<h2>CHAPTER XXIV</h2>
<h3><i>Those in the Hut</i></h3>
<p class="dropcap" ><span class="dcap">In</span> an angle formed by two cliff sides, within a
stone’s throw of the lake of Guadiva, a native,
Flores by name, had built himself a hut. Here he
lived with his mate Lotta in a little Nirvana of his
own, content with his love and his task of tending
a flock of sheep which furnished them both with food
and clothing. Few came near this hut. The sky
above, the lake before, and the mountains round about
were all his, his and his alone even as was the love
of the dark-eyed woman near him. Within their
simple lives they had sounded the depths of despair
and reached the heights of bliss.</p>
<p>The woman Lotta was the daughter of a chieftain
of the tribe of Chibca, one whose ancestry went far
back into the history of the Golden One. Some of
them had been priests, some of them guards, and all
of them had fought hard for their god. But the father
of this girl incurred the displeasure of the Priest and
finally, not yielding to discipline, his wrath. The
stern autocrat of these tribes condemned him to extreme
punishment––a fast of thirty days in the hut
upon the mountain top––the hut of the Golden God.
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_287' name='page_287'></SPAN>287</span>
Cowed and frightened, the man, somewhat feeble with
sickness, bade good-bye to his daughter and climbed
the rugged path. Below, the girl waited day after
day until the strain became unbearable. She ventured,
knowing well what the penalty was, to visit him
with food. She found him groaning upon the stone
floor, eaten by fever and racked with pain. She
nursed him until her supplies were exhausted and
then came down for more, choosing a secret path which
she in her rambles as a girl had discovered. It was then
she heard whispered among the gossips news of a white
stranger with marvelous powers who was hiding in
the hut of a neighbor. It was just after the battle
with the men from the sea––a battle terrible in its
ferocity. This man was one of the refugees from the
scattered army, sheltered at first for gold and later
because of the power he possessed of stopping pain.
A wounded native, member of the family which
sheltered him, had been brought in suffering agonies
and the stranger had healed him with the touch of a
tiny needle. Lotta heard these things and that night
found the stranger’s hiding place and begged him to
follow. He knew enough of the native language to
understand and––to make his bargain. If she would
guide him to the mountain pass, he would follow.</p>
<p>The man was Sorez.</p>
<p>The next few hours were burned into Sorez’ mind
forever. At her heels he had clawed his way up the
steep hillside expecting at every step a spear thrust
in his back. He tore his hands and knees, but, drawn
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_288' name='page_288'></SPAN>288</span>
on by a picture of the girl, moving shadow-like in the
moonlight ahead of him, he followed steadily after.
Pausing for breath once he saw the dark fringe of
trees below the lava slopes, the twinkle of the camp
fires, and over all the clear stars. But this region
here was a dead region. He felt as if he were moving
through some inferno, some ghastly haunt of moaning
specters, with the dark-faced girl guiding him like
some dead love. On they climbed in silence until his
head began to swim with the exertion and the rarefied
air. Suddenly the girl disappeared as though she had
dropped over a precipice. To the left he saw a small
path leading over a yawning chasm. She beckoned
and he felt his way along. Then they came upon a
tiny plateau upon which had been built a hut of rocks.</p>
<p>The scene within was terrible. Upon the stone floor
lay a brown-skinned skeleton with bulging eyes and
clawing fingers muttering incoherently. Sorez could do
nothing but administer a small injection of the soothing
drug, but this brought instant relief and with it a few
moments of sanity. The doctor had picked up a small
vocabulary and gathered from what the dying man
muttered that he, Sorez, a very much bruised and
weary mortal, was being mistaken for one from heaven.
A smile lighted the haggard face of the invalid and the
bony hands came together in prayer. The girl bent
over him and then drew back in horror. She met the
eyes of her father in some new-found wonder, gasping
for breath. Then she bent her ear once more. The
message, whatever it was, was repeated. Still, as
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_289' name='page_289'></SPAN>289</span>
though half doubting, she moved to the rear of the hut
and pounded with a large rock against what was
apparently the naked face of the cliff in which the
hut was built. It swung in, revealing a sort of shrine.
Within this reposed a golden image. She turned her
eyes again upon her father and then without hesitation
took out the idol and handed it to Sorez.</p>
<p>“The God of Gods,” she whispered, bending low her
head.</p>
<p>“But I don’t want your god,” protested the doctor.</p>
<p>“You must. He says it is for you to guard.”</p>
<p>He had taken it carelessly to humor the dying man.
