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Virgin of the Sun, The
BOOK II   BOOK II - CHAPTER VIII - THE FIELD OF BLOOD
H.Rider Haggard
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       _ When on the morrow Huaracha, King of the Chancas, heard all this story
       and that Urco had given poison to his daughter Quilla, who, if she
       still lived at all, did so, it was said, as a blind woman, a kind of
       madness took hold of him.
       "Now let war come; I will not rest or stay," he cried, "till I see
       this hound, Urco, dead, and hang up his skin stuffed with straw as an
       offering to his own god, the Sun."
       "Yet it was you, King Huaracha, who sent the lady Quilla to this Urco
       for your own purposes," said Kari in his quiet fashion.
       "Who and what are you that reprove me?" asked Huaracha turning on him.
       "I only know you as the servant or slave of the White-Lord-from-the-
       Sea, though it is true I have heard stories concerning you," he added.
       "I am Kari, the first-born lawful son of Upanqui and by right heir to
       the Inca throne, no less, O Huaracha. Urco my brother robbed me of my
       wife, as through the folly of my father, upon whose heart Urco's
       mother worked, he had already robbed me of my inheritance. Then, to
       make sure, he strove to poison me as he has poisoned your daughter,
       with a poison that would make me mad and incapable of rule, yet leave
       me living--because he feared lest the curse of the Sun should fall
       upon him if he murdered me. I recovered from that bane and wandered to
       a far land. Now I have returned to take my own, if I am able. All that
       I say I can prove to you."
       For a while Huaracha stared at him astonished, then said:
       "And if you prove it, what do you ask of me, O Kari?"
       "The help of your armies to enable me to overthrow Urco, who is very
       strong, being the Commander of the Quichua hosts."
       "And if your tale be true and Urco is overthrown, what do you promise
       me in return?"
       "The independence of the Chanca people, who otherwise must soon be
       destroyed, and certain other added territories which you covet, while
       I am Inca."
       "And with this my daughter, if she still lives?" asked Huaracha
       looking at him.
       "Nay," replied Kari firmly. "As to the lady Quilla I promise nothing.
       She has vowed herself to my Father the Sun, and what I have already
       told the Lord Hurachi here, who loves her I tell you. Henceforward no
       man may look upon her, who is the Bride of the Sun, for if I suffered
       this, certainly the curse of the Sun would fall upon me and upon my
       people. He who lays a hand upon her I will strive to slay"--here he
       looked at me with meaning--"because I must or be accurst. Take all
       else, but let the lady Quilla be. What the Sun has, he holds forever."
       "Perhaps the Moon, her mother, may have something to say in that
       matter," said Huaracha gloomily. "Still, let it lie for the while."
       Then they fell to discussing the terms of their alliance and, when it
       came to battle, what help Kari could bring from among those who clung
       to him in Cuzco.
       After this Huaracha took me to another chamber, where we debated the
       business.
       "This Kari, if he be Kari himself, is a bigot," he said, "and if he
       has his way, neither you nor I will ever set eyes on Quilla again,
       because to him it is sacrilege. So, what say you?"
       I answered that it would be best to make an alliance with Kari, whom I
       knew to be honest and no Pretender, since without his help I did not
       think that it would be possible to defeat the armies of the People of
       the Incas. For the rest, we must trust to chance, making no promises
       as to Quilla.
       "If we did they would avail little," said Huaracha, "seeing that
       without doubt she is dead and only vengeance remains to us. There is
       more poison in Cuzco, White Lord!"
        
       Eight days later we were marching on Cuzco, a great host of us,
       numbering at least forty thousand Chancas and twenty-five thousand of
       the rebellious Yuncas, who had joined our standard.
       On we marched by the great road over mountains and across plains,
       driving with us numberless herds of the native sheep for food, but
       meeting no man, since so soon as we were out of the territory of the
       Chancas all fled at our approach. At length one night we camped upon a
       hill named Carmenca and saw beneath us at a distance the mighty city
       of Cuzco standing in a valley through which a river ran. There it was
       with its huge fortresses built of great blocks of stone, its temples,
       its palaces, its open squares, and its countless streets bordered by
       low houses. Moreover, beyond and around it we saw other things,
       namely, the camps of a vast army dotted with thousands of white tents.
       "Urco is ready for us," said Kari to me grimly as he pointed to these
       tents.
