6
The Tor-o-don
Pan-at-lee slept—the troubled
sleep, of physical and nervous exhaustion, filled
with weird dreamings. She dreamed that she slept
beneath a great tree in the bottom of the Kor-ul-gryf
and that one of the fearsome beasts was creeping upon
her but she could not open her eyes nor move.
She tried to scream but no sound issued from her lips.
She felt the thing touch her throat, her breast, her
arm, and there it closed and seemed to be dragging
her toward it. With a super-human effort of will
she opened her eyes. In the instant she knew
that she was dreaming and that quickly the hallucination
of the dream would fade—it had happened
to her many times before. But it persisted.
In the dim light that filtered into the dark chamber
she saw a form beside her, she felt hairy fingers upon
her and a hairy breast against which she was being
drawn. Jad-ben-Otho! this was no dream.
And then she screamed and tried to fight the thing
from her; but her scream was answered by a low growl
and another hairy hand seized her by the hair of the
head. The beast rose now upon its hind legs and
dragged her from the cave to the moonlit recess without
and at the same instant she saw the figure of what
she took to be a Ho-don rise above the outer edge of
the niche.
The beast that held her saw it too
and growled ominously but it did not relinquish its
hold upon her hair. It crouched as though waiting
an attack, and it increased the volume and frequency
of its growls until the horrid sounds reverberated
through the gorge, drowning even the deep bellowings
of the beasts below, whose mighty thunderings had
broken out anew with the sudden commotion from the
high-flung cave. The beast that held her crouched
and the creature that faced it crouched also, and
growled—as hideously as the other.
Pan-at-lee trembled. This was no Ho-don and though
she feared the Ho-don she feared this thing more,
with its catlike crouch and its beastly growls.
She was lost—that Pan-at-lee knew.
The two things might fight for her, but whichever
won she was lost. Perhaps, during the battle,
if it came to that, she might find the opportunity
to throw herself over into the Kor-ul-gryf.
The thing that held her she had recognized
now as a Tor-o-don, but the other thing she could
not place, though in the moonlight she could see it
very distinctly. It had no tail. She could
see its hands and its feet, and they were not the
hands and feet of the races of Pal-ul-don. It
was slowly closing upon the Tor-o-don and in one hand
it held a gleaming knife. Now it spoke and to
Pan-at-lee’s terror was added an equal weight
of consternation.
“When it leaves go of you,”
it said, “as it will presently to defend itself,
run quickly behind me, Pan-at-lee, and go to the cave
nearest the pegs you descended from the cliff top.
Watch from there. If I am defeated you will have
time to escape this slow thing; if I am not I will
come to you there. I am Om-at’s friend
and yours.”
The last words took the keen edge
from Pan-at-lee’s terror; but she did not understand.
How did this strange creature know her name?
How did it know that she had descended the pegs by
a certain cave? It must, then, have been here
when she came. Pan-at-lee was puzzled.
“Who are you?” she asked,
“and from whence do you come?”
“I am Tarzan,” he replied,
“and just now I came from Om-at, of Kor-ul-ja,
in search of you.”
Om-at, gund of Kor-ul-ja! What
wild talk was this? She would have questioned
him further, but now he was approaching the Tor-o-don
and the latter was screaming and growling so loudly
as to drown the sound of her voice. And then
it did what the strange creature had said that it
would do—it released its hold upon her hair
as it prepared to charge. Charge it did and in
those close quarters there was no room to fence for
openings. Instantly the two beasts locked in
deadly embrace, each seeking the other’s throat.
Pan-at-lee watched, taking no advantage of the opportunity
to escape which their preoccupation gave her.
She watched and waited, for into her savage little
brain had come the resolve to pin her faith to this
strange creature who had unlocked her heart with those
four words—“I am Om-at’s friend!”
And so she waited, with drawn knife, the opportunity
to do her bit in the vanquishing of the Tor-o-don.
That the newcomer could do it unaided she well knew
to be beyond the realms of possibility, for she knew
well the prowess of the beastlike man with whom it
fought. There were not many of them in Pal-ul-don,
but what few there were were a terror to the women
of the Waz-don and the Ho-don, for the old Tor-o-don
bulls roamed the mountains and the valleys of Pal-ul-don
between rutting seasons and woe betide the women who
fell in their paths.
With his tail the Tor-o-don sought
one of Tarzan’s ankles, and finding it, tripped
him. The two fell heavily, but so agile was the
ape-man and so quick his powerful muscles that even
in falling he twisted the beast beneath him, so that
Tarzan fell on top and now the tail that had tripped
him sought his throat as had the tail of In-tan, the
Kor-ul-lul. In the effort of turning his antagonist’s
body during the fall Tarzan had had to relinquish his
knife that he might seize the shaggy body with both
hands and now the weapon lay out of reach at the very
edge of the recess. Both hands were occupied
for the moment in fending off the clutching fingers
that sought to seize him and drag his throat within
reach of his foe’s formidable fangs and now
the tail was seeking its deadly hold with a formidable
persistence that would not be denied.
Pan-at-lee hovered about, breathless,
her dagger ready, but there was no opening that did
not also endanger Tarzan, so constantly were the two
duelists changing their positions. Tarzan felt
the tail slowly but surely insinuating itself about
his neck though he had drawn his head down between
the muscles of his shoulders in an effort to protect
this vulnerable part. The battle seemed to be
going against him for the giant beast against which
he strove would have been a fair match in weight and
strength for Bolgani, the gorilla. And knowing
this he suddenly exerted a single super-human effort,
thrust far apart the giant hands and with the swiftness
of a striking snake buried his fangs in the jugular
of the Tor-o-don. At the same instant the creature’s
tail coiled about his own throat and then commenced
a battle royal of turning and twisting bodies as each
sought to dislodge the fatal hold of the other, but
the acts of the ape-man were guided by a human brain
and thus it was that the rolling bodies rolled in
the direction that Tarzan wished—toward
the edge of the recess.
The choking tail had shut the air
from his lungs, he knew that his gasping lips were
parted and his tongue protruding; and now his brain
reeled and his sight grew dim; but not before he reached
his goal and a quick hand shot out to seize the knife
that now lay within reach as the two bodies tottered
perilously upon the brink of the chasm.
With all his remaining strength the
ape-man drove home the blade—once, twice,
thrice, and then all went black before him as he felt
himself, still in the clutches of the Tor-o-don, topple
from the recess.
Fortunate it was for Tarzan that Pan-at-lee
had not obeyed his injunction to make good her escape
while he engaged the Tor-o-don, for it was to this
fact that he owed his life. Close beside the
struggling forms during the brief moments of the terrific
climax she had realized every detail of the danger
to Tarzan with which the emergency was fraught and
as she saw the two rolling over the outer edge of
the niche she seized the ape-man by an ankle at the
same time throwing herself prone upon the rocky floor.
The muscles of the Tor-o-don relaxed in death with
the last thrust of Tarzan’s knife and with its
hold upon the ape-man released it shot from sight
into the gorge below.
It was with infinite difficulty that
Pan-at-lee retained her hold upon the ankle of her
protector, but she did so and then, slowly, she sought
to drag the dead weight back to the safety of the niche.
This, however, was beyond her strength and she could
but hold on tightly, hoping that some plan would suggest
itself before her powers of endurance failed.
She wondered if, after all, the creature was already
dead, but that she could not bring herself to believe—and
if not dead how long it would be before he regained
consciousness. If he did not regain it soon he
never would regain it, that she knew, for she felt
her fingers numbing to the strain upon them and slipping,
slowly, slowly, from their hold. It was then that
Tarzan regained consciousness. He could not know
what power upheld him, but he felt that whatever it
was it was slowly releasing its hold upon his ankle.
Within easy reach of his hands were two pegs and these
he seized upon just as Pan-at-lee’s fingers slipped
from their hold.
