The great chest in the bottom of Rajah
Muda Saffir’s prahu had awakened in other hearts
as well as his, blind greed and avarice; so that as
it had been the indirect cause of his disaster it
now proved the incentive to another to turn the mishap
to his own profit, and to the final undoing of the
Malay.
The panglima Ninaka of the Signana
Dyaks who manned Muda Saffir’s war prahu saw
his chief disappear beneath the swift waters of the
river, but the word of command that would have sent
the boat hurriedly back to pick up the swimmer was
not given. Instead a lusty cry for greater speed
ahead urged the sinuous muscles gliding beneath the
sleek brown hides; and when Muda Saffir rose to the
surface with a cry for help upon his lips Ninaka shouted
back to him in derision, consigning his carcass to
the belly of the nearest crocodile.
In futile rage Muda Saffir called
down the most terrible curses of Allah and his Prophet
upon the head of Ninaka and his progeny to the fifth
generation, and upon the shades of his forefathers,
and upon the grim skulls which hung from the rafters
of his long-house. Then he turned and swam rapidly
toward the shore.
Ninaka, now in possession of both
the chest and the girl, was rich indeed, but with
Muda Saffir dead he scarce knew to whom he could dispose
of the white girl for a price that would make it worth
while to be burdened with the danger and responsibility
of retaining her. He had had some experience
of white men in the past and knew that dire were the
punishments meted to those who wronged the white man’s
women. All through the remainder of the long
night Ninaka pondered the question deeply. At
last he turned to Virginia.
“Why does the big white man
who leads the ourang outangs follow us?” he
asked. “Is it the chest he desires, or
you?”
“It is certainly not the chest,”
replied the girl. “He wishes to take me
back to my father, that is all. If you will return
me to him you may keep the chest, if that is what
you wish.”
Ninaka looked at her quizzically for
a moment. Evidently then she was of some value.
Possibly should he retain her he could wring a handsome
ransom from the white man. He would wait and
see, it were always an easy matter to rid himself
of her should circumstances require. The river
was there, deep, dark and silent, and he could place
the responsibility for her loss upon Muda Saffir.
Shortly after day break Ninaka beached
his prahu before the long-house of a peaceful river
tribe. The chest he hid in the underbrush close
by his boat, and with the girl ascended the notched
log that led to the verandah of the structure, which,
stretching away for three hundred yards upon its tall
piles, resembled a huge centipede.
The dwellers in the long-house extended
every courtesy to Ninaka and his crew. At the
former’s request Virginia was hidden away in
a dark sleeping closet in one of the windowless living
rooms which opened along the verandah for the full
length of the house. Here a native girl brought
her food and water, sitting, while she ate, in rapt
contemplation of the white skin and golden hair of
the strange female.
At about the time that Ninaka pulled
his prahu upon the beach before the long-house, Muda
Saffir from the safety of the concealing underbrush
upon the shore saw a familiar war prahu forging rapidly
up the stream. As it approached him he was about
to call aloud to those who manned it, for in the bow
he saw a number of his own men; but a second glance
as the boat came opposite him caused him to alter
his intention and drop further into the engulfing
verdure, for behind his men squatted five of the terrible
monsters that had wrought such havoc with his expedition,
and in the stern he saw his own Barunda in friendly
converse with the mad white man who had led them.
As the boat disappeared about a bend
in the river Rajah Muda Saffir arose, shaking his
fist in the direction it had vanished and, cursing
anew and volubly, damned each separate hair in the
heads of the faithless Barunda and the traitorous
Ninaka. Then he resumed his watch for the friendly
prahu, or smaller sampan which he knew time would
eventually bring from up or down the river to his rescue,
for who of the surrounding natives would dare refuse
succor to the powerful Rajah of Sakkan!
At the long-house which harbored Ninaka
and his crew, Barunda and Bulan stopped with theirs
to obtain food and rest. The quick eye of the
Dyak chieftain recognized the prahu of Rajah Muda
Saffir where it lay upon the beach, but he said nothing
to his white companion of what it augured—it
might be well to discover how the land lay before
he committed himself too deeply to either faction.
At the top of the notched log he was
met by Ninaka, who, with horror-wide eyes, looked
down upon the fearsome monstrosities that lumbered
awkwardly up the rude ladder in the wake of the agile
Dyaks and the young white giant.
“What does it mean?” whispered
the panglima to Barunda.
“These are now my friends,”
replied Barunda. “Where is Muda Saffir?”
Ninaka jerked his thumb toward the
river. “Some crocodile has feasted well,”
he said significantly. Barunda smiled.
“And the girl?” he continued.
“And the treasure?”
Ninaka’s eyes narrowed.
“They are safe,” he answered.
“The white man wants the girl,”
remarked Barunda. “He does not suspect
that you are one of Muda Saffir’s people.
If he guessed that you knew the whereabouts of the
girl he would torture the truth from you and then
kill you. He does not care for the treasure.
There is enough in that great chest for two, Ninaka.
Let us be friends. Together we can divide it;
otherwise neither of us will get any of it.
What do you say, Ninaka?”
The panglima scowled. He did
not relish the idea of sharing his prize, but he was
shrewd enough to realize that Barunda possessed the
power to rob him of it all, so at last he acquiesced,
though with poor grace.
Bulan had stood near during this conversation,
unable, of course, to understand a single word of
the native tongue.
“What does the man say?”
he asked Barunda. “Has he seen anything
of the prahu bearing the girl?”
“Yes,” replied the Dyak.
“He says that two hours ago such a war prahu
passed on its way up river—he saw the white
girl plainly. Also he knows whither they are
bound, and how, by crossing through the jungle on
foot, you may intercept them at their next stop.”
Bulan, suspecting no treachery, was
all anxiety to be off at once. Barunda suggested
that in case of some possible emergency causing the
quarry to return down the river it would be well to
have a force remain at the long-house to intercept
them. He volunteered to undertake the command
of this party. Ninaka, he said, would furnish
guides to escort Bulan and his men through the jungle
to the point at which they might expect to find Muda
Saffir.
And so, with the girl he sought lying
within fifty feet of him, Bulan started off through
the jungle with two of Ninaka’s Dyaks as guides—guides
who had been well instructed by their panglima as
to their duties. Twisting and turning through
the dense maze of underbrush and close-growing, lofty
trees the little party of eight plunged farther and
farther into the bewildering labyrinth.
For hours the tiresome march was continued,
until at last the guides halted, apparently to consult
each other as to the proper direction. By signs
they made known to Bulan that they did not agree upon
the right course to pursue from there on, and that
they had decided that it would be best for each to
advance a little way in the direction he thought the
right one while Bulan and his five creatures remained
where they were.
“We will go but a little way,”
said the spokesman, “and then we shall return
and lead you in the proper direction.”
Bulan saw no harm in this, and without
a shade of suspicion sat down upon a fallen tree and
watched his two guides disappear into the jungle in
opposite directions. Once out of sight of the
white man the two turned back and met a short distance
in the rear of the party they had deserted—in
another moment they were headed for the long-house
from which they had started.
It was fully an hour thereafter that
doubts began to enter Bulan’s head, and as the
day dragged on he came to realize that he and his
weird pack were alone and lost in the heart of a strange
and tangled web of tropical jungle.
No sooner had Bulan and his party
disappeared in the jungle than Barunda and Ninaka
made haste to embark with the chest and the girl and
push rapidly on up the river toward the wild and inaccessible
regions of the interior. Virginia Maxon’s
strong hope of succor had been gradually waning as
no sign of the rescue party appeared as the day wore
on. Somewhere behind her upon the broad river
she was sure a long, narrow native prahu was being
urged forward in pursuit, and that in command of
it was the young giant who was now never for a moment
absent from her thoughts.
For hours she strained her eyes over
the stern of the craft that was bearing her deeper
and deeper into the wild heart of fierce Borneo.
On either shore they occasionally passed a native
long-house, and the girl could not help but wonder
at the quiet and peace which reigned over these little
settlements. It was as though they were passing
along a beaten highway in the center of a civilized
community; and yet she knew that the men who lolled
upon the verandahs, puffing indolently upon their
cigarettes or chewing betel nut, were all head hunters,
and that along the verandah rafters above them hung
the grisly trophies of their prowess.
Yet as she glanced from them to her
new captors she could not but feel that she would
prefer captivity in one of the settlements they were
passing—there at least she might find an
opportunity to communicate with her father, or be
discovered by the rescue party as it came up the river.
The idea grew upon her as the day advanced until
she spent the time in watching furtively for some
means of escape should they but touch the shore momentarily;
and though they halted twice her captors were too
watchful to permit her the slightest opportunity for
putting her plan into action.
Barunda and Ninaka urged their men
on, with brief rests, all day, nor did they halt even
after night had closed down upon the river.
On, on the swift prahu sped up the winding channel
which had now dwindled to a narrow stream, at intervals
rushing strongly between rocky walls with a current
that tested the strength of the strong, brown paddlers.
Long-houses had become more and more
infrequent until for some time now no sign of human
habitation had been visible. The jungle undergrowth
was scantier and the spaces between the boles of the
forest trees more open. Virginia Maxon was almost
frantic with despair as the utter helplessness of
her position grew upon her. Each stroke of those
slender paddles was driving her farther and farther
from friends, or the possibility of rescue. Night
had fallen, dark and impenetrable, and with it had
come the haunting fears that creep in when the sun
has deserted his guardian post.
Barunda and Ninaka were whispering
together in low gutturals, and to the girl’s
distorted and fear excited imagination it seemed possible
that she alone must be the subject of their plotting.
The prahu was gliding through a stretch of comparatively
quiet and placid water where the stream spread out
into a little basin just above a narrow gorge through
which they had just forced their way by dint of the
most laborious exertions on the part of the crew.
Virginia watched the two men near
her furtively. They were deeply engrossed in
their conversation. Neither was looking in her
direction. The backs of the paddlers were all
toward her. Stealthily she rose to a stooping
position at the boat’s side. For a moment
she paused, and then, almost noiselessly, dove overboard
and disappeared beneath the black waters.
It was the slight rocking of the prahu
that caused Barunda to look suddenly about to discover
the reason for the disturbance. For a moment
neither of the men apprehended the girl’s absence.
Ninaka was the first to do so, and it was he who
called loudly to the paddlers to bring the boat to
a stop. Then they dropped down the river with
the current, and paddled about above the gorge for
half an hour.
The moment that Virginia Maxon felt
the waters close above her head she struck out beneath
the surface for the shore upon the opposite side to
that toward which she had dived into the river.
She knew that if any had seen her leave the prahu
they would naturally expect to intercept her on her
way toward the nearest shore, and so she took this
means of outwitting them, although it meant nearly
double the distance to be covered.
After swimming a short distance beneath
the surface the girl rose and looked about her.
Up the river a few yards she caught the phosphorescent
gleam of water upon the prahu’s paddles as they
brought her to a sudden stop in obedience to Ninaka’s
command. Then she saw the dark mass of the war-craft
drifting down toward her.
Again she dove and with strong strokes
headed for the shore. The next time that she
rose she was terrified to see the prahu looming close
behind her. The paddlers were propelling the
boat slowly in her direction— it was almost
upon her now—there was a shout from a man
in the bow—she had been seen.
Like a flash she dove once more and,
turning, struck out rapidly straight back beneath
the oncoming boat. When she came to the surface
again it was to find herself as far from shore as
she had been when she first quitted the prahu, but
the craft was now circling far below her, and she
set out once again to retrace her way toward the inky
mass of shore line which loomed apparently near and
yet, as she knew, was some considerable distance from
her.
As she swam, her mind, filled with
the terrors of the night, conjured recollection of
the stories she had heard of the fierce crocodiles
which infest certain of the rivers of Borneo.
Again and again she could have sworn that she felt
some huge, slimy body sweep beneath her in the mysterious
waters of this unknown river.
Behind her she saw the prahu turn
back up stream, but now her mind was suddenly engaged
with a new danger, for the girl realized that the
strong current was bearing her down stream more rapidly
than she had imagined. Already she could hear
the increasing roar of the river as it rushed, wild
and tumultuous, through the entrance to the narrow
gorge below her. How far it was to shore she
could not guess, or how far to the certain death of
the swirling waters toward which she was being drawn
by an irresistible force; but of one thing she was
certain, her strength was rapidly waning, and she
must reach the bank quickly.
With redoubled energy she struck out
in one last mighty effort to reach the shore.
The tug of the current was strong upon her, like
a giant hand reaching up out of the cruel river to
bear her back to death. She felt her strength
ebbing quickly—her strokes now were feeble
and futile. With a prayer to her Maker she threw
her hands above her head in the last effort of the
drowning swimmer to clutch at even thin air for support—the
current caught and swirled her downward toward the
gorge, and, at the same instant her fingers touched
and closed upon something which swung low above the
water.
With the last flickering spark of
vitality that remained in her poor, exhausted body
Virginia Maxon clung to the frail support that a kind
Providence had thrust into her hands. How long
she hung there she never knew, but finally a little
strength returned to her, and presently she realized
that it was a pendant creeper hanging low from a jungle
tree upon the bank that had saved her from the river’s
rapacious maw.
Inch by inch she worked herself upward
toward the bank, and at last, weak and panting, sunk
exhausted to the cool carpet of grass that grew to
the water’s edge. Almost immediately tired,
Nature plunged her into a deep sleep. It was
daylight when she awoke, dreaming that the tall young
giant had rescued her from a band of demons and was
lifting her in his arms to carry her back to her father.
Through half open lids she saw the
sunlight filtering through the leafy canopy above
her—she wondered at the realism of her
dream; full consciousness returned and with it the
conviction that she was in truth being held close
by strong arms against a bosom that throbbed to the
beating of a real heart.
With a sudden start she opened her
eyes wide to look up into the hideous face of a giant
ourang outang.
11
“I am coming!”
The morning following the capture
of Virginia Maxon by Muda Saffir, Professor Maxon,
von Horn, Sing Lee and the sole surviving lascar from
the crew of the Ithaca set out across the strait toward
the mainland of Borneo in the small boat which the
doctor had secreted in the jungle near the harbor.
The party was well equipped with firearms and ammunition,
and the bottom of the boat was packed full with provisions
and cooking utensils. Von Horn had been careful
to see that the boat was furnished with a mast and
sail, and now, under a good breeze the party was making
excellent time toward the mysterious land of their
destination.
They had scarcely cleared the harbor
when they sighted a ship far out across the strait.
Its erratic movements riveted their attention upon
it, and later, as they drew nearer, they perceived
that the strange craft was a good sized schooner with
but a single short mast and tiny sail. For a
minute or two her sail would belly with the wind and
the vessel make headway, then she would come suddenly
about, only to repeat the same tactics a moment later.
She sailed first this way and then that, losing one
minute what she had gained the minute before.
Von Horn was the first to recognize her.
“It is the Ithaca,” he
said, “and her Dyak crew are having a devil
of a time managing her—she acts as though
she were rudderless.”
Von Horn ran the small boat within
hailing distance of the dismasted hulk whose side
was now lined with waving, gesticulating natives.
They were peaceful fishermen, they explained, whose
prahus had been wrecked in the recent typhoon.
They had barely escaped with their lives by clambering
aboard this wreck which Allah had been so merciful
as to place directly in their road. Would the
Tuan Besar be so good as to tell them how to make
the big prahu steer?
Von Horn promised to help them on
condition that they would guide him and his party
to the stronghold of Rajah Muda Saffir in the heart
of Borneo. The Dyaks willingly agreed, and von
Horn worked his small boat in close under the Ithaca’s
stern. Here he found that the rudder had been
all but unshipped, probably as the vessel was lifted
over the reef during the storm, but a