Page:Gaston Leroux--The bride of the sun.djvu/83

Rh "That is all very fine, but still does not explain it. How many men were there with Pizarro when he marched on Cajamarca?"

"He had received reenforcementsreënforcements [sic]," interjected the Marquis, twisting his mustache, "and there were then a hundred and seventy-seven of them."

"Minus nine," corrected the Indian.

"That is, unless I am mistaken, only a hundred and sixty-eight," put in Uncle Francis, busy with his note-book.

"Why minus nine?" questioned Maria-Teresa.

"Because, señorita," replied the descendant of Mama-Runtu, who seemed to know the history of the conquest of New Spain better than the descendants of the conquerors themselves, "because Pizarro gave his new followers the same chance to draw back that the others had received. He had halted in the mountains to rest his band and make a careful inspection. As you have said, señor, they were then only a hundred and seventy-seven, including sixty-seven horse. There were only three arquebusiers, and a few crossbowmen—not more than twenty altogether. And with this band Pizarro was marching against an army of 50,000 men and against a nation of twenty millions! For, under the Incas, Peru included what are to-day called