
Sweat beaded on Diego's furrowed brow. His breathing became labored and his legs twitched, as he
raced across the primitive causeway away from the Aztec island city and toward the safety of the hills on
the distant shore. Even in the throes of nightmare, the tang of salt water and blood stung his nostrils. He
ran, pursued by a frenzied horde dressed in the eagle feathers and jaguar pelts of their savage military
orders. Around himfleeing Spaniards and native allies fell to wooden spears and knives or were pushed
into the lake to drown, weighed down by pockets full of stolen gold. A league ahead, Cortez rode onto
solid ground with his sword raised, while a flint knife pierced Diego's thigh—
“Uh!” Diego sat up, shivering and covered in mud. More than a year had passed since Cortez's army
had been routed from the Aztec capital. Two weeks later, the Captain General had sent him north with a
small exploratory expedition and a cache of native treasure. Yet his dream recollections were not fading
with time and distance, but becoming more vivid and intense. A sudden uneasiness gripped him as the
night pulsed, darkening by heartbeats. He scowled, refusing to accept the ominous portent of the dream,
forcing the lingering images to retreat.
Wiping his nose with a wet sleeve, Diego crawled to the opening of the stone crevasse. The torrential
rains of the past several days had stopped, and a sliver of moon shone through a break in the thick cloud
cover. Cold and wet, he dragged himself upright on cramped legs to survey the dark encampment. His
seven remaining men huddled under a ledge at the base of a gradual incline . . . the other eighteen had
been lost to accident and attack on the long and treacherous journey across the desert. They had been
neither warm nor dry for a week, nor would they be any time soon, for want of dry tinder. He could do
nothing to alleviate their misery but let them rest.
And find a suitable place to hide the treasure so they could rejoin Cortez's army, the only enclave of
civilization in this godforsaken land.
Diego cast a quick glance at the burros tethered in astand of scrub trees, their tails tucked and their
heads lowered in bestial resignation and acceptance of rain and human whim. The packs they had carried
more than a thousand miles were piled against a nearby boulder, containing beaded gold and turquoise
jewelry, mosaic masks and shields inlaid with silver and precious stones, copper and obsidian idols
depicting the bloodthirsty Aztec gods of light and dark hidden beneath layers of cracked leather and
woven cloth. The fortune in artifacts entrusted to him would not be shared with the Crown but retrieved
by Cortez at a more convenient time, after the vast territory had been tamed. Diego dared neither doubt
Cortez's pledge to reward him for this service nor betray his trust. Only a fool would contemplate stealing
from that obsessed and invincible champion of Spanish conquest. However, should Cortez fall in battle,
Diego would have no misgivings about claiming the riches for himself. No one else would live to reveal
the secret hiding place, which he had yet to choose.
Perhaps right here would do. Since they had not encountered any savage hunting bands or villages within
the last hundred miles, the treasure would be safe from accidental discovery and theft by curious natives.
Diego nodded, as the cloud cover fragmented and his gaze brushed the moonlit terrain. At the crest of
the incline above his men, concentrated streams of water flowed downward, skirting a solitary tower of
rock and cutting gouges in the lower slope. The tall rock formation snagged his attention, commanding
closer inspection at first light.
Diego shivered and stamped his feet, splattering more mud on his water sodden boots. It was
unseasonably cold for mid-August; a fire would have heartenedas well as warmed his weary men, but he
had no hope of starting one. Everything within range of the camp was soaked, and the stench of damp rot
hung heavy in the night air. Suddenly anxious, Diego limped toward the packs. The painful ache in his
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