<h2>CHAPTER XX</h2>
<h3><i>In the Footsteps of Quesada</i></h3>
<p class="dropcap" ><span class="dcap">Once</span> out of hearing, Stubbs, who had not spoken
a word, broke out.</p>
<p style="clear: both; padding-top: 1.5px;">“If there ever was a devil treading the earth, it’s
that man. I’ve tol’ Danbury so from the first. Ye
can’t trust that sort. My fingers jus’ itched along the
butt of my weapin’ all the while ye was talkin’.
Seems though a man oughter have a right to plug sech
as him an’ be done with it.”</p>
<p>“You’re prejudiced, Stubbs. I’ll admit the man
is queer, but, after all, he is protecting his own beliefs
and his own people. <SPAN name="P237"></SPAN>I don’t know as I would trust
him any further than you, but––he is something of
a pathetic figure, too, Stubbs.”</p>
<p>“Huh?”</p>
<p>“Looks to me almost like an exile. I’ve got more
to hate him for than you have, but I don’t very long
at a time.”</p>
<p>“Ye’ve got more t’ like him for, too; he’s doin’
his best to git rid of Sorez fer you. But I says, ‘Watch
him. Watch him day an’ night––mos’ particlarly at
night.’”</p>
<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_238' name='page_238'></SPAN>238</span></div>
<p>“But what did he mean by to-morrow? I don’t
know but what we ought to let the treasure go and find
Sorez first.”</p>
<p>“Find Sorez and ye has ter help him; help him
and the Priest fixes us immejiate. Then where’s yer
girl? No, th’ thing for us ter do is ter git th’ treasure
first and get it quick. Then we has somethin’ ter work
with.”</p>
<p>“And if the treasure isn’t there?”</p>
<p>“Get the girl an’ make a run for home. The Priest
won’t touch her so long as he thinks she is jus’ bein’
fooled. If we joins th’ band, he won’t think so an’
will kill us all.”</p>
<p>“I don’t know but what you’re right,” answered
Wilson.</p>
<p>They pushed their tired animals on to the foot of
the mountain and, pausing here just long enough to
catch their breath, began the long ascent. It was
no child’s play from the first. The path was narrow,
rocky, and steep, blocked by undergrowth and huge
boulders, many of which at a touch became loosened
and plunged with a crashing roar down the slope behind
them. With any lesser incentive than that which
drove them on, they would have stopped a dozen
times.</p>
<p>Ahead of them loomed the broken crater edge with
just below it a fringe of stubby trees which broke off
abruptly where the barren lava began. The cone was
like a huge sugar loaf with the upper third cut off
unevenly. The edges were sharp and made a wild
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_239' name='page_239'></SPAN>239</span>
jumble of crags which were broken by many deep
fissures. Here and there the mountain was split into
a yawning chasm. But the growth extended to within
about an eighth of a mile of the top. Here it stopped
and the path became nothing but a dizzy climb up a
slope as steep and smooth as a house roof.</p>
<p>They tethered their animals on the edge of the
green growth and here Stubbs set about making a
camping place for the night.</p>
<p>“I don’t want the dark comin’ down on me,” he
growled as Wilson suggested leaving their things and
pushing on to the top, “not until I finds a solid place
fer my back where nothin’ can come up behin’. You
go on if ye wants to, an’ I’ll git things settled.”</p>
<p>Wilson hesitated, but in the end he was drawn on.
She lay beyond, somewhere upon the shores of the
lake. It was a scramble almost upon hands and knees.
It looked as though it were an impossibility for men
heavily laden ever to make their way to the top. He
turned once to look back, and saw behind him the
green sweep of the beautiful valley of Jaula––then
mile upon mile of heavy timber which extended to
where the lusty mountains began once more. He
attacked the trail anew and at the end of twenty
minutes reached the top, bruised, cut, and exhausted.
