ear of the new governor of Virginia, the man who had ordered them all to this strange site.
It was why they were still here-and had been for so long.
Over the passing weeks, Billy had watched the surrounding foliage slowly turn from shades of copper to fiery crimson. The past few mornings had begun to frost. At night, winds stripped the trees, leaving skeletal branches scratching at the sky. At the start of each day, Billy had to sweep and rake away piles of leaves from the dig site. It was a constant battle, as if the forest were trying to rebury what lay exposed to the sun.
Even now, Billy held the hay-bristled broom and watched as his father-dressed in muddy breeches, his shirtsleeves rolled to the elbows-cleared the last of the dirt from the buried treasure.
'With great care now...' Fortescue warned in his thick accent. He swept back the tails of his jacket to lean closer, one fist on his hip, the other hand leaning on a carved wooden cane.
Billy bristled at the implied condescension in the Frenchman's manner. His father knew all the woods, from the tidewaters of Virginia to remote tracts of Kentucky, better than any man. Since before the war, his father had been a trapper and trader with the Indians in these parts. He'd even once met Daniel Boone.
Still, Billy saw how his father's hands shook as he used brush and trowel to pick and tease the treasure out of the rich forest loam.
'This is it,' his uncle said, excited. 'We found it.'
Fortescue loomed over the kneeling men. '
Billy didn't know what they were seeking-only his father and uncle had read the sealed letters from the governor to the Frenchman-but he knew what Fortescue meant by 'the serpent.'
Billy glanced away from the hole to survey the breadth of the site. They'd been excavating an earthen mound that wound and twisted away through the forest. It stood two yards high, twice that wide, and ran two thousand feet through the woods and over the gentle hills. It looked like a giant snake had died and been buried where it fell.
Billy had heard about such earthen mounds. Embankments such as these, along with many more man-made hills, dotted the wilderness of the Americas. His father claimed the long-lost ancestors of the region's savages had built them, that they were sacred Indian burial mounds. It was said that the savages themselves had no memory of the ancient mound builders, only myths and legends. Stories continued to abound of lost civilizations, of ancient kingdoms, of ghosts, of vile curses-and, of course, of buried treasures.
Billy shifted closer as his father unearthed the object, wrapped in what appeared to be a thick hide of skin, the black coarse fur still intact. A musky scent-a heavy mix of loam and beast-welled up, overpowering even the smell of venison stew from the neighboring cook fires.
'Buffalo hide,' his father determined, glancing over to Fortescue.
The Frenchman nodded for him to continue.
Using both hands, his father gently peeled away a flap of the hide to reveal what had lain hidden for ages.
Billy held his breath.
Since the founding of these lands, many Indian mounds had been dug up and looted. All that had been found were the buried bones of the dead, along with a few arrowheads, hide shields, and shards of Indian pottery.
So why was this particular site so important?
After two months of meticulously surveying, mapping, and digging, Billy was still none the wiser as to
It was a daunting endeavor to collect and catalog everything. It had taken them all the way to the edge of winter to work from one end of the winding mound to the other, painstakingly stripping down the Indian burial mound layer by layer, sifting through dirt and rock-until, as the Frenchman said, they'd reached the head of the serpent.
His father unfolded the buffalo skin. Gasps spread among those gathered here. Even Fortescue took a sharp intake of breath through his pinched nose.
Across the inner surface of the preserved hide, a riotous battle had been drawn. Stylized figures of men on horseback raced across the hide, many bearing shields. Spears stabbed with splashes of crimson dyes. Arrows flew. Billy swore he could hear the whoops and war cries of the savages.
Fortescue spoke as he knelt down. A hand hovered over the display. 'I've witnessed such handiwork before. The natives would tan the buffalo skin with a mash of the beast's own brains, then apply their pigment with a hollowed-out piece of its own bone. But,
The Frenchman's hand shifted next to hover over what the hide had protected all these years. 'And I've never seen anything like this.'
The skull of the monster was laid bare. Earlier, they had excavated the broken tusks of the beast, poking out of the hide-wrapped package. The cranium, exposed now to the light of day, was as large as a church bell. And like the buffalo hide, the bone of the skull had also been adorned, become a canvas for some prehistoric artist.
Across its surface, figures and shapes had been carved into the bone and painted so brightly they looked wet to the touch.
Billy's uncle spoke, full of awe. 'The skull. It's a mammoth, isn't it? Like those found over at Big Salt Lick.'
'No. It's not a
'I don't care what it's called,' his father commented forcefully. 'Is this the
'There is only one way to find out.'
Fortescue reached and ran his index finger along the bony crest of the skull. The tip of his finger sank into a hole near the back. Over the years, Billy had dressed enough deer and rabbit carcasses to know the hole looked too clean to be natural. The Frenchman used that purchase and pulled up.
Another round of gasps spread outward. Several of the slaves fell back in horror. Billy's eyes widened as the top of the monster's skull split into two halves, opening like the doors of a cabinet. With his father's help, Fortescue gently pushed back the two pieces of the cranium-each two inches thick and as large as dinner platters.
Even in the meager sunlight, what lay inside the skull glinted brightly.
'Gold,' his uncle choked out, shocked.
The entire inside of the skull had been plated in the precious metal. Fortescue ran a finger along the inner surface of one of the bony halves. Only now did Billy notice the bumps and grooves across the gold surface. It looked to be a crude map, with stylized trees, sculpted mountains, and snaking rivers. The surface was also inscribed with hen scratches that might be writing.
Leaning closer, he heard Fortescue mumble one word, full of awe and a flicker of fear. 'Hebrew.'
After the initial shock wore off, his father spoke at Billy's elbow: 'But the skull is empty.'
Fortescue turned his attention to the open cavity of the gold-lined cranium. The space was large enough to cradle a newborn baby inside, but as his father had noted, it was empty.
Fortescue studied the cavity, his face unreadable, but behind his eyes, Billy saw his mind churning on unfathomable calculations and speculations.
Fortescue stood up. 'Close it back up. Keep it wrapped in the hide. We need it ready for transport to Virginia within the hour.'
No one argued. If word spread of gold here, the place would surely be ransacked. Over the next hour, as the sun sank below the horizon and torches were lit, men worked quickly to free the massive skull. A wagon was prepared, horses readied. Billy's father, his uncle, and the Frenchman spent much of that time with their heads bent together.