His Unknown Wife - His Unknown Wife Part 34
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His Unknown Wife Part 34

He lowered himself to what had been the ceiling of a cabin, and moved cautiously among a litter of rotting wood, evidently the furniture which had once rendered the tiny apartment habitable. He came back with laden hands, and passed out a curiously shaped jug, or flagon.

Maseden examined it critically.

"By Jove!" he cried; "this is Aztec work, and hammered out of solid gold!"

"There's five more of the same sort," said Sturgess, in a voice cracked with excitement. "And _this_ strikes me as something worth while."

He produced a crudely modeled figure of a puma, the body in silver and the head, feet, and tail in gold. The eyes and claws were of polished quartz, and were bright as when the ornament left the hands of the Mexican lapidary who fashioned it. The metals, of course, were tarnished, the silver being black with age, but both men realized that they were gazing at a splendid specimen of a long-forgotten art.

"How much of this sort of stuff is there?" said Maseden, his imagination running riot as to the possible history of this unrecorded argosy.

"Twelve pieces altogether," chuckled Sturgess. "Six gold pitchers, four animals and two carved dishes, each of gold. I've rummaged around carefully, and that's the lot. For'ard of this section is a hold, and, from what I can make out, it was loaded with furs and cloth, but the cargo is all mussed up with salt and lime."

"Show me one of the dishes."

Sturgess brought forth an oval-shaped dish, made, like the vessels, of solid gold. On its broad rim were chased twelve weird-looking creatures which reminded Maseden of the signs of the Zodiac; in the sunken center appeared a very elaborate design consisting of four trees, a bird perched on the topmost branches of each. Long afterwards he learned that this cartoon represented, in Aztec picture-writing, the four famous chiefs who founded the Aztec dynasty.

At any rate, he knew at the time that the hoard which Sturgess had discovered was of great archaeological interest, apart from the intrinsic value of the precious metals, itself no small sum.

"We ought to devote the necessary time to a thorough survey of the wreck," he said thoughtfully. "Meanwhile what have you at the back of your head about Nina and Madge? What did you mean by saying it would make matters easier?"

"Well, suppose you and I agree to give 'em the proceeds of the sale,"

and Sturgess handled one of the jugs lovingly. "There's sixty ounces of pure specie in this pretty thing alone, I'll bet. Then, if it dates away back, the price goes up like a rocket."

Maseden knew that the really important part of his question had been avoided.

"We must think it over," he said.

"Think _what_ over?"

Sturgess, whose face was on a level with Maseden's knees, scowled up at his friend with such an air of indignant surprise that the other man laughed.

"I am not planning a daylight robbery of two fatherless orphans,"

explained Maseden. "Our difficulty will be to persuade these two to accept their legitimate half share, let alone the whole of the plunder.

Shan't we give them a hail, and let them see the pirate's _cache_ before breakfast? Because that is what it is. These things were stolen from some Aztec shrine."

"Why Aztec?"

"Why not?"

"Peru is a far more likely place."

"Yes, if these utensils were not of Mexican origin. The signs on the dishes are the animal-names used in the Aztec calendar."

"Crushed again!" said Sturgess, clambering out of the wreck. "But say, professor, how did you ever manage to stow away those odds and ends of information? I'm your age, and not exactly a fool, but I never had time to read."

"You never made time, you mean. If you had lived seven years on a solitary ranch you would be forced to buy books and read them. My inclination turned naturally to the records of the country I lived in.

The stories of the Spanish invaders in Mexico to the north and Peru to the south were more romantic than any novel. You've heard of Captain Kidd, the buccaneer, of course, but I suppose you know nothing of the Welshman Henry Morgan, and his exploits on the Spanish Main?"

"Not as much as would go on a dime in big type."

"Well, Morgan would have made Kidd shine his boots if they had ever met."

"Gee whiz! Hennery must have been _some_ Thug.... Hi, Madge. Where's Nina?"

"You two ought to have been washed quarter of an hour ago," came Madge's wrathful cry. "I've been looking for you everywhere. Breakfast will be spoiled!"

"Madge is quite right," said Maseden. "Breakfast is more important than loot. Eat first, and discuss the pile afterwards."

