The Fear-Phantom
From a lofty perch Tarzan viewed the
village of thatched huts across the intervening plantation.
He saw that at one point the forest
touched the village, and to this spot he made his
way, lured by a fever of curiosity to behold animals
of his own kind, and to learn more of their ways and
view the strange lairs in which they lived.
His savage life among the fierce wild
brutes of the jungle left no opening for any thought
that these could be aught else than enemies.
Similarity of form led him into no erroneous conception
of the welcome that would be accorded him should he
be discovered by these, the first of his own kind he
had ever seen.
Tarzan of the Apes was no sentimentalist.
He knew nothing of the brotherhood of man.
All things outside his own tribe were his deadly enemies,
with the few exceptions of which Tantor, the elephant,
was a marked example.
And he realized all this without malice
or hatred. To kill was the law of the wild world
he knew. Few were his primitive pleasures, but
the greatest of these was to hunt and kill, and so
he accorded to others the right to cherish the same
desires as he, even though he himself might be the
object of their hunt.
His strange life had left him neither
morose nor bloodthirsty. That he joyed in killing,
and that he killed with a joyous laugh upon his handsome
lips betokened no innate cruelty. He killed for
food most often, but, being a man, he sometimes killed
for pleasure, a thing which no other animal does;
for it has remained for man alone among all creatures
to kill senselessly and wantonly for the mere pleasure
of inflicting suffering and death.
And when he killed for revenge, or
in self-defense, he did that also without hysteria,
for it was a very businesslike proceeding which admitted
of no levity.
So it was that now, as he cautiously
approached the village of Mbonga, he was quite prepared
either to kill or be killed should he be discovered.
He proceeded with unwonted stealth, for Kulonga had
taught him great respect for the little sharp splinters
of wood which dealt death so swiftly and unerringly.
At length he came to a great tree,
heavy laden with thick foliage and loaded with pendant
loops of giant creepers. From this almost impenetrable
bower above the village he crouched, looking down
upon the scene below him, wondering over every feature
of this new, strange life.
There were naked children running
and playing in the village street. There were
women grinding dried plantain in crude stone mortars,
while others were fashioning cakes from the powdered
flour. Out in the fields he could see still other
women hoeing, weeding, or gathering.
All wore strange protruding girdles
of dried grass about their hips and many were loaded
with brass and copper anklets, armlets and bracelets.
Around many a dusky neck hung curiously coiled strands
of wire, while several were further ornamented by
huge nose rings.
Tarzan of the Apes looked with growing
wonder at these strange creatures. Dozing in
the shade he saw several men, while at the extreme
outskirts of the clearing he occasionally caught glimpses
of armed warriors apparently guarding the village
against surprise from an attacking enemy.
He noticed that the women alone worked.
Nowhere was there evidence of a man tilling the fields
or performing any of the homely duties of the village.
Finally his eyes rested upon a woman
directly beneath him.
Before her was a small cauldron standing
over a low fire and in it bubbled a thick, reddish,
tarry mass. On one side of her lay a quantity
of wooden arrows the points of which she dipped into
the seething substance, then laying them upon a narrow
rack of boughs which stood upon her other side.
Tarzan of the Apes was fascinated.
Here was the secret of the terrible destructiveness
of The Archer’s tiny missiles. He noted
the extreme care which the woman took that none of
the matter should touch her hands, and once when a
particle spattered upon one of her fingers he saw
her plunge the member into a vessel of water and quickly
rub the tiny stain away with a handful of leaves.
Tarzan knew nothing of poison, but
his shrewd reasoning told him that it was this deadly
stuff that killed, and not the little arrow, which
was merely the messenger that carried it into the
body of its victim.
How he should like to have more of
those little death-dealing slivers. If the woman
would only leave her work for an instant he could
drop down, gather up a handful, and be back in the
tree again before she drew three breaths.
As he was trying to think out some
plan to distract her attention he heard a wild cry
from across the clearing. He looked and saw
a black warrior standing beneath the very tree in
which he had killed the murderer of Kala an hour before.
The fellow was shouting and waving
his spear above his head. Now and again he would
point to something on the ground before him.
The village was in an uproar instantly.
