In spite of newspapers and letters
and tape-machines and telegrams and such like aids
to the speedy diffusion of news, the same travels
quicker in villages than in cities. Word of mouth
can spread gossip with marvelous rapidity in sparsely
inhabited communities, since it is obvious that in
such places every person knows the other as
the saying goes inside out. In every
English village walls have ears and windows have eyes,
so that every cottage is a hot-bed of scandal, and
what is known to one is, within the hour, known to
the others. Even the Sphinx could not have preserved
her secret long in such a locality.
Gartley could keep up its reputation
in this respect along with the best, therefore it
was little to be wondered at, that early next morning
every one knew that Professor Braddock had found his
long-lost mummy in Mrs. Jasher’s garden, and
had removed the same to the Pyramids without unnecessary
delay. It was not particularly late when the hand-cart,
with its uncanny burden, had passed along the sole
street of the place, and several men had emerged from
the Warrior Inn ostensibly to offer help, but really
to know what the eccentric master of the great house
was doing. Braddock brusquely rejected these
offers; but the oddly shaped mummy case, stained green,
having been seen, it needed little wit for those who
had caught a sight of it to put two and two together,
especially as the weird object had been described at
the inquest and had been talked over ever since in
every cottage. And as the cart had been seen
coming out of the widow’s garden, it naturally
occurred to the villagers that Mrs. Jasher had been
concealing the mummy. Shortly the rumor spread
that she had also murdered Bolton, for unless she had
done so, she certainly according to village
logic could not have been possessed of
the spoil. Finally, as Mrs. Jasher’s doors
and windows were small and the mummy was rather bulky,
it was natural to presume that she had hidden it in
the garden. Report said she had buried it and
had dug it up just in time to be pounced upon by its
rightful owner. From which it can be seen that
gossip is not invariably accurate.
However this may be, the news of Professor
Braddock’s good fortune shortly came to Don
Pedro’s ears through the medium of the landlady.
As she revealed what she had heard in the morning,
the Peruvian gentleman was spared a sleepless night.
But as soon as he learned the truth which
was surprising enough in its unexpectedness he
hastily finished his breakfast and hurried to the
Pyramids. As yet he had not intended to see Braddock
so promptly, or at least not until he had made further
inquiries at Pierside, but the news that Braddock possessed
the royal ancestor of the De Gayangoses brought him
immediately into the museum. He greeted the Professor
in his usual grave and dignified manner, and no one
would have guessed from his inherent calmness that
the unexpected news of Braddock’s arrival, and
the still more unexpected information about the green
mummy, had surprised him beyond measure. Being
somewhat superstitious, it also occurred to Don Pedro
that the coincidence meant good fortune to him in
the recovery of his long-lost ancestor.
Braddock, already knowing a great
deal about Don Pedro from Lucy and Archie Hope, was
only too pleased to see the Peruvian, hoping to find
in him a kindred spirit. As yet the Professor
was not aware of the contents of the ancient Latin
manuscript, which revealed the fact of the hidden
emeralds, since Hope had decided to leave it to the
Peruvian to impart the information. Archie knew
very well that Don Pedro as he had plainly
stated wished to purchase the mummy, and
it was only right that Braddock should know what he
was selling. But Hope forgot one important fact
perhaps from the careless way in which Don Pedro had
told his story namely, that the Professor
in a second degree was a receiver of stolen goods.
Therefore it was more than probable that the Peruvian
would claim the mummy as his own property. Still,
in that event he would have to prove his claim, and
that would not be easy.
The plump little professor had not
yet unsealed the case, and when Don Pedro entered,
he was standing before it rubbing his fat hands, with
a gloating expression in his face. However, as
Cockatoo had brought in the Peruvian’s card,
Braddock expected his visitor and wheeled to face him.
“How are you, sir?” said
he, extending his hand. “I am glad to see
you, as I hear that you know all about this mummy
of Inca Caxas.”
“Well, I do,” answered
De Gayangos, sitting down in the chair which his host
pushed forward. “But may I ask who told
you that this mummy was that of the last Inca?”
Braddock pinched his plump chin and
replied readily, enough.
“Certainly, Don Pedro.
I wished to learn the difference in embalming between
the Egyptians and the ancient Peruvians, and looked
about for a South American corpse. Unexpectedly
I saw in several European newspapers and in two English
journals that a green Peruvian mummy was for sale at
Malta for one thousand pounds. I sent my assistant,
Sidney Bolton, to buy it, and he managed to get it,
coffin and all, for nine hundred. While in Malta,
and before he started back in The Diver with the mummy,
he wrote me an account of the transaction. The
seller who was the son of a Maltese collector told
Bolton that his father had picked up the mummy in
Paris some twenty and more years ago. It came
from Lima some thirty years back, I believe, and,
according to the collector in Paris, was the corpse
of Inca Caxas. That is the whole story.”
Don Pedro nodded gravely.
“Was there a Latin manuscript delivered along
with the mummy?” he asked.
Braddock’s eyes opened widely.
“No, sir. The mummy came
thirty years ago from Lima to Paris. It passed
twenty years back into the possession of the Maltese
collector, and his son sold it to me a few months
ago. I never heard of any manuscript.”
“Then Mr. Hope did not repeat to you what I
told him the other night?”
The Professor sat down and his mouth grew obstinate.
“Mr. Hope related some story
you told him and others about this mummy having been
stolen from you.”
“From my father,” corrected
the unsmiling Peruvian; keeping a careful eye on his
host; “that is really the case. Inca Caxas
is, or was, my ancestor, and this manuscript” Don
Pedro produced the same from his inner pocket “details
the funeral ceremonies.”
“Very interesting; most interesting,”
fussed Braddock, stretching out his hand. “May
I see it?”
“You read Latin,” observed
Don Pedro, surrendering the manuscript.
Braddock raised his eyebrows.
“Of course,” he said simply,
“every well-educated man reads Latin, or should
do so. Wait, sir, until I glance through this
document.”
“One moment,” said Don
Pedro, as the Professor began to literally devour
the discolored page. “You know from Hope,
I have no doubt, how I chance upon my own property
in Europe?”
Braddock, still with his eyes on the manuscript, mumbled
“Your own property. Quite so: quite
so.”
“You admit that. Then you will no doubt
restore the mummy to me.”
By this time the drift of Don Pedro’s
observations entirely reached the understanding of
the scientist, and he dropped the document he was
reading to leap to his feet.
“Restore the mummy to you!” he gasped.
“Why, it is mine.”
“Pardon me,” said the
Peruvian, still gravely but very decisively, “you
admitted that it belonged to me.”
Braddock’s face deepened to a fine purple.
“I didn’t know what I
was saying,” he protested. “How could
I say it was your property when I have bought it for
nine hundred pounds?”
“It was stolen from me.”
“That has got to be proved,” said Braddock
caustically.
Don Pedro rose, looking more like, Don Quixote than
ever.
“I have the honor to give you my word and ”
“Yes, yes. That is all right. I cast
no imputation on your honor.”
“I should think not,” said the other coldly
but strongly.
“All the same, you can scarcely
expect me to part with so valuable an object,”
Braddock waved his hand towards the case, “without
strict inquiry into the circumstances. And again,
sir, even if you succeed in proving your ownership,
I am not inclined to restore the mummy to you for
nothing.”
“But it is stolen property you are keeping from
me.”
“I know nothing about that:
I have only your bare word that it is so, Don Pedro.
All I know is that I paid nine hundred pounds for the
mummy and that it cost the best part of another hundred
to bring it to England. What I have, I keep.”
“Like your country,” said the Peruvian
sarcastically.
“Precisely,” replied the
Professor suavely. “Every Englishman has
a bull-dog tenacity of purpose. Brag is a good
dog, Don Pedro, but Holdfast is a better one.”
“Then I understand,” said
the Peruvian, stretching out his hand to pick up the
fallen manuscript, “that you will keep the mummy.”
“Certainly,” said Braddock
coolly, “since I have paid for it. Also,
I shall keep the jewels, which the manuscript tells
me from the glance I obtained of it were
buried with it.”
“The sole jewels buried are
two large emeralds which the mummy holds in its hands,”
explained Don Pedro, restoring the manuscript to his
pocket, “and I wish for them so that I may get
money to restore the fortunes of my family.”
“No! no! no!” said Braddock
forcibly. “I have bought the mummy and the
jewels with it. They will sell to supply me with
money to fit out my expedition to the tomb of Queen
Tahoser.”
“I shall dispute your claim,”
cried De Gayangos, losing his calmness.
Braddock waved his hand with supreme content.
“I can give you the address
of my lawyers,” he retorted; “any steps
you choose to take will only result in loss, and from
what you hint I should not think that you had much
money to spend on litigation.”
Don Pedro bit his lip, and saw that
it was indeed a more difficult task than he had anticipated
to make Braddock yield up his prize.
“If you were in Lima,”
he muttered, speaking Spanish in his excitement, “you
would then learn that I speak truly.”
“I do not doubt your truth,”
answered the Professor in the same language.
De Gayangos wheeled and faced his host, much surprised.
“You speak my tongue, senor?” he demanded.
Braddock nodded.
“I have been in Spain, and I
have been in Peru,” he answered dryly, “therefore
I know classical Spanish and its colonial dialects.
As to being in Lima, I was there, and I do not wish
to go there again, as I had quite enough of those
uncivilized parts thirty years ago, when the country
was much disturbed after your civil war.”
“You were in Lima thirty years
ago,” echoed Don Pedro; “then you were
there when Vasa stole this mummy.”
“I don’t know who stole
it, or even if it was stolen,” said the Professor
obstinately, “and I don’t know the name
of Vasa. Ah! now I remember. Young Hope
did say something about the Swedish sailor who you
said stole the mummy.”
“Vasa did, and brought it to
Europe to sell probably to that man in
Paris, who afterwards sold it to your Malteses collector.”
“No doubt,” rejoined Braddock
calmly; “but what has all this to do with me,
Don Pedro?”
“I want my mummy,” raged the other, and
looked dangerous.
“Then you won’t get it,”
retorted Braddock, adopting a pugnacious attitude
and quite composed. “This mummy has caused
one death, Don Pedro, and from your looks I should
think you would like it to cause another.”
“Will you not be honest?”
“I’ll knock your head
off if you bring my honesty into question,” cried
the Professor, standing on tip-toe like a bantam.
“The best thing to do will be to take the matter
into court. Then the law can decide, and I have
little doubt but what it will decide in my favor.”
The Englishman and the Peruvian glared
at one another, and Cockatoo, who was crouching on
the floor, glanced from one angry face to another.
He guessed that the white men were quarreling and
perhaps would come to blows. It was at this moment
that a knock came to the door, and a minute later
Archie entered. Braddock glanced at him, and took
a sudden resolution as he stepped forward.
“Hope, you are just in time,”
he declared. “Don Pedro states that the
mummy belongs to him, and I assert that I have bought
it. We shall make you umpire. He wants it:
I want it. What is to be done?”
“The mummy is my own flesh and
blood, Mr. Hope,” said Don Pedro.
“Precious little of either about
it,” said Braddock contemptuously.
Archie twisted a chair round and straddled
his long legs across it, with his arms resting on
its back. His quick brain had rapidly comprehended
the situation, and, being acquainted with both sides
of the question, it was not difficult to come to a
decision. If it was hard that Don Pedro should
lose his ancestor’s mummy, it was equally hard
that Braddock or rather himself should
lose the purchase money, seeing that it had been paid
in good faith to the seller in Malta for a presumably
righteously acquired object. On these premises
the young Solon proceeded to deliver judgment.
“I understand,” said he
judiciously, “that Don Pedro had the mummy stolen
from him thirty years ago, and that you, Professor,
bought it under the impression that the Maltese owner
had a right to possess it.”
“Yes,” snapped Braddock,
“and I daresay the Maltese owner thought so
too, since he bought it from that collector in Paris.”
Hope nodded.
“And if Vasa sold it to the
man in Paris,” said he calmly, “he certainly
would not tell the purchaser that he had looted the
mummy in Lima, and the poor man would not know that
he was receiving stolen goods. Is that right,
Don Pedro?”
