On their return to camp after her
rescue Virginia talked a great deal to von Horn about
the young giant who had rescued her, until the man
feared that she was more interested in him than seemed
good for his own plans.
He had now cast from him the last
vestige of his loyalty for his employer, and thus
freed had determined to use every means within his
power to win Professor Maxon’s daughter, and
with her the heritage of wealth which he knew would
be hers should her father, through some unforeseen
mishap, meet death before he could return to civilization
and alter his will, a contingency which von Horn knew
he might have to consider should he marry the girl
against her father’s wishes, and thus thwart
the crazed man’s mad, but no less dear project.
He realized that first he must let
the girl fully understand the grave peril in which
she stood, and turn her hope of protection from her
father to himself. He imagined that the initial
step in undermining Virginia’s confidence in
her father would be to narrate every detail of the
weird experiments which Professor Maxon had brought
to such successful issues during their residence upon
the island.
The girl’s own questioning gave
him the lead he needed.
“Where could that horrid creature
have come from that set upon me in the jungle and
nearly killed poor Sing?” she asked.
For a moment von Horn was silent,
in well simulated hesitancy to reply to her query.
“I cannot tell you, Miss Maxon,”
he said sadly, “how much I should hate to be
the one to ignore your father’s commands, and
enlighten you upon this and other subjects which lie
nearer to your personal welfare than you can possibly
guess; but I feel that after the horrors of this day
duty demands that I must lay all before you—you
cannot again be exposed to the horrors from which
you were rescued only by a miracle.”
“I cannot imagine what you hint
at, Dr. von Horn,” said Virginia, “but
if to explain to me will necessitate betraying my
father’s confidence I prefer that you remain
silent.”
“You do not understand,”
broke in the man, “you cannot guess the horrors
that I have seen upon this island, or the worse horrors
that are to come. Could you dream of what lies
in store for you, you would seek death rather than
face the future. I have been loyal to your father,
Virginia, but were you not blind, or indifferent,
you would long since have seen that your welfare means
more to me than my loyalty to him— more
to me than my life or my honor.
“You asked where the creature
came from that attacked you today. I shall tell
you. It is one of a dozen similarly hideous
things that your father has created in his mad desire
to solve the problem of life. He has solved it;
but, God, at what a price in misshapen, soulless,
hideous monsters!”
The girl looked up at him, horror stricken.
“Do you mean to say that my
father in a mad attempt to usurp the functions of
God created that awful thing?” she asked in
a low, faint voice, “and that there are others
like it upon the island?”
“In the campong next to yours
there are a dozen others,” replied von Horn,
“nor would it be easy to say which is the most
hideous and repulsive. They are grotesque caricatures
of humanity—without soul and almost without
brain.”
“God!” murmured the girl,
burying her face in her hands, “he has gone
mad; he has gone mad.”
“I truly believe that he is
mad,” said von Horn, “nor could you doubt
it for a moment were I to tell you the worst.”
“The worst!” exclaimed
the girl. “What could be worse than that
which you already have divulged? Oh, how could
you have permitted it?”
“There is much worse than I
have told you, Virginia. So much worse that I
can scarce force my lips to frame the words, but you
must be told. I would be more criminally liable
than your father were I to keep it from you, for my
brain, at least, is not crazed. Virginia, you
have in your mind a picture of the hideous thing that
carried you off into the jungle?”
“Yes,” and as the girl
replied a convulsive shudder racked her frame.
Von Horn grasped her arm gently as
he went on, as though to support and protect her during
the shock that he was about to administer.
“Virginia,” he said in
a very low voice, “it is your father’s
intention to wed you to one of his creatures.”
The girl broke from him with an angry cry.
“It is not true!” she
exclaimed. “It is not true. Oh, Dr.
von Horn how could you tell me such a cruel and terrible
untruth.”
“As God is my judge, Virginia,”
and the man reverently uncovered as he spoke, “it
is the truth. Your father told me it in so many
words when I asked his permission to pay court to
you myself—you are to marry Number Thirteen
when his education is complete.”
