Manco, the Peruvian Chief Part 12
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Without answering me, he lifted me up, and led me towards the open air.
An impulse I could not restrain made me turn my head; and on the ground, close to where I had rested, I saw the corpse of a man. Trembling in every limb, I stopped to look at it. It was that of a white man.
Several ghastly wounds were seen on the broad chest, and another on the head. The dress and the full black beard and moustache showed me that he was a Spaniard. There were no other corpses to be seen; and as I looked at the object in the broad daylight, with the fresh breeze blowing in my face, the undefined horror I had before felt completely vanished. I felt ashamed of my previous fears, and releasing myself from his support, a.s.sured him that I had recovered my strength. The effort itself a.s.sisted to restore my nerves to their usual tension; and I was able to turn back and examine the corpse.
"Who can have murdered the man and placed him here?" I asked.
Manco shook his head. "It is a bad thing--a very bad thing!" he replied, as he examined the wounds of the man. "I fear my countrymen have done it. He must have been taken prisoner, for I find the marks of cords round his wrists, and he attempted to escape, and thus was killed; but ask no further questions. Come, it is time to proceed."
The little mule was safe outside, so I mounted and hastened from the spot.
As I rode on, my spirits returned with the air and exercise, and my mind no longer dwelt on the events of the previous night; and the effects of the _surumpe_ also began to wear off. Several rock-rabbits crossed our path, two of which Manco shot; and when we came to a height which sheltered us from the wind, we halted for breakfast. Having tethered the mule, we set to work to collect the dry gra.s.s and the stems of creepers growing from the clefts of the rocks for fuel. Manco had with him the means of striking a light, and a fire was soon kindled, over which we cooked the rabbits and boiled some cocoa in a tin pannikin, by the aid of which, with some Indian corn bread, we made a very fair meal.
In an hour more we reached the edge of the _Alto_, or high plain, over which we had been travelling. Before us lay, deep and deeper, the dark valleys of the lower mountain regions, among which, scarcely discernible, were scattered numerous Indian villages. Far beyond a more level country stretched out, till it was lost in the distant line of the horizon. For several hours we descended, till we began to experience a very great change of temperature. We rested that night at a village inhabited entirely by Indians. It was situated among such inaccessible rocks that they had no fear of being surprised by the Spaniards. To my great grief, Manco told me that he must quit me by dawn on the morrow.
I of course could not be so selfish as to wish to detain him.
"I have been, fortunately, able to find a trustworthy guide for you," he said. "He is a lad a year or so younger than you are, but very quick and intelligent. He is of a white complexion, though he has an Indian heart, for he has been among us from his childhood. When an infant he was discovered by some of our people in a wood near a Spanish village, and was brought hither by them. Their idea is, that either he had been deserted by his mother, or that his parents had been murdered by robbers, who, for some reason or other, saved his life. He is called Pedro. He speaks Spanish well; and should you fall among the Spaniards, he will be supposed to belong to their people. Should you discover your parents, of which I have no hopes, give him his liberty, and he will return to us; and if you abandon the attempt, he will lead you back to us. But I will bring him to you, and he will speak for himself."
On this Manco left the hut where we were lodging, and soon returned, accompanied by a youth, whose clear complexion and full black eyes showed that he was descended from the race who had conquered Peru.
"Are you willing to accompany me, Pedro?" I asked in Spanish. "You will probably have many dangers to encounter."
He looked at me attentively for some time, as if examining my countenance to judge if he could trust me, before he answered.
"Yes," he at length said. "I will aid you gladly in the work you are about. I care not for dangers. G.o.d will protect me, as He has before done."
I was much struck with his words and manner, and gladly accepted his services.
"But I have no means of rewarding you, Pedro," I remarked. "Some day I may have, but the time is probably far distant."
"A good action is its own reward," he answered, in an unaffected tone.
"I require no reward. My chief and benefactor wishes me to go; and I desire to obey him."
Pedro was an unusual character. He possessed all the genius and fire of his Spanish fathers, with the simple education of an Indian uncontaminated by mixing with the world. The next morning he appeared habited in the dress of a Spanish farmer's son, which was the character he was to a.s.sume should he be interrogated. He rode a mule similar to mine. He and I set forward together towards the west at the same time that Manco started to return to the Indian camp. I found that Manco had supplied him amply with money to pay our expenses, when we should reach the territory inhabited by Spaniards; but he told me that we should require none while we wandered among the Indian villages.