Armed men rushed from the interior of many a hut
and raced madly across the clearing toward the excited
sentry. After them trooped the old men, and
the women and children until, in a moment, the village
was deserted.
Tarzan of the Apes knew that they
had found the body of his victim, but that interested
him far less than the fact that no one remained in
the village to prevent his taking a supply of the
arrows which lay below him.
Quickly and noiselessly he dropped
to the ground beside the cauldron of poison.
For a moment he stood motionless, his quick, bright
eyes scanning the interior of the palisade.
No one was in sight. His eyes
rested upon the open doorway of a nearby hut.
He would take a look within, thought Tarzan, and
so, cautiously, he approached the low thatched building.
For a moment he stood without, listening
intently. There was no sound, and he glided
into the semi-darkness of the interior.
Weapons hung against the walls—long
spears, strangely shaped knives, a couple of narrow
shields. In the center of the room was a cooking
pot, and at the far end a litter of dry grasses covered
by woven mats which evidently served the owners as
beds and bedding. Several human skulls lay upon
the floor.
Tarzan of the Apes felt of each article,
hefted the spears, smelled of them, for he “saw”
largely through his sensitive and highly trained nostrils.
He determined to own one of these long, pointed sticks,
but he could not take one on this trip because of
the arrows he meant to carry.
As he took each article from the walls,
he placed it in a pile in the center of the room.
On top of all he placed the cooking pot, inverted,
and on top of this he laid one of the grinning skulls,
upon which he fastened the headdress of the dead Kulonga.
Then he stood back, surveyed his work, and grinned.
Tarzan of the Apes enjoyed a joke.
But now he heard, outside, the sounds
of many voices, and long mournful howls, and mighty
wailing. He was startled. Had he remained
too long? Quickly he reached the doorway and
peered down the village street toward the village gate.
The natives were not yet in sight,
though he could plainly hear them approaching across
the plantation. They must be very near.
Like a flash he sprang across the
opening to the pile of arrows. Gathering up all
he could carry under one arm, he overturned the seething
cauldron with a kick, and disappeared into the foliage
above just as the first of the returning natives entered
the gate at the far end of the village street.
Then he turned to watch the proceeding below, poised
like some wild bird ready to take swift wing at the
first sign of danger.
The natives filed up the street, four
of them bearing the dead body of Kulonga. Behind
trailed the women, uttering strange cries and weird
lamentation. On they came to the portals of
Kulonga’s hut, the very one in which Tarzan had
wrought his depredations.
Scarcely had half a dozen entered
the building ere they came rushing out in wild, jabbering
confusion. The others hastened to gather about.
There was much excited gesticulating, pointing, and
chattering; then several of the warriors approached
and peered within.
Finally an old fellow with many ornaments
of metal about his arms and legs, and a necklace of
dried human hands depending upon his chest, entered
the hut.
It was Mbonga, the king, father of Kulonga.
For a few moments all was silent.
Then Mbonga emerged, a look of mingled wrath and
superstitious fear writ upon his hideous countenance.
He spoke a few words to the assembled warriors, and
in an instant the men were flying through the little
village searching minutely every hut and corner within
the palisades.
Scarcely had the search commenced
than the overturned cauldron was discovered, and with
it the theft of the poisoned arrows. Nothing
more they found, and it was a thoroughly awed and
frightened group of savages which huddled around their
king a few moments later.
Mbonga could explain nothing of the
strange events that had taken place. The finding
of the still warm body of Kulonga—on the
very verge of their fields and within easy earshot
of the village—knifed and stripped at the
door of his father’s home, was in itself sufficiently
mysterious, but these last awesome discoveries within
the village, within the dead Kulonga’s own hut,
filled their hearts with dismay, and conjured in their
poor brains only the most frightful of superstitious
explanations.
They stood in little groups, talking
in low tones, and ever casting affrighted glances
behind them from their great rolling eyes.
Tarzan of the Apes watched them for
a while from his lofty perch in the great tree.
There was much in their demeanor which he could not
understand, for of superstition he was ignorant, and
of fear of any kind he had but a vague conception.
The sun was high in the heavens.
Tarzan had not broken fast this day, and it was many
miles to where lay the toothsome remains of Horta
the boar.
So he turned his back upon the village
of Mbonga and melted away into the leafy fastness
of the forest.