As it was he came near to being precipitated
into the gorge—only his great strength
saved him. He was upright now and his feet found
other pegs. His first thought was of his foe.
Where was he? Waiting above there to finish him?
Tarzan looked up just as the frightened face of Pan-at-lee
appeared over the threshold of the recess.
“You live?” she cried.
“Yes,” replied Tarzan. “Where
is the shaggy one?”
Pan-at-lee pointed downward. “There,”
she said, “dead.”
“Good!” exclaimed the
ape-man, clambering to her side. “You are
unharmed?” he asked.
“You came just in time,”
replied Pan-at-lee; “but who are you and how
did you know that I was here and what do you know of
Om-at and where did you come from and what did you
mean by calling Om-at, gund?”
“Wait, wait,” cried Tarzan;
“one at a time. My, but you are all alike—the
shes of the tribe of Kerchak, the ladies of England,
and their sisters of Pal-ul-don. Have patience
and I will try to tell you all that you wish to know.
Four of us set out with Om-at from Kor-ul-ja to search
for you. We were attacked by the Kor-ul-lul and
separated. I was taken prisoner, but escaped.
Again I stumbled upon your trail and followed it,
reaching the summit of this cliff just as the hairy
one was climbing up after you. I was coming to
investigate when I heard your scream—the
rest you know.”
“But you called Om-at, gund
of Kor-ul-ja,” she insisted. “Es-sat
is gund.”
“Es-sat is dead,” explained
the ape-man. “Om-at slew him and now Om-at
is gund. Om-at came back seeking you. He
found Es-sat in your cave and killed him.”
“Yes,” said the girl,
“Es-sat came to my cave and I struck him down
with my golden breastplates and escaped.”
“And a lion pursued you,”
continued Tarzan, “and you leaped from the cliff
into Kor-ul-lul, but why you were not killed is beyond
me.”
“Is there anything beyond you?”
exclaimed Pan-at-lee. “How could you know
that a lion pursued me and that I leaped from the cliff
and not know that it was the pool of deep water below
that saved me?”
“I would have known that, too,
had not the Kor-ul-lul come then and prevented me
continuing upon your trail. But now I would ask
you a question—by what name do you call
the thing with which I just fought?”
“It was a Tor-o-don,”
she replied. “I have seen but one before.
They are terrible creatures with the cunning of man
and the ferocity of a beast. Great indeed must
be the warrior who slays one single-handed.”
She gazed at him in open admiration.
“And now,” said Tarzan,
“you must sleep, for tomorrow we shall return
to Kor-ul-ja and Om-at, and I doubt that you have had
much rest these two nights.”
Pan-at-lee, lulled by a feeling of
security, slept peacefully into the morning while
Tarzan stretched himself upon the hard floor of the
recess just outside her cave.
The sun was high in the heavens when
he awoke; for two hours it had looked down upon another
heroic figure miles away—the figure of
a godlike man fighting his way through the hideous
morass that lies like a filthy moat defending Pal-ul-don
from the creatures of the outer world. Now waist
deep in the sucking ooze, now menaced by loathsome
reptiles, the man advanced only by virtue of Herculean
efforts gaining laboriously by inches along the devious
way that he was forced to choose in selecting the
least precarious footing. Near the center of
the morass was open water—slimy, green-hued
water. He reached it at last after more than two
hours of such effort as would have left an ordinary
man spent and dying in the sticky mud, yet he was
less than halfway across the marsh. Greasy with
slime and mud was his smooth, brown hide, and greasy
with slime and mud was his beloved Enfield that had
shone so brightly in the first rays of the rising
sun.
He paused a moment upon the edge of
the open water and then throwing himself forward struck
out to swim across. He swam with long, easy,
powerful strokes calculated less for speed than for
endurance, for his was, primarily, a test of the latter,
since beyond the open water was another two hours
or more of gruelling effort between it and solid ground.
He was, perhaps, halfway across and congratulating
himself upon the ease of the achievement of this portion
of his task when there arose from the depths directly
in his path a hideous reptile, which, with wide-distended
jaws, bore down upon him, hissing shrilly.
