23
A Night of Terror
To Jane Clayton, waiting in the tree
where Werper had placed her, it seemed that the long
night would never end, yet end it did at last, and
within an hour of the coming of dawn her spirits leaped
with renewed hope at sight of a solitary horseman approaching
along the trail.
The flowing burnoose, with its loose
hood, hid both the face and the figure of the rider;
but that it was M. Frecoult the girl well knew, since
he had been garbed as an Arab, and he alone might be
expected to seek her hiding place.
That which she saw relieved the strain
of the long night vigil; but there was much that she
did not see. She did not see the black face
beneath the white hood, nor the file of ebon horsemen
beyond the trail’s bend riding slowly in the
wake of their leader. These things she did not
see at first, and so she leaned downward toward the
approaching rider, a cry of welcome forming in her
throat.
At the first word the man looked up,
reining in in surprise, and as she saw the black face
of Abdul Mourak, the Abyssinian, she shrank back in
terror among the branches; but it was too late.
The man had seen her, and now he called to her to
descend. At first she refused; but when a dozen
black cavalrymen drew up behind their leader, and
at Abdul Mourak’s command one of them started
to climb the tree after her she realized that resistance
was futile, and came slowly down to stand upon the
ground before this new captor and plead her cause
in the name of justice and humanity.
Angered by recent defeat, and by the
loss of the gold, the jewels, and his prisoners, Abdul
Mourak was in no mood to be influenced by any appeal
to those softer sentiments to which, as a matter of
fact, he was almost a stranger even under the most
favourable conditions.
He looked for degradation and possible
death in punishment for his failures and his misfortunes
when he should have returned to his native land and
made his report to Menelek; but an acceptable gift
might temper the wrath of the emperor, and surely this
fair flower of another race should be gratefully received
by the black ruler!
When Jane Clayton had concluded her
appeal, Abdul Mourak replied briefly that he would
promise her protection; but that he must take her
to his emperor. The girl did not need ask him
why, and once again hope died within her breast.
Resignedly she permitted herself to be lifted to
a seat behind one of the troopers, and again, under
new masters, her journey was resumed toward what she
now began to believe was her inevitable fate.
Abdul Mourak, bereft of his guides
by the battle he had waged against the raiders, and
himself unfamiliar with the country, had wandered
far from the trail he should have followed, and as
a result had made but little progress toward the north
since the beginning of his flight. Today he
was beating toward the west in the hope of coming
upon a village where he might obtain guides; but night
found him still as far from a realization of his hopes
as had the rising sun.
It was a dispirited company which
went into camp, waterless and hungry, in the dense
jungle. Attracted by the horses, lions roared
about the boma, and to their hideous din was added
the shrill neighs of the terror-stricken beasts they
hunted. There was little sleep for man or beast,
and the sentries were doubled that there might be
enough on duty both to guard against the sudden charge
of an overbold, or overhungry lion, and to keep the
fire blazing which was an even more effectual barrier
against them than the thorny boma.
It was well past midnight, and as
yet Jane Clayton, notwithstanding that she had passed
a sleepless night the night before, had scarcely more
than dozed. A sense of impending danger seemed
to hang like a black pall over the camp. The
veteran troopers of the black emperor were nervous
and ill at ease. Abdul Mourak left his blankets
a dozen times to pace restlessly back and forth between
the tethered horses and the crackling fire.
The girl could see his great frame silhouetted against
the lurid glare of the flames, and she guessed from
the quick, nervous movements of the man that he was
afraid.
The roaring of the lions rose in sudden
fury until the earth trembled to the hideous chorus.
The horses shrilled their neighs of terror as they
lay back upon their halter ropes in their mad endeavors
to break loose. A trooper, braver than his fellows,
leaped among the kicking, plunging, fear-maddened beasts
in a futile attempt to quiet them. A lion, large,
and fierce, and courageous, leaped almost to the boma,
full in the bright light from the fire. A sentry
raised his piece and fired, and the little leaden pellet
unstoppered the vials of hell upon the terror-stricken
camp.
The shot ploughed a deep and painful
furrow in the lion’s side, arousing all the
bestial fury of the little brain; but abating not
a whit the power and vigor of the great body.
Unwounded, the boma and the flames
might have turned him back; but now the pain and the
rage wiped caution from his mind, and with a loud,
and angry roar he topped the barrier with an easy leap
and was among the horses.
What had been pandemonium before became
now an indescribable tumult of hideous sound.
The stricken horse upon which the lion leaped shrieked
out its terror and its agony. Several about it
broke their tethers and plunged madly about the camp.
Men leaped from their blankets and with guns ready
ran toward the picket line, and then from the jungle
beyond the boma a dozen lions, emboldened by the example
of their fellow charged fearlessly upon the camp.
Singly and in twos and threes they
leaped the boma, until the little enclosure was filled
with cursing men and screaming horses battling for
their lives with the green-eyed devils of the jungle.
With the charge of the first lion,
Jane Clayton had scrambled to her feet, and now she
stood horror-struck at the scene of savage slaughter
that swirled and eddied about her. Once a bolting
horse knocked her down, and a moment later a lion,
leaping in pursuit of another terror-stricken animal,
brushed her so closely that she was again thrown from
her feet.
Amidst the cracking of the rifles
and the growls of the carnivora rose the death screams
of stricken men and horses as they were dragged down
by the blood-mad cats. The leaping carnivora
and the plunging horses, prevented any concerted action
by the Abyssinians—it was every man for
himself—and in the melee, the defenseless
woman was either forgotten or ignored by her black
captors. A score of times was her life menaced
by charging lions, by plunging horses, or by the wildly
fired bullets of the frightened troopers, yet there
was no chance of escape, for now with the fiendish
cunning of their kind, the tawny hunters commenced
to circle about their prey, hemming them within a
ring of mighty, yellow fangs, and sharp, long talons.
Again and again an individual lion would dash suddenly
among the frightened men and horses, and occasionally
a horse, goaded to frenzy by pain or terror, succeeded
in racing safely through the circling lions, leaping
the boma, and escaping into the jungle; but for the
men and the woman no such escape was possible.
A horse, struck by a stray bullet,
fell beside Jane Clayton, a lion leaped across the
expiring beast full upon the breast of a black trooper
just beyond. The man clubbed his rifle and struck
futilely at the broad head, and then he was down and
the carnivore was standing above him.
Shrieking out his terror, the soldier
clawed with puny fingers at the shaggy breast in vain
endeavor to push away the grinning jaws. The
lion lowered his head, the gaping fangs closed with
a single sickening crunch upon the fear-distorted
face, and turning strode back across the body of the
dead horse dragging his limp and bloody burden with
him.
Wide-eyed the girl stood watching.
She saw the carnivore step upon the corpse, stumblingly,
as the grisly thing swung between its forepaws, and
her eyes remained fixed in fascination while the beast
passed within a few paces of her.
The interference of the body seemed
to enrage the lion. He shook the inanimate clay
venomously. He growled and roared hideously at
the dead, insensate thing, and then he dropped it and
raised his head to look about in search of some living
victim upon which to wreak his ill temper. His
yellow eyes fastened themselves balefully upon the
figure of the girl, the bristling lips raised, disclosing
the grinning fangs. A terrific roar broke from
the savage throat, and the great beast crouched to
spring upon this new and helpless victim.
Quiet had fallen early upon the camp
where Tarzan and Werper lay securely bound.
Two nervous sentries paced their beats, their eyes
rolling often toward the impenetrable shadows of the
gloomy jungle. The others slept or tried to
sleep—all but the ape-man. Silently
and powerfully he strained at the bonds which fettered
his wrists.
The muscles knotted beneath the smooth,
brown skin of his arms and shoulders, the veins stood
out upon his temples from the force of his exertions—a
strand parted, another and another, and one hand was
free. Then from the jungle came a low guttural,
and the ape-man became suddenly a silent, rigid statue,
with ears and nostrils straining to span the black
void where his eyesight could not reach.
Again came the uncanny sound from
the thick verdure beyond the camp. A sentry halted
abruptly, straining his eyes into the gloom.
The kinky wool upon his head stiffened and raised.
He called to his comrade in a hoarse whisper.
“Did you hear it?” he asked.
The other came closer, trembling.
“Hear what?”
Again was the weird sound repeated,
followed almost immediately by a similar and answering
sound from the camp. The sentries drew close
together, watching the black spot from which the voice
seemed to come.
Trees overhung the boma at this point
which was upon the opposite side of the camp from
them. They dared not approach. Their terror
even prevented them from arousing their fellows—they
could only stand in frozen fear and watch for the
fearsome apparition they momentarily expected to see
leap from the jungle.
Nor had they long to wait. A
dim, bulky form dropped lightly from the branches
of a tree into the camp. At sight of it one of
the sentries recovered command of his muscles and
his voice. Screaming loudly to awaken the sleeping
camp, he leaped toward the flickering watch fire and
threw a mass of brush upon it.
The white officer and the black soldiers
sprang from their blankets. The flames leaped
high upon the rejuvenated fire, lighting the entire
camp, and the awakened men shrank back in superstitious
terror from the sight that met their frightened and
astonished vision.
A dozen huge and hairy forms loomed
large beneath the trees at the far side of the enclosure.
The white giant, one hand freed, had struggled to
his knees and was calling to the frightful, nocturnal
visitors in a hideous medley of bestial gutturals,
barkings and growlings.
Werper had managed to sit up.
He, too, saw the savage faces of the approaching
anthropoids and scarcely knew whether to be relieved
or terror-stricken.
Growling, the great apes leaped forward
toward Tarzan and Werper. Chulk led them.
The Belgian officer called to his men to fire upon
the intruders; but the Negroes held back, filled as
they were with superstitious terror of the hairy treemen,
and with the conviction that the white giant who could
thus summon the beasts of the jungle to his aid was
more than human.
Drawing his own weapon, the officer
fired, and Tarzan fearing the effect of the noise
upon his really timid friends called to them to hasten
and fulfill his commands.
