And you have incurred its displeasure?” she queried.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Alas, yes, though I know not how. I must go to Wall
-Street——”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Which is its altar?” she broke in to ask.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Which is its altar,” he answered, “and where I must
-find out wherein I have offended and wherein I may placate
-and make amends.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>His hurried attempt to explain to her the virtues and
-functions of the maid he had wired for from Colon, scarcely
-interested her, and she broke him off by saying that evidently
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_238'>238</span>the maid was similar to the Indian women who had attended
-her in the Valley of Lost Souls, and that she had been
-accustomed to personal service ever since she was a little girl
-learning English and Spanish from her mother in the house
-on the lake.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But when Francis caught up his hat and kissed her, she
-relented and wished him luck before the altar.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>After several hours of amazing adventures in her own
-quarters, where the maid, a Spanish-speaking Frenchwoman,
-acted as guide and mentor, and after being variously measured
-and gloated over by a gorgeous woman who seemed
-herself a queen and who was attended by two young women,
-and who, in the Queen’s mind, was without doubt summoned
-to serve her and Francis, she came back down the grand
-stairway to investigate the library with its mysterious telephones
-and ticker.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Long she gazed at the ticker and listened to its irregular
-chatter. But she, who could read and write English and
-Spanish, could make nothing of the strange hieroglyphics
-that grew miraculously on the tape. Next, she explored the
-first of the telephones. Remembering how Francis had
-listened, she put her ear to the transmitter. Then, recollecting
-his use of the receiver, she took it off its hook and placed
-it to her ear. The voice, unmistakably a woman’s, sounded
-so near to her that in her startled surprise she dropped the
-receiver and recoiled. At this moment, Parker, Francis’ old
-valet, chanced to enter the room. She had not observed
-him before, and, so immaculate was his dress, so dignified
-his carriage, that she mistook him for a friend of Francis
-rather than a servitor——a friend similar to Bascom who had
-met them at the station with Francis’ machine, ridden inside
-with them as an equal, yet departed with Francis’ commands
-in his ears which it was patent he was to obey.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>At sight of Parker’s solemn face she laughed with embarrassment
-and pointed inquiringly to the telephone.
-Solemnly he picked up the receiver, murmured “A mistake,”
-into the transmitter, and hung up. In those several
-seconds the Queen’s thought underwent revolution. No
-god’s nor spirit’s voice had been that which she had heard,
-but a woman’s voice.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Where is that woman?” she demanded.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Parker merely stiffened up more stiffly, assumed a
-solemner expression, and bowed.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“There is a woman concealed in the house,” she charged
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_239'>239</span>with quick words. “Her voice speaks there in that thing.
-She must be in the next room——”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“It was Central,” Parker attempted to stem the flood of
-her utterance.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I care not what her name is,” the Queen dashed on.
-“I shall have no other woman but myself in my house. Bid
-her begone. I am very angry.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Parker was even stiller and solemner, and a new mood
-came over her. Perhaps this dignified gentleman was higher
-than she had suspected in the hierarchy of the lesser kings,
-she thought. Almost might he be an equal king with Francis,
-and she had treated him peremptorily as less, as much less.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>She caught him by the hand, in her impetuousness noting
-his reluctance, drew him over to a sofa, and made him sit
-beside her. To add to Parker’s discomfiture, she dipped
-into a box of candy and began to feed him chocolates,
-closing his mouth with the sweets every time he opened it
-to protest.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Come,” she said, when she had almost choked him, “is
-it the custom of the men of this country to be polygamous?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Parker was aghast at such rawness of frankness.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Oh, I know the meaning of the word,” she assured him.
-“So I repeat: is it the custom of the men of this country
-to be polygamous?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“There is no woman in this house, besides yourself,
-madam, except servant women,” he managed to enunciate.
-“That voice you heard is not the voice of a woman in this
-house, but the voice of a woman miles away who is your
-servant, or is anybody’s servant who desires to talk over the
-telephone.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“She is the slave of the mystery?” the Queen questioned,
-beginning to get a dim glimmer of the actuality of the
-matter.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Yes,” her husband’s valet admitted. “She is a slave
-of the telephone.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Of the flying speech?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Yes, madam, call it that, of the flying speech.” He
-was desperate to escape from a situation unprecedented in
-his entire career. “Come, I will show you, madam. This
-slave of the flying speech is yours to command both by night
-and day. If you wish, the slave will enable you to talk with
-your husband, Mr. Morgan——”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Now?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Parker nodded, arose, and led her to the telephone.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_240'>240</span>“First of all,” he instructed, “you will speak to the
-slave. The instant you take this down and put it to your
-ear, the slave will respond. It is the slave’s invariable way
-of saying ‘Number?’ Sometimes she says it, ‘Number?
-Number?’ And sometimes she is very irritable.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“When the slave has said ‘Number,’ then do you say
-‘Eddystone 1292,’ whereupon the slave will say ‘Eddystone
-1292?’ and then you will say, ‘Yes, please——‘”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“To a slave I shall say ‘please’?” she interrupted.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Yes, madam, for these slaves of the flying speech are
-peculiar slaves that one never sees. I am not a young man,
-yet I have never seen a Central in all my life.—Thus, next,
-after a moment, another slave, a woman, who is miles away
-from the first one, will say to you, ‘This is Eddystone 1292,’
-and you will say, ‘I am Mrs. Morgan. I wish to speak with
-Mr. Morgan, who is, I think, in Mr. Bascom’s private
-office.’ And then you wait, maybe for half a minute, or for
-a minute, and then Mr. Morgan will begin to talk to you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“From miles and miles away?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Yes, madam——just as if he were in the next room.
-And when Mr. Morgan says ‘Good-bye,’ you will say ‘Good-bye,’
-and hang up as you have seen me do.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And all that Parker had told her came to pass as she
-carried out his instructions. The two different slaves obeyed
-the magic of the number she gave them, and Francis talked
-and laughed with her, begged her not to be lonely, and promised
-to be home not later than five that afternoon.</p>
-
-<hr class='c010' />
-
-<p class='c000'>Meanwhile, and throughout the day, Francis was a very
-busy and perturbed man.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“What secret enemy have you?” Bascom again and
-again demanded, while Francis shook his head in futility of
-conjecture.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“For see, except where your holdings are concerned, the
-market is reasonable and right. But take your holdings.
-There’s Frisco Consolidated. There is neither sense nor logic
-that it should be beared this way. Only your holdings are
-being beared. New York, Vermont and Connecticut, paid
-fifteen per cent. the last four quarters and is as solid as
-Gibraltar. Yet it’s down, and down hard. The same with
-Montana Lode, Death Valley Copper, Imperial Tungsten,
-Northwestern Electric. Take Alaska Trodwell——as solid
-as the everlasting rock. The movement against it started
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_241'>241</span>only yesterday late. It closed eight points down, and to-day
-has slumped twice as much more. Every one, stock in
-which you are heavily interested. And no other stocks involved.
-The rest of the market is firm.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“So is Tampico Petroleum firm,” Francis said, “and
-I’m interested in it heaviest of all.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Bascom shrugged his shoulders despairingly.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Are you sure you cannot think of somebody who is doing
-this and who may be your enemy?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Not for the life of me, Bascom. Can’t think of a soul.
-I haven’t made any enemies, because, since my father died,
-I have not been active. Tampico Petroleum is the only
-thing I ever got busy with, and even now it’s all right.” He
-strolled over to the ticker. “There. Half a point up for
-five hundred shares.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Just the same, somebody’s after you,” Bascom assured
-him. “The thing is clear as the sun at midday. I have
-been going over the reports of the different stocks at issue.
-They are colored, artfully and delicately colored, and the
-coloring matter is pessimistic and official. Why did Northwestern
-Electric pass its dividend? Why did they put that
-black-eye stuff into Mulhaney’s report on Montana Lode?
-Oh, never mind the rest of the black-eying, but why all this
-activity of unloading? It’s clear. There’s a raid on, and it
-seems on you, and it’s not a sudden rush raid. It’s been
-slowly and steadily growing. And it’s ripe to break at the
-first rumor of war, at a big strike, or a financial panic——at
-anything that will bear the entire market.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Look at the situation you’re in now, when all holdings
-except your own are normal. I’ve covered your margins,
-and covered them. A grave proportion of your straight collateral
-is already up. And your margins keep on shrinking.
-You can scarcely throw them overboard. It might start a
-break. It’s too ticklish.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“There’s Tampico Petroleum, smiling as pretty as you
-please——it’s collateral enough to cover everything,” Francis
-suggested. “Though I’ve been chary of touching it,” he
-amended.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Bascom shook his head.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“There’s the Mexican revolution, and our own spineless
-administration. If we involved Tampico Petroleum, and
-anything serious should break down there, you’d be finished,
-cleaned out, broke.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And yet,” Bascom resumed, “I see no other way out
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_242'>242</span>than to use Tampico Petroleum. You see, I have
-almost exhausted what you have placed in my hands. And
-this is no whirlwind raid. It’s slow and steady as an
-advancing glacier. I’ve only handled the market for you
-all these years, and this is the first tight place we’ve got
-into. Now your general business affairs? Collins has the
-handling and knows. You must know. What securities can
-you let me have? Now? And to-morrow? And next week?
-And the next three weeks?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“How much do you want?” Francis questioned back.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“A million before closing time to-day.” Bascom pointed
-eloquently at the ticker. “At least twenty million more in
-the next three weeks, if——and mark you that <em>if</em> well——if
-the world remains at peace, and if the general market remains
-as normal as it has been for the past six months.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Francis stood up with decision and reached for his hat.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I’m going to Collins at once. He knows far more about
-my outside business than I know myself. I shall have at
-least the million in your hands before closing time, and I’ve
-a shrewd suspicion that I’ll cover the rest during the next
-several weeks.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Remember,” Bascom warned him, as they shook hands,
-“it’s the very slowness of this raid that is ominous. It’s
-directed against you, and it’s no fly-by-night affair. Whoever
-is making it, is doing it big, and must be big.”</p>
-
-<hr class='c010' />
-
-<p class='c000'>Several times, late that afternoon and evening, the Queen
-was called up by the slave of the flying speech and enabled
-to talk with her husband. To her delight, in her own room,
-by her bedside, she found a telephone, through which, by
-calling up Collins’ office, she gave her good night to Francis.
-Also, she essayed to kiss her heart to him, and received back,
-queer and vague of sound, his answering kiss.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>She knew not how long she had slept, when she awoke.
-Not moving, through her half-open eyes she saw Francis
-peer into the room and across to her. When he had gone
-softly away, she leapt out of bed and ran to the door in time
-to see him start down the staircase.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>More trouble with the great god Business——was her
-surmise. He was going down to that wonderful room, the
-library, to read more of the dread god’s threats and warnings
-that were so mysteriously made to take form of written
-speech to the clicking of the ticker. She looked at herself
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_243'>243</span>in the mirror, adjusted her hair, and with a little love-smile
-of anticipation on her lips put on a dressing-gown——another
-of the marvelous pretties of Francis’ forethought and providing.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>At the entrance of the library she paused, hearing the
-voice of another than Francis. At first thought she decided
-it was the flying speech, but immediately afterward she knew
-it to be too loud and near and different. Peeping in, she
-saw two men drawn up in big leather chairs near to each
-other and facing. Francis, tired of face from the day’s
-exertions, still wore his business suit; but the other was clad
-in evening dress. And she heard him call her husband
-“Francis,” who, in turn, called him “Johnny.” That,
-and the familiarity of their conversation, conveyed to her
-that they were old, close friends.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And don’t tell me, Francis,” the other was saying,
-“that you’ve frivoled through Panama all this while without
-losing your heart to the senoritas a dozen times.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Only once,” Francis replied, after a pause, in which the
-Queen noted that he gazed steadily at his friend.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Further,” he went on, after another pause, “I really
-lost my heart——but not my head. Johnny Pathmore, O
-Johnny Pathmore, you are a mere flirtatious brute, but I
-tell you that you’ve lots to learn. I tell you that in Panama
-I found the most wonderful woman in the world——a woman
-that I was glad I had lived to know, a woman that I would
-gladly die for; a woman of fire, of passion, of sweetness, of
-nobility, a very queen of women.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And the Queen, listening and looking upon the intense
-exaltation of his face, smiled with proud fondness and certitude
-to herself, for had she not won a husband who remained
-a lover?</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And did the lady, er——ah——did she reciprocate?”