Tarzan arose and stretched, expanded
his great chest and drank in deep draughts of the
fresh morning air. His clear eyes scanned the
wondrous beauties of the landscape spread out before
them. Directly below lay Kor-ul-gryf, a dense,
somber green of gently moving tree tops. To Tarzan
it was neither grim, nor forbidding—it was
jungle, beloved jungle. To his right there spread
a panorama of the lower reaches of the Valley of Jad-ben-Otho,
with its winding streams and its blue lakes.
Gleaming whitely in the sunlight were scattered groups
of dwellings—the feudal strongholds of the
lesser chiefs of the Ho-don. A-lur, the City
of Light, he could not see as it was hidden by the
shoulder of the cliff in which the deserted village
lay.
For a moment Tarzan gave himself over
to that spiritual enjoyment of beauty that only the
man-mind may attain and then Nature asserted herself
and the belly of the beast called aloud that it was
hungry. Again Tarzan looked down at Kor-ul-gryf.
There was the jungle! Grew there a jungle that
would not feed Tarzan? The ape-man smiled and
commenced the descent to the gorge. Was there
danger there? Of course. Who knew it better
than Tarzan? In all jungles lies death, for life
and death go hand in hand and where life teems death
reaps his fullest harvest. Never had Tarzan met
a creature of the jungle with which he could not cope—sometimes
by virtue of brute strength alone, again by a combination
of brute strength and the cunning of the man-mind;
but Tarzan had never met a gryf.
He had heard the bellowings in the
gorge the night before after he had lain down to sleep
and he had meant to ask Pan-at-lee this morning what
manner of beast so disturbed the slumbers of its betters.
He reached the foot of the cliff and strode into the
jungle and here he halted, his keen eyes and ears
watchful and alert, his sensitive nostrils searching
each shifting air current for the scent spoor of game.
Again he advanced deeper into the wood, his light
step giving forth no sound, his bow and arrows in readiness.
A light morning breeze was blowing from up the gorge
and in this direction he bent his steps. Many
odors impinged upon his organs of scent. Some
of these he classified without effort, but others
were strange—the odors of beasts and of
birds, of trees and shrubs and flowers with which
he was unfamiliar. He sensed faintly the reptilian
odor that he had learned to connect with the strange,
nocturnal forms that had loomed dim and bulky on several
occasions since his introduction to Pal-ul-don.
And then, suddenly he caught plainly
the strong, sweet odor of Bara, the deer. Were
the belly vocal, Tarzan’s would have given a
little cry of joy, for it loved the flesh of Bara.
The ape-man moved rapidly, but cautiously forward.
The prey was not far distant and as the hunter approached
it, he took silently to the trees and still in his
nostrils was the faint reptilian odor that spoke of
a great creature which he had never yet seen except
as a denser shadow among the dense shadows of the
night; but the odor was of such a faintness as suggests
to the jungle bred the distance of absolute safety.
And now, moving noiselessly, Tarzan
came within sight of Bara drinking at a pool where
the stream that waters Kor-ul-gryf crosses an open
place in the jungle. The deer was too far from
the nearest tree to risk a charge, so the ape-man
must depend upon the accuracy and force of his first
arrow, which must drop the deer in its tracks or forfeit
both deer and shaft. Far back came the right hand
and the bow, that you or I might not move, bent easily
beneath the muscles of the forest god. There
was a singing twang and Bara, leaping high in air,
collapsed upon the ground, an arrow through his heart.
Tarzan dropped to earth and ran to his kill, lest the
animal might even yet rise and escape; but Bara was
safely dead. As Tarzan stooped to lift it to
his shoulder there fell upon his ears a thunderous
bellow that seemed almost at his right elbow, and
as his eyes shot in the direction of the sound, there
broke upon his vision such a creature as paleontologists
have dreamed as having possibly existed in the dimmest
vistas of Earth’s infancy—a gigantic
creature, vibrant with mad rage, that charged, bellowing,
upon him.
When Pan-at-lee awoke she looked out
upon the niche in search of Tarzan. He was not
there. She sprang to her feet and rushed out,
looking down into Kor-ul-gryf guessing that he had
gone down in search of food and there she caught a
glimpse of him disappearing into the forest.
For an instant she was panic-stricken. She knew
that he was a stranger in Pal-ul-don and that, so,
he might not realize the dangers that lay in that
gorge of terror. Why did she not call to him
to return? You or I might have done so, but no
Pal-ul-don, for they know the ways of the gryf—they
know the weak eyes and the keen ears, and that at
the sound of a human voice they come. To have
called to Tarzan, then, would but have been to invite
disaster and so she did not call. Instead, afraid
though she was, she descended into the gorge for the
purpose of overhauling Tarzan and warning him in whispers
of his danger. It was a brave act, since it was
performed in the face of countless ages of inherited
fear of the creatures that she might be called upon
to face. Men have been decorated for less.
Pan-at-lee, descended from a long
line of hunters, assumed that Tarzan would move up
wind and in this direction she sought his tracks,
which she soon found well marked, since he had made
no effort to conceal them. She moved rapidly
until she reached the point at which Tarzan had taken
to the trees. Of course she knew what had happened;
since her own people were semi-arboreal; but she could
not track him through the trees, having no such well-developed
sense of scent as he.
She could but hope that he had continued
on up wind and in this direction she moved, her heart
pounding in terror against her ribs, her eyes glancing
first in one direction and then another. She
had reached the edge of a clearing when two things
happened—she caught sight of Tarzan bending
over a dead deer and at the same instant a deafening
roar sounded almost beside her. It terrified
her beyond description, but it brought no paralysis
of fear. Instead it galvanized her into instant
action with the result that Pan-at-lee swarmed up
the nearest tree to the very loftiest branch that
would sustain her weight. Then she looked down.
The thing that Tarzan saw charging
him when the warning bellow attracted his surprised
eyes loomed terrifically monstrous before him—monstrous
and awe-inspiring; but it did not terrify Tarzan,
it only angered him, for he saw that it was beyond
even his powers to combat and that meant that it might
cause him to lose his kill, and Tarzan was hungry.
There was but a single alternative to remaining for
annihilation and that was flight—swift and
immediate. And Tarzan fled, but he carried the
carcass of Bara, the deer, with him. He had not
more than a dozen paces start, but on the other hand
the nearest tree was almost as close. His greatest
danger lay, he imagined, in the great, towering height
of the creature pursuing him, for even though he reached
the tree he would have to climb high in an incredibly
short time as, unless appearances were deceiving,
the thing could reach up and pluck him down from any
branch under thirty feet above the ground, and possibly
from those up to fifty feet, if it reared up on its
hind legs.
But Tarzan was no sluggard and though
the gryf was incredibly fast despite its great bulk,
it was no match for Tarzan, and when it comes to climbing,
the little monkeys gaze with envy upon the feats of
the ape-man. And so it was that the bellowing
gryf came to a baffled stop at the foot of the tree
and even though he reared up and sought to seize his
prey among the branches, as Tarzan had guessed he
might, he failed in this also. And then, well
out of reach, Tarzan came to a stop and there, just
above him, he saw Pan-at-lee sitting, wide-eyed and
trembling.
“How came you here?” he asked.
She told him. “You came
to warn me!” he said. “It was very
brave and unselfish of you. I am chagrined that
I should have been thus surprised. The creature
was up wind from me and yet I did not sense its near
presence until it charged. I cannot understand
it.”
“It is not strange,” said
Pan-at-lee. “That is one of the peculiarities
of the gryf—it is said that man never knows
of its presence until it is upon him—so
silently does it move despite its great size.”
“But I should have smelled it,”
cried Tarzan, disgustedly.
“Smelled it!” ejaculated Pan-at-lee.
“Smelled it?”
