That cry was from Lilla, who ran to
my uncle’s side just as he staggered to a chair,
holding his face with both hands.
“Not much hurt, I think,”
he gasped; “but it was a close touch a
sort of farewell keepsake,” he said with a faint
attempt to smile.
It was, indeed, a narrow escape, for
the ball had ploughed one of his cheeks so that it
bled profusely, and I could have freely returned the
shot in the rage which I felt.
Perhaps it would have been better
for all parties had I fired, for it would only have
been disabling as black-hearted a scoundrel as ever
breathed. But my plans were made, and by an effort
I kept to them, just as the notary was about to flee
in alarm.
“Loose him, Tom,” I said;
and Garcia started up, foaming almost at the mouth.
“Keep back there,” I cried, “and
do not let me see one of those hands move towards
breast or pocket. The instant I detect any such
act I fire.”
Garcia stood scowling for a few moments
but not meeting my eye, and I continued addressing
the notary:
“Give me full particulars of
this amount, and I will pay it.”
“You, Harry you!” exclaimed
my uncle.
“You! you vile impostor!
You beggar and vagabond! You do not possess
an onza of gold,” roared Garcia, bursting
forth into a fit of vituperation. “Don’t
listen to him; don’t heed him; it’s a trick a
plan. I take possession. The money was
to be paid this morning, and it is not paid, so I
seize the plantation.”
“You are the business man,”
I said coolly to the notary with that coolness
that the possession of money gives “this
is a mining country, and gold in ounces should be
current.”
“The best of currency, senor,”
said the notary with a smile and a bow.
“Tell me the amount, then, in
ounces,” I said, “and I will pay you.”
“Don Xeres,” gasped Garcia,
almost beside himself with rage, “I will take
no promises to pay.”
The old notary shrugged his shoulders.
“But, Senor Garcia, there are
no promises to pay. I understand the English
senor to say that he will pay at once!
Am I not right, senor?”
“Quite,” I said. “Uncle, I
will lend you this amount.”
“But, Harry, my dear boy, you are mad!
You have no idea of the extent.”
“Two hundred and five ounces
would equal the amount in pesos d’oro
which Senor Landell is indebted,” said the notary
quietly.
“Good!” I said.
“Then will you have proper balances brought?
Uncle, see to the return of your papers.”
“I am in the hands of Senor
Xeres,” said my uncle in a bewildered tone.
“He will see justice done.”
The old notary bowed and smiled, while
I crossed to where my leather case stood upon a side-table,
brought it to my chair, and then seated myself, slowly
unbuckling the straps and unlocking it while the balances
were brought, when I drew out six of the little yellow
bar ingots and passed them over to the notary, who
was the banker of the district as well.
He took them, turned them over, wiped
his glasses, and replaced them; then examined each
bar again.
“Pure metal, I think, senor?” I said,
smiling.
“The purest, Senor Inglese,” he replied
with another bow.
Then, placing the ingots in the balances,
he recorded each one’s weight as he went on,
to find them, with a few grains variation more or less,
six ounces each.
Five times, to Garcia’s astonishment
and rage, did I bring from the case in my lap six
of the golden bars, the notary the while testing and
weighing them one by one in the coolest and most business-like
way imaginable. Then his spectacles were directed
inquiringly at me, and I brought out four more, which
were duly weighed and placed with the others.
Then again were the spectacles directed at me.
“Another ounce, less a quarter,
senor,” said the notary. “I have
here two hundred and four ounces and a quarter.”
“Fortunatus’s purse wants
aiding, Uncle,” I said, unwilling to exhibit
more of the golden spoil. “You can manage
the three-quarters of an ounce?”
My uncle was speechless; but he rushed
to a secretary, took out a little canvas bag, and
counted out the difference in coin. When, coolly
drawing out bags of his own, the notary made up a neat
package of the bars, inclosing therewith his account
of the weights, tied it up, lit with apparatus
of his own a wax taper, sealed the package,
and handed it to Garcia, who took it with a fierce
scowl, but only to dash it down the next instant upon
the table.
“I will not take it,”
he exclaimed. “It is a trick the
gold is base!”
“Senor Don Pablo Garcia, I have I,
S. Xeres have examined and proved that
gold,” said the old notary. “I say
it is pure, and you cannot refuse it. Senor
Landell, there are your bonds now. Senor Garcia
is angry, but the business is terminated.”
Rising and bowing to us with a courtly
grace that could win nothing less than respect, the
old notary handed some deeds to my uncle, and then,
picking up the gold, he passed his arm through Garcia’s
and led him away the notary’s attendant
following with his master’s writing-case and
balances.
But the next moment a shadow darkened
the door, and Garcia would have rushed in had not
Tom blocked the way.
“Now, then, where are you shovin’
to, eh?” grumbled Tom; and there was a scuffle,
and the muttering of a score of Spanish oaths, with,
I must say, a couple of English ones, that sounded
to be in Tom’s voice, when Garcia shouted, in
a voice that we could all hear:
“Tell him there is another debt
to pay yet, and it shall be paid in another coin!”
The door closed then, and it was evident
that Tom was enjoying the act of seeing Garcia off
the premises, while the next minute my uncle was holding
me tightly by both hands and my aunt sobbing on my
neck.
“And I was saying you were like
the rest of the world like the rest of
the world, Harry, my dear boy,” was all my uncle
could say, in a choking voice, and there were tears
in his eyes as he spoke.