-Johnny Pathmore ventured.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The Queen saw Francis nod as he solemnly replied.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“She loves me as I love her——this I know in all
-absoluteness.” He stood up suddenly. “Wait. I will
-show her to you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And as he started toward the door, the Queen, in roguishness
-of a very extreme of happiness at her husband’s confession
-she had overheard, fled trippingly to hide in the wide
-doorway of a grand room which the maid had informed her
-was the drawing room, whatever such room might be. Deliciously
-imagining Francis’ surprise at not finding her in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_244'>244</span>bed, she watched him go up the wide marble staircase. In
-a few moments he descended. With a slight chill at the
-heart she observed that he betrayed no perturbation at not
-having found her. In his hand he carried a scroll or roll
-of thin, white cardboard. Looking neither to right nor left,
-he re-entered the library.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Peeping in, she saw him unroll the scroll, present it before
-Johnny Pathmore’s eyes, and heard him say:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Judge for yourself. There she is.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“But why be so funereal about it, old man?” Johnny
-Pathmore queried, after a prolonged examination of the
-photograph.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Because we met too late. I was compelled to marry
-another. And I left her forever just a few hours before she
-was to marry another, which marriage had been compelled
-before either of us ever knew the other existed. And the
-woman I married, please know, is a good and splendid
-woman. She will have my devotion forever. Unfortunately,
-she will never possess<a id='t244'></a> my heart.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In a great instant of revulsion, the entire truth came to
-the Queen. Clutching at her heart with clasped hands, she
-nearly fainted of the vertigo that assailed her. Although
-they still talked inside the library, she heard no further word
-of their utterance as she strove with slow success to draw
-herself together. Finally, with indrawn shoulders, a little
-forlorn sort of a ghost of the resplendent woman and wife
-she had been but minutes before, she staggered across the
-hall and slowly, as if in a nightmare wherein speed never
-resides, dragged herself upstairs. In her room, she lost all
-control. Francis’ ring was torn from her finger and stamped
-upon. Her boudoir cap and her turtle-shell hairpins joined
-the general havoc under her feet. Convulsed, shuddering,
-muttering to herself in her extremity, she threw herself upon
-her bed and only managed, in an ecstasy of anguish, to remain
-perfectly quiet when Francis peeped in on his way to
-bed.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>An hour, that seemed a thousand centuries, she gave him
-to go to sleep. Then she arose, took in hand the crude
-jeweled dagger which had been hers in the Valley of the Lost
-Souls, and softly tiptoed into his room. There on the
-dresser it was, the large photograph of Leoncia. In thorough
-indecision, clutching the dagger until the cramp of her palm
-and fingers hurt her, she debated between her husband and
-Leoncia. Once, beside his bed, her hand raised to strike, an
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_245'>245</span>effusion of tears into her dry eyes obscured her seeing so that
-her dagger-hand dropped as she sobbed audibly.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Stiffening herself with changed resolve, she crossed over
-to the dresser. A pad and pencil lying handy, caught her
-attention. She scribbled two words, tore off the sheet, and
-placed it upon the face of Leoncia as it lay flat and upturned
-on the surface of polished wood. Next, with an unerring
-drive of the dagger, she pinned the note between the pictured
-semblance of Leoncia’s eyes, so that the point of the blade
-penetrated the wood and left the haft quivering and upright.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_246'>246</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER XXV</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>Meanwhile, after the manner of cross purposes in New York,
-wherein Regan craftily proceeded with his gigantic raid on
-all Francis’ holdings while Francis and Bascom vainly strove
-to find his identity, so in Panama were at work cross purposes
-which involved Leoncia and the Solanos, Torres and
-the Jefe, and, not least in importance, one, Yi Poon, the
-rotund and moon-faced Chinese.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The little old judge, who was the Jefe’s creature, sat
-asleep in court in San Antonio. He had slept placidly for
-two hours, occasionally nodding his head and muttering profoundly,
-although the case was a grave one, involving twenty
-years in San Juan, where the strongest could not survive
-ten years. But there was no need for the judge to consider
-evidence or argument. Before the case was called, decision
-and sentence were in his mind, having been put there
-by the Jefe. The prisoner’s lawyer ceased his perfunctory
-argument, the clerk of the court sneezed, and the judge
-woke up. He looked about him briskly and said:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Guilty.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>No one was surprised, not even the prisoner.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Appear to-morrow morning for sentence.——Next
-case.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Having so ordered, the judge prepared to settle down into
-another nap, when he saw Torres and the Jefe enter the
-courtroom. A gleam in the Jefe’s eye was his cue, and he
-abruptly dismissed court for the day.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I have been to Rodriguez Fernandez,” the Jefe was explaining
-five minutes later, in the empty courtroom. “He
-says it was a natural gem, and that much would be lost in
-the cutting, but that nevertheless he would still give five
-hundred gold for it.——Show it to the judge, Senor Torres,
-and the rest of the handful of big ones.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And Torres began to lie. He had to lie, because he could
-not confess the shame of having had the gems taken away
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_247'>247</span>from him by the Solanos and the Morgans when they threw
-him out of the hacienda. And so convincingly did he lie
-that even the Jefe he convinced, while the judge, except
-in the matter of brands of strong liquor, accepted everything
-the Jefe wanted him to believe. In brief, shorn of
-the multitude of details that Torres threw in, his tale was
-that he was so certain of the jeweler’s under-appraisal that
-he had despatched the gems by special messenger to his
-agent in Colon with instructions to forward to New York to
-Tiffany’s for appraisement that might lead to sale.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>As they emerged from the courtroom and descended the
-several steps that were flanked by single adobe pillars marred
-by bullet scars from previous revolutions, the Jefe was
-saying:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And so, needing the ægis of the law for our adventure
-after these gems, and, more than that, both of us loving
-our good friend the judge, we will let him in for a modest
-share of whatever we shall gain. He shall represent us in
-San Antonio while we are gone, and, if needs be, furnish
-us with the law’s protection.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Now it happened that behind one of the pillars, hat pulled
-over his face, Yi Poon half-sat, half-reclined. Nor was he
-there by mere accident. Long ago he had learned that
-secrets of value, which always connoted the troubles of
-humans, were markedly prevalent around courtrooms,
-which were the focal points for the airing of such troubles
-when they became acute. One could never tell. At any
-moment a secret might leap at one or brim over to one.
-Therefore it was like a fisherman casting his line into the
-sea for Yi Poon to watch the defendant and the plaintiff,
-the witnesses for and against, and even the court hanger-on
-or casual-seeming onlooker.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>So, on this morning, the one person of promise that Yi
-Poon had picked out was a ragged old peon who looked as
-if he had been drinking too much and yet would perish
-in his condition of reaction if he did not get another drink
-very immediately. Bleary-eyed he was, and red-lidded,
-with desperate resolve painted on all his haggard, withered
-lineaments. When the courtroom had emptied, he had
-taken up his stand outside on the steps close to a pillar.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And why? Yi Poon had asked himself. Inside remained
-only the three chief men of San Antonio——the Jefe, Torres,
-and the judge. What connection between them, or any
-of them, and the drink-sodden creature that shook as if
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_248'>248</span>freezing in the scorching blaze of the direct sun-rays? Yi
-Poon did not know, but he did know that it was worth while
-waiting on a chance, no matter how remote, of finding out.
-So, behind the pillar, where no atom of shade protected
-him from the cooking sun which he detested, he lolled on
-the steps with all the impersonation of one placidly infatuated
-with sun-baths. The old peon tottered a step,
-swayed as if about to fall, yet managed to deflect Torres
-from his companions, who paused to wait for him on the
-pavement a dozen paces on, restless and hot-footed as if
-they stood on a grid, though deep in earnest conversation.
-And Yi Poon missed no word nor gesture, nor glint of eye
-nor shifting face-line, of the dialogue that took place between
-the grand Torres and the wreck of a peon.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“What now?” Torres demanded harshly.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Money, a little money, for the love of God, senor, a
-little money,” the ancient peon whined.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“You have had your money,” Torres snarled. “When
-I went away I gave you double the amount to last you twice
-as long. Not for two weeks yet is there a centavo due you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I am in debt,” was the old man’s whimper, the while
-all the flesh of him quivered and trembled from the nerve-ravishment
-of the drink so palpably recently consumed.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“On the pulque slate at Peter and Paul’s,” Torres, with
-a sneer, diagnosed unerringly.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“On the pulque slate at Peter and Paul’s,” was the
-frank acknowledgment. “And the slate is full. No more
-pulque can I get credit for. I am wretched and suffer a
-thousand torments without my pulque.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“You are a pig creature without reason!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>A strange dignity, as of wisdom beyond wisdom, seemed
-suddenly to animate the old wreck as he straightened up, for
-the nonce ceased from trembling, and gravely said:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I am old. There is no vigor left in the veins or the
-heart of me. The desires of my youth are gone. Not even
-may I labor with this broken body of mine, though well I
-know that labor is an easement and a forgetting. Not even
-may I labor and forget. Food is a distaste in my mouth
-and a pain in my belly. Women—they are a pest that it
-is a vexation to remember ever having desired. Children—I
-buried my last a dozen years gone. Religion—it frightens
-me. Death—I sleep with the terror of it. Pulque—ah,
-dear God! the one tickle and taste of living left to me!</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“What if I drink over much? It is because I have much
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_249'>249</span>to forget, and have but a little space yet to linger in the
-sun, ere the Darkness, for my old eyes, blots out the sun
-forever.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Impervious to the old man’s philosophy, Torres made an
-impatient threat of movement that he was going.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“A few pesos, just a handful of pesos,” the old peon
-pleaded.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Not a centavo,” Torres said with finality.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Very well,” said the old man with equal finality.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“What do you mean?” Torres rasped with swift suspicion.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Have you forgotten?” was the retort, with such emphasis
-of significance as to make Yi Poon wonder for what
-reason Torres gave the peon what seemed a pension or an
-allowance.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I pay you, according to agreement, to forget,” said
-Torres.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I shall never forget that my old eyes saw you stab the
-Senor Alfaro Solano in the back,” the peon replied.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Although he remained hidden and motionless in his
-posture of repose behind the pillar, Yi Poon metaphorically
-sat up. The Solanos were persons of place and wealth. That
-Torres should have murdered one of them was indeed a
-secret of price.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Beast! Pig without reason! Animal of the dirt!”
-Torres’ hands clenched in his rage. “Because I am kind
-do you treat me thus! One blabbing of your tongue and I
-will send you to San Juan. You know what that means.
-Not only will you sleep with the terror of death, but never
-for a moment of waking will you be free of the terror of
-living as you stare upon the buzzards that will surely and
-shortly pick your bones. And there will be no pulque in
-San Juan. There is never any pulque in San Juan for the
-men I send there. So? Eh? I thought so. You will wait
-two weeks for the proper time when I shall again give you
-money. If you do not wait, then never, this side of your
-interment in the bellies of buzzards, will you drink pulque
-again.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Torres whirled on his heel and was gone. Yi Poon watched
-him and his two companions go down the street, then
-rounded the pillar to find the old peon sunk down in collapse
-at his disappointment of not getting any pulque, groaning
-and moaning and making sharp little yelping cries, his body
-quivering as dying animals quiver in the final throes, his
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_250'>250</span>fingers picking at his flesh and garments as if picking off
-centipedes. Down beside him sat Yi Poon, who began a
-remarkable performance of his own. Drawing gold coins
-and silver ones from his pockets he began to count over
-his money with chink and clink that was mellow and liquid
-and that to the distraught peon’s ear was as the sound of
-the rippling and riffling of fountains of pulque.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“We are wise,” Yi Poon told him in grandiloquent
-Spanish, still clinking the money, while the peon whined
-and yammered for the few centavos necessary for one drink
-of pulque. “We are wise, you and I, old man, and we
-will sit here and tell each other what we know about men
-and women, and life and love, and anger and sudden death,
-the rage red in the heart and the steel bitter cold in the
-back; and if you tell me what pleases me, then shall you
-drink pulque till your ears run out with it, and your eyes
-are drowned in it. You like that pulque, eh? You like one
-drink now, <em>now</em>, soon, very quick?”</p>
-
-<hr class='c010' />
-
-<p class='c000'>The night, while the Jefe Politico and Torres organized
-their expedition under cover of the dark, was destined to
-be a momentous one in the Solano hacienda. Things began
-to happen early. Dinner over, drinking their coffee and
-smoking their cigarettes, the family, of which Henry was
-accounted one by virtue of his brotherhood to Leoncia, sat
-on the wide front veranda. Through the moonlight, up the
-steps, they saw a strange figure approach.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“It is like a ghost,” said Alvarado Solano.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“A fat ghost,” Martinez, his twin brother, amended.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“A Chink ghost you couldn’t poke your finger through,”
-Ricardo laughed.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“The very Chink who saved Leoncia and me from
-marrying,” said Henry Morgan, with recognition.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“The seller of secrets,” Leoncia gurgled. “And if he
-hasn’t brought a new secret, I shall be disappointed.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“What do you want, Chinaman?” Alesandro, the eldest
-of the Solano brothers, demanded sharply.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Nice new secret, very nice new secret maybe you buy,”
-Yi Poon murmured proudly.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Your secrets are too expensive, Chinaman,” said Enrico
-discouragingly.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“This nice new secret very expensive,” Yi Poon assured
-him complacently.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_251'>251</span>“Go away,” old Enrico ordered. “I shall live a long
-time, yet to the day of my death I care to hear no more
-secrets.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But Yi Poon was suavely certain of himself.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“One time you have very fine brother,” he said. “One
-time your very fine brother, the Senor Alfaro Solano, die
-with knife in his back. Very well. Some secret, eh?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But Enrico was on his feet quivering.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“You know?” he almost screamed his eager interrogation.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“How much?” said Yi Poon.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“All I possess!” Enrico cried, ere turning to Alesandro
-to add: “You deal with him, son. Pay him well if he can
-prove by witness of the eye.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“You bet,” quoth Yi Poon. “I got witness. He got
-good eye-sight. He see man stick knife in the Senor Alfaro’s
-back in the dark. His name ...”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Yes, yes,” Enrico breathed his suspense.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“One thousand dollars his name,” said Yi Poon, hesitating
-to make up his mind to what kind of dollars he could
-dare to claim. “One thousand dollars gold,” he concluded.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Enrico forgot that he had deputed the transaction to his
-eldest son.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Where is your witness?” he shouted.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And Yi Poon, calling softly down the steps into the shrubbery,
-evoked the pulque-ravaged peon, a real-looking ghost
-who slowly advanced and tottered up the steps.</p>
-
-<hr class='c010' />
-
-<p class='c000'>At the same time, on the edge of town, twenty mounted
-men, among whom were the gendarmes Rafael, Ignacio,
-Augustino, and Vicente, herded a pack train of more than
-twenty mules and waited the command of the Jefe to
-depart on they knew not what mysterious adventure into
-the Cordilleras. What they did know was that, herded carefully
-apart from all other animals, was a strapping big mule
-loaded with two hundred and fifty pounds of dynamite.
-Also, they knew that the delay was due to the Senor Torres,
-who had ridden away along the beach with the dreaded
-Caroo murderer, José Mancheno, who, only by the grace of
-God and of the Jefe Politico, had been kept for years from
-expiating on the scaffold his various offenses against life and
-law.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And, while Torres waited on the beach and held the
-Caroo’s horse and an extra horse, the Caroo ascended on
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_252'>252</span>foot the winding road that led to the hacienda of the Solanos.
-Little did Torres guess that twenty feet away, in the jungle
-that encroached on the beach, lay a placid-sleeping, pulque-drunken,
-old peon, with, crouching beside him, a very alert
-and very sober Chinese with a recently acquired thousand
-dollars stowed under his belt. Yi Poon had had barely time
-to drag the peon into hiding when Torres rode along in the
-sand and stopped almost beside him.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Up at the hacienda, all members of the household were
-going to bed. Leoncia, just starting to let down her hair,
-stopped when she heard the rattle of tiny pebbles against
-her windows. Warning her in low whispers to make no noise,
-José Mancheno handed her a crumpled note which Torres
-had written, saying mysteriously:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“From a strange Chinaman who waits not a hundred
-feet away on the edge of the shrubbery.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And Leoncia read, in execrable Spanish:</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>“First time, I tell you secret about Henry Morgan.