He looked down within the cone––not upon death
and desolation, not upon ashes and tumbled rock, but
upon the blue waters of the lake of Guadiva. It lay
nestled within the bosom of this cone at a depth of
just where, on the outside, the green began. The
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_240' name='page_240'></SPAN>240</span>
sun had set early upon it and it now lay a grayish-blue
surface surrounded by a luxuriant tangle of
growing things. In a circle about it stood the dark
buttress of the lava sides. <SPAN name="P240"></SPAN>It was like a turquoise set
in stone. The contrast to its surroundings was as
startling as a living eye of faultless blue in a grinning
skull.</p>
<p>He did not have long to look at it––not long to
search its borders for some sign of the living. The
dark came swiftly. As he was about to turn back,
he thought he caught a glimpse of a spiral of smoke
upon the farther side, but as he stared at this, it faded
until he was not sure it had been at all. He took
it for a good-night message from her. Then gold and
jewels, though they might be within arm’s reach,
became as nothing before the deep desire which almost
dragged his heart from his body––which almost
sent him scrambling down the steep sides within the
cone to make a wild dash to reach her side that
night.</p>
<p>When he returned, he found Stubbs anxiously
waiting for him with supper ready and a shelter for
the night picked out beneath two large rocks which
effectively guarded their rear.</p>
<p>The next morning, as soon as the sun tipped with
pink the snow-capped tops of the Andes, Stubbs was
up and studying the map again. The air during the
night had been sharp, but snugly wrapped in their
blankets both men had secured a sound sleep. Towards
the early morning, however, Wilson had begun
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_241' name='page_241'></SPAN>241</span>
to toss a little with thoughts of Jo. It was of her he
first spoke. Stubbs interrupted him sharply.</p>
<p>“See here, m’ son,” he said with some irritation,
“we ain’t got but a darned short time in which to
work. So th’ only way is to mark out a course now
and stick to it. While you’ve been dreamin’ of yer
lady-love––which is right an’ proper––I’ve been
thinkin’ on how we can git her an’ the other thing
too. Here’s the pint I hed reached when you interrupted
me: first and foremost, ye can’t git th’ girl
until ye gits suthin’ to git her with. Sorez ain’t a-goin’
to listen to you until ye can show him he’s wrong.
He ain’t goneter b’lieve he’s wrong until ye can show
him th’ treasure. Secondly, the Priest gent ain’t
goneter sleep till he finds out what fer we are wanderin’
’round here. Thirdly, when he does find out,
it ain’t goneter be comfortable, as ye might say, to be
seen in this here harbor. Fourthly, it ain’t goneter be
easy to git away with what we does find with a couple
of hundred natives at our heels, which they will be
mighty soon. So, says I, we’d better quit dreamin’
an’ begin fishin’ right erway.”</p>
<p>He paused to see what effect this had. Wilson
nodded for him to go on.</p>
<p>“Then we’ll take another p’int; this here map
starts from the hut where the heathen image lived.
Wherefore we’ve got ter find thet hut afore we can
start. We’ve gotter lay our course from thet. So,
says I, there’s jus’ one thing ter do––hunt fer it
lively.”</p>
<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_242' name='page_242'></SPAN>242</span></div>
<p>“On the other hand,” broke in Wilson, “if Sorez
is in danger, the girl is in danger. The treasure is
going to be here for a while longer, but maybe the
girl won’t. If we could combine forces with
Sorez–––”</p>
<p>“Well, I’m damned!” growled Stubbs. “See
here, m’ boy, the only thing that will do is to
bring the Priest down on <i>us.</i> If Sorez wasn’t crazy,
he wouldn’t have come in here with thet idol with
less than a regiment back of him. But he has, an’
what we wanter do is ter keep outer the squall he’s
in.”</p>
<p>“You don’t understand the man. He is absolutely
fearless. He knows the place––he knows the natives––he
knows the Priest. He won’t be caught
napping.”</p>
<p>“Maybe so. Then he don’t need us.”</p>
<p>Wilson sprang to his feet. He was half ashamed
of an obsession which shut out thought of everything
else but the girl.</p>
<p>“See here, Stubbs,” he blurted out, “you’re right
and I’m a sickly sentimentalist. I’ve been thinking
so much of her that I’m not fit for an expedition of
this sort. But from now on I’m under your orders.
