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8838 lines
408 KiB
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[pg/etext94/tarz610.txt]
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The Jungle Tales of Tarzan by Edgar Rice Burroughs
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February, 1994 [Etext #106]
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This etext was created by Judith Boss, Omaha, Nebraska.
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The equipment: an IBM-compatible 486/50, a Hewlett-Packard
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ScanJet IIc flatbed scanner, and a copy of Calera Recognition
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Systems' M/600 Series Professional OCR software and RISC
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accelerator board donated by Calera.
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This text is in the PUBLIC DOMAIN.
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Jungle Tales of Tarzan
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by Edgar Rice Burroughs
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Contents
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CHAPTER
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1 Tarzan's First Love
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2 The Capture of Tarzan
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3 The Fight for the Balu
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4 The God of Tarzan
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5 Tarzan and the Black Boy
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6 The Witch-Doctor Seeks Vengeance
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7 The End of Bukawai
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8 The Lion
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9 The Nightmare
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10 The Battle for Teeka
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11 A Jungle Joke
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12 Tarzan Rescues the Moon
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1
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Tarzan's First Love
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TEEKA, STRETCHED AT luxurious ease in the shade of the
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tropical forest, presented, unquestionably, a most alluring
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picture of young, feminine loveliness. Or at least so
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thought Tarzan of the Apes, who squatted upon a low-swinging
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branch in a near-by tree and looked down upon her.
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Just to have seen him there, lolling upon the swaying
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bough of the jungle-forest giant, his brown skin mottled
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by the brilliant equatorial sunlight which percolated
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through the leafy canopy of green above him, his clean-limbed
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body relaxed in graceful ease, his shapely head partly
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turned in contemplative absorption and his intelligent,
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gray eyes dreamily devouring the object of their devotion,
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you would have thought him the reincarnation of some
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demigod of old.
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You would not have guessed that in infancy he had suckled
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at the breast of a hideous, hairy she-ape, nor that in all
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his conscious past since his parents had passed away in the
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little cabin by the landlocked harbor at the jungle's verge,
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he had known no other associates than the sullen bulls
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and the snarling cows of the tribe of Kerchak, the great ape.
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Nor, could you have read the thoughts which passed through
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that active, healthy brain, the longings and desires
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and aspirations which the sight of Teeka inspired,
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would you have been any more inclined to give credence
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to the reality of the origin of the ape-man. For,
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from his thoughts alone, you could never have gleaned
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the truth--that he had been born to a gentle English lady
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or that his sire had been an English nobleman of time-honored
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lineage.
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Lost to Tarzan of the Apes was the truth of his origin.
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That he was John Clayton, Lord Greystoke, with a seat
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in the House of Lords, he did not know, nor, knowing,
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would have understood.
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Yes, Teeka was indeed beautiful!
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Of course Kala had been beautiful--one's mother is always
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that--but Teeka was beautiful in a way all her own,
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an indescribable sort of way which Tarzan was just
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beginning to sense in a rather vague and hazy manner.
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For years had Tarzan and Teeka been play-fellows, and Teeka
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still continued to be playful while the young bulls of her own
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age were rapidly becoming surly and morose. Tarzan, if he
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gave the matter much thought at all, probably reasoned
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that his growing attachment for the young female could
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be easily accounted for by the fact that of the former
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playmates she and he alone retained any desire to frolic as of
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old.
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But today, as he sat gazing upon her, he found himself
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noting the beauties of Teeka's form and features--something
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he never had done before, since none of them had aught
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to do with Teeka's ability to race nimbly through the lower
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terraces of the forest in the primitive games of tag and
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hide-and-go-seek which Tarzan's fertile brain evolved.
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Tarzan scratched his head, running his fingers deep
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into the shock of black hair which framed his shapely,
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boyish face--he scratched his head and sighed.
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Teeka's new-found beauty became as suddenly his despair.
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He envied her the handsome coat of hair which covered
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her body. His own smooth, brown hide he hated with a
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hatred born of disgust and contempt. Years back he had
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harbored a hope that some day he, too, would be clothed
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in hair as were all his brothers and sisters; but of late
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he had been forced to abandon the delectable dream.
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Then there were Teeka's great teeth, not so large as the males,
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of course, but still mighty, handsome things by comparison
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with Tarzan's feeble white ones. And her beetling brows,
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and broad, flat nose, and her mouth! Tarzan had often
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practiced making his mouth into a little round circle and then
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puffing out his cheeks while he winked his eyes rapidly;
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but he felt that he could never do it in the same cute
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and irresistible way in which Teeka did it.
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And as he watched her that afternoon, and wondered,
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a young bull ape who had been lazily foraging for food
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beneath the damp, matted carpet of decaying vegetation
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at the roots of a near-by tree lumbered awkwardly
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in Teeka's direction. The other apes of the tribe
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of Kerchak moved listlessly about or lolled restfully
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in the midday heat of the equatorial jungle. From time
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to time one or another of them had passed close to Teeka,
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and Tarzan had been uninterested. Why was it then that his
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brows contracted and his muscles tensed as he saw Taug
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pause beside the young she and then squat down close to her?
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Tarzan always had liked Taug. Since childhood they
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had romped together. Side by side they had squatted
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near the water, their quick, strong fingers ready to
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leap forth and seize Pisah, the fish, should that wary
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denizen of the cool depths dart surfaceward to the lure
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of the insects Tarzan tossed upon the face of the pool.
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Together they had baited Tublat and teased Numa, the lion.
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Why, then, should Tarzan feel the rise of the short hairs
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at the nape of his neck merely because Taug sat close to Teeka?
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It is true that Taug was no longer the frolicsome ape
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of yesterday. When his snarling-muscles bared his giant
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fangs no one could longer imagine that Taug was in as
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playful a mood as when he and Tarzan had rolled upon
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the turf in mimic battle. The Taug of today was a huge,
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sullen bull ape, somber and forbidding. Yet he and Tarzan
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never had quarreled.
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For a few minutes the young ape-man watched Taug press
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closer to Teeka. He saw the rough caress of the huge
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paw as it stroked the sleek shoulder of the she,
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and then Tarzan of the Apes slipped catlike to the ground
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and approached the two.
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As he came his upper lip curled into a snarl, exposing his
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fighting fangs, and a deep growl rumbled from his
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cavernous chest. Taug looked up, batting his blood-shot eyes.
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Teeka half raised herself and looked at Tarzan.
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Did she guess the cause of his perturbation? Who may
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say? At any rate, she was feminine, and so she reached
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up and scratched Taug behind one of his small, flat ears.
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Tarzan saw, and in the instant that he saw, Teeka was no
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longer the little playmate of an hour ago; instead she
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was a wondrous thing--the most wondrous in the world--and
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a possession for which Tarzan would fight to the death
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against Taug or any other who dared question his right
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of proprietorship.
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Stooped, his muscles rigid and one great shoulder turned
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toward the young bull, Tarzan of the Apes sidled nearer
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and nearer. His face was partly averted, but his keen
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gray eyes never left those of Taug, and as he came,
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his growls increased in depth and volume.
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Taug rose upon his short legs, bristling. His fighting
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fangs were bared. He, too, sidled, stiff-legged, and growled.
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"Teeka is Tarzan's," said the ape-man, in the low gutturals
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of the great anthropoids.
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"Teeka is Taug's," replied the bull ape.
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Thaka and Numgo and Gunto, disturbed by the growlings
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of the two young bulls, looked up half apathetic,
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half interested. They were sleepy, but they sensed a fight.
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It would break the monotony of the humdrum jungle life
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they led.
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Coiled about his shoulders was Tarzan's long grass rope,
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in his hand was the hunting knife of the long-dead father
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he had never known. In Taug's little brain lay a great
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respect for the shiny bit of sharp metal which the ape-boy
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knew so well how to use. With it had he slain Tublat,
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his fierce foster father, and Bolgani, the gorilla.
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Taug knew these things, and so he came warily, circling about
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Tarzan in search of an opening. The latter, made cautious
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because of his lesser bulk and the inferiority of his
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natural armament, followed similar tactics.
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For a time it seemed that the altercation would
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follow the way of the majority of such differences
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between members of the tribe and that one of them would
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finally lose interest and wander off to prosecute some
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other line of endeavor. Such might have been the end
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of it had the CASUS BELLI been other than it was;
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but Teeka was flattered at the attention that was being
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drawn to her and by the fact that these two young bulls
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were contemplating battle on her account. Such a thing
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never before had occurred in Teeka's brief life.
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She had seen other bulls battling for other and older shes,
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and in the depth of her wild little heart she had longed
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for the day when the jungle grasses would be reddened
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with the blood of mortal combat for her fair sake.
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So now she squatted upon her haunches and insulted
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both her admirers impartially. She hurled taunts at
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them for their cowardice, and called them vile names,
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such as Histah, the snake, and Dango, the hyena.
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She threatened to call Mumga to chastise them with a
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stick--Mumga, who was so old that she could no longer
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climb and so toothless that she was forced to confine
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her diet almost exclusively to bananas and grub-worms.
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The apes who were watching heard and laughed.
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Taug was infuriated. He made a sudden lunge for Tarzan,
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but the ape-boy leaped nimbly to one side, eluding him,
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and with the quickness of a cat wheeled and leaped back
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again to close quarters. His hunting knife was raised
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above his head as he came in, and he aimed a vicious blow
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at Taug's neck. The ape wheeled to dodge the weapon
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so that the keen blade struck him but a glancing blow upon
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the shoulder.
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The spurt of red blood brought a shrill cry of delight
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from Teeka. Ah, but this was something worth while!
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She glanced about to see if others had witnessed this
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evidence of her popularity. Helen of Troy was never
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one whit more proud than was Teeka at that moment.
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If Teeka had not been so absorbed in her own vaingloriousness
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she might have noted the rustling of leaves in the
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tree above her--a rustling which was not caused by
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any movement of the wind, since there was no wind.
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And had she looked up she might have seen a sleek body
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crouching almost directly over her and wicked yellow
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eyes glaring hungrily down upon her, but Teeka did not look up.
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With his wound Taug had backed off growling horribly.
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Tarzan had followed him, screaming insults at him,
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and menacing him with his brandishing blade. Teeka moved
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from beneath the tree in an effort to keep close to
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the duelists.
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The branch above Teeka bent and swayed a trifle with the
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movement of the body of the watcher stretched along it.
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Taug had halted now and was preparing to make a new stand.
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His lips were flecked with foam, and saliva drooled from
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his jowls. He stood with head lowered and arms outstretched,
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preparing for a sudden charge to close quarters.
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Could he but lay his mighty hands upon that soft,
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brown skin the battle would be his. Taug considered
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Tarzan's manner of fighting unfair. He would not close.
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Instead, he leaped nimbly just beyond the reach of Taug's
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muscular fingers.
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The ape-boy had as yet never come to a real trial
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of strength with a bull ape, other than in play,
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and so he was not at all sure that it would be safe to put
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his muscles to the test in a life and death struggle.
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Not that he was afraid, for Tarzan knew nothing of fear.
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The instinct of self-preservation gave him caution--that
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was all. He took risks only when it seemed necessary,
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and then he would hesitate at nothing.
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His own method of fighting seemed best fitted to his build
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and to his armament. His teeth, while strong and sharp, were,
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as weapons of offense, pitifully inadequate by comparison
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with the mighty fighting fangs of the anthropoids.
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By dancing about, just out of reach of an antagonist,
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Tarzan could do infinite injury with his long,
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sharp hunting knife, and at the same time escape
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many of the painful and dangerous wounds which would
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be sure to follow his falling into the clutches of a bull ape.
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And so Taug charged and bellowed like a bull, and Tarzan
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of the Apes danced lightly to this side and that,
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hurling jungle billingsgate at his foe, the while he
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nicked him now and again with his knife.
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There were lulls in the fighting when the two would stand
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panting for breath, facing each other, mustering their
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wits and their forces for a new onslaught. It was
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during a pause such as this that Taug chanced to let
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his eyes rove beyond his foeman. Instantly the entire
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aspect of the ape altered. Rage left his countenance
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to be supplanted by an expression of fear.
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With a cry that every ape there recognized, Taug turned
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and fled. No need to question him--his warning proclaimed
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the near presence of their ancient enemy.
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Tarzan started to seek safety, as did the other members
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of the tribe, and as he did so he heard a panther's
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scream mingled with the frightened cry of a she-ape.
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Taug heard, too; but he did not pause in his flight.
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With the ape-boy, however, it was different. He looked
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back to see if any member of the tribe was close pressed
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by the beast of prey, and the sight that met his eyes
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filled them with an expression of horror.
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Teeka it was who cried out in terror as she fled across
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a little clearing toward the trees upon the opposite side,
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for after her leaped Sheeta, the panther, in easy,
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graceful bounds. Sheeta appeared to be in no hurry.
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His meat was assured, since even though the ape reached
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the trees ahead of him she could not climb beyond his
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clutches before he could be upon her.
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Tarzan saw that Teeka must die. He cried to Taug
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and the other bulls to hasten to Teeka's assistance,
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and at the same time he ran toward the pursuing beast,
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taking down his rope as he came. Tarzan knew that once
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the great bulls were aroused none of the jungle,
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not even Numa, the lion, was anxious to measure fangs
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with them, and that if all those of the tribe who chanced
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to be present today would charge, Sheeta, the great cat,
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would doubtless turn tail and run for his life.
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Taug heard, as did the others, but no one came to Tarzan's
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assistance or Teeka's rescue, and Sheeta was rapidly
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closing up the distance between himself and his prey.
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The ape-boy, leaping after the panther, cried aloud to
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the beast in an effort to turn it from Teeka or otherwise
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distract its attention until the she-ape could gain the
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safety of the higher branches where Sheeta dared not go.
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He called the panther every opprobrious name that fell
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to his tongue. He dared him to stop and do battle with him;
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but Sheeta only loped on after the luscious titbit now
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almost within his reach.
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Tarzan was not far behind and he was gaining, but the
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distance was so short that he scarce hoped to overhaul
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the carnivore before it had felled Teeka. In his right hand
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the boy swung his grass rope above his head as he ran.
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He hated to chance a miss, for the distance was much
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greater than he ever had cast before except in practice.
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It was the full length of his grass rope which separated
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him from Sheeta, and yet there was no other thing to do.
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He could not reach the brute's side before it overhauled Teeka.
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He must chance a throw.
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And just as Teeka sprang for the lower limb of a great tree,
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and Sheeta rose behind her in a long, sinuous leap,
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the coils of the ape-boy's grass rope shot swiftly
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through the air, straightening into a long thin line
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as the open noose hovered for an instant above the savage
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head and the snarling jaws. Then it settled--clean
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and true about the tawny neck it settled, and Tarzan,
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with a quick twist of his rope-hand, drew the noose taut,
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bracing himself for the shock when Sheeta should have
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taken up the slack.
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Just short of Teeka's glossy rump the cruel talons raked
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the air as the rope tightened and Sheeta was brought to a
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sudden stop--a stop that snapped the big beast over upon
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his back. Instantly Sheeta was up--with glaring eyes,
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and lashing tail, and gaping jaws, from which issued
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hideous cries of rage and disappointment.
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He saw the ape-boy, the cause of his discomfiture,
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scarce forty feet before him, and Sheeta charged.
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Teeka was safe now; Tarzan saw to that by a quick glance
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into the tree whose safety she had gained not an instant
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too soon, and Sheeta was charging. It was useless to risk
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his life in idle and unequal combat from which no good
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could come; but could he escape a battle with the enraged
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cat? And if he was forced to fight, what chance had he
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to survive? Tarzan was constrained to admit that his
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position was aught but a desirable one. The trees were
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||
|
too far to hope to reach in time to elude the cat.
|
||
|
Tarzan could but stand facing that hideous charge.
|
||
|
In his right hand he grasped his hunting knife--a puny,
|
||
|
futile thing indeed by comparison with the great rows
|
||
|
of mighty teeth which lined Sheeta's powerful jaws,
|
||
|
and the sharp talons encased within his padded paws;
|
||
|
yet the young Lord Greystoke faced it with the same courageous
|
||
|
resignation with which some fearless ancestor went down
|
||
|
to defeat and death on Senlac Hill by Hastings.
|
||
|
|
||
|
From safety points in the trees the great apes watched,
|
||
|
screaming hatred at Sheeta and advice at Tarzan, for the
|
||
|
progenitors of man have, naturally, many human traits.
|
||
|
Teeka was frightened. She screamed at the bulls to hasten
|
||
|
to Tarzan's assistance; but the bulls were otherwise
|
||
|
engaged--principally in giving advice and making faces.
|
||
|
Anyway, Tarzan was not a real Mangani, so why should they
|
||
|
risk their lives in an effort to protect him?
|
||
|
|
||
|
And now Sheeta was almost upon the lithe, naked body,
|
||
|
and--the body was not there. Quick as was the great cat,
|
||
|
the ape-boy was quicker. He leaped to one side almost
|
||
|
as the panther's talons were closing upon him, and as Sheeta
|
||
|
went hurtling to the ground beyond, Tarzan was racing
|
||
|
for the safety of the nearest tree.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The panther recovered himself almost immediately and,
|
||
|
wheeling, tore after his prey, the ape-boy's rope
|
||
|
dragging along the ground behind him. In doubling back
|
||
|
after Tarzan, Sheeta had passed around a low bush.
|
||
|
It was a mere nothing in the path of any jungle creature
|
||
|
of the size and weight of Sheeta--provided it had no
|
||
|
trailing rope dangling behind. But Sheeta was handicapped
|
||
|
by such a rope, and as he leaped once again after Tarzan
|
||
|
of the Apes the rope encircled the small bush, became
|
||
|
tangled in it and brought the panther to a sudden stop.
|
||
|
An instant later Tarzan was safe among the higher branches
|
||
|
of a small tree into which Sheeta could not follow him.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Here he perched, hurling twigs and epithets at the raging
|
||
|
feline beneath him. The other members of the tribe now
|
||
|
took up the bombardment, using such hard-shelled fruits
|
||
|
and dead branches as came within their reach, until Sheeta,
|
||
|
goaded to frenzy and snapping at the grass rope,
|
||
|
finally succeeded in severing its strands. For a moment
|
||
|
the panther stood glaring first at one of his tormentors
|
||
|
and then at another, until, with a final scream of rage,
|
||
|
he turned and slunk off into the tangled mazes of the jungle.
|
||
|
|
||
|
A half hour later the tribe was again upon the ground,
|
||
|
feeding as though naught had occurred to interrupt the somber
|
||
|
dullness of their lives. Tarzan had recovered the greater
|
||
|
part of his rope and was busy fashioning a new noose,
|
||
|
while Teeka squatted close behind him, in evident token
|
||
|
that her choice was made.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Taug eyed them sullenly. Once when he came close,
|
||
|
Teeka bared her fangs and growled at him, and Tarzan
|
||
|
showed his canines in an ugly snarl; but Taug did not
|
||
|
provoke a quarrel. He seemed to accept after the manner
|
||
|
of his kind the decision of the she as an indication
|
||
|
that he had been vanquished in his battle for her favors.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Later in the day, his rope repaired, Tarzan took to the trees
|
||
|
in search of game. More than his fellows he required meat,
|
||
|
and so, while they were satisfied with fruits and herbs
|
||
|
and beetles, which could be discovered without much effort
|
||
|
upon their part, Tarzan spent considerable time hunting
|
||
|
the game animals whose flesh alone satisfied the cravings
|
||
|
of his stomach and furnished sustenance and strength
|
||
|
to the mighty thews which, day by day, were building
|
||
|
beneath the soft, smooth texture of his brown hide.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Taug saw him depart, and then, quite casually, the big beast
|
||
|
hunted closer and closer to Teeka in his search for food.
|
||
|
At last he was within a few feet of her, and when he shot
|
||
|
a covert glance at her he saw that she was appraising him
|
||
|
and that there was no evidence of anger upon her face.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Taug expanded his great chest and rolled about on his
|
||
|
short legs, making strange growlings in his throat.
|
||
|
He raised his lips, baring his fangs. My, but what great,
|
||
|
beautiful fangs he had! Teeka could not but notice them.
|
||
|
She also let her eyes rest in admiration upon Taug's beetling
|
||
|
brows and his short, powerful neck. What a beautiful
|
||
|
creature he was indeed!
|
||
|
|
||
|
Taug, flattered by the unconcealed admiration in her eyes,
|
||
|
strutted about, as proud and as vain as a peacock.
|
||
|
Presently he began to inventory his assets, mentally,
|
||
|
and shortly he found himself comparing them with those
|
||
|
of his rival.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Taug grunted, for there was no comparison. How could
|
||
|
one compare his beautiful coat with the smooth and naked
|
||
|
hideousness of Tarzan's bare hide? Who could see beauty
|
||
|
in the stingy nose of the Tarmangani after looking at
|
||
|
Taug's broad nostrils? And Tarzan's eyes! Hideous things,
|
||
|
showing white about them, and entirely unrimmed with red.
|
||
|
Taug knew that his own blood-shot eyes were beautiful,
|
||
|
for he had seen them reflected in the glassy surface of many
|
||
|
a drinking pool.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The bull drew nearer to Teeka, finally squatting close
|
||
|
against her. When Tarzan returned from his hunting a short
|
||
|
time later it was to see Teeka contentedly scratching
|
||
|
the back of his rival.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tarzan was disgusted. Neither Taug nor Teeka saw him
|
||
|
as he swung through the trees into the glade. He paused
|
||
|
a moment, looking at them; then, with a sorrowful grimace,
|
||
|
he turned and faded away into the labyrinth of leafy
|
||
|
boughs and festooned moss out of which he had come.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tarzan wished to be as far away from the cause of his heartache
|
||
|
as he could. He was suffering the first pangs of blighted love,
|
||
|
and he didn't quite know what was the matter with him.
|
||
|
He thought that he was angry with Taug, and so he couldn't
|
||
|
understand why it was that he had run away instead
|
||
|
of rushing into mortal combat with the destroyer of his
|
||
|
happiness.
|
||
|
|
||
|
He also thought that he was angry with Teeka, yet a
|
||
|
vision of her many beauties persisted in haunting him,
|
||
|
so that he could only see her in the light of love
|
||
|
as the most desirable thing in the world.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The ape-boy craved affection. From babyhood until the
|
||
|
time of her death, when the poisoned arrow of Kulonga
|
||
|
had pierced her savage heart, Kala had represented
|
||
|
to the English boy the sole object of love which he had known.
|
||
|
|
||
|
In her wild, fierce way Kala had loved her adopted son,
|
||
|
and Tarzan had returned that love, though the outward
|
||
|
demonstrations of it were no greater than might have
|
||
|
been expected from any other beast of the jungle.
|
||
|
It was not until he was bereft of her that the boy
|
||
|
realized how deep had been his attachment for his mother,
|
||
|
for as such he looked upon her.
|
||
|
|
||
|
In Teeka he had seen within the past few hours a
|
||
|
substitute for Kala--someone to fight for and to hunt
|
||
|
for--someone to caress; but now his dream was shattered.
|
||
|
Something hurt within his breast. He placed his hand
|
||
|
over his heart and wondered what had happened to him.
|
||
|
Vaguely he attributed his pain to Teeka. The more he
|
||
|
thought of Teeka as he had last seen her, caressing Taug,
|
||
|
the more the thing within his breast hurt him.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tarzan shook his head and growled; then on and on
|
||
|
through the jungle he swung, and the farther he traveled
|
||
|
and the more he thought upon his wrongs, the nearer
|
||
|
he approached becoming an irreclaimable misogynist.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Two days later he was still hunting alone--very morose
|
||
|
and very unhappy; but he was determined never to return
|
||
|
to the tribe. He could not bear the thought of seeing
|
||
|
Taug and Teeka always together. As he swung upon
|
||
|
a great limb Numa, the lion, and Sabor, the lioness,
|
||
|
passed beneath him, side by side, and Sabor leaned
|
||
|
against the lion and bit playfully at his cheek.
|
||
|
It was a half-caress. Tarzan sighed and hurled a nut at them.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Later he came upon several of Mbonga's black warriors.
|
||
|
He was upon the point of dropping his noose about the
|
||
|
neck of one of them, who was a little distance from
|
||
|
his companions, when he became interested in the thing
|
||
|
which occupied the savages. They were building a cage
|
||
|
in the trail and covering it with leafy branches.
|
||
|
When they had completed their work the structure was
|
||
|
scarcely visible.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tarzan wondered what the purpose of the thing might be,
|
||
|
and why, when they had built it, they turned away and started
|
||
|
back along the trail in the direction of their village.
|
||
|
|
||
|
It had been some time since Tarzan had visited the blacks
|
||
|
and looked down from the shelter of the great trees which
|
||
|
overhung their palisade upon the activities of his enemies,
|
||
|
from among whom had come the slayer of Kala.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Although he hated them, Tarzan derived considerable
|
||
|
entertainment in watching them at their daily life within
|
||
|
the village, and especially at their dances, when the
|
||
|
fires glared against their naked bodies as they leaped
|
||
|
and turned and twisted in mimic warfare. It was rather
|
||
|
in the hope of witnessing something of the kind that he
|
||
|
now followed the warriors back toward their village,
|
||
|
but in this he was disappointed, for there was no dance
|
||
|
that night.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Instead, from the safe concealment of his tree, Tarzan saw
|
||
|
little groups seated about tiny fires discussing the events
|
||
|
of the day, and in the darker corners of the village he
|
||
|
descried isolated couples talking and laughing together,
|
||
|
and always one of each couple was a young man and the
|
||
|
other a young woman.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tarzan cocked his head upon one side and thought,
|
||
|
and before he went to sleep that night, curled in the crotch
|
||
|
of the great tree above the village, Teeka filled his mind,
|
||
|
and afterward she filled his dreams--she and the young
|
||
|
black men laughing and talking with the young black women.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Taug, hunting alone, had wandered some distance from
|
||
|
the balance of the tribe. He was making his way slowly
|
||
|
along an elephant path when he discovered that it was
|
||
|
blocked with undergrowth. Now Taug, come into maturity,
|
||
|
was an evil-natured brute of an exceeding short temper.
|
||
|
When something thwarted him, his sole idea was to overcome
|
||
|
it by brute strength and ferocity, and so now when he found
|
||
|
his way blocked, he tore angrily into the leafy screen
|
||
|
and an instant later found himself within a strange lair,
|
||
|
his progress effectually blocked, notwithstanding his most
|
||
|
violent efforts to forge ahead.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Biting and striking at the barrier, Taug finally worked
|
||
|
himself into a frightful rage, but all to no avail;
|
||
|
and at last he became convinced that he must turn back.
|
||
|
But when he would have done so, what was his chagrin to
|
||
|
discover that another barrier had dropped behind him while he
|
||
|
fought to break down the one before him! Taug was trapped.
|
||
|
Until exhaustion overcame him he fought frantically for
|
||
|
his freedom; but all for naught.
|
||
|
|
||
|
In the morning a party of blacks set out from the village
|
||
|
of Mbonga in the direction of the trap they had constructed
|
||
|
the previous day, while among the branches of the trees above
|
||
|
them hovered a naked young giant filled with the curiosity
|
||
|
of the wild things. Manu, the monkey, chattered and
|
||
|
scolded as Tarzan passed, and though he was not afraid
|
||
|
of the familiar figure of the ape-boy, he hugged closer
|
||
|
to him the little brown body of his life's companion.
|
||
|
Tarzan laughed as he saw it; but the laugh was followed
|
||
|
by a sudden clouding of his face and a deep sigh.
|
||
|
|
||
|
A little farther on, a gaily feathered bird strutted
|
||
|
about before the admiring eyes of his somber-hued mate.
|
||
|
It seemed to Tarzan that everything in the jungle was
|
||
|
combining to remind him that he had lost Teeka; yet every
|
||
|
day of his life he had seen these same things and thought
|
||
|
nothing of them.
|
||
|
|
||
|
When the blacks reached the trap, Taug set up a great commotion.
|
||
|
Seizing the bars of his prison, he shook them frantically,
|
||
|
and all the while he roared and growled terrifically.
|
||
|
The blacks were elated, for while they had not built
|
||
|
their trap for this hairy tree man, they were delighted
|
||
|
with their catch.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tarzan pricked up his ears when he heard the voice of a
|
||
|
great ape and, circling quickly until he was down wind
|
||
|
from the trap, he sniffed at the air in search of the scent
|
||
|
spoor of the prisoner. Nor was it long before there came
|
||
|
to those delicate nostrils the familiar odor that told
|
||
|
Tarzan the identity of the captive as unerringly as though
|
||
|
he had looked upon Taug with his eyes. Yes, it was Taug,
|
||
|
and he was alone.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tarzan grinned as he approached to discover what the blacks
|
||
|
would do to their prisoner. Doubtless they would slay him
|
||
|
at once. Again Tarzan grinned. Now he could have Teeka
|
||
|
for his own, with none to dispute his right to her.
|
||
|
As he watched, he saw the black warriors strip the screen
|
||
|
from about the cage, fasten ropes to it and drag it away
|
||
|
along the trail in the direction of their village.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tarzan watched until his rival passed out of sight,
|
||
|
still beating upon the bars of his prison and growling
|
||
|
out his anger and his threats. Then the ape-boy turned
|
||
|
and swung rapidly off in search of the tribe, and Teeka.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Once, upon the journey, he surprised Sheeta and his family
|
||
|
in a little overgrown clearing. The great cat lay stretched
|
||
|
upon the ground, while his mate, one paw across her lord's
|
||
|
savage face, licked at the soft white fur at his throat.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tarzan increased his speed then until he fairly flew
|
||
|
through the forest, nor was it long before he came upon
|
||
|
the tribe. He saw them before they saw him, for of all
|
||
|
the jungle creatures, none passed more quietly than Tarzan
|
||
|
of the Apes. He saw Kamma and her mate feeding side
|
||
|
by side, their hairy bodies rubbing against each other.
|
||
|
And he saw Teeka feeding by herself. Not for long
|
||
|
would she feed thus in loneliness, thought Tarzan,
|
||
|
as with a bound he landed amongst them.
|
||
|
|
||
|
There was a startled rush and a chorus of angry
|
||
|
and frightened snarls, for Tarzan had surprised them;
|
||
|
but there was more, too, than mere nervous shock to account
|
||
|
for the bristling neck hair which remained standing long
|
||
|
after the apes had discovered the identity of the newcomer.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tarzan noticed this as he had noticed it many times
|
||
|
in the past--that always his sudden coming among them
|
||
|
left them nervous and unstrung for a considerable time,
|
||
|
and that they one and all found it necessary to satisfy
|
||
|
themselves that he was indeed Tarzan by smelling about him
|
||
|
a half dozen or more times before they calmed down.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Pushing through them, he made his way toward Teeka;
|
||
|
but as he approached her the ape drew away.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Teeka," he said, "it is Tarzan. You belong to Tarzan.
|
||
|
I have come for you."
|
||
|
|
||
|
The ape drew closer, looking him over carefully.
|
||
|
Finally she sniffed at him, as though to make assurance
|
||
|
doubly sure.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Where is Taug?" she asked.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"The Gomangani have him," replied Tarzan. "They will
|
||
|
kill him."
|
||
|
|
||
|
In the eyes of the she, Tarzan saw a wistful expression
|
||
|
and a troubled look of sorrow as he told her of Taug's fate;
|
||
|
but she came quite close and snuggled against him,
|
||
|
and Tarzan, Lord Greystoke, put his arm about her.
|
||
|
|
||
|
As he did so he noticed, with a start, the strange
|
||
|
incongruity of that smooth, brown arm against the black
|
||
|
and hairy coat of his lady-love. He recalled the paw of
|
||
|
Sheeta's mate across Sheeta's face--no incongruity there.
|
||
|
He thought of little Manu hugging his she, and how the one
|
||
|
seemed to belong to the other. Even the proud male bird,
|
||
|
with his gay plumage, bore a close resemblance to his
|
||
|
quieter spouse, while Numa, but for his shaggy mane,
|
||
|
was almost a counterpart of Sabor, the lioness.
|
||
|
The males and the females differed, it was true;
|
||
|
but not with such differences as existed between Tarzan
|
||
|
and Teeka.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tarzan was puzzled. There was something wrong. His arm
|
||
|
dropped from the shoulder of Teeka. Very slowly he drew
|
||
|
away from her. She looked at him with her head cocked
|
||
|
upon one side. Tarzan rose to his full height and beat
|
||
|
upon his breast with his fists. He raised his head toward
|
||
|
the heavens and opened his mouth. From the depths of his
|
||
|
lungs rose the fierce, weird challenge of the victorious
|
||
|
bull ape. The tribe turned curiously to eye him.
|
||
|
He had killed nothing, nor was there any antagonist to be
|
||
|
goaded to madness by the savage scream. No, there was
|
||
|
no excuse for it, and they turned back to their feeding,
|
||
|
but with an eye upon the ape-man lest he be preparing
|
||
|
to suddenly run amuck.
|
||
|
|
||
|
As they watched him they saw him swing into a near-by
|
||
|
tree and disappear from sight. Then they forgot him,
|
||
|
even Teeka.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Mbonga's black warriors, sweating beneath their strenuous task,
|
||
|
and resting often, made slow progress toward their village.
|
||
|
Always the savage beast in the primitive cage growled
|
||
|
and roared when they moved him. He beat upon the bars
|
||
|
and slavered at the mouth. His noise was hideous.
|
||
|
|
||
|
They had almost completed their journey and were making
|
||
|
their final rest before forging ahead to gain the clearing
|
||
|
in which lay their village. A few more minutes would
|
||
|
have taken them out of the forest, and then, doubtless,
|
||
|
the thing would not have happened which did happen.
|
||
|
|
||
|
A silent figure moved through the trees above them.
|
||
|
Keen eyes inspected the cage and counted the number
|
||
|
of warriors. An alert and daring brain figured upon
|
||
|
the chances of success when a certain plan should be put
|
||
|
to the test.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tarzan watched the blacks lolling in the shade.
|
||
|
They were exhausted. Already several of them slept.
|
||
|
He crept closer, pausing just above them. Not a leaf rustled
|
||
|
before his stealthy advance. He waited in the infinite
|
||
|
patience of the beast of prey. Presently but two of the
|
||
|
warriors remained awake, and one of these was dozing.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tarzan of the Apes gathered himself, and as he did so the
|
||
|
black who did not sleep arose and passed around to the rear
|
||
|
of the cage. The ape-boy followed just above his head.
|
||
|
Taug was eyeing the warrior and emitting low growls.
|
||
|
Tarzan feared that the anthropoid would awaken the sleepers.
|
||
|
|
||
|
In a whisper which was inaudible to the ears of the Negro,
|
||
|
Tarzan whispered Taug's name, cautioning the ape to silence,
|
||
|
and Taug's growling ceased.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The black approached the rear of the cage and examined
|
||
|
the fastenings of the door, and as he stood there the
|
||
|
beast above him launched itself from the tree full upon
|
||
|
his back. Steel fingers circled his throat, choking the
|
||
|
cry which sprang to the lips of the terrified man.
|
||
|
Strong teeth fastened themselves in his shoulder,
|
||
|
and powerful legs wound themselves about his torso.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The black in a frenzy of terror tried to dislodge
|
||
|
the silent thing which clung to him. He threw himself
|
||
|
to the ground and rolled about; but still those mighty
|
||
|
fingers closed more and more tightly their deadly grip.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The man's mouth gaped wide, his swollen tongue protruded,
|
||
|
his eyes started from their sockets; but the relentless
|
||
|
fingers only increased their pressure.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Taug was a silent witness of the struggle. In his fierce
|
||
|
little brain he doubtless wondered what purpose prompted
|
||
|
Tarzan to attack the black. Taug had not forgotten his
|
||
|
recent battle with the ape-boy, nor the cause of it.
|
||
|
Now he saw the form of the Gomangani suddenly go limp.
|
||
|
There was a convulsive shiver and the man lay still.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tarzan sprang from his prey and ran to the door of the cage.
|
||
|
With nimble fingers he worked rapidly at the thongs
|
||
|
which held the door in place. Taug could only watch--he
|
||
|
could not help. Presently Tarzan pushed the thing up
|
||
|
a couple of feet and Taug crawled out. The ape would
|
||
|
have turned upon the sleeping blacks that he might wreak
|
||
|
his pent vengeance; but Tarzan would not permit it.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Instead, the ape-boy dragged the body of the black
|
||
|
within the cage and propped it against the side bars.
|
||
|
Then he lowered the door and made fast the thongs as they
|
||
|
had been before.
|
||
|
|
||
|
A happy smile lighted his features as he worked,
|
||
|
for one of his principal diversions was the baiting
|
||
|
of the blacks of Mbonga's village. He could imagine
|
||
|
their terror when they awoke and found the dead body
|
||
|
of their comrade fast in the cage where they had left
|
||
|
the great ape safely secured but a few minutes before.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tarzan and Taug took to the trees together, the shaggy
|
||
|
coat of the fierce ape brushing the sleek skin of the
|
||
|
English lordling as they passed through the primeval
|
||
|
jungle side by side.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Go back to Teeka," said Tarzan. "She is yours.
|
||
|
Tarzan does not want her."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Tarzan has found another she?" asked Taug.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The ape-boy shrugged.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"For the Gomangani there is another Gomangani," he said;
|
||
|
"for Numa, the lion, there is Sabor, the lioness;
|
||
|
for Sheeta there is a she of his own kind; for Bara,
|
||
|
the deer; for Manu, the monkey; for all the beasts
|
||
|
and the birds of the jungle is there a mate. Only for
|
||
|
Tarzan of the Apes is there none. Taug is an ape.
|
||
|
Teeka is an ape. Go back to Teeka. Tarzan is a man.
|
||
|
He will go alone."
|
||
|
|
||
|
2
|
||
|
|
||
|
The Capture of Tarzan
|
||
|
|
||
|
THE BLACK WARRIORS labored in the humid heat of the jungle's
|
||
|
stifling shade. With war spears they loosened the thick,
|
||
|
black loam and the deep layers of rotting vegetation.
|
||
|
With heavy-nailed fingers they scooped away the disintegrated
|
||
|
earth from the center of the age-old game trail. Often they
|
||
|
ceased their labors to squat, resting and gossiping,
|
||
|
with much laughter, at the edge of the pit they were digging.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Against the boles of near-by trees leaned their long,
|
||
|
oval shields of thick buffalo hide, and the spears
|
||
|
of those who were doing the scooping. Sweat glistened
|
||
|
upon their smooth, ebon skins, beneath which rolled
|
||
|
rounded muscles, supple in the perfection of nature's
|
||
|
uncontaminated health.
|
||
|
|
||
|
A reed buck, stepping warily along the trail toward water,
|
||
|
halted as a burst of laughter broke upon his startled ears.
|
||
|
For a moment he stood statuesque but for his sensitively
|
||
|
dilating nostrils; then he wheeled and fled noiselessly
|
||
|
from the terrifying presence of man.
|
||
|
|
||
|
A hundred yards away, deep in the tangle of impenetrable
|
||
|
jungle, Numa, the lion, raised his massive head. Numa had
|
||
|
dined well until almost daybreak and it had required much
|
||
|
noise to awaken him. Now he lifted his muzzle and sniffed
|
||
|
the air, caught the acrid scent spoor of the reed buck
|
||
|
and the heavy scent of man. But Numa was well filled.
|
||
|
With a low, disgusted grunt he rose and slunk away.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Brilliantly plumaged birds with raucous voices darted from
|
||
|
tree to tree. Little monkeys, chattering and scolding,
|
||
|
swung through the swaying limbs above the black warriors.
|
||
|
Yet they were alone, for the teeming jungle with all its
|
||
|
myriad life, like the swarming streets of a great metropolis,
|
||
|
is one of the loneliest spots in God's great universe.
|
||
|
|
||
|
But were they alone?
|
||
|
|
||
|
Above them, lightly balanced upon a leafy tree limb, a gray-eyed
|
||
|
youth watched with eager intentness their every move.
|
||
|
The fire of hate, restrained, smoldered beneath the lad's
|
||
|
evident desire to know the purpose of the black men's labors.
|
||
|
Such a one as these it was who had slain his beloved Kala.
|
||
|
For them there could be naught but enmity, yet he liked
|
||
|
well to watch them, avid as he was for greater knowledge
|
||
|
of the ways of man.
|
||
|
|
||
|
He saw the pit grow in depth until a great hole yawned
|
||
|
the width of the trail--a hole which was amply large
|
||
|
enough to hold at one time all of the six excavators.
|
||
|
Tarzan could not guess the purpose of so great a labor.
|
||
|
And when they cut long stakes, sharpened at their upper ends,
|
||
|
and set them at intervals upright in the bottom of the pit,
|
||
|
his wonderment but increased, nor was it satisfied with
|
||
|
the placing of the light cross-poles over the pit, or the
|
||
|
careful arrangement of leaves and earth which completely
|
||
|
hid from view the work the black men had performed.
|
||
|
|
||
|
When they were done they surveyed their handiwork with
|
||
|
evident satisfaction, and Tarzan surveyed it, too. Even to
|
||
|
his practiced eye there remained scarce a vestige of evidence
|
||
|
that the ancient game trail had been tampered with in any way.
|
||
|
|
||
|
So absorbed was the ape-man in speculation as to
|
||
|
the purpose of the covered pit that he permitted
|
||
|
the blacks to depart in the direction of their village
|
||
|
without the usual baiting which had rendered him
|
||
|
the terror of Mbonga's people and had afforded Tarzan
|
||
|
both a vehicle of revenge and a source of inexhaustible delight.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Puzzle as he would, however, he could not solve the mystery
|
||
|
of the concealed pit, for the ways of the blacks were still
|
||
|
strange ways to Tarzan. They had entered his jungle but a
|
||
|
short time before--the first of their kind to encroach upon
|
||
|
the age-old supremacy of the beasts which laired there.
|
||
|
To Numa, the lion, to Tantor, the elephant, to the great
|
||
|
apes and the lesser apes, to each and all of the myriad
|
||
|
creatures of this savage wild, the ways of man were new.
|
||
|
They had much to learn of these black, hairless creatures
|
||
|
that walked erect upon their hind paws--and they were
|
||
|
learning it slowly, and always to their sorrow.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Shortly after the blacks had departed, Tarzan swung easily
|
||
|
to the trail. Sniffing suspiciously, he circled the edge
|
||
|
of the pit. Squatting upon his haunches, he scraped
|
||
|
away a little earth to expose one of the cross-bars. He
|
||
|
sniffed at this, touched it, cocked his head upon one side,
|
||
|
and contemplated it gravely for several minutes. Then he
|
||
|
carefully re-covered it, arranging the earth as neatly
|
||
|
as had the blacks. This done, he swung himself back among
|
||
|
the branches of the trees and moved off in search of his
|
||
|
hairy fellows, the great apes of the tribe of Kerchak.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Once he crossed the trail of Numa, the lion, pausing for a
|
||
|
moment to hurl a soft fruit at the snarling face of his enemy,
|
||
|
and to taunt and insult him, calling him eater of carrion
|
||
|
and brother of Dango, the hyena. Numa, his yellow-green
|
||
|
eyes round and burning with concentrated hate, glared up
|
||
|
at the dancing figure above him. Low growls vibrated his
|
||
|
heavy jowls and his great rage transmitted to his sinuous
|
||
|
tail a sharp, whiplike motion; but realizing from past
|
||
|
experience the futility of long distance argument with the
|
||
|
ape-man, he turned presently and struck off into the tangled
|
||
|
vegetation which hid him from the view of his tormentor.
|
||
|
With a final scream of jungle invective and an apelike
|
||
|
grimace at his departing foe, Tarzan continued along his way.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Another mile and a shifting wind brought to his keen
|
||
|
nostrils a familiar, pungent odor close at hand,
|
||
|
and a moment later there loomed beneath him a huge,
|
||
|
gray-black bulk forging steadily along the jungle trail.
|
||
|
Tarzan seized and broke a small tree limb, and at the
|
||
|
sudden cracking sound the ponderous figure halted.
|
||
|
Great ears were thrown forward, and a long, supple trunk
|
||
|
rose quickly to wave to and fro in search of the scent
|
||
|
of an enemy, while two weak, little eyes peered suspiciously
|
||
|
and futilely about in quest of the author of the noise
|
||
|
which had disturbed his peaceful way.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tarzan laughed aloud and came closer above the head
|
||
|
of the pachyderm.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Tantor! Tantor!" he cried. "Bara, the deer, is less fearful
|
||
|
than you--you, Tantor, the elephant, greatest of the jungle
|
||
|
folk with the strength of as many Numas as I have toes upon
|
||
|
my feet and fingers upon my hands. Tantor, who can uproot
|
||
|
great trees, trembles with fear at the sound of a broken twig."
|
||
|
|
||
|
A rumbling noise, which might have been either a sign
|
||
|
of contempt or a sigh of relief, was Tantor's only reply
|
||
|
as the uplifted trunk and ears came down and the beast's
|
||
|
tail dropped to normal; but his eyes still roved about
|
||
|
in search of Tarzan. He was not long kept in suspense,
|
||
|
however, as to the whereabouts of the ape-man, for a second
|
||
|
later the youth dropped lightly to the broad head of his
|
||
|
old friend. Then stretching himself at full length,
|
||
|
he drummed with his bare toes upon the thick hide, and as
|
||
|
his fingers scratched the more tender surfaces beneath the
|
||
|
great ears, he talked to Tantor of the gossip of the jungle
|
||
|
as though the great beast understood every word that he said.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Much there was which Tarzan could make Tantor understand,
|
||
|
and though the small talk of the wild was beyond
|
||
|
the great, gray dreadnaught of the jungle, he stood
|
||
|
with blinking eyes and gently swaying trunk as though
|
||
|
drinking in every word of it with keenest appreciation.
|
||
|
As a matter of fact it was the pleasant, friendly voice
|
||
|
and caressing hands behind his ears which he enjoyed,
|
||
|
and the close proximity of him whom he had often borne
|
||
|
upon his back since Tarzan, as a little child, had once
|
||
|
fearlessly approached the great bull, assuming upon the
|
||
|
part of the pachyderm the same friendliness which filled
|
||
|
his own heart.
|
||
|
|
||
|
In the years of their association Tarzan had discovered
|
||
|
that he possessed an inexplicable power to govern and
|
||
|
direct his mighty friend. At his bidding, Tantor would
|
||
|
come from a great distance--as far as his keen ears could
|
||
|
detect the shrill and piercing summons of the ape-man--and
|
||
|
when Tarzan was squatted upon his head, Tantor would
|
||
|
lumber through the jungle in any direction which his
|
||
|
rider bade him go. It was the power of the man-mind
|
||
|
over that of the brute and it was just as effective
|
||
|
as though both fully understood its origin, though neither did.
|
||
|
|
||
|
For half an hour Tarzan sprawled there upon Tantor's back.
|
||
|
Time had no meaning for either of them. Life, as they saw it,
|
||
|
consisted principally in keeping their stomachs filled.
|
||
|
To Tarzan this was a less arduous labor than to Tantor,
|
||
|
for Tarzan's stomach was smaller, and being omnivorous,
|
||
|
food was less difficult to obtain. If one sort did not
|
||
|
come readily to hand, there were always many others to
|
||
|
satisfy his hunger. He was less particular as to his diet
|
||
|
than Tantor, who would eat only the bark of certain trees,
|
||
|
and the wood of others, while a third appealed to him only
|
||
|
through its leaves, and these, perhaps, just at certain
|
||
|
seasons of the year.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tantor must needs spend the better part of his life
|
||
|
in filling his immense stomach against the needs of his
|
||
|
mighty thews. It is thus with all the lower orders--their
|
||
|
lives are so occupied either with searching for food or
|
||
|
with the processes of digestion that they have little time
|
||
|
for other considerations. Doubtless it is this handicap
|
||
|
which has kept them from advancing as rapidly as man,
|
||
|
who has more time to give to thought upon other matters.
|
||
|
|
||
|
However, these questions troubled Tarzan but little,
|
||
|
and Tantor not at all. What the former knew was that
|
||
|
he was happy in the companionship of the elephant.
|
||
|
He did not know why. He did not know that because he was
|
||
|
a human being-- a normal, healthy human being--he craved
|
||
|
some living thing upon which to lavish his affection.
|
||
|
His childhood playmates among the apes of Kerchak were
|
||
|
now great, sullen brutes. They felt nor inspired but
|
||
|
little affection. The younger apes Tarzan still played
|
||
|
with occasionally. In his savage way he loved them;
|
||
|
but they were far from satisfying or restful companions.
|
||
|
Tantor was a great mountain of calm, of poise, of stability.
|
||
|
It was restful and satisfying to sprawl upon his rough
|
||
|
pate and pour one's vague hopes and aspirations into
|
||
|
the great ears which flapped ponderously to and fro
|
||
|
in apparent understanding. Of all the jungle folk,
|
||
|
Tantor commanded Tarzan's greatest love since Kala
|
||
|
had been taken from him. Sometimes Tarzan wondered
|
||
|
if Tantor reciprocated his affection. It was difficult
|
||
|
to know.
|
||
|
|
||
|
It was the call of the stomach--the most compelling and
|
||
|
insistent call which the jungle knows--that took Tarzan
|
||
|
finally back to the trees and off in search of food,
|
||
|
while Tantor continued his interrupted journey in the
|
||
|
opposite direction.
|
||
|
|
||
|
For an hour the ape-man foraged. A lofty nest yielded
|
||
|
its fresh, warm harvest. Fruits, berries, and tender
|
||
|
plantain found a place upon his menu in the order that he
|
||
|
happened upon them, for he did not seek such foods.
|
||
|
Meat, meat, meat! It was always meat that Tarzan
|
||
|
of the Apes hunted; but sometimes meat eluded him, as today.
|
||
|
|
||
|
And as he roamed the jungle his active mind busied itself
|
||
|
not alone with his hunting, but with many other subjects.
|
||
|
He had a habit of recalling often the events of the preceding
|
||
|
days and hours. He lived over his visit with Tantor;
|
||
|
he cogitated upon the digging blacks and the strange,
|
||
|
covered pit they had left behind them. He wondered
|
||
|
again and again what its purpose might be. He compared
|
||
|
perceptions and arrived at judgments. He compared judgments,
|
||
|
reaching conclusions--not always correct ones, it is true,
|
||
|
but at least he used his brain for the purpose God
|
||
|
intended it, which was the less difficult because he was
|
||
|
not handicapped by the second-hand, and usually erroneous,
|
||
|
judgment of others.
|
||
|
|
||
|
And as he puzzled over the covered pit, there loomed
|
||
|
suddenly before his mental vision a huge, gray-black bulk
|
||
|
which lumbered ponderously along a jungle trail.
|
||
|
Instantly Tarzan tensed to the shock of a sudden fear.
|
||
|
Decision and action usually occurred simultaneously in
|
||
|
the life of the ape-man, and now he was away through the
|
||
|
leafy branches ere the realization of the pit's purpose
|
||
|
had scarce formed in his mind.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Swinging from swaying limb to swaying limb, he raced through
|
||
|
the middle terraces where the trees grew close together.
|
||
|
Again he dropped to the ground and sped, silently and
|
||
|
light of foot, over the carpet of decaying vegetation,
|
||
|
only to leap again into the trees where the tangled
|
||
|
undergrowth precluded rapid advance upon the surface.
|
||
|
|
||
|
In his anxiety he cast discretion to the winds.
|
||
|
The caution of the beast was lost in the loyalty of
|
||
|
the man, and so it came that he entered a large clearing,
|
||
|
denuded of trees, without a thought of what might lie
|
||
|
there or upon the farther edge to dispute the way with him.
|
||
|
|
||
|
He was half way across when directly in his path and
|
||
|
but a few yards away there rose from a clump of tall
|
||
|
grasses a half dozen chattering birds. Instantly Tarzan
|
||
|
turned aside, for he knew well enough what manner of creature
|
||
|
the presence of these little sentinels proclaimed.
|
||
|
Simultaneously Buto, the rhinoceros, scrambled to his
|
||
|
short legs and charged furiously. Haphazard charges Buto,
|
||
|
the rhinoceros. With his weak eyes he sees but poorly
|
||
|
even at short distances, and whether his erratic rushes
|
||
|
are due to the panic of fear as he attempts to escape,
|
||
|
or to the irascible temper with which he is generally credited,
|
||
|
it is difficult to determine. Nor is the matter of little
|
||
|
moment to one whom Buto charges, for if he be caught and tossed,
|
||
|
the chances are that naught will interest him thereafter.
|
||
|
|
||
|
And today it chanced that Buto bore down straight
|
||
|
upon Tarzan, across the few yards of knee-deep grass which
|
||
|
separated them. Accident started him in the direction
|
||
|
of the ape-man, and then his weak eyes discerned the enemy,
|
||
|
and with a series of snorts he charged straight for him.
|
||
|
The little rhino birds fluttered and circled about their
|
||
|
giant ward. Among the branches of the trees at the edge
|
||
|
of the clearing, a score or more monkeys chattered
|
||
|
and scolded as the loud snorts of the angry beast sent
|
||
|
them scurrying affrightedly to the upper terraces.
|
||
|
Tarzan alone appeared indifferent and serene.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Directly in the path of the charge he stood. There had been
|
||
|
no time to seek safety in the trees beyond the clearing,
|
||
|
nor had Tarzan any mind to delay his journey because
|
||
|
of Buto. He had met the stupid beast before and held
|
||
|
him in fine contempt.
|
||
|
|
||
|
And now Buto was upon him, the massive head lowered
|
||
|
and the long, heavy horn inclined for the frightful work
|
||
|
for which nature had designed it; but as he struck upward,
|
||
|
his weapon raked only thin air, for the ape-man had sprung
|
||
|
lightly aloft with a catlike leap that carried him above
|
||
|
the threatening horn to the broad back of the rhinoceros.
|
||
|
Another spring and he was on the ground behind the brute
|
||
|
and racing like a deer for the trees.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Buto, angered and mystified by the strange disappearance
|
||
|
of his prey, wheeled and charged frantically in
|
||
|
another direction, which chanced to be not the direction
|
||
|
of Tarzan's flight, and so the ape-man came in safety
|
||
|
to the trees and continued on his swift way through the forest.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Some distance ahead of him Tantor moved steadily along the
|
||
|
well-worn elephant trail, and ahead of Tantor a crouching,
|
||
|
black warrior listened intently in the middle of the path.
|
||
|
Presently he heard the sound for which he had been hoping--
|
||
|
the cracking, snapping sound which heralded the approach
|
||
|
of an elephant.
|
||
|
|
||
|
To his right and left in other parts of the jungle other
|
||
|
warriors were watching. A low signal, passed from one
|
||
|
to another, apprised the most distant that the quarry
|
||
|
was afoot. Rapidly they converged toward the trail,
|
||
|
taking positions in trees down wind from the point
|
||
|
at which Tantor must pass them. Silently they waited
|
||
|
and presently were rewarded by the sight of a mighty
|
||
|
tusker carrying an amount of ivory in his long tusks
|
||
|
that set their greedy hearts to palpitating.
|
||
|
|
||
|
No sooner had he passed their positions than the warriors
|
||
|
clambered from their perches. No longer were they silent,
|
||
|
but instead clapped their hands and shouted as they
|
||
|
reached the ground. For an instant Tantor, the elephant,
|
||
|
paused with upraised trunk and tail, with great ears
|
||
|
up-pricked, and then he swung on along the trail at a rapid,
|
||
|
shuffling pace--straight toward the covered pit with its
|
||
|
sharpened stakes upstanding in the ground.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Behind him came the yelling warriors, urging him on
|
||
|
in the rapid flight which would not permit a careful
|
||
|
examination of the ground before him. Tantor, the elephant,
|
||
|
who could have turned and scattered his adversaries
|
||
|
with a single charge, fled like a frightened deer--fled
|
||
|
toward a hideous, torturing death.
|
||
|
|
||
|
And behind them all came Tarzan of the Apes, racing through
|
||
|
the jungle forest with the speed and agility of a squirrel,
|
||
|
for he had heard the shouts of the warriors and had
|
||
|
interpreted them correctly. Once he uttered a piercing
|
||
|
call that reverberated through the jungle; but Tantor,
|
||
|
in the panic of terror, either failed to hear, or hearing,
|
||
|
dared not pause to heed.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Now the giant pachyderm was but a few yards from
|
||
|
the hidden death lurking in his path, and the blacks,
|
||
|
certain of success, were screaming and dancing in his wake,
|
||
|
waving their war spears and celebrating in advance the
|
||
|
acquisition of the splendid ivory carried by their prey
|
||
|
and the surfeit of elephant meat which would be theirs this
|
||
|
night.
|
||
|
|
||
|
So intent were they upon their gratulations that they
|
||
|
entirely failed to note the silent passage of the man-beast
|
||
|
above their heads, nor did Tantor, either, see or hear him,
|
||
|
even though Tarzan called to him to stop.
|
||
|
|
||
|
A few more steps would precipitate Tantor upon the sharpened
|
||
|
stakes;
|
||
|
Tarzan fairly flew through the trees until he had come
|
||
|
abreast of the fleeing animal and then had passed him.