“Certainly. How do you
suppose I found this deer so quickly? And I sensed
the gryf, too, but faintly as at a great distance.”
Tarzan suddenly ceased speaking and looked down at
the bellowing creature below them—his nostrils
quivered as though searching for a scent. “Ah!”
he exclaimed. “I have it!”
“What?” asked Pan-at-lee.
“I was deceived because the
creature gives off practically no odor,” explained
the ape-man. “What I smelled was the faint
aroma that doubtless permeates the entire jungle because
of the long presence of many of the creatures—it
is the sort of odor that would remain for a long time,
faint as it is.
“Pan-at-lee, did you ever hear
of a triceratops? No? Well this thing that
you call a gryf is a triceratops and it has been extinct
for hundreds of thousands of years. I have seen
its skeleton in the museum in London and a figure
of one restored. I always thought that the scientists
who did such work depended principally upon an overwrought
imagination, but I see that I was wrong. This
living thing is not an exact counterpart of the restoration
that I saw; but it is so similar as to be easily recognizable,
and then, too, we must remember that during the ages
that have elapsed since the paleontologist’s
specimen lived many changes might have been wrought
by evolution in the living line that has quite evidently
persisted in Pal-ul-don.”
“Triceratops, London, paleo—I
don’t know what you are talking about,”
cried Pan-at-lee.
Tarzan smiled and threw a piece of
dead wood at the face of the angry creature below
them. Instantly the great bony hood over the
neck was erected and a mad bellow rolled upward from
the gigantic body. Full twenty feet at the shoulder
the thing stood, a dirty slate-blue in color except
for its yellow face with the blue bands encircling
the eyes, the red hood with the yellow lining and the
yellow belly. The three parallel lines of bony
protuberances down the back gave a further touch of
color to the body, those following the line of the
spine being red, while those on either side are yellow.
The five- and three-toed hoofs of the ancient horned
dinosaurs had become talons in the gryf, but the three
horns, two large ones above the eyes and a median
horn on the nose, had persisted through all the ages.
Weird and terrible as was its appearance Tarzan could
not but admire the mighty creature looming big below
him, its seventy-five feet of length majestically typifying
those things which all his life the ape-man had admired—courage
and strength. In that massive tail alone was
the strength of an elephant.
The wicked little eyes looked up at
him and the horny beak opened to disclose a full set
of powerful teeth.
“Herbivorous!” murmured
the ape-man. “Your ancestors may have been,
but not you,” and then to Pan-at-lee: “Let
us go now. At the cave we will have deer meat
and then—back to Kor-ul-ja and Om-at.”
The girl shuddered. “Go?”
she repeated. “We will never go from here.”
“Why not?” asked Tarzan.
For answer she but pointed to the gryf.
“Nonsense!” exclaimed
the man. “It cannot climb. We can reach
the cliff through the trees and be back in the cave
before it knows what has become of us.”
“You do not know the gryf,” replied Pan-at-lee
gloomily.
“Wherever we go it will follow
and always it will be ready at the foot of each tree
when we would descend. It will never give us up.”
“We can live in the trees for
a long time if necessary,” replied Tarzan, “and
sometime the thing will leave.”
The girl shook her head. “Never,”
she said, “and then there are the Tor-o-don.
They will come and kill us and after eating a little
will throw the balance to the gryf—the
gryf and Tor-o-don are friends, because the Tor-o-don
shares his food with the gryf.”
“You may be right,” said
Tarzan; “but even so I don’t intend waiting
here for someone to come along and eat part of me and
then feed the balance to that beast below. If
I don’t get out of this place whole it won’t
be my fault. Come along now and we’ll make
a try at it,” and so saying he moved off through
the tree tops with Pan-at-lee close behind. Below
them, on the ground, moved the horned dinosaur and
when they reached the edge of the forest where there
lay fifty yards of open ground to cross to the foot
of the cliff he was there with them, at the bottom
of the tree, waiting.
Tarzan looked ruefully down and scratched his head.