home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
Text File | 1994-12-31 | 384.1 KB | 9,011 lines |
- Please take a look at the important information in this header.
- We encourage you to keep this file on your own disk, keeping an
- electronic path open for the next readers. Do not remove this.
-
- **Welcome To The World of Free Plain Vanilla Electronic Texts**
-
- **Etexts Readable By Both Humans and By Computers, Since 1971**
-
- *These Etexts Prepared By Hundreds of Volunteers and Donations*
-
- Information on contacting Project Gutenberg to get Etexts, and
- further information is included below. We need your donations.
-
- Proofread by some of the anonymous Project Gutenberg volunteers.
- No, you don't have to remain anonymous, your name would appear,
- unless you requested otherwise.
-
-
- December, 1993 [Etext #92]
-
- *The Project Gutenberg Etext of Tarzan and the Jewels of Opar*
- ******This file should be named opar10.txt or tarz510.zip*****
-
- Corrected EDITIONS of our etexts get a new NUMBER, tarz511.txt.
- VERSIONS based on separate sources get new LETTER, tarz10a.txt.
-
-
- This etext was created by Judith Boss, Omaha, Nebraska, using:
-
- The Calera Recognition Systems' M/600 Series Professional
- OCR software and RISC accelerator board donated by Calera;
- on an IBM-compatible 486/50, with a Hewlett-Packard ScanJet
- IIc flatbed scanner.
-
- For more information about Calera's super-OCR system, contact:
-
- Calera Recognition Systems
- 475 Potrero
- Sunnyvale, CA 94086
- 1-408-720-8300
-
- mikel@calera.com
-
- Ask about:
-
- M/Series Profesional Software
- M/Series Accelerator Card
-
-
- The official release date of all Project Gutenberg Etexts is at
- Midnight, Central Time, of the last day of the stated month. A
- preliminary version may often be posted for suggestion, comment
- and editing by those who wish to do so. To be sure you have an
- up to date first edition [xxxxx10x.xxx] please check file sizes
- in the first week of the next month. Since our ftp program has
- a bug in it that scrambles the date [tried to fix and failed] a
- look at the file size will have to do, but we will try to see a
- new copy has at least one byte more or less.
-
-
- Information about Project Gutenberg (one page)
-
- We produce about one million dollars for each hour we work. One
- hundred hours is a conservative estimate for how long it we take
- to get any etext selected, entered, proofread, edited, copyright
- searched and analyzed, the copyright letters written, etc. This
- projected audience is one hundred million readers. If our value
- per text is nominally estimated at one dollar, then we produce a
- million dollars per hour; next year we will have to do four text
- files per month, thus upping our productivity to two million/hr.
- The Goal of Project Gutenberg is to Give Away One Trillion Etext
- Files by the December 31, 2001. [10,000 x 100,000,000=Trillion]
- This is ten thousand titles each to one hundred million readers.
-
- We need your donations more than ever!
-
- All donations should be made to "Project Gutenberg/IBC", and are
- tax deductible to the extent allowable by law ("IBC" is Illinois
- Benedictine College). (Subscriptions to our paper newsletter go
- to IBC, too)
-
- For these and other matters, please mail to:
-
- David Turner, Project Gutenberg
- Illinois Benedictine College
- 5700 College Road
- Lisle, IL 60532-0900
-
- Email requests to:
- Internet: chipmonk@eagle.ibc.edu (David Turner)
- Compuserve: chipmonk@eagle.ibc.edu (David Turner)
- Attmail: internet!chipmonk@eagle.ibc.edu (David Turner)
- MCImail: (David Turner)
- ADDRESS TYPE: MCI / EMS: INTERNET / MBX:chipmonk@eagle.ibc.edu
-
- We would prefer to send you this information by email
- (Internet, Bitnet, Compuserve, ATTMAIL or MCImail).
-
- ******
- If you have an FTP program (or emulator), please:
-
- FTP directly to the Project Gutenberg archives:
- ftp mrcnext.cso.uiuc.edu
- login: anonymous
- password: your@login
- cd etext/etext91
- or cd etext92 [for new books] [now also cd etext/etext92]
- or cd etext/articles [get suggest gut for more information]
- dir [to see files]
- get or mget [to get files. . .set bin for zip files]
- GET INDEX and AAINDEX
- for a list of books
- and
- GET NEW GUT for general information
- and
- MGET GUT* for newsletters.
-
- **Information prepared by the Project Gutenberg legal advisor**
- (Three Pages)
-
- ****START**THE SMALL PRINT!**FOR PUBLIC DOMAIN ETEXTS**START****
-
- Why is this "Small Print!" statement here? You know: lawyers.
- They tell us you might sue us if there is something wrong with
- your copy of this etext, even if you got it for free from
- someone other than us, and even if what's wrong is not our
- fault. So, among other things, this "Small Print!" statement
- disclaims most of our liability to you. It also tells you how
- you can distribute copies of this etext if you want to.
-
- *BEFORE!* YOU USE OR READ THIS ETEXT
-
- By using or reading any part of this PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm etext,
- you indicate that you understand, agree to and accept this
- "Small Print!" statement. If you do not, you can receive a
- refund of the money (if any) you paid for this etext by sending
- a request within 30 days of receiving it to the person you got
- it from. If you received this etext on a physical medium (such
- as a disk), you must return it with your request.
-
- ABOUT PROJECT GUTENBERG-TM ETEXTS
-
- This PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm etext, like most PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm
- etexts, is a "public domain" work distributed by Professor
- Michael S. Hart through the Project Gutenberg Association (the
- "Project"). Among other things, this means that no one owns a
- United States copyright on or for this work, so the Project (and
- you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without
- permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special
- rules, set forth below, apply if you wish to copy and distribute
- this etext under the Project's "PROJECT GUTENBERG" trademark.
-
- To create these etexts, the Project expends considerable efforts
- to identify, transcribe and proofread public domain works.
- Despite these efforts, the Project's etexts and any medium they
- may be on may contain "Defects". Among other things, Defects
- may take the form of incomplete, inaccurate or corrupt data,
- transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual property
- infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other etext medium,
- a computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be
- read by your equipment.
-
- DISCLAIMER
-
- But for the "Right of Replacement or Refund" described below,
- [1] the Project (and any other party you may receive this etext
- from as a PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm etext) disclaims all liability to
- you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal fees, and
- [2] YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE OR UNDER STRICT LIABILI-
- TY, OR FOR BREACH OF WARRANTY OR CONTRACT, INCLUDING BUT NOT
- LIMITED TO INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR INCIDENTAL
- DAMAGES, EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
- DAMAGES.
-
- If you discover a Defect in this etext within 90 days of
- receiving it, you can receive a refund of the money (if any) you
- paid for it by sending an explanatory note within that time to
- the person you received it from. If you received it on a
- physical medium, you must return it with your note, and such
- person may choose to alternatively give you a replacement copy.
- If you received it electronically, such person may choose to
- alternatively give you a second opportunity to receive it elec-
- tronically.
-
- THIS ETEXT IS OTHERWISE PROVIDED TO YOU "AS-IS". NO OTHER
- WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, ARE MADE TO YOU AS
- TO THE ETEXT OR ANY MEDIUM IT MAY BE ON, INCLUDING BUT NOT
- LIMITED TO WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A
- PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
-
- Some states do not allow disclaimers of implied warranties or
- the exclusion or limitation of consequential damages, so the
- above disclaimers and exclusions may not apply to you, and you
- may have other legal rights.
-
- INDEMNITY
-
- You will indemnify and hold the Project, its directors,
- officers, members and agents harmless from all liability, cost
- and expense, including legal fees, that arise from any
- distribution of this etext for which you are responsible, and
- from [1] any alteration, modification or addition to the etext
- for which you are responsible, or [2] any Defect.
-
- DISTRIBUTION UNDER "PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm"
-
- You may distribute copies of this etext electronically, or by
- disk, book or any other medium if you either delete this "Small
- Print!" and all other references to Project Gutenberg, or:
-
- [1] Only give exact copies of it. Among other things, this re-
- quires that you do not remove, alter or modify the etext or
- this "small print!" statement. You may however, if you
- wish, distribute this etext in machine readable binary,
- compressed, mark-up, or proprietary form, including any
- form resulting from conversion by word processing or hyper-
- text software, but only so long as *EITHER*:
-
- [*] The etext, when displayed, is clearly readable. We
- consider an etext *not* clearly readable if it
- contains characters other than those intended by the
- author of the work, although tilde (~), asterisk (*)
- and underline (_) characters may be used to convey
- punctuation intended by the author, and additional
- characters may be used to indicate hypertext links.
-
- [*] The etext may be readily converted by the reader at no
- expense into plain ASCII, EBCDIC or equivalent form
- by the program that displays the etext (as is the
- case, for instance, with most word processors).
-
- [*] You provide, or agree to also provide on request at no
- additional cost, fee or expense, a copy of the etext
- in its original plain ASCII form (or in EBCDIC or
- other equivalent proprietary form).
-
- [2] Honor the etext refund and replacement provisions of this
- "Small Print!" statement.
-
- [3] Pay a trademark license fee of 20% (twenty percent) of the
- net profits you derive from distributing this etext under
- the trademark, determined in accordance with generally
- accepted accounting practices. The license fee:
-
- [*] Is required only if you derive such profits. In
- distributing under our trademark, you incur no
- obligation to charge money or earn profits for your
- distribution.
-
- [*] Shall be paid to "Project Gutenberg Association /
- Illinois Benedictine College" (or to such other person
- as the Project Gutenberg Association may direct)
- within the 60 days following each date you prepare (or
- were legally required to prepare) your year-end tax
- return with respect to your income for that year.
-
- WHAT IF YOU *WANT* TO SEND MONEY EVEN IF YOU DON'T HAVE TO?
-
- The Project gratefully accepts contributions in money, time,
- scanning machines, OCR software, public domain etexts, royalty
- free copyright licenses, and every other sort of contribution
- you can think of. Money should be paid to "Project Gutenberg
- Association / Illinois Benedictine College".
-
- WRITE TO US! We can be reached at:
-
- Project Gutenberg Director of Communications (PGDIRCOM)
-
- Internet: pgdircom@vmd.cso.uiuc.edu
- Bitnet: pgdircom@uiucvmd
- CompuServe: >internet:pgdircom@.vmd.cso.uiuc.edu
- Attmail: internet!vmd.cso.uiuc.edu!pgdircom
-
- Drafted by CHARLES B. KRAMER, Attorney
- CompuServe: 72600,2026
- Internet: 72600.2026@compuserve.com
- Tel: (212) 254-5093
- *END*THE SMALL PRINT! FOR PUBLIC DOMAIN ETEXTS*Ver.07.02.92*END*
-
-
-
- *The Project Gutenberg Etext of Tarzan and the Jewels of Opar*
-
-
-
- Tarzan and the Jewels of Opar
- by Edgar Rice Burroughs
-
-
-
-
-
- Contents
-
- CHAPTER PAGE
- 1 Belgian and Arab
- 2 On the Road to Opar
- 3 The Call of the Jungle
- 4 Prophecy and Fulfillment
- 5 The Altar of the Flaming God
- 6 The Arab Raid
- 7 The Jewel-Room of Opar
- 8 The Escape from Opar
- 9 The Theft of the Jewels
- 10 Achmet Zek Sees the Jewels
- 11 Tarzan Becomes a Beast Again
- 12 La Seeks Vengeance
- 13 Condemned to Torture and Death
- 14 A Priestess But Yet a Woman
- 15 The Flight of Werper
- 16 Tarzan Again Leads the Mangani
- 17 The Deadly Peril of Jane Clayton
- 18 The Fight For the Treasure
- 19 Jane Clayton and The Beasts of the Jungle
- 20 Jane Clayton Again a Prisoner
- 21 The Flight to the Jungle
- 22 Tarzan Recovers His Reason
- 23 A Night of Terror
- 24 Home
-
-
-
- Tarzan and the Jewels of Opar
- by Edgar Rice Burroughs
-
-
-
- 1
-
- Belgian and Arab
-
-
- Lieutenant Albert Werper had only the prestige of the name
- he had dishonored to thank for his narrow escape from
- being cashiered. At first he had been humbly thankful,
- too, that they had sent him to this Godforsaken Congo post
- instead of court-martialing him, as he had so justly deserved;
- but now six months of the monotony, the frightful isolation and
- the loneliness had wrought a change. The young man brooded
- continually over his fate. His days were filled with morbid
- self-pity, which eventually engendered in his weak and
- vacillating mind a hatred for those who had sent him here--
- for the very men he had at first inwardly thanked for saving him
- from the ignominy of degradation.
-
- He regretted the gay life of Brussels as he never had
- regretted the sins which had snatched him from that
- gayest of capitals, and as the days passed he came to
- center his resentment upon the representative in Congo
- land of the authority which had exiled him--his captain
- and immediate superior.
-
- This officer was a cold, taciturn man, inspiring little
- love in those directly beneath him, yet respected and
- feared by the black soldiers of his little command.
-
- Werper was accustomed to sit for hours glaring at his
- superior as the two sat upon the veranda of their
- common quarters, smoking their evening cigarets in a
- silence which neither seemed desirous of breaking.
- The senseless hatred of the lieutenant grew at last into a
- form of mania. The captain's natural taciturnity he
- distorted into a studied attempt to insult him because
- of his past shortcomings. He imagined that his
- superior held him in contempt, and so he chafed and
- fumed inwardly until one evening his madness became
- suddenly homicidal. He fingered the butt of the
- revolver at his hip, his eyes narrowed and his brows
- contracted. At last he spoke.
-
- "You have insulted me for the last time!" he cried,
- springing to his feet. "I am an officer and a
- gentleman, and I shall put up with it no longer without
- an accounting from you, you pig."
-
- The captain, an expression of surprise upon his
- features, turned toward his junior. He had seen men
- before with the jungle madness upon them--the madness
- of solitude and unrestrained brooding, and perhaps a
- touch of fever.
-
- He rose and extended his hand to lay it upon the
- other's shoulder. Quiet words of counsel were upon his
- lips; but they were never spoken. Werper construed his
- superior's action into an attempt to close with him.
- His revolver was on a level with the captain's heart,
- and the latter had taken but a step when Werper pulled
- the trigger. Without a moan the man sank to the rough
- planking of the veranda, and as he fell the mists that
- had clouded Werper's brain lifted, so that he saw
- himself and the deed that he had done in the same light
- that those who must judge him would see them.
-
- He heard excited exclamations from the quarters of the
- soldiers and he heard men running in his direction.
- They would seize him, and if they didn't kill him they
- would take him down the Congo to a point where a
- properly ordered military tribunal would do so just as
- effectively, though in a more regular manner.
-
- Werper had no desire to die. Never before had he so
- yearned for life as in this moment that he had so
- effectively forfeited his right to live. The men were
- nearing him. What was he to do? He glanced about as
- though searching for the tangible form of a legitimate
- excuse for his crime; but he could find only the body
- of the man he had so causelessly shot down.
-
- In despair, he turned and fled from the oncoming
- soldiery. Across the compound he ran, his revolver
- still clutched tightly in his hand. At the gates a
- sentry halted him. Werper did not pause to parley or
- to exert the influence of his commission--he merely
- raised his weapon and shot down the innocent black. A
- moment later the fugitive had torn open the gates and
- vanished into the blackness of the jungle, but not
- before he had transferred the rifle and ammunition
- belts of the dead sentry to his own person.
-
- All that night Werper fled farther and farther into the
- heart of the wilderness. Now and again the voice of a
- lion brought him to a listening halt; but with cocked
- and ready rifle he pushed ahead again, more fearful of
- the human huntsmen in his rear than of the wild
- carnivora ahead.
-
- Dawn came at last, but still the man plodded on.
- All sense of hunger and fatigue were lost in the terrors
- of contemplated capture. He could think only of escape.
- He dared not pause to rest or eat until there was no
- further danger from pursuit, and so he staggered on
- until at last he fell and could rise no more. How long
- he had fled he did not know, or try to know. When he
- could flee no longer the knowledge that he had reached
- his limit was hidden from him in the unconsciousness of
- utter exhaustion.
-
- And thus it was that Achmet Zek, the Arab, found him.
- Achmet's followers were for running a spear through the
- body of their hereditary enemy; but Achmet would have
- it otherwise. First he would question the Belgian.
- It were easier to question a man first and kill him
- afterward, than kill him first and then question him.
-
- So he had Lieutenant Albert Werper carried to his own
- tent, and there slaves administered wine and food in
- small quantities until at last the prisoner regained
- consciousness. As he opened his eyes he saw the faces
- of strange black men about him, and just outside the
- tent the figure of an Arab. Nowhere was the uniform of
- his soldiers to be seen.
-
- The Arab turned and seeing the open eyes of the
- prisoner upon him, entered the tent.
-
- "I am Achmet Zek," he announced. "Who are you, and
- what were you doing in my country? Where are your
- soldiers?"
-
- Achmet Zek! Werper's eyes went wide, and his heart
- sank. He was in the clutches of the most notorious of
- cut-throats--a hater of all Europeans, especially those
- who wore the uniform of Belgium. For years the
- military forces of Belgian Congo had waged a fruitless
- war upon this man and his followers--a war in which
- quarter had never been asked nor expected by either
- side.
-
- But presently in the very hatred of the man for
- Belgians, Werper saw a faint ray of hope for himself.
- He, too, was an outcast and an outlaw. So far, at
- least, they possessed a common interest, and Werper
- decided to play upon it for all that it might yield.
-
- "I have heard of you," he replied, "and was searching
- for you. My people have turned against me. I hate
- them. Even now their soldiers are searching for me,
- to kill me. I knew that you would protect me from them,
- for you, too, hate them. In return I will take service
- with you. I am a trained soldier. I can fight, and
- your enemies are my enemies."
-
- Achmet Zek eyed the European in silence. In his mind
- he revolved many thoughts, chief among which was that
- the unbeliever lied. Of course there was the chance
- that he did not lie, and if he told the truth then his
- proposition was one well worthy of consideration, since
- fighting men were never over plentiful--especially
- white men with the training and knowledge of military
- matters that a European officer must possess.
-
- Achmet Zek scowled and Werper's heart sank; but Werper
- did not know Achmet Zek, who was quite apt to scowl
- where another would smile, and smile where another
- would scowl.
-
- "And if you have lied to me," said Achmet Zek, "I will
- kill you at any time. What return, other than your
- life, do you expect for your services?"
-
- "My keep only, at first," replied Werper. "Later, if I
- am worth more, we can easily reach an understanding."
- Werper's only desire at the moment was to preserve his
- life. And so the agreement was reached and Lieutenant
- Albert Werper became a member of the ivory and slave
- raiding band of the notorious Achmet Zek.
-
- For months the renegade Belgian rode with the savage
- raider. He fought with a savage abandon, and a vicious
- cruelty fully equal to that of his fellow desperadoes.
- Achmet Zek watched his recruit with eagle eye, and with
- a growing satisfaction which finally found expression
- in a greater confidence in the man, and resulted in an
- increased independence of action for Werper.
-
- Achmet Zek took the Belgian into his confidence to a
- great extent, and at last unfolded to him a pet scheme
- which the Arab had long fostered, but which he never
- had found an opportunity to effect. With the aid of a
- European, however, the thing might be easily
- accomplished. He sounded Werper.
-
- "You have heard of the man men call Tarzan?" he asked.
-
- Werper nodded. "I have heard of him; but I do not know
- him."
-
- "But for him we might carry on our 'trading' in safety
- and with great profit," continued the Arab. "For years
- he has fought us, driving us from the richest part of
- the country, harassing us, and arming the natives that
- they may repel us when we come to 'trade.' He is very
- rich. If we could find some way to make him pay us
- many pieces of gold we should not only be avenged upon
- him; but repaid for much that he has prevented us from
- winning from the natives under his protection."
-
- Werper withdrew a cigaret from a jeweled case and
- lighted it.
-
- "And you have a plan to make him pay?" he asked.
-
- "He has a wife," replied Achmet Zek, "whom men say is
- very beautiful. She would bring a great price farther
- north, if we found it too difficult to collect ransom
- money from this Tarzan."
-
- Werper bent his head in thought. Achmet Zek stood
- awaiting his reply. What good remained in Albert
- Werper revolted at the thought of selling a white woman
- into the slavery and degradation of a Moslem harem.
- He looked up at Achmet Zek. He saw the Arab's eyes
- narrow, and he guessed that the other had sensed his
- antagonism to the plan. What would it mean to Werper to
- refuse? His life lay in the hands of this semi-barbarian,
- who esteemed the life of an unbeliever less
- highly than that of a dog. Werper loved life. What
- was this woman to him, anyway? She was a European,
- doubtless, a member of organized society. He was an
- outcast. The hand of every white man was against him.
- She was his natural enemy, and if he refused to lend
- himself to her undoing, Achmet Zek would have him
- killed.
-
- "You hesitate," murmured the Arab.
-
- "I was but weighing the chances of success," lied
- Werper, "and my reward. As a European I can gain
- admittance to their home and table. You have no other
- with you who could do so much. The risk will be great.
- I should be well paid, Achmet Zek."
-
- A smile of relief passed over the raider's face.
-
- "Well said, Werper," and Achmet Zek slapped his
- lieutenant upon the shoulder. "You should be well paid
- and you shall. Now let us sit together and plan how
- best the thing may be done," and the two men squatted
- upon a soft rug beneath the faded silks of Achmet's
- once gorgeous tent, and talked together in low voices
- well into the night. Both were tall and bearded, and
- the exposure to sun and wind had given an almost Arab
- hue to the European's complexion. In every detail of
- dress, too, he copied the fashions of his chief, so
- that outwardly he was as much an Arab as the other.
- It was late when he arose and retired to his own tent.
-
- The following day Werper spent in overhauling his
- Belgian uniform, removing from it every vestige of
- evidence that might indicate its military purposes.
- From a heterogeneous collection of loot, Achmet Zek
- procured a pith helmet and a European saddle, and from
- his black slaves and followers a party of porters,
- askaris and tent boys to make up a modest safari for a
- big game hunter. At the head of this party Werper set
- out from camp.
-
-
-
- 2
-
- On the Road To Opar
-
-
- It was two weeks later that John Clayton, Lord
- Greystoke, riding in from a tour of inspection of his
- vast African estate, glimpsed the head of a column of
- men crossing the plain that lay between his bungalow
- and the forest to the north and west.
-
- He reined in his horse and watched the little party as
- it emerged from a concealing swale. His keen eyes
- caught the reflection of the sun upon the white helmet
- of a mounted man, and with the conviction that a
- wandering European hunter was seeking his hospitality,
- he wheeled his mount and rode slowly forward to meet
- the newcomer.
-
- A half hour later he was mounting the steps leading to
- the veranda of his bungalow, and introducing M. Jules
- Frecoult to Lady Greystoke.
-
- "I was completely lost," M. Frecoult was explaining.
- "My head man had never before been in this part of the
- country and the guides who were to have accompanied me
- from the last village we passed knew even less of the
- country than we. They finally deserted us two days
- since. I am very fortunate indeed to have stumbled so
- providentially upon succor. I do not know what I
- should have done, had I not found you."
-
- It was decided that Frecoult and his party should
- remain several days, or until they were thoroughly
- rested, when Lord Greystoke would furnish guides to
- lead them safely back into country with which
- Frecoult's head man was supposedly familiar.
-
- In his guise of a French gentleman of leisure, Werper
- found little difficulty in deceiving his host and in
- ingratiating himself with both Tarzan and Jane Clayton;
- but the longer he remained the less hopeful he became
- of an easy accomplishment of his designs.
-
- Lady Greystoke never rode alone at any great distance
- from the bungalow, and the savage loyalty of the
- ferocious Waziri warriors who formed a great part of
- Tarzan's followers seemed to preclude the possibility
- of a successful attempt at forcible abduction, or of
- the bribery of the Waziri themselves.
-
- A week passed, and Werper was no nearer the fulfillment
- of his plan, in so far as he could judge, than upon the
- day of his arrival, but at that very moment something
- occurred which gave him renewed hope and set his mind
- upon an even greater reward than a woman's ransom.
-
- A runner had arrived at the bungalow with the weekly
- mail, and Lord Greystoke had spent the afternoon in his
- study reading and answering letters. At dinner he
- seemed distraught, and early in the evening he excused
- himself and retired, Lady Greystoke following him very
- soon after. Werper, sitting upon the veranda, could
- hear their voices in earnest discussion, and having
- realized that something of unusual moment was afoot,
- he quietly rose from his chair, and keeping well in the
- shadow of the shrubbery growing profusely about the
- bungalow, made his silent way to a point beneath the
- window of the room in which his host and hostess slept.
-
- Here he listened, and not without result, for almost
- the first words he overheard filled him with
- excitement. Lady Greystoke was speaking as Werper came
- within hearing.
-
- "I always feared for the stability of the company," she
- was saying; "but it seems incredible that they should
- have failed for so enormous a sum--unless there has
- been some dishonest manipulation."
-
- "That is what I suspect," replied Tarzan; "but whatever
- the cause, the fact remains that I have lost
- everything, and there is nothing for it but to return
- to Opar and get more."
-
- "Oh, John," cried Lady Greystoke, and Werper could feel
- the shudder through her voice, "is there no other way?
- I cannot bear to think of you returning to that
- frightful city. I would rather live in poverty always
- than to have you risk the hideous dangers of Opar."
-
- "You need have no fear," replied Tarzan, laughing.
- "I am pretty well able to take care of myself, and were
- I not, the Waziri who will accompany me will see that no
- harm befalls me."
-
- "They ran away from Opar once, and left you to your
- fate," she reminded him.
-
- "They will not do it again," he answered. "They were
- very much ashamed of themselves, and were coming back
- when I met them."
-
- "But there must be some other way," insisted the woman.
-
- "There is no other way half so easy to obtain another
- fortune, as to go to the treasure vaults of Opar and
- bring it away," he replied. "I shall be very careful,
- Jane, and the chances are that the inhabitants of Opar
- will never know that I have been there again and
- despoiled them of another portion of the treasure, the
- very existence of which they are as ignorant of as they
- would be of its value."
-
- The finality in his tone seemed to assure Lady
- Greystoke that further argument was futile, and so she
- abandoned the subject.
-
- Werper remained, listening, for a short time, and then,
- confident that he had overheard all that was necessary
- and fearing discovery, returned to the veranda, where
- he smoked numerous cigarets in rapid succession before
- retiring.
-
- The following morning at breakfast, Werper announced
- his intention of making an early departure, and asked
- Tarzan's permission to hunt big game in the Waziri
- country on his way out--permission which Lord Greystoke
- readily granted.
-
- The Belgian consumed two days in completing his
- preparations, but finally got away with his safari,
- accompanied by a single Waziri guide whom Lord
- Greystoke had loaned him. The party made but a single
- short march when Werper simulated illness, and
- announced his intention of remaining where he was until
- he had fully recovered. As they had gone but a short
- distance from the Greystoke bungalow, Werper dismissed
- the Waziri guide, telling the warrior that he would
- send for him when he was able to proceed. The Waziri
- gone, the Belgian summoned one of Achmet Zek's trusted
- blacks to his tent, and dispatched him to watch for the
- departure of Tarzan, returning immediately to advise
- Werper of the event and the direction taken by the
- Englishman.
-
- The Belgian did not have long to wait, for the
- following day his emissary returned with word that
- Tarzan and a party of fifty Waziri warriors had set out
- toward the southeast early in the morning.
-
- Werper called his head man to him, after writing a long
- letter to Achmet Zek. This letter he handed to the
- head man.
-
- "Send a runner at once to Achmet Zek with this," he
- instructed the head man. "Remain here in camp awaiting
- further instructions from him or from me. If any come
- from the bungalow of the Englishman, tell them that I
- am very ill within my tent and can see no one. Now,
- give me six porters and six askaris--the strongest and
- bravest of the safari--and I will march after the
- Englishman and discover where his gold is hidden."
-
- And so it was that as Tarzan, stripped to the loin
- cloth and armed after the primitive fashion he best
- loved, led his loyal Waziri toward the dead city of
- Opar, Werper, the renegade, haunted his trail through
- the long, hot days, and camped close behind him by
- night.
-
- And as they marched, Achmet Zek rode with his entire
- following southward toward the Greystoke farm.
-
- To Tarzan of the Apes the expedition was in the nature
- of a holiday outing. His civilization was at best but
- an outward veneer which he gladly peeled off with his
- uncomfortable European clothes whenever any reasonable
- pretext presented itself. It was a woman's love which
- kept Tarzan even to the semblance of civilization--a
- condition for which familiarity had bred contempt. He
- hated the shams and the hypocrisies of it and with the
- clear vision of an unspoiled mind he had penetrated to
- the rotten core of the heart of the thing--the cowardly
- greed for peace and ease and the safe-guarding of
- property rights. That the fine things of life--art,
- music and literature--had thriven upon such enervating
- ideals he strenuously denied, insisting, rather, that
- they had endured in spite of civilization.
-
- "Show me the fat, opulent coward," he was wont to say,
- "who ever originated a beautiful ideal. In the clash
- of arms, in the battle for survival, amid hunger and
- death and danger, in the face of God as manifested in
- the display of Nature's most terrific forces, is born
- all that is finest and best in the human heart and
- mind."
-
- And so Tarzan always came back to Nature in the spirit
- of a lover keeping a long deferred tryst after a period
- behind prison walls. His Waziri, at marrow, were more
- civilized than he. They cooked their meat before they
- ate it and they shunned many articles of food as
- unclean that Tarzan had eaten with gusto all his life
- and so insidious is the virus of hypocrisy that even
- the stalwart ape-man hesitated to give rein to his
- natural longings before them. He ate burnt flesh when
- he would have preferred it raw and unspoiled, and he
- brought down game with arrow or spear when he would far
- rather have leaped upon it from ambush and sunk his
- strong teeth in its jugular; but at last the call of
- the milk of the savage mother that had suckled him in
- infancy rose to an insistent demand--he craved the hot
- blood of a fresh kill and his muscles yearned to pit
- themselves against the savage jungle in the battle for
- existence that had been his sole birthright for the
- first twenty years of his life.
-
-
-
- 3
-
- The Call of the Jungle
-
-
- Moved by these vague yet all-powerful urgings the
- ape-man lay awake one night in the little thorn boma
- that protected, in a way, his party from the depredations
- of the great carnivora of the jungle. A single warrior
- stood sleepy guard beside the fire that yellow eyes
- out of the darkness beyond the camp made imperative.
- The moans and the coughing of the big cats mingled with
- the myriad noises of the lesser denizens of the jungle
- to fan the savage flame in the breast of this savage
- English lord. He tossed upon his bed of grasses,
- sleepless, for an hour and then he rose, noiseless as a
- wraith, and while the Waziri's back was turned, vaulted
- the boma wall in the face of the flaming eyes, swung
- silently into a great tree and was gone.
-
- For a time in sheer exuberance of animal spirit he
- raced swiftly through the middle terrace, swinging
- perilously across wide spans from one jungle giant to
- the next, and then he clambered upward to the swaying,
- lesser boughs of the upper terrace where the moon shone
- full upon him and the air was stirred by little breezes
- and death lurked ready in each frail branch. Here he
- paused and raised his face to Goro, the moon.
- With uplifted arm he stood, the cry of the bull ape
- quivering upon his lips, yet he remained silent lest he
- arouse his faithful Waziri who were all too familiar
- with the hideous challenge of their master.
-
- And then he went on more slowly and with greater
- stealth and caution, for now Tarzan of the Apes was
- seeking a kill. Down to the ground he came in the
- utter blackness of the close-set boles and the
- overhanging verdure of the jungle. He stooped from time
- to time and put his nose close to earth. He sought and
- found a wide game trail and at last his nostrils were
- rewarded with the scent of the fresh spoor of Bara, the
- deer. Tarzan's mouth watered and a low growl escaped
- his patrician lips. Sloughed from him was the last
- vestige of artificial caste--once again he was the
- primeval hunter--the first man--the highest caste type
- of the human race. Up wind he followed the elusive
- spoor with a sense of perception so transcending that
- of ordinary man as to be inconceivable to us. Through
- counter currents of the heavy stench of meat eaters he
- traced the trail of Bara; the sweet and cloying stink
- of Horta, the boar, could not drown his quarry's scent--
- the permeating, mellow musk of the deer's foot.
-
- Presently the body scent of the deer told Tarzan that
- his prey was close at hand. It sent him into the trees
- again--into the lower terrace where he could watch the
- ground below and catch with ears and nose the first
- intimation of actual contact with his quarry. Nor was
- it long before the ape-man came upon Bara standing
- alert at the edge of a moon-bathed clearing.
- Noiselessly Tarzan crept through the trees until he was
- directly over the deer. In the ape-man's right hand
- was the long hunting knife of his father and in his
- heart the blood lust of the carnivore. Just for an
- instant he poised above the unsuspecting Bara and then
- he launched himself downward upon the sleek back. The
- impact of his weight carried the deer to its knees and
- before the animal could regain its feet the knife had
- found its heart. As Tarzan rose upon the body of his
- kill to scream forth his hideous victory cry into the
- face of the moon the wind carried to his nostrils
- something which froze him to statuesque immobility and
- silence. His savage eyes blazed into the direction
- from which the wind had borne down the warning to him
- and a moment later the grasses at one side of the
- clearing parted and Numa, the lion, strode majestically
- into view. His yellow-green eyes were fastened upon
- Tarzan as he halted just within the clearing and glared
- enviously at the successful hunter, for Numa had had no
- luck this night.
-
- From the lips of the ape-man broke a rumbling growl of
- warning. Numa answered but he did not advance.
- Instead he stood waving his tail gently to and fro,
- and presently Tarzan squatted upon his kill and cut a
- generous portion from a hind quarter. Numa eyed him
- with growing resentment and rage as, between mouthfuls,
- the ape-man growled out his savage warnings. Now this
- particular lion had never before come in contact with
- Tarzan of the Apes and he was much mystified. Here was
- the appearance and the scent of a man-thing and Numa
- had tasted of human flesh and learned that though not
- the most palatable it was certainly by far the easiest
- to secure, yet there was that in the bestial growls of
- the strange creature which reminded him of formidable
- antagonists and gave him pause, while his hunger and
- the odor of the hot flesh of Bara goaded him almost to
- madness. Always Tarzan watched him, guessing what was
- passing in the little brain of the carnivore and well
- it was that he did watch him, for at last Numa could
- stand it no longer. His tail shot suddenly erect and
- at the same instant the wary ape-man, knowing all too
- well what the signal portended, grasped the remainder
- of the deer's hind quarter between his teeth and leaped
- into a nearby tree as Numa charged him with all the
- speed and a sufficient semblance of the weight of an
- express train.
-
- Tarzan's retreat was no indication that he felt fear.
- Jungle life is ordered along different lines than ours
- and different standards prevail. Had Tarzan been
- famished he would, doubtless, have stood his ground and
- met the lion's charge. He had done the thing before
- upon more than one occasion, just as in the past he had
- charged lions himself; but tonight he was far from
- famished and in the hind quarter he had carried off
- with him was more raw flesh than he could eat; yet it
- was with no equanimity that he looked down upon Numa
- rending the flesh of Tarzan's kill. The presumption of
- this strange Numa must be punished! And forthwith
- Tarzan set out to make life miserable for the big cat.
- Close by were many trees bearing large, hard fruits and
- to one of these the ape-man swung with the agility of a
- squirrel. Then commenced a bombardment which brought
- forth earthshaking roars from Numa. One after another
- as rapidly as he could gather and hurl them, Tarzan
- pelted the hard fruit down upon the lion. It was
- impossible for the tawny cat to eat under that hail of
- missiles--he could but roar and growl and dodge and
- eventually he was driven away entirely from the carcass
- of Bara, the deer. He went roaring and resentful; but
- in the very center of the clearing his voice was
- suddenly hushed and Tarzan saw the great head lower and
- flatten out, the body crouch and the long tail quiver,
- as the beast slunk cautiously toward the trees upon the
- opposite side.
-
- Immediately Tarzan was alert. He lifted his head and
- sniffed the slow, jungle breeze. What was it that had
- attracted Numa's attention and taken him soft-footed
- and silent away from the scene of his discomfiture?
- Just as the lion disappeared among the trees beyond the
- clearing Tarzan caught upon the down-coming wind the
- explanation of his new interest--the scent spoor of man
- was wafted strongly to the sensitive nostrils. Caching
- the remainder of the deer's hind quarter in the crotch
- of a tree the ape-man wiped his greasy palms upon his
- naked thighs and swung off in pursuit of Numa. A
- broad, well-beaten elephant path led into the forest
- from the clearing. Parallel to this slunk Numa, while
- above him Tarzan moved through the trees, the shadow of
- a wraith. The savage cat and the savage man saw Numa's
- quarry almost simultaneously, though both had known
- before it came within the vision of their eyes that it
- was a black man. Their sensitive nostrils had told
- them this much and Tarzan's had told him that the scent
- spoor was that of a stranger--old and a male, for race
- and sex and age each has its own distinctive scent.
- It was an old man that made his way alone through the
- gloomy jungle, a wrinkled, dried up, little old man
- hideously scarred and tattooed and strangely garbed,
- with the skin of a hyena about his shoulders and the
- dried head mounted upon his grey pate. Tarzan
- recognized the ear-marks of the witch-doctor and
- awaited Numa's charge with a feeling of pleasurable
- anticipation, for the ape-man had no love for
- witch-doctors; but in the instant that Numa did charge,
- the white man suddenly recalled that the lion had stolen
- his kill a few minutes before and that revenge is
- sweet.
-
- The first intimation the black man had that he was in
- danger was the crash of twigs as Numa charged through
- the bushes into the game trail not twenty yards behind
- him. Then he turned to see a huge, black-maned lion
- racing toward him and even as he turned, Numa seized
- him. At the same instant the ape-man dropped from an
- overhanging limb full upon the lion's back and as he
- alighted he plunged his knife into the tawny side
- behind the left shoulder, tangled the fingers of his
- right hand in the long mane, buried his teeth in Numa's
- neck and wound his powerful legs about the beast's
- torso. With a roar of pain and rage, Numa reared up
- and fell backward upon the ape-man; but still the
- mighty man-thing clung to his hold and repeatedly the
- long knife plunged rapidly into his side. Over and
- over rolled Numa, the lion, clawing and biting at the
- air, roaring and growling horribly in savage attempt to
- reach the thing upon its back. More than once was
- Tarzan almost brushed from his hold. He was battered
- and bruised and covered with blood from Numa and dirt
- from the trail, yet not for an instant did he lessen
- the ferocity of his mad attack nor his grim hold upon
- the back of his antagonist. To have loosened for an
- instant his grip there, would have been to bring him
- within reach of those tearing talons or rending fangs,
- and have ended forever the grim career of this jungle-bred
- English lord. Where he had fallen beneath the
- spring of the lion the witch-doctor lay, torn and
- bleeding, unable to drag himself away and watched the
- terrific battle between these two lords of the jungle.
- His sunken eyes glittered and his wrinkled lips moved
- over toothless gums as he mumbled weird incantations to
- the demons of his cult.
-
- For a time he felt no doubt as to the outcome--the
- strange white man must certainly succumb to terrible
- Simba--whoever heard of a lone man armed only with a
- knife slaying so mighty a beast! Yet presently the old
- black man's eyes went wider and he commenced to have
- his doubts and misgivings. What wonderful sort of
- creature was this that battled with Simba and held his
- own despite the mighty muscles of the king of beasts
- and slowly there dawned in those sunken eyes, gleaming
- so brightly from the scarred and wrinkled face, the
- light of a dawning recollection. Gropingly backward
- into the past reached the fingers of memory, until at
- last they seized upon a faint picture, faded and yellow
- with the passing years. It was the picture of a lithe,
- white-skinned youth swinging through the trees in
- company with a band of huge apes, and the old eyes
- blinked and a great fear came into them--the
- superstitious fear of one who believes in ghosts and
- spirits and demons.
-
- And came the time once more when the witch-doctor no
- longer doubted the outcome of the duel, yet his first
- judgment was reversed, for now he knew that the jungle
- god would slay Simba and the old black was even more
- terrified of his own impending fate at the hands of the
- victor than he had been by the sure and sudden death
- which the triumphant lion would have meted out to him.
- He saw the lion weaken from loss of blood. He saw the
- mighty limbs tremble and stagger and at last he saw the
- beast sink down to rise no more. He saw the forest god
- or demon rise from the vanquished foe, and placing a
- foot upon the still quivering carcass, raise his face
- to the moon and bay out a hideous cry that froze the
- ebbing blood in the veins of the witch-doctor.
-
-
-
- 4
-
- Prophecy and Fulfillment
-
-
- Then Tarzan turned his attention to the man. He had
- not slain Numa to save the Negro--he had merely done it
- in revenge upon the lion; but now that he saw the old
- man lying helpless and dying before him something akin
- to pity touched his savage heart. In his youth he
- would have slain the witch-doctor without the slightest
- compunction; but civilization had had its softening
- effect upon him even as it does upon the nations and
- races which it touches, though it had not yet gone far
- enough with Tarzan to render him either cowardly or
- effeminate. He saw an old man suffering and dying, and
- he stooped and felt of his wounds and stanched the flow
- of blood.
-
- "Who are you?" asked the old man in a trembling voice.
-
- "I am Tarzan--Tarzan of the Apes," replied the ape-man
- and not without a greater touch of pride than he would
- have said, "I am John Clayton, Lord Greystoke."
-
- The witch-doctor shook convulsively and closed his
- eyes. When he opened them again there was in them a
- resignation to whatever horrible fate awaited him at
- the hands of this feared demon of the woods. "Why do
- you not kill me?" he asked.
-
- "Why should I kill you?" inquired Tarzan.
- "You have not harmed me, and anyway you are already dying.
- Numa, the lion, has killed you."
-
- "You would not kill me?" Surprise and incredulity were
- in the tones of the quavering old voice.
-
- "I would save you if I could," replied Tarzan, "but
- that cannot be done. Why did you think I would kill
- you?"
-
- For a moment the old man was silent. When he spoke it
- was evidently after some little effort to muster his
- courage. "I knew you of old," he said, "when you
- ranged the jungle in the country of Mbonga, the chief.
- I was already a witch-doctor when you slew Kulonga and
- the others, and when you robbed our huts and our poison
- pot. At first I did not remember you; but at last I
- did--the white-skinned ape that lived with the hairy
- apes and made life miserable in the village of Mbonga,
- the chief--the forest god--the Munango-Keewati for whom
- we set food outside our gates and who came and ate it.
- Tell me before I die--are you man or devil?"
-
- Tarzan laughed. "I am a man," he said.
-
- The old fellow sighed and shook his head. "You have
- tried to save me from Simba," he said. "For that I
- shall reward you. I am a great witch-doctor. Listen
- to me, white man! I see bad days ahead of you. It is
- writ in my own blood which I have smeared upon my palm.
- A god greater even than you will rise up and strike you
- down. Turn back, Munango-Keewati! Turn back before it
- is too late. Danger lies ahead of you and danger lurks
- behind; but greater is the danger before. I see--"
- He paused and drew a long, gasping breath. Then he
- crumpled into a little, wrinkled heap and died.