|
||
|
At the pit's verge the ape-man dropped to the ground
|
||
|
in the center of the trail. Tantor was almost upon him
|
||
|
before his weak eyes permitted him to recognize his old friend.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Stop!" cried Tarzan, and the great beast halted
|
||
|
to the upraised hand.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tarzan turned and kicked aside some of the brush which hid
|
||
|
the pit. Instantly Tantor saw and understood.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Fight!" growled Tarzan. "They are coming behind you."
|
||
|
But Tantor, the elephant, is a huge bunch of nerves,
|
||
|
and now he was half panic-stricken by terror.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Before him yawned the pit, how far he did not know, but to
|
||
|
right and left lay the primeval jungle untouched by man.
|
||
|
With a squeal the great beast turned suddenly at right
|
||
|
angles and burst his noisy way through the solid wall
|
||
|
of matted vegetation that would have stopped any but him.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tarzan, standing upon the edge of the pit, smiled as he
|
||
|
watched Tantor's undignified flight. Soon the blacks
|
||
|
would come. It was best that Tarzan of the Apes faded
|
||
|
from the scene. He essayed a step from the pit's edge,
|
||
|
and as he threw the weight of his body upon his left foot,
|
||
|
the earth crumbled away. Tarzan made a single Herculean
|
||
|
effort to throw himself forward, but it was too late.
|
||
|
Backward and downward he went toward the sharpened stakes in
|
||
|
the bottom of the pit.
|
||
|
|
||
|
When, a moment later, the blacks came they saw even
|
||
|
from a distance that Tantor had eluded them, for the
|
||
|
size of the hole in the pit covering was too small
|
||
|
to have accommodated the huge bulk of an elephant.
|
||
|
At first they thought that their prey had put one great
|
||
|
foot through the top and then, warned, drawn back;
|
||
|
but when they had come to the pit's verge and peered over,
|
||
|
their eyes went wide in astonishment, for, quiet and still,
|
||
|
at the bottom lay the naked figure of a white giant.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Some of them there had glimpsed this forest god before
|
||
|
and they drew back in terror, awed by the presence
|
||
|
which they had for some time believed to possess the
|
||
|
miraculous powers of a demon; but others there were who
|
||
|
pushed forward, thinking only of the capture of an enemy,
|
||
|
and these leaped into the pit and lifted Tarzan out.
|
||
|
|
||
|
There was no scar upon his body. None of the sharpened
|
||
|
stakes had pierced him--only a swollen spot at the base
|
||
|
of the brain indicated the nature of his injury.
|
||
|
In the falling backward his head had struck upon the
|
||
|
side of one of the stakes, rendering him unconscious.
|
||
|
The blacks were quick to discover this, and equally
|
||
|
quick to bind their prisoner's arms and legs before he
|
||
|
should regain consciousness, for they had learned to
|
||
|
harbor a wholesome respect for this strange man-beast
|
||
|
that consorted with the hairy tree folk.
|
||
|
|
||
|
They had carried him but a short distance toward their
|
||
|
village when the ape-man's eyelids quivered and raised.
|
||
|
He looked about him wonderingly for a moment,
|
||
|
and then full consciousness returned and he realized
|
||
|
the seriousness of his predicament. Accustomed almost
|
||
|
from birth to relying solely upon his own resources,
|
||
|
he did not cast about for outside aid now, but devoted
|
||
|
his mind to a consideration of the possibilities
|
||
|
for escape which lay within himself and his own powers.
|
||
|
|
||
|
He did not dare test the strength of his bonds while the
|
||
|
blacks were carrying him, for fear they would become
|
||
|
apprehensive and add to them. Presently his captors
|
||
|
discovered that he was conscious, and as they had little
|
||
|
stomach for carrying a heavy man through the jungle heat,
|
||
|
they set him upon his feet and forced him forward
|
||
|
among them, pricking him now and then with their spears,
|
||
|
yet with every manifestation of the superstitious awe
|
||
|
in which they held him.
|
||
|
|
||
|
When they discovered that their prodding brought no outward
|
||
|
evidence of suffering, their awe increased, so that they
|
||
|
soon desisted, half believing that this strange white
|
||
|
giant was a supernatural being and so was immune from pain.
|
||
|
|
||
|
As they approached their village, they shouted aloud the
|
||
|
victorious cries of successful warriors, so that by the time
|
||
|
they reached the gate, dancing and waving their spears,
|
||
|
a great crowd of men, women, and children were gathered
|
||
|
there to greet them and hear the story of their adventure.
|
||
|
|
||
|
As the eyes of the villagers fell upon the prisoner,
|
||
|
they went wild, and heavy jaws fell open in astonishment
|
||
|
and incredulity. For months they had lived in perpetual
|
||
|
terror of a weird, white demon whom but few had ever
|
||
|
glimpsed and lived to describe. Warriors had disappeared
|
||
|
from the paths almost within sight of the village and
|
||
|
from the midst of their companions as mysteriously and
|
||
|
completely as though they had been swallowed by the earth,
|
||
|
and later, at night, their dead bodies had fallen,
|
||
|
as from the heavens, into the village street.
|
||
|
|
||
|
This fearsome creature had appeared by night in the huts
|
||
|
of the village, killed, and disappeared, leaving behind
|
||
|
him in the huts with his dead, strange and terrifying
|
||
|
evidences of an uncanny sense of humor.
|
||
|
|
||
|
But now he was in their power! No longer could he
|
||
|
terrorize them. Slowly the realization of this dawned
|
||
|
upon them. A woman, screaming, ran forward and struck
|
||
|
the ape-man across the face. Another and another followed
|
||
|
her example, until Tarzan of the Apes was surrounded
|
||
|
by a fighting, clawing, yelling mob of natives.
|
||
|
|
||
|
And then Mbonga, the chief, came, and laying his spear
|
||
|
heavily across the shoulders of his people, drove them
|
||
|
from their prey.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"We will save him until night," he said.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Far out in the jungle Tantor, the elephant, his first
|
||
|
panic of fear allayed, stood with up-pricked ears and
|
||
|
undulating trunk. What was passing through the convolutions
|
||
|
of his savage brain? Could he be searching for Tarzan?
|
||
|
Could he recall and measure the service the ape-man
|
||
|
had performed for him? Of that there can be no doubt.
|
||
|
But did he feel gratitude? Would he have risked his own
|
||
|
life to have saved Tarzan could he have known of the
|
||
|
danger which confronted his friend? You will doubt it.
|
||
|
Anyone at all familiar with elephants will doubt it.
|
||
|
Englishmen who have hunted much with elephants in India
|
||
|
will tell you that they never have heard of an instance
|
||
|
in which one of these animals has gone to the aid of a man
|
||
|
in danger, even though the man had often befriended it.
|
||
|
And so it is to be doubted that Tantor would have attempted
|
||
|
to overcome his instinctive fear of the black men in an
|
||
|
effort to succor Tarzan.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The screams of the infuriated villagers came faintly to
|
||
|
his sensitive ears, and he wheeled, as though in terror,
|
||
|
contemplating flight; but something stayed him,
|
||
|
and again he turned about, raised his trunk, and gave
|
||
|
voice to a shrill cry.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Then he stood listening.
|
||
|
|
||
|
In the distant village where Mbonga had restored quiet
|
||
|
and order, the voice of Tantor was scarcely audible
|
||
|
to the blacks, but to the keen ears of Tarzan of the Apes
|
||
|
it bore its message.
|
||
|
|
||
|
His captors were leading him to a hut where he might be
|
||
|
confined and guarded against the coming of the nocturnal
|
||
|
orgy that would mark his torture-laden death. He halted
|
||
|
as he heard the notes of Tantor's call, and raising
|
||
|
his head, gave vent to a terrifying scream that sent
|
||
|
cold chills through the superstitious blacks and caused
|
||
|
the warriors who guarded him to leap back even though
|
||
|
their prisoner's arms were securely bound behind him.
|
||
|
|
||
|
With raised spears they encircled him as for a moment
|
||
|
longer he stood listening. Faintly from the distance
|
||
|
came another, an answering cry, and Tarzan of the Apes,
|
||
|
satisfied, turned and quietly pursued his way toward
|
||
|
the hut where he was to be imprisoned.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The afternoon wore on. From the surrounding village the
|
||
|
ape-man heard the bustle of preparation for the feast.
|
||
|
Through the doorway of the hut he saw the women laying the
|
||
|
cooking fires and filling their earthen caldrons with water;
|
||
|
but above it all his ears were bent across the jungle
|
||
|
in eager listening for the coming of Tantor.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Even Tarzan but half believed that he would come.
|
||
|
He knew Tantor even better than Tantor knew himself.
|
||
|
He knew the timid heart which lay in the giant body.
|
||
|
He knew the panic of terror which the scent of the Gomangani
|
||
|
inspired within that savage breast, and as night drew on,
|
||
|
hope died within his heart and in the stoic calm of the wild
|
||
|
beast which he was, he resigned himself to meet the fate
|
||
|
which awaited him.
|
||
|
|
||
|
All afternoon he had been working, working, working with the
|
||
|
bonds that held his wrists. Very slowly they were giving.
|
||
|
He might free his hands before they came to lead him out
|
||
|
to be butchered, and if he did--Tarzan licked his lips
|
||
|
in anticipation, and smiled a cold, grim smile. He could
|
||
|
imagine the feel of soft flesh beneath his fingers and the
|
||
|
sinking of his white teeth into the throats of his foemen.
|
||
|
He would let them taste his wrath before they overpowered him!
|
||
|
|
||
|
At last they came--painted, befeathered warriors--even
|
||
|
more hideous than nature had intended them. They came
|
||
|
and pushed him into the open, where his appearance was
|
||
|
greeted by wild shouts from the assembled villagers.
|
||
|
|
||
|
To the stake they led him, and as they pushed him roughly
|
||
|
against it preparatory to binding him there securely
|
||
|
for the dance of death that would presently encircle him,
|
||
|
Tarzan tensed his mighty thews and with a single,
|
||
|
powerful wrench parted the loosened thongs which had
|
||
|
secured his hands. Like thought, for quickness,
|
||
|
he leaped forward among the warriors nearest him.
|
||
|
A blow sent one to earth, as, growling and snarling,
|
||
|
the beast-man leaped upon the breast of another.
|
||
|
His fangs were buried instantly in the jugular of his
|
||
|
adversary and then a half hundred black men had leaped
|
||
|
upon him and borne him to earth.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Striking, clawing, and snapping, the ape-man fought--
|
||
|
fought as his foster people had taught him to fight--fought
|
||
|
like a wild beast cornered. His strength, his agility,
|
||
|
his courage, and his intelligence rendered him easily a match
|
||
|
for half a dozen black men in a hand-to-hand struggle,
|
||
|
but not even Tarzan of the Apes could hope to successfully
|
||
|
cope with half a hundred.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Slowly they were overpowering him, though a score of them
|
||
|
bled from ugly wounds, and two lay very still beneath the
|
||
|
trampling feet, and the rolling bodies of the contestants.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Overpower him they might, but could they keep him
|
||
|
overpowered while they bound him? A half hour of
|
||
|
desperate endeavor convinced them that they could not,
|
||
|
and so Mbonga, who, like all good rulers, had circled in
|
||
|
the safety of the background, called to one to work his way
|
||
|
in and spear the victim. Gradually, through the milling,
|
||
|
battling men, the warrior approached the object of his quest.
|
||
|
|
||
|
He stood with poised spear above his head waiting for
|
||
|
the instant that would expose a vulnerable part of the
|
||
|
ape-man's body and still not endanger one of the blacks.
|
||
|
Closer and closer he edged about, following the movements
|
||
|
of the twisting, scuffling combatants. The growls
|
||
|
of the ape-man sent cold chills up the warrior's spine,
|
||
|
causing him to go carefully lest he miss at the first cast
|
||
|
and lay himself open to an attack from those merciless
|
||
|
teeth and mighty hands.
|
||
|
|
||
|
At last he found an opening. Higher he raised his spear,
|
||
|
tensing his muscles, rolling beneath his glistening, ebon hide,
|
||
|
and then from the jungle just beyond the palisade came
|
||
|
a thunderous crashing. The spear-hand paused, the black
|
||
|
cast a quick glance in the direction of the disturbance,
|
||
|
as did the others of the blacks who were not occupied
|
||
|
with the subjugation of the ape-man.
|
||
|
|
||
|
In the glare of the fires they saw a huge bulk topping
|
||
|
the barrier. They saw the palisade belly and sway inward.
|
||
|
They saw it burst as though built of straws, and an instant
|
||
|
later Tantor, the elephant, thundered down upon them.
|
||
|
|
||
|
To right and left the blacks fled, screaming in terror.
|
||
|
Some who hovered upon the verge of the strife with Tarzan
|
||
|
heard and made good their escape, but a half dozen there
|
||
|
were so wrapt in the blood-madness of battle that they
|
||
|
failed to note the approach of the giant tusker.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Upon these Tantor charged, trumpeting furiously. Above them
|
||
|
he stopped, his sensitive trunk weaving among them, and there,
|
||
|
at the bottom, he found Tarzan, bloody, but still battling.
|
||
|
|
||
|
A warrior turned his eyes upward from the melee.
|
||
|
Above him towered the gigantic bulk of the pachyderm,
|
||
|
the little eyes flashing with the reflected light of the
|
||
|
fires--wicked, frightful, terrifying. The warrior screamed,
|
||
|
and as he screamed, the sinuous trunk encircled him,
|
||
|
lifted him high above the ground, and hurled him far after
|
||
|
the fleeing crowd.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Another and another Tantor wrenched from the body
|
||
|
of the ape-man, throwing them to right and to left,
|
||
|
where they lay either moaning or very quiet, as death
|
||
|
came slowly or at once.
|
||
|
|
||
|
At a distance Mbonga rallied his warriors. His greedy
|
||
|
eyes had noted the great ivory tusks of the bull.
|
||
|
The first panic of terror relieved, he urged his men
|
||
|
forward to attack with their heavy elephant spears;
|
||
|
but as they came, Tantor swung Tarzan to his broad head,
|
||
|
and, wheeling, lumbered off into the jungle through
|
||
|
the great rent he had made in the palisade.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Elephant hunters may be right when they aver that this
|
||
|
animal would not have rendered such service to a man,
|
||
|
but to Tantor, Tarzan was not a man--he was but a fellow
|
||
|
jungle beast.
|
||
|
|
||
|
And so it was that Tantor, the elephant, discharged an
|
||
|
obligation to Tarzan of the Apes, cementing even more
|
||
|
closely the friendship that had existed between them
|
||
|
since Tarzan as a little, brown boy rode upon Tantor's huge
|
||
|
back through the moonlit jungle beneath the equatorial stars.
|
||
|
|
||
|
3
|
||
|
|
||
|
The Fight for the Balu
|
||
|
|
||
|
TEEKA HAD BECOME a mother. Tarzan of the Apes was
|
||
|
intensely interested, much more so, in fact, than Taug,
|
||
|
the father. Tarzan was very fond of Teeka. Even the cares
|
||
|
of prospective motherhood had not entirely quenched the fires
|
||
|
of carefree youth, and Teeka had remained a good-natured
|
||
|
playmate even at an age when other shes of the tribe
|
||
|
of Kerchak had assumed the sullen dignity of maturity.
|
||
|
She yet retained her childish delight in the primitive
|
||
|
games of tag and hide-and-go-seek which Tarzan's fertile
|
||
|
man-mind had evolved.
|
||
|
|
||
|
To play tag through the tree tops is an exciting
|
||
|
and inspiring pastime. Tarzan delighted in it,
|
||
|
but the bulls of his childhood had long since abandoned
|
||
|
such childish practices. Teeka, though, had been keen
|
||
|
for it always until shortly before the baby came;
|
||
|
but with the advent of her first-born, even Teeka changed.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The evidence of the change surprised and hurt Tarzan
|
||
|
immeasurably.
|
||
|
One morning he saw Teeka squatted upon a low branch hugging
|
||
|
something very close to her hairy breast-- a wee something
|
||
|
which squirmed and wriggled. Tarzan approached filled
|
||
|
with the curiosity which is common to all creatures endowed
|
||
|
with brains which have progressed beyond the microscopic stage.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Teeka rolled her eyes in his direction and strained the
|
||
|
squirming mite still closer to her. Tarzan came nearer.
|
||
|
Teeka drew away and bared her fangs. Tarzan was nonplussed.
|
||
|
In all his experiences with Teeka, never before had she
|
||
|
bared fangs at him other than in play; but today she did
|
||
|
not look playful. Tarzan ran his brown fingers through
|
||
|
his thick, black hair, cocked his head upon one side,
|
||
|
and stared. Then he edged a bit nearer, craning his neck
|
||
|
to have a better look at the thing which Teeka cuddled.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Again Teeka drew back her upper lip in a warning snarl.
|
||
|
Tarzan reached forth a hand, cautiously, to touch the
|
||
|
thing which Teeka held, and Teeka, with a hideous growl,
|
||
|
turned suddenly upon him. Her teeth sank into the
|
||
|
flesh of his forearm before the ape-man could snatch
|
||
|
it away, and she pursued him for a short distance
|
||
|
as he retreated incontinently through the trees;
|
||
|
but Teeka, carrying her baby, could not overtake him.
|
||
|
At a safe distance Tarzan stopped and turned to regard
|
||
|
his erstwhile play-fellow in unconcealed astonishment.
|
||
|
What had happened to so alter the gentle Teeka? She had
|
||
|
so covered the thing in her arms that Tarzan had not yet
|
||
|
been able to recognize it for what it was; but now, as she
|
||
|
turned from the pursuit of him, he saw it. Through his
|
||
|
pain and chagrin he smiled, for Tarzan had seen young ape
|
||
|
mothers before. In a few days she would be less suspicious.
|
||
|
Still Tarzan was hurt; it was not right that Teeka,
|
||
|
of all others, should fear him. Why, not for the world
|
||
|
would he harm her, or her balu, which is the ape word
|
||
|
for baby.
|
||
|
|
||
|
And now, above the pain of his injured arm and the hurt
|
||
|
to his pride, rose a still stronger desire to come close
|
||
|
and inspect the new-born son of Taug. Possibly you will
|
||
|
wonder that Tarzan of the Apes, mighty fighter that he was,
|
||
|
should have fled before the irritable attack of a she,
|
||
|
or that he should hesitate to return for the satisfaction
|
||
|
of his curiosity when with ease he might have vanquished
|
||
|
the weakened mother of the new-born cub; but you need
|
||
|
not wonder. Were you an ape, you would know that only
|
||
|
a bull in the throes of madness will turn upon a female
|
||
|
other than to gently chastise her, with the occasional
|
||
|
exception of the individual whom we find exemplified among
|
||
|
our own kind, and who delights in beating up his better
|
||
|
half because she happens to be smaller and weaker than he.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tarzan again came toward the young mother--warily
|
||
|
and with his line of retreat safely open. Again Teeka
|
||
|
growled ferociously. Tarzan expostulated.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Tarzan of the Apes will not harm Teeka's balu," he said.
|
||
|
"Let me see it."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Go away!" commanded Teeka. "Go away, or I will kill you."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Let me see it," urged Tarzan.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Go away," reiterated the she-ape. "Here comes Taug.
|
||
|
He will make you go away. Taug will kill you. This is
|
||
|
Taug's balu."
|
||
|
|
||
|
A savage growl close behind him apprised Tarzan of the
|
||
|
nearness of Taug, and the fact that the bull had heard the
|
||
|
warnings and threats of his mate and was coming to her succor.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Now Taug, as well as Teeka, had been Tarzan's play-fellow
|
||
|
while the bull was still young enough to wish to play.
|
||
|
Once Tarzan had saved Taug's life; but the memory
|
||
|
of an ape is not overlong, nor would gratitude rise
|
||
|
above the parental instinct. Tarzan and Taug had once
|
||
|
measured strength, and Tarzan had been victorious.
|
||
|
That fact Taug could be depended upon still to remember;
|
||
|
but even so, he might readily face another defeat for his
|
||
|
first-born--if he chanced to be in the proper mood.
|
||
|
|
||
|
From his hideous growls, which now rose in strength
|
||
|
and volume, he seemed to be in quite the mood. Now Tarzan
|
||
|
felt no fear of Taug, nor did the unwritten law of the jungle
|
||
|
demand that he should flee from battle with any male,
|
||
|
unless he cared to from purely personal reasons.
|
||
|
But Tarzan liked Taug. He had no grudge against him,
|
||
|
and his man-mind told him what the mind of an ape would
|
||
|
never have deduced-- that Taug's attitude in no sense
|
||
|
indicated hatred. It was but the instinctive urge
|
||
|
of the male to protect its offspring and its mate.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tarzan had no desire to battle with Taug, nor did the blood
|
||
|
of his English ancestors relish the thought of flight,
|
||
|
yet when the bull charged, Tarzan leaped nimbly to one side,
|
||
|
and thus encouraged, Taug wheeled and rushed again madly
|
||
|
to the attack. Perhaps the memory of a past defeat at
|
||
|
Tarzan's hands goaded him. Perhaps the fact that Teeka sat
|
||
|
there watching him aroused a desire to vanquish the ape-man
|
||
|
before her eyes, for in the breast of every jungle male lurks
|
||
|
a vast egotism which finds expression in the performance
|
||
|
of deeds of derring-do before an audience of the opposite sex.
|
||
|
|
||
|
At the ape-man's side swung his long grass rope--the
|
||
|
play-thing of yesterday, the weapon of today--and
|
||
|
as Taug charged the second time, Tarzan slipped the
|
||
|
coils over his head and deftly shook out the sliding
|
||
|
noose as he again nimbly eluded the ungainly beast.
|
||
|
Before the ape could turn again, Tarzan had fled
|
||
|
far aloft among the branches of the upper terrace.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Taug, now wrought to a frenzy of real rage, followed him.
|
||
|
Teeka peered upward at them. It was difficult to say
|
||
|
whether she was interested. Taug could not climb as
|
||
|
rapidly as Tarzan, so the latter reached the high levels
|
||
|
to which the heavy ape dared not follow before the former
|
||
|
overtook him. There he halted and looked down upon
|
||
|
his pursuer, making faces at him and calling him such
|
||
|
choice names as occurred to the fertile man-brain. Then,
|
||
|
when he had worked Taug to such a pitch of foaming rage
|
||
|
that the great bull fairly danced upon the bending limb
|
||
|
beneath him, Tarzan's hand shot suddenly outward, a widening
|
||
|
noose dropped swiftly through the air, there was a quick
|
||
|
jerk as it settled about Taug, falling to his knees,
|
||
|
a jerk that tightened it securely about the hairy legs
|
||
|
of the anthropoid.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Taug, slow of wit, realized too late the intention of
|
||
|
his tormentor. He scrambled to escape, but the ape-man
|
||
|
gave the rope a tremendous jerk that pulled Taug from
|
||
|
his perch, and a moment later, growling hideously,
|
||
|
the ape hung head downward thirty feet above the ground.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tarzan secured the rope to a stout limb and descended
|
||
|
to a point close to Taug.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Taug," he said, "you are as stupid as Buto, the rhinoceros.
|
||
|
Now you may hang here until you get a little sense
|
||
|
in your thick head. You may hang here and watch while I
|
||
|
go and talk with Teeka."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Taug blustered and threatened, but Tarzan only grinned
|
||
|
at him as he dropped lightly to the lower levels. Here he
|
||
|
again approached Teeka only to be again greeted with bared
|
||
|
fangs and menacing growls. He sought to placate her;
|
||
|
he urged his friendly intentions, and craned his neck to
|
||
|
have a look at Teeka's balu; but the she-ape was not to be
|
||
|
persuaded that he meant other than harm to her little one.
|
||
|
Her motherhood was still so new that reason was yet
|
||
|
subservient to instinct.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Realizing the futility of attempting to catch
|
||
|
and chastise Tarzan, Teeka sought to escape him.
|
||
|
She dropped to the ground and lumbered across the little
|
||
|
clearing about which the apes of the tribe were disposed
|
||
|
in rest or in the search of food, and presently Tarzan
|
||
|
abandoned his attempts to persuade her to permit a close
|
||
|
examination of the balu. The ape-man would have liked
|
||
|
to handle the tiny thing. The very sight of it awakened
|
||
|
in his breast a strange yearning. He wished to cuddle
|
||
|
and fondle the grotesque little ape-thing. It was Teeka's
|
||
|
balu and Tarzan had once lavished his young affections upon
|
||
|
Teeka.
|
||
|
|
||
|
But now his attention was diverted by the voice of Taug.
|
||
|
The threats that had filled the ape's mouth had turned
|
||
|
to pleas. The tightening noose was stopping the circulation
|
||
|
of the blood in his legs--he was beginning to suffer.
|
||
|
Several apes sat near him highly interested in his predicament.
|
||
|
They made uncomplimentary remarks about him, for each of
|
||
|
them had felt the weight of Taug's mighty hands and the
|
||
|
strength of his great jaws. They were enjoying revenge.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Teeka, seeing that Tarzan had turned back toward
|
||
|
the trees, had halted in the center of the clearing,
|
||
|
and there she sat hugging her balu and casting suspicious
|
||
|
glances here and there. With the coming of the balu,
|
||
|
Teeka's care-free world had suddenly become peopled
|
||
|
with innumerable enemies. She saw an implacable foe
|
||
|
in Tarzan, always heretofore her best friend. Even poor
|
||
|
old Mumga, half blind and almost entirely toothless,
|
||
|
searching patiently for grubworms beneath a fallen log,
|
||
|
represented to her a malignant spirit thirsting for the
|
||
|
blood of little balus.
|
||
|
|
||
|
And while Teeka guarded suspiciously against harm,
|
||
|
where there was no harm, she failed to note two baleful,
|
||
|
yellow-green eyes staring fixedly at her from behind
|
||
|
a clump of bushes at the opposite side of the clearing.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Hollow from hunger, Sheeta, the panther, glared greedily
|
||
|
at the tempting meat so close at hand, but the sight
|
||
|
of the great bulls beyond gave him pause.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Ah, if the she-ape with her balu would but come just a
|
||
|
trifle nearer! A quick spring and he would be upon them
|
||
|
and away again with his meat before the bulls could prevent.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The tip of his tawny tail moved in spasmodic little jerks;
|
||
|
his lower jaw hung low, exposing a red tongue and
|
||
|
yellow fangs. But all this Teeka did not see, nor did any
|
||
|
other of the apes who were feeding or resting about her.
|
||
|
Nor did Tarzan or the apes in the trees.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Hearing the abuse which the bulls were pouring upon
|
||
|
the helpless Taug, Tarzan clambered quickly among them.
|
||
|
One was edging closer and leaning far out in an effort
|
||
|
to reach the dangling ape. He had worked himself into
|
||
|
quite a fury through recollection of the last occasion
|
||
|
upon which Taug had mauled him, and now he was bent
|
||
|
upon revenge. Once he had grasped the swinging ape,
|
||
|
he would quickly have drawn him within reach of his jaws.
|
||
|
Tarzan saw and was wroth. He loved a fair fight,
|
||
|
but the thing which this ape contemplated revolted him.
|
||
|
Already a hairy hand had clutched the helpless Taug when,
|
||
|
with an angry growl of protest, Tarzan leaped to the branch
|
||
|
at the attacking ape's side, and with a single mighty cuff,
|
||
|
swept him from his perch.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Surprised and enraged, the bull clutched madly for
|
||
|
support as he toppled sidewise, and then with an agile
|
||
|
movement succeeded in projecting himself toward another
|
||
|
limb a few feet below. Here he found a hand-hold,
|
||
|
quickly righted himself, and as quickly clambered
|
||
|
upward to be revenged upon Tarzan, but the ape-man was
|
||
|
otherwise engaged and did not wish to be interrupted.
|
||
|
He was explaining again to Taug the depths of the latter's
|
||
|
abysmal ignorance, and pointing out how much greater
|
||
|
and mightier was Tarzan of the Apes than Taug or any other ape.
|
||
|
|
||
|
In the end he would release Taug, but not until Taug
|
||
|
was fully acquainted with his own inferiority. And then
|
||
|
the maddened bull came from beneath, and instantly Tarzan
|
||
|
was transformed from a good-natured, teasing youth into
|
||
|
a snarling, savage beast. Along his scalp the hair
|
||
|
bristled: his upper lip drew back that his fighting fangs
|
||
|
might be uncovered and ready. He did not wait for the bull
|
||
|
to reach him, for something in the appearance or the voice
|
||
|
of the attacker aroused within the ape-man a feeling
|
||
|
of belligerent antagonism that would not be denied.
|
||
|
With a scream that carried no human note, Tarzan leaped
|
||
|
straight at the throat of the attacker.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The impetuosity of this act and the weight and momentum
|
||
|
of his body carried the bull backward, clutching and clawing
|
||
|
for support, down through the leafy branches of the tree.
|
||
|
For fifteen feet the two fell, Tarzan's teeth buried in
|
||
|
the jugular of his opponent, when a stout branch stopped
|
||
|
their descent. The bull struck full upon the small of his back
|
||
|
across the limb, hung there for a moment with the ape-man
|
||
|
still upon his breast, and then toppled over toward the ground.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tarzan had felt the instantaneous relaxation of the body
|
||
|
beneath him after the heavy impact with the tree limb,
|
||
|
and as the other turned completely over and started again
|
||
|
upon its fall toward the ground, he reached forth a hand
|
||
|
and caught the branch in time to stay his own descent,
|
||
|
while the ape dropped like a plummet to the foot of
|
||
|
the tree.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tarzan looked downward for a moment upon the still form
|
||
|
of his late antagonist, then he rose to his full height,
|
||
|
swelled his deep chest, smote upon it with his clenched
|
||
|
fist and roared out the uncanny challenge of the victorious
|
||
|
bull ape.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Even Sheeta, the panther, crouched for a spring at the edge
|
||
|
of the little clearing, moved uneasily as the mighty voice
|
||
|
sent its weird cry reverberating through the jungle.
|
||
|
To right and left, nervously, glanced Sheeta, as though
|
||
|
assuring himself that the way of escape lay ready at hand.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I am Tarzan of the Apes," boasted the ape-man;
|
||
|
"mighty hunter, mighty fighter! None in all the jungle
|
||
|
so great as Tarzan."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Then he made his way back in the direction of Taug.
|
||
|
Teeka had watched the happenings in the tree. She had
|
||
|
even placed her precious balu upon the soft grasses and
|
||
|
come a little nearer that she might better witness all
|
||
|
that was passing in the branches above her. In her heart
|
||
|
of hearts did she still esteem the smooth-skinned Tarzan?
|
||
|
Did her savage breast swell with pride as she witnessed
|
||
|
his victory over the ape? You will have to ask Teeka.
|
||
|
|
||
|
And Sheeta, the panther, saw that the she-ape had left
|
||
|
her cub alone among the grasses. He moved his tail again,
|
||
|
as though this closest approximation of lashing in which he
|
||
|
dared indulge might stimulate his momentarily waned courage.
|
||
|
The cry of the victorious ape-man still held his nerves
|
||
|
beneath its spell. It would be several minutes before he
|
||
|
again could bring himself to the point of charging into
|
||
|
view of the giant anthropoids.
|
||
|
|
||
|
And as he regathered his forces, Tarzan reached Taug's side,
|
||
|
and then clambering higher up to the point where the end
|
||
|
of the grass rope was made fast, he unloosed it and
|
||
|
lowered the ape slowly downward, swinging him in until
|
||
|
the clutching hands fastened upon a limb.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Quickly Taug drew himself to a position of safety and shook
|
||
|
off the noose. In his rage-maddened heart was no room
|
||
|
for gratitude to the ape-man. He recalled only the fact
|
||
|
that Tarzan had laid this painful indignity upon him.
|
||
|
He would be revenged, but just at present his legs were
|
||
|
so numb and his head so dizzy that he must postpone
|
||
|
the gratification of his vengeance.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tarzan was coiling his rope the while he lectured
|
||
|
Taug on the futility of pitting his poor powers,
|
||
|
physical and intellectual, against those of his betters.
|
||
|
Teeka had come close beneath the tree and was peering upward.
|
||
|
Sheeta was worming his way stealthily forward, his belly
|
||
|
close to the ground. In another moment he would be clear
|
||
|
of the underbrush and ready for the rapid charge and the quick
|
||
|
retreat that would end the brief existence of Teeka's balu.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Then Tarzan chanced to look up and across the clearing.
|
||
|
Instantly his attitude of good-natured bantering and pompous
|
||
|
boastfulness dropped from him. Silently and swiftly he
|
||
|
shot downward toward the ground. Teeka, seeing him coming,
|
||
|
and thinking that he was after her or her balu, bristled and
|
||
|
prepared to fight. But Tarzan sped by her, and as he went,
|
||
|
her eyes followed him and she saw the cause of his sudden
|
||
|
descent and his rapid charge across the clearing.
|
||
|
There in full sight now was Sheeta, the panther,
|
||
|
stalking slowly toward the tiny, wriggling balu which lay
|
||
|
among the grasses many yards away.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Teeka gave voice to a shrill scream of terror and of warning
|
||
|
as she dashed after the ape-man. Sheeta saw Tarzan coming.
|
||
|
He saw the she-ape's cub before him, and he thought
|
||
|
that this other was bent upon robbing him of his prey.
|
||
|
With an angry growl, he charged.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Taug, warned by Teeka's cry, came lumbering down to
|
||
|
her assistance. Several other bulls, growling and barking,
|
||
|
closed in toward the clearing, but they were all much farther
|
||
|
from the balu and the panther than was Tarzan of the Apes,
|
||
|
so it was that Sheeta and the ape-man reached Teeka's
|
||
|
little one almost simultaneously; and there they stood,
|
||
|
one upon either side of it, baring their fangs and snarling
|
||
|
at each other over the little creature.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Sheeta was afraid to seize the balu, for thus he would
|
||
|
give the ape-man an opening for attack; and for the same
|
||
|
reason Tarzan hesitated to snatch the panther's prey
|
||
|
out of harm's way, for had he stooped to accomplish this,
|
||
|
the great beast would have been upon him in an instant.
|
||
|
Thus they stood while Teeka came across the clearing,
|
||
|
going more slowly as she neared the panther, for even her
|
||
|
mother love could scarce overcome her instinctive terror
|
||
|
of this natural enemy of her kind.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Behind her came Taug, warily and with many pauses and
|
||
|
much bluster, and still behind him came other bulls,
|
||
|
snarling ferociously and uttering their uncanny challenges.
|
||
|
Sheeta's yellow-green eyes glared terribly at Tarzan,
|
||
|
and past Tarzan they shot brief glances at the apes
|
||
|
of Kerchak advancing upon him. Discretion prompted him
|
||
|
to turn and flee, but hunger and the close proximity
|
||
|
of the tempting morsel in the grass before him urged him
|
||
|
to remain. He reached forth a paw toward Teeka's balu,
|
||
|
and as he did so, with a savage guttural, Tarzan of the Apes
|
||
|
was upon him.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The panther reared to meet the ape-man's attack.
|
||
|
He swung a frightful raking blow for Tarzan that would have
|
||
|
wiped his face away had it landed, but it did not land,
|
||
|
for Tarzan ducked beneath it and closed, his long knife
|
||
|
ready in one strong hand--the knife of his dead father,
|
||
|
of the father he never had known.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Instantly the balu was forgotten by Sheeta, the panther.
|
||
|
He now thought only of tearing to ribbons with his powerful
|
||
|
talons the flesh of his antagonist, of burying his long,
|
||
|
yellow fangs in the soft, smooth hide of the ape-man, but
|
||
|
Tarzan had fought before with clawed creatures of the jungle.
|
||
|
Before now he had battled with fanged monsters, nor always
|
||
|
had he come away unscathed. He knew the risk that he ran,
|
||
|
but Tarzan of the Apes, inured to the sight of suffering
|
||
|
and death, shrank from neither, for he feared neither.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The instant that he dodged beneath Sheeta's blow, he leaped
|
||
|
to the beast's rear and then full upon the tawny back,
|
||
|
burying his teeth in Sheeta's neck and the fingers of one
|
||
|
hand in the fur at the throat, and with the other hand
|
||
|
he drove his blade into Sheeta's side.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Over and over upon the grass rolled Sheeta, growling and
|
||
|
screaming,
|
||
|
clawing and biting, in a mad effort to dislodge his antagonist
|
||
|
or get some portion of his body within range of teeth or talons.
|
||
|
|
||
|
As Tarzan leaped to close quarters with the panther,
|
||
|
Teeka had run quickly in and snatched up her balu.
|
||
|
Now she sat upon a high branch, safe out of harm's way,
|
||
|
cuddling the little thing close to her hairy breast,
|
||
|
the while her savage little eyes bored down upon the
|
||
|
contestants in the clearing, and her ferocious voice urged
|
||
|
Taug and the other bulls to leap into the melee.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Thus goaded the bulls came closer, redoubling their
|
||
|
hideous clamor; but Sheeta was already sufficiently engaged--
|
||
|
he did not even hear them. Once he succeeded in partially
|
||
|
dislodging the ape-man from his back, so that Tarzan swung
|
||
|
for an instant in front of those awful talons, and in the
|
||
|
brief instant before he could regain his former hold,
|
||
|
a raking blow from a hind paw laid open one leg from hip to knee.
|
||
|
|
||
|
It was the sight and smell of this blood, possibly,
|
||
|
which wrought upon the encircling apes; but it
|
||
|
was Taug who really was responsible for the thing they did.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Taug, but a moment before filled with rage toward
|
||
|
Tarzan of the Apes, stood close to the battling pair,
|
||
|
his red-rimmed, wicked little eyes glaring at them.
|
||
|
What was passing in his savage brain? Did he gloat over
|
||
|
the unenviable position of his recent tormentor? Did
|
||
|
he long to see Sheeta's great fangs sink into the soft
|
||
|
throat of the ape-man? Or did he realize the courageous
|
||
|
unselfishness that had prompted Tarzan to rush to the
|
||
|
rescue and imperil his life for Teeka's balu--for Taug's
|
||
|
little balu? Is gratitude a possession of man only,
|
||
|
or do the lower orders know it also?
|
||
|
|
||
|
With the spilling of Tarzan's blood, Taug answered
|
||
|
these questions. With all the weight of his great body
|
||
|
he leaped, hideously growling, upon Sheeta. His long
|
||
|
fighting fangs buried themselves in the white throat.
|
||
|
His powerful arms beat and clawed at the soft fur until it
|
||
|
flew upward in the jungle breeze.
|
||
|
|
||
|
And with Taug's example before them the other bulls charged,
|
||
|
burying Sheeta beneath rending fangs and filling all
|
||
|
the forest with the wild din of their battle cries.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Ah! but it was a wondrous and inspiring sight--this battle
|
||
|
of the primordial apes and the great, white ape-man
|
||
|
with their ancestral foe, Sheeta, the panther.
|
||
|
|
||
|
In frenzied excitement, Teeka fairly danced upon
|
||
|
the limb which swayed beneath her great weight as she
|
||
|
urged on the males of her people, and Thaka, and Mumga,
|
||
|
and Kamma, with the other shes of the tribe of Kerchak,
|
||
|
added their shrill cries or fierce barkings to the
|
||
|
pandemonium which now reigned within the jungle.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Bitten and biting, tearing and torn, Sheeta battled
|
||
|
for his life; but the odds were against him. Even Numa,
|
||
|
the lion, would have hesitated to have attacked an equal
|
||
|
number of the great bulls of the tribe of Kerchak, and now,
|
||
|
a half mile away, hearing the sounds of the terrific battle,
|
||
|
the king of beasts rose uneasily from his midday slumber
|
||
|
and slunk off farther into the jungle.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Presently Sheeta's torn and bloody body ceased its
|
||
|
titanic struggles. It stiffened spasmodically, twitched and
|
||
|
was still, yet the bulls continued to lacerate it until
|
||
|
the beautiful coat was torn to shreds. At last they desisted
|
||
|
from sheer physical weariness, and then from the tangle
|
||
|
of bloody bodies rose a crimson giant, straight as an arrow.
|
||
|
|
||
|
He placed a foot upon the dead body of the panther,
|
||
|
and lifting his blood-stained face to the blue of the
|
||
|
equatorial heavens, gave voice to the horrid victory
|
||
|
cry of the bull ape.
|
||
|
|
||
|
One by one his hairy fellows of the tribe of Kerchak
|
||
|
followed his example. The shes came down from their perches
|
||
|
of safety and struck and reviled the dead body of Sheeta.
|
||
|
The young apes refought the battle in mimicry of their
|
||
|
mighty elders.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Teeka was quite close to Tarzan. He turned and saw her
|
||
|
with the balu hugged close to her hairy breast, and put
|
||
|
out his hands to take the little one, expecting that Teeka
|
||
|
would bare her fangs and spring upon him; but instead
|
||
|
she placed the balu in his arms, and coming nearer,
|
||
|
licked his frightful wounds.
|
||
|
|
||
|
And presently Taug, who had escaped with only a few scratches,
|
||
|
came and squatted beside Tarzan and watched him as he
|
||
|
played with the little balu, and at last he too leaned
|
||
|
over and helped Teeka with the cleansing and the healing
|
||
|
of the ape-man's hurts.
|
||
|
|
||
|
4
|
||
|
|
||
|
The God of Tarzan
|
||
|
|
||
|
AMONG THE BOOKS of his dead father in the little cabin
|
||
|
by the land-locked harbor, Tarzan of the Apes found
|
||
|
many things to puzzle his young head. By much labor and
|
||
|
through the medium of infinite patience as well, he had,
|
||
|
without assistance, discovered the purpose of the little
|
||
|
bugs which ran riot upon the printed pages. He had learned
|
||
|
that in the many combinations in which he found them they
|
||
|
spoke in a silent language, spoke in a strange tongue,
|
||
|
spoke of wonderful things which a little ape-boy could
|
||
|
not by any chance fully understand, arousing his curiosity,
|
||
|
stimulating his imagination and filling his soul with
|
||
|
a mighty longing for further knowledge.
|
||
|
|
||
|
A dictionary had proven itself a wonderful storehouse
|
||
|
of information, when, after several years of tireless
|
||
|
endeavor, he had solved the mystery of its purpose
|
||
|
and the manner of its use. He had learned to make
|
||
|
a species of game out of it, following up the spoor of
|
||
|
a new thought through the mazes of the many definitions
|
||
|
which each new word required him to consult. It was like
|
||
|
following a quarry through the jungle-- it was hunting,
|
||
|
and Tarzan of the Apes was an indefatigable huntsman.
|
||
|
|
||
|
There were, of course, certain words which aroused his
|
||
|
curiosity to a greater extent than others, words which,
|
||
|
for one reason or another, excited his imagination.
|
||
|
There was one, for example, the meaning of which was
|
||
|
rather difficult to grasp. It was the word GOD.
|
||
|
Tarzan first had been attracted to it by the fact that it
|
||
|
was very short and that it commenced with a larger g-bug
|
||
|
than those about it--a male g-bug it was to Tarzan,
|
||
|
the lower-case letters being females. Another fact
|
||
|
which attracted him to this word was the number of he-bugs
|
||
|
which figured in its definition--Supreme Deity, Creator or
|
||
|
Upholder of the Universe. This must be a very important
|
||
|
word indeed, he would have to look into it, and he did,
|
||
|
though it still baffled him after many months of thought
|
||
|
and study.
|
||
|
|
||
|
However, Tarzan counted no time wasted which he devoted
|
||
|
to these strange hunting expeditions into the game
|
||
|
preserves of knowledge, for each word and each definition
|
||
|
led on and on into strange places, into new worlds where,
|
||
|
with increasing frequency, he met old, familiar faces.
|
||
|
And always he added to his store of knowledge.
|
||
|
|
||
|
But of the meaning of GOD he was yet in doubt.
|
||
|
Once he thought he had grasped it--that God was a
|
||
|
mighty chieftain, king of all the Mangani. He was not
|
||
|
quite sure, however, since that would mean that God was
|
||
|
mightier than Tarzan-- a point which Tarzan of the Apes,
|
||
|
who acknowledged no equal in the jungle, was loath to concede.
|
||
|
|
||
|
But in all the books he had there was no picture of God,
|
||
|
though he found much to confirm his belief that God was
|
||
|
a great, an all-powerful individual. He saw pictures of
|
||
|
places where God was worshiped; but never any sign of God.
|
||
|
Finally he began to wonder if God were not of a different
|
||
|
form than he, and at last he determined to set out in search
|
||
|
of Him.
|
||
|
|
||
|
He commenced by questioning Mumga, who was very old and
|
||
|
had seen many strange things in her long life; but Mumga,
|
||
|
being an ape, had a faculty for recalling the trivial.
|
||
|
That time when Gunto mistook a sting-bug for an edible
|
||
|
beetle had made more impression upon Mumga than all
|
||
|
the innumerable manifestations of the greatness of God
|
||
|
which she had witnessed, and which, of course, she had
|
||
|
not understood.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Numgo, overhearing Tarzan's questions, managed to wrest
|
||
|
his attention long enough from the diversion of flea
|
||
|
hunting to advance the theory that the power which made
|
||
|
the lightning and the rain and the thunder came from Goro,
|
||
|
the moon. He knew this, he said, because the Dum-Dum
|
||
|
always was danced in the light of Goro. This reasoning,
|
||
|
though entirely satisfactory to Numgo and Mumga,
|
||
|
failed fully to convince Tarzan. However, it gave him
|
||
|
a basis for further investigation along a new line.
|
||
|
He would investigate the moon.
|
||
|
|
||
|
That night he clambered to the loftiest pinnacle of the
|
||
|
tallest jungle giant. The moon was full, a great, glorious,
|
||
|
equatorial moon. The ape-man, upright upon a slender,
|
||
|
swaying limb, raised his bronzed face to the silver orb.
|
||
|
Now that he had clambered to the highest point within
|
||
|
his reach, he discovered, to his surprise, that Goro
|
||
|
was as far away as when he viewed him from the ground.
|
||
|
He thought that Goro was attempting to elude him.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Come, Goro!" he cried, "Tarzan of the Apes will not
|
||
|
harm you!" But still the moon held aloof.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Tell me," he continued, "if you be the great king
|
||
|
who sends Ara, the lightning; who makes the great noise
|
||
|
and the mighty winds, and sends the waters down upon
|
||
|
the jungle people when the days are dark and it is cold.
|
||
|
Tell me, Goro, are you God?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
Of course he did not pronounce God as you or I would
|
||
|
pronounce His name, for Tarzan knew naught of the spoken
|
||
|
language of his English forbears; but he had a name of his
|
||
|
own invention for each of the little bugs which constituted
|
||
|
the alphabet. Unlike the apes he was not satisfied merely
|
||
|
to have a mental picture of the things he knew, he must
|
||
|
have a word descriptive of each. In reading he grasped
|
||
|
a word in its entirety; but when he spoke the words he
|
||
|
had learned from the books of his father, he pronounced
|
||
|
each according to the names he had given the various little
|
||
|
bugs which occurred in it, usually giving the gender prefix for
|
||
|
each.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Thus it was an imposing word which Tarzan made of GOD.
|
||
|
The masculine prefix of the apes is BU, the feminine
|
||
|
MU; g Tarzan had named LA, o he pronounced TU,
|
||
|
and d was MO. So the word God evolved itself
|
||
|
into BULAMUTUMUMO, or, in English, he-g-she-o-she-d.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Similarly he had arrived at a strange and wonderful
|
||
|
spelling of his own name. Tarzan is derived from the
|
||
|
two ape words TAR and ZAN, meaning white skin.
|
||
|
It was given him by his foster mother, Kala, the great
|
||
|
she-ape. When Tarzan first put it into the written language
|
||
|
of his own people he had not yet chanced upon either WHITE
|
||
|
or SKIN in the dictionary; but in a primer
|
||
|
he had seen the picture of a little white boy and so he
|
||
|
wrote his name BUMUDE-MUTOMURO, or he-boy.
|
||
|
|
||
|
To follow Tarzan's strange system of spelling would be
|
||
|
laborious as well as futile, and so we shall in the future,
|
||
|
as we have in the past, adhere to the more familiar forms
|
||
|
of our grammar school copybooks. It would tire you
|
||
|
to remember that DO meant b, TU o, and RO y,
|
||
|
and that to say he-boy you must prefix the ape masculine
|
||
|
gender sound BU before the entire word and the feminine
|
||
|
gender sound MU before each of the lower-case letters
|
||
|
which go to make up boy--it would tire you and it would
|
||
|
bring me to the nineteenth hole several strokes under par.
|
||
|
|
||
|
And so Tarzan harangued the moon, and when Goro did not reply,
|
||
|
Tarzan of the Apes waxed wroth. He swelled his giant
|
||
|
chest and bared his fighting fangs, and hurled into the
|
||
|
teeth of the dead satellite the challenge of the bull ape.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"You are not Bulamutumumo," he cried. "You are not king
|
||
|
of the jungle folk. You are not so great as Tarzan,
|
||
|
mighty fighter, mighty hunter. None there is so great
|
||
|
as Tarzan. If there be a Bulamutumumo, Tarzan can kill him.
|
||
|
Come down, Goro, great coward, and fight with Tarzan.
|
||
|
Tarzan will kill you. I am Tarzan, the killer."
|
||
|
|
||
|
But the moon made no answer to the boasting of the
|
||
|
ape-man, and when a cloud came and obscured her face,
|
||
|
Tarzan thought that Goro was indeed afraid, and was hiding
|
||
|
from him, so he came down out of the trees and awoke
|
||
|
Numgo and told him how great was Tarzan--how he had
|
||
|
frightened Goro out of the sky and made him tremble.
|
||
|
Tarzan spoke of the moon as HE, for all things large
|
||
|
or awe inspiring are male to the ape folk.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Numgo was not much impressed; but he was very sleepy,
|
||
|
so he told Tarzan to go away and leave his betters alone.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"But where shall I find God?" insisted Tarzan. "You are
|
||
|
very old; if there is a God you must have seen Him.
|
||
|
What does He look like? Where does He live?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I am God," replied Numgo. "Now sleep and disturb me
|
||
|
no more."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tarzan looked at Numgo steadily for several minutes,
|
||
|
his shapely head sank just a trifle between his great shoulders,
|
||
|
his square chin shot forward and his short upper lip
|
||
|
drew back, exposing his white teeth. Then, with a low
|
||
|
growl he leaped upon the ape and buried his fangs
|
||
|
in the other's hairy shoulder, clutching the great neck
|
||
|
in his mighty fingers. Twice he shook the old ape,
|
||
|
then he released his tooth-hold.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Are you God?" he demanded.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"No," wailed Numgo. "I am only a poor, old ape.
|
||
|
Leave me alone. Go ask the Gomangani where God is.
|
||
|
They are hairless like yourself and very wise, too.
|
||
|
They should know."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tarzan released Numgo and turned away. The suggestion
|
||
|
that he consult the blacks appealed to him, and though
|
||
|
his relations with the people of Mbonga, the chief,
|
||
|
were the antithesis of friendly, he could at least spy upon
|
||
|
his hated enemies and discover if they had intercourse
|
||
|
with God.
|
||
|
|
||
|
So it was that Tarzan set forth through the trees toward
|
||
|
the village of the blacks, all excitement at the prospect
|
||
|
of discovering the Supreme Being, the Creator of all things.
|
||
|
As he traveled he reviewed, mentally, his armament--the
|
||
|
condition of his hunting knife, the number of his arrows,
|
||
|
the newness of the gut which strung his bow--he hefted
|
||
|
the war spear which had once been the pride of some black
|
||
|
warrior of Mbonga's tribe.
|
||
|
|
||
|
If he met God, Tarzan would be prepared. One could never
|
||
|
tell whether a grass rope, a war spear, or a poisoned arrow
|
||
|
would be most efficacious against an unfamiliar foe.
|
||
|
Tarzan of the Apes was quite content--if God wished to fight,
|
||
|
the ape-man had no doubt as to the outcome of the struggle.
|
||
|
There were many questions Tarzan wished to put to the
|
||
|
Creator of the Universe and so he hoped that God would
|
||
|
not prove a belligerent God; but his experience of life
|
||
|
and the ways of living things had taught him that any
|
||
|
creature with the means for offense and defense was quite
|
||
|
likely to provoke attack if in the proper mood.
|
||
|
|
||
|
It was dark when Tarzan came to the village of Mbonga.
|
||
|
As silently as the silent shadows of the night he
|
||
|
sought his accustomed place among the branches of the
|
||
|
great tree which overhung the palisade. Below him,
|
||
|
in the village street, he saw men and women. The men
|
||
|
were hideously painted--more hideously than usual.
|
||
|
Among them moved a weird and grotesque figure, a tall figure
|
||
|
that went upon the two legs of a man and yet had the head
|
||
|
of a buffalo. A tail dangled to his ankles behind him,
|
||
|
and in one hand he carried a zebra's tail while the other
|
||
|
clutched a bunch of small arrows.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tarzan was electrified. Could it be that chance had given
|
||
|
him thus early an opportunity to look upon God? Surely
|
||
|
this thing was neither man nor beast, so what could it
|
||
|
be then other than the Creator of the Universe! The
|
||
|
ape-man watched the every move of the strange creature.
|
||
|
He saw the black men and women fall back at its approach
|
||
|
as though they stood in terror of its mysterious powers.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Presently he discovered that the deity was speaking and
|
||
|
that all listened in silence to his words. Tarzan was
|
||
|
sure that none other than God could inspire such awe
|
||
|
in the hearts of the Gomangani, or stop their mouths
|
||
|
so effectually without recourse to arrows or spears.
|
||
|
Tarzan had come to look with contempt upon the blacks,
|
||
|
principally because of their garrulity. The small apes
|
||
|
talked a great deal and ran away from an enemy. The big,
|
||
|
old bulls of Kerchak talked but little and fought upon
|
||
|
the slightest provocation. Numa, the lion, was not given
|
||
|
to loquacity, yet of all the jungle folk there were few
|
||
|
who fought more often than he.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tarzan witnessed strange things that night, none of which
|
||
|
he understood, and, perhaps because they were strange,
|
||
|
he thought that they must have to do with the God he could
|
||
|
not understand. He saw three youths receive their first war
|
||
|
spears in a weird ceremony which the grotesque witch-doctor
|
||
|
strove successfully to render uncanny and awesome.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Hugely interested, he watched the slashing of the three brown
|
||
|
arms and the exchange of blood with Mbonga, the chief,
|
||
|
in the rites of the ceremony of blood brotherhood.
|
||
|
He saw the zebra's tail dipped into a caldron of water
|
||
|
above which the witch-doctor had made magical passes
|
||
|
the while he danced and leaped about it, and he saw
|
||
|
the breasts and foreheads of each of the three novitiates
|
||
|
sprinkled with the charmed liquid. Could the ape-man
|
||
|
have known the purpose of this act, that it was intended
|
||
|
to render the recipient invulnerable to the attacks
|
||
|
of his enemies and fearless in the face of any danger,
|
||
|
he would doubtless have leaped into the village street
|
||
|
and appropriated the zebra's tail and a portion of the
|
||
|
contents of the caldron.
|
||
|
|
||
|
But he did not know, and so he only wondered, not alone
|
||
|
at what he saw but at the strange sensations which played
|
||
|
up and down his naked spine, sensations induced, doubtless,
|
||
|
by the same hypnotic influence which held the black
|
||
|
spectators in tense awe upon the verge of a hysteric upheaval.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The longer Tarzan watched, the more convinced he became
|
||
|
that his eyes were upon God, and with the conviction came
|
||
|
determination to have word with the deity. With Tarzan
|
||
|
of the Apes, to think was to act.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The people of Mbonga were keyed to the highest pitch
|
||
|
of hysterical excitement. They needed little to release
|
||
|
the accumulated pressure of static nerve force which
|
||
|
the terrorizing mummery of the witch-doctor had induced.
|
||
|
|
||
|
A lion roared, suddenly and loud, close without the palisade.
|
||
|
The blacks started nervously, dropping into utter silence
|
||
|
as they listened for a repetition of that all-too-familiar
|
||
|
and always terrorizing voice. Even the witch-doctor paused
|
||
|
in the midst of an intricate step, remaining momentarily
|
||
|
rigid and statuesque as he plumbed his cunning mind
|
||
|
for a suggestion as how best he might take advantage
|
||
|
of the condition of his audience and the timely interruption.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Already the evening had been vastly profitable to him.
|
||
|
There would be three goats for the initiation of the
|
||
|
three youths into full-fledged warriorship, and besides
|
||
|
these he had received several gifts of grain and beads,
|
||
|
together with a piece of copper wire from admiring and
|
||
|
terrified members of his audience.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Numa's roar still reverberated along taut nerves when a
|
||
|
woman's laugh, shrill and piercing, shattered the silence
|
||
|
of the village. It was this moment that Tarzan chose
|
||
|
to drop lightly from his tree into the village street.