“Yes, sir,” said the Peruvian,
who had recovered his temper and his gravity; “but
I declare solemnly that the mummy was stolen from my
father and should belong to me.”
“No one disputes that,”
said Archie cheerfully; “but it ought to belong
to the Professor also, since he has bought it.
Now, as it can’t possibly belong to two people,
we must split the difference. You, Professor,
must sell back the mummy to Don Pedro for the price
you paid for it, and then, Don Pedro, you must recompense
Professor Braddock for his loss.”
“I have not much money,”
said Don Pedro gravely; “still, I am willing
to do as you say.”
“I don’t know that I am,”
protested Braddock noisily. “There are the
two emeralds which are of immense value, as Don Pedro
says, and they belong to me, since the mummy is my
property.”
“Professor,” said Archie
solemnly, “you must do right, even if you lose
by it. I believe the story of Senor De Gayangos;
and the mummy with its jewels belongs to him.
Besides, you only wish to see the way in which the
Inca race embalmed their dead. Well, then, unpack
the mummy here in the presence of Don Pedro.
When you have satisfied your curiosity, and when Senor
De Gayangos signs a check for one thousand pounds,
he can take away the corpse. You have had so
much trouble over it, that I wonder your are not anxious
to see the last of it.”
“But the emeralds would sell
for much money and would defray the expenses of my
expedition into Egypt to search for that Queen’s
tomb.”
“I understood from Lucy that
Mrs. Jasher intended to finance that expedition when
she became your wife.”
“Humph!” muttered Braddock,
stroking his fat chin. “I said a few foolish
things to her last night when I was heated up.
She may not forgive me, Hope.”
“A woman will forgive anything
to the man she loves,” said Archie.
Braddock was no fool, and could not
help casting a glance at his tubby figure, which was
reflected in a near mirror. It seemed incredible
that Mrs. Jasher could love him for his looks, and
the fact that he might some day be a baronet did not
strike him at the moment as a consideration.
However, he foresaw trouble and expense should Don
Pedro go to law, as he seemed determined to do.
Taking all things into consideration, Braddock thought
that Archie’s judgment was a good one, and yielded.
“Well,” he said after
reflection, “let us agree. I shall open
the case and examine the mummy, which after all is
the reason why I bought it. When I have satisfied
myself as to the difference between the modes of embalming,
Don Pedro can give me a check and take away the mummy.
I only hope that he will have less trouble with it
than I have had,” and, so speaking, Braddock,
signing to Cockatoo to bring all the necessary tools,
laid hands on the case.
“I am content,” said Don
Pedro briefly, and seated himself in a chair beside
the young Daniel who had delivered judgment.
Hope offered to assist the Professor
to open the case, but was dismissed with an abrupt
refusal.
“Though I am glad you are present
to see the mummy unpacked,” said Braddock, laboring
at the lid of the case, “for if the emeralds
are missing, Don Pedro might accuse me of stealing
them.”
“Why should the emeralds be missing?”
asked Hope quickly.
Braddock shrugged his shoulders.
“Sidney Bolton was killed,”
said he in a low voice, “and it was not likely
that any one would commit a murder for the sake of
this mummy, and then leave it stranded in Mrs. Jasher’s
garden. I have my doubts about the safety of
the emeralds, else I would not have consented to sell
the thing back again.”
With this honest speech, the Professor
vigorously attacked the lid of the case, and inserted
a steel instrument into the cracks to prize up the
covering. The lid was closed with wooden pegs
in an antique but perfectly safe manner, and apparently
had not been opened since the dead Inca had been laid
to rest therein hundreds of years ago among the Andean
mountains. Don Pedro winced at this desecration
of the dead, but, as he had given his consent, there
was nothing left to do but to grin and bear it.
In a wonderfully short space of time, considering the
neatness of the workmanship and the holding power of
the wooden pegs, the lid was removed. Then the
four on-lookers saw that the mummy had been tampered
with. Swathed in green-stained llama wool, it
lay rigid in its case. But the swathings had
been cut; the hands protruded and the emeralds were
gone torn rudely from the hard grip of the
dead.