"I thought that all the Indians were poor, and that even a chief like Manco would have little or no money," I remarked.
He smiled as he answered, "When men are slaves, if they are wise they conceal their wealth, lest their masters should take it from them.
These mountains are full of rich mines of gold and silver, with which none but the Indians are acquainted. Many such exist, known only to particular families, to whom the knowledge has been handed down from father to son. Perhaps Manco has such a mine; but he is too wise to speak of it."
I did not think it right to inquire further about the source of Manco's wealth; but I was satisfied that he could spare what he had provided for me. My young guide, however, was inclined to be communicative, and he beguiled the way by a number of interesting anecdotes.
"O yes," he continued; "the Indians are wise to conceal their riches; for if the Spaniards discovered them, they would no longer be theirs.
Not far from this, there lives a good padre, the curate of the parish.
He is very much liked by all the Indians, though he has his faults like other men. He is very kind-hearted and generous, and is ready to administer to the sick in body as well as in mind; but he is sadly addicted to gambling. He will play all day and night with anybody who will play with him, till he has lost his last real, and has often, I know, to go supperless to bed. When the Indians know by his looks and his staying at home that he is in poverty, they will send him fowls and eggs, and bread and provisions of all sorts. One day he had just received his yearly stipend, when the evil spirit came upon him, and he went away to the nearest town and lost it all. He came home very miserable, and could scarcely attend to his duties. Fortunately for him, an Indian, whose sick child he had attended, had compa.s.sion on his grief, and told him to be comforted. The next day, as soon as it was dark, the Indian came to his house, bringing a bag full of rich silver ore. The padre was very grateful; but instead of spending it wisely to supply his wants, he took it into the town, and it went the way of his stipend--into the pockets of his gambling companions. Again he returned home as full of grief as before. The Indian soon heard of what had happened, for he loved the padre very much; so he brought him another bag of silver. The padre's propensity was incurable, and he lost that as he had done the first. The Indian's generosity was not yet worn out, and he brought him a third bag full of ore. When the padre saw it, he could scarcely believe his own senses.
"'I fear that I am robbing you, my kind friend,' he said. 'I shall bring you into the poverty to which I have foolishly reduced myself.'
"'O no, Senor Padre; there is plenty more where this comes from,'
returned the Indian. 'What I have given you is but like a drop of water in the ocean to the abundance of rich ore which there lies concealed.'
"'If that be the case, my kind friend, why not show it to me?' exclaimed the padre. 'I shall soon become a rich man, and will no longer think of gambling.'
"After much persuasion, the Indian agreed to lead the padre to the mine, on condition that he would consent to be blindfolded both going and returning. The next night they accordingly set out, the Indian leading the padre by the hand. After walking for some hours, the bandage was taken from the padre's eyes, and he found himself in a spot he had never before visited. The Indian set to work, and clearing away a quant.i.ty of earth and bushes, exposed to the delighted eyes of the padre a cave full of glittering ma.s.ses of pure silver.
"'There, Senor Padre, is the mine I spoke of. Take as much as you can carry, and we will return speedily home,' said the Indian.
"The padre filled a number of bags he had brought with him under his cloak, till he could scarcely stagger onwards with the weight. While also he was collecting the treasure, avarice seized his soul, and he forgot the dictates of honour. He was then again blindfolded; and he set forward on his return in the same manner as he had come. But though he had got as much silver as would have supplied him with food and clothing for many years, he wanted more. He contrived, therefore, as he thought unperceived, to break the string of his rosary, and as he returned he dropped one bead, then another, hoping thus to trace his way by means of them back to the mine. At last he reached home, congratulating himself on his cleverness. Of what use, he thought, is all that silver to the Indians? They are not the better for it, but I shall know how to spend it. He was eager to set out the next morning, when just as he was leaving his house, the Indian stepped in at his door.
"'Ah, Senor Padre, I am come to see how you are after your long walk,'
said the Indian, smiling.
"'Very well, my son--very well, thank the saints,' answered the padre.
'I am just going out to take another.'
"'I hope it may be a pleasant one, Senor Padre,' observed the Indian.