|
||
|
Fearless among his blood enemies he stood, taller by a full
|
||
|
head than many of Mbonga's warriors, straight as their
|
||
|
straightest arrow, muscled like Numa, the lion.
|
||
|
|
||
|
For a moment Tarzan stood looking straight at the
|
||
|
witch-doctor. Every eye was upon him, yet no one had
|
||
|
moved-- a paralysis of terror held them, to be broken
|
||
|
a moment later as the ape-man, with a toss of head,
|
||
|
stepped straight toward the hideous figure beneath the buffalo
|
||
|
head.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Then the nerves of the blacks could stand no more.
|
||
|
For months the terror of the strange, white, jungle god
|
||
|
had been upon them. Their arrows had been stolen from
|
||
|
the very center of the village; their warriors had been
|
||
|
silently slain upon the jungle trails and their dead
|
||
|
bodies dropped mysteriously and by night into the village
|
||
|
street as from the heavens above.
|
||
|
|
||
|
One or two there were who had glimpsed the strange figure
|
||
|
of the new demon and it was from their oft-repeated
|
||
|
descriptions that the entire village now recognized Tarzan
|
||
|
as the author of many of their ills. Upon another occasion
|
||
|
and by daylight, the warriors would doubtless have leaped
|
||
|
to attack him, but at night, and this night of all others,
|
||
|
when they were wrought to such a pitch of nervous dread
|
||
|
by the uncanny artistry of their witch-doctor, they were
|
||
|
helpless with terror. As one man they turned and fled,
|
||
|
scattering for their huts, as Tarzan advanced.
|
||
|
For a moment one and one only held his ground. It was
|
||
|
the witch-doctor. More than half self-hypnotized into
|
||
|
a belief in his own charlatanry he faced this new demon
|
||
|
who threatened to undermine his ancient and lucrative profession.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Are you God?" asked Tarzan.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The witch-doctor, having no idea of the meaning of the
|
||
|
other's words, danced a few strange steps, leaped high
|
||
|
in the air, turning completely around and alighting in a
|
||
|
stooping posture with feet far outspread and head thrust
|
||
|
out toward the ape-man. Thus he remained for an instant
|
||
|
before he uttered a loud "Boo!" which was evidently intended
|
||
|
to frighten Tarzan away; but in reality had no such effect.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tarzan did not pause. He had set out to approach and examine
|
||
|
God and nothing upon earth might now stay his feet.
|
||
|
Seeing that his antics had no potency with the visitor,
|
||
|
the witch-doctor tried some new medicine. Spitting upon
|
||
|
the zebra's tail, which he still clutched in one hand,
|
||
|
he made circles above it with the arrows in the other hand,
|
||
|
meanwhile backing cautiously away from Tarzan and speaking
|
||
|
confidentially to the bushy end of the tail.
|
||
|
|
||
|
This medicine must be short medicine, however, for the creature,
|
||
|
god or demon, was steadily closing up the distance which had
|
||
|
separated them. The circles therefore were few and rapid,
|
||
|
and when they were completed, the witch-doctor struck an attitude
|
||
|
which was intended to be awe inspiring and waving the zebra's
|
||
|
tail before him, drew an imaginary line between himself and
|
||
|
Tarzan.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Beyond this line you cannot pass, for my medicine is
|
||
|
strong medicine," he cried. "Stop, or you will fall
|
||
|
dead as your foot touches this spot. My mother was
|
||
|
a voodoo, my father was a snake; I live upon lions'
|
||
|
hearts and the entrails of the panther; I eat young babies
|
||
|
for breakfast and the demons of the jungle are my slaves.
|
||
|
I am the most powerful witch-doctor in the world;
|
||
|
I fear nothing, for I cannot die. I--" But he got no further;
|
||
|
instead he turned and fled as Tarzan of the Apes crossed
|
||
|
the magical dead line and still lived.
|
||
|
|
||
|
As the witch-doctor ran, Tarzan almost lost his temper.
|
||
|
This was no way for God to act, at least not in accordance
|
||
|
with the conception Tarzan had come to have of God.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Come back!" he cried. "Come back, God, I will not harm you."
|
||
|
But the witch-doctor was in full retreat by this time,
|
||
|
stepping high as he leaped over cooking pots and the
|
||
|
smoldering embers of small fires that had burned before
|
||
|
the huts of villagers. Straight for his own hut ran
|
||
|
the witch-doctor, terror-spurred to unwonted speed;
|
||
|
but futile was his effort--the ape-man bore down upon
|
||
|
him with the speed of Bara, the deer.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Just at the entrance to his hut the witch-doctor was overhauled.
|
||
|
A heavy hand fell upon his shoulder to drag him back.
|
||
|
It seized upon a portion of the buffalo hide, dragging the
|
||
|
disguise from him. It was a naked black man that Tarzan
|
||
|
saw dodge into the darkness of the hut's interior.
|
||
|
|
||
|
So this was what he had thought was God! Tarzan's lip
|
||
|
curled in an angry snarl as he leaped into the hut after
|
||
|
the terror-stricken witch-doctor. In the blackness within
|
||
|
he found the man huddled at the far side and dragged him
|
||
|
forth into the comparative lightness of the moonlit night.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The witch-doctor bit and scratched in an attempt to escape;
|
||
|
but a few cuffs across the head brought him to a better
|
||
|
realization of the futility of resistance. Beneath the moon
|
||
|
Tarzan held the cringing figure upon its shaking feet.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"So you are God!" he cried. "If you be God, then Tarzan
|
||
|
is greater than God," and so the ape-man thought.
|
||
|
"I am Tarzan," he shouted into the ear of the black.
|
||
|
"In all the jungle, or above it, or upon the running
|
||
|
waters, or the sleeping waters, or upon the big water,
|
||
|
or the little water, there is none so great as Tarzan.
|
||
|
Tarzan is greater than the Mangani; he is greater than
|
||
|
the Gomangani. With his own hands he has slain Numa,
|
||
|
the lion, and Sheeta, the panther; there is none so great
|
||
|
as Tarzan. Tarzan is greater than God. See!" and with
|
||
|
a sudden wrench he twisted the black's neck until the
|
||
|
fellow shrieked in pain and then slumped to the earth
|
||
|
in a swoon.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Placing his foot upon the neck of the fallen witch-doctor,
|
||
|
the ape-man raised his face to the moon and uttered
|
||
|
the long, shrill scream of the victorious bull ape.
|
||
|
Then he stooped and snatched the zebra's tail from the
|
||
|
nerveless fingers of the unconscious man and without
|
||
|
a backward glance retraced his footsteps across the village.
|
||
|
|
||
|
From several hut doorways frightened eyes watched him.
|
||
|
Mbonga, the chief, was one of those who had seen
|
||
|
what passed before the hut of the witch-doctor. Mbonga
|
||
|
was greatly concerned. Wise old patriarch that he was,
|
||
|
he never had more than half believed in witch-doctors,
|
||
|
at least not since greater wisdom had come with age;
|
||
|
but as a chief he was well convinced of the power of the
|
||
|
witch-doctor as an arm of government, and often it was
|
||
|
that Mbonga used the superstitious fears of his people
|
||
|
to his own ends through the medium of the medicine-man.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Mbonga and the witch-doctor had worked together and divided
|
||
|
the spoils, and now the "face" of the witch-doctor
|
||
|
would be lost forever if any saw what Mbonga had seen;
|
||
|
nor would this generation again have as much faith
|
||
|
in any future witch-doctor.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Mbonga must do something to counteract the evil influence
|
||
|
of the forest demon's victory over the witch-doctor. He
|
||
|
raised his heavy spear and crept silently from his hut
|
||
|
in the wake of the retreating ape-man. Down the village
|
||
|
street walked Tarzan, as unconcerned and as deliberate
|
||
|
as though only the friendly apes of Kerchak surrounded
|
||
|
him instead of a village full of armed enemies.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Seeming only was the indifference of Tarzan,
|
||
|
for alert and watchful was every well-trained sense.
|
||
|
Mbonga, wily stalker of keen-eared jungle creatures,
|
||
|
moved now in utter silence. Not even Bara, the deer,
|
||
|
with his great ears could have guessed from any sound
|
||
|
that Mbonga was near; but the black was not stalking Bara;
|
||
|
he was stalking man, and so he sought only to avoid noise.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Closer and closer to the slowly moving ape-man he came.
|
||
|
Now he raised his war spear, throwing his spear-hand far back
|
||
|
above his right shoulder. Once and for all would Mbonga,
|
||
|
the chief, rid himself and his people of the menace
|
||
|
of this terrifying enemy. He would make no poor cast;
|
||
|
he would take pains, and he would hurl his weapon with such
|
||
|
great force as would finish the demon forever.
|
||
|
|
||
|
But Mbonga, sure as he thought himself, erred in
|
||
|
his calculations. He might believe that he was stalking
|
||
|
a man-- he did not know, however, that it was a man
|
||
|
with the delicate sense perception of the lower orders.
|
||
|
Tarzan, when he had turned his back upon his enemies,
|
||
|
had noted what Mbonga never would have thought of considering
|
||
|
in the hunting of man--the wind. It was blowing in the
|
||
|
same direction that Tarzan was proceeding, carrying to
|
||
|
his delicate nostrils the odors which arose behind him.
|
||
|
Thus it was that Tarzan knew that he was being followed,
|
||
|
for even among the many stenches of an African village,
|
||
|
the ape-man's uncanny faculty was equal to the task
|
||
|
of differentiating one stench from another and locating
|
||
|
with remarkable precision the source from whence it came.
|
||
|
|
||
|
He knew that a man was following him and coming closer,
|
||
|
and his judgment warned him of the purpose of the stalker.
|
||
|
When Mbonga, therefore, came within spear range
|
||
|
of the ape-man, the latter suddenly wheeled upon him,
|
||
|
so suddenly that the poised spear was shot a fraction
|
||
|
of a second before Mbonga had intended. It went a trifle
|
||
|
high and Tarzan stooped to let it pass over his head;
|
||
|
then he sprang toward the chief. But Mbonga did not wait
|
||
|
to receive him. Instead, he turned and fled for the dark
|
||
|
doorway of the nearest hut, calling as he went for his
|
||
|
warriors to fall upon the stranger and slay him.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Well indeed might Mbonga scream for help, for Tarzan,
|
||
|
young and fleet-footed, covered the distance between
|
||
|
them in great leaps, at the speed of a charging lion.
|
||
|
He was growling, too, not at all unlike Numa himself.
|
||
|
Mbonga heard and his blood ran cold. He could feel the wool
|
||
|
stiffen upon his pate and a prickly chill run up his spine,
|
||
|
as though Death had come and run his cold finger along
|
||
|
Mbonga's back.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Others heard, too, and saw, from the darkness of their
|
||
|
huts--bold warriors, hideously painted, grasping heavy
|
||
|
war spears in nerveless fingers. Against Numa, the lion,
|
||
|
they would have charged fearlessly. Against many times
|
||
|
their own number of black warriors would they have raced
|
||
|
to the protection of their chief; but this weird jungle
|
||
|
demon filled them with terror. There was nothing human
|
||
|
in the bestial growls that rumbled up from his deep chest;
|
||
|
there was nothing human in the bared fangs, or the catlike leaps.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Mbonga's warriors were terrified--too terrified to leave
|
||
|
the seeming security of their huts while they watched
|
||
|
the beast-man spring full upon the back of their old chieftain.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Mbonga went down with a scream of terror. He was
|
||
|
too frightened even to attempt to defend himself.
|
||
|
He just lay beneath his antagonist in a paralysis of fear,
|
||
|
screaming at the top of his lungs. Tarzan half rose
|
||
|
and kneeled above the black. He turned Mbonga over and
|
||
|
looked him in the face, exposing the man's throat, then he
|
||
|
drew his long, keen knife, the knife that John Clayton,
|
||
|
Lord Greystoke, had brought from England many years before.
|
||
|
He raised it close above Mbonga's neck. The old black
|
||
|
whimpered with terror. He pleaded for his life in a tongue
|
||
|
which Tarzan could not understand.
|
||
|
|
||
|
For the first time the ape-man had a close view of the chief.
|
||
|
He saw an old man, a very old man with scrawny neck
|
||
|
and wrinkled face--a dried, parchment-like face which
|
||
|
resembled some of the little monkeys Tarzan knew so well.
|
||
|
He saw the terror in the man's eyes--never before had
|
||
|
Tarzan seen such terror in the eyes of any animal, or such
|
||
|
a piteous appeal for mercy upon the face of any creature.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Something stayed the ape-man's hand for an instant.
|
||
|
He wondered why it was that he hesitated to make the kill;
|
||
|
never before had he thus delayed. The old man seemed to
|
||
|
wither and shrink to a bag of puny bones beneath his eyes.
|
||
|
So weak and helpless and terror-stricken he appeared
|
||
|
that the ape-man was filled with a great contempt;
|
||
|
but another sensation also claimed him--something new
|
||
|
to Tarzan of the Apes in relation to an enemy. It was
|
||
|
pity--pity for a poor, frightened, old man.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tarzan rose and turned away, leaving Mbonga, the chief, unharmed.
|
||
|
|
||
|
With head held high the ape-man walked through the village,
|
||
|
swung himself into the branches of the tree which overhung
|
||
|
the palisade and disappeared from the sight of the villagers.
|
||
|
|
||
|
All the way back to the stamping ground of the apes,
|
||
|
Tarzan sought for an explanation of the strange power which
|
||
|
had stayed his hand and prevented him from slaying Mbonga.
|
||
|
It was as though someone greater than he had commanded
|
||
|
him to spare the life of the old man. Tarzan could
|
||
|
not understand, for he could conceive of nothing, or no one,
|
||
|
with the authority to dictate to him what he should do,
|
||
|
or what he should refrain from doing.
|
||
|
|
||
|
It was late when Tarzan sought a swaying couch among
|
||
|
the trees beneath which slept the apes of Kerchak,
|
||
|
and he was still absorbed in the solution of his strange
|
||
|
problem when he fell asleep.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The sun was well up in the heavens when he awoke.
|
||
|
The apes were astir in search of food. Tarzan watched
|
||
|
them lazily from above as they scratched in the rotting
|
||
|
loam for bugs and beetles and grubworms, or sought among
|
||
|
the branches of the trees for eggs and young birds,
|
||
|
or luscious caterpillars.
|
||
|
|
||
|
An orchid, dangling close beside his head, opened slowly,
|
||
|
unfolding its delicate petals to the warmth and light
|
||
|
of the sun which but recently had penetrated to its
|
||
|
shady retreat. A thousand times had Tarzan of the Apes
|
||
|
witnessed the beauteous miracle; but now it aroused
|
||
|
a keener interest, for the ape-man was just commencing
|
||
|
to ask himself questions about all the myriad wonders
|
||
|
which heretofore he had but taken for granted.
|
||
|
|
||
|
What made the flower open? What made it grow from a tiny
|
||
|
bud to a full-blown bloom? Why was it at all? Why was he?
|
||
|
Where did Numa, the lion, come from? Who planted the first
|
||
|
tree? How did Goro get way up into the darkness of the night
|
||
|
sky to cast his welcome light upon the fearsome nocturnal
|
||
|
jungle? And the sun! Did the sun merely happen there?
|
||
|
|
||
|
Why were all the peoples of the jungle not trees? Why were
|
||
|
the trees not something else? Why was Tarzan different
|
||
|
from Taug, and Taug different from Bara, the deer,
|
||
|
and Bara different from Sheeta, the panther, and why
|
||
|
was not Sheeta like Buto, the rhinoceros? Where and how,
|
||
|
anyway, did they all come from--the trees, the flowers,
|
||
|
the insects, the countless creatures of the jungle?
|
||
|
|
||
|
Quite unexpectedly an idea popped into Tarzan's head.
|
||
|
In following out the many ramifications of the dictionary
|
||
|
definition of GOD he had come upon the word CREATE--
|
||
|
"to cause to come into existence; to form out of nothing."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tarzan almost had arrived at something tangible when a
|
||
|
distant wail startled him from his preoccupation into
|
||
|
sensibility of the present and the real. The wail came
|
||
|
from the jungle at some little distance from Tarzan's
|
||
|
swaying couch. It was the wail of a tiny balu.
|
||
|
Tarzan recognized it at once as the voice of Gazan,
|
||
|
Teeka's baby. They had called it Gazan because its soft,
|
||
|
baby hair had been unusually red, and GAZAN in the
|
||
|
language of the great apes, means red skin.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The wail was immediately followed by a real scream
|
||
|
of terror from the small lungs. Tarzan was electrified
|
||
|
into instant action. Like an arrow from a bow he shot
|
||
|
through the trees in the direction of the sound.
|
||
|
Ahead of him he heard the savage snarling of an adult
|
||
|
she-ape. It was Teeka to the rescue. The danger must
|
||
|
be very real. Tarzan could tell that by the note of rage
|
||
|
mingled with fear in the voice of the she.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Running along bending limbs, swinging from one tree
|
||
|
to another, the ape-man raced through the middle
|
||
|
terraces toward the sounds which now had risen in volume
|
||
|
to deafening proportions. From all directions the apes
|
||
|
of Kerchak were hurrying in response to the appeal in
|
||
|
the tones of the balu and its mother, and as they came,
|
||
|
their roars reverberated through the forest.
|
||
|
|
||
|
But Tarzan, swifter than his heavy fellows, distanced them all.
|
||
|
It was he who was first upon the scene. What he saw
|
||
|
sent a cold chill through his giant frame, for the enemy
|
||
|
was the most hated and loathed of all the jungle creatures.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Twined in a great tree was Histah, the snake--huge, ponderous,
|
||
|
slimy--and in the folds of its deadly embrace was Teeka's
|
||
|
little balu, Gazan. Nothing in the jungle inspired within
|
||
|
the breast of Tarzan so near a semblance to fear as did
|
||
|
the hideous Histah. The apes, too, loathed the terrifying
|
||
|
reptile and feared him even more than they did Sheeta,
|
||
|
the panther, or Numa, the lion. Of all their enemies there
|
||
|
was none they gave a wider berth than they gave Histah,
|
||
|
the snake.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tarzan knew that Teeka was peculiarly fearful of this silent,
|
||
|
repulsive foe, and as the scene broke upon his vision,
|
||
|
it was the action of Teeka which filled him with the
|
||
|
greatest wonder, for at the moment that he saw her,
|
||
|
the she-ape leaped upon the glistening body of the snake,
|
||
|
and as the mighty folds encircled her as well as her offspring,
|
||
|
she made no effort to escape, but instead grasped the writhing
|
||
|
body in a futile effort to tear it from her screaming balu.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tarzan knew all too well how deep-rooted was Teeka's terror
|
||
|
of Histah. He scarce could believe the testimony of his
|
||
|
own eyes then, when they told him that she had voluntarily
|
||
|
rushed into that deadly embrace. Nor was Teeka's innate
|
||
|
dread of the monster much greater than Tarzan's own.
|
||
|
Never, willingly, had he touched a snake. Why, he could
|
||
|
not say, for he would admit fear of nothing; nor was it fear,
|
||
|
but rather an inherent repulsion bequeathed to him by many
|
||
|
generations of civilized ancestors, and back of them, perhaps,
|
||
|
by countless myriads of such as Teeka, in the breasts
|
||
|
of each of which had lurked the same nameless terror of the slimy
|
||
|
reptile.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Yet Tarzan did not hesitate more than had Teeka,
|
||
|
but leaped upon Histah with all the speed and impetuosity
|
||
|
that he would have shown had he been springing upon Bara,
|
||
|
the deer, to make a kill for food. Thus beset the snake
|
||
|
writhed and twisted horribly; but not for an instant
|
||
|
did it loose its hold upon any of its intended victims,
|
||
|
for it had included the ape-man in its cold embrace
|
||
|
the minute that he had fallen upon it.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Still clinging to the tree, the mighty reptile held
|
||
|
the three as though they had been without weight,
|
||
|
the while it sought to crush the life from them.
|
||
|
Tarzan had drawn his knife and this he now plunged rapidly
|
||
|
into the body of the enemy; but the encircling folds
|
||
|
promised to sap his life before he had inflicted a death
|
||
|
wound upon the snake. Yet on he fought, nor once did he
|
||
|
seek to escape the horrid death that confronted him--his
|
||
|
sole aim was to slay Histah and thus free Teeka and her balu.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The great, wide-gaping jaws of the snake turned and hovered
|
||
|
above him. The elastic maw, which could accommodate a rabbit
|
||
|
or a horned buck with equal facility, yawned for him;
|
||
|
but Histah, in turning his attention upon the ape-man, brought
|
||
|
his head within reach of Tarzan's blade. Instantly a brown
|
||
|
hand leaped forth and seized the mottled neck, and another
|
||
|
drove the heavy hunting knife to the hilt into the little brain.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Convulsively Histah shuddered and relaxed, tensed and
|
||
|
relaxed again, whipping and striking with his great body;
|
||
|
but no longer sentient or sensible. Histah was dead,
|
||
|
but in his death throes he might easily dispatch a dozen
|
||
|
apes or men.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Quickly Tarzan seized Teeka and dragged her from the
|
||
|
loosened embrace, dropping her to the ground beneath,
|
||
|
then he extricated the balu and tossed it to its mother.
|
||
|
Still Histah whipped about, clinging to the ape-man;
|
||
|
but after a dozen efforts Tarzan succeeded in wriggling
|
||
|
free and leaping to the ground out of range of the mighty
|
||
|
battering of the dying snake.
|
||
|
|
||
|
A circle of apes surrounded the scene of the battle;
|
||
|
but the moment that Tarzan broke safely from the enemy they
|
||
|
turned silently away to resume their interrupted feeding,
|
||
|
and Teeka turned with them, apparently forgetful of all
|
||
|
but her balu and the fact that when the interruption had
|
||
|
occurred she just had discovered an ingeniously hidden
|
||
|
nest containing three perfectly good eggs.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tarzan, equally indifferent to a battle that was over,
|
||
|
merely cast a parting glance at the still writhing
|
||
|
body of Histah and wandered off toward the little
|
||
|
pool which served to water the tribe at this point.
|
||
|
Strangely, he did not give the victory cry over the
|
||
|
vanquished Histah. Why, he could not have told you,
|
||
|
other than that to him Histah was not an animal.
|
||
|
He differed in some peculiar way from the other denizens
|
||
|
of the jungle. Tarzan only knew that he hated him.
|
||
|
|
||
|
At the pool Tarzan drank his fill and lay stretched
|
||
|
upon the soft grass beneath the shade of a tree.
|
||
|
His mind reverted to the battle with Histah, the snake.
|
||
|
It seemed strange to him that Teeka should have placed
|
||
|
herself within the folds of the horrid monster.
|
||
|
Why had she done it? Why, indeed, had he? Teeka did
|
||
|
not belong to him, nor did Teeka's balu. They were both
|
||
|
Taug's. Why then had he done this thing? Histah was not
|
||
|
food for him when he was dead. There seemed to Tarzan,
|
||
|
now that he gave the matter thought, no reason in the world
|
||
|
why he should have done the thing he did, and presently it
|
||
|
occurred to him that he had acted almost involuntarily,
|
||
|
just as he had acted when he had released the old Gomangani
|
||
|
the previous evening.
|
||
|
|
||
|
What made him do such things? Somebody more powerful than he must
|
||
|
force him to act at times. "All-powerful," thought Tarzan.
|
||
|
"The little bugs say that God is all-powerful. It must
|
||
|
be that God made me do these things, for I never did them
|
||
|
by myself. It was God who made Teeka rush upon Histah.
|
||
|
Teeka would never go near Histah of her own volition.
|
||
|
It was God who held my knife from the throat of the
|
||
|
old Gomangani. God accomplishes strange things for he is
|
||
|
'all-powerful.' I cannot see Him; but I know that it must
|
||
|
be God who does these things. No Mangani, no Gomangani,
|
||
|
no Tarmangani could do them."
|
||
|
|
||
|
And the flowers--who made them grow? Ah, now it
|
||
|
was all explained--the flowers, the trees, the moon,
|
||
|
the sun, himself, every living creature in the jungle--they
|
||
|
were all made by God out of nothing.
|
||
|
|
||
|
And what was God? What did God look like? Of that he had
|
||
|
no conception; but he was sure that everything that was good
|
||
|
came from God. His good act in refraining from slaying
|
||
|
the poor, defenseless old Gomangani; Teeka's love that had
|
||
|
hurled her into the embrace of death; his own loyalty to
|
||
|
Teeka which had jeopardized his life that she might live.
|
||
|
The flowers and the trees were good and beautiful.
|
||
|
God had made them. He made the other creatures,
|
||
|
too, that each might have food upon which to live.
|
||
|
He had made Sheeta, the panther, with his beautiful coat;
|
||
|
and Numa, the lion, with his noble head and his shaggy mane.
|
||
|
He had made Bara, the deer, lovely and graceful.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Yes, Tarzan had found God, and he spent the whole day
|
||
|
in attributing to Him all of the good and beautiful things
|
||
|
of nature; but there was one thing which troubled him.
|
||
|
He could not quite reconcile it to his conception of his
|
||
|
new-found God.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Who made Histah, the snake?
|
||
|
|
||
|
5
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tarzan and the Black Boy
|
||
|
|
||
|
TARZAN OF THE Apes sat at the foot of a great tree braiding
|
||
|
a new grass rope. Beside him lay the frayed remnants of the
|
||
|
old one, torn and severed by the fangs and talons of Sheeta,
|
||
|
the panther. Only half the original rope was there,
|
||
|
the balance having been carried off by the angry cat as he
|
||
|
bounded away through the jungle with the noose still about
|
||
|
his savage neck and the loose end dragging among the underbrush.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tarzan smiled as he recalled Sheeta's great rage, his frantic
|
||
|
efforts to free himself from the entangling strands,
|
||
|
his uncanny screams that were part hate, part anger,
|
||
|
part terror. He smiled in retrospection at the discomfiture
|
||
|
of his enemy, and in anticipation of another day as he
|
||
|
added an extra strand to his new rope.
|
||
|
|
||
|
This would be the strongest, the heaviest rope that Tarzan
|
||
|
of the Apes ever had fashioned. Visions of Numa, the lion,
|
||
|
straining futilely in its embrace thrilled the ape-man. He
|
||
|
was quite content, for his hands and his brain were busy.
|
||
|
Content, too, were his fellows of the tribe of Kerchak,
|
||
|
searching for food in the clearing and the surrounding
|
||
|
trees about him. No perplexing thoughts of the future
|
||
|
burdened their minds, and only occasionally, dimly arose
|
||
|
recollections of the near past. They were stimulated
|
||
|
to a species of brutal content by the delectable business
|
||
|
of filling their bellies. Afterward they would sleep--it
|
||
|
was their life, and they enjoyed it as we enjoy ours,
|
||
|
you and I--as Tarzan enjoyed his. Possibly they enjoyed
|
||
|
theirs more than we enjoy ours, for who shall say that the
|
||
|
beasts of the jungle do not better fulfill the purposes
|
||
|
for which they are created than does man with his many
|
||
|
excursions into strange fields and his contraventions
|
||
|
of the laws of nature? And what gives greater content
|
||
|
and greater happiness than the fulfilling of a destiny?
|
||
|
|
||
|
As Tarzan worked, Gazan, Teeka's little balu, played about
|
||
|
him while Teeka sought food upon the opposite side of
|
||
|
the clearing. No more did Teeka, the mother, or Taug,
|
||
|
the sullen sire, harbor suspicions of Tarzan's intentions
|
||
|
toward their first-born. Had he not courted death to save
|
||
|
their Gazan from the fangs and talons of Sheeta? Did he
|
||
|
not fondle and cuddle the little one with even as great
|
||
|
a show of affection as Teeka herself displayed? Their
|
||
|
fears were allayed and Tarzan now found himself often
|
||
|
in the role of nursemaid to a tiny anthropoid-- an
|
||
|
avocation which he found by no means irksome, since Gazan
|
||
|
was a never-failing fount of surprises and entertainment.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Just now the apeling was developing those arboreal
|
||
|
tendencies which were to stand him in such good stead
|
||
|
during the years of his youth, when rapid flight into
|
||
|
the upper terraces was of far more importance and value
|
||
|
than his undeveloped muscles and untried fighting fangs.
|
||
|
Backing off fifteen or twenty feet from the bole of the tree
|
||
|
beneath the branches of which Tarzan worked upon his rope,
|
||
|
Gazan scampered quickly forward, scrambling nimbly upward
|
||
|
to the lower limbs. Here he would squat for a moment or two,
|
||
|
quite proud of his achievement, then clamber to the ground
|
||
|
again and repeat. Sometimes, quite often in fact, for he
|
||
|
was an ape, his attention was distracted by other things,
|
||
|
a beetle, a caterpillar, a tiny field mouse, and off he
|
||
|
would go in pursuit; the caterpillars he always caught,
|
||
|
and sometimes the beetles; but the field mice, never.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Now he discovered the tail of the rope upon which Tarzan
|
||
|
was working. Grasping it in one small hand he bounced away,
|
||
|
for all the world like an animated rubber ball, snatching it
|
||
|
from the ape-man's hand and running off across the clearing.
|
||
|
Tarzan leaped to his feet and was in pursuit in an instant,
|
||
|
no trace of anger on his face or in his voice as he called
|
||
|
to the roguish little balu to drop his rope.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Straight toward his mother raced Gazan, and after him
|
||
|
came Tarzan. Teeka looked up from her feeding, and in the
|
||
|
first instant that she realized that Gazan was fleeing and
|
||
|
that another was in pursuit, she bared her fangs and bristled;
|
||
|
but when she saw that the pursuer was Tarzan she turned back
|
||
|
to the business that had been occupying her attention.
|
||
|
At her very feet the ape-man overhauled the balu and,
|
||
|
though the youngster squealed and fought when Tarzan
|
||
|
seized him, Teeka only glanced casually in their direction.
|
||
|
No longer did she fear harm to her first-born at the hands
|
||
|
of the ape-man. Had he not saved Gazan on two occasions?
|
||
|
|
||
|
Rescuing his rope, Tarzan returned to his tree and resumed
|
||
|
his labor; but thereafter it was necessary to watch
|
||
|
carefully the playful balu, who was now possessed to steal
|
||
|
it whenever he thought his great, smooth-skinned cousin
|
||
|
was momentarily off his guard.
|
||
|
|
||
|
But even under this handicap Tarzan finally completed
|
||
|
the rope, a long, pliant weapon, stronger than any he
|
||
|
ever had made before. The discarded piece of his former
|
||
|
one he gave to Gazan for a plaything, for Tarzan had
|
||
|
it in his mind to instruct Teeka's balu after ideas
|
||
|
of his own when the youngster should be old and strong
|
||
|
enough to profit by his precepts. At present the little
|
||
|
ape's innate aptitude for mimicry would be sufficient
|
||
|
to familiarize him with Tarzan's ways and weapons,
|
||
|
and so the ape-man swung off into the jungle, his new rope
|
||
|
coiled over one shoulder, while little Gazan hopped about
|
||
|
the clearing dragging the old one after him in childish glee.
|
||
|
|
||
|
As Tarzan traveled, dividing his quest for food with one
|
||
|
for a sufficiently noble quarry whereupon to test his
|
||
|
new weapon, his mind often was upon Gazan. The ape-man
|
||
|
had realized a deep affection for Teeka's balu almost from
|
||
|
the first, partly because the child belonged to Teeka,
|
||
|
his first love, and partly for the little ape's own sake,
|
||
|
and Tarzan's human longing for some sentient creature
|
||
|
upon which to expend those natural affections of the soul
|
||
|
which are inherent to all normal members of the GENUS
|
||
|
HOMO. Tarzan envied Teeka. It was true that Gazan
|
||
|
evidenced a considerable reciprocation of Tarzan's fondness
|
||
|
for him, even preferring him to his own surly sire;
|
||
|
but to Teeka the little one turned when in pain or terror,
|
||
|
when tired or hungry. Then it was that Tarzan felt
|
||
|
quite alone in the world and longed desperately for one
|
||
|
who should turn first to him for succor and protection.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Taug had Teeka; Teeka had Gazan; and nearly every other
|
||
|
bull and cow of the tribe of Kerchak had one or more
|
||
|
to love and by whom to be loved. Of course Tarzan could
|
||
|
scarcely formulate the thought in precisely this way--he
|
||
|
only knew that he craved something which was denied him;
|
||
|
something which seemed to be represented by those
|
||
|
relations which existed between Teeka and her balu,
|
||
|
and so he envied Teeka and longed for a balu of his own.
|
||
|
|
||
|
He saw Sheeta and his mate with their little family of three;
|
||
|
and deeper inland toward the rocky hills, where one might lie
|
||
|
up during the heat of the day, in the dense shade of a tangled
|
||
|
thicket close under the cool face of an overhanging rock,
|
||
|
Tarzan had found the lair of Numa, the lion, and of Sabor,
|
||
|
the lioness. Here he had watched them with their little
|
||
|
balus--playful creatures, spotted leopard-like. And he
|
||
|
had seen the young fawn with Bara, the deer, and with Buto,
|
||
|
the rhinoceros, its ungainly little one. Each of the
|
||
|
creatures of the jungle had its own--except Tarzan.
|
||
|
It made the ape-man sad to think upon this thing,
|
||
|
sad and lonely; but presently the scent of game cleared
|
||
|
his young mind of all other considerations, as catlike he
|
||
|
crawled far out upon a bending limb above the game trail
|
||
|
which led down to the ancient watering place of the wild
|
||
|
things of this wild world.
|
||
|
|
||
|
How many thousands of times had this great, old limb bent
|
||
|
to the savage form of some blood-thirsty hunter in the
|
||
|
long years that it had spread its leafy branches above
|
||
|
the deep-worn jungle path! Tarzan, the ape-man, Sheeta,
|
||
|
the panther, and Histah, the snake, it knew well.
|
||
|
They had worn smooth the bark upon its upper surface.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Today it was Horta, the boar, which came down toward the
|
||
|
watcher in the old tree--Horta, the boar, whose formidable
|
||
|
tusks and diabolical temper preserved him from all but
|
||
|
the most ferocious or most famished of the largest carnivora.
|
||
|
|
||
|
But to Tarzan, meat was meat; naught that was edible or tasty
|
||
|
might pass a hungry Tarzan unchallenged and unattacked.
|
||
|
In hunger, as in battle, the ape-man out-savaged the
|
||
|
dreariest denizens of the jungle. He knew neither fear
|
||
|
nor mercy, except upon rare occasions when some strange,
|
||
|
inexplicable force stayed his hand--a force inexplicable
|
||
|
to him, perhaps, because of his ignorance of his own origin
|
||
|
and of all the forces of humanitarianism and civilization
|
||
|
that were his rightful heritage because of that origin.
|
||
|
|
||
|
So today, instead of staying his hand until a less
|
||
|
formidable feast found its way toward him, Tarzan dropped
|
||
|
his new noose about the neck of Horta, the boar.
|
||
|
It was an excellent test for the untried strands.
|
||
|
The angered boar bolted this way and that; but each time
|
||
|
the new rope held him where Tarzan had made it fast
|
||
|
about the stem of the tree above the branch from which he
|
||
|
had cast it.
|
||
|
|
||
|
As Horta grunted and charged, slashing the sturdy jungle
|
||
|
patriarch with his mighty tusks until the bark flew in
|
||
|
every direction, Tarzan dropped to the ground behind him.
|
||
|
In the ape-man's hand was the long, keen blade that had been
|
||
|
his constant companion since that distant day upon which
|
||
|
chance had directed its point into the body of Bolgani,
|
||
|
the gorilla, and saved the torn and bleeding man-child
|
||
|
from what else had been certain death.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tarzan walked in toward Horta, who swung now to face
|
||
|
his enemy. Mighty and muscled as was the young giant,
|
||
|
it yet would have appeared but the maddest folly for him
|
||
|
to face so formidable a creature as Horta, the boar,
|
||
|
armed only with a slender hunting knife. So it would
|
||
|
have seemed to one who knew Horta even slightly and Tarzan
|
||
|
not at all.
|
||
|
|
||
|
For a moment Horta stood motionless facing the ape-man.
|
||
|
His wicked, deep-set eyes flashed angrily. He shook
|
||
|
his lowered head.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Mud-eater!" jeered the ape-man. "Wallower in filth.
|
||
|
Even your meat stinks, but it is juicy and makes Tarzan strong.
|
||
|
Today I shall eat your heart, O Lord of the Great Tusks,
|
||
|
that it shall keep savage that which pounds against my
|
||
|
own ribs."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Horta, understanding nothing of what Tarzan said, was none
|
||
|
the less enraged because of that. He saw only a naked
|
||
|
man-thing, hairless and futile, pitting his puny fangs
|
||
|
and soft muscles against his own indomitable savagery,
|
||
|
and he charged.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tarzan of the Apes waited until the upcut of a wicked
|
||
|
tusk would have laid open his thigh, then he moved--just
|
||
|
the least bit to one side; but so quickly that lightning
|
||
|
was a sluggard by comparison, and as he moved, he stooped
|
||
|
low and with all the great power of his right arm drove
|
||
|
the long blade of his father's hunting knife straight
|
||
|
into the heart of Horta, the boar. A quick leap carried
|
||
|
him from the zone of the creature's death throes,
|
||
|
and a moment later the hot and dripping heart of Horta
|
||
|
was in his grasp.
|
||
|
|
||
|
His hunger satisfied, Tarzan did not seek a lying-up place
|
||
|
for sleep, as was sometimes his way, but continued on
|
||
|
through the jungle more in search of adventure than of food,
|
||
|
for today he was restless. And so it came that he turned
|
||
|
his footsteps toward the village of Mbonga, the black chief,
|
||
|
whose people Tarzan had baited remorselessly since that
|
||
|
day upon which Kulonga, the chief's son, had slain Kala.
|
||
|
|
||
|
A river winds close beside the village of the black men.
|
||
|
Tarzan reached its side a little below the clearing where
|
||
|
squat the thatched huts of the Negroes. The river life
|
||
|
was ever fascinating to the ape-man. He found pleasure
|
||
|
in watching the ungainly antics of Duro, the hippopotamus,
|
||
|
and keen sport in tormenting the sluggish crocodile,
|
||
|
Gimla, as he basked in the sun. Then, too, there were
|
||
|
the shes and the balus of the black men of the Gomangani
|
||
|
to frighten as they squatted by the river, the shes with
|
||
|
their meager washing, the balus with their primitive toys.
|
||
|
|
||
|
This day he came upon a woman and her child farther
|
||
|
down stream than usual. The former was searching for a
|
||
|
species of shellfish which was to be found in the mud
|
||
|
close to the river bank. She was a young black woman
|
||
|
of about thirty. Her teeth were filed to sharp points,
|
||
|
for her people ate the flesh of man. Her under lip
|
||
|
was slit that it might support a rude pendant of copper
|
||
|
which she had worn for so many years that the lip had been
|
||
|
dragged downward to prodigious lengths, exposing the teeth
|
||
|
and gums of her lower jaw. Her nose, too, was slit,
|
||
|
and through the slit was a wooden skewer. Metal ornaments
|
||
|
dangled from her ears, and upon her forehead and cheeks;
|
||
|
upon her chin and the bridge of her nose were tattooings
|
||
|
in colors that were mellowed now by age. She was
|
||
|
naked except for a girdle of grasses about her waist.
|
||
|
Altogether she was very beautiful in her own estimation
|
||
|
and even in the estimation of the men of Mbonga's tribe,
|
||
|
though she was of another people--a trophy of war seized
|
||
|
in her maidenhood by one of Mbonga's fighting men.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Her child was a boy of ten, lithe, straight and,
|
||
|
for a black, handsome. Tarzan looked upon the two from
|
||
|
the concealing foliage of a near-by bush. He was about
|
||
|
to leap forth before them with a terrifying scream,
|
||
|
that he might enjoy the spectacle of their terror and their
|
||
|
incontinent flight; but of a sudden a new whim seized him.
|
||
|
Here was a balu fashioned as he himself was fashioned.
|
||
|
Of course this one's skin was black; but what of it?
|
||
|
Tarzan had never seen a white man. In so far as he knew,
|
||
|
he was the sole representative of that strange form
|
||
|
of life upon the earth. The black boy should make an
|
||
|
excellent balu for Tarzan, since he had none of his own.
|
||
|
He would tend him carefully, feed him well, protect him
|
||
|
as only Tarzan of the Apes could protect his own,
|
||
|
and teach him out of his half human, half bestial lore
|
||
|
the secrets of the jungle from its rotting surface
|
||
|
vegetation to the high tossed pinnacles of the forest's
|
||
|
upper terraces.
|
||
|
|
||
|
* * *
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tarzan uncoiled his rope, and shook out the noose.
|
||
|
The two before him, all ignorant of the near presence of
|
||
|
that terrifying form, continued preoccupied in the search
|
||
|
for shellfish, poking about in the mud with short sticks.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tarzan stepped from the jungle behind them; his noose
|
||
|
lay open upon the ground beside him. There was a quick
|
||
|
movement of the right arm and the noose rose gracefully
|
||
|
into the air, hovered an instant above the head of the
|
||
|
unsuspecting youth, then settled. As it encompassed
|
||
|
his body below the shoulders, Tarzan gave a quick jerk
|
||
|
that tightened it about the boy's arms, pinioning them
|
||
|
to his sides. A scream of terror broke from the lad's lips,
|
||
|
and as his mother turned, affrighted at his cry,
|
||
|
she saw him being dragged quickly toward a great white
|
||
|
giant who stood just beneath the shade of a near-by tree,
|
||
|
scarcely a dozen long paces from her.
|
||
|
|
||
|
With a savage cry of terror and rage, the woman leaped fearlessly
|
||
|
toward the ape-man. In her mien Tarzan saw determination
|
||
|
and courage which would shrink not even from death itself.
|
||
|
She was very hideous and frightful even when her face
|
||
|
was in repose; but convulsed by passion, her expression
|
||
|
became terrifyingly fiendish. Even the ape-man drew back,
|
||
|
but more in revulsion than fear--fear he knew not.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Biting and kicking was the black she's balu as Tarzan tucked
|
||
|
him beneath his arm and vanished into the branches hanging
|
||
|
low above him, just as the infuriated mother dashed forward
|
||
|
to seize and do battle with him. And as he melted away into
|
||
|
the depth of the jungle with his still struggling prize,
|
||
|
he meditated upon the possibilities which might lie in the
|
||
|
prowess of the Gomangani were the hes as formidable as the shes.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Once at a safe distance from the despoiled mother and out
|
||
|
of earshot of her screams and menaces, Tarzan paused
|
||
|
to inspect his prize, now so thoroughly terrorized
|
||
|
that he had ceased his struggles and his outcries.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The frightened child rolled his eyes fearfully toward
|
||
|
his captor, until the whites showed gleaming all about
|
||
|
the irises.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I am Tarzan," said the ape-man, in the vernacular of
|
||
|
the anthropoids. "I will not harm you. You are to be
|
||
|
Tarzan's balu. Tarzan will protect you. He will feed you.
|
||
|
The best in the jungle shall be for Tarzan's balu,
|
||
|
for Tarzan is a mighty hunter. None need you fear,
|
||
|
not even Numa, the lion, for Tarzan is a mighty fighter.
|
||
|
None so great as Tarzan, son of Kala. Do not fear."
|
||
|
|
||
|
But the child only whimpered and trembled, for he did
|
||
|
not understand the tongue of the great apes, and the voice
|
||
|
of Tarzan sounded to him like the barking and growling
|
||
|
of a beast. Then, too, he had heard stories of this bad,
|
||
|
white forest god. It was he who had slain Kulonga
|
||
|
and others of the warriors of Mbonga, the chief.
|
||
|
It was he who entered the village stealthily, by magic,
|
||
|
in the darkness of the night, to steal arrows and poison,
|
||
|
and frighten the women and the children and even the
|
||
|
great warriors. Doubtless this wicked god fed upon
|
||
|
little boys. Had his mother not said as much when he
|
||
|
was naughty and she threatened to give him to the white
|
||
|
god of the jungle if he were not good? Little black Tibo
|
||
|
shook as with ague.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Are you cold, Go-bu-balu?" asked Tarzan, using the simian
|
||
|
equivalent of black he-baby in lieu of a better name.
|
||
|
"The sun is hot; why do you shiver?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tibo could not understand; but he cried for his mamma and
|
||
|
begged the great, white god to let him go, promising always
|
||
|
to be a good boy thereafter if his plea were granted.
|
||
|
Tarzan shook his head. Not a word could he understand.
|
||
|
This would never do! He must teach Go-bu-balu a language
|
||
|
which sounded like talk. It was quite certain to Tarzan
|
||
|
that Go-bu-balu's speech was not talk at all. It sounded
|
||
|
quite as senseless as the chattering of the silly birds.
|
||
|
It would be best, thought the ape-man, quickly to get him
|
||
|
among the tribe of Kerchak where he would hear the Mangani
|
||
|
talking among themselves. Thus he would soon learn an
|
||
|
intelligible form of speech.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tarzan rose to his feet upon the swaying branch where he
|
||
|
had halted far above the ground, and motioned to the child
|
||
|
to follow him; but Tibo only clung tightly to the bole
|
||
|
of the tree and wept. Being a boy, and a native African,
|
||
|
he had, of course, climbed into trees many times before this;
|
||
|
but the idea of racing off through the forest, leaping from
|
||
|
one branch to another, as his captor, to his horror,
|
||
|
had done when he had carried Tibo away from his mother,
|
||
|
filled his childish heart with terror.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tarzan sighed. His newly acquired balu had much indeed
|
||
|
to learn. It was pitiful that a balu of his size and strength
|
||
|
should be so backward. He tried to coax Tibo to follow him;
|
||
|
but the child dared not, so Tarzan picked him up and carried
|
||
|
him upon his back. Tibo no longer scratched or bit.
|
||
|
Escape seemed impossible. Even now, were he set upon
|
||
|
the ground, the chance was remote, he knew, that he could
|
||
|
find his way back to the village of Mbonga, the chief.
|
||
|
Even if he could, there were the lions and the leopards
|
||
|
and the hyenas, any one of which, as Tibo was well aware,
|
||
|
was particularly fond of the meat of little black boys.
|
||
|
|
||
|
So far the terrible white god of the jungle had offered
|
||
|
him no harm. He could not expect even this much
|
||
|
consideration from the frightful, green-eyed man-eaters.
|
||
|
It would be the lesser of two evils, then, to let the
|
||
|
white god carry him away without scratching and biting,
|
||
|
as he had done at first.
|
||
|
|
||
|
As Tarzan swung rapidly through the trees, little Tibo
|
||
|
closed his eyes in terror rather than look longer down
|
||
|
into the frightful abysses beneath. Never before in all
|
||
|
his life had Tibo been so frightened, yet as the white
|
||
|
giant sped on with him through the forest there stole
|
||
|
over the child an inexplicable sensation of security as he
|
||
|
saw how true were the leaps of the ape-man, how unerring
|
||
|
his grasp upon the swaying limbs which gave him hand-hold,
|
||
|
and then, too, there was safety in the middle terraces
|
||
|
of the forest, far above the reach of the dreaded lions.
|
||
|
|
||
|
And so Tarzan came to the clearing where the tribe fed,
|
||
|
dropping among them with his new balu clinging tightly
|
||
|
to his shoulders. He was fairly in the midst of them
|
||
|
before Tibo spied a single one of the great hairy forms,
|
||
|
or before the apes realized that Tarzan was not alone.
|
||
|
When they saw the little Gomangani perched upon his back
|
||
|
some of them came forward in curiosity with upcurled lips
|
||
|
and snarling mien.
|
||
|
|
||
|
An hour before little Tibo would have said that he
|
||
|
knew the uttermost depths of fear; but now, as he saw
|
||
|
these fearsome beasts surrounding him, he realized that
|
||
|
all that had gone before was as nothing by comparison.
|
||
|
Why did the great white giant stand there so unconcernedly?
|
||
|
Why did he not flee before these horrid, hairy, tree men
|
||
|
fell upon them both and tore them to pieces? And then
|
||
|
there came to Tibo a numbing recollection. It was none
|
||
|
other than the story he had heard passed from mouth
|
||
|
to mouth, fearfully, by the people of Mbonga, the chief,
|
||
|
that this great white demon of the jungle was naught other
|
||
|
than a hairless ape, for had not he been seen in company with
|
||
|
these?
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tibo could only stare in wide-eyed horror at the
|
||
|
approaching apes. He saw their beetling brows,
|
||
|
their great fangs, their wicked eyes. He noted their
|
||
|
mighty muscles rolling beneath their shaggy hides.
|
||
|
Their every attitude and expression was a menace.
|
||
|
Tarzan saw this, too. He drew Tibo around in front of him.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"This is Tarzan's Go-bu-balu," he said. "Do not harm him,
|
||
|
or Tarzan will kill you," and he bared his own fangs
|
||
|
in the teeth of the nearest ape.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"It is a Gomangani," replied the ape. "Let me kill it.
|
||
|
It is a Gomangani. The Gomangani are our enemies.
|
||
|
Let me kill it."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Go away," snarled Tarzan. "I tell you, Gunto, it is
|
||
|
Tarzan's balu. Go away or Tarzan will kill you,"
|
||
|
and the ape-man took a step toward the advancing ape.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The latter sidled off, quite stiff and haughty,
|
||
|
after the manner of a dog which meets another and is
|
||
|
too proud to fight and too fearful to turn his back and run.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Next came Teeka, prompted by curiosity. At her side
|
||
|
skipped little Gazan. They were filled with wonder
|
||
|
like the others; but Teeka did not bare her fangs.
|
||
|
Tarzan saw this and motioned that she approach.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Tarzan has a balu now," he said. "He and Teeka's balu
|
||
|
can play together."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"It is a Gomangani, " replied Teeka. "It will kill my balu.
|
||
|
Take it away, Tarzan."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tarzan laughed. "It could not harm Pamba, the rat,"
|
||
|
he said. "It is but a little balu and very frightened.
|
||
|
Let Gazan play with it."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Teeka still was fearful, for with all their mighty
|
||
|
ferocity the great anthropoids are timid; but at last,
|
||
|
assured by her great confidence in Tarzan, she pushed
|
||
|
Gazan forward toward the little black boy. The small ape,
|
||
|
guided by instinct, drew back toward its mother, baring its
|
||
|
small fangs and screaming in mingled fear and rage.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tibo, too, showed no signs of desiring a closer acquaintance
|
||
|
with Gazan, so Tarzan gave up his efforts for the time.
|
||
|
|
||
|
During the week which followed, Tarzan found his time
|
||
|
much occupied. His balu was a greater responsibility
|
||
|
than he had counted upon. Not for a moment did he dare
|
||
|
leave it, since of all the tribe, Teeka alone could have
|
||
|
been depended upon to refrain from slaying the hapless
|
||
|
black had it not been for Tarzan's constant watchfulness.
|
||
|
When the ape-man hunted, he must carry Go-bu-balu about
|
||
|
with him. It was irksome, and then the little black
|
||
|
seemed so stupid and fearful to Tarzan. It was quite
|
||
|
helpless against even the lesser of the jungle creatures.
|
||
|
Tarzan wondered how it had survived at all. He tried
|
||
|
to teach it, and found a ray of hope in the fact that
|
||
|
Go-bu-balu had mastered a few words of the language
|
||
|
of the anthropoids, and that he could now cling to a
|
||
|
high-tossed branch without screaming in fear; but there
|
||
|
was something about the child which worried Tarzan.
|
||
|
He often had watched the blacks within their village.
|
||
|
He had seen the children playing, and always there had
|
||
|
been much laughter; but little Go-bu-balu never laughed.
|
||
|
It was true that Tarzan himself never laughed. Upon occasion
|
||
|
he smiled, grimly, but to laughter he was a stranger.
|
||
|
The black, however, should have laughed, reasoned the ape-man.
|
||
|
It was the way of the Gomangani.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Also, he saw that the little fellow often refused food
|
||
|
and was growing thinner day by day. At times he surprised
|
||
|
the boy sobbing softly to himself. Tarzan tried to
|
||
|
comfort him, even as fierce Kala had comforted Tarzan
|
||
|
when the ape-man was a balu, but all to no avail.
|
||
|
Go-bu-balu merely no longer feared Tarzan--that was all.
|
||
|
He feared every other living thing within the jungle.
|
||
|
He feared the jungle days with their long excursions
|
||
|
through the dizzy tree tops. He feared the jungle nights
|
||
|
with their swaying, perilous couches far above the ground,
|
||
|
and the grunting and coughing of the great carnivora prowling
|
||
|
beneath him.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tarzan did not know what to do. His heritage of English
|
||
|
blood rendered it a difficult thing even to consider
|
||
|
a surrender of his project, though he was forced to admit
|
||
|
to himself that his balu was not all that he had hoped.
|
||
|
Though he was faithful to his self-imposed task, and even
|
||
|
found that he had grown to like Go-bu-balu, he could
|
||
|
not deceive himself into believing that he felt for it
|
||
|
that fierce heat of passionate affection which Teeka
|
||
|
revealed for Gazan, and which the black mother had shown
|
||
|
for Go-bu-balu.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The little black boy from cringing terror at the sight of
|
||
|
Tarzan passed by degrees into trustfulness and admiration.
|
||
|
Only kindness had he ever received at the hands of the
|
||
|
great white devil-god, yet he had seen with what ferocity
|
||
|
his kindly captor could deal with others. He had seen him
|
||
|
leap upon a certain he-ape which persisted in attempting
|
||
|
to seize and slay Go-bu-balu. He had seen the strong,
|
||
|
white teeth of the ape-man fastened in the neck of
|
||
|
his adversary, and the mighty muscles tensed in battle.
|
||
|
He had heard the savage, bestial snarls and roars
|
||
|
of combat, and he had realized with a shudder that he
|
||
|
could not differentiate between those of his guardian
|
||
|
and those of the hairy ape.
|
||
|
|
||
|
He had seen Tarzan bring down a buck, just as Numa, the lion,
|
||
|
might have done, leaping upon its back and fastening his fangs
|
||
|
in the creature's neck. Tibo had shuddered at the sight,
|
||
|
but he had thrilled, too, and for the first time there
|
||
|
entered his dull, Negroid mind a vague desire to emulate
|
||
|
his savage foster parent. But Tibo, the little black boy,
|
||
|
lacked the divine spark which had permitted Tarzan,
|
||
|
the white boy, to benefit by his training in the ways
|
||
|
of the fierce jungle. In imagination he was wanting,
|
||
|
and imagination is but another name for super-intelligence.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Imagination it is which builds bridges, and cities,
|
||
|
and empires. The beasts know it not, the blacks only
|
||
|
a little, while to one in a hundred thousand of earth's
|
||
|
dominant race it is given as a gift from heaven that man
|
||
|
may not perish from the earth.
|
||
|
|
||
|
While Tarzan pondered his problem concerning the future
|
||
|
of his balu, Fate was arranging to take the matter out
|
||
|
of his hands. Momaya, Tibo's mother, grief-stricken at
|
||
|
the loss of her boy, had consulted the tribal witch-doctor,
|
||
|
but to no avail. The medicine he made was not good medicine,
|
||
|
for though Momaya paid him two goats for it, it did
|
||
|
not bring back Tibo, nor even indicate where she might
|
||
|
search for him with reasonable assurance of finding him.
|
||
|
Momaya, being of a short temper and of another people,
|
||
|
had little respect for the witch-doctor of her
|
||
|
husband's tribe, and so, when he suggested that a further
|
||
|
payment of two more fat goats would doubtless enable
|
||
|
him to make stronger medicine, she promptly loosed her
|
||
|
shrewish tongue upon him, and with such good effect that
|
||
|
he was glad to take himself off with his zebra's tail and his pot
|
||
|
of magic.
|
||
|
|
||
|
When he had gone and Momaya had succeeded in partially
|
||
|
subduing her anger, she gave herself over to thought,
|
||
|
as she so often had done since the abduction of her Tibo,
|
||
|
in the hope that she finally might discover some feasible
|
||
|
means of locating him, or at least assuring herself as to
|
||
|
whether he were alive or dead.
|
||
|
|
||
|
It was known to the blacks that Tarzan did not eat the flesh
|
||
|
of man, for he had slain more than one of their number,
|
||
|
yet never tasted the flesh of any. Too, the bodies
|
||
|
always had been found, sometimes dropping as though
|
||
|
from the clouds to alight in the center of the village.
|
||
|
As Tibo's body had not been found, Momaya argued that he
|
||
|
still lived, but where?