And when the latter closed his eyes for all time, Sorez
remembered that the heathen image was still in his
possession. He started to return it to the shrine, but
the girl threw herself before him.</p>
<p>“No. The trust is yours.”</p>
<p>Well, it would be a pleasant memento of an incident
that was anything but pleasant. He brought it down
the mountain side and put it beneath his blanket.</p>
<p>It was not until several days later that bit by bit he
came to a realization of that which he had so lightly
taken. The old man who brought his food whispered
the news through ashen lips.</p>
<p>“The Golden One is gone.”</p>
<p>“Who is the Golden One?”</p>
<p>“The Golden God in the hut above who guards the
secret of the sacred treasure. It is said that some day
this image will speak and tell where the lost altar lies.”</p>
<p>The whole tribe was in the grip of an awful terror
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_290' name='page_290'></SPAN>290</span>
over this disappearance. But the Priest proved master
of the situation.</p>
<p>“It will be found,” he said.</p>
<p>In the excitement Sorez found his opportunity to
escape, with the help of the girl, the image still beneath
his coat,––the image fated to light in him the same
fires which drove on Raleigh and Quesada. Before
he reached the home trail he had a chance to see this
strange Priest of whom he had heard so much in connection
with the rumored treasure in the lake. He
came upon him, a tall, sallow-faced man, when within
an hour of safety. Sorez had never before met eyes
such as looked from beneath the skull-like forehead of
this man; they bored, bored like hot iron. The Priest
spoke good English.</p>
<p>“Leave the image,” he said quietly.</p>
<p>Sorez, his hand upon a thirty-two caliber revolver,
laughed (even as Quesada had laughed) and disappeared
in the dark. The next time he met the Priest
was many months later and many thousand miles from
the Andes.</p>
<p>The girl who, at the command of her father, had
given Sorez the image was made an exile in consequence
of this act by a decree of the priest. But the
thread of love is universal. It is the strain out of
which springs all idealism––even the notion of God––and
as such is bounded by neither time nor place. It
is in the beating hearts of all things human––the definition
perhaps of humanity. Civilization differs from
savagery in many things, but both have in common,
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_291' name='page_291'></SPAN>291</span>
after all, whatever is eternal; and love is the thing
alone which we know to be eternal. Just human love––love
of man for woman and woman for man.</p>
<p>Flores followed her into the mountains among which
they had both grown. <SPAN name="P291"></SPAN>He built a shelter for her,
bought sheep and toiled for her, and with her, found
the best of all that a larger life brings to many. The
Priest, of course, could have easily annihilated the
two, but he hesitated. There was something in the
hearts of his people with which he dare not tamper.
So the two had been able to live their idyl in peace,
though Flores slept always with one eye open and his
knife near.</p>
<p>It was quite by accident that Sorez and the tired girl
came upon the two at the finish of his second journey
into these mountains. The woman in the hut recognized
him instantly and bade him welcome. The one-room
structure was given up to the women while Flores
built near it a leanto for himself and Sorez. This
simplified things mightily for the exhausted travelers,
and gave them at once the opportunity for much-needed
rest. They slept the major part of two days, but Sorez
again showed his remarkable recuperative powers by
awaking with all his old-time strength of body and
mind. He accepted the challenge of the lake and
mountains with all his former fearlessness. He
thought no more of the danger which lurked near him
than he did of the possible failure of his expedition.