“I shall die first!” she cried.
“Why not accept me instead?” suggested
the man.
For a moment Virginia looked straight
into his eyes as though to read his inmost soul.
“Let me have time to consider
it, Doctor,” she replied. “I do not
know that I care for you in that way at all.”
“Think of Number Thirteen,”
he suggested. “It should not be difficult
to decide.”
“I could not marry you simply
to escape a worse fate,” replied the girl.
“I am not that cowardly—but let me
think it over. There can be no immediate danger,
I am sure.”
“One can never tell,”
replied von Horn, “what strange, new vagaries
may enter a crazed mind to dictate this moment’s
action or the next.”
“Where could we wed?” asked Virginia.
“The Ithaca would bear us to
Singapore, and when we returned you would be under
my legal protection and safe.”
“I shall think about it from
every angle,” she answered sadly, “and
now good night, my dear friend,” and with a
wan smile she entered her quarters.
For the next month Professor Maxon
was busy educating Number Thirteen. He found
the young man intelligent far beyond his most sanguine
hopes, so that the progress made was little short
of uncanny.
Von Horn during this time continued
to urge upon Virginia the necessity for a prompt and
favorable decision in the matter of his proposal;
but when it came time to face the issue squarely the
girl found it impossible to accede to his request—she
thought that she loved him, but somehow she dared
not say the word that would make her his for life.
Bududreen, the Malay mate was equally
harassed by conflicting desires, though of a different
nature, or he had his eye upon the main chance that
was represented to him by the great chest, and also
upon the lesser reward which awaited him upon delivery
of the girl to Rajah Muda Saffir. The fact that
he could find no safe means for accomplishing both
these ends simultaneously was all that had protected
either from his machinations.
The presence of the uncanny creatures
of the court of mystery had become known to the Malay
and he used this knowledge as an argument to foment
discord and mutiny in the ignorant and superstitious
crew under his command. By boring a hole in
the partition wall separating their campong from the
inner one he had disclosed to the horrified view of
his men the fearsome brutes harbored so close to them.
The mate, of course, had no suspicion of the true
origin of these monsters, but his knowledge of the
fact that they had not been upon the island when the
Ithaca arrived and that it would have been impossible
for them to have landed and reached the camp without
having been seen by himself or some member of his
company, was sufficient evidence to warrant him in
attributing their presence to some supernatural and
malignant power.
This explanation the crew embraced
willingly, and with it Bududreen’s suggestion
that Professor Maxon had power to transform them all
into similar atrocities. The ball once started
gained size and momentum as it progressed. The
professor’s ofttimes strange expression was
attributed to an evil eye, and every ailment suffered
by any member of the crew was blamed upon their employer’s
Satanic influence. There was but one escape
from the horrors of such a curse—the death
of its author; and when Bududreen discovered that
they had reached this point, and were even discussing
the method of procedure, he added all that was needed
to the dangerously smouldering embers of bloody mutiny
by explaining that should anything happen to the white
men he would become sole owner of their belongings,
including the heavy chest, and that the reward of
each member of the crew would be generous.
Von Horn was really the only stumbling
block in Bududreen’s path. With the natural
cowardice of the Malay he feared this masterful American
who never moved without a brace of guns slung about
his hips; and it was at just this psychological moment
that the doctor played into the hands of his subordinate,
much to the latter’s inward elation.
Von Horn had finally despaired of
winning Virginia by peaceful court, and had about
decided to resort to force when he was precipitately
confirmed in his decision by a conversation with the
girl’s father.
He and the professor were talking
in the workshop of the remarkable progress of Number
Thirteen toward a complete mastery of English and
the ways and manners of society, in which von Horn
had been assisting his employer to train the young
giant. The breach between the latter and von
Horn had been patched over by Professor Maxon’s
explanations to Number Thirteen as soon as the young
man was able to comprehend—in the meantime
it had been necessary to keep von Horn out of the
workshop except when the giant was confined in his
own room off the larger one.