       We camped upon the hill Carmenca and that night there came to us an
       embassy which spoke in the names of Upanqui and Urco, as though they
       reigned jointly. This embassy of great lords who all wore discs of
       gold in their ears asked us what was our purpose. Huaracha answered--
       to avenge the murder of the lady Quilla, his daughter, that he heard
       had been poisoned by Urco.
       "How know you that she is dead?" asked the spokesman.
       "If she is not dead," replied Huaracha, "show her to us."
       "That may not be," replied the spokesman, "since if she lives, it is
       in the House of the Virgins of the Sun, whence none come out and where
       none go in. Hearken, O Huaracha. Go back whence you came, or the
       countless army of the Incas will fall upon you and destroy you, you
       and your handful together."
       "That is yet to be seen," answered Huaracha, and without more words
       the embassy withdrew.
       That night also men crept into our camp secretly, who were of the
       party of Kari. Of Quilla they seemed to know nothing, for none spoke
       of those over whom the veil of the Sun had fallen. They told us,
       however, that the old Inca, Upanqui, was still in Cuzco and had
       recovered somewhat from his sickness. Also they said that now the feud
       between him and Urco was bitter, but that Urco had the upper hand and
       was still in command of the armies. These armies, they declared, were
       immense and would fight us on the morrow, adding, however, that
       certain regiments of them who were of the party of Kari would desert
       to us in the battle. Lastly, they said that there was great fear in
       Cuzco, since none knew how that battle would end, which was understood
       by all to be one for the dominion of Tavantinsuyu.
       They had nothing more to say except that they prayed the Sun for our
       success to save them from the tyranny of Urco. This prince, it
       appeared, suspected their conspiracy, for now the rumour that Kari
       lived was everywhere, and having obtained the names of some who were
       connected with it through his spies, he pursued them with murder and
       sudden death. They were poisoned at their food; they were stabbed as
       they walked through the streets at night; their wives, if young and
       fair, vanished away, as they believed into the houses of those who
       desired them; even their children were kidnapped, doubtless to become
       the servants of whom they knew not. They had complained of these
       things to the old Inca Upanqui, but without avail, since in such
       matters he was powerless before Urco who had command of the armies.
       Therefore they would even welcome the triumph of Huaracha, which meant
       that Kari would become Inca if with lessened territory.
       Before they parted to play their parts, Kari brought them before me,
       whom in their foolishness they worshipped, believing me to be in truth
       a god. Then he told them to have no fear, since I would command the
       armies of Huaracha in the battle.
       Having surveyed the ground while the light lasted, for the most of
       that night, together with Huaracha and Kari, I toiled, making plans
       for the great fight that was to come. All being ready, I lay down to
       sleep awhile, wondering whether it were the last time I should do so
       upon the earth and, to tell the truth, not caring overmuch who,
       believing that Quilla was dead, had it not been for my sins which
       weighed upon me with none to whom I might confess them, should have
       been glad to leave the world and its troubles for whatever might lie
       beyond, even if it were but sleep.
       There comes a time to most men when above everything they desire rest,
       and now that hour was with me, the exiled and the desolate. Here in
       this strange country and among these alien people I had found one soul
       which was akin to mine, that of a beautiful woman who loved me and
       whom I had come to love and desire. But what was the end of it? Owing
       to the necessities of statecraft and her own nobleness, she had been
       separated from me and although, as it would seem, she had as yet
       escaped defilement, was spirited away into the temple of some
       barbarous worship where I was almost sure death had found her.
       At the best she was blinded, and where she lay in her darkness no man
       might come because of the superstitions of these folk. Even if Kari
       became Inca, it would not help me or her, should she still live, since
       he was the fiercest bigot of them all and swore that he would kill me,
       his friend, rather than that I should touch her, the vowed to his
       false gods.
       Or perhaps, through the priests, to save himself such sorrow, he would
       kill her. At the least, dead or not, she was lost to me, while I--
       utterly alone--must fight for a cause in which I had but one concern,
       to bring some savage prince to his end because of his crime against
       Quilla. And, if things went well and this chanced, what of the Future?