- Tarzan wondered what else he had seen.
-
- It was very late when the ape-man re-entered the boma
- and lay down among his black warriors. None had seen
- him go and none saw him return. He thought about the
- warning of the old witch-doctor before he fell asleep
- and he thought of it again after he awoke; but he did
- not turn back for he was unafraid, though had he known
- what lay in store for one he loved most in all the
- world he would have flown through the trees to her side
- and allowed the gold of Opar to remain forever hidden
- in its forgotten storehouse.
-
- Behind him that morning another white man pondered
- something he had heard during the night and very nearly
- did he give up his project and turn back upon his
- trail. It was Werper, the murderer, who in the still
- of the night had heard far away upon the trail ahead of
- him a sound that had filled his cowardly soul with
- terror--a sound such as he never before had heard in
- all his life, nor dreamed that such a frightful thing
- could emanate from the lungs of a God-created creature.
- He had heard the victory cry of the bull ape as Tarzan
- had screamed it forth into the face of Goro, the moon,
- and he had trembled then and hidden his face; and now
- in the broad light of a new day he trembled again as he
- recalled it, and would have turned back from the
- nameless danger the echo of that frightful sound seemed
- to portend, had he not stood in even greater fear of
- Achmet Zek, his master.
-
- And so Tarzan of the Apes forged steadily ahead toward
- Opar's ruined ramparts and behind him slunk Werper,
- jackal-like, and only God knew what lay in store for
- each.
-
- At the edge of the desolate valley, overlooking the
- golden domes and minarets of Opar, Tarzan halted.
- By night he would go alone to the treasure vault,
- reconnoitering, for he had determined that caution
- should mark his every move upon this expedition.
-
- With the coming of night he set forth, and Werper, who
- had scaled the cliffs alone behind the ape-man's party,
- and hidden through the day among the rough boulders of
- the mountain top, slunk stealthily after him. The
- boulder-strewn plain between the valley's edge and the
- mighty granite kopje, outside the city's walls, where
- lay the entrance to the passage-way leading to the
- treasure vault, gave the Belgian ample cover as he
- followed Tarzan toward Opar.
-
- He saw the giant ape-man swing himself nimbly up the
- face of the great rock. Werper, clawing fearfully
- during the perilous ascent, sweating in terror, almost
- palsied by fear, but spurred on by avarice, following
- upward, until at last he stood upon the summit of the
- rocky hill.
-
- Tarzan was nowhere in sight. For a time Werper hid
- behind one of the lesser boulders that were scattered
- over the top of the hill, but, seeing or hearing
- nothing of the Englishman, he crept from his place of
- concealment to undertake a systematic search of his
- surroundings, in the hope that he might discover the
- location of the treasure in ample time to make his
- escape before Tarzan returned, for it was the Belgian's
- desire merely to locate the gold, that, after Tarzan
- had departed, he might come in safety with his
- followers and carry away as much as he could transport.
-
- He found the narrow cleft leading downward into the
- heart of the kopje along well-worn, granite steps. He
- advanced quite to the dark mouth of the tunnel into
- which the runway disappeared; but here he halted,
- fearing to enter, lest he meet Tarzan returning.
-
- The ape-man, far ahead of him, groped his way along the
- rocky passage, until he came to the ancient wooden
- door. A moment later he stood within the treasure
- chamber, where, ages since, long-dead hands had ranged
- the lofty rows of precious ingots for the rulers of
- that great continent which now lies submerged beneath
- the waters of the Atlantic.
-
- No sound broke the stillness of the subterranean vault.
- There was no evidence that another had discovered the
- forgotten wealth since last the ape-man had visited its
- hiding place.
-
- Satisfied, Tarzan turned and retraced his steps toward
- the summit of the kopje. Werper, from the concealment
- of a jutting, granite shoulder, watched him pass up
- from the shadows of the stairway and advance toward the
- edge of the hill which faced the rim of the valley
- where the Waziri awaited the signal of their master.
- Then Werper, slipping stealthily from his hiding place,
- dropped into the somber darkness of the entrance and
- disappeared.
-
- Tarzan, halting upon the kopje's edge, raised his voice
- in the thunderous roar of a lion. Twice, at regular
- intervals, he repeated the call, standing in attentive
- silence for several minutes after the echoes of the
- third call had died away. And then, from far across
- the valley, faintly, came an answering roar--once,
- twice, thrice. Basuli, the Waziri chieftain, had heard
- and replied.
-
- Tarzan again made his way toward the treasure vault,
- knowing that in a few hours his blacks would be with
- him, ready to bear away another fortune in the
- strangely shaped, golden ingots of Opar. In the
- meantime he would carry as much of the precious metal
- to the summit of the kopje as he could.
-
- Six trips he made in the five hours before Basuli
- reached the kopje, and at the end of that time he had
- transported forty-eight ingots to the edge of the great
- boulder, carrying upon each trip a load which might
- well have staggered two ordinary men, yet his giant
- frame showed no evidence of fatigue, as he helped to
- raise his ebon warriors to the hill top with the rope
- that had been brought for the purpose.
-
- Six times he had returned to the treasure chamber, and
- six times Werper, the Belgian, had cowered in the black
- shadows at the far end of the long vault. Once again
- came the ape-man, and this time there came with him
- fifty fighting men, turning porters for love of the
- only creature in the world who might command of their
- fierce and haughty natures such menial service. Fifty-two
- more ingots passed out of the vaults, making the total
- of one hundred which Tarzan intended taking away
- with him.
-
- As the last of the Waziri filed from the chamber,
- Tarzan turned back for a last glimpse of the fabulous
- wealth upon which his two inroads had made no
- appreciable impression. Before he extinguished the
- single candle he had brought with him for the purpose,
- and the flickering light of which had cast the first
- alleviating rays into the impenetrable darkness of the
- buried chamber, that it had known for the countless
- ages since it had lain forgotten of man, Tarzan's mind
- reverted to that first occasion upon which he had
- entered the treasure vault, coming upon it by chance as
- he fled from the pits beneath the temple, where he had
- been hidden by La, the High Priestess of the Sun
- Worshipers.
-
- He recalled the scene within the temple when he had
- lain stretched upon the sacrificial altar, while La,
- with high-raised dagger, stood above him, and the rows
- of priests and priestesses awaited, in the ecstatic
- hysteria of fanaticism, the first gush of their
- victim's warm blood, that they might fill their golden
- goblets and drink to the glory of their Flaming God.
-
- The brutal and bloody interruption by Tha, the mad
- priest, passed vividly before the ape-man's
- recollective eyes, the flight of the votaries before
- the insane blood lust of the hideous creature, the
- brutal attack upon La, and his own part of the grim
- tragedy when he had battled with the infuriated Oparian
- and left him dead at the feet of the priestess he would
- have profaned.
-
- This and much more passed through Tarzan's memory as
- he stood gazing at the long tiers of dull-yellow metal.
- He wondered if La still ruled the temples of the ruined
- city whose crumbling walls rose upon the very
- foundations about him. Had she finally been forced
- into a union with one of her grotesque priests?
- It seemed a hideous fate, indeed, for one so beautiful.
- With a shake of his head, Tarzan stepped to the
- flickering candle, extinguished its feeble rays and
- turned toward the exit.
-
- Behind him the spy waited for him to be gone. He had
- learned the secret for which he had come, and now he
- could return at his leisure to his waiting followers,
- bring them to the treasure vault and carry away all the
- gold that they could stagger under.
-
- The Waziri had reached the outer end of the tunnel,
- and were winding upward toward the fresh air and the
- welcome starlight of the kopje's summit, before Tarzan
- shook off the detaining hand of reverie and started
- slowly after them.
-
- Once again, and, he thought, for the last time, he
- closed the massive door of the treasure room. In the
- darkness behind him Werper rose and stretched his
- cramped muscles. He stretched forth a hand and
- lovingly caressed a golden ingot on the nearest tier.
- He raised it from its immemorial resting place and
- weighed it in his hands. He clutched it to his bosom
- in an ecstasy of avarice.
-
- Tarzan dreamed of the happy homecoming which lay before
- him, of dear arms about his neck, and a soft cheek
- pressed to his; but there rose to dispel that dream the
- memory of the old witch-doctor and his warning.
-
- And then, in the span of a few brief seconds, the hopes
- of both these men were shattered. The one forgot even
- his greed in the panic of terror--the other was plunged
- into total forgetfulness of the past by a jagged
- fragment of rock which gashed a deep cut upon his head.
-
-
-
- 5
-
- The Altar of the Flaming God
-
-
- It was at the moment that Tarzan turned from the closed
- door to pursue his way to the outer world. The thing
- came without warning. One instant all was quiet and
- stability--the next, and the world rocked, the tortured
- sides of the narrow passageway split and crumbled,
- great blocks of granite, dislodged from the ceiling,
- tumbled into the narrow way, choking it, and the walls
- bent inward upon the wreckage. Beneath the blow of a
- fragment of the roof, Tarzan staggered back against the
- door to the treasure room, his weight pushed it open
- and his body rolled inward upon the floor.
-
- In the great apartment where the treasure lay less
- damage was wrought by the earthquake. A few ingots
- toppled from the higher tiers, a single piece of the
- rocky ceiling splintered off and crashed downward to
- the floor, and the walls cracked, though they did not
- collapse.
-
- There was but the single shock, no other followed to
- complete the damage undertaken by the first. Werper,
- thrown to his length by the suddenness and violence of
- the disturbance, staggered to his feet when he found
- himself unhurt. Groping his way toward the far end of
- the chamber, he sought the candle which Tarzan had left
- stuck in its own wax upon the protruding end of an
- ingot.
-
- By striking numerous matches the Belgian at last found
- what he sought, and when, a moment later, the sickly
- rays relieved the Stygian darkness about him, he
- breathed a nervous sigh of relief, for the impenetrable
- gloom had accentuated the terrors of his situation.
-
- As they became accustomed to the light the man turned
- his eyes toward the door--his one thought now was of
- escape from this frightful tomb--and as he did so he
- saw the body of the naked giant lying stretched upon
- the floor just within the doorway. Werper drew back in
- sudden fear of detection; but a second glance convinced
- him that the Englishman was dead. From a great gash in
- the man's head a pool of blood had collected upon the
- concrete floor.
-
- Quickly, the Belgian leaped over the prostrate form of
- his erstwhile host, and without a thought of succor for
- the man in whom, for aught he knew, life still
- remained, he bolted for the passageway and safety.
-
- But his renewed hopes were soon dashed. Just beyond
- the doorway he found the passage completely clogged and
- choked by impenetrable masses of shattered rock.
- Once more he turned and re-entered the treasure vault.
- Taking the candle from its place he commenced a
- systematic search of the apartment, nor had he gone far
- before he discovered another door in the opposite end
- of the room, a door which gave upon creaking hinges to
- the weight of his body. Beyond the door lay another
- narrow passageway. Along this Werper made his way,
- ascending a flight of stone steps to another corridor
- twenty feet above the level of the first. The
- flickering candle lighted the way before him, and a
- moment later he was thankful for the possession of this
- crude and antiquated luminant, which, a few hours
- before he might have looked upon with contempt, for it
- showed him, just in time, a yawning pit, apparently
- terminating the tunnel he was traversing.
-
- Before him was a circular shaft. He held the candle
- above it and peered downward. Below him, at a great
- distance, he saw the light reflected back from the
- surface of a pool of water. He had come upon a well.
- He raised the candle above his head and peered across
- the black void, and there upon the opposite side he saw
- the continuation of the tunnel; but how was he to span
- the gulf?
-
- As he stood there measuring the distance to the
- opposite side and wondering if he dared venture so
- great a leap, there broke suddenly upon his startled
- ears a piercing scream which diminished gradually until
- it ended in a series of dismal moans. The voice seemed
- partly human, yet so hideous that it might well have
- emanated from the tortured throat of a lost soul,
- writhing in the fires of hell.
-
- The Belgian shuddered and looked fearfully upward,
- for the scream had seemed to come from above him.
- As he looked he saw an opening far overhead, and a
- patch of sky pinked with brilliant stars.
-
- His half-formed intention to call for help was expunged
- by the terrifying cry--where such a voice lived, no
- human creatures could dwell. He dared not reveal
- himself to whatever inhabitants dwelt in the place
- above him. He cursed himself for a fool that he had
- ever embarked upon such a mission. He wished himself
- safely back in the camp of Achmet Zek, and would almost
- have embraced an opportunity to give himself up to the
- military authorities of the Congo if by so doing he
- might be rescued from the frightful predicament in
- which he now was.
-
- He listened fearfully, but the cry was not repeated,
- and at last spurred to desperate means, he gathered
- himself for the leap across the chasm. Going back
- twenty paces, he took a running start, and at the edge
- of the well, leaped upward and outward in an attempt to
- gain the opposite side.
-
- In his hand he clutched the sputtering candle,
- and as he took the leap the rush of air extinguished it.
- In utter darkness he flew through space, clutching outward
- for a hold should his feet miss the invisible ledge.
-
- He struck the edge of the door of the opposite terminus
- of the rocky tunnel with his knees, slipped backward,
- clutched desperately for a moment, and at last hung
- half within and half without the opening; but he was safe.
- For several minutes he dared not move; but
- clung, weak and sweating, where he lay. At last,
- cautiously, he drew himself well within the tunnel,
- and again he lay at full length upon the floor,
- fighting to regain control of his shattered nerves.
-
- When his knees struck the edge of the tunnel he had
- dropped the candle. Presently, hoping against hope
- that it had fallen upon the floor of the passageway,
- rather than back into the depths of the well, he rose
- upon all fours and commenced a diligent search for the
- little tallow cylinder, which now seemed infinitely
- more precious to him than all the fabulous wealth of
- the hoarded ingots of Opar.
-
- And when, at last, he found it, he clasped it to him
- and sank back sobbing and exhausted. For many minutes
- he lay trembling and broken; but finally he drew
- himself to a sitting posture, and taking a match from
- his pocket, lighted the stump of the candle which
- remained to him. With the light he found it easier to
- regain control of his nerves, and presently he was
- again making his way along the tunnel in search of an
- avenue of escape. The horrid cry that had come down to
- him from above through the ancient well-shaft still
- haunted him, so that he trembled in terror at even the
- sounds of his own cautious advance.
-
- He had gone forward but a short distance, when, to his
- chagrin, a wall of masonry barred his farther progress,
- closing the tunnel completely from top to bottom and
- from side to side. What could it mean? Werper was an
- educated and intelligent man. His military training
- had taught him to use his mind for the purpose for
- which it was intended. A blind tunnel such as this was
- senseless. It must continue beyond the wall. Someone,
- at some time in the past, had had it blocked for an
- unknown purpose of his own. The man fell to examining
- the masonry by the light of his candle. To his delight
- he discovered that the thin blocks of hewn stone of
- which it was constructed were fitted in loosely without
- mortar or cement. He tugged upon one of them, and to
- his joy found that it was easily removable. One after
- another he pulled out the blocks until he had opened an
- aperture large enough to admit his body, then he
- crawled through into a large, low chamber. Across this
- another door barred his way; but this, too, gave before
- his efforts, for it was not barred. A long, dark
- corridor showed before him, but before he had followed
- it far, his candle burned down until it scorched his
- fingers. With an oath he dropped it to the floor,
- where it sputtered for a moment and went out.
-
- Now he was in total darkness, and again terror rode
- heavily astride his neck. What further pitfalls and
- dangers lay ahead he could not guess; but that he was
- as far as ever from liberty he was quite willing to
- believe, so depressing is utter absence of light to one
- in unfamiliar surroundings.
-
- Slowly he groped his way along, feeling with his hands
- upon the tunnel's walls, and cautiously with his feet
- ahead of him upon the floor before he could take a
- single forward step. How long he crept on thus he
- could not guess; but at last, feeling that the tunnel's
- length was interminable, and exhausted by his efforts,
- by terror, and loss of sleep, he determined to lie down
- and rest before proceeding farther.
-
- When he awoke there was no change in the surrounding
- blackness. He might have slept a second or a day--he
- could not know; but that he had slept for some time was
- attested by the fact that he felt refreshed and hungry.
-
- Again he commenced his groping advance; but this time
- he had gone but a short distance when he emerged into a
- room, which was lighted through an opening in the
- ceiling, from which a flight of concrete steps led
- downward to the floor of the chamber.
-
- Above him, through the aperture, Werper could see
- sunlight glancing from massive columns, which were
- twined about by clinging vines. He listened; but he
- heard no sound other than the soughing of the wind
- through leafy branches, the hoarse cries of birds,
- and the chattering of monkeys.
-
- Boldly he ascended the stairway, to find himself in a
- circular court. Just before him stood a stone altar,
- stained with rusty-brown discolorations. At the time
- Werper gave no thought to an explanation of these
- stains--later their origin became all too hideously
- apparent to him.
-
- Beside the opening in the floor, just behind the altar,
- through which he had entered the court from the
- subterranean chamber below, the Belgian discovered
- several doors leading from the enclosure upon the level
- of the floor. Above, and circling the courtyard, was a
- series of open balconies. Monkeys scampered about the
- deserted ruins, and gaily plumaged birds flitted in and
- out among the columns and the galleries far above; but
- no sign of human presence was discernible. Werper felt
- relieved. He sighed, as though a great weight had been
- lifted from his shoulders. He took a step toward one
- of the exits, and then he halted, wide-eyed in
- astonishment and terror, for almost at the same instant
- a dozen doors opened in the courtyard wall and a horde
- of frightful men rushed in upon him.
-
- They were the priests of the Flaming God of Opar--the
- same, shaggy, knotted, hideous little men who had
- dragged Jane Clayton to the sacrificial altar at this
- very spot years before. Their long arms, their short
- and crooked legs, their close-set, evil eyes, and their
- low, receding foreheads gave them a bestial appearance
- that sent a qualm of paralyzing fright through the
- shaken nerves of the Belgian.
-
- With a scream he turned to flee back into the lesser
- terrors of the gloomy corridors and apartments from
- which he had just emerged, but the frightful men
- anticipated his intentions. They blocked the way;
- they seized him, and though he fell, groveling upon his
- knees before them, begging for his life, they bound him
- and hurled him to the floor of the inner temple.
-
- The rest was but a repetition of what Tarzan and Jane
- Clayton had passed through. The priestesses came,
- and with them La, the High Priestess. Werper was raised
- and laid across the altar. Cold sweat exuded from his
- every pore as La raised the cruel, sacrificial knife
- above him. The death chant fell upon his tortured
- ears. His staring eyes wandered to the golden goblets
- from which the hideous votaries would soon quench their
- inhuman thirst in his own, warm life-blood.
-
- He wished that he might be granted the brief respite of
- unconsciousness before the final plunge of the keen
- blade--and then there was a frightful roar that sounded
- almost in his ears. The High Priestess lowered her
- dagger. Her eyes went wide in horror. The
- priestesses, her votaresses, screamed and fled madly
- toward the exits. The priests roared out their rage
- and terror according to the temper of their courage.
- Werper strained his neck about to catch a sight of the
- cause of their panic, and when, at last he saw it, he
- too went cold in dread, for what his eyes beheld was
- the figure of a huge lion standing in the center of the
- temple, and already a single victim lay mangled beneath
- his cruel paws.
-
- Again the lord of the wilderness roared, turning his
- baleful gaze upon the altar. La staggered forward,
- reeled, and fell across Werper in a swoon.
-
-
-
- 6
-
- The Arab Raid
-
-
- After their first terror had subsided subsequent to the
- shock of the earthquake, Basuli and his warriors
- hastened back into the passageway in search of Tarzan
- and two of their own number who were also missing.
-
- They found the way blocked by jammed and distorted
- rock. For two days they labored to tear a way through
- to their imprisoned friends; but when, after Herculean
- efforts, they had unearthed but a few yards of the
- choked passage, and discovered the mangled remains of
- one of their fellows they were forced to the conclusion
- that Tarzan and the second Waziri also lay dead beneath
- the rock mass farther in, beyond human aid, and no
- longer susceptible of it.
-
- Again and again as they labored they called aloud the
- names of their master and their comrade; but no
- answering call rewarded their listening ears. At last
- they gave up the search. Tearfully they cast a last
- look at the shattered tomb of their master, shouldered
- the heavy burden of gold that would at least furnish
- comfort, if not happiness, to their bereaved and
- beloved mistress, and made their mournful way back
- across the desolate valley of Opar, and downward
- through the forests beyond toward the distant bungalow.
-
- And as they marched what sorry fate was already drawing
- down upon that peaceful, happy home!
-
- From the north came Achmet Zek, riding to the summons
- of his lieutenant's letter. With him came his horde of
- renegade Arabs, outlawed marauders, these, and equally
- degraded blacks, garnered from the more debased and
- ignorant tribes of savage cannibals through whose
- countries the raider passed to and fro with perfect
- impunity.
-
- Mugambi, the ebon Hercules, who had shared the dangers
- and vicissitudes of his beloved Bwana, from Jungle
- Island, almost to the headwaters of the Ugambi,
- was the first to note the bold approach of the
- sinister caravan.
-
- He it was whom Tarzan had left in charge of the
- warriors who remained to guard Lady Greystoke, nor
- could a braver or more loyal guardian have been found
- in any clime or upon any soil. A giant in stature,
- a savage, fearless warrior, the huge black possessed also
- soul and judgment in proportion to his bulk and his ferocity.
-
- Not once since his master had departed had he been
- beyond sight or sound of the bungalow, except when Lady
- Greystoke chose to canter across the broad plain, or
- relieve the monotony of her loneliness by a brief
- hunting excursion. On such occasions Mugambi, mounted
- upon a wiry Arab, had ridden close at her horse's
- heels.
-
- The raiders were still a long way off when the
- warrior's keen eyes discovered them. For a time he
- stood scrutinizing the advancing party in silence,
- then he turned and ran rapidly in the direction of the
- native huts which lay a few hundred yards below the bungalow.
-
- Here he called out to the lolling warriors. He issued
- orders rapidly. In compliance with them the men seized
- upon their weapons and their shields. Some ran to call
- in the workers from the fields and to warn the tenders
- of the flocks and herds. The majority followed Mugambi
- back toward the bungalow.
-
- The dust of the raiders was still a long distance away.
- Mugambi could not know positively that it hid an enemy;
- but he had spent a lifetime of savage life in savage
- Africa, and he had seen parties before come thus
- unheralded. Sometimes they had come in peace and
- sometimes they had come in war--one could never tell.
- It was well to be prepared. Mugambi did not like the
- haste with which the strangers advanced.
-
- The Greystoke bungalow was not well adapted for
- defense. No palisade surrounded it, for, situated as
- it was, in the heart of loyal Waziri, its master had
- anticipated no possibility of an attack in force by any
- enemy. Heavy, wooden shutters there were to close the
- window apertures against hostile arrows, and these
- Mugambi was engaged in lowering when Lady Greystoke
- appeared upon the veranda.
-
- "Why, Mugambi!" she exclaimed. "What has happened?
- Why are you lowering the shutters?"
-
- Mugambi pointed out across the plain to where a white-robed
- force of mounted men was now distinctly visible.
-
- "Arabs," he explained. "They come for no good purpose
- in the absence of the Great Bwana."
-
- Beyond the neat lawn and the flowering shrubs, Jane
- Clayton saw the glistening bodies of her Waziri.
- The sun glanced from the tips of their metal-shod spears,
- picked out the gorgeous colors in the feathers of their
- war bonnets, and reflected the high-lights from the
- glossy skins of their broad shoulders and high cheek bones.
-
- Jane Clayton surveyed them with unmixed feelings of
- pride and affection. What harm could befall her with
- such as these to protect her?
-
- The raiders had halted now, a hundred yards out upon
- the plain. Mugambi had hastened down to join his
- warriors. He advanced a few yards before them and
- raising his voice hailed the strangers. Achmet Zek sat
- straight in his saddle before his henchmen.
-
- "Arab!" cried Mugambi. "What do you here?"
-
- "We come in peace," Achmet Zek called back.
-
- "Then turn and go in peace," replied Mugambi.
- "We do not want you here. There can be no peace between
- Arab and Waziri."
-
- Mugambi, although not born in Waziri, had been adopted
- into the tribe, which now contained no member more
- jealous of its traditions and its prowess than he.
-
- Achmet Zek drew to one side of his horde, speaking to
- his men in a low voice. A moment later, without
- warning, a ragged volley was poured into the ranks of
- the Waziri. A couple of warriors fell, the others were
- for charging the attackers; but Mugambi was a cautious
- as well as a brave leader. He knew the futility of
- charging mounted men armed with muskets. He withdrew
- his force behind the shrubbery of the garden. Some he
- dispatched to various other parts of the grounds
- surrounding the bungalow. Half a dozen he sent to the
- bungalow itself with instructions to keep their
- mistress within doors, and to protect her with their lives.
-
- Adopting the tactics of the desert fighters from which
- he had sprung, Achmet Zek led his followers at a gallop
- in a long, thin line, describing a great circle which
- drew closer and closer in toward the defenders.
-
- At that part of the circle closest to the Waziri,
- a constant fusillade of shots was poured into the bushes
- behind which the black warriors had concealed
- themselves. The latter, on their part, loosed their
- slim shafts at the nearest of the enemy.
-
- The Waziri, justly famed for their archery, found no
- cause to blush for their performance that day.
- Time and again some swarthy horseman threw hands above
- his head and toppled from his saddle, pierced by a
- deadly arrow; but the contest was uneven. The Arabs
- outnumbered the Waziri; their bullets penetrated the
- shrubbery and found marks that the Arab riflemen had
- not even seen; and then Achmet Zek circled inward a
- half mile above the bungalow, tore down a section of
- the fence, and led his marauders within the grounds.
-
- Across the fields they charged at a mad run. Not again
- did they pause to lower fences, instead, they drove
- their wild mounts straight for them, clearing the
- obstacles as lightly as winged gulls.
-
- Mugambi saw them coming, and, calling those of his
- warriors who remained, ran for the bungalow and the
- last stand. Upon the veranda Lady Greystoke stood,
- rifle in hand. More than a single raider had accounted
- to her steady nerves and cool aim for his outlawry;
- more than a single pony raced, riderless, in the wake
- of the charging horde.
-
- Mugambi pushed his mistress back into the greater
- security of the interior, and with his depleted force
- prepared to make a last stand against the foe.
-
- On came the Arabs, shouting and waving their long guns
- above their heads. Past the veranda they raced,
- pouring a deadly fire into the kneeling Waziri who
- discharged their volley of arrows from behind their
- long, oval shields--shields well adapted, perhaps,
- to stop a hostile arrow, or deflect a spear; but futile,
- quite, before the leaden missiles of the riflemen.
-
- From beneath the half-raised shutters of the bungalow
- other bowmen did effective service in greater security,
- and after the first assault, Mugambi withdrew his
- entire force within the building.
-
- Again and again the Arabs charged, at last forming a
- stationary circle about the little fortress, and
- outside the effective range of the defenders' arrows.
- From their new position they fired at will at the
- windows. One by one the Waziri fell. Fewer and fewer
- were the arrows that replied to the guns of the
- raiders, and at last Achmet Zek felt safe in ordering
- an assault.
-
- Firing as they ran, the bloodthirsty horde raced for
- the veranda. A dozen of them fell to the arrows of the
- defenders; but the majority reached the door.
- Heavy gun butts fell upon it. The crash of splintered
- wood mingled with the report of a rifle as Jane Clayton
- fired through the panels upon the relentless foe.
-
- Upon both sides of the door men fell; but at last the
- frail barrier gave to the vicious assaults of the
- maddened attackers; it crumpled inward and a dozen
- swarthy murderers leaped into the living-room.
- At the far end stood Jane Clayton surrounded by the remnant
- of her devoted guardians. The floor was covered by the
- bodies of those who already had given up their lives in
- her defense. In the forefront of her protectors stood
- the giant Mugambi. The Arabs raised their rifles to
- pour in the last volley that would effectually end all
- resistance; but Achmet Zek roared out a warning order
- that stayed their trigger fingers.
-
- "Fire not upon the woman!" he cried. "Who harms her,
- dies. Take the woman alive!"
-
- The Arabs rushed across the room; the Waziri met them
- with their heavy spears. Swords flashed, long-barreled
- pistols roared out their sullen death dooms. Mugambi
- launched his spear at the nearest of the enemy with a
- force that drove the heavy shaft completely through the
- Arab's body, then he seized a pistol from another, and
- grasping it by the barrel brained all who forced their
- way too near his mistress.
-
- Emulating his example the few warriors who remained to
- him fought like demons; but one by one they fell, until
- only Mugambi remained to defend the life and honor of
- the ape-man's mate.
-
- From across the room Achmet Zek watched the unequal
- struggle and urged on his minions. In his hands was a
- jeweled musket. Slowly he raised it to his shoulder,
- waiting until another move should place Mugambi at his
- mercy without endangering the lives of the woman or any
- of his own followers.
-
- At last the moment came, and Achmet Zek pulled the
- trigger. Without a sound the brave Mugambi sank to the
- floor at the feet of Jane Clayton.
-
- An instant later she was surrounded and disarmed.
- Without a word they dragged her from the bungalow.
- A giant Negro lifted her to the pommel of his saddle,
- and while the raiders searched the bungalow and outhouses
- for plunder he rode with her beyond the gates and
- waited the coming of his master.
-
- Jane Clayton saw the raiders lead the horses from the
- corral, and drive the herds in from the fields.
- She saw her home plundered of all that represented
- intrinsic worth in the eyes of the Arabs, and then she saw
- the torch applied, and the flames lick up what remained.
-
- And at last, when the raiders assembled after glutting
- their fury and their avarice, and rode away with her
- toward the north, she saw the smoke and the flames
- rising far into the heavens until the winding of the trail
- into the thick forests hid the sad view from her eyes.
-
- As the flames ate their way into the living-room,
- reaching out forked tongues to lick up the bodies of
- the dead, one of that gruesome company whose bloody
- welterings had long since been stilled, moved again.
- It was a huge black who rolled over upon his side and
- opened blood-shot, suffering eyes. Mugambi, whom the
- Arabs had left for dead, still lived. The hot flames
- were almost upon him as he raised himself painfully
- upon his hands and knees and crawled slowly toward the
- doorway.
-
- Again and again he sank weakly to the floor; but each
- time he rose again and continued his pitiful way toward
- safety. After what seemed to him an interminable time,
- during which the flames had become a veritable fiery
- furnace at the far side of the room, the great black
- managed to reach the veranda, roll down the steps,
- and crawl off into the cool safety of some nearby
- shrubbery.
-
- All night he lay there, alternately unconscious and
- painfully sentient; and in the latter state watching
- with savage hatred the lurid flames which still rose
- from burning crib and hay cock. A prowling lion roared
- close at hand; but the giant black was unafraid. There
- was place for but a single thought in his savage mind--
- revenge! revenge! revenge!
-
-
-
- 7
-
- The Jewel-Room of Opar
-
-
- For some time Tarzan lay where he had fallen upon the
- floor of the treasure chamber beneath the ruined walls
- of Opar. He lay as one dead; but he was not dead.
- At length he stirred. His eyes opened upon the utter
- darkness of the room. He raised his hand to his head
- and brought it away sticky with clotted blood. He
- sniffed at his fingers, as a wild beast might sniff at
- the life-blood upon a wounded paw.
-
- Slowly he rose to a sitting posture--listening.
- No sound reached to the buried depths of his sepulcher.
- He staggered to his feet, and groped his way about
- among the tiers of ingots. What was he? Where was he?
- His head ached; but otherwise he felt no ill effects
- from the blow that had felled him. The accident he did not
- recall, nor did he recall aught of what had led up to it.
-
- He let his hands grope unfamiliarly over his limbs,
- his torso, and his head. He felt of the quiver at his
- back, the knife in his loin cloth. Something struggled
- for recognition within his brain. Ah! he had it.
- There was something missing. He crawled about upon
- the floor, feeling with his hands for the thing that
- instinct warned him was gone. At last he found it--the
- heavy war spear that in past years had formed so
- important a feature of his daily life, almost of his
- very existence, so inseparably had it been connected
- with his every action since the long-gone day that he
- had wrested his first spear from the body of a black
- victim of his savage training.
-
- Tarzan was sure that there was another and more lovely
- world than that which was confined to the darkness of
- the four stone walls surrounding him. He continued his
- search and at last found the doorway leading inward
- beneath the city and the temple. This he followed,
- most incautiously. He came to the stone steps leading
- upward to the higher level. He ascended them and
- continued onward toward the well.
-
- Nothing spurred his hurt memory to a recollection of
- past familiarity with his surroundings. He blundered
- on through the darkness as though he were traversing an
- open plain under the brilliance of a noonday sun, and
- suddenly there happened that which had to happen under
- the circumstances of his rash advance.
-
- He reached the brink of the well, stepped outward into
- space, lunged forward, and shot downward into the inky
- depths below. Still clutching his spear, he struck the
- water, and sank beneath its surface, plumbing the
- depths.
-
- The fall had not injured him, and when he rose to the
- surface, he shook the water from his eyes, and found
- that he could see. Daylight was filtering into the
- well from the orifice far above his head. It illumined
- the inner walls faintly. Tarzan gazed about him.
- On the level with the surface of the water he saw a
- large opening in the dark and slimy wall. He swam to it,
- and drew himself out upon the wet floor of a tunnel.
-
- Along this he passed; but now he went warily, for
- Tarzan of the Apes was learning. The unexpected pit
- had taught him care in the traversing of dark
- passageways--he needed no second lesson.
-
- For a long distance the passage went straight as an
- arrow. The floor was slippery, as though at times the
- rising waters of the well overflowed and flooded it.
- This, in itself, retarded Tarzan's pace, for it was
- with difficulty that he kept his footing.
-
- The foot of a stairway ended the passage. Up this he
- made his way. It turned back and forth many times,
- leading, at last, into a small, circular chamber,
- the gloom of which was relieved by a faint light which
- found ingress through a tubular shaft several feet in
- diameter which rose from the center of the room's
- ceiling, upward to a distance of a hundred feet or
- more, where it terminated in a stone grating through
- which Tarzan could see a blue and sun-lit sky.
-
- Curiosity prompted the ape-man to investigate his
- surroundings. Several metal-bound, copper-studded
- chests constituted the sole furniture of the round
- room. Tarzan let his hands run over these. He felt
- of the copper studs, he pulled upon the hinges, and at
- last, by chance, he raised the cover of one.
-
- An exclamation of delight broke from his lips at sight
- of the pretty contents. Gleaming and glistening in the
- subdued light of the chamber, lay a great tray full of
- brilliant stones. Tarzan, reverted to the primitive by
- his accident, had no conception of the fabulous value
- of his find. To him they were but pretty pebbles.
- He plunged his hands into them and let the priceless gems
- filter through his fingers. He went to others of the
- chests, only to find still further stores of precious
- stones. Nearly all were cut, and from these he
- gathered a handful and filled the pouch which dangled at
- his side--the uncut stones he tossed back into the chests.
-
- Unwittingly, the ape-man had stumbled upon the
- forgotten jewel-room of Opar. For ages it had lain
- buried beneath the temple of the Flaming God, midway of
- one of the many inky passages which the superstitious
- descendants of the ancient Sun Worshipers had either
- dared not or cared not to explore.
-
- Tiring at last of this diversion, Tarzan took up his way
- along the corridor which led upward from the jewel-room
- by a steep incline. Winding and twisting, but always
- tending upward, the tunnel led him nearer and
- nearer to the surface, ending finally in a low-ceiled
- room, lighter than any that he had as yet discovered.
-
- Above him an opening in the ceiling at the upper end of
- a flight of concrete steps revealed a brilliant sunlit
- scene. Tarzan viewed the vine-covered columns in mild
- wonderment. He puckered his brows in an attempt to
- recall some recollection of similar things. He was not
- sure of himself. There was a tantalizing suggestion
- always present in his mind that something was eluding
- him--that he should know many things which he did not know.
-
- His earnest cogitation was rudely interrupted by a
- thunderous roar from the opening above him. Following
- the roar came the cries and screams of men and women.
- Tarzan grasped his spear more firmly and ascended the
- steps. A strange sight met his eyes as he emerged from
- the semi-darkness of the cellar to the brilliant light
- of the temple.
-
- The creatures he saw before him he recognized for what
- they were--men and women, and a huge lion. The men and
- women were scuttling for the safety of the exits.
- The lion stood upon the body of one who had been less fortunate
- than the others. He was in the center of the temple.
- Directly before Tarzan, a woman stood beside a
- block of stone. Upon the top of the stone lay
- stretched a man, and as the ape-man watched the scene,
- he saw the lion glare terribly at the two who remained
- within the temple. Another thunderous roar broke from
- the savage throat, the woman screamed and swooned
- across the body of the man stretched prostrate upon the
- stone altar before her.
-
- The lion advanced a few steps and crouched. The tip of
- his sinuous tail twitched nervously. He was upon the
- point of charging when his eyes were attracted toward
- the ape-man.
-
- Werper, helpless upon the altar, saw the great
- carnivore preparing to leap upon him. He saw the
- sudden change in the beast's expression as his eyes
- wandered to something beyond the altar and out of the
- Belgian's view. He saw the formidable creature rise to
- a standing position. A figure darted past Werper.
- He saw a mighty arm upraised, and a stout spear shoot
- forward toward the lion, to bury itself in the broad chest.
-
- He saw the lion snapping and tearing at the weapon's
- shaft, and he saw, wonder of wonders, the naked giant
- who had hurled the missile charging upon the great
- beast, only a long knife ready to meet those ferocious
- fangs and talons.
-
- The lion reared up to meet this new enemy. The beast
- was growling frightfully, and then upon the startled
- ears of the Belgian, broke a similar savage growl from
- the lips of the man rushing upon the beast.
-
- By a quick side step, Tarzan eluded the first swinging
- clutch of the lion's paws. Darting to the beast's
- side, he leaped upon the tawny back. His arms
- encircled the maned neck, his teeth sank deep into the
- brute's flesh. Roaring, leaping, rolling and
- struggling, the giant cat attempted to dislodge this
- savage enemy, and all the while one great, brown fist
- was driving a long keen blade repeatedly into the
- beast's side.
-
- During the battle, La regained consciousness.
- Spellbound, she stood above her victim watching the
- spectacle. It seemed incredible that a human being
- could best the king of beasts in personal encounter and
- yet before her very eyes there was taking place just
- such an improbability.
-
- At last Tarzan's knife found the great heart, and with
- a final, spasmodic struggle the lion rolled over upon
- the marble floor, dead. Leaping to his feet the
- conqueror placed a foot upon the carcass of his kill,
- raised his face toward the heavens, and gave voice to
- so hideous a cry that both La and Werper trembled as it
- reverberated through the temple.
-
- Then the ape-man turned, and Werper recognized him as
- the man he had left for dead in the treasure room.
-
-
-
- 8
-
- The Escape from Opar
-
-
- Werper was astounded. Could this creature be the same
- dignified Englishman who had entertained him so
- graciously in his luxurious African home? Could this
- wild beast, with blazing eyes, and bloody countenance,
- be at the same time a man? Could the horrid, victory
- cry he had but just heard have been formed in human
- throat?
-
- Tarzan was eyeing the man and the woman, a puzzled
- expression in his eyes, but there was no faintest tinge
- of recognition. It was as though he had discovered
- some new species of living creature and was marveling
- at his find.
-
- La was studying the ape-man's features. Slowly her
- large eyes opened very wide.
-
- "Tarzan!" she exclaimed, and then, in the vernacular of
- the great apes which constant association with the
- anthropoids had rendered the common language of the
- Oparians: "You have come back to me! La has ignored the
- mandates of her religion, waiting, always waiting for
- Tarzan--for her Tarzan. She has taken no mate, for in
- all the world there was but one with whom La would
- mate. And now you have come back! Tell me, O Tarzan,
- that it is for me you have returned."
-
- Werper listened to the unintelligible jargon.
- He looked from La to Tarzan. Would the latter understand
- this strange tongue? To the Belgian's surprise, the
- Englishman answered in a language evidently identical
- to hers.
-
- "Tarzan," he repeated, musingly. "Tarzan. The name
- sounds familiar."
-
- "It is your name--you are Tarzan," cried La.
-
- "I am Tarzan?" The ape-man shrugged. "Well, it is a
- good name--I know no other, so I will keep it; but I do
- not know you. I did not come hither for you. Why I
- came, I do not know at all; neither do I know from
- whence I came. Can you tell me?"
-
- La shook her head. "I never knew," she replied.
-
- Tarzan turned toward Werper and put the same question
- to him; but in the language of the great apes.
- The Belgian shook his head.
-
- "I do not understand that language," he said in French.
-
- Without effort, and apparently without realizing that
- he made the change, Tarzan repeated his question in
- French. Werper suddenly came to a full realization of
- the magnitude of the injury of which Tarzan was a
- victim. The man had lost his memory--no longer could
- he recollect past events. The Belgian was upon the
- point of enlightening him, when it suddenly occurred to
- him that by keeping Tarzan in ignorance, for a time at
- least, of his true identity, it might be possible to
- turn the ape-man's misfortune to his own advantage.
-
- "I cannot tell you from whence you came," he said;
- "but this I can tell you--if we do not get out of this
- horrible place we shall both be slain upon this bloody
- altar. The woman was about to plunge her knife into my
- heart when the lion interrupted the fiendish ritual. Come!
- Before they recover from their fright and reassemble,
- let us find a way out of their damnable temple."
-
- Tarzan turned again toward La.
-
- "Why," he asked, "would you have killed this man?
- Are you hungry?"
-
- The High Priestess cried out in disgust.
-
- "Did he attempt to kill you?" continued Tarzan.
-
- The woman shook her head.
-
- "Then why should you have wished to kill him?" Tarzan
- was determined to get to the bottom of the thing.
-
- La raised her slender arm and pointed toward the sun.
-
- "We were offering up his soul as a gift to the Flaming
- God," she said.
-
- Tarzan looked puzzled. He was again an ape, and apes
- do not understand such matters as souls and Flaming
- Gods.
-
- "Do you wish to die?" he asked Werper.
-
- The Belgian assured him, with tears in his eyes, that
- he did not wish to die.
-
- "Very well then, you shall not," said Tarzan. "Come!
- We will go. This SHE would kill you and keep me
- for herself. It is no place anyway for a Mangani.
- I should soon die, shut up behind these stone walls."
-
- He turned toward La. "We are going now," he said.
-
- The woman rushed forward and seized the ape-man's hands
- in hers.
-
- "Do not leave me!" she cried. "Stay, and you shall be
- High Priest. La loves you. All Opar shall be yours.
- Slaves shall wait upon you. Stay, Tarzan of the Apes,
- and let love reward you."
-
- The ape-man pushed the kneeling woman aside. "Tarzan
- does not desire you," he said, simply, and stepping to
- Werper's side he cut the Belgian's bonds and motioned
- him to follow.
-
- Panting--her face convulsed with rage, La sprang to her
- feet.
-
- "Stay, you shall!" she screamed. "La will have you--if
- she cannot have you alive, she will have you dead," and
- raising her face to the sun she gave voice to the same
- hideous shriek that Werper had heard once before and
- Tarzan many times.
-
- In answer to her cry a babel of voices broke from the
- surrounding chambers and corridors.
-
- "Come, Guardian Priests!" she cried. "The infidels
- have profaned the holiest of the holies. Come! Strike
- terror to their hearts; defend La and her altar; wash
- clean the temple with the blood of the polluters."
-
- Tarzan understood, though Werper did not. The former
- glanced at the Belgian and saw that he was unarmed.
- Stepping quickly to La's side the ape-man seized her in
- his strong arms and though she fought with all the mad
- savagery of a demon, he soon disarmed her, handing her
- long, sacrificial knife to Werper.
-
- "You will need this," he said, and then from each
- doorway a horde of the monstrous, little men of Opar
- streamed into the temple.
-
- They were armed with bludgeons and knives, and
- fortified in their courage by fanatical hate and
- frenzy. Werper was terrified. Tarzan stood eyeing the
- foe in proud disdain. Slowly he advanced toward the
- exit he had chosen to utilize in making his way from
- the temple. A burly priest barred his way. Behind the
- first was a score of others. Tarzan swung his heavy
- spear, clublike, down upon the skull of the priest.
- The fellow collapsed, his head crushed.
-
- Again and again the weapon fell as Tarzan made his way
- slowly toward the doorway. Werper pressed close
- behind, casting backward glances toward the shrieking,
- dancing mob menacing their rear. He held the
- sacrificial knife ready to strike whoever might come
- within its reach; but none came. For a time he
- wondered that they should so bravely battle with the
- giant ape-man, yet hesitate to rush upon him, who was
- relatively so weak. Had they done so he knew that he
- must have fallen at the first charge. Tarzan had
- reached the doorway over the corpses of all that had
- stood to dispute his way, before Werper guessed at the
- reason for his immunity. The priests feared the
- sacrificial knife! Willingly would they face death and
- welcome it if it came while they defended their High
- Priestess and her altar; but evidently there were
- deaths, and deaths. Some strange superstition must
- surround that polished blade, that no Oparian cared to
- chance a death thrust from it, yet gladly rushed to the
- slaughter of the ape-man's flaying spear.
-
- Once outside the temple court, Werper communicated his
- discovery to Tarzan. The ape-man grinned, and let
- Werper go before him, brandishing the jeweled and holy
- weapon. Like leaves before a gale, the Oparians
- scattered in all directions and Tarzan and the Belgian
- found a clear passage through the corridors and
- chambers of the ancient temple.
-
- The Belgian's eyes went wide as they passed through the
- room of the seven pillars of solid gold. With ill-concealed
- avarice he looked upon the age-old, golden tablets
- set in the walls of nearly every room and down
- the sides of many of the corridors. To the ape-man all
- this wealth appeared to mean nothing.
-
- On the two went, chance leading them toward the broad
- avenue which lay between the stately piles of the
- half-ruined edifices and the inner wall of the city.
- Great apes jabbered at them and menaced them; but Tarzan
- answered them after their own kind, giving back taunt
- for taunt, insult for insult, challenge for challenge.
-
- Werper saw a hairy bull swing down from a broken column
- and advance, stiff-legged and bristling, toward the
- naked giant. The yellow fangs were bared, angry snarls
- and barkings rumbled threateningly through the thick
- and hanging lips.
-
- The Belgian watched his companion. To his horror, he
- saw the man stoop until his closed knuckles rested upon
- the ground as did those of the anthropoid. He saw him
- circle, stiff-legged about the circling ape. He heard
- the same bestial barkings and growlings issue from the
- human throat that were coming from the mouth of the
- brute. Had his eyes been closed he could not have
- known but that two giant apes were bridling for combat.
-
- But there was no battle. It ended as the majority of
- such jungle encounters end--one of the boasters loses
- his nerve, and becomes suddenly interested in a blowing
- leaf, a beetle, or the lice upon his hairy stomach.
-
- In this instance it was the anthropoid that retired in
- stiff dignity to inspect an unhappy caterpillar, which
- he presently devoured. For a moment Tarzan seemed
- inclined to pursue the argument. He swaggered
- truculently, stuck out his chest, roared and advanced
- closer to the bull. It was with difficulty that Werper
- finally persuaded him to leave well enough alone and
- continue his way from the ancient city of the Sun
- Worshipers.
-
- The two searched for nearly an hour before they found
- the narrow exit through the inner wall. From there the
- well-worn trail led them beyond the outer fortification
- to the desolate valley of Opar.
-
- Tarzan had no idea, in so far as Werper could discover,
- as to where he was or whence he came. He wandered
- aimlessly about, searching for food, which he
- discovered beneath small rocks, or hiding in the shade
- of the scant brush which dotted the ground.
-
- The Belgian was horrified by the hideous menu of his
- companion. Beetles, rodents and caterpillars were
- devoured with seeming relish. Tarzan was indeed an ape
- again.
-
- At last Werper succeeded in leading his companion
- toward the distant hills which mark the northwestern
- boundary of the valley, and together the two set out in
- the direction of the Greystoke bungalow.
-
- What purpose prompted the Belgian in leading the victim
- of his treachery and greed back toward his former home
- it is difficult to guess, unless it was that without
- Tarzan there could be no ransom for Tarzan's wife.
-
- That night they camped in the valley beyond the hills,
- and as they sat before a little fire where cooked a
- wild pig that had fallen to one of Tarzan's arrows, the
- latter sat lost in speculation. He seemed continually
- to be trying to grasp some mental image which as
- constantly eluded him.
-
- At last he opened the leathern pouch which hung at his
- side. From it he poured into the palm of his hand a
- quantity of glittering gems. The firelight playing
- upon them conjured a multitude of scintillating rays,
- and as the wide eyes of the Belgian looked on in rapt
- fascination, the man's expression at last acknowledged
- a tangible purpose in courting the society of the ape-man.
-
-
-
- 9
-
- The Theft of the Jewels
-
-
- For two days Werper sought for the party that had
- accompanied him from the camp to the barrier cliffs;
- but not until late in the afternoon of the second day
- did he find clew to its whereabouts, and then in such
- gruesome form that he was totally unnerved by the
- sight.
-
- In an open glade he came upon the bodies of three of
- the blacks, terribly mutilated, nor did it require
- considerable deductive power to explain their murder.
- Of the little party only these three had not been
- slaves. The others, evidently tempted to hope for
- freedom from their cruel Arab master, had taken
- advantage of their separation from the main camp, to
- slay the three representatives of the hated power which
- held them in slavery, and vanish into the jungle.
-
- Cold sweat exuded from Werper's forehead as he
- contemplated the fate which chance had permitted him to
- escape, for had he been present when the conspiracy
- bore fruit, he, too, must have been of the garnered.
-
- Tarzan showed not the slightest surprise or interest in
- the discovery. Inherent in him was a calloused
- familiarity with violent death. The refinements of his
- recent civilization expunged by the force of the sad
- calamity which had befallen him, left only the
- primitive sensibilities which his childhood's training
- had imprinted indelibly upon the fabric of his mind.
-
- The training of Kala, the examples and precepts of
- Kerchak, of Tublat, and of Terkoz now formed the basis
- of his every thought and action. He retained a
- mechanical knowledge of French and English speech.
- Werper had spoken to him in French, and Tarzan had
- replied in the same tongue without conscious
- realization that he had departed from the anthropoidal
- speech in which he had addressed La. Had Werper used
- English, the result would have been the same.
-
- Again, that night, as the two sat before their camp
- fire, Tarzan played with his shining baubles. Werper
- asked him what they were and where he had found them.
- The ape-man replied that they were gay-colored stones,
- with which he purposed fashioning a necklace, and that
- he had found them far beneath the sacrificial court of
- the temple of the Flaming God.
-
- Werper was relieved to find that Tarzan had no
- conception of the value of the gems. This would make
- it easier for the Belgian to obtain possession of them.
- Possibly the man would give them to him for the asking.
- Werper reached out his hand toward the little pile that
- Tarzan had arranged upon a piece of flat wood before
- him.
-
- "Let me see them," said the Belgian.
-
- Tarzan placed a large palm over his treasure. He bared
- his fighting fangs, and growled. Werper withdrew his
- hand more quickly than he had advanced it. Tarzan
- resumed his playing with the gems, and his conversation
- with Werper as though nothing unusual had occurred.
- He had but exhibited the beast's jealous protective
- instinct for a possession. When he killed he shared
- the meat with Werper; but had Werper ever, by accident,
- laid a hand upon Tarzan's share, he would have aroused
- the same savage, and resentful warning.
-
- From that occurrence dated the beginning of a great
- fear in the breast of the Belgian for his savage
- companion. He had never understood the transformation
- that had been wrought in Tarzan by the blow upon his
- head, other than to attribute it to a form of amnesia.
- That Tarzan had once been, in truth, a savage, jungle
- beast, Werper had not known, and so, of course, he
- could not guess that the man had reverted to the state
- in which his childhood and young manhood had been
- spent.
-
- Now Werper saw in the Englishman a dangerous maniac,
- whom the slightest untoward accident might turn upon
- him with rending fangs. Not for a moment did Werper
- attempt to delude himself into the belief that he could
- defend himself successfully against an attack by the
- ape-man. His one hope lay in eluding him, and making
- for the far distant camp of Achmet Zek as rapidly as he
- could; but armed only with the sacrificial knife,
- Werper shrank from attempting the journey through the
- jungle. Tarzan constituted a protection that was by no
- means despicable, even in the face of the larger
- carnivora, as Werper had reason to acknowledge from the
- evidence he had witnessed in the Oparian temple.
-
- Too, Werper had his covetous soul set upon the pouch of
- gems, and so he was torn between the various emotions
- of avarice and fear. But avarice it was that burned
- most strongly in his breast, to the end that he dared
- the dangers and suffered the terrors of constant
- association with him he thought a mad man, rather than
- give up the hope of obtaining possession of the fortune
- which the contents of the little pouch represented.
-
- Achmet Zek should know nothing of these--these would be
- for Werper alone, and so soon as he could encompass his
- design he would reach the coast and take passage for
- America, where he could conceal himself beneath the
- veil of a new identity and enjoy to some measure the
- fruits of his theft. He had it all planned out, did
- Lieutenant Albert Werper, living in anticipation the
- luxurious life of the idle rich. He even found himself
- regretting that America was so provincial, and that
- nowhere in the new world was a city that might compare
- with his beloved Brussels.
-
- It was upon the third day of their progress from Opar
- that the keen ears of Tarzan caught the sound of men
- behind them. Werper heard nothing above the humming of
- the jungle insects, and the chattering life of the
- lesser monkeys and the birds.
-
- For a time Tarzan stood in statuesque silence,
- listening, his sensitive nostrils dilating as he
- assayed each passing breeze. Then he withdrew Werper
- into the concealment of thick brush, and waited.
- Presently, along the game trail that Werper and Tarzan
- had been following, there came in sight a sleek,
- black warrior, alert and watchful.
-
- In single file behind him, there followed, one after
- another, near fifty others, each burdened with two
- dull-yellow ingots lashed upon his back. Werper
- recognized the party immediately as that which had
- accompanied Tarzan on his journey to Opar. He glanced
- at the ape-man; but in the savage, watchful eyes he saw
- no recognition of Basuli and those other loyal Waziri.
-
- When all had passed, Tarzan rose and emerged from
- concealment. He looked down the trail in the direction
- the party had gone. Then he turned to Werper.
-
- "We will follow and slay them," he said.
-
- "Why?" asked the Belgian.
-
- "They are black," explained Tarzan. "It was a black
- who killed Kala. They are the enemies of the
- Manganis."
-
- Werper did not relish the idea of engaging in a battle
- with Basuli and his fierce fighting men. And, again,
- he had welcomed the sight of them returning toward the
- Greystoke bungalow, for he had begun to have doubts as
- to his ability to retrace his steps to the Waziri
- country. Tarzan, he knew, had not the remotest idea of
- whither they were going. By keeping at a safe distance
- behind the laden warriors, they would have no
- difficulty in following them home. Once at the
- bungalow, Werper knew the way to the camp of Achmet
- Zek. There was still another reason why he did not
- wish to interfere with the Waziri--they were bearing
- the great burden of treasure in the direction he wished
- it borne. The farther they took it, the less the
- distance that he and Achmet Zek would have to transport it.
-
- He argued with the ape-man therefore, against the
- latter's desire to exterminate the blacks, and at last
- he prevailed upon Tarzan to follow them in peace,
- saying that he was sure they would lead them out of the
- forest into a rich country, teeming with game.
-
- It was many marches from Opar to the Waziri country;
- but at last came the hour when Tarzan and the Belgian,
- following the trail of the warriors, topped the last
- rise, and saw before them the broad Waziri plain, the
- winding river, and the distant forests to the north and
- west.
-
- A mile or more ahead of them, the line of warriors was
- creeping like a giant caterpillar through the tall
- grasses of the plain. Beyond, grazing herds of zebra,
- hartebeest, and topi dotted the level landscape, while
- closer to the river a bull buffalo, his head and
- shoulders protruding from the reeds watched the
- advancing blacks for a moment, only to turn at last and
- disappear into the safety of his dank and gloomy
- retreat.
-
- Tarzan looked out across the familiar vista with no
- faintest gleam of recognition in his eyes. He saw the
- game animals, and his mouth watered; but he did not
- look in the direction of his bungalow. Werper,
- however, did. A puzzled expression entered the
- Belgian's eyes. He shaded them with his palms and
- gazed long and earnestly toward the spot where the
- bungalow had stood. He could not credit the testimony
- of his eyes--there was no bungalow--no barns--no
- out- houses. The corrals, the hay stacks--all were gone.
- What could it mean?
-
- And then, slowly there filtered into Werper's
- consciousness an explanation of the havoc that had been
- wrought in that peaceful valley since last his eyes had
- rested upon it--Achmet Zek had been there!
-
- Basuli and his warriors had noted the devastation the
- moment they had come in sight of the farm. Now they
- hastened on toward it talking excitedly among
- themselves in animated speculation upon the cause and
- meaning of the catastrophe.
-
- When, at last they crossed the trampled garden and
- stood before the charred ruins of their master's
- bungalow, their greatest fears became convictions in
- the light of the evidence about them.
-
- Remnants of human dead, half devoured by prowling
- hyenas and others of the carnivora which infested the
- region, lay rotting upon the ground, and among the
- corpses remained sufficient remnants of their clothing
- and ornaments to make clear to Basuli the frightful
- story of the disaster that had befallen his master's
- house.
-
- "The Arabs," he said, as his men clustered about him.
-
- The Waziri gazed about in mute rage for several
- minutes. Everywhere they encountered only further
- evidence of the ruthlessness of the cruel enemy that
- had come during the Great Bwana's absence and laid
- waste his property.
-
- "What did they with 'Lady'?" asked one of the blacks.
-
- They had always called Lady Greystoke thus.
-
- "The women they would have taken with them," said
- Basuli. "Our women and his."
-
- A giant black raised his spear above his head, and gave
- voice to a savage cry of rage and hate. The others
- followed his example. Basuli silenced them with a gesture.
-
- "This is no time for useless noises of the mouth," he
- said. "The Great Bwana has taught us that it is acts
- by which things are done, not words. Let us save our
- breath--we shall need it all to follow up the Arabs and
- slay them. If 'Lady' and our women live the greater
- the need of haste, and warriors cannot travel fast upon
- empty lungs."
-
- From the shelter of the reeds along the river, Werper
- and Tarzan watched the blacks. They saw them dig a
- trench with their knives and fingers. They saw them
- lay their yellow burdens in it and scoop the overturned
- earth back over the tops of the ingots.
-
- Tarzan seemed little interested, after Werper had
- assured him that that which they buried was not good to
- eat; but Werper was intensely interested. He would
- have given much had he had his own followers with him,
- that he might take away the treasure as soon as the
- blacks left, for he was sure that they would leave this
- scene of desolation and death as soon as possible.
-
- The treasure buried, the blacks removed themselves a
- short distance up wind from the fetid corpses, where
- they made camp, that they might rest before setting out
- in pursuit of the Arabs. It was already dusk. Werper
- and Tarzan sat devouring some pieces of meat they had
- brought from their last camp. The Belgian was occupied
- with his plans for the immediate future. He was
- positive that the Waziri would pursue Achmet Zek,
- for he knew enough of savage warfare, and of the
- characteristics of the Arabs and their degraded
- followers to guess that they had carried the Waziri
- women off into slavery. This alone would assure
- immediate pursuit by so warlike a people as the Waziri.
-
- Werper felt that he should find the means and the
- opportunity to push on ahead, that he might warn Achmet
- Zek of the coming of Basuli, and also of the location
- of the buried treasure. What the Arab would now do
- with Lady Greystoke, in view of the mental affliction
- of her husband, Werper neither knew nor cared. It was
- enough that the golden treasure buried upon the site of
- the burned bungalow was infinitely more valuable than
- any ransom that would have occurred even to the
- avaricious mind of the Arab, and if Werper could
- persuade the raider to share even a portion of it with
- him he would be well satisfied.
-
- But by far the most important consideration, to Werper,
- at least, was the incalculably valuable treasure in the
- little leathern pouch at Tarzan's side. If he could
- but obtain possession of this! He must! He would!
-
- His eyes wandered to the object of his greed.
- They measured Tarzan's giant frame, and rested upon
- the rounded muscles of his arms. It was hopeless.
- What could he, Werper, hope to accomplish, other than his
- own death, by an attempt to wrest the gems from their
- savage owner?
-
- Disconsolate, Werper threw himself upon his side.
- His head was pillowed on one arm, the other rested across
- his face in such a way that his eyes were hidden from
- the ape-man, though one of them was fastened upon him
- from beneath the shadow of the Belgian's forearm.
- For a time he lay thus, glowering at Tarzan, and
- originating schemes for plundering him of his treasure--
- schemes that were discarded as futile as rapidly as
- they were born.
-
- Tarzan presently let his own eyes rest upon Werper.
- The Belgian saw that he was being watched, and lay very
- still. After a few moments he simulated the regular
- breathing of deep slumber.
-
- Tarzan had been thinking. He had seen the Waziri bury
- their belongings. Werper had told him that they were
- hiding them lest some one find them and take them away.
- This seemed to Tarzan a splendid plan for safeguarding
- valuables. Since Werper had evinced a desire to
- possess his glittering pebbles, Tarzan, with the
- suspicions of a savage, had guarded the baubles, of
- whose worth he was entirely ignorant, as zealously as
- though they spelled life or death to him.
-
- For a long time the ape-man sat watching his companion.
- At last, convinced that he slept, Tarzan withdrew his
- hunting knife and commenced to dig a hole in the ground
- before him. With the blade he loosened up the earth,
- and with his hands he scooped it out until he had
- excavated a little cavity a few inches in diameter, and
- five or six inches in depth. Into this he placed the
- pouch of jewels. Werper almost forgot to breathe after
- the fashion of a sleeper as he saw what the ape-man was
- doing--he scarce repressed an ejaculation of
- satisfaction.
-
- Tarzan become suddenly rigid as his keen ears noted the
- cessation of the regular inspirations and expirations
- of his companion. His narrowed eyes bored straight
- down upon the Belgian. Werper felt that he was lost--
- he must risk all on his ability to carry on the
- deception. He sighed, threw both arms outward, and
- turned over on his back mumbling as though in the
- throes of a bad dream. A moment later he resumed the
- regular breathing.
-
- Now he could not watch Tarzan, but he was sure that the
- man sat for a long time looking at him. Then, faintly,
- Werper heard the other's hands scraping dirt, and later
- patting it down. He knew then that the jewels were
- buried.
-
- It was an hour before Werper moved again, then he
- rolled over facing Tarzan and opened his eyes. The
- ape-man slept. By reaching out his hand Werper could
- touch the spot where the pouch was buried.
-
- For a long time he lay watching and listening.
- He moved about, making more noise than necessary,
- yet Tarzan did not awaken. He drew the sacrificial knife
- from his belt, and plunged it into the ground.
- Tarzan did not move. Cautiously the Belgian pushed the
- blade downward through the loose earth above the pouch.
- He felt the point touch the soft, tough fabric of the
- leather. Then he pried down upon the handle.
- Slowly the little mound of loose earth rose and parted.
- An instant later a corner of the pouch came into view.
- Werper pulled it from its hiding place, and tucked it
- in his shirt. Then he refilled the hole and pressed
- the dirt carefully down as it had been before.
-
- Greed had prompted him to an act, the discovery of
- which by his companion could lead only to the most
- frightful consequences for Werper. Already he could
- almost feel those strong, white fangs burying
- themselves in his neck. He shuddered. Far out across
- the plain a leopard screamed, and in the dense reeds
- behind him some great beast moved on padded feet.
-
- Werper feared these prowlers of the night; but
- infinitely more he feared the just wrath of the human
- beast sleeping at his side. With utmost caution the
- Belgian arose. Tarzan did not move. Werper took a few
- steps toward the plain and the distant forest to the
- northwest, then he paused and fingered the hilt of the
- long knife in his belt. He turned and looked down upon
- the sleeper.
-
- "Why not?" he mused. "Then I should be safe."
-
- He returned and bent above the ape-man. Clutched
- tightly in his hand was the sacrificial knife of the
- High Priestess of the Flaming God!
-
-
-
- 10
-
- Achmet Zek Sees the Jewels
-
-
- Mugambi, weak and suffering, had dragged his painful
- way along the trail of the retreating raiders.
- He could move but slowly, resting often; but savage hatred
- and an equally savage desire for vengeance kept him to
- his task. As the days passed his wounds healed and his
- strength returned, until at last his giant frame had
- regained all of its former mighty powers. Now he went
- more rapidly; but the mounted Arabs had covered a great
- distance while the wounded black had been painfully
- crawling after them.
-
- They had reached their fortified camp, and there Achmet
- Zek awaited the return of his lieutenant, Albert
- Werper. During the long, rough journey, Jane Clayton
- had suffered more in anticipation of her impending fate
- than from the hardships of the road.
-
- Achmet Zek had not deigned to acquaint her with his
- intentions regarding her future. She prayed that she
- had been captured in the hope of ransom, for if such
- should prove the case, no great harm would befall her
- at the hands of the Arabs; but there was the chance,
- the horrid chance, that another fate awaited her.
- She had heard of many women, among whom were white women,
- who had been sold by outlaws such as Achmet Zek into
- the slavery of black harems, or taken farther north
- into the almost equally hideous existence of some
- Turkish seraglio.
-
- Jane Clayton was of sterner stuff than that which bends
- in spineless terror before danger. Until hope proved
- futile she would not give it up; nor did she entertain
- thoughts of self-destruction only as a final escape
- from dishonor. So long as Tarzan lived there was every
- reason to expect succor. No man nor beast who roamed
- the savage continent could boast the cunning and the
- powers of her lord and master. To her, he was little
- short of omnipotent in his native world--this world of
- savage beasts and savage men. Tarzan would come, and
- she would be rescued and avenged, of that she was
- certain. She counted the days that must elapse before
- he would return from Opar and discover what had
- transpired during his absence. After that it would be
- but a short time before he had surrounded the Arab
- stronghold and punished the motley crew of wrongdoers
- who inhabited it.
-
- That he could find her she had no slightest doubt.
- No spoor, however faint, could elude the keen vigilance
- of his senses. To him, the trail of the raiders would be
- as plain as the printed page of an open book to her.
-
- And while she hoped, there came through the dark jungle
- another. Terrified by night and by day, came Albert
- Werper. A dozen times he had escaped the claws and
- fangs of the giant carnivora only by what seemed a
- miracle to him. Armed with nothing more than the knife
- he had brought with him from Opar, he had made his way
- through as savage a country as yet exists upon the face
- of the globe.
-
- By night he had slept in trees. By day he had stumbled
- fearfully on, often taking refuge among the branches
- when sight or sound of some great cat warned him from
- danger. But at last he had come within sight of the
- palisade behind which were his fierce companions.
-
- At almost the same time Mugambi came out of the jungle
- before the walled village. As he stood in the shadow
- of a great tree, reconnoitering, he saw a man, ragged
- and disheveled, emerge from the jungle almost at his
- elbow. Instantly he recognized the newcomer as he who
- had been a guest of his master before the latter had
- departed for Opar.
-
- The black was upon the point of hailing the Belgian
- when something stayed him. He saw the white man
- walking confidently across the clearing toward the
- village gate. No sane man thus approached a village in
- this part of Africa unless he was sure of a friendly
- welcome. Mugambi waited. His suspicions were aroused.
-
- He heard Werper halloo; he saw the gates swing open,
- and he witnessed the surprised and friendly welcome
- that was accorded the erstwhile guest of Lord and Lady
- Greystoke. A light broke upon the understanding of
- Mugambi. This white man had been a traitor and a spy.
- It was to him they owed the raid during the absence of
- the Great Bwana. To his hate for the Arabs, Mugambi
- added a still greater hate for the white spy.
-
- Within the village Werper passed hurriedly toward the
- silken tent of Achmet Zek. The Arab arose as his
- lieutenant entered. His face showed surprise as he
- viewed the tattered apparel of the Belgian.
-
- "What has happened?" he asked.
-
- Werper narrated all, save the little matter of the
- pouch of gems which were now tightly strapped about his
- waist, beneath his clothing. The Arab's eyes narrowed
- greedily as his henchman described the treasure that
- the Waziri had buried beside the ruins of the Greystoke
- bungalow.
-
- "It will be a simple matter now to return and get it,"
- said Achmet Zek. "First we will await the coming of
- the rash Waziri, and after we have slain them we may
- take our time to the treasure--none will disturb it
- where it lies, for we shall leave none alive who knows
- of its existence.
-
- "And the woman?" asked Werper.
-
- "I shall sell her in the north," replied the raider.
- "It is the only way, now. She should bring a good
- price."
-
- The Belgian nodded. He was thinking rapidly. If he
- could persuade Achmet Zek to send him in command of the
- party which took Lady Greystoke north it would give him
- the opportunity he craved to make his escape from his
- chief. He would forego a share of the gold, if he
- could but get away unscathed with the jewels.
-
- He knew Achmet Zek well enough by this time to know
- that no member of his band ever was voluntarily
- released from the service of Achmet Zek. Most of the
- few who deserted were recaptured. More than once had
- Werper listened to their agonized screams as they were
- tortured before being put to death. The Belgian had no
- wish to take the slightest chance of recapture.
-
- "Who will go north with the woman," he asked, "while we
- are returning for the gold that the Waziri buried by
- the bungalow of the Englishman?"
-
- Achmet Zek thought for a moment. The buried gold was
- of much greater value than the price the woman would
- bring. It was necessary to rid himself of her as
- quickly as possible and it was also well to obtain the
- gold with the least possible delay. Of all his
- followers, the Belgian was the most logical lieutenant
- to intrust with the command of one of the parties. An
- Arab, as familiar with the trails and tribes as Achmet
- Zek himself, might collect the woman's price and make
- good his escape into the far north. Werper, on the
- other hand, could scarce make his escape alone through
- a country hostile to Europeans while the men he would
- send with the Belgian could be carefully selected with
- a view to preventing Werper from persuading any
- considerable portion of his command to accompany him
- should he contemplate desertion of his chief.
-
- At last the Arab spoke: "It is not necessary that we
- both return for the gold. You shall go north with the
- woman, carrying a letter to a friend of mine who is
- always in touch with the best markets for such
- merchandise, while I return for the gold. We can meet
- again here when our business is concluded."
-
- Werper could scarce disguise the joy with which he
- received this welcome decision. And that he did
- entirely disguise it from the keen and suspicious eyes
- of Achmet Zek is open to question. However, the
- decision reached, the Arab and his lieutenant discussed
- the details of their forthcoming ventures for a short
- time further, when Werper made his excuses and returned
- to his own tent for the comforts and luxury of a
- long-desired bath and shave.
-
- Having bathed, the Belgian tied a small hand mirror to
- a cord sewn to the rear wall of his tent, placed a rude
- chair beside an equally rude table that stood beside
- the glass, and proceeded to remove the rough stubble
- from his face.
-
- In the catalog of masculine pleasures there is scarce
- one which imparts a feeling of greater comfort and
- refreshment than follows a clean shave, and now, with
- weariness temporarily banished, Albert Werper sprawled
- in his rickety chair to enjoy a final cigaret before
- retiring. His thumbs, tucked in his belt in lazy
- support of the weight of his arms, touched the belt
- which held the jewel pouch about his waist. He tingled
- with excitement as he let his mind dwell upon the value
- of the treasure, which, unknown to all save himself,
- lay hidden beneath his clothing.
-
- What would Achmet Zek say, if he knew? Werper grinned.
- How the old rascal's eyes would pop could he but have a
- glimpse of those scintillating beauties! Werper had
- never yet had an opportunity to feast his eyes for any
- great length of time upon them. He had not even
- counted them--only roughly had he guessed at their
- value.
-
- He unfastened the belt and drew the pouch from its
- hiding place. He was alone. The balance of the camp,
- save the sentries, had retired--none would enter the
- Belgian's tent. He fingered the pouch, feeling out the
- shapes and sizes of the precious, little nodules
- within. He hefted the bag, first in one palm, then in
- the other, and at last he wheeled his chair slowly
- around before the table, and in the rays of his small
- lamp let the glittering gems roll out upon the rough
- wood.
-
- The refulgent rays transformed the interior of the
- soiled and squalid canvas to the splendor of a palace
- in the eyes of the dreaming man. He saw the gilded
- halls of pleasure that would open their portals to the
- possessor of the wealth which lay scattered upon this
- stained and dented table top. He dreamed of joys and
- luxuries and power which always had been beyond his
- grasp, and as he dreamed his gaze lifted from the
- table, as the gaze of a dreamer will, to a far distant
- goal above the mean horizon of terrestrial
- commonplaceness.
-
- Unseeing, his eyes rested upon the shaving mirror which
- still hung upon the tent wall above the table; but his
- sight was focused far beyond. And then a reflection
- moved within the polished surface of the tiny glass,
- the man's eyes shot back out of space to the mirror's
- face, and in it he saw reflected the grim visage of
- Achmet Zek, framed in the flaps of the tent doorway
- behind him.
-
- Werper stifled a gasp of dismay. With rare
- self-possession he let his gaze drop, without appearing
- to have halted upon the mirror until it rested again upon
- the gems. Without haste, he replaced them in the
- pouch, tucked the latter into his shirt, selected a
- cigaret from his case, lighted it and rose. Yawning,
- and stretching his arms above his head, he turned
- slowly toward the opposite end of the tent. The face
- of Achmet Zek had disappeared from the opening.
-
- To say that Albert Werper was terrified would be
- putting it mildly. He realized that he not only had
- sacrificed his treasure; but his life as well.
- Achmet Zek would never permit the wealth that he had
- discovered to slip through his fingers, nor would he
- forgive the duplicity of a lieutenant who had gained
- possession of such a treasure without offering to share
- it with his chief.
-
- Slowly the Belgian prepared for bed. If he were being
- watched, he could not know; but if so the watcher saw
- no indication of the nervous excitement which the
- European strove to conceal. When ready for his
- blankets, the man crossed to the little table and
- extinguished the light.
-
- It was two hours later that the flaps at the front of
- the tent separated silently and gave entrance to a
- dark-robed figure, which passed noiselessly from the
- darkness without to the darkness within. Cautiously
- the prowler crossed the interior. In one hand was a
- long knife. He came at last to the pile of blankets
- spread upon several rugs close to one of the tent
- walls.
-
- Lightly, his fingers sought and found the bulk beneath
- the blankets--the bulk that should be Albert Werper.
- They traced out the figure of a man, and then an arm
- shot upward, poised for an instant and descended.
- Again and again it rose and fell, and each time the
- long blade of the knife buried itself in the thing
- beneath the blankets. But there was an initial
- lifelessness in the silent bulk that gave the assassin
- momentary wonder. Feverishly he threw back the
- coverlets, and searched with nervous hands for the
- pouch of jewels which he expected to find concealed
- upon his victim's body.
-
- An instant later he rose with a curse upon his lips.
- It was Achmet Zek, and he cursed because he had
- discovered beneath the blankets of his lieutenant only
- a pile of discarded clothing arranged in the form and
- semblance of a sleeping man--Albert Werper had fled.
-
- Out into the village ran the chief, calling in angry
- tones to the sleepy Arabs, who tumbled from their tents
- in answer to his voice. But though they searched the
- village again and again they found no trace of the
- Belgian. Foaming with anger, Achmet Zek called his
- followers to horse, and though the night was pitchy
- black they set out to scour the adjoining forest for
- their quarry.
-
- As they galloped from the open gates, Mugambi, hiding
- in a nearby bush, slipped, unseen, within the palisade.
- A score of blacks crowded about the entrance to watch
- the searchers depart, and as the last of them passed
- out of the village the blacks seized the portals and
- drew them to, and Mugambi lent a hand in the work as
- though the best of his life had been spent among the
- raiders.
-
- In the darkness he passed, unchallenged, as one of
- their number, and as they returned from the gates to
- their respective tents and huts, Mugambi melted into
- the shadows and disappeared.
-
- For an hour he crept about in the rear of the various
- huts and tents in an effort to locate that in which his
- master's mate was imprisoned. One there was which he
- was reasonably assured contained her, for it was the
- only hut before the door of which a sentry had been
- posted. Mugambi was crouching in the shadow of this
- structure, just around the corner from the unsuspecting
- guard, when another approached to relieve his comrade.
-
- "The prisoner is safe within?" asked the newcomer.
-
- "She is," replied the other, "for none has passed this
- doorway since I came."
-
- The new sentry squatted beside the door, while he whom
- he had relieved made his way to his own hut. Mugambi
- slunk closer to the corner of the building. In one
- powerful hand he gripped a heavy knob-stick. No sign
- of elation disturbed his phlegmatic calm, yet inwardly
- he was aroused to joy by the proof he had just heard
- that "Lady" really was within.
-
- The sentry's back was toward the corner of the hut
- which hid the giant black. The fellow did not see the
- huge form which silently loomed behind him. The
- knob-stick swung upward in a curve, and downward again.
- There was the sound of a dull thud, the crushing of
- heavy bone, and the sentry slumped into a silent,
- inanimate lump of clay.
-
- A moment later Mugambi was searching the interior of
- the hut. At first slowly, calling, "Lady!" in a low
- whisper, and finally with almost frantic haste, until
- the truth presently dawned upon him--the hut was empty!
-
-
-
- 11
-
- Tarzan Becomes a Beast Again
-
-
- For a moment Werper had stood above the sleeping ape-man,
- his murderous knife poised for the fatal thrust;
- but fear stayed his hand. What if the first blow
- should fail to drive the point to his victim's heart?
- Werper shuddered in contemplation of the disastrous
- consequences to himself. Awakened, and even with a few
- moments of life remaining, the giant could literally
- tear his assailant to pieces should he choose, and the
- Belgian had no doubt but that Tarzan would so choose.
-
- Again came the soft sound of padded footsteps in the
- reeds--closer this time. Werper abandoned his design.
- Before him stretched the wide plain and escape.
- The jewels were in his possession. To remain longer was to
- risk death at the hands of Tarzan, or the jaws of the
- hunter creeping ever nearer. Turning, he slunk away
- through the night, toward the distant forest.
-
- Tarzan slept on. Where were those uncanny, guardian
- powers that had formerly rendered him immune from the
- dangers of surprise? Could this dull sleeper be the
- alert, sensitive Tarzan of old?
-
- Perhaps the blow upon his head had numbed his senses,
- temporarily--who may say? Closer crept the stealthy
- creature through the reeds. The rustling curtain of
- vegetation parted a few paces from where the sleeper
- lay, and the massive head of a lion appeared. The
- beast surveyed the ape-man intently for a moment, then
- he crouched, his hind feet drawn well beneath him, his
- tail lashing from side to side.
-
- It was the beating of the beast's tail against the
- reeds which awakened Tarzan. Jungle folk do not awaken
- slowly--instantly, full consciousness and full command
- of their every faculty returns to them from the depth
- of profound slumber.
-
- Even as Tarzan opened his eyes he was upon his feet,
- his spear grasped firmly in his hand and ready for
- attack. Again was he Tarzan of the Apes, sentient,
- vigilant, ready.
-
- No two lions have identical characteristics, nor does
- the same lion invariably act similarly under like
- circumstances. Whether it was surprise, fear or
- caution which prompted the lion crouching ready to
- spring upon the man, is immaterial--the fact remains
- that he did not carry out his original design, he did
- not spring at the man at all, but, instead, wheeled and
- sprang back into the reeds as Tarzan arose and
- confronted him.
-
- The ape-man shrugged his broad shoulders and looked
- about for his companion. Werper was nowhere to be
- seen. At first Tarzan suspected that the man had been
- seized and dragged off by another lion, but upon
- examination of the ground he soon discovered that the
- Belgian had gone away alone out into the plain.
-
- For a moment he was puzzled; but presently came to the
- conclusion that Werper had been frightened by the
- approach of the lion, and had sneaked off in terror.
- A sneer touched Tarzan's lips as he pondered the man's
- act--the desertion of a comrade in time of danger, and
- without warning. Well, if that was the sort of
- creature Werper was, Tarzan wished nothing more of him.
- He had gone, and for all the ape-man cared, he might
- remain away--Tarzan would not search for him.
-
- A hundred yards from where he stood grew a large tree,
- alone upon the edge of the reedy jungle. Tarzan made
- his way to it, clambered into it, and finding a
- comfortable crotch among its branches, reposed himself
- for uninterrupted sleep until morning.
-
- And when morning came Tarzan slept on long after the
- sun had risen. His mind, reverted to the primitive,
- was untroubled by any more serious obligations than
- those of providing sustenance, and safeguarding his life.
- Therefore, there was nothing to awaken for until
- danger threatened, or the pangs of hunger assailed.
- It was the latter which eventually aroused him.
-
- Opening his eyes, he stretched his giant thews, yawned,
- rose and gazed about him through the leafy foliage of
- his retreat. Across the wasted meadowlands and fields
- of John Clayton, Lord Greystoke, Tarzan of the Apes
- looked, as a stranger, upon the moving figures of
- Basuli and his braves as they prepared their morning
- meal and made ready to set out upon the expedition
- which Basuli had planned after discovering the havoc and
- disaster which had befallen the estate of his dead master.
-
- The ape-man eyed the blacks with curiosity.
- In the back of his brain loitered a fleeting sense of
- familiarity with all that he saw, yet he could not
- connect any of the various forms of life, animate and
- inanimate, which had fallen within the range of his
- vision since he had emerged from the darkness of the
- pits of Opar, with any particular event of the past.
-
- Hazily he recalled a grim and hideous form, hairy,
- ferocious. A vague tenderness dominated his savage
- sentiments as this phantom memory struggled for
- recognition. His mind had reverted to his childhood
- days--it was the figure of the giant she-ape, Kala,
- that he saw; but only half recognized. He saw, too,
- other grotesque, manlike forms. They were of Terkoz,
- Tublat, Kerchak, and a smaller, less ferocious figure,
- that was Neeta, the little playmate of his boyhood.
-
- Slowly, very slowly, as these visions of the past
- animated his lethargic memory, he came to recognize
- them. They took definite shape and form, adjusting
- themselves nicely to the various incidents of his life
- with which they had been intimately connected. His
- boyhood among the apes spread itself in a slow panorama
- before him, and as it unfolded it induced within him a
- mighty longing for the companionship of the shaggy,
- low-browed brutes of his past.
-
- He watched the blacks scatter their cook fire and
- depart; but though the face of each of them had but
- recently been as familiar to him as his own, they
- awakened within him no recollections whatsoever.
-
- When they had gone, he descended from the tree and
- sought food. Out upon the plain grazed numerous herds
- of wild ruminants. Toward a sleek, fat bunch of zebra
- he wormed his stealthy way. No intricate process of
- reasoning caused him to circle widely until he was down
- wind from his prey--he acted instinctively. He took
- advantage of every form of cover as he crawled upon all
- fours and often flat upon his stomach toward them.
-
- A plump young mare and a fat stallion grazed nearest to
- him as he neared the herd. Again it was instinct which
- selected the former for his meat. A low bush grew but
- a few yards from the unsuspecting two. The ape-man
- reached its shelter. He gathered his spear firmly in
- his grasp. Cautiously he drew his feet beneath him.
- In a single swift move he rose and cast his heavy
- weapon at the mare's side. Nor did he wait to note the
- effect of his assault, but leaped cat-like after his
- spear, his hunting knife in his hand.
-
- For an instant the two animals stood motionless.
- The tearing of the cruel barb into her side brought a
- sudden scream of pain and fright from the mare, and
- then they both wheeled and broke for safety; but Tarzan
- of the Apes, for a distance of a few yards, could equal
- the speed of even these, and the first stride of the
- mare found her overhauled, with a savage beast at her
- shoulder. She turned, biting and kicking at her foe.
- Her mate hesitated for an instant, as though about to
- rush to her assistance; but a backward glance revealed
- to him the flying heels of the balance of the herd, and
- with a snort and a shake of his head he wheeled and
- dashed away.
-
- Clinging with one hand to the short mane of his quarry,
- Tarzan struck again and again with his knife at the
- unprotected heart. The result had, from the first,
- been inevitable. The mare fought bravely, but
- hopelessly, and presently sank to the earth, her heart
- pierced. The ape-man placed a foot upon her carcass
- and raised his voice in the victory call of the
- Mangani. In the distance, Basuli halted as the faint
- notes of the hideous scream broke upon his ears.
-
- "The great apes," he said to his companion. "It has
- been long since I have heard them in the country of the
- Waziri. What could have brought them back?"
-
- Tarzan grasped his kill and dragged it to the partial
- seclusion of the bush which had hidden his own near
- approach, and there he squatted upon it, cut a huge
- hunk of flesh from the loin and proceeded to satisfy
- his hunger with the warm and dripping meat.
-
- Attracted by the shrill screams of the mare, a pair of
- hyenas slunk presently into view. They trotted to a
- point a few yards from the gorging ape-man, and halted.
- Tarzan looked up, bared his fighting fangs and growled.
- The hyenas returned the compliment, and withdrew a
- couple of paces. They made no move to attack; but
- continued to sit at a respectful distance until Tarzan
- had concluded his meal. After the ape-man had cut a
- few strips from the carcass to carry with him, he
- walked slowly off in the direction of the river to
- quench his thirst. His way lay directly toward the
- hyenas, nor did he alter his course because of them.
-
- With all the lordly majesty of Numa, the lion,
- he strode straight toward the growling beasts. For a
- moment they held their ground, bristling and defiant;
- but only for a moment, and then slunk away to one side
- while the indifferent ape-man passed them on his lordly
- way. A moment later they were tearing at the remains
- of the zebra.
-
- Back to the reeds went Tarzan, and through them toward
- the river. A herd of buffalo, startled by his
- approach, rose ready to charge or to fly. A great bull
- pawed the ground and bellowed as his bloodshot eyes
- discovered the intruder; but the ape-man passed across
- their front as though ignorant of their existence.
- The bull's bellowing lessened to a low rumbling, he turned
- and scraped a horde of flies from his side with his
- muzzle, cast a final glance at the ape-man and resumed
- his feeding. His numerous family either followed his
- example or stood gazing after Tarzan in mild-eyed
- curiosity, until the opposite reeds swallowed him from
- view.
-
- At the river, Tarzan drank his fill and bathed. During
- the heat of the day he lay up under the shade of a tree
- near the ruins of his burned barns. His eyes wandered
- out across the plain toward the forest, and a longing
- for the pleasures of its mysterious depths possessed
- his thoughts for a considerable time. With the next
- sun he would cross the open and enter the forest! There
- was no hurry--there lay before him an endless vista of
- tomorrows with naught to fill them but the satisfying
- of the appetites and caprices of the moment.
-
- The ape-man's mind was untroubled by regret for the
- past, or aspiration for the future. He could lie at
- full length along a swaying branch, stretching his
- giant limbs, and luxuriating in the blessed peace of
- utter thoughtlessness, without an apprehension or a
- worry to sap his nervous energy and rob him of his
- peace of mind. Recalling only dimly any other
- existence, the ape-man was happy. Lord Greystoke had
- ceased to exist.
-
- For several hours Tarzan lolled upon his swaying, leafy
- couch until once again hunger and thirst suggested an
- excursion. Stretching lazily he dropped to the ground
- and moved slowly toward the river. The game trail down
- which he walked had become by ages of use a deep,
- narrow trench, its walls topped on either side by
- impenetrable thicket and dense-growing trees closely
- interwoven with thick-stemmed creepers and lesser vines
- inextricably matted into two solid ramparts of
- vegetation. Tarzan had almost reached the point where
- the trail debouched upon the open river bottom when he
- saw a family of lions approaching along the path from
- the direction of the river. The ape-man counted seven--
- a male and two lionesses, full grown, and four young
- lions as large and quite as formidable as their
- parents. Tarzan halted, growling, and the lions
- paused, the great male in the lead baring his fangs and
- rumbling forth a warning roar. In his hand the ape-man
- held his heavy spear; but he had no intention of
- pitting his puny weapon against seven lions; yet he
- stood there growling and roaring and the lions did
- likewise. It was purely an exhibition of jungle bluff.
- Each was trying to frighten off the other. Neither
- wished to turn back and give way, nor did either at
- first desire to precipitate an encounter. The lions
- were fed sufficiently so as not to be goaded by pangs
- of hunger and as for Tarzan he seldom ate the meat of
- the carnivores; but a point of ethics was at stake and
- neither side wished to back down. So they stood there
- facing one another, making all sorts of hideous noises
- the while they hurled jungle invective back and forth.
- How long this bloodless duel would have persisted it is
- difficult to say, though eventually Tarzan would have
- been forced to yield to superior numbers.
-
- There came, however, an interruption which put an end
- to the deadlock and it came from Tarzan's rear. He and
- the lions had been making so much noise that neither
- could hear anything above their concerted bedlam, and
- so it was that Tarzan did not hear the great bulk
- bearing down upon him from behind until an instant
- before it was upon him, and then he turned to see Buto,
- the rhinoceros, his little, pig eyes blazing, charging
- madly toward him and already so close that escape
- seemed impossible; yet so perfectly were mind and
- muscles coordinated in this unspoiled, primitive man
- that almost simultaneously with the sense perception of
- the threatened danger he wheeled and hurled his spear
- at Buto's chest. It was a heavy spear shod with iron,
- and behind it were the giant muscles of the ape-man,
- while coming to meet it was the enormous weight of Buto
- and the momentum of his rapid rush. All that happened
- in the instant that Tarzan turned to meet the charge of
- the irascible rhinoceros might take long to tell, and
- yet would have taxed the swiftest lens to record.
- As his spear left his hand the ape-man was looking down
- upon the mighty horn lowered to toss him, so close was
- Buto to him. The spear entered the rhinoceros' neck at
- its junction with the left shoulder and passed almost
- entirely through the beast's body, and at the instant
- that he launched it, Tarzan leaped straight into the
- air alighting upon Buto's back but escaping the mighty
- horn.
-
- Then Buto espied the lions and bore madly down upon
- them while Tarzan of the Apes leaped nimbly into the
- tangled creepers at one side of the trail. The first
- lion met Buto's charge and was tossed high over the
- back of the maddened brute, torn and dying, and then
- the six remaining lions were upon the rhinoceros,
- rending and tearing the while they were being gored or
- trampled. From the safety of his perch Tarzan watched
- the royal battle with the keenest interest, for the
- more intelligent of the jungle folk are interested in
- such encounters. They are to them what the racetrack
- and the prize ring, the theater and the movies are to
- us. They see them often; but always they enjoy them for
- no two are precisely alike.
-
- For a time it seemed to Tarzan that Buto, the
- rhinoceros, would prove victor in the gory battle.
- Already had he accounted for four of the seven lions
- and badly wounded the three remaining when in a
- momentary lull in the encounter he sank limply to his
- knees and rolled over upon his side. Tarzan's spear
- had done its work. It was the man-made weapon which
- killed the great beast that might easily have survived
- the assault of seven mighty lions, for Tarzan's spear
- had pierced the great lungs, and Buto, with victory
- almost in sight, succumbed to internal hemorrhage.
-
- Then Tarzan came down from his sanctuary and as the
- wounded lions, growling, dragged themselves away, the
- ape-man cut his spear from the body of Buto, hacked off
- a steak and vanished into the jungle. The episode was
- over. It had been all in the day's work--something
- which you and I might talk about for a lifetime Tarzan
- dismissed from his mind the moment that the scene
- passed from his sight.
-
-
-
- 12
-
- La Seeks Vengeance
-
-
- Swinging back through the jungle in a wide circle the
- ape-man came to the river at another point, drank and
- took to the trees again and while he hunted, all
- oblivious of his past and careless of his future, there
- came through the dark jungles and the open, parklike
- places and across the wide meadows, where grazed the
- countless herbivora of the mysterious continent, a
- weird and terrible caravan in search of him. There
- were fifty frightful men with hairy bodies and gnarled
- and crooked legs. They were armed with knives and
- great bludgeons and at their head marched an almost
- naked woman, beautiful beyond compare. It was La of
- Opar, High Priestess of the Flaming God, and fifty of
- her horrid priests searching for the purloiner of the
- sacred sacrificial knife.
-
- Never before had La passed beyond the crumbling outer
- walls of Opar; but never before had need been so
- insistent. The sacred knife was gone! Handed down
- through countless ages it had come to her as a heritage
- and an insignia of her religious office and regal
- authority from some long-dead progenitor of lost and
- forgotten Atlantis. The loss of the crown jewels or
- the Great Seal of England could have brought no greater
- consternation to a British king than did the pilfering
- of the sacred knife bring to La, the Oparian, Queen and
- High Priestess of the degraded remnants of the oldest
- civilization upon earth. When Atlantis, with all her
- mighty cities and her cultivated fields and her great
- commerce and culture and riches sank into the sea long
- ages since, she took with her all but a handful of her
- colonists working the vast gold mines of Central
- Africa. From these and their degraded slaves and a
- later intermixture of the blood of the anthropoids
- sprung the gnarled men of Opar; but by some queer freak
- of fate, aided by natural selection, the old Atlantean
- strain had remained pure and undegraded in the females
- descended from a single princess of the royal house of
- Atlantis who had been in Opar at the time of the great
- catastrophe. Such was La.
-
- Burning with white-hot anger was the High Priestess,
- her heart a seething, molten mass of hatred for Tarzan
- of the Apes. The zeal of the religious fanatic whose
- altar has been desecrated was triply enhanced by the
- rage of a woman scorned. Twice had she thrown her
- heart at the feet of the godlike ape-man and twice had
- she been repulsed. La knew that she was beautiful--and
- she was beautiful, not by the standards of prehistoric
- Atlantis alone, but by those of modern times was La
- physically a creature of perfection. Before Tarzan
- came that first time to Opar, La had never seen a human
- male other than the grotesque and knotted men of her
- clan. With one of these she must mate sooner or later
- that the direct line of high priestesses might not be
- broken, unless Fate should bring other men to Opar.
- Before Tarzan came upon his first visit, La had had no
- thought that such men as he existed, for she knew only
- her hideous little priests and the bulls of the tribe
- of great anthropoids that had dwelt from time
- immemorial in and about Opar, until they had come to be
- looked upon almost as equals by the Oparians. Among
- the legends of Opar were tales of godlike men of the
- olden time and of black men who had come more recently;
- but these latter had been enemies who killed and
- robbed. And, too, these legends always held forth the
- hope that some day that nameless continent from which
- their race had sprung, would rise once more out of the
- sea and with slaves at the long sweeps would send her
- carven, gold-picked galleys forth to succor the
- long-exiled colonists.
-
- The coming of Tarzan had aroused within La's breast the
- wild hope that at last the fulfillment of this ancient
- prophecy was at hand; but more strongly still had it
- aroused the hot fires of love in a heart that never
- otherwise would have known the meaning of that
- all-consuming passion, for such a wondrous creature as
- La could never have felt love for any of the repulsive
- priests of Opar. Custom, duty and religious zeal might
- have commanded the union; but there could have been no
- love on La's part. She had grown to young womanhood a
- cold and heartless creature, daughter of a thousand
- other cold, heartless, beautiful women who had never
- known love. And so when love came to her it liberated
- all the pent passions of a thousand generations,
- transforming La into a pulsing, throbbing volcano of
- desire, and with desire thwarted this great force of
- love and gentleness and sacrifice was transmuted by its
- own fires into one of hatred and revenge.
-
- It was in a state of mind superinduced by these
- conditions that La led forth her jabbering company to
- retrieve the sacred emblem of her high office and wreak
- vengeance upon the author of her wrongs. To Werper she
- gave little thought. The fact that the knife had been
- in his hand when it departed from Opar brought down no
- thoughts of vengeance upon his head. Of course, he
- should be slain when captured; but his death would give
- La no pleasure--she looked for that in the contemplated
- death agonies of Tarzan. He should be tortured.
- His should be a slow and frightful death. His punishment
- should be adequate to the immensity of his crime.
- He had wrested the sacred knife from La; he had lain
- sacreligious hands upon the High Priestess of the
- Flaming God; he had desecrated the altar and the
- temple. For these things he should die; but he had
- scorned the love of La, the woman, and for this he
- should die horribly with great anguish.
-
- The march of La and her priests was not without its
- adventures. Unused were these to the ways of the
- jungle, since seldom did any venture forth from behind
- Opar's crumbling walls, yet their very numbers
- protected them and so they came without fatalities far
- along the trail of Tarzan and Werper. Three great apes
- accompanied them and to these was delegated the
- business of tracking the quarry, a feat beyond the
- senses of the Oparians. La commanded. She arranged
- the order of march, she selected the camps, she set the
- hour for halting and the hour for resuming and though
- she was inexperienced in such matters, her native
- intelligence was so far above that of the men or the
- apes that she did better than they could have done.
- She was a hard taskmaster, too, for she looked down
- with loathing and contempt upon the misshapen creatures
- amongst which cruel Fate had thrown her and to some
- extent vented upon them her dissatisfaction and her
- thwarted love. She made them build her a strong
- protection and shelter each night and keep a great fire
- burning before it from dusk to dawn. When she tired of
- walking they were forced to carry her upon an
- improvised litter, nor did one dare to question her
- authority or her right to such services. In fact they
- did not question either. To them she was a goddess and
- each loved her and each hoped that he would be chosen
- as her mate, so they slaved for her and bore the
- stinging lash of her displeasure and the habitually
- haughty disdain of her manner without a murmur.
-
- For many days they marched, the apes following the
- trail easily and going a little distance ahead of the
- body of the caravan that they might warn the others of
- impending danger. It was during a noonday halt while
- all were lying resting after a tiresome march that one
- of the apes rose suddenly and sniffed the breeze. In a
- low guttural he cautioned the others to silence and a
- moment later was swinging quietly up wind into the
- jungle. La and the priests gathered silently together,
- the hideous little men fingering their knives and
- bludgeons, and awaited the return of the shaggy
- anthropoid.
-
- Nor had they long to wait before they saw him emerge
- from a leafy thicket and approach them. Straight to La
- he came and in the language of the great apes which was
- also the language of decadent Opar he addressed her.
-
- "The great Tarmangani lies asleep there," he said,
- pointing in the direction from which he had just come.
- "Come and we can kill him."
-
- "Do not kill him," commanded La in cold tones.
- "Bring the great Tarmangani to me alive and unhurt.
- The vengeance is La's. Go; but make no sound!" and she
- waved her hands to include all her followers.
-
- Cautiously the weird party crept through the jungle in
- the wake of the great ape until at last he halted them
- with a raised hand and pointed upward and a little
- ahead. There they saw the giant form of the ape-man
- stretched along a low bough and even in sleep one hand
- grasped a stout limb and one strong, brown leg reached
- out and overlapped another. At ease lay Tarzan of the
- Apes, sleeping heavily upon a full stomach and dreaming
- of Numa, the lion, and Horta, the boar, and other
- creatures of the jungle. No intimation of danger
- assailed the dormant faculties of the ape-man--he saw
- no crouching hairy figures upon the ground beneath him
- nor the three apes that swung quietly into the tree
- beside him.
-
- The first intimation of danger that came to Tarzan was
- the impact of three bodies as the three apes leaped
- upon him and hurled him to the ground, where he
- alighted half stunned beneath their combined weight and
- was immediately set upon by the fifty hairy men or as
- many of them as could swarm upon his person. Instantly
- the ape-man became the center of a whirling, striking,
- biting maelstrom of horror. He fought nobly but the
- odds against him were too great. Slowly they overcame
- him though there was scarce one of them that did not
- feel the weight of his mighty fist or the rending of
- his fangs.
-
-
-
- 13
-
- Condemned To Torture and Death
-
-
- La had followed her company and when she saw them
- clawing and biting at Tarzan, she raised her voice and
- cautioned them not to kill him. She saw that he was
- weakening and that soon the greater numbers would
- prevail over him, nor had she long to wait before the
- mighty jungle creature lay helpless and bound at her
- feet.
-
- "Bring him to the place at which we stopped," she
- commanded and they carried Tarzan back to the little
- clearing and threw him down beneath a tree.
-
- "Build me a shelter!" ordered La. "We shall stop here
- tonight and tomorrow in the face of the Flaming God, La
- will offer up the heart of this defiler of the temple.
- Where is the sacred knife? Who took it from him?"
-
- But no one had seen it and each was positive in his
- assurance that the sacrificial weapon had not been upon
- Tarzan's person when they captured him. The ape-man
- looked upon the menacing creatures which surrounded him
- and snarled his defiance. He looked upon La and
- smiled. In the face of death he was unafraid.
-
- "Where is the knife?" La asked him.
-
- "I do not know," replied Tarzan. "The man took it with
- him when he slipped away during the night. Since you
- are so desirous for its return I would look for him and
- get it back for you, did you not hold me prisoner; but
- now that I am to die I cannot get it back. Of what
- good was your knife, anyway? You can make another.
- Did you follow us all this way for nothing more than a
- knife? Let me go and find him and I will bring it back
- to you."
-
- La laughed a bitter laugh, for in her heart she knew
- that Tarzan's sin was greater than the purloining of
- the sacrificial knife of Opar; yet as she looked at him
- lying bound and helpless before her, tears rose to her
- eyes so that she had to turn away to hide them; but she
- remained inflexible in her determination to make him
- pay in frightful suffering and in eventual death for
- daring to spurn the love of La.
-
- When the shelter was completed La had Tarzan
- transferred to it. "All night I shall torture him,"
- she muttered to her priests, "and at the first streak
- of dawn you may prepare the flaming altar upon which
- his heart shall be offered up to the Flaming God.
- Gather wood well filled with pitch, lay it in the form
- and size of the altar at Opar in the center of the
- clearing that the Flaming God may look down upon our
- handiwork and be pleased."
-
- During the balance of the day the priests of Opar were
- busy erecting an altar in the center of the clearing,
- and while they worked they chanted weird hymns in the
- ancient tongue of that lost continent that lies at the
- bottom of the Atlantic. They knew not the meanings of
- the words they mouthed; they but repeated the ritual
- that had been handed down from preceptor to neophyte
- since that long-gone day when the ancestors of the
- Piltdown man still swung by their tails in the humid
- jungles that are England now.
-
- And in the shelter of the hut, La paced to and fro
- beside the stoic ape-man. Resigned to his fate was
- Tarzan. No hope of succor gleamed through the dead
- black of the death sentence hanging over him. He knew
- that his giant muscles could not part the many strands
- that bound his wrists and ankles, for he had strained
- often, but ineffectually for release. He had no hope
- of outside help and only enemies surrounded him within
- the camp, and yet he smiled at La as she paced
- nervously back and forth the length of the shelter.
-
- And La? She fingered her knife and looked down upon her
- captive. She glared and muttered but she did not
- strike. "Tonight!" she thought. "Tonight, when it is
- dark I will torture him." She looked upon his perfect,
- godlike figure and upon his handsome, smiling face and
- then she steeled her heart again by thoughts of her
- love spurned; by religious thoughts that damned the
- infidel who had desecrated the holy of holies; who had
- taken from the blood-stained altar of Opar the offering
- to the Flaming God--and not once but thrice.
- Three times had Tarzan cheated the god of her fathers.
- At the thought La paused and knelt at his side. In her
- hand was a sharp knife. She placed its point against
- the ape-man's side and pressed upon the hilt; but
- Tarzan only smiled and shrugged his shoulders.
-
- How beautiful he was! La bent low over him, looking
- into his eyes. How perfect was his figure. She
- compared it with those of the knurled and knotted men
- from whom she must choose a mate, and La shuddered at
- the thought. Dusk came and after dusk came night.
- A great fire blazed within the little thorn boma about
- the camp. The flames played upon the new altar erected
- in the center of the clearing, arousing in the mind of
- the High Priestess of the Flaming God a picture of the
- event of the coming dawn. She saw this giant and
- perfect form writhing amid the flames of the burning
- pyre. She saw those smiling lips, burned and
- blackened, falling away from the strong, white teeth.
- She saw the shock of black hair tousled upon Tarzan's
- well-shaped head disappear in a spurt of flame. She
- saw these and many other frightful pictures as she
- stood with closed eyes and clenched fists above the
- object of her hate--ah! was it hate that La of Opar
- felt?
-
- The darkness of the jungle night had settled down upon
- the camp, relieved only by the fitful flarings of the
- fire that was kept up to warn off the man-eaters.
- Tarzan lay quietly in his bonds. He suffered from
- thirst and from the cutting of the tight strands about
- his wrists and ankles; but he made no complaint.
- A jungle beast was Tarzan with the stoicism of the beast
- and the intelligence of man. He knew that his doom was
- sealed--that no supplications would avail to temper the
- severity of his end and so he wasted no breath in
- pleadings; but waited patiently in the firm conviction
- that his sufferings could not endure forever.
-
- In the darkness La stooped above him. In her hand was
- a sharp knife and in her mind the determination to
- initiate his torture without further delay. The knife
- was pressed against his side and La's face was close to
- his when a sudden burst of flame from new branches
- thrown upon the fire without, lighted up the interior
- of the shelter. Close beneath her lips La saw the
- perfect features of the forest god and into her woman's
- heart welled all the great love she had felt for Tarzan
- since first she had seen him, and all the accumulated
- passion of the years that she had dreamed of him.
-
- Dagger in hand, La, the High Priestess, towered above
- the helpless creature that had dared to violate the
- sanctuary of her deity. There should be no torture--
- there should be instant death. No longer should the
- defiler of the temple pollute the sight of the lord god
- almighty. A single stroke of the heavy blade and then
- the corpse to the flaming pyre without. The knife arm
- stiffened ready for the downward plunge, and then La,
- the woman, collapsed weakly upon the body of the man
- she loved.
-
- She ran her hands in mute caress over his naked flesh;
- she covered his forehead, his eyes, his lips with hot
- kisses; she covered him with her body as though to
- protect him from the hideous fate she had ordained for
- him, and in trembling, piteous tones she begged him for
- his love. For hours the frenzy of her passion
- possessed the burning hand-maiden of the Flaming God,
- until at last sleep overpowered her and she lapsed into
- unconsciousness beside the man she had sworn to torture
- and to slay. And Tarzan, untroubled by thoughts of the
- future, slept peacefully in La's embrace.
-
- At the first hint of dawn the chanting of the priests
- of Opar brought Tarzan to wakefulness. Initiated in
- low and subdued tones, the sound soon rose in volume to
- the open diapason of barbaric blood lust. La stirred.
- Her perfect arm pressed Tarzan closer to her--a smile
- parted her lips and then she awoke, and slowly the
- smile faded and her eyes went wide in horror as the
- significance of the death chant impinged upon her
- understanding.
-
- "Love me, Tarzan!" she cried. "Love me, and you shall
- be saved."
-
- Tarzan's bonds hurt him. He was suffering the tortures
- of long-restricted circulation. With an angry growl he
- rolled over with his back toward La. That was her
- answer! The High Priestess leaped to her feet. A hot
- flush of shame mantled her cheek and then she went dead
- white and stepped to the shelter's entrance.
-
- "Come, Priests of the Flaming God!" she cried,
- "and make ready the sacrifice."
-
- The warped things advanced and entered the shelter.
- They laid hands upon Tarzan and bore him forth, and as
- they chanted they kept time with their crooked bodies,
- swaying to and fro to the rhythm of their song of blood
- and death. Behind them came La, swaying too; but not
- in unison with the chanted cadence. White and drawn
- was the face of the High Priestess--white and drawn
- with unrequited love and hideous terror of the moments
- to come. Yet stern in her resolve was La. The infidel
- should die! The scorner of her love should pay the
- price upon the fiery altar. She saw them lay the
- perfect body there upon the rough branches. She saw
- the High Priest, he to whom custom would unite her--
- bent, crooked, gnarled, stunted, hideous--advance with
- the flaming torch and stand awaiting her command to
- apply it to the faggots surrounding the sacrificial
- pyre. His hairy, bestial face was distorted in a
- yellow-fanged grin of anticipatory enjoyment. His
- hands were cupped to receive the life blood of the
- victim--the red nectar that at Opar would have filled
- the golden sacrificial goblets.
-
- La approached with upraised knife, her face turned
- toward the rising sun and upon her lips a prayer to the
- burning deity of her people. The High Priest looked
- questioningly toward her--the brand was burning close
- to his hand and the faggots lay temptingly near.
- Tarzan closed his eyes and awaited the end. He knew
- that he would suffer, for he recalled the faint
- memories of past burns. He knew that he would suffer
- and die; but he did not flinch. Death is no great
- adventure to the jungle bred who walk hand-in-hand with
- the grim specter by day and lie down at his side by
- night through all the years of their lives. It is
- doubtful that the ape-man even speculated upon what
- came after death. As a matter of fact as his end
- approached, his mind was occupied by thoughts of the
- pretty pebbles he had lost, yet his every faculty still
- was open to what passed around him.
-
- He felt La lean over him and he opened his eyes.
- He saw her white, drawn face and he saw tears blinding
- her eyes. "Tarzan, my Tarzan!" she moaned, "tell me that
- you love me--that you will return to Opar with me--and
- you shall live. Even in the face of the anger of my
- people I will save you. This last chance I give you.
- What is your answer?"
-
- At the last moment the woman in La had triumphed over
- the High Priestess of a cruel cult. She saw upon the
- altar the only creature that ever had aroused the fires
- of love within her virgin breast; she saw the beast-faced
- fanatic who would one day be her mate, unless she
- found another less repulsive, standing with the burning
- torch ready to ignite the pyre; yet with all her mad
- passion for the ape-man she would give the word to
- apply the flame if Tarzan's final answer was
- unsatisfactory. With heaving bosom she leaned close
- above him. "Yes or no?" she whispered.
-
- Through the jungle, out of the distance, came faintly a
- sound that brought a sudden light of hope to Tarzan's
- eyes. He raised his voice in a weird scream that sent
- La back from him a step or two. The impatient priest
- grumbled and switched the torch from one hand to the
- other at the same time holding it closer to the tinder
- at the base of the pyre.
-
- "Your answer!" insisted La. "What is your answer to
- the love of La of Opar?"
-
- Closer came the sound that had attracted Tarzan's
- attention and now the others heard it--the shrill
- trumpeting of an elephant. As La looked wide-eyed into
- Tarzan's face, there to read her fate for happiness or
- heartbreak, she saw an expression of concern shadow his
- features. Now, for the first time, she guessed the
- meaning of Tarzan's shrill scream--he had summoned
- Tantor, the elephant, to his rescue! La's brows
- contracted in a savage scowl. "You refuse La!"
- she cried. "Then die! The torch!" she commanded,
- turning toward the priest.
-
- Tarzan looked up into her face. "Tantor is coming,"
- he said. "I thought that he would rescue me; but I know
- now from his voice that he will slay me and you and all
- that fall in his path, searching out with the cunning
- of Sheeta, the panther, those who would hide from him,
- for Tantor is mad with the madness of love."
-
- La knew only too well the insane ferocity of a bull
- elephant in MUST. She knew that Tarzan had not
- exaggerated. She knew that the devil in the cunning,
- cruel brain of the great beast might send it hither and
- thither hunting through the forest for those who
- escaped its first charge, or the beast might pass on
- without returning--no one might guess which.
-
- "I cannot love you, La," said Tarzan in a low voice.
- "I do not know why, for you are very beautiful.
- I could not go back and live in Opar--I who have the
- whole broad jungle for my range. No, I cannot love you
- but I cannot see you die beneath the goring tusks of
- mad Tantor. Cut my bonds before it is too late.
- Already he is almost upon us. Cut them and I may yet
- save you."
-
- A little spiral of curling smoke rose from one corner
- of the pyre--the flames licked upward, crackling.
- La stood there like a beautiful statue of despair gazing
- at Tarzan and at the spreading flames. In a moment
- they would reach out and grasp him. From the tangled
- forest came the sound of cracking limbs and crashing
- trunks--Tantor was coming down upon them, a huge
- Juggernaut of the jungle. The priests were becoming
- uneasy. They cast apprehensive glances in the direction
- of the approaching elephant and then back at La.
-
- "Fly!" she commanded them and then she stooped and cut
- the bonds securing her prisoner's feet and hands.
- In an instant Tarzan was upon the ground. The priests
- screamed out their rage and disappointment. He with
- the torch took a menacing step toward La and the ape-man.
- "Traitor!" He shrieked at the woman. "For this
- you too shall die!" Raising his bludgeon he rushed upon
- the High Priestess; but Tarzan was there before her.
- Leaping in to close quarters the ape-man seized the
- upraised weapon and wrenched it from the hands of the
- frenzied fanatic and then the priest closed upon him
- with tooth and nail. Seizing the stocky, stunted body
- in his mighty hands Tarzan raised the creature high
- above his head, hurling him at his fellows who were now
- gathered ready to bear down upon their erstwhile
- captive. La stood proudly with ready knife behind the
- ape-man. No faint sign of fear marked her perfect
- brow--only haughty disdain for her priests and
- admiration for the man she loved so hopelessly filled
- her thoughts.
-
- Suddenly upon this scene burst the mad bull--a huge
- tusker, his little eyes inflamed with insane rage.
- The priests stood for an instant paralyzed with terror;
- but Tarzan turned and gathering La in his arms raced for
- the nearest tree. Tantor bore down upon him trumpeting shrilly.
- La clung with both white arms about the ape-man's neck.
- She felt him leap into the air and
- marveled at his strength and his ability as, burdened
- with her weight, he swung nimbly into the lower
- branches of a large tree and quickly bore her upward
- beyond reach of the sinuous trunk of the pachyderm.
-
- Momentarily baffled here, the huge elephant wheeled and
- bore down upon the hapless priests who had now
- scattered, terror-stricken, in every direction.
- The nearest he gored and threw high among the branches
- of a tree. One he seized in the coils of his trunk and
- broke upon a huge bole, dropping the mangled pulp to
- charge, trumpeting, after another. Two he trampled
- beneath his huge feet and by then the others had
- disappeared into the jungle. Now Tantor turned his
- attention once more to Tarzan for one of the symptoms
- of madness is a revulsion of affection--objects of sane
- love become the objects of insane hatred. Peculiar in
- the unwritten annals of the jungle was the proverbial
- love that had existed between the ape-man and the tribe
- of Tantor. No elephant in all the jungle would harm
- the Tarmangani--the white-ape; but with the madness of
- MUST upon him the great bull sought to destroy his
- long-time play-fellow.
-
- Back to the tree where La and Tarzan perched came
- Tantor, the elephant. He reared up with his forefeet
- against the bole and reached high toward them with his
- long trunk; but Tarzan had foreseen this and clambered
- beyond the bull's longest reach. Failure but tended to
- further enrage the mad creature. He bellowed and
- trumpeted and screamed until the earth shook to the
- mighty volume of his noise. He put his head against
- the tree and pushed and the tree bent before his mighty
- strength; yet still it held.
-
- The actions of Tarzan were peculiar in the extreme.
- Had Numa, or Sabor, or Sheeta, or any other beast of
- the jungle been seeking to destroy him, the ape-man
- would have danced about hurling missiles and invectives
- at his assailant. He would have insulted and taunted
- them, reviling in the jungle Billingsgate he knew so
- well; but now he sat silent out of Tantor's reach and
- upon his handsome face was an expression of deep sorrow
- and pity, for of all the jungle folk Tarzan loved
- Tantor the best. Could he have slain him he would not
- have thought of doing so. His one idea was to escape,
- for he knew that with the passing of the MUST
- Tantor would be sane again and that once more he might
- stretch at full length upon that mighty back and make
- foolish speech into those great, flapping ears.
-
- Finding that the tree would not fall to his pushing,
- Tantor was but enraged the more. He looked up at the
- two perched high above him, his red-rimmed eyes blazing
- with insane hatred, and then he wound his trunk about
- the bole of the tree, spread his giant feet wide apart
- and tugged to uproot the jungle giant. A huge creature
- was Tantor, an enormous bull in the full prime of all
- his stupendous strength. Mightily he strove until
- presently, to Tarzan's consternation, the great tree
- gave slowly at the roots. The ground rose in little
- mounds and ridges about the base of the bole, the tree
- tilted--in another moment it would be uprooted and fall.
-
- The ape-man whirled La to his back and just as the tree
- inclined slowly in its first movement out of the
- perpendicular, before the sudden rush of its final
- collapse, he swung to the branches of a lesser
- neighbor. It was a long and perilous leap. La closed
- her eyes and shuddered; but when she opened them again
- she found herself safe and Tarzan whirling onward
- through the forest. Behind them the uprooted tree
- crashed heavily to the ground, carrying with it the
- lesser trees in its path and then Tantor, realizing
- that his prey had escaped him, set up once more his
- hideous trumpeting and followed at a rapid charge upon
- their trail.
-
-
-
- 14
-
- A Priestess But Yet a Woman
-
-
- At first La closed her eyes and clung to Tarzan in terror,
- though she made no outcry; but presently she gained
- sufficient courage to look about her, to look down
- at the ground beneath and even to keep her eyes open
- during the wide, perilous swings from tree to tree,
- and then there came over her a sense of safety
- because of her confidence in the perfect physical
- creature in whose strength and nerve and agility her
- fate lay. Once she raised her eyes to the burning sun
- and murmured a prayer of thanks to her pagan god that
- she had not been permitted to destroy this godlike man,
- and her long lashes were wet with tears. A strange
- anomaly was La of Opar--a creature of circumstance torn
- by conflicting emotions. Now the cruel and
- bloodthirsty creature of a heartless god and again a
- melting woman filled with compassion and tenderness.
- Sometimes the incarnation of jealousy and revenge and
- sometimes a sobbing maiden, generous and forgiving; at
- once a virgin and a wanton; but always--a woman.
- Such was La.
-
- She pressed her cheek close to Tarzan's shoulder.
- Slowly she turned her head until her hot lips were
- pressed against his flesh. She loved him and would
- gladly have died for him; yet within an hour she had
- been ready to plunge a knife into his heart and might
- again within the coming hour.
-
- A hapless priest seeking shelter in the jungle chanced
- to show himself to enraged Tantor. The great beast
- turned to one side, bore down upon the crooked, little
- man, snuffed him out and then, diverted from his
- course, blundered away toward the south. In a few
- minutes even the noise of his trumpeting was lost in
- the distance.
-
- Tarzan dropped to the ground and La slipped to her feet
- from his back. "Call your people together," said Tarzan.
-
- "They will kill me," replied La.
-
- "They will not kill you," contradicted the ape-man.
- "No one will kill you while Tarzan of the Apes is here.
- Call them and we will talk with them."
-
- La raised her voice in a weird, flutelike call that
- carried far into the jungle on every side. From near
- and far came answering shouts in the barking tones of
- the Oparian priests: "We come! We come!" Again and
- again, La repeated her summons until singly and in
- pairs the greater portion of her following approached
- and halted a short distance away from the High
- Priestess and her savior. They came with scowling
- brows and threatening mien. When all had come Tarzan
- addressed them.
-
- "Your La is safe," said the ape-man. "Had she slain me
- she would now herself be dead and many more of you; but
- she spared me that I might save her. Go your way with
- her back to Opar, and Tarzan will go his way into the
- jungle. Let there be peace always between Tarzan and
- La. What is your answer?"
-
- The priests grumbled and shook their heads. They spoke
- together and La and Tarzan could see that they were not
- favorably inclined toward the proposition. They did
- not wish to take La back and they did wish to complete
- the sacrifice of Tarzan to the Flaming God. At last
- the ape-man became impatient.
-
- "You will obey the commands of your queen," he said,
- "and go back to Opar with her or Tarzan of the Apes
- will call together the other creatures of the jungle
- and slay you all. La saved me that I might save you
- and her. I have served you better alive than I could
- have dead. If you are not all fools you will let me go
- my way in peace and you will return to Opar with La.
- I know not where the sacred knife is; but you can fashion
- another. Had I not taken it from La you would have
- slain me and now your god must be glad that I took it
- since I have saved his priestess from love-mad Tantor.
- Will you go back to Opar with La, promising that no
- harm shall befall her?"
-
- The priests gathered together in a little knot arguing
- and discussing. They pounded upon their breasts with
- their fists; they raised their hands and eyes to their
- fiery god; they growled and barked among themselves
- until it became evident to Tarzan that one of their
- number was preventing the acceptance of his proposal.
- This was the High Priest whose heart was filled with
- jealous rage because La openly acknowledged her love
- for the stranger, when by the worldly customs of their
- cult she should have belonged to him. Seemingly there
- was to be no solution of the problem until another
- priest stepped forth and, raising his hand, addressed
- La.
-
- "Cadj, the High Priest," he announced, "would sacrifice
- you both to the Flaming God; but all of us except Cadj
- would gladly return to Opar with our queen."
-
- "You are many against one," spoke up Tarzan.
- "Why should you not have your will? Go your way with
- La to Opar and if Cadj interferes slay him."
-
- The priests of Opar welcomed this suggestion with loud
- cries of approval. To them it appeared nothing short
- of divine inspiration. The influence of ages of
- unquestioning obedience to high priests had made it
- seem impossible to them to question his authority; but
- when they realized that they could force him to their
- will they were as happy as children with new toys.
-
- They rushed forward and seized Cadj. They talked in
- loud menacing tones into his ear. They threatened him
- with bludgeon and knife until at last he acquiesced in
- their demands, though sullenly, and then Tarzan stepped
- close before Cadj.
-
- "Priest," he said, "La goes back to her temple under
- the protection of her priests and the threat of Tarzan
- of the Apes that whoever harms her shall die. Tarzan
- will go again to Opar before the next rains and if harm
- has befallen La, woe betide Cadj, the High Priest."
-
- Sullenly Cadj promised not to harm his queen.
-
- "Protect her," cried Tarzan to the other Oparians.
- "Protect her so that when Tarzan comes again he will
- find La there to greet him."
-
- "La will be there to greet thee," exclaimed the High
- Priestess, "and La will wait, longing, always longing,
- until you come again. Oh, tell me that you will come!"
-
- "Who knows?" asked the ape-man as he swung quickly into
- the trees and raced off toward the east.
-
- For a moment La stood looking after him, then her head
- drooped, a sigh escaped her lips and like an old woman
- she took up the march toward distant Opar.
-
- Through the trees raced Tarzan of the Apes until the
- darkness of night had settled upon the jungle, then he
- lay down and slept, with no thought beyond the morrow
- and with even La but the shadow of a memory within his
- consciousness.
-
- But a few marches to the north Lady Greystoke looked
- forward to the day when her mighty lord and master
- should discover the crime of Achmet Zek, and be
- speeding to rescue and avenge, and even as she pictured
- the coming of John Clayton, the object of her thoughts
- squatted almost naked, beside a fallen log, beneath
- which he was searching with grimy fingers for a chance
- beetle or a luscious grub.
-
- Two days elapsed following the theft of the jewels
- before Tarzan gave them a thought. Then, as they
- chanced to enter his mind, he conceived a desire to
- play with them again, and, having nothing better to do
- than satisfy the first whim which possessed him, he
- rose and started across the plain from the forest in
- which he had spent the preceding day.
-
- Though no mark showed where the gems had been buried,
- and though the spot resembled the balance of an
- unbroken stretch several miles in length, where the
- reeds terminated at the edge of the meadowland, yet the
- ape-man moved with unerring precision directly to the
- place where he had hid his treasure.
-
- With his hunting knife he upturned the loose earth,
- beneath which the pouch should be; but, though he
- excavated to a greater distance than the depth of the
- original hole there was no sign of pouch or jewels.
- Tarzan's brow clouded as he discovered that he had been
- despoiled. Little or no reasoning was required to
- convince him of the identity of the guilty party, and
- with the same celerity that had marked his decision to
- unearth the jewels, he set out upon the trail of the
- thief.
-
- Though the spoor was two days old, and practically
- obliterated in many places, Tarzan followed it with
- comparative ease. A white man could not have followed
- it twenty paces twelve hours after it had been made, a
- black man would have lost it within the first mile; but
- Tarzan of the Apes had been forced in childhood to
- develop senses that an ordinary mortal scarce ever uses.
-
- We may note the garlic and whisky on the breath of a
- fellow strap hanger, or the cheap perfume emanating
- from the person of the wondrous lady sitting in front
- of us, and deplore the fact of our sensitive noses;
- but, as a matter of fact, we cannot smell at all, our
- olfactory organs are practically atrophied, by
- comparison with the development of the sense among the
- beasts of the wild.
-
- Where a foot is placed an effluvium remains for a
- considerable time. It is beyond the range of our
- sensibilities; but to a creature of the lower orders,
- especially to the hunters and the hunted, as
- interesting and ofttimes more lucid than is the printed
- page to us.
-
- Nor was Tarzan dependent alone upon his sense of smell.
- Vision and hearing had been brought to a marvelous
- state of development by the necessities of his early
- life, where survival itself depended almost daily upon
- the exercise of the keenest vigilance and the constant
- use of all his faculties.
-
- And so he followed the old trail of the Belgian through
- the forest and toward the north; but because of the age
- of the trail he was constrained to a far from rapid
- progress. The man he followed was two days ahead of
- him when Tarzan took up the pursuit, and each day he
- gained upon the ape-man. The latter, however, felt not
- the slightest doubt as to the outcome. Some day he
- would overhaul his quarry--he could bide his time in
- peace until that day dawned. Doggedly he followed the
- faint spoor, pausing by day only to kill and eat, and
- at night only to sleep and refresh himself.
-
- Occasionally he passed parties of savage warriors; but
- these he gave a wide berth, for he was hunting with a
- purpose that was not to be distracted by the minor
- accidents of the trail.
-
- These parties were of the collecting hordes of the
- Waziri and their allies which Basuli had scattered his
- messengers broadcast to summon. They were marching to
- a common rendezvous in preparation for an assault upon
- the stronghold of Achmet Zek; but to Tarzan they were
- enemies--he retained no conscious memory of any
- friendship for the black men.
-
- It was night when he halted outside the palisaded
- village of the Arab raider. Perched in the branches of
- a great tree he gazed down upon the life within the
- enclosure. To this place had the spoor led him. His
- quarry must be within; but how was he to find him among
- so many huts? Tarzan, although cognizant of his mighty
- powers, realized also his limitations. He knew that he
- could not successfully cope with great numbers in open
- battle. He must resort to the stealth and trickery of
- the wild beast, if he were to succeed.
-
- Sitting in the safety of his tree, munching upon the
- leg bone of Horta, the boar, Tarzan waited a favorable
- opportunity to enter the village. For awhile he gnawed
- at the bulging, round ends of the large bone,
- splintering off small pieces between his strong jaws,
- and sucking at the delicious marrow within; but all the
- time he cast repeated glances into the village. He saw
- white-robed figures, and half-naked blacks; but not
- once did he see one who resembled the stealer of the gems.
-
- Patiently he waited until the streets were deserted by
- all save the sentries at the gates, then he dropped
- lightly to the ground, circled to the opposite side of
- the village and approached the palisade.
-
- At his side hung a long, rawhide rope--a natural and
- more dependable evolution from the grass rope of his
- childhood. Loosening this, he spread the noose upon the
- ground behind him, and with a quick movement of his
- wrist tossed the coils over one of the sharpened
- projections of the summit of the palisade.
-
- Drawing the noose taut, he tested the solidity of its
- hold. Satisfied, the ape-man ran nimbly up the vertical
- wall, aided by the rope which he clutched in both
- hands. Once at the top it required but a moment to
- gather the dangling rope once more into its coils, make
- it fast again at his waist, take a quick glance
- downward within the palisade, and, assured that no one
- lurked directly beneath him, drop softly to the ground.
-
- Now he was within the village. Before him stretched a
- series of tents and native huts. The business of
- exploring each of them would be fraught with danger;
- but danger was only a natural factor of each day's
- life--it never appalled Tarzan. The chances appealed
- to him--the chances of life and death, with his prowess
- and his faculties pitted against those of a worthy
- antagonist.
-
- It was not necessary that he enter each habitation--
- through a door, a window or an open chink, his nose
- told him whether or not his prey lay within. For some
- time he found one disappointment following upon the
- heels of another in quick succession. No spoor of the
- Belgian was discernible. But at last he came to a tent
- where the smell of the thief was strong. Tarzan
- listened, his ear close to the canvas at the rear, but
- no sound came from within.
-
- At last he cut one of the pin ropes, raised the bottom
- of the canvas, and intruded his head within the
- interior. All was quiet and dark. Tarzan crawled
- cautiously within--the scent of the Belgian was strong;
- but it was not live scent. Even before he had examined
- the interior minutely, Tarzan knew that no one was
- within it.
-
- In one corner he found a pile of blankets and clothing
- scattered about; but no pouch of pretty pebbles.
- A careful examination of the balance of the tent revealed
- nothing more, at least nothing to indicate the presence
- of the jewels; but at the side where the blankets and
- clothing lay, the ape-man discovered that the tent wall
- had been loosened at the bottom, and presently he
- sensed that the Belgian had recently passed out of the
- tent by this avenue.
-
- Tarzan was not long in following the way that his prey
- had fled. The spoor led always in the shadow and at
- the rear of the huts and tents of the village--it was
- quite evident to Tarzan that the Belgian had gone alone
- and secretly upon his mission. Evidently he feared the
- inhabitants of the village, or at least his work had
- been of such a nature that he dared not risk detection.
-
- At the back of a native hut the spoor led through a
- small hole recently cut in the brush wall and into the
- dark interior beyond. Fearlessly, Tarzan followed the
- trail. On hands and knees, he crawled through the
- small aperture. Within the hut his nostrils were
- assailed by many odors; but clear and distinct among
- them was one that half aroused a latent memory of the
- past--it was the faint and delicate odor of a woman.
- With the cognizance of it there rose in the breast of
- the ape-man a strange uneasiness--the result of an
- irresistible force which he was destined to become
- acquainted with anew--the instinct which draws the male
- to his mate.
-
- In the same hut was the scent spoor of the Belgian,
- too, and as both these assailed the nostrils of the
- ape-man, mingling one with the other, a jealous rage
- leaped and burned within him, though his memory held
- before the mirror of recollection no image of the she
- to which he had attached his desire.
-
- Like the tent he had investigated, the hut, too, was
- empty, and after satisfying himself that his stolen
- pouch was secreted nowhere within, he left, as he had
- entered, by the hole in the rear wall.
-
- Here he took up the spoor of the Belgian, followed it
- across the clearing, over the palisade, and out into
- the dark jungle beyond.
-
-
-
- 15
-
- The Flight of Werper
-
-
- After Werper had arranged the dummy in his bed, and
- sneaked out into the darkness of the village beneath
- the rear wall of his tent, he had gone directly to the
- hut in which Jane Clayton was held captive.
-
- Before the doorway squatted a black sentry. Werper
- approached him boldly, spoke a few words in his ear,
- handed him a package of tobacco, and passed into the
- hut. The black grinned and winked as the European
- disappeared within the darkness of the interior.
-
- The Belgian, being one of Achmet Zek's principal
- lieutenants, might naturally go where he wished within
- or without the village, and so the sentry had not
- questioned his right to enter the hut with the white,
- woman prisoner.
-
- Within, Werper called in French and in a low whisper:
- "Lady Greystoke! It is I, M. Frecoult. Where are you?"
- But there was no response. Hastily the man felt around
- the interior, groping blindly through the darkness with
- outstretched hands. There was no one within!
-
- Werper's astonishment surpassed words. He was on the
- point of stepping without to question the sentry, when
- his eyes, becoming accustomed to the dark, discovered a
- blotch of lesser blackness near the base of the rear
- wall of the hut. Examination revealed the fact that the
- blotch was an opening cut in the wall. It was large
- enough to permit the passage of his body, and assured
- as he was that Lady Greystoke had passed out through
- the aperture in an attempt to escape the village, he
- lost no time in availing himself of the same avenue;
- but neither did he lose time in a fruitless search for
- Jane Clayton.
-
- His own life depended upon the chance of his eluding,
- or outdistancing Achmet Zek, when that worthy should
- have discovered that he had escaped. His original plan
- had contemplated connivance in the escape of Lady
- Greystoke for two very good and sufficient reasons.
- The first was that by saving her he would win the
- gratitude of the English, and thus lessen the chance of
- his extradition should his identity and his crime
- against his superior officer be charged against him.
-
- The second reason was based upon the fact that only one
- direction of escape was safely open to him. He could
- not travel to the west because of the Belgian
- possessions which lay between him and the Atlantic.
- The south was closed to him by the feared presence of
- the savage ape-man he had robbed. To the north lay the
- friends and allies of Achmet Zek. Only toward the
- east, through British East Africa, lay reasonable
- assurance of freedom.
-
- Accompanied by a titled Englishwoman whom he had
- rescued from a frightful fate, and his identity vouched
- for by her as that of a Frenchman by the name of
- Frecoult, he had looked forward, and not without
- reason, to the active assistance of the British from
- the moment that he came in contact with their first
- outpost.
-
- But now that Lady Greystoke had disappeared, though he
- still looked toward the east for hope, his chances were
- lessened, and another, subsidiary design completely
- dashed. From the moment that he had first laid eyes
- upon Jane Clayton he had nursed within his breast a
- secret passion for the beautiful American wife of the
- English lord, and when Achmet Zek's discovery of the
- jewels had necessitated flight, the Belgian had
- dreamed, in his planning, of a future in which he might
- convince Lady Greystoke that her husband was dead,
- and by playing upon her gratitude win her for himself.
-
- At that part of the village farthest from the gates,
- Werper discovered that two or three long poles, taken
- from a nearby pile which had been collected for the
- construction of huts, had been leaned against the top
- of the palisade, forming a precarious, though not
- impossible avenue of escape.
-
- Rightly, he inferred that thus had Lady Greystoke found
- the means to scale the wall, nor did he lose even a
- moment in following her lead. Once in the jungle he
- struck out directly eastward.
-
- A few miles south of him, Jane Clayton lay panting
- among the branches of a tree in which she had taken
- refuge from a prowling and hungry lioness.
-
- Her escape from the village had been much easier than
- she had anticipated. The knife which she had used to
- cut her way through the brush wall of the hut to
- freedom she had found sticking in the wall of her
- prison, doubtless left there by accident when a former
- tenant had vacated the premises.
-
- To cross the rear of the village, keeping always in the
- densest shadows, had required but a few moments, and
- the fortunate circumstance of the discovery of the hut
- poles lying so near the palisade had solved for her the
- problem of the passage of the high wall.
-
- For an hour she had followed the old game trail toward
- the south, until there fell upon her trained hearing
- the stealthy padding of a stalking beast behind her.
- The nearest tree gave her instant sanctuary, for she
- was too wise in the ways of the jungle to chance her
- safety for a moment after discovering that she was
- being hunted.
-
- Werper, with better success, traveled slowly onward
- until dawn, when, to his chagrin, he discovered a
- mounted Arab upon his trail. It was one of Achmet
- Zek's minions, many of whom were scattered in all
- directions through the forest, searching for the
- fugitive Belgian.
-
- Jane Clayton's escape had not yet been discovered when
- Achmet Zek and his searchers set forth to overhaul
- Werper. The only man who had seen the Belgian after his
- departure from his tent was the black sentry before the
- doorway of Lady Greystoke's prison hut, and he had been
- silenced by the discovery of the dead body of the man
- who had relieved him, the sentry that Mugambi had
- dispatched.
-
- The bribe taker naturally inferred that Werper had
- slain his fellow and dared not admit that he had
- permitted him to enter the hut, fearing as he did,
- the anger of Achmet Zek. So, as chance directed that he
- should be the one to discover the body of the sentry
- when the first alarm had been given following Achmet
- Zek's discovery that Werper had outwitted him, the
- crafty black had dragged the dead body to the interior
- of a nearby tent, and himself resumed his station
- before the doorway of the hut in which he still
- believed the woman to be.
-
- With the discovery of the Arab close behind him, the
- Belgian hid in the foliage of a leafy bush. Here the
- trail ran straight for a considerable distance, and
- down the shady forest aisle, beneath the overarching
- branches of the trees, rode the white-robed figure of
- the pursuer.
-
- Nearer and nearer he came. Werper crouched closer to
- the ground behind the leaves of his hiding place.
- Across the trail a vine moved. Werper's eyes instantly
- centered upon the spot. There was no wind to stir the
- foliage in the depths of the jungle. Again the vine
- moved. In the mind of the Belgian only the presence of
- a sinister and malevolent force could account for the
- phenomenon.
-
- The man's eyes bored steadily into the screen of leaves
- upon the opposite side of the trail. Gradually a form
- took shape beyond them--a tawny form, grim and
- terrible, with yellow-green eyes glaring fearsomely
- across the narrow trail straight into his.
-
- Werper could have screamed in fright, but up the trail
- was coming the messenger of another death, equally sure
- and no less terrible. He remained silent, almost
- paralyzed by fear. The Arab approached. Across the
- trail from Werper the lion crouched for the spring,
- when suddenly his attention was attracted toward the
- horseman.
-
- The Belgian saw the massive head turn in the direction
- of the raider and his heart all but ceased its beating
- as he awaited the result of this interruption. At a
- walk the horseman approached. Would the nervous animal
- he rode take fright at the odor of the carnivore, and,
- bolting, leave Werper still to the mercies of the king
- of beasts?
-
- But he seemed unmindful of the near presence of the
- great cat. On he came, his neck arched, champing at
- the bit between his teeth. The Belgian turned his eyes
- again toward the lion. The beast's whole attention now
- seemed riveted upon the horseman. They were abreast
- the lion now, and still the brute did not spring.
- Could he be but waiting for them to pass before
- returning his attention to the original prey? Werper
- shuddered and half rose. At the same instant the lion
- sprang from his place of concealment, full upon the
- mounted man. The horse, with a shrill neigh of terror,
- shrank sideways almost upon the Belgian, the lion
- dragged the helpless Arab from his saddle, and the
- horse leaped back into the trail and fled away toward
- the west.
-
- But he did not flee alone. As the frightened beast had
- pressed in upon him, Werper had not been slow to note
- the quickly emptied saddle and the opportunity it
- presented. Scarcely had the lion dragged the Arab down
- from one side, than the Belgian, seizing the pommel of
- the saddle and the horse's mane, leaped upon the
- horse's back from the other.
-
- A half hour later a naked giant, swinging easily
- through the lower branches of the trees, paused, and
- with raised head, and dilating nostrils sniffed the
- morning air. The smell of blood fell strong upon his
- senses, and mingled with it was the scent of Numa, the
- lion. The giant cocked his head upon one side and
- listened.
-
- From a short distance up the trail came the
- unmistakable noises of the greedy feeding of a lion.
- The crunching of bones, the gulping of great pieces,
- the contented growling, all attested the nearness of
- the king at table.
-
- Tarzan approached the spot, still keeping to the
- branches of the trees. He made no effort to conceal
- his approach, and presently he had evidence that Numa
- had heard him, from the ominous, rumbling warning that
- broke from a thicket beside the trail.
-
- Halting upon a low branch just above the lion Tarzan
- looked down upon the grisly scene. Could this
- unrecognizable thing be the man he had been trailing?
- The ape-man wondered. From time to time he had
- descended to the trail and verified his judgment by the
- evidence of his scent that the Belgian had followed
- this game trail toward the east.
-
- Now he proceeded beyond the lion and his feast,
- again descended and examined the ground with his nose.
- There was no scent spoor here of the man he had been
- trailing. Tarzan returned to the tree. With keen eyes
- he searched the ground about the mutilated corpse for a
- sign of the missing pouch of pretty pebbles; but naught
- could he see of it.
-
- He scolded Numa and tried to drive the great beast
- away; but only angry growls rewarded his efforts.
- He tore small branches from a nearby limb and hurled them
- at his ancient enemy. Numa looked up with bared fangs,
- grinning hideously, but he did not rise from his kill.
-
- Then Tarzan fitted an arrow to his bow, and drawing the
- slim shaft far back let drive with all the force of the
- tough wood that only he could bend. As the arrow sank
- deeply into his side, Numa leaped to his feet with a
- roar of mingled rage and pain. He leaped futilely at
- the grinning ape-man, tore at the protruding end of the
- shaft, and then, springing into the trail, paced back
- and forth beneath his tormentor. Again Tarzan loosed a
- swift bolt. This time the missile, aimed with care,
- lodged in the lion's spine. The great creature halted
- in its tracks, and lurched awkwardly forward upon its
- face, paralyzed.
-
- Tarzan dropped to the trail, ran quickly to the beast's
- side, and drove his spear deep into the fierce heart,
- then after recovering his arrows turned his attention
- to the mutilated remains of the animal's prey in the
- nearby thicket.
-
- The face was gone. The Arab garments aroused no doubt
- as to the man's identity, since he had trailed him into
- the Arab camp and out again, where he might easily have
- acquired the apparel. So sure was Tarzan that the body
- was that of he who had robbed him that he made no
- effort to verify his deductions by scent among the
- conglomerate odors of the great carnivore and the fresh
- blood of the victim.
-
- He confined his attentions to a careful search for the
- pouch, but nowhere upon or about the corpse was any
- sign of the missing article or its contents. The ape-man
- was disappointed--possibly not so much because of
- the loss of the colored pebbles as with Numa for
- robbing him of the pleasures of revenge.
-
- Wondering what could have become of his possessions,
- the ape-man turned slowly back along the trail in the
- direction from which he had come. In his mind he
- revolved a plan to enter and search the Arab camp,
- after darkness had again fallen. Taking to the trees,
- he moved directly south in search of prey, that he
- might satisfy his hunger before midday, and then lie up
- for the afternoon in some spot far from the camp, where
- he might sleep without fear of discovery until it came
- time to prosecute his design.
-
- Scarcely had he quitted the trail when a tall, black
- warrior, moving at a dogged trot, passed toward the
- east. It was Mugambi, searching for his mistress.
- He continued along the trail, halting to examine the body
- of the dead lion. An expression of puzzlement crossed
- his features as he bent to search for the wounds which
- had caused the death of the jungle lord. Tarzan had
- removed his arrows, but to Mugambi the proof of death
- was as strong as though both the lighter missiles and
- the spear still protruded from the carcass.
-
- The black looked furtively about him. The body was
- still warm, and from this fact he reasoned that the
- killer was close at hand, yet no sign of living man
- appeared. Mugambi shook his head, and continued along
- the trail, but with redoubled caution.
-
- All day he traveled, stopping occasionally to call
- aloud the single word, "Lady," in the hope that at last
- she might hear and respond; but in the end his loyal
- devotion brought him to disaster.
-
- From the northeast, for several months, Abdul Mourak,
- in command of a detachment of Abyssinian soldiers, had
- been assiduously searching for the Arab raider, Achmet
- Zek, who, six months previously, had affronted the
- majesty of Abdul Mourak's emperor by conducting a slave
- raid within the boundaries of Menelek's domain.
-
- And now it happened that Abdul Mourak had halted for a
- short rest at noon upon this very day and along the
- same trail that Werper and Mugambi were following
- toward the east.
-
- It was shortly after the soldiers had dismounted that
- the Belgian, unaware of their presence, rode his tired
- mount almost into their midst, before he had discovered
- them. Instantly he was surrounded, and a volley of
- questions hurled at him, as he was pulled from his
- horse and led toward the presence of the commander.
-
- Falling back upon his European nationality, Werper
- assured Abdul Mourak that he was a Frenchman, hunting
- in Africa, and that he had been attacked by strangers,
- his safari killed or scattered, and himself escaping
- only by a miracle.
-
- From a chance remark of the Abyssinian, Werper
- discovered the purpose of the expedition, and when he
- realized that these men were the enemies of Achmet Zek,
- he took heart, and immediately blamed his predicament
- upon the Arab.
-
- Lest, however, he might again fall into the hands of
- the raider, he discouraged Abdul Mourak in the further
- prosecution of his pursuit, assuring the Abyssinian
- that Achmet Zek commanded a large and dangerous force,
- and also that he was marching rapidly toward the south.
-
- Convinced that it would take a long time to overhaul
- the raider, and that the chances of engagement made the
- outcome extremely questionable, Mourak, none too
- unwillingly, abandoned his plan and gave the necessary
- orders for his command to pitch camp where they were,
- preparatory to taking up the return march toward
- Abyssinia the following morning.
-
- It was late in the afternoon that the attention of the
- camp was attracted toward the west by the sound of a
- powerful voice calling a single word, repeated several
- times: "Lady! Lady! Lady!"
-
- True to their instincts of precaution, a number of
- Abyssinians, acting under orders from Abdul Mourak,
- advanced stealthily through the jungle toward the
- author of the call.
-
- A half hour later they returned, dragging Mugambi among
- them. The first person the big black's eyes fell upon
- as he was hustled into the presence of the Abyssinian
- officer, was M. Jules Frecoult, the Frenchman who had
- been the guest of his master and whom he last had seen
- entering the village of Achmet Zek under circumstances
- which pointed to his familiarity and friendship for the
- raiders.
-
- Between the disasters that had befallen his master and
- his master's house, and the Frenchman, Mugambi saw a
- sinister relationship, which kept him from recalling to
- Werper's attention the identity which the latter
- evidently failed to recognize.
-
- Pleading that he was but a harmless hunter from a tribe
- farther south, Mugambi begged to be allowed to go upon
- his way; but Abdul Mourak, admiring the warrior's
- splendid physique, decided to take him back to Adis
- Abeba and present him to Menelek. A few moments later
- Mugambi and Werper were marched away under guard, and
- the Belgian learned for the first time, that he too was
- a prisoner rather than a guest. In vain he protested
- against such treatment, until a strapping soldier
- struck him across the mouth and threatened to shoot him
- if he did not desist.
-
- Mugambi took the matter less to heart, for he had not
- the slightest doubt but that during the course of the
- journey he would find ample opportunity to elude the
- vigilance of his guards and make good his escape.
- With this idea always uppermost in his mind, he courted
- the good opinion of the Abyssinians, asked them many
- questions about their emperor and their country, and
- evinced a growing desire to reach their destination,
- that he might enjoy all the good things which they
- assured him the city of Adis Abeba contained. Thus he
- disarmed their suspicions, and each day found a slight
- relaxation of their watchfulness over him.
-
- By taking advantage of the fact that he and Werper
- always were kept together, Mugambi sought to learn what
- the other knew of the whereabouts of Tarzan, or the
- authorship of the raid upon the bungalow, as well as
- the fate of Lady Greystoke; but as he was confined to
- the accidents of conversation for this information, not
- daring to acquaint Werper with his true identity, and
- as Werper was equally anxious to conceal from the world
- his part in the destruction of his host's home and
- happiness, Mugambi learned nothing--at least in this way.
-
- But there came a time when he learned a very surprising
- thing, by accident.
-
- The party had camped early in the afternoon of a sultry
- day, upon the banks of a clear and beautiful stream.
- The bottom of the river was gravelly, there was no
- indication of crocodiles, those menaces to promiscuous
- bathing in the rivers of certain portions of the dark
- continent, and so the Abyssinians took advantage of the
- opportunity to perform long-deferred, and much needed,
- ablutions.
-
- As Werper, who, with Mugambi, had been given permission
- to enter the water, removed his clothing, the black
- noted the care with which he unfastened something which
- circled his waist, and which he took off with his
- shirt, keeping the latter always around and concealing
- the object of his suspicious solicitude.
-
- It was this very carefulness which attracted the
- black's attention to the thing, arousing a natural
- curiosity in the warrior's mind, and so it chanced that
- when the Belgian, in the nervousness of overcaution,
- fumbled the hidden article and dropped it, Mugambi saw
- it as it fell upon the ground, spilling a portion of
- its contents on the sward.
-
- Now Mugambi had been to London with his master.
- He was not the unsophisticated savage that his apparel
- proclaimed him. He had mingled with the cosmopolitan
- hordes of the greatest city in the world; he had
- visited museums and inspected shop windows; and,
- besides, he was a shrewd and intelligent man.
-
- The instant that the jewels of Opar rolled,
- scintillating, before his astonished eyes, he
- recognized them for what they were; but he recognized
- something else, too, that interested him far more
- deeply than the value of the stones. A thousand times
- he had seen the leathern pouch which dangled at his
- master's side, when Tarzan of the Apes had, in a spirit
- of play and adventure, elected to return for a few
- hours to the primitive manners and customs of his
- boyhood, and surrounded by his naked warriors hunt the
- lion and the leopard, the buffalo and the elephant
- after the manner he loved best.
-
- Werper saw that Mugambi had seen the pouch and the
- stones. Hastily he gathered up the precious gems and
- returned them to their container, while Mugambi,
- assuming an air of indifference, strolled down to the
- river for his bath.
-
- The following morning Abdul Mourak was enraged and
- chagrined to discover that this huge, black prisoner
- had escaped during the night, while Werper was
- terrified for the same reason, until his trembling
- fingers discovered the pouch still in its place beneath
- his shirt, and within it the hard outlines of its
- contents.
-
-
-
- 16
-
- Tarzan Again Leads the Mangani
-
-
- Achmet Zek with two of his followers had circled far to
- the south to intercept the flight of his deserting
- lieutenant, Werper. Others had spread out in various
- directions, so that a vast circle had been formed by
- them during the night, and now they were beating in
- toward the center.
-
- Achmet and the two with him halted for a short rest
- just before noon. They squatted beneath the trees upon
- the southern edge of a clearing. The chief of the
- raiders was in ill humor. To have been outwitted by an
- unbeliever was bad enough; but to have, at the same
- time, lost the jewels upon which he had set his
- avaricious heart was altogether too much--Allah must,
- indeed be angry with his servant.
-
- Well, he still had the woman. She would bring a fair
- price in the north, and there was, too, the buried
- treasure beside the ruins of the Englishman's house.
-
- A slight noise in the jungle upon the opposite side of
- the clearing brought Achmet Zek to immediate and alert
- attention. He gathered his rifle in readiness for
- instant use, at the same time motioning his followers
- to silence and concealment. Crouching behind the
- bushes the three waited, their eyes fastened upon the
- far side of the open space.
-
- Presently the foliage parted and a woman's face
- appeared, glancing fearfully from side to side.
- A moment later, evidently satisfied that no immediate
- danger lurked before her, she stepped out into the
- clearing in full view of the Arab.
-
- Achmet Zek caught his breath with a muttered
- exclamation of incredulity and an imprecation.
- The woman was the prisoner he had thought safely guarded
- at his camp!
-
- Apparently she was alone, but Achmet Zek waited that he
- might make sure of it before seizing her. Slowly Jane
- Clayton started across the clearing. Twice already
- since she had quitted the village of the raiders had
- she barely escaped the fangs of carnivora, and once she
- had almost stumbled into the path of one of the
- searchers. Though she was almost despairing of ever
- reaching safety she still was determined to fight on,
- until death or success terminated her endeavors.
-
- As the Arabs watched her from the safety of their
- concealment, and Achmet Zek noted with satisfaction
- that she was walking directly into his clutches,
- another pair of eyes looked down upon the entire scene
- from the foliage of an adjacent tree.
-
- Puzzled, troubled eyes they were, for all their gray
- and savage glint, for their owner was struggling with
- an intangible suggestion of the familiarity of the face
- and figure of the woman below him.
-
- A sudden crashing of the bushes at the point from which
- Jane Clayton had emerged into the clearing brought her
- to a sudden stop and attracted the attention of the
- Arabs and the watcher in the tree to the same point.
-
- The woman wheeled about to see what new danger menaced
- her from behind, and as she did so a great, anthropoid
- ape waddled into view. Behind him came another and
- another; but Lady Greystoke did not wait to learn how
- many more of the hideous creatures were so close upon
- her trail.
-
- With a smothered scream she rushed toward the opposite
- jungle, and as she reached the bushes there, Achmet Zek
- and his two henchmen rose up and seized her. At the
- same instant a naked, brown giant dropped from the
- branches of a tree at the right of the clearing.
-
- Turning toward the astonished apes he gave voice to a
- short volley of low gutturals, and without waiting to
- note the effect of his words upon them, wheeled and
- charged for the Arabs.
-
- Achmet Zek was dragging Jane Clayton toward his
- tethered horse. His two men were hastily unfastening
- all three mounts. The woman, struggling to escape the
- Arab, turned and saw the ape-man running toward her.
- A glad light of hope illuminated her face.
-
- "John!" she cried. "Thank God that you have come in time."
-
- Behind Tarzan came the great apes, wondering, but
- obedient to his summons. The Arabs saw that they would
- not have time to mount and make their escape before the
- beasts and the man were upon them. Achmet Zek
- recognized the latter as the redoubtable enemy of such
- as he, and he saw, too, in the circumstance an
- opportunity to rid himself forever of the menace of the
- ape-man's presence.
-
- Calling to his men to follow his example he raised his
- rifle and leveled it upon the charging giant. His
- followers, acting with no less alacrity than himself,
- fired almost simultaneously, and with the reports of
- the rifles, Tarzan of the Apes and two of his hairy
- henchmen pitched forward among the jungle grasses.
-
- The noise of the rifle shots brought the balance of the
- apes to a wondering pause, and, taking advantage of
- their momentary distraction, Achmet Zek and his fellows
- leaped to their horses' backs and galloped away with
- the now hopeless and grief-stricken woman.
-
- Back to the village they rode, and once again Lady
- Greystoke found herself incarcerated in the filthy,
- little hut from which she had thought to have escaped
- for good. But this time she was not only guarded by an
- additional sentry, but bound as well.
-
- Singly and in twos the searchers who had ridden out
- with Achmet Zek upon the trail of the Belgian, returned
- empty handed. With the report of each the raider's
- rage and chagrin increased, until he was in such a
- transport of ferocious anger that none dared approach
- him. Threatening and cursing, Achmet Zek paced up and
- down the floor of his silken tent; but his temper
- served him naught--Werper was gone and with him the
- fortune in scintillating gems which had aroused the
- cupidity of his chief and placed the sentence of death
- upon the head of the lieutenant.
-
- With the escape of the Arabs the great apes had turned
- their attention to their fallen comrades. One was
- dead, but another and the great white ape still
- breathed. The hairy monsters gathered about these two,
- grumbling and muttering after the fashion of their kind.
-
- Tarzan was the first to regain consciousness. Sitting
- up, he looked about him. Blood was flowing from a
- wound in his shoulder. The shock had thrown him down
- and dazed him; but he was far from dead. Rising slowly
- to his feet he let his eyes wander toward the spot
- where last he had seen the she, who had aroused within
- his savage breast such strange emotions.
-
- "Where is she?" he asked.
-
- "The Tarmangani took her away," replied one of the apes.
- "Who are you who speak the language of the Mangani?"
-
- "I am Tarzan," replied the ape-man; "mighty hunter,
- greatest of fighters. When I roar, the jungle is
- silent and trembles with terror. I am Tarzan of the
- Apes. I have been away; but now I have come back to my
- people."
-
- "Yes," spoke up an old ape, "he is Tarzan. I know him.
- It is well that he has come back. Now we shall have
- good hunting."
-
- The other apes came closer and sniffed at the ape-man.
- Tarzan stood very still, his fangs half bared, and his
- muscles tense and ready for action; but there was none
- there to question his right to be with them, and
- presently, the inspection satisfactorily concluded, the
- apes again returned their attention to the other survivor.
-
- He too was but slightly wounded, a bullet, grazing his
- skull, having stunned him, so that when he regained
- consciousness he was apparently as fit as ever.
-
- The apes told Tarzan that they had been traveling
- toward the east when the scent spoor of the she had
- attracted them and they had stalked her. Now they
- wished to continue upon their interrupted march; but
- Tarzan preferred to follow the Arabs and take the woman
- from them. After a considerable argument it was
- decided that they should first hunt toward the east for
- a few days and then return and search for the Arabs,
- and as time is of little moment to the ape folk, Tarzan
- acceded to their demands, he, himself, having reverted
- to a mental state but little superior to their own.
-
- Another circumstance which decided him to postpone
- pursuit of the Arabs was the painfulness of his wound.
- It would be better to wait until that had healed before
- he pitted himself again against the guns of the
- Tarmangani.
-
- And so, as Jane Clayton was pushed into her prison hut
- and her hands and feet securely bound, her natural
- protector roamed off toward the east in company with a
- score of hairy monsters, with whom he rubbed shoulders
- as familiarly as a few months before he had mingled
- with his immaculate fellow-members of one of London's
- most select and exclusive clubs.
-
- But all the time there lurked in the back of his
- injured brain a troublesome conviction that he had no
- business where he was--that he should be, for some
- unaccountable reason, elsewhere and among another sort
- of creature. Also, there was the compelling urge to be
- upon the scent of the Arabs, undertaking the rescue of
- the woman who had appealed so strongly to his savage
- sentiments; though the thought-word which naturally
- occurred to him in the contemplation of the venture,
- was "capture," rather than "rescue."
-
- To him she was as any other jungle she, and he had set
- his heart upon her as his mate. For an instant, as he
- had approached closer to her in the clearing where the
- Arabs had seized her, the subtle aroma which had first
- aroused his desires in the hut that had imprisoned her
- had fallen upon his nostrils, and told him that he had
- found the creature for whom he had developed so sudden
- and inexplicable a passion.
-
- The matter of the pouch of jewels also occupied his
- thoughts to some extent, so that he found a double urge
- for his return to the camp of the raiders. He would
- obtain possession of both his pretty pebbles and the
- she. Then he would return to the great apes with his
- new mate and his baubles, and leading his hairy
- companions into a far wilderness beyond the ken of man,
- live out his life, hunting and battling among the lower
- orders after the only manner which he now recollected.
-
- He spoke to his fellow-apes upon the matter, in an
- attempt to persuade them to accompany him; but all
- except Taglat and Chulk refused. The latter was young
- and strong, endowed with a greater intelligence than
- his fellows, and therefore the possessor of better
- developed powers of imagination. To him the expedition
- savored of adventure, and so appealed, strongly. With
- Taglat there was another incentive--a secret and
- sinister incentive, which, had Tarzan of the Apes had
- knowledge of it, would have sent him at the other's
- throat in jealous rage.
-
- Taglat was no longer young; but he was still a
- formidable beast, mightily muscled, cruel, and,
- because of his greater experience, crafty and cunning.
- Too, he was of giant proportions, the very weight of his
- huge bulk serving ofttimes to discount in his favor the
- superior agility of a younger antagonist.
-
- He was of a morose and sullen disposition that marked
- him even among his frowning fellows, where such
- characteristics are the rule rather than the exception,
- and, though Tarzan did not guess it, he hated the ape-man
- with a ferocity that he was able to hide only
- because the dominant spirit of the nobler creature had
- inspired within him a species of dread which was as
- powerful as it was inexplicable to him.
-
- These two, then, were to be Tarzan's companions upon
- his return to the village of Achmet Zek. As they set
- off, the balance of the tribe vouchsafed them but a
- parting stare, and then resumed the serious business of
- feeding.
-
- Tarzan found difficulty in keeping the minds of his
- fellows set upon the purpose of their adventure, for
- the mind of an ape lacks the power of long-sustained
- concentration. To set out upon a long journey, with a
- definite destination in view, is one thing, to remember
- that purpose and keep it uppermost in one's mind
- continually is quite another. There are so many things
- to distract one's attention along the way.
-
- Chulk was, at first, for rushing rapidly ahead as
- though the village of the raiders lay but an hour's
- march before them instead of several days; but within a
- few minutes a fallen tree attracted his attention with
- its suggestion of rich and succulent forage beneath,
- and when Tarzan, missing him, returned in search, he
- found Chulk squatting beside the rotting bole, from
- beneath which he was assiduously engaged in digging out
- the grubs and beetles, whose kind form a considerable
- proportion of the diet of the apes.
-
- Unless Tarzan desired to fight there was nothing to
- do but wait until Chulk had exhausted the storehouse,
- and this he did, only to discover that Taglat was now
- missing. After a considerable search, he found that
- worthy gentleman contemplating the sufferings of an
- injured rodent he had pounced upon. He would sit in
- apparent indifference, gazing in another direction,
- while the crippled creature, wriggled slowly and
- painfully away from him, and then, just as his victim
- felt assured of escape, he would reach out a giant palm
- and slam it down upon the fugitive. Again and again he
- repeated this operation, until, tiring of the sport, he
- ended the sufferings of his plaything by devouring it.
-
- Such were the exasperating causes of delay which
- retarded Tarzan's return journey toward the village of
- Achmet Zek; but the ape-man was patient, for in his
- mind was a plan which necessitated the presence of
- Chulk and Taglat when he should have arrived at his
- destination.
-
- It was not always an easy thing to maintain in the
- vacillating minds of the anthropoids a sustained
- interest in their venture. Chulk was wearying of the
- continued marching and the infrequency and short
- duration of the rests. He would gladly have abandoned
- this search for adventure had not Tarzan continually
- filled his mind with alluring pictures of the great
- stores of food which were to be found in the village of
- Tarmangani.
-
- Taglat nursed his secret purpose to better advantage
- than might have been expected of an ape, yet there were
- times when he, too, would have abandoned the adventure
- had not Tarzan cajoled him on.
-
- It was mid-afternoon of a sultry, tropical day when the
- keen senses of the three warned them of the proximity
- of the Arab camp. Stealthily they approached, keeping
- to the dense tangle of growing things which made
- concealment easy to their uncanny jungle craft.
-
- First came the giant ape-man, his smooth, brown skin
- glistening with the sweat of exertion in the close, hot
- confines of the jungle. Behind him crept Chulk and
- Taglat, grotesque and shaggy caricatures of their
- godlike leader.
-
- Silently they made their way to the edge of the
- clearing which surrounded the palisade, and here they
- clambered into the lower branches of a large tree
- overlooking the village occupied by the enemy, the
- better to spy upon his goings and comings.
-
- A horseman, white burnoosed, rode out through the
- gateway of the village. Tarzan, whispering to Chulk
- and Taglat to remain where they were, swung, monkey-like,
- through the trees in the direction of the trail
- the Arab was riding. From one jungle giant to the next
- he sped with the rapidity of a squirrel and the silence
- of a ghost.
-
- The Arab rode slowly onward, unconscious of the danger
- hovering in the trees behind him. The ape-man made a
- slight detour and increased his speed until he had
- reached a point upon the trail in advance of the
- horseman. Here he halted upon a leafy bough which
- overhung the narrow, jungle trail. On came the victim,
- humming a wild air of the great desert land of the
- north. Above him poised the savage brute that was
- today bent upon the destruction of a human life--the
- same creature who a few months before, had occupied his
- seat in the House of Lords at London, a respected and
- distinguished member of that august body.
-
- The Arab passed beneath the overhanging bough, there
- was a slight rustling of the leaves above, the horse
- snorted and plunged as a brown-skinned creature dropped
- upon its rump. A pair of mighty arms encircled the
- Arab and he was dragged from his saddle to the trail.
-
- Ten minutes later the ape-man, carrying the outer
- garments of an Arab bundled beneath an arm, rejoined
- his companions. He exhibited his trophies to them,
- explaining in low gutturals the details of his exploit.
- Chulk and Taglat fingered the fabrics, smelled of them,
- and, placing them to their ears, tried to listen to them.
-
- Then Tarzan led them back through the jungle to the
- trail, where the three hid themselves and waited.
- Nor had they long to wait before two of Achmet Zek's
- blacks, clothed in habiliments similar to their master's,
- came down the trail on foot, returning to the camp.
-
- One moment they were laughing and talking together--the
- next they lay stretched in death upon the trail, three
- mighty engines of destruction bending over them.
- Tarzan removed their outer garments as he had removed
- those of his first victim, and again retired with Chulk
- and Taglat to the greater seclusion of the tree they
- had first selected.
-
- Here the ape-man arranged the garments upon his shaggy
- fellows and himself, until, at a distance, it might
- have appeared that three white-robed Arabs squatted
- silently among the branches of the forest.
-
- Until dark they remained where they were, for from his
- point of vantage, Tarzan could view the enclosure
- within the palisade. He marked the position of the hut
- in which he had first discovered the scent spoor of the
- she he sought. He saw the two sentries standing before
- its doorway, and he located the habitation of Achmet
- Zek, where something told him he would most likely find
- the missing pouch and pebbles.
-
- Chulk and Taglat were, at first, greatly interested in
- their wonderful raiment. They fingered the fabric,
- smelled of it, and regarded each other intently with
- every mark of satisfaction and pride. Chulk, a
- humorist in his way, stretched forth a long and hairy
- arm, and grasping the hood of Taglat's burnoose pulled
- it down over the latter's eyes, extinguishing him,
- snuffer-like, as it were.
-
- The older ape, pessimistic by nature, recognized no
- such thing as humor. Creatures laid their paws upon
- him for but two things--to search for fleas and to
- attack. The pulling of the Tarmangani-scented thing
- about his head and eyes could not be for the
- performance of the former act; therefore it must be the
- latter. He was attacked! Chulk had attacked him.
-
- With a snarl he was at the other's throat, not even
- waiting to lift the woolen veil which obscured his
- vision. Tarzan leaped upon the two, and swaying and
- toppling upon their insecure perch the three great
- beasts tussled and snapped at one another until the
- ape-man finally succeeded in separating the enraged
- anthropoids.
-
- An apology is unknown to these savage progenitors of
- man, and explanation a laborious and usually futile
- process, Tarzan bridged the dangerous gulf by
- distracting their attention from their altercation to a
- consideration of their plans for the immediate future.
- Accustomed to frequent arguments in which more hair
- than blood is wasted, the apes speedily forget such
- trivial encounters, and presently Chulk and Taglat were
- again squatting in close proximity to each other and
- peaceful repose, awaiting the moment when the ape-man
- should lead them into the village of the Tarmangani.
-
- It was long after darkness had fallen, that Tarzan led
- his companions from their hiding place in the tree to
- the ground and around the palisade to the far side of
- the village.
-
- Gathering the skirts of his burnoose, beneath one arm,
- that his legs might have free action, the ape-man took
- a short running start, and scrambled to the top of the
- barrier. Fearing lest the apes should rend their
- garments to shreds in a similar attempt, he had
- directed them to wait below for him, and himself
- securely perched upon the summit of the palisade he
- unslung his spear and lowered one end of it to Chulk.
-
- The ape seized it, and while Tarzan held tightly to the
- upper end, the anthropoid climbed quickly up the shaft
- until with one paw he grasped the top of the wall.
- To scramble then to Tarzan's side was the work of but an
- instant. In like manner Taglat was conducted to their
- sides, and a moment later the three dropped silently
- within the enclosure.
-
- Tarzan led them first to the rear of the hut in which
- Jane Clayton was confined, where, through the roughly
- repaired aperture in the wall, he sought with his
- sensitive nostrils for proof that the she he had come
- for was within.
-
- Chulk and Taglat, their hairy faces pressed close to
- that of the patrician, sniffed with him. Each caught
- the scent spoor of the woman within, and each reacted
- according to his temperament and his habits of thought.
-
- It left Chulk indifferent. The she was for Tarzan--all
- that he desired was to bury his snout in the foodstuffs
- of the Tarmangani. He had come to eat his fill without
- labor--Tarzan had told him that that should be his
- reward, and he was satisfied.
-
- But Taglat's wicked, bloodshot eyes, narrowed to the
- realization of the nearing fulfillment of his carefully
- nursed plan. It is true that sometimes during the
- several days that had elapsed since they had set out
- upon their expedition it had been difficult for Taglat
- to hold his idea uppermost in his mind, and on several
- occasions he had completely forgotten it, until Tarzan,
- by a chance word, had recalled it to him, but, for an
- ape, Taglat had done well.
-
- Now, he licked his chops, and he made a sickening,
- sucking noise with his flabby lips as he drew in his breath.
-
- Satisfied that the she was where he had hoped to find
- her, Tarzan led his apes toward the tent of Achmet Zek.
- A passing Arab and two slaves saw them, but the night
- was dark and the white burnooses hid the hairy limbs of
- the apes and the giant figure of their leader, so that
- the three, by squatting down as though in conversation,
- were passed by, unsuspected. To the rear of the tent
- they made their way. Within, Achmet Zek conversed with
- several of his lieutenants. Without, Tarzan listened.
-
-
-
- 17
-
- The Deadly Peril of Jane Clayton
-
-
- Lieutenant Albert Werper, terrified by contemplation of
- the fate which might await him at Adis Abeba, cast
- about for some scheme of escape, but after the black
- Mugambi had eluded their vigilance the Abyssinians
- redoubled their precautions to prevent Werper following
- the lead of the Negro.
-
- For some time Werper entertained the idea of bribing
- Abdul Mourak with a portion of the contents of the
- pouch; but fearing that the man would demand all the
- gems as the price of liberty, the Belgian, influenced
- by avarice, sought another avenue from his dilemma.
-
- It was then that there dawned upon him the possibility
- of the success of a different course which would still
- leave him in possession of the jewels, while at the
- same time satisfying the greed of the Abyssinian with
- the conviction that he had obtained all that Werper had
- to offer.
-
- And so it was that a day or so after Mugambi had
- disappeared, Werper asked for an audience with Abdul
- Mourak. As the Belgian entered the presence of his
- captor the scowl upon the features of the latter boded
- ill for any hope which Werper might entertain, still he
- fortified himself by recalling the common weakness of
- mankind, which permits the most inflexible of natures
- to bend to the consuming desire for wealth.
-
- Abdul Mourak eyed him, frowningly. "What do you want
- now?" he asked.
-
- "My liberty," replied Werper.
-
- The Abyssinian sneered. "And you disturbed me thus to
- tell me what any fool might know," he said.
-
- "I can pay for it," said Werper.
-
- Abdul Mourak laughed loudly. "Pay for it?" he cried.
- "What with--the rags that you have upon your back?
- Or, perhaps you are concealing beneath your coat a thousand
- pounds of ivory. Get out! You are a fool. Do not
- bother me again or I shall have you whipped."
-
- But Werper persisted. His liberty and perhaps his life
- depended upon his success.
-
- "Listen to me," he pleaded. "If I can give you as much
- gold as ten men may carry will you promise that I shall
- be conducted in safety to the nearest English
- commissioner?"
-
- "As much gold as ten men may carry!" repeated Abdul
- Mourak. "You are crazy. Where have you so much gold
- as that?"
-
- "I know where it is hid," said Werper. "Promise, and I
- will lead you to it--if ten loads is enough?"
-
- Abdul Mourak had ceased to laugh. He was eyeing the
- Belgian intently. The fellow seemed sane enough--yet
- ten loads of gold! It was preposterous. The Abyssinian
- thought in silence for a moment.
-
- "Well, and if I promise," he said. "How far is this gold?"
-
- "A long week's march to the south," replied Werper.
-
- "And if we do not find it where you say it is, do you
- realize what your punishment will be?"
-
- "If it is not there I will forfeit my life," replied
- the Belgian. "I know it is there, for I saw it buried
- with my own eyes. And more--there are not only ten
- loads, but as many as fifty men may carry. It is all
- yours if you will promise to see me safely delivered
- into the protection of the English."
-
- "You will stake your life against the finding of the
- gold?" asked Abdul.
-
- Werper assented with a nod.
-
- "Very well," said the Abyssinian, "I promise, and even
- if there be but five loads you shall have your freedom;
- but until the gold is in my possession you remain a
- prisoner."
-
- "I am satisfied," said Werper. "Tomorrow we start?"
-
- Abdul Mourak nodded, and the Belgian returned to his
- guards. The following day the Abyssinian soldiers were
- surprised to receive an order which turned their faces
- from the northeast to the south. And so it happened
- that upon the very night that Tarzan and the two apes
- entered the village of the raiders, the Abyssinians
- camped but a few miles to the east of the same spot.
-
- While Werper dreamed of freedom and the unmolested
- enjoyment of the fortune in his stolen pouch, and Abdul
- Mourak lay awake in greedy contemplation of the fifty
- loads of gold which lay but a few days farther to the
- south of him, Achmet Zek gave orders to his lieutenants
- that they should prepare a force of fighting men and
- carriers to proceed to the ruins of the Englishman's
- DOUAR on the morrow and bring back the fabulous
- fortune which his renegade lieutenant had told him was
- buried there.
-
- And as he delivered his instructions to those within, a
- silent listener crouched without his tent, waiting for
- the time when he might enter in safety and prosecute
- his search for the missing pouch and the pretty pebbles
- that had caught his fancy.
-
- At last the swarthy companions of Achmet Zek quitted
- his tent, and the leader went with them to smoke a pipe
- with one of their number, leaving his own silken
- habitation unguarded. Scarcely had they left the
- interior when a knife blade was thrust through the
- fabric of the rear wall, some six feet above the
- ground, and a swift downward stroke opened an entrance
- to those who waited beyond.
-
- Through the opening stepped the ape-man, and close
- behind him came the huge Chulk; but Taglat did not
- follow them. Instead he turned and slunk through the
- darkness toward the hut where the she who had arrested
- his brutish interest lay securely bound. Before the
- doorway the sentries sat upon their haunches,
- conversing in monotones. Within, the young woman lay
- upon a filthy sleeping mat, resigned, through utter
- hopelessness to whatever fate lay in store for her
- until the opportunity arrived which would permit her to
- free herself by the only means which now seemed even
- remotely possible--the hitherto detested act of
- self-destruction.
-
- Creeping silently toward the sentries, a white-burnoosed
- figure approached the shadows at one end of the hut.
- The meager intellect of the creature denied
- it the advantage it might have taken of its disguise.
- Where it could have walked boldly to the very sides of
- the sentries, it chose rather to sneak upon them,
- unseen, from the rear.
-
- It came to the corner of the hut and peered around.
- The sentries were but a few paces away; but the ape did
- not dare expose himself, even for an instant, to those
- feared and hated thunder-sticks which the Tarmangani
- knew so well how to use, if there were another and
- safer method of attack.
-
- Taglat wished that there was a tree nearby from the
- over-hanging branches of which he might spring upon his
- unsuspecting prey; but, though there was no tree, the
- idea gave birth to a plan. The eaves of the hut were
- just above the heads of the sentries--from them he
- could leap upon the Tarmangani, unseen. A quick snap
- of those mighty jaws would dispose of one of them
- before the other realized that they were attacked,
- and the second would fall an easy prey to the strength,
- agility and ferocity of a second quick charge.
-
- Taglat withdrew a few paces to the rear of the hut,
- gathered himself for the effort, ran quickly forward
- and leaped high into the air. He struck the roof
- directly above the rear wall of the hut, and the
- structure, reinforced by the wall beneath, held his
- enormous weight for an instant, then he moved forward a
- step, the roof sagged, the thatching parted and the
- great anthropoid shot through into the interior.
-
- The sentries, hearing the crashing of the roof poles,
- leaped to their feet and rushed into the hut. Jane
- Clayton tried to roll aside as the great form lit upon
- the floor so close to her that one foot pinned her
- clothing to the ground.
-
- The ape, feeling the movement beside him, reached down
- and gathered the girl in the hollow of one mighty arm.
- The burnoose covered the hairy body so that Jane
- Clayton believed that a human arm supported her, and
- from the extremity of hopelessness a great hope sprang
- into her breast that at last she was in the keeping of
- a rescuer.
-
- The two sentries were now within the hut, but
- hesitating because of doubt as to the nature of the
- cause of the disturbance. Their eyes, not yet
- accustomed to the darkness of the interior, told them
- nothing, nor did they hear any sound, for the ape stood
- silently awaiting their attack.
-
- Seeing that they stood without advancing, and realizing
- that, handicapped as he was by the weight of the she,
- he could put up but a poor battle, Taglat elected to
- risk a sudden break for liberty. Lowering his head, he
- charged straight for the two sentries who blocked the
- doorway. The impact of his mighty shoulders bowled
- them over upon their backs, and before they could
- scramble to their feet, the ape was gone, darting in
- the shadows of the huts toward the palisade at the far
- end of the village.
-
- The speed and strength of her rescuer filled Jane
- Clayton with wonder. Could it be that Tarzan had
- survived the bullet of the Arab? Who else in all the
- jungle could bear the weight of a grown woman as
- lightly as he who held her? She spoke his name; but
- there was no response. Still she did not give up hope.
-
- At the palisade the beast did not even hesitate.
- A single mighty leap carried it to the top, where it
- poised but for an instant before dropping to the ground
- upon the opposite side. Now the girl was almost
- positive that she was safe in the arms of her husband,
- and when the ape took to the trees and bore her swiftly
- into the jungle, as Tarzan had done at other times in
- the past, belief became conviction.
-
- In a little moonlit glade, a mile or so from the camp
- of the raiders, her rescuer halted and dropped her to
- the ground. His roughness surprised her, but still she
- had no doubts. Again she called him by name, and at
- the same instant the ape, fretting under the restraints
- of the unaccustomed garments of the Tarmangani, tore
- the burnoose from him, revealing to the eyes of the
- horror-struck woman the hideous face and hairy form of
- a giant anthropoid.
-
- With a piteous wail of terror, Jane Clayton swooned,
- while, from the concealment of a nearby bush, Numa,
- the lion, eyed the pair hungrily and licked his chops.
-
-
-
- Tarzan, entering the tent of Achmet Zek, searched the
- interior thoroughly. He tore the bed to pieces and
- scattered the contents of box and bag about the floor.
- He investigated whatever his eyes discovered, nor did
- those keen organs overlook a single article within the
- habitation of the raider chief; but no pouch or pretty
- pebbles rewarded his thoroughness.
-
- Satisfied at last that his belongings were not in the
- possession of Achmet Zek, unless they were on the
- person of the chief himself, Tarzan decided to secure
- the person of the she before further prosecuting his
- search for the pouch.
-
- Motioning for Chulk to follow him, he passed out of the
- tent by the same way that he had entered it, and
- walking boldly through the village, made directly for
- the hut where Jane Clayton had been imprisoned.
-
- He noted with surprise the absence of Taglat, whom he
- had expected to find awaiting him outside the tent of
- Achmet Zek; but, accustomed as he was to the
- unreliability of apes, he gave no serious attention to
- the present defection of his surly companion. So long
- as Taglat did not cause interference with his plans,
- Tarzan was indifferent to his absence.
-
- As he approached the hut, the ape-man noticed that a
- crowd had collected about the entrance. He could see
- that the men who composed it were much excited, and
- fearing lest Chulk's disguise should prove inadequate
- to the concealment of his true identity in the face of
- so many observers, he commanded the ape to betake
- himself to the far end of the village, and there await him.
-
- As Chulk waddled off, keeping to the shadows, Tarzan
- advanced boldly toward the excited group before the
- doorway of the hut. He mingled with the blacks and the
- Arabs in an endeavor to learn the cause of the
- commotion, in his interest forgetting that he alone of
- the assemblage carried a spear, a bow and arrows, and
- thus might become an object of suspicious attention.
-
- Shouldering his way through the crowd he approached the
- doorway, and had almost reached it when one of the
- Arabs laid a hand upon his shoulder, crying: "Who is
- this?" at the same time snatching back the hood from
- the ape-man's face.
-
- Tarzan of the Apes in all his savage life had never
- been accustomed to pause in argument with an
- antagonist. The primitive instinct of self-preservation
- acknowledges many arts and wiles; but
- argument is not one of them, nor did he now waste
- precious time in an attempt to convince the raiders
- that he was not a wolf in sheep's clothing. Instead he
- had his unmasker by the throat ere the man's words had
- scarce quitted his lips, and hurling him from side to
- side brushed away those who would have swarmed upon him.
-
- Using the Arab as a weapon, Tarzan forced his way
- quickly to the doorway, and a moment later was within
- the hut. A hasty examination revealed the fact that it
- was empty, and his sense of smell discovered, too, the
- scent spoor of Taglat, the ape. Tarzan uttered a low,
- ominous growl. Those who were pressing forward at the
- doorway to seize him, fell back as the savage notes of
- the bestial challenge smote upon their ears. They
- looked at one another in surprise and consternation.
- A man had entered the hut alone, and yet with their own
- ears they had heard the voice of a wild beast within.
- What could it mean? Had a lion or a leopard sought
- sanctuary in the interior, unbeknown to the sentries?
-
- Tarzan's quick eyes discovered the opening in the roof,
- through which Taglat had fallen. He guessed that the
- ape had either come or gone by way of the break, and
- while the Arabs hesitated without, he sprang, catlike,
- for the opening, grasped the top of the wall and
- clambered out upon the roof, dropping instantly to the
- ground at the rear of the hut.
-
- When the Arabs finally mustered courage to enter the
- hut, after firing several volleys through the walls,
- they found the interior deserted. At the same time
- Tarzan, at the far end of the village, sought for
- Chulk; but the ape was nowhere to be found.
-
- Robbed of his she, deserted by his companions, and as
- much in ignorance as ever as to the whereabouts of his
- pouch and pebbles, it was an angry Tarzan who climbed
- the palisade and vanished into the darkness of the
- jungle.
-
- For the present he must give up the search for his
- pouch, since it would be paramount to self-destruction
- to enter the Arab camp now while all its inhabitants
- were aroused and upon the alert.
-
- In his escape from the village, the ape-man had lost
- the spoor of the fleeing Taglat, and now he circled
- widely through the forest in an endeavor to again pick
- it up.
-
- Chulk had remained at his post until the cries and
- shots of the Arabs had filled his simple soul with
- terror, for above all things the ape folk fear the
- thunder-sticks of the Tarmangani; then he had clambered
- nimbly over the palisade, tearing his burnoose in the
- effort, and fled into the depths of the jungle,
- grumbling and scolding as he went.
-
- Tarzan, roaming the jungle in search of the trail of
- Taglat and the she, traveled swiftly. In a little
- moonlit glade ahead of him the great ape was bending
- over the prostrate form of the woman Tarzan sought.
- The beast was tearing at the bonds that confined her
- ankles and wrists, pulling and gnawing upon the cords.
-
- The course the ape-man was taking would carry him but a
- short distance to the right of them, and though he
- could not have seen them the wind was bearing down from them
- to him, carrying their scent spoor strongly toward him.
-
- A moment more and Jane Clayton's safety might have been
- assured, even though Numa, the lion, was already
- gathering himself in preparation for a charge; but
- Fate, already all too cruel, now outdid herself--the
- wind veered suddenly for a few moments, the scent spoor
- that would have led the ape-man to the girl's side was
- wafted in the opposite direction; Tarzan passed within
- fifty yards of the tragedy that was being enacted in
- the glade, and the opportunity was gone beyond recall.
-
-
-
- 18
-
- The Fight For the Treasure
-
-
- It was morning before Tarzan could bring himself to a
- realization of the possibility of failure of his quest,
- and even then he would only admit that success was but
- delayed. He would eat and sleep, and then set forth
- again. The jungle was wide; but wide too were the
- experience and cunning of Tarzan. Taglat might travel
- far; but Tarzan would find him in the end, though he
- had to search every tree in the mighty forest.
-
- Soliloquizing thus, the ape-man followed the spoor of
- Bara, the deer, the unfortunate upon which he had
- decided to satisfy his hunger. For half an hour the
- trail led the ape-man toward the east along a
- well-marked game path, when suddenly, to the stalker's
- astonishment, the quarry broke into sight, racing madly
- back along the narrow way straight toward the hunter.
-
- Tarzan, who had been following along the trail, leaped
- so quickly to the concealing verdure at the side that
- the deer was still unaware of the presence of an enemy
- in this direction, and while the animal was still some
- distance away, the ape-man swung into the lower
- branches of the tree which overhung the trail. There
- he crouched, a savage beast of prey, awaiting the
- coming of its victim.
-
- What had frightened the deer into so frantic a retreat,
- Tarzan did not know--Numa, the lion, perhaps, or
- Sheeta, the panther; but whatsoever it was mattered
- little to Tarzan of the Apes--he was ready and willing
- to defend his kill against any other denizen of the
- jungle. If he were unable to do it by means of
- physical prowess, he had at his command another and a
- greater power--his shrewd intelligence.
-
- And so, on came the running deer, straight into the
- jaws of death. The ape-man turned so that his back was
- toward the approaching animal. He poised with bent
- knees upon the gently swaying limb above the trail,
- timing with keen ears the nearing hoof beats of
- frightened Bara.
-
- In a moment the victim flashed beneath the limb and at
- the same instant the ape-man above sprang out and down
- upon its back. The weight of the man's body carried
- the deer to the ground. It stumbled forward once in a
- futile effort to rise, and then mighty muscles dragged
- its head far back, gave the neck a vicious wrench, and
- Bara was dead.
-
- Quick had been the killing, and equally quick were the
- ape-man's subsequent actions, for who might know what
- manner of killer pursued Bara, or how close at hand he
- might be? Scarce had the neck of the victim snapped
- than the carcass was hanging over one of Tarzan's broad
- shoulders, and an instant later the ape-man was perched
- once more among the lower branches of a tree above the
- trail, his keen, gray eyes scanning the pathway down
- which the deer had fled.
-
- Nor was it long before the cause of Bara's fright
- became evident to Tarzan, for presently came the
- unmistakable sounds of approaching horsemen. Dragging
- his kill after him the ape-man ascended to the middle
- terrace, and settling himself comfortably in the crotch
- of a tree where he could still view the trail beneath,
- cut a juicy steak from the deer's loin, and burying his
- strong, white teeth in the hot flesh proceeded to enjoy
- the fruits of his prowess and his cunning.
-
- Nor did he neglect the trail beneath while he satisfied
- his hunger. His sharp eyes saw the muzzle of the
- leading horse as it came into view around a bend in the
- tortuous trail, and one by one they scrutinized the
- riders as they passed beneath him in single file.
-
- Among them came one whom Tarzan recognized, but so
- schooled was the ape-man in the control of his emotions
- that no slightest change of expression, much less any
- hysterical demonstration that might have revealed his
- presence, betrayed the fact of his inward excitement.
-
- Beneath him, as unconscious of his presence as were the
- Abyssinians before and behind him, rode Albert Werper,
- while the ape-man scrutinized the Belgian for some sign
- of the pouch which he had stolen.
-
- As the Abyssinians rode toward the south, a giant
- figure hovered ever upon their trail--a huge, almost
- naked white man, who carried the bloody carcass of a
- deer upon his shoulders, for Tarzan knew that he might
- not have another opportunity to hunt for some time if
- he were to follow the Belgian.
-
- To endeavor to snatch him from the midst of the armed
- horsemen, not even Tarzan would attempt other than in
- the last extremity, for the way of the wild is the way
- of caution and cunning, unless they be aroused to
- rashness by pain or anger.
-
- So the Abyssinians and the Belgian marched southward
- and Tarzan of the Apes swung silently after them
- through the swaying branches of the middle terrace.
-
- A two days' march brought them to a level plain beyond
- which lay mountains--a plain which Tarzan remembered
- and which aroused within him vague half memories and
- strange longings. Out upon the plain the horsemen
- rode, and at a safe distance behind them crept the ape-man,
- taking advantage of such cover as the ground afforded.
-
- Beside a charred pile of timbers the Abyssinians
- halted, and Tarzan, sneaking close and concealing
- himself in nearby shrubbery, watched them in
- wonderment. He saw them digging up the earth, and he
- wondered if they had hidden meat there in the past and
- now had come for it. Then he recalled how he had
- buried his pretty pebbles, and the suggestion that had
- caused him to do it. They were digging for the things
- the blacks had buried here!
-
- Presently he saw them uncover a dirty, yellow object,
- and he witnessed the joy of Werper and of Abdul Mourak
- as the grimy object was exposed to view. One by one
- they unearthed many similar pieces, all of the same
- uniform, dirty yellow, until a pile of them lay upon
- the ground, a pile which Abdul Mourak fondled and
- petted in an ecstasy of greed.
-
- Something stirred in the ape-man's mind as he looked
- long upon the golden ingots. Where had he seen such
- before? What were they? Why did these Tarmangani covet
- them so greatly? To whom did they belong?
-
- He recalled the black men who had buried them.
- The things must be theirs. Werper was stealing them as
- he had stolen Tarzan's pouch of pebbles. The ape-man's
- eyes blazed in anger. He would like to find the black
- men and lead them against these thieves. He wondered
- where their village might be.
-
- As all these things ran through the active mind, a
- party of men moved out of the forest at the edge of the
- plain and advanced toward the ruins of the burned bungalow.
-
- Abdul Mourak, always watchful, was the first to see
- them, but already they were halfway across the open.
- He called to his men to mount and hold themselves in
- readiness, for in the heart of Africa who may know
- whether a strange host be friend or foe?
-
- Werper, swinging into his saddle, fastened his eyes
- upon the newcomers, then, white and trembling he turned
- toward Abdul Mourak.
-
- "It is Achmet Zek and his raiders," he whispered.
- "They are come for the gold."
-
- It must have been at about the same instant that Achmet
- Zek discovered the pile of yellow ingots and realized
- the actuality of what he had already feared since first
- his eyes had alighted upon the party beside the ruins
- of the Englishman's bungalow. Someone had forestalled
- him--another had come for the treasure ahead of him.
-
- The Arab was crazed by rage. Recently everything had
- gone against him. He had lost the jewels, the Belgian,
- and for the second time he had lost the Englishwoman.
- Now some one had come to rob him of this treasure which
- he had thought as safe from disturbance here as though
- it never had been mined.
-
- He cared not whom the thieves might be. They would not
- give up the gold without a battle, of that he was
- certain, and with a wild whoop and a command to his
- followers, Achmet Zek put spurs to his horse and dashed
- down upon the Abyssinians, and after him, waving their
- long guns above their heads, yelling and cursing, came
- his motley horde of cut-throat followers.
-
- The men of Abdul Mourak met them with a volley which
- emptied a few saddles, and then the raiders were among
- them, and sword, pistol and musket, each was doing its
- most hideous and bloody work.
-
- Achmet Zek, spying Werper at the first charge, bore
- down upon the Belgian, and the latter, terrified by
- contemplation of the fate he deserved, turned his
- horse's head and dashed madly away in an effort to
- escape. Shouting to a lieutenant to take command, and
- urging him upon pain of death to dispatch the
- Abyssinians and bring the gold back to his camp, Achmet
- Zek set off across the plain in pursuit of the Belgian,
- his wicked nature unable to forego the pleasures of
- revenge, even at the risk of sacrificing the treasure.
-
- As the pursued and the pursuer raced madly toward the
- distant forest the battle behind them raged with bloody
- savageness. No quarter was asked or given by either
- the ferocious Abyssinians or the murderous cut-throats
- of Achmet Zek.
-
- From the concealment of the shrubbery Tarzan watched
- the sanguinary conflict which so effectually surrounded
- him that he found no loop-hole through which he might
- escape to follow Werper and the Arab chief.
-
- The Abyssinians were formed in a circle which included
- Tarzan's position, and around and into them galloped
- the yelling raiders, now darting away, now charging in
- to deliver thrusts and cuts with their curved swords.
-
- Numerically the men of Achmet Zek were superior, and
- slowly but surely the soldiers of Menelek were being
- exterminated. To Tarzan the result was immaterial.
- He watched with but a single purpose--to escape the ring
- of blood-mad fighters and be away after the Belgian and
- his pouch.
-
- When he had first discovered Werper upon the trail
- where he had slain Bara, he had thought that his eyes
- must be playing him false, so certain had he been that
- the thief had been slain and devoured by Numa; but
- after following the detachment for two days, with his
- keen eyes always upon the Belgian, he no longer doubted
- the identity of the man, though he was put to it to
- explain the identity of the mutilated corpse he had
- supposed was the man he sought.
-
- As he crouched in hiding among the unkempt shrubbery
- which so short a while since had been the delight and
- pride of the wife he no longer recalled, an Arab and an
- Abyssinian wheeled their mounts close to his position
- as they slashed at each other with their swords.
-
- Step by step the Arab beat back his adversary until the
- latter's horse all but trod upon the ape-man, and then
- a vicious cut clove the black warrior's skull, and the
- corpse toppled backward almost upon Tarzan.
-
- As the Abyssinian tumbled from his saddle the
- possibility of escape which was represented by the
- riderless horse electrified the ape-man to instant
- action. Before the frightened beast could gather
- himself for flight a naked giant was astride his back.
- A strong hand had grasped his bridle rein, and the
- surprised Arab discovered a new foe in the saddle of
- him, whom he had slain.
-
- But this enemy wielded no sword, and his spear and bow
- remained upon his back. The Arab, recovered from his
- first surprise, dashed in with raised sword to
- annihilate this presumptuous stranger. He aimed a
- mighty blow at the ape-man's head, a blow which swung
- harmlessly through thin air as Tarzan ducked from its
- path, and then the Arab felt the other's horse brushing
- his leg, a great arm shot out and encircled his waist,
- and before he could recover himself he was dragged from
- his saddle, and forming a shield for his antagonist was
- borne at a mad run straight through the encircling
- ranks of his fellows.
-
- Just beyond them he was tossed aside upon the ground,
- and the last he saw of his strange foeman the latter
- was galloping off across the plain in the direction of
- the forest at its farther edge.
-
- For another hour the battle raged nor did it cease
- until the last of the Abyssinians lay dead upon the
- ground, or had galloped off toward the north in flight.
- But a handful of men escaped, among them Abdul Mourak.
-
- The victorious raiders collected about the pile of
- golden ingots which the Abyssinians had uncovered, and
- there awaited the return of their leader. Their
- exultation was slightly tempered by the glimpse they
- had had of the strange apparition of the naked white
- man galloping away upon the horse of one of their
- foemen and carrying a companion who was now among them
- expatiating upon the superhuman strength of the ape-man.
- None of them there but was familiar with the name
- and fame of Tarzan of the Apes, and the fact that they
- had recognized the white giant as the ferocious enemy
- of the wrongdoers of the jungle, added to their terror,
- for they had been assured that Tarzan was dead.
-
- Naturally superstitious, they fully believed that they
- had seen the disembodied spirit of the dead man, and
- now they cast fearful glances about them in expectation
- of the ghost's early return to the scene of the ruin
- they had inflicted upon him during their recent raid
- upon his home, and discussed in affrighted whispers the
- probable nature of the vengeance which the spirit would
- inflict upon them should he return to find them in
- possession of his gold.
-
- As they conversed their terror grew, while from the
- concealment of the reeds along the river below them a
- small party of naked, black warriors watched their
- every move. From the heights beyond the river these
- black men had heard the noise of the conflict, and
- creeping warily down to the stream had forded it and
- advanced through the reeds until they were in a
- position to watch every move of the combatants.
-
- For a half hour the raiders awaited Achmet Zek's
- return, their fear of the earlier return of the ghost
- of Tarzan constantly undermining their loyalty to and
- fear of their chief. Finally one among them voiced the
- desires of all when he announced that he intended
- riding forth toward the forest in search of Achmet Zek.
- Instantly every man of them sprang to his mount.
-
- "The gold will be safe here," cried one. "We have
- killed the Abyssinians and there are no others to carry
- it away. Let us ride in search of Achmet Zek!"
-
- And a moment later, amidst a cloud of dust, the raiders
- were galloping madly across the plain, and out from the
- concealment of the reeds along the river, crept a party
- of black warriors toward the spot where the golden
- ingots of Opar lay piled on the ground.
-
- Werper had still been in advance of Achmet Zek when he
- reached the forest; but the latter, better mounted, was
- gaining upon him. Riding with the reckless courage of
- desperation the Belgian urged his mount to greater
- speed even within the narrow confines of the winding,
- game trail that the beast was following.
-
- Behind him he could hear the voice of Achmet Zek crying
- to him to halt; but Werper only dug the spurs deeper
- into the bleeding sides of his panting mount. Two
- hundred yards within the forest a broken branch lay
- across the trail. It was a small thing that a horse
- might ordinarily take in his natural stride without
- noticing its presence; but Werper's horse was jaded,
- his feet were heavy with weariness, and as the branch
- caught between his front legs he stumbled, was unable
- to recover himself, and went down, sprawling in the
- trail.
-
- Werper, going over his head, rolled a few yards farther
- on, scrambled to his feet and ran back. Seizing the
- reins he tugged to drag the beast to his feet; but the
- animal would not or could not rise, and as the Belgian
- cursed and struck at him, Achmet Zek appeared in view.
-
- Instantly the Belgian ceased his efforts with the dying
- animal at his feet, and seizing his rifle, dropped
- behind the horse and fired at the oncoming Arab.
-
- His bullet, going low, struck Achmet Zek's horse in the
- breast, bringing him down a hundred yards from where
- Werper lay preparing to fire a second shot.
-
- The Arab, who had gone down with his mount, was
- standing astride him, and seeing the Belgian's
- strategic position behind his fallen horse, lost no
- time in taking up a similar one behind his own.
-
- And there the two lay, alternately firing at and
- cursing each other, while from behind the Arab, Tarzan
- of the Apes approached to the edge of the forest. Here
- he heard the occasional shots of the duelists, and
- choosing the safer and swifter avenue of the forest
- branches to the uncertain transportation afforded by a
- half-broken Abyssinian pony, took to the trees.
-
- Keeping to one side of the trail, the ape-man came
- presently to a point where he could look down in
- comparative safety upon the fighters. First one and
- then the other would partially raise himself above his
- breastwork of horseflesh, fire his weapon and
- immediately drop flat behind his shelter, where he
- would reload and repeat the act a moment later.
-
- Werper had but little ammunition, having been hastily
- armed by Abdul Mourak from the body of one of the first
- of the Abyssinians who had fallen in the fight about
- the pile of ingots, and now he realized that soon he
- would have used his last bullet, and be at the mercy of
- the Arab--a mercy with which he was well acquainted.
-
- Facing both death and despoilment of his treasure, the
- Belgian cast about for some plan of escape, and the
- only one that appealed to him as containing even a
- remote possibility of success hinged upon the chance of
- bribing Achmet Zek.
-
- Werper had fired all but a single cartridge, when,
- during a lull in the fighting, he called aloud to his
- opponent.
-
- "Achmet Zek," he cried, "Allah alone knows which one of
- us may leave our bones to rot where he lies upon this
- trail today if we keep up our foolish battle. You wish
- the contents of the pouch I wear about my waist, and I
- wish my life and my liberty even more than I do the
- jewels. Let us each, then, take that which he most
- desires and go our separate ways in peace. I will lay
- the pouch upon the carcass of my horse, where you may
- see it, and you, in turn, will lay your gun upon your
- horse, with butt toward me. Then I will go away,
- leaving the pouch to you, and you will let me go in
- safety. I want only my life, and my freedom."
-
- The Arab thought in silence for a moment. Then he
- spoke. His reply was influenced by the fact that he had
- expended his last shot.
-
- "Go your way, then," he growled, "leaving the pouch in
- plain sight behind you. See, I lay my gun thus, with
- the butt toward you. Go."
-
- Werper removed the pouch from about his waist.
- Sorrowfully and affectionately he let his fingers press
- the hard outlines of the contents. Ah, if he could
- extract a little handful of the precious stones! But
- Achmet Zek was standing now, his eagle eyes commanding
- a plain view of the Belgian and his every act.
-
- Regretfully Werper laid the pouch, its contents
- undisturbed, upon the body of his horse, rose, and
- taking his rifle with him, backed slowly down the trail
- until a turn hid him from the view of the watchful Arab.
-
- Even then Achmet Zek did not advance, fearful as he was
- of some such treachery as he himself might have been
- guilty of under like circumstances; nor were his
- suspicions groundless, for the Belgian, no sooner had
- he passed out of the range of the Arab's vision, halted
- behind the bole of a tree, where he still commanded an
- unobstructed view of his dead horse and the pouch, and
- raising his rifle covered the spot where the other's
- body must appear when he came forward to seize the
- treasure.
-
- But Achmet Zek was no fool to expose himself to the
- blackened honor of a thief and a murderer. Taking his
- long gun with him, he left the trail, entering the rank
- and tangled vegetation which walled it, and crawling
- slowly forward on hands and knees he paralleled the
- trail; but never for an instant was his body exposed to
- the rifle of the hidden assassin.
-
- Thus Achmet Zek advanced until he had come opposite the
- dead horse of his enemy. The pouch lay there in full
- view, while a short distance along the trail, Werper
- waited in growing impatience and nervousness, wondering
- why the Arab did not come to claim his reward.
-
- Presently he saw the muzzle of a rifle appear suddenly
- and mysteriously a few inches above the pouch, and
- before he could realize the cunning trick that the Arab
- had played upon him the sight of the weapon was
- adroitly hooked into the rawhide thong which formed the
- carrying strap of the pouch, and the latter was drawn
- quickly from his view into the dense foliage at the
- trail's side.
-
- Not for an instant had the raider exposed a square inch
- of his body, and Werper dared not fire his one
- remaining shot unless every chance of a successful hit
- was in his favor.
-
- Chuckling to himself, Achmet Zek withdrew a few paces
- farther into the jungle, for he was as positive that
- Werper was waiting nearby for a chance to pot him as
- though his eyes had penetrated the jungle trees to the
- figure of the hiding Belgian, fingering his rifle
- behind the bole of the buttressed giant.
-
- Werper did not dare advance--his cupidity would not
- permit him to depart, and so he stood there, his rifle
- ready in his hands, his eyes watching the trail before
- him with catlike intensity.
-
- But there was another who had seen the pouch and
- recognized it, who did advance with Achmet Zek,
- hovering above him, as silent and as sure as death
- itself, and as the Arab, finding a little spot less
- overgrown with bushes than he had yet encountered,
- prepared to gloat his eyes upon the contents of the
- pouch, Tarzan paused directly above him, intent upon
- the same object.
-
- Wetting his thin lips with his tongue, Achmet Zek
- loosened the tie strings which closed the mouth of the
- pouch, and cupping one claw-like hand poured forth a
- portion of the contents into his palm.
-
- A single look he took at the stones lying in his hand.
- His eyes narrowed, a curse broke from his lips, and he
- hurled the small objects upon the ground, disdainfully.
- Quickly he emptied the balance of the contents until he
- had scanned each separate stone, and as he dumped them
- all upon the ground and stamped upon them his rage grew
- until the muscles of his face worked in demon-like
- fury, and his fingers clenched until his nails bit into
- the flesh.
-
- Above, Tarzan watched in wonderment. He had been
- curious to discover what all the pow-wow about his
- pouch had meant. He wanted to see what the Arab would
- do after the other had gone away, leaving the pouch
- behind him, and, having satisfied his curiosity, he
- would then have pounced upon Achmet Zek and taken the
- pouch and his pretty pebbles away from him, for did
- they not belong to Tarzan?
-
- He saw the Arab now throw aside the empty pouch, and
- grasping his long gun by the barrel, clublike, sneak
- stealthily through the jungle beside the trail along
- which Werper had gone.
-
- As the man disappeared from his view, Tarzan dropped to
- the ground and commenced gathering up the spilled
- contents of the pouch, and the moment that he obtained
- his first near view of the scattered pebbles he
- understood the rage of the Arab, for instead of the
- glittering and scintillating gems which had first
- caught and held the attention of the ape-man, the pouch
- now contained but a collection of ordinary river
- pebbles.
-
-
-
- 19
-
- Jane Clayton and the Beasts of the Jungle
-
-
- Mugambi, after his successful break for liberty,
- had fallen upon hard times. His way had led him through
- a country with which he was unfamiliar, a jungle country
- in which he could find no water, and but little food,
- so that after several days of wandering he found
- himself so reduced in strength that he could barely
- drag himself along.
-
- It was with growing difficulty that he found the
- strength necessary to construct a shelter by night
- wherein he might be reasonably safe from the large
- carnivora, and by day he still further exhausted his
- strength in digging for edible roots, and searching for
- water.
-
- A few stagnant pools at considerable distances apart
- saved him from death by thirst; but his was a pitiable
- state when finally he stumbled by accident upon a large
- river in a country where fruit was abundant, and small
- game which he might bag by means of a combination of
- stealth, cunning, and a crude knob-stick which he had
- fashioned from a fallen limb.
-
- Realizing that he still had a long march ahead of him
- before he could reach even the outskirts of the Waziri
- country, Mugambi wisely decided to remain where he was
- until he had recuperated his strength and health. A
- few days' rest would accomplish wonders for him, he
- knew, and he could ill afford to sacrifice his chances
- for a safe return by setting forth handicapped by
- weakness.
-
- And so it was that he constructed a substantial thorn
- boma, and rigged a thatched shelter within it, where he
- might sleep by night in security, and from which he
- sallied forth by day to hunt the flesh which alone
- could return to his giant thews their normal prowess.
-
- One day, as he hunted, a pair of savage eyes discovered
- him from the concealment of the branches of a great
- tree beneath which the black warrior passed.
- Bloodshot, wicked eyes they were, set in a fierce and
- hairy face.
-
- They watched Mugambi make his little kill of a small
- rodent, and they followed him as he returned to his
- hut, their owner moving quietly through the trees upon
- the trail of the Negro.
-
- The creature was Chulk, and he looked down upon the
- unconscious man more in curiosity than in hate. The
- wearing of the Arab burnoose which Tarzan had placed
- upon his person had aroused in the mind of the
- anthropoid a desire for similar mimicry of the
- Tarmangani. The burnoose, though, had obstructed his
- movements and proven such a nuisance that the ape had
- long since torn it from him and thrown it away.
-
- Now, however, he saw a Gomangani arrayed in less
- cumbersome apparel--a loin cloth, a few copper
- ornaments and a feather headdress. These were more in
- line with Chulk's desires than a flowing robe which was
- constantly getting between one's legs, and catching
- upon every limb and bush along the leafy trail.
-
- Chulk eyed the pouch, which, suspended over Mugambi's
- shoulder, swung beside his black hip. This took his
- fancy, for it was ornamented with feathers and a
- fringe, and so the ape hung about Mugambi's boma,
- waiting an opportunity to seize either by stealth or
- might some object of the black's apparel.
-
- Nor was it long before the opportunity came. Feeling
- safe within his thorny enclosure, Mugambi was wont to
- stretch himself in the shade of his shelter during the
- heat of the day, and sleep in peaceful security until
- the declining sun carried with it the enervating
- temperature of midday.
-
- Watching from above, Chulk saw the black warrior
- stretched thus in the unconsciousness of sleep one
- sultry afternoon. Creeping out upon an overhanging
- branch the anthropoid dropped to the ground within the
- boma. He approached the sleeper upon padded feet which
- gave forth no sound, and with an uncanny woodcraft that
- rustled not a leaf or a grass blade.
-
- Pausing beside the man, the ape bent over and examined
- his belongings. Great as was the strength of Chulk
- there lay in the back of his little brain a something
- which deterred him from arousing the man to combat--a
- sense that is inherent in all the lower orders, a
- strange fear of man, that rules even the most powerful
- of the jungle creatures at times.
-
- To remove Mugambi's loin cloth without awakening him
- would be impossible, and the only detachable things
- were the knob-stick and the pouch, which had fallen
- from the black's shoulder as he rolled in sleep.
-
- Seizing these two articles, as better than nothing at
- all, Chulk retreated with haste, and every indication
- of nervous terror, to the safety of the tree from which
- he had dropped, and, still haunted by that indefinable
- terror which the close proximity of man awakened in his
- breast, fled precipitately through the jungle. Aroused
- by attack, or supported by the presence of another of
- his kind, Chulk could have braved the presence of a
- score of human beings, but alone--ah, that was a
- different matter--alone, and unenraged.
-
- It was some time after Mugambi awoke that he missed the
- pouch. Instantly he was all excitement. What could
- have become of it? It had been at his side when he lay
- down to sleep--of that he was certain, for had he not
- pushed it from beneath him when its bulging bulk,
- pressing against his ribs, caused him discomfort? Yes,
- it had been there when he lay down to sleep. How then
- had it vanished?
-
- Mugambi's savage imagination was filled with visions of
- the spirits of departed friends and enemies, for only
- to the machinations of such as these could he attribute
- the disappearance of his pouch and knob-stick in the
- first excitement of the discovery of their loss; but
- later and more careful investigation, such as his
- woodcraft made possible, revealed indisputable evidence
- of a more material explanation than his excited fancy
- and superstition had at first led him to accept.
-
- In the trampled turf beside him was the faint impress
- of huge, manlike feet. Mugambi raised his brows as the
- truth dawned upon him. Hastily leaving the boma he
- searched in all directions about the enclosure for some
- farther sign of the tell-tale spoor. He climbed trees
- and sought for evidence of the direction of the thief's
- flight; but the faint signs left by a wary ape who
- elects to travel through the trees eluded the woodcraft
- of Mugambi. Tarzan might have followed them; but no
- ordinary mortal could perceive them, or perceiving,
- translate.
-
- The black, now strengthened and refreshed by his rest,
- felt ready to set out again for Waziri, and finding
- himself another knob-stick, turned his back upon the
- river and plunged into the mazes of the jungle.
-
- As Taglat struggled with the bonds which secured the
- ankles and wrists of his captive, the great lion that
- eyed the two from behind a nearby clump of bushes
- wormed closer to his intended prey.
-
- The ape's back was toward the lion. He did not see the
- broad head, fringed by its rough mane, protruding
- through the leafy wall. He could not know that the
- powerful hind paws were gathering close beneath the
- tawny belly preparatory to a sudden spring, and his
- first intimation of impending danger was the thunderous
- and triumphant roar which the charging lion could no
- longer suppress.
-
- Scarce pausing for a backward glance, Taglat abandoned
- the unconscious woman and fled in the opposite
- direction from the horrid sound which had broken in so
- unexpected and terrifying a manner upon his startled
- ears; but the warning had come too late to save him,
- and the lion, in his second bound, alighted full upon
- the broad shoulders of the anthropoid.
-
- As the great bull went down there was awakened in him
- to the full all the cunning, all the ferocity, all the
- physical prowess which obey the mightiest of the
- fundamental laws of nature, the law of self-preservation,
- and turning upon his back he closed with
- the carnivore in a death struggle so fearless and
- abandoned, that for a moment the great Numa himself may
- have trembled for the outcome.
-
- Seizing the lion by the mane, Taglat buried his
- yellowed fangs deep in the monster's throat, growling
- hideously through the muffled gag of blood and hair.
- Mixed with the ape's voice the lion's roars of rage and
- pain reverberated through the jungle, till the lesser
- creatures of the wild, startled from their peaceful
- pursuits, scurried fearfully away.
-
- Rolling over and over upon the turf the two battled
- with demoniac fury, until the colossal cat, by doubling
- his hind paws far up beneath his belly sank his talons
- deep into Taglat's chest, then, ripping downward with
- all his strength, Numa accomplished his design, and the
- disemboweled anthropoid, with a last spasmodic
- struggle, relaxed in limp and bloody dissolution
- beneath his titanic adversary.
-
- Scrambling to his feet, Numa looked about quickly in
- all directions, as though seeking to detect the
- possible presence of other foes; but only the still and
- unconscious form of the girl, lying a few paces from
- him met his gaze, and with an angry growl he placed a
- forepaw upon the body of his kill and raising his head
- gave voice to his savage victory cry.
-
- For another moment he stood with fierce eyes roving to
- and fro about the clearing. At last they halted for a
- second time upon the girl. A low growl rumbled from
- the lion's throat. His lower jaw rose and fell, and
- the slaver drooled and dripped upon the dead face of
- Taglat.
-
- Like two yellow-green augurs, wide and unblinking, the
- terrible eyes remained fixed upon Jane Clayton. The
- erect and majestic pose of the great frame shrank
- suddenly into a sinister crouch as, slowly and gently
- as one who treads on eggs, the devil-faced cat crept
- forward toward the girl.
-
- Beneficent Fate maintained her in happy unconsciousness
- of the dread presence sneaking stealthily upon her.
- She did not know when the lion paused at her side.
- She did not hear the sniffing of his nostrils as he smelled
- about her. She did not feel the heat of the fetid
- breath upon her face, nor the dripping of the saliva
- from the frightful jaws half opened so close above her.
-
- Finally the lion lifted a forepaw and turned the body
- of the girl half over, then he stood again eyeing her
- as though still undetermined whether life was extinct
- or not. Some noise or odor from the nearby jungle
- attracted his attention for a moment. His eyes did not
- again return to Jane Clayton, and presently he left
- her, walked over to the remains of Taglat, and
- crouching down upon his kill with his back toward the
- girl, proceeded to devour the ape.
-
- It was upon this scene that Jane Clayton at last opened
- her eyes. Inured to danger, she maintained her
- self-possession in the face of the startling surprise
- which her new-found consciousness revealed to her. She
- neither cried out nor moved a muscle, until she had
- taken in every detail of the scene which lay within the
- range of her vision.
-
- She saw that the lion had killed the ape, and that he
- was devouring his prey less than fifty feet from where
- she lay; but what could she do? Her hands and feet were
- bound. She must wait then, in what patience she could
- command, until Numa had eaten and digested the ape,
- when, without doubt, he would return to feast upon her,
- unless, in the meantime, the dread hyenas should
- discover her, or some other of the numerous prowling
- carnivora of the jungle.
-
- As she lay tormented by these frightful thoughts, she
- suddenly became conscious that the bonds at her wrists
- and ankles no longer hurt her, and then of the fact
- that her hands were separated, one lying upon either
- side of her, instead of both being confined at her back.
-
- Wonderingly she moved a hand. What miracle had been
- performed? It was not bound! Stealthily and noiselessly
- she moved her other limbs, only to discover that she
- was free. She could not know how the thing had
- happened, that Taglat, gnawing upon them for sinister
- purposes of his own, had cut them through but an
- instant before Numa had frightened him from his victim.
-
- For a moment Jane Clayton was overwhelmed with joy and
- thanksgiving; but only for a moment. What good was her
- new-found liberty in the face of the frightful beast
- crouching so close beside her? If she could have had
- this chance under different conditions, how happily she
- would have taken advantage of it; but now it was given
- to her when escape was practically impossible.
-
- The nearest tree was a hundred feet away, the lion less
- than fifty. To rise and attempt to reach the safety of
- those tantalizing branches would be but to invite
- instant destruction, for Numa would doubtless be too
- jealous of this future meal to permit it to escape with
- ease. And yet, too, there was another possibility--a
- chance which hinged entirely upon the unknown temper of
- the great beast.
-
- His belly already partially filled, he might watch with
- indifference the departure of the girl; yet could she
- afford to chance so improbable a contingency? She
- doubted it. Upon the other hand she was no more minded
- to allow this frail opportunity for life to entirely
- elude her without taking or attempting to take some
- advantage from it.
-
- She watched the lion narrowly. He could not see her
- without turning his head more than halfway around. She
- would attempt a ruse. Silently she rolled over in the
- direction of the nearest tree, and away from the lion,
- until she lay again in the same position in which Numa
- had left her, but a few feet farther from him.
-
- Here she lay breathless watching the lion; but the
- beast gave no indication that he had heard aught to
- arouse his suspicions. Again she rolled over, gaining
- a few more feet and again she lay in rigid
- contemplation of the beast's back.
-
- During what seemed hours to her tense nerves, Jane
- Clayton continued these tactics, and still the lion fed
- on in apparent unconsciousness that his second prey was
- escaping him. Already the girl was but a few paces
- from the tree--a moment more and she would be close
- enough to chance springing to her feet, throwing
- caution aside and making a sudden, bold dash for
- safety. She was halfway over in her turn, her face
- away from the lion, when he suddenly turned his great
- head and fastened his eyes upon her. He saw her roll
- over upon her side away from him, and then her eyes
- were turned again toward him, and the cold sweat broke
- from the girl's every pore as she realized that with
- life almost within her grasp, death had found her out.
-
- For a long time neither the girl nor the lion moved.
- The beast lay motionless, his head turned upon his
- shoulders and his glaring eyes fixed upon the rigid
- victim, now nearly fifty yards away. The girl stared
- back straight into those cruel orbs, daring not to move
- even a muscle.
-
- The strain upon her nerves was becoming so unbearable
- that she could scarcely restrain a growing desire to
- scream, when Numa deliberately turned back to the
- business of feeding; but his back-layed ears attested a
- sinister regard for the actions of the girl behind him.
-
- Realizing that she could not again turn without
- attracting his immediate and perhaps fatal attention,
- Jane Clayton resolved to risk all in one last attempt
- to reach the tree and clamber to the lower branches.
-
- Gathering herself stealthily for the effort, she leaped
- suddenly to her feet, but almost simultaneously the
- lion sprang up, wheeled and with wide-distended jaws
- and terrific roars, charged swiftly down upon her.
-
- Those who have spent lifetimes hunting the big game of
- Africa will tell you that scarcely any other creature
- in the world attains the speed of a charging lion.
- For the short distance that the great cat can maintain it,
- it resembles nothing more closely than the onrushing of
- a giant locomotive under full speed, and so, though the
- distance that Jane Clayton must cover was relatively
- small, the terrific speed of the lion rendered her
- hopes of escape almost negligible.
-
- Yet fear can work wonders, and though the upward spring
- of the lion as he neared the tree into which she was
- scrambling brought his talons in contact with her boots
- she eluded his raking grasp, and as he hurtled against
- the bole of her sanctuary, the girl drew herself into
- the safety of the branches above his reach.
-
- For some time the lion paced, growling and moaning,
- beneath the tree in which Jane Clayton crouched,
- panting and trembling. The girl was a prey to the
- nervous reaction from the frightful ordeal through
- which she had so recently passed, and in her
- overwrought state it seemed that never again should she
- dare descend to the ground among the fearsome dangers
- which infested the broad stretch of jungle that she
- knew must lie between herself and the nearest village
- of her faithful Waziri.
-
- It was almost dark before the lion finally quit the
- clearing, and even had his place beside the remnants of
- the mangled ape not been immediately usurped by a pack
- of hyenas, Jane Clayton would scarcely have dared
- venture from her refuge in the face of impending night,
- and so she composed herself as best she could for the
- long and tiresome wait, until daylight might offer some
- means of escape from the dread vicinity in which she
- had witnessed such terrifying adventures.
-
- Tired nature at last overcame even her fears, and she
- dropped into a deep slumber, cradled in a comparatively
- safe, though rather uncomfortable, position against the
- bole of the tree, and supported by two large branches
- which grew outward, almost horizontally, but a few
- inches apart.
-
- The sun was high in the heavens when she at last awoke,
- and beneath her was no sign either of Numa or the
- hyenas. Only the clean-picked bones of the ape,
- scattered about the ground, attested the fact of what
- had transpired in this seemingly peaceful spot but a
- few hours before.
-
- Both hunger and thirst assailed her now, and realizing
- that she must descend or die of starvation, she at last
- summoned courage to undertake the ordeal of continuing
- her journey through the jungle.
-
- Descending from the tree, she set out in a southerly
- direction, toward the point where she believed the
- plains of Waziri lay, and though she knew that only
- ruin and desolation marked the spot where once her
- happy home had stood, she hoped that by coming to the
- broad plain she might eventually reach one of the
- numerous Waziri villages that were scattered over the
- surrounding country, or chance upon a roving band of
- these indefatigable huntsmen.
-
- The day was half spent when there broke unexpectedly
- upon her startled ears the sound of a rifle shot not
- far ahead of her. As she paused to listen, this first
- shot was followed by another and another and another.
- What could it mean? The first explanation which sprung
- to her mind attributed the firing to an encounter
- between the Arab raiders and a party of Waziri; but as
- she did not know upon which side victory might rest, or
- whether she were behind friend or foe, she dared not
- advance nearer on the chance of revealing herself to an
- enemy.
-
- After listening for several minutes she became
- convinced that no more than two or three rifles were
- engaged in the fight, since nothing approximating the
- sound of a volley reached her ears; but still she
- hesitated to approach, and at last, determining to take
- no chance, she climbed into the concealing foliage of a
- tree beside the trail she had been following and there
- fearfully awaited whatever might reveal itself.
-
- As the firing became less rapid she caught the sound of
- men's voices, though she could distinguish no words,
- and at last the reports of the guns ceased, and she
- heard two men calling to each other in loud tones.
- Then there was a long silence which was finally broken
- by the stealthy padding of footfalls on the trail ahead
- of her, and in another moment a man appeared in view
- backing toward her, a rifle ready in his hands, and his
- eyes directed in careful watchfulness along the way
- that he had come.
-
- Almost instantly Jane Clayton recognized the man as M.
- Jules Frecoult, who so recently had been a guest in her
- home. She was upon the point of calling to him in glad
- relief when she saw him leap quickly to one side and
- hide himself in the thick verdure at the trail's side.
- It was evident that he was being followed by an enemy,
- and so Jane Clayton kept silent, lest she distract
- Frecoult's attention, or guide his foe to his hiding
- place.
-
- Scarcely had Frecoult hidden himself than the figure of
- a white-robed Arab crept silently along the trail in
- pursuit. From her hiding place, Jane Clayton could see
- both men plainly. She recognized Achmet Zek as the
- leader of the band of ruffians who had raided her home
- and made her a prisoner, and as she saw Frecoult, the
- supposed friend and ally, raise his gun and take
- careful aim at the Arab, her heart stood still and
- every power of her soul was directed upon a fervent
- prayer for the accuracy of his aim.
-
- Achmet Zek paused in the middle of the trail. His keen
- eyes scanned every bush and tree within the radius of
- his vision. His tall figure presented a perfect target
- to the perfidious assassin. There was a sharp report,
- and a little puff of smoke arose from the bush that hid
- the Belgian, as Achmet Zek stumbled forward and
- pitched, face down, upon the trail.
-
- As Werper stepped back into the trail, he was startled
- by the sound of a glad cry from above him, and as he
- wheeled about to discover the author of this unexpected
- interruption, he saw Jane Clayton drop lightly from a
- nearby tree and run forward with outstretched hands to
- congratulate him upon his victory.
-
-
-
- 20
-
- Jane Clayton Again a Prisoner
-
-
- Though her clothes were torn and her hair disheveled,
- Albert Werper realized that he never before had looked
- upon such a vision of loveliness as that which Lady
- Greystoke presented in the relief and joy which she
- felt in coming so unexpectedly upon a friend and
- rescuer when hope had seemed so far away.
-
- If the Belgian had entertained any doubts as to the
- woman's knowledge of his part in the perfidious attack
- upon her home and herself, it was quickly dissipated by
- the genuine friendliness of her greeting. She told him
- quickly of all that had befallen her since he had
- departed from her home, and as she spoke of the death
- of her husband her eyes were veiled by the tears which
- she could not repress.
-
- "I am shocked," said Werper, in well-simulated
- sympathy; "but I am not surprised. That devil there,"
- and he pointed toward the body of Achmet Zek, "has
- terrorized the entire country. Your Waziri are either
- exterminated, or have been driven out of their country,
- far to the south. The men of Achmet Zek occupy the
- plain about your former home--there is neither
- sanctuary nor escape in that direction. Our only hope
- lies in traveling northward as rapidly as we may, of
- coming to the camp of the raiders before the knowledge
- of Achmet Zek's death reaches those who were left
- there, and of obtaining, through some ruse, an escort
- toward the north.
-
- "I think that the thing can be accomplished, for I was
- a guest of the raider's before I knew the nature of the
- man, and those at the camp are not aware that I turned
- against him when I discovered his villainy.
-
- "Come! We will make all possible haste to reach the
- camp before those who accompanied Achmet Zek upon his
- last raid have found his body and carried the news of
- his death to the cut-throats who remained behind. It
- is our only hope, Lady Greystoke, and you must place
- your entire faith in me if I am to succeed. Wait for
- me here a moment while I take from the Arab's body the
- wallet that he stole from me," and Werper stepped
- quickly to the dead man's side, and, kneeling, sought
- with quick fingers the pouch of jewels. To his
- consternation, there was no sign of them in the
- garments of Achmet Zek. Rising, he walked back along
- the trail, searching for some trace of the missing
- pouch or its contents; but he found nothing, even
- though he searched carefully the vicinity of his dead
- horse, and for a few paces into the jungle on either
- side. Puzzled, disappointed and angry, he at last
- returned to the girl. "The wallet is gone," he
- explained, crisply, "and I dare not delay longer in
- search of it. We must reach the camp before the
- returning raiders."
-
- Unsuspicious of the man's true character, Jane Clayton
- saw nothing peculiar in his plans, or in his specious
- explanation of his former friendship for the raider,
- and so she grasped with alacrity the seeming hope for
- safety which he proffered her, and turning about she
- set out with Albert Werper toward the hostile camp in
- which she so lately had been a prisoner.
-
- It was late in the afternoon of the second day before
- they reached their destination, and as they paused upon
- the edge of the clearing before the gates of the walled
- village, Werper cautioned the girl to accede to
- whatever he might suggest by his conversation with the
- raiders.
-
- "I shall tell them," he said, "that I apprehended you
- after you escaped from the camp, that I took you to
- Achmet Zek, and that as he was engaged in a stubborn
- battle with the Waziri, he directed me to return to
- camp with you, to obtain here a sufficient guard, and
- to ride north with you as rapidly as possible and
- dispose of you at the most advantageous terms to a
- certain slave broker whose name he gave me."
-
- Again the girl was deceived by the apparent frankness
- of the Belgian. She realized that desperate situations
- required desperate handling, and though she trembled
- inwardly at the thought of again entering the vile and
- hideous village of the raiders she saw no better course
- than that which her companion had suggested.
-
- Calling aloud to those who tended the gates, Werper,
- grasping Jane Clayton by the arm, walked boldly across
- the clearing. Those who opened the gates to him
- permitted their surprise to show clearly in their
- expressions. That the discredited and hunted
- lieutenant should be thus returning fearlessly of his
- own volition, seemed to disarm them quite as
- effectually as his manner toward Lady Greystoke had
- deceived her.
-
- The sentries at the gate returned Werper's salutations,
- and viewed with astonishment the prisoner whom he
- brought into the village with him.
-
- Immediately the Belgian sought the Arab who had been
- left in charge of the camp during Achmet Zek's absence,
- and again his boldness disarmed suspicion and won the
- acceptance of his false explanation of his return.
- The fact that he had brought back with him the woman
- prisoner who had escaped, added strength to his claims,
- and Mohammed Beyd soon found himself fraternizing
- good-naturedly with the very man whom he would have slain
- without compunction had he discovered him alone in the
- jungle a half hour before.
-
- Jane Clayton was again confined to the prison hut she
- had formerly occupied, but as she realized that this
- was but a part of the deception which she and Frecoult
- were playing upon the credulous raiders, it was with
- quite a different sensation that she again entered the
- vile and filthy interior, from that which she had
- previously experienced, when hope was so far away.
-
- Once more she was bound and sentries placed before the
- door of her prison; but before Werper left her he
- whispered words of cheer into her ear. Then he left,
- and made his way back to the tent of Mohammed Beyd.
- He had been wondering how long it would be before the
- raiders who had ridden out with Achmet Zek would return
- with the murdered body of their chief, and the more he
- thought upon the matter the greater his fears became,
- that without accomplices his plan would fail.
-
- What, even, if he got away from the camp in safety
- before any returned with the true story of his guilt--
- of what value would this advantage be other than to
- protract for a few days his mental torture and his
- life? These hard riders, familiar with every trail and
- bypath, would get him long before he could hope to
- reach the coast.
-
- As these thoughts passed through his mind he entered
- the tent where Mohammed Beyd sat cross-legged upon a
- rug, smoking. The Arab looked up as the European came
- into his presence.
-
- "Greetings, O Brother!" he said.
-
- "Greetings!" replied Werper.
-
- For a while neither spoke further. The Arab was the
- first to break the silence.
-
- "And my master, Achmet Zek, was well when last you saw
- him?" he asked.
-
- "Never was he safer from the sins and dangers of
- mortality," replied the Belgian.
-
- "It is well," said Mohammed Beyd, blowing a little puff
- of blue smoke straight out before him.
-
- Again there was silence for several minutes.
-
- "And if he were dead?" asked the Belgian, determined to
- lead up to the truth, and attempt to bribe Mohammed
- Beyd into his service.
-
- The Arab's eyes narrowed and he leaned forward, his
- gaze boring straight into the eyes of the Belgian.
-
- "I have been thinking much, Werper, since you returned
- so unexpectedly to the camp of the man whom you had
- deceived, and who sought you with death in his heart.
- I have been with Achmet Zek for many years--his own
- mother never knew him so well as I. He never forgives--
- much less would he again trust a man who had once
- betrayed him; that I know.
-
- "I have thought much, as I said, and the result of my
- thinking has assured me that Achmet Zek is dead--for
- otherwise you would never have dared return to his
- camp, unless you be either a braver man or a bigger
- fool than I have imagined. And, if this evidence of my
- judgment is not sufficient, I have but just now
- received from your own lips even more confirmatory
- witness--for did you not say that Achmet Zek was never
- more safe from the sins and dangers of mortality?
-
- "Achmet Zek is dead--you need not deny it. I was not
- his mother, or his mistress, so do not fear that my
- wailings shall disturb you. Tell me why you have come
- back here. Tell me what you want, and, Werper, if you
- still possess the jewels of which Achmet Zek told me,
- there is no reason why you and I should not ride north
- together and divide the ransom of the white woman and
- the contents of the pouch you wear about your person. Eh?"
-
- The evil eyes narrowed, a vicious, thin-lipped smile
- tortured the villainous face, as Mohammed Beyd grinned
- knowingly into the face of the Belgian.
-
- Werper was both relieved and disturbed by the Arab's
- attitude. The complacency with which he accepted the
- death of his chief lifted a considerable burden of
- apprehension from the shoulders of Achmet Zek's
- assassin; but his demand for a share of the jewels
- boded ill for Werper when Mohammed Beyd should have
- learned that the precious stones were no longer in the
- Belgian's possession.
-
- To acknowledge that he had lost the jewels might be to
- arouse the wrath or suspicion of the Arab to such an
- extent as would jeopardize his new-found chances of
- escape. His one hope seemed, then, to lie in fostering
- Mohammed Beyd's belief that the jewels were still in
- his possession, and depend upon the accidents of the
- future to open an avenue of escape.
-
- Could he contrive to tent with the Arab upon the march
- north, he might find opportunity in plenty to remove
- this menace to his life and liberty--it was worth
- trying, and, further, there seemed no other way out of
- his difficulty.
-
- "Yes," he said, "Achmet Zek is dead. He fell in battle
- with a company of Abyssinian cavalry that held me
- captive. During the fighting I escaped; but I doubt if
- any of Achmet Zek's men live, and the gold they sought
- is in the possession of the Abyssinians. Even now they
- are doubtless marching on this camp, for they were sent
- by Menelek to punish Achmet Zek and his followers for a
- raid upon an Abyssinian village. There are many of
- them, and if we do not make haste to escape we shall
- all suffer the same fate as Achmet Zek."
-
- Mohammed Beyd listened in silence. How much of the
- unbeliever's story he might safely believe he did not
- know; but as it afforded him an excuse for deserting
- the village and making for the north he was not
- inclined to cross-question the Belgian too minutely.
-
- "And if I ride north with you," he asked, "half the
- jewels and half the ransom of the woman shall be mine?"
-
- "Yes," replied Werper.
-
- "Good," said Mohammed Beyd. "I go now to give the
- order for the breaking of camp early on the morrow,"
- and he rose to leave the tent.
-
- Werper laid a detaining hand upon his arm.
-
- "Wait," he said, "let us determine how many shall
- accompany us. It is not well that we be burdened by
- the women and children, for then indeed we might be
- overtaken by the Abyssinians. It would be far better
- to select a small guard of your bravest men, and leave
- word behind that we are riding WEST. Then, when
- the Abyssinians come they will be put upon the wrong
- trail should they have it in their hearts to pursue us,
- and if they do not they will at least ride north with
- less rapidity than as though they thought that we were
- ahead of them."
-
- "The serpent is less wise than thou, Werper," said
- Mohammed Beyd with a smile. "It shall be done as you
- say. Twenty men shall accompany us, and we shall ride
- WEST--when we leave the village."
-
- "Good," cried the Belgian, and so it was arranged.
-
- Early the next morning Jane Clayton, after an almost
- sleepless night, was aroused by the sound of voices
- outside her prison, and a moment later, M. Frecoult,
- and two Arabs entered. The latter unbound her ankles
- and lifted her to her feet. Then her wrists were
- loosed, she was given a handful of dry bread, and led
- out into the faint light of dawn.
-
- She looked questioningly at Frecoult, and at a moment
- that the Arab's attention was attracted in another
- direction the man leaned toward her and whispered that
- all was working out as he had planned. Thus assured,
- the young woman felt a renewal of the hope which the
- long and miserable night of bondage had almost expunged.
-
- Shortly after, she was lifted to the back of a horse,
- and surrounded by Arabs, was escorted through the
- gateway of the village and off into the jungle toward
- the west. Half an hour later the party turned north,
- and northerly was their direction for the balance of
- the march.
-
- M. Frecoult spoke with her but seldom, and she
- understood that in carrying out his deception he must
- maintain the semblance of her captor, rather than
- protector, and so she suspected nothing though she saw
- the friendly relations which seemed to exist between
- the European and the Arab leader of the band.
-
- If Werper succeeded in keeping himself from
- conversation with the young woman, he failed signally
- to expel her from his thoughts. A hundred times a day
- he found his eyes wandering in her direction and
- feasting themselves upon her charms of face and figure.
- Each hour his infatuation for her grew, until his
- desire to possess her gained almost the proportions of
- madness.
-
- If either the girl or Mohammed Beyd could have guessed
- what passed in the mind of the man which each thought a
- friend and ally, the apparent harmony of the little
- company would have been rudely disturbed.
-
- Werper had not succeeded in arranging to tent with
- Mohammed Beyd, and so he revolved many plans for the
- assassination of the Arab that would have been greatly
- simplified had he been permitted to share the other's
- nightly shelter.
-
- Upon the second day out Mohammed Beyd reined his horse
- to the side of the animal on which the captive was
- mounted. It was, apparently, the first notice which
- the Arab had taken of the girl; but many times during
- these two days had his cunning eyes peered greedily
- from beneath the hood of his burnoose to gloat upon the
- beauties of the prisoner.
-
- Nor was this hidden infatuation of any recent origin.
- He had conceived it when first the wife of the
- Englishman had fallen into the hands of Achmet Zek; but
- while that austere chieftain lived, Mohammed Beyd had
- not even dared hope for a realization of his
- imaginings.
-
- Now, though, it was different--only a despised dog of a
- Christian stood between himself and possession of the
- girl. How easy it would be to slay the unbeliever, and
- take unto himself both the woman and the jewels! With
- the latter in his possession, the ransom which might be
- obtained for the captive would form no great inducement
- to her relinquishment in the face of the pleasures of
- sole ownership of her. Yes, he would kill Werper,
- retain all the jewels and keep the Englishwoman.
-
- He turned his eyes upon her as she rode along at his
- side. How beautiful she was! His fingers opened and
- closed--skinny, brown talons itching to feel the soft
- flesh of the victim in their remorseless clutch.
-
- "Do you know," he asked leaning toward her, "where this
- man would take you?"
-
- Jane Clayton nodded affirmatively.
-
- "And you are willing to become the plaything of a black
- sultan?"
-
- The girl drew herself up to her full height, and turned
- her head away; but she did not reply. She feared lest
- her knowledge of the ruse that M. Frecoult was playing
- upon the Arab might cause her to betray herself through
- an insufficient display of terror and aversion.
-
- "You can escape this fate," continued the Arab;
- "Mohammed Beyd will save you," and he reached out a
- brown hand and seized the fingers of her right hand in
- a grasp so sudden and so fierce that this brutal
- passion was revealed as clearly in the act as though
- his lips had confessed it in words. Jane Clayton
- wrenched herself from his grasp.
-
- "You beast!" she cried. "Leave me or I shall call M.
- Frecoult."
-
- Mohammed Beyd drew back with a scowl. His thin, upper
- lip curled upward, revealing his smooth, white teeth.
-
- "M. Frecoult?" he jeered. "There is no such person.
- The man's name is Werper. He is a liar, a thief, and a
- murderer. He killed his captain in the Congo country
- and fled to the protection of Achmet Zek. He led
- Achmet Zek to the plunder of your home. He followed
- your husband, and planned to steal his gold from him.
- He has told me that you think him your protector, and
- he has played upon this to win your confidence that it
- might be easier to carry you north and sell you into
- some black sultan's harem. Mohammed Beyd is your only
- hope," and with this assertion to provide the captive
- with food for thought, the Arab spurred forward toward
- the head of the column.
-
- Jane Clayton could not know how much of Mohammed Beyd's
- indictment might be true, or how much false; but at
- least it had the effect of dampening her hopes and
- causing her to review with suspicion every past act of
- the man upon whom she had been looking as her sole
- protector in the midst of a world of enemies and
- dangers.
-
- On the march a separate tent had been provided for the
- captive, and at night it was pitched between those of
- Mohammed Beyd and Werper. A sentry was posted at the
- front and another at the back, and with these
- precautions it had not been thought necessary to
- confine the prisoner to bonds. The evening following
- her interview with Mohammed Beyd, Jane Clayton sat for
- some time at the opening of her tent watching the rough
- activities of the camp. She had eaten the meal that
- had been brought her by Mohammed Beyd's Negro slave--a
- meal of cassava cakes and a nondescript stew in which a
- new-killed monkey, a couple of squirrels and the
- remains of a zebra, slain the previous day, were
- impartially and unsavorily combined; but the one-time
- Baltimore belle had long since submerged in the stern
- battle for existence, an estheticism which formerly
- revolted at much slighter provocation.
-
- As the girl's eyes wandered across the trampled jungle
- clearing, already squalid from the presence of man, she
- no longer apprehended either the nearer objects of the
- foreground, the uncouth men laughing or quarreling
- among themselves, or the jungle beyond, which
- circumscribed the extreme range of her material vision.
- Her gaze passed through all these, unseeing, to center
- itself upon a distant bungalow and scenes of happy
- security which brought to her eyes tears of mingled joy
- and sorrow. She saw a tall, broad-shouldered man
- riding in from distant fields; she saw herself waiting
- to greet him with an armful of fresh-cut roses from the
- bushes which flanked the little rustic gate before her.
- All this was gone, vanished into the past, wiped out by
- the torches and bullets and hatred of these hideous and
- degenerate men. With a stifled sob, and a little
- shudder, Jane Clayton turned back into her tent and
- sought the pile of unclean blankets which were her bed.
- Throwing herself face downward upon them she sobbed
- forth her misery until kindly sleep brought her, at
- least temporary, relief.
-
- And while she slept a figure stole from the tent that
- stood to the right of hers. It approached the sentry
- before the doorway and whispered a few words in the
- man's ear. The latter nodded, and strode off through
- the darkness in the direction of his own blankets.
- The figure passed to the rear of Jane Clayton's tent
- and spoke again to the sentry there, and this man also
- left, following in the trail of the first.
-
- Then he who had sent them away stole silently to the
- tent flap and untying the fastenings entered with the
- noiselessness of a disembodied spirit.
-
-
-
- 21
-
- The Flight to the Jungle
-
-
- Sleepless upon his blankets, Albert Werper let his evil
- mind dwell upon the charms of the woman in the nearby
- tent. He had noted Mohammed Beyd's sudden interest in
- the girl, and judging the man by his own standards, had
- guessed at the basis of the Arab's sudden change of
- attitude toward the prisoner.
-
- And as he let his imaginings run riot they aroused
- within him a bestial jealousy of Mohammed Beyd, and a
- great fear that the other might encompass his base
- designs upon the defenseless girl. By a strange
- process of reasoning, Werper, whose designs were
- identical with the Arab's, pictured himself as Jane
- Clayton's protector, and presently convinced himself
- that the attentions which might seem hideous to her
- if proffered by Mohammed Beyd, would be welcomed from
- Albert Werper.
-
- Her husband was dead, and Werper fancied that he could
- replace in the girl's heart the position which had been
- vacated by the act of the grim reaper. He could offer
- Jane Clayton marriage--a thing which Mohammed Beyd
- would not offer, and which the girl would spurn from
- him with as deep disgust as she would his unholy lust.
-
- It was not long before the Belgian had succeeded in
- convincing himself that the captive not only had every
- reason for having conceived sentiments of love for him;
- but that she had by various feminine methods
- acknowledged her new-born affection.
-
- And then a sudden resolution possessed him. He threw
- the blankets from him and rose to his feet. Pulling on
- his boots and buckling his cartridge belt and revolver
- about his hips he stepped to the flap of his tent and
- looked out. There was no sentry before the entrance to
- the prisoner's tent! What could it mean? Fate was
- indeed playing into his hands.
-
- Stepping outside he passed to the rear of the girl's
- tent. There was no sentry there, either! And now,
- boldly, he walked to the entrance and stepped within.
-
- Dimly the moonlight illumined the interior. Across the
- tent a figure bent above the blankets of a bed. There
- was a whispered word, and another figure rose from the
- blankets to a sitting position. Slowly Albert Werper's
- eyes were becoming accustomed to the half darkness of
- the tent. He saw that the figure leaning over the bed
- was that of a man, and he guessed at the truth of the
- nocturnal visitor's identity.
-
- A sullen, jealous rage enveloped him. He took a step
- in the direction of the two. He heard a frightened cry
- break from the girl's lips as she recognized the
- features of the man above her, and he saw Mohammed Beyd
- seize her by the throat and bear her back upon the
- blankets.
-
- Cheated passion cast a red blur before the eyes of the
- Belgian. No! The man should not have her. She was for
- him and him alone. He would not be robbed of his rights.
-
- Quickly he ran across the tent and threw himself upon
- the back of Mohammed Beyd. The latter, though
- surprised by this sudden and unexpected attack, was not
- one to give up without a battle. The Belgian's fingers
- were feeling for his throat, but the Arab tore them
- away, and rising wheeled upon his adversary. As they
- faced each other Werper struck the Arab a heavy blow in
- the face, sending him staggering backward. If he had
- followed up his advantage he would have had Mohammed
- Beyd at his mercy in another moment; but instead he
- tugged at his revolver to draw it from its holster, and
- Fate ordained that at that particular moment the weapon
- should stick in its leather scabbard.
-
- Before he could disengage it, Mohammed Beyd had
- recovered himself and was dashing upon him. Again
- Werper struck the other in the face, and the Arab
- returned the blow. Striking at each other and
- ceaselessly attempting to clinch, the two battled
- about the small interior of the tent, while the girl,
- wide-eyed in terror and astonishment, watched the
- duel in frozen silence.
-
- Again and again Werper struggled to draw his weapon.
- Mohammed Beyd, anticipating no such opposition to his
- base desires, had come to the tent unarmed, except for
- a long knife which he now drew as he stood panting
- during the first brief rest of the encounter.
-
- "Dog of a Christian," he whispered, "look upon this
- knife in the hands of Mohammed Beyd! Look well,
- unbeliever, for it is the last thing in life that you
- shall see or feel. With it Mohammed Beyd will cut out
- your black heart. If you have a God pray to him now--
- in a minute more you shall be dead," and with that he
- rushed viciously upon the Belgian, his knife raised
- high above his head.
-
- Werper was still dragging futilely at his weapon. The
- Arab was almost upon him. In desperation the European
- waited until Mohammed Beyd was all but against him,
- then he threw himself to one side to the floor of the
- tent, leaving a leg extended in the path of the Arab.
-
- The trick succeeded. Mohammed Beyd, carried on by the
- momentum of his charge, stumbled over the projecting
- obstacle and crashed to the ground. Instantly he was
- up again and wheeling to renew the battle; but Werper
- was on foot ahead of him, and now his revolver,
- loosened from its holster, flashed in his hand.
-
- The Arab dove headfirst to grapple with him, there was
- a sharp report, a lurid gleam of flame in the darkness,
- and Mohammed Beyd rolled over and over upon the floor
- to come to a final rest beside the bed of the woman he
- had sought to dishonor.
-
- Almost immediately following the report came the sound
- of excited voices in the camp without. Men were
- calling back and forth to one another asking the
- meaning of the shot. Werper could hear them running
- hither and thither, investigating.
-
- Jane Clayton had risen to her feet as the Arab died,
- and now she came forward with outstretched hands toward
- Werper.
-
- "How can I ever thank you, my friend?" she asked.
- "And to think that only today I had almost believed the
- infamous story which this beast told me of your perfidy
- and of your past. Forgive me, M. Frecoult. I might
- have known that a white man and a gentleman could be
- naught else than the protector of a woman of his own
- race amid the dangers of this savage land."
-
- Werper's hands dropped limply at his sides. He stood
- looking at the girl; but he could find no words to
- reply to her. Her innocent arraignment of his true
- purposes was unanswerable.
-
- Outside, the Arabs were searching for the author of
- the disturbing shot. The two sentries who had been
- relieved and sent to their blankets by Mohammed Beyd
- were the first to suggest going to the tent of the
- prisoner. It occurred to them that possibly the woman
- had successfully defended herself against their leader.
-
- Werper heard the men approaching. To be apprehended as
- the slayer of Mohammed Beyd would be equivalent to a
- sentence of immediate death. The fierce and brutal
- raiders would tear to pieces a Christian who had dared
- spill the blood of their leader. He must find some
- excuse to delay the finding of Mohammed Beyd's dead
- body.
-
- Returning his revolver to its holster, he walked
- quickly to the entrance of the tent. Parting the flaps
- he stepped out and confronted the men, who were rapidly
- approaching. Somehow he found within him the necessary
- bravado to force a smile to his lips, as he held up his
- hand to bar their farther progress.
-
- "The woman resisted," he said, "and Mohammed Beyd was
- forced to shoot her. She is not dead--only slightly
- wounded. You may go back to your blankets. Mohammed
- Beyd and I will look after the prisoner;" then he
- turned and re-entered the tent, and the raiders,
- satisfied by this explanation, gladly returned to their
- broken slumbers.
-
- As he again faced Jane Clayton, Werper found himself
- animated by quite different intentions than those which
- had lured him from his blankets but a few minutes
- before. The excitement of his encounter with Mohammed
- Beyd, as well as the dangers which he now faced at the
- hands of the raiders when morning must inevitably
- reveal the truth of what had occurred in the tent of
- the prisoner that night, had naturally cooled the hot
- passion which had dominated him when he entered the
- tent.
-
- But another and stronger force was exerting itself in
- the girl's favor. However low a man may sink, honor
- and chivalry, has he ever possessed them, are never
- entirely eradicated from his character, and though
- Albert Werper had long since ceased to evidence the
- slightest claim to either the one or the other, the
- spontaneous acknowledgment of them which the girl's
- speech had presumed had reawakened them both within
- him.
-
- For the first time he realized the almost hopeless and
- frightful position of the fair captive, and the depths
- of ignominy to which he had sunk, that had made it
- possible for him, a well-born, European gentleman, to
- have entertained even for a moment the part that he had
- taken in the ruin of her home, happiness, and herself.
-
- Too much of baseness already lay at the threshold of
- his conscience for him ever to hope entirely to redeem
- himself; but in the first, sudden burst of contrition
- the man conceived an honest intention to undo, in so
- far as lay within his power, the evil that his criminal
- avarice had brought upon this sweet and unoffending
- woman.
-
- As he stood apparently listening to the retreating
- footsteps--Jane Clayton approached him.
-
- "What are we to do now?" she asked. "Morning will
- bring discovery of this," and she pointed to the still
- body of Mohammed Beyd. "They will kill you when they
- find him."
-
- For a time Werper did not reply, then he turned
- suddenly toward the woman.
-
- "I have a plan," he cried. "It will require nerve and
- courage on your part; but you have already shown that
- you possess both. Can you endure still more?"
-
- "I can endure anything," she replied with a brave
- smile, "that may offer us even a slight chance for
- escape."
-
- "You must simulate death," he explained, "while I carry
- you from the camp. I will explain to the sentries that
- Mohammed Beyd has ordered me to take your body into the
- jungle. This seemingly unnecessary act I shall explain
- upon the grounds that Mohammed Beyd had conceived a
- violent passion for you and that he so regretted the
- act by which he had become your slayer that he could
- not endure the silent reproach of your lifeless body."
-
- The girl held up her hand to stop. A smile touched her
- lips.
-
- "Are you quite mad?" she asked. "Do you imagine that
- the sentries will credit any such ridiculous tale?"
-
- "You do not know them," he replied. "Beneath their
- rough exteriors, despite their calloused and criminal
- natures, there exists in each a well-defined strain of
- romantic emotionalism--you will find it among such as
- these throughout the world. It is romance which lures
- men to lead wild lives of outlawry and crime. The ruse
- will succeed--never fear."
-
- Jane Clayton shrugged. "We can but try it--and then
- what?"
-
- "I shall hide you in the jungle," continued the
- Belgian, "coming for you alone and with two horses in
- the morning."
-
- "But how will you explain Mohammed Beyd's death?" she
- asked. "It will be discovered before ever you can
- escape the camp in the morning."
-
- "I shall not explain it," replied Werper. "Mohammed
- Beyd shall explain it himself--we must leave that to
- him. Are you ready for the venture?"
-
- "Yes."
-
- "But wait, I must get you a weapon and ammunition,"
- and Werper walked quickly from the tent.
-
- Very shortly he returned with an extra revolver and
- ammunition belt strapped about his waist.
-
- "Are you ready?" he asked.
-
- "Quite ready," replied the girl.
-
- "Then come and throw yourself limply across my left
- shoulder," and Werper knelt to receive her.
-
- "There," he said, as he rose to his feet. "Now, let
- your arms, your legs and your head hang limply.
- Remember that you are dead."
-
- A moment later the man walked out into the camp, the
- body of the woman across his shoulder.
-
- A thorn boma had been thrown up about the camp, to
- discourage the bolder of the hungry carnivora. A
- couple of sentries paced to and fro in the light of a
- fire which they kept burning brightly. The nearer of
- these looked up in surprise as he saw Werper approaching.
-
- "Who are you?" he cried. "What have you there?"
-
- Werper raised the hood of his burnoose that the fellow
- might see his face.
-
- "This is the body of the woman," he explained.
- "Mohammed Beyd has asked me to take it into the jungle,
- for he cannot bear to look upon the face of her whom he
- loved, and whom necessity compelled him to slay. He
- suffers greatly--he is inconsolable. It was with
- difficulty that I prevented him taking his own life."
-
- Across the speaker's shoulder, limp and frightened, the
- girl waited for the Arab's reply. He would laugh at
- this preposterous story; of that she was sure. In an
- instant he would unmask the deception that M. Frecoult
- was attempting to practice upon him, and they would
- both be lost. She tried to plan how best she might aid
- her would-be rescuer in the fight which must most
- certainly follow within a moment or two.
-
- Then she heard the voice of the Arab as he replied to
- M. Frecoult.
-
- "Are you going alone, or do you wish me to awaken
- someone to accompany you?" he asked, and his tone
- denoted not the least surprise that Mohammed Beyd had
- suddenly discovered such remarkably sensitive
- characteristics.
-
- "I shall go alone," replied Werper, and he passed on
- and out through the narrow opening in the boma, by
- which the sentry stood.
-
- A moment later he had entered among the boles of the
- trees with his burden, and when safely hidden from the
- sentry's view lowered the girl to her feet, with a low,
- "sh-sh," when she would have spoken.
-
- Then he led her a little farther into the forest,
- halted beneath a large tree with spreading branches,
- buckled a cartridge belt and revolver about her waist,
- and assisted her to clamber into the lower branches.
-
- "Tomorrow," he whispered, "as soon as I can elude them,
- I will return for you. Be brave, Lady Greystoke--we
- may yet escape."
-
- "Thank you," she replied in a low tone. "You have been
- very kind, and very brave."
-
- Werper did not reply, and the darkness of the night hid
- the scarlet flush of shame which swept upward across
- his face. Quickly he turned and made his way back to
- camp. The sentry, from his post, saw him enter his own
- tent; but he did not see him crawl under the canvas at
- the rear and sneak cautiously to the tent which the
- prisoner had occupied, where now lay the dead body of
- Mohammed Beyd.
-
- Raising the lower edge of the rear wall, Werper crept
- within and approached the corpse. Without an instant's
- hesitation he seized the dead wrists and dragged the
- body upon its back to the point where he had just
- entered. On hands and knees he backed out as he had
- come in, drawing the corpse after him. Once outside
- the Belgian crept to the side of the tent and surveyed
- as much of the camp as lay within his vision--no one
- was watching.
-
- Returning to the body, he lifted it to his shoulder,
- and risking all on a quick sally, ran swiftly across
- the narrow opening which separated the prisoner's tent
- from that of the dead man. Behind the silken wall he
- halted and lowered his burden to the ground, and there
- he remained motionless for several minutes, listening.
-
- Satisfied, at last, that no one had seen him, he
- stooped and raised the bottom of the tent wall, backed
- in and dragged the thing that had been Mohammed Beyd
- after him. To the sleeping rugs of the dead raider he
- drew the corpse, then he fumbled about in the darkness
- until he had found Mohammed Beyd's revolver. With the
- weapon in his hand he returned to the side of the dead
- man, kneeled beside the bedding, and inserted his right
- hand with the weapon beneath the rugs, piled a number
- of thicknesses of the closely woven fabric over and
- about the revolver with his left hand. Then he pulled
- the trigger, and at the same time he coughed.
-
- The muffled report could not have been heard above the
- sound of his cough by one directly outside the tent.
- Werper was satisfied. A grim smile touched his lips as
- he withdrew the weapon from the rugs and placed it
- carefully in the right hand of the dead man, fixing
- three of the fingers around the grip and the index
- finger inside the trigger guard.
-
- A moment longer he tarried to rearrange the disordered
- rugs, and then he left as he had entered, fastening
- down the rear wall of the tent as it had been before he
- had raised it.
-
- Going to the tent of the prisoner he removed there also
- the evidence that someone might have come or gone
- beneath the rear wall. Then he returned to his own
- tent, entered, fastened down the canvas, and crawled
- into his blankets.
-
- The following morning he was awakened by the excited
- voice of Mohammed Beyd's slave calling to him at the
- entrance of his tent.
-
- "Quick! Quick!" cried the black in a frightened tone.
- "Come! Mohammed Beyd is dead in his tent--dead by his
- own hand."
-
- Werper sat up quickly in his blankets at the first
- alarm, a startled expression upon his countenance; but
- at the last words of the black a sigh of relief escaped
- his lips and a slight smile replaced the tense lines
- upon his face.
-
- "I come," he called to the slave, and drawing on his
- boots, rose and went out of his tent.
-
- Excited Arabs and blacks were running from all parts of
- the camp toward the silken tent of Mohammed Beyd, and
- when Werper entered he found a number of the raiders
- crowded about the corpse, now cold and stiff.
-
- Shouldering his way among them, the Belgian halted
- beside the dead body of the raider. He looked down in
- silence for a moment upon the still face, then he
- wheeled upon the Arabs.
-
- "Who has done this thing?" he cried. His tone was both
- menacing and accusing. "Who has murdered Mohammed Beyd?"
-
- A sudden chorus of voices arose in tumultuous protest.
-
- "Mohammed Beyd was not murdered," they cried. "He died
- by his own hand. This, and Allah, are our witnesses,"
- and they pointed to a revolver in the dead man's hand.
-
- For a time Werper pretended to be skeptical; but at
- last permitted himself to be convinced that Mohammed
- Beyd had indeed killed himself in remorse for the death
- of the white woman he had, all unknown to his
- followers, loved so devotedly.
-
- Werper himself wrapped the blankets of the dead man
- about the corpse, taking care to fold inward the
- scorched and bullet-torn fabric that had muffled the
- report of the weapon he had fired the night before.
- Then six husky blacks carried the body out into the
- clearing where the camp stood, and deposited it in a
- shallow grave. As the loose earth fell upon the silent
- form beneath the tell-tale blankets, Albert Werper
- heaved another sigh of relief--his plan had worked out
- even better than he had dared hope.
-
- With Achmet Zek and Mohammed Beyd both dead, the
- raiders were without a leader, and after a brief
- conference they decided to return into the north on
- visits to the various tribes to which they belonged,
- Werper, after learning the direction they intended
- taking, announced that for his part, he was going east
- to the coast, and as they knew of nothing he possessed
- which any of them coveted, they signified their
- willingness that he should go his way.
-
- As they rode off, he sat his horse in the center of the
- clearing watching them disappear one by one into the
- jungle, and thanked his God that he had at last escaped
- their villainous clutches.
-
- When he could no longer hear any sound of them, he
- turned to the right and rode into the forest toward the
- tree where he had hidden Lady Greystoke, and drawing
- rein beneath it, called up in a gay and hopeful voice a
- pleasant, "Good morning!"
-
- There was no reply, and though his eyes searched the
- thick foliage above him, he could see no sign of the
- girl. Dismounting, he quickly climbed into the tree,
- where he could obtain a view of all its branches. The
- tree was empty--Jane Clayton had vanished during the
- silent watches of the jungle night.
-
-
-
- 22
-
- Tarzan Recovers His Reason
-
-
- As Tarzan let the pebbles from the recovered pouch run
- through his fingers, his thoughts returned to the pile
- of yellow ingots about which the Arabs and the
- Abyssinians had waged their relentless battle.
-
- What was there in common between that pile of dirty
- metal and the beautiful, sparkling pebbles that had
- formerly been in his pouch? What was the metal?
- From whence had it come? What was that tantalizing
- half-conviction which seemed to demand the recognition of
- his memory that the yellow pile for which these men had
- fought and died had been intimately connected with his
- past--that it had been his?
-
- What had been his past? He shook his head. Vaguely the
- memory of his apish childhood passed slowly in review--
- then came a strangely tangled mass of faces, figures
- and events which seemed to have no relation to Tarzan
- of the Apes, and yet which were, even in their
- fragmentary form, familiar.
-
- Slowly and painfully, recollection was attempting to
- reassert itself, the hurt brain was mending, as the
- cause of its recent failure to function was being
- slowly absorbed or removed by the healing processes of
- perfect circulation.
