The Adventures of Captain Horn eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 454 pages of information about The Adventures of Captain Horn.

The Adventures of Captain Horn eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 454 pages of information about The Adventures of Captain Horn.
but misery upon them.  The Incas, in their way, were good, civilized people, and it stands to reason that the treasure they hid away should go to other good, civilized people when the Incas had departed from the face of the earth.  Think of the good that could be done with such wealth, should it fall into the proper hands!  Think of the good to the poor people of Peru, with the right kind of mission work done among them!  I tell you all that the responsibility of this discovery is as great as its value in dollars.  What do you think about it, Edna?”

“I think this,” said Miss Markham:  “so far as any of us have anything to do with it, it belongs to Captain Horn.  He discovered it, and it is his.”

“The whole of it?” cried Ralph.

“Yes,” said his sister, firmly, “the whole of it, so far as we are concerned.  What he chooses to do with it is his affair, and whether he gets every bar of gold, or only a reward from the Peruvian government, it is his, to do what he pleases with it.”

“Now, Edna, I am amazed to hear you speak of the Peruvian government,” cried Mrs. Cliff.  “It would be nothing less than a crime to let them have it, or even know of it.”

“What do you think, captain?” asked Edna.

“I am exactly of your opinion, Miss Markham,” he said.  “That treasure belongs to me.  I discovered it, and it is for me to decide what is to be done with it.”

“Now, then,” exclaimed Ralph, his face very red, “I differ with you!  We are all partners in this business, and it isn’t fair for any one to have everything.”

“And I am not so sure, either,” said Mrs. Cliff, “that the captain ought to decide what is to be done with this treasure.  Each of us should have a voice.”

“Mrs. Cliff, Miss Markham, and Ralph,” said the captain, “I have a few words to say to you, and I must say them quickly, for I see those black fellows coming.  That treasure in the stone mound is mine.  I discovered the mound, and no matter what might have been in it, the contents would have been mine.  All that gold is just as much mine as if I dug it in a gold-mine in California, and we won’t discuss that question any further.  What I want to say particularly is that it may seem very selfish in me to claim the whole of that treasure, but I assure you that that is the only thing to be done.  I know you will all agree to that when you see the matter in the proper light, and I have told you my plans about it.  I intended to claim all that treasure, if it turned out to be treasure.  I made up my mind to that last night, and I am very glad Miss Markham told me her opinion of the rights of the thing before I mentioned it.  Now, I have just got time to say a few words more.  If there should be any discussion about the ownership of this gold and the way it ought to be divided, there would be trouble, and perhaps bloody trouble.  There are those black fellows coming up here, and two of them speak English.  Eight of my men went away

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The Adventures of Captain Horn from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.