Conclusion
At the sight of Jane, cries of relief
and delight broke from every lip, and as Tarzan’s
car stopped beside the other, Professor Porter caught
his daughter in his arms.
For a moment no one noticed Tarzan,
sitting silently in his seat.
Clayton was the first to remember,
and, turning, held out his hand.
“How can we ever thank you?”
he exclaimed. “You have saved us all.
You called me by name at the cottage, but I do not
seem to recall yours, though there is something very
familiar about you. It is as though I had known
you well under very different conditions a long time
ago.”
Tarzan smiled as he took the proffered hand.
“You are quite right, Monsieur
Clayton,” he said, in French. “You
will pardon me if I do not speak to you in English.
I am just learning it, and while I understand it fairly
well I speak it very poorly.”
“But who are you?” insisted
Clayton, speaking in French this time himself.
“Tarzan of the Apes.”
Clayton started back in surprise.
“By Jove!” he exclaimed. “It
is true.”
And Professor Porter and Mr. Philander
pressed forward to add their thanks to Clayton’s,
and to voice their surprise and pleasure at seeing
their jungle friend so far from his savage home.
The party now entered the modest little hostelry,
where
Clayton soon made arrangements for their entertainment.
They were sitting in the little, stuffy
parlor when the distant chugging of an approaching
automobile caught their attention.
Mr. Philander, who was sitting near
the window, looked out as the car drew in sight, finally
stopping beside the other automobiles.
“Bless me!” said Mr. Philander,
a shade of annoyance in his tone. “It
is Mr. Canler. I had hoped, er—I had
thought or—er—how very happy
we should be that he was not caught in the fire,”
he ended lamely.
“Tut, tut! Mr. Philander,”
said Professor Porter. “Tut, tut!
I have often admonished my pupils to count ten before
speaking. Were I you, Mr. Philander, I should
count at least a thousand, and then maintain a discreet
silence.”
“Bless me, yes!” acquiesced
Mr. Philander. “But who is the clerical
appearing gentleman with him?”
Jane blanched.
Clayton moved uneasily in his chair.
Professor Porter removed his spectacles
nervously, and breathed upon them, but replaced them
on his nose without wiping.
The ubiquitous Esmeralda grunted.
Only Tarzan did not comprehend.
Presently Robert Canler burst into the room.
“Thank God!” he cried.
“I feared the worst, until I saw your car,
Clayton. I was cut off on the south road and
had to go away back to town, and then strike east
to this road. I thought we’d never reach
the cottage.”
No one seemed to enthuse much.
Tarzan eyed Robert Canler as Sabor eyes her prey.
Jane glanced at him and coughed nervously.
“Mr. Canler,” she said, “this is
Monsieur Tarzan, an old friend.”
Canler turned and extended his hand.
Tarzan rose and bowed as only D’Arnot could
have taught a gentleman to do it, but he did not seem
to see Canler’s hand.
Nor did Canler appear to notice the oversight.
“This is the Reverend Mr. Tousley,
Jane,” said Canler, turning to the clerical
party behind him. “Mr. Tousley, Miss Porter.”
Mr. Tousley bowed and beamed.
Canler introduced him to the others.
“We can have the ceremony at
once, Jane,” said Canler. “Then you
and I can catch the midnight train in town.”
Tarzan understood the plan instantly.
He glanced out of half-closed eyes at Jane, but he
did not move.
The girl hesitated. The room
was tense with the silence of taut nerves.
All eyes turned toward Jane, awaiting her reply.
“Can’t we wait a few days?”
she asked. “I am all unstrung. I
have been through so much today.”
Canler felt the hostility that emanated
from each member of the party. It made him angry.
“We have waited as long as I
intend to wait,” he said roughly. “You
have promised to marry me. I shall be played
with no longer. I have the license and here is
the preacher. Come Mr. Tousley; come Jane.
There are plenty of witnesses —more than
enough,” he added with a disagreeable inflection;
and taking Jane Porter by the arm, he started to lead
her toward the waiting minister.
But scarcely had he taken a single
step ere a heavy hand closed upon his arm with a grip
of steel.
Another hand shot to his throat and
in a moment he was being shaken high above the floor,
as a cat might shake a mouse.
Jane turned in horrified surprise toward Tarzan.
And, as she looked into his face,
she saw the crimson band upon his forehead that she
had seen that other day in far distant Africa, when
Tarzan of the Apes had closed in mortal combat with
the great anthropoid—Terkoz.
She knew that murder lay in that savage
heart, and with a little cry of horror she sprang
forward to plead with the ape-man. But her fears
were more for Tarzan than for Canler. She realized
the stern retribution which justice metes to the murderer.
Before she could reach them, however,
Clayton had jumped to Tarzan’s side and attempted
to drag Canler from his grasp.
With a single sweep of one mighty
arm the Englishman was hurled across the room, and
then Jane laid a firm white hand upon Tarzan’s
wrist, and looked up into his eyes.