       Of what use to me were rewards that I did not want, and the worship of
       the vulgar which I hated? Rather would I have lived out my life as the
       humblest fisherman on Hastings beach, than be made a king over these
       glittering barbarians with their gold and gems which could buy nothing
       that I needed, not even a Book of Hours to feed my soul, or the sound
       of the English tongue to comfort my empty heart.
       At length I fell asleep, and as it seemed but a few minutes later,
       though really six hours had gone by, was awakened by Kari, who told me
       that the dawn was not far off and came to help me to buckle on my
       armour. Then I went forth and together with Huaracha arranged our army
       for battle. Our plan was to advance from our rising ground across a
       great plain beneath us which was called Xaqui, but afterwards became
       known by the name of Yahuar-pampa, or Field of Blood.
       This plain lay between us and the city of Cuzco, and my thought was
       that we would march or fight our way across it and rush into the city
       which was unwalled, and there amidst its streets and houses await the
       attack of the Inca hosts that were encamped upon its farther side, for
       thus protected by their walls we hoped that we should be more equal to
       them. Yet things happened otherwise, since with the first light,
       without which we did not dare to move over unknown ground, we
       perceived that during the darkness the Inca armies had moved round and
       through the town and were gathered by the ten thousand in dense
       battalions upon the farther side of the plain.
       Now we took council together and in the end decided not to attack as
       we had proposed, but to await their onslaught on the rocky ridge up
       which they must climb. So we commanded that our army, which was
       marshalled in three divisions abreast and two wings with the Yuncas as
       a reserve behind, should eat and make ready. In the centre of our main
       division, which numbered some fifteen thousand of the Chanca troops,
       and a little in front of it, was a low long hill upon the highest
       point of which I took my place, standing upon a rock with a group of
       captains and messengers behind me and a guard of about a thousand
       picked men massed upon the slopes and around the hill. From this high
       point I could see everything, and in my glittering armour was visible
       to all, friends and foes together.
       After a pause, during which the priests of the Chancas and of the
       Yuncas behind us sacrificed sheep to the moon and the many other gods
       they worshipped, and those of the Quichuas, as I could see from my
       rock, made prayers and offerings to the rising sun, with a mighty
       shouting the Inca hosts began to advance across the plain towards us.
       Reckoning them with my eye I saw that they outnumbered us by two or
       three to one; indeed their hordes seemed to be countless, and always
       more of them came on behind from the dim recesses of the city. Divided
       into three great armies they crept across the plain, a wild and
       gorgeous spectacle, the sunlight shining upon the forest of their
       spears and on their rich barbaric uniforms.
       A furlong or more away they halted and took counsel, pointing to me
       with their spears as though they feared me. We stood quite still,
       though some of our generals urged that we should charge, but this I
       counselled Huaracha not to do, who desired that the Quichuas should
       break their strength upon us. At length some word was given; the
       splendid "rainbow Banner" of the Incas was unfurled and, still divided
       into three armies with a wide stretch of plain between each of them
       they attacked, yelling like all the fiends of hell.
       Now they had reached us and there began the most terrible battle that
       was told of in the history of that land. Wave after wave of them
       rolled up against us, but our battalions which I had not trained in
       vain stood like rocks and slew and slew and slew till the dead could
       be counted by the thousand. Again and again they strove to storm the
       hill on which I stood, hoping to kill me, and each time we beat them
       back. Picking out their generals I loosed shaft after shaft from my
       long bow, and seldom did I miss, nor could their cotton-quilted armour
       turn those bitter arrows.
       "/The shafts of the god! The shafts of the god!/" they cried, and
       shrank back from before me.
       There appeared a man with a yellow fillet on his head and a robe that
       was studded with precious stones; a huge man with great limbs and
       flaming eyes; a loose-mouthed, hideous man who wielded a big axe of
       copper and carried a bow longer than any I had seen in that land.
       Hooking the axe to his belt, he set an arrow on the bow and let drive
       at me. It sped true and struck me full upon the breast, only to
       shatter on the good French mail, which copper could not pierce.
       Again he shot, and this time the arrow glanced from my helm. Then I
       drew on him and my shaft, that I had aimed at his head, cut away the
       fringe about his brow and carried it far away. At this sight a groan
       went up from the lords about him, and one cried:
       "An omen, O Urco, an evil omen!"
       "Aye," he shouted, "for the White Wizard who shot the arrow."