Von Horn had been particularly anxious,
for the furtherance of certain plans he had in mind,
to effect a reconciliation with Number Thirteen, to
reach a basis of friendship with the young man, and
had left no stone unturned to accomplish this result.
To this end he had spent considerable time with Number
Thirteen, coaching him in English and in the ethics
of human association.
“He is progressing splendidly,
Doctor,” Professor Maxon had said. “It
will be but a matter of a day or so when I can introduce
him to Virginia, but we must be careful that she has
no inkling of his origin until mutual affection has
gained a sure foothold between them.”
“And if that should not occur?”
questioned von Horn.
“I should prefer that they mated
voluntarily,” replied the professor, the strange
gleam leaping to his eyes at the suggestion of possible
antagonism to his cherished plan, “but if not,
then they shall be compelled by the force of my authority—they
both belong to me, body and soul.”
“You will wait for the final
consummation of your desires until you return with
them to civilization, I presume,” said von Horn.
“And why?” returned the
professor. “I can wed them here myself—it
would be the surer way—yes, that is what
I shall do.”
It was this determination on the part
of Professor Maxon that decided von Horn to act at
once. Further, it lent a reasonable justification
for his purposed act.
Shortly after their talk the older
man left the workshop, and von Horn took the opportunity
to inaugurate the second move of his campaign.
Number Thirteen was sitting near a window which let
upon the inner court, busy with the rudiments of written
English. Von Horn approached him.
“You are getting along nicely,
Jack,” he said kindly, looking over the other’s
shoulder and using the name which had been adopted
at his suggestion to lend a more human tone to their
relations with the nameless man.
“Yes,” replied the other,
looking up with a smile. “Professor Maxon
says that in another day or two I may come and live
in his own house, and again meet his beautiful daughter.
It seems almost too good to be true that I shall
actually live under the same roof with her and see
her every day—sit at the same table with
her—and walk with her among the beautiful
trees and flowers that witnessed our first meeting.
I wonder if she will remember me. I wonder
if she will be as glad to see me again as I shall
be to see her.”
“Jack,” said von Horn,
sadly, “I am afraid there is a terrible and
disappointing awakening for you. It grieves me
that it should be so, but it seems only fair to tell
you, what Professor Maxon either does not know or
has forgotten, that his daughter will not look with
pleasure upon you when she learns your origin.
“You are not as other men.
You are but the accident of a laboratory experiment.
You have no soul, and the soul is all that raises
man above the beasts. Jack, poor boy, you are
not a human being—you are not even a beast.
The world, and Miss Maxon is of the world, will look
upon you as a terrible creature to be shunned—
a horrible monstrosity far lower in the scale of creation
than the lowest order of brutes.
“Look,” and the man pointed
through the window toward the group of hideous things
that wandered aimlessly about the court of mystery.
“You are of the same breed as those, you differ
from them only in the symmetry of your face and features,
and the superior development of your brain.
There is no place in the world for them, nor for you.
“I am sorry that it is so.
I am sorry that I should have to be the one to tell
you; but it is better that you know it now from a
friend than that you meet the bitter truth when you
least expected it, and possibly from the lips of one
like Miss Maxon for whom you might have formed a hopeless
affection.”
As von Horn spoke the expression on
the young man’s face became more and more hopeless,
and when he had ceased he dropped his head into his
open palms, sitting quiet and motionless as a carven
statue. No sob shook his great frame, there
was no outward indication of the terrible grief that
racked him inwardly—only in the pose was
utter dejection and hopelessness.
The older man could not repress a
cold smile—it had had more effect than
he had hoped.
“Don’t take it too hard,
my boy,” he continued. “The world
is wide. It would be easy to find a thousand
places where your antecedents would be neither known
nor questioned. You might be very happy elsewhere
and there a hundred thousand girls as beautiful and
sweet as Virginia Maxon—remember that you
have never seen another, so you can scarcely judge.”
“Why did he ever bring me into
the world?” exclaimed the young man suddenly.
“It was wicked—wicked—
terribly cruel and wicked.”
“I agree with you,” said
von Horn quickly, seeing another possibility that
would make his future plans immeasurably easier.
“It was wicked, and it is still more wicked
to continue the work and bring still other unfortunate
creatures into the world to be the butt and plaything
of cruel fate.”
“He intends to do that?” asked the youth.
“Unless he is stopped,” replied von Horn.
“He must be stopped,”
cried the other. “Even if it were necessary
to kill him.”
Von Horn was quite satisfied with
the turn events had taken. He shrugged his shoulders
and turned on his heel toward the outer campong.
“If he had wronged me as he
has you, and those others,” with a gesture toward
the court of mystery, “I should not be long
in reaching a decision.” And with that
he passed out, leaving the door unlatched.
Von Horn went straight to the south
campong and sought out Bududreen. Motioning
the Malay to follow him they walked across the clearing
and entered the jungle out of sight and hearing of
the camp. Sing, hanging clothes in the north
end of the clearing saw them depart, and wondered
a little.
“Bududreen,” said von
Horn, when the two had reached a safe distance from
the enclosures, “there is no need of mincing
matters—something must be done at once.
I do not know how much you know of the work that
Professor Maxon has been engaged in since we reached
this island; but it has been hellish enough and it
must go no further. You have seen the creatures
in the campong next to yours?”
“I have seen,” replied
Bududreen, with a shudder.
“Professor Maxon intends to
wed one of these to his daughter,” von Horn
continued. “She loves me and we wish to
escape—can I rely on you and your men to
aid us? There is a chest in the workshop which
we must take along too, and I can assure you that
you all will be well rewarded for your work.
We intend merely to leave Professor Maxon here with
the creatures he has created.”
Bududreen could scarce repress a smile—it
was indeed too splendid to be true.
“It will be perilous work, Captain,”
he answered. “We should all be hanged were
we caught.”
“There will be no danger of
that, Bududreen, for there will be no one to divulge
our secret.”
“There will be the Professor
Maxon,” urged the Malay. “Some day
he will escape from the island, and then we shall
all hang.”
“He will never escape,”
replied von Horn, “his own creatures will see
to that. They are already commencing to realize
the horrible crime he has committed against them,
and when once they are fully aroused there will be
no safety for any of us. If you wish to leave
the island at all it will be best for you to accept
my proposal and leave while your head yet remains
upon your shoulders. Were we to suggest to the
professor that he leave now he would not only refuse
but he would take steps to make it impossible for any
of us to leave, even to sinking the Ithaca. The
man is mad—quite mad—Bududreen,
and we cannot longer jeopardize our own throats merely
to humor his crazy and criminal whims.”
The Malay was thinking fast, and could
von Horn have guessed what thoughts raced through
the tortuous channels of that semi-barbarous brain
he would have wished himself safely housed in the
American prison where he belonged.
“When do you wish to sail?” asked the
Malay.
“Tonight,” replied von
Horn, and together they matured their plans.
An hour later the second mate with six men disappeared
into the jungle toward the harbor. They, with
the three on watch, were to get the vessel in readiness
for immediate departure.
After the evening meal von Horn sat
on the verandah with Virginia Maxon until the Professor
came from the workshop to retire for the night.
As he passed them he stopped for a word with von
Horn, taking him aside out of the girl’s hearing.
“Have you noticed anything peculiar
in the actions of Thirteen?” asked the older
man. “He was sullen and morose this evening,
and at times there was a strange, wild light in his
eyes as he looked at me. Can it be possible
that, after all, his brain is defective? It would
be terrible. My work would have gone for naught,
for I can see no way in which I can improve upon him.”
“I will go and have a talk with
him later,” said von Horn, “so if you
hear us moving about in the workshop, or even out
here in the campong think nothing of it. I may
take him for a long walk. It is possible that
the hard study and close confinement to that little
building have been too severe upon his brain and nerves.
A long walk each evening may bring him around all right.”
