登陆注册
26272600000030

第30章 CHAPTER VIII(1)

As it was still some hours before dawn, and Freeman was too weak to travel, it was decided to encamp beside the pyramid till the following evening, and then make the trip across the desert in the comparative coolness of starlight. Meanwhile, there was something to be done, and much to be explained.

The spirit of Kamaiakan had passed away, apparently at the same moment that the peculiar case of "possession" under which Miriam had suffered came to an end. They determined to bury him at the foot of the great pyramid, which would form a fitting monument of his antique character and virtues.

Miriam, after her struggle, had lapsed into a state of partial lethargy, from which she was aroused gradually. It was then found that she could give no account what ever of how or why she came there. The last thing she distinctly remembered was standing on the veranda at the ranch and looking towards the east. She was under the impression that Kamaiakan had approached and spoken with her, but of that she was not certain. The next fact in her consciousness was that she was held in Freeman's arms, with a feeling that she had barely escaped from some great peril. She could recall nothing of the journey down the gorge, of the adventure at the bottom of it, or of the return. It was only by degrees that some partial light was thrown upon this matter. Freeman knew that he was at the entrance of the cave when the earthquake began, and he remembered receiving a blow on the head. Consequently it must have been at that spot that Miriam and the Indian found him. He had, too, a vague impression of seeing Miriam coming out of the cave, dragging the chest; and there, sure enough, was a metal box, strapped to the saddle of the pack-mule. But the mystery remained very dense. And although the reader is in a position to analyze events more closely than the actors themselves could do, it may be doubted whether the essential mystery is much clearer to him than it was to them.

"We know that the ancient Aztecan priests were adepts in magic," observed the professor, "and it's natural that some of their learning should have descended to their posterity. We have been clever in giving names to such phenomena, but we know perhaps even less about their esoteric meaning than the Aztecans did. I should judge that Miriam would be what is called a good 'subject.' Kamaiakan discovered that fact; and as for what followed, we can only infer it from the results. I was always an admirer of Kamaiakan; but I must say I am the better resigned to his departure, from the reflection that Miriam will henceforth be undisturbed in the possession of her own individuality."

"As near as I could make out, she called herself Semitzin," put in Freeman.

"Semitzin?" repeated the general.

"Why, if I'm not mistaken, there are accounts of an Aztecan princess of that name, an ancestress of my wife's family, in some old documents that I have in a box, at home."

"That would only add the marvel of heredity to the other marvels," said Meschines. "Suppose we leave the things we can't understand, and come to those we can?"

"I have something to say, General Trednoke," said Freeman.

"I think I have already guessed what it may be, Mr. Freeman," returned the general, gravely. "Old people have eyes, and hearts too, as well as young ones."

"Come, Trednoke," interposed the professor, with a chuckle, "your eyes might not have seen so much, if I hadn't held the lantern."

"I love your daughter, and I told her so yesterday morning," went on Freeman, after a pause. "I meant to tell you on my return. I know I don't appear desirable as a son-in-law. But I came here on a commission----"

"Meschines and I have talked it all over," the general said. "When an old West-Pointer and a professor of physics get together, they are sometimes able to put two and two together. And, to tell the truth, I received a letter from a member of your syndicate, who is also an acquaintance of mine, which explained your position. Under the circumstances, I consider your course to have been honorable. You and I were both in search of the same thing, and now, as it appears, nature has sent an earthquake to do our affair for us. No operations of ours could have achieved such a result as last night's disturbance did; and if that do not prove effective, nothing else will."

"If it turns out well, I was promised a share in the benefits," said Freeman, "and that would put me in a rather better condition, from a worldly point of view."

"After all," interrupted Meschines, "you found your way to the spot from which the waters broke forth, and may fairly be entitled to the credit of the discovery.--Eh, Trednoke? At any rate, we found nothing.

--Yes, I think they'll have to admit you to partnership, Harvey: and Miriam too,-- who, by the way, seems to be the only one who actually penetrated into this cave you speak of. Maybe the removal of the chest pulled the plug out of the bung-hole, as it were: the escape of confined air through such a vent would be apt to draw water along with it. By the way, let's have a look at this same chest: it looks solid enough to hold something valuable."