       Dropping the bow, he rushed up the hill at me roaring, axe aloft, and
       followed by his company. He smote, and I caught the blow upon my
       shield, and striking back with Wave-Flame, shore through the shaft of
       the axe that he had lifted to guard his head as though it had been
       made of reed, aye, and through the quilted cotton on his shoulder
       strengthened with strips of gold, and to the bone beneath.
       Then a man slipped past me. It was Kari, striking at Urco with
       Deleroy's sword. They closed and rolled down the slope locked in each
       other's arms. What chanced after this I do not know, for others rushed
       in and all grew confused, but presently Kari limped back somewhat
       shaken and bleeding, and I caught sight of Urco, little hurt, as it
       seemed, amidst his lords at the bottom of the slope.
       At this moment I heard a great shouting and looking round, saw that
       the Quichuas had broken through our left and were slaughtering many,
       while the rest fled, also that our right was wavering. I sent
       messengers to Huaracha, bidding him call up the Yunca rear guard. They
       were slow in coming and I began to fear that all was lost for little
       by little the hordes of the men of Cuzco were surrounding us.
       Then it was that Kari, or some with him, lifted a banner that had been
       wrapped upon a pole, a blue banner upon which was embroidered a golden
       sun. At the sight of it there was tumult in the Inca ranks, and
       presently a great body of men, five or six thousand of them that had
       seemed to be in reserve, ran forward shouting, "/Kari! Kari!/" and
       fell upon those who were pursuing our shattered left, breaking them up
       and dispersing them. Also at last the Yuncas came up and drove back
       the regiments that assailed our right, while from Urco's armies there
       rose a cry of "Treachery!"
       Trumpets blew and the Inca host, gathering itself together and
       abandoning its dead and wounded, drew back sullenly on to the plain,
       and there halted in three bodies as before, though much lessened in
       number.
       Huaracha appeared, saying:
       "Strike, White Lord! It is our hour! The heart is out of them."
       The signal was given, and roaring like a hurricane, presently the
       Chancas charged. Down the slope they went, I at the head of them with
       Huaracha on one side and Kari on the other. The swift-footed Chancas
       outran me who was hindered by my mail. We charged in three masses as
       we had stood on the ridge, following those open lanes of ground up
       which the foe had not come, because these were less cumbered with dead
       and wounded. Presently I saw why those of Cuzco had left these lanes
       untrod, for of a sudden some warriors, who had outstripped me,
       vanished. They had fallen into a pit covered over with earth laid upon
       canes, of which the bottom was set with sharp stakes. Others, who were
       running along the lanes of open ground to right and left, also fell
       into pits of which there were scores all carefully prepared against
       the day of battle. With trouble the Chancas were halted, but not
       before we had lost some hundreds of men. Then we advanced again across
       that ground over which the Inca host had retreated.
       At length we reached their lines, passing through a storm of arrows,
       and there began such a battle as I had never heard of or even dreamed.
       With axes, stone-headed clubs and spears, both armies fought
       furiously, and though the Incas still outnumbered us by two to one,
       because of my training our regiments drove them back. Lord after lord
       rushed at me with glaring eyes, but my mail turned their copper spears
       and knives of flint. Oh! Wave-Flame fed full that day, and if
       Thorgrimmer my forefather could have seen us from his home in
       Valhalla, surely he must have sworn by Odin that never had he given it
       such a feast.
       The Inca warriors grew afraid and shrank back.
       "This Red-Beard from the sea is indeed a god. He cannot be slain!" I
       heard them cry.
       Then Urco appeared, bloody and furious, shouting:
       "Cowards! I will show you whether he cannot be slain."
       He rushed onward to meet--not me, but Huaracha, who seeing that I was
       weary, had leapt in front of me. They fought, and Huaracha went down
       and was dragged away by some of his servants.
       Now Urco and I were face to face, he wielding a huge copper-headed
       club with which, as my mail could not be pierced, he thought to batter
       out my life. I caught the blow upon my shield, but so great was the
       giant's strength that it brought me to my knees. Next second I was up
       and at him. Shouting, I smote with both hands, for my shield had
       fallen. The thick, turban-like headdress that Urco wore was severed,
       cut through as the axe had been, and Wave-Flame bit deep into the
       skull beneath.
