Victory is to the Cross of the Christians!’
Thus he wailed, then came the sound of sword blows and I knew that this prophet was dead also.
Now a strong arm pulled the dying priest from off us, and he staggered back till he fell over the altar where the eternal fire burned, quenching it with his blood and body after it had flared for many generations, and a knife cut the rope that bound us.
I sat up staring round me wildly, and a voice spoke above me in Castilian, not to me indeed but to some comrade.
‘These two went near to it, poor devils,’ said the voice.
‘Had my cut been one second later, that savage would have drilled a hole in him as big as my head.
By all the saints! the girl is lovely, or would be if she were washed.
I shall beg her of Cortes as my prize.’
The voice spoke and I knew the voice.
None other ever had that hard clear ring.
I knew it even then and looked up, slipping off the death-stone as I looked. Now I saw.
Before me fully clad in mail was my enemy, de Garcia.
It was HIS sword that by the good providence of God had pierced the breast of the priest.
He had saved me who, had he known, would as soon have turned his steel against his own heart as on that of my destroyer.
I gazed at him, wondering if I dreamed, then my lips spoke, without my will as it were:
‘DE GARCIA!’
He staggered back at the sound of my voice, like a man struck by a shot, then stared at me, rubbed his eyes with his hand, and stared again.
Now at length he knew me through my paint.
‘Mother of God!’ he gasped, ‘it is that knave Thomas Wingfield, AND I HAVE SAVED HIS LIFE!’
By this time my senses had come back to me, and knowing all my folly, I turned seeking escape.
But de Garcia had no mind to suffer this.
Lifting his sword, he sprang at me with a beastlike scream of rage and hate.
Swiftly as thought I slipped round the stone of sacrifice and after me came the uplifted sword of my enemy.
It would have overtaken me soon enough, for I was weak with fear and fasting, and my limbs were cramped with bonds, but at that moment a cavalier whom by his dress and port I guessed to be none other than Cortes himself, struck up de Garcia’s sword, saying:
‘How now, Sarceda?
Are you mad with the lust of blood that you would take to sacrificing victims like an Indian priest?
Let the poor devil go.’
‘He is no Indian, he is an English spy,’ cried de Garcia, and once more struggled to get at me.
‘Decidedly our friend is mad,’ said Cortes, scanning me; ‘he says that this wretched creature is an Englishman.
Come, be off both of you, or somebody else may make the same mistake,’ and he waved his sword in token to us to go, deeming that I could not understand his words; then added angrily, as de Garcia, speechless with rage, made a new attempt to get at me:
‘No, by heaven!
I will not suffer it.
We are Christians and come to save victims, not to slay them.
Here, comrades, hold this fool who would stain his soul with murder.’
Now the Spaniards clutched de Garcia by the arms, and he cursed and raved at them, for as I have said, his rage was that of a beast rather than of a man.
But I stood bewildered, not knowing whither to fly.
Fortunate it was for me indeed that one was by who though she understood no Spanish, yet had a quicker wit.
For while I stood thus, Otomie clasped my hand, and whispering, ‘Fly, fly swiftly!’ led me away from the stone of sacrifice.
‘Whither shall we go?’ I said at length.
‘Were it not better to trust to the mercy of the Spaniards?’
‘To the mercy of that man-devil with the sword?’ she answered.
‘Peace, Teule, and follow me.’
Now she led me on, and the Spaniards let us by unharmed, ay, and even spoke words of pity as we passed, for they knew that we were victims snatched from sacrifice. Indeed, when a certain brute, a Tlascalan Indian, rushed at us, purposing to slay us with a club, one of the Spaniards ran him through the shoulder so that he fell wounded to the pavement.
So we went on, and at the edge of the pyramid we glanced back and saw that de Garcia had broken from those who held him, or perhaps he found his tongue and had explained the truth to them. At the least he was bounding from the altar of sacrifice nearly fifty yards away, and coming towards us with uplifted sword.
Then fear gave us strength, and we fled like the wind.
Along the steep path we rushed side by side, leaping down the steps and over the hundreds of dead and dying, only pausing now and again to save ourselves from being smitten into space by the bodies of the priests whom the Spaniards were hurling from the crest of the teocalli.
Once looking up, I caught sight of de Garcia pursuing far above us, but after that we saw him no more; doubtless he wearied of the chase, or feared to fall into the hands of such of the Aztec warriors as still clustered round the foot of the pyramid.
We had lived through many dangers that day, the princess Otomie and I, but one more awaited us before ever we found shelter for awhile.
After we had reached the foot of the pyramid and turned to mingle with the terrified rabble that surged and flowed through the courtyard of the temple, bearing away the dead and wounded as the sea at flood reclaims its waste and wreckage, a noise like thunder caught my ear.
I looked up, for the sound came from above, and saw a huge mass bounding down the steep side of the pyramid. Even then I knew it again; it was the idol of the god Tezcat that the Spaniards had torn from its shrine, and like an avenging demon it rushed straight on to me.