We’ll get this heathen treasure––and we’ll take
it down and show it to Sorez––and we’ll take the
girl and fight our way out if we have to. As you
say, we haven’t much time and we’ve got to work
hard. We know the hut is near the cone and overlooks
the lake. Let’s see–––”</p>
<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_243' name='page_243'></SPAN>243</span></div>
<p>He reached for the map which he had fastened
about his neck, but Stubbs checked his hand.</p>
<p>“Easy, boy. Jus’ as well not to let the shadders
know we has maps. I’ve gut my copy here hidden
in the grass. S’posin’ the hut is in the center; this
here docyment mentions two peaks––one ‘kissed
by the sun’ which I take it is the highest, and t’ other
where ‘the trees climb highest.’ Now at sea we often
lays our course inshore by jus’ sech marks. I figgers
it out this way; these p’ints bein’ startin’ p’ints from
the hut mus’ be somewhere nigh the hut. So if we
finds the tallest peak on the horizon an’ then the peak
on the cone where the trees come up the farthest an’
gits the two in line, we’ll have a straight course for
the hut. Ain’t thet so?”</p>
<p>“Sounds right.”</p>
<p>“Maybe it is; maybe it ain’t. Anyhow, it’s wuth
tryin’. Now I’m for givin’ the burros lots er rope
an’ lettin’ ’em nibble here. Then we’ll hide our provisions
in one place an’ our ammunition in another
and start immedjiate. I ’spect there’s a dozen of
them niggers watchin’ us. We’ll take a good look
roun’ fore we begin.”</p>
<p>Both men beat the bushes for the radius of a hundred
rods or more without, however, bringing to light anything
but a few birds. Then Stubbs piled the provisions
and blankets together with the picks and
shovels into a crevice between the rocks and covered
them with dry leaves and bits of sticks. He made
another reconnoitre before hiding the ammunition.
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_244' name='page_244'></SPAN>244</span>
This he finally buried in another crevice, covering it
so skillfully that not a leaf beneath which it lay looked
as though it had been disturbed. He piled a few stones
in one place, notched a tree in another, and left a bit
of his handkerchief in a third spot, to mark the caché.
Then, shouldering their rifles, the two men began the
ascent.</p>
<p>Refreshed by their rest and the brisk morning air,
they reached the summit easily and once again Wilson
gazed down upon the lake now reflecting golden sunbeams
until it looked as though it were of molten gold
itself. Even Stubbs was moved by its beauty.</p>
<p>“Sorter makes you feel like worshipin’ suthin’
yerself,” he exclaimed.</p>
<p>But he was the practical one of the two, or they
would have got no further. His eyes swept the surrounding
circle of peaks until they rested upon a
majestic pile which so clearly overtopped its fellows
as to leave no doubt that this must be the one “kissed
by the sun.” To the right from where they stood the
second landmark was equally distinct, the green
creeping up its sides several hundred rods higher than
upon the others.</p>
<p>“There ye are!” he exclaimed, pointing them out
to Wilson. “Clear as though they was labeled. An’
now we can’t stand here admirin’ the scenery. There
ain’t no trolley to where we’re bound.”</p>
<p>He led the way, keeping as closely as possible to the
crater’s edge. But the path was a rugged one and
frequently broken by half-hidden ravines which often
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_245' name='page_245'></SPAN>245</span>
drove them down and in a wide circle around. It was
a place for sure feet and sound nerves for they
skirted the edge of sheer falls of hundreds of feet.
<SPAN name="P245A"></SPAN>Before they reached a position opposite the crater peak,
they found themselves almost down to the green line
again. Here they discovered a sort of trail––scarcely
marked more than a sheep path, but still fairly well
outlined. They followed this to the top again. When
they looked down upon the lake and across to the
distant summit, they found the two landmarks in line.
But neither to the right nor to the left could they see
the hut––that magnet which had drawn them for so
many miles over the sea. Stubbs looked disconsolate.</p>
<p>“Well,” he said finally, “jus’ my luck. Mighter
known better.”</p>
<p>“But we haven’t given up yet,” said Wilson.
“Did you expect to find a driveway leading to it?
You get out to the right and I’ll explore to the left.”</p>
<p>Stubbs had not been gone more than ten minutes
before he heard a shout from Wilson and hurrying
to his side found him peering into a small stone hut
scarcely large enough to hold more than a single man.</p>
<p>As the two stood there they felt for the first time
the possibilities which lay before them. <SPAN name="P245B"></SPAN>The quest
loomed larger and more real than ever before. From a
half ghost treasure it became a reality. As the first actual
proof of the verity of the map which they possessed
it gave them a keener vision of what was to come.</p>
<p>“Lord, if it should be true!” gasped Stubbs.</p>
<p>“Man––man, it is!” cried Wilson. “I feel it
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_246' name='page_246'></SPAN>246</span>
tingling through every vein. We are on the very edge
of the biggest treasure a man ever found!”</p>
<p>“What––did the paper say there was? Can you
remember?”</p>
<p>“Gold plate and jewels––over six hundred pieces.
No one knows how valuable they are. Each one might
be a fortune in itself.”</p>
<p>“Gawd!”</p>
<p>Stubbs sat down on the threshold of the little hut.
He drew out his pipe.</p>
<p>“Let’s jus’ think on ’t a minute,” he said.</p>
<p>It was not so much the money value these things
represented that appealed to the men. They could
not grasp that. Nor was it the intrinsic beauty of the
objects themselves. It was just the thrilling consciousness
of being within that golden zone which had
been sought by so many during so many centuries.
Men from the four corners of the earth had come in
search of what now lay within a day’s reach of them;
brave men, men who had made history. Yet they had
failed; the mountains had kept their secret and the
little blue lake had laughed at their efforts.</p>
<p>Wilson broke the spell. He was feverish with the
desire to go farther. It was the exciting finish to a
long race; the last move in a puzzle which had challenged
men for centuries.</p>
<p>“The map, Stubbs! We mustn’t stop here now.”</p>
<p>Stubbs put up his pipe and unrolled once more the
bit of parchment. The directions now seemed brutally
calm.</p>
<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_247' name='page_247'></SPAN>247</span></div>
<p>“From where the peaks kiss,” he read, “take one
hundred strides to the right.”</p>
<p>“We must go back to there,” said Wilson. “Come
on.”</p>
<p>He led the way at a run. This starting point was a
distance of several hundred yards from the hut itself.
From there Wilson took the stated number of steps.
He stopped with a start upon the brink of a hidden
precipice. The chasm was narrow, scarcely ten feet
wide, and from where he stood slanted so that the
bottom could not be seen. But a little way to the
right of here one looked into a sheer drop which ended
in darkness. Wilson wiped his forehead.</p>
<p>“I guess we had better remember what the Priest
says about those with unsteady steps. Another yard
and I would have gone down.”</p>
<p>But Stubbs was again bending over the map.</p>
<p>“The brave do not falter,” it read, “for the seeming
is not always the true. The path leads down twice the
length of a man’s body, then ten paces to the left.
Again the seeming is not true, for it leads back again
and under.”</p>
<p>“Lord!” exclaimed Stubbs, “Why couldn’t he put
this in plain English. There is no sense in that.”</p>
<p>“The path leads down,” repeated Wilson. “That
can mean but one thing; it leads over the edge here.”</p>
<p>“To what? You get into that hole an’–––”</p>
<p>“Let’s have a closer look.”</p>
<p>The opposite side was smooth and sloped in so that
it was lost beneath the side upon which they stood.
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_248' name='page_248'></SPAN>248</span>
A man dropping over would strike this slanting
surface.</p>
<p>“If we had brought a bit of rope now.”</p>
<p>“We’ll have to take the next best thing,” said
Wilson. “Peel off your coat.”</p>
<p>“You don’t mean to go over the side, m’ son?”</p>
<p>“It’s only twice the length of a man’s body,” repeated
Wilson. “If that is so, I ought to strike something
below––a ledge––that we can’t see now.”</p>
<p>“Better wait until we can get a rope. If it ain’t
so, you may drop a mile.”</p>
<p>“It would take two hours to go back. I believe
that phrase ‘the seeming is not always the true’ means
something. Those things were not put in there for
nothing. And it isn’t likely that such a treasure as
this was hidden where it could ever be found by
accident.”</p>
<p>He had stripped off his coat and stood waiting impatiently
for Stubbs. The latter delayed.</p>
<p>“I’ll be damned if you go down there,” he said
finally. “If anyone goes, it’s me. In these sorter
hills ye can’t tell how deep a hole is.”</p>
<p>“I wouldn’t drop any farther than you.”</p>
<p>“Maybe not. But if anyone gits foolish round
here, it’s me.” He added, looking Wilson squarely
in the eyes, “There ain’t no one waiting fer me to
come back.”</p>
<p>But Wilson refused to listen.</p>
<p>“In the first place, I’m the lighter man, Stubbs;
and in the second, I’m the younger. This isn’t a
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_249' name='page_249'></SPAN>249</span>
matter for sentiment, but bull strength. I’m in
earnest, Stubbs; I’m going.”</p>
<p>For a moment Stubbs considered the advisability
of attempting to knock him down. It seemed foolish
for the boy to risk his life to save a matter of two
hours. But when he met again the stubborn eyes
and the jaw which was locked upon the resolution,
he recognized the futility of further protest. He took
off his coat and they tied the two sleeves together.</p>
<p>“Once more afore ye start, boy,––won’t ye consider?”</p>
<p>“Stubbs, this isn’t like you. There is no danger.