“Say no more, Uncle say
no more,” I exclaimed, shaking him warmly by
the hands.
Then he took his wife to his heart,
telling her in broken words that there was to be peace
at the old place after all.
It must have been from joy at the
happiness I was the means of bringing into that home,
or else from the example that was set me, for the next
moment I had Lilla in my arms, kissing her for response
to the thanks looking from her bright eyes; and even
when my uncle turned to me I could only get one hand
at liberty to give him, the other would still clasp
the little form that did not for an instant shrink.
“Too bad too bad,
Harry too bad!” said my uncle, with
a smile and a shake of the head. “I am
no sooner free of one obligation than I am under another;
and so now, on the strength of that money, you put
in your claims.”
“To be sure, Uncle,” I
said laughing; “and you see how poor Lilla suffers.”
I repented saying those words the
next moment, for Lilla shrank hastily away, blushing
deeply.
My uncle and I were soon left alone,
when, holding out his hand to me, he said, in a voice
whose deep tones told how he was moved:
“Harry, my boy, I can never
repay you the service you have done me; but if I live
I will repay you the money.”
“Look here, Uncle,” I
said, “once and for all let that be
buried. There, light your cigar; and I can talk
to you.” Then, taking our places in a
recess by one of the shaded windows, I spoke to him
in a low tone. “You know how I have spent
my time lately?”
He nodded.
“Treasure-seeking?”
He nodded again.
“Uncle, at times it almost seemed
to me a madness; but I persevered and succeeded.
Look here!”
I tore open the case and showed him the sixteen golden
ingots remaining.
“And you found all that, Harry! My boy,
you were fortunate indeed.”
“All that, Uncle!” I
said with a smile. “That is not a hundredth
part. I am rich. I? No! We
are rich; and now I want your advice. What are
we to do? for I’ve hidden my treasure again till
I can fetch it away in safety.”
“You have done well, then,”
he said gravely. “But is not this some
delusion, my boy?”
“Are these delusive, Uncle?”
I exclaimed, clinking together two of the sonorous
little bars. “Were those delusive which
Garcia has carried off? No, Uncle, I thought
once it must be a dream; but it is a solid reality.
I have found the treasures of one of the temples of
the Sun ingots, plates, sheets, cups,
and two great shields besides, all of solid metal.”
“Harry,” said my uncle,
“it sounds like a wild invention from some story-teller’s
pen, and I should laugh in your face but for the proofs
you have given me. But you must not stay here
in this country. It is as much yours as any
lucky adventurer’s, but your right would be
disputed in a hundred quarters; while, as for the Indians ”
“Disputed, Uncle?” I
said interrupting him. “Disputed if it
were known. You know it.”
“Does any one else?” said my uncle anxiously.
“Tom was with me. We found
it together,” I said, “and he helped me
to conceal it again. But I could trust him with
my life. In fact, Uncle,” I said laughing,
“we owe one another half-a-dozen lives over our
discovery, for either I was saving his life or he was
saving mine all the time.”
“But the Indians, Harry the
Indians! That is a sacred treasure the
treasure devoted to their gods, hence its remaining
so long untouched. If they knew that you had
taken it, no part of South America would hold you
free from their vengeance. They would have your
life, sooner or later.”
“Pleasant place this, certainly,
Uncle,” I said laughing; “what with Garcia
and the Indians.”
“I don’t think it could
become known from those ingots,” said my uncle
musingly, “though Garcia will rack his brains
to find out how you became possessed of them.
And yet I don’t know; you see they have two
or three characters stamped on them that the Indians
might know. But were you seen?”
“Coming from the place, Uncle?
Yes, I suppose I must have been watched constantly.
But all the same, I have the treasure hidden away;
and as to the risk from the Indians, I don’t
feel much alarmed; and you may depend upon it that
they are in the most profound What’s
that?”
My uncle uttered an ejaculation at
the same moment, for as I spoke, rapid as the dart
of a serpent, a dark shadowy arm was passed under the
blind close to the little table where we sat, and on
looking there were but fifteen of the little ingots
left.
“Stop here! I’ll go,” I exclaimed.
In an instant I had torn aside the
blind, pushed open the jalousie, and leaped out into
the outer sunshine, to stand in the glare, looking
this way and that way, but in vain: there were
flowers, and trees, and the bright glare, but not
a soul in sight.
I stood for an instant to think; and
then, feeling for my pistol to see if it was there
if wanted, I dashed across the plantation towards the
forest, peering in every direction, but without avail;
and at last, more troubled than I cared to own, I
returned, dripping with perspiration, to the hacienda,
to meet Tom.
“Say, Mas’r Harry, what’s
the good o’ running yourself all away, like so
much butter? ’Tain’t good for the
constitution.”
“Have you seen any Indians lurking
about to-day, Tom, anywhere near the place?”
“Not half a one, Mas’r
Harry, because why? I’ve been fast asleep
ever since I saw the Don off the premises.”
“Keep a good look-out, Tom,” I cried.
Then I hurried in to my uncle, who looked troubled.
“I don’t like that, Harry,”
he said. “There were eavesdroppers close
at hand. I thought I would go too, but I saw
nothing. Not a man had been out of the yard.
But there, take the gold up to your room and lock
it in the big chest; the key is in it. I put
it here for safety till you got back, and confound!”
We gazed in blank astonishment, for
as my uncle opened his secretary and laid bare my
leather case, which he had locked and strapped up,
there it was with the straps cut through, the lock
cut out, and the fifteen ingots gone!