uld cut and run
like a lot of schoolboys."
"Hist!" I said softly.
For Garcia was now evidently appealing most strongly to one who appeared
to be the leader of the Indians--a tall, bronzed giant of a fellow, who
pointed, waved his arms about, and made some long reply.
"I'd give something to understand all that, Mas'r Harry," whispered Tom.
"He says that if the senor's enemies and the searchers for the sacred
treasure are in this direction, the great spirit who dwells in this part
of the cave has flown with them down into the great hole that reaches
right through the world."
"Uncle!" I exclaimed, as he whispered these words close to our ears.
"I was uneasy about you, Harry," he replied. "But who is that--Garcia?
Ah! he will never get the Indians to come here. They dread this gloomy
place, and believe it is full of the departed souls of their tribe. I
have heard that they will never come beyond a certain point, and this
must be the point."
Standing where we did we could plainly see all that was taking place,
even to the working of the excited countenances. Garcia was evidently
furious with disappointment, and, as my uncle afterwards informed me,
spared neither taunt nor promise in his endeavours to get the Indians
forward, telling them that they risked far more from their gods by
leaving the treasure-takers unpunished than by going in there after
them. He told them that they must proceed now--that it was imperative,
and as he spoke in a low, deep voice, it gave us a hint as to our own
remarks, for the cavern was like some great whispering gallery, and his
words came plainly to us, though few of them were intelligible to my
ear.
All Garcia's efforts seemed to be in vain, and the Indians were
apparently about to return, when our enemy made a last appeal.
"No," said the Indian, who was certainly the leader; "we have done our
part. We have chased them to the home of the great god Illapa, and he
will punish them. They took away the great treasure, but have they not
brought it back? It would be offending him, and bringing down his wrath
upon us, if we did more. If the treasure-seekers should escape, then we
would seize them; but they will not, for yonder is the great void where
Illapa dwells; and those who in olden times once dared to go as far were
swallowed up in the great home of thunder."
The Indian spoke reverently and with a display of dignity, beside which
the rage and gesticulations of Ga
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