-This time I have secret about Francis. You come along
-and talk with me now.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Leoncia’s heart leaped at mention of Francis, and
-as she slipped on a mantle and accompanied the Caroo it
-never entered her head to doubt that Yi Poon was waiting
-for her.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And Yi Poon, down on the beach and spying upon Torres,
-had no doubts when he saw the Caroo murderer appear
-with the Solano senorita, bound and gagged, slung across
-his shoulder like a sack of meal. Nor did Yi Poon have any
-doubts about his next action, when he saw Leoncia tied
-into the saddle of the spare horse and taken away down
-the beach at a gallop, with Torres and the Caroo riding on
-either side of her. Leaving the pulque-sodden peon to sleep,
-the fat Chinaman took the road up the hill at so stiff a
-pace that he arrived breathless at the hacienda. Not content
-with knocking at the door, he beat upon it with his
-fists and feet and prayed to his Chinese gods that no peevish
-Solano should take a shot at him before he could explain
-the urgency of his errand.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“O go to hell,” Alesandro said, when he had opened the
-door and flashed a light on the face of the importunate caller.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I have big secret,” Yi Poon panted. “Very big brand
-new secret.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_253'>253</span>“Come around to-morrow in business hours,” Alesandro
-growled as he prepared to kick the Chinaman off the premises.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I don’t sell secret,” Yi Poon stammered and
-gasped. “I make you present. I give secret now. The
-Senorita, your sister, she is stolen. She is tied upon a horse
-that runs fast down the beach.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But Alesandro, who had said good night to Leoncia, not
-half an hour before, laughed loudly his unbelief, and prepared
-again to boot off the trafficker in secrets. Yi Poon
-was desperate. He drew forth the thousand dollars and
-placed it in Alesandro’s hand, saying:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“You go look quick. If the Senorita stop in this house
-now, you keep all that money. If the Senorita no stop,
-then you give money back....”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And Alesandro was convinced. A minute later he was
-rousing the house. Five minutes later the horse-peons, their
-eyes hardly open from sound sleep, were roping and saddling
-horses and pack-mules in the corrals, while the Solano tribe
-was pulling on riding gear and equipping itself with weapons.</p>
-
-<hr class='c010' />
-
-<p class='c000'>Up and down the coast, and on the various paths leading
-back to the Cordilleras, the Solanos scattered, questing
-blindly in the blind dark for the trail of the abductors. As
-chance would have it, thirty hours afterward, Henry alone
-caught the scent and followed it, so that, camped in the
-very Footstep of God where first the old Maya priest had
-sighted the eyes of Chia, he found the entire party of twenty
-men and Leoncia cooking and eating breakfast. Twenty to
-one, never fair and always impossible, did not appeal to
-Henry Morgan’s Anglo-Saxon mind. What did appeal to
-him was the dynamite-loaded mule, tethered apart from the
-off-saddled forty-odd animals and left to stand by the careless
-peons with its load still on its back. Instead of
-attempting the patently impossible rescue of Leoncia, and
-recognising that in numbers her woman’s safety lay, he stole
-the dynamite-mule.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Not far did he take it. In the shelter of the low woods,
-he opened the pack and filled all his pockets with sticks of
-dynamite, a box of detonators, and a short coil of fuse.
-With a regretful look at the rest of the dynamite which he
-would have liked to explode but dared not, he busied himself
-along the line of retreat he would have to take if he
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_254'>254</span>succeeded in stealing Leoncia from her captors. As Francis,
-on a previous occasion at Juchitan, had sown the retreat
-with silver dollars, so, this time, did Henry sow the retreat
-with dynamite——the sticks in small bundles and the fuses,
-no longer than the length of a detonator, and with detonators
-fast to each end.</p>
-
-<hr class='c010' />
-
-<p class='c000'>Three hours Henry devoted to lurking around the camp
-in the Footstep of God, ere he got his opportunity to signal
-his presence to Leoncia; and another precious two hours
-were wasted ere she found her opportunity to steal away
-to him. Which would not have been so bad, had not
-her escape almost immediately been discovered and had not
-the gendarmes and the rest of Torres’ party, mounted, been
-able swiftly to overtake them on foot.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>When Henry drew Leoncia down to hide beside him in
-the shelter of a rock, and at the same time brought his
-rifle into action ready for play, she protested.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“We haven’t a chance, Henry,” she said. “They are
-too many. If you fight you will be killed. And then what
-will become of me? Better that you make your own escape,
-and bring help, leaving me to be retaken, than that you
-die and let me be retaken anyway.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But he shook his head.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“We are not going to be taken, dearest sister. Put your
-trust in me and watch. Here they come now. You just
-watch.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Variously mounted, on horses and pack mules—whichever
-had come handiest in their haste—Torres, the Jefe,
-and their men clattered into sight. Henry drew a sight,
-not on them, but on the point somewhat nearer where he
-had made his first plant of dynamite. When he pulled
-trigger, the intervening distance rose up in a cloud of smoke
-and earth dust that obscured them. As the cloud slowly dissipated,
-they could be seen, half of them, animals and men,
-overthrown, and all of them dazed and shocked by the explosion.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Henry seized Leoncia’s hand, jerked her to her feet,
-and ran on side by side with her. Conveniently beyond his
-second planting, he drew her down beside him to rest and
-catch breath.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“They won’t come on so fast this time,” he hissed
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_255'>255</span>exultantly. “And the longer they pursue us the slower
-they’ll come on.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>True to his forecast, when the pursuit appeared, it moved
-very cautiously and very slowly.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“They ought to be killed,” Henry said. “But they
-have no chance, and I haven’t the heart to do it. But I’ll
-surely shake them up some.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Again he fired into his planted dynamite, and again,
-turning his back on the confusion, he fled to his third
-planting.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>After he had fired off the third explosion, he raced Leoncia
-to his tethered horse, put her in the saddle, and ran on beside
-her, hanging on to her stirrup.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_256'>256</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER XXVI</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>Francis had left orders for Parker to call him at eight o’clock,
-and when Parker softly entered he found his master still
-asleep. Turning on the water in the bathroom and preparing
-the shaving gear, the valet re-entered the bedroom.
-Still moving softly about so that his master would have the
-advantage of the last possible second of sleep, Parker’s eyes
-lighted on the strange dagger that stood upright, its point
-pinning through a note and a photograph and into the hard
-wood of the dresser-top. For a long time he gazed at the
-strange array, then, without hesitation, carefully opened
-the door to Mrs. Morgan’s room and peeped in. Next, he
-firmly shook Francis by the shoulder.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The latter’s eyes opened, for a second betraying the incomprehension
-of the sleeper suddenly awakened, then lighting
-with recognition and memory of the waking order he had
-left the previous night.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Time to get up, sir,” the valet murmured.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Which is ever an ill time,” Francis yawned with a smile.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>He closed his eyes with a, “Let me lie a minute, Parker.
-If I doze, shake me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But Parker shook him immediately.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“You must get up right away, sir. I think something has
-happened to Mrs. Morgan. She is not in her room, and there
-is a queer note and a knife here that may explain. I don’t
-know, sir——”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Francis was out of bed in a bound, staring one moment at
-the dagger, and next, drawing it out, reading the note over
-and over as if its simple meaning, contained in two simple
-words, were too abstruse for his comprehension.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Adios forever,” said the note.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>What shocked him even more, was the dagger thrust
-between Leoncia’s eyes, and, as he stared at the wound
-made in the thin cardboard, it came to him that he had seen
-this very thing before, and he remembered back to the lake-dwelling
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_257'>257</span>of the Queen when all had gazed into the golden
-bowl and seen variously, and when he had seen Leoncia’s
-face on the strange liquid metal with the knife thrust between
-the eyes. He even put the dagger back into the cardboard
-wound and stared at it some more.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The explanation was obvious. The Queen had betrayed
-jealousy against Leoncia from the first, and here, in New
-York, finding her rival’s photograph on her husband’s
-dresser, had no more missed the true conclusion than had she
-missed the pictured features with her point of steel. But
-where was she? Where had she gone?——she who was the
-veriest stranger that had ever entered the great city, who
-called the telephone the magic of the flying speech, who
-thought of Wall Street as a temple, and regarded Business
-as the New York man’s god. For all the world she was as
-unsophisticated and innocent of a great city as had she been
-a traveler from Mars. Where and how had she passed the
-night? Where was she now? Was she even alive?</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Visions of the Morgue with its unidentified dead, and of
-bodies drifting out to sea on the ebb, rushed into his brain.
-It was Parker who steadied him back to himself.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Is there anything I can do, sir? Shall I call up the
-detective bureau? Your father always——”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Yes, yes,” Francis interrupted quickly. “There was
-one man he employed more than all others, a young man
-with the Pinkertons——do you remember his name?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Birchman, sir,” Parker answered promptly, moving
-away. “I shall send for him to come at once.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And thereupon, in the quest after his wife, Francis entered
-upon a series of adventures that were to him, a born New
-Yorker, a liberal education in conditions and phases of New
-York of which, up to that time, he had been profoundly
-ignorant. Not alone did Birchman search, but he had at
-work a score of detectives under him who fine-tooth-combed
-the city, while in Chicago and Boston, he directed the
-activities of similar men.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Between his battle with the unguessed enemy of Wall
-Street, and the frequent calls he received to go here and
-there and everywhere, on the spur of the moment, to identify
-what might possibly be his wife, Francis led anything but a
-boresome existence. He forgot what regular hours of sleep
-were, and grew accustomed to being dragged from luncheon
-or dinner, or of being routed out of his bed, to respond to
-hurry calls to come and look over new-found missing ladies.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_258'>258</span>No trace of one answering her description, who had left the
-city by train or steamer had been discovered, and Birchman
-assiduously pursued his fine-tooth combing, convinced
-that she was still in the city.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Thus, Francis took trips to Mattenwan and down Blackwell’s,
-and the Tombs and the All-Night court knew his
-presence. Nor did he escape being dragged to countless
-hospitals nor to the Morgue. Once, a fresh-caught shoplifter,
-of whom there was no criminal record and to whom
-there was no clew of identity, was brought to his notice.
-He had adventures with mysterious women cornered by
-Birchman’s satellites in the back rooms of Raines’ Hotels,
-and, on the West Side, in the Fifties, was guilty of trespassing
-upon two comparatively innocent love-idyls, to the
-embarrassment of all concerned including himself.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Perhaps his most interesting and tragic adventure was in
-the ten-million-dollar mansion of Philip January, the Telluride
-mining king. The strange woman, a lady slender, had
-wandered in upon the Januarys a week before, ere Francis
-came to see her. And, as she had heartbreakingly done
-for the entire week, so she heartbreakingly did for Francis,
-wringing her hands, perpetually weeping, and murmuring
-beseechingly: “Otho, you are wrong. On my knees I tell
-you you are wrong. Otho, you, and you only, do I love.
-There is no one but you, Otho. There has never been any
-one but you. It is all a dreadful mistake. Believe me,
-Otho, believe me, or I shall die....”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And through it all, the Wall Street battle went on against
-the undiscoverable and powerful enemy who had launched
-what Francis and Bascom could not avoid acknowledging
-was a catastrophic, war-to-the-death raid on his fortune.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“If only we can avoid throwing Tampico Petroleum into
-the whirlpool,” Bascom prayed.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I look to Tampico Petroleum to save me,” Francis
-replied. “When every security I can lay hand to has been
-engulfed, then, throwing in Tampico Petroleum will be like
-the eruption of a new army upon a losing field.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And suppose your unknown foe is powerful enough to
-swallow down that final, splendid asset and clamor for
-more?” Bascom queried.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Francis shrugged his shoulders.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Then I shall be broke. But my father went broke half
-a dozen times before he won out. Also was he born broke.
-I should worry about a little thing like that.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_259'>259</span>For a time, in the Solano hacienda, events had been moving
-slowly. In fact, following upon the rescue of Leoncia
-by Henry along his dynamite-sown trail, there had been no
-events. Not even had Yi Poon appeared with a perfectly
-fresh and entirely brand new secret to sell. Nothing had
-happened, save that Leoncia drooped and was apathetic, that
-neither Enrico nor Henry, her full brother, nor her Solano
-brothers who were not her brothers at all, could cheer her.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But, while Leoncia drooped, Henry and the tall sons of
-Enrico worried and perplexed themselves about the treasure
-in the Valley of the Lost Souls, into which Torres was even
-then dynamiting his way. One thing they did know, namely,
-that the Torres’ expedition had sent Augustino and Vicente
-back to San Antonio to get two more mule-loads of dynamite.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It was Henry, after conferring with Enrico and obtaining
-his permission, who broached the matter to Leoncia.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Sweet sister,” had been his way, “we’re going to go
-up and see what the scoundrel Torres and his gang are doing.
-We do know, thanks to you, their objective. The dynamite
-is to blow an entrance into the Valley. We know where
-the Lady Who Dreams sank her treasure when her house
-burned. Torres does not know this. The idea is that we
-can follow them into the Valley, when they have drained
-the Maya caves, and have as good a chance, if not a better
-chance than they in getting possession of that marvelous
-chest of gems. And the very tip of the point is that we’d
-like to take you along on the expedition. I fancy, if we
-managed to get the treasure ourselves, that you wouldn’t
-mind repeating that journey down the subterranean river.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But Leoncia shook her head wearily.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“No,” she said, after further urging. “I never want to
-see the Valley of the Lost Souls again, nor ever to hear it
-mentioned. There is where I lost Francis to that woman.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“It was all a mistake, darling sister. But who was to
-know? I did not. You did not. Nor did Francis. He
-played the man’s part fairly and squarely. Not knowing
-that you and I were brother and sister, believing that we
-were truly betrothed——as we were at the time——he refrained
-from trying to win you from me, and he rendered
-further temptation impossible and saved the lives of all
-of us by marrying the Queen.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I miss you and Francis singing your everlasting ‘Back
-to back against the mainmast,’” she murmured sadly and
-irrelevantly.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_260'>260</span>Quiet tears welled into her eyes and brimmed over as she
-turned away, passed down the steps of the veranda, crossed
-the grounds, and aimlessly descended the hill. For the
-twentieth time since she had last seen Francis she pursued
-the same course, covering the same ground from the time
-she first espied him rowing to the beach from the <em>Angelique</em>,
-through her dragging him into the jungle to save him from
-her irate menfolk, to the moment, with drawn revolver,
-when she had kissed him and urged him into the boat and
-away. This had been his first visit.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Next, she covered every detail of his second visit from
-the moment, coming from behind the rock after her swim
-in the lagoon, she had gazed upon him leaning against the
-rock as he scribbled his first note to her, through her startled
-flight into the jungle, the bite on her knee of the labarri
-(which she had mistaken for a deadly viperine), to her recoiling
-collision against Francis and her faint on the sand.
-And, under her parasol, she sat down on the very spot where
-she had fainted and come to, to find him preparing to suck
-the poison from the wound which he had already excoriated.
-As she remembered back, she realized that it had been the
-pain of the excoriation which brought her to her senses.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Deep she was in the sweet recollections of how she had
-slapped his cheek even as his lips approached her knee,
-blushed with her face hidden in her hands, laughed because
-her foot had been made asleep by his too-efficient tourniquet,
-turned white with anger when he reminded her that she
-considered him the murderer of her uncle, and repulsed his
-offer to untie the tourniquet. So deep was she in such fond
-recollections of only the other day that yet seemed separated
-from the present by half a century, such was the wealth of
-episode, adventure, and tender passages which had intervened,
-that she did not see the rattletrap rented carriage
-from San Antonio drive up the beach road. Nor did she see
-a lady, fashionably clad in advertisement that she was from
-New York, dismiss the carriage and proceed toward her on
-foot. This lady, who was none other than the Queen,
-Francis’ wife, likewise sheltered herself beneath a parasol
-from the tropic sun.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Standing directly behind Leoncia, she did not realize that
-she had surprised the girl in a moment of high renunciation.
-All that she did know was that she saw Leoncia draw from
-her breast and gaze long at a tiny photograph. Over her
-shoulder the Queen made it out to be a snapshot of Francis,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_261'>261</span>whereupon her mad jealousy raged anew. A poniard flashed
-to her hand from its sheath within the bosom of her dress.
-The quickness of this movement was sufficient to warn
-Leoncia, who tilted her parasol forward so as to look up
-at whatever person stood at her back. Too utterly dreary
-even to feel surprise, she greeted the wife of Francis Morgan
-as casually as if she had parted from her an hour before.
-Even the poniard failed to arouse in her curiosity or fear.
-Perhaps, had she displayed startlement and fear, the Queen
-might have driven the steel home to her. As it was, she
-could only cry out.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“You are a vile woman! A vile, vile woman!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>To which Leoncia merely shrugged her shoulders, and
-said:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“You would better keep your parasol between you and
-the sun.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The Queen passed round in front of her, facing her and
-staring down at her with woman’s wrath compounded of
-such jealousy as to be speechless.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Why?” Leoncia was the first to speak, after a long
-pause. “Why am I a vile woman?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Because you are a thief,” the Queen flamed. “Because
-you are a stealer of men, yourself married. Because
-you are unfaithful to your husband——in heart, at least,
-since more than that has so far been impossible.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I have no husband,” Leoncia answered quietly.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Husband to be, then——I thought you were to be married
-the day after our departure.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I have no husband to be,” Leoncia continued with the
-same quietness.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>So swiftly tense did the other woman become that Leoncia
-idly thought of her as a tigress.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Henry Morgan!” the Queen cried.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“He is my brother.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“A word which I have discovered is of wide meaning,
-Leoncia Solano. In New York there are worshippers at certain
-altars who call all men in the world ‘brothers,’ all
-women ‘sisters.’”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“His father was my father,” Leoncia explained with
-patient explicitness. “His mother was my mother. We are
-full brother and sister.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And Francis?” the other queried, convinced, with
-sudden access of interest. “Are you, too, his sister?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Leoncia shook her head.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_262'>262</span>“Then you do love Francis!” the Queen charged, smarting
-with disappointment.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“You have him,” said Leoncia.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“No; for you have taken him from me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Leoncia slowly and sadly shook her head and sadly gazed
-out over the heat-shimmering surface of Chiriqui Lagoon.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>After a long lapse of silence, she said, wearily, “Believe
-that. Believe anything.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I divined it in you from the first,” the Queen cried.
-“You have a strange power over men. I am a woman not
-unbeautiful. Since I have been out in the world I have
-watched the eyes of men looking at me. I know I am not
-all undesirable. Even have the wretched males of my Lost
-Valley with downcast eyes looked love at me. One dared
-more than look, and he died for me, or because of me, and
-was flung into the whirl of waters to his fate. And yet you,
-with this woman’s power of yours, strangely exercise it
-over my Francis so that in my very arms he thinks of you.
-I know it. I know that even then he thinks of you!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Her last words were the cry of a passion-stricken and
-breaking heart. And the next moment, though very little
-to Leoncia’s surprise, being too hopelessly apathetic to be
-surprised at anything, the Queen dropped her knife in the
-sand and sank down, buried her face in her hands, and surrendered
-to the weakness of hysteric grief. Almost idly,
-and quite mechanically, Leoncia put her arm around her
-and comforted her. For many minutes this continued, when
-the Queen, growing more calm, spoke with sudden determination.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I left Francis the moment I knew he loved you,” she
-said. “I drove my knife into the photograph of you he
-keeps in his bedroom, and returned here to do the same
-to you in person. But I was wrong. It is not your fault,
-nor Francis’. It is my fault that I have failed to win his
-love. Not you, but I it is who must die. But first, I
-must go back to my valley and recover my treasure. In
-the temple called Wall Street, Francis is in great trouble.
-His fortune may be taken away from him, and he requires
-another fortune to save his fortune. I have that fortune,
-and there is no time to lose. Will you and yours help me?
-It is for Francis’ sake.”</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_263'>263</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER XXVII</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>So it came about that the Valley of the Lost Souls was
-invaded subterraneously from opposite directions by two
-parties of treasure-seekers. From one side, and quickly,
-came the Queen and Leoncia, Henry Morgan, and the
-Solanos. Far more slowly, although they had started long
-in advance, did Torres and the Jefe progress. The first
-attack on the mountain had proved the chiefest obstacle.
-To blow open an entrance to the Maya caves had required
-more dynamite than they had originally brought, while the
-rock had proved stubborner than they expected. Further,
-when they had finally made a way, it had proved to be above
-the cave floor, so that more blasting had been required to
-drain off the water. And, having blasted their way in to
-the water-logged mummies of the conquistadores and to the
-Room of the Idols, they had to blast their way out again and
-on into the heart of the mountain. But first, ere they continued
-on, Torres looted the ruby eyes of Chia and the
-emerald eyes of Hzatzl.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Meanwhile, with scarcely any delays, the Queen and her
-party penetrated to the Valley through the mountain on
-the opposite side. Nor did they entirely duplicate the course
-of their earlier traverse. The Queen, through long gazing
-into her Mirror, knew every inch of the way. Where the
-underground river plunged through the passage and out into
-the bosom of the Gualaca River it was impossible to take in
-their boats. But, by assiduous search under her directions,
-they found the tiny mouth of a cave on the steep wall of the
-cliff, so shielded by a growth of mountain berries that only
-by knowing for what they sought could they have found it.
-By main strength, applied to the coils of rope which they
-had brought along, they hoisted their canoes up the cliff,
-portaged them on their shoulders through the winding
-passage, and launched them on the subterranean river itself
-where it ran so broadly and placidly between wide banks
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_264'>264</span>that they paddled easily against its slack current. At other
-times, where the river proved too swift, they lined the canoes
-up by towing from the bank; and wherever the river made
-a plunge through the solid tie-ribs of mountain, the Queen
-showed them the obviously hewn and patently ancient
-passages through which to portage their light crafts around.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Here we leave the canoes,” the Queen directed at last,
-and the men began securely mooring them to the bank in the
-light of the flickering torches. “It is but a short distance
-through the last passage. Then we will come to a small
-opening in the cliff, shielded by climbing vines and ferns,
-and look down upon the spot where my house once stood
-beside the whirl of waters. The ropes will be necessary in
-order to descend the cliff, but it is only about fifty feet.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Henry, with an electric torch, led the way, the Queen
-beside him, while old Enrico and Leoncia brought up the
-rear, vigilant to see that no possible half-hearted peon or
-Indian boatman should slip back and run away. But when
-the party came to where the mouth of the passage ought to
-have been, there was no mouth. The passage ceased, being
-blocked off solidly from floor to roof by a debris of crumbled
-rocks that varied in size from paving stones to native houses.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Who could have done this?” the Queen exclaimed
-angrily.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But Henry, after a cursory examination, reassured her.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“It’s just a slide of rock,” he said, “a superficial fault
-in the outer skin of the mountain that has slipped; and it
-won’t take us long with our dynamite to remedy it. Lucky
-we fetched a supply along.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But it did take long. For what was the remainder of the
-day and throughout the night they toiled. Large charges of
-explosive were not used because of Henry’s fear of exciting
-a greater slip along the fault overhead. What dynamite was
-used was for the purpose of loosening up the rubble so that
-they could shift it back along the passage. At eight the
-following morning the charge was exploded that opened up
-to them the first glimmer of daylight ahead. After that they
-worked carefully, being apprehensive of jarring down fresh
-slides. At the last, they were baffled by a ten-ton block of
-rock in the very mouth of the passage. Through crevices
-on either side of it they could squeeze their arms into the
-blazing sunshine, yet the stone-block thwarted them. No
-leverage they applied could more than quiver it, and Henry
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_265'>265</span>decided on one final blast that would topple it out and down
-into the Valley.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“They’ll certainly know visitors are coming, the way
-we’ve been knocking on their back door for the last fifteen
-hours,” he laughed, as he prepared to light the fuse.</p>
-
-<hr class='c010' />
-
-<p class='c000'>Assembled before the altar of the Sun God at the Long
-House, the entire population was indeed aware, and
-anxiously aware, of the coming of visitors. So disastrous
-had been their experiences with their last ones, when the
-lake dwelling had been burned and their Queen lost to them,
-that they were now begging the Sun God to send no more
-visitors. But upon one thing, having been passionately
-harangued by their priest, they were resolved; namely, to
-kill at sight and without parley whatever newcomers did
-descend upon them.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Even Da Vasco himself,” the priest had cried.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Even Da Vasco!” the Lost Souls had responded.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>All were armed with spears, war-clubs, and bows and
-arrows; and while they waited they continued to pray before
-the altar. Every few minutes runners arrived from the lake,
-making the same reports that while the mountain still
-labored thunderously nothing had emerged from it.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The little girl of ten, the Maid of the Long House who
-had entertained Leoncia, was the first to spy out new
-arrivals. This was made possible because of the tribe’s
-attention being fixed on the rumbling mountain beside the
-lake. No one expected visitors out of the mountain on the
-opposite side of the valley.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Da Vasco!” she cried. “Da Vasco!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>All looked and saw, not fifty yards away, Torres, the Jefe,
-and their gang of followers, emerging into the open clearing.
-Torres wore again the helmet he had filched from his
-withered ancestor in the Chamber of the Mummies. Their
-greeting was instant and warm, taking the form of a flight
-of arrows that arched into them and stretched two of the
-followers on the ground. Next, the Lost Souls, men and
-women, charged; while the rifles of Torres’ men began to
-speak. So unexpected was this charge, so swiftly made and
-with so short a distance to cover, that, though many fell
-before the bullets, a number reached the invaders and
-engaged in a desperate hand-to-hand conflict. Here the
-advantage of firearms was minimized, and gendarmes and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_266'>266</span>others were thrust through by spears or had their skulls
-cracked under the ponderous clubs.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In the end, however, the Lost Souls were outfought,
-thanks chiefly to the revolvers that could kill in the thickest
-of the scuffling. The survivors fled, but of the invaders
-half were down and down forever. The women having in
-drastic fashion attended to every man who fell wounded.
-The Jefe was spluttering with pain and rage at an arrow
-which had perforated his arm; nor could he be appeased
-until Vicente cut off the barbed head and pulled out the
-shaft.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Torres, beyond an aching shoulder where a club had hit
-him, was uninjured; and he became jubilant when he saw
-the old priest dying on the ground with his head resting on
-the little maid’s knees.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Since there were no wounded of their own to be attended
-to with rough and ready surgery, Torres and the Jefe led the
-way to the lake, skirted its shores, and came to the ruins
-of the Queen’s dwelling. Only charred stumps of piles,
-projecting above the water, showed where it had once stood.
-Torres was nonplussed, but the Jefe was furious.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Here, right in this house that was, the treasure chest
-stood,” he stammered.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“A wild goose chase!” the Jefe grunted. “Senor
-Torres, I always suspected you were a fool.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“How was I to know the place had been burned down?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“You ought to have known, you who are so very wise in
-all things,” the Jefe bickered back. “But you can’t fool
-me. I had my eye on you. I saw you rob the emeralds and
-rubies from the eye-sockets of the Maya gods. That much
-you shall divide with me, and now.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Wait, wait, be a trifle patient,” Torres begged. “Let
-us first investigate. Of course, I shall divide the four gems
-with you——but what are they compared with a whole chest-full?
-It was a light, fragile house. The chest may have
-fallen into the water undamaged by fire when the roof fell in.
-And water will not damage precious stones.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In amongst the burnt piling the Jefe sent his men to investigate,
-and they waded and swam about in the shoal
-water, being careful to avoid being caught by the outlying
-suck of the whirlpool. Augustino, the Silent, made the find,
-close in to shore.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I am standing on something,” he announced, the level
-of the lake barely to his knees.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_267'>267</span>Torres plunged in, and, reaching under till he buried his
-head and shoulders, felt out the object.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“It is the chest, I am certain,” he declared. “—Come!
-All of you! Drag this out to the dry land so that we may
-examine into it!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But when this was accomplished, and just as he bent to
-open the lid, the Jefe stopped him.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Go back into the water, the lot of you,” he commanded
-his men. “There are a number of chests like this, and the
-expedition will be a failure if we don’t find them. One chest
-would not pay the expenses.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Not until all the men were floundering and groping in the
-water, did Torres raise the lid. The Jefe stood transfixed.
-He could only gaze and mutter inarticulate mouthings.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Now will you believe?” Torres queried. “It is beyond
-price. We are the richest two men in Panama, in South
-America, in the world. This is the Maya treasure. We
-heard of it when we were boys. Our fathers and our grandfathers
-dreamed of it. The Conquistadores failed to find
-it. And it is ours——ours!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And, while the two men, almost stupefied, stood and
-stared, one by one their followers crept out of the water,
-formed a silent semi-circle at their backs, and likewise
-stared. Neither did the Jefe and Torres know their men
-stood at their backs, nor did the men know of the Lost Souls
-that were creeping stealthily upon them from the rear. As
-it was, all were staring at the treasure with fascinated amazement
-when the attack was sprung.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Bows and arrows, at ten yards distance, are deadly,
-especially when due time is taken to make certain of aim.