A couple of the apes turned and fled
at the sound of the firearm; but Chulk and a half
dozen others waddled rapidly forward, and, following
the ape-man’s directions, seized both him and
Werper and bore them off toward the jungle.
By dint of threats, reproaches and
profanity the Belgian officer succeeded in persuading
his trembling command to fire a volley after the retreating
apes. A ragged, straggling volley it was, but
at least one of its bullets found a mark, for as the
jungle closed about the hairy rescuers, Chulk, who
bore Werper across one broad shoulder, staggered and
fell.
In an instant he was up again; but
the Belgian guessed from his unsteady gait that he
was hard hit. He lagged far behind the others,
and it was several minutes after they had halted at
Tarzan’s command before he came slowly up to
them, reeling from side to side, and at last falling
again beneath the weight of his burden and the shock
of his wound.
As Chulk went down he dropped Werper,
so that the latter fell face downward with the body
of the ape lying half across him. In this position
the Belgian felt something resting against his hands,
which were still bound at his back—something
that was not a part of the hairy body of the ape.
Mechanically the man’s fingers
felt of the object resting almost in their grasp—it
was a soft pouch, filled with small, hard particles.
Werper gasped in wonderment as recognition filtered
through the incredulity of his mind. It was
impossible, and yet—it was true!
Feverishly he strove to remove the
pouch from the ape and transfer it to his own possession;
but the restricted radius to which his bonds held
his hands prevented this, though he did succeed in
tucking the pouch with its precious contents inside
the waist band of his trousers.
Tarzan, sitting at a short distance,
was busy with the remaining knots of the cords which
bound him. Presently he flung aside the last
of them and rose to his feet. Approaching Werper
he knelt beside him. For a moment he examined
the ape.
“Quite dead,” he announced.
“It is too bad—he was a splendid
creature,” and then he turned to the work of
liberating the Belgian.
He freed his hands first, and then
commenced upon the knots at his ankles.
“I can do the rest,” said
the Belgian. “I have a small pocketknife
which they overlooked when they searched me,”
and in this way he succeeded in ridding himself of
the ape-man’s attentions that he might find
and open his little knife and cut the thong which
fastened the pouch about Chulk’s shoulder, and
transfer it from his waist band to the breast of his
shirt. Then he rose and approached Tarzan.
Once again had avarice claimed him.
Forgotten were the good intentions which the confidence
of Jane Clayton in his honor had awakened. What
she had done, the little pouch had undone. How
it had come upon the person of the great ape, Werper
could not imagine, unless it had been that the anthropoid
had witnessed his fight with Achmet Zek, seen the
Arab with the pouch and taken it away from him; but
that this pouch contained the jewels of Opar, Werper
was positive, and that was all that interested him
greatly.
“Now,” said the ape-man,
“keep your promise to me. Lead me to the
spot where you last saw my wife.”
It was slow work pushing through the
jungle in the dead of night behind the slow-moving
Belgian. The ape-man chafed at the delay, but
the European could not swing through the trees as could
his more agile and muscular companions, and so the
speed of all was limited to that of the slowest.
The apes trailed out behind the two
white men for a matter of a few miles; but presently
their interest lagged, the foremost of them halted
in a little glade and the others stopped at his side.
There they sat peering from beneath their shaggy
brows at the figures of the two men forging steadily
ahead, until the latter disappeared in the leafy trail
beyond the clearing. Then an ape sought a comfortable
couch beneath a tree, and one by one the others followed
his example, so that Werper and Tarzan continued their
journey alone; nor was the latter either surprised
or concerned.
The two had gone but a short distance
beyond the glade where the apes had deserted them,
when the roaring of distant lions fell upon their
ears. The ape-man paid no attention to the familiar
sounds until the crack of a rifle came faintly from
the same direction, and when this was followed by
the shrill neighing of horses, and an almost continuous
fusillade of shots intermingled with increased and
savage roaring of a large troop of lions, he became
immediately concerned.
“Someone is having trouble over
there,” he said, turning toward Werper.
“I’ll have to go to them—they
may be friends.”
“Your wife might be among them,”
suggested the Belgian, for since he had again come
into possession of the pouch he had become fearful
and suspicious of the ape-man, and in his mind had
constantly revolved many plans for eluding this giant
Englishman, who was at once his savior and his captor.
At the suggestion Tarzan started as
though struck with a whip.
“God!” he cried, “she
might be, and the lions are attacking them—they
are in the camp. I can tell from the screams
of the horses—and there! that was the
cry of a man in his death agonies. Stay here
man—I will come back for you. I must
go first to them,” and swinging into a tree
the lithe figure swung rapidly off into the night
with the speed and silence of a disembodied spirit.
For a moment Werper stood where the
ape-man had left him. Then a cunning smile crossed
his lips. “Stay here?” he asked himself.
“Stay here and wait until you return to find
and take these jewels from me? Not I, my friend,
not I,” and turning abruptly eastward Albert
Werper passed through the foliage of a hanging vine
and out of the sight of his fellow-man—forever.