“Most Remarkable”
Several miles south of the cabin,
upon a strip of sandy beach, stood two old men, arguing.
Before them stretched the broad Atlantic.
At their backs was the Dark Continent. Close
around them loomed the impenetrable blackness of the
jungle.
Savage beasts roared and growled;
noises, hideous and weird, assailed their ears.
They had wandered for miles in search of their camp,
but always in the wrong direction. They were
as hopelessly lost as though they suddenly had been
transported to another world.
At such a time, indeed, every fiber
of their combined intellects must have been concentrated
upon the vital question of the minute—the
life-and-death question to them of retracing their
steps to camp.
Samuel T. Philander was speaking.
“But, my dear professor,”
he was saying, “I still maintain that but for
the victories of Ferdinand and Isabella over the fifteenth-century
Moors in Spain the world would be today a thousand
years in advance of where we now find ourselves.
The Moors were essentially a tolerant, broad-minded,
liberal race of agriculturists, artisans and merchants—the
very type of people that has made possible such civilization
as we find today in America and Europe—while
the Spaniards—”
“Tut, tut, dear Mr. Philander,”
interrupted Professor Porter; “their religion
positively precluded the possibilities you suggest.
Moslemism was, is, and always will be, a blight on
that scientific progress which has marked—”
“Bless me! Professor,”
interjected Mr. Philander, who had turned his gaze
toward the jungle, “there seems to be someone
approaching.”
Professor Archimedes Q. Porter turned
in the direction indicated by the nearsighted Mr.
Philander.
“Tut, tut, Mr. Philander,”
he chided. “How often must I urge you
to seek that absolute concentration of your mental
faculties which alone may permit you to bring to bear
the highest powers of intellectuality upon the momentous
problems which naturally fall to the lot of great
minds? And now I find you guilty of a most flagrant
breach of courtesy in interrupting my learned discourse
to call attention to a mere quadruped of the genus
FELIS. As I was saying, Mr.—”
“Heavens, Professor, a lion?”
cried Mr. Philander, straining his weak eyes toward
the dim figure outlined against the dark tropical
underbrush.
“Yes, yes, Mr. Philander, if
you insist upon employing slang in your discourse,
a `lion.’ But as I was saying—”
“Bless me, Professor,”
again interrupted Mr. Philander; “permit me
to suggest that doubtless the Moors who were conquered
in the fifteenth century will continue in that most
regrettable condition for the time being at least,
even though we postpone discussion of that world calamity
until we may attain the enchanting view of yon FELIS
CARNIVORA which distance proverbially is credited
with lending.”
In the meantime the lion had approached
with quiet dignity to within ten paces of the two
men, where he stood curiously watching them.
The moonlight flooded the beach, and
the strange group stood out in bold relief against
the yellow sand.
“Most reprehensible, most reprehensible,”
exclaimed Professor Porter, with a faint trace of
irritation in his voice. “Never, Mr. Philander,
never before in my life have I known one of these
animals to be permitted to roam at large from its
cage. I shall most certainly report this outrageous
breach of ethics to the directors of the adjacent
zoological garden.”
“Quite right, Professor,”
agreed Mr. Philander, “and the sooner it is
done the better. Let us start now.”
Seizing the professor by the arm,
Mr. Philander set off in the direction that would
put the greatest distance between themselves and the
lion.
They had proceeded but a short distance
when a backward glance revealed to the horrified gaze
of Mr. Philander that the lion was following them.
He tightened his grip upon the protesting professor
and increased his speed.
“As I was saying, Mr. Philander,”
repeated Professor Porter.
Mr. Philander took another hasty glance
rearward. The lion also had quickened his gait,
and was doggedly maintaining an unvarying distance
behind them.
“He is following us!”
gasped Mr. Philander, breaking into a run.
“Tut, tut, Mr. Philander,”
remonstrated the professor, “this unseemly haste
is most unbecoming to men of letters. What will
our friends think of us, who may chance to be upon
the street and witness our frivolous antics?
Pray let us proceed with more decorum.”
Mr. Philander stole another observation astern.