“Splendid—splendid,”
replied the professor. “You may be quite
right. Do it by all means, my dear doctor,”
and there was a touch of the old, friendly, sane tone
which had been so long missing, that almost caused
von Horn to feel a trace of compunction for the hideous
act of disloyalty that he was on the verge of perpetrating.
As Professor Maxon entered the house
von Horn returned to Virginia and suggested that they
take a short walk outside the campong before retiring.
The girl readily acquiesced to the plan, and a moment
later found them strolling through the clearing toward
the southern end of the camp. In the dark shadows
of the gateway leading to the men’s enclosure
a figure crouched. The girl did not see it, but
as they came opposite it von Horn coughed twice, and
then the two passed on toward the edge of the jungle.
6
To kill!
The Rajah Muda Saffir, tiring of the
excuses and delays which Bududreen interposed to postpone
the fulfillment of his agreement with the former,
whereby he was to deliver into the hands of the rajah
a certain beautiful maiden, decided at last to act
upon his own initiative. The truth of the matter
was that he had come to suspect the motives of the
first mate of the Ithaca, and not knowing of the great
chest attributed them to Bududreen’s desire
to possess the girl for himself.
So it was that as the second mate
of the Ithaca with his six men waded down the bed
of the little stream toward the harbor and the ship,
a fleet of ten war prahus manned by over five hundred
fierce Dyaks and commanded by Muda Saffir himself,
pulled cautiously into the little cove upon the opposite
side of the island, and landed but a quarter of a
mile from camp.
At the same moment von Horn was leading
Virginia Maxon farther and farther from the north
campong where resistance, if there was to be any,
would be most likely to occur. At his superior’s
cough Bududreen had signalled silently to the men
within the enclosure, and a moment later six savage
lascars crept stealthily to his side.
The moment that von Horn and the girl
were entirely concealed by the darkness, the seven
moved cautiously along the shadow of the palisade
toward the north campong. There was murder in
the cowardly hearts of several of them, and stupidity
and lust in the hearts of all. There was no
single one who would not betray his best friend for
a handful of silver, nor any but was inwardly hoping
and scheming to the end that he might alone possess
both the chest and the girl.
It was such a pack of scoundrels that
Bududreen led toward the north campong to bear away
the treasure. In the breast of the leader was
the hope that he had planted enough of superstitious
terror in their hearts to make the sight of the supposed
author of their imagined wrongs sufficient provocation
for his murder; for Bududreen was too sly to give
the order for the killing of a white man—the
arm of the white man’s law was too long—but
he felt that he would rest easier were he to leave
the island with the knowledge that only a dead man
remained behind with the secret of his perfidy.
While these events were transpiring
Number Thirteen was pacing restlessly back and forth
the length of the workshop. But a short time
before he had had his author—the author
of his misery—within the four walls of
his prison, and yet he had not wreaked the vengeance
that was in his heart. Twice he had been on the
point of springing upon the man, but both times the
other’s eyes had met his and something which
he was not able to comprehend had stayed him.
Now that the other had gone and he was alone contemplation
of the hideous wrong that had been done loosed again
the flood gates of his pent rage.
The thought that he had been made
by this man—made in the semblance of a
human being, yet denied by the manner of his creation
a place among the lowest of Nature’s creatures—filled
him with fury, but it was not this thought that drove
him to the verge of madness. It was the knowledge,
suggested by von Horn, that Virginia Maxon would look
upon him in horror, as a grotesque and loathsome monstrosity.
He had no standard and no experience
whereby he might classify his sentiments toward this
wonderful creature. All he knew was that his
life would be complete could he be near her always—see
her and speak with her daily. He had thought
of her almost constantly since those short, delicious
moments that he had held her in his arms. Again
and again he experienced in retrospection the exquisite
thrill that had run through every fiber of his being
at the sight of her averted eyes and flushed face.
And the more he let his mind dwell upon the wonderful
happiness that was denied him because of his origin,
the greater became his wrath against his creator.
It was now quite dark without.
The door leading to Professor Maxon’s campong,
left unlatched earlier in the evening by von Horn
for sinister motives of his own, was still unbarred
through a fatal coincidence of forgetfulness on the
part of the professor.
Number Thirteen approached this door.
He laid his hand upon the knob. A moment later
he was moving noiselessly across the campong toward
the house in which Professor Maxon lay peacefully
sleeping; while at the south gate Bududreen and his
six cutthroats crept cautiously within and slunk in
the dense shadows of the palisade toward the workshop
where lay the heavy chest of their desire. At
the same instant Muda Saffir with fifty of his head-hunting
Dyaks emerged from the jungle east of the camp, bent
on discovering the whereabouts of the girl the Malay
sought and bearing her away to his savage court far
within the jungle fastness of his Bornean principality.
Number Thirteen reached the verandah
of the house and peered through the window into the
living room, where an oil lamp, turned low, dimly
lighted the interior, which he saw was unoccupied.
Going to the door he pushed it open and entered the
apartment. All was still within. He listened
intently for some slight sound which might lead him
to the victim he sought, or warn him from the apartment
of the girl or that of von Horn—his business
was with Professor Maxon. He did not wish to
disturb the others whom he believed to be sleeping
somewhere within the structure—a low, rambling
bungalow of eight rooms.
Cautiously he approached one of the
four doors which opened from the living room.
Gently he turned the knob and pushed the door ajar.
The interior of the apartment beyond was in inky
darkness, but Number Thirteen’s greatest fear
was that he might have stumbled upon the sleeping
room of Virginia Maxon, and that if she were to discover
him there, not only would she be frightened, but her
cries would alarm the other inmates of the dwelling.
The thought of the horror that his
presence would arouse within her, the knowledge that
she would look upon him as a terrifying monstrosity,
added new fuel to the fires of hate that raged in
his bosom against the man who had created him.
With clenched fists, and tight set jaws the great,
soulless giant moved across the dark chamber with
the stealthy noiselessness of a tiger. Feeling
before him with hands and feet he made the circuit
of the room before he reached the bed.
Scarce breathing he leaned over and
groped across the covers with his fingers in search
of his prey—the bed was empty. With
the discovery came a sudden nervous reaction that
sent him into a cold sweat. Weakly, he seated
himself upon the edge of the bed. Had his fingers
found the throat of Professor Maxon beneath the coverlet
they would never have released their hold until life
had forever left the body of the scientist, but now
that the highest tide of the young man’s hatred
had come and gone he found himself for the first time
assailed by doubts.
Suddenly he recalled the fact that
the man whose life he sought was the father of the
beautiful creature he adored. Perhaps she loved
him and would be unhappy were he taken away from her.
Number Thirteen did not know, of course, but the
idea obtruded itself, and had sufficient weight to
cause him to remain seated upon the edge of the bed
meditating upon the act he contemplated. He had
by no means given up the idea of killing Professor
Maxon, but now there were doubts and obstacles which
had not been manifest before.
His standards of right and wrong were
but half formed, from the brief attempts of Professor
Maxon and von Horn to inculcate proper moral perceptions
in a mind entirely devoid of hereditary inclinations
toward either good or bad, but he realized one thing
most perfectly—that to be a soulless thing
was to be damned in the estimation of Virginia Maxon,
and it now occurred to him that to kill her father
would be the act of a soulless being. It was
this thought more than another that caused him to
pause in the pursuit of his revenge, since he knew
that the act he contemplated would brand him the very
thing he was, yet wished not to be.
At length, however, he slowly comprehended
that no act of his would change the hideous fact of
his origin; that nothing would make him acceptable
in her eyes, and with a shake of his head he arose
and stepped toward the living room to continue his
search for the professor.
In the workshop Bududreen and his
men had easily located the chest. Dragging it
into the north campong the Malay was about to congratulate
himself upon the ease with which the theft had been
accomplished when one of his fellows declared his
intention of going to the house for the purpose of
dispatching Professor Maxon, lest the influence of
his evil eye should overtake them with some terrible
curse when the loss of the chest should be discovered.
