Von Horn cursed the chance that had
snatched the girl from him, but he tried to content
himself with the thought that the treasure probably
still rested in the cabin of the Ithaca, where Bududreen
was to have deposited it. He wished that the
Dyaks would take themselves off so that he could board
the vessel and carry the chest ashore to bury it against
the time that fate should provide a means for transporting
it to Singapore.
In the water below him floated the
Ithaca’s masts, their grisly burdens still lashed
to their wave swept sides. Bududreen lay there,
his contorted features set in a horrible grimace of
death which grinned up at the man he would have cheated,
as though conscious of the fact that the white man
would have betrayed him had the opportunity come,
the while he enjoyed in anticipation the other’s
disappointment in the loss of both the girl and the
treasure.
The tide was rising now, and presently
the Ithaca began to float. No sooner was it
apparent that she was free than the Dyaks sprang into
the water and swam to her side. Like monkeys
they scrambled aboard, swarming below deck in search,
thought von Horn, of pillage. He prayed that
they would not discover the chest.
Presently a half dozen of them leaped
overboard and swam to the mass of tangled spars and
rigging which littered the beach. Selecting
what they wished they returned to the vessel, and
a few minutes later von Horn was chagrined to see
them stepping a jury mast— he thought the
treasure lay in the Ithaca’s cabin.
Before dark the vessel moved slowly
out of the harbor, setting a course across the strait
in the direction that the war prahus had taken.
When it was apparent that there was no danger that
the head hunters would return, the lascar came from
his hiding place, and dancing up and down upon the
shore screamed warlike challenges and taunts at the
retreating enemy.
Von Horn also came forth, much to
the sailor’s surprise, and in silence the two
stood watching the disappearing ship. At length
they turned and made their way up the stream toward
camp—there was no longer aught to fear
there. Von Horn wondered if the creatures he
had loosed upon Professor Maxon had done their work
before they left, or if they had all turned to mush
as had Number Thirteen.
Once at the encampment his questions
were answered, for he saw a light in the bungalow,
and as he mounted the steps there were Sing and Professor
Maxon just coming from the living room.
“Von Horn!” exclaimed
the professor. “You, then, are not dead;
but where is Virginia? Tell me that she is safe.”
“She has been carried away”
was the startling answer. “Your creatures,
under the thing you wished to marry her to, have taken
her to Borneo with a band of Malay and Dyak pirates.
I was alone and could do nothing to prevent them.”
“God!” moaned the old
man. “Why did I not kill the thing when
it stood within my power to do so. Only last
night he was here beside me, and now it is too late.”
“I warned you,” said von Horn, coldly.
“I was mad,” retorted
the professor. “Could you not see that
I was mad? Oh, why did you not stop me?
You were sane enough. You at least might have
forced me to abandon the insane obsession which has
overpowered my reason for all these terrible months.
I am sane now, but it is too late—too
late.”
“Both you and your daughter
could only have interpreted any such action on my
part as instigated by self-interest, for you both
knew that I wanted to make her my wife,” replied
the other. “My hands were tied. I
am sorry now that I did not act, but you can readily
see the position in which I was placed.”
“Can nothing be done to get
her back?” cried the father. “There
must be some way to save her. Do it von Horn,
and not only is my daughter yours but my wealth as
well— every thing that I possess shall
be yours if you will but save her from those frightful
creatures.”
“The Ithaca is gone, too,”
replied the doctor. “There is only a small
boat that I hid in the jungle for some such emergency.
It will carry us to Borneo, but what can we four
do against five hundred pirates and the dozen monsters
you have brought into the world? No, Professor
Maxon, I fear there is little hope, though I am willing
to give my life in an attempt to save Virginia.
You will not forget your promise should we succeed?”
“No, doctor,” replied
the old man. “I swear that you shall have
Virginia as your wife, and all my property shall be
made over to you if she is rescued.”
Sing Lee had been a silent listener
to this strange conversation. An odd look came
into his slant eyes as he heard von Horn exact a confirmation
from the professor, but what passed in his shrewd
mind only he could say.
It was too late to attempt to make
a start that day for Borneo, as darkness had already
fallen. Professor Maxon and von Horn walked
over to the workshop and the inner campong to ascertain
what damage had been done there.
On their return Sing was setting the
table on the verandah for the evening meal.