Get a good brace with your feet. You won’t have to
bear the full weight because I can climb a little.”</p>
<p>Without more ado Wilson let himself slowly over the
edge. He slipped the length of the sleeves, his feet
dangling in the air over what depth he did not know.
He swung his toes in either direction and felt them
strike the opposite wall. He lowered himself a bit
more, and his toe rested upon what seemed a firm
platform. He was on a projection from the opposite
cliff face which slanted under. He let go the sleeve
and looked down. He found he could step from here
to a narrow path upon the nigh side where at this
point the two walls came almost together. He was
now beneath the place where he had started, which
hung over him like a canopy. The walls again
separated below, revealing a dark cavern.</p>
<p>At the end of a few steps taken with his face flat to
the rock, he found himself again on a narrow trail
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_250' name='page_250'></SPAN>250</span>
which threaded its way over a yawning chasm. He
moved slowly, shuffling one foot ahead and dragging
the other after it. In this way he had gone perhaps
one hundred feet when the path seemed to come to an
abrupt end. His foot dangled over nothing. He almost
lost his balance. When he recovered himself,
he was so weak and dizzy that it was with difficulty
he clung to the rock. In a moment he was able to think.
He had been moving on a downward slope and it was
probable that this was only a more abrupt descent in
the shape of steps. One thing was sure: the path
did not end here, if it really was a path, and not a
chance formation. The opposite ledge had constantly
receded until it was now some thirty feet distant.
The path upon which he stood had narrowed until
it was scarcely over eighteen inches wide at this spot.
There was one other possibility: the ledge at this
point might have crumbled and fallen. In his progress
he had loosened many stones which rattled downwards
out of hearing.</p>
<p>He secured a good balance on his left foot and
cautiously lowered the other. Inch by inch he groped
down keeping his arms as far outstretched as possible.
Finally his toe touched something solid. He ventured
an inch farther at the risk of losing his balance.
He found a more secure footing and, taking a chance,
rested his full weight. The base was firm and he
drew down the other foot. He was on a wider path
than that above. He paused here for the effort had
made his breath come short. It was more the mental
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_251' name='page_251'></SPAN>251</span>
than the physical strain which had weakened him.
It was nerve-racking work. The dark and the silence
oppressed him. There was almost a tomb-like effect
in this slit of the earth where man had not been for
centuries. Once he had ventured to shout to Stubbs
but his voice had sounded so muffled and the effort
had produced in him such a panicky feeling that he
did not try it again.</p>
<p>Once more he shuffled forward and once more his
foot dangled over nothing. But he had gained more
confidence now and lowered it to find another firm
base. Two more steps came after this, and then the
path proceeded on the level once more. He had gone
some forty paces on this last lap when he was brought
up against a face of solid rock. He moved his hands
over it as far as possible in every direction, but he
could not detect any boundaries. It appeared to be
a part of the cliff itself. But once more he recalled
the warning, “The seeming is not always the true.”
Then he tried to recall the details of the directions.
His map was about his neck but he was in such a
position that it would be hazardous to attempt to
reach it. In spite of the many times he had read
it, he could not now remember a word. The more he
tried, the more confused he became.</p>
<p>After all, he had gone farther than he had intended.
The thought of returning came as a relief. The next
time he would have more confidence and could proceed
with less of a strain. And so, step by step, he began
to retrace the path. He was forced to keep his cheek
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_252' name='page_252'></SPAN>252</span>
almost flat to the rock. The dry dust sifted into his
nostrils and peppered his eyes so that he was beginning
to suffer acutely from the inflammation. His
arms, too, began to pain him as he had been unable to
relieve them at all from their awkward position. The
last fifty feet were accomplished in an agony that left
him almost too weak to raise his voice. But he braced
himself and shouted. He received no response. He
lifted his head and reached up an aching arm for the
sleeve which he had left dangling over the cliff. It
was not there. With a sinking heart he realized that
something must have happened to Stubbs. The coats
had probably fallen into the chasm below.</p>
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