While this met fully with Bududreen’s
plans he urged the man against any such act that he
might have witnesses to prove that he not only had
no hand in the crime, but had exerted his authority
to prevent it; but when two of the men separated themselves
from the party and crept toward the bungalow no force
was interposed to stop them.
The moon had risen now, so that from
the dark shadows of the palisade Muda Saffir and his
savages watched the party with Bududreen squatting
about the heavy chest, and saw the two who crept toward
the house. To Muda Saffir’s evil mind
there was but one explanation. Bududreen had
discovered a rich treasure, and having stolen that
had dispatched two of his men to bring him the girl
also.
Rajah Muda Saffir was furious.
In subdued whispers he sent a half dozen of his Dyaks
back beneath the shadow of the palisade to the opposite
side of the bungalow where they were to enter the
building, killing all within except the girl, whom
they were to carry straight to the beach and the war
prahus.
Then with the balance of his horde
he crept alone in the darkness until opposite Bududreen
and the watchers about the chest. Just as the
two who crept toward the bungalow reached it, Muda
Saffir gave the word for the attack upon the Malays
and lascars who guarded the treasure. With savage
yells they dashed upon the unsuspecting men.
Parangs and spears glistened in the moonlight.
There was a brief and bloody encounter, for the cowardly
Bududreen and his equally cowardly crew had had no
alternative but to fight, so suddenly had the foe
fallen upon them.
In a moment the savage Borneo head
hunters had added five grisly trophies to their record.
Bududreen and another were racing madly toward the
jungle beyond the campong.
As Number Thirteen arose to continue
his search for Professor Maxon his quick ear caught
the shuffling of bare feet upon the verandah.
As he paused to listen there broke suddenly upon
the still night the hideous war cries of the Dyaks,
and the screams and shrieks of their frightened victims
in the campong without. Almost simultaneously
Professor Maxon and Sing rushed into the living room
to ascertain the cause of the wild alarm, while at
the same instant Bududreen’s assassins sprang
through the door with upraised krisses, to be almost
immediately followed by Muda Saffir’s six Dyaks
brandishing their long spears and wicked parangs.
In an instant the little room was
filled with howling, fighting men. The Dyaks,
whose orders as well as inclinations incited them
to a general massacre, fell first upon Bududreen’s
lascars who, cornered in the small room, fought like
demons for their lives, so that when the Dyaks had
overcome them two of their own number lay dead beside
the dead bodies of Bududreen’s henchmen.
Sing and Professor Maxon stood in
the doorway to the professor’s room gazing upon
the scene of carnage in surprise and consternation.
The scientist was unarmed, but Sing held a long,
wicked looking Colt in readiness for any contingency.
It was evident the celestial was no stranger to the
use of his deadly weapon, nor to the moments of extreme
and sudden peril which demanded its use, for he seemed
no more perturbed than had he been but hanging out
his weekly wash.
As Number Thirteen watched the two
men from the dark shadows of the room in which he
stood, he saw that both were calm—the Chinaman
with the calmness of perfect courage, the other through
lack of full understanding of the grave danger which
menaced him. In the eyes of the latter shone
a strange gleam—it was the wild light of
insanity that the sudden nervous shock of the attack
had brought to a premature culmination.
Now the four remaining Dyaks were
advancing upon the two men. Sing levelled his
revolver and fired at the foremost, and at the same
instant Professor Maxon, with a shrill, maniacal scream,
launched himself full upon a second. Number
Thirteen saw the blood spurt from a superficial wound
in the shoulder of the fellow who received Sing’s
bullet, but except for eliciting a howl of rage the
missile had no immediate effect. Then Sing pulled
the trigger again and again, but the cylinder would
not revolve and the hammer fell futilely upon the
empty cartridge. As two of the head hunters closed
upon him the brave Chinaman clubbed his weapon and
went down beneath them beating madly at the brown
skulls.
The man with whom Professor Maxon
had grappled had no opportunity to use his weapons
for the crazed man held him close with one encircling
arm while he tore and struck at him with his free
hand. The fourth Dyak danced around the two
with raised parang watching for an opening that he
might deliver a silencing blow upon the white man’s
skull.