"I would like, in the first place, to hear what General Trednoke has to say about what I have told him," said Freeman, clearing his throat.

"Miriam," said the general, "do you wish to be married to this young man?"

The old soldier was sitting with her hand in his, and he turned to her as he spoke.

She threw her arms round his neck, and pressed her face against his shoulder. "He is to me what you were to mamma," she said, so that only he could hear.

"Then be to him what she was to me," answered the general, kissing her. "Ah me, little girl! I am old, but perhaps this is the right way for me to grow young again.

Well, if you are of the same mind six months hence----"

"Worse; it will be much worse, then," murmured the professor. "Better make it three."

同类推荐
  • Sally Dows

    Sally Dows

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 台湾杂咏合刻

    台湾杂咏合刻

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • My Discovery of England

    My Discovery of England

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 勘处播州事情疏

    勘处播州事情疏

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 道门十规

    道门十规

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 蒙面歌王

    蒙面歌王

    流浪歌手苏洛离奇得到了一面神奇的面具自此娱乐圈出现了一个传奇歌手:他是《中国好声音》第四季最有看点的导师。他是《我是歌手》第三季当之无愧的歌王。韩国人称他的歌声是天籁之声。他的歌声征服了大和民族......
  • 武斗机铠

    武斗机铠

    漆黑的世界中究竟有些什么呢?谁能够看清这片黑色所隐藏的秘密呢?“哒!哒!”他身着黑色的铠甲,戴着头盔,腰间配着一把暗红色的剑,手持长枪,枪头系着一条长巾,鲜红欲滴。突然,他停了下来,看着前方,目光雷裂。“轰!轰!”震天巨响,一个庞然大物正缓步前行着,每一步落下都能让大地剧烈震动。突然,它停了下来,猩红色的眼珠盯着前方,大吼一声,猛地向前冲去。......
  • 我的小萌狐

    我的小萌狐

    黑云压顶,劈碎天空的紫雷直朝着一处山洞砸去。只见一只全身雪白,浑身没有一丝杂毛的小狐狸。
  • 雪夜幻世行

    雪夜幻世行

    这方天地。有和尚不守戒律,冲冠一怒为红颜,祸乱天下。有道士厚颜无耻,为达目的不择手段,却普救众生。有儒士胸藏丘壑,经纶满腹为社稷,终一统天下。但一样是这方天地,修道途中,有飞来横祸,还未得道,便身死。神仙龙佛,妖魔鬼怪,魑魅魍魉,你方唱罢我登场,谱写旷世赞歌!可能对一个凡俗之人来说,得到一本秘笈、收获一柄仙剑便是摸到了九天仙界的门槛。而主角,一剑便将九天仙界劈作两半!
  • 莫须有的爱情

    莫须有的爱情

    也许会有这么一首歌曲去歌颂真挚的爱情,尽管大多数人都不承认爱情的存在。为什么那些当初很爱的人到后来都背叛了,出轨了,是爱情经不起考验吗?亲爱的,让我告诉你,因为那原本就不是爱情。
  • 我是高手你咋滴

    我是高手你咋滴

    一个从山沟沟里走出的孩子…一个神秘的黑曜石之戒…一个强大的幕后黑手…他,带着无上使命踏上寻宝之路!当一切都应该正常的谢幕时,本该结束的寻宝路途。竟没想到,他!就是幕后黑手!却又被卷入另一场世俗纷争。一个又一个谜团被解开…一个又一个亲人在失去…终于等到最后时,却发现……
  • 瘟疫德鲁伊

    瘟疫德鲁伊

    “别碰我,会毒死你的”,一只熊对着对面的人说。
  • 樱花恋之千面樱花

    樱花恋之千面樱花

    桃花年年有,今年特别多。ps:前面可能写的不太好,见谅,见谅
  • 我愿是

    我愿是

    生活除了锅碗瓢盆,还要有诗意。这是几年写下的一些诗,忧伤、郁闷曾几何时包围了我,因为有诗让我跌跌撞撞终于走过来。
  • Within an Inch of His Life

    Within an Inch of His Life

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。