It was this magnificent domination of self, this utter
scorn of circumstance, which made such a situation
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_292' name='page_292'></SPAN>292</span>
as this in which he now found himself with the girl
possible. No ordinary man would, with so weak a
frame, have dared face such a venture.</p>
<p>To the girl he had been as thoughtful and as kind
as a father. He lavished upon her a care and affection
that seemed to find relief for whatever uneasiness of
conscience he felt. Though Sorez realized that the
Priest must know of his presence here and would spare
no effort to get the image, he felt safe enough in this
hut. With a few simple defenses Flores had made
secret approach to the hut practically impossible. The
cliff walls protected them from the rear, while approach
from the front could be made only by the lake,
save for short distances on either side. Across these
spaces Flores had sprinkled dry twigs and so sensitive
had his hearing become by his constant watchfulness
that he would awake instantly upon the snapping of
one of these. As a further precaution he placed his
sheep at night within this enclosure, knowing that no
one could approach without exciting them to a panic.</p>
<p>Moreover, Sorez suspected that the Priest had kept
secret from the tribe his failure to recover the image
after his long absence in pursuit of it. Not only was
such a loss a reflection on his power, but it challenged
the power of the Golden Man himself. Would the Sun
God allow such a thing? Could the image be gone
with no divine manifestations of its loss? Such questions
were sure to be asked. The Priest had no men
he could trust with a secret so important. He would
work alone. The matter would end with a rifle
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_293' name='page_293'></SPAN>293</span>
bullet or a stab in the dark––if it ended in favor of
the Priest. With the vanishing of the treasure and
the return of the image––if in favor of Sorez.</p>
<p>During the three days they had spent at the lake
Jo had grown very serious and thoughtful. This
seemed such a fairy world in which they were living
that things took on new values. The two were seated
around the fire with Flores and his wife in the shadows,
when the girl spoke of new fears which had possessed
her lately. Led on as much by what she herself saw
and continued to see in the crystals, by the fascination
she found in venturing into these new and strange
countries, but above all by the domination of this
stronger and older personality, she had until now
followed without much sober thinking. If she hesitated,
if she paused, he had only to tell of some rumor
of a strange seaman in the city of Bogova or repeat
one of the dozen wild tales current of Americans who
had gone into the interior in search of gold and there
been lost for years to turn up later sound and rich.
He had hurried her half asleep from the house at
Bogova and frightened her into silent obedience by
suggesting that Wilson might by force take her back
home when upon the eve of finding her father. She
had looked again into the crystal and as always had
seen him wandering among big hills in a region much
like this. What did it all mean? She did not know,
but now a deeper, more insistent longing was lessening
the hold of the other. Her thoughts in the last
few days had gone back more often than ever they had
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_294' name='page_294'></SPAN>294</span>
to the younger man who had played, with such vivid,
brilliant strokes, so important a part in her life. She
felt, what was new to her, a growing need of him––a
need based on nothing tangible and yet none the less
eager. She turned to Sorez.</p>
<p>“I am almost getting discouraged,” she said.
“When shall we turn back?”</p>
<p>“Soon. Soon. Have you lost interest in the treasure
altogether?”</p>
<p>“The treasure never mattered very much to me,
did it? You have done your best to help me find my
father, and for that I am willing to help you with this
other thing. But I am beginning to think that neither
of the quests is real.”</p>
<p>She added impulsively:</p>
<p>“Twice I have left the most real thing in my life––once
at home and once in Bogova. I shall not do it
again.”</p>
<p>“You refer to Wilson?”</p>
<p>“Yes. Here in the mountains––here with Flores
and his wife, I am beginning to see.”</p>
<p>“What, my girl?”</p>
<p>“That things of to-day are better worth than things
of to-morrow.”</p>
<p>Sorez shifted a bit uneasily. He had come to care
a great deal for the girl––to find her occupying the
place in his heart left empty by the death of the niece
who lived in Boston. He was able less and less to consider
her impersonally even in the furtherance of this
project. He would have given one half the fortune he
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_295' name='page_295'></SPAN>295</span>
expected, really to be able to help the girl to her father.
He had lied––lied, taking advantage of this passionate
devotion to entice her to the shores of this lake with
her extraordinary gift of crystal-seeing. He was beginning
to wonder if it were worth while. At any rate,
he would be foolish not to reap the reward of his
deceit at this point.</p>
<p>“Well,” he concluded brusquely, “we must not get
gloomy on the eve of victory. To-morrow the moon is
full––do you think you will be strong enough to come
with me to-morrow night to the shrine of the Golden
Man?”</p>
<p>“Yes,” she answered indifferently.</p>
<p>“He chose his own and surely he will not desert
the agent of his choosing.”</p>
<p>“No,” answered the girl.</p>
<p>Her eyes rested a moment upon the silver lake before
her and then upon the cliffs beyond. She had an odd desire
this evening to get nearer to those walls of granite.
A dozen times she had found her eyes turning to them
and each time she obeyed the impulse it was followed
by a new longing for David. She wished he were
here with her now. She wished he was to be with her
to-morrow night when Sorez took her out upon the lake
with him. She did not mind gazing into the eyes of
the image, of sinking under their spell, but now––this
time––she would feel better if he were near her.
She had a feeling as though he <i>were</i> somewhere near
her––as though he were up there near the cliffs which
she faced.</p>
<hr class='major' />
<SPAN name='CHAPTER_XXV_WHAT_THE_STARS_SAW' id='CHAPTER_XXV_WHAT_THE_STARS_SAW'></SPAN>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />