11
Tarzan Becomes a Beast Again
For a moment Werper had stood above
the sleeping ape-man, his murderous knife poised for
the fatal thrust; but fear stayed his hand.
What if the first blow should fail to drive the point
to his victim’s heart? Werper shuddered
in contemplation of the disastrous consequences to
himself. Awakened, and even with a few moments
of life remaining, the giant could literally tear his
assailant to pieces should he choose, and the Belgian
had no doubt but that Tarzan would so choose.
Again came the soft sound of padded
footsteps in the reeds—closer this time.
Werper abandoned his design. Before him stretched
the wide plain and escape. The jewels were in
his possession. To remain longer was to risk
death at the hands of Tarzan, or the jaws of the hunter
creeping ever nearer. Turning, he slunk away
through the night, toward the distant forest.
Tarzan slept on. Where were
those uncanny, guardian powers that had formerly rendered
him immune from the dangers of surprise? Could
this dull sleeper be the alert, sensitive Tarzan of
old?
Perhaps the blow upon his head had
numbed his senses, temporarily—who may
say? Closer crept the stealthy creature through
the reeds. The rustling curtain of vegetation
parted a few paces from where the sleeper lay, and
the massive head of a lion appeared. The beast
surveyed the ape-man intently for a moment, then he
crouched, his hind feet drawn well beneath him, his
tail lashing from side to side.
It was the beating of the beast’s
tail against the reeds which awakened Tarzan.
Jungle folk do not awaken slowly—instantly,
full consciousness and full command of their every
faculty returns to them from the depth of profound
slumber.
Even as Tarzan opened his eyes he
was upon his feet, his spear grasped firmly in his
hand and ready for attack. Again was he Tarzan
of the Apes, sentient, vigilant, ready.
No two lions have identical characteristics,
nor does the same lion invariably act similarly under
like circumstances. Whether it was surprise,
fear or caution which prompted the lion crouching ready
to spring upon the man, is immaterial—the
fact remains that he did not carry out his original
design, he did not spring at the man at all, but,
instead, wheeled and sprang back into the reeds as
Tarzan arose and confronted him.
The ape-man shrugged his broad shoulders
and looked about for his companion. Werper was
nowhere to be seen. At first Tarzan suspected
that the man had been seized and dragged off by another
lion, but upon examination of the ground he soon discovered
that the Belgian had gone away alone out into the
plain.
For a moment he was puzzled; but presently
came to the conclusion that Werper had been frightened
by the approach of the lion, and had sneaked off in
terror. A sneer touched Tarzan’s lips as
he pondered the man’s act—the desertion
of a comrade in time of danger, and without warning.
Well, if that was the sort of creature Werper was,
Tarzan wished nothing more of him. He had gone,
and for all the ape-man cared, he might remain away—Tarzan
would not search for him.
A hundred yards from where he stood
grew a large tree, alone upon the edge of the reedy
jungle. Tarzan made his way to it, clambered
into it, and finding a comfortable crotch among its
branches, reposed himself for uninterrupted sleep
until morning.
And when morning came Tarzan slept
on long after the sun had risen. His mind, reverted
to the primitive, was untroubled by any more serious
obligations than those of providing sustenance, and
safeguarding his life. Therefore, there was nothing
to awaken for until danger threatened, or the pangs
of hunger assailed. It was the latter which
eventually aroused him.
Opening his eyes, he stretched his
giant thews, yawned, rose and gazed about him through
the leafy foliage of his retreat. Across the
wasted meadowlands and fields of John Clayton, Lord
Greystoke, Tarzan of the Apes looked, as a stranger,
upon the moving figures of Basuli and his braves as
they prepared their morning meal and made ready to
set out upon the expedition which Basuli had planned
after discovering the havoc and disaster which had
befallen the estate of his dead master.
The ape-man eyed the blacks with curiosity.
In the back of his brain loitered a fleeting sense
of familiarity with all that he saw, yet he could
not connect any of the various forms of life, animate
and inanimate, which had fallen within the range of
his vision since he had emerged from the darkness
of the pits of Opar, with any particular event of
the past.
Hazily he recalled a grim and hideous
form, hairy, ferocious. A vague tenderness dominated
his savage sentiments as this phantom memory struggled
for recognition. His mind had reverted to his
childhood days—it was the figure of the
giant she-ape, Kala, that he saw; but only half recognized.
He saw, too, other grotesque, manlike forms.
They were of Terkoz, Tublat, Kerchak, and a smaller,
less ferocious figure, that was Neeta, the little playmate
of his boyhood.
