Comparing the two locations, Lee soon realized that the chroniclers’ assertions that Vilcabamba was the largest city in the area now made sense: there was indeed no other city of equal size anywhere else in the province, including Machu Picchu. As Savoy had already noted, the roof tiles, too, were a critical find. According to the British historian John Hemming, in fact, the ruined city that first Bingham, then Savoy discovered at Espíritu Pampa was “the only known Inca ruin in the Andes where scorched, Spanish-style roof tiles are found scattered among the remains.” As Lee well knew, the Incas had set fire to Vilcabamba before Spanish forces had occupied the city in June 1572, no doubt scorching the roof tiles in the process.
Still, despite his team’s discoveries, Lee realized that one of the main obstacles preventing anyone from making sense not only of the ruins of Vilcabamba but also of how those ruins fit into the wider context of the entire Inca province was the simple fact that no one had ever bothered to map the ruins in the area. Lee, the professional architect, was determined to change all that. He later wrote:
After more than a century of exploration, there still was no accurate map [in 1984] of the province…. Yet anyone serious about piecing together the bewildering jigsaw puzzle that was Inca Vilcabamba needed to have all the pieces, or at least all those that were known, laid out on the table. It couldn’t be done. Theories abounded, but no one
was playing with a full deck. Lying there in the dark, waiting for dawn, I told myself: that, at least, was about to change.
And change it did. Lee knew that the Spaniards had fought the Incas at the site of another Inca fort just prior to their sacking of Vilcabamba. The Incas had called the place Machu Pucará, or “Old Fort.” After carefully combing the area, Lee and his team sure enough discovered the second fort just where the chronicles said it should be. Click. Another piece of the Vilcabamba puzzle had fallen neatly into place.
Having retraced the invading Spaniards’ presumed route and having rediscovered two lost forts that were located exactly where the sixteenth-century chronicles said they should be, Lee had now gathered additional evidence supporting Savoy’s thesis that the ruins of Espíritu Pampa were indeed those of Manco’s Vilcabamba. Lee and a friend now decided to break off from the main expedition and go in search of the ruins that Savoy had suggested might exist nearby. “There’s supposed to be a beautiful two-story building made of white limestone somewhere up in the Puncuyoc Mountains,” Savoy had said. “If I were going back, that’s where I’d go.” After three days of slogging through steep cloud forest along with two
campesino
guides, Lee and his companions discovered that Savoy had been right. Puncuyoc, it turned out, was a group of surprisingly well-preserved ruins located at an elevation of 12,850 feet. The main ruin was a tall and rather unusual two-story building with associated structures nearby; it was in excellent condition and still stood upright in a gap between two mountain peaks. As Lee later wrote:
Continuing up the final stairway through a dense grove of tangled, moss-covered trees, we arrived at the object of our search and found all our efforts of the past few days repaid several times over…. It struck me that our “discovery” of Puncuyoc was exactly the unexpected surprise I had dreamed of…. Puncuyoc … was a truly magnificent find. Unlike the historic but tumbled ruins we had found along the trail to Vilcabamba the Old, the significance of Puncuyoc seemed to have no known history but was instead a virtually undisturbed relic from the world of the Incas. From my reading, I knew that made it an
almost incredible rarity. Better yet, its near-perfect state of preservation (more pristine, in fact, than anything at Machu Picchu) and its complex design made it a veritable laboratory for the study of Incan building techniques. With the expedition all but over, it looked like we had hit the jackpot. Like Bingham, seven decades earlier, we were blessed with unbelievable good luck.
Unbeknownst to Lee at the time, however, the American writer and explorer Victor von Hagen’s expedition had actually discovered the ruins of Puncuyoc in 1953 while exploring the Incas’ road network. Von Hagen had recounted the discovery in his 1955 book,
Highway of the Sun.
Savoy most likely had either read or remembered von Hagen’s account, then had passed along his suggestion to Lee. In any case, after returning to Wyoming, Lee gave Savoy a call, telling him about his “discovery” of Puncuyoc and the two Inca forts—Huayna Pucará and Machu Pucará—and also about the maps and site plans that he planned to create based upon his discoveries. Savoy, Lee said, sounded extremely interested, especially in the ruins of Puncuyoc. The veteran explorer suddenly informed Lee that he had recently decided to update the material in his 1970 book,
Antisuyo
, and would soon publish a new book on the same subject. Lee’s recent discoveries, Savoy said, would be perfect to include in his new book. Was Lee interested? And could Lee fly out to Reno when his drawings were done and make a presentation of them to Savoy’s Andean Explorers Foundation? Flattered, Lee told Savoy that he would be honored to have his material included in Savoy’s book and that he would also be happy to present his new findings.