       Urco fell like a stunned ox and I sprang upon him to make an end. Then
       it was that a rope was flung about my shoulders, a noosed rope that
       was hauled tight. In vain I struggled. I was thrown down; I was seized
       by a score of hands and dragged away into the heart of Urco's host.
       Waiting till a litter could be brought, they set me on my feet again,
       my arms still bound by the noose that these Indians call /laso/, which
       they know so well how to throw, the red sword Wave-Flame still hanging
       by its thong from my right wrist. Whilst I stood thus, like a bull in
       a net, they gathered round, staring at me, not with hate as it seemed
       to me, but in fear and with reverence. When at length the litter came
       they aided me to enter it quite gently.
       As I did so I looked back. The battle still raged but it seemed to me
       with less fury than before. It was as though both sides were weary of
       slaughter, their leaders being fallen. The litter was borne forward,
       till at length the noise of shouting and tumult grew low. Twisting
       myself round I peered through the back curtains and saw that the Inca
       host and that of the Chancas were separating sullenly, neither of them
       broken since they carried their wounded away with them. It was plain
       that the battle remained drawn for there was no rout and no triumph.
       I saw, too, that I was entering the great city of Cuzco, where women
       and children stood at the doors of the houses gazing, and some of them
       wringing their hands with tears upon their faces.
       Passing down long streets and across a bridge, I came to a vast square
       round which stood mighty buildings, low, massive, and constructed of
       huge stones. At the door of one of these the litter halted and I was
       helped to descend. Men beautifully clad in broidered linen led me
       through a gateway and across a garden where I noted a marvellous
       thing, namely: that all the plants therein were fashioned of solid
       gold with silver flowers, or sometimes of silver with golden flowers.
       Also there were trees on which were perched birds of gold and silver.
       When I saw this I thought that I must be mad, but it was not so, for
       having no other use for the precious metals, of which they had so much
       abundance, thus did these Incas adorn their palaces.
       Leaving the golden garden, I reached a courtyard surrounded by rooms,
       to one of which I was conducted. Passing its door, I found myself in a
       splendid chamber hung with tapestries fantastically wrought and having
       cushioned seats, and tables of rich woods incrusted with precious
       stones. Here servants or slaves appeared with a chamberlain who bowed
       deeply and welcomed me in the name of the Inca.
       Then, as though I were something half divine, gently enough, they
       loosed the sword from my wrist, took the long bow from my back, with
       the few arrows that remained, also my dagger, and hid them away. They
       unbound me, and freeing me from my armour, as I told them how, and the
       garments beneath, laved me with warm, scented water, rubbed my bruised
       limbs, and clothed me in wonderful soft garments, also scented and
       fastened about my middle with a golden belt. This done, food and
       spiced drinks of their native wine were brought to me in golden
       vessels. I ate and drank and, being very weary, laid myself down upon
       one of the couches to sleep. For now I no longer took any thought as
       to what might befall me, but received all as it came, good and ill
       together, entrusting my body and soul to the care of God and St.
       Hubert. Indeed, what else could I do who was disarmed and a prisoner?
       When I awoke again, very stiff and bruised, but much refreshed, night
       had fallen, for hanging lamps were lit about the room. By their light
       I saw the chamberlain of whom I have spoken standing before me. I
       asked him his errand. With many bows he said that if I were rested the
       Inca Upanqui desired my presence that he might speak with me.
       I bade him lead on, and, with others who waited without, he conducted
       me through a maze of passages into a glorious chamber where everything
       seemed to be gold, for even the walls were panelled with it. Never had
       I dreamt of so much gold; indeed the sight of it wearied me till I
       could have welcomed that of humble brick or wood. At the end of this
       chamber that was also lit with lamps, were curtains. Presently these
       were drawn by two beautiful women in jewelled skirts and head-dresses,
       and behind them on a dais I saw a couch and on the couch the old Inca
       Upanqui looking feebler than when I had last beheld him in the Chanca
       city, and very simply clad in a white tunic. Only on his head he wore
       the red fringe from which I suppose he never parted day or night. He
       looked up and said:
       "Greeting, White-Lord-from-the-Sea. So you have come to visit me after
       all, though you said that you would not."
       "I have been brought to visit you, Inca," I answered.
       "Yes, yes, they tell me they captured you in the battle, though I
       expect that was by your own will as you had wearied of those Chancas.
       For what /laso/ can hold a god?"
