2
“To the Death!”
In the moment of discovery Tarzan
saw that the creature was almost a counterpart of
his companion in size and conformation, with the exception
that his body was entirely clothed with a coat of shaggy
black hair which almost concealed his features, while
his harness and weapons were similar to those of the
creature he had attacked. Ere Tarzan could prevent
the creature had struck the ape-man’s companion
a blow upon the head with his knotted club that felled
him, unconscious, to the earth; but before he could
inflict further injury upon his defenseless prey the
ape-man had closed with him.
Instantly Tarzan realized that he
was locked with a creature of almost superhuman strength.
The sinewy fingers of a powerful hand sought his throat
while the other lifted the bludgeon above his head.
But if the strength of the hairy attacker was great,
great too was that of his smooth-skinned antagonist.
Swinging a single terrific blow with clenched fist
to the point of the other’s chin, Tarzan momentarily
staggered his assailant and then his own fingers closed
upon the shaggy throat, as with the other hand he seized
the wrist of the arm that swung the club. With
equal celerity he shot his right leg behind the shaggy
brute and throwing his weight forward hurled the thing
over his hip heavily to the ground, at the same time
precipitating his own body upon the other’s chest.
With the shock of the impact the club
fell from the brute’s hand and Tarzan’s
hold was wrenched from its throat. Instantly the
two were locked in a deathlike embrace. Though
the creature bit at Tarzan the latter was quickly
aware that this was not a particularly formidable
method of offense or defense, since its canines were
scarcely more developed than his own. The thing
that he had principally to guard against was the sinuous
tail which sought steadily to wrap itself about his
throat and against which experience had afforded him
no defense.
Struggling and snarling the two rolled
growling about the sward at the foot of the tree,
first one on top and then the other but each more
occupied at present in defending his throat from the
other’s choking grasp than in aggressive, offensive
tactics. But presently the ape-man saw his opportunity
and as they rolled about he forced the creature closer
and closer to the pool, upon the banks of which the
battle was progressing. At last they lay upon
the very verge of the water and now it remained for
Tarzan to precipitate them both beneath the surface
but in such a way that he might remain on top.
At the same instant there came within
range of Tarzan’s vision, just behind the prostrate
form of his companion, the crouching, devil-faced
figure of the striped saber-tooth hybrid, eyeing him
with snarling, malevolent face.
Almost simultaneously Tarzan’s
shaggy antagonist discovered the menacing figure of
the great cat. Immediately he ceased his belligerent
activities against Tarzan and, jabbering and chattering
to the ape-man, he tried to disengage himself from
Tarzan’s hold but in such a way that indicated
that as far as he was concerned their battle was over.
Appreciating the danger to his unconscious companion
and being anxious to protect him from the saber-tooth
the ape-man relinquished his hold upon his adversary
and together the two rose to their feet.
Drawing his knife Tarzan moved slowly
toward the body of his companion, expecting that his
recent antagonist would grasp the opportunity for
escape. To his surprise, however, the beast, after
regaining its club, advanced at his side.
The great cat, flattened upon its
belly, remained motionless except for twitching tail
and snarling lips where it lay perhaps fifty feet
beyond the body of the pithecanthropus. As Tarzan
stepped over the body of the latter he saw the eyelids
quiver and open, and in his heart he felt a strange
sense of relief that the creature was not dead and
a realization that without his suspecting it there
had arisen within his savage bosom a bond of attachment
for this strange new friend.
Tarzan continued to approach the saber-tooth,
nor did the shaggy beast at his right lag behind.
Closer and closer they came until at a distance of
about twenty feet the hybrid charged. Its rush
was directed toward the shaggy manlike ape who halted
in his tracks with upraised bludgeon to meet the assault.
Tarzan, on the contrary, leaped forward and with a
celerity second not even to that of the swift-moving
cat, he threw himself headlong upon him as might a
Rugby tackler on an American gridiron. His right
arm circled the beast’s neck in front of the
right shoulder, his left behind the left foreleg,
and so great was the force of the impact that the
two rolled over and over several times upon the ground,
the cat screaming and clawing to liberate itself that
it might turn upon its attacker, the man clinging
desperately to his hold.
Seemingly the attack was one of mad,
senseless ferocity unguided by either reason or skill.
Nothing, however, could have been farther from the
truth than such an assumption since every muscle in
the ape-man’s giant frame obeyed the dictates
of the cunning mind that long experience had trained
to meet every exigency of such an encounter.
