Forty Englishmen, with Indian carriers
and scouts, stole out from the river-side camp under
the clear light of the tropical stars. The villagers
on the hills slept in a false security. Spies
had hung about the river all day; but the preparations
had no meaning for them, except that they probably
signalized an early departure. They had witnessed
the arrival of the other boat, and had sped to their
chieftain with the news. But the idea of a night
attack on their stronghold never occurred to them.
This newest type of white man, they had been told
and really believed, fought with their own kind only.
The Indians shut and barred their great gate, curled
themselves up on couch of skins or reed matting, and
fell into the deep sleep of the tired savage.
The friendly scouts had so learned
every turn and obstacle in the upward path from the
river that they could have walked it in the blackest
darkness, and the metallic light from the clear heavens
was more than sufficient for the keen-eyed mariners.
One torch was carried for the firing of the big gun
and for the lighting of the matches of the arquebusiers,
but its yellow glare was shrouded in a soldier’s
helmet.
The strip of forest was passed, and
the men filed out on the plateau. A breeze from
the neighbouring heights stirred the green patches
of corn. A scout came back, and whispered that
the way was clear. The band moved forward.
The dull, gray mass of the village
loomed dimly ahead. No light was visible, but
a thin column of smoke from the communal fire rose
above the walls and bent away before the wind.
The adventurers were within gunshot
of the gate. The big gun was silently fitted
to its carriage, loaded and shotted; and the native
allies ran back into the corn and hid themselves, quaking
with terror.
There was a flash of red flame, a
loud roar that came back in echoing thunder from the
hills, the crash of the iron ball against the gate.
The villagers started from sleep, and looked around
in dismay. Another flash, another roar, another
crash, a pealing of strange thunder. Then a
shout in a strange tongue: “For England!
Mother England!” The children of the sun,
the wielders of the thunder and lightning, were through
the broken gate.
Then arose a mad stampede of terror.
The arquebusiers were within the rampart, and
death-fire and nauseous smoke spurted from a dozen
different places. With squeals and shrieks, as
from a mob of terrified brutes, men, women, and children
dashed for the walls and the farther outlets in mad
flight for the hills.
“Make for the chief’s
house. Kill no man unless he opposes you,”
was the order; and a shouting band soon surrounded
the great house in the centre of the village.
Some fired the thatched roofs, and a red glare shot
up to the blue sky. The cries and screams of
the scurrying tribe grew fainter and fainter.
But the sturdy headman was not with them. Spear
in hand, and alone, he faced his terrible foes, eyes
and teeth fiercely gleaming a bronze Hector.
He lunged at the foremost man, and Master Jeffreys
knocked him down with the flat of his sword.
Instantly Morgan and three or four others threw themselves
upon him. He writhed and twisted like a limbed
snake, and bit and tore with teeth and hands.
But the odds were hopelessly against him; a rope in
a sailor’s practised hands wound about his body,
and he lay, a panting prisoner, across his own threshold.
A few others of the villagers were seized, the rest
of the roofs were fired, and the adventurers marched
back to the river. No spoil was taken.
The next morning the rank and file
of the prisoners were set at liberty. A present
was given to each one, and it was impressed upon them
that the white strangers bore them no ill-will, and
would not again molest the village if its inhabitants
conducted themselves with due deference and friendliness.
They had punished them for their churlishness and
disrespect, and had no thought of doing them further
mischief if they profited by the lesson given them.
The men departed, astonished at the clemency shown
them.
During the day the major portion of
the villagers came back from the mountains and woods,
and set stolidly to work repairing their homes.
One of the released prisoners ventured to come down
to the white men and beg permission to cut rushes
for the rethatching of his dwelling. He was quickly
told that the river and its rushes were as free to
him as ever they had been; and some of the adventurers
cut rushes themselves, and told the fellow to let
the people know that a supply awaited them.
These wise measures went far to conciliate
the natives. They had learned that they must
not oppose the strangers, but they also were fairly
assured that the white men were not the robbers and
destroyers that rumour had represented them to be.
Some of them came freely enough into the camp, bartering
produce for gaudy trinkets; but, to the intense disappointment
of the company, none seemed to know anything about
the “Gilded One” or the marvellous city
in which he dwelt.
The expedition moved on rapids,
rocks, gorges, and waterfalls impeding the way.
The heat was intense; and when at times long marches
were necessary, in order to avoid obstacles in the
river, the labour of tugging the boats was alike heartbreaking
and limb-breaking. More than once the wisdom
of leaving the river and marching overland was discussed.
But the river was at least a sure path, according
to all reports. It led to Lake Parime and its
golden sands and wondrous city. The men grew
feverish and unbalanced with anxiety and disappointed
hopes. Night after night they were to be found
in groups, listening to Yacamo or the Indians from
the delta as they retold for the thousandth time the
story of “El Dorado;” others would sit
beside Master Jeffreys whilst he read and translated
Dan’s papers; and any words that fell from the
Johnsons, and others who had sailed the Spanish Main
before, and heard the Spanish stories of fabulous
Indian treasures, were stored up as precious oracles.
And yet the mysterious region never
seemed to come nearer; rather it receded as the adventurers
advanced, a yellow will-o’-the-wisp that had
led them through tangled forest and pestilential swamp
only to mock them in the end. The natives grew
fiercer and more threatening; the guides began to
murmur at the length of the way their river
homes seemed so far behind them. Savage faces
peered out from bush and rock upon the company of
wearied, ragged, dispirited men. One soldier
went mad, raved of gold and jewels, and jumped into
a whirlpool to seek both. Two others one
a Cornish squire who had sold his little all to join
the expedition were stricken by the sun,
and dropped dead as they were pulling at the boat
ropes. A jaguar pounced upon another man as
he stooped to get water from a stream. An Indian
arrow found the heart of another. The sun, fatigue,
fevers, bruises, and the endless racking of limbs
and brains, reduced the spirits and strength of the
men. They became gaunt, hollow-eyed, tattered,
unshorn, uncombed, unkempt, yet they toiled on, silent save
when they cursed and railed at fate dogged,
fiercely purposeful, resolved to die rather than turn
back. Song and jest were rarely heard in any
boat; haggard fellows tugged at the oars, or lay dreamily
watching the sail as it filled with the welcome breeze.
Their patience being sapped by disappointment and
privation, they were no longer the kindly “white
brother” to the Indians; they estranged their
friends and made foes at every halting-place.
One man saw this. Since the
attack on the hill village the chief of that place
had been dragged along with the expedition by way of
punishment. Sullenly he had tugged at his oar,
carried his load, or pulled at his rope; he neither
forgot anything nor forgave anything. He rarely
spoke to the Indians from the delta and the plain,
and when he did his words were full of contempt.
One night, when the adventurers were lodged on the
land in a cleft of the mountains, he disappeared.
The natives who slept on either side of him as guard
were both stabbed to the heart. The sight still
further dulled the spirits of all.