“For my sake,” she said.
The grasp upon Canler’s throat relaxed.
Tarzan looked down into the beautiful face before
him.
“Do you wish this to live?” he asked in
surprise.
“I do not wish him to die at
your hands, my friend,” she replied. “I
do not wish you to become a murderer.”
Tarzan removed his hand from Canler’s throat.
“Do you release her from her
promise?” he asked. “It is the price
of your life.”
Canler, gasping for breath, nodded.
“Will you go away and never molest her further?”
Again the man nodded his head, his
face distorted by fear of the death that had been
so close.
Tarzan released him, and Canler staggered
toward the door. In another moment he was gone,
and the terror-stricken preacher with him.
Tarzan turned toward Jane.
“May I speak with you for a moment, alone,”
he asked.
The girl nodded and started toward
the door leading to the narrow veranda of the little
hotel. She passed out to await Tarzan and so
did not hear the conversation which followed.
“Wait,” cried Professor Porter, as Tarzan
was about to follow.
The professor had been stricken dumb
with surprise by the rapid developments of the past
few minutes.
“Before we go further, sir,
I should like an explanation of the events which have
just transpired. By what right, sir, did you
interfere between my daughter and Mr. Canler?
I had promised him her hand, sir, and regardless
of our personal likes or dislikes, sir, that promise
must be kept.”
“I interfered, Professor Porter,”
replied Tarzan, “because your daughter does
not love Mr. Canler—she does not wish to
marry him. That is enough for me to know.”
“You do not know what you have
done,” said Professor Porter. “Now
he will doubtless refuse to marry her.”
“He most certainly will,”
said Tarzan, emphatically.
“And further,” added Tarzan,
“you need not fear that your pride will suffer,
Professor Porter, for you will be able to pay the
Canler person what you owe him the moment you reach
home.”
“Tut, tut, sir!” exclaimed
Professor Porter. “What do you mean, sir?”
“Your treasure has been found,” said Tarzan.
“What—what is that
you are saying?” cried the professor. “You
are mad, man. It cannot be.”
“It is, though. It was
I who stole it, not knowing either its value or to
whom it belonged. I saw the sailors bury it,
and, ape-like, I had to dig it up and bury it again
elsewhere. When D’Arnot told me what it
was and what it meant to you I returned to the jungle
and recovered it. It had caused so much crime
and suffering and sorrow that D’Arnot thought
it best not to attempt to bring the treasure itself
on here, as had been my intention, so I have brought
a letter of credit instead.
“Here it is, Professor Porter,”
and Tarzan drew an envelope from his pocket and handed
it to the astonished professor, “two hundred
and forty-one thousand dollars. The treasure
was most carefully appraised by experts, but lest there
should be any question in your mind, D’Arnot
himself bought it and is holding it for you, should
you prefer the treasure to the credit.”
“To the already great burden
of the obligations we owe you, sir,” said Professor
Porter, with trembling voice, “is now added
this greatest of all services. You have given
me the means to save my honor.”
Clayton, who had left the room a moment
after Canler, now returned.
“Pardon me,” he said.
“I think we had better try to reach town before
dark and take the first train out of this forest.
A native just rode by from the north, who reports
that the fire is moving slowly in this direction.”
This announcement broke up further
conversation, and the entire party went out to the
waiting automobiles.
Clayton, with Jane, the professor
and Esmeralda occupied Clayton’s car, while
Tarzan took Mr. Philander in with him.
“Bless me!” exclaimed
Mr. Philander, as the car moved off after Clayton.
“Who would ever have thought it possible!
The last time I saw you you were a veritable wild
man, skipping about among the branches of a tropical
African forest, and now you are driving me along a
Wisconsin road in a French automobile. Bless
me! But it is most remarkable.”
“Yes,” assented Tarzan,
and then, after a pause, “Mr. Philander, do
you recall any of the details of the finding and burying
of three skeletons found in my cabin beside that African
jungle?”
“Very distinctly, sir, very
distinctly,” replied Mr. Philander.
“Was there anything peculiar
about any of those skeletons?”
Mr. Philander eyed Tarzan narrowly.
“Why do you ask?”
“It means a great deal to me
to know,” replied Tarzan. “Your answer
may clear up a mystery. It can do no worse, at
any rate, than to leave it still a mystery. I
have been entertaining a theory concerning those skeletons
for the past two months, and I want you to answer
my question to the best of your knowledge—were
the three skeletons you buried all human skeletons?”
“No,” said Mr. Philander,
“the smallest one, the one found in the crib,
was the skeleton of an anthropoid ape.”
“Thank you,” said Tarzan.
In the car ahead, Jane was thinking
fast and furiously. She had felt the purpose
for which Tarzan had asked a few words with her, and
she knew that she must be prepared to give him an
answer in the very near future.
He was not the sort of person one
could put off, and somehow that very thought made
her wonder if she did not really fear him.
And could she love where she feared?
She realized the spell that had been
upon her in the depths of that far-off jungle, but
there was no spell of enchantment now in prosaic Wisconsin.
Nor did the immaculate young Frenchman
appeal to the primal woman in her, as had the stalwart
forest god.
Did she love him? She did not know—now.
She glanced at Clayton out of the
corner of her eye. Was not here a man trained
in the same school of environment in which she had
been trained—a man with social position
and culture such as she had been taught to consider
as the prime essentials to congenial association?
Did not her best judgment point to
this young English nobleman, whose love she knew to
be of the sort a civilized woman should crave, as
the logical mate for such as herself?
Could she love Clayton? She
could see no reason why she could not. Jane
was not coldly calculating by nature, but training,
environment and heredity had all combined to teach
her to reason even in matters of the heart.
That she had been carried off her
feet by the strength of the young giant when his great
arms were about her in the distant African forest,
and again today, in the Wisconsin woods, seemed to
her only attributable to a temporary mental reversion
to type on her part—to the psychological
appeal of the primeval man to the primeval woman in
her nature.
If he should never touch her again,
she reasoned, she would never feel attracted toward
him. She had not loved him, then. It had
been nothing more than a passing hallucination, super-induced
by excitement and by personal contact.
Excitement would not always mark their
future relations, should she marry him, and the power
of personal contact eventually would be dulled by
familiarity.
Again she glanced at Clayton.
He was very handsome and every inch a gentleman.
She should be very proud of such a husband.
And then he spoke—a minute
sooner or a minute later might have made all the difference
in the world to three lives —but chance
stepped in and pointed out to Clayton the psychological
moment.
“You are free now, Jane,”
he said. “Won’t you say yes—I
will devote my life to making you very happy.”
“Yes,” she whispered.
That evening in the little waiting
room at the station Tarzan caught Jane alone for a
moment.
“You are free now, Jane,”
he said, “and I have come across the
ages out of the dim and distant past from the lair
of the primeval man to claim you—for your
sake I have become a civilized man—for
your sake I have crossed oceans and continents—for
your sake I will be whatever you will me to be.
I can make you happy, Jane, in the life you know and
love best. Will you marry me?”
For the first time she realized the
depths of the man’s love —all that
he had accomplished in so short a time solely for
love of her. Turning her head she buried her
face in her arms.
What had she done? Because she
had been afraid she might succumb to the pleas of
this giant, she had burned her bridges behind her—in
her groundless apprehension that she might make a
terrible mistake, she had made a worse one.
And then she told him all—told
him the truth word by word, without attempting to
shield herself or condone her error.
“What can we do?” he asked.
“You have admitted that you love me.
You know that I love you; but I do not know the ethics
of society by which you are governed. I shall
leave the decision to you, for you know best what
will be for your eventual welfare.”
“I cannot tell him, Tarzan,”
she said. “He too, loves me, and he is
a good man. I could never face you nor any other
honest person if I repudiated my promise to Mr. Clayton.
I shall have to keep it—and you must help
me bear the burden, though we may not see each other
again after tonight.”
The others were entering the room
now and Tarzan turned toward the little window.
But he saw nothing outside—within
he saw a patch of greensward surrounded by a matted
mass of gorgeous tropical plants and flowers, and,
above, the waving foliage of mighty trees, and, over
all, the blue of an equatorial sky.
In the center of the greensward a
young woman sat upon a little mound of earth, and
beside her sat a young giant. They ate pleasant
fruit and looked into each other’s eyes and
smiled. They were very happy, and they were all
alone.
His thoughts were broken in upon by
the station agent who entered asking if there was
a gentleman by the name of Tarzan in the party.
“I am Monsieur Tarzan,” said the ape-man.
“Here is a message for you,
forwarded from Baltimore; it is a cablegram from Paris.”
Tarzan took the envelope and tore
it open. The message was from D’Arnot.
It read:
Fingerprints prove you Greystoke. Congratulations.
D’ARNOT.
As Tarzan finished reading, Clayton
entered and came toward him with extended hand.
Here was the man who had Tarzan’s
title, and Tarzan’s estates, and was going to
marry the woman whom Tarzan loved—the woman
who loved Tarzan. A single word from Tarzan would
make a great difference in this man’s life.
It would take away his title and his
lands and his castles, and—it would take
them away from Jane Porter also. “I say,
old man,” cried Clayton, “I haven’t
had a chance to thank you for all you’ve done
for us. It seems as though you had your hands
full saving our lives in Africa and here.
“I’m awfully glad you
came on here. We must get better acquainted.
I often thought about you, you know, and the remarkable
circumstances of your environment.
“If it’s any of my business,
how the devil did you ever get into that bally jungle?”
“I was born there,” said
Tarzan, quietly. “My mother was an Ape,
and of course she couldn’t tell me much about
it. I never knew who my father was.”
For the
further adventures
of lord Greystoke
read
the return of Tarzan