The long, powerful legs, though seemingly inextricably
entangled with the hind feet of the clawing cat, ever
as by a miracle, escaped the raking talons and yet
at just the proper instant in the midst of all the
rolling and tossing they were where they should be
to carry out the ape-man’s plan of offense.
So that on the instant that the cat believed it had
won the mastery of its antagonist it was jerked suddenly
upward as the ape-man rose to his feet, holding the
striped back close against his body as he rose and
forcing it backward until it could but claw the air
helplessly.
Instantly the shaggy black rushed
in with drawn knife which it buried in the beast’s
heart. For a few moments Tarzan retained his
hold but when the body had relaxed in final dissolution
he pushed it from him and the two who had formerly
been locked in mortal combat stood facing each other
across the body of the common foe.
Tarzan waited, ready either for peace
or war. Presently two shaggy black hands were
raised; the left was laid upon its own heart and the
right extended until the palm touched Tarzan’s
breast. It was the same form of friendly salutation
with which the pithecanthropus had sealed his alliance
with the ape-man and Tarzan, glad of every ally he
could win in this strange and savage world, quickly
accepted the proffered friendship.
At the conclusion of the brief ceremony
Tarzan, glancing in the direction of the hairless
pithecanthropus, discovered that the latter had recovered
consciousness and was sitting erect watching them
intently. He now rose slowly and at the same time
the shaggy black turned in his direction and addressed
him in what evidently was their common language.
The hairless one replied and the two approached each
other slowly. Tarzan watched interestedly the
outcome of their meeting. They halted a few paces
apart, first one and then the other speaking rapidly
but without apparent excitement, each occasionally
glancing or nodding toward Tarzan, indicating that
he was to some extent the subject of their conversation.
Presently they advanced again until
they met, whereupon was repeated the brief ceremony
of alliance which had previously marked the cessation
of hostilities between Tarzan and the black.
They then advanced toward the ape-man addressing him
earnestly as though endeavoring to convey to him some
important information. Presently, however, they
gave it up as an unprofitable job and, resorting to
sign language, conveyed to Tarzan that they were proceeding
upon their way together and were urging him to accompany
them.
As the direction they indicated was
a route which Tarzan had not previously traversed
he was extremely willing to accede to their request,
as he had determined thoroughly to explore this unknown
land before definitely abandoning search for Lady Jane
therein.
For several days their way led through
the foothills parallel to the lofty range towering
above. Often were they menaced by the savage
denizens of this remote fastness, and occasionally
Tarzan glimpsed weird forms of gigantic proportions
amidst the shadows of the nights.
On the third day they came upon a
large natural cave in the face of a low cliff at the
foot of which tumbled one of the numerous mountain
brooks that watered the plain below and fed the morasses
in the lowlands at the country’s edge. Here
the three took up their temporary abode where Tarzan’s
instruction in the language of his companions progressed
more rapidly than while on the march.
The cave gave evidence of having harbored
other manlike forms in the past. Remnants of
a crude, rock fireplace remained and the walls and
ceiling were blackened with the smoke of many fires.
Scratched in the soot, and sometimes deeply into the
rock beneath, were strange hieroglyphics and the outlines
of beasts and birds and reptiles, some of the latter
of weird form suggesting the extinct creatures of
Jurassic times. Some of the more recently made
hieroglyphics Tarzan’s companions read with interest
and commented upon, and then with the points of their
knives they too added to the possibly age-old record
of the blackened walls.
Tarzan’s curiosity was aroused,
but the only explanation at which he could arrive
was that he was looking upon possibly the world’s
most primitive hotel register. At least it gave
him a further insight into the development of the
strange creatures with which Fate had thrown him.
Here were men with the tails of monkeys, one of them
as hair covered as any fur-bearing brute of the lower
orders, and yet it was evident that they possessed
not only a spoken, but a written language. The
former he was slowly mastering and at this new evidence
of unlooked-for civilization in creatures possessing
so many of the physical attributes of beasts, Tarzan’s
curiosity was still further piqued and his desire
quickly to master their tongue strengthened, with
the result that he fell to with even greater assiduity
to the task he had set himself. Already he knew
the names of his companions and the common names of
the fauna and flora with which they had most often
come in contact.
Ta-den, he of the hairless, white
skin, having assumed the role of tutor, prosecuted
his task with a singleness of purpose that was reflected
in his pupil’s rapid mastery of Ta-den’s
mother tongue. Om-at, the hairy black, also seemed
to feel that there rested upon his broad shoulders
a portion of the burden of responsibility for Tarzan’s
education, with the result that either one or the other
of them was almost constantly coaching the ape-man
during his waking hours. The result was only
what might have been expected—a rapid assimilation
of the teachings to the end that before any of them
realized it, communication by word of mouth became
an accomplished fact.
Tarzan explained to his companions
the purpose of his mission but neither could give
him any slightest thread of hope to weave into the
fabric of his longing. Never had there been in
their country a woman such as he described, nor any
tailless man other than himself that they ever had
seen.
“I have been gone from A-lur
while Bu, the moon, has eaten seven times,”
said Ta-den. “Many things may happen in
seven times twenty-eight days; but I doubt that your
woman could have entered our country across the terrible
morasses which even you found an almost insurmountable
obstacle, and if she had, could she have survived
the perils that you already have encountered beside
those of which you have yet to learn? Not even
our own women venture into the savage lands beyond
the cities.”
“‘A-lur,’ Light-city,
City of Light,” mused Tarzan, translating the
word into his own tongue. “And where is
A-lur?” he asked. “Is it your city,
Ta-den, and Om-at’s?”
“It is mine,” replied
the hairless one; “but not Om-at’s.
The Waz-don have no cities—they live in
the trees of the forests and the caves of the hills—is
it not so, black man?” he concluded, turning
toward the hairy giant beside him.
“Yes,” replied Om-at,
“We Waz-don are free—only the Hodon
imprison themselves in cities. I would not be
a white man!”
Tarzan smiled. Even here was
the racial distinction between white man and black
man—Ho-don and Waz-don. Not even the
fact that they appeared to be equals in the matter
of intelligence made any difference—one
was white and one was black, and it was easy to see
that the white considered himself superior to the other—one
could see it in his quiet smile.
“Where is A-lur?” Tarzan
asked again. “You are returning to it?”
“It is beyond the mountains,”
replied Ta-den. “I do not return to it—not
yet. Not until Ko-tan is no more.”
“Ko-tan?” queried Tarzan.
“Ko-tan is king,” explained
the pithecanthropus. “He rules this land.
I was one of his warriors. I lived in the palace
of Ko-tan and there I met O-lo-a, his daughter.
We loved, Likestar-light, and I; but Ko-tan would
have none of me. He sent me away to fight with
the men of the village of Dak-at, who had refused to
pay his tribute to the king, thinking that I would
be killed, for Dak-at is famous for his many fine
warriors. And I was not killed. Instead
I returned victorious with the tribute and with Dak-at
himself my prisoner; but Ko-tan was not pleased because
he saw that O-lo-a loved me even more than before,
her love being strengthened and fortified by pride
in my achievement.
“Powerful is my father, Ja-don,
the Lion-man, chief of the largest village outside
of A-lur. Him Ko-tan hesitated to affront and
so he could not but praise me for my success, though
he did it with half a smile. But you do not understand!
It is what we call a smile that moves only the muscles
of the face and affects not the light of the eyes—it
means hypocrisy and duplicity. I must be praised
and rewarded. What better than that he reward
me with the hand of O-lo-a, his daughter? But
no, he saves O-lo-a for Bu-lot, son of Mo-sar, the
chief whose great-grandfather was king and who thinks
that he should be king. Thus would Ko-tan appease
the wrath of Mo-sar and win the friendship of those
who think with Mo-sar that Mo-sar should be king.
“But what reward shall repay
the faithful Ta-den? Greatly do we honor our
priests. Within the temples even the chiefs and
the king himself bow down to them. No greater
honor could Ko-tan confer upon a subject—who
wished to be a priest, but I did not so wish.
Priests other than the high priest must become eunuchs
for they may never marry.
“It was O-lo-a herself who brought
word to me that her father had given the commands
that would set in motion the machinery of the temple.
A messenger was on his way in search of me to summon
me to Ko-tan’s presence. To have refused
the priesthood once it was offered me by the king
would have been to have affronted the temple and the
gods—that would have meant death; but if
I did not appear before Ko-tan I would not have to
refuse anything. O-lo-a and I decided that I
must not appear. It was better to fly, carrying
in my bosom a shred of hope, than to remain and, with
my priesthood, abandon hope forever.
“Beneath the shadows of the
great trees that grow within the palace grounds I
pressed her to me for, perhaps, the last time and then,
lest by ill-fate I meet the messenger, I scaled the
great wall that guards the palace and passed through
the darkened city. My name and rank carried me
beyond the city gate. Since then I have wandered
far from the haunts of the Ho-don but strong within
me is the urge to return if even but to look from
without her walls upon the city that holds her most
dear to me and again to visit the village of my birth,
to see again my father and my mother.”
“But the risk is too great?” asked Tarzan.
“It is great, but not too great,” replied
Ta-den. “I shall go.”
“And I shall go with you, if
I may,” said the ape-man, “for I must
see this City of Light, this A-lur of yours, and search
there for my lost mate even though you believe that
there is little chance that I find her. And you,
Om-at, do you come with us?”
“Why not?” asked the hairy
one. “The lairs of my tribe lie in the
crags above A-lur and though Es-sat, our chief, drove
me out I should like to return again, for there is
a she there upon whom I should be glad to look once
more and who would be glad to look upon me. Yes,
I will go with you. Es-sat feared that I might
become chief and who knows but that Es-sat was right.
But Pan-at-lee! it is she I seek first even before
a chieftainship.”
“We three, then, shall travel together,”
said Tarzan.
“And fight together,”
added Ta-den; “the three as one,” and as
he spoke he drew his knife and held it above his head.
“The three as one,” repeated
Om-at, drawing his weapon and duplicating Ta-den’s
act. “It is spoken!”
“The three as one!” cried
Tarzan of the Apes. “To the death!”
and his blade flashed in the sunlight.
“Let us go, then,” said
Om-at; “my knife is dry and cries aloud for
the blood of Es-sat.”
The trail over which Ta-den and Om-at
led and which scarcely could be dignified even by
the name of trail was suited more to mountain sheep,
monkeys, or birds than to man; but the three that followed
it were trained to ways which no ordinary man might
essay. Now, upon the lower slopes, it led through
dense forests where the ground was so matted with
fallen trees and over-rioting vines and brush that
the way held always to the swaying branches high above
the tangle; again it skirted yawning gorges whose
slippery-faced rocks gave but momentary foothold even
to the bare feet that lightly touched them as the
three leaped chamois-like from one precarious foothold
to the next. Dizzy and terrifying was the way
that Om-at chose across the summit as he led them
around the shoulder of a towering crag that rose a
sheer two thousand feet of perpendicular rock above
a tumbling river. And when at last they stood
upon comparatively level ground again Om-at turned
and looked at them both intently and especially at
Tarzan of the Apes.
“You will both do,” he
said. “You are fit companions for Om-at,
the Waz-don.”
“What do you mean?” asked Tarzan.
“I brought you this way,”
replied the black, “to learn if either lacked
the courage to follow where Om-at led. It is here
that the young warriors of Es-sat come to prove their
courage. And yet, though we are born and raised
upon cliff sides, it is considered no disgrace to
admit that Pastar-ul-ved, the Father of Mountains,
has defeated us, for of those who try it only a few
succeed—the bones of the others lie at
the feet of Pastar-ul-ved.”
Ta-den laughed. “I would
not care to come this way often,” he said.
“No,” replied Om-at; “but
it has shortened our journey by at least a full day.
So much the sooner shall Tarzan look upon the Valley
of Jad-ben-Otho. Come!” and he led the
way upward along the shoulder of Pastar-ul-ved until
there lay spread below them a scene of mystery and
of beauty—a green valley girt by towering
cliffs of marble whiteness—a green valley
dotted by deep blue lakes and crossed by the blue
trail of a winding river. In the center a city
of the whiteness of the marble cliffs—a
city which even at so great a distance evidenced a
strange, yet artistic architecture. Outside the
city there were visible about the valley isolated groups
of buildings—sometimes one, again two and
three and four in a cluster—but always
of the same glaring whiteness, and always in some
fantastic form.
About the valley the cliffs were occasionally
cleft by deep gorges, verdure filled, giving the appearance
of green rivers rioting downward toward a central
sea of green.
“Jad Pele ul Jad-ben-Otho,”
murmured Tarzan in the tongue of the pithecanthropi;
“The Valley of the Great God—it is
beautiful!”
“Here, in A-lur, lives Ko-tan,
the king, ruler over all Pal-ul-don,” said Ta-den.
“And here in these gorges live
the Waz-don,” exclaimed Om-at, “who do
not acknowledge that Ko-tan is the ruler over all the
Land-of-man.”
Ta-den smiled and shrugged. “We
will not quarrel, you and I,” he said to Om-at,
“over that which all the ages have not proved
sufficient time in which to reconcile the Ho-don and
Waz-don; but let me whisper to you a secret, Om-at.
The Ho-don live together in greater or less peace
under one ruler so that when danger threatens them
they face the enemy with many warriors, for every fighting
Ho-don of Pal-ul-don is there. But you Waz-don,
how is it with you? You have a dozen kings who
fight not only with the Ho-don but with one another.
When one of your tribes goes forth upon the fighting
trail, even against the Ho-don, it must leave behind
sufficient warriors to protect its women and its children
from the neighbors upon either hand. When we
want eunuchs for the temples or servants for the fields
or the homes we march forth in great numbers upon
one of your villages. You cannot even flee, for
upon either side of you are enemies and though you
fight bravely we come back with those who will presently
be eunuchs in the temples and servants in our fields
and homes. So long as the Waz-don are thus foolish
the Ho-don will dominate and their king will be king
of Pal-ul-don.”
“Perhaps you are right,”
admitted Om-at. “It is because our neighbors
are fools, each thinking that his tribe is the greatest
and should rule among the Waz-don. They will
not admit that the warriors of my tribe are the bravest
and our shes the most beautiful.”
Ta-den grinned. “Each of
the others presents precisely the same arguments that
you present, Om-at,” he said, “which, my
friend, is the strongest bulwark of defense possessed
by the Ho-don.”
“Come!” exclaimed Tarzan;
“such discussions often lead to quarrels and
we three must have no quarrels. I, of course,
am interested in learning what I can of the political
and economic conditions of your land; I should like
to know something of your religion; but not at the
expense of bitterness between my only friends in Pal-ul-don.
Possibly, however, you hold to the same god?”
“There indeed we do differ,”
cried Om-at, somewhat bitterly and with a trace of
excitement in his voice.
“Differ!” almost shouted
Ta-den; “and why should we not differ?
Who could agree with the preposterous——”
“Stop!” cried Tarzan.
“Now, indeed, have I stirred up a hornets’
nest. Let us speak no more of matters political
or religious.”
“That is wiser,” agreed
Om-at; “but I might mention, for your information,
that the one and only god has a long tail.”
“It is sacrilege,” cried
Ta-den, laying his hand upon his knife; “Jad-ben-Otho
has no tail!”
“Stop!” shrieked Om-at,
springing forward; but instantly Tarzan interposed
himself between them.
“Enough!” he snapped.
“Let us be true to our oaths of friendship that
we may be honorable in the sight of God in whatever
form we conceive Him.”
“You are right, Tailless One,”
said Ta-den. “Come, Om-at, let us look
after our friendship and ourselves, secure in the conviction
that Jad-ben-Otho is sufficiently powerful to look
after himself.”
“Done!” agreed Om-at, “but——”
“No ‘buts,’ Om-at,” admonished
Tarzan.
The shaggy black shrugged his shoulders
and smiled. “Shall we make our way down
toward the valley?” he asked. “The
gorge below us is uninhabited; that to the left contains
the caves of my people. I would see Pan-at-lee
once more. Ta-den would visit his father in the
valley below and Tarzan seeks entrance to A-lur in
search of the mate that would be better dead than
in the clutches of the Ho-don priests of Jad-ben-Otho.
How shall we proceed?”
“Let us remain together as long
as possible,” urged Ta-den. “You,
Om-at, must seek Pan-at-lee by night and by stealth,
for three, even we three, may not hope to overcome
Es-sat and all his warriors. At any time may
we go to the village where my father is chief, for
Ja-don always will welcome the friends of his son.
But for Tarzan to enter A-lur is another matter, though
there is a way and he has the courage to put it to
the test—listen, come close for Jad-ben-Otho
has keen ears and this he must not hear,” and
with his lips close to the ears of his companions
Ta-den, the Tall-tree, son of Ja-don, the Lion-man,
unfolded his daring plan.
And at the same moment, a hundred
miles away, a lithe figure, naked but for a loin cloth
and weapons, moved silently across a thorn-covered,
waterless steppe, searching always along the ground
before him with keen eyes and sensitive nostrils.