-
- The people who now passed before his mind's eye for the
- first time in weeks wore familiar faces; but yet he
- could neither place them in the niches they had once
- filled in his past life, nor call them by name. One
- was a fair she, and it was her face which most often
- moved through the tangled recollections of his
- convalescing brain. Who was she? What had she been to
- Tarzan of the Apes? He seemed to see her about the very
- spot upon which the pile of gold had been unearthed by
- the Abyssinians; but the surroundings were vastly
- different from those which now obtained.
-
- There was a building--there were many buildings--and
- there were hedges, fences, and flowers. Tarzan
- puckered his brow in puzzled study of the wonderful
- problem. For an instant he seemed to grasp the whole
- of a true explanation, and then, just as success was
- within his grasp, the picture faded into a jungle scene
- where a naked, white youth danced in company with a
- band of hairy, primordial ape-things.
-
- Tarzan shook his head and sighed. Why was it that he
- could not recollect? At least he was sure that in some
- way the pile of gold, the place where it lay, the
- subtle aroma of the elusive she he had been pursuing,
- the memory figure of the white woman, and he himself,
- were inextricably connected by the ties of a forgotten
- past.
-
- If the woman belonged there, what better place to
- search or await her than the very spot which his broken
- recollections seemed to assign to her? It was worth
- trying. Tarzan slipped the thong of the empty pouch
- over his shoulder and started off through the trees in
- the direction of the plain.
-
- At the outskirts of the forest he met the Arabs
- returning in search of Achmet Zek. Hiding, he let them
- pass, and then resumed his way toward the charred ruins
- of the home he had been almost upon the point of
- recalling to his memory.
-
- His journey across the plain was interrupted by the
- discovery of a small herd of antelope in a little
- swale, where the cover and the wind were well combined
- to make stalking easy. A fat yearling rewarded a half
- hour of stealthy creeping and a sudden, savage rush,
- and it was late in the afternoon when the ape-man
- settled himself upon his haunches beside his kill to
- enjoy the fruits of his skill, his cunning, and his
- prowess.
-
- His hunger satisfied, thirst next claimed his
- attention. The river lured him by the shortest path
- toward its refreshing waters, and when he had drunk,
- night already had fallen and he was some half mile or
- more down stream from the point where he had seen the
- pile of yellow ingots, and where he hoped to meet the
- memory woman, or find some clew to her whereabouts or
- her identity.
-
- To the jungle bred, time is usually a matter of small
- moment, and haste, except when engendered by terror,
- by rage, or by hunger, is distasteful. Today was gone.
- Therefore tomorrow, of which there was an infinite
- procession, would answer admirably for Tarzan's further
- quest. And, besides, the ape-man was tired and would
- sleep.
-
- A tree afforded him the safety, seclusion and comforts
- of a well-appointed bedchamber, and to the chorus of
- the hunters and the hunted of the wild river bank he
- soon dropped off into deep slumber.
-
- Morning found him both hungry and thirsty again, and
- dropping from his tree he made his way to the drinking
- place at the river's edge. There he found Numa, the
- lion, ahead of him. The big fellow was lapping the
- water greedily, and at the approach of Tarzan along the
- trail in his rear, he raised his head, and turning his
- gaze backward across his maned shoulders glared at the
- intruder. A low growl of warning rumbled from his
- throat; but Tarzan, guessing that the beast had but
- just quitted his kill and was well filled, merely made
- a slight detour and continued to the river, where he
- stopped a few yards above the tawny cat, and dropping
- upon his hands and knees plunged his face into the cool
- water. For a moment the lion continued to eye the man;
- then he resumed his drinking, and man and beast
- quenched their thirst side by side each apparently
- oblivious of the other's presence.
-
- Numa was the first to finish. Raising his head, he
- gazed across the river for a few minutes with that
- stony fixity of attention which is a characteristic of
- his kind. But for the ruffling of his black mane to
- the touch of the passing breeze he might have been
- wrought from golden bronze, so motionless, so
- statuesque his pose.
-
- A deep sigh from the cavernous lungs dispelled the
- illusion. The mighty head swung slowly around until
- the yellow eyes rested upon the man. The bristled lip
- curved upward, exposing yellow fangs. Another warning
- growl vibrated the heavy jowls, and the king of beasts
- turned majestically about and paced slowly up the trail
- into the dense reeds.
-
- Tarzan of the Apes drank on, but from the corners of
- his gray eyes he watched the great brute's every move
- until he had disappeared from view, and, after, his
- keen ears marked the movements of the carnivore.
-
- A plunge in the river was followed by a scant breakfast
- of eggs which chance discovered to him, and then he set
- off up river toward the ruins of the bungalow where the
- golden ingots had marked the center of yesterday's
- battle.
-
- And when he came upon the spot, great was his surprise
- and consternation, for the yellow metal had
- disappeared. The earth, trampled by the feet of horses
- and men, gave no clew. It was as though the ingots had
- evaporated into thin air.
-
- The ape-man was at a loss to know where to turn or what
- next to do. There was no sign of any spoor which might
- denote that the she had been here. The metal was gone,
- and if there was any connection between the she and the
- metal it seemed useless to wait for her now that the
- latter had been removed elsewhere.
-
- Everything seemed to elude him--the pretty pebbles, the
- yellow metal, the she, his memory. Tarzan was
- disgusted. He would go back into the jungle and look
- for Chulk, and so he turned his steps once more toward
- the forest. He moved rapidly, swinging across the
- plain in a long, easy trot, and at the edge of the
- forest, taking to the trees with the agility and speed
- of a small monkey.
-
- His direction was aimless--he merely raced on and on
- through the jungle, the joy of unfettered action his
- principal urge, with the hope of stumbling upon some
- clew to Chulk or the she, a secondary incentive.
-
- For two days he roamed about, killing, eating, drinking
- and sleeping wherever inclination and the means to
- indulge it occurred simultaneously. It was upon the
- morning of the third day that the scent spoor of horse
- and man were wafted faintly to his nostrils. Instantly
- he altered his course to glide silently through the
- branches in the direction from which the scent came.
-
- It was not long before he came upon a solitary horseman
- riding toward the east. Instantly his eyes confirmed
- what his nose had previously suspected--the rider was
- he who had stolen his pretty pebbles. The light of
- rage flared suddenly in the gray eyes as the ape-man
- dropped lower among the branches until he moved almost
- directly above the unconscious Werper.
-
- There was a quick leap, and the Belgian felt a heavy
- body hurtle onto the rump of his terror-stricken mount.
- The horse, snorting, leaped forward. Giant arms
- encircled the rider, and in the twinkling of an eye he
- was dragged from his saddle to find himself lying in
- the narrow trail with a naked, white giant kneeling
- upon his breast.
-
- Recognition came to Werper with the first glance at his
- captor's face, and a pallor of fear overspread his
- features. Strong fingers were at his throat, fingers
- of steel. He tried to cry out, to plead for his life;
- but the cruel fingers denied him speech, as they were
- as surely denying him life.
-
- "The pretty pebbles?" cried the man upon his breast.
- "What did you with the pretty pebbles--with Tarzan's
- pretty pebbles?"
-
- The fingers relaxed to permit a reply. For some time
- Werper could only choke and cough--at last he regained
- the powers of speech.
-
- "Achmet Zek, the Arab, stole them from me," he cried;
- "he made me give up the pouch and the pebbles."
-
- "I saw all that," replied Tarzan; "but the pebbles in
- the pouch were not the pebbles of Tarzan--they were
- only such pebbles as fill the bottoms of the rivers,
- and the shelving banks beside them. Even the Arab
- would not have them, for he threw them away in anger
- when he had looked upon them. It is my pretty pebbles
- that I want--where are they?"
-
- "I do not know, I do not know," cried Werper. "I gave
- them to Achmet Zek or he would have killed me. A few
- minutes later he followed me along the trail to slay
- me, although he had promised to molest me no further,
- and I shot and killed him; but the pouch was not upon
- his person and though I searched about the jungle for
- some time I could not find it."
-
- "I found it, I tell you," growled Tarzan, "and I also
- found the pebbles which Achmet Zek had thrown away in
- disgust. They were not Tarzan's pebbles. You have
- hidden them! Tell me where they are or I will kill
- you," and the brown fingers of the ape-man closed a
- little tighter upon the throat of his victim.
-
- Werper struggled to free himself. "My God, Lord
- Greystoke," he managed to scream, "would you commit
- murder for a handful of stones?"
-
- The fingers at his throat relaxed, a puzzled, far-away
- expression softened the gray eyes.
-
- "Lord Greystoke!" repeated the ape-man. "Lord
- Greystoke! Who is Lord Greystoke? Where have I heard
- that name before?"
-
- "Why man, you are Lord Greystoke," cried the Belgian.
- "You were injured by a falling rock when the earthquake
- shattered the passage to the underground chamber to
- which you and your black Waziri had come to fetch
- golden ingots back to your bungalow. The blow
- shattered your memory. You are John Clayton, Lord
- Greystoke--don't you remember?"
-
- "John Clayton, Lord Greystoke!" repeated Tarzan. Then
- for a moment he was silent. Presently his hand went
- falteringly to his forehead, an expression of
- wonderment filled his eyes--of wonderment and sudden
- understanding. The forgotten name had reawakened the
- returning memory that had been struggling to reassert
- itself. The ape-man relinquished his grasp upon the
- throat of the Belgian, and leaped to his feet.
-
- "God!" he cried, and then, "Jane!" Suddenly he turned
- toward Werper. "My wife?" he asked. "What has become
- of her? The farm is in ruins. You know. You have had
- something to do with all this. You followed me to
- Opar, you stole the jewels which I thought but pretty
- pebbles. You are a crook! Do not try to tell me that
- you are not."
-
- "He is worse than a crook," said a quiet voice close
- behind them.
-
- Tarzan turned in astonishment to see a tall man in
- uniform standing in the trail a few paces from him.
- Back of the man were a number of black soldiers in the
- uniform of the Congo Free State.
-
- "He is a murderer, Monsieur," continued the officer.
- "I have followed him for a long time to take him back
- to stand trial for the killing of his superior
- officer."
-
- Werper was upon his feet now, gazing, white and
- trembling, at the fate which had overtaken him even in
- the fastness of the labyrinthine jungle. Instinctively
- he turned to flee; but Tarzan of the Apes reached out a
- strong hand and grasped him by the shoulder.
-
- "Wait!" said the ape-man to his captive. "This
- gentleman wishes you, and so do I. When I am through
- with you, he may have you. Tell me what has become of
- my wife."
-
- The Belgian officer eyed the almost naked, white giant
- with curiosity. He noted the strange contrast of
- primitive weapons and apparel, and the easy, fluent
- French which the man spoke. The former denoted the
- lowest, the latter the highest type of culture. He
- could not quite determine the social status of this
- strange creature; but he knew that he did not relish
- the easy assurance with which the fellow presumed to
- dictate when he might take possession of the prisoner.
-
- "Pardon me," he said, stepping forward and placing his
- hand on Werper's other shoulder; "but this gentleman is
- my prisoner. He must come with me."
-
- "When I am through with him," replied Tarzan, quietly.
-
- The officer turned and beckoned to the soldiers
- standing in the trail behind him. A company of
- uniformed blacks stepped quickly forward and pushing
- past the three, surrounded the ape-man and his captive.
-
- "Both the law and the power to enforce it are upon my
- side," announced the officer. "Let us have no trouble.
- If you have a grievance against this man you may return
- with me and enter your charge regularly before an
- authorized tribunal."
-
- "Your legal rights are not above suspicion, my friend,"
- replied Tarzan, "and your power to enforce your
- commands are only apparent--not real. You have
- presumed to enter British territory with an armed
- force. Where is your authority for this invasion?
- Where are the extradition papers which warrant the
- arrest of this man? And what assurance have you that I
- cannot bring an armed force about you that will prevent
- your return to the Congo Free State?"
-
- The Belgian lost his temper. "I have no disposition to
- argue with a naked savage," he cried. "Unless you wish
- to be hurt you will not interfere with me. Take the
- prisoner, Sergeant!"
-
- Werper raised his lips close to Tarzan's ear. "Keep me
- from them, and I can show you the very spot where I saw
- your wife last night," he whispered. "She cannot be
- far from here at this very minute."
-
- The soldiers, following the signal from their sergeant,
- closed in to seize Werper. Tarzan grabbed the Belgian
- about the waist, and bearing him beneath his arm as he
- might have borne a sack of flour, leaped forward in an
- attempt to break through the cordon. His right fist
- caught the nearest soldier upon the jaw and sent him
- hurtling backward upon his fellows. Clubbed rifles
- were torn from the hands of those who barred his way,
- and right and left the black soldiers stumbled aside in
- the face of the ape-man's savage break for liberty.
-
- So completely did the blacks surround the two that they
- dared not fire for fear of hitting one of their own
- number, and Tarzan was already through them and upon
- the point of dodging into the concealing mazes of the
- jungle when one who had sneaked upon him from behind
- struck him a heavy blow upon the head with a rifle.
-
- In an instant the ape-man was down and a dozen black
- soldiers were upon his back. When he regained
- consciousness he found himself securely bound, as was
- Werper also. The Belgian officer, success having
- crowned his efforts, was in good humor, and inclined to
- chaff his prisoners about the ease with which they had
- been captured; but from Tarzan of the Apes he elicited
- no response. Werper, however, was voluble in his
- protests. He explained that Tarzan was an English
- lord; but the officer only laughed at the assertion,
- and advised his prisoner to save his breath for his
- defense in court.
-
- As soon as Tarzan regained his senses and it was found
- that he was not seriously injured, the prisoners were
- hastened into line and the return march toward the
- Congo Free State boundary commenced.
-
- Toward evening the column halted beside a stream, made
- camp and prepared the evening meal. From the thick
- foliage of the nearby jungle a pair of fierce eyes
- watched the activities of the uniformed blacks with
- silent intensity and curiosity. From beneath beetling
- brows the creature saw the boma constructed, the fires
- built, and the supper prepared.
-
- Tarzan and Werper had been lying bound behind a small
- pile of knapsacks from the time that the company had
- halted; but with the preparation of the meal completed,
- their guard ordered them to rise and come forward to
- one of the fires where their hands would be unfettered
- that they might eat.
-
- As the giant ape-man rose, a startled expression of
- recognition entered the eyes of the watcher in the
- jungle, and a low guttural broke from the savage lips.
- Instantly Tarzan was alert, but the answering growl
- died upon his lips, suppressed by the fear that it
- might arouse the suspicions of the soldiers.
-
- Suddenly an inspiration came to him. He turned toward
- Werper.
-
- "I am going to speak to you in a loud voice and in a
- tongue which you do not understand. Appear to listen
- intently to what I say, and occasionally mumble
- something as though replying in the same language--our
- escape may hinge upon the success of your efforts."
-
- Werper nodded in assent and understanding, and
- immediately there broke from the lips of his companion
- a strange jargon which might have been compared with
- equal propriety to the barking and growling of a dog
- and the chattering of monkeys.
-
- The nearer soldiers looked in surprise at the ape-man.
- Some of them laughed, while others drew away in evident
- superstitious fear. The officer approached the
- prisoners while Tarzan was still jabbering, and halted
- behind them, listening in perplexed interest. When
- Werper mumbled some ridiculous jargon in reply his
- curiosity broke bounds, and he stepped forward,
- demanding to know what language it was that they spoke.
-
- Tarzan had gauged the measure of the man's culture from
- the nature and quality of his conversation during the
- march, and he rested the success of his reply upon the
- estimate he had made.
-
- "Greek," he explained.
-
- "Oh, I thought it was Greek," replied the officer; "but
- it has been so many years since I studied it that I was
- not sure. In future, however, I will thank you to
- speak in a language which I am more familiar with."
-
- Werper turned his head to hide a grin, whispering to
- Tarzan: "It was Greek to him all right--and to me, too."
-
- But one of the black soldiers mumbled in a low voice to
- a companion: "I have heard those sounds before--once at
- night when I was lost in the jungle, I heard the hairy
- men of the trees talking among themselves, and their
- words were like the words of this white man. I wish
- that we had not found him. He is not a man at all--he
- is a bad spirit, and we shall have bad luck if we do
- not let him go," and the fellow rolled his eyes
- fearfully toward the jungle.
-
- His companion laughed nervously, and moved away, to
- repeat the conversation, with variations and
- exaggerations, to others of the black soldiery, so that
- it was not long before a frightful tale of black magic
- and sudden death was woven about the giant prisoner,
- and had gone the rounds of the camp.
-
- And deep in the gloomy jungle amidst the darkening
- shadows of the falling night a hairy, manlike creature
- swung swiftly southward upon some secret mission of his
- own.
-
-
-
- 23
-
- A Night of Terror
-
-
- To Jane Clayton, waiting in the tree where Werper had
- placed her, it seemed that the long night would never
- end, yet end it did at last, and within an hour of the
- coming of dawn her spirits leaped with renewed hope at
- sight of a solitary horseman approaching along the
- trail.
-
- The flowing burnoose, with its loose hood, hid both the
- face and the figure of the rider; but that it was M.
- Frecoult the girl well knew, since he had been garbed
- as an Arab, and he alone might be expected to seek her
- hiding place.
-
- That which she saw relieved the strain of the long
- night vigil; but there was much that she did not see.
- She did not see the black face beneath the white hood,
- nor the file of ebon horsemen beyond the trail's bend
- riding slowly in the wake of their leader. These
- things she did not see at first, and so she leaned
- downward toward the approaching rider, a cry of welcome
- forming in her throat.
-
- At the first word the man looked up, reining in in
- surprise, and as she saw the black face of Abdul
- Mourak, the Abyssinian, she shrank back in terror among
- the branches; but it was too late. The man had seen
- her, and now he called to her to descend. At first she
- refused; but when a dozen black cavalrymen drew up
- behind their leader, and at Abdul Mourak's command one
- of them started to climb the tree after her she
- realized that resistance was futile, and came slowly
- down to stand upon the ground before this new captor
- and plead her cause in the name of justice and humanity.
-
- Angered by recent defeat, and by the loss of the gold,
- the jewels, and his prisoners, Abdul Mourak was in no
- mood to be influenced by any appeal to those softer
- sentiments to which, as a matter of fact, he was almost
- a stranger even under the most favourable conditions.
-
- He looked for degradation and possible death in
- punishment for his failures and his misfortunes when he
- should have returned to his native land and made his
- report to Menelek; but an acceptable gift might temper
- the wrath of the emperor, and surely this fair flower
- of another race should be gratefully received by the
- black ruler!
-
- When Jane Clayton had concluded her appeal, Abdul
- Mourak replied briefly that he would promise her
- protection; but that he must take her to his emperor.
- The girl did not need ask him why, and once again hope
- died within her breast. Resignedly she permitted
- herself to be lifted to a seat behind one of the
- troopers, and again, under new masters, her journey was
- resumed toward what she now began to believe was her
- inevitable fate.
-
- Abdul Mourak, bereft of his guides by the battle he had
- waged against the raiders, and himself unfamiliar with
- the country, had wandered far from the trail he should
- have followed, and as a result had made but little
- progress toward the north since the beginning of his
- flight. Today he was beating toward the west in the
- hope of coming upon a village where he might obtain
- guides; but night found him still as far from a
- realization of his hopes as had the rising sun.
-
- It was a dispirited company which went into camp,
- waterless and hungry, in the dense jungle. Attracted
- by the horses, lions roared about the boma, and to
- their hideous din was added the shrill neighs of the
- terror-stricken beasts they hunted. There was little
- sleep for man or beast, and the sentries were doubled
- that there might be enough on duty both to guard
- against the sudden charge of an overbold, or overhungry
- lion, and to keep the fire blazing which was an even
- more effectual barrier against them than the thorny boma.
-
- It was well past midnight, and as yet Jane Clayton,
- notwithstanding that she had passed a sleepless night
- the night before, had scarcely more than dozed. A
- sense of impending danger seemed to hang like a black
- pall over the camp. The veteran troopers of the black
- emperor were nervous and ill at ease. Abdul Mourak
- left his blankets a dozen times to pace restlessly back
- and forth between the tethered horses and the crackling
- fire. The girl could see his great frame silhouetted
- against the lurid glare of the flames, and she guessed
- from the quick, nervous movements of the man that he
- was afraid.
-
- The roaring of the lions rose in sudden fury until the
- earth trembled to the hideous chorus. The horses
- shrilled their neighs of terror as they lay back upon
- their halter ropes in their mad endeavors to break
- loose. A trooper, braver than his fellows, leaped
- among the kicking, plunging, fear-maddened beasts in a
- futile attempt to quiet them. A lion, large, and
- fierce, and courageous, leaped almost to the boma, full
- in the bright light from the fire. A sentry raised his
- piece and fired, and the little leaden pellet
- unstoppered the vials of hell upon the terror-stricken
- camp.
-
- The shot ploughed a deep and painful furrow in the
- lion's side, arousing all the bestial fury of the
- little brain; but abating not a whit the power and
- vigor of the great body.
-
- Unwounded, the boma and the flames might have turned
- him back; but now the pain and the rage wiped caution
- from his mind, and with a loud, and angry roar he
- topped the barrier with an easy leap and was among the
- horses.
-
- What had been pandemonium before became now an
- indescribable tumult of hideous sound. The stricken
- horse upon which the lion leaped shrieked out its
- terror and its agony. Several about it broke their
- tethers and plunged madly about the camp. Men leaped
- from their blankets and with guns ready ran toward the
- picket line, and then from the jungle beyond the boma a
- dozen lions, emboldened by the example of their fellow
- charged fearlessly upon the camp.
-
- Singly and in twos and threes they leaped the boma,
- until the little enclosure was filled with cursing men
- and screaming horses battling for their lives with the
- green-eyed devils of the jungle.
-
- With the charge of the first lion, Jane Clayton had
- scrambled to her feet, and now she stood horror-struck
- at the scene of savage slaughter that swirled and
- eddied about her. Once a bolting horse knocked her
- down, and a moment later a lion, leaping in pursuit of
- another terror-stricken animal, brushed her so closely
- that she was again thrown from her feet.
-
- Amidst the cracking of the rifles and the growls of the
- carnivora rose the death screams of stricken men and
- horses as they were dragged down by the blood-mad cats.
- The leaping carnivora and the plunging horses,
- prevented any concerted action by the Abyssinians--it
- was every man for himself--and in the melee, the
- defenseless woman was either forgotten or ignored by
- her black captors. A score of times was her life
- menaced by charging lions, by plunging horses, or by
- the wildly fired bullets of the frightened troopers,
- yet there was no chance of escape, for now with the
- fiendish cunning of their kind, the tawny hunters
- commenced to circle about their prey, hemming them
- within a ring of mighty, yellow fangs, and sharp, long
- talons. Again and again an individual lion would dash
- suddenly among the frightened men and horses, and
- occasionally a horse, goaded to frenzy by pain or
- terror, succeeded in racing safely through the circling
- lions, leaping the boma, and escaping into the jungle;
- but for the men and the woman no such escape was
- possible.
-
- A horse, struck by a stray bullet, fell beside Jane
- Clayton, a lion leaped across the expiring beast full
- upon the breast of a black trooper just beyond. The
- man clubbed his rifle and struck futilely at the broad
- head, and then he was down and the carnivore was
- standing above him.
-
- Shrieking out his terror, the soldier clawed with puny
- fingers at the shaggy breast in vain endeavor to push
- away the grinning jaws. The lion lowered his head, the
- gaping fangs closed with a single sickening crunch upon
- the fear-distorted face, and turning strode back across
- the body of the dead horse dragging his limp and bloody
- burden with him.
-
- Wide-eyed the girl stood watching. She saw the
- carnivore step upon the corpse, stumblingly, as the
- grisly thing swung between its forepaws, and her eyes
- remained fixed in fascination while the beast passed
- within a few paces of her.
-
- The interference of the body seemed to enrage the lion.
- He shook the inanimate clay venomously. He growled and
- roared hideously at the dead, insensate thing, and then
- he dropped it and raised his head to look about in
- search of some living victim upon which to wreak his
- ill temper. His yellow eyes fastened themselves
- balefully upon the figure of the girl, the bristling
- lips raised, disclosing the grinning fangs. A terrific
- roar broke from the savage throat, and the great beast
- crouched to spring upon this new and helpless victim.
-
- Quiet had fallen early upon the camp where Tarzan and
- Werper lay securely bound. Two nervous sentries paced
- their beats, their eyes rolling often toward the
- impenetrable shadows of the gloomy jungle. The others
- slept or tried to sleep--all but the ape-man. Silently
- and powerfully he strained at the bonds which fettered
- his wrists.
-
- The muscles knotted beneath the smooth, brown skin of
- his arms and shoulders, the veins stood out upon his
- temples from the force of his exertions--a strand
- parted, another and another, and one hand was free.
- Then from the jungle came a low guttural, and the
- ape-man became suddenly a silent, rigid statue, with ears
- and nostrils straining to span the black void where his
- eyesight could not reach.
-
- Again came the uncanny sound from the thick verdure
- beyond the camp. A sentry halted abruptly, straining
- his eyes into the gloom. The kinky wool upon his head
- stiffened and raised. He called to his comrade in a
- hoarse whisper.
-
- "Did you hear it?" he asked.
-
- The other came closer, trembling.
-
- "Hear what?"
-
- Again was the weird sound repeated, followed almost
- immediately by a similar and answering sound from the
- camp. The sentries drew close together, watching the
- black spot from which the voice seemed to come.
-
- Trees overhung the boma at this point which was upon
- the opposite side of the camp from them. They dared
- not approach. Their terror even prevented them from
- arousing their fellows--they could only stand in frozen
- fear and watch for the fearsome apparition they
- momentarily expected to see leap from the jungle.
-
- Nor had they long to wait. A dim, bulky form dropped
- lightly from the branches of a tree into the camp. At
- sight of it one of the sentries recovered command of
- his muscles and his voice. Screaming loudly to awaken
- the sleeping camp, he leaped toward the flickering
- watch fire and threw a mass of brush upon it.
-
- The white officer and the black soldiers sprang from
- their blankets. The flames leaped high upon the
- rejuvenated fire, lighting the entire camp, and the
- awakened men shrank back in superstitious terror from
- the sight that met their frightened and astonished
- vision.
-
- A dozen huge and hairy forms loomed large beneath the
- trees at the far side of the enclosure. The white
- giant, one hand freed, had struggled to his knees and
- was calling to the frightful, nocturnal visitors in a
- hideous medley of bestial gutturals, barkings and
- growlings.
-
- Werper had managed to sit up. He, too, saw the savage
- faces of the approaching anthropoids and scarcely knew
- whether to be relieved or terror-stricken.
-
- Growling, the great apes leaped forward toward Tarzan
- and Werper. Chulk led them. The Belgian officer
- called to his men to fire upon the intruders; but the
- Negroes held back, filled as they were with
- superstitious terror of the hairy treemen, and with the
- conviction that the white giant who could thus summon
- the beasts of the jungle to his aid was more than human.
-
- Drawing his own weapon, the officer fired, and Tarzan
- fearing the effect of the noise upon his really timid
- friends called to them to hasten and fulfill his commands.
-
- A couple of the apes turned and fled at the sound of
- the firearm; but Chulk and a half dozen others waddled
- rapidly forward, and, following the ape-man's
- directions, seized both him and Werper and bore them
- off toward the jungle.
-
- By dint of threats, reproaches and profanity the
- Belgian officer succeeded in persuading his trembling
- command to fire a volley after the retreating apes. A
- ragged, straggling volley it was, but at least one of
- its bullets found a mark, for as the jungle closed
- about the hairy rescuers, Chulk, who bore Werper across
- one broad shoulder, staggered and fell.
-
- In an instant he was up again; but the Belgian guessed
- from his unsteady gait that he was hard hit. He lagged
- far behind the others, and it was several minutes after
- they had halted at Tarzan's command before he came
- slowly up to them, reeling from side to side, and at
- last falling again beneath the weight of his burden and
- the shock of his wound.
-
- As Chulk went down he dropped Werper, so that the
- latter fell face downward with the body of the ape
- lying half across him. In this position the Belgian
- felt something resting against his hands, which were
- still bound at his back--something that was not a part
- of the hairy body of the ape.
-
- Mechanically the man's fingers felt of the object
- resting almost in their grasp--it was a soft pouch,
- filled with small, hard particles. Werper gasped in
- wonderment as recognition filtered through the
- incredulity of his mind. It was impossible, and yet--
- it was true!
-
- Feverishly he strove to remove the pouch from the ape
- and transfer it to his own possession; but the
- restricted radius to which his bonds held his hands
- prevented this, though he did succeed in tucking the
- pouch with its precious contents inside the waist band
- of his trousers.
-
- Tarzan, sitting at a short distance, was busy with the
- remaining knots of the cords which bound him.
- Presently he flung aside the last of them and rose to
- his feet. Approaching Werper he knelt beside him. For
- a moment he examined the ape.
-
- "Quite dead," he announced. "It is too bad--he was a
- splendid creature," and then he turned to the work of
- liberating the Belgian.
-
- He freed his hands first, and then commenced upon the
- knots at his ankles.
-
- "I can do the rest," said the Belgian. "I have a small
- pocketknife which they overlooked when they searched
- me," and in this way he succeeded in ridding himself of
- the ape-man's attentions that he might find and open
- his little knife and cut the thong which fastened the
- pouch about Chulk's shoulder, and transfer it from his
- waist band to the breast of his shirt. Then he rose
- and approached Tarzan.
-
- Once again had avarice claimed him. Forgotten were the
- good intentions which the confidence of Jane Clayton in
- his honor had awakened. What she had done, the little
- pouch had undone. How it had come upon the person of
- the great ape, Werper could not imagine, unless it had
- been that the anthropoid had witnessed his fight with
- Achmet Zek, seen the Arab with the pouch and taken it
- away from him; but that this pouch contained the jewels
- of Opar, Werper was positive, and that was all that
- interested him greatly.
-
- "Now," said the ape-man, "keep your promise to me.
- Lead me to the spot where you last saw my wife."
-
- It was slow work pushing through the jungle in the dead
- of night behind the slow-moving Belgian. The ape-man
- chafed at the delay, but the European could not swing
- through the trees as could his more agile and muscular
- companions, and so the speed of all was limited to that
- of the slowest.
-
- The apes trailed out behind the two white men for a
- matter of a few miles; but presently their interest
- lagged, the foremost of them halted in a little glade
- and the others stopped at his side. There they sat
- peering from beneath their shaggy brows at the figures
- of the two men forging steadily ahead, until the latter
- disappeared in the leafy trail beyond the clearing.
- Then an ape sought a comfortable couch beneath a tree,
- and one by one the others followed his example, so that
- Werper and Tarzan continued their journey alone; nor
- was the latter either surprised or concerned.
-
- The two had gone but a short distance beyond the glade
- where the apes had deserted them, when the roaring of
- distant lions fell upon their ears. The ape-man paid
- no attention to the familiar sounds until the crack of
- a rifle came faintly from the same direction, and when
- this was followed by the shrill neighing of horses, and
- an almost continuous fusillade of shots intermingled
- with increased and savage roaring of a large troop of
- lions, he became immediately concerned.
-
- "Someone is having trouble over there," he said,
- turning toward Werper. "I'll have to go to them--they
- may be friends."
-
- "Your wife might be among them," suggested the Belgian,
- for since he had again come into possession of the
- pouch he had become fearful and suspicious of the
- ape-man, and in his mind had constantly revolved many plans
- for eluding this giant Englishman, who was at once his
- savior and his captor.
-
- At the suggestion Tarzan started as though struck with
- a whip.
-
- "God!" he cried, "she might be, and the lions are
- attacking them--they are in the camp. I can tell from
- the screams of the horses--and there! that was the cry
- of a man in his death agonies. Stay here man--I will
- come back for you. I must go first to them," and
- swinging into a tree the lithe figure swung rapidly off
- into the night with the speed and silence of a
- disembodied spirit.
-
- For a moment Werper stood where the ape-man had left
- him. Then a cunning smile crossed his lips. "Stay
- here?" he asked himself. "Stay here and wait until you
- return to find and take these jewels from me? Not I, my
- friend, not I," and turning abruptly eastward Albert
- Werper passed through the foliage of a hanging vine and
- out of the sight of his fellow-man--forever.
-
-
-
- 24
-
- Home
-
-
- As Tarzan of the Apes hurtled through the trees the
- discordant sounds of the battle between the Abyssinians
- and the lions smote more and more distinctly upon his
- sensitive ears, redoubling his assurance that the
- plight of the human element of the conflict was
- critical indeed.
-
- At last the glare of the camp fire shone plainly
- through the intervening trees, and a moment later the
- giant figure of the ape-man paused upon an overhanging
- bough to look down upon the bloody scene of carnage
- below.
-
- His quick eye took in the whole scene with a single
- comprehending glance and stopped upon the figure of a
- woman standing facing a great lion across the carcass
- of a horse.
-
- The carnivore was crouching to spring as Tarzan
- discovered the tragic tableau. Numa was almost beneath
- the branch upon which the ape-man stood, naked and
- unarmed. There was not even an instant's hesitation
- upon the part of the latter--it was as though he had
- not even paused in his swift progress through the
- trees, so lightning-like his survey and comprehension
- of the scene below him--so instantaneous his consequent
- action.
-
- So hopeless had seemed her situation to her that Jane
- Clayton but stood in lethargic apathy awaiting the
- impact of the huge body that would hurl her to the
- ground--awaiting the momentary agony that cruel talons
- and grisly fangs may inflict before the coming of the
- merciful oblivion which would end her sorrow and her
- suffering.
-
- What use to attempt escape? As well face the hideous
- end as to be dragged down from behind in futile flight.
- She did not even close her eyes to shut out the
- frightful aspect of that snarling face, and so it was
- that as she saw the lion preparing to charge she saw,
- too, a bronzed and mighty figure leap from an
- overhanging tree at the instant that Numa rose in his
- spring.
-
- Wide went her eyes in wonder and incredulity, as she
- beheld this seeming apparition risen from the dead.
- The lion was forgotten--her own peril--everything save
- the wondrous miracle of this strange recrudescence.
- With parted lips, with palms tight pressed against her
- heaving bosom, the girl leaned forward, large-eyed,
- enthralled by the vision of her dead mate.
-
- She saw the sinewy form leap to the shoulder of the
- lion, hurtling against the leaping beast like a huge,
- animate battering ram. She saw the carnivore brushed
- aside as he was almost upon her, and in the instant she
- realized that no substanceless wraith could thus turn
- the charge of a maddened lion with brute force greater
- than the brute's.
-
- Tarzan, her Tarzan, lived! A cry of unspeakable
- gladness broke from her lips, only to die in terror as
- she saw the utter defenselessness of her mate, and
- realized that the lion had recovered himself and was
- turning upon Tarzan in mad lust for vengeance.
-
- At the ape-man's feet lay the discarded rifle of the
- dead Abyssinian whose mutilated corpse sprawled where
- Numa had abandoned it. The quick glance which had
- swept the ground for some weapon of defense discovered
- it, and as the lion reared upon his hind legs to seize
- the rash man-thing who had dared interpose its puny
- strength between Numa and his prey, the heavy stock
- whirred through the air and splintered upon the broad
- forehead.
-
- Not as an ordinary mortal might strike a blow did
- Tarzan of the Apes strike; but with the maddened frenzy
- of a wild beast backed by the steel thews which his
- wild, arboreal boyhood had bequeathed him. When the
- blow ended the splintered stock was driven through the
- splintered skull into the savage brain, and the heavy
- iron barrel was bent into a rude V.
-
- In the instant that the lion sank, lifeless, to the
- ground, Jane Clayton threw herself into the eager arms
- of her husband. For a brief instant he strained her
- dear form to his breast, and then a glance about him
- awakened the ape-man to the dangers which still
- surrounded them.
-
- Upon every hand the lions were still leaping upon new
- victims. Fear-maddened horses still menaced them with
- their erratic bolting from one side of the enclosure to
- the other. Bullets from the guns of the defenders who
- remained alive but added to the perils of their
- situation.
-
- To remain was to court death. Tarzan seized Jane
- Clayton and lifted her to a broad shoulder. The blacks
- who had witnessed his advent looked on in amazement as
- they saw the naked giant leap easily into the branches
- of the tree from whence he had dropped so uncannily
- upon the scene, and vanish as he had come, bearing away
- their prisoner with him.
-
- They were too well occupied in self-defense to attempt
- to halt him, nor could they have done so other than by
- the wasting of a precious bullet which might be needed
- the next instant to turn the charge of a savage foe.
-
- And so, unmolested, Tarzan passed from the camp of the
- Abyssinians, from which the din of conflict followed
- him deep into the jungle until distance gradually
- obliterated it entirely.
-
- Back to the spot where he had left Werper went the
- ape-man, joy in his heart now, where fear and sorrow had
- so recently reigned; and in his mind a determination to
- forgive the Belgian and aid him in making good his
- escape. But when he came to the place, Werper was
- gone, and though Tarzan called aloud many times he
- received no reply. Convinced that the man had
- purposely eluded him for reasons of his own, John
- Clayton felt that he was under no obligations to expose
- his wife to further danger and discomfort in the
- prosecution of a more thorough search for the missing
- Belgian.
-
- "He has acknowledged his guilt by his flight, Jane," he
- said. "We will let him go to lie in the bed that he
- has made for himself."
-
- Straight as homing pigeons, the two made their way
- toward the ruin and desolation that had once been the
- center of their happy lives, and which was soon to be
- restored by the willing black hands of laughing
- laborers, made happy again by the return of the master
- and mistress whom they had mourned as dead.
-
- Past the village of Achmet Zek their way led them, and
- there they found but the charred remains of the
- palisade and the native huts, still smoking, as mute
- evidence of the wrath and vengeance of a powerful
- enemy.
-
- "The Waziri," commented Tarzan with a grim smile.
-
- "God bless them!" cried Jane Clayton.
-
- "They cannot be far ahead of us," said Tarzan, "Basuli
- and the others. The gold is gone and the jewels of
- Opar, Jane; but we have each other and the Waziri--and
- we have love and loyalty and friendship. And what are
- gold and jewels to these?"
-
- "If only poor Mugambi lived," she replied, "and those
- other brave fellows who sacrificed their lives in vain
- endeavor to protect me!"
-
- In the silence of mingled joy and sorrow they passed
- along through the familiar jungle, and as the afternoon
- was waning there came faintly to the ears of the
- ape-man the murmuring cadence of distant voices.
-
- "We are nearing the Waziri, Jane," he said. "I can
- hear them ahead of us. They are going into camp for
- the night, I imagine."
-
- A half hour later the two came upon a horde of ebon
- warriors which Basuli had collected for his war of
- vengeance upon the raiders. With them were the
- captured women of the tribe whom they had found in the
- village of Achmet Zek, and tall, even among the giant
- Waziri, loomed a familiar black form at the side of
- Basuli. It was Mugambi, whom Jane had thought dead
- amidst the charred ruins of the bungalow.
-
- Ah, such a reunion! Long into the night the dancing and
- the singing and the laughter awoke the echoes of the
- somber wood. Again and again were the stories of their
- various adventures retold. Again and once again they
- fought their battles with savage beast and savage man,
- and dawn was already breaking when Basuli, for the
- fortieth time, narrated how he and a handful of his
- warriors had watched the battle for the golden ingots
- which the Abyssinians of Abdul Mourak had waged against
- the Arab raiders of Achmet Zek, and how, when the
- victors had ridden away they had sneaked out of the
- river reeds and stolen away with the precious ingots to
- hide them where no robber eye ever could discover them.
-
- Pieced out from the fragments of their various
- experiences with the Belgian the truth concerning the
- malign activities of Albert Werper became apparent.
- Only Lady Greystoke found aught to praise in the
- conduct of the man, and it was difficult even for her
- to reconcile his many heinous acts with this one
- evidence of chivalry and honor.
-
- "Deep in the soul of every man," said Tarzan, "must
- lurk the germ of righteousness. It was your own
- virtue, Jane, rather even than your helplessness which
- awakened for an instant the latent decency of this
- degraded man. In that one act he retrieved himself,
- and when he is called to face his Maker may it outweigh
- in the balance, all the sins he has committed."
-
- And Jane Clayton breathed a fervent, "Amen!"
-
- Months had passed. The labor of the Waziri and the
- gold of Opar had rebuilt and refurnished the wasted
- homestead of the Greystokes. Once more the simple life
- of the great African farm went on as it had before the
- coming of the Belgian and the Arab. Forgotten were the
- sorrows and dangers of yesterday.
-
- For the first time in months Lord Greystoke felt that
- he might indulge in a holiday, and so a great hunt was
- organized that the faithful laborers might feast in
- celebration of the completion of their work.
-
- In itself the hunt was a success, and ten days after
- its inauguration, a well-laden safari took up its
- return march toward the Waziri plain. Lord and Lady
- Greystoke with Basuli and Mugambi rode together at the
- head of the column, laughing and talking together in
- that easy familiarity which common interests and mutual
- respect breed between honest and intelligent men of any
- races.
-
- Jane Clayton's horse shied suddenly at an object half
- hidden in the long grasses of an open space in the
- jungle. Tarzan's keen eyes sought quickly for an
- explanation of the animal's action.
-
- "What have we here?" he cried, swinging from his
- saddle, and a moment later the four were grouped about
- a human skull and a little litter of whitened human
- bones.
-
- Tarzan stooped and lifted a leathern pouch from the
- grisly relics of a man. The hard outlines of the
- contents brought an exclamation of surprise to his
- lips.
-
- "The jewels of Opar!" he cried, holding the pouch
- aloft, "and," pointing to the bones at his feet, "all
- that remains of Werper, the Belgian."
-
- Mugambi laughed. "Look within, Bwana," he cried, "and
- you will see what are the jewels of Opar--you will see
- what the Belgian gave his life for," and the black
- laughed aloud.
-
- "Why do you laugh?" asked Tarzan.
-
- "Because," replied Mugambi, "I filled the Belgian's
- pouch with river gravel before I escaped the camp of
- the Abyssinians whose prisoners we were. I left the
- Belgian only worthless stones, while I brought away
- with me the jewels he had stolen from you. That they
- were afterward stolen from me while I slept in the
- jungle is my shame and my disgrace; but at least the
- Belgian lost them--open his pouch and you will see."
-
- Tarzan untied the thong which held the mouth of the
- leathern bag closed, and permitted the contents to
- trickle slowly forth into his open palm. Mugambi's
- eyes went wide at the sight, and the others uttered
- exclamations of surprise and incredulity, for from the
- rusty and weatherworn pouch ran a stream of brilliant,
- scintillating gems.
-
- "The jewels of Opar!" cried Tarzan. "But how did
- Werper come by them again?"
-
- None could answer, for both Chulk and Werper were dead,
- and no other knew.
-
- "Poor devil!" said the ape-man, as he swung back into
- his saddle. "Even in death he has made restitution--
- let his sins lie with his bones."
-
-
- End of Project Gutenberg Etext of Tarzan and the Jewels of Opar
-
-