The two men were talking, and without making his presence
noticeable the Chinaman hovered about ever within
ear shot.
“I cannot make it out, von Horn,”
Professor Maxon was saying. “Not a board
broken, and the doors both apparently opened intentionally
by someone familiar with locks and bolts. Who
could have done it?”
“You forget Number Thirteen,”
suggested the doctor.
“But the chest!” expostulated
the other. “What in the world would he
want of that enormous and heavy chest?”
“He might have thought that
it contained treasure,” hazarded von Horn, in
an innocent tone of voice.
“Bosh, my dear man,” replied
Professor Maxon. “He knew nothing of treasures,
or money, or the need or value of either. I tell
you the workshop was opened, and the inner campong
as well by some one who knew the value of money and
wanted that chest, but why they should have released
the creatures from the inner enclosure is beyond me.”
“And I tell you Professor Maxon
that it could have been none other than Number Thirteen,”
insisted von Horn. “Did I not myself see
him leading his eleven monsters as easily as a captain
commands his company? The fellow is brighter
than we have imagined. He has learned much from
us both, he has reasoned, and he has shrewdly guessed
many things that he could not have known through experience.”
“But his object?” asked the professor.
“That is simple,” returned
von Horn. “You have held out hopes to
him that soon he should come to live under your roof
with Virginia. The creature has been madly infatuated
with her ever since the day he took her from Number
One, and you have encouraged his infatuation until
yesterday. Then you regained your sanity and
put him in his rightful place. What is the result?
Denied the easy prey he expected he immediately decided
to take it by force, and with that end in view, and
taking advantage of the series of remarkable circumstances
which played into his hands, he liberated his fellows,
and with them hastened to the beach in search of Virginia
and in hopes of being able to fly with her upon the
Ithaca. There he met the Malay pirates, and
together they formed an alliance under terms of which
Number Thirteen is to have the girl, and the pirates
the chest in return for transporting him and his crew
to Borneo. Why it is all perfectly simple and
logical, Professor Maxon; do you not see it now?”
“You may be right, doctor,”
answered the old man. “But it is idle to
conjecture. Tomorrow we can be up and doing,
so let us get what sleep we can tonight. We shall
need all our energies if we are to save my poor, dear
girl, from the clutches of that horrid, soulless thing.”
At the very moment that he spoke the
object of his contumely was entering the dark mouth
of a broad river that flowed from out of the heart
of savage Borneo. In the prahu with him his eleven
hideous companions now bent to their paddles with
slightly increased efficiency. Before them the
leader saw a fire blazing upon a tiny island in the
center of the stream. Toward this they turned
their silent way. Grimly the war prahu with its
frightful freight nosed closer to the bank.
At last Number Thirteen made out the
figures of men about the fire, and as they came still
closer he was sure that they were members of the very
party he had been pursuing across the broad waters
for hours. The prahus were drawn up upon the
bank and the warriors were preparing to eat.
Just as the young giants’ prahu
came within the circle of firelight a swarthy Malay
approached the fire, dragging a white girl roughly
by the arm. No more was needed to convince Number
Thirteen of the identity of the party. With
a low command to his fellows he urged them to redoubled
speed. At the same instant a Dyak warrior caught
sight of the approaching boat as it sped into the
full glare of the light.
At sight of the occupants the head
hunters scattered for their own prahus. The
frightful aspect of the enemy turned their savage
hearts to water, leaving no fight in their ordinarily
warlike souls.
So quickly they moved that as the
pursuing prahu touched the bank all the nearer boats
had been launched, and the remaining pirates were
scurrying across the little island for those which
lay upon the opposite side. Among these was
the Malay who guarded the girl, but he had not been
quick enough to prevent Virginia Maxon recognizing
the stalwart figure standing in the bow of the oncoming
craft.
As he dragged her away toward the
prahu of Muda Saffir she cried out to the strange
white man who seemed her self-appointed protector.
“Help! Help!” she
called. “This way! Across the island!”
And then the brown hand of her jailer closed over her
mouth. Like a tigress she fought to free herself,
or to detain her captor until the rescue party should
catch up with them, but the scoundrel was muscled
like a bull, and when the girl held back he lifted
her across his shoulder and broke into a run.
Rajah Muda Saffir had no stomach for
a fight himself, but he was loathe to lose the prize
he had but just won, and seeing that his men were
panic-stricken he saw no alternative but to rally
them for a brief stand that would give the little
moment required to slip away in his own prahu with
the girl.
Calling aloud for those around him
to come to his support he halted fifty yards from
his boat just as Number Thirteen with his fierce,
brainless horde swept up from the opposite side of
the island in the wake of him who bore Virginia Maxon.
The old rajah succeeded in gathering some fifty warriors
about him from the crews of the two boats which lay
near his. His own men he hastened to their posts
in his prahu that they might be ready to pull swiftly
away the moment that he and the captive were aboard.
The Dyak warriors presented an awe
inspiring spectacle in the fitful light of the nearby
camp fire. The ferocity of their fierce faces
was accentuated by the upturned, bristling tiger cat’s
teeth which protruded from every ear; while the long
feathers of the Argus pheasant waving from their war-caps,
the brilliant colors of their war-coats trimmed with
the black and white feathers of the hornbill, and
the strange devices upon their gaudy shields but added
to the savagery of their appearance as they danced
and howled, menacing and intimidating, in the path
of the charging foe.
A single backward glance was all that
Virginia Maxon found it possible to throw in the direction
of the rescue party, and in that she saw a sight that
lived forever in her memory. At the head of
his hideous, misshapen pack sprang the stalwart young
giant straight into the heart of the flashing parangs
of the howling savages. To right and left fell
the mighty bull whip cutting down men with all the
force and dispatch of a steel saber. The Dyaks,
encouraged by the presence of Muda Saffir in their
rear, held their ground; and the infuriated, brainless
things that followed the wielder of the bull whip
threw themselves upon the head hunters with beating
hands and rending fangs.
Number Ten wrested a parang from an
adversary, and acting upon his example the other creatures
were not long in arming themselves in a similar manner.
Cutting and jabbing they hewed their way through the
solid ranks of the enemy, until Muda Saffir, seeing
that defeat was inevitable turned and fled toward
his prahu.
Four of his creatures lay dead as
the last of the Dyaks turned to escape from the mad
white man who faced naked steel with only a rawhide
whip. In panic the head hunters made a wild
dash for the two remaining prahus, for Muda Saffir
had succeeded in getting away from the island in safety.
Number Thirteen reached the water’s
edge but a moment after the prow of the rajah’s
craft had cleared the shore and was swinging up stream
under the vigorous strokes of its fifty oarsmen.
For an instant he stood poised upon the bank as though
to spring after the retreating prahu, but the knowledge
that he could not swim held him back—it
was useless to throw away his life when the need of
it was so great if Virginia Maxon was to be saved.
Turning to the other prahus he saw
that one was already launched, but that the crew of
the other was engaged in a desperate battle with the
seven remaining members of his crew for possession
of the boat. Leaping among the combatants he
urged his fellows aboard the prahu which was already
half filled with Dyaks. Then he shoved the boat
out into the river, jumping aboard himself as its
prow cleared the gravelly beach.
For several minutes that long, hollowed
log was a veritable floating hell of savage, screaming
men locked in deadly battle. The sharp parangs
of the head hunters were no match for the superhuman
muscles of the creatures that battered them about;
now lifting one high above his fellows and using the
body as a club to beat down those nearby; again snapping
an arm or leg as one might break a pipe stem; or hurling
a living antagonist headlong above the heads of his
fellows to the dark waters of the river. And
above them all in the thickest of the fight, towering
even above his own giants, rose the mighty figure
of the terrible white man, whose very presence wrought
havoc with the valor of the brown warriors.
Two more of Number Thirteen’s
creatures had been cut down in the prahu, but the
loss among the Dyaks had been infinitely greater,
and to it was now added the desertions of the terror
stricken savages who seemed to fear the frightful
countenances of their adversaries even as much as
they did their prowess.
There remained but a handful of brown
warriors in one end of the boat when the advantage
of utilizing their knowledge of the river and of navigation
occurred to Number Thirteen. Calling to his
men he commanded them to cease killing, making prisoners
of those who remained instead. So accustomed
had his pack now become to receiving and acting upon
his orders that they changed their tactics immediately,
and one by one the remaining Dyaks were overpowered,
disarmed and held.
With difficulty Number Thirteen communicated
with them, for among them there was but a single warrior
who had ever had intercourse with an Englishman, but
at last by means of signs and the few words that were
common to them both he made the native understand
that he would spare the lives of himself and his companions
if they would help him in pursuit of Muda Saffir and
the girl.
The Dyaks felt but little loyalty
for the rascally Malay they served, since in common
with all their kind they and theirs had suffered for
generations at the hands of the cruel, crafty and
unscrupulous race that had usurped the administration
of their land. So it was not difficult to secure
from them the promise of assistance in return for
their lives.
Number Thirteen noticed that when
they addressed him it was always as Bulan, and upon
questioning them he discovered that they had given
him this title of honor partly in view of his wonderful
fighting ability and partly because the sight of his
white face emerging from out of the darkness of the
river into the firelight of their blazing camp fire
had carried to their impressionable minds a suggestion
of the tropic moon which they admired and reverenced.
Both the name and the idea appealed to Number Thirteen
and from that time he adopted Bulan as his rightful
cognomen.
The loss of time resulting from the
fight in the prahu and the ensuing peace parley permitted
Muda Saffir to put considerable distance between himself
and his pursuers. The Malay’s boat was
now alone, for of the eight prahus that remained of
the original fleet it was the only one which had taken
this branch of the river, the others having scurried
into a smaller southerly arm after the fight upon
the island, that they might the more easily escape
their hideous foemen.
Only Barunda, the headman, knew which
channel Rajah Muda Saffir intended following, and
Muda wondered why it was that the two boats that were
to have borne Barunda’s men did not catch up
with his. While he had left Barunda and his
warriors engaged in battle with the strangers he did
not for an instant imagine that they would suffer
any severe loss, and that one of their boats should
be captured was beyond belief. But this was precisely
what had happened, and the second boat, seeing the
direction taken by the enemy, had turned down stream
the more surely to escape them.
So it was that while Rajah Muda Saffir
moved leisurely up the river toward his distant stronghold
waiting for the other boats of his fleet to overtake
him, Barunda, the headman, guided the white enemy
swiftly after him. Barunda had discovered that
it was the girl alone this white man wanted.
Evidently he either knew nothing of the treasure
chest lying in the bottom of Muda Saffir’s boat,
or, knowing, was indifferent. In either event
Barunda thought that he saw a chance to possess himself
of the rich contents of the heavy box, and so served
his new master with much greater enthusiasm than he
had the old.
Beneath the paddles of the natives
and the five remaining members of his pack Bulan sped
up the dark river after the single prahu with its
priceless freight. Already six of the creatures
of Professor Maxon’s experiments had given up
their lives in the service of his daughter, and the
remaining six were pushing forward through the inky
blackness of the jungle night into the untracked heart
of savage Borneo to rescue her from her abductors
though they sacrificed their own lives in the endeavor.
Far ahead of them in the bottom of
the great prahu crouched the girl they sought.
Her thoughts were of the man she felt intuitively
to possess the strength, endurance and ability to
overcome every obstacle and reach her at last.
Would he come in time? Ah, that was the question.
The mystery of the stranger appealed to her.
A thousand times she had attempted to solve the question
of his first appearance on the island at the very
moment that his mighty muscles were needed to rescue
her from the horrible creature of her father’s
creation. Then there was his unaccountable disappearance
for weeks; there was von Horn’s strange reticence
and seeming ignorance as to the circumstances which
brought the young man to the island, or his equally
unaccountable disappearance after having rescued her
from Number One. And now, when she suddenly found
herself in need of protection, here was the same
young man turning up in a most miraculous fashion,
and at the head of the terrible creatures of the inner
campong.
The riddle was too deep for her—she
could not solve it; and then her thoughts were interrupted
by the thin, brown hand of Rajah Muda Saffir as it
encircled her waist and drew her toward him.
Upon the evil lips were hot words of passion.
The girl wrenched herself from the man’s embrace,
and, with a little scream of terror, sprang to her
feet, and as Muda Saffir arose to grasp her again
she struck him full in the face with one small, clenched
fist.
Directly behind the Malay lay the
heavy chest of Professor Maxon. As the man stepped
backward to recover his equilibrium both feet struck
the obstacle. For an instant he tottered with
wildly waving arms in an endeavor to regain his lost
balance, then, with a curse upon his lips, he lunged
across the box and over the side of the prahu into
the dark waters of the river.
10