Slowly, very slowly, as these visions
of the past animated his lethargic memory, he came
to recognize them. They took definite shape
and form, adjusting themselves nicely to the various
incidents of his life with which they had been intimately
connected. His boyhood among the apes spread
itself in a slow panorama before him, and as it unfolded
it induced within him a mighty longing for the companionship
of the shaggy, low-browed brutes of his past.
He watched the blacks scatter their
cook fire and depart; but though the face of each
of them had but recently been as familiar to him as
his own, they awakened within him no recollections
whatsoever.
When they had gone, he descended from
the tree and sought food. Out upon the plain
grazed numerous herds of wild ruminants. Toward
a sleek, fat bunch of zebra he wormed his stealthy
way. No intricate process of reasoning caused
him to circle widely until he was down wind from his
prey—he acted instinctively. He took
advantage of every form of cover as he crawled upon
all fours and often flat upon his stomach toward them.
A plump young mare and a fat stallion
grazed nearest to him as he neared the herd.
Again it was instinct which selected the former for
his meat. A low bush grew but a few yards from
the unsuspecting two. The ape-man reached its
shelter. He gathered his spear firmly in his
grasp. Cautiously he drew his feet beneath him.
In a single swift move he rose and cast his heavy
weapon at the mare’s side. Nor did he
wait to note the effect of his assault, but leaped
cat-like after his spear, his hunting knife in his
hand.
For an instant the two animals stood
motionless. The tearing of the cruel barb into
her side brought a sudden scream of pain and fright
from the mare, and then they both wheeled and broke
for safety; but Tarzan of the Apes, for a distance
of a few yards, could equal the speed of even these,
and the first stride of the mare found her overhauled,
with a savage beast at her shoulder. She turned,
biting and kicking at her foe. Her mate hesitated
for an instant, as though about to rush to her assistance;
but a backward glance revealed to him the flying heels
of the balance of the herd, and with a snort and a
shake of his head he wheeled and dashed away.
Clinging with one hand to the short
mane of his quarry, Tarzan struck again and again
with his knife at the unprotected heart. The
result had, from the first, been inevitable.
The mare fought bravely, but hopelessly, and presently
sank to the earth, her heart pierced. The ape-man
placed a foot upon her carcass and raised his voice
in the victory call of the Mangani. In the distance,
Basuli halted as the faint notes of the hideous scream
broke upon his ears.
“The great apes,” he said
to his companion. “It has been long since
I have heard them in the country of the Waziri.
What could have brought them back?”
Tarzan grasped his kill and dragged
it to the partial seclusion of the bush which had
hidden his own near approach, and there he squatted
upon it, cut a huge hunk of flesh from the loin and
proceeded to satisfy his hunger with the warm and dripping
meat.
Attracted by the shrill screams of
the mare, a pair of hyenas slunk presently into view.
They trotted to a point a few yards from the gorging
ape-man, and halted. Tarzan looked up, bared
his fighting fangs and growled. The hyenas returned
the compliment, and withdrew a couple of paces.
They made no move to attack; but continued to sit
at a respectful distance until Tarzan had concluded
his meal. After the ape-man had cut a few strips
from the carcass to carry with him, he walked slowly
off in the direction of the river to quench his thirst.
His way lay directly toward the hyenas, nor did he
alter his course because of them.
With all the lordly majesty of Numa,
the lion, he strode straight toward the growling beasts.
For a moment they held their ground, bristling and
defiant; but only for a moment, and then slunk away
to one side while the indifferent ape-man passed them
on his lordly way. A moment later they were
tearing at the remains of the zebra.
Back to the reeds went Tarzan, and
through them toward the river. A herd of buffalo,
startled by his approach, rose ready to charge or
to fly. A great bull pawed the ground and bellowed
as his bloodshot eyes discovered the intruder; but
the ape-man passed across their front as though ignorant
of their existence. The bull’s bellowing
lessened to a low rumbling, he turned and scraped a
horde of flies from his side with his muzzle, cast
a final glance at the ape-man and resumed his feeding.
His numerous family either followed his example or
stood gazing after Tarzan in mild-eyed curiosity, until
the opposite reeds swallowed him from view.
At the river, Tarzan drank his fill
and bathed. During the heat of the day he lay
up under the shade of a tree near the ruins of his
burned barns. His eyes wandered out across the
plain toward the forest, and a longing for the pleasures
of its mysterious depths possessed his thoughts for
a considerable time. With the next sun he would
cross the open and enter the forest! There was
no hurry—there lay before him an endless
vista of tomorrows with naught to fill them but the
satisfying of the appetites and caprices of the moment.
The ape-man’s mind was untroubled
by regret for the past, or aspiration for the future.