|
||
|
|
||
|
Then it was that there came to her mind a recollection
|
||
|
of Bukawai, the unclean, who dwelt in a cave in the hillside
|
||
|
to the north, and who it was well known entertained
|
||
|
devils in his evil lair. Few, if any, had the temerity
|
||
|
to visit old Bukawai, firstly because of fear of his black
|
||
|
magic and the two hyenas who dwelt with him and were
|
||
|
commonly known to be devils masquerading, and secondly
|
||
|
because of the loathsome disease which had caused Bukawai
|
||
|
to be an outcast--a disease which was slowly eating away his
|
||
|
face.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Now it was that Momaya reasoned shrewdly that if any might
|
||
|
know the whereabouts of her Tibo, it would be Bukawai,
|
||
|
who was in friendly intercourse with gods and demons,
|
||
|
since a demon or a god it was who had stolen her baby;
|
||
|
but even her great mother love was sorely taxed to find
|
||
|
the courage to send her forth into the black jungle toward
|
||
|
the distant hills and the uncanny abode of Bukawai,
|
||
|
the unclean, and his devils.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Mother love, however, is one of the human passions
|
||
|
which closely approximates to the dignity of an
|
||
|
irresistible force. It drives the frail flesh of weak
|
||
|
women to deeds of heroic measure. Momaya was neither frail
|
||
|
nor weak, physically, but she was a woman, an ignorant,
|
||
|
superstitious, African savage. She believed in devils,
|
||
|
in black magic, and in witchcraft. To Momaya, the jungle
|
||
|
was inhabited by far more terrifying things than lions
|
||
|
and leopards--horrifying, nameless things which possessed
|
||
|
the power of wreaking frightful harm under various innocent
|
||
|
guises.
|
||
|
|
||
|
From one of the warriors of the village, whom she knew
|
||
|
to have once stumbled upon the lair of Bukawai, the mother
|
||
|
of Tibo learned how she might find it--near a spring of
|
||
|
water which rose in a small rocky canon between two hills,
|
||
|
the easternmost of which was easily recognizable because
|
||
|
of a huge granite boulder which rested upon its summit.
|
||
|
The westerly hill was lower than its companion, and was
|
||
|
quite bare of vegetation except for a single mimosa tree
|
||
|
which grew just a little below its summit.
|
||
|
|
||
|
These two hills, the man assured her, could be seen
|
||
|
for some distance before she reached them, and together
|
||
|
formed an excellent guide to her destination.
|
||
|
He warned her, however, to abandon so foolish and
|
||
|
dangerous an adventure, emphasizing what she already
|
||
|
quite well knew, that if she escaped harm at the hands
|
||
|
of Bukawai and his demons, the chances were that she
|
||
|
would not be so fortunate with the great carnivora
|
||
|
of the jungle through which she must pass going and returning.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The warrior even went to Momaya's husband, who, in turn,
|
||
|
having little authority over the vixenish lady of his choice,
|
||
|
went to Mbonga, the chief. The latter summoned Momaya,
|
||
|
threatening her with the direst punishment should she
|
||
|
venture forth upon so unholy an excursion. The old
|
||
|
chief's interest in the matter was due solely to that
|
||
|
age-old alliance which exists between church and state.
|
||
|
The local witch-doctor, knowing his own medicine
|
||
|
better than any other knew it, was jealous of all
|
||
|
other pretenders to accomplishments in the black art.
|
||
|
He long had heard of the power of Bukawai, and feared lest,
|
||
|
should he succeed in recovering Momaya's lost child,
|
||
|
much of the tribal patronage and consequent fees would be
|
||
|
diverted to the unclean one. As Mbonga received, as chief,
|
||
|
a certain proportion of the witch-doctor's fees and could
|
||
|
expect nothing from Bukawai, his heart and soul were,
|
||
|
quite naturally, wrapped up in the orthodox church.
|
||
|
|
||
|
But if Momaya could view with intrepid heart an excursion
|
||
|
into the jungle and a visit to the fear-haunted abode
|
||
|
of Bukawai, she was not likely to be deterred by threats
|
||
|
of future punishment at the hands of old Mbonga,
|
||
|
whom she secretly despised. Yet she appeared to accede
|
||
|
to his injunctions, returning to her hut in silence.
|
||
|
|
||
|
She would have preferred starting upon her quest
|
||
|
by day-light, but this was now out of the question,
|
||
|
since she must carry food and a weapon of some sort--things
|
||
|
which she never could pass out of the village with by
|
||
|
day without being subjected to curious questioning
|
||
|
that surely would come immediately to the ears of Mbonga.
|
||
|
|
||
|
So Momaya bided her time until night, and just before the
|
||
|
gates of the village were closed, she slipped through into
|
||
|
the darkness and the jungle. She was much frightened,
|
||
|
but she set her face resolutely toward the north, and though
|
||
|
she paused often to listen, breathlessly, for the huge
|
||
|
cats which, here, were her greatest terror, she nevertheless
|
||
|
continued her way staunchly for several hours, until a low
|
||
|
moan a little to her right and behind her brought her to a sudden
|
||
|
stop.
|
||
|
|
||
|
With palpitating heart the woman stood, scarce daring
|
||
|
to breathe, and then, very faintly but unmistakable
|
||
|
to her keen ears, came the stealthy crunching of twigs
|
||
|
and grasses beneath padded feet.
|
||
|
|
||
|
All about Momaya grew the giant trees of the tropical jungle,
|
||
|
festooned with hanging vines and mosses. She seized
|
||
|
upon the nearest and started to clamber, apelike, to the
|
||
|
branches above. As she did so, there was a sudden
|
||
|
rush of a great body behind her, a menacing roar that
|
||
|
caused the earth to tremble, and something crashed
|
||
|
into the very creepers to which she was clinging--but below her.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Momaya drew herself to safety among the leafy branches and
|
||
|
thanked the foresight which had prompted her to bring along
|
||
|
the dried human ear which hung from a cord about her neck.
|
||
|
She always had known that that ear was good medicine.
|
||
|
It had been given her, when a girl, by the witch-doctor
|
||
|
of her town tribe, and was nothing like the poor,
|
||
|
weak medicine of Mbonga's witch-doctor.
|
||
|
|
||
|
All night Momaya clung to her perch, for although the
|
||
|
lion sought other prey after a short time, she dared
|
||
|
not descend into the darkness again, for fear she might
|
||
|
encounter him or another of his kind; but at daylight
|
||
|
she clambered down and resumed her way.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tarzan of the Apes, finding that his balu never ceased to give
|
||
|
evidence of terror in the presence of the apes of the tribe,
|
||
|
and also that most of the adult apes were a constant menace
|
||
|
to Go-bu-balu's life, so that Tarzan dared not leave him
|
||
|
alone with them, took to hunting with the little black boy
|
||
|
farther and farther from the stamping grounds of the anthropoids.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Little by little his absences from the tribe grew in length
|
||
|
as he wandered farther away from them, until finally he
|
||
|
found himself a greater distance to the north than he ever
|
||
|
before had hunted, and with water and ample game and fruit,
|
||
|
he felt not at all inclined to return to the tribe.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Little Go-bu-balu gave evidences of a greater interest
|
||
|
in life, an interest which varied in direct proportion
|
||
|
to the distance he was from the apes of Kerchak.
|
||
|
He now trotted along behind Tarzan when the ape-man went
|
||
|
upon the ground, and in the trees he even did his best
|
||
|
to follow his mighty foster parent. The boy was still
|
||
|
sad and lonely. His thin, little body had grown steadily
|
||
|
thinner since he had come among the apes, for while,
|
||
|
as a young cannibal, he was not overnice in the matter
|
||
|
of diet, he found it not always to his taste to stomach
|
||
|
the weird things which tickled the palates of epicures
|
||
|
among the apes.
|
||
|
|
||
|
His large eyes were very large indeed now, his cheeks sunken,
|
||
|
and every rib of his emaciated body plainly discernible
|
||
|
to whomsoever should care to count them. Constant terror,
|
||
|
perhaps, had had as much to do with his physical condition as
|
||
|
had improper food. Tarzan noticed the change and was worried.
|
||
|
He had hoped to see his balu wax sturdy and strong.
|
||
|
His disappointment was great. In only one respect did
|
||
|
Go-bu-balu seem to progress--he readily was mastering
|
||
|
the language of the apes. Even now he and Tarzan could
|
||
|
converse in a fairly satisfactory manner by supplementing
|
||
|
the meager ape speech with signs; but for the most part,
|
||
|
Go-bu-balu was silent other than to answer questions put
|
||
|
to him. His great sorrow was yet too new and too poignant
|
||
|
to be laid aside even momentarily. Always he pined for
|
||
|
Momaya--shrewish, hideous, repulsive, perhaps, she would
|
||
|
have been to you or me, but to Tibo she was mamma,
|
||
|
the personification of that one great love which knows
|
||
|
no selfishness and which does not consume itself in its own
|
||
|
fires.
|
||
|
|
||
|
As the two hunted, or rather as Tarzan hunted and Go-bu-balu
|
||
|
tagged along in his wake, the ape-man noticed many things
|
||
|
and thought much. Once they came upon Sabor moaning in
|
||
|
the tall grasses. About her romped and played two little
|
||
|
balls of fur, but her eyes were for one which lay between
|
||
|
her great forepaws and did not romp, one who never would romp
|
||
|
again.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tarzan read aright the anguish and the suffering of the
|
||
|
huge mother cat. He had been minded to bait her. It was
|
||
|
to do this that he had sneaked silently through the trees
|
||
|
until he had come almost above her, but something held the
|
||
|
ape-man as he saw the lioness grieving over her dead cub.
|
||
|
With the acquisition of Go-bu-balu, Tarzan had come
|
||
|
to realize the responsibilities and sorrows of parentage,
|
||
|
without its joys. His heart went out to Sabor as it might
|
||
|
not have done a few weeks before. As he watched her,
|
||
|
there rose quite unbidden before him a vision of Momaya,
|
||
|
the skewer through the septum of her nose, her pendulous
|
||
|
under lip sagging beneath the weight which dragged it down.
|
||
|
Tarzan saw not her unloveliness; he saw only the same anguish
|
||
|
that was Sabor's, and he winced. That strange functioning
|
||
|
of the mind which sometimes is called association of ideas
|
||
|
snapped Teeka and Gazan before the ape-man's mental vision.
|
||
|
What if one should come and take Gazan from Teeka.
|
||
|
Tarzan uttered a low and ominous growl as though Gazan were
|
||
|
his own. Go-bu-balu glanced here and there apprehensively,
|
||
|
thinking that Tarzan had espied an enemy. Sabor sprang
|
||
|
suddenly to her feet, her yellow-green eyes blazing,
|
||
|
her tail lashing as she cocked her ears, and raising
|
||
|
her muzzle, sniffed the air for possible danger.
|
||
|
The two little cubs, which had been playing, scampered
|
||
|
quickly to her, and standing beneath her, peered out
|
||
|
from between her forelegs, their big ears upstanding,
|
||
|
their little heads cocked first upon one side and then
|
||
|
upon the other.
|
||
|
|
||
|
With a shake of his black shock, Tarzan turned away
|
||
|
and resumed his hunting in another direction; but all day
|
||
|
there rose one after another, above the threshold of his
|
||
|
objective mind, memory portraits of Sabor, of Momaya,
|
||
|
and of Teeka--a lioness, a cannibal, and a she-ape, yet
|
||
|
to the ape-man they were identical through motherhood.
|
||
|
|
||
|
It was noon of the third day when Momaya came within
|
||
|
sight of the cave of Bukawai, the unclean. The old
|
||
|
witch-doctor had rigged a framework of interlaced boughs
|
||
|
to close the mouth of the cave from predatory beasts.
|
||
|
This was now set to one side, and the black cavern beyond
|
||
|
yawned mysterious and repellent. Momaya shivered as from
|
||
|
a cold wind of the rainy season. No sign of life appeared
|
||
|
about the cave, yet Momaya experienced that uncanny
|
||
|
sensation as of unseen eyes regarding her malevolently.
|
||
|
Again she shuddered. She tried to force her unwilling
|
||
|
feet onward toward the cave, when from its depths issued
|
||
|
an uncanny sound that was neither brute nor human, a weird
|
||
|
sound that was akin to mirthless laughter.
|
||
|
|
||
|
With a stifled scream, Momaya turned and fled into the jungle.
|
||
|
For a hundred yards she ran before she could control
|
||
|
her terror, and then she paused, listening. Was all
|
||
|
her labor, were all the terrors and dangers through
|
||
|
which she had passed to go for naught? She tried to steel
|
||
|
herself to return to the cave, but again fright overcame her.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Saddened, disheartened, she turned slowly upon the back trail
|
||
|
toward the village of Mbonga. Her young shoulders now were
|
||
|
drooped like those of an old woman who bears a great burden
|
||
|
of many years with their accumulated pains and sorrows,
|
||
|
and she walked with tired feet and a halting step.
|
||
|
The spring of youth was gone from Momaya.
|
||
|
|
||
|
For another hundred yards she dragged her weary way,
|
||
|
her brain half paralyzed from dumb terror and suffering,
|
||
|
and then there came to her the memory of a little babe
|
||
|
that suckled at her breast, and of a slim boy who romped,
|
||
|
laughing, about her, and they were both Tibo--her Tibo!
|
||
|
|
||
|
Her shoulders straightened. She shook her savage head,
|
||
|
and she turned about and walked boldly back to the
|
||
|
mouth of the cave of Bukawai, the unclean--of Bukawai,
|
||
|
the witch-doctor.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Again, from the interior of the cave came the hideous
|
||
|
laughter that was not laughter. This time Momaya
|
||
|
recognized it for what it was, the strange cry of a hyena.
|
||
|
No more did she shudder, but she held her spear ready
|
||
|
and called aloud to Bukawai to come out.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Instead of Bukawai came the repulsive head of a hyena.
|
||
|
Momaya poked at it with her spear, and the ugly,
|
||
|
sullen brute drew back with an angry growl. Again Momaya
|
||
|
called Bukawai by name, and this time there came an answer
|
||
|
in mumbling tones that were scarce more human than those
|
||
|
of the beast.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Who comes to Bukawai?" queried the voice.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"It is Momaya," replied the woman; "Momaya from the village
|
||
|
of Mbonga, the chief.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"What do you want?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I want good medicine, better medicine than Mbonga's witch-doctor
|
||
|
can make," replied Momaya. "The great, white, jungle god
|
||
|
has stolen my Tibo, and I want medicine to bring him back,
|
||
|
or to find where he is hidden that I may go and get him."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Who is Tibo?" asked Bukawai.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Momaya told him.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Bukawai's medicine is very strong," said the voice.
|
||
|
"Five goats and a new sleeping mat are scarce enough in
|
||
|
exchange for Bukawai's medicine."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Two goats are enough," said Momaya, for the spirit
|
||
|
of barter is strong in the breasts of the blacks.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The pleasure of haggling over the price was a sufficiently
|
||
|
potent lure to draw Bukawai to the mouth of the cave.
|
||
|
Momaya was sorry when she saw him that he had not
|
||
|
remained within. There are some things too horrible,
|
||
|
too hideous, too repulsive for description--Bukawai's face
|
||
|
was of these. When Momaya saw him she understood why it
|
||
|
was that he was almost inarticulate.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Beside him were two hyenas, which rumor had said were his
|
||
|
only and constant companions. They made an excellent
|
||
|
trio--the most repulsive of beasts with the most repulsive
|
||
|
of humans.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Five goats and a new sleeping mat," mumbled Bukawai.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Two fat goats and a sleeping mat." Momaya raised her bid;
|
||
|
but Bukawai was obdurate. He stuck for the five goats
|
||
|
and the sleeping mat for a matter of half an hour,
|
||
|
while the hyenas sniffed and growled and laughed hideously.
|
||
|
Momaya was determined to give all that Bukawai asked
|
||
|
if she could do no better, but haggling is second nature
|
||
|
to black barterers, and in the end it partly repaid her,
|
||
|
for a compromise finally was reached which included
|
||
|
three fat goats, a new sleeping mat, and a piece of
|
||
|
copper wire.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Come back tonight," said Bukawai, "when the moon is two
|
||
|
hours in the sky. Then will I make the strong medicine
|
||
|
which shall bring Tibo back to you. Bring with you
|
||
|
the three fat goats, the new sleeping mat, and the piece
|
||
|
of copper wire the length of a large man's forearm."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I cannot bring them," said Momaya. "You will have
|
||
|
to come after them. When you have restored Tibo to me,
|
||
|
you shall have them all at the village of Mbonga.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Bukawai shook his head.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I will make no medicine," he said, "until I have
|
||
|
the goats and the mat and the copper wire."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Momaya pleaded and threatened, but all to no avail.
|
||
|
Finally, she turned away and started off through the jungle
|
||
|
toward the village of Mbonga. How she could get three
|
||
|
goats and a sleeping mat out of the village and through
|
||
|
the jungle to the cave of Bukawai, she did not know,
|
||
|
but that she would do it somehow she was quite positive--she
|
||
|
would do it or die. Tibo must be restored to her.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tarzan coming lazily through the jungle with little Go-bu-balu,
|
||
|
caught the scent of Bara, the deer. Tarzan hungered for
|
||
|
the flesh of Bara. Naught tickled his palate so greatly;
|
||
|
but to stalk Bara with Go-bu-balu at his heels, was out
|
||
|
of the question, so he hid the child in the crotch of
|
||
|
a tree where the thick foliage screened him from view,
|
||
|
and set off swiftly and silently upon the spoor of Bara.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tibo alone was more terrified than Tibo even among the apes.
|
||
|
Real and apparent dangers are less disconcerting than
|
||
|
those which we imagine, and only the gods of his people
|
||
|
knew how much Tibo imagined.
|
||
|
|
||
|
He had been but a short time in his hiding place when
|
||
|
he heard something approaching through the jungle.
|
||
|
He crouched closer to the limb upon which he lay and prayed
|
||
|
that Tarzan would return quickly. His wide eyes searched
|
||
|
the jungle in the direction of the moving creature.
|
||
|
|
||
|
What if it was a leopard that had caught his scent! It would
|
||
|
be upon him in a minute. Hot tears flowed from the large
|
||
|
eyes of little Tibo. The curtain of jungle foliage rustled
|
||
|
close at hand. The thing was but a few paces from his tree!
|
||
|
His eyes fairly popped from his black face as he watched
|
||
|
for the appearance of the dread creature which presently would
|
||
|
thrust a snarling countenance from between the vines and
|
||
|
creepers.
|
||
|
|
||
|
And then the curtain parted and a woman stepped into
|
||
|
full view. With a gasping cry, Tibo tumbled from his
|
||
|
perch and raced toward her. Momaya suddenly started
|
||
|
back and raised her spear, but a second later she cast
|
||
|
it aside and caught the thin body in her strong arms.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Crushing it to her, she cried and laughed all at one and
|
||
|
the same time, and hot tears of joy, mingled with the tears
|
||
|
of Tibo, trickled down the crease between her naked breasts.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Disturbed by the noise so close at hand, there arose
|
||
|
from his sleep in a near-by thicket Numa, the lion.
|
||
|
He looked through the tangled underbrush and saw
|
||
|
the black woman and her young. He licked his chops
|
||
|
and measured the distance between them and himself.
|
||
|
A short charge and a long leap would carry him upon them.
|
||
|
He flicked the end of his tail and sighed.
|
||
|
|
||
|
A vagrant breeze, swirling suddenly in the wrong direction,
|
||
|
carried the scent of Tarzan to the sensitive nostrils
|
||
|
of Bara, the deer. There was a startled tensing of muscles
|
||
|
and cocking of ears, a sudden dash, and Tarzan's meat
|
||
|
was gone. The ape-man angrily shook his head and turned
|
||
|
back toward the spot where he had left Go-bu-balu. He
|
||
|
came softly, as was his way. Before he reached the spot
|
||
|
he heard strange sounds--the sound of a woman laughing
|
||
|
and of a woman weeping, and the two which seemed to come
|
||
|
from one throat were mingled with the convulsive sobbing
|
||
|
of a child. Tarzan hastened, and when Tarzan hastened,
|
||
|
only the birds and the wind went faster.
|
||
|
|
||
|
And as Tarzan approached the sounds, he heard another,
|
||
|
a deep sigh. Momaya did not hear it, nor did Tibo;
|
||
|
but the ears of Tarzan were as the ears of Bara, the deer.
|
||
|
He heard the sigh, and he knew, so he unloosed the heavy
|
||
|
spear which dangled at his back. Even as he sped through
|
||
|
the branches of the trees, with the same ease that you
|
||
|
or I might take out a pocket handkerchief as we strolled
|
||
|
nonchalantly down a lazy country lane, Tarzan of the Apes
|
||
|
took the spear from its thong that it might be ready against
|
||
|
any emergency.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Numa, the lion, did not rush madly to attack.
|
||
|
He reasoned again, and reason told him that already the prey
|
||
|
was his, so he pushed his great bulk through the foliage
|
||
|
and stood eyeing his meat with baleful, glaring eyes.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Momaya saw him and shrieked, drawing Tibo closer to her breast.
|
||
|
To have found her child and to lose him, all in a moment!
|
||
|
She raised her spear, throwing her hand far back of
|
||
|
her shoulder. Numa roared and stepped slowly forward.
|
||
|
Momaya cast her weapon. It grazed the tawny shoulder,
|
||
|
inflicting a flesh wound which aroused all the terrific
|
||
|
bestiality of the carnivore, and the lion charged.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Momaya tried to close her eyes, but could not. She saw
|
||
|
the flashing swiftness of the huge, oncoming death,
|
||
|
and then she saw something else. She saw a mighty,
|
||
|
naked white man drop as from the heavens into the path
|
||
|
of the charging lion. She saw the muscles of a great arm
|
||
|
flash in the light of the equatorial sun as it filtered,
|
||
|
dappling, through the foliage above. She saw a heavy
|
||
|
hunting spear hurtle through the air to meet the lion
|
||
|
in midleap.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Numa brought up upon his haunches, roaring terribly and striking
|
||
|
at the spear which protruded from his breast. His great blows
|
||
|
bent and twisted the weapon. Tarzan, crouching and with
|
||
|
hunting knife in hand, circled warily about the frenzied cat.
|
||
|
Momaya, wide-eyed, stood rooted to the spot, watching,
|
||
|
fascinated.
|
||
|
|
||
|
In sudden fury Numa hurled himself toward the ape-man,
|
||
|
but the wiry creature eluded the blundering charge,
|
||
|
side-stepping quickly only to rush in upon his foe.
|
||
|
Twice the hunting blade flashed in the air. Twice it fell
|
||
|
upon the back of Numa, already weakening from the spear
|
||
|
point so near his heart. The second stroke of the blade
|
||
|
pierced far into the beast's spine, and with a last
|
||
|
convulsive sweep of the fore-paws, in a vain attempt
|
||
|
to reach his tormentor, Numa sprawled upon the ground,
|
||
|
paralyzed and dying.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Bukawai, fearful lest he should lose any recompense,
|
||
|
followed Momaya with the intention of persuading her
|
||
|
to part with her ornaments of copper and iron against
|
||
|
her return with the price of the medicine--to pay,
|
||
|
as it were, for an option on his services as one pays
|
||
|
a retaining fee to an attorney, for, like an attorney,
|
||
|
Bukawai knew the value of his medicine and that it was
|
||
|
well to collect as much as possible in advance.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The witch-doctor came upon the scene as Tarzan leaped
|
||
|
to meet the lion's charge. He saw it all and marveled,
|
||
|
guessing immediately that this must be the strange white
|
||
|
demon concerning whom he had heard vague rumors before
|
||
|
Momaya came to him.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Momaya, now that the lion was past harming her or hers,
|
||
|
gazed with new terror upon Tarzan. It was he who had stolen
|
||
|
her Tibo. Doubtless he would attempt to steal him again.
|
||
|
Momaya hugged the boy close to her. She was determined
|
||
|
to die this time rather than suffer Tibo to be taken from
|
||
|
her again.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tarzan eyed them in silence. The sight of the boy clinging,
|
||
|
sobbing, to his mother aroused within his savage breast
|
||
|
a melancholy loneliness. There was none thus to cling
|
||
|
to Tarzan, who yearned so for the love of someone,
|
||
|
of something.
|
||
|
|
||
|
At last Tibo looked up, because of the quiet that had
|
||
|
fallen upon the jungle, and saw Tarzan. He did not shrink.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Tarzan," he said, in the speech of the great apes of the
|
||
|
tribe of Kerchak, "do not take me from Momaya, my mother.
|
||
|
Do not take me again to the lair of the hairy, tree men,
|
||
|
for I fear Taug and Gunto and the others. Let me stay
|
||
|
with Momaya, O Tarzan, God of the Jungle! Let me stay
|
||
|
with Momaya, my mother, and to the end of our days we will
|
||
|
bless you and put food before the gates of the village
|
||
|
of Mbonga that you may never hunger."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tarzan sighed.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Go," he said, "back to the village of Mbonga, and Tarzan
|
||
|
will follow to see that no harm befalls you."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tibo translated the words to his mother, and the two turned
|
||
|
their backs upon the ape-man and started off toward home.
|
||
|
In the heart of Momaya was a great fear and a great exultation,
|
||
|
for never before had she walked with God, and never had
|
||
|
she been so happy. She strained little Tibo to her,
|
||
|
stroking his thin cheek. Tarzan saw and sighed again.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"For Teeka there is Teeka's balu," he soliloquized;
|
||
|
"for Sabor there are balus, and for the she-Gomangani,
|
||
|
and for Bara, and for Manu, and even for Pamba, the rat;
|
||
|
but for Tarzan there can be none--neither a she nor a balu.
|
||
|
Tarzan of the Apes is a man, and it must be that man
|
||
|
walks alone."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Bukawai saw them go, and he mumbled through his rotting face,
|
||
|
swearing a great oath that he would yet have the three
|
||
|
fat goats, the new sleeping mat, and the bit of copper wire.
|
||
|
|
||
|
6
|
||
|
|
||
|
The Witch-Doctor Seeks Vengeance
|
||
|
|
||
|
LORD GREYSTOKE was hunting, or, to be more accurate,
|
||
|
he was shooting pheasants at Chamston-Hedding. Lord
|
||
|
Greystoke was immaculately and appropriately garbed--to
|
||
|
the minutest detail he was vogue. To be sure, he was among
|
||
|
the forward guns, not being considered a sporting shot,
|
||
|
but what he lacked in skill he more than made up
|
||
|
in appearance. At the end of the day he would, doubtless,
|
||
|
have many birds to his credit, since he had two guns
|
||
|
and a smart loader-- many more birds than he could eat
|
||
|
in a year, even had he been hungry, which he was not,
|
||
|
having but just arisen from the breakfast table.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The beaters--there were twenty-three of them, in white
|
||
|
smocks--had but just driven the birds into a patch of gorse,
|
||
|
and were now circling to the opposite side that they
|
||
|
might drive down toward the guns. Lord Greystoke was
|
||
|
quite as excited as he ever permitted himself to become.
|
||
|
There was an exhilaration in the sport that would not
|
||
|
be denied. He felt his blood tingling through his veins
|
||
|
as the beaters approached closer and closer to the birds.
|
||
|
In a vague and stupid sort of way Lord Greystoke felt,
|
||
|
as he always felt upon such occasions, that he was
|
||
|
experiencing a sensation somewhat akin to a reversion
|
||
|
to a prehistoric type--that the blood of an ancient forbear
|
||
|
was coursing hot through him, a hairy, half-naked forbear
|
||
|
who had lived by the hunt.
|
||
|
|
||
|
And far away in a matted equatorial jungle another
|
||
|
Lord Greystoke, the real Lord Greystoke, hunted. By the
|
||
|
standards which he knew, he, too, was vogue--utterly vogue,
|
||
|
as was the primal ancestor before the first eviction.
|
||
|
The day being sultry, the leopard skin had been left behind.
|
||
|
The real Lord Greystoke had not two guns, to be sure,
|
||
|
nor even one, neither did he have a smart loader; but he
|
||
|
possessed something infinitely more efficacious than guns,
|
||
|
or loaders, or even twenty-three beaters in white smocks--he
|
||
|
possessed an appetite, an uncanny woodcraft, and muscles
|
||
|
that were as steel springs.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Later that day, in England, a Lord Greystoke ate bountifully
|
||
|
of things he had not killed, and he drank other things
|
||
|
which were uncorked to the accompaniment of much noise.
|
||
|
He patted his lips with snowy linen to remove the faint
|
||
|
traces of his repast, quite ignorant of the fact that he was
|
||
|
an impostor and that the rightful owner of his noble title
|
||
|
was even then finishing his own dinner in far-off Africa.
|
||
|
He was not using snowy linen, though. Instead he drew
|
||
|
the back of a brown forearm and hand across his mouth
|
||
|
and wiped his bloody fingers upon his thighs. Then he
|
||
|
moved slowly through the jungle to the drinking place,
|
||
|
where, upon all fours, he drank as drank his fellows,
|
||
|
the other beasts of the jungle.
|
||
|
|
||
|
As he quenched his thirst, another denizen of the gloomy
|
||
|
forest approached the stream along the path behind him.
|
||
|
It was Numa, the lion, tawny of body and black of mane,
|
||
|
scowling and sinister, rumbling out low, coughing roars.
|
||
|
Tarzan of the Apes heard him long before he came within sight,
|
||
|
but the ape-man went on with his drinking until he had had
|
||
|
his fill; then he arose, slowly, with the easy grace of a
|
||
|
creature of the wilds and all the quiet dignity that was
|
||
|
his birthright.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Numa halted as he saw the man standing at the very spot
|
||
|
where the king would drink. His jaws were parted, and his
|
||
|
cruel eyes gleamed. He growled and advanced slowly.
|
||
|
The man growled, too, backing slowly to one side,
|
||
|
and watching, not the lion's face, but its tail.
|
||
|
Should that commence to move from side to side in quick,
|
||
|
nervous jerks, it would be well to be upon the alert,
|
||
|
and should it rise suddenly erect, straight and stiff,
|
||
|
then one might prepare to fight or flee; but it did neither,
|
||
|
so Tarzan merely backed away and the lion came down and drank
|
||
|
scarce fifty feet from where the man stood.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tomorrow they might be at one another's throats, but today
|
||
|
there existed one of those strange and inexplicable truces
|
||
|
which so often are seen among the savage ones of the jungle.
|
||
|
Before Numa had finished drinking, Tarzan had returned
|
||
|
into the forest, and was swinging away in the direction
|
||
|
of the village of Mbonga, the black chief.
|
||
|
|
||
|
It had been at least a moon since the ape-man had called upon
|
||
|
the Gomangani. Not since he had restored little Tibo to his
|
||
|
grief-stricken mother had the whim seized him to do so.
|
||
|
The incident of the adopted balu was a closed one to Tarzan.
|
||
|
He had sought to find something upon which to lavish such
|
||
|
an affection as Teeka lavished upon her balu, but a short
|
||
|
experience of the little black boy had made it quite plain
|
||
|
to the ape-man that no such sentiment could exist between them.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The fact that he had for a time treated the little black
|
||
|
as he might have treated a real balu of his own had
|
||
|
in no way altered the vengeful sentiments with which he
|
||
|
considered the murderers of Kala. The Gomangani were
|
||
|
his deadly enemies, nor could they ever be aught else.
|
||
|
Today he looked forward to some slight relief from
|
||
|
the monotony of his existence in such excitement as he
|
||
|
might derive from baiting the blacks.
|
||
|
|
||
|
It was not yet dark when he reached the village and took
|
||
|
his place in the great tree overhanging the palisade.
|
||
|
From beneath came a great wailing out of the depths
|
||
|
of a near-by hut. The noise fell disagreeably upon
|
||
|
Tarzan's ears--it jarred and grated. He did not like it,
|
||
|
so he decided to go away for a while in the hopes that it
|
||
|
might cease; but though he was gone for a couple of hours
|
||
|
the wailing still continued when he returned.
|
||
|
|
||
|
With the intention of putting a violent termination to the
|
||
|
annoying sound, Tarzan slipped silently from the tree into
|
||
|
the shadows beneath. Creeping stealthily and keeping well
|
||
|
in the cover of other huts, he approached that from which rose
|
||
|
the sounds of lamentation. A fire burned brightly before
|
||
|
the doorway as it did before other doorways in the village.
|
||
|
A few females squatted about, occasionally adding their
|
||
|
own mournful howlings to those of the master artist within.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The ape-man smiled a slow smile as he thought of the
|
||
|
consternation
|
||
|
which would follow the quick leap that would carry him
|
||
|
among the females and into the full light of the fire.
|
||
|
Then he would dart into the hut during the excitement,
|
||
|
throttle the chief screamer, and be gone into the jungle
|
||
|
before the blacks could gather their scattered nerves for an
|
||
|
assault.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Many times had Tarzan behaved similarly in the village
|
||
|
of Mbonga, the chief. His mysterious and unexpected
|
||
|
appearances always filled the breasts of the poor,
|
||
|
superstitious blacks with the panic of terror; never,
|
||
|
it seemed, could they accustom themselves to the sight
|
||
|
of him. It was this terror which lent to the adventures
|
||
|
the spice of interest and amusement which the human
|
||
|
mind of the ape-man craved. Merely to kill was not in
|
||
|
itself sufficient. Accustomed to the sight of death,
|
||
|
Tarzan found no great pleasure in it. Long since had he
|
||
|
avenged the death of Kala, but in the accomplishment of it,
|
||
|
he had learned the excitement and the pleasure to be derived
|
||
|
from the baiting of the blacks. Of this he never tired.
|
||
|
|
||
|
It was just as he was about to spring forward with a savage
|
||
|
roar that a figure appeared in the doorway of the hut.
|
||
|
It was the figure of the wailer whom he had come to still,
|
||
|
the figure of a young woman with a wooden skewer
|
||
|
through the split septum of her nose, with a heavy
|
||
|
metal ornament depending from her lower lip, which it
|
||
|
had dragged down to hideous and repulsive deformity,
|
||
|
with strange tattooing upon forehead, cheeks, and breasts,
|
||
|
and a wonderful coiffure built up with mud and wire.
|
||
|
|
||
|
A sudden flare of the fire threw the grotesque figure
|
||
|
into high relief, and Tarzan recognized her as Momaya,
|
||
|
the mother of Tibo. The fire also threw out a fitful
|
||
|
flame which carried to the shadows where Tarzan lurked,
|
||
|
picking out his light brown body from the surrounding darkness.
|
||
|
Momaya saw him and knew him. With a cry, she leaped
|
||
|
forward and Tarzan came to meet her. The other women,
|
||
|
turning, saw him, too; but they did not come toward him.
|
||
|
Instead they rose as one, shrieked as one, fled as one.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Momaya threw herself at Tarzan's feet, raising supplicating
|
||
|
hands toward him and pouring forth from her mutilated
|
||
|
lips a perfect cataract of words, not one of which
|
||
|
the ape-man comprehended. For a moment he looked
|
||
|
down upon the upturned, frightful face of the woman.
|
||
|
He had come to slay, but that overwhelming torrent
|
||
|
of speech filled him with consternation and with awe.
|
||
|
He glanced about him apprehensively, then back at the woman.
|
||
|
A revulsion of feeling seized him. He could not kill
|
||
|
little Tibo's mother, nor could he stand and face this
|
||
|
verbal geyser. With a quick gesture of impatience at
|
||
|
the spoiling of his evening's entertainment, he wheeled
|
||
|
and leaped away into the darkness. A moment later he
|
||
|
was swinging through the black jungle night, the cries
|
||
|
and lamentations of Momaya growing fainter in the distance.
|
||
|
|
||
|
It was with a sigh of relief that he finally reached
|
||
|
a point from which he could no longer hear them,
|
||
|
and finding a comfortable crotch high among the trees,
|
||
|
composed himself for a night of dreamless slumber,
|
||
|
while a prowling lion moaned and coughed beneath him,
|
||
|
and in far-off England the other Lord Greystoke,
|
||
|
with the assistance of a valet, disrobed and crawled
|
||
|
between spotless sheets, swearing irritably as a cat
|
||
|
meowed beneath his window.
|
||
|
|
||
|
As Tarzan followed the fresh spoor of Horta, the boar,
|
||
|
the following morning, he came upon the tracks of two Gomangani,
|
||
|
a large one and a small one. The ape-man, accustomed as he
|
||
|
was to questioning closely all that fell to his perceptions,
|
||
|
paused to read the story written in the soft mud of the
|
||
|
game trail. You or I would have seen little of interest
|
||
|
there, even if, by chance, we could have seen aught.
|
||
|
Perhaps had one been there to point them out to us,
|
||
|
we might have noted indentations in the mud, but there
|
||
|
were countless indentations, one overlapping another into
|
||
|
a confusion that would have been entirely meaningless to us.
|
||
|
To Tarzan each told its own story. Tantor, the elephant,
|
||
|
had passed that way as recently as three suns since.
|
||
|
Numa had hunted here the night just gone, and Horta,
|
||
|
the boar, had walked slowly along the trail within an hour;
|
||
|
but what held Tarzan's attention was the spoor tale of
|
||
|
the Gomangani. It told him that the day before an old man
|
||
|
had gone toward the north in company with a little boy,
|
||
|
and that with them had been two hyenas.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tarzan scratched his head in puzzled incredulity.
|
||
|
He could see by the overlapping of the footprints that
|
||
|
the beasts had not been following the two, for sometimes
|
||
|
one was ahead of them and one behind, and again both were
|
||
|
in advance, or both were in the rear. It was very strange
|
||
|
and quite inexplicable, especially where the spoor showed
|
||
|
where the hyenas in the wider portions of the path had walked
|
||
|
one on either side of the human pair, quite close to them.
|
||
|
Then Tarzan read in the spoor of the smaller Gomangani
|
||
|
a shrinking terror of the beast that brushed his side,
|
||
|
but in that of the old man was no sign of fear.
|
||
|
|
||
|
At first Tarzan had been solely occupied by the remarkable
|
||
|
juxtaposition of the spoor of Dango and Gomangani,
|
||
|
but now his keen eyes caught something in the spoor of
|
||
|
the little Gomangani which brought him to a sudden stop.
|
||
|
It was as though, finding a letter in the road, you suddenly
|
||
|
had discovered in it the familiar handwriting of a friend.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Go-bu-balu!" exclaimed the ape-man, and at once memory
|
||
|
flashed upon the screen of recollection the supplicating
|
||
|
attitude of Momaya as she had hurled herself before
|
||
|
him in the village of Mbonga the night before.
|
||
|
Instantly all was explained--the wailing and lamentation,
|
||
|
the pleading of the black mother, the sympathetic howling
|
||
|
of the shes about the fire. Little Go-bu-balu had been
|
||
|
stolen again, and this time by another than Tarzan.
|
||
|
Doubtless the mother had thought that he was again in the
|
||
|
power of Tarzan of the Apes, and she had been beseeching
|
||
|
him to return her balu to her.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Yes, it was all quite plain now; but who could have stolen
|
||
|
Go-bu-balu this time? Tarzan wondered, and he wondered,
|
||
|
too, about the presence of Dango. He would investigate.
|
||
|
The spoor was a day old and it ran toward the north.
|
||
|
Tarzan set out to follow it. In places it was totally
|
||
|
obliterated by the passage of many beasts, and where the way
|
||
|
was rocky, even Tarzan of the Apes was almost baffled;
|
||
|
but there was still the faint effluvium which clung to
|
||
|
the human spoor, appreciable only to such highly trained
|
||
|
perceptive powers as were Tarzan's.
|
||
|
|
||
|
It had all happened to little Tibo very suddenly and unexpectedly
|
||
|
within the brief span of two suns. First had come Bukawai,
|
||
|
the witch-doctor--Bukawai, the unclean--with the ragged
|
||
|
bit of flesh which still clung to his rotting face.
|
||
|
He had come alone and by day to the place at the river
|
||
|
where Momaya went daily to wash her body and that of Tibo,
|
||
|
her little boy. He had stepped out from behind a great
|
||
|
bush quite close to Momaya, frightening little Tibo
|
||
|
so that he ran screaming to his mother's protecting arms.
|
||
|
|
||
|
But Momaya, though startled, had wheeled to face the
|
||
|
fearsome thing with all the savage ferocity of a she-tiger
|
||
|
at bay. When she saw who it was, she breathed a sigh
|
||
|
of partial relief, though she still clung tightly to Tibo.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I have come," said Bukawai without preliminary,
|
||
|
"for the three fat goats, the new sleeping mat,
|
||
|
and the bit of copper wire as long as a tall man's arm."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I have no goats for you," snapped Momaya, "nor a sleeping mat,
|
||
|
nor any wire. Your medicine was never made. The white
|
||
|
jungle god gave me back my Tibo. You had nothing to do with it."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"But I did," mumbled Bukawai through his fleshless jaws.
|
||
|
"It was I who commanded the white jungle god to give back
|
||
|
your Tibo."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Momaya laughed in his face. "Speaker of lies," she cried,
|
||
|
"go back to your foul den and your hyenas. Go back
|
||
|
and hide your stinking face in the belly of the mountain,
|
||
|
lest the sun, seeing it, cover his face with a black cloud."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I have come," reiterated Bukawai, "for the three fat goats,
|
||
|
the new sleeping mat, and the bit of copper wire the length
|
||
|
of a tall man's arm, which you were to pay me for the return of
|
||
|
your Tibo."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"It was to be the length of a man's forearm," corrected Momaya,
|
||
|
"but you shall have nothing, old thief. You would not
|
||
|
make medicine until I had brought the payment in advance,
|
||
|
and when I was returning to my village the great,
|
||
|
white jungle god gave me back my Tibo--gave him to me out
|
||
|
of the jaws of Numa. His medicine is true medicine-- yours
|
||
|
is the weak medicine of an old man with a hole in his face."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I have come," repeated Bukawai patiently, "for the
|
||
|
three fat--" But Momaya had not waited to hear more
|
||
|
of what she already knew by heart. Clasping Tibo close
|
||
|
to her side, she was hurrying away toward the palisaded
|
||
|
village of Mbonga, the chief.
|
||
|
|
||
|
And the next day, when Momaya was working in the plantain
|
||
|
field with others of the women of the tribe, and little
|
||
|
Tibo had been playing at the edge of the jungle, casting a
|
||
|
small spear in anticipation of the distant day when he
|
||
|
should be a full-fledged warrior, Bukawai had come again.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tibo had seen a squirrel scampering up the bole of a
|
||
|
great tree. His childish mind had transformed it into
|
||
|
the menacing figure of a hostile warrior. Little Tibo
|
||
|
had raised his tiny spear, his heart filled with the savage
|
||
|
blood lust of his race, as he pictured the night's orgy
|
||
|
when he should dance about the corpse of his human kill
|
||
|
as the women of his tribe prepared the meat for the feast to
|
||
|
follow.
|
||
|
|
||
|
But when he cast the spear, he missed both squirrel and tree,
|
||
|
losing his missile far among the tangled undergrowth of
|
||
|
the jungle. However, it could be but a few steps within
|
||
|
the forbidden labyrinth. The women were all about in
|
||
|
the field. There were warriors on guard within easy hail,
|
||
|
and so little Tibo boldly ventured into the dark place.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Just behind the screen of creepers and matted foliage lurked
|
||
|
three horrid figures--an old, old man, black as the pit,
|
||
|
with a face half eaten away by leprosy, his sharp-filed teeth,
|
||
|
the teeth of a cannibal, showing yellow and repulsive
|
||
|
through the great gaping hole where his mouth and nose
|
||
|
had been. And beside him, equally hideous, stood two
|
||
|
powerful hyenas--carrion-eaters consorting with carrion.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tibo did not see them until, head down, he had forced
|
||
|
his way through the thickly growing vines in search of his
|
||
|
little spear, and then it was too late. As he looked up
|
||
|
into the face of Bukawai, the old witch-doctor seized him,
|
||
|
muffling his screams with a palm across his mouth.
|
||
|
Tibo struggled futilely.
|
||
|
|
||
|
A moment later he was being hustled away through the dark
|
||
|
and terrible jungle, the frightful old man still muffling
|
||
|
his screams, and the two hideous hyenas pacing now on
|
||
|
either side, now before, now behind, always prowling,
|
||
|
always growling, snapping, snarling, or, worst of all,
|
||
|
laughing hideously.
|
||
|
|
||
|
To little Tibo, who within his brief existence had passed
|
||
|
through such experiences as are given to few to pass
|
||
|
through in a lifetime, the northward journey was a nightmare
|
||
|
of terror. He thought now of the time that he had been
|
||
|
with the great, white jungle god, and he prayed with all
|
||
|
his little soul that he might be back again with the
|
||
|
white-skinned giant who consorted with the hairy tree men.
|
||
|
Terror-stricken he had been then, but his surroundings
|
||
|
had been nothing by comparison with those which he now endured.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The old man seldom addressed Tibo, though he kept up
|
||
|
an almost continuous mumbling throughout the long day.
|
||
|
Tibo caught repeated references to fat goats, sleeping mats,
|
||
|
and pieces of copper wire. "Ten fat goats, ten fat goats,"
|
||
|
the old Negro would croon over and over again. By this
|
||
|
little Tibo guessed that the price of his ransom had risen.
|
||
|
Ten fat goats? Where would his mother get ten fat goats,
|
||
|
or thin ones, either, for that matter, to buy back just
|
||
|
a poor little boy? Mbonga would never let her have them,
|
||
|
and Tibo knew that his father never had owned more than
|
||
|
three goats at the same time in all his life. Ten fat
|
||
|
goats! Tibo sniffled. The putrid old man would kill him
|
||
|
and eat him, for the goats would never be forthcoming.
|
||
|
Bukawai would throw his bones to the hyenas. The little
|
||
|
black boy shuddered and became so weak that he almost fell
|
||
|
in his tracks. Bukawai cuffed him on an ear and jerked
|
||
|
him along.
|
||
|
|
||
|
After what seemed an eternity to Tibo, they arrived at
|
||
|
the mouth of a cave between two rocky hills. The opening
|
||
|
was low and narrow. A few saplings bound together
|
||
|
with strips of rawhide closed it against stray beasts.
|
||
|
Bukawai removed the primitive door and pushed Tibo within.
|
||
|
The hyenas, snarling, rushed past him and were lost to
|
||
|
view in the blackness of the interior. Bukawai replaced
|
||
|
the saplings and seizing Tibo roughly by the arm,
|
||
|
dragged him along a narrow, rocky passage. The floor
|
||
|
was comparatively smooth, for the dirt which lay thick
|
||
|
upon it had been trodden and tramped by many feet until
|
||
|
few inequalities remained.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The passage was tortuous, and as it was very dark
|
||
|
and the walls rough and rocky, Tibo was scratched and
|
||
|
bruised from the many bumps he received. Bukawai walked
|
||
|
as rapidly through the winding gallery as one would
|
||
|
traverse a familiar lane by daylight. He knew every
|
||
|
twist and turn as a mother knows the face of her child,
|
||
|
and he seemed to be in a hurry. He jerked poor little
|
||
|
Tibo possibly a trifle more ruthlessly than necessary
|
||
|
even at the pace Bukawai set; but the old witch-doctor,
|
||
|
an outcast from the society of man, diseased, shunned,
|
||
|
hated, feared, was far from possessing an angelic temper.
|
||
|
Nature had given him few of the kindlier characteristics
|
||
|
of man, and these few Fate had eradicated entirely.
|
||
|
Shrewd, cunning, cruel, vindictive, was Bukawai, the
|
||
|
witch-doctor.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Frightful tales were whispered of the cruel tortures he
|
||
|
inflicted upon his victims. Children were frightened into
|
||
|
obedience by the threat of his name. Often had Tibo been
|
||
|
thus frightened, and now he was reaping a grisly harvest
|
||
|
of terror from the seeds his mother had innocently sown.
|
||
|
The darkness, the presence of the dreaded witch-doctor,
|
||
|
the pain of the contusions, with a haunting premonition
|
||
|
of the future, and the fear of the hyenas combined to
|
||
|
almost paralyze the child. He stumbled and reeled until
|
||
|
Bukawai was dragging rather than leading him.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Presently Tibo saw a faint lightness ahead of them,
|
||
|
and a moment later they emerged into a roughly circular
|
||
|
chamber to which a little daylight filtered through
|
||
|
a rift in the rocky ceiling. The hyenas were there
|
||
|
ahead of them, waiting. As Bukawai entered with Tibo,
|
||
|
the beasts slunk toward them, baring yellow fangs.
|
||
|
They were hungry. Toward Tibo they came, and one snapped
|
||
|
at his naked legs. Bukawai seized a stick from the floor
|
||
|
of the chamber and struck a vicious blow at the beast,
|
||
|
at the same time mumbling forth a volley of execrations.
|
||
|
The hyena dodged and ran to the side of the chamber, where he
|
||
|
stood growling. Bukawai took a step toward the creature,
|
||
|
which bristled with rage at his approach. Fear and hatred
|
||
|
shot from its evil eyes, but, fortunately for Bukawai,
|
||
|
fear predominated.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Seeing that he was unnoticed, the second beast made a short,
|
||
|
quick rush for Tibo. The child screamed and darted after
|
||
|
the witch-doctor, who now turned his attention to the
|
||
|
second hyena. This one he reached with his heavy stick,
|
||
|
striking it repeatedly and driving it to the wall.
|
||
|
There the two carrion-eaters commenced to circle the chamber
|
||
|
while the human carrion, their master, now in a perfect
|
||
|
frenzy of demoniacal rage, ran to and fro in an effort
|
||
|
to intercept them, striking out with his cudgel and lashing
|
||
|
them with his tongue, calling down upon them the curses
|
||
|
of whatever gods and demons he could summon to memory,
|
||
|
and describing in lurid figures the ignominy of their ancestors.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Several times one or the other of the beasts would turn
|
||
|
to make a stand against the witch-doctor, and then Tibo
|
||
|
would hold his breath in agonized terror, for never in his
|
||
|
brief life had he seen such frightful hatred depicted upon
|
||
|
the countenance of man or beast; but always fear overcame
|
||
|
the rage of the savage creatures, so that they resumed
|
||
|
their flight, snarling and bare-fanged, just at the moment
|
||
|
that Tibo was certain they would spring at Bukawai's throat.
|
||
|
|
||
|
At last the witch-doctor tired of the futile chase.
|
||
|
With a snarl quite as bestial as those of the beast,
|
||
|
he turned toward Tibo. "I go to collect the ten fat goats,
|
||
|
the new sleeping mat, and the two pieces of copper wire
|
||
|
that your mother will pay for the medicine I shall make
|
||
|
to bring you back to her," he said. "You will stay here.
|
||
|
There," and he pointed toward the passage which they
|
||
|
had followed to the chamber, "I will leave the hyenas.
|
||
|
If you try to escape, they will eat you."
|
||
|
|
||
|
He cast aside the stick and called to the beasts.
|
||
|
They came, snarling and slinking, their tails between
|
||
|
their legs. Bukawai led them to the passage and drove
|
||
|
them into it. Then he dragged a rude lattice into
|
||
|
place before the opening after he, himself, had left
|
||
|
the chamber. "This will keep them from you," he said.
|
||
|
"If I do not get the ten fat goats and the other things,
|
||
|
they shall at least have a few bones after I am through."
|
||
|
And he left the boy to think over the meaning of his
|
||
|
all-too-suggestive words.
|
||
|
|
||
|
When he was gone, Tibo threw himself upon the earth floor
|
||
|
and broke into childish sobs of terror and loneliness.
|
||
|
He knew that his mother had no ten fat goats to give
|
||
|
and that when Bukawai returned, little Tibo would
|
||
|
be killed and eaten. How long he lay there he did
|
||
|
not know, but presently he was aroused by the growling
|
||
|
of the hyenas. They had returned through the passage
|
||
|
and were glaring at him from beyond the lattice. He could
|
||
|
see their yellow eyes blazing through the darkness.
|
||
|
They reared up and clawed at the barrier. Tibo shivered
|
||
|
and withdrew to the opposite side of the chamber. He saw
|
||
|
the lattice sag and sway to the attacks of the beasts.
|
||
|
Momentarily he expected that it would fall inward,
|
||
|
letting the creatures upon him.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Wearily the horror-ridden hours dragged their slow way.
|
||
|
Night came, and for a time Tibo slept, but it seemed
|
||
|
that the hungry beasts never slept. Always they stood
|
||
|
just beyond the lattice growling their hideous growls
|
||
|
or laughing their hideous laughs. Through the narrow rift
|
||
|
in the rocky roof above him, Tibo could see a few stars,
|
||
|
and once the moon crossed. At last daylight came again.
|
||
|
Tibo was very hungry and thirsty, for he had not eaten
|
||
|
since the morning before, and only once upon the long march
|
||
|
had he been permitted to drink, but even hunger and thirst
|
||
|
were almost forgotten in the terror of his position.
|
||
|
|
||
|
It was after daylight that the child discovered a second
|
||
|
opening in the walls of the subterranean chamber,
|
||
|
almost opposite that at which the hyenas still stood
|
||
|
glaring hungrily at him. It was only a narrow slit
|
||
|
in the rocky wall. It might lead in but a few feet,
|
||
|
or it might lead to freedom! Tibo approached it and
|
||
|
looked within. He could see nothing. He extended his arm
|
||
|
into the blackness, but he dared not venture farther.
|
||
|
Bukawai never would have left open a way of escape,
|
||
|
Tibo reasoned, so this passage must lead either nowhere
|
||
|
or to some still more hideous danger.
|
||
|
|
||
|
To the boy's fear of the actual dangers which menaced
|
||
|
him--Bukawai and the two hyenas--his superstition added
|
||
|
countless others quite too horrible even to name,
|
||
|
for in the lives of the blacks, through the shadows of
|
||
|
the jungle day and the black horrors of the jungle night,
|
||
|
flit strange, fantastic shapes peopling the already
|
||
|
hideously peopled forests with menacing figures, as though
|
||
|
the lion and the leopard, the snake and the hyena,
|
||
|
and the countless poisonous insects were not quite
|
||
|
sufficient to strike terror to the hearts of the poor,
|
||
|
simple creatures whose lot is cast in earth's most fearsome spot.
|
||
|
|
||
|
And so it was that little Tibo cringed not only from
|
||
|
real menaces but from imaginary ones. He was afraid
|
||
|
even to venture upon a road that might lead to escape,
|
||
|
lest Bukawai had set to watch it some frightful demon
|
||
|
of the jungle.
|
||
|
|
||
|
But the real menaces suddenly drove the imaginary ones
|
||
|
from the boy's mind, for with the coming of daylight
|
||
|
the half-famished hyenas renewed their efforts to break
|
||
|
down the frail barrier which kept them from their prey.
|
||
|
Rearing upon their hind feet they clawed and struck at
|
||
|
the lattice. With wide eyes Tibo saw it sag and rock.
|
||
|
Not for long, he knew, could it withstand the assaults
|
||
|
of these two powerful and determined brutes. Already one
|
||
|
corner had been forced past the rocky protuberance of the
|
||
|
entrance way which had held it in place. A shaggy forearm
|
||
|
protruded into the chamber. Tibo trembled as with ague,
|
||
|
for he knew that the end was near.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Backing against the farther wall he stood flattened out
|
||
|
as far from the beasts as he could get. He saw the lattice
|
||
|
give still more. He saw a savage, snarling head forced
|
||
|
past it, and grinning jaws snapping and gaping toward him.
|
||
|
In another instant the pitiful fabric would fall inward,
|
||
|
and the two would be upon him, rending his flesh from
|
||
|
his bones, gnawing the bones themselves, fighting for
|
||
|
possession of his entrails.
|
||
|
|
||
|
* * *
|
||
|
|
||
|
Bukawai came upon Momaya outside the palisade of Mbonga,
|
||
|
the chief. At sight of him the woman drew back in revulsion,
|
||
|
then she flew at him, tooth and nail; but Bukawai
|
||
|
threatening her with a spear held her at a safe distance.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Where is my baby?" she cried. "Where is my little Tibo?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
Bukawai opened his eyes in well-simulated amazement.
|
||
|
"Your baby!" he exclaimed. "What should I know of him,
|
||
|
other than that I rescued him from the white god
|
||
|
of the jungle and have not yet received my pay.
|
||
|
I come for the goats and the sleeping mat and the piece
|
||
|
of copper wire the length of a tall man's arm from the
|
||
|
shoulder to the tips of his fingers." "Offal of a hyena!"
|
||
|
shrieked Momaya. "My child has been stolen, and you,
|
||
|
rotting fragment of a man, have taken him. Return him
|
||
|
to me or I shall tear your eyes from your head and feed
|
||
|
your heart to the wild hogs."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Bukawai shrugged his shoulders. "What do I know about
|
||
|
your child?" he asked. "I have not taken him. If he is
|
||
|
stolen again, what should Bukawai know of the matter? Did
|
||
|
Bukawai steal him before? No, the white jungle god stole him,
|
||
|
and if he stole him once he would steal him again.
|
||
|
It is nothing to me. I returned him to you before and I
|
||
|
have come for my pay. If he is gone and you would
|
||
|
have him returned, Bukawai will return him--for ten
|
||
|
fat goats, a new sleeping mat and two pieces of copper
|
||
|
wire the length of a tall man's arm from the shoulder
|
||
|
to the tips of his fingers, and Bukawai will say nothing
|
||
|
more about the goats and the sleeping mat and the copper
|
||
|
wire which you were to pay for the first medicine."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Ten fat goats!" screamed Momaya. "I could not pay you
|
||
|
ten fat goats in as many years. Ten fat goats, indeed!"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Ten fat goats," repeated Bukawai. "Ten fat goats,
|
||
|
the new sleeping mat and two pieces of copper wire
|
||
|
the length of--"
|
||
|
|
||
|
Momaya stopped him with an impatient gesture.