'But I forgot--I came to return you your rosary, which you dropped last night.'
"And to the dismay of the padre, the Indian gave him all the beads which he had carefully collected. The padre had nothing to say for himself; but the Indian did not utter any other rebuke, though he never again offered to bring him any more silver ore."
"I think the Indian behaved very well; but I can find no excuse for the padre," I remarked.
With similar stories, which he told with far more spirit than I have at this distance of time been able to give to them, Pedro endeavoured to divert my mind from dwelling on the thoughts which he saw oppressed it.
He certainly succeeded better than I could have expected.
Our road led us over a lofty height, at the summit of which we halted to rest ourselves and our mules. As we were sitting on the ground, and employed in eating our dinner, we observed a large condor high above us in the air. He approached us with outstretched wings, and at first I thought that he had been attracted by the provisions we carried, and that he was about to attack us. I c.o.c.ked a gun Manco had given me, and prepared to shoot him should he come near us; but he pa.s.sed beyond us, and presently he pounced down on the ground at some distance off.
Instead, however, of his rising again with his prey in his talons as we expected, we saw him violently flapping his wings; and, to our great surprise, directly afterwards he was surrounded by a number of Indians, who began to strike him about the head with sticks to keep him quiet.
Our curiosity induced us to run as fast as we could towards the spot, when we found that the condor had been caught in a trap laid on purpose for him. A hole had been dug in the ground, over which had been spread a fresh cowhide, with parts of the flesh still adhering to it.
Underneath this an Indian had concealed himself with a rope in his hand.
The condor, attracted by the smell of the flesh, had darted down on the hide, when the Indian below had firmly bound his claws together, and held on with all his might, the cowhide protecting him from the attacks of the bird's beak. The other Indians had been concealed near the spot to help their companion. They quickly secured the monster bird, and prepared to carry him off in triumph to their village. At first when we appeared, they looked suspiciously at us; but after Pedro had spoken to them, their looks brightened up, and they invited us to accompany them to their dwellings, which were on the other side of the height.
We gladly accepted their invitations, for they lived near the road we wished to pursue. I have so often spoken of the wretchedness of Indian huts, and of the coa.r.s.eness of the food, that I need not describe them.
They were no exceptions to the general rule. The scene before them was wild and dreary. At some distance off appeared a ma.s.s of long rushes, beyond which extended a sheet of water, the opposite sh.o.r.e of which was scarcely visible. Numerous flocks of waterfowl were hovering over the marshy banks of this lake, which I found was of very considerable extent, though inferior to that of t.i.ticaca, the largest in South America.
Pedro and I were sitting round a fire in the hut with our Indian hosts, before retiring to rest, when a loud moaning noise was heard in the distance. The Indians regarded each other with terrified looks.
"What can cause that noise?" I inquired of Pedro. He shook his head, and turned to one of the Indians.
"It forebodes evil to the herdsmen," answered the man. "In yonder lake, which is so profound that no plummet has ever reached the bottom, there dwell huge monsters, neither beasts nor fish. No man has ever seen one near; but at night, when the moon is s.h.i.+ning, they have been descried at a distance, prowling about in search of prey. When that noise is heard, which has just sounded in our ears, it is a sign that they have attacked some of the cattle feeding in the surrounding pastures; and to-morrow morning there is no doubt several will be found missing."
"But cannot the monsters be caught or killed?" I asked. "Surely it is foolish in the herdsmen to allow the cattle to be killed with impunity."
"Who would venture to do it?" exclaimed the Indian with a look of horror. "Besides, I told you, Senor, that no one has seen them near enough to observe their form; and sure I am that neither stones cast from slings, nor arrows shot from bows, nor bullets from guns, would pierce their hides."
"I should like to encounter one of these monsters," I replied. "A ball from a good rifle would soon enable me to judge what they are like."
"May Heaven protect you from such an adventure!" answered the Indian.
"If I ever return here, we will see."
I said this because I very much doubted the existence of the monsters he spoke of, and suspected that the moanings we heard arose most probably from some of the cattle which had sunk into the marshes near the lake, and were unable to extricate themselves. In every part of the world where I have since been, I have heard similar legends, and have in most instances been able to discover a very probable explanation of the mystery.
Manco, the Peruvian Chief Part 12
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