The great odds against the two men—their
bravery in the face of death, their grave danger—and
last and greatest, the fact that one was the father
of the beautiful creature he worshipped, wrought a
sudden change in Number Thirteen. In an instant
he forgot that he had come here to kill the white-haired
man, and with a bound stood in the center of the room—
an unarmed giant towering above the battling four.
The parang of the Dyak who sought
Professor Maxon’s life was already falling as
a mighty hand grasped the wrist of the head hunter;
but even then it was too late to more than lessen
the weight of the blow, and the sharp edge of the
blade bit deep into the forehead of the white man.
As he sank to his knees his other antagonist freed
an arm from the embrace which had pinioned it to his
side, but before he could deal the professor a blow
with the short knife that up to now he had been unable
to use, Number Thirteen had hurled his man across
the room and was upon him who menaced the scientist.
Tearing him loose from his prey, he
raised him far above his head and threw him heavily
against the opposite wall, then he turned his attention
toward Sing’s assailants. All that had
so far saved the Chinaman from death was the fact
that the two savages were each so anxious to secure
his head for the verandah rafters of his own particular
long-house that they interfered with one another in
the consummation of their common desire.
Although battling for his life, Sing
had not failed to note the advent of the strange young
giant, nor the part he had played in succoring the
professor, so that it was with a feeling of relief
that he saw the newcomer turn his attention toward
those who were rapidly reducing the citadel of his
own existence.
The two Dyaks who sought the trophy
which nature had set upon the Chinaman’s shoulders
were so busily engaged with their victim that they
knew nothing of the presence of Number Thirteen until
a mighty hand seized each by the neck and they were
raised bodily from the floor, shaken viciously for
an instant, and then hurled to the opposite end of
the room upon the bodies of the two who had preceded
them.
As Sing came to his feet he found
Professor Maxon lying in a pool of his own blood,
a great gash in his forehead. He saw the white
giant standing silently looking down upon the old
man. Across the room the four stunned Dyaks
were recovering consciousness. Slowly and fearfully
they regained their feet, and seeing that no attention
was being paid them, cast a parting, terrified look
at the mighty creature who had defeated them with
his bare hands, and slunk quickly out into the darkness
of the campong.
When they caught up with Rajah Muda
Saffir near the beach, they narrated a fearful tale
of fifty terrible white men with whom they had battled
valiantly, killing many, before they had been compelled
to retreat in the face of terrific odds. They
swore that even then they had only returned because
the girl was not in the house—otherwise
they should have brought her to their beloved master
as he had directed.
Now Muda Saffir believed nothing that
they said, but he was well pleased with the great
treasure which had so unexpectedly fallen into his
hands, and he decided to make quite sure of that by
transporting it to his own land— later
he could return for the girl. So the ten war
prahus of the Malay pulled quietly out of the little
cove upon the east side of the island, and bending
their way toward the south circled its southern extremity
and bore away for Borneo.
In the bungalow within the north campong
Sing and Number Thirteen had lifted Professor Maxon
to his bed, and the Chinaman was engaged in bathing
and bandaging the wound that had left the older man
unconscious. The white giant stood beside him
watching his every move. He was trying to understand
why sometimes men killed one another and again defended
and nursed. He was curious as to the cause of
his own sudden change in sentiment toward Professor
Maxon. At last he gave the problem up as beyond
his powers of solution, and at Sing’s command
set about the task of helping to nurse the man whom
he considered the author of his unhappiness and whom
a few short minutes before he had come to kill.
As the two worked over the stricken
man their ears were suddenly assailed by a wild commotion
from the direction of the workshop. There were
sounds of battering upon wood, loud growls and roars,
mingled with weird shrieks and screams and the strange,
uncanny gibbering of brainless things.
Sing looked quickly up at his companion.
“Whallee mallee?” he asked.
The giant did not answer. An
expression of pain crossed his features, and he shuddered—but
not from fear.
7