In the fall of 1984, as snow thickened outside his Wyoming home, Vincent Lee sat in his wood-lined study where, with his field notebooks in hand, he began the process of creating precise maps and three-dimensional reconstructions of the ruins that he had located and taken the measurements of in Peru. For the first time in more than four hundred years—ironically in a studio at the base of the Rocky Mountains—the outlines of ancient cities and settlements in Manco’s distant province of Vilcabamba began to emerge, just as remarkably as the outlines of Machu Picchu had once been revealed by Hiram Bingham in the on-site chemical baths he had used to develop his photos. Wrote Lee:
It was a fascinating process…. Slowly, as each new bit of information
was added, the essence of sites completely unintelligible in the field re-emerged after four hundred years of obscurity. By early November everything we had seen of Inca Vilcabamba was shown on eleven large blue-line print sheets and I put together several hundred of our best slides to augment the drawings.
Lee now felt ready for his presentation to Savoy.
Three months later, Lee stood before a select group that Savoy had assembled in Reno and began showing them his slides of the various ruins. Savoy, Lee said, was keenly interested in Lee’s photos and drawings and was increasingly fascinated with his “discovery” of Puncuyoc. After the presentation, Savoy said that if Lee could write up his findings and submit a manuscript to him by June of 1985, then he would include them in his new book. He couldn’t pay Lee anything, Savoy said, as there “was no money in it”—but he
would
give Lee fifty copies of the new book to do with as he pleased. Excited at the thought of having his discoveries published, Lee agreed. And, as a gesture of gratitude to the man who in a sense had inspired his own explorations, Lee left Savoy duplicates of all of his recent drawings and maps.
Three months later, while busily working to meet the publishing deadline, Lee received a phone call from Gene Savoy. After an absence of fifteen years, Savoy abruptly told him, he had decided to travel back to Peru—and had just returned from the ruins that Lee had “discovered.”
“[I] Just returned from an expedition to Puncuyoc,” he [Savoy] said. “Quite a place!” This, from a man who had only three months earlier assured us he would “never go back” to Peru. It was obvious he had begun planning the expedition before we even left Reno and had the drawings I left behind to show him the way. With the help of the local
campesinos
, he said, he took his family up there for a few days to look around and photograph the ruins. I was stunned! In a matter of seconds, it looked like my mentor had become a competitor, and a formidable one at that.
A few weeks later, Lee had his worst suspicions confirmed. A friend of Lee’s in New York City, a documentary filmmaker, had received a form letter written by Gene Savoy that had been sent out
to a large number of people, although Lee was not one of them. Gene Savoy, the letter said, had recently returned to Peru after a long absence and had immediately made an exciting “new discovery” of an Inca “Temple of the Sun,” set high up in the mountains of Vilcabamba. Savoy was determined to return to the site to do a more thorough exploration, but needed money to help defray the costs. Savoy had thus hit upon an ingenious solution: he had decided to publish a limited edition of 250 copies of
Antisuyo, Search for the Lost Cities of the Amazon
that would be distributed among expedition members and friends at a cost of $250 per book. As an added bonus, Savoy said, the new edition would contain photographs, maps, and architectural renderings of the ruins—all unpublished up to now.
Lee did some quick calculations: 250 books at $250 per copy equaled more than $60,000. “So much for there being no money in it,” he later said, shaking his head. Of course there were maps and architectural renderings of the ruins, all unpublished up to now—because Lee had
created
the maps and renderings but had not yet
published
them. Since the book was slated to be published in June 1985—the very month that Savoy had asked Lee to submit his manuscript for inclusion in his “new book”—it appeared to Lee that Savoy had sent him on a “snipe hunt” of sorts, ensuring that Lee couldn’t possibly publish his material before Savoy did. Lee later wrote:
It didn’t take Sherlock Holmes to see that the material he had asked me to submit by June 1st would arrive too late to be included in the $250 book. Savoy had gotten all he needed from me back in November, when I had foolishly left my drawings behind. Galvanized into action, I went back to my word processor, double-time. By the end of March, the manuscript was finished and I decided to publish it myself, desktop style, as
Sixpac Manco: Travels Among the Incas.
