The Green Mummy - Page 97/191

"Then you won't get it," retorted Braddock, adopting a pugnacious

attitude and quite composed. "This mummy has caused one death, Don

Pedro, and from your looks I should think you would like it to cause

another."

"Will you not be honest?"

"I'll knock your head off if you bring my honesty into question," cried

the Professor, standing on tip-toe like a bantam. "The best thing to do

will be to take the matter into court. Then the law can decide, and I

have little doubt but what it will decide in my favor."

The Englishman and the Peruvian glared at one another, and Cockatoo, who

was crouching on the floor, glanced from one angry face to another. He

guessed that the white men were quarreling and perhaps would come to

blows. It was at this moment that a knock came to the door, and a

minute later Archie entered. Braddock glanced at him, and took a sudden

resolution as he stepped forward.

"Hope, you are just in time," he declared. "Don Pedro states that the

mummy belongs to him, and I assert that I have bought it. We shall make

you umpire. He wants it: I want it. What is to be done?"

"The mummy is my own flesh and blood, Mr. Hope," said Don Pedro.

"Precious little of either about it," said Braddock contemptuously.

Archie twisted a chair round and straddled his long legs across it, with

his arms resting on its back. His quick brain had rapidly comprehended

the situation, and, being acquainted with both sides of the question, it

was not difficult to come to a decision. If it was hard that Don Pedro

should lose his ancestor's mummy, it was equally hard that Braddock--or

rather himself--should lose the purchase money, seeing that it had been

paid in good faith to the seller in Malta for a presumably righteously

acquired object. On these premises the young Solon proceeded to deliver

judgment.

"I understand," said he judiciously, "that Don Pedro had the mummy

stolen from him thirty years ago, and that you, Professor, bought it

under the impression that the Maltese owner had a right to possess it."

"Yes," snapped Braddock, "and I daresay the Maltese owner thought so

too, since he bought it from that collector in Paris."

Hope nodded.

"And if Vasa sold it to the man in Paris," said he calmly, "he certainly

would not tell the purchaser that he had looted the mummy in Lima, and

the poor man would not know that he was receiving stolen goods. Is that

right, Don Pedro?"

"Yes, sir," said the Peruvian, who had recovered his temper and his

gravity; "but I declare solemnly that the mummy was stolen from my

father and should belong to me."

"No one disputes that," said Archie cheerfully; "but it ought to belong

to the Professor also, since he has bought it. Now, as it can't possibly

belong to two people, we must split the difference. You, Professor,

must sell back the mummy to Don Pedro for the price you paid for it, and

then, Don Pedro, you must recompense Professor Braddock for his loss."