-Two-thirds of the treasure-seekers went down simultaneously.
-Through Vicente, who had chanced to be standing
-directly behind Torres, no less than two spears and five
-arrows had perforated. The handful of survivors had barely
-time to seize their rifles and whirl, when the club attack was
-upon them. In this Rafael and Ignacio, two of the
-gendarmes who had been on the adventure to the Juchitan
-oil fields, almost immediately had their skulls cracked.
-And, as usual, the Lost Souls women saw to it that the
-wounded did not remain wounded long.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The end for Torres and the Jefe was but a matter of
-moments, when a loud roar from the mountain followed by
-a crashing avalanche of rock, created a diversion. The few
-Lost Souls that remained alive, darted back terror-stricken
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_268'>268</span>into the shelter of the bushes. The Jefe and Torres, who
-alone stood on their feet and breathed, cast their eyes up
-the cliff to where the smoke still issued from the new-made
-hole, and saw Henry Morgan and the Queen step into the
-sunshine on the lip of the cliff.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“You take the lady,” the Jefe snarled. “I shall get
-the Gringo Morgan if it’s the last act of what seems a life
-that isn’t going to be much longer.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Both lifted their rifles and fired. Torres, never much of
-a shot, sent his bullet fairly centered into the Queen’s breast.
-But the Jefe, master marksman and possessor of many
-medals, made a clean miss of his target. The next instant,
-a bullet from Henry’s rifle struck his wrist and traveled up
-the forearm to the elbow, whence it escaped and passed on.
-And as his rifle clattered to the ground he knew that never
-again would that right arm, its bone pulped from wrist to
-elbow, have use for a rifle.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But Henry was not shooting well. Just emerged from
-twenty-four hours of darkness in the cave, not at once
-could his eyes adjust themselves to the blinding dazzle of
-the sun. His first shot had been lucky. His succeeding
-shots merely struck in the immediate neighbourhood of the
-Jefe and Torres as they turned and fled madly for the
-brush.</p>
-
-<hr class='c010' />
-
-<p class='c000'>Ten minutes later, the wounded Jefe in the lead, Torres
-saw a woman of the Lost Souls spring out from behind
-a tree and brain him with a huge stone wielded in both her
-hands. Torres shot her first, then crossed himself with
-horror, and stumbled on. From behind arose distant calls
-of Henry and the Solano brothers in pursuit, and he remembered
-the vision of his end he had glimpsed but refused to
-see in the Mirror of the World and wondered if this end was
-near upon him. Yet it had not resembled this place of
-trees and ferns and jungle. From the glimpse he remembered
-nothing of vegetation——only solid rock and blazing
-sun and bones of animals. Hope sprang up afresh at the
-thought. Perhaps that end was not for this day, maybe
-not for this year. Who knew? Twenty years might yet
-pass ere that end came.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Emerging from the jungle, he came upon a queer ridge
-of what looked like long disintegrated lava rock. Here he
-left no trail, and he proceeded carefully on beyond it
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_269'>269</span>through further jungle, believing once again in his star that
-would enable him to elude pursuit. His plan of escape took
-shape. He would find a safe hiding place until after dark.
-Then he would circle back to the lake and the whirl of waters.
-That gained, nothing and nobody could stop him. He had
-but to leap in. The subterranean journey had no terrors
-for him because he had done it before. And in his fancy
-he saw once more the pleasant picture of the Gualaca River
-flashing under the open sky on its way to the sea. Besides,
-did he not carry with him the two great emeralds and two
-great rubies that had been the eyes of Chia and Hzatzl?
-Fortune enough, and vast good fortune, were they for any
-man. What if he had failed by the Maya Treasure to
-become the richest man in the world? He was satisfied.
-All he wanted now was darkness and one last dive into the
-heart of the mountain and through the heart of the mountain
-to the Gualaca flowing to the sea.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And just then, the assured vision of his escape so vividly
-filling his eyes that he failed to observe the way of his feet,
-he dived. Nor was it a dive into swirling waters. It was
-a head-foremost, dry-land dive down a slope of rock. So
-slippery was it that he continued to slide down, although
-he managed to turn around, with face and stomach to the
-surface, and to claw wildly up with hands and feet. Such
-effort merely slowed his descent, but could not stop it.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>For a while, at the bottom, he lay breathless and dazed.
-When his senses came back to him, he became aware first
-of all of something unusual upon which his hand rested.
-He could have sworn that he felt teeth. At length, opening
-his eyes with a shudder and summoning his resolution, he
-dared to look at the object. And relief was immediate.
-Teeth they were, in an indubitable, weather-white jaw-bone;
-but they were pig’s teeth and the jaw was a pig’s jaw.
-Other bones lay about, on which his body rested, which,
-on examination, proved to be the bones of pigs and of smaller
-animals.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Where had he glimpsed such an arrangement of bones?
-He thought, and remembered the Queen’s great golden bowl.
-He looked up. Ah! Mother of God! The very place! He
-knew it at first sight, as he gazed up what was a funnel
-at the far spectacle of day. Fully two hundred feet above
-him was the rim of the funnel. The sides of hard, smooth
-rock sloped steeply in and down to him, and his eyes and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_270'>270</span>judgment told him that no man born of woman could ever
-scale that slope.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The fancy that came to his mind caused him to spring
-to his feet in sudden panic and look hastily round about
-him. Only on a more colossal scale, the funnel in which
-he was trapped had reminded him of the funnel-pits dug
-in the sand by hunting spiders that lurked at the bottom
-for such prey that tumbled in upon them. And, his vivid
-fancy leaping, he had been frightened by the thought that
-some spider monster, as colossal as the funnel-pit, might
-possibly be lurking there to devour him. But no such denizen
-occurred. The bottom of the pit, circular in form, was a
-good ten feet across and carpeted, he knew not how deep,
-by a debris of small animals’ bones. Now for what had the
-Mayas of old time made so tremendous an excavation? he
-questioned; for he was more than half-convinced that the
-funnel was no natural phenomenon.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Before nightfall he made sure, by a dozen attempts, that
-the funnel was unscalable. Between attempts, he crouched
-in the growing shadow of the descending sun and panted
-dry-lipped with heat and thirst. The place was a very furnace,
-and the juices of his body were wrung from him in
-profuse perspiration. Throughout the night, between dozes,
-he vainly pondered the problem of escape. The only way
-out was up, nor could his mind devise any method of getting
-up. Also, he looked forward with terror to the coming of
-the day, for he knew that no man could survive a full
-ten hours of the baking heat that would be his. Ere the
-next nightfall the last drop of moisture would have evaporated
-from his body leaving him a withered and
-already half-sun-dried mummy.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>With the coming of daylight his growing terror added
-wings to his thought, and he achieved a new and profoundly
-simple theory of escape. Since he could not climb up, and
-since he could not get out through the sides themselves,
-then the only possible remaining way was down. Fool that
-he was! He might have been working through the cool
-night hours, and now he must labour in the quickly increasing
-heat. He applied himself in an ecstasy of energy to
-digging down through the mass of crumbling bones. Of
-course, there was a way out. Else how did the funnel
-drain? Otherwise it would have been full or part full of
-water from the rains. Fool! And thrice times thrice a
-fool!</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_271'>271</span>He dug down one side of the wall, flinging the rubbish
-into a mound against the opposite side. So desperately did
-he apply himself that he broke his finger-nails to the quick
-and deeper, while every finger-tip was lacerated to bleeding.
-But love of life was strong in him, and he knew it was a
-life-and-death race with the sun. As he went deeper, the
-rubbish became more compact, so that he used the muzzle
-of his rifle like a crowbar to loosen it, ere tossing it up in
-single and double handfuls.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>By mid-forenoon, his senses beginning to reel in the heat,
-he made a discovery. Upon the wall which he had uncovered,
-he came upon the beginning of an inscription,
-evidently rudely scratched in the rock by the point of a
-knife. With renewed hope, his head and shoulders down
-in the hole, he dug and scratched for all the world like a
-dog, throwing the rubbish out and between his legs in
-true dog-fashion. Some of it fell clear, but most of it fell
-back and down upon him. Yet had he become too frantic
-to note the inefficiency of his effort.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>At last the inscription was cleared, so that he was able
-to read:</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>Peter McGill, of Glasgow. On March 12, 1820,</div>
- <div>I escaped from the Pit of Hell by this passage by</div>
- <div>digging down and finding it.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>A passage! The passage must be beneath the inscription!
-Torres now toiled in a fury. So dirt-soiled was he that
-he was like some huge, four-legged, earth-burrowing animal.
-The dirt got into his eyes, and, on occasion, into his nostrils
-and air passages so as to suffocate him and compel him to
-back up out of the hole and sneeze and cough his breathing
-apparatus clear. Twice he fainted. But the sun, by then
-almost directly overhead, drove him on.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>He found the upper rim of the passage. He did not dig
-down to the lower rim; for the moment the aperture was
-large enough to accommodate his lean shape, he writhed and
-squirmed into it and away from the destroying sun-rays.
-The cool and the dark soothed him, but his joy and the
-reaction from what he had undergone sent his pulse giddily
-up, so that for the third time he fainted.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Recovered, mouthing with black and swollen lips a half-insane
-chant of gratefulness and thanksgiving, he crawled
-on along the passage. Perforce he crawled, because it was
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_272'>272</span>so low that a dwarf could not have stood erect in it. The
-place was a charnel house. Bones crunched and crumbled
-under his hands and knees, and he knew that his knees
-were being worn to the bone. At the end of a hundred
-feet he caught his first glimmering of light. But the nearer
-he approached freedom, the slower he progressed, for the
-final stages of exhaustion were coming upon him. He knew
-that it was not physical exhaustion, nor food exhaustion,
-but thirst exhaustion. Water, a few ounces of water, was
-all he needed to make him strong again. And there was
-no water.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But the light was growing stronger and nearer. He
-noted, toward the last, that the floor of the passage pitched
-down at an angle of fully thirty degrees. This made the way
-easier. Gravity drew him on, and helped every failing
-effort of him, toward the source of light. Very close to it,
-he encountered an increase in the deposit of bones. Yet they
-bothered him little, for they had become an old story,
-while he was too exhausted to mind them.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>He did observe, with swimming eyes and increasing numbness
-of touch, that the passage was contracting both vertically
-and horizontally. Slanting downward at thirty
-degrees, it gave him an impression of a rat-trap, himself
-the rat, descending head foremost toward he knew not what.
-Even before he reached it, he apprehended that the slit
-of bright day that advertised the open world beyond was
-too narrow for the egress of his body. And his apprehension
-was verified. Crawling unconcernedly over a skeleton that
-the blaze of day showed him to be a man’s, he managed,
-by severely and painfully squeezing his ears flat back, to
-thrust his head through the slitted aperture. The sun beat
-down upon his head, while his eyes drank in the openness
-of the freedom of the world that the unyielding rock denied
-to the rest of his body.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Most maddening of all was a running stream not a
-hundred yards away, tree-fringed beyond, with lush meadow-grass
-leading down to it from his side. And in the tree-shadowed
-water, knee-deep and drowsing, stood several cows
-of the dwarf breed peculiar to the Valley of Lost Souls.
-Occasionally they flicked their tails lazily at flies, or
-changed the distribution of their weight on their legs. He
-glared at them to see them drink, but they were evidently
-too sated with water. Fools! Why should they not drink,
-with all that wealth of water flowing idly by!</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_273'>273</span>They betrayed alertness, turning their heads toward the
-far bank and pricking their ears forward. Then, as a big
-antlered buck came out from among the trees to the water’s
-edge, they flattened their ears back and shook their heads
-and pawed the water till he could hear the splashing. But
-the stag disdained their threats, lowered his head, and drank.
-This was too much for Torres, who emitted a maniacal
-scream which, had he been in his senses, he would not have
-recognised as proceeding from his own throat and larynx.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The stag sprang away. The cattle turned their heads
-in Torres’ direction, drowsed, their eyes shut, and resumed
-the flicking of flies. With a violent effort, scarcely knowing
-that he had half-torn off his ears, he drew his head back
-through the slitted aperture and fainted on top of the
-skeleton.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Two hours later, though he did not know the passage of
-time, he regained consciousness, and found his own head
-cheek by jowl with the skull of the skeleton on which he
-lay. The descending sun was already shining into the
-narrow opening, and his gaze chanced upon a rusty knife.
-The point of it was worn and broken, and he established
-the connection. This was the knife that had scratched the
-inscription on the rock at the base of the funnel at the
-other end of the passage, and this skeleton was the bony
-framework of the man who had done the scratching. And
-Alvarez Torres went immediately mad.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Ah, Peter McGill, my enemy,” he muttered. “Peter
-McGill of Glasgow who betrayed me to this end.—This for
-you!—And this!—And this!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>So speaking, he drove the heavy knife into the fragile
-front of the skull. The dust of the bone which had once
-been the tabernacle of Peter McGill’s brain arose in his
-nostrils and increased his frenzy. He attacked the skeleton
-with his hands, tearing at it, disrupting it, filling the pent
-space about him with flying bones. It was like a battle,
-in which he destroyed what was left of the mortal remains
-of the one time resident of Glasgow.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Once again Torres squeezed his head through the slit
-to gaze at the fading glory of the world. Like a rat in the
-trap caught by the neck in the trap of ancient Maya devising,
-he saw the bright world and day dim to darkness as his
-final consciousness drowned in the darkness of death.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But still the cattle stood in the water and drowsed and
-flicked at flies, and, later, the stag returned, disdainful of
-the cattle, to complete its interrupted drink.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_274'>274</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER XXVIII</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>Not for nothing had Regan been named by his associates,
-The Wolf of Wall Street! While usually no more than a
-conservative, large-scale player, ever so often, like a
-periodical drinker, he had to go on a rampage of wild and
-daring stock-gambling. At least five times in his long career
-had he knocked the bottom out of the market or lifted the
-roof off, and each time to the tune of a personal gain of
-millions. He never went on a small rampage, and he never
-went too often.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>He would let years of quiescence slip by, until suspicion
-of him was lulled asleep and his world deemed that the Wolf
-was at last grown old and peaceable. And then, like a
-thunderbolt, he would strike at the men and interests he
-wished to destroy. But, though the blow always fell like a
-thunderbolt, not like a thunderbolt was it in its inception.
-Long months, and even years, were spent in deviously preparing
-for the day and painstakingly maturing the plans and
-conditions for the battle.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Thus had it been in the outlining and working up of the
-impending Waterloo for Francis Morgan. Revenge lay back
-of it, but it was revenge against a dead man. Not Francis,
-but Francis’ father, was the one he struck against, although
-he struck through the living into the heart of the grave to
-accomplish it. Eight years he had waited and sought his
-chance ere old R.H.M.——Richard Henry Morgan——had
-died. But no chance had he found. He was, truly, the
-Wolf of Wall Street, but never by any luck had he found an
-opportunity against the Lion—for to his death R.H.M. had
-been known as the Lion of Wall Street.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>So, from father to son, always under a show of fair
-appearance, Regan had carried the feud over. Yet Regan’s
-very foundation on which he built for revenge was meretricious
-and wrongly conceived. True, eight years before
-R.H.M.’s death, he had tried to double-cross him and failed;
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_275'>275</span>but he never dreamed that R.H.M. had guessed. Yet
-R.H.M. had not only guessed but had ascertained beyond
-any shadow of doubt, and had promptly and cleverly double-crossed
-his treacherous associate. Thus, had Regan known
-that R.H.M. knew of his perfidy, Regan would have taken
-his medicine without thought of revenge. As it was, believing
-that R.H.M. was as bad as himself, believing that
-R.H.M., out of meanness as mean as his own, without provocation
-or suspicion, had done this foul thing to him, he
-saw no way to balance the account save by ruining him, or,
-in lieu of him, by ruining his son.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And Regan had taken his time. At first Francis had left
-the financial game alone, content with letting his money
-remain safely in the safe investments into which it had been
-put by his father. Not until Francis had become for the
-first time active in undertaking Tampico Petroleum to the
-tune of millions of investment, with an assured many
-millions of ultimate returns, had Regan had the ghost of a
-chance to destroy him. But, the chance given, Regan had
-not wasted time, though his slow and thorough campaign
-had required many months to develop. Ere he was done, he
-came very close to knowing every share of whatever stock
-Francis carried on margin or owned outright.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It had really taken two years and more for Regan to prepare.
-In some of the corporations in which Francis owned
-heavily, Regan was himself a director and no inconsiderable
-arbiter of destiny. In Frisco Consolidated he was president.
-In New York, Vermont and Connecticut he was vice-president.
-From controlling one director in Northwestern
-Electric, he had played kitchen politics until he controlled
-the two-thirds majority. And so with all the rest, either
-directly, or indirectly through corporation and banking
-ramifications, he had his hand in the secret springs and
-levers of the financial and business mechanism which gave
-strength to Francis’ fortune.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Yet no one of these was more than a bagatelle compared
-with the biggest thing of all——Tampico Petroleum. In
-this, beyond a paltry twenty thousand shares bought on the
-open market, Regan owned nothing, controlled nothing,
-though the time was growing ripe for him to sell and deal
-and juggle in inordinate quantities. Tampico Petroleum was
-practically Francis’ private preserve. A number of his
-friends were, for them, deeply involved, Mrs. Carruthers
-even gravely so. She worried him, and was not even above
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_276'>276</span>pestering him over the telephone. There were others, like
-Johnny Pathmore, who never bothered him at all, and who,
-when they met, talked carelessly and optimistically about
-the condition of the market and financial things in general.
-All of which was harder to bear than Mrs. Carruthers’ perpetual
-nervousness.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Northwestern Electric, thanks to Regan’s machinations,
-had actually dropped thirty points and remained there.
-Those on the outside who thought they knew, regarded it
-as positively shaky. Then there was the little, old, solid-as-the-rock-of-Gibraltar
-Frisco Consolidated. The nastiest
-of rumors were afloat, and the talk of a receivership was
-growing emphatic. Montana Lode was still sickly under
-Mulhaney’s unflattering and unmodified report, and Weston,
-the great expert sent out by the English investors, had
-failed to report anything reassuring. For six months, Imperial
-Tungsten, earning nothing, had been put to disastrous
-expense in the great strike which seemed only just begun.
-Nor did anybody, save the several labor leaders who knew,
-dream that it was Regan’s gold that was at the bottom of
-the affair.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The secrecy and the deadliness of the attack was what
-unnerved Bascom. All properties in which Francis was interested
-were being pressed down as if by a slow-moving
-glacier. There was nothing spectacular about the movement,
-merely a steady persistent decline that made Francis’
-large fortune shrink horribly. And, along with what he
-owned outright, what he held on margin suffered even greater
-shrinkage.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Then had come rumors of war. Ambassadors were receiving
-their passports right and left, and half the world seemed
-mobilizing. This was the moment, with the market shaken
-and panicky, and with the world powers delaying in declaring
-moratoriums, that Regan selected to strike. The time
-was ripe for a bear raid, and with him were associated half
-a dozen other big bears who tacitly accepted his leadership.
-But even they did not know the full extent of his plans,
-nor guess at the specific direction of them. They were in
-the raid for what they could make, and thought he was in
-it for the same reason, in their simple directness of pecuniary
-vision catching no glimpse of Francis Morgan nor of his
-ghostly father at whom the big blow was being struck.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Regan’s rumor factory began working overtime, and the
-first to drop and the fastest to drop in the dropping market
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_277'>277</span>were the stocks of Francis, which had already done considerable
-dropping ere the bear market began. Yet Regan was
-careful to bring no pressure on Tampico Petroleum. Proudly
-it held up its head in the midst of the general slump, and
-eagerly Regan waited for the moment of desperation when
-Francis would be forced to dump it on the market to cover
-his shrunken margins in other lines.</p>
-
-<hr class='c010' />
-
-<p class='c000'>“Lord! Lord!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Bascom held the side of his face in the palm of one hand
-and grimaced as if he had a jumping toothache.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Lord! Lord!” he reiterated. “The market’s gone to
-smash and Tampico Pet along with it. How she slumped!
-Who’d have dreamed it!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Francis, puffing steadily away at a cigarette and quite
-oblivious that it was unlighted, sat with Bascom in the
-latter’s private office.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“It looks like a fire-sale,” he vouchsafed.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“That won’t last longer than this time to-morrow morning——then
-you’ll be sold out, and me with you,” his
-broker simplified, with a swift glance at the clock.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It marked twelve, as Francis’ swiftly automatic glance
-verified.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Dump in the rest of Tampico Pet,” he said wearily.
-“That ought to hold back until to-morrow.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Then what to-morrow?” his broker demanded, “with
-the bottom out and everybody including the office boys
-selling short.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Francis shrugged his shoulders. “You know I’ve mortgaged
-the house, Dreamwold, and the Adirondack Camp to
-the limit.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Have you any friends?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“At such a time!” Francis countered bitterly.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Well, it’s the very time,” Bascom retorted. “Look
-here, Morgan. I know the set you ran with at college.
-There’s Johnny Pathmore——”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And he’s up to his eyes already. When I smash he
-smashes. And Dave Donaldson will have to readjust his
-life to about one hundred and sixty a month. And as for
-Chris Westhouse, he’ll have to take to the movies for a
-livelihood. He always was good at theatricals, and I happen
-to know he’s got the ideal ‘film’ face.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_278'>278</span>“There’s Charley Tippery,” Bascom suggested, though it
-was patent that he was hopeless about it.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Yes,” Francis agreed with equal hopelessness. “There’s
-only one thing the matter with him——his father still lives.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“The old cuss never took a flyer in his life,” Bascom
-supplemented. “There’s never a time he can’t put his hand
-on millions. And he still lives, worse luck.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Charley could get him to do it, and would, except the
-one thing that’s the matter with me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“No securities left?” his broker queried.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Francis nodded.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Catch the old man parting with a dollar without due
-security.”</p>
-
-<hr class='c010' />
-
-<p class='c000'>Nevertheless, a few minutes later, hoping to find Charley
-Tippery in his office during the noon hour, Francis was sending
-in his card. Of all jewelers and gem merchants in New
-York, the Tippery establishment was the greatest. Not
-only that. It was esteemed the greatest in the world. More
-of the elder Tippery’s money was invested in the great
-Diamond Corner, than even those in the know of most things
-knew of this particular thing.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The interview was as Francis had forecast. The old man
-still held tight reins on practically everything, and the son
-had little hope of winning his assistance.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I know him,” he told Francis. “And though I’m going
-to wrestle with him, don’t pin an iota of faith on the outcome.
-I’ll go to the mat with him, but that will be about
-all. The worst of it is that he has the ready cash, to say
-nothing of oodles and oodles of safe securities and United
-States bonds. But you see, Grandfather Tippery, when he
-was young and struggling and founding the business, once
-loaned a friend a thousand. He never got it back, and he
-never got over it. Nor did Father Tippery ever get over it
-either. The experience seared both of them. Why, father
-wouldn’t lend a penny on the North Pole unless he got the
-Pole for security after having had it expertly appraised.
-And you haven’t any security, you see.
-But I’ll tell you what. I’ll wrestle with the old
-man to-night after dinner. That’s his most amiable
-mood of the day. And I’ll hustle around on my own and
-see what I can do. Oh, I know a few hundred thousand
-won’t mean anything, and I’ll do my darnedest for something
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_279'>279</span>big. Whatever happens, I’ll be at your house at nine
-to-morrow——”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Which will be my busy day,” Francis smiled wanly, as
-they shook hands. “I’ll be out of the house by eight.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And I’ll be there by eight then,” Charley Tippery responded,
-again wringing his hand heartily. “And in the
-meantime I’ll get busy. There are ideas already beginning
-to sprout....”</p>
-
-<hr class='c010' />
-
-<p class='c000'>Another interview Francis had that afternoon. Arrived
-back at his broker’s office, Bascom told him that Regan had
-called up and wanted to see Francis, saying that he had
-some interesting information for him.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I’ll run around right away,” Francis said, reaching for
-his hat, while his face lighted up with hope. “He was
-an old friend of father’s, and if anybody could pull me
-through, he could.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Don’t be too sure,” Bascom shook his head, and paused
-reluctantly a moment before making confession. “I called
-him up just before you returned from Panama. I was very
-frank. I told him of your absence and of your perilous
-situation here, and——oh, yes, flatly and flat out——asked
-him if I could rely on him in case of need. And he baffled.
-You know anybody can baffle when asked a favor. That
-was all right. But I thought I sensed more ... no, I
-won’t dare to say enmity; but I will say that I was impressed ...
-how shall I say?—well, that he struck me
-as being particularly and peculiarly cold-blooded and non-committal.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Nonsense,” Francis laughed. “He was too good a
-friend of my father’s.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Ever heard of the Conmopolitan Railways Merger?”
-Bascom queried with significant irrelevance.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Francis nodded promptly, then said:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“But that was before my time. I merely have heard of
-it, that’s all. Shoot. Tell me about it. Give me the
-weight of your mind.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Too long a story, but take this one word of advice. If
-you see Regan, don’t put your cards on the table. Let him
-play first, and, if he offers, let him offer without solicitation
-from you. Of course, I may be all wrong, but it won’t
-damage you to hold up your hand and get his play first.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>At the end of another half hour, Francis was closeted with
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_280'>280</span>Regan, and the stress of his peril was such that he controlled
-his natural impulses, remembering Bascom’s instruction,
-and was quite fairly nonchalant about the state of his
-affairs. He even bluffed.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“In pretty deep, eh?” was Regan’s beginning.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Oh, not so deep that my back-teeth are awash yet,”
-Francis replied airily. “I can still breathe, and it will
-be a long time before I begin swallowing.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Regan did not immediately reply. Instead, pregnantly,
-he ran over the last few yards of the ticker tape.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“You’re dumping Tampico Pet pretty heavily, just the
-same.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And they’re snapping it up,” Francis came back, and
-for the first time, in a maze of wonderment, he considered
-the possibility of Bascom’s intuition being right. “Sure,
-I’ve got <em>them</em> swallowing.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Just the same, you’ll note that Tampico Pet is tumbling
-at the same time it’s being snapped up, which is a very
-curious phenomenon,” Regan urged.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“In a bear market all sorts of curious phenomena occur,”
-Francis bluffed with a mature show of wisdom. “And when
-they’ve swallowed enough of my dumpings they’ll be ripe
-to roll on a barrel. Somebody will pay something to get
-my dumpings out of their system. I fancy they’ll pay
-through the nose before I’m done with them.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“But you’re all in, boy. I’ve been watching your fight,
-even before your return. Tampico Pet is your last.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Francis shook his head.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I’d scarcely say that,” he lied. “I’ve got assets my
-market enemies never dream of. I’m luring them on, that’s
-all, just luring them on. Of course, Regan, I’m telling you
-this in confidence. You were my father’s friend. Mine is
-going to be some clean up, and, if you’ll take my tip, in this
-short market you start buying. You’ll be sure to settle with
-the sellers long in the end.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“What are your other assets?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Francis shrugged his shoulders.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“That’s what they’re going to find out when they’re full
-up with my stuff.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“It’s a bluff!” Regan admired explosively. “You’ve got
-the old man’s nerve, all right. But you’ve got to show
-me it isn’t bluff.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Regan waited, and Francis was suddenly inspired.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“It is,” he muttered. “You’ve named it. I’m drowning
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_281'>281</span>over my back-teeth now, and they’re the highest out of the
-wash. But I won’t drown if you will help me. All you’ve
-got to do is to remember my father and put out your hand
-to save his son. If you’ll back me up, we’ll make them all
-sick....”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And right there the Wolf of Wall Street showed his teeth.
-He pointed to Richard Henry Morgan’s picture.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Why do you think I kept that hanging on the wall all
-these years?” he demanded.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Francis nodded as if the one accepted explanation was
-their tried and ancient friendship.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Guess again,” Regan sneered grimly.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Francis shook his head in perplexity.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“So I shouldn’t ever forget him,” the Wolf went on.