       "None," I answered boldly.
       "Of course not, and that you are a kind of god there is no doubt
       because of the things you did in that battle. They say that the arrows
       and spears melted when they touched you and that you shot and cut down
       men by scores. Also that when the prince Urco tried to kill you,
       although he is the strongest man in my kingdom, you knocked him over
       as though he had been a little child and hacked his head open so that
       they do not know whether he will live or die. I think I hope he will
       die, for you see I have quarrelled with him."
       I thought to myself that so did I, but I only asked:
       "How did the battle end, Inca?"
       "As it began, Lord Hurachi. A great many men have been killed on both
       sides, thousands and thousands of them, and neither army has the
       victory. They have drawn back and sit growling at each other like two
       angry lions which are afraid to fight again. Indeed, I do not want
       them to fight, and now that Urco cannot interfere, I shall put a stop
       to all this bloodshed if I am able. Tell me, for you were with him,
       why does this Huaracha, who I hear is also wounded, want to make war
       on me with those troublesome Chancas of his?"
       "Because your son, the prince Urco, has poisoned, or tried to poison,
       his only child, Quilla."
       "Yes, yes, I know, and it was a wicked thing to do. You see, Lord,
       what happened was this: That lovely Quilla, who is fairer than her
       mother the Moon, was to have married Urco. But, Lord, as it chanced on
       our journey together, although I am old--well, she became enamoured of
       me, and prayed me to protect her from Urco. Such things happen to
       women, Lord, whose hearts, when they behold the divine, are apt to
       carry them away from the vulgar," and he laughed in a silly fashion
       like the vain old fool that he was.
       "Naturally. How could she help it, Inca? Who, after seeing you, would
       wish to turn to Urco?"
       "No one, especially as Urco is a coarse and brutal fellow. Well, what
       was I to do? There are reasons why I do not wish to marry again at my
       age; indeed I am tired of the sight of women, who want time to pray
       and think of holy things; also if I had done what she wished, some
       might have thought that I had behaved badly to Urco. At the same time,
       a woman's heart is sacred and I could not do violence to that of one
       so sweet and understanding and lovely. So I put her into the House of
       the Virgins of the Sun where she will be quite safe."
       "It seems that she was not safe, Inca."
       "No, because that violent man, Urco, being disappointed and very
       jealous, through some low creature of his, who waited on the Virgins,
       tried to poison her with a drug which would have made her all swollen
       and hideous and covered her face with blotches, also perhaps have sent
       her mad. Luckily one of the matrons, whom we call /Mama-conas/,
       knocked the cup away before she drank, but some of the horrible poison
       went into her eyes and blinded her."
       "So she lives, Inca."
       "Certainly she lives. I have learnt that for myself, because in this
       country it is not wise to trust what they tell you. You know as Inca I
       have privileges, and although even I do not talk to them, I caused
       those Virgins of the Sun to be led in front of me, which in strictness
       even I ought not to have done. It was a dreary business, Lord Hurachi,
       for though those Virgins may be so holy, some of them are very old and
       hideous and of course Quilla as a novice came last in the line
       conducted by two /Mama-conas/ who are cousins of my own. The odd thing
       is that the poison seems to have made her much more beautiful than
       before, for her eyes have grown bigger and are glorious, shining like
       stars seen when there is frost. Well, there she is safe from Urco and
       every other man, however wicked and impious. But what does this
       Huaracha want?"
       "He wants his blinded daughter back, Inca."
       "Impossible, impossible! Who ever heard of such a thing! Why, Heaven
       and Earth would come together and the Sun, my father, and her husband,
       would burn us all up. Still, perhaps, we could come to an agreement
       for Huaracha must have had enough fighting and very likely he will
       die. Now I am tired of talking about the lady Quilla and I want to ask
       you something."
       "Speak on, Inca."
       Suddenly the old dotard's manner changed: he became quick and shrewd,
       as doubtless he was in his prime, for this Upanqui had been a great
       king. At the beginning of our talk the two women of whom I have spoken
       and the chamberlain had withdrawn to the end of the chamber where they
       waited with their hands folded, like those who adore before an altar.