|
||
|
"Wait! she cried. "I have no goats. You waste your breath.
|
||
|
Stay here while I go to my man. He has but three goats,
|
||
|
yet something may be done. Wait!"
|
||
|
|
||
|
Bukawai sat down beneath a tree. He felt quite content,
|
||
|
for he knew that he should have either payment or revenge.
|
||
|
He did not fear harm at the hands of these people
|
||
|
of another tribe, although he well knew that they must
|
||
|
fear and hate him. His leprosy alone would prevent
|
||
|
their laying hands upon him, while his reputation as a
|
||
|
witch-doctor rendered him doubly immune from attack.
|
||
|
He was planning upon compelling them to drive the ten
|
||
|
goats to the mouth of his cave when Momaya returned.
|
||
|
With her were three warriors-- Mbonga, the chief, Rabba Kega,
|
||
|
the village witch-doctor, and Ibeto, Tibo's father.
|
||
|
They were not pretty men even under ordinary circumstances,
|
||
|
and now, with their faces marked by anger, they well
|
||
|
might have inspired terror in the heart of anyone;
|
||
|
but if Bukawai felt any fear, he did not betray it.
|
||
|
Instead he greeted them with an insolent stare, intended to
|
||
|
awe them, as they came and squatted in a semi-circle
|
||
|
before him.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Where is Ibeto's son?" asked Mbonga.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"How should I know?" returned Bukawai. "Doubtless the
|
||
|
white devil-god has him. If I am paid I will make strong
|
||
|
medicine and then we shall know where is Ibeto's son,
|
||
|
and shall get him back again. It was my medicine which
|
||
|
got him back the last time, for which I got no pay."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I have my own witch-doctor to make medicine,"
|
||
|
replied Mbonga with dignity.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Bukawai sneered and rose to his feet. "Very well,"
|
||
|
he said, "let him make his medicine and see if he
|
||
|
can bring Ibeto's son back." He took a few steps
|
||
|
away from them, and then he turned angrily back.
|
||
|
"His medicine will not bring the child back--that I know,
|
||
|
and I also know that when you find him it will be too late
|
||
|
for any medicine to bring him back, for he will be dead.
|
||
|
This have I just found out, the ghost of my father's
|
||
|
sister but now came to me and told me."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Now Mbonga and Rabba Kega might not take much stock
|
||
|
in their own magic, and they might even be skeptical
|
||
|
as to the magic of another; but there was always a chance
|
||
|
of SOMETHING being in it, especially if it were not
|
||
|
their own. Was it not well known that old Bukawai had
|
||
|
speech with the demons themselves and that two even lived
|
||
|
with him in the forms of hyenas! Still they must not
|
||
|
accede too hastily. There was the price to be considered,
|
||
|
and Mbonga had no intention of parting lightly with ten
|
||
|
goats to obtain the return of a single little boy who might
|
||
|
die of smallpox long before he reached a warrior's estate.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Wait," said Mbonga. "Let us see some of your magic,
|
||
|
that we may know if it be good magic. Then we can talk
|
||
|
about payment. Rabba Kega will make some magic, too.
|
||
|
We will see who makes the best magic. Sit down, Bukawai."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"The payment will be ten goats--fat goats--a new sleeping
|
||
|
mat and two pieces of copper wire the length of a tall
|
||
|
man's arm from the shoulder to the ends of his fingers,
|
||
|
and it will be made in advance, the goats being driven
|
||
|
to my cave. Then will I make the medicine, and on
|
||
|
the second day the boy will be returned to his mother.
|
||
|
It cannot be done more quickly than that because it takes
|
||
|
time to make such strong medicine."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Make us some medicine now," said Mbonga. "Let us see
|
||
|
what sort of medicine you make."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Bring me fire," replied Bukawai, "and I will make you
|
||
|
a little magic."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Momaya was dispatched for the fire, and while she was away
|
||
|
Mbonga dickered with Bukawai about the price. Ten goats,
|
||
|
he said, was a high price for an able-bodied warrior.
|
||
|
He also called Bukawai's attention to the fact that he,
|
||
|
Mbonga, was very poor, that his people were very poor,
|
||
|
and that ten goats were at least eight too many,
|
||
|
to say nothing of a new sleeping mat and the copper wire;
|
||
|
but Bukawai was adamant. His medicine was very expensive
|
||
|
and he would have to give at least five goats to the gods
|
||
|
who helped him make it. They were still arguing when Momaya
|
||
|
returned with the fire.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Bukawai placed a little on the ground before him, took a
|
||
|
pinch of powder from a pouch at his side and sprinkled
|
||
|
it on the embers. A cloud of smoke rose with a puff.
|
||
|
Bukawai closed his eyes and rocked back and forth.
|
||
|
Then he made a few passes in the air and pretended
|
||
|
to swoon. Mbonga and the others were much impressed.
|
||
|
Rabba Kega grew nervous. He saw his reputation waning.
|
||
|
There was some fire left in the vessel which Momaya
|
||
|
had brought. He seized the vessel, dropped a handful
|
||
|
of dry leaves into it while no one was watching and then
|
||
|
uttered a frightful scream which drew the attention of
|
||
|
Bukawai's audience to him. It also brought Bukawai quite
|
||
|
miraculously out of his swoon, but when the old witch-doctor
|
||
|
saw the reason for the disturbance he quickly relapsed
|
||
|
into unconsciousness before anyone discovered his FAUX
|
||
|
PAS.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Rabba Kega, seeing that he had the attention of Mbonga,
|
||
|
Ibeto, and Momaya, blew suddenly into the vessel,
|
||
|
with the result that the leaves commenced to smolder,
|
||
|
and smoke issued from the mouth of the receptacle.
|
||
|
Rabba Kega was careful to hold it so that none might see
|
||
|
the dry leaves. Their eyes opened wide at this remarkable
|
||
|
demonstration of the village witch-doctor's powers.
|
||
|
The latter, greatly elated, let himself out. He shouted,
|
||
|
jumped up and down, and made frightful grimaces; then he put
|
||
|
his face close over the mouth of the vessel and appeared
|
||
|
to be communing with the spirits within.
|
||
|
|
||
|
It was while he was thus engaged that Bukawai came out of
|
||
|
his trance, his curiosity finally having gotten the better
|
||
|
of him. No one was paying him the slightest attention.
|
||
|
He blinked his one eye angrily, then he, too, let out
|
||
|
a loud roar, and when he was sure that Mbonga had turned
|
||
|
toward him, he stiffened rigidly and made spasmodic
|
||
|
movements with his arms and legs.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I see him!" he cried. "He is far away. The white
|
||
|
devil-god did not get him. He is alone and in great danger;
|
||
|
but," he added, "if the ten fat goats and the other
|
||
|
things are paid to me quickly there is yet time to save him."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Rabba Kega had paused to listen. Mbonga looked toward him.
|
||
|
The chief was in a quandary. He did not know which
|
||
|
medicine was the better. "What does your magic tell you?"
|
||
|
he asked of Rabba Kega.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I, too, see him," screamed Rabba Kega; "but he is not
|
||
|
where Bukawai says he is. He is dead at the bottom
|
||
|
of the river."
|
||
|
|
||
|
At this Momaya commenced to howl loudly.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tarzan had followed the spoor of the old man,
|
||
|
the two hyenas, and the little black boy to the mouth
|
||
|
of the cave in the rocky canon between the two hills.
|
||
|
Here he paused a moment before the sapling barrier which
|
||
|
Bukawai had set up, listening to the snarls and growls
|
||
|
which came faintly from the far recesses of the cavern.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Presently, mingled with the beastly cries, there came
|
||
|
faintly to the keen ears of the ape-man, the agonized
|
||
|
moan of a child. No longer did Tarzan hesitate.
|
||
|
Hurling the door aside, he sprang into the dark opening.
|
||
|
Narrow and black was the corridor; but long use of his
|
||
|
eyes in the Stygian blackness of the jungle nights had
|
||
|
given to the ape-man something of the nocturnal visionary
|
||
|
powers of the wild things with which he had consorted
|
||
|
since babyhood.
|
||
|
|
||
|
He moved rapidly and yet with caution, for the place
|
||
|
was dark, unfamiliar and winding. As he advanced, he heard
|
||
|
more and more loudly the savage snarls of the two hyenas,
|
||
|
mingled with the scraping and scratching of their paws
|
||
|
upon wood. The moans of a child grew in volume,
|
||
|
and Tarzan recognized in them the voice of the little
|
||
|
black boy he once had sought to adopt as his balu.
|
||
|
|
||
|
There was no hysteria in the ape-man's advance.
|
||
|
Too accustomed was he to the passing of life in the
|
||
|
jungle to be greatly wrought even by the death of one
|
||
|
whom he knew; but the lust for battle spurred him on.
|
||
|
He was only a wild beast at heart and his wild beast's
|
||
|
heart beat high in anticipation of conflict.
|
||
|
|
||
|
In the rocky chamber of the hill's center, little Tibo
|
||
|
crouched low against the wall as far from the hunger-crazed
|
||
|
beasts as he could drag himself. He saw the lattice giving
|
||
|
to the frantic clawing of the hyenas. He knew that in a few
|
||
|
minutes his little life would flicker out horribly beneath
|
||
|
the rending, yellow fangs of these loathsome creatures.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Beneath the buffetings of the powerful bodies,
|
||
|
the lattice sagged inward, until, with a crash it
|
||
|
gave way, letting the carnivora in upon the boy.
|
||
|
Tibo cast one affrighted glance toward them, then closed
|
||
|
his eyes and buried his face in his arms, sobbing piteously.
|
||
|
|
||
|
For a moment the hyenas paused, caution and cowardice holding
|
||
|
them from their prey. They stood thus glaring at the lad,
|
||
|
then slowly, stealthily, crouching, they crept toward him.
|
||
|
It was thus that Tarzan came upon them, bursting into
|
||
|
the chamber swiftly and silently; but not so silently
|
||
|
that the keen-eared beasts did not note his coming.
|
||
|
With angry growls they turned from Tibo upon the ape-man, as,
|
||
|
with a smile upon his lips, he ran toward them.
|
||
|
For an instant one of the animals stood its ground;
|
||
|
but the ape-man did not deign even to draw his hunting
|
||
|
knife against despised Dango. Rushing in upon the brute he
|
||
|
grasped it by the scruff of the neck, just as it attempted
|
||
|
to dodge past him, and hurled it across the cavern after
|
||
|
its fellow which already was slinking into the corridor,
|
||
|
bent upon escape.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Then Tarzan picked Tibo from the floor, and when the
|
||
|
child felt human hands upon him instead of the paws
|
||
|
and fangs of the hyenas, he rolled his eyes upward in
|
||
|
surprise and incredulity, and as they fell upon Tarzan,
|
||
|
sobs of relief broke from the childish lips and his
|
||
|
hands clutched at his deliverer as though the white
|
||
|
devil-god was not the most feared of jungle creatures.
|
||
|
|
||
|
When Tarzan came to the cave mouth the hyenas were nowhere
|
||
|
in sight, and after permitting Tibo to quench his thirst
|
||
|
in the spring which rose near by, he lifted the boy to his
|
||
|
shoulders and set off toward the jungle at a rapid trot,
|
||
|
determined to still the annoying howlings of Momaya
|
||
|
as quickly as possible, for he shrewdly had guessed that
|
||
|
the absence of her balu was the cause of her lamentation.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"He is not dead at the bottom of the river," cried Bukawai.
|
||
|
"What does this fellow know about making magic? Who
|
||
|
is he, anyway, that he dare say Bukawai's magic is not
|
||
|
good magic? Bukawai sees Momaya's son. He is far away
|
||
|
and alone and in great danger. Hasten then with the ten
|
||
|
fat goats, the--"
|
||
|
|
||
|
But he got no further. There was a sudden interruption
|
||
|
from above, from the branches of the very tree beneath
|
||
|
which they squatted, and as the five blacks looked up
|
||
|
they almost swooned in fright as they saw the great,
|
||
|
white devil-god looking down upon them; but before they could
|
||
|
flee they saw another face, that of the lost little Tibo,
|
||
|
and his face was laughing and very happy.
|
||
|
|
||
|
And then Tarzan dropped fearlessly among them, the boy
|
||
|
still upon his back, and deposited him before his mother.
|
||
|
Momaya, Ibeto, Rabba Kega, and Mbonga were all crowding
|
||
|
around the lad trying to question him at the same time.
|
||
|
Suddenly Momaya turned ferociously to fall upon Bukawai,
|
||
|
for the boy had told her all that he had suffered at
|
||
|
the hands of the cruel old man; but Bukawai was no longer
|
||
|
there--he had required no recourse to black art to assure
|
||
|
him that the vicinity of Momaya would be no healthful
|
||
|
place for him after Tibo had told his story, and now he
|
||
|
was running through the jungle as fast as his old legs
|
||
|
would carry him toward the distant lair where he knew no
|
||
|
black would dare pursue him.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tarzan, too, had vanished, as he had a way of doing,
|
||
|
to the mystification of the blacks. Then Momaya's eyes
|
||
|
lighted upon Rabba Kega. The village witch-doctor saw
|
||
|
something in those eyes of hers which boded no good to him,
|
||
|
and backed away.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"So my Tibo is dead at the bottom of the river, is he?"
|
||
|
the woman shrieked. "And he's far away and alone and in
|
||
|
great danger, is he? Magic!" The scorn which Momaya crowded
|
||
|
into that single word would have done credit to a Thespian
|
||
|
of the first magnitude. "Magic, indeed!" she screamed.
|
||
|
"Momaya will show you some magic of her own," and with that
|
||
|
she seized upon a broken limb and struck Rabba Kega across
|
||
|
the head. With a howl of pain, the man turned and fled,
|
||
|
Momaya pursuing him and beating him across the shoulders,
|
||
|
through the gateway and up the length of the village street,
|
||
|
to the intense amusement of the warriors, the women,
|
||
|
and the children who were so fortunate as to witness
|
||
|
the spectacle, for one and all feared Rabba Kega, and to fear
|
||
|
is to hate.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Thus it was that to his host of passive enemies, Tarzan of
|
||
|
the Apes added that day two active foes, both of whom
|
||
|
remained awake long into the night planning means of revenge
|
||
|
upon the white devil-god who had brought them into ridicule
|
||
|
and disrepute, but with their most malevolent schemings
|
||
|
was mingled a vein of real fear and awe that would not down.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Young Lord Greystoke did not know that they planned
|
||
|
against him, nor, knowing, would have cared. He slept
|
||
|
as well that night as he did on any other night,
|
||
|
and though there was no roof above him, and no doors
|
||
|
to lock against intruders, he slept much better than
|
||
|
his noble relative in England, who had eaten altogether
|
||
|
too much lobster and drank too much wine at dinner that night.
|
||
|
|
||
|
7
|
||
|
|
||
|
The End of Bukawai
|
||
|
|
||
|
WHEN TARZAN OF the Apes was still but a boy he had learned,
|
||
|
among other things, to fashion pliant ropes of fibrous
|
||
|
jungle grass. Strong and tough were the ropes of Tarzan,
|
||
|
the little Tarmangani. Tublat, his foster father,
|
||
|
would have told you this much and more. Had you tempted
|
||
|
him with a handful of fat caterpillars he even might have
|
||
|
sufficiently unbended to narrate to you a few stories
|
||
|
of the many indignities which Tarzan had heaped upon
|
||
|
him by means of his hated rope; but then Tublat always
|
||
|
worked himself into such a frightful rage when he devoted
|
||
|
any considerable thought either to the rope or to Tarzan,
|
||
|
that it might not have proved comfortable for you to have
|
||
|
remained close enough to him to hear what he had to say.
|
||
|
|
||
|
So often had that snakelike noose settled unexpectedly over
|
||
|
Tublat's head, so often had he been jerked ridiculously
|
||
|
and painfully from his feet when he was least looking
|
||
|
for such an occurrence, that there is little wonder he
|
||
|
found scant space in his savage heart for love of his
|
||
|
white-skinned foster child, or the inventions thereof.
|
||
|
There had been other times, too, when Tublat had swung
|
||
|
helplessly in midair, the noose tightening about his neck,
|
||
|
death staring him in the face, and little Tarzan dancing upon
|
||
|
a near-by limb, taunting him and making unseemly grimaces.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Then there had been another occasion in which the rope
|
||
|
had figured prominently--an occasion, and the only
|
||
|
one connected with the rope, which Tublat recalled
|
||
|
with pleasure. Tarzan, as active in brain as he was
|
||
|
in body, was always inventing new ways in which to play.
|
||
|
It was through the medium of play that he learned much
|
||
|
during his childhood. This day he learned something,
|
||
|
and that he did not lose his life in the learning of it,
|
||
|
was a matter of great surprise to Tarzan, and the fly
|
||
|
in the ointment, to Tublat.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The man-child had, in throwing his noose at a playmate
|
||
|
in a tree above him, caught a projecting branch instead.
|
||
|
When he tried to shake it loose it but drew the tighter.
|
||
|
Then Tarzan started to climb the rope to remove it
|
||
|
from the branch. When he was part way up a frolicsome
|
||
|
playmate seized that part of the rope which lay upon
|
||
|
the ground and ran off with it as far as he could go.
|
||
|
When Tarzan screamed at him to desist, the young ape
|
||
|
released the rope a little and then drew it tight again.
|
||
|
The result was to impart a swinging motion to Tarzan's
|
||
|
body which the ape-boy suddenly realized was a new and
|
||
|
pleasurable form of play. He urged the ape to continue
|
||
|
until Tarzan was swinging to and fro as far as the short
|
||
|
length of rope would permit, but the distance was not
|
||
|
great enough, and, too, he was not far enough above the
|
||
|
ground to give the necessary thrills which add so greatly
|
||
|
to the pastimes of the young.
|
||
|
|
||
|
So he clambered to the branch where the noose was caught
|
||
|
and after removing it carried the rope far aloft and out upon
|
||
|
a long and powerful branch. Here he again made it fast,
|
||
|
and taking the loose end in his hand, clambered quickly
|
||
|
down among the branches as far as the rope would permit
|
||
|
him to go; then he swung out upon the end of it,
|
||
|
his lithe, young body turning and twisting--a human bob
|
||
|
upon a pendulum of grass--thirty feet above the ground.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Ah, how delectable! This was indeed a new play of the
|
||
|
first magnitude. Tarzan was entranced. Soon he discovered
|
||
|
that by wriggling his body in just the right way at the
|
||
|
proper time he could diminish or accelerate his oscillation,
|
||
|
and, being a boy, he chose, naturally, to accelerate.
|
||
|
Presently he was swinging far and wide, while below him,
|
||
|
the apes of the tribe of Kerchak looked on in mild amaze.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Had it been you or I swinging there at the end of that
|
||
|
grass rope, the thing which presently happened would
|
||
|
not have happened, for we could not have hung on so long
|
||
|
as to have made it possible; but Tarzan was quite as much
|
||
|
at home swinging by his hands as he was standing upon
|
||
|
his feet, or, at least, almost. At any rate he felt no
|
||
|
fatigue long after the time that an ordinary mortal would
|
||
|
have been numb with the strain of the physical exertion.
|
||
|
And this was his undoing.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tublat was watching him as were others of the tribe.
|
||
|
Of all the creatures of the wild, there was none Tublat
|
||
|
so cordially hated as he did this hideous, hairless,
|
||
|
white-skinned, caricature of an ape. But for Tarzan's
|
||
|
nimbleness,
|
||
|
and the zealous watchfulness of savage Kala's mother love,
|
||
|
Tublat would long since have rid himself of this stain upon
|
||
|
his family escutcheon. So long had it been since Tarzan
|
||
|
became a member of the tribe, that Tublat had forgotten
|
||
|
the circumstances surrounding the entrance of the jungle
|
||
|
waif into his family, with the result that he now imagined
|
||
|
that Tarzan was his own offspring, adding greatly to his chagrin.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Wide and far swung Tarzan of the Apes, until at last,
|
||
|
as he reached the highest point of the arc the rope,
|
||
|
which rapidly had frayed on the rough bark of the tree limb,
|
||
|
parted suddenly. The watching apes saw the smooth,
|
||
|
brown body shoot outward, and down, plummet-like. Tublat
|
||
|
leaped high in the air, emitting what in a human being
|
||
|
would have been an exclamation of delight. This would
|
||
|
be the end of Tarzan and most of Tublat's troubles.
|
||
|
From now on he could lead his life in peace and security.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tarzan fell quite forty feet, alighting on his back in a thick
|
||
|
bush.
|
||
|
Kala was the first to reach his side--ferocious, hideous,
|
||
|
loving Kala. She had seen the life crushed from her own
|
||
|
balu in just such a fall years before. Was she to lose
|
||
|
this one too in the same way? Tarzan was lying quite
|
||
|
still when she found him, embedded deeply in the bush.
|
||
|
It took Kala several minutes to disentangle him and drag
|
||
|
him forth; but he was not killed. He was not even
|
||
|
badly injured. The bush had broken the force of the fall.
|
||
|
A cut upon the back of his head showed where he had struck
|
||
|
the tough stem of the shrub and explained his unconsciousness.
|
||
|
|
||
|
In a few minutes he was as active as ever. Tublat was furious.
|
||
|
In his rage he snapped at a fellow-ape without first
|
||
|
discovering the identity of his victim, and was badly mauled
|
||
|
for his ill temper, having chosen to vent his spite upon
|
||
|
a husky and belligerent young bull in the full prime of his
|
||
|
vigor.
|
||
|
|
||
|
But Tarzan had learned something new. He had learned that
|
||
|
continued friction would wear through the strands of his rope,
|
||
|
though it was many years before this knowledge did more
|
||
|
for him than merely to keep him from swinging too long
|
||
|
at a time, or too far above the ground at the end of his rope.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The day came, however, when the very thing that had once
|
||
|
all but killed him proved the means of saving his life.
|
||
|
|
||
|
He was no longer a child, but a mighty jungle male.
|
||
|
There was none now to watch over him, solicitously, nor did
|
||
|
he need such. Kala was dead. Dead, too, was Tublat,
|
||
|
and though with Kala passed the one creature that ever
|
||
|
really had loved him, there were still many who hated
|
||
|
him after Tublat departed unto the arms of his fathers.
|
||
|
It was not that he was more cruel or more savage than they
|
||
|
that they hated him, for though he was both cruel and savage
|
||
|
as were the beasts, his fellows, yet too was he often tender,
|
||
|
which they never were. No, the thing which brought Tarzan
|
||
|
most into disrepute with those who did not like him,
|
||
|
was the possession and practice of a characteristic
|
||
|
which they had not and could not understand-- the human
|
||
|
sense of humor. In Tarzan it was a trifle broad, perhaps,
|
||
|
manifesting itself in rough and painful practical jokes
|
||
|
upon his friends and cruel baiting of his enemies.
|
||
|
|
||
|
But to neither of these did he owe the enmity of Bukawai,
|
||
|
the witch-doctor, who dwelt in the cave between the two
|
||
|
hills far to the north of the village of Mbonga, the chief.
|
||
|
Bukawai was jealous of Tarzan, and Bukawai it was who came
|
||
|
near proving the undoing of the ape-man. For months Bukawai
|
||
|
had nursed his hatred while revenge seemed remote indeed,
|
||
|
since Tarzan of the Apes frequented another part
|
||
|
of the jungle, miles away from the lair of Bukawai.
|
||
|
Only once had the black witch-doctor seen the devil-god,
|
||
|
as he was most often called among the blacks, and upon
|
||
|
that occasion Tarzan had robbed him of a fat fee,
|
||
|
at the same time putting the lie in the mouth of Bukawai,
|
||
|
and making his medicine seem poor medicine. All this
|
||
|
Bukawai never could forgive, though it seemed unlikely
|
||
|
that the opportunity would come to be revenged.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Yet it did come, and quite unexpectedly. Tarzan was hunting
|
||
|
far to the north. He had wandered away from the tribe,
|
||
|
as he did more and more often as he approached maturity,
|
||
|
to hunt alone for a few days. As a child he had enjoyed
|
||
|
romping and playing with the young apes, his companions;
|
||
|
but now these play-fellows of his had grown to surly,
|
||
|
lowering bulls, or to touchy, suspicious mothers,
|
||
|
jealously guarding helpless balus. So Tarzan found in his
|
||
|
own man-mind a greater and a truer companionship than any
|
||
|
or all of the apes of Kerchak could afford him.
|
||
|
|
||
|
This day, as Tarzan hunted, the sky slowly became overcast.
|
||
|
Torn clouds, whipped to ragged streamers, fled low above
|
||
|
the tree tops. They reminded Tarzan of frightened antelope
|
||
|
fleeing the charge of a hungry lion. But though the light
|
||
|
clouds raced so swiftly, the jungle was motionless.
|
||
|
Not a leaf quivered and the silence was a great,
|
||
|
dead weight-- insupportable. Even the insects seemed
|
||
|
stilled by apprehension of some frightful thing impending,
|
||
|
and the larger things were soundless. Such a forest,
|
||
|
such a jungle might have stood there in the beginning
|
||
|
of that unthinkably far-gone age before God peopled the
|
||
|
world with life, when there were no sounds because there
|
||
|
were no ears to hear.
|
||
|
|
||
|
And over all lay a sickly, pallid ocher light through
|
||
|
which the scourged clouds raced. Tarzan had seen all
|
||
|
these conditions many times before, yet he never could
|
||
|
escape a strange feeling at each recurrence of them.
|
||
|
He knew no fear, but in the face of Nature's manifestations
|
||
|
of her cruel, immeasurable powers, he felt very small--very
|
||
|
small and very lonely.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Now he heard a low moaning, far away. "The lions seek
|
||
|
their prey," he murmured to himself, looking up once again
|
||
|
at the swift-flying clouds. The moaning rose to a great
|
||
|
volume of sound. "They come!" said Tarzan of the Apes,
|
||
|
and sought the shelter of a thickly foliaged tree.
|
||
|
Quite suddenly the trees bent their tops simultaneously
|
||
|
as though God had stretched a hand from the heavens and
|
||
|
pressed His flat palm down upon the world. "They pass!"
|
||
|
whispered Tarzan. "The lions pass." Then came a vivid
|
||
|
flash of lightning, followed by deafening thunder.
|
||
|
"The lions have sprung," cried Tarzan, "and now they roar
|
||
|
above the bodies of their kills."
|
||
|
|
||
|
The trees were waving wildly in all directions now,
|
||
|
a perfectly demoniacal wind threshed the jungle pitilessly.
|
||
|
In the midst of it the rain came--not as it comes upon us
|
||
|
of the northlands, but in a sudden, choking, blinding deluge.
|
||
|
"The blood of the kill," thought Tarzan, huddling himself
|
||
|
closer to the bole of the great tree beneath which he stood.
|
||
|
|
||
|
He was close to the edge of the jungle, and at a little
|
||
|
distance he had seen two hills before the storm broke;
|
||
|
but now he could see nothing. It amused him to look out
|
||
|
into the beating rain, searching for the two hills and
|
||
|
imagining that the torrents from above had washed them away,
|
||
|
yet he knew that presently the rain would cease, the sun
|
||
|
come out again and all be as it was before, except where
|
||
|
a few branches had fallen and here and there some old
|
||
|
and rotted patriarch had crashed back to enrich the soil
|
||
|
upon which he had fatted for, maybe, centuries. All about
|
||
|
him branches and leaves filled the air or fell to earth,
|
||
|
torn away by the strength of the tornado and the weight
|
||
|
of the water upon them. A gaunt corpse toppled and fell
|
||
|
a few yards away; but Tarzan was protected from all these
|
||
|
dangers by the wide-spreading branches of the sturdy young
|
||
|
giant beneath which his jungle craft had guided him.
|
||
|
Here there was but a single danger, and that a remote one.
|
||
|
Yet it came. Without warning the tree above him was riven
|
||
|
by lightning, and when the rain ceased and the sun came
|
||
|
out Tarzan lay stretched as he had fallen, upon his face
|
||
|
amidst the wreckage of the jungle giant that should have
|
||
|
shielded him.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Bukawai came to the entrance of his cave after the rain
|
||
|
and the storm had passed and looked out upon the scene.
|
||
|
From his one eye Bukawai could see; but had he had
|
||
|
a dozen eyes he could have found no beauty in the fresh
|
||
|
sweetness of the revivified jungle, for to such things,
|
||
|
in the chemistry of temperament, his brain failed
|
||
|
to react; nor, even had he had a nose, which he had not
|
||
|
for years, could he have found enjoyment or sweetness
|
||
|
in the clean-washed air.
|
||
|
|
||
|
At either side of the leper stood his sole and
|
||
|
constant companions, the two hyenas, sniffing the air.
|
||
|
Presently one of them uttered a low growl and with flattened
|
||
|
head started, sneaking and wary, toward the jungle.
|
||
|
The other followed. Bukawai, his curiosity aroused,
|
||
|
trailed after them, in his hand a heavy knob-stick.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The hyenas halted a few yards from the prostrate Tarzan,
|
||
|
sniffing and growling. Then came Bukawai, and at first he
|
||
|
could not believe the witness of his own eyes; but when he
|
||
|
did and saw that it was indeed the devil-god his rage knew
|
||
|
no bounds, for he thought him dead and himself cheated
|
||
|
of the revenge he had so long dreamed upon.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The hyenas approached the ape-man with bared fangs.
|
||
|
Bukawai, with an inarticulate scream, rushed upon them,
|
||
|
striking cruel and heavy blows with his knob-stick, for
|
||
|
there might still be life in the apparently lifeless form.
|
||
|
The beasts, snapping and snarling, half turned upon
|
||
|
their master and their tormentor, but long fear still
|
||
|
held them from his putrid throat. They slunk away a few
|
||
|
yards and squatted upon their haunches, hatred and baffled
|
||
|
hunger gleaming from their savage eyes.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Bukawai stooped and placed his ear above the ape-man's heart.
|
||
|
It still beat. As well as his sloughed features could
|
||
|
register pleasure they did so; but it was not a pretty sight.
|
||
|
At the ape-man's side lay his long, grass rope.
|
||
|
Quickly Bukawai bound the limp arms behind his prisoner's back,
|
||
|
then he raised him to one of his shoulders, for, though
|
||
|
Bukawai was old and diseased, he was still a strong man.
|
||
|
The hyenas fell in behind as the witch-doctor set off
|
||
|
toward the cave, and through the long black corridors
|
||
|
they followed as Bukawai bore his victim into the bowels
|
||
|
of the hills. Through subterranean chambers, connected by
|
||
|
winding passageways, Bukawai staggered with his load.
|
||
|
At a sudden turning of the corridor, daylight flooded
|
||
|
them and Bukawai stepped out into a small, circular basin
|
||
|
in the hill, apparently the crater of an ancient volcano,
|
||
|
one of those which never reached the dignity of a mountain
|
||
|
and are little more than lava-rimmed pits closed to the earth's
|
||
|
surface.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Steep walls rimmed the cavity. The only exit was
|
||
|
through the passageway by which Bukawai had entered.
|
||
|
A few stunted trees grew upon the rocky floor. A hundred
|
||
|
feet above could be seen the ragged lips of this cold,
|
||
|
dead mouth of hell.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Bukawai propped Tarzan against a tree and bound him there
|
||
|
with his own grass rope, leaving his hands free but securing
|
||
|
the knots in such a way that the ape-man could not reach them.
|
||
|
The hyenas slunk to and fro, growling. Bukawai hated them
|
||
|
and they hated him. He knew that they but waited for the time
|
||
|
when he should be helpless, or when their hatred should
|
||
|
rise to such a height as to submerge their cringing fear of him.
|
||
|
|
||
|
In his own heart was not a little fear of these repulsive
|
||
|
creatures, and because of that fear, Bukawai always kept
|
||
|
the beasts well fed, often hunting for them when their own
|
||
|
forages for food failed, but ever was he cruel to them
|
||
|
with the cruelty of a little brain, diseased, bestial, primitive.
|
||
|
|
||
|
He had had them since they were puppies. They had known
|
||
|
no other life than that with him, and though they went
|
||
|
abroad to hunt, always they returned. Of late Bukawai
|
||
|
had come to believe that they returned not so much
|
||
|
from habit as from a fiendish patience which would
|
||
|
submit to every indignity and pain rather than forego
|
||
|
the final vengeance, and Bukawai needed but little
|
||
|
imagination to picture what that vengeance would be.
|
||
|
Today he would see for himself what his end would be;
|
||
|
but another should impersonate Bukawai.
|
||
|
|
||
|
When he had trussed Tarzan securely, Bukawai went back
|
||
|
into the corridor, driving the hyenas ahead of him,
|
||
|
and pulling across the opening a lattice of laced branches,
|
||
|
which shut the pit from the cave during the night that
|
||
|
Bukawai might sleep in security, for then the hyenas
|
||
|
were penned in the crater that they might not sneak upon
|
||
|
a sleeping Bukawai in the darkness.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Bukawai returned to the outer cave mouth, filled a vessel
|
||
|
with water at the spring which rose in the little canon
|
||
|
close at hand and returned toward the pit. The hyenas
|
||
|
stood before the lattice looking hungrily toward Tarzan.
|
||
|
They had been fed in this manner before.
|
||
|
|
||
|
With his water, the witch-doctor approached Tarzan and threw
|
||
|
a portion of the contents of the vessel in the ape-man's face.
|
||
|
There was fluttering of the eyelids, and at the second
|
||
|
application Tarzan opened his eyes and looked about.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Devil-god," cried Bukawai, "I am the great witch-doctor.
|
||
|
My medicine is strong. Yours is weak. If it is not,
|
||
|
why do you stay tied here like a goat that is bait
|
||
|
for lions?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tarzan understood nothing the witch-doctor said, therefore he
|
||
|
did not reply, but only stared straight at Bukawai with
|
||
|
cold and level gaze. The hyenas crept up behind him.
|
||
|
He heard them growl; but he did not even turn his head.
|
||
|
He was a beast with a man's brain. The beast in him refused
|
||
|
to show fear in the face of a death which the man-mind
|
||
|
already admitted to be inevitable.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Bukawai, not yet ready to give his victim to the beasts,
|
||
|
rushed upon the hyenas with his knob-stick. There
|
||
|
was a short scrimmage in which the brutes came off
|
||
|
second best, as they always did. Tarzan watched it.
|
||
|
He saw and realized the hatred which existed between
|
||
|
the two animals and the hideous semblance of a man.
|
||
|
|
||
|
With the hyenas subdued, Bukawai returned to the baiting
|
||
|
of Tarzan; but finding that the ape-man understood
|
||
|
nothing he said, the witch-doctor finally desisted.
|
||
|
Then he withdrew into the corridor and pulled the latticework
|
||
|
barrier across the opening. He went back into the cave
|
||
|
and got a sleeping mat, which he brought to the opening,
|
||
|
that he might lie down and watch the spectacle of his
|
||
|
revenge in comfort.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The hyenas were sneaking furtively around the ape-man.
|
||
|
Tarzan strained at his bonds for a moment, but soon
|
||
|
realized that the rope he had braided to hold Numa,
|
||
|
the lion, would hold him quite as successfully.
|
||
|
He did not wish to die; but he could look death in the
|
||
|
face now as he had many times before without a quaver.
|
||
|
|
||
|
As he pulled upon the rope he felt it rub against the
|
||
|
small tree about which it was passed. Like a flash of
|
||
|
the cinematograph upon the screen, a picture was flashed
|
||
|
before his mind's eye from the storehouse of his memory.
|
||
|
He saw a lithe, boyish figure swinging high above the
|
||
|
ground at the end of a rope. He saw many apes watching
|
||
|
from below, and then he saw the rope part and the boy
|
||
|
hurtle downward toward the ground. Tarzan smiled.
|
||
|
Immediately he commenced to draw the rope rapidly back
|
||
|
and forth across the tree trunk.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The hyenas, gaining courage, came closer. They sniffed
|
||
|
at his legs; but when he struck at them with his free arms
|
||
|
they slunk off. He knew that with the growth of hunger
|
||
|
they would attack. Coolly, methodically, without haste,
|
||
|
Tarzan drew the rope back and forth against the rough
|
||
|
trunk of the small tree.
|
||
|
|
||
|
In the entrance to the cavern Bukawai fell asleep.
|
||
|
He thought it would be some time before the beasts gained
|
||
|
sufficient courage or hunger to attack the captive.
|
||
|
Their growls and the cries of the victim would awaken him.
|
||
|
In the meantime he might as well rest, and he did.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Thus the day wore on, for the hyenas were not famished,
|
||
|
and the rope with which Tarzan was bound was a stronger
|
||
|
one than that of his boyhood, which had parted so quickly
|
||
|
to the chafing of the rough tree bark. Yet, all the
|
||
|
while hunger was growing upon the beasts and the strands
|
||
|
of the grass rope were wearing thinner and thinner.
|
||
|
Bukawai slept.
|
||
|
|
||
|
It was late afternoon before one of the beasts,
|
||
|
irritated by the gnawing of appetite, made a quick,
|
||
|
growling dash at the ape-man. The noise awoke Bukawai.
|
||
|
He sat up quickly and watched what went on within
|
||
|
the crater. He saw the hungry hyena charge the man,
|
||
|
leaping for the unprotected throat. He saw Tarzan reach
|
||
|
out and seize the growling animal, and then he saw
|
||
|
the second beast spring for the devil-god's shoulder.
|
||
|
There was a mighty heave of the great, smooth-skinned body.
|
||
|
Rounded muscles shot into great, tensed piles beneath
|
||
|
the brown hide--the ape-man surged forward with all his
|
||
|
weight and all his great strength--the bonds parted,
|
||
|
and the three were rolling upon the floor of the crater
|
||
|
snarling, snapping, and rending.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Bukawai leaped to his feet. Could it be that the devil-god
|
||
|
was to prevail against his servants? Impossible! The
|
||
|
creature was unarmed, and he was down with two hyenas
|
||
|
on top of him; but Bukawai did not know Tarzan.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The ape-man fastened his fingers upon the throat of one
|
||
|
of the hyenas and rose to one knee, though the other beast
|
||
|
tore at him frantically in an effort to pull him down.
|
||
|
With a single hand Tarzan held the one, and with the other
|
||
|
hand he reached forth and pulled toward him the second beast.
|
||
|
|
||
|
And then Bukawai, seeing the battle going against his forces,
|
||
|
rushed forward from the cavern brandishing his knob-stick.
|
||
|
Tarzan saw him coming, and rising now to both feet,
|
||
|
a hyena in each hand, he hurled one of the foaming beasts
|
||
|
straight at the witch-doctor's head. Down went the two
|
||
|
in a snarling, biting heap. Tarzan tossed the second hyena
|
||
|
across the crater, while the first gnawed at the rotting
|
||
|
face of its master; but this did not suit the ape-man.
|
||
|
With a kick he sent the beast howling after its companion,
|
||
|
and springing to the side of the prostrate witch-doctor,
|
||
|
dragged him to his feet.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Bukawai, still conscious, saw death, immediate and terrible,
|
||
|
in the cold eyes of his captor, so he turned upon Tarzan
|
||
|
with teeth and nails. The ape-man shuddered at the proximity
|
||
|
of that raw face to his. The hyenas had had enough
|
||
|
and disappeared through the small aperture leading into
|
||
|
the cave. Tarzan had little difficulty in overpowering
|
||
|
and binding Bukawai. Then he led him to the very tree
|
||
|
to which he had been bound; but in binding Bukawai,
|
||
|
Tarzan saw to it that escape after the same fashion that
|
||
|
he had escaped would be out of the question; then he left him.
|
||
|
|
||
|
As he passed through the winding corridors and the
|
||
|
subterranean apartments, Tarzan saw nothing of the hyenas.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"They will return," he said to himself.
|
||
|
|
||
|
In the crater between the towering walls Bukawai,
|
||
|
cold with terror, trembled, trembled as with ague.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"They will return!" he cried, his voice rising
|
||
|
to a fright-filled shriek.
|
||
|
|
||
|
And they did.
|
||
|
|
||
|
8
|
||
|
|
||
|
The Lion
|
||
|
|
||
|
NUMA, THE LION, crouched behind a thorn bush close beside
|
||
|
the drinking pool where the river eddied just below the bend.
|
||
|
There was a ford there and on either bank a well-worn trail,
|
||
|
broadened far out at the river's brim, where, for countless
|
||
|
centuries, the wild things of the jungle and of the plains
|
||
|
beyond had come down to drink, the carnivora with bold
|
||
|
and fearless majesty, the herbivora timorous, hesitating,
|
||
|
fearful.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Numa, the lion, was hungry, he was very hungry, and so he
|
||
|
was quite silent now. On his way to the drinking place
|
||
|
he had moaned often and roared not a little; but as he
|
||
|
neared the spot where he would lie in wait for Bara,
|
||
|
the deer, or Horta, the boar, or some other of the many
|
||
|
luscious-fleshed creatures who came hither to drink,
|
||
|
he was silent. It was a grim, a terrible silence,
|
||
|
shot through with yellow-green light of ferocious eyes,
|
||
|
punctuated with undulating tremors of sinuous tail.
|
||
|
|
||
|
It was Pacco, the zebra, who came first, and Numa, the lion,
|
||
|
could scarce restrain a roar of anger, for of all the
|
||
|
plains people, none are more wary than Pacco, the zebra.
|
||
|
Behind the black-striped stallion came a herd of thirty
|
||
|
or forty of the plump and vicious little horselike beasts.
|
||
|
As he neared the river, the leader paused often,
|
||
|
cocking his ears and raising his muzzle to sniff the
|
||
|
gentle breeze for the tell-tale scent spoor of the dread
|
||
|
flesh-eaters.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Numa shifted uneasily, drawing his hind quarters far
|
||
|
beneath his tawny body, gathering himself for the sudden
|
||
|
charge and the savage assault. His eyes shot hungry fire.
|
||
|
His great muscles quivered to the excitement of the moment.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Pacco came a little nearer, halted, snorted, and wheeled.
|
||
|
There was a pattering of scurrying hoofs and the herd was gone;
|
||
|
but Numa, the lion, moved not. He was familiar with the
|
||
|
ways of Pacco, the zebra. He knew that he would return,
|
||
|
though many times he might wheel and fly before he
|
||
|
summoned the courage to lead his harem and his offspring
|
||
|
to the water. There was the chance that Pacco might be
|
||
|
frightened off entirely. Numa had seen this happen before,
|
||
|
and so he became almost rigid lest he be the one to send
|
||
|
them galloping, waterless, back to the plain.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Again and again came Pacco and his family, and again
|
||
|
and again did they turn and flee; but each time they came
|
||
|
closer to the river, until at last the plump stallion
|
||
|
dipped his velvet muzzle daintily into the water.
|
||
|
The others, stepping warily, approached their leader.
|
||
|
Numa selected a sleek, fat filly and his flaming eyes burned
|
||
|
greedily as they feasted upon her, for Numa, the lion,
|
||
|
loves scarce anything better than the meat of Pacco,
|
||
|
perhaps because Pacco is, of all the grass-eaters, the most
|
||
|
difficult to catch.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Slowly the lion rose, and as he rose, a twig snapped beneath
|
||
|
one of his great, padded paws. Like a shot from a rifle
|
||
|
he charged upon the filly; but the snapped twig had been
|
||
|
enough to startle the timorous quarry, so that they
|
||
|
were in instant flight simultaneously with Numa's charge.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The stallion was last, and with a prodigious leap,
|
||
|
the lion catapulted through the air to seize him;
|
||
|
but the snapping twig had robbed Numa of his dinner,
|
||
|
though his mighty talons raked the zebra's glossy rump,
|
||
|
leaving four crimson bars across the beautiful coat.
|
||
|
|
||
|
It was an angry Numa that quitted the river and prowled,
|
||
|
fierce, dangerous, and hungry, into the jungle.
|
||
|
Far from particular now was his appetite. Even Dango,
|
||
|
the hyena, would have seemed a tidbit to that ravenous maw.
|
||
|
And in this temper it was that the lion came upon the tribe
|
||
|
of Kerchak, the great ape.
|
||
|
|
||
|
One does not look for Numa, the lion, this late in the morning.
|
||
|
He should be lying up asleep beside his last night's
|
||
|
kill by now; but Numa had made no kill last night.
|
||
|
He was still hunting, hungrier than ever.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The anthropoids were idling about the clearing, the first
|
||
|
keen desire of the morning's hunger having been satisfied.
|
||
|
Numa scented them long before he saw them. Ordinarily he
|
||
|
would have turned away in search of other game, for even
|
||
|
Numa respected the mighty muscles and the sharp fangs
|
||
|
of the great bulls of the tribe of Kerchak, but today he
|
||
|
kept on steadily toward them, his bristled snout wrinkled
|
||
|
into a savage snarl.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Without an instant's hesitation, Numa charged the moment
|
||
|
he reached a point from where the apes were visible
|
||
|
to him. There were a dozen or more of the hairy,
|
||
|
manlike creatures upon the ground in a little glade.
|
||
|
In a tree at one side sat a brown-skinned youth.
|
||
|
He saw Numa's swift charge; he saw the apes turn and flee,
|
||
|
huge bulls trampling upon little balus; only a single she
|
||
|
held her ground to meet the charge, a young she inspired
|
||
|
by new motherhood to the great sacrifice that her balu
|
||
|
might escape.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tarzan leaped from his perch, screaming at the flying
|
||
|
bulls beneath and at those who squatted in the safety
|
||
|
of surrounding trees. Had the bulls stood their ground,
|
||
|
Numa would not have carried through that charge unless
|
||
|
goaded by great rage or the gnawing pangs of starvation.
|
||
|
Even then he would not have come off unscathed.
|
||
|
|
||
|
If the bulls heard, they were too slow in responding,
|
||
|
for Numa had seized the mother ape and dragged her into
|
||
|
the jungle before the males had sufficiently collected their
|
||
|
wits and their courage to rally in defense of their fellow.
|
||
|
Tarzan's angry voice aroused similar anger in the breasts
|
||
|
of the apes. Snarling and barking they followed Numa
|
||
|
into the dense labyrinth of foliage wherein he sought
|
||
|
to hide himself from them. The ape-man was in the lead,
|
||
|
moving rapidly and yet with caution, depending even more
|
||
|
upon his ears and nose than upon his eyes for information
|
||
|
of the lion's whereabouts.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The spoor was easy to follow, for the dragged body of the
|
||
|
victim left a plain trail, blood-spattered and scentful.
|
||
|
Even such dull creatures as you or I might easily have
|
||
|
followed it. To Tarzan and the apes of Kerchak it was
|
||
|
as obvious as a cement sidewalk.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tarzan knew that they were nearing the great cat even
|
||
|
before he heard an angry growl of warning just ahead.
|
||
|
Calling to the apes to follow his example, he swung into
|
||
|
a tree and a moment later Numa was surrounded by a ring
|
||
|
of growling beasts, well out of reach of his fangs and talons
|
||
|
but within plain sight of him. The carnivore crouched
|
||
|
with his fore-quarters upon the she-ape. Tarzan could see
|
||
|
that the latter was already dead; but something within
|
||
|
him made it seem quite necessary to rescue the useless
|
||
|
body from the clutches of the enemy and to punish him.
|
||
|
|
||
|
He shrieked taunts and insults at Numa, and tearing
|
||
|
dead branches from the tree in which he danced,
|
||
|
hurled them at the lion. The apes followed his example.
|
||
|
Numa roared out in rage and vexation. He was hungry,
|
||
|
but under such conditions he could not feed.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The apes, if they had been left to themselves,
|
||
|
would doubtless soon have left the lion to peaceful
|
||
|
enjoyment of his feast, for was not the she dead? They
|
||
|
could not restore her to life by throwing sticks at Numa,
|
||
|
and they might even now be feeding in quiet themselves;
|
||
|
but Tarzan was of a different mind. Numa must be punished
|
||
|
and driven away. He must be taught that even though
|
||
|
he killed a Mangani, he would not be permitted to feed
|
||
|
upon his kill. The man-mind looked into the future,
|
||
|
while the apes perceived only the immediate present.
|
||
|
They would be content to escape today the menace of Numa,
|
||
|
while Tarzan saw the necessity, and the means as well,
|
||
|
of safeguarding the days to come.
|
||
|
|
||
|
So he urged the great anthropoids on until Numa was
|
||
|
showered with missiles that kept his head dodging
|
||
|
and his voice pealing forth its savage protest;
|
||
|
but still he clung desperately to his kill.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The twigs and branches hurled at Numa, Tarzan soon realized,
|
||
|
did not hurt him greatly even when they struck him,
|
||
|
and did not injure him at all, so the ape-man looked about
|
||
|
for more effective missiles, nor did he have to look long.
|
||
|
An out-cropping of decomposed granite not far from Numa
|
||
|
suggested ammunition of a much more painful nature.
|
||
|
Calling to the apes to watch him, Tarzan slipped to
|
||
|
the ground and gathered a handful of small fragments.
|
||
|
He knew that when once they had seen him carry out his
|
||
|
idea they would be much quicker to follow his lead than
|
||
|
to obey his instructions, were he to command them to
|
||
|
procure pieces of rock and hurl them at Numa, for Tarzan
|
||
|
was not then king of the apes of the tribe of Kerchak.
|
||
|
That came in later years. Now he was but a youth, though one
|
||
|
who already had wrested for himself a place in the councils
|
||
|
of the savage beasts among whom a strange fate had cast him.
|
||
|
The sullen bulls of the older generation still hated
|
||
|
him as beasts hate those of whom they are suspicious,
|
||
|
whose scent characteristic is the scent characteristic
|
||
|
of an alien order and, therefore, of an enemy order.
|
||
|
The younger bulls, those who had grown up through
|
||
|
childhood as his playmates, were as accustomed to Tarzan's
|
||
|
scent as to that of any other member of the tribe.
|
||
|
They felt no greater suspicion of him than of any other
|
||
|
bull of their acquaintance; yet they did not love him,
|
||
|
for they loved none outside the mating season, and the
|
||
|
animosities aroused by other bulls during that season lasted
|
||
|
well over until the next. They were a morose and peevish
|
||
|
band at best, though here and there were those among them
|
||
|
in whom germinated the primal seeds of humanity--reversions
|
||
|
to type, these, doubtless; reversions to the ancient
|
||
|
progenitor who took the first step out of ape-hood
|
||
|
toward humanness, when he walked more often upon his hind
|
||
|
feet and discovered other things for idle hands to do.
|
||
|
|
||
|
So now Tarzan led where he could not yet command.
|
||
|
He had long since discovered the apish propensity for
|
||
|
mimicry and learned to make use of it. Having filled
|
||
|
his arms with fragments of rotted granite, he clambered
|
||
|
again into a tree, and it pleased him to see that the apes
|
||
|
had followed his example.
|
||
|
|
||
|
During the brief respite while they were gathering
|
||
|
their ammunition, Numa had settled himself to feed;
|
||
|
but scarce had he arranged himself and his kill when
|
||
|
a sharp piece of rock hurled by the practiced hand of
|
||
|
the ape-man struck him upon the cheek. His sudden roar
|
||
|
of pain and rage was smothered by a volley from the apes,
|
||
|
who had seen Tarzan's act. Numa shook his massive
|
||
|
head and glared upward at his tormentors. For a half
|
||
|
hour they pursued him with rocks and broken branches,
|
||
|
and though he dragged his kill into densest thickets,
|
||
|
yet they always found a way to reach him with their missiles,
|
||
|
giving him no opportunity to feed, and driving him on and on.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The hairless ape-thing with the man scent was worst of all,
|
||
|
for he had even the temerity to advance upon the ground
|
||
|
to within a few yards of the Lord of the Jungle, that he
|
||
|
might with greater accuracy and force hurl the sharp bits
|
||
|
of granite and the heavy sticks at him. Time and again
|
||
|
did Numa charge--sudden, vicious charges--but the lithe,
|
||
|
active tormentor always managed to elude him and with such
|
||
|
insolent ease that the lion forgot even his great hunger
|
||
|
in the consuming passion of his rage, leaving his meat
|
||
|
for considerable spaces of time in vain efforts to catch
|
||
|
his enemy.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The apes and Tarzan pursued the great beast to a natural
|
||
|
clearing,
|
||
|
where Numa evidently determined to make a last stand,
|
||
|
taking up his position in the center of the open space,
|
||
|
which was far enough from any tree to render him practically
|
||
|
immune from the rather erratic throwing of the apes, though
|
||
|
Tarzan still found him with most persistent and aggravating
|
||
|
frequency.
|
||
|
|
||
|
This, however, did not suit the ape-man, since Numa now
|
||
|
suffered an occasional missile with no more than a snarl,
|
||
|
while he settled himself to partake of his delayed feast.
|
||
|
Tarzan scratched his head, pondering some more effective
|
||
|
method of offense, for he had determined to prevent Numa
|
||
|
from profiting in any way through his attack upon the tribe.
|
||
|
The man-mind reasoned against the future, while the
|
||
|
shaggy apes thought only of their present hatred of this
|
||
|
ancestral enemy. Tarzan guessed that should Numa find it
|
||
|
an easy thing to snatch a meal from the tribe of Kerchak,
|
||
|
it would be but a short time before their existence would
|
||
|
be one living nightmare of hideous watchfulness and dread.
|
||
|
Numa must be taught that the killing of an ape brought
|
||
|
immediate punishment and no rewards. It would take but
|
||
|
a few lessons to insure the former safety of the tribe.
|
||
|
This must be some old lion whose failing strength and
|
||
|
agility had forced him to any prey that he could catch;
|
||
|
but even a single lion, undisputed, could exterminate
|
||
|
the tribe, or at least make its existence so precarious
|
||
|
and so terrifying that life would no longer be a
|
||
|
pleasant condition.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Let him hunt among the Gomangani," thought Tarzan.
|
||
|
"He will find them easier prey. I will teach ferocious
|
||
|
Numa that he may not hunt the Mangani."
|
||
|
|
||
|
But how to wrest the body of his victim from the
|
||
|
feeding lion was the first question to be solved.
|
||
|
At last Tarzan hit upon a plan. To anyone but Tarzan
|
||
|
of the Apes it might have seemed rather a risky plan,
|
||
|
and perhaps it did even to him; but Tarzan rather liked
|
||
|
things that contained a considerable element of danger.
|
||
|
At any rate, I rather doubt that you or I would have chosen
|
||
|
a similar plan for foiling an angry and a hungry lion.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tarzan required assistance in the scheme he had hit upon
|
||
|
and his assistant must be equally as brave and almost
|
||
|
as active as he. The ape-man's eyes fell upon Taug,
|
||
|
the playmate of his childhood, the rival in his first love
|
||
|
and now, of all the bulls of the tribe, the only one
|
||
|
that might be thought to hold in his savage brain any
|
||
|
such feeling toward Tarzan as we describe among ourselves
|
||
|
as friendship. At least, Tarzan knew, Taug was courageous,
|
||
|
and he was young and agile and wonderfully muscled.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Taug!" cried the ape-man. The great ape looked up from a dead
|
||
|
limb he was attempting to tear from a lightning-blasted tree.
|
||
|
"Go close to Numa and worry him," said Tarzan. "Worry him
|
||
|
until he charges. Lead him away from the body of Mamka.
|
||
|
Keep him away as long as you can."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Taug nodded. He was across the clearing from Tarzan.
|
||
|
Wresting the limb at last from the tree he dropped to the
|
||
|
ground and advanced toward Numa, growling and barking out
|
||
|
his insults. The worried lion looked up and rose to his feet.
|
||
|
His tail went stiffly erect and Taug turned in flight,
|
||
|
for he knew that warming signal of the charge.
|
||
|
|
||
|
From behind the lion, Tarzan ran quickly toward the center
|
||
|
of the clearing and the body of Mamka. Numa, all his
|
||
|
eyes for Taug, did not see the ape-man. Instead he shot
|
||
|
forward after the fleeing bull, who had turned in flight
|
||
|
not an instant too soon, since he reached the nearest
|
||
|
tree but a yard or two ahead of the pursuing demon.
|
||
|
Like a cat the heavy anthropoid scampered up the bole
|
||
|
of his sanctuary. Numa's talons missed him by little
|
||
|
more than inches.
|
||
|
|
||
|
For a moment the lion paused beneath the tree, glaring up
|
||
|
at the ape and roaring until the earth trembled, then he
|
||
|
turned back again toward his kill, and as he did so,
|
||
|
his tail shot once more to rigid erectness and he
|
||
|
charged back even more ferociously than he had come,
|
||
|
for what he saw was the naked man-thing running toward
|
||
|
the farther trees with the bloody carcass of his prey
|
||
|
across a giant shoulder.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The apes, watching the grim race from the safety of
|
||
|
the trees, screamed taunts at Numa and warnings to Tarzan.
