The Tree-top Hunter
The morning after the Dum-Dum the
tribe started slowly back through the forest toward
the coast.
The body of Tublat lay where it had
fallen, for the people of Kerchak do not eat their
own dead.
The march was but a leisurely search
for food. Cabbage palm and gray plum, pisang
and scitamine they found in abundance, with wild pineapple,
and occasionally small mammals, birds, eggs, reptiles,
and insects. The nuts they cracked between their
powerful jaws, or, if too hard, broke by pounding
between stones.
Once old Sabor, crossing their path,
sent them scurrying to the safety of the higher branches,
for if she respected their number and their sharp
fangs, they on their part held her cruel and mighty
ferocity in equal esteem.
Upon a low-hanging branch sat Tarzan
directly above the majestic, supple body as it forged
silently through the thick jungle. He hurled
a pineapple at the ancient enemy of his people.
The great beast stopped and, turning, eyed the taunting
figure above her.
With an angry lash of her tail she
bared her yellow fangs, curling her great lips in
a hideous snarl that wrinkled her bristling snout
in serried ridges and closed her wicked eyes to two
narrow slits of rage and hatred.
With back-laid ears she looked straight
into the eyes of Tarzan of the Apes and sounded her
fierce, shrill challenge. And from the safety
of his overhanging limb the ape-child sent back the
fearsome answer of his kind.
For a moment the two eyed each other
in silence, and then the great cat turned into the
jungle, which swallowed her as the ocean engulfs a
tossed pebble.
But into the mind of Tarzan a great
plan sprang. He had killed the fierce Tublat,
so was he not therefore a mighty fighter? Now
would he track down the crafty Sabor and slay her
likewise. He would be a mighty hunter, also.
At the bottom of his little English
heart beat the great desire to cover his nakedness
with clothes for he had learned from his picture
books that all men were so covered, while monkeys
and apes and every other living thing went naked.
CLOTHES therefore, must be truly a
badge of greatness; the insignia of the superiority
of man over all other animals, for surely there
could be no other reason for wearing the hideous things.
Many moons ago, when he had been much
smaller, he had desired the skin of Sabor, the lioness,
or Numa, the lion, or Sheeta, the leopard to cover
his hairless body that he might no longer resemble
hideous Histah, the snake; but now he was proud of
his sleek skin for it betokened his descent from a
mighty race, and the conflicting desires to go naked
in prideful proof of his ancestry, or to conform to
the customs of his own kind and wear hideous and uncomfortable
apparel found first one and then the other in the
ascendency.
As the tribe continued their slow
way through the forest after the passing of Sabor,
Tarzan’s head was filled with his great scheme
for slaying his enemy, and for many days thereafter
he thought of little else.
On this day, however, he presently
had other and more immediate interests to attract
his attention.
Suddenly it became as midnight; the
noises of the jungle ceased; the trees stood motionless
as though in paralyzed expectancy of some great and
imminent disaster. All nature waited—but
not for long.
Faintly, from a distance, came a low,
sad moaning. Nearer and nearer it approached,
mounting louder and louder in volume.
The great trees bent in unison as
though pressed earthward by a mighty hand. Farther
and farther toward the ground they inclined, and still
there was no sound save the deep and awesome moaning
of the wind.
Then, suddenly, the jungle giants
whipped back, lashing their mighty tops in angry and
deafening protest. A vivid and blinding light
flashed from the whirling, inky clouds above.
The deep cannonade of roaring thunder belched forth
its fearsome challenge. The deluge came—all
hell broke loose upon the jungle.
The tribe shivering from the cold
rain, huddled at the bases of great trees. The
lightning, darting and flashing through the blackness,
showed wildly waving branches, whipping streamers
and bending trunks.
Now and again some ancient patriarch
of the woods, rent by a flashing bolt, would crash
in a thousand pieces among the surrounding trees,
carrying down numberless branches and many smaller
neighbors to add to the tangled confusion of the tropical
jungle.
Branches, great and small, torn away
by the ferocity of the tornado, hurtled through the
wildly waving verdure, carrying death and destruction
to countless unhappy denizens of the thickly peopled
world below.
For hours the fury of the storm continued
without surcease, and still the tribe huddled close
in shivering fear. In constant danger from falling
trunks and branches and paralyzed by the vivid flashing
of lightning and the bellowing of thunder they crouched
in pitiful misery until the storm passed.
The end was as sudden as the beginning.
The wind ceased, the sun shone forth—nature
smiled once more.
The dripping leaves and branches,
and the moist petals of gorgeous flowers glistened
in the splendor of the returning day. And, so—as
Nature forgot, her children forgot also. Busy
life went on as it had been before the darkness and
the fright.
But to Tarzan a dawning light had
come to explain the mystery of clothes.
How snug he would have been beneath the heavy coat
of Sabor! And so was added a further incentive
to the adventure.
For several months the tribe hovered
near the beach where stood Tarzan’s cabin, and
his studies took up the greater portion of his time,
but always when journeying through the forest he kept
his rope in readiness, and many were the smaller animals
that fell into the snare of the quick thrown noose.
Once it fell about the short neck
of Horta, the boar, and his mad lunge for freedom
toppled Tarzan from the overhanging limb where he
had lain in wait and from whence he had launched his
sinuous coil.
The mighty tusker turned at the sound
of his falling body, and, seeing only the easy prey
of a young ape, he lowered his head and charged madly
at the surprised youth.
Tarzan, happily, was uninjured by
the fall, alighting catlike upon all fours far outspread
to take up the shock. He was on his feet in
an instant and, leaping with the agility of the monkey
he was, he gained the safety of a low limb as Horta,
the boar, rushed futilely beneath.
Thus it was that Tarzan learned by
experience the limitations as well as the possibilities
of his strange weapon.
He lost a long rope on this occasion,
but he knew that had it been Sabor who had thus dragged
him from his perch the outcome might have been very
different, for he would have lost his life, doubtless,
into the bargain.
It took him many days to braid a new
rope, but when, finally, it was done he went forth
purposely to hunt, and lie in wait among the dense
foliage of a great branch right above the well-beaten
trail that led to water.
Several small animals passed unharmed
beneath him. He did not want such insignificant
game. It would take a strong animal to test
the efficacy of his new scheme.
At last came she whom Tarzan sought,
with lithe sinews rolling beneath shimmering hide;
fat and glossy came Sabor, the lioness.
Her great padded feet fell soft and
noiseless on the narrow trail. Her head was
high in ever alert attention; her long tail moved
slowly in sinuous and graceful undulations.
Nearer and nearer she came to where
Tarzan of the Apes crouched upon his limb, the coils
of his long rope poised ready in his hand.
Like a thing of bronze, motionless
as death, sat Tarzan. Sabor passed beneath.
One stride beyond she took—a second, a
third, and then the silent coil shot out above her.
For an instant the spreading noose
hung above her head like a great snake, and then,
as she looked upward to detect the origin of the swishing
sound of the rope, it settled about her neck.
With a quick jerk Tarzan snapped the noose tight
about the glossy throat, and then he dropped the rope
and clung to his support with both hands.
Sabor was trapped.
With a bound the startled beast turned
into the jungle, but Tarzan was not to lose another
rope through the same cause as the first. He
had learned from experience. The lioness had
taken but half her second bound when she felt the rope
tighten about her neck; her body turned completely
over in the air and she fell with a heavy crash upon
her back. Tarzan had fastened the end of the
rope securely to the trunk of the great tree on which
he sat.
Thus far his plan had worked to perfection,
but when he grasped the rope, bracing himself behind
a crotch of two mighty branches, he found that dragging
the mighty, struggling, clawing, biting, screaming
mass of iron-muscled fury up to the tree and hanging
her was a very different proposition.
The weight of old Sabor was immense,
and when she braced her huge paws nothing less than
Tantor, the elephant, himself, could have budged her.
The lioness was now back in the path
where she could see the author of the indignity which
had been placed upon her. Screaming with rage
she suddenly charged, leaping high into the air toward
Tarzan, but when her huge body struck the limb on
which Tarzan had been, Tarzan was no longer there.
Instead he perched lightly upon a
smaller branch twenty feet above the raging captive.
For a moment Sabor hung half across the branch, while
Tarzan mocked, and hurled twigs and branches at her
unprotected face.
Presently the beast dropped to the
earth again and Tarzan came quickly to seize the rope,
but Sabor had now found that it was only a slender
cord that held her, and grasping it in her huge jaws
severed it before Tarzan could tighten the strangling
noose a second time.
Tarzan was much hurt. His well-laid
plan had come to naught, so he sat there screaming
at the roaring creature beneath him and making mocking
grimaces at it.
Sabor paced back and forth beneath
the tree for hours; four times she crouched and sprang
at the dancing sprite above her, but might as well
have clutched at the illusive wind that murmured through
the tree tops.
At last Tarzan tired of the sport,
and with a parting roar of challenge and a well-aimed
ripe fruit that spread soft and sticky over the snarling
face of his enemy, he swung rapidly through the trees,
a hundred feet above the ground, and in a short time
was among the members of his tribe.
Here he recounted the details of his
adventure, with swelling chest and so considerable
swagger that he quite impressed even his bitterest
enemies, while Kala fairly danced for joy and pride.