I was careful to include all the maps and drawings we left with Savoy and I registered the copyright with the Library of Congress. With a certain poetic justice, I sent a copy of the finished product to Savoy on April Fool’s day, 1985, with a letter suggesting he let me know if he wanted to use any of its contents in his new book…. My only comment [at the end was]: “You’ve told me from the start that I should ‘trust no one’—and I guess you really meant no one.”
Savoy never responded—nor was his book on his “new discoveries” in the Vilcabamba area ever published.
Both Gene Savoy and Vincent Lee ultimately helped to gather
the evidence that proved for the first time and beyond a shadow of a doubt that the final capital of the Incas—Vilcabamba—had indeed been rediscovered after having been lost to the rest of the world for centuries. Hiram Bingham—despite a lifetime of insisting that Machu Picchu was in fact ancient Vilcabamba—had clearly been wrong. Now that the location of the real Vilcabamba had been discovered, however, the original question inevitably turned itself on its head: for if Machu Picchu was
not
Vilcabamba, then what on earth was Machu Picchu?
“If you take a map of the Vilcabamba area and put
a map pin at every major imperial Inca site, then you can see that there’s a big hole in the pattern, right along the Apurímac River, downstream from Choqquequirau. There are two Inca roads that lead into that area—and the Incas wouldn’t have built them unless they led somewhere. There could be another stone city in there, but who knows? I guess that’s one of the reasons why we all keep coming back.”
VINCENT LEE, 2005
TO UNDERSTAND HOW VILCABAMBA AND MACHU PICCHU were once intertwined, one has to go back to the decades in which both were constructed: presumably in the mid-fifteenth century.
*
In the early part of that century, the ethnic group known as the Incas lived within a small kingdom centered around the valley of Cuzco, one of many such small kingdoms in the Andes and on the coast. The Incas told the Spaniards that they were led by an old Inca king named Viracocha Inca. Faced with an approaching army from the powerful kingdom of the Chancas, the Inca ruler fled, leaving his adult son, Cusi Yupanqui, behind. The latter quickly took charge, raised an army, and somehow miraculously
defeated the invaders. Cusi Yupanqui then deposed his father, arranged for his own coronation, and changed his name to Pachacuti, a Quechua word that means “earth-shaker” or “cataclysm,” or “he who turns the world upside down.” The name was a prescient one, for Pachacuti would soon revolutionize the entire Andean world.
According to Inca oral history, Pachacuti also had had a profound religious experience when he was young, a sort of epiphany that revealed to him both his divine nature and a vision of a nearly unbounded future. Wrote the Jesuit priest Bernabé Cobo:
It is said of this Inca [Pachacuti], that before he became king, he went once to visit his father Viracocha, who was … five leagues from Cuzco, and as he reached a spring called Susurpuquiu, he saw a crystal tablet fall into it; within this tablet there appeared to him the figure of an Indian dressed in this way: around his head he had a
llauto
like the headdress of the Incas; three brightly shining rays, like those of the sun, sprang from the top of his head; some snakes were coiled around his arms at the shoulder joints and there was a kind of snake that stretched from the top to the bottom of his back. Upon seeing this image, Pachacuti became so terrified that he started to flee, but the image spoke to him from inside the spring, saying to him: “Come here, my child; have no fear, for I am your father the Sun; I know that you will subjugate many nations and take great care to honor me and remember me in your sacrifices”; and, having said these words, the vision disappeared, but the crystal tablet remained in the spring. The Inca took the tablet and kept it; it is said that after this it served him as a mirror in which he saw anything he wanted, and in memory of his vision, when he was king, he had a statue made of the Sun, which was none other than the image he had seen in the crystal, and he built a temple of the Sun called Qoricancha, with the magnificence and richness that it had at the time when the Spaniards came, because before it was a small and humble structure. Moreover, he ordered that solemn temples dedicated to the Sun be built throughout all the lands that he subjugated under his empire, and he endowed them with great incomes, ordering that all his subjects worship and revere the Sun.