This sound advice availed him or Sturgess little afterwards. Both girls were vexed that the discovery was kept from them even during that short space of half an hour. They were placated, however, by being allowed to share in the labor of clearing a sufficient area around and above the wreck to permit of its exact size being ascertained. It was only a small craft, the keel measuring some fifty feet in length, yet, as Maseden was careful to point out, the early navigators deemed such vessels large enough to cross the mighty Atlantic.

When the tide rose, and the wreck was flooded again, it floated. This was foreseen, and the expectant watchers had a number of stout poles in readiness, with which they under-pinned the hull on one side. Thus it was rendered much easier of access later.

Beyond a couple of beautifully carved and chased rapiers, the blades of which were largely protected by leather scabbards hardened by salt water, and a number of copper cooking utensils, they found nothing more of value. The cargo, which appeared to have been furs and mats of painted reeds, was wholly destroyed. The vessel had carried two masts, whose stumps, broken off short near the deck, seemed to indicate the mischance which had befallen her in the Pacific. There were no cannon or other arms of any sort in or under the wreck, but as she had surely come there by way of Providence Beach and Hell Gate, she had probably rolled over countless times during the journey.

She was built of oak. The bluff bows and high-pitched forecastle and poop dated her as a product of the early seventeenth century. No trace of a name was discernible, but the bulwarks had been torn off. The absence of an elaborate figurehead was significant. She was a strongly constructed, but not highly finished little ship.

As to her history or nationality, the only reliable tokens were the swords, which were Spanish, with Toledo blades. The copper cooking-pots were Mexican. In a word, she was ostensibly a trader, and Maseden believed that the iron-clamped box containing the treasure had been hidden beneath the floor of the cabin, because the planks were broken where the heavy package had apparently fallen through.

One thing was certain. The similarity of the six flagons, the two dishes and the four animal figures showed that they came from an Aztec _teocalli_, or temple, of great wealth and importance. It was highly improbable that any town on the west coast of Mexico contained any such fame. If, therefore, they had been looted from the interior of the country, a reasonable assumption was that some band of Spanish adventurers, finding the way hopelessly blocked to the east, fought their way westward, and actually built the vessel which should convey them to far-off Cadiz.

It was a strange hap that laid bare their plunder to the eyes of four descendants of the race which was destined to sweep them and their barbarous methods off the high seas.

After a day of hard work and many thrills, Maseden was moved to accept the discovery as a good omen.

"I had in my mind to suggest that we should renew our voyage by to-morrow's first tide," he said, as they sat near the camp-fire after the evening meal. "Just as the Romans consulted the oracle before starting on any great undertaking, so have we been given a happy augury by having thrust into our hands, so to speak, a notable treasure.

Friends, I propose that we accept the decision of the gods, and weigh anchor in the morning."

For no assignable reason, the suddenness of this resolve seemed to startle the others.

"Have you made up your mind, then, that the channel is practicable?"

inquired Sturgess after a marked pause.

"The only channel we know is practicable," said Maseden.

"Do you mean that we should return the way we came?" put in Nina in an awed tone.

"It offers our only means of escape," was the grave answer. "To my mind, if we attempt the southern exit we go to certain death. We have a roomy boat, a sail, and oars. By putting off slightly before high water we can reach the mouth of the gorge just on the turn of the tide. I think we can get through without any real difficulty, and even beach our boat in the open and shallow channel of Hanover Island which we were making for when the raft was swept out of its course. We have discussed the tides many times, and we all believe that we shall find ourselves in the main tidal stream again on the other side of that island opposite," and he pointed to the mass of black hills outlined against the eastern sky. "It is only the 'lesser of two evils,' I admit, but it yields a possibility; whereas I regard any attempt to navigate the southern avenue as absolutely fatal."

"Why the rush for the morning tide?" queried Sturgess.

Then Maseden laughed.

"You have fallen a victim to the prospecting mania," he said cheerfully.

"Having made a good strike, you want to follow it up. I don't blame you.

I believe this beach would pay well for digging. Before you were through with the search you would have a fine collection of odds and ends. But I'm minded to be superstitious for once. That puma with the glistening eyes has seemed to wink at me all day and say 'Get me and yourself out of this quick!' I don't want to impose my wishes on you others, but my advice is: Start to-morrow!"

Madge, listening intently, nodded.