As the girl turned to bid them good
night, she thought that she saw a shadowy form moving
in the darkness beyond them, and almost simultaneously
she was sure that she heard the sounds of stealthy
movement in the same direction.
“What is that?” she whispered.
“There is something out there in the darkness.”
“Yes,” replied Tarzan,
“it is a lion. It has been there for some
time. Hadn’t you noticed it before?”
“Oh!” cried the girl,
breathing a sigh of relief, “is it our lion?”
“No,” said Tarzan, “it
is not our lion; it is another lion and he is hunting.”
“He is stalking us?” asked the girl.
“He is,” replied the ape-man.
Smith-Oldwick fingered the grip of his pistol.
Tarzan saw the involuntary movement
and shook his head.
“Leave that thing where it is, Lieutenant,”
he said.
The officer laughed nervously.
“I couldn’t help it, you know, old man,”
he said; “instinct of self-preservation and all
that.”
“It would prove an instinct
of self-destruction,” said Tarzan. “There
are at least three hunting lions out there watching
us. If we had a fire or the moon were up you
would see their eyes plainly. Presently they
may come after us but the chances are that they will
not. If you are very anxious that they should,
fire your pistol and hit one of them.”
“What if they do charge?”
asked the girl; “there is no means of escape.”
“Why, we should have to fight them,” replied
Tarzan.
“What chance would we three have against them?”
asked the girl.
The ape-man shrugged his shoulders.
“One must die sometime,” he said.
“To you doubtless it may seem terrible—such
a death; but Tarzan of the Apes has always expected
to go out in some such way. Few of us die of
old age in the jungle, nor should I care to die thus.
Some day Numa will get me, or Sheeta, or a black warrior.
These or some of the others. What difference does
it make which it is, or whether it comes tonight or
next year or in ten years? After it is over it
will be all the same.”
The girl shuddered. “Yes,”
she said in a dull, hopeless voice, “after it
is over it will be all the same.”
Then she went into the cavern and
lay down upon the sand. Smith-Oldwick sat in
the entrance and leaned against the cliff. Tarzan
squatted on the opposite side.
“May I smoke?” questioned
the officer of Tarzan. “I have been hoarding
a few cigarettes and if it won’t attract those
bouncers out there I would like to have one last smoke
before I cash in. Will you join me?” and
he proffered the ape-man a cigarette.
“No, thanks,” said Tarzan,
“but it will be all right if you smoke.
No wild animal is particularly fond of the fumes of
tobacco so it certainly won’t entice them any
closer.”
Smith-Oldwick lighted his cigarette
and sat puffing slowly upon it. He had proffered
one to the girl but she had refused, and thus they
sat in silence for some time, the silence of the night
ruffled occasionally by the faint crunching of padded
feet upon the soft sands of the gorge’s floor.
It was Smith-Oldwick who broke the
silence. “Aren’t they unusually quiet
for lions?” he asked.
“No,” replied the ape-man;
“the lion that goes roaring around the jungle
does not do it to attract prey. They are very
quiet when they are stalking their quarry.”
“I wish they would roar,”
said the officer. “I wish they would do
anything, even charge. Just knowing that they
are there and occasionally seeing something like a
shadow in the darkness and the faint sounds that come
to us from them are getting on my nerves. But
I hope,” he said, “that all three don’t
charge at once.”
“Three?” said Tarzan.
“There are seven of them out there now.”
“Good Lord! exclaimed Smith-Oldwick.
“Couldn’t we build a fire,”
asked the girl, “and frighten them away?”
“I don’t know that it
would do any good,” said Tarzan, “as I
have an idea that these lions are a little different
from any that we are familiar with and possibly for
the same reason which at first puzzled me a little—I
refer to the apparent docility in the presence of
a man of the lion who was with us today. A man
is out there now with those lions.”
“It is impossible!” exclaimed
Smith-Oldwick. “They would tear him to
pieces.”
“What makes you think there
is a man there?” asked the girl.
Tarzan smiled and shook his head.
“I am afraid you would not understand,”
he replied. “It is difficult for us to understand
anything that is beyond our own powers.”
“What do you mean by that?” asked the
officer.
“Well,” said Tarzan, “if
you had been born without eyes you could not understand
sense impressions that the eyes of others transmit
to their brains, and as you have both been born without
any sense of smell I am afraid you cannot understand
how I can know that there is a man there.”
“You mean that you scent a man?” asked
the girl.
Tarzan nodded affirmatively.
“And in the same way you know the number of
lions?” asked the man.
“Yes,” said Tarzan.
“No two lions look alike, no two have the same
scent.”
The young Englishman shook his head.
“No,” he said, “I cannot understand.”
“I doubt if the lions or the
man are here necessarily for the purpose of harming
us,” said Tarzan, “because there has been
nothing to prevent their doing so long before had
they wished to. I have a theory, but it is utterly
preposterous.”
“What is it?” asked the girl.
“I think they are here,”
replied Tarzan, “to prevent us from going some
place that they do not wish us to go; in other words
we are under surveillance, and possibly as long as
we don’t go where we are not wanted we shall
not be bothered.”
“But how are we to know where
they don’t want us to go?” asked Smith-Oldwick.
“We can’t know,”
replied Tarzan, “and the chances are that the
very place we are seeking is the place they don’t
wish us to trespass on.”
“You mean the water?” asked the girl.
“Yes,” replied Tarzan.
For some time they sat in silence
which was broken only by an occasional sound of movement
from the outer darkness. It must have been an
hour later that the ape-man rose quietly and drew his
long blade from its sheath. Smith-Oldwick was
dozing against the rocky wall of the cavern entrance,
while the girl, exhausted by the excitement and fatigue
of the day, had fallen into deep slumber. An
instant after Tarzan arose, Smith-Oldwick and the girl
were aroused by a volley of thunderous roars and the
noise of many padded feet rushing toward them.
Tarzan of the Apes stood directly
before the entrance to the cavern, his knife in his
hand, awaiting the charge. The ape-man had not
expected any such concerted action as he now realized
had been taken by those watching them. He had
known for some time that other men had joined those
who were with the lions earlier in the evening, and
when he arose to his feet it was because he knew that
the lions and the men were moving cautiously closer
to him and his party. He might easily have eluded
them, for he had seen that the face of the cliff rising
above the mouth of the cavern might be scaled by as
good a climber as himself. It might have been
wiser had he tried to escape, for he knew that in
the face of such odds even he was helpless, but he
stood his ground though I doubt if he could have told
why.
He owed nothing either of duty or
friendship to the girl sleeping in the cavern, nor
could he longer be of any protection to her or her
companion. Yet something held him there in futile
self-sacrifice.
The great Tarmangani had not even
the satisfaction of striking a blow in self-defense.
A veritable avalanche of savage beasts rolled over
him and threw him heavily to the ground. In falling
his head struck the rocky surface of the cliff, stunning
him.
It was daylight when he regained consciousness.
The first dim impression borne to his awakening mind
was a confusion of savage sounds which gradually resolved
themselves into the growling of lions, and then, little
by little, there came back to him the recollections
of what had preceded the blow that had felled him.
Strong in his nostrils was the scent
of Numa, the lion, and against one naked leg he could
feel the coat of some animal. Slowly Tarzan
opened his eyes. He was lying on his side and
as he looked down his body, he saw that a great lion
stood straddling him—a great lion who growled
hideously at something which Tarzan could not see.
With the full return of his senses
Tarzan’s nose told him that the beast above
him was Numa of the Wamabo pit.
Thus reassured, the ape-man spoke
to the lion and at the same time made a motion as
though he would arise. Immediately Numa stepped
from above him. As Tarzan raised his head, he
saw that he still lay where he had fallen before the
opening of the cliff where the girl had been sleeping
and that Numa, backed against the cliffside, was apparently
defending him from two other lions who paced to and
fro a short distance from their intended victim.
And then Tarzan turned his eyes into
the cave and saw that the girl and Smith-Oldwick were
gone.
His efforts had been for naught.
With an angry toss of his head, the ape-man turned
upon the two lions who had continued to pace back
and forth a few yards from him. Numa of the lion
pit turned a friendly glance in Tarzan’s direction,
rubbed his head against the ape-man’s side,
and then directed his snarling countenance toward
the two hunters.
“I think,” said Tarzan
to Numa, “that you and I together can make these
beasts very unhappy.” He spoke in English,
which, of course, Numa did not understand at all,
but there must have been something reassuring in the
tone, for Numa whined pleadingly and moved impatiently
to and fro parallel with their antagonists.
“Come,” said Tarzan suddenly
and grasping the lion’s mane with his left hand
he moved toward the other lions, his companion pacing
at his side. As the two advanced the others drew
slowly back and, finally separating, moved off to
either side. Tarzan and Numa passed between
them but neither the great black-maned lion nor the
man failed to keep an eye upon the beast nearer him
so that they were not caught unawares when, as though
at some preconcerted signal, the two cats charged
simultaneously from opposite directions.
The ape-man met the charge of his
antagonist after the same fashion of fighting that
he had been accustomed to employing in previous encounters
with Numa and Sheeta. To have attempted to meet
the full shock of a lion’s charge would have
been suicidal even for the giant Tarmangani.
Instead he resorted to methods of agility and cunning,
for quick as are the great cats, even quicker is Tarzan
of the Apes.
With outspread, raking talons and
bared fangs Numa sprang for the naked chest of the
ape-man. Throwing up his left arm as a boxer might
ward off a blow, Tarzan struck upward beneath the left
forearm of the lion, at the same time rushing in with
his shoulder beneath the animal’s body and simultaneously
drove his blade into the tawny hide behind the shoulder.
With a roar of pain Numa wheeled again, the personification
of bestial rage. Now indeed would he exterminate
this presumptuous man-thing who dared even to think
that he could thwart the king of beasts in his desires.
But as he wheeled, his intended quarry wheeled with
him, brown fingers locked in the heavy mane on the
powerful neck and again the blade struck deep into
the lion’s side.
Then it was that Numa went mad with
hate and pain and at the same instant the ape-man
leaped full upon his back. Easily before had
Tarzan locked his legs beneath the belly of a lion
while he clung to its long mane and stabbed it until
his point reached its heart. So easy it had seemed
before that he experienced a sharp feeling of resentment
that he was unable to do so now, for the quick movements
of the lion prevented him, and presently, to his dismay,
as the lion leaped and threw him about, the ape-man
realized that he was swinging inevitably beneath those
frightful talons.
With a final effort he threw himself
from Numa’s back and sought, by his quickness,
to elude the frenzied beast for the fraction of an
instant that would permit him to regain his feet and
meet the animal again upon a more even footing.
But this time Numa was too quick for him and he was
but partially up when a great paw struck him on the
side of the head and bowled him over.
As he fell he saw a black streak shoot
above him and another lion close upon his antagonist.
Rolling from beneath the two battling lions Tarzan
regained his feet, though he was half dazed and staggering
from the impact of the terrible blow he had received.
Behind him he saw a lifeless lion lying torn and bleeding
upon the sand, and before him Numa of the pit was
savagely mauling the second lion.
He of the black coat tremendously
outclassed his adversary in point of size and strength
as well as in ferocity. The battling beasts made
a few feints and passes at each other before the larger
succeeded in fastening his fangs in the other’s
throat, and then, as a cat shakes a mouse, the larger
lion shook the lesser, and when his dying foe sought
to roll beneath and rake his conqueror with his hind
claws, the other met him halfway at his own game, and
as the great talons buried themselves in the lower
part of the other’s chest and then were raked
downward with all the terrific strength of the mighty
hind legs, the battle was ended.
As Numa rose from his second victim
and shook himself, Tarzan could not but again note
the wondrous proportions and symmetry of the beast.
The lions they had bested were splendid specimens themselves
and in their coats Tarzan noted a suggestion of the
black which was such a strongly marked characteristic
of Numa of the pit. Their manes were just a trifle
darker than an ordinary black-maned lion but the tawny
shade on the balance of their coats predominated.
However, the ape-man realized that they were a distinct
species from any he had seen as though they had sprung
originally from a cross between the forest lion of
his acquaintance and a breed of which Numa of the
pit might be typical.
The immediate obstruction in his way
having been removed, Tarzan was for setting out in
search of the spoor of the girl and Smith-Oldwick,
that he might discover their fate. He suddenly
found himself tremendously hungry and as he circled
about over the sandy bottom searching among the tangled
network of innumerable tracks for those of his proteges,
there broke from his lips involuntarily the whine
of a hungry beast. Immediately Numa of the pit
pricked up his ears and, regarding the ape-man steadily
for a moment, he answered the call of hunger and started
briskly off toward the south, stopping occasionally
to see if Tarzan was following.
The ape-man realized that the beast
was leading him to food, and so he followed and as
he followed his keen eyes and sensitive nostrils sought
for some indication of the direction taken by the man
and the girl. Presently out of the mass of lion
tracks, Tarzan picked up those of many sandaled feet
and the scent spoor of the members of the strange
race such as had been with the lions the night before,
and then faintly he caught the scent spoor of the girl
and a little later that of Smith-Oldwick. Presently
the tracks thinned and here those of the girl and
the Englishman became well marked.
They had been walking side by side
and there had been men and lions to the right and
left of them, and men and lions in front and behind.
The ape-man was puzzled by the possibilities suggested
by the tracks, but in the light of any previous experience
he could not explain satisfactorily to himself what
his perceptions indicated.
There was little change in the formation
of the gorge; it still wound its erratic course between
precipitous cliffs. In places it widened out
and again it became very narrow and always deeper the
further south they traveled. Presently the bottom
of the gorge began to slope more rapidly. Here
and there were indications of ancient rapids and waterfalls.
The trail became more difficult but was well marked
and showed indications of great antiquity, and, in
places, the handiwork of man. They had proceeded
for a half or three-quarters of a mile when, at a
turning of the gorge, Tarzan saw before him a narrow
valley cut deep into the living rock of the earth’s
crust, with lofty mountain ranges bounding it upon
the south. How far it extended east and west
he could not see, but apparently it was no more than
three or four miles across from north to south.
That it was a well-watered valley
was indicated by the wealth of vegetation that carpeted
its floor from the rocky cliffs upon the north to
the mountains on the south.
Over the edge of the cliffs from which
the ape-man viewed the valley a trail had been hewn
that led downward to the base. Preceded by the
lion Tarzan descended into the valley, which, at this
point, was forested with large trees. Before
him the trail wound onward toward the center of the
valley. Raucous-voiced birds of brilliant plumage
screamed among the branches while innumerable monkeys
chattered and scolded above him.
The forest teemed with life, and yet
there was borne in upon the ape-man a sense of unutterable
loneliness, a sensation that he never before had felt
in his beloved jungles. There was unreality in
everything about him—in the valley itself,
lying hidden and forgotten in what was supposed to
be an arid waste. The birds and the monkeys,
while similar in type to many with which he was familiar,
were identical with none, nor was the vegetation without
its idiosyncrasies. It was as though he had been
suddenly transported to another world and he felt
a strange restlessness that might easily have been
a premonition of danger.
Fruits were growing among the trees
and some of these he saw that Manu, the monkey, ate.
Being hungry he swung to the lower branches and, amidst
a great chattering of the monkeys, proceeded to eat
such of the fruit as he saw the monkeys ate in safety.
When he had partially satisfied his hunger, for meat
alone could fully do so, he looked about him for Numa
of the pit to discover that the lion had gone.