"
"Jewels," murmured Hope under his breath. "I thought as much."
"The son of Inca Caxas married a Spanish lady and made peace with
the Spaniards. He came to live at Cuzco, and brought with him,
for some purpose which the manuscript does not disclose, the
mummy of his father. But the manuscript was lost for years, and
although my family--the De Gayangoses--became poor, no member
of it knew that, concealed in the corpse of Inca Caxas, were two
large emeralds of immense value. The mummy of our royal ancestor
was treated as a sacred thing and venerated accordingly.
Afterwards my family came to live at Lima, and I still dwell in
the old house."
"But how was the mummy stolen from you?" asked Random curiously.
"I am coming to that," said Don Pedro, frowning at the
interruption. "I was not in Lima at the time; but I had met the
man who stole the precious mummy."
"Was he a Spaniard?"
"No," answered Don Pedro slowly, "he was an English sailor
called Vasa."
"Vasa is a Swedish name," observed Hope critically.
"This man said that he was English, and certainly spoke like an
Englishman, so far as I, a foreigner, can tell. At that time,
when I was a young man, civil war raged in Peru.
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