The lion was bounding along in easy leaps scarce five
paces behind.
Mr. Philander dropped the professor’s
arm, and broke into a mad orgy of speed that would
have done credit to any varsity track team.
“As I was saying, Mr. Philander—”
screamed Professor Porter, as, metaphorically speaking,
he himself “threw her into high.”
He, too, had caught a fleeting backward glimpse of
cruel yellow eyes and half open mouth within startling
proximity of his person.
With streaming coat tails and shiny
silk hat Professor Archimedes Q. Porter fled through
the moonlight close upon the heels of Mr. Samuel T.
Philander.
Before them a point of the jungle
ran out toward a narrow promontory, and it was for
the heaven of the trees he saw there that Mr. Samuel
T. Philander directed his prodigious leaps and bounds;
while from the shadows of this same spot peered two
keen eyes in interested appreciation of the race.
It was Tarzan of the Apes who watched,
with face a-grin, this odd game of follow-the-leader.
He knew the two men were safe enough
from attack in so far as the lion was concerned.
The very fact that Numa had foregone such easy prey
at all convinced the wise forest craft of Tarzan that
Numa’s belly already was full.
The lion might stalk them until hungry
again; but the chances were that if not angered he
would soon tire of the sport, and slink away to his
jungle lair.
Really, the one great danger was that
one of the men might stumble and fall, and then the
yellow devil would be upon him in a moment and the
joy of the kill would be too great a temptation to
withstand.
So Tarzan swung quickly to a lower
limb in line with the approaching fugitives; and as
Mr. Samuel T. Philander came panting and blowing beneath
him, already too spent to struggle up to the safety
of the limb, Tarzan reached down and, grasping him
by the collar of his coat, yanked him to the limb
by his side.
Another moment brought the professor
within the sphere of the friendly grip, and he, too,
was drawn upward to safety just as the baffled Numa,
with a roar, leaped to recover his vanishing quarry.
For a moment the two men clung panting
to the great branch, while Tarzan squatted with his
back to the stem of the tree, watching them with mingled
curiosity and amusement.
It was the professor who first broke the silence.
“I am deeply pained, Mr. Philander,
that you should have evinced such a paucity of manly
courage in the presence of one of the lower orders,
and by your crass timidity have caused me to exert
myself to such an unaccustomed degree in order that
I might resume my discourse. As I was saying,
Mr. Philander, when you interrupted me, the Moors—”
“Professor Archimedes Q. Porter,”
broke in Mr. Philander, in icy tones, “the time
has arrived when patience becomes a crime and mayhem
appears garbed in the mantle of virtue. You have
accused me of cowardice. You have insinuated
that you ran only to overtake me, not to escape the
clutches of the lion. Have a care, Professor
Archimedes Q. Porter! I am a desperate man.
Goaded by long-suffering patience the worm will turn.”
“Tut, tut, Mr. Philander, tut,
tut!” cautioned Professor Porter; “you
forget yourself.”
“I forget nothing as yet, Professor
Archimedes Q. Porter; but, believe me, sir, I am tottering
on the verge of forgetfulness as to your exalted position
in the world of science, and your gray hairs.”
The professor sat in silence for a
few minutes, and the darkness hid the grim smile that
wreathed his wrinkled countenance. Presently
he spoke.
“Look here, Skinny Philander,”
he said, in belligerent tones, “if you are lookin’
for a scrap, peel off your coat and come on down on
the ground, and I’ll punch your head just as
I did sixty years ago in the alley back of Porky Evans’
barn.”
“Ark!” gasped the astonished
Mr. Philander. “Lordy, how good that sounds!
When you’re human, Ark, I love you; but somehow
it seems as though you had forgotten how to be human
for the last twenty years.”
The professor reached out a thin,
trembling old hand through the darkness until it found
his old friend’s shoulder.
“Forgive me, Skinny,”
he said, softly. “It hasn’t been
quite twenty years, and God alone knows how hard I
have tried to be `human’ for Jane’s sake,
and yours, too, since He took my other Jane away.”