|
||
|
The high sun, hot and brilliant, fell like a spotlight
|
||
|
upon the actors in the little clearing, portraying them
|
||
|
in glaring relief to the audience in the leafy shadows
|
||
|
of the surrounding trees. The light-brown body of the
|
||
|
naked youth, all but hidden by the shaggy carcass of the
|
||
|
killed ape, the red blood streaking his smooth hide,
|
||
|
his muscles rolling, velvety, beneath. Behind him
|
||
|
the black-maned lion, head flattened, tail extended,
|
||
|
racing, a jungle thoroughbred, across the sunlit clearing.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Ah, but this was life! With death at his heels,
|
||
|
Tarzan thrilled with the joy of such living as this;
|
||
|
but would he reach the trees ahead of the rampant death
|
||
|
so close behind?
|
||
|
|
||
|
Gunto swung from a limb in a tree before him. Gunto was
|
||
|
screaming warnings and advice.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Catch me!" cried Tarzan, and with his heavy burden leaped
|
||
|
straight for the big bull hanging there by his hind feet
|
||
|
and one forepaw. And Gunto caught them--the big ape-man
|
||
|
and the dead weight of the slain she-ape--caught them
|
||
|
with one great, hairy paw and whirled them upward until
|
||
|
Tarzan's fingers closed upon a near-by branch.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Beneath, Numa leaped; but Gunto, heavy and awkward as he
|
||
|
may have appeared, was as quick as Manu, the monkey,
|
||
|
so that the lion's talons but barely grazed him,
|
||
|
scratching a bloody streak beneath one hairy arm.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tarzan carried Mamka's corpse to a high crotch, where even
|
||
|
Sheeta, the panther, could not get it. Numa paced angrily
|
||
|
back and forth beneath the tree, roaring frightfully.
|
||
|
He had been robbed of his kill and his revenge also.
|
||
|
He was very savage indeed; but his despoilers were
|
||
|
well out of his reach, and after hurling a few taunts
|
||
|
and missiles at him they swung away through the trees,
|
||
|
fiercely reviling him.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tarzan thought much upon the little adventure of that day.
|
||
|
He foresaw what might happen should the great carnivora
|
||
|
of the jungle turn their serious attention upon the tribe
|
||
|
of Kerchak, the great ape, but equally he thought upon
|
||
|
the wild scramble of the apes for safety when Numa first
|
||
|
charged among them. There is little humor in the jungle
|
||
|
that is not grim and awful. The beasts have little
|
||
|
or no conception of humor; but the young Englishman saw
|
||
|
humor in many things which presented no humorous angle
|
||
|
to his associates.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Since earliest childhood he had been a searcher after fun,
|
||
|
much to the sorrow of his fellow-apes, and now he
|
||
|
saw the humor of the frightened panic of the apes
|
||
|
and the baffled rage of Numa even in this grim jungle
|
||
|
adventure which had robbed Mamka of life, and jeopardized
|
||
|
that of many members of the tribe.
|
||
|
|
||
|
It was but a few weeks later that Sheeta, the panther,
|
||
|
made a sudden rush among the tribe and snatched a little
|
||
|
balu from a tree where it had been hidden while its mother
|
||
|
sought food. Sheeta got away with his small prize unmolested.
|
||
|
Tarzan was very wroth. He spoke to the bulls of the ease
|
||
|
with which Numa and Sheeta, in a single moon, had slain
|
||
|
two members of the tribe.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"They will take us all for food," he cried. "We hunt
|
||
|
as we will through the jungle, paying no heed to
|
||
|
approaching enemies. Even Manu, the monkey, does not so.
|
||
|
He keeps two or three always watching for enemies.
|
||
|
Pacco, the zebra, and Wappi, the antelope, have those about
|
||
|
the herd who keep watch while the others feed, while we,
|
||
|
the great Mangani, let Numa, and Sabor, and Sheeta
|
||
|
come when they will and carry us off to feed their balus.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Gr-r-rmph," said Numgo.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"What are we to do?" asked Taug.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"We, too, should have two or three always watching for the
|
||
|
approach of Numa, and Sabor, and Sheeta," replied Tarzan.
|
||
|
"No others need we fear, except Histah, the snake, and if
|
||
|
we watch for the others we will see Histah if he comes,
|
||
|
though gliding ever so silently."
|
||
|
|
||
|
And so it was that the great apes of the tribe of Kerchak
|
||
|
posted sentries thereafter, who watched upon three sides
|
||
|
while the tribe hunted, scattered less than had been
|
||
|
their wont.
|
||
|
|
||
|
But Tarzan went abroad alone, for Tarzan was a man-thing
|
||
|
and sought amusement and adventure and such humor as the grim
|
||
|
and terrible jungle offers to those who know it and do not
|
||
|
fear it--a weird humor shot with blazing eyes and dappled
|
||
|
with the crimson of lifeblood. While others sought
|
||
|
only food and love, Tarzan of the Apes sought food and joy.
|
||
|
|
||
|
One day he hovered above the palisaded village of Mbonga,
|
||
|
the chief, the jet cannibal of the jungle primeval.
|
||
|
He saw, as he had seen many times before, the witch-doctor,
|
||
|
Rabba Kega, decked out in the head and hide of Gorgo,
|
||
|
the buffalo. It amused Tarzan to see a Gomangani parading
|
||
|
as Gorgo; but it suggested nothing in particular to him
|
||
|
until he chanced to see stretched against the side of
|
||
|
Mbonga's hut the skin of a lion with the head still on.
|
||
|
Then a broad grin widened the handsome face of the savage
|
||
|
beast-youth.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Back into the jungle he went until chance, agility, strength,
|
||
|
and cunning backed by his marvelous powers of perception,
|
||
|
gave him an easy meal. If Tarzan felt that the world
|
||
|
owed him a living he also realized that it was for him
|
||
|
to collect it, nor was there ever a better collector than
|
||
|
this son of an English lord, who knew even less of the ways
|
||
|
of his forbears than he did of the forbears themselves,
|
||
|
which was nothing.
|
||
|
|
||
|
It was quite dark when Tarzan returned to the village
|
||
|
of Mbonga and took his now polished perch in the tree
|
||
|
which overhangs the palisade upon one side of the
|
||
|
walled enclosure. As there was nothing in particular
|
||
|
to feast upon in the village there was little life
|
||
|
in the single street, for only an orgy of flesh
|
||
|
and native beer could draw out the people of Mbonga.
|
||
|
Tonight they sat gossiping about their cooking fires,
|
||
|
the older members of the tribe; or, if they were young,
|
||
|
paired off in the shadows cast by the palm-thatched huts.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tarzan dropped lightly into the village, and sneaking
|
||
|
stealthily in the concealment of the denser shadows,
|
||
|
approached the hut of the chief, Mbonga. Here he found
|
||
|
that which he sought. There were warriors all about him;
|
||
|
but they did not know that the feared devil-god slunk
|
||
|
noiselessly so near them, nor did they see him possess
|
||
|
himself of that which he coveted and depart from their
|
||
|
village as noiselessly as he had come.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Later that night, as Tarzan curled himself for sleep,
|
||
|
he lay for a long time looking up at the burning planets
|
||
|
and the twinkling stars and at Goro the moon, and he smiled.
|
||
|
He recalled how ludicrous the great bulls had appeared
|
||
|
in their mad scramble for safety that day when Numa
|
||
|
had charged among them and seized Mamka, and yet he knew
|
||
|
them to be fierce and courageous. It was the sudden
|
||
|
shock of surprise that always sent them into a panic;
|
||
|
but of this Tarzan was not as yet fully aware. That was
|
||
|
something he was to learn in the near future.
|
||
|
|
||
|
He fell asleep with a broad grin upon his face.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Manu, the monkey, awoke him in the morning by dropping
|
||
|
discarded bean pods upon his upturned face from a branch
|
||
|
a short distance above him. Tarzan looked up and smiled.
|
||
|
He had been awakened thus before many times. He and Manu
|
||
|
were fairly good friends, their friendship operating upon
|
||
|
a reciprocal basis. Sometimes Manu would come running early
|
||
|
in the morning to awaken Tarzan and tell him that Bara,
|
||
|
the deer, was feeding close at hand, or that Horta,
|
||
|
the boar, was asleep in a mudhole hard by, and in return
|
||
|
Tarzan broke open the shells of the harder nuts and fruits
|
||
|
for Manu, or frightened away Histah, the snake, and Sheeta,
|
||
|
the panther.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The sun had been up for some time, and the tribe had
|
||
|
already wandered off in search of food. Manu indicated
|
||
|
the direction they had taken with a wave of his hand
|
||
|
and a few piping notes of his squeaky little voice.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Come, Manu," said Tarzan, "and you will see that which
|
||
|
shall make you dance for joy and squeal your wrinkled
|
||
|
little head off. Come, follow Tarzan of the Apes."
|
||
|
|
||
|
With that he set off in the direction Manu had indicated
|
||
|
and above him, chattering, scolding and squealing,
|
||
|
skipped Manu, the monkey. Across Tarzan's shoulders
|
||
|
was the thing he had stolen from the village of Mbonga,
|
||
|
the chief, the evening before.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The tribe was feeding in the forest beside the clearing
|
||
|
where Gunto, and Taug, and Tarzan had so harassed Numa
|
||
|
and finally taken away from him the fruit of his kill.
|
||
|
Some of them were in the clearing itself. In peace
|
||
|
and content they fed, for were there not three sentries,
|
||
|
each watching upon a different side of the herd? Tarzan
|
||
|
had taught them this, and though he had been away for
|
||
|
several days hunting alone, as he often did, or visiting
|
||
|
at the cabin by the sea, they had not as yet forgotten
|
||
|
his admonitions, and if they continued for a short time
|
||
|
longer to post sentries, it would become a habit of their
|
||
|
tribal life and thus be perpetuated indefinitely.
|
||
|
|
||
|
But Tarzan, who knew them better than they knew themselves,
|
||
|
was confident that they had ceased to place the watchers about
|
||
|
them the moment that he had left them, and now he planned
|
||
|
not only to have a little fun at their expense but to teach
|
||
|
them a lesson in preparedness, which, by the way, is even
|
||
|
a more vital issue in the jungle than in civilized places.
|
||
|
That you and I exist today must be due to the preparedness
|
||
|
of some shaggy anthropoid of the Oligocene. Of course
|
||
|
the apes of Kerchak were always prepared, after their own
|
||
|
way--Tarzan had merely suggested a new and additional safeguard.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Gunto was posted today to the north of the clearing.
|
||
|
He squatted in the fork of a tree from where he might
|
||
|
view the jungle for quite a distance about him.
|
||
|
It was he who first discovered the enemy. A rustling
|
||
|
in the undergrowth attracted his attention, and a moment
|
||
|
later he had a partial view of a shaggy mane and tawny
|
||
|
yellow back. Just a glimpse it was through the matted
|
||
|
foliage beneath him; but it brought from Gunto's leathern
|
||
|
lungs a shrill "Kreeg-ah!" which is the ape for beware,
|
||
|
or danger.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Instantly the tribe took up the cry until "Kreeg-ahs!" rang
|
||
|
through the jungle about the clearing as apes swung quickly
|
||
|
to places of safety among the lower branches of the trees
|
||
|
and the great bulls hastened in the direction of Gunto.
|
||
|
|
||
|
And then into the clearing strode Numa, the lion-- majestic
|
||
|
and mighty, and from a deep chest issued the moan and the
|
||
|
cough and the rumbling roar that set stiff hairs to bristling
|
||
|
from shaggy craniums down the length of mighty spines.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Inside the clearing, Numa paused and on the instant
|
||
|
there fell upon him from the trees near by a shower
|
||
|
of broken rock and dead limbs torn from age-old trees.
|
||
|
A dozen times he was hit, and then the apes ran down
|
||
|
and gathered other rocks, pelting him unmercifully.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Numa turned to flee, but his way was barred by a fusilade
|
||
|
of sharp-cornered missiles, and then, upon the edge
|
||
|
of the clearing, great Taug met him with a huge fragment
|
||
|
of rock as large as a man's head, and down went the Lord
|
||
|
of the Jungle beneath the stunning blow.
|
||
|
|
||
|
With shrieks and roars and loud barkings the great apes
|
||
|
of the tribe of Kerchak rushed upon the fallen lion.
|
||
|
Sticks and stones and yellow fangs menaced the still form.
|
||
|
In another moment, before he could regain consciousness,
|
||
|
Numa would be battered and torn until only a bloody mass
|
||
|
of broken bones and matted hair remained of what had once been
|
||
|
the most dreaded of jungle creatures.
|
||
|
|
||
|
But even as the sticks and stones were raised above him
|
||
|
and the great fangs bared to tear him, there descended
|
||
|
like a plummet from the trees above a diminutive
|
||
|
figure with long, white whiskers and a wrinkled face.
|
||
|
Square upon the body of Numa it alighted and there it
|
||
|
danced and screamed and shrieked out its challenge
|
||
|
against the bulls of Kerchak.
|
||
|
|
||
|
For an instant they paused, paralyzed by the wonder of
|
||
|
the thing. It was Manu, the monkey, Manu, the little coward,
|
||
|
and here he was daring the ferocity of the great Mangani,
|
||
|
hopping about upon the carcass of Numa, the lion,
|
||
|
and crying out that they must not strike it again.
|
||
|
|
||
|
And when the bulls paused, Manu reached down and seized a
|
||
|
tawny ear. With all his little might he tugged upon the heavy
|
||
|
head until slowly it turned back, revealing the tousled,
|
||
|
black head and clean-cut profile of Tarzan of the Apes.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Some of the older apes were for finishing what they had
|
||
|
commenced;
|
||
|
but Taug, sullen, mighty Taug, sprang quickly to the
|
||
|
ape-man's side and straddling the unconscious form warned
|
||
|
back those who would have struck his childhood playmate.
|
||
|
And Teeka, his mate, came too, taking her place with bared
|
||
|
fangs at Taug's side. others followed their example,
|
||
|
until at last Tarzan was surrounded by a ring of hairy
|
||
|
champions who would permit no enemy to approach him.
|
||
|
|
||
|
It was a surprised and chastened Tarzan who opened
|
||
|
his eyes to consciousness a few minutes later.
|
||
|
He looked about him at the surrounding apes and slowly
|
||
|
there returned to him a realization of what had occurred.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Gradually a broad grin illuminated his features.
|
||
|
His bruises were many and they hurt; but the good that had
|
||
|
come from his adventure was worth all that it had cost.
|
||
|
He had learned, for instance, that the apes of Kerchak
|
||
|
had heeded his teaching, and he had learned that he
|
||
|
had good friends among the sullen beasts whom he had
|
||
|
thought without sentiment. He had discovered that Manu,
|
||
|
the monkey--even little, cowardly Manu--had risked his life
|
||
|
in his defense.
|
||
|
|
||
|
It made Tarzan very glad to know these things;
|
||
|
but at the other lesson he had been taught he reddened.
|
||
|
He had always been a joker, the only joker in the grim
|
||
|
and terrible company; but now as he lay there half dead
|
||
|
from his hurts, he almost swore a solemn oath forever
|
||
|
to forego practical joking--almost; but not quite.
|
||
|
|
||
|
9
|
||
|
|
||
|
The Nightmare
|
||
|
|
||
|
THE BLACKS OF the village of Mbonga, the chief, were feasting,
|
||
|
while above them in a large tree sat Tarzan of the
|
||
|
Apes--grim, terrible, empty, and envious. Hunting had
|
||
|
proved poor that day, for there are lean days as well
|
||
|
as fat ones for even the greatest of the jungle hunters.
|
||
|
Oftentimes Tarzan went empty for more than a full sun,
|
||
|
and he had passed through entire moons during which he
|
||
|
had been but barely able to stave off starvation;
|
||
|
but such times were infrequent.
|
||
|
|
||
|
There once had been a period of sickness among the
|
||
|
grass-eaters which had left the plains almost bare of game
|
||
|
for several years, and again the great cats had increased
|
||
|
so rapidly and so overrun the country that their prey,
|
||
|
which was also Tarzan's, had been frightened off for a
|
||
|
considerable time.
|
||
|
|
||
|
But for the most part Tarzan had fed well always.
|
||
|
Today, though, he had gone empty, one misfortune following
|
||
|
another as rapidly as he raised new quarry, so that now,
|
||
|
as he sat perched in the tree above the feasting blacks,
|
||
|
he experienced all the pangs of famine and his hatred
|
||
|
for his lifelong enemies waxed strong in his breast.
|
||
|
It was tantalizing, indeed, to sit there hungry while
|
||
|
these Gomangani filled themselves so full of food that
|
||
|
their stomachs seemed almost upon the point of bursting,
|
||
|
and with elephant steaks at that!
|
||
|
|
||
|
It was true that Tarzan and Tantor were the best of friends,
|
||
|
and that Tarzan never yet had tasted of the flesh of
|
||
|
the elephant; but the Gomangani evidently had slain one,
|
||
|
and as they were eating of the flesh of their kill,
|
||
|
Tarzan was assailed by no doubts as to the ethics
|
||
|
of his doing likewise, should he have the opportunity.
|
||
|
Had he known that the elephant had died of sickness
|
||
|
several days before the blacks discovered the carcass,
|
||
|
he might not have been so keen to partake of the feast,
|
||
|
for Tarzan of the Apes was no carrion-eater. Hunger,
|
||
|
however, may blunt the most epicurean taste, and Tarzan
|
||
|
was not exactly an epicure.
|
||
|
|
||
|
What he was at this moment was a very hungry wild beast
|
||
|
whom caution was holding in leash, for the great cooking
|
||
|
pot in the center of the village was surrounded by
|
||
|
black warriors, through whom not even Tarzan of the Apes
|
||
|
might hope to pass unharmed. It would be necessary,
|
||
|
therefore, for the watcher to remain there hungry until
|
||
|
the blacks had gorged themselves to stupor, and then,
|
||
|
if they had left any scraps, to make the best meal he
|
||
|
could from such; but to the impatient Tarzan it seemed
|
||
|
that the greedy Gomangani would rather burst than leave
|
||
|
the feast before the last morsel had been devoured.
|
||
|
For a time they broke the monotony of eating by executing
|
||
|
portions of a hunting dance, a maneuver which sufficiently
|
||
|
stimulated digestion to permit them to fall to once more
|
||
|
with renewed vigor; but with the consumption of appalling
|
||
|
quantities of elephant meat and native beer they presently
|
||
|
became too loggy for physical exertion of any sort,
|
||
|
some reaching a stage where they no longer could rise
|
||
|
from the ground, but lay conveniently close to the great
|
||
|
cooking pot, stuffing themselves into unconsciousness.
|
||
|
|
||
|
It was well past midnight before Tarzan even could begin
|
||
|
to see the end of the orgy. The blacks were now falling
|
||
|
asleep rapidly; but a few still persisted. From before
|
||
|
their condition Tarzan had no doubt but that he easily
|
||
|
could enter the village and snatch a handful of meat from
|
||
|
before their noses; but a handful was not what he wanted.
|
||
|
Nothing less than a stomachful would allay the gnawing
|
||
|
craving of that great emptiness. He must therefore have
|
||
|
ample time to forage in peace.
|
||
|
|
||
|
At last but a single warrior remained true to his ideals--
|
||
|
an old fellow whose once wrinkled belly was now as smooth
|
||
|
and as tight as the head of a drum. With evidences
|
||
|
of great discomfort, and even pain, he would crawl toward
|
||
|
the pot and drag himself slowly to his knees, from which
|
||
|
position he could reach into the receptacle and seize
|
||
|
a piece of meat. Then he would roll over on his back
|
||
|
with a loud groan and lie there while he slowly forced
|
||
|
the food between his teeth and down into his gorged stomach.
|
||
|
|
||
|
It was evident to Tarzan that the old fellow would
|
||
|
eat until he died, or until there was no more meat.
|
||
|
The ape-man shook his head in disgust. What foul
|
||
|
creatures were these Gomangani? Yet of all the jungle
|
||
|
folk they alone resembled Tarzan closely in form.
|
||
|
Tarzan was a man, and they, too, must be some manner of men,
|
||
|
just as the little monkeys, and the great apes, and Bolgani,
|
||
|
the gorilla, were quite evidently of one great family,
|
||
|
though differing in size and appearance and customs.
|
||
|
Tarzan was ashamed, for of all the beasts of the jungle,
|
||
|
then, man was the most disgusting--man and Dango, the hyena.
|
||
|
Only man and Dango ate until they swelled up like a dead rat.
|
||
|
Tarzan had seen Dango eat his way into the carcass of a dead
|
||
|
elephant and then continue to eat so much that he had been
|
||
|
unable to get out of the hole through which he had entered.
|
||
|
Now he could readily believe that man, given the opportunity,
|
||
|
would do the same. Man, too, was the most unlovely
|
||
|
of creatures--with his skinny legs and his big stomach,
|
||
|
his filed teeth, and his thick, red lips. Man was disgusting.
|
||
|
Tarzan's gaze was riveted upon the hideous old warrior
|
||
|
wallowing in filth beneath him.
|
||
|
|
||
|
There! the thing was struggling to its knees to reach
|
||
|
for another morsel of flesh. It groaned aloud in pain
|
||
|
and yet it persisted in eating, eating, ever eating.
|
||
|
Tarzan could endure it no longer--neither his hunger nor
|
||
|
his disgust. Silently he slipped to the ground with the
|
||
|
bole of the great tree between himself and the feaster.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The man was still kneeling, bent almost double in agony,
|
||
|
before the cooking pot. His back was toward the ape-man.
|
||
|
Swiftly and noiselessly Tarzan approached him. There was
|
||
|
no sound as steel fingers closed about the black throat.
|
||
|
The struggle was short, for the man was old and already half
|
||
|
stupefied from the effects of the gorging and the beer.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tarzan dropped the inert mass and scooped several large
|
||
|
pieces of meat from the cooking pot--enough to satisfy even
|
||
|
his great hunger--then he raised the body of the feaster
|
||
|
and shoved it into the vessel. When the other blacks awoke
|
||
|
they would have something to think about! Tarzan grinned.
|
||
|
As he turned toward the tree with his meat, he picked
|
||
|
up a vessel containing beer and raised it to his lips,
|
||
|
but at the first taste he spat the stuff from his mouth
|
||
|
and tossed the primitive tankard aside. He was quite
|
||
|
sure that even Dango would draw the line at such filthy
|
||
|
tasting drink as that, and his contempt for man increased
|
||
|
with the conviction.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tarzan swung off into the jungle some half mile or
|
||
|
so before he paused to partake of his stolen food.
|
||
|
He noticed that it gave forth a strange and unpleasant odor,
|
||
|
but assumed that this was due to the fact that it had
|
||
|
stood in a vessel of water above a fire. Tarzan was,
|
||
|
of course, unaccustomed to cooked food. He did not like it;
|
||
|
but he was very hungry and had eaten a considerable
|
||
|
portion of his haul before it was really borne in upon
|
||
|
him that the stuff was nauseating. It required far less
|
||
|
than he had imagined it would to satisfy his appetite.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Throwing the balance to the ground he curled up in a
|
||
|
convenient crotch and sought slumber; but slumber seemed
|
||
|
difficult to woo. Ordinarily Tarzan of the Apes was asleep
|
||
|
as quickly as a dog after it curls itself upon a hearthrug
|
||
|
before a roaring blaze; but tonight he squirmed and twisted,
|
||
|
for at the pit of his stomach was a peculiar feeling
|
||
|
that resembled nothing more closely than an attempt upon
|
||
|
the part of the fragments of elephant meat reposing there
|
||
|
to come out into the night and search for their elephant;
|
||
|
but Tarzan was adamant. He gritted his teeth and held
|
||
|
them back. He was not to be robbed of his meal after
|
||
|
waiting so long to obtain it.
|
||
|
|
||
|
He had succeeded in dozing when the roaring of a lion
|
||
|
awoke him. He sat up to discover that it was broad daylight.
|
||
|
Tarzan rubbed his eyes. Could it be that he had really
|
||
|
slept? He did not feel particularly refreshed as he
|
||
|
should have after a good sleep. A noise attracted
|
||
|
his attention, and he looked down to see a lion standing
|
||
|
at the foot of the tree gazing hungrily at him.
|
||
|
Tarzan made a face at the king of beasts, whereat Numa,
|
||
|
greatly to the ape-man's surprise, started to climb up into
|
||
|
the branches toward him. Now, never before had Tarzan seen
|
||
|
a lion climb a tree, yet, for some unaccountable reason,
|
||
|
he was not greatly surprised that this particular lion
|
||
|
should do so.
|
||
|
|
||
|
As the lion climbed slowly toward him, Tarzan sought
|
||
|
higher branches; but to his chagrin, he discovered that it
|
||
|
was with the utmost difficulty that he could climb at all.
|
||
|
Again and again he slipped back, losing all that he
|
||
|
had gained, while the lion kept steadily at his climbing,
|
||
|
coming ever closer and closer to the ape-man. Tarzan
|
||
|
could see the hungry light in the yellow-green eyes.
|
||
|
He could see the slaver on the drooping jowls,
|
||
|
and the great fangs agape to seize and destroy him.
|
||
|
Clawing desperately, the ape-man at last succeeded in gaining
|
||
|
a little upon his pursuer. He reached the more slender
|
||
|
branches far aloft where he well knew no lion could follow;
|
||
|
yet on and on came devil-faced Numa. It was incredible;
|
||
|
but it was true. Yet what most amazed Tarzan was
|
||
|
that though he realized the incredibility of it all,
|
||
|
he at the same time accepted it as a matter of course,
|
||
|
first that a lion should climb at all and second that he
|
||
|
should enter the upper terraces where even Sheeta, the panther,
|
||
|
dared not venture.
|
||
|
|
||
|
To the very top of a tall tree the ape-man clawed his awkward
|
||
|
way and after him came Numa, the lion, moaning dismally.
|
||
|
At last Tarzan stood balanced upon the very utmost pinnacle
|
||
|
of a swaying branch, high above the forest. He could go
|
||
|
no farther. Below him the lion came steadily upward,
|
||
|
and Tarzan of the Apes realized that at last the end had come.
|
||
|
He could not do battle upon a tiny branch with Numa,
|
||
|
the lion, especially with such a Numa, to which swaying
|
||
|
branches two hundred feet above the ground provided as
|
||
|
substantial footing as the ground itself.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Nearer and nearer came the lion. Another moment and he
|
||
|
could reach up with one great paw and drag the ape-man
|
||
|
downward to those awful jaws. A whirring noise above
|
||
|
his head caused Tarzan to glance apprehensively upward.
|
||
|
A great bird was circling close above him. He never had
|
||
|
seen so large a bird in all his life, yet he recognized
|
||
|
it immediately, for had he not seen it hundreds of times
|
||
|
in one of the books in the little cabin by the land-locked
|
||
|
bay--the moss-grown cabin that with its contents was
|
||
|
the sole heritage left by his dead and unknown father
|
||
|
to the young Lord Greystoke?
|
||
|
|
||
|
In the picture-book the great bird was shown flying far
|
||
|
above the ground with a small child in its talons while,
|
||
|
beneath, a distracted mother stood with uplifted hands.
|
||
|
The lion was already reaching forth a taloned paw to seize
|
||
|
him when the bird swooped and buried no less formidable
|
||
|
talons in Tarzan's back. The pain was numbing; but it
|
||
|
was with a sense of relief that the ape-man felt himself
|
||
|
snatched from the clutches of Numa.
|
||
|
|
||
|
With a great whirring of wings the bird rose rapidly
|
||
|
until the forest lay far below. It made Tarzan sick
|
||
|
and dizzy to look down upon it from so great a height,
|
||
|
so he closed his eyes tight and held his breath. Higher and
|
||
|
higher climbed the huge bird. Tarzan opened his eyes.
|
||
|
The jungle was so far away that he could see only a dim,
|
||
|
green blur below him, but just above and quite close was
|
||
|
the sun. Tarzan reached out his hands and warmed them,
|
||
|
for they were very cold. Then a sudden madness seized him.
|
||
|
Where was the bird taking him? Was he to submit thus
|
||
|
passively to a feathered creature however enormous? Was he,
|
||
|
Tarzan of the Apes, mighty fighter, to die without striking
|
||
|
a blow in his own defense? Never!
|
||
|
|
||
|
He snatched the hunting blade from his gee-string
|
||
|
and thrusting upward drove it once, twice, thrice into
|
||
|
the breast above him. The mighty wings fluttered a few
|
||
|
more times, spasmodically, the talons relaxed their hold,
|
||
|
and Tarzan of the Apes fell hurtling downward toward
|
||
|
the distant jungle.
|
||
|
|
||
|
It seemed to the ape-man that he fell for many minutes before
|
||
|
he crashed through the leafy verdure of the tree tops.
|
||
|
The smaller branches broke his fall, so that he came
|
||
|
to rest for an instant upon the very branch upon which he
|
||
|
had sought slumber the previous night. For an instant he
|
||
|
toppled there in a frantic attempt to regain his equilibrium;
|
||
|
but at last he rolled off, yet, clutching wildly,
|
||
|
he succeeded in grasping the branch and hanging on.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Once more he opened his eyes, which he had closed during
|
||
|
the fall. Again it was night. With all his old agility he
|
||
|
clambered back to the crotch from which he had toppled.
|
||
|
Below him a lion roared, and, looking downward, Tarzan could
|
||
|
see the yellow-green eyes shining in the moonlight as they
|
||
|
bored hungrily upward through the darkness of the jungle
|
||
|
night toward him.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The ape-man gasped for breath. Cold sweat stood out
|
||
|
from every pore, there was a great sickness at the pit
|
||
|
of Tarzan's stomach. Tarzan of the Apes had dreamed
|
||
|
his first dream.
|
||
|
|
||
|
For a long time he sat watching for Numa to climb into the tree
|
||
|
after him, and listening for the sound of the great wings
|
||
|
from above, for to Tarzan of the Apes his dream was a reality.
|
||
|
|
||
|
He could not believe what he had seen and yet,
|
||
|
having seen even these incredible things, he could
|
||
|
not disbelieve the evidence of his own perceptions.
|
||
|
Never in all his life had Tarzan's senses deceived
|
||
|
him badly, and so, naturally, he had great faith in them.
|
||
|
Each perception which ever had been transmitted to Tarzan's
|
||
|
brain had been, with varying accuracy, a true perception.
|
||
|
He could not conceive of the possibility of apparently
|
||
|
having passed through such a weird adventure in which there
|
||
|
was no grain of truth. That a stomach, disordered by
|
||
|
decayed elephant flesh, a lion roaring in the jungle,
|
||
|
a picture-book, and sleep could have so truly portrayed
|
||
|
all the clear-cut details of what he had seemingly
|
||
|
experienced was quite beyond his knowledge; yet he knew
|
||
|
that Numa could not climb a tree, he knew that there
|
||
|
existed in the jungle no such bird as he had seen,
|
||
|
and he knew, too, that he could not have fallen a tiny
|
||
|
fraction of the distance he had hurtled downward, and lived.
|
||
|
|
||
|
To say the least, he was a very puzzled Tarzan as he tried
|
||
|
to compose himself once more for slumber--a very puzzled
|
||
|
and a very nauseated Tarzan.
|
||
|
|
||
|
As he thought deeply upon the strange occurrences of
|
||
|
the night, he witnessed another remarkable happening.
|
||
|
It was indeed quite preposterous, yet he saw it all
|
||
|
with his own eyes--it was nothing less than Histah,
|
||
|
the snake, wreathing his sinuous and slimy way up the bole
|
||
|
of the tree below him--Histah, with the head of the old
|
||
|
man Tarzan had shoved into the cooking pot--the head and
|
||
|
the round, tight, black, distended stomach. As the old
|
||
|
man's frightful face, with upturned eyes, set and glassy,
|
||
|
came close to Tarzan, the jaws opened to seize him.
|
||
|
The ape-man struck furiously at the hideous face, and as he
|
||
|
struck the apparition disappeared.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tarzan sat straight up upon his branch trembling in
|
||
|
every limb, wide-eyed and panting. He looked all around
|
||
|
him with his keen, jungle-trained eyes, but he saw naught
|
||
|
of the old man with the body of Histah, the snake,
|
||
|
but on his naked thigh the ape-man saw a caterpillar,
|
||
|
dropped from a branch above him. With a grimace he
|
||
|
flicked it off into the darkness beneath.
|
||
|
|
||
|
And so the night wore on, dream following dream, nightmare
|
||
|
following nightmare, until the distracted ape-man started
|
||
|
like a frightened deer at the rustling of the wind in the
|
||
|
trees about him, or leaped to his feet as the uncanny laugh
|
||
|
of a hyena burst suddenly upon a momentary jungle silence.
|
||
|
But at last the tardy morning broke and a sick and feverish
|
||
|
Tarzan wound sluggishly through the dank and gloomy mazes
|
||
|
of the forest in search of water. His whole body seemed
|
||
|
on fire, a great sickness surged upward to his throat.
|
||
|
He saw a tangle of almost impenetrable thicket, and,
|
||
|
like the wild beast he was, he crawled into it to die
|
||
|
alone and unseen, safe from the attacks of predatory carnivora.
|
||
|
|
||
|
But he did not die. For a long time he wanted to;
|
||
|
but presently nature and an outraged stomach relieved
|
||
|
themselves in their own therapeutic manner, the ape-man broke
|
||
|
into a violent perspiration and then fell into a normal and
|
||
|
untroubled sleep which persisted well into the afternoon.
|
||
|
When he awoke he found himself weak but no longer sick.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Once more he sought water, and after drinking deeply,
|
||
|
took his way slowly toward the cabin by the sea.
|
||
|
In times of loneliness and trouble it had long been his
|
||
|
custom to seek there the quiet and restfulness which he
|
||
|
could find nowhere else.
|
||
|
|
||
|
As he approached the cabin and raised the crude latch
|
||
|
which his father had fashioned so many years before,
|
||
|
two small, blood-shot eyes watched him from the concealing
|
||
|
foliage of the jungle close by. From beneath shaggy,
|
||
|
beetling brows they glared maliciously upon him,
|
||
|
maliciously and with a keen curiosity; then Tarzan entered
|
||
|
the cabin and closed the door after him. Here, with all
|
||
|
the world shut out from him, he could dream without
|
||
|
fear of interruption. He could curl up and look at
|
||
|
the pictures in the strange things which were books,
|
||
|
he could puzzle out the printed word he had learned to read
|
||
|
without knowledge of the spoken language it represented,
|
||
|
he could live in a wonderful world of which he had no
|
||
|
knowledge beyond the covers of his beloved books.
|
||
|
Numa and Sabor might prowl about close to him, the elements
|
||
|
might rage in all their fury; but here at least,
|
||
|
Tarzan might be entirely off his guard in a delightful
|
||
|
relaxation which gave him all his faculties for the
|
||
|
uninterrupted pursuit of this greatest of all his pleasures.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Today he turned to the picture of the huge bird which bore
|
||
|
off the little Tarmangani in its talons. Tarzan puckered
|
||
|
his brows as he examined the colored print. Yes, this was
|
||
|
the very bird that had carried him off the day before,
|
||
|
for to Tarzan the dream had been so great a reality
|
||
|
that he still thought another day and a night had passed
|
||
|
since he had lain down in the tree to sleep.
|
||
|
|
||
|
But the more he thought upon the matter the less positive
|
||
|
he was as to the verity of the seeming adventure through
|
||
|
which he had passed, yet where the real had ceased and
|
||
|
the unreal commenced he was quite unable to determine.
|
||
|
Had he really then been to the village of the blacks at all,
|
||
|
had he killed the old Gomangani, had he eaten of the
|
||
|
elephant meat, had he been sick? Tarzan scratched his
|
||
|
tousled black head and wondered. It was all very strange,
|
||
|
yet he knew that he never had seen Numa climb a tree,
|
||
|
or Histah with the head and belly of an old black man whom
|
||
|
Tarzan already had slain.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Finally, with a sigh he gave up trying to fathom
|
||
|
the unfathomable, yet in his heart of hearts he knew
|
||
|
that something had come into his life that he never before
|
||
|
had experienced, another life which existed when he slept
|
||
|
and the consciousness of which was carried over into his waking
|
||
|
hours.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Then he commenced to wonder if some of these strange
|
||
|
creatures which he met in his sleep might not slay him,
|
||
|
for at such times Tarzan of the Apes seemed to be a
|
||
|
different Tarzan, sluggish, helpless and timid--wishing
|
||
|
to flee his enemies as fled Bara, the deer, most fearful
|
||
|
of creatures.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Thus, with a dream, came the first faint tinge of a knowledge
|
||
|
of fear, a knowledge which Tarzan, awake, had never experienced,
|
||
|
and perhaps he was experiencing what his early forbears
|
||
|
passed through and transmitted to posterity in the form of
|
||
|
superstition first and religion later; for they, as Tarzan,
|
||
|
had seen things at night which they could not explain
|
||
|
by the daylight standards of sense perception or of reason,
|
||
|
and so had built for themselves a weird explanation
|
||
|
which included grotesque shapes, possessed of strange
|
||
|
and uncanny powers, to whom they finally came to attribute
|
||
|
all those inexplicable phenomena of nature which with
|
||
|
each recurrence filled them with awe, with wonder, or with
|
||
|
terror.
|
||
|
|
||
|
And as Tarzan concentrated his mind on the little bugs
|
||
|
upon the printed page before him, the active recollection
|
||
|
of the strange adventures presently merged into the text
|
||
|
of that which he was reading--a story of Bolgani,
|
||
|
the gorilla, in captivity. There was a more or less
|
||
|
lifelike illustration of Bolgani in colors and in a cage,
|
||
|
with many remarkable looking Tarmangani standing against
|
||
|
a rail and peering curiously at the snarling brute.
|
||
|
Tarzan wondered not a little, as he always did, at the odd
|
||
|
and seemingly useless array of colored plumage which covered
|
||
|
the bodies of the Tarmangani. It always caused him to grin
|
||
|
a trifle when he looked at these strange creatures.
|
||
|
He wondered if they so covered their bodies from shame
|
||
|
of their hairlessness or because they thought the odd things
|
||
|
they wore added any to the beauty of their appearance.
|
||
|
Particularly was Tarzan amused by the grotesque headdresses
|
||
|
of the pictured people. He wondered how some of the shes
|
||
|
succeeded in balancing theirs in an upright position,
|
||
|
and he came as near to laughing aloud as he ever had,
|
||
|
as he contemplated the funny little round things upon
|
||
|
the heads of the hes.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Slowly the ape-man picked out the meaning of the various
|
||
|
combinations of letters on the printed page, and as he read,
|
||
|
the little bugs, for as such he always thought of the letters,
|
||
|
commenced to run about in a most confusing manner,
|
||
|
blurring his vision and befuddling his thoughts.
|
||
|
Twice he brushed the back of a hand smartly across his eyes;
|
||
|
but only for a moment could he bring the bugs back
|
||
|
to coherent and intelligible form. He had slept ill the
|
||
|
night before and now he was exhausted from loss of sleep,
|
||
|
from sickness, and from the slight fever he had had,
|
||
|
so that it became more and more difficult to fix his attention,
|
||
|
or to keep his eyes open.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tarzan realized that he was falling asleep, and just
|
||
|
as the realization was borne in upon him and he had
|
||
|
decided to relinquish himself to an inclination which
|
||
|
had assumed almost the proportions of a physical pain,
|
||
|
he was aroused by the opening of the cabin door.
|
||
|
Turning quickly toward the interruption Tarzan was amazed,
|
||
|
for a moment, to see bulking large in the doorway the huge
|
||
|
and hairy form of Bolgani, the gorilla.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Now there was scarcely a denizen of the great jungle
|
||
|
with whom Tarzan would rather not have been cooped up
|
||
|
inside the small cabin than Bolgani, the gorilla, yet he
|
||
|
felt no fear, even though his quick eye noted that Bolgani
|
||
|
was in the throes of that jungle madness which seizes
|
||
|
upon so many of the fiercer males. Ordinarily the huge
|
||
|
gorillas avoid conflict, hide themselves from the other
|
||
|
jungle folk, and are generally the best of neighbors;
|
||
|
but when they are attacked, or the madness seizes them,
|
||
|
there is no jungle denizen so bold and fierce as to
|
||
|
deliberately seek a quarrel with them.
|
||
|
|
||
|
But for Tarzan there was no escape. Bolgani was glowering
|
||
|
at him from red-rimmed, wicked eyes. In a moment he
|
||
|
would rush in and seize the ape-man. Tarzan reached
|
||
|
for the hunting knife where he had lain it on the table
|
||
|
beside him; but as his fingers did not immediately locate
|
||
|
the weapon, he turned a quick glance in search of it.
|
||
|
As he did so his eyes fell upon the book he had been
|
||
|
looking at which still lay open at the picture of Bolgani.
|
||
|
Tarzan found his knife, but he merely fingered it idly
|
||
|
and grinned in the direction of the advancing gorilla.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Not again would he be fooled by empty things which came
|
||
|
while he slept! In a moment, no doubt, Bolgani would turn
|
||
|
into Pamba, the rat, with the head of Tantor, the elephant.
|
||
|
Tarzan had seen enough of such strange happenings
|
||
|
recently to have some idea as to what he might expect;
|
||
|
but this time Bolgani did not alter his form as he came
|
||
|
slowly toward the young ape-man.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tarzan was a bit puzzled, too, that he felt no desire
|
||
|
to rush frantically to some place of safety, as had been
|
||
|
the sensation most conspicuous in the other of his new
|
||
|
and remarkable adventures. He was just himself now,
|
||
|
ready to fight, if necessary; but still sure that no flesh
|
||
|
and blood gorilla stood before him.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The thing should be fading away into thin air by now,
|
||
|
thought Tarzan, or changing into something else;
|
||
|
yet it did not. Instead it loomed clear-cut and real
|
||
|
as Bolgani himself, the magnificent dark coat glistening
|
||
|
with life and health in a bar of sunlight which shot
|
||
|
across the cabin through the high window behind the young
|
||
|
Lord Greystoke. This was quite the most realistic
|
||
|
of his sleep adventures, thought Tarzan, as he passively
|
||
|
awaited the next amusing incident.
|
||
|
|
||
|
And then the gorilla charged. Two mighty, calloused hands
|
||
|
seized upon the ape-man, great fangs were bared close
|
||
|
to his face, a hideous growl burst from the cavernous
|
||
|
throat and hot breath fanned Tarzan's cheek, and still he
|
||
|
sat grinning at the apparition. Tarzan might be fooled
|
||
|
once or twice, but not for so many times in succession!
|
||
|
He knew that this Bolgani was no real Bolgani, for had he
|
||
|
been he never could have gained entrance to the cabin,
|
||
|
since only Tarzan knew how to operate the latch.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The gorilla seemed puzzled by the strange passivity of the
|
||
|
hairless ape. He paused an instant with his jaws snarling
|
||
|
close to the other's throat, then he seemed suddenly
|
||
|
to come to some decision. Whirling the ape-man across
|
||
|
a hairy shoulder, as easily as you or I might lift a babe
|
||
|
in arms, Bolgani turned and dashed out into the open,
|
||
|
racing toward the great trees.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Now, indeed, was Tarzan sure that this was a sleep
|
||
|
adventure, and so grinned largely as the giant gorilla
|
||
|
bore him, unresisting, away. Presently, reasoned Tarzan,
|
||
|
he would awaken and find himself back in the cabin
|
||
|
where he had fallen asleep. He glanced back at the
|
||
|
thought and saw the cabin door standing wide open.
|
||
|
This would never do! Always had he been careful to close
|
||
|
and latch it against wild intruders. Manu, the monkey,
|
||
|
would make sad havoc there among Tarzan's treasures should
|
||
|
he have access to the interior for even a few minutes.
|
||
|
The question which arose in Tarzan's mind was a baffling one.
|
||
|
Where did sleep adventures end and reality commence? How
|
||
|
was he to be sure that the cabin door was not really open?
|
||
|
Everything about him appeared quite normal--there were none
|
||
|
of the grotesque exaggerations of his former sleep adventures.
|
||
|
It would be better then to be upon the safe side and make
|
||
|
sure that the cabin door was closed--it would do no harm
|
||
|
even if all that seemed to be happening were not happening at
|
||
|
all.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tarzan essayed to slip from Bolgani's shoulder; but the
|
||
|
great beast only growled ominously and gripped him tighter.
|
||
|
With a mighty effort the ape-man wrenched himself loose,
|
||
|
and as he slid to the ground, the dream gorilla turned
|
||
|
ferociously upon him, seized him once more and buried
|
||
|
great fangs in a sleek, brown shoulder.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The grin of derision faded from Tarzan's lips as the pain
|
||
|
and the hot blood aroused his fighting instincts.
|
||
|
Asleep or awake, this thing was no longer a joke! Biting,
|
||
|
tearing, and snarling, the two rolled over upon the ground.
|
||
|
The gorilla now was frantic with insane rage. Again and again
|
||
|
he loosed his hold upon the ape-man's shoulder in an attempt
|
||
|
to seize the jugular; but Tarzan of the Apes had fought
|
||
|
before with creatures who struck first for the vital vein,
|
||
|
and each time he wriggled out of harm's way as he
|
||
|
strove to get his fingers upon his adversary's throat.
|
||
|
At last he succeeded--his great muscles tensed and knotted
|
||
|
beneath his smooth hide as he forced with every ounce
|
||
|
of his mighty strength to push the hairy torso from him.
|
||
|
And as he choked Bolgani and strained him away,
|
||
|
his other hand crept slowly upward between them until
|
||
|
the point of the hunting knife rested over the savage
|
||
|
heart--there was a quick movement of the steel-thewed
|
||
|
wrist and the blade plunged to its goal.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Bolgani, the gorilla, voiced a single frightful shriek,
|
||
|
tore himself loose from the grasp of the ape-man, rose to
|
||
|
his feet, staggered a few steps and then plunged to earth.
|
||
|
There were a few spasmodic movements of the limbs and the
|
||
|
brute was still.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tarzan of the Apes stood looking down upon his kill,
|
||
|
and as he stood there he ran his fingers through his thick,
|
||
|
black shock of hair. Presently he stooped and touched
|
||
|
the dead body. Some of the red life-blood of the gorilla
|
||
|
crimsoned his fingers. He raised them to his nose and sniffed.
|
||
|
Then he shook his head and turned toward the cabin.
|
||
|
The door was still open. He closed it and fastened the latch.
|
||
|
Returning toward the body of his kill he again paused
|
||
|
and scratched his head.
|
||
|
|
||
|
If this was a sleep adventure, what then was reality? How
|
||
|
was he to know the one from the other? How much of all
|
||
|
that had happened in his life had been real and how much
|
||
|
unreal?
|
||
|
|
||
|
He placed a foot upon the prostrate form and raising his face
|
||
|
to the heavens gave voice to the kill cry of the bull ape.
|
||
|
Far in the distance a lion answered. It was very real and,
|
||
|
yet, he did not know. Puzzled, he turned away into the jungle.
|
||
|
|
||
|
No, he did not know what was real and what was not;
|
||
|
but there was one thing that he did know--never again
|
||
|
would he eat of the flesh of Tantor, the elephant.
|
||
|
|
||
|
10
|
||
|
|
||
|
The Battle for Teeka
|
||
|
|
||
|
THE DAY WAS perfect. A cool breeze tempered the heat
|
||
|
of the equatorial sun. Peace had reigned within the tribe
|
||
|
for weeks and no alien enemy had trespassed upon its
|
||
|
preserves from without. To the ape-mind all this was
|
||
|
sufficient evidence that the future would be identical
|
||
|
with the immediate past--that Utopia would persist.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The sentinels, now from habit become a fixed tribal custom,
|
||
|
either relaxed their vigilance or entirely deserted
|
||
|
their posts, as the whim seized them. The tribe was
|
||
|
far scattered in search of food. Thus may peace and
|
||
|
prosperity undermine the safety of the most primitive
|
||
|
community even as it does that of the most cultured.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Even the individuals became less watchful and alert,
|
||
|
so that one might have thought Numa and Sabor and Sheeta
|
||
|
entirely deleted from the scheme of things. The shes
|
||
|
and the balus roamed unguarded through the sullen jungle,
|
||
|
while the greedy males foraged far afield, and thus it
|
||
|
was that Teeka and Gazan, her balu, hunted upon the extreme
|
||
|
southern edge of the tribe with no great male near them.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Still farther south there moved through the forest
|
||
|
a sinister figure--a huge bull ape, maddened by solitude
|
||
|
and defeat. A week before he had contended for the
|
||
|
kingship of a tribe far distant, and now battered,
|
||
|
and still sore, he roamed the wilderness an outcast.
|
||
|
Later he might return to his own tribe and submit to the
|
||
|
will of the hairy brute he had attempted to dethrone;
|
||
|
but for the time being he dared not do so, since he
|
||
|
had sought not only the crown but the wives, as well,
|
||
|
of his lord and master. It would require an entire moon
|
||
|
at least to bring forgetfulness to him he had wronged,
|
||
|
and so Toog wandered a strange jungle, grim, terrible,
|
||
|
hate-filled.
|
||
|
|
||
|
It was in this mental state that Toog came unexpectedly upon
|
||
|
a young she feeding alone in the jungle--a stranger she,
|
||
|
lithe and strong and beautiful beyond compare.
|
||
|
Toog caught his breath and slunk quickly to one side
|
||
|
of the trail where the dense foliage of the tropical
|
||
|
underbrush concealed him from Teeka while permitting
|
||
|
him to feast his eyes upon her loveliness.
|
||
|
|
||
|
But not alone were they concerned with Teeka--they roved
|
||
|
the surrounding jungle in search of the bulls and cows
|
||
|
and balus of her tribe, though principally for the bulls.
|
||
|
When one covets a she of an alien tribe one must take
|
||
|
into consideration the great, fierce, hairy guardians
|
||
|
who seldom wander far from their wards and who will
|
||
|
fight a stranger to the death in protection of the mate
|
||
|
or offspring of a fellow, precisely as they would fight
|
||
|
for their own.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Toog could see no sign of any ape other than the strange
|
||
|
she and a young balu playing near by. His wicked,
|
||
|
blood-shot eyes half closed as they rested upon the charms
|
||
|
of the former--as for the balu, one snap of those great
|
||
|
jaws upon the back of its little neck would prevent
|
||
|
it from raising any unnecessary alarm.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Toog was a fine, big male, resembling in many ways
|
||
|
Teeka's mate, Taug. Each was in his prime, and each was
|
||
|
wonderfully muscled, perfectly fanged and as horrifyingly
|
||
|
ferocious as the most exacting and particular she could wish.
|
||
|
Had Toog been of her own tribe, Teeka might as readily have
|
||
|
yielded to him as to Taug when her mating time arrived;
|
||
|
but now she was Taug's and no other male could claim
|
||
|
her without first defeating Taug in personal combat.
|
||
|
And even then Teeka retained some rights in the matter.
|
||
|
If she did not favor a correspondent, she could enter
|
||
|
the lists with her rightful mate and do her part toward
|
||
|
discouraging his advances, a part, too, which would prove
|
||
|
no mean assistance to her lord and master, for Teeka,
|
||
|
even though her fangs were smaller than a male's, could use
|
||
|
them to excellent effect.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Just now Teeka was occupied in a fascinating search
|
||
|
for beetles, to the exclusion of all else. She did not
|
||
|
realize how far she and Gazan had become separated from
|
||
|
the balance of the tribe, nor were her defensive senses upon
|
||
|
the alert as they should have been. Months of immunity from
|
||
|
danger under the protecting watchfulness of the sentries,
|
||
|
which Tarzan had taught the tribe to post, had lulled them
|
||
|
all into a sense of peaceful security based on that fallacy
|
||
|
which has wrecked many enlightened communities in the past
|
||
|
and will continue to wreck others in the future--that
|
||
|
because they have not been attacked they never will be.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Toog, having satisfied himself that only the she and her balu
|
||
|
were in the immediate vicinity, crept stealthily forward.
|
||
|
Teeka's back was toward him when he finally rushed upon her;
|
||
|
but her senses were at last awakened to the presence
|
||
|
of danger and she wheeled to face the strange bull just
|
||
|
before he reached her. Toog halted a few paces from her.
|
||
|
His anger had fled before the seductive feminine charms
|
||
|
of the stranger. He made conciliatory noises--a species
|
||
|
of clucking sound with his broad, flat lips--that were,
|
||
|
too, not greatly dissimilar to that which might be produced
|
||
|
in an osculatory solo.
|
||
|
|
||
|
But Teeka only bared her fangs and growled. Little Gazan
|
||
|
started to run toward his mother, but she warned him away
|
||
|
with a quick "Kreeg-ah!" telling him to run high into
|
||
|
a tall tree. Evidently Teeka was not favorably impressed
|
||
|
by her new suitor. Toog realized this and altered
|
||
|
his methods accordingly. He swelled his giant chest,
|
||
|
beat upon it with his calloused knuckles and swaggered
|
||
|
to and fro before her.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I am Toog," he boasted. "Look at my fighting fangs.
|
||
|
Look at my great arms and my mighty legs. With one bite I
|
||
|
can slay your biggest bull. Alone have I slain Sheeta.
|
||
|
I am Toog. Toog wants you." Then he waited for the effect,
|
||
|
nor did he have long to wait. Teeka turned with a
|
||
|
swiftness which belied her great weight and bolted
|
||
|
in the opposite direction. Toog, with an angry growl,
|
||
|
leaped in pursuit; but the smaller, lighter female was too
|
||
|
fleet for him. He chased her for a few yards and then,
|
||
|
foaming and barking, he halted and beat upon the ground
|
||
|
with his hard fists.
|
||
|
|
||
|
From the tree above him little Gazan looked down and
|
||
|
witnessed the stranger bull's discomfiture. Being young,
|
||
|
and thinking himself safe above the reach of the heavy male,
|
||
|
Gazan screamed an ill-timed insult at their tormentor.
|
||
|
Toog looked up. Teeka had halted at a little distance--she
|
||
|
would not go far from her balu; that Toog quickly realized
|
||
|
and as quickly determined to take advantage of. He saw
|
||
|
that the tree in which the young ape squatted was isolated
|
||
|
and that Gazan could not reach another without coming
|
||
|
to earth. He would obtain the mother through her love
|
||
|
for her young.
|
||
|
|
||
|
He swung himself into the lower branches of the tree.
|
||
|
Little Gazan ceased to insult him; his expression of
|
||
|
deviltry changed to one of apprehension, which was quickly
|
||
|
followed by fear as Toog commenced to ascend toward him.
|
||
|
Teeka screamed to Gazan to climb higher, and the little
|
||
|
fellow scampered upward among the tiny branches which would
|
||
|
not support the weight of the great bull; but nevertheless
|
||
|
Toog kept on climbing. Teeka was not fearful. She knew
|
||
|
that he could not ascend far enough to reach Gazan,
|
||
|
so she sat at a little distance from the tree and applied
|
||
|
jungle opprobrium to him. Being a female, she was a past
|
||
|
master of the art.
|
||
|
|
||
|
But she did not know the malevolent cunning of Toog's
|
||
|
little brain. She took it for granted that the bull
|
||
|
would climb as high as he could toward Gazan and then,
|
||
|
finding that he could not reach him, resume his pursuit
|
||
|
of her, which she knew would prove equally fruitless.
|
||
|
So sure was she of the safety of her balu and her own ability
|
||
|
to take care of herself that she did not voice the cry
|
||
|
for help which would soon have brought the other members
|
||
|
of the tribe flocking to her side.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Toog slowly reached the limit to which he dared risk
|
||
|
his great weight to the slender branches. Gazan was
|
||
|
still fifteen feet above him. The bull braced himself
|
||
|
and seized the main branch in his powerful hands, then he
|
||
|
commenced shaking it vigorously. Teeka was appalled.
|
||
|
Instantly she realized what the bull purposed.
|
||
|
Gazan clung far out upon a swaying limb. At the first
|
||
|
shake he lost his balance, though he did not quite fall,
|
||
|
clinging still with his four hands; but Toog redoubled
|
||
|
his efforts; the shaking produced a violent snapping
|
||
|
of the limb to which the young ape clung. Teeka saw
|
||
|
all too plainly what the outcome must be and forgetting
|
||
|
her own danger in the depth of her mother love,
|
||
|
rushed forward to ascend the tree and give battle to the
|
||
|
fearsome creature that menaced the life of her little one.
|
||
|
|
||
|
But before ever she reached the bole, Toog had succeeded,
|
||
|
by violent shaking of the branch, to loosen Gazan's hold.
|
||
|
With a cry the little fellow plunged down through the foliage,
|
||
|
clutching futilely for a new hold, and alighted with
|
||
|
a sickening thud at his mother's feet, where he lay
|
||
|
silent and motionless. Moaning, Teeka stooped to lift
|
||
|
the still form in her arms; but at the same instant Toog
|
||
|
was upon her.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Struggling and biting she fought to free herself; but the giant
|
||
|
muscles of the great bull were too much for her lesser strength.
|
||
|
Toog struck and choked her repeatedly until finally,
|
||
|
half unconscious, she lapsed into quasi submission.