       Still he peered about him to make sure that none were within hearing,
       and in the end beckoned to me to ascend the dais and sit upon the
       couch beside him, saying:
       "You see I trust you although you are a god from the sea who has been
       fighting against me. Now hearken. You had a servant with you, a very
       strange man, who is said also to have come out of the sea, though that
       I cannot believe since he is like one of our princes. Where is that
       man?"
       "With the army of Huaracha, Inca."
       "So I have heard. I heard also that in the battle he hoisted a banner
       with the sun blazoned on it, and that thereon certain regiments of
       mine deserted to Huaracha. Now, why did they do that?"
       "I understand, O Inca, that the kings of this land have many children.
       Perhaps he might be one of them."
       "Ah! You are clever as a god should be. Well, I am a god also and the
       same thought has come to me, although as a fact I have only had two
       legitimate sons and the others are of no account. The eldest of these
       was an able and beautiful prince named Kari, but we quarrelled, and to
       tell the truth there was a woman in the matter, or rather two women,
       for Kari's mother fought with Urco's mother whom I loved, because she
       never scolded me, which the other did. So Urco was named to be Inca
       after me. Yet that was not enough for him who remained jealous of his
       brother Kari who outpassed him in all things save strength of body.
       They wooed the same beautiful woman and Kari won her, whereon Urco
       seduced her from him, and afterwards he or someone killed her. At
       least she died, I forget how. Then the lords of the Inca blood began
       to turn towards Kari because he was royal and wise, which would have
       meant civil war when I had been gathered to the Sun. Therefore Urco
       poisoned him, or so it was rumoured; at any rate, he vanished away,
       and often since then I have mourned him."
       "The dead come to life again sometimes, Inca."
       "Yes, yes, Lord-from-the-Sea, that happens; the gods who took them
       away bring them back--and this servant of yours--they say he is so
       like to Kari that he might be the same man grown older. And--why did
       those regiments, all of them officered by men who used to love Kari,
       go over to Huaracha to-day, and why do rumours run through the land
       like the wind that springs up suddenly in fine weather? Tell me of
       this servant of yours and how you found him in the sea."
       "Why should I tell you, Inca? Is it because you want to kill him who
       is so like to this lost Kari of yours?"
       "No, no--gods can keep each other's counsel, can they not? It is
       because I would give--oh! half my godship to know that he is alive.
       Hark you, Urco wearies me so much that sometimes I wonder whether he
       really is my son. Who can tell? There was a certain lord of the
       coastlands, a hairy giant who, they said, could eat half a sheep at a
       sitting and break the backs of men in his hands, of whom Urco's mother
       used to think much. But who can tell? No one except my father, the
       Sun, and he guards his secrets--for the present. At least Urco wearies
       me with his coarse crimes and his drunkenness, though the army loves
       him because he is a butcher and liberal. We quarrelled the other day
       over the small matter of this lady Quilla, and he threatened me till I
       grew wrath and said that I would not hand him my crown as I had
       purposed to do. Yes, I grew wrath and hated him for whose sake I had
       sinned because his mother bewitched me. Lord-from-the-Sea," here his
       voice dropped to a whisper, "I am afraid of Urco. Even a god such as I
       am can be murdered, Lord-from-the-Sea. That is why I will not go to
       Yucay, for there I might die and none know it, whereas here I still am
       Inca and a god whom it is sacrilege to touch."
       "I understand, but how can I help you, Inca, who am but a prisoner in
       your palace?"
       "No, no, you are only a prisoner in name. At the worst Urco will be
       sick for a long while, since the physicians say that sword of yours
       has bitten deep, and during that time all power is mine. Messengers
       are at your service; you are free to come and go as you will. Bring
       this servant of yours to my presence, for doubtless he trusts you. I
       would speak with him, O Lord-from-the-Sea."
       "If I should do this, Inca, will the lady Quilla be given back to her
       father?"
       "Nay, it would be sacrilege. Ask what else you will, lands and rule
       and palaces and wives--not that. Myself I should not dare to lay a
       finger on her who rests in the arms of the Sun. What does it matter
       about this Quilla who is but one fair woman among thousands?"
       I thought awhile, then answered, "I think it matters much, Inca.
       Still, that this bloodshed may be stayed, I will do my best to bring
       him who was my servant to your presence if you can find me the means
       to come at him, and afterwards we will talk again."
       "Yes, I am weary now. Afterwards we will talk again. Farewell, Lord-
       from-the-Sea." _