He could lie at full length along a swaying branch,
stretching his giant limbs, and luxuriating in the
blessed peace of utter thoughtlessness, without an
apprehension or a worry to sap his nervous energy
and rob him of his peace of mind. Recalling
only dimly any other existence, the ape-man was happy.
Lord Greystoke had ceased to exist.
For several hours Tarzan lolled upon
his swaying, leafy couch until once again hunger and
thirst suggested an excursion. Stretching lazily
he dropped to the ground and moved slowly toward the
river. The game trail down which he walked had
become by ages of use a deep, narrow trench, its walls
topped on either side by impenetrable thicket and
dense-growing trees closely interwoven with thick-stemmed
creepers and lesser vines inextricably matted into
two solid ramparts of vegetation. Tarzan had
almost reached the point where the trail debouched
upon the open river bottom when he saw a family of
lions approaching along the path from the direction
of the river. The ape-man counted seven—a
male and two lionesses, full grown, and four young
lions as large and quite as formidable as their parents.
Tarzan halted, growling, and the lions paused, the
great male in the lead baring his fangs and rumbling
forth a warning roar. In his hand the ape-man
held his heavy spear; but he had no intention of pitting
his puny weapon against seven lions; yet he stood
there growling and roaring and the lions did likewise.
It was purely an exhibition of jungle bluff.
Each was trying to frighten off the other.
Neither wished to turn back and give way, nor did
either at first desire to precipitate an encounter.
The lions were fed sufficiently so as not to be goaded
by pangs of hunger and as for Tarzan he seldom ate
the meat of the carnivores; but a point of ethics
was at stake and neither side wished to back down.
So they stood there facing one another, making all
sorts of hideous noises the while they hurled jungle
invective back and forth. How long this bloodless
duel would have persisted it is difficult to say,
though eventually Tarzan would have been forced to
yield to superior numbers.
There came, however, an interruption
which put an end to the deadlock and it came from
Tarzan’s rear. He and the lions had been
making so much noise that neither could hear anything
above their concerted bedlam, and so it was that Tarzan
did not hear the great bulk bearing down upon him
from behind until an instant before it was upon him,
and then he turned to see Buto, the rhinoceros, his
little, pig eyes blazing, charging madly toward him
and already so close that escape seemed impossible;
yet so perfectly were mind and muscles coordinated
in this unspoiled, primitive man that almost simultaneously
with the sense perception of the threatened danger
he wheeled and hurled his spear at Buto’s chest.
It was a heavy spear shod with iron, and behind it
were the giant muscles of the ape-man, while coming
to meet it was the enormous weight of Buto and the
momentum of his rapid rush. All that happened
in the instant that Tarzan turned to meet the charge
of the irascible rhinoceros might take long to tell,
and yet would have taxed the swiftest lens to record.
As his spear left his hand the ape-man was looking
down upon the mighty horn lowered to toss him, so
close was Buto to him. The spear entered the
rhinoceros’ neck at its junction with the left
shoulder and passed almost entirely through the beast’s
body, and at the instant that he launched it, Tarzan
leaped straight into the air alighting upon Buto’s
back but escaping the mighty horn.
Then Buto espied the lions and bore
madly down upon them while Tarzan of the Apes leaped
nimbly into the tangled creepers at one side of the
trail. The first lion met Buto’s charge
and was tossed high over the back of the maddened
brute, torn and dying, and then the six remaining
lions were upon the rhinoceros, rending and tearing
the while they were being gored or trampled.
From the safety of his perch Tarzan watched the royal
battle with the keenest interest, for the more intelligent
of the jungle folk are interested in such encounters.
They are to them what the racetrack and the prize
ring, the theater and the movies are to us. They
see them often; but always they enjoy them for no
two are precisely alike.
For a time it seemed to Tarzan that
Buto, the rhinoceros, would prove victor in the gory
battle. Already had he accounted for four of
the seven lions and badly wounded the three remaining
when in a momentary lull in the encounter he sank
limply to his knees and rolled over upon his side.
Tarzan’s spear had done its work. It
was the man-made weapon which killed the great beast
that might easily have survived the assault of seven
mighty lions, for Tarzan’s spear had pierced
the great lungs, and Buto, with victory almost in
sight, succumbed to internal hemorrhage.
Then Tarzan came down from his sanctuary
and as the wounded lions, growling, dragged themselves
away, the ape-man cut his spear from the body of Buto,
hacked off a steak and vanished into the jungle.
The episode was over. It had been all in the
day’s work—something which you and
I might talk about for a lifetime Tarzan dismissed
from his mind the moment that the scene passed from
his sight.