-“And never a waking moment have I forgotten him.——Remember
-the Conmopolitan Railways Merger? Well, old
-R.H.M. double-crossed me in that deal. And it was some
-double-cross, believe me. But he was too cunning ever
-to let me get a come-back on him. So there his picture has
-hung, and here I’ve sat and waited. And now the time has
-come.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“You mean?” Francis queried quietly.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Just that,” Regan snarled. “I’ve waited and worked
-for this day, and the day has come. I’ve got the whelp
-where I want him at any rate.” He glanced up maliciously
-at the picture. “And if that don’t make the old gent turn
-in his grave....”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Francis rose to his feet and regarded his enemy curiously.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“No,” he said, as if in soliloquy, “it isn’t worth it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“What isn’t worth what?” the other demanded with swift
-suspicion.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Beating you up,” was the cool answer. “I could kill
-you with my hands in five minutes. You’re no Wolf. You’re
-just mere yellow dog, the part of you that isn’t plain skunk.
-They told me to expect this of you; but I didn’t believe,
-and I came to see. They were right. You were all that
-they said. Well, I must get along out of this. It smells
-like a den of foxes. It stinks.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>He paused with his hand on the door knob and looked
-back. He had not succeeded in making Regan lose his
-temper.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And what are you going to do about it?” the latter
-jeered.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_282'>282</span>“If you’ll permit me to get my broker on your ‘phone
-maybe you’ll learn,” Francis replied.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Go to it, my laddy buck,” Regan conceded, then, with
-a wave of suspicion, “—I’ll get him for you myself.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And, having ascertained that Bascom was really at the
-other end of the line, he turned the receiver over to Francis.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“You were right,” the latter assured Bascom. “Regan’s
-all you said and worse. Go right on with your plan of campaign.
-We’ve got him where we want him, though the old
-fox won’t believe it for a moment. He thinks he’s going
-to strip me, clean me out.” Francis paused to think up the
-strongest way of carrying on his bluff, then continued. “I’ll
-tell you something you don’t know. He’s the one who
-manœuvred the raid from the beginning. So now you know
-who we’re going to bury.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And, after a little more of similar talk, he hung up.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“You see,” he explained, again from the door, “you
-were so crafty that we couldn’t make out who it was. Why
-hell, Regan, we were prepared to give a walloping to some
-unknown that had several times your strength. And now
-that it’s you, it’s easy. We were prepared to strain. But
-with you it will be a walk-over. To-morrow, around this
-time, there’s going to be a funeral right here in your office
-and you’re not going to be one of the mourners. You’re
-going to be the corpse——and a not-nice looking financial
-corpse you’ll be when we get done with you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“The dead spit of R.H.M.,” the Wolf grinned. “Lord,
-how he could pull off a bluff!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“It’s a pity he didn’t bury you and save me all the
-trouble,” was Francis’ parting shot.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And all the expense,” Regan flung after him. “It’s
-going to be pretty expensive for you, and there isn’t going
-to be any funeral from this place.”</p>
-
-<hr class='c010' />
-
-<p class='c000'>“Well, to-morrow’s the day,” Francis delivered to
-Bascom, as they parted that evening. “This time to-morrow
-I’ll be a perfectly nice scalped and skinned and
-sun-dried and smoke-cured specimen for Regan’s private collection.
-But who’d have believed the old skunk had it in
-for me! I never harmed him. On the contrary, I always
-considered him father’s best friend.——If Charley Tippery
-could only come through with some of the Tippery surplus
-coin....”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_283'>283</span>“Or if the United States would only declare a moratorium,”
-Bascom hoped equally hopelessly.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And Regan, at that moment, was saying to his assembled
-agents and rumor-factory specialists:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Sell! Sell! Sell all you’ve got and then sell short. I
-see no bottom to this market!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And Francis, on his way up town, buying the last extra,
-scanned the five-inch-lettered headline:</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>“I SEE NO BOTTOM TO THIS MARKET.—THOMAS REGAN.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>But Francis was not at his house at eight next morning
-to meet Charley Tippery. It had been a night in which
-official Washington had not slept, and the night-wires had
-carried the news out over the land that the United States,
-though not at war, had declared its moratorium. Wakened
-out of his bed at seven by Bascom in person, who brought
-the news, Francis had accompanied him down town. The
-moratorium had given them hope, and there was much to do.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Charles Tippery, however, was not the first to arrive at
-the Riverside Drive palace. A few minutes before eight,
-Parker was very much disturbed and perturbed when Henry
-and Leoncia, much the worse for sunburn and travel-stain,
-brushed past the second butler who had opened the door.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“It’s no use you’re coming in this way,” Parker assured
-them. “Mr. Morgan is not at home.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Where’s he gone?” Henry demanded, shifting the suit-case
-he carried to the other hand. “We’ve got to see him
-<i><span lang="es" xml:lang="es">pronto</span></i>, and I’ll have you know that <em>pronto</em> means quick.
-And who in hell are you?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I am Mr. Morgan’s confidential valet,” Parker answered
-solemnly. “And who are you?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“My name’s Morgan,” Henry answered shortly, looking
-about in quest of something, striding to the library, glancing
-in, and discovering the telephones. “Where’s Francis?
-With what number can I call him up?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Mr. Morgan left express instructions that nobody was
-to telephone him except on important business.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Well, my business is important. What’s the number?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Mr. Morgan is very busy to-day,” Parker reiterated
-stubbornly.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“He’s in a pretty bad way, eh?” Henry quizzed.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_284'>284</span>The valet’s face remained expressionless.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Looks as though he was going to be cleaned out to-day,
-eh?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Parker’s face betrayed neither emotion nor intelligence.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“For a second time I tell you he is very busy——” he
-began.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Hell’s bells!” Henry interrupted. “It’s no secret.
-The market’s got him where the hair is short. Everybody
-knows that. A lot of it was in the morning papers. Now
-come across, Mr. Confidential Valet. I want his number.
-I’ve got important business with him myself.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But Parker remained obdurate.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“What’s his lawyer’s name? Or the name of his agent?
-Or of any of his representatives?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Parker shook his head.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“If you will tell me the nature of your business with
-him,” the valet essayed.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Henry dropped the suit-case and made as if about to leap
-upon the other and shake Francis’ number out of him. But
-Leoncia intervened.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Tell him,” she said.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Tell him!” Henry shouted, accepting her suggestion.
-“I’ll do better than that. I’ll show him.—Here, come on,
-you.” He strode into the library, swung the suit-case on
-the reading table, and began opening it. “Listen to me,
-Mr. Confidential Valet. Our business is the real business.
-We’re going to save Francis Morgan. We’re going to pull
-him out of the hole. We’ve got millions for him, right here
-inside of this thing——”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Parker, who had been looking on with cold, disapproving
-eyes, recoiled in alarm at the last words. Either the
-strange callers were lunatics, or cunning criminals. Even
-at that moment, while they held him here with their talk of
-millions, confederates might be ransacking the upper parts
-of the house. As for the suit-case, for all he knew it might
-be filled with dynamite.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Here!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>With a quick reach Henry had caught him by the collar
-as he turned to flee. With his other hand, Henry lifted the
-cover, exposing a bushel of uncut gems. Parker showed
-plainly that he was overcome, although Henry failed to guess
-the nature of his agitation.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Thought I’d convince you,” Henry exulted. “Now be a<a id='t284'></a>
-good dog and give me his number.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_285'>285</span>“Be seated, sir ... and madame,” Parker murmured,
-with polite bows and a successful effort to control himself.
-“Be seated, please. I have left the private number in Mr.
-Morgan’s bedroom, which he gave to me this morning when
-I helped him dress. I shall be gone but a moment to get it.
-In the meantime please be seated.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Once outside the library, Parker became a most active,
-clear-thinking person. Stationing the second footman at
-the front door, he placed the first one to watch at the library
-door. Several other servants he sent scouting into the
-upper regions on the chance of surprising possible confederates
-at their nefarious work. Himself he addressed, via
-the butler’s telephone, to the nearest police station.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Yes, sir,” he repeated to the desk sergeant. “They
-are either a couple of lunatics or criminals. Send a patrol
-wagon at once, please, sir. Even now I do not know what
-horrible crimes are being committed under this roof ...”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In the meantime, in response at the front door, the second
-footman, with visible relief, admitted Charley Tippery, clad
-in evening dress at that early hour, as a known and tried
-friend of the master. The first butler, with similar relief,
-to which he added sundry winks and warnings, admitted him
-into the library.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Expecting he knew not what nor whom, Charley Tippery
-advanced across the large room to the strange man and
-woman. Unlike Parker, their sunburn and travel-stain
-caught his eye, not as insignia suspicious, but as tokens
-worthy of wider consideration than average New York
-accords its more or less average visitors. Leoncia’s beauty
-was like a blow between the eyes, and he knew she was a
-lady. Henry’s bronze, brazed upon features unmistakably
-reminiscent of Francis and of R.H.M., drew his admiration
-and respect.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Good morning,” he addressed Henry, although he
-subtly embraced Leoncia with his greeting. “Friends of
-Francis?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Oh, sir,” Leoncia cried out. “We are more than
-friends. We are here to save him. I have read the
-morning papers. If only it weren’t for the stupidity of the
-servants ...”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And Charley Tippery was immediately unaware of any
-slightest doubt. He extended his hand to Henry.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I am Charley Tippery,” he said.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And my name’s Morgan, Henry Morgan,” Henry met
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_286'>286</span>him warmly, like a drowning man clutching at a life preserver.
-“And this is Miss Solano—the Senorita Solano—Mr.
-Tippery. In fact, Miss Solano is my sister.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I came on the same errand,” Charley Tippery announced,
-introductions over. “The saving of Francis, as I
-understand it, must consist of hard cash or of securities
-indisputably negotiable. I have brought with me what I
-have hustled all night to get, and what I am confident is not
-sufficient——”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“How much have you brought?” Henry asked bluntly.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Eighteen hundred thousand—what have you brought?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Piffle,” said Henry, pointing to the open suit-case,
-unaware that he talked to a three-generations’ gem expert.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>A quick examination of a dozen of the gems picked at
-random, and an even quicker eye-estimate of the quantity,
-put wonder and excitement into Charley Tippery’s face.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“They’re worth millions! millions!” he exclaimed.
-“What are you going to do with them?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Negotiate them, so as to help Francis out,” Henry
-answered. “They’re security for any amount, aren’t
-they?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Close up the suit-case,” Charley Tippery cried, “while
-I telephone!—I want to catch my father before he leaves
-the house,” he explained over his shoulder, while waiting
-for his switch. “It’s only five minutes’ run from here.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Just as he concluded the brief words with his father,
-Parker, followed by a police lieutenant and two policemen,
-entered.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“There’s the gang, lieutenant—arrest them,” Parker
-said.—“Oh, sir, I beg your pardon, Mr. Tippery. Not you,
-of course.—Only the other two, lieutenant. I don’t know
-what the charge will be—crazy, anyway, if not worse, which
-is more likely.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“How do you do, Mr. Tippery,” the lieutenant greeted
-familiarly.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“You’ll arrest nobody, Lieutenant Burns,” Charley Tippery
-smiled to him. “You can send the wagon back to
-the station. I’ll square it with the Inspector. For you’re
-coming along with me, and this suit-case, and these suspicious
-characters, to my house. You’ll have to be bodyguard—oh,
-not for me, but for this suit-case. There are
-millions in it, cold millions, hard millions, beautiful millions.
-When I open it before my father, you’ll see a sight
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_287'>287</span>given to few men in this world to see.—And now, come on
-everybody. We’re wasting time.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>He made a grab at the suit-case simultaneously with
-Henry, and, as both their hands clutched it, Lieutenant
-Burns sprang to interfere.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I fancy I’ll carry it until it’s negotiated,” Henry
-asserted.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Surely, surely,” Charley Tippery conceded, “as long
-as we don’t lose any more precious time. It will take time
-to do the negotiating. Come on! Hustle!”</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_288'>288</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER XXIX</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>Helped tremendously by the moratorium, the sagging
-market had ceased sagging, and some stocks were even
-beginning to recover. This was true for practically every
-line save those lines in which Francis owned and which
-Regan was bearing. He continued bearing and making
-them reluctantly fall, and he noted with joy the huge blocks
-of Tampico Petroleum which were being dumped obviously
-by no other person than Francis.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Now’s the time,” Regan informed his bear conspirators.
-“Play her coming and going. It’s a double ruff. Remember
-the list I gave you. Sell these, and sell short. For
-them there is no bottom. As for all the rest, buy and buy
-now, and deliver all that you sold. You can’t lose, you see,
-and by continuing to hammer the list you’ll make a double
-killing.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“How about yourself?” one of his bear crowd queried.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I’ve nothing to buy,” came the answer. “That will
-show you how square I have been in my tip, and how
-confident I am. I haven’t sold a share outside the list, so
-I have nothing to deliver. I am still selling short and hammering
-down the list, and the list only. There’s my killing,
-and you can share in it by as much as you continue to
-sell short.”</p>
-
-<hr class='c010' />
-
-<p class='c000'>“There you are!” Bascom, in despair in his private office,
-cried to Francis at ten-thirty. “Here’s the whole market
-rising, except your lines. Regan’s out for blood. I never
-dreamed he could show such strength. We can’t stand
-this. We’re finished. We’re smashed now——you, me, all
-of us——everything.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Never had Francis been cooler. Since all was lost, why
-worry?—was his attitude; and, a mere layman in the game,
-he caught a glimpse of possibilities that were veiled to
-Bascom who too thoroughly knew too much about the game.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_289'>289</span>“Take it easy,” Francis counseled, his new vision assuming
-form and substance with each tick of a second. “Let’s
-have a smoke and talk it over for a few minutes.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Bascom made a gesture of infinite impatience.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“But wait,” Francis urged. “Stop! Look! Listen!