|
||
|
Then the bull lifted her to his shoulder and turned
|
||
|
back to the trail toward the south from whence he had come.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Upon the ground lay the quiet form of little Gazan.
|
||
|
He did not moan. He did not move. The sun rose slowly
|
||
|
toward meridian. A mangy thing, lifting its nose to
|
||
|
scent the jungle breeze, crept through the underbrush.
|
||
|
It was Dango, the hyena. Presently its ugly muzzle broke
|
||
|
through some near-by foliage and its cruel eyes fastened
|
||
|
upon Gazan.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Early that morning, Tarzan of the Apes had gone to
|
||
|
the cabin by the sea, where he passed many an hour at
|
||
|
such times as the tribe was ranging in the vicinity.
|
||
|
On the floor lay the skeleton of a man--all that remained
|
||
|
of the former Lord Greystoke--lay as it had fallen
|
||
|
some twenty years before when Kerchak, the great ape,
|
||
|
had thrown it, lifeless, there. Long since had the
|
||
|
termites and the small rodents picked clean the sturdy
|
||
|
English bones. For years Tarzan had seen it lying there,
|
||
|
giving it no more attention than he gave the countless
|
||
|
thousand bones that strewed his jungle haunts.
|
||
|
On the bed another, smaller, skeleton reposed and the
|
||
|
youth ignored it as he ignored the other. How could he
|
||
|
know that the one had been his father, the other his
|
||
|
mother? The little pile of bones in the rude cradle,
|
||
|
fashioned with such loving care by the former Lord Greystoke,
|
||
|
meant nothing to him-- that one day that little skull
|
||
|
was to help prove his right to a proud title was as far
|
||
|
beyond his ken as the satellites of the suns of Orion.
|
||
|
To Tarzan they were bones--just bones. He did not
|
||
|
need them, for there was no meat left upon them, and they
|
||
|
were not in his way, for he knew no necessity for a bed,
|
||
|
and the skeleton upon the floor he easily could step over.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Today he was restless. He turned the pages first of one
|
||
|
book and then of another. He glanced at pictures which he
|
||
|
knew by heart, and tossed the books aside. He rummaged
|
||
|
for the thousandth time in the cupboard. He took out a bag
|
||
|
which contained several small, round pieces of metal.
|
||
|
He had played with them many times in the years gone by;
|
||
|
but always he replaced them carefully in the bag,
|
||
|
and the bag in the cupboard, upon the very shelf where
|
||
|
first he had discovered it. In strange ways did heredity
|
||
|
manifest itself in the ape-man. Come of an orderly race,
|
||
|
he himself was orderly without knowing why. The apes
|
||
|
dropped things wherever their interest in them waned--in
|
||
|
the tall grass or from the high-flung branches of the trees.
|
||
|
What they dropped they sometimes found again, by accident;
|
||
|
but not so the ways of Tarzan. For his few belongings
|
||
|
he had a place and scrupulously he returned each
|
||
|
thing to its proper place when he was done with it.
|
||
|
The round pieces of metal in the little bag always
|
||
|
interested him. Raised pictures were upon either side,
|
||
|
the meaning of which he did not quite understand.
|
||
|
The pieces were bright and shiny. It amused him to arrange
|
||
|
them in various figures upon the table. Hundreds of times
|
||
|
had he played thus. Today, while so engaged, he dropped
|
||
|
a lovely yellow piece-- an English sovereign--which rolled
|
||
|
beneath the bed where lay all that was mortal of the once
|
||
|
beautiful Lady Alice.
|
||
|
|
||
|
True to form, Tarzan at once dropped to his hands and knees
|
||
|
and searched beneath the bed for the lost gold piece.
|
||
|
Strange as it might appear, he had never before looked
|
||
|
beneath the bed. He found the gold piece, and something
|
||
|
else he found, too--a small wooden box with a loose cover.
|
||
|
Bringing them both out he returned the sovereign to
|
||
|
its bag and the bag to its shelf within the cupboard;
|
||
|
then he investigated the box. It contained a quantity
|
||
|
of cylindrical bits of metal, cone-shaped at one
|
||
|
end and flat at the other, with a projecting rim.
|
||
|
They were all quite green and dull, coated with years
|
||
|
of verdigris.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tarzan removed a handful of them from the box and examined them.
|
||
|
He rubbed one upon another and discovered that the green
|
||
|
came off, leaving a shiny surface for two-thirds of
|
||
|
their length and a dull gray over the cone-shaped end.
|
||
|
Finding a bit of wood he rubbed one of the cylinders rapidly
|
||
|
and was rewarded by a lustrous sheen which pleased him.
|
||
|
|
||
|
At his side hung a pocket pouch taken from the body
|
||
|
of one of the numerous black warriors he had slain.
|
||
|
Into this pouch he put a handful of the new playthings,
|
||
|
thinking to polish them at his leisure; then he replaced
|
||
|
the box beneath the bed, and finding nothing more to
|
||
|
amuse him, left the cabin and started back in the direction
|
||
|
of the tribe.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Shortly before he reached them he heard a great commotion
|
||
|
ahead of him--the loud screams of shes and balus,
|
||
|
the savage, angry barking and growling of the great bulls.
|
||
|
Instantly he increased his speed, for the "Kreeg-ahs"
|
||
|
that came to his ears warned him that something was amiss
|
||
|
with his fellows.
|
||
|
|
||
|
While Tarzan had been occupied with his own devices
|
||
|
in the cabin of his dead sire, Taug, Teeka's mighty mate,
|
||
|
had been hunting a mile to the north of the tribe.
|
||
|
At last, his belly filled, he had turned lazily back toward
|
||
|
the clearing where he had last seen the tribe and presently
|
||
|
commenced passing its members scattered alone or in twos
|
||
|
or threes. Nowhere did he see Teeka or Gazan, and soon
|
||
|
he began inquiring of the other apes where they might be;
|
||
|
but none had seen them recently.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Now the lower orders are not highly imaginative.
|
||
|
They do not, as you and I, paint vivid mental pictures
|
||
|
of things which might have occurred, and so Taug did
|
||
|
not now apprehend that any misfortune had overtaken
|
||
|
his mate and their off-spring-- he merely knew that he
|
||
|
wished to find Teeka that he might lie down in the shade
|
||
|
and have her scratch his back while his breakfast digested;
|
||
|
but though he called to her and searched for her and
|
||
|
asked each whom he met, he could find no trace of Teeka,
|
||
|
nor of Gazan either.
|
||
|
|
||
|
He was beginning to become peeved and had about made up
|
||
|
his mind to chastise Teeka for wandering so far afield
|
||
|
when he wanted her. He was moving south along a game trail,
|
||
|
his calloused soles and knuckles giving forth no sound,
|
||
|
when he came upon Dango at the opposite side of a
|
||
|
small clearing. The eater of carrion did not see Taug,
|
||
|
for all his eyes were for something which lay in the grass
|
||
|
beneath a tree--something upon which he was sneaking
|
||
|
with the cautious stealth of his breed.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Taug, always cautious himself, as it behooves one to be
|
||
|
who fares up and down the jungle and desires to survive,
|
||
|
swung noiselessly into a tree, where he could have
|
||
|
a better view of the clearing. He did not fear Dango;
|
||
|
but he wanted to see what it was that Dango stalked.
|
||
|
In a way, possibly, he was actuated as much by curiosity
|
||
|
as by caution.
|
||
|
|
||
|
And when Taug reached a place in the branches from
|
||
|
which he could have an unobstructed view of the clearing
|
||
|
he saw Dango already sniffing at something directly
|
||
|
beneath him-- something which Taug instantly recognized
|
||
|
as the lifeless form of his little Gazan.
|
||
|
|
||
|
With a cry so frightful, so bestial, that it momentarily
|
||
|
paralyzed the startled Dango, the great ape launched his
|
||
|
mighty bulk upon the surprised hyena. With a cry and a snarl,
|
||
|
Dango, crushed to earth, turned to tear at his assailant;
|
||
|
but as effectively might a sparrow turn upon a hawk.
|
||
|
Taug's great, gnarled fingers closed upon the hyena's
|
||
|
throat and back, his jaws snapped once on the mangy neck,
|
||
|
crushing the vertebrae, and then he hurled the dead body
|
||
|
contemptuously aside.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Again he raised his voice in the call of the bull ape
|
||
|
to its mate, but there was no reply; then he leaned down to
|
||
|
sniff at the body of Gazan. In the breast of this savage,
|
||
|
hideous beast there beat a heart which was moved,
|
||
|
however slightly, by the same emotions of paternal love
|
||
|
which affect us. Even had we no actual evidence of this,
|
||
|
we must know it still, since only thus might be explained
|
||
|
the survival of the human race in which the jealousy
|
||
|
and selfishness of the bulls would, in the earliest
|
||
|
stages of the race, have wiped out the young as rapidly
|
||
|
as they were brought into the world had not God implanted
|
||
|
in the savage bosom that paternal love which evidences
|
||
|
itself most strongly in the protective instinct of the male.
|
||
|
|
||
|
In Taug the protective instinct was not alone highly developed;
|
||
|
but affection for his offspring as well, for Taug was an
|
||
|
unusually intelligent specimen of these great, manlike apes
|
||
|
which the natives of the Gobi speak of in whispers;
|
||
|
but which no white man ever had seen, or, if seeing,
|
||
|
lived to tell of until Tarzan of the Apes came among them.
|
||
|
|
||
|
And so Taug felt sorrow as any other father might feel
|
||
|
sorrow at the loss of a little child. To you little
|
||
|
Gazan might have seemed a hideous and repulsive creature,
|
||
|
but to Taug and Teeka he was as beautiful and as cute
|
||
|
as is your little Mary or Johnnie or Elizabeth Ann to you,
|
||
|
and he was their firstborn, their only balu, and a he--three
|
||
|
things which might make a young ape the apple of any fond
|
||
|
father's eye.
|
||
|
|
||
|
For a moment Taug sniffed at the quiet little form.
|
||
|
With his muzzle and his tongue he smoothed and caressed
|
||
|
the rumpled coat. From his savage lips broke a low moan;
|
||
|
but quickly upon the heels of sorrow came the overmastering
|
||
|
desire for revenge.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Leaping to his feet he screamed out a volley of "Kreegahs,"
|
||
|
punctuated from time to time by the blood-freezing
|
||
|
cry of an angry, challenging bull--a rage-mad bull
|
||
|
with the blood lust strong upon him.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Answering his cries came the cries of the tribe as they swung
|
||
|
through the trees toward him. It was these that Tarzan
|
||
|
heard on his return from his cabin, and in reply to them he
|
||
|
raised his own voice and hurried forward with increased speed
|
||
|
until he fairly flew through the middle terraces of the forest.
|
||
|
|
||
|
When at last he came upon the tribe he saw their members
|
||
|
gathered about Taug and something which lay quietly upon
|
||
|
the ground. Dropping among them, Tarzan approached
|
||
|
the center of the group. Taug was stiff roaring
|
||
|
out his challenges; but when he saw Tarzan he ceased
|
||
|
and stooping picked up Gazan in his arms and held him
|
||
|
out for Tarzan to see. Of all the bulls of the tribe,
|
||
|
Taug held affection for Tarzan only. Tarzan he trusted
|
||
|
and looked up to as one wiser and more cunning.
|
||
|
To Tarzan he came now--to the playmate of his balu days,
|
||
|
the companion of innumerable battles of his maturity.
|
||
|
|
||
|
When Tarzan saw the still form in Taug's arms, a low growl
|
||
|
broke from his lips, for he too loved Teeka's little balu.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Who did it?" he asked. "Where is Teeka?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I do not know," replied Taug. "I found him lying here
|
||
|
with Dango about to feed upon him; but it was not Dango
|
||
|
that did it--there are no fang marks upon him."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tarzan came closer and placed an ear against Gazan's breast.
|
||
|
"He is not dead," he said. "Maybe he will not die."
|
||
|
He pressed through the crowd of apes and circled once
|
||
|
about them, examining the ground step by step. Suddenly he
|
||
|
stopped and placing his nose close to the earth sniffed.
|
||
|
Then he sprang to his feet, giving a peculiar cry.
|
||
|
Taug and the others pressed forward, for the sound told them
|
||
|
that the hunter had found the spoor of his quarry.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"A stranger bull has been here," said Tarzan. "It was he
|
||
|
that hurt Gazan. He has carried off Teeka."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Taug and the other bulls commenced to roar and threaten;
|
||
|
but they did nothing. Had the stranger bull been within
|
||
|
sight they would have torn him to pieces; but it did not
|
||
|
occur to them to follow him.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"If the three bulls had been watching around the tribe
|
||
|
this would not have happened," said Tarzan. "Such things
|
||
|
will happen as long as you do not keep the three bulls
|
||
|
watching for an enemy. The jungle is full of enemies,
|
||
|
and yet you let your shes and your balus feed where they will,
|
||
|
alone and unprotected. Tarzan goes now--he goes to find
|
||
|
Teeka and bring her back to the tribe."
|
||
|
|
||
|
The idea appealed to the other bulls. "We will all go,"
|
||
|
they cried.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"No," said Tarzan, "you will not all go. We cannot
|
||
|
take shes and balus when we go out to hunt and fight.
|
||
|
You must remain to guard them or you will lose them all."
|
||
|
|
||
|
They scratched their heads. The wisdom of his advice
|
||
|
was dawning upon them, but at first they had been carried
|
||
|
away by the new idea--the idea of following up an enemy
|
||
|
offender to wrest his prize from him and punish him.
|
||
|
The community instinct was ingrained in their characters
|
||
|
through ages of custom. They did not know why they had not
|
||
|
thought to pursue and punish the offender--they could not know
|
||
|
that it was because they had as yet not reached a mental
|
||
|
plane which would permit them to work as individuals.
|
||
|
In times of stress, the community instinct sent them
|
||
|
huddling into a compact herd where the great bulls,
|
||
|
by the weight of their combined strength and ferocity,
|
||
|
could best protect them from an enemy. The idea of separating
|
||
|
to do battle with a foe had not yet occurred to them--it was
|
||
|
too foreign to custom, too inimical to community interests;
|
||
|
but to Tarzan it was the first and most natural thought.
|
||
|
His senses told him that there was but a single bull
|
||
|
connected with the attack upon Teeka and Gazan. A single
|
||
|
enemy did not require the entire tribe for his punishment.
|
||
|
Two swift bulls could quickly overhaul him and rescue Teeka.
|
||
|
|
||
|
In the past no one ever had thought to go forth in search
|
||
|
of the shes that were occasionally stolen from the tribe.
|
||
|
If Numa, Sabor, Sheeta or a wandering bull ape from another
|
||
|
tribe chanced to carry off a maid or a matron while no
|
||
|
one was looking, that was the end of it--she was gone,
|
||
|
that was all. The bereaved husband, if the victim chanced
|
||
|
to have been mated, growled around for a day or two and then,
|
||
|
if he were strong enough, took another mate within the tribe,
|
||
|
and if not, wandered far into the jungle on the chance
|
||
|
of stealing one from another community.
|
||
|
|
||
|
In the past Tarzan of the Apes had condoned this
|
||
|
practice for the reason that he had had no interest
|
||
|
in those who had been stolen; but Teeka had been
|
||
|
his first love and Teeka's balu held a place in his
|
||
|
heart such as a balu of his own would have held.
|
||
|
Just once before had Tarzan wished to follow and revenge.
|
||
|
That had been years before when Kulonga, the son of Mbonga,
|
||
|
the chief, had slain Kala. Then, single-handed, Tarzan
|
||
|
had pursued and avenged. Now, though to a lesser degree,
|
||
|
he was moved by the same passion.
|
||
|
|
||
|
He turned toward Taug. "Leave Gazan with Mumga," he said.
|
||
|
"She is old and her fangs are broken and she is no good;
|
||
|
but she can take care of Gazan until we return with Teeka,
|
||
|
and if Gazan is dead when we come back," he turned to
|
||
|
address Mumga, "I will kill you, too."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Where are we going?" asked Taug.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"We are going to get Teeka," replied the ape-man, "and
|
||
|
kill the bull who has stolen her. Come!"
|
||
|
|
||
|
He turned again to the spoor of the stranger bull,
|
||
|
which showed plainly to his trained senses, nor did he
|
||
|
glance back to note if Taug followed. The latter laid
|
||
|
Gazan in Mumga's arms with a parting: "If he dies Tarzan
|
||
|
will kill you," and he followed after the brown-skinned
|
||
|
figure that already was moving at a slow trot along
|
||
|
the jungle trail.
|
||
|
|
||
|
No other bull of the tribe of Kerchak was so good a
|
||
|
trailer as Tarzan, for his trained senses were aided
|
||
|
by a high order of intelligence. His judgment told him
|
||
|
the natural trail for a quarry to follow, so that he
|
||
|
need but note the most apparent marks upon the way,
|
||
|
and today the trail of Toog was as plain to him as type
|
||
|
upon a printed page to you or me.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Following close behind the lithe figure of the ape-man came
|
||
|
the huge and shaggy bull ape. No words passed between them.
|
||
|
They moved as silently as two shadows among the myriad
|
||
|
shadows of the forest. Alert as his eyes and ears,
|
||
|
was Tarzan's patrician nose. The spoor was fresh, and now
|
||
|
that they had passed from the range of the strong ape odor
|
||
|
of the tribe he had little difficulty in following Toog
|
||
|
and Teeka by scent alone. Teeka's familiar scent spoor
|
||
|
told both Tarzan and Taug that they were upon her trail,
|
||
|
and soon the scent of Toog became as familiar as the other.
|
||
|
|
||
|
They were progressing rapidly when suddenly dense
|
||
|
clouds overcast the sun. Tarzan accelerated his pace.
|
||
|
Now he fairly flew along the jungle trail, or, where Toog
|
||
|
had taken to the trees, followed nimbly as a squirrel along
|
||
|
the bending, undulating pathway of the foliage branches,
|
||
|
swinging from tree to tree as Toog had swung before them;
|
||
|
but more rapidly because they were not handicapped by a
|
||
|
burden such as Toog's.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tarzan felt that they must be almost upon the quarry,
|
||
|
for the scent spoor was becoming stronger and stronger,
|
||
|
when the jungle was suddenly shot by livid lightning,
|
||
|
and a deafening roar of thunder reverberated through the
|
||
|
heavens and the forest until the earth trembled and shook.
|
||
|
Then came the rain--not as it comes to us of the
|
||
|
temperate zones, but as a mighty avalanche of water--a
|
||
|
deluge which spills tons instead of drops upon the bending
|
||
|
forest giants and the terrified creatures which haunt
|
||
|
their shade.
|
||
|
|
||
|
And the rain did what Tarzan knew that it would do-- it
|
||
|
wiped the spoor of the quarry from the face of the earth.
|
||
|
For a half hour the torrents fell--then the sun burst forth,
|
||
|
jeweling the forest with a million scintillant gems;
|
||
|
but today the ape-man, usually alert to the changing wonders
|
||
|
of the jungle, saw them not. Only the fact that the spoor
|
||
|
of Teeka and her abductor was obliterated found lodgment
|
||
|
in his thoughts.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Even among the branches of the trees there are well-worn trails,
|
||
|
just as there are trails upon the surface of the ground;
|
||
|
but in the trees they branch and cross more often,
|
||
|
since the way is more open than among the dense undergrowth
|
||
|
at the surface. Along one of these well-marked trails
|
||
|
Tarzan and Taug continued after the rain had ceased,
|
||
|
because the ape-man knew that this was the most logical
|
||
|
path for the thief to follow; but when they came to a fork,
|
||
|
they were at a loss. Here they halted, while Tarzan
|
||
|
examined every branch and leaf which might have been
|
||
|
touched by the fleeing ape.
|
||
|
|
||
|
He sniffed the bole of the tree, and with his keen eyes
|
||
|
he sought to find upon the bark some sign of the way
|
||
|
the quarry had taken. It was slow work and all the time,
|
||
|
Tarzan knew, the bull of the alien tribe was forging
|
||
|
steadily away from them--gaining precious minutes that might
|
||
|
carry him to safety before they could catch up with him.
|
||
|
|
||
|
First along one fork he went, and then another, applying every
|
||
|
test that his wonderful junglecraft was cognizant of;
|
||
|
but again and again he was baffled, for the scent had been
|
||
|
washed away by the heavy downpour, in every exposed place.
|
||
|
For a half hour Tarzan and Taug searched, until at last,
|
||
|
upon the bottom of a broad leaf, Tarzan's keen nose caught
|
||
|
the faint trace of the scent spoor of Toog, where the leaf
|
||
|
had brushed a hairy shoulder as the great ape passed
|
||
|
through the foliage.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Once again the two took up the trail, but it was slow
|
||
|
work now and there were many discouraging delays when
|
||
|
the spoor seemed lost beyond recovery. To you or me
|
||
|
there would have been no spoor, even before the coming
|
||
|
of the rain, except, possibly, where Toog had come
|
||
|
to earth and followed a game trail. In such places
|
||
|
the imprint of a huge handlike foot and the knuckles
|
||
|
of one great hand were sometimes plain enough for an
|
||
|
ordinary mortal to read. Tarzan knew from these and
|
||
|
other indications that the ape was yet carrying Teeka.
|
||
|
The depth of the imprint of his feet indicated a much greater
|
||
|
weight than that of any of the larger bulls, for they
|
||
|
were made under the combined weight of Toog and Teeka,
|
||
|
while the fact that the knuckles of but one hand touched
|
||
|
the ground at any time showed that the other hand was
|
||
|
occupied in some other business--the business of holding
|
||
|
the prisoner to a hairy shoulder. Tarzan could follow,
|
||
|
in sheltered places, the changing of the burden from one
|
||
|
shoulder to another, as indicated by the deepening of the
|
||
|
foot imprint upon the side of the load, and the changing
|
||
|
of the knuckle imprints from one side of the trail to the other.
|
||
|
|
||
|
There were stretches along the surface paths where the ape had
|
||
|
gone for considerable distances entirely erect upon his hind
|
||
|
feet--walking as a man walks; but the same might have been
|
||
|
true of any of the great anthropoids of the same species,
|
||
|
for, unlike the chimpanzee and the gorilla, they walk
|
||
|
without the aid of their hands quite as readily as with.
|
||
|
It was such things, however, which helped to identify
|
||
|
to Tarzan and to Taug the appearance of the abductor,
|
||
|
and with his individual scent characteristic already
|
||
|
indelibly impressed upon their memories, they were in a
|
||
|
far better position to know him when they came upon him,
|
||
|
even should he have disposed of Teeka before, than is a modern
|
||
|
sleuth with his photographs and Bertillon measurements,
|
||
|
equipped to recognize a fugitive from civilized justice.
|
||
|
|
||
|
But with all their high-strung and delicately attuned
|
||
|
perceptive faculties the two bulls of the tribe of Kerchak
|
||
|
were often sore pressed to follow the trail at all,
|
||
|
and at best were so delayed that in the afternoon of the
|
||
|
second day, they still had not overhauled the fugitive.
|
||
|
The scent was now strong, for it had been made since the rain,
|
||
|
and Tarzan knew that it would not be long before they
|
||
|
came upon the thief and his loot. Above them, as they
|
||
|
crept stealthily forward, chattered Manu, the monkey,
|
||
|
and his thousand fellows; squawked and screamed the
|
||
|
brazen-throated birds of plumage; buzzed and hummed the
|
||
|
countless insects amid the rustling of the forest leaves,
|
||
|
and, as they passed, a little gray-beard, squeaking and
|
||
|
scolding upon a swaying branch, looked down and saw them.
|
||
|
Instantly the scolding and squeaking ceased, and off
|
||
|
tore the long-tailed mite as though Sheeta, the panther,
|
||
|
had been endowed with wings and was in close pursuit of him.
|
||
|
To all appearances he was only a very much frightened
|
||
|
little monkey, fleeing for his life--there seemed nothing
|
||
|
sinister about him.
|
||
|
|
||
|
And what of Teeka during all this time? Was she at last
|
||
|
resigned to her fate and accompanying her new mate
|
||
|
in the proper humility of a loving and tractable spouse?
|
||
|
A single glance at the pair would have answered these
|
||
|
questions to the utter satisfaction of the most captious.
|
||
|
She was torn and bleeding from many wounds, inflicted by the
|
||
|
sullen Toog in his vain efforts to subdue her to his will,
|
||
|
and Toog too was disfigured and mutilated; but with
|
||
|
stubborn ferocity, he still clung to his now useless prize.
|
||
|
|
||
|
On through the jungle he forced his way in the direction
|
||
|
of the stamping ground of his tribe. He hoped that his
|
||
|
king would have forgotten his treason; but if not he
|
||
|
was still resigned to his fate--any fate would be better
|
||
|
than suffering longer the sole companionship of this
|
||
|
frightful she, and then, too, he wished to exhibit
|
||
|
his captive to his fellows. Maybe he could wish her
|
||
|
on the king--it is possible that such a thought urged him on.
|
||
|
|
||
|
At last they came upon two bulls feeding in a parklike
|
||
|
grove--a beautiful grove dotted with huge boulders half
|
||
|
embedded in the rich loam--mute monuments, possibly, to a
|
||
|
forgotten age when mighty glaciers rolled their slow course
|
||
|
where now a torrid sun beats down upon a tropic jungle.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The two bulls looked up, baring long fighting fangs,
|
||
|
as Toog appeared in the distance. The latter recognized
|
||
|
the two as friends. "It is Toog," he growled. "Toog has
|
||
|
come back with a new she."
|
||
|
|
||
|
The apes waited his nearer approach. Teeka turned a snarling,
|
||
|
fanged face toward them. She was not pretty to look upon,
|
||
|
yet through the blood and hatred upon her countenance
|
||
|
they realized that she was beautiful, and they envied
|
||
|
Toog--alas! they did not know Teeka.
|
||
|
|
||
|
As they squatted looking at one another there raced through
|
||
|
the trees toward them a long-tailed little monkey with
|
||
|
gray whiskers. He was a very excited little monkey when he
|
||
|
came to a halt upon the limb of a tree directly overhead.
|
||
|
"Two strange bulls come," he cried. One is a Mangani,
|
||
|
the other a hideous ape without hair upon his body.
|
||
|
They follow the spoor of Toog. I saw them."
|
||
|
|
||
|
The four apes turned their eyes backward along the trail
|
||
|
Toog had just come; then they looked at one another for
|
||
|
a minute. "Come," said the larger of Toog's two friends,
|
||
|
"we will wait for the strangers in the thick bushes beyond
|
||
|
the clearing."
|
||
|
|
||
|
He turned and waddled away across the open place,
|
||
|
the others following him. The little monkey danced about,
|
||
|
all excitement. His chief diversion in life was to bring
|
||
|
about bloody encounters between the larger denizens of
|
||
|
the forest, that he might sit in the safety of the trees
|
||
|
and witness the spectacles. He was a glutton for gore,
|
||
|
was this little, whiskered, gray monkey, so long as it was
|
||
|
the gore of others-- a typical fight fan was the graybeard.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The apes hid themselves in the shrubbery beside the
|
||
|
trail along which the two stranger bulls would pass.
|
||
|
Teeka trembled with excitement. She had heard the words
|
||
|
of Manu, and she knew that the hairless ape must be Tarzan,
|
||
|
while the other was, doubtless, Taug. Never, in her
|
||
|
wildest hopes, had she expected succor of this sort.
|
||
|
Her one thought had been to escape and find her way back
|
||
|
to the tribe of Kerchak; but even this had appeared to her
|
||
|
practically impossible, so closely did Toog watch her.
|
||
|
|
||
|
As Taug and Tarzan reached the grove where Toog had come
|
||
|
upon his friends, the ape scent became so strong that
|
||
|
both knew the quarry was but a short distance ahead.
|
||
|
And so they went even more cautiously, for they wished
|
||
|
to come upon the thief from behind if they could
|
||
|
and charge him before he was aware of their presence.
|
||
|
That a little gray-whiskered monkey had forestalled them
|
||
|
they did not know, nor that three pairs of savage eyes
|
||
|
were already watching their every move and waiting for them
|
||
|
to come within reach of itching paws and slavering jowls.
|
||
|
|
||
|
On they came across the grove, and as they entered
|
||
|
the path leading into the dense jungle beyond, a sudden
|
||
|
"Kreeg-ah!" shrilled out close before them--a "Kreeg-ah"
|
||
|
in the familiar voice of Teeka. The small brains
|
||
|
of Toog and his companions had not been able to foresee
|
||
|
that Teeka might betray them, and now that she had,
|
||
|
they went wild with rage. Toog struck the she a mighty
|
||
|
blow that felled her, and then the three rushed forth
|
||
|
to do battle with Tarzan and Taug. The little monkey
|
||
|
danced upon his perch and screamed with delight.
|
||
|
|
||
|
And indeed he might well be delighted, for it was a
|
||
|
lovely fight. There were no preliminaries, no formalities,
|
||
|
no introductions-- the five bulls merely charged and clinched.
|
||
|
They rolled in the narrow trail and into the thick
|
||
|
verdure beside it. They bit and clawed and scratched
|
||
|
and struck, and all the while they kept up the most
|
||
|
frightful chorus of growlings and barkings and roarings.
|
||
|
In five minutes they were torn and bleeding, and the little
|
||
|
graybeard leaped high, shrilling his primitive bravos;
|
||
|
but always his attitude was "thumbs down." He wanted
|
||
|
to see something killed. He did not care whether it
|
||
|
were friend or foe. It was blood he wanted--blood and death.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Taug had been set upon by Toog and another of the apes,
|
||
|
while Tarzan had the third--a huge brute with the strength
|
||
|
of a buffalo. Never before had Tarzan's assailant beheld
|
||
|
so strange a creature as this slippery, hairless bull with
|
||
|
which he battled. Sweat and blood covered Tarzan's sleek,
|
||
|
brown hide. Again and again he slipped from the clutches
|
||
|
of the great bull, and all the while he struggled to free
|
||
|
his hunting knife from the scabbard in which it had stuck.
|
||
|
|
||
|
At length he succeeded--a brown hand shot out and clutched
|
||
|
a hairy throat, another flew upward clutching the sharp blade.
|
||
|
Three swift, powerful strokes and the bull relaxed
|
||
|
with a groan, falling limp beneath his antagonist.
|
||
|
Instantly Tarzan broke from the clutches of the dying bull
|
||
|
and sprang to Taug's assistance. Toog saw him coming
|
||
|
and wheeled to meet him. In the impact of the charge,
|
||
|
Tarzan's knife was wrenched from his hand and then Toog
|
||
|
closed with him. Now was the battle even--two against
|
||
|
two--while on the verge, Teeka, now recovered from the blow
|
||
|
that had felled her, slunk waiting for an opportunity
|
||
|
to aid. She saw Tarzan's knife and picked it up.
|
||
|
She never had used it, but knew how Tarzan used it.
|
||
|
Always had she been afraid of the thing which dealt death
|
||
|
to the mightiest of the jungle people with the ease that
|
||
|
Tantor's great tusks deal death to Tantor's enemies.
|
||
|
|
||
|
She saw Tarzan's pocket pouch torn from his side,
|
||
|
and with the curiosity of an ape, that even danger and
|
||
|
excitement cannot entirely dispel, she picked this up, too.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Now the bulls were standing--the clinches had been broken.
|
||
|
Blood streamed down their sides--their faces were crimsoned
|
||
|
with it. Little graybeard was so fascinated that at last
|
||
|
he had even forgotten to scream and dance; but sat rigid
|
||
|
with delight in the enjoyment of the spectacle.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Back across the grove Tarzan and Taug forced their adversaries.
|
||
|
Teeka followed slowly. She scarce knew what to do.
|
||
|
She was lame and sore and exhausted from the frightful
|
||
|
ordeal through which she had passed, and she had
|
||
|
the confidence of her sex in the prowess of her mate
|
||
|
and the other bull of her tribe--they would not need
|
||
|
the help of a she in their battle with these two strangers.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The roars and screams of the fighters reverberated through
|
||
|
the jungle, awakening the echoes in the distant hills.
|
||
|
From the throat of Tarzan's antagonist had come a score
|
||
|
of "Kreeg-ahs!" and now from behind came the reply he
|
||
|
had awaited. Into the grove, barking and growling,
|
||
|
came a score of huge bull apes--the fighting men of
|
||
|
Toog's tribe.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Teeka saw them first and screamed a warning to Tarzan and Taug.
|
||
|
Then she fled past the fighters toward the opposite
|
||
|
side of the clearing, fear for a moment claiming her.
|
||
|
Nor can one censure her after the frightful ordeal from
|
||
|
which she was still suffering.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Down upon them came the great apes. In a moment Tarzan
|
||
|
and Taug would be torn to shreds that would later form
|
||
|
the PIECE DE RESISTANCE of the savage orgy of a Dum-Dum.
|
||
|
Teeka turned to glance back. She saw the impending
|
||
|
fate of her defenders and there sprung to life in her
|
||
|
savage bosom the spark of martyrdom, that some common
|
||
|
forbear had transmitted alike to Teeka, the wild ape,
|
||
|
and the glorious women of a higher order who have invited
|
||
|
death for their men. With a shrill scream she ran toward
|
||
|
the battlers who were rolling in a great mass at the foot
|
||
|
of one of the huge boulders which dotted the grove;
|
||
|
but what could she do? The knife she held she could
|
||
|
not use to advantage because of her lesser strength.
|
||
|
She had seen Tarzan throw missiles, and she had learned
|
||
|
this with many other things from her childhood playmate.
|
||
|
She sought for something to throw and at last her fingers
|
||
|
touched upon the hard objects in the pouch that had been
|
||
|
torn from the ape-man. Tearing the receptacle open,
|
||
|
she gathered a handful of shiny cylinders--heavy for
|
||
|
their size, they seemed to her, and good missiles.
|
||
|
With all her strength she hurled them at the apes battling
|
||
|
in front of the granite boulder.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The result surprised Teeka quite as much as it did the apes.
|
||
|
There was a loud explosion, which deafened the fighters,
|
||
|
and a puff of acrid smoke. Never before had one there
|
||
|
heard such a frightful noise. Screaming with terror,
|
||
|
the stranger bulls leaped to their feet and fled back
|
||
|
toward the stamping ground of their tribe, while Taug
|
||
|
and Tarzan slowly gathered themselves together and arose,
|
||
|
lame and bleeding, to their feet. They, too, would have
|
||
|
fled had they not seen Teeka standing there before them,
|
||
|
the knife and the pocket pouch in her hands.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"What was it?" asked Tarzan.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Teeka shook her head. "I hurled these at the stranger bulls,"
|
||
|
and she held forth another handful of the shiny metal
|
||
|
cylinders with the dull gray, cone-shaped ends.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tarzan looked at them and scratched his head.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"What are they?" asked Taug.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I do not know," said Tarzan. "I found them."
|
||
|
|
||
|
The little monkey with the gray beard halted among the trees
|
||
|
a mile away and huddled, terrified, against a branch.
|
||
|
He did not know that the dead father of Tarzan of the Apes,
|
||
|
reaching back out of the past across a span of twenty years,
|
||
|
had saved his son's life.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Nor did Tarzan, Lord Greystoke, know it either.
|
||
|
|
||
|
11
|
||
|
|
||
|
A Jungle Joke
|
||
|
|
||
|
TIME SELDOM HUNG heavily upon Tarzan's hands. Even where
|
||
|
there is sameness there cannot be monotony if most of
|
||
|
the sameness consists in dodging death first in one form
|
||
|
and then in another; or in inflicting death upon others.
|
||
|
There is a spice to such an existence; but even this Tarzan
|
||
|
of the Apes varied in activities of his own invention.
|
||
|
|
||
|
He was full grown now, with the grace of a Greek god
|
||
|
and the thews of a bull, and, by all the tenets of apedom,
|
||
|
should have been sullen, morose, and brooding; but he
|
||
|
was not. His spirits seemed not to age at all--he was
|
||
|
still a playful child, much to the discomfiture of his
|
||
|
fellow-apes. They could not understand him or his ways,
|
||
|
for with maturity they quickly forgot their youth and
|
||
|
its pastimes.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Nor could Tarzan quite understand them. It seemed strange
|
||
|
to him that a few moons since, he had roped Taug about an ankle
|
||
|
and dragged him screaming through the tall jungle grasses,
|
||
|
and then rolled and tumbled in good-natured mimic battle
|
||
|
when the young ape had freed himself, and that today when
|
||
|
he had come up behind the same Taug and pulled him over
|
||
|
backward upon the turf, instead of the playful young ape,
|
||
|
a great, snarling beast had whirled and leaped for his throat.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Easily Tarzan eluded the charge and quickly Taug's anger
|
||
|
vanished,
|
||
|
though it was not replaced with playfulness; yet the ape-man
|
||
|
realized that Taug was not amused nor was he amusing.
|
||
|
The big bull ape seemed to have lost whatever sense of humor
|
||
|
he once may have possessed. With a grunt of disappointment,
|
||
|
young Lord Greystoke turned to other fields of endeavor.
|
||
|
A strand of black hair fell across one eye. He brushed
|
||
|
it aside with the palm of a hand and a toss of his head.
|
||
|
It suggested something to do, so he sought his quiver which
|
||
|
lay cached in the hollow bole of a lightning-riven tree.
|
||
|
Removing the arrows he turned the quiver upside down,
|
||
|
emptying upon the ground the contents of its bottom--
|
||
|
his few treasures. Among them was a flat bit of stone
|
||
|
and a shell which he had picked up from the beach near
|
||
|
his father's cabin.
|
||
|
|
||
|
With great care he rubbed the edge of the shell back and
|
||
|
forth upon the flat stone until the soft edge was quite
|
||
|
fine and sharp. He worked much as a barber does who hones
|
||
|
a razor, and with every evidence of similar practice; but his
|
||
|
proficiency was the result of years of painstaking effort.
|
||
|
Unaided he had worked out a method of his own for putting
|
||
|
an edge upon the shell--he even tested it with the ball
|
||
|
of his thumb-- and when it met with his approval he
|
||
|
grasped a wisp of hair which fell across his eyes,
|
||
|
grasped it between the thumb and first finger of his left
|
||
|
hand and sawed upon it with the sharpened shell until it
|
||
|
was severed. All around his head he went until his black
|
||
|
shock was rudely bobbed with a ragged bang in front.
|
||
|
For the appearance of it he cared nothing; but in the
|
||
|
matter of safety and comfort it meant everything.
|
||
|
A lock of hair falling in one's eyes at the wrong moment
|
||
|
might mean all the difference between life and death,
|
||
|
while straggly strands, hanging down one's back were
|
||
|
most uncomfortable, especially when wet with dew or rain
|
||
|
or perspiration.
|
||
|
|
||
|
As Tarzan labored at his tonsorial task, his active
|
||
|
mind was busy with many things. He recalled his
|
||
|
recent battle with Bolgani, the gorilla, the wounds
|
||
|
of which were but just healed. He pondered the strange
|
||
|
sleep adventures of his first dreams, and he smiled
|
||
|
at the painful outcome of his last practical joke upon
|
||
|
the tribe, when, dressed in the hide of Numa, the lion,
|
||
|
he had come roaring upon them, only to be leaped upon
|
||
|
and almost killed by the great bulls whom he had taught
|
||
|
how to defend themselves from an attack of their ancient enemy.
|
||
|
|
||
|
His hair lopped off to his entire satisfaction, and seeing
|
||
|
no possibility of pleasure in the company of the tribe,
|
||
|
Tarzan swung leisurely into the trees and set off in
|
||
|
the direction of his cabin; but when part way there his
|
||
|
attention was attracted by a strong scent spoor coming
|
||
|
from the north. It was the scent of the Gomangani.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Curiosity, that best-developed, common heritage of man
|
||
|
and ape, always prompted Tarzan to investigate where the
|
||
|
Gomangani were concerned. There was that about them
|
||
|
which aroused his imagination. Possibly it was because
|
||
|
of the diversity of their activities and interests.
|
||
|
The apes lived to eat and sleep and propagate.
|
||
|
The same was true of all the other denizens of the jungle,
|
||
|
save the Gomangani.
|
||
|
|
||
|
These black fellows danced and sang, scratched around in the
|
||
|
earth from which they had cleared the trees and underbrush;
|
||
|
they watched things grow, and when they had ripened,
|
||
|
they cut them down and put them in straw-thatched huts.
|
||
|
They made bows and spears and arrows, poison, cooking pots,
|
||
|
things of metal to wear around their arms and legs.
|
||
|
If it hadn't been for their black faces, their hideously
|
||
|
disfigured features, and the fact that one of them had
|
||
|
slain Kala, Tarzan might have wished to be one of them.
|
||
|
At least he sometimes thought so, but always at the thought
|
||
|
there rose within him a strange revulsion of feeling, which he
|
||
|
could not interpret or understand--he simply knew that he
|
||
|
hated the Gomangani, and that he would rather be Histah,
|
||
|
the snake, than one of these.
|
||
|
|
||
|
But their ways were interesting, and Tarzan never tired
|
||
|
of spying upon them. and from them he learned much more than
|
||
|
he realized, though always his principal thought was of some
|
||
|
new way in which he could render their lives miserable.
|
||
|
The baiting of the blacks was Tarzan's chief divertissement.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tarzan realized now that the blacks were very near
|
||
|
and that there were many of them, so he went silently
|
||
|
and with great caution. Noiselessly he moved through
|
||
|
the lush grasses of the open spaces, and where the forest
|
||
|
was dense, swung from one swaying branch to another,
|
||
|
or leaped lightly over tangled masses of fallen trees
|
||
|
where there was no way through the lower terraces,
|
||
|
and the ground was choked and impassable.
|
||
|
|
||
|
And so presently he came within sight of the black
|
||
|
warriors of Mbonga, the chief. They were engaged in a
|
||
|
pursuit with which Tarzan was more or less familiar,
|
||
|
having watched them at it upon other occasions.
|
||
|
They were placing and baiting a trap for Numa, the lion.
|
||
|
In a cage upon wheels they were tying a kid, so fastening
|
||
|
it that when Numa seized the unfortunate creature,
|
||
|
the door of the cage would drop behind him, making him
|
||
|
a prisoner.
|
||
|
|
||
|
These things the blacks had learned in their old home,
|
||
|
before they escaped through the untracked jungle to their
|
||
|
new village. Formerly they had dwelt in the Belgian
|
||
|
Congo until the cruelties of their heartless oppressors
|
||
|
had driven them to seek the safety of unexplored solitudes
|
||
|
beyond the boundaries of Leopold's domain.
|
||
|
|
||
|
In their old life they often had trapped animals for the
|
||
|
agents of European dealers, and had learned from them
|
||
|
certain tricks, such as this one, which permitted them
|
||
|
to capture even Numa without injuring him, and to transport
|
||
|
him in safety and with comparative ease to their village.
|
||
|
|
||
|
No longer was there a white market for their savage wares;
|
||
|
but there was still a sufficient incentive for the taking
|
||
|
of Numa--alive. First was the necessity for ridding the
|
||
|
jungle of man-eaters, and it was only after depredations
|
||
|
by these grim and terrible scourges that a lion hunt
|
||
|
was organized. Secondarily was the excuse for an orgy
|
||
|
of celebration was the hunt successful, and the fact that
|
||
|
such fetes were rendered doubly pleasurable by the presence
|
||
|
of a live creature that might be put to death by torture.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tarzan had witnessed these cruel rites in the past.
|
||
|
Being himself more savage than the savage warriors
|
||
|
of the Gomangani, he was not so shocked by the cruelty
|
||
|
of them as he should have been, yet they did shock him.
|
||
|
He could not understand the strange feeling of revulsion
|
||
|
which possessed him at such times. He had no love for Numa,
|
||
|
the lion, yet he bristled with rage when the blacks
|
||
|
inflicted upon his enemy such indignities and cruelties
|
||
|
as only the mind of the one creature molded in the image
|
||
|
of God can conceive.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Upon two occasions he had freed Numa from the trap before
|
||
|
the blacks had returned to discover the success or failure
|
||
|
of their venture. He would do the same today--that he
|
||
|
decided immediately he realized the nature of their intentions.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Leaving the trap in the center of a broad elephant trail
|
||
|
near the drinking hole, the warriors turned back toward
|
||
|
their village. On the morrow they would come again.
|
||
|
Tarzan looked after them, upon his lips an unconscious
|
||
|
sneer--the heritage of unguessed caste. He saw them file
|
||
|
along the broad trail, beneath the overhanging verdure
|
||
|
of leafy branch and looped and festooned creepers,
|
||
|
brushing ebon shoulders against gorgeous blooms which
|
||
|
inscrutable Nature has seen fit to lavish most profusely
|
||
|
farthest from the eye of man.
|
||
|
|
||
|
As Tarzan watched, through narrowed lids, the last
|
||
|
of the warriors disappear beyond a turn in the trail,
|
||
|
his expression altered to the urge of a newborn thought.
|
||
|
A slow, grim smile touched his lips. He looked down upon
|
||
|
the frightened, bleating kid, advertising, in its fear
|
||
|
and its innocence, its presence and its helplessness.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Dropping to the ground, Tarzan approached the trap and entered.
|
||
|
Without disturbing the fiber cord, which was adjusted to drop
|
||
|
the door at the proper time, he loosened the living bait,
|
||
|
tucked it under an arm and stepped out of the cage.
|
||
|
|
||
|
With his hunting knife he quieted the frightened animal,
|
||
|
severing its jugular; then he dragged it, bleeding,
|
||
|
along the trail down to the drinking hole, the half smile
|
||
|
persisting upon his ordinarily grave face. At the water's
|
||
|
edge the ape-man stooped and with hunting knife and quick
|
||
|
strong fingers deftly removed the dead kid's viscera.
|
||
|
Scraping a hole in the mud, he buried these parts which he
|
||
|
did not eat, and swinging the body to his shoulder took
|
||
|
to the trees.
|
||
|
|
||
|
For a short distance he pursued his way in the wake of the
|
||
|
black warriors, coming down presently to bury the meat
|
||
|
of his kill where it would be safe from the depredations
|
||
|
of Dango, the hyena, or the other meat-eating beasts
|
||
|
and birds of the jungle. He was hungry. Had he been
|
||
|
all beast he would have eaten; but his man-mind could
|
||
|
entertain urges even more potent than those of the belly,
|
||
|
and now he was concerned with an idea which kept a smile
|
||
|
upon his lips and his eyes sparkling in anticipation.
|
||
|
An idea, it was, which permitted him to forget that he
|
||
|
was hungry.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The meat safely cached, Tarzan trotted along the elephant
|
||
|
trail after the Gomangani. Two or three miles from the
|
||
|
cage he overtook them and then he swung into the trees
|
||
|
and followed above and behind them--waiting his chance.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Among the blacks was Rabba Kega, the witch-doctor. Tarzan
|
||
|
hated them all; but Rabba Kega he especially hated.
|
||
|
As the blacks filed along the winding path, Rabba Kega,
|
||
|
being lazy, dropped behind. This Tarzan noted, and it
|
||
|
filled him with satisfaction--his being radiated a grim
|
||
|
and terrible content. Like an angel of death he hovered
|
||
|
above the unsuspecting black.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Rabba Kega, knowing that the village was but a short
|
||
|
distance ahead, sat down to rest. Rest well, O Rabba
|
||
|
Kega! It is thy last opportunity.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tarzan crept stealthily among the branches of the tree
|
||
|
above the well-fed, self-satisfied witch-doctor.
|
||
|
He made no noise that the dull ears of man could
|
||
|
hear above the soughing of the gentle jungle breeze
|
||
|
among the undulating foliage of the upper terraces,
|
||
|
and when he came close above the black man he halted,
|
||
|
well concealed by leafy branch and heavy creeper.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Rabba Kega sat with his back against the bole of a tree,
|
||
|
facing Tarzan. The position was not such as the waiting
|
||
|
beast of prey desired, and so, with the infinite patience
|
||
|
of the wild hunter, the ape-man crouched motionless and
|
||
|
silent as a graven image until the fruit should be ripe
|
||
|
for the plucking. A poisonous insect buzzed angrily out
|
||
|
of space. It loitered, circling, close to Tarzan's face.
|
||
|
The ape-man saw and recognized it. The virus of its
|
||
|
sting spelled death for lesser things than he--for
|
||
|
him it would mean days of anguish. He did not move.
|
||
|
His glittering eyes remained fixed upon Rabba Kega
|
||
|
after acknowledging the presence of the winged torture
|
||
|
by a single glance. He heard and followed the movements
|
||
|
of the insect with his keen ears, and then he felt it
|
||
|
alight upon his forehead. No muscle twitched, for the
|
||
|
muscles of such as he are the servants of the brain.
|
||
|
Down across his face crept the horrid thing--over nose
|
||
|
and lips and chin. Upon his throat it paused, and turning,
|
||
|
retraced its steps. Tarzan watched Rabba Kega.
|
||
|
Now not even his eyes moved. So motionless he crouched
|
||
|
that only death might counterpart his movelessness.
|
||
|
The insect crawled upward over the nut-brown cheek and stopped
|
||
|
with its antennae brushing the lashes of his lower lid.
|
||
|
You or I would have started back, closing our eyes
|
||
|
and striking at the thing; but you and I are the slaves,
|
||
|
not the masters of our nerves. Had the thing crawled upon
|
||
|
the eyeball of the ape-man, it is believable that he could
|
||
|
yet have remained wide-eyed and rigid; but it did not.
|
||
|
For a moment it loitered there close to the lower lid,
|
||
|
then it rose and buzzed away.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Down toward Rabba Kega it buzzed and the black man heard it,
|
||
|
saw it, struck at it, and was stung upon the cheek before
|
||
|
he killed it. Then he rose with a howl of pain and anger,
|
||
|
and as he turned up the trail toward the village of Mbonga,
|
||
|
the chief, his broad, black back was exposed to the silent
|
||
|
thing waiting above him.
|
||
|
|
||
|
And as Rabba Kega turned, a lithe figure shot outward
|
||
|
and downward from the tree above upon his broad shoulders.
|
||
|
The impact of the springing creature carried Rabba Kega
|
||
|
to the ground. He felt strong jaws close upon his neck,
|
||
|
and when he tried to scream, steel fingers throttled his throat.
|
||
|
The powerful black warrior struggled to free himself;
|
||
|
but he was as a child in the grip of his adversary.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Presently Tarzan released his grip upon the other's throat;
|
||
|
but each time that Rabba Kega essayed a scream, the cruel
|
||
|
fingers choked him painfully. At last the warrior desisted.
|
||
|
Then Tarzan half rose and kneeled upon his victim's back,
|
||
|
and when Rabba Kega struggled to arise, the ape-man
|
||
|
pushed his face down into the dirt of the trail.
|
||
|
With a bit of the rope that had secured the kid,
|
||
|
Tarzan made Rabba Kega's wrists secure behind his back,
|
||
|
then he rose and jerked his prisoner to his feet,
|
||
|
faced him back along the trail and pushed him on ahead.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Not until he came to his feet did Rabba Kega obtain
|
||
|
a square look at his assailant. When he saw that it
|
||
|
was the white devil-god his heart sank within him and
|
||
|
his knees trembled; but as he walked along the trail
|
||
|
ahead of his captor and was neither injured nor molested
|
||
|
his spirits slowly rose, so that he took heart again.
|
||
|
Possibly the devil-god did not intend to kill him after all.
|
||
|
Had he not had little Tibo in his power for days without
|
||
|
harming him, and had he not spared Momaya, Tibo's mother,
|
||
|
when he easily might have slain her?
|
||
|
|
||
|
And then they came upon the cage which Rabba Kega,
|
||
|
with the other black warriors of the village of Mbonga,
|
||
|
the chief, had placed and baited for Numa. Rabba Kega
|
||
|
saw that the bait was gone, though there was no lion
|
||
|
within the cage, nor was the door dropped. He saw and he
|
||
|
was filled with wonder not unmixed with apprehension.
|
||
|
It entered his dull brain that in some way this combination
|
||
|
of circumstances had a connection with his presence there
|
||
|
as the prisoner of the white devil-god.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Nor was he wrong. Tarzan pushed him roughly into
|
||
|
the cage, and in another moment Rabba Kega understood.
|
||
|
Cold sweat broke from every pore of his body--he trembled
|
||
|
as with ague--for the ape-man was binding him securely
|
||
|
in the very spot the kid had previously occupied.
|
||
|
The witch-doctor pleaded, first for his life, and then
|
||
|
for a death less cruel; but he might as well have saved
|
||
|
his pleas for Numa, since already they were directed toward
|
||
|
a wild beast who understood no word of what he said.
|
||
|
|
||
|
But his constant jabbering not only annoyed Tarzan,
|
||
|
who worked in silence, but suggested that later the black
|
||
|
might raise his voice in cries for succor, so he stepped out
|
||
|
of the cage, gathered a handful of grass and a small stick
|
||
|
and returning, jammed the grass into Rabba Kega's mouth,
|
||
|
laid the stick crosswise between his teeth and fastened
|
||
|
it there with the thong from Rabba Kega's loin cloth.
|
||
|
Now could the witch-doctor but roll his eyes and sweat.
|
||
|
Thus Tarzan left him.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The ape-man went first to the spot where he had cached
|
||
|
the body of the kid. Digging it up, he ascended into a
|
||
|
tree and proceeded to satisfy his hunger. What remained
|
||
|
he again buried; then he swung away through the trees
|
||
|
to the water hole, and going to the spot where fresh,
|
||
|
cold water bubbled from between two rocks, he drank deeply.
|
||
|
The other beasts might wade in and drink stagnant water;
|
||
|
but not Tarzan of the Apes. In such matters he was fastidious.
|
||
|
From his hands he washed every trace of the repugnant
|
||
|
scent of the Gomangani, and from his face the blood of
|
||
|
the kid. Rising, he stretched himself not unlike some huge,
|
||
|
lazy cat, climbed into a near-by tree and fell asleep.
|
||
|
|
||
|
When he awoke it was dark, though a faint luminosity still
|
||
|
tinged the western heavens. A lion moaned and coughed
|
||
|
as it strode through the jungle toward water. It was
|
||
|
approaching the drinking hole. Tarzan grinned sleepily,
|
||
|
changed his position and fell asleep again.
|
||
|
|
||
|
When the blacks of Mbonga, the chief, reached their village
|
||
|
they discovered that Rabba Kega was not among them.
|
||
|
When several hours had elapsed they decided that something
|
||
|
had happened to him, and it was the hope of the majority
|
||
|
of the tribe that whatever had happened to him might
|
||
|
prove fatal. They did not love the witch-doctor. Love
|
||
|
and fear seldom are playmates; but a warrior is a warrior,
|
||
|
and so Mbonga organized a searching party. That his own
|
||
|
grief was not unassuagable might have been gathered from
|
||
|
the fact that he remained at home and went to sleep.
|
||
|
The young warriors whom he sent out remained steadfast to
|
||
|
their purpose for fully half an hour, when, unfortunately for
|
||
|
Rabba Kega-- upon so slight a thing may the fate of a man
|
||
|
rest--a honey bird attracted the attention of the searchers
|
||
|
and led them off for the delicious store it previously
|
||
|
had marked down for betrayal, and Rabba Kega's doom was sealed.
|
||
|
|
||
|
When the searchers returned empty handed, Mbonga was wroth;
|
||
|
but when he saw the great store of honey they brought with
|
||
|
them his rage subsided. Already Tubuto, young, agile and
|
||
|
evil-minded, with face hideously painted, was practicing
|
||
|
the black art upon a sick infant in the fond hope of
|
||
|
succeeding to the office and perquisites of Rabba Kega.
|
||
|
Tonight the women of the old witch-doctor would moan
|
||
|
and howl. Tomorrow he would be forgotten. Such is life,
|
||
|
such is fame, such is power--in the center of the world's
|
||
|
highest civilization, or in the depths of the black,
|
||
|
primeval jungle. Always, everywhere, man is man, nor has
|
||
|
he altered greatly beneath his veneer since he scurried
|
||
|
into a hole between two rocks to escape the tyrannosaurus
|
||
|
six million years ago.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The morning following the disappearance of Rabba Kega,
|
||
|
the warriors set out with Mbonga, the chief, to examine
|
||
|
the trap they had set for Numa. Long before they
|
||
|
reached the cage, they heard the roaring of a great
|
||
|
lion and guessed that they had made a successful bag,
|
||
|
so it was with shouts of joy that they approached
|
||
|
the spot where they should find their captive.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Yes! There he was, a great, magnificent specimen--a huge,
|
||
|
black-maned lion. The warriors were frantic with delight.
|
||
|
They leaped into the air and uttered savage cries--hoarse
|
||
|
victory cries, and then they came closer, and the cries
|
||
|
died upon their lips, and their eyes went wide so that the
|
||
|
whites showed all around their irises, and their pendulous
|
||
|
lower lips drooped with their drooping jaws. They drew
|
||
|
back in terror at the sight within the cage--the mauled
|
||
|
and mutilated corpse of what had, yesterday, been Rabba Kega,
|
||
|
the witch-doctor.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The captured lion had been too angry and frightened to feed
|
||
|
upon the body of his kill; but he had vented upon it much
|
||
|
of his rage, until it was a frightful thing to behold.