Another old hand stole up from Mr.
Philander’s side to clasp the one that lay upon
his shoulder, and no other message could better have
translated the one heart to the other.
They did not speak for some minutes.
The lion below them paced nervously back and forth.
The third figure in the tree was hidden by the dense
shadows near the stem. He, too, was silent—motionless
as a graven image.
“You certainly pulled me up
into this tree just in time,” said the professor
at last. “I want to thank you. You
saved my life.”
“But I didn’t pull you
up here, Professor,” said Mr. Philander.
“Bless me! The excitement of the moment
quite caused me to forget that I myself was drawn
up here by some outside agency—there must
be someone or something in this tree with us.”
“Eh?” ejaculated Professor
Porter. “Are you quite positive, Mr. Philander?”
“Most positive, Professor,”
replied Mr. Philander, “and,” he added,
“I think we should thank the party. He
may be sitting right next to you now, Professor.”
“Eh? What’s that?
Tut, tut, Mr. Philander, tut, tut!” said Professor
Porter, edging cautiously nearer to Mr. Philander.
Just then it occurred to Tarzan of
the Apes that Numa had loitered beneath the tree for
a sufficient length of time, so he raised his young
head toward the heavens, and there rang out upon the
terrified ears of the two old men the awful warning
challenge of the anthropoid.
The two friends, huddled trembling
in their precarious position on the limb, saw the
great lion halt in his restless pacing as the blood-curdling
cry smote his ears, and then slink quickly into the
jungle, to be instantly lost to view.
“Even the lion trembles in fear,”
whispered Mr. Philander.
“Most remarkable, most remarkable,”
murmured Professor Porter, clutching frantically at
Mr. Philander to regain the balance which the sudden
fright had so perilously endangered. Unfortunately
for them both, Mr. Philander’s center of equilibrium
was at that very moment hanging upon the ragged edge
of nothing, so that it needed but the gentle impetus
supplied by the additional weight of Professor Porter’s
body to topple the devoted secretary from the limb.
For a moment they swayed uncertainly,
and then, with mingled and most unscholarly shrieks,
they pitched headlong from the tree, locked in frenzied
embrace.
It was quite some moments ere either
moved, for both were positive that any such attempt
would reveal so many breaks and fractures as to make
further progress impossible.
At length Professor Porter made an
attempt to move one leg. To his surprise, it
responded to his will as in days gone by. He
now drew up its mate and stretched it forth again.
“Most remarkable, most remarkable,” he
murmured.
“Thank God, Professor,”
whispered Mr. Philander, fervently, “you are
not dead, then?”
“Tut, tut, Mr. Philander, tut,
tut,” cautioned Professor Porter, “I do
not know with accuracy as yet.”
With infinite solicitude Professor
Porter wiggled his right arm—joy!
It was intact. Breathlessly he waved his left
arm above his prostrate body—it waved!
“Most remarkable, most remarkable,” he
said.
“To whom are you signaling,
Professor?” asked Mr. Philander, in an excited
tone.
Professor Porter deigned to make no
response to this puerile inquiry. Instead he
raised his head gently from the ground, nodding it
back and forth a half dozen times.
“Most remarkable,” he
breathed. “It remains intact.”
Mr. Philander had not moved from where
he had fallen; he had not dared the attempt.
How indeed could one move when one’s arms and
legs and back were broken?
One eye was buried in the soft loam;
the other, rolling sidewise, was fixed in awe upon
the strange gyrations of Professor Porter.
“How sad!” exclaimed Mr.
Philander, half aloud. “Concussion of
the brain, superinducing total mental aberration.
How very sad indeed! and for one still so young!”
Professor Porter rolled over upon
his stomach; gingerly he bowed his back until he resembled
a huge tom cat in proximity to a yelping dog.
Then he sat up and felt of various portions of his
anatomy.
“They are all here,” he
exclaimed. “Most remarkable!”
Whereupon he arose, and, bending a
scathing glance upon the still prostrate form of Mr.
Samuel T. Philander, he said:
“Tut, tut, Mr. Philander; this
is no time to indulge in slothful ease. We must
be up and doing.”
Mr. Philander lifted his other eye
out of the mud and gazed in speechless rage at Professor
Porter. Then he attempted to rise; nor could
there have been any more surprised than he when his
efforts were immediately crowned with marked success.
He was still bursting with rage, however,
at the cruel injustice of Professor Porter’s
insinuation, and was on the point of rendering a tart
rejoinder when his eyes fell upon a strange figure
standing a few paces away, scrutinizing them intently.
Professor Porter had recovered his
shiny silk hat, which he had brushed carefully upon
the sleeve of his coat and replaced upon his head.
When he saw Mr. Philander pointing to something behind
him he turned to behold a giant, naked but for a loin
cloth and a few metal ornaments, standing motionless
before him.
“Good evening, sir!” said
the professor, lifting his hat.
For reply the giant motioned them
to follow him, and set off up the beach in the direction
from which they had recently come.
“I think it the better part
of discretion to follow him,” said Mr. Philander.
“Tut, tut, Mr. Philander,”
returned the professor. “A short time
since you were advancing a most logical argument in
substantiation of your theory that camp lay directly
south of us. I was skeptical, but you finally
convinced me; so now I am positive that toward the
south we must travel to reach our friends. Therefore
I shall continue south.”
“But, Professor Porter, this
man may know better than either of us. He seems
to be indigenous to this part of the world.
Let us at least follow him for a short distance.”
“Tut, tut, Mr. Philander,”
repeated the professor. “I am a difficult
man to convince, but when once convinced my decision
is unalterable. I shall continue in the proper
direction, if I have to circumambulate the continent
of Africa to reach my destination.”
Further argument was interrupted by
Tarzan, who, seeing that these strange men were not
following him, had returned to their side.
Again he beckoned to them; but still
they stood in argument.
Presently the ape-man lost patience
with their stupid ignorance. He grasped the frightened
Mr. Philander by the shoulder, and before that worthy
gentleman knew whether he was being killed or merely
maimed for life, Tarzan had tied one end of his rope
securely about Mr. Philander’s neck.
“Tut, tut, Mr. Philander,”
remonstrated Professor Porter; “it is most unbeseeming
in you to submit to such indignities.”
But scarcely were the words out of
his mouth ere he, too, had been seized and securely
bound by the neck with the same rope. Then Tarzan
set off toward the north, leading the now thoroughly
frightened professor and his secretary.
In deathly silence they proceeded
for what seemed hours to the two tired and hopeless
old men; but presently as they topped a little rise
of ground they were overjoyed to see the cabin lying
before them, not a hundred yards distant.
Here Tarzan released them, and, pointing
toward the little building, vanished into the jungle
beside them.
“Most remarkable, most remarkable!”
gasped the professor. “But you see, Mr.
Philander, that I was quite right, as usual; and but
for your stubborn willfulness we should have escaped
a series of most humiliating, not to say dangerous
accidents. Pray allow yourself to be guided by
a more mature and practical mind hereafter when in
need of wise counsel.”
Mr. Samuel T. Philander was too much
relieved at the happy outcome to their adventure to
take umbrage at the professor’s cruel fling.
Instead he grasped his friend’s arm and hastened
him forward in the direction of the cabin.
It was a much-relieved party of castaways
that found itself once more united. Dawn discovered
them still recounting their various adventures and
speculating upon the identity of the strange guardian
and protector they had found on this savage shore.
Esmeralda was positive that it was
none other than an angel of the Lord, sent down especially
to watch over them.
“Had you seen him devour the
raw meat of the lion, Esmeralda,” laughed Clayton,
“you would have thought him a very material
angel.”
“There was nothing heavenly
about his voice,” said Jane Porter, with a little
shudder at recollection of the awful roar which had
followed the killing of the lioness.
“Nor did it precisely comport
with my preconceived ideas of the dignity of divine
messengers,” remarked Professor Porter, “when
the—ah—gentleman tied two highly
respectable and erudite scholars neck to neck and
dragged them through the jungle as though they had
been cows.”