-I’m finished, you say?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>His broker nodded.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“You’re finished?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Again the nod.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Which means that we’re busted, flat busted,” Francis
-went on to the exposition of his new idea. “Now it is
-perfectly clear, then, to your mind and mine, that a man
-can never be worse than a complete, perfect, hundred-percent.,
-entire, total bust.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“We’re wasting valuable time,” Bascom protested as he
-nodded affirmation.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Not if we’re busted as completely as you’ve agreed we
-are,” smiled Francis. “Being thoroughly busted, time,
-sales, purchases, nothing can be of any value to us. Values
-have ceased, don’t you see.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Go on, what is it?” Bascom said, with the momentarily
-assumed patience of abject despair. “I’m busted higher
-than a kite now, and, as you say, they can’t bust me any
-higher.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Now you get the idea!” Francis jubilated. “You’re
-a member of the Exchange. Then go ahead, sell or buy,
-do anything your and my merry hearts decide. We can’t
-lose. Anything from zero always leaves zero. We’ve shot all
-we’ve got, and more. Let’s shoot what we haven’t got.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Bascom still struggled feebly to protest, but Francis beat
-him down with a final:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Remember, anything from zero leaves zero.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And for the next hour, as in a nightmare, no longer a free
-agent, Bascom yielded to Francis’ will in the maddest stock
-adventure of his life.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Oh, well,” Francis laughed at half-past eleven, “we
-might as well quit now. But remember, we’re no worse
-off than we were an hour ago. We were zero then. We’re
-zero now. You can hang up the auctioneer’s flag any time
-now.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Bascom, heavily and wearily taking down the receiver, was
-about to transmit the orders that would stop the battle by
-acknowledgment of unconditional defeat, when the door
-opened and through it came the familiar ring of a pirate
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_290'>290</span>stave that made Francis flash his hand out in peremptory
-stoppage of his broker’s arm.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Stop!” Francis cried. “Listen!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And they listened to the song preceding the singer:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Back to back against the mainmast,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Held at bay the entire crew.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>As Henry swaggered in, carrying a huge and different
-suit-case, Francis joined with him in the stave.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“What’s doing?” Bascom queried of Charley Tippery,
-who, still in evening dress, looked very jaded and worn from
-his exertions.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>From his breast pocket he drew and passed over three
-certified checks that totaled eighteen hundred thousand
-dollars. Bascom shook his head sadly.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Too late,” he said. “That’s only a drop in the
-bucket. Put them back in your pocket. It would be only
-throwing them away.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“But wait,” Charley Tippery cried, taking the suit-case
-from his singing companion and proceeding to open it.
-“Maybe that will help.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“That” consisted of a great mass of orderly bundles of
-gold bonds and gilt edge securities.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“How much is it?” Bascom gasped, his courage springing
-up like wild-fire.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But Francis, overcome by the sight of such plethora of
-ammunition, ceased singing to gasp. And both he and
-Bascom gasped again when Henry drew from his inside
-pocket a bundle of a dozen certified checks. They could
-only stare at the prodigious sum, for each was written for
-a million dollars.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And plenty more where that came from,” Henry announced
-airily. “All you have to do is say the word,
-Francis, and we’ll knock this bear gang to smithereens.
-Now suppose you get busy. The rumors are around everywhere
-that you’re gone and done for. Pitch in and show
-them, that’s all. Bust every last one of them that jumped
-you. Shake ‘m down to their gold watches and the fillings
-out of their teeth.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“You found old Sir Henry’s treasure after all,” Francis
-congratulated.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“No,” Henry shook his head. “That represents part of
-the old Maya treasure——about a third of it. We’ve got
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_291'>291</span>another third down with Enrico Solano, and the last third’s
-safe right here in the Jewelers and Traders’ National Bank.—Say,
-I’ve got news for you when you’re ready to listen.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And Francis was quickly ready. Bascom knew even better
-than he what was to be done, and was already giving
-his orders to his staff over the telephone—buying orders of
-such prodigious size that all of Regan’s fortune would not
-enable him to deliver what he had sold short.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Torres is dead,” Henry told him.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Hurrah!” was Francis’ way of receiving it.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Died like a rat in a trap. I saw his head sticking out.
-It wasn’t pretty. And the Jefe’s dead. And ... and
-somebody else is dead——”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Not Leoncia!” Francis cried out.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Henry shook his head.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Some one of the Solanos——old Enrico?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“No; your wife, Mrs. Morgan. Torres shot her, deliberately
-shot her. I was beside her when she fell. Now hold
-on, I’ve got other news. Leoncia’s right there in that other
-office, and she’s waiting for you to come to her.—Can’t you
-wait till I’m through? I’ve got more news that will give
-you the right steer before you go in to her. Why, hell’s
-bells, if I were a certain Chinaman that I know, I’d make
-you pay me a million for all the information I’m giving you
-for nothing.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Shoot——what is it?” Francis demanded impatiently.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Good news, of course, unadulterated good news. Best
-news you ever heard. I—now don’t laugh, or knock my
-block off——for the good news is that I’ve got a sister.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“What of it?” was Francis’ brusque response. “I
-always knew you had sisters in England.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“But you don’t get me,” Henry dragged on. “This is
-a perfectly brand new sister, all grown up, and the most
-beautiful woman you ever laid eyes on.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“And what of it?” growled Francis. “That may be
-good news for you, but I don’t see how it affects me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Ah, now we’re coming to it,” Henry grinned. “You’re
-going to marry her. I give you my full permission——”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Not if she were ten times your sister, nor if she were
-ten times as beautiful,” Francis broke in. “The woman
-doesn’t exist I’d marry.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Just the same, Francis boy, you’re going to marry this
-one. I know it. I feel it in my bones. I’d bet on it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I’ll bet you a thousand I don’t.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_292'>292</span>“Aw, go on and make it a real bet,” Henry drawled.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Any amount you want.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Done, then, for a thousand and fifty dollars.—Now go
-right into the office there and take a look at her.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“She’s with Leoncia?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Nope; she’s by herself.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I thought you said Leoncia was in there.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“So I did, so I did. And so Leoncia <em>is</em> in there. And
-she isn’t with another soul, and she’s waiting to talk with
-you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>By this time Francis was growing peevish.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“What are you stringing me for?” he demanded. “I
-can’t make head nor tale of your foolery. One moment it’s
-your brand new sister in there, and the next moment it’s
-your wife.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Who said I ever had a wife?” Henry came back.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“I give up!” Francis cried. “I’m going on in and see
-Leoncia. I’ll talk with you later on when you’re back in
-your right mind.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>He started for the door, but was stopped by Henry.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Just a second more, Francis, and I’m done,” he said.
-“I want to give you that steer. I am not married. There
-is only one woman waiting for you in there. That one
-woman is my sister. Also is she Leoncia.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It required a dazed half minute for Francis to get it
-clearly into his head. Again, and in a rush, he was starting
-for the door, when Henry stopped him.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Do I win?” queried Henry.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But Francis shook him off, dashed through the door, and
-slammed it after him.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div>THE END.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Cahill &amp; Co., Ltd., Printers, London and Dublin</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-
-<table class='table0' summary='BOOKS BY JACK LONDON'>
- <tr>
- <td class='btt bbt blt brt c011' colspan='3'><span class='xlarge'>BOOKS BY JACK LONDON<a id='end'></a></span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c013'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012' colspan='2'>MICHAEL BROTHER OF JERRY</td>
- <td class='brt c013'>6s. net</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c013'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c012' colspan='2'><cite>Daily Graphic</cite>—“A clever and intimate study of a thoroughbred dog—full of adventure.”</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c013'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c013'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012' colspan='2'>JERRY OF THE ISLANDS</td>
- <td class='brt c013'>6s.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c013'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c012' colspan='2'><cite>Globe</cite>—“The finest he has ever done.”</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c013'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c013'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012' colspan='2'>TURTLES OF TASMAN (Entirely New)</td>
- <td class='brt c013'>1s. 6d. net</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c013'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012' colspan='2'>THE STRENGTH OF THE STRONG</td>
- <td class='brt c013'>6s. and 1s. 6d. net</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c013'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c012' colspan='2'><cite>Athenæum</cite>—“All worth reading.”</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c013'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c013'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012' colspan='2'>THE NIGHTBORN</td>
- <td class='brt c013'>6s. and 1s. 6d. net</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c013'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c012' colspan='2'><cite>Punch</cite>—“I defy you to read them and think of the Bosches at the same time.”</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c013'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c013'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012' colspan='2'>THE LITTLE LADY OF THE BIG HOUSE</td>
- <td class='brt c013'>6s. and 1s. 6d. net</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c013'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c012' colspan='2'>“A real Londonian romance.”</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c013'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c013'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012' colspan='2'>THE JACKET</td>
- <td class='brt c013'>6s. and 1s. 6d. net</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c013'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c012' colspan='2'><cite>Times</cite>—“Mr. London at his best. Emphatically a Jack Londonian <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">tour-de-force</span></i>.”</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c013'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c013'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012' colspan='2'>THE VALLEY OF THE MOON</td>
- <td class='brt c013'>6s. and 2s. 6d. net</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c013'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c012' colspan='2'><cite>Times</cite>—“Delightful; absorbing.”</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c013'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c013'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012' colspan='2'>JOHN BARLEYCORN</td>
- <td class='brt c013'>6s. and 1s. 6d. net</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c013'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c012' colspan='2'><cite>Standard</cite>—“An amazing human document, and a treatise on a great question worthy of the consideration of social reformers.”</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c013'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c013'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012' colspan='2'>BEFORE ADAM</td>
- <td class='brt c013'>1s. 6d. net</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c013'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c013'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td class='c014' colspan='3'>THE SCARLET PLAGUE (Entirely New) 1s. 6d. net</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c013'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c012' colspan='2'><cite>Manchester Guardian</cite>—“It is sheer muscular ‘chestiness’ that wins him his popularity.”</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c013'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c013'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012' colspan='2'>THE GOD OF HIS FATHERS</td>
- <td class='brt c013'>1s. 6d. net</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c013'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c012' colspan='2'><cite>Spectator</cite>—“Mr. London possesses that power of adapting himself to any period or circumstances which characterises Mr. Kipling’s work.”</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c013'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c013'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012' colspan='2'>THE IRON HEEL</td>
- <td class='brt c013'>1s. 6d. net</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c013'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c012' colspan='2'><cite>World</cite>—“A story of immense interest.”</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c013'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c013'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012' colspan='2'>THE MUTINY OF THE ELSINORE</td>
- <td class='brt c013'>6s. and 1s. 6d. net</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c013'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c012' colspan='2'><cite>Manchester Guardian</cite>—“Nothing quite so good as this tale of mutiny on the high seas has beat done since ‘Treasure Island.’”</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c013'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c013'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012' colspan='2'>ADVENTURE</td>
- <td class='brt c013'>1s. 6d. net</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c013'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c012' colspan='2'><cite>Punch</cite>—“He has them all beat.”</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c013'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c013'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012' colspan='2'>THE CRUISE OF THE SNARK</td>
- <td class='brt c013'>1s. 6d. net</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c013'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c012' colspan='2'><cite>Scotsman</cite>—“Makes a fresh and strong appeal to all those who love high adventure and good literature.”</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c013'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c013'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012' colspan='2'>THE CRUISE OF THE DAZZLER</td>
- <td class='brt c013'>1s. 6d. net</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c013'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c012' colspan='2'><cite>Athenæum</cite>—“His descriptions of weather are wonderful.”</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c013'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c013'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012' colspan='2'>LOST FACE</td>
- <td class='brt c013'>6s. and 1s. 6d. net</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c013'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c012' colspan='2'><cite>Daily Telegraph</cite>—“Excellent are these short stories.”</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c013'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c013'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012' colspan='2'>SOUTH SEA TALES</td>
- <td class='brt c013'>6s. and 1s. 6d. net</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c013'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c012' colspan='2'><cite>Empire Magazine</cite>—“All perfect and inimitable gems.”</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c013'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c013'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012' colspan='2'>WHEN GOD LAUGHS</td>
- <td class='brt c013'>6s. and 1s. 6d. net</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c013'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c012' colspan='2'><cite>Observer</cite>—“Immensely worth reading.”</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c013'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c013'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt brt c012' colspan='3'>THE ROAD (Entirely New)</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c013'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c012' colspan='2'><cite>Daily Graphic</cite>—“Wonderful things to read about.”</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c013'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c013'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012' colspan='2'>THE HOUSE OF PRIDE (Entirely New)</td>
- <td class='brt c013'>1s. 6d. net</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c013'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c012' colspan='2'><cite>Daily Express</cite>—“Grips the heart and stirs the imagination.”</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c013'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c013'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012' colspan='2'>LOVE OF LIFE</td>
- <td class='brt c013'>1s. 6d. net</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c013'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c012' colspan='2'><cite>Saturday Review</cite>—“Mr. London is always at his best in dog stories.”</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c013'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c013'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012' colspan='2'>SON OF THE SUN</td>
- <td class='brt c013'>6s. and 1s. 6d. net</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c013'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c012' colspan='2'><cite>Dundee Advertiser</cite>—“A glorious story.”</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c013'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c013'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012' colspan='2'>SMOKE BELLEW</td>
- <td class='brt c013'>6s. and 1s. 6d. net</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c013'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c012' colspan='2'><cite>Glasgow Herald</cite>—“Fine racy stuff in Mr. London’s best vein.”</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c013'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c013'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012' colspan='2'>AN ODYSSEY OF THE NORTH</td>
- <td class='brt c013'>1s. 6d. net</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c013'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c012' colspan='2'><cite>Nation</cite>—“He writes a novel with something of the intensity with which an athlete shoots a goal.”</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c013'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c013'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012' colspan='2'>CHILDREN OF THE FROST</td>
- <td class='brt c013'>1s. 6d. net</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c013'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='bbt blt c012'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c012' colspan='2'><cite>Manchester Guardian</cite>—“He is the real stuff.”</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='bbt blt brt c011' colspan='3'>MILLS &amp; BOON, Ltd., 49 Rupert St., London, W.1</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<div class='tnotes'>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c005'>TRANSCRIBER’S NOTE</h2>
-</div>
- <ol class='ol_1 c002'>
- <li>Moved the ad page to the <a href='#end'>end</a>.
-
- </li>
- <li>Changed ‘broken’ to ‘broke’ on p. <a href='#t53'>53</a>.
-
- </li>
- <li>Changed ‘woman’ to ‘women on p. <a href='#t64'>64</a>.
-
- </li>
- <li>Added ‘of’ to p. <a href='#t71'>71</a>.
-
- </li>
- <li>Added ‘an’ to p. <a href='#t148'>148</a>.
-
- </li>
- <li>Changed ‘thy’ to ‘they’ on p. <a href='#t181'>181</a>.
-
- </li>
- <li>Changed ‘posses’ to ‘possess’ on p. <a href='#t244'>244</a>.
-
- </li>
- <li>Added ‘a’ to p. <a href='#t284'>284</a>.
-
- </li>
- <li>Silently corrected typographical errors.
-
- </li>
- <li>Retained anachronistic and non-standard spellings as printed.
- </li>
- </ol>
-</div>
-
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<hr class="full" />
-<p>***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HEARTS OF THREE***</p>
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