|
||
|
|
||
|
From his perch in a near-by tree Tarzan of the Apes,
|
||
|
Lord Greystoke, looked down upon the black warriors
|
||
|
and grinned. Once again his self-pride in his ability
|
||
|
as a practical joker asserted itself. It had lain dormant
|
||
|
for some time following the painful mauling he had received
|
||
|
that time he leaped among the apes of Kerchak clothed
|
||
|
in the skin of Numa; but this joke was a decided success.
|
||
|
|
||
|
After a few moments of terror, the blacks came closer to
|
||
|
the cage, rage taking the place of fear--rage and curiosity.
|
||
|
How had Rabba Kega happened to be in the cage? Where was
|
||
|
the kid? There was no sign nor remnant of the original bait.
|
||
|
They looked closely and they saw, to their horror,
|
||
|
that the corpse of their erstwhile fellow was bound
|
||
|
with the very cord with which they had secured the kid.
|
||
|
Who could have done this thing? They looked at one another.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tubuto was the first to speak. He had come hopefully out
|
||
|
with the expedition that morning. Somewhere he might find
|
||
|
evidence of the death of Rabba Kega. Now he had found it,
|
||
|
and he was the first to find an explanation.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"The white devil-god," he whispered. "It is the work
|
||
|
of the white devil-god!"
|
||
|
|
||
|
No one contradicted Tubuto, for, indeed, who else could it
|
||
|
have been but the great, hairless ape they all so feared? And
|
||
|
so their hatred of Tarzan increased again with an increased
|
||
|
fear of him. And Tarzan sat in his tree and hugged himself.
|
||
|
|
||
|
No one there felt sorrow because of the death of Rabba Kega;
|
||
|
but each of the blacks experienced a personal fear of
|
||
|
the ingenious mind which might discover for any of them
|
||
|
a death equally horrible to that which the witch-doctor
|
||
|
had suffered. It was a subdued and thoughtful company
|
||
|
which dragged the captive lion along the broad elephant
|
||
|
path back to the village of Mbonga, the chief.
|
||
|
|
||
|
And it was with a sigh of relief that they finally rolled
|
||
|
it into the village and closed the gates behind them.
|
||
|
Each had experienced the sensation of being spied upon from
|
||
|
the moment they left the spot where the trap had been set,
|
||
|
though none had seen or heard aught to give tangible food
|
||
|
to his fears.
|
||
|
|
||
|
At the sight of the body within the cage with the lion,
|
||
|
the women and children of the village set up a most
|
||
|
frightful lamentation, working themselves into a joyous
|
||
|
hysteria which far transcended the happy misery derived
|
||
|
by their more civilized prototypes who make a business of
|
||
|
dividing their time between the movies and the neighborhood
|
||
|
funerals of friends and strangers--especially strangers.
|
||
|
|
||
|
From a tree overhanging the palisade, Tarzan watched
|
||
|
all that passed within the village. He saw the frenzied
|
||
|
women tantalizing the great lion with sticks and stones.
|
||
|
The cruelty of the blacks toward a captive always induced
|
||
|
in Tarzan a feeling of angry contempt for the Gomangani.
|
||
|
Had he attempted to analyze this feeling he would have
|
||
|
found it difficult, for during all his life he had been
|
||
|
accustomed to sights of suffering and cruelty. He, himself,
|
||
|
was cruel. All the beasts of the jungle were cruel;
|
||
|
but the cruelty of the blacks was of a different order.
|
||
|
It was the cruelty of wanton torture of the helpless,
|
||
|
while the cruelty of Tarzan and the other beasts was the
|
||
|
cruelty of necessity or of passion.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Perhaps, had he known it, he might have credited this
|
||
|
feeling of repugnance at the sight of unnecessary
|
||
|
suffering to heredity--to the germ of British love
|
||
|
of fair play which had been bequeathed to him by his
|
||
|
father and his mother; but, of course, he did not know,
|
||
|
since he still believed that his mother had been Kala,
|
||
|
the great ape.
|
||
|
|
||
|
And just in proportion as his anger rose against the
|
||
|
Gomangani his savage sympathy went out to Numa, the lion,
|
||
|
for, though Numa was his lifetime enemy, there was neither
|
||
|
bitterness nor contempt in Tarzan's sentiments toward him.
|
||
|
In the ape-man's mind, therefore, the determination
|
||
|
formed to thwart the blacks and liberate the lion;
|
||
|
but he must accomplish this in some way which would
|
||
|
cause the Gomangani the greatest chagrin and discomfiture.
|
||
|
|
||
|
As he squatted there watching the proceeding beneath him,
|
||
|
he saw the warriors seize upon the cage once more and drag
|
||
|
it between two huts. Tarzan knew that it would remain
|
||
|
there now until evening, and that the blacks were planning
|
||
|
a feast and orgy in celebration of their capture.
|
||
|
When he saw that two warriors were placed beside the cage,
|
||
|
and that these drove off the women and children and young
|
||
|
men who would have eventually tortured Numa to death,
|
||
|
he knew that the lion would be safe until he was needed
|
||
|
for the evening's entertainment, when he would be more
|
||
|
cruelly and scientifically tortured for the edification of
|
||
|
the entire tribe.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Now Tarzan preferred to bait the blacks in as theatric
|
||
|
a manner as his fertile imagination could evolve.
|
||
|
He had some half-formed conception of their superstitious
|
||
|
fears and of their especial dread of night, and so he
|
||
|
decided to wait until darkness fell and the blacks partially
|
||
|
worked to hysteria by their dancing and religious rites
|
||
|
before he took any steps toward the freeing of Numa.
|
||
|
In the meantime, he hoped, an idea adequate to the
|
||
|
possibilities of the various factors at hand would occur
|
||
|
to him. Nor was it long before one did.
|
||
|
|
||
|
He had swung off through the jungle to search for food
|
||
|
when the plan came to him. At first it made him smile
|
||
|
a little and then look dubious, for he still retained
|
||
|
a vivid memory of the dire results that had followed
|
||
|
the carrying out of a very wonderful idea along almost
|
||
|
identical lines, yet he did not abandon his intention,
|
||
|
and a moment later, food temporarily forgotten, he was
|
||
|
swinging through the middle terraces in rapid flight
|
||
|
toward the stamping ground of the tribe of Kerchak,
|
||
|
the great ape.
|
||
|
|
||
|
As was his wont, he alighted in the midst of the little
|
||
|
band without announcing his approach save by a hideous
|
||
|
scream just as he sprang from a branch above them.
|
||
|
Fortunate are the apes of Kerchak that their kind is
|
||
|
not subject to heart failure, for the methods of Tarzan
|
||
|
subjected them to one severe shock after another,
|
||
|
nor could they ever accustom themselves to the ape-man's
|
||
|
peculiar style of humor.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Now, when they saw who it was they merely snarled and
|
||
|
grumbled angrily for a moment and then resumed their
|
||
|
feeding or their napping which he had interrupted, and he,
|
||
|
having had his little joke, made his way to the hollow tree
|
||
|
where he kept his treasures hid from the inquisitive eyes
|
||
|
and fingers of his fellows and the mischievous little manus.
|
||
|
Here he withdrew a closely rolled hide--the hide of Numa with
|
||
|
the head on; a clever bit of primitive curing and mounting,
|
||
|
which had once been the property of the witch-doctor,
|
||
|
Rabba Kega, until Tarzan had stolen it from the village.
|
||
|
|
||
|
With this he made his way back through the jungle toward
|
||
|
the village of the blacks, stopping to hunt and feed upon
|
||
|
the way, and, in the afternoon, even napping for an hour,
|
||
|
so that it was already dusk when he entered the great
|
||
|
tree which overhung the palisade and gave him a view
|
||
|
of the entire village. He saw that Numa was still alive
|
||
|
and that the guards were even dozing beside the cage.
|
||
|
A lion is no great novelty to a black man in the lion country,
|
||
|
and the first keen edge of their desire to worry the brute
|
||
|
having worn off, the villagers paid little or no attention
|
||
|
to the great cat, preferring now to await the grand event
|
||
|
of the night.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Nor was it long after dark before the festivities commenced.
|
||
|
To the beating of tom-toms, a lone warrior, crouched
|
||
|
half doubled, leaped into the firelight in the center
|
||
|
of a great circle of other warriors, behind whom stood
|
||
|
or squatted the women and the children. The dancer
|
||
|
was painted and armed for the hunt and his movements
|
||
|
and gestures suggested the search for the spoor of game.
|
||
|
Bending low, sometimes resting for a moment on one knee,
|
||
|
he searched the ground for signs of the quarry;
|
||
|
again he poised, statuesque, listening. The warrior
|
||
|
was young and lithe and graceful; he was full-muscled
|
||
|
and arrow-straight. The firelight glistened upon his ebon
|
||
|
body and brought out into bold relief the grotesque
|
||
|
designs painted upon his face, breasts, and abdomen.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Presently he bent low to the earth, then leaped high in air.
|
||
|
Every line of face and body showed that he had struck the scent.
|
||
|
Immediately he leaped toward the circle of warriors about him,
|
||
|
telling them of his find and summoning them to the hunt.
|
||
|
It was all in pantomime; but so truly done that even
|
||
|
Tarzan could follow it all to the least detail.
|
||
|
|
||
|
He saw the other warriors grasp their hunting spears
|
||
|
and leap to their feet to join in the graceful,
|
||
|
stealthy "stalking dance." It was very interesting;
|
||
|
but Tarzan realized that if he was to carry his design
|
||
|
to a successful conclusion he must act quickly.
|
||
|
He had seen these dances before and knew that after
|
||
|
the stalk would come the game at bay and then the kill,
|
||
|
during which Numa would be surrounded by warriors,
|
||
|
and unapproachable.
|
||
|
|
||
|
With the lion's skin under one arm the ape-man dropped
|
||
|
to the ground in the dense shadows beneath the tree and
|
||
|
then circled behind the huts until he came out directly
|
||
|
in the rear of the cage, in which Numa paced nervously
|
||
|
to and fro. The cage was now unguarded, the two warriors
|
||
|
having left it to take their places among the other dancers.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Behind the cage Tarzan adjusted the lion's skin about him,
|
||
|
just as he had upon that memorable occasion when the apes
|
||
|
of Kerchak, failing to pierce his disguise, had all but
|
||
|
slain him. Then, on hands and knees, he crept forward,
|
||
|
emerged from between the two huts and stood a few paces
|
||
|
back of the dusky audience, whose whole attention was
|
||
|
centered upon the dancers before them.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tarzan saw that the blacks had now worked themselves to a
|
||
|
proper pitch of nervous excitement to be ripe for the lion.
|
||
|
In a moment the ring of spectators would break at a point
|
||
|
nearest the caged lion and the victim would be rolled
|
||
|
into the center of the circle. It was for this moment
|
||
|
that Tarzan waited.
|
||
|
|
||
|
At last it came. A signal was given by Mbonga, the chief,
|
||
|
at which the women and children immediately in front
|
||
|
of Tarzan rose and moved to one side, leaving a broad
|
||
|
path opening toward the caged lion. At the same instant
|
||
|
Tarzan gave voice to the low, couching roar of an angry
|
||
|
lion and slunk slowly forward through the open lane toward
|
||
|
the frenzied dancers.
|
||
|
|
||
|
A woman saw him first and screamed. Instantly there
|
||
|
was a panic in the immediate vicinity of the ape-man. The
|
||
|
strong light from the fire fell full upon the lion head
|
||
|
and the blacks leaped to the conclusion, as Tarzan had
|
||
|
known they would, that their captive had escaped his cage.
|
||
|
|
||
|
With another roar, Tarzan moved forward. The dancing
|
||
|
warriors paused but an instant. They had been hunting
|
||
|
a lion securely housed within a strong cage, and now
|
||
|
that he was at liberty among them, an entirely different
|
||
|
aspect was placed upon the matter. Their nerves were not
|
||
|
attuned to this emergency. The women and children already
|
||
|
had fled to the questionable safety of the nearest huts,
|
||
|
and the warriors were not long in following their example,
|
||
|
so that presently Tarzan was left in sole possession
|
||
|
of the village street.
|
||
|
|
||
|
But not for long. Nor did he wish to be left thus
|
||
|
long alone. It would not comport with his scheme.
|
||
|
Presently a head peered forth from a near-by hut, and then
|
||
|
another and another until a score or more of warriors were
|
||
|
looking out upon him, waiting for his next move--waiting
|
||
|
for the lion to charge or to attempt to escape from the village.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Their spears were ready in their hands against either
|
||
|
a charge or a bolt for freedom, and then the lion rose
|
||
|
erect upon its hind legs, the tawny skin dropped from it
|
||
|
and there stood revealed before them in the firelight
|
||
|
the straight young figure of the white devil-god.
|
||
|
|
||
|
For an instant the blacks were too astonished to act.
|
||
|
They feared this apparition fully as much as they did Numa,
|
||
|
yet they would gladly have slain the thing could they
|
||
|
quickly enough have gathered together their wits;
|
||
|
but fear and superstition and a natural mental density
|
||
|
held them paralyzed while the ape-man stooped and gathered
|
||
|
up the lion skin. They saw him turn then and walk
|
||
|
back into the shadows at the far end of the village.
|
||
|
Not until then did they gain courage to pursue him,
|
||
|
and when they had come in force, with brandished spears
|
||
|
and loud war cries, the quarry was gone.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Not an instant did Tarzan pause in the tree. Throwing the
|
||
|
skin over a branch he leaped again into the village upon
|
||
|
the opposite side of the great bole, and diving into the
|
||
|
shadow of a hut, ran quickly to where lay the caged lion.
|
||
|
Springing to the top of the cage he pulled upon the cord
|
||
|
which raised the door, and a moment later a great lion
|
||
|
in the prime of his strength and vigor leaped out into
|
||
|
the village.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The warriors, returning from a futile search for Tarzan,
|
||
|
saw him step into the firelight. Ah! there was the
|
||
|
devil-god again, up to his old trick. Did he think
|
||
|
he could twice fool the men of Mbonga, the chief,
|
||
|
the same way in so short a time? They would show him!
|
||
|
For long they had waited for such an opportunity to rid
|
||
|
themselves forever of this fearsome jungle demon.
|
||
|
As one they rushed forward with raised spears.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The women and the children came from the huts to witness
|
||
|
the slaying of the devil-god. The lion turned blazing eyes
|
||
|
upon them and then swung about toward the advancing warriors.
|
||
|
|
||
|
With shouts of savage joy and triumph they came toward him,
|
||
|
menacing him with their spears. The devil-god was theirs!
|
||
|
|
||
|
And then, with a frightful roar, Numa, the lion, charged.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The men of Mbonga, the chief, met Numa with ready spears
|
||
|
and screams of raillery. In a solid mass of muscled ebony
|
||
|
they waited the coming of the devil-god; yet beneath
|
||
|
their brave exteriors lurked a haunting fear that all
|
||
|
might not be quite well with them--that this strange
|
||
|
creature could yet prove invulnerable to their weapons
|
||
|
and inflict upon them full punishment for their effrontery.
|
||
|
The charging lion was all too lifelike--they saw that in
|
||
|
the brief instant of the charge; but beneath the tawny
|
||
|
hide they knew was hid the soft flesh of the white man,
|
||
|
and how could that withstand the assault of many war spears?
|
||
|
|
||
|
In their forefront stood a huge young warrior in the full
|
||
|
arrogance of his might and his youth. Afraid? Not he! He
|
||
|
laughed as Numa bore down upon him; he laughed and couched
|
||
|
his spear, setting the point for the broad breast.
|
||
|
And then the lion was upon him. A great paw swept away
|
||
|
the heavy war spear, splintering it as the hand of man
|
||
|
might splinter a dry twig.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Down went the black, his skull crushed by another blow.
|
||
|
And then the lion was in the midst of the warriors,
|
||
|
clawing and tearing to right and left. Not for long did
|
||
|
they stand their ground; but a dozen men were mauled before
|
||
|
the others made good their escape from those frightful
|
||
|
talons and gleaming fangs.
|
||
|
|
||
|
In terror the villagers fled hither and thither.
|
||
|
No hut seemed a sufficiently secure asylum with Numa
|
||
|
ranging within the palisade. From one to another fled
|
||
|
the frightened blacks, while in the center of the village
|
||
|
Numa stood glaring and growling above his kills.
|
||
|
|
||
|
At last a tribesman flung wide the gates of the village
|
||
|
and sought safety amid the branches of the forest
|
||
|
trees beyond. Like sheep his fellows followed him,
|
||
|
until the lion and his dead remained alone in the village.
|
||
|
|
||
|
From the nearer trees the men of Mbonga saw the lion lower
|
||
|
his great head and seize one of his victims by the shoulder
|
||
|
and then with slow and stately tread move down the village
|
||
|
street past the open gates and on into the jungle.
|
||
|
They saw and shuddered, and from another tree Tarzan
|
||
|
of the Apes saw and smiled.
|
||
|
|
||
|
A full hour elapsed after the lion had disappeared
|
||
|
with his feast before the blacks ventured down from
|
||
|
the trees and returned to their village. Wide eyes
|
||
|
rolled from side to side, and naked flesh contracted
|
||
|
more to the chill of fear than to the chill of the jungle night.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"It was he all the time," murmured one. "It was the devil-god."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"He changed himself from a lion to a man, and back again
|
||
|
into a lion," whispered another.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"And he dragged Mweeza into the forest and is eating him,"
|
||
|
said a third, shuddering.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"We are no longer safe here," wailed a fourth. "Let us
|
||
|
take our belongings and search for another village site
|
||
|
far from the haunts of the wicked devil-god."
|
||
|
|
||
|
But with morning came renewed courage, so that the
|
||
|
experiences of the preceding evening had little
|
||
|
other effect than to increase their fear of Tarzan
|
||
|
and strengthen their belief in his supernatural origin.
|
||
|
|
||
|
And thus waxed the fame and the power of the ape-man in the
|
||
|
mysterious haunts of the savage jungle where he ranged,
|
||
|
mightiest of beasts because of the man-mind which directed
|
||
|
his giant muscles and his flawless courage.
|
||
|
|
||
|
12
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tarzan Rescues the Moon
|
||
|
|
||
|
THE MOON SHONE down out of a cloudless sky--a huge,
|
||
|
swollen moon that seemed so close to earth that one might
|
||
|
wonder that she did not brush the crooning tree tops.
|
||
|
It was night, and Tarzan was abroad in the jungle--Tarzan,
|
||
|
the ape-man; mighty fighter, mighty hunter. Why he swung
|
||
|
through the dark shadows of the somber forest he could
|
||
|
not have told you. It was not that he was hungry--he had
|
||
|
fed well this day, and in a safe cache were the remains
|
||
|
of his kill, ready against the coming of a new appetite.
|
||
|
Perhaps it was the very joy of living that urged him
|
||
|
from his arboreal couch to pit his muscles and his senses
|
||
|
against the jungle night, and then, too, Tarzan always was
|
||
|
goaded by an intense desire to know.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The jungle which is presided over by Kudu, the sun,
|
||
|
is a very different jungle from that of Goro, the moon.
|
||
|
The diurnal jungle has its own aspect--its own lights
|
||
|
and shades, its own birds, its own blooms, its own beasts;
|
||
|
its noises are the noises of the day. The lights and
|
||
|
shades of the nocturnal jungle are as different as one
|
||
|
might imagine the lights and shades of another world
|
||
|
to differ from those of our world; its beasts, its blooms,
|
||
|
and its birds are not those of the jungle of Kudu,
|
||
|
the sun.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Because of these differences Tarzan loved to investigate
|
||
|
the jungle by night. Not only was the life another life;
|
||
|
but it was richer in numbers and in romance; it was
|
||
|
richer in dangers, too, and to Tarzan of the Apes danger
|
||
|
was the spice of life. And the noises of the jungle
|
||
|
night--the roar of the lion, the scream of the leopard,
|
||
|
the hideous laughter of Dango, the hyena, were music
|
||
|
to the ears of the ape-man.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The soft padding of unseen feet, the rustling of leaves
|
||
|
and grasses to the passage of fierce beasts, the sheen
|
||
|
of opalesque eyes flaming through the dark, the million
|
||
|
sounds which proclaimed the teeming life that one might
|
||
|
hear and scent, though seldom see, constituted the appeal
|
||
|
of the nocturnal jungle to Tarzan.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tonight he had swung a wide circle--toward the east first
|
||
|
and then toward the south, and now he was rounding back again
|
||
|
into the north. His eyes, his ears and his keen nostrils
|
||
|
were ever on the alert. Mingled with the sounds he knew,
|
||
|
there were strange sounds--weird sounds which he never
|
||
|
heard until after Kudu had sought his lair below the far
|
||
|
edge of the big water-sounds which belonged to Goro,
|
||
|
the moon--and to the mysterious period of Goro's supremacy.
|
||
|
These sounds often caused Tarzan profound speculation.
|
||
|
They baffled him because he thought that he knew his jungle
|
||
|
so well that there could be nothing within it unfamiliar to him.
|
||
|
Sometimes he thought that as colors and forms appeared
|
||
|
to differ by night from their familiar daylight aspects,
|
||
|
so sounds altered with the passage of Kudu and the coming
|
||
|
of Goro, and these thoughts roused within his brain a vague
|
||
|
conjecture that perhaps Goro and Kudu influenced these changes.
|
||
|
And what more natural that eventually he came to attribute
|
||
|
to the sun and the moon personalities as real as his
|
||
|
own? The sun was a living creature and ruled the day.
|
||
|
The moon, endowed with brains and miraculous powers,
|
||
|
ruled the night.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Thus functioned the untrained man-mind groping through the
|
||
|
dark night of ignorance for an explanation of the things
|
||
|
he could not touch or smell or hear and of the great,
|
||
|
unknown powers of nature which he could not see.
|
||
|
|
||
|
As Tarzan swung north again upon his wide circle
|
||
|
the scent of the Gomangani came to his nostrils,
|
||
|
mixed with the acrid odor of wood smoke. The ape-man
|
||
|
moved quickly in the direction from which the scent
|
||
|
was borne down to him upon the gentle night wind.
|
||
|
Presently the ruddy sheen of a great fire filtered
|
||
|
through the foliage to him ahead, and when Tarzan came
|
||
|
to a halt in the trees near it, he saw a party of half
|
||
|
a dozen black warriors huddled close to the blaze.
|
||
|
It was evidently a hunting party from the village of Mbonga,
|
||
|
the chief, caught out in the jungle after dark.
|
||
|
In a rude circle about them they had constructed a thorn
|
||
|
boma which, with the aid of the fire, they apparently
|
||
|
hoped would discourage the advances of the larger carnivora.
|
||
|
|
||
|
That hope was not conviction was evidenced by the very palpable
|
||
|
terror in which they crouched, wide-eyed and trembling,
|
||
|
for already Numa and Sabor were moaning through the jungle
|
||
|
toward them. There were other creatures, too, in the shadows
|
||
|
beyond the firelight. Tarzan could see their yellow
|
||
|
eyes flaming there. The blacks saw them and shivered.
|
||
|
Then one arose and grasping a burning branch from the fire
|
||
|
hurled it at the eyes, which immediately disappeared.
|
||
|
The black sat down again. Tarzan watched and saw that it
|
||
|
was several minutes before the eyes began to reappear
|
||
|
in twos and fours.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Then came Numa, the lion, and Sabor, his mate. The other
|
||
|
eyes scattered to right and left before the menacing
|
||
|
growls of the great cats, and then the huge orbs of the
|
||
|
man-eaters flamed alone out of the darkness. Some of
|
||
|
the blacks threw themselves upon their faces and moaned;
|
||
|
but he who before had hurled the burning branch now
|
||
|
hurled another straight at the faces of the hungry lions,
|
||
|
and they, too, disappeared as had the lesser lights
|
||
|
before them. Tarzan was much interested. He saw a new
|
||
|
reason for the nightly fires maintained by the blacks--a
|
||
|
reason in addition to those connected with warmth and
|
||
|
light and cooking. The beasts of the jungle feared fire,
|
||
|
and so fire was, in a measure, a protection from them.
|
||
|
Tarzan himself knew a certain awe of fire. Once he had,
|
||
|
in investigating an abandoned fire in the village of the blacks,
|
||
|
picked up a live coal. Since then he had maintained
|
||
|
a respectful distance from such fires as he had seen.
|
||
|
One experience had sufficed.
|
||
|
|
||
|
For a few minutes after the black hurled the firebrand no
|
||
|
eyes appeared, though Tarzan could hear the soft padding
|
||
|
of feet all about him. Then flashed once more the twin
|
||
|
fire spots that marked the return of the lord of the
|
||
|
jungle and a moment later, upon a slightly lower level,
|
||
|
there appeared those of Sabor, his mate.
|
||
|
|
||
|
For some time they remained fixed and unwavering--a
|
||
|
constellation of fierce stars in the jungle night--then
|
||
|
the male lion advanced slowly toward the boma, where all
|
||
|
but a single black still crouched in trembling terror.
|
||
|
When this lone guardian saw that Numa was again approaching,
|
||
|
he threw another firebrand, and, as before, Numa retreated
|
||
|
and with him Sabor, the lioness; but not so far, this time,
|
||
|
nor for so long. Almost instantly they turned and began
|
||
|
circling the boma, their eyes turning constantly toward
|
||
|
the firelight, while low, throaty growls evidenced their
|
||
|
increasing displeasure. Beyond the lions glowed the flaming
|
||
|
eyes of the lesser satellites, until the black jungle was
|
||
|
shot all around the black men's camp with little spots of fire.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Again and again the black warrior hurled his puny brands at
|
||
|
the two big cats; but Tarzan noticed that Numa paid little
|
||
|
or no attention to them after the first few retreats.
|
||
|
The ape-man knew by Numa's voice that the lion was hungry
|
||
|
and surmised that he had made up his mind to feed upon
|
||
|
a Gomangani; but would he dare a closer approach to the
|
||
|
dreaded flames?
|
||
|
|
||
|
Even as the thought was passing in Tarzan's mind,
|
||
|
Numa stopped his restless pacing and faced the boma.
|
||
|
For a moment he stood motionless, except for the quick,
|
||
|
nervous upcurving of his tail, then he walked deliberately
|
||
|
forward, while Sabor moved restlessly to and fro where he
|
||
|
had left her. The black man called to his comrades
|
||
|
that the lion was coming, but they were too far gone
|
||
|
in fear to do more than huddle closer together and moan
|
||
|
more loudly than before.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Seizing a blazing branch the man cast it straight
|
||
|
into the face of the lion. There was an angry roar,
|
||
|
followed by a swift charge. With a single bound
|
||
|
the savage beast cleared the boma wall as, with almost
|
||
|
equal agility, the warrior cleared it upon the opposite
|
||
|
side and, chancing the dangers lurking in the darkness,
|
||
|
bolted for the nearest tree.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Numa was out of the boma almost as soon as he was inside it;
|
||
|
but as he went back over the low thorn wall, he took
|
||
|
a screaming negro with him. Dragging his victim along
|
||
|
the ground he walked back toward Sabor, the lioness,
|
||
|
who joined him, and the two continued into the blackness,
|
||
|
their savage growls mingling with the piercing shrieks of
|
||
|
the doomed and terrified man.
|
||
|
|
||
|
At a little distance from the blaze the lions halted,
|
||
|
there ensued a short succession of unusually vicious growls
|
||
|
and roars, during which the cries and moans of the black
|
||
|
man ceased--forever.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Presently Numa reappeared in the firelight. He made
|
||
|
a second trip into the boma and the former grisly tragedy
|
||
|
was reenacted with another howling victim.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tarzan rose and stretched lazily. The entertainment
|
||
|
was beginning to bore him. He yawned and turned upon
|
||
|
his way toward the clearing where the tribe would
|
||
|
be sleeping in the encircling trees.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Yet even when he had found his familiar crotch and curled
|
||
|
himself for slumber, he felt no desire to sleep.
|
||
|
For a long time he lay awake thinking and dreaming.
|
||
|
He looked up into the heavens and watched the moon and
|
||
|
the stars. He wondered what they were and what power
|
||
|
kept them from falling. His was an inquisitive mind.
|
||
|
Always he had been full of questions concerning all that
|
||
|
passed around him; but there never had been one to answer
|
||
|
his questions. In childhood he had wanted to KNOW, and,
|
||
|
denied almost all knowledge, he still, in manhood,
|
||
|
was filled with the great, unsatisfied curiosity of
|
||
|
a child.
|
||
|
|
||
|
He was never quite content merely to perceive that things
|
||
|
happened--he desired to know WHY they happened.
|
||
|
He wanted to know what made things go. The secret
|
||
|
of life interested him immensely. The miracle of death
|
||
|
he could not quite fathom. Upon innumerable occasions
|
||
|
he had investigated the internal mechanism of his kills,
|
||
|
and once or twice he had opened the chest cavity of victims
|
||
|
in time to see the heart still pumping.
|
||
|
|
||
|
He had learned from experience that a knife thrust through
|
||
|
this organ brought immediate death nine times out of ten,
|
||
|
while he might stab an antagonist innumerable times
|
||
|
in other places without even disabling him. And so he
|
||
|
had come to think of the heart, or, as he called it,
|
||
|
"the red thing that breathes," as the seat and origin
|
||
|
of life.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The brain and its functionings he did not comprehend at all.
|
||
|
That his sense perceptions were transmitted to his brain
|
||
|
and there translated, classified, and labeled was something
|
||
|
quite beyond him. He thought that his fingers knew when
|
||
|
they touched something, that his eyes knew when they saw,
|
||
|
his ears when they heard, his nose when it scented.
|
||
|
|
||
|
He considered his throat, epidermis, and the hairs
|
||
|
of his head as the three principal seats of emotion.
|
||
|
When Kala had been slain a peculiar choking sensation
|
||
|
had possessed his throat; contact with Histah, the snake,
|
||
|
imparted an unpleasant sensation to the skin of his whole body;
|
||
|
while the approach of an enemy made the hairs on his scalp
|
||
|
stand erect.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Imagine, if you can, a child filled with the wonders
|
||
|
of nature, bursting with queries and surrounded only
|
||
|
by beasts of the jungle to whom his questionings were
|
||
|
as strange as Sanskrit would have been. If he asked
|
||
|
Gunto what made it rain, the big old ape would but gaze
|
||
|
at him in dumb astonishment for an instant and then
|
||
|
return to his interesting and edifying search for fleas;
|
||
|
and when he questioned Mumga, who was very old and should
|
||
|
have been very wise, but wasn't, as to the reason for
|
||
|
the closing of certain flowers after Kudu had deserted
|
||
|
the sky, and the opening of others during the night,
|
||
|
he was surprised to discover that Mumga had never
|
||
|
noticed these interesting facts, though she could tell
|
||
|
to an inch just where the fattest grubworm should be hiding.
|
||
|
|
||
|
To Tarzan these things were wonders. They appealed to his
|
||
|
intellect and to his imagination. He saw the flowers
|
||
|
close and open; he saw certain blooms which turned their
|
||
|
faces always toward the sun; he saw leaves which moved
|
||
|
when there was no breeze; he saw vines crawl like living
|
||
|
things up the boles and over the branches of great trees;
|
||
|
and to Tarzan of the Apes the flowers and the vines and
|
||
|
the trees were living creatures. He often talked to them,
|
||
|
as he talked to Goro, the moon, and Kudu, the sun,
|
||
|
and always was he disappointed that they did not reply.
|
||
|
He asked them questions; but they could not answer,
|
||
|
though he knew that the whispering of the leaves was the
|
||
|
language of the leaves--they talked with one another.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The wind he attributed to the trees and grasses. He thought
|
||
|
that they swayed themselves to and fro, creating the wind.
|
||
|
In no other way could he account for this phenomenon.
|
||
|
The rain he finally attributed to the stars, the moon,
|
||
|
and the sun; but his hypothesis was entirely unlovely
|
||
|
and unpoetical.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tonight as Tarzan lay thinking, there sprang to his fertile
|
||
|
imagination an explanation of the stars and the moon.
|
||
|
He became quite excited about it. Taug was sleeping
|
||
|
in a nearby crotch. Tarzan swung over beside him.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Taug!" he cried. Instantly the great bull was awake
|
||
|
and bristling, sensing danger from the nocturnal summons.
|
||
|
"Look, Taug!" exclaimed Tarzan, pointing toward the stars.
|
||
|
"See the eyes of Numa and Sabor, of Sheeta and Dango.
|
||
|
They wait around Goro to leap in upon him for their kill.
|
||
|
See the eyes and the nose and the mouth of Goro. And the
|
||
|
light that shines upon his face is the light of the great
|
||
|
fire he has built to frighten away Numa and Sabor and Dango
|
||
|
and Sheeta.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"All about him are the eyes, Taug, you can see them! But
|
||
|
they do not come very close to the fire--there are few
|
||
|
eyes close to Goro. They fear the fire! It is the fire
|
||
|
that saves Goro from Numa. Do you see them, Taug? Some
|
||
|
night Numa will be very hungry and very angry--then he
|
||
|
will leap over the thorn bushes which encircle Goro and we
|
||
|
will have no more light after Kudu seeks his lair--the
|
||
|
night will be black with the blackness that comes when
|
||
|
Goro is lazy and sleeps late into the night, or when he
|
||
|
wanders through the skies by day, forgetting the jungle
|
||
|
and its people."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Taug looked stupidly at the heavens and then at Tarzan.
|
||
|
A meteor fell, blazing a flaming way through the sky.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Look!" cried Tarzan. "Goro has thrown a burning branch
|
||
|
at Numa."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Taug grumbled. "Numa is down below," he said. "Numa does
|
||
|
not hunt above the trees." But he looked curiously
|
||
|
and a little fearfully at the bright stars above him,
|
||
|
as though he saw them for the first time, and doubtless
|
||
|
it was the first time that Taug ever had seen the stars,
|
||
|
though they had been in the sky above him every night
|
||
|
of his life. To Taug they were as the gorgeous jungle
|
||
|
blooms--he could not eat them and so he ignored them.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Taug fidgeted and was nervous. For a long time he
|
||
|
lay sleepless, watching the stars--the flaming eyes
|
||
|
of the beasts of prey surrounding Goro, the moon--Goro,
|
||
|
by whose light the apes danced to the beating of their
|
||
|
earthen drums. If Goro should be eaten by Numa there could
|
||
|
be no more Dum-Dums. Taug was overwhelmed by the thought.
|
||
|
He glanced at Tarzan half fearfully. Why was his friend
|
||
|
so different from the others of the tribe? No one else whom
|
||
|
Taug ever had known had had such queer thoughts as Tarzan.
|
||
|
The ape scratched his head and wondered, dimly, if Tarzan
|
||
|
was a safe companion, and then he recalled slowly,
|
||
|
and by a laborious mental process, that Tarzan had served
|
||
|
him better than any other of the apes, even the strong
|
||
|
and wise bulls of the tribe.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tarzan it was who had freed him from the blacks at the
|
||
|
very time that Taug had thought Tarzan wanted Teeka.
|
||
|
It was Tarzan who had saved Taug's little balu from death.
|
||
|
It was Tarzan who had conceived and carried out the plan
|
||
|
to pursue Teeka's abductor and rescue the stolen one.
|
||
|
Tarzan had fought and bled in Taug's service so many times
|
||
|
that Taug, although only a brutal ape, had had impressed
|
||
|
upon his mind a fierce loyalty which nothing now could
|
||
|
swerve--his friendship for Tarzan had become a habit,
|
||
|
a tradition almost, which would endure while Taug endured.
|
||
|
He never showed any outward demonstration of affection--he
|
||
|
growled at Tarzan as he growled at the other bulls
|
||
|
who came too close while he was feeding--but he would
|
||
|
have died for Tarzan. He knew it and Tarzan knew it;
|
||
|
but of such things apes do not speak--their vocabulary,
|
||
|
for the finer instincts, consisting more of actions
|
||
|
than words. But now Taug was worried, and he fell
|
||
|
asleep again still thinking of the strange words of
|
||
|
his fellow.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The following day he thought of them again, and without
|
||
|
any intention of disloyalty he mentioned to Gunto what
|
||
|
Tarzan had suggested about the eyes surrounding Goro,
|
||
|
and the possibility that sooner or later Numa would
|
||
|
charge the moon and devour him. To the apes all large
|
||
|
things in nature are male, and so Goro, being the largest
|
||
|
creature in the heavens by night, was, to them, a bull.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Gunto bit a sliver from a horny finger and recalled
|
||
|
the fact that Tarzan had once said that the trees talked
|
||
|
to one another, and Gozan recounted having seen the ape-man
|
||
|
dancing alone in the moonlight with Sheeta, the panther.
|
||
|
They did not know that Tarzan had roped the savage beast
|
||
|
and tied him to a tree before he came to earth and leaped
|
||
|
about before the rearing cat, to tantalize him.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Others told of seeing Tarzan ride upon the back of Tantor,
|
||
|
the elephant; of his bringing the black boy, Tibo,
|
||
|
to the tribe, and of mysterious things with which he
|
||
|
communed in the strange lair by the sea. They had never
|
||
|
understood his books, and after he had shown them to one
|
||
|
or two of the tribe and discovered that even the pictures
|
||
|
carried no impression to their brains, he had desisted.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Tarzan is not an ape," said Gunto. "He will bring
|
||
|
Numa to eat us, as he is bringing him to eat Goro.
|
||
|
We should kill him."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Immediately Taug bristled. Kill Tarzan! "First you will
|
||
|
kill Taug," he said, and lumbered away to search for food.
|
||
|
|
||
|
But others joined the plotters. They thought of many
|
||
|
things which Tarzan had done--things which apes did not do
|
||
|
and could not understand. Again Gunto voiced the opinion
|
||
|
that the Tarmangani, the white ape, should be slain,
|
||
|
and the others, filled with terror about the stories they
|
||
|
had heard, and thinking Tarzan was planning to slay Goro,
|
||
|
greeted the proposal with growls of accord.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Among them was Teeka, listening with all her ears;
|
||
|
but her voice was not raised in furtherance of the plan.
|
||
|
Instead she bristled, showing her fangs, and afterward
|
||
|
she went away in search of Tarzan; but she could not
|
||
|
find him, as he was roaming far afield in search of meat.
|
||
|
She found Taug, though, and told him what the others
|
||
|
were planning, and the great bull stamped upon the ground
|
||
|
and roared. His bloodshot eyes blazed with wrath,
|
||
|
his upper lip curled up to expose his fighting fangs,
|
||
|
and the hair upon his spine stood erect, and then a rodent
|
||
|
scurried across the open and Taug sprang to seize it.
|
||
|
In an instant he seemed to have forgotten his rage
|
||
|
against the enemies of his friend; but such is the mind of
|
||
|
an ape.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Several miles away Tarzan of the Apes lolled upon the
|
||
|
broad head of Tantor, the elephant. He scratched beneath
|
||
|
the great ears with the point of a sharp stick, and he
|
||
|
talked to the huge pachyderm of everything which filled
|
||
|
his black-thatched head. Little, or nothing, of what he
|
||
|
said did Tantor understand; but Tantor is a good listener.
|
||
|
Swaying from side to side he stood there enjoying
|
||
|
the companionship of his friend, the friend he loved,
|
||
|
and absorbing the delicious sensations of the scratching.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Numa, the lion, caught the scent of man, and warily stalked
|
||
|
it until he came within sight of his prey upon the head
|
||
|
of the mighty tusker; then he turned, growling and muttering,
|
||
|
away in search of more propitious hunting grounds.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The elephant caught the scent of the lion, borne to him by
|
||
|
an eddying breeze, and lifting his trunk trumpeted loudly.
|
||
|
Tarzan stretched back luxuriously, lying supine at full
|
||
|
length along the rough hide. Flies swarmed about his face;
|
||
|
but with a leafy branch torn from a tree he lazily brushed
|
||
|
them away.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Tantor," he said, "it is good to be alive. It is good
|
||
|
to lie in the cool shadows. It is good to look upon
|
||
|
the green trees and the bright colors of the flowers--upon
|
||
|
everything which Bulamutumumo has put here for us.
|
||
|
He is very good to us, Tantor; He has given you tender leaves
|
||
|
and bark, and rich grasses to eat; to me He has given Bara
|
||
|
and Horta and Pisah, the fruits and the nuts and the roots.
|
||
|
He provides for each the food that each likes best.
|
||
|
All that He asks is that we be strong enough or cunning enough
|
||
|
to go forth and take it. Yes, Tantor, it is good to live.
|
||
|
I should hate to die."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tantor made a little sound in his throat and curled his
|
||
|
trunk upward that he might caress the ape-man's cheek
|
||
|
with the finger at its tip.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Tantor," said Tarzan presently, "turn and feed in
|
||
|
the direction of the tribe of Kerchak, the great ape,
|
||
|
that Tarzan may ride home upon your head without walking."
|
||
|
|
||
|
The tusker turned and moved slowly off along a broad,
|
||
|
tree-arched trail, pausing occasionally to pluck a tender
|
||
|
branch, or strip the edible bark from an adjacent tree.
|
||
|
Tarzan sprawled face downward upon the beast's head and back,
|
||
|
his legs hanging on either side, his head supported by his
|
||
|
open palms, his elbows resting on the broad cranium.
|
||
|
And thus they made their leisurely way toward the gathering
|
||
|
place of the tribe.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Just before they arrived at the clearing from the north
|
||
|
there reached it from the south another figure--that
|
||
|
of a well-knit black warrior, who stepped cautiously
|
||
|
through the jungle, every sense upon the alert against
|
||
|
the many dangers which might lurk anywhere along the way.
|
||
|
Yet he passed beneath the southernmost sentry that was
|
||
|
posted in a great tree commanding the trail from the south.
|
||
|
The ape permitted the Gomangani to pass unmolested, for he
|
||
|
saw that he was alone; but the moment that the warrior
|
||
|
had entered the clearing a loud "Kreeg-ah!" rang out from
|
||
|
behind him, immediately followed by a chorus of replies
|
||
|
from different directions, as the great bulls crashed
|
||
|
through the trees in answer to the summons of their fellow.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The black man halted at the first cry and looked about him.
|
||
|
He could see nothing, but he knew the voice of the hairy
|
||
|
tree men whom he and his kind feared, not alone because
|
||
|
of the strength and ferocity of the savage beings,
|
||
|
but as well through a superstitious terror engendered
|
||
|
by the manlike appearance of the apes.
|
||
|
|
||
|
But Bulabantu was no coward. He heard the apes all about him;
|
||
|
he knew that escape was probably impossible, so he stood
|
||
|
his ground, his spear ready in his hand and a war cry
|
||
|
trembling on his lips. He would sell his life dearly,
|
||
|
would Bulabantu, under-chief of the village of Mbonga,
|
||
|
the chief.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tarzan and Tantor were but a short distance away when the
|
||
|
first cry of the sentry rang out through the quiet jungle.
|
||
|
Like a flash the ape-man leaped from the elephant's
|
||
|
back to a near-by tree and was swinging rapidly
|
||
|
in the direction of the clearing before the echoes
|
||
|
of the first "Kreeg-ah" had died away. When he arrived
|
||
|
he saw a dozen bulls circling a single Gomangani.
|
||
|
With a blood-curdling scream Tarzan sprang to the attack.
|
||
|
He hated the blacks even more than did the apes,
|
||
|
and here was an opportunity for a kill in the open.
|
||
|
What had the Gomangani done? Had he slain one of the tribe?
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tarzan asked the nearest ape. No, the Gomangani had
|
||
|
harmed none. Gozan, being on watch, had seen him coming
|
||
|
through the forest and had warned the tribe--that was all.
|
||
|
The ape-man pushed through the circle of bulls, none of
|
||
|
which as yet had worked himself into sufficient frenzy
|
||
|
for a charge, and came where he had a full and close
|
||
|
view of the black. He recognized the man instantly.
|
||
|
Only the night before he had seen him facing the eyes
|
||
|
in the dark, while his fellows groveled in the dirt
|
||
|
at his feet, too terrified even to defend themselves.
|
||
|
Here was a brave man, and Tarzan had deep admiration
|
||
|
for bravery. Even his hatred of the blacks was not so
|
||
|
strong a passion as his love of courage. He would have
|
||
|
joyed in battling with a black warrior at almost any time;
|
||
|
but this one he did not wish to kill--he felt, vaguely,
|
||
|
that the man had earned his life by his brave defense
|
||
|
of it on the preceding night, nor did he fancy the odds
|
||
|
that were pitted against the lone warrior.
|
||
|
|
||
|
He turned to the apes. "Go back to your feeding,"
|
||
|
he said, "and let this Gomangani go his way in peace.
|
||
|
He has not harmed us, and last night I saw him fighting Numa
|
||
|
and Sabor with fire, alone in the jungle. He is brave.
|
||
|
Why should we kill one who is brave and who has not attacked
|
||
|
us? Let him go."
|
||
|
|
||
|
The apes growled. They were displeased. "Kill the Gomangani!"
|
||
|
cried one.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Yes." roared another, "kill the Gomangani and the
|
||
|
Tarmangani as well."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Kill the white ape!" screamed Gozan, "he is no ape at all;
|
||
|
but a Gomangani with his skin off."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Kill Tarzan!" bellowed Gunto. "Kill! Kill! Kill!"
|
||
|
|
||
|
The bulls were now indeed working themselves into the frenzy
|
||
|
of slaughter; but against Tarzan rather than the black man.
|
||
|
A shaggy form charged through them, hurling those it
|
||
|
came in contact with to one side as a strong man might
|
||
|
scatter children. It was Taug--great, savage Taug.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Who says 'kill Tarzan'?" he demanded. "Who kills Tarzan
|
||
|
must kill Taug, too. Who can kill Taug? Taug will tear
|
||
|
your insides from you and feed them to Dango."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"We can kill you all," replied Gunto. "There are many
|
||
|
of us and few of you," and he was right. Tarzan knew
|
||
|
that he was right. Taug knew it; but neither would admit
|
||
|
such a possibility. It is not the way of bull apes.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I am Tarzan," cried the ape-man. "I am Tarzan.
|
||
|
Mighty hunter; mighty fighter. In all the jungle none
|
||
|
so great as Tarzan."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Then, one by one, the opposing bulls recounted their virtues
|
||
|
and their prowess. And all the time the combatants came
|
||
|
closer and closer to one another. Thus do the bulls work
|
||
|
themselves to the proper pitch before engaging in battle.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Gunto came, stiff-legged, close to Tarzan and sniffed at him,
|
||
|
with bared fangs. Tarzan rumbled forth a low, menacing growl.
|
||
|
They might repeat these tactics a dozen times; but sooner
|
||
|
or later one bull would close with another and then the
|
||
|
whole hideous pack would be tearing and rending at their prey.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Bulabantu, the black man, had stood wide-eyed in wonder from
|
||
|
the moment he had seen Tarzan approaching through the apes.
|
||
|
He had heard much of this devil-god who ran with the
|
||
|
hairy tree people; but never before had he seen him in
|
||
|
full daylight. He knew him well enough from the description
|
||
|
of those who had seen him and from the glimpses he had had
|
||
|
of the marauder upon several occasions when the ape-man
|
||
|
had entered the village of Mbonga, the chief, by night,
|
||
|
in the perpetration of one of his numerous ghastly jokes.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Bulabantu could not, of course, understand anything
|
||
|
which passed between Tarzan and the apes; but he saw
|
||
|
that the ape-man and one of the larger bulls were in
|
||
|
argument with the others. He saw that these two were
|
||
|
standing with their back toward him and between him
|
||
|
and the balance of the tribe, and he guessed, though it
|
||
|
seemed improbable, that they might be defending him.
|
||
|
He knew that Tarzan had once spared the life of Mbonga,
|
||
|
the chief, and that he had succored Tibo, and Tibo's
|
||
|
mother, Momaya. So it was not impossible that he would
|
||
|
help Bulabantu; but how he could accomplish it Bulabantu
|
||
|
could not guess; nor as a matter of fact could Tarzan,
|
||
|
for the odds against him were too great.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Gunto and the others were slowly forcing Tarzan and Taug
|
||
|
back toward Bulabantu. The ape-man thought of his words
|
||
|
with Tantor just a short time before: "Yes, Tantor,
|
||
|
it is good to live. I should hate to die." And now
|
||
|
he knew that he was about to die, for the temper
|
||
|
of the great bulls was mounting rapidly against him.
|
||
|
Always had many of them hated him, and all were suspicious
|
||
|
of him. They knew he was different. Tarzan knew it too;
|
||
|
but he was glad that he was--he was a MAN; that he had
|
||
|
learned from his picture-books, and he was very proud of
|
||
|
the distinction. Presently, though, he would be a dead man.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Gunto was preparing to charge. Tarzan knew the signs.
|
||
|
He knew that the balance of the bulls would charge
|
||
|
with Gunto. Then it would soon be over. Something moved
|
||
|
among the verdure at the opposite side of the clearing.
|
||
|
Tarzan saw it just as Gunto, with the terrifying cry
|
||
|
of a challenging ape, sprang forward. Tarzan voiced
|
||
|
a peculiar call and then crouched to meet the assault.
|
||
|
Taug crouched, too, and Bulabantu, assured now that
|
||
|
these two were fighting upon his side, couched his spear
|
||
|
and sprang between them to receive the first charge of
|
||
|
the enemy.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Simultaneously a huge bulk broke into the clearing
|
||
|
from the jungle behind the charging bulls.
|
||
|
The trumpeting of a mad tusker rose shrill above
|
||
|
the cries of the anthropoids, as Tantor, the elephant,
|
||
|
dashed swiftly across the clearing to the aid of his friend.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Gunto never closed upon the ape-man, nor did a fang enter
|
||
|
flesh upon either side. The terrific reverberation of
|
||
|
Tantor's challenge sent the bulls scurrying to the trees,
|
||
|
jabbering and scolding. Taug raced off with them.
|
||
|
Only Tarzan and Bulabantu remained. The latter stood
|
||
|
his ground because he saw that the devil-god did not run,
|
||
|
and because the black had the courage to face a certain
|
||
|
and horrible death beside one who had quite evidently dared
|
||
|
death for him.
|
||
|
|
||
|
But it was a surprised Gomangani who saw the mighty
|
||
|
elephant come to a sudden halt in front of the ape-man
|
||
|
and caress him with his long, sinuous trunk.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tarzan turned toward the black man. "Go!" he said in
|
||
|
the language of the apes, and pointed in the direction
|
||
|
of the village of Mbonga. Bulabantu understood the gesture,
|
||
|
if not the word, nor did he lose time in obeying.
|
||
|
Tarzan stood watching him until he had disappeared.
|
||
|
He knew that the apes would not follow. Then he said
|
||
|
to the elephant: "Pick me up!" and the tusker swung him
|
||
|
lightly to his head.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Tarzan goes to his lair by the big water," shouted the
|
||
|
ape-man to the apes in the trees. "All of you are more
|
||
|
foolish than Manu, except Taug and Teeka. Taug and Teeka
|
||
|
may come to see Tarzan; but the others must keep away.
|
||
|
Tarzan is done with the tribe of Kerchak."
|
||
|
|
||
|
He prodded Tantor with a calloused toe and the big beast
|
||
|
swung off across the clearing, the apes watching them
|
||
|
until they were swallowed up by the jungle.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Before the night fell Taug killed Gunto, picking a quarrel
|
||
|
with him over his attack upon Tarzan.
|
||
|
|
||
|
For a moon the tribe saw nothing of Tarzan of the Apes.
|
||
|
Many of them probably never gave him a thought; but there
|
||
|
were those who missed him more than Tarzan imagined.
|
||
|
Taug and Teeka often wished that he was back, and Taug determined
|
||
|
a dozen times to go and visit Tarzan in his seaside lair;
|
||
|
but first one thing and then another interfered.
|
||
|
|
||
|
One night when Taug lay sleepless looking up at the starry
|
||
|
heavens he recalled the strange things that Tarzan once
|
||
|
had suggested to him--that the bright spots were the eyes
|
||
|
of the meat-eaters waiting in the dark of the jungle
|
||
|
sky to leap upon Goro, the moon, and devour him.
|
||
|
The more he thought about this matter the more perturbed
|
||
|
he became.
|
||
|
|
||
|
And then a strange thing happened. Even as Taug looked
|
||
|
at Goro, he saw a portion of one edge disappear,
|
||
|
precisely as though something was gnawing upon it.
|
||
|
Larger and larger became the hole in the side of Goro.
|
||
|
With a scream, Taug leaped to his feet. His frenzied
|
||
|
"Kreeg-ahs!" brought the terrified tribe screaming and
|
||
|
chattering toward him.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Look!" cried Taug, pointing at the moon. "Look! It
|
||
|
is as Tarzan said. Numa has sprung through the fires
|
||
|
and is devouring Goro. You called Tarzan names and
|
||
|
drove him from the tribe; now see how wise he was.
|
||
|
Let one of you who hated Tarzan go to Goro's aid.
|
||
|
See the eyes in the dark jungle all about Goro. He is
|
||
|
in danger and none can help him--none except Tarzan.
|
||
|
Soon Goro will be devoured by Numa and we shall have no
|
||
|
more light after Kudu seeks his lair. How shall we dance
|
||
|
the Dum-Dum without the light of Goro?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
The apes trembled and whimpered. Any manifestation
|
||
|
of the powers of nature always filled them with terror,
|
||
|
for they could not understand.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Go and bring Tarzan," cried one, and then they all took up
|
||
|
the cry of "Tarzan!" "Bring Tarzan!" "He will save Goro."
|
||
|
But who was to travel the dark jungle by night to fetch
|
||
|
him?
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I will go," volunteered Taug, and an instant later he
|
||
|
was off through the Stygian gloom toward the little
|
||
|
land-locked harbor by the sea.
|
||
|
|
||
|
And as the tribe waited they watched the slow devouring
|
||
|
of the moon. Already Numa had eaten out a great
|
||
|
semicircular piece. At that rate Goro would be entirely gone
|
||
|
before Kudu came again. The apes trembled at the thought
|
||
|
of perpetual darkness by night. They could not sleep.
|
||
|
Restlessly they moved here and there among the branches
|
||
|
of trees, watching Numa of the skies at his deadly feast,
|
||
|
and listening for the coming of Taug with Tarzan.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Goro was nearly gone when the apes heard the sounds of
|
||
|
the approach through the trees of the two they awaited,
|
||
|
and presently Tarzan, followed by Taug, swung into
|
||
|
a nearby tree.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The ape-man wasted no time in idle words. In his hand was
|
||
|
his long bow and at his back hung a quiver full of arrows,
|
||
|
poisoned arrows that he had stolen from the village of
|
||
|
the blacks; just as he had stolen the bow. Up into a great
|
||
|
tree he clambered, higher and higher until he stood swaying
|
||
|
upon a small limb which bent low beneath his weight.
|
||
|
Here he had a clear and unobstructed view of the heavens.
|
||
|
He saw Goro and the inroads which the hungry Numa had made
|
||
|
into his shining surface.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Raising his face to the moon, Tarzan shrilled forth
|
||
|
his hideous challenge. Faintly and from afar came
|
||
|
the roar of an answering lion. The apes shivered.
|
||
|
Numa of the skies had answered Tarzan.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Then the ape-man fitted an arrow to his bow, and drawing
|
||
|
the shaft far back, aimed its point at the heart of Numa
|
||
|
where he lay in the heavens devouring Goro. There was a loud
|
||
|
twang as the released bolt shot into the dark heavens.
|
||
|
Again and again did Tarzan of the Apes launch his arrows
|
||
|
at Numa, and all the while the apes of the tribe of Kerchak
|
||
|
huddled together in terror.
|
||
|
|
||
|
At last came a cry from Taug. "Look! Look!" he screamed.
|
||
|
"Numa is killed. Tarzan has killed Numa. See! Goro is
|
||
|
emerging from the belly of Numa," and, sure enough, the moon
|
||
|
was gradually emerging from whatever had devoured her,
|
||
|
whether it was Numa, the lion, or the shadow of the earth;
|
||
|
but were you to try to convince an ape of the tribe of
|
||
|
Kerchak that it was aught but Numa who so nearly devoured
|
||
|
Goro that night, or that another than Tarzan preserved
|
||
|
the brilliant god of their savage and mysterious rites
|
||
|
from a frightful death, you would have difficulty--and
|
||
|
a fight on your hands.
|
||
|
|
||
|
And so Tarzan of the Apes came back to the tribe of Kerchak,
|
||
|
and in his coming he took a long stride toward the kingship,
|
||
|
which he ultimately won, for now the apes looked up to him
|
||
|
as a superior being.
|
||
|
|
||
|
In all the tribe there was but one who was at all
|
||
|
skeptical about the plausibility of Tarzan's remarkable
|
||
|
rescue of Goro, and that one, strange as it may seem,
|
||
|
was Tarzan of the Apes.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[End.]
|
||
|
.
|