Page:Gaston Leroux--The bride of the sun.djvu/103

Rh and twenty horsemen. The Inca received Fernando on his throne, his forehead adorned with the royal borla. He was surrounded by his officers and wives.

"The Strangers came with words of honey, and the Inca replied: 'Tell your leader that I am fasting until to-morrow. Then will I and my chiefs visit him. Until then, I allow him to occupy the public buildings on the square, but no others. I will decide to-morrow what is meet.'

"Now it happened that after these good words, a Spaniard, to thank the Inca, put his horse through its paces, for the prince who had never seen such an animal. And several of those present having shown fear, while the Inca himself remained impassible, the Inca ordered them to be put to death, as was just. Then the ambassadors drank chicha in golden vases brought to them by the Virgins of the Sun, and returned to Cajamarca.

"When they told their leader of what they had seen, the splendor of the Inca's camp, the number of his troops, despair entered the soldiers' hearts. At night they saw the Inca's camp-fires lighting up the mountain-sides, and blazing in the darkness like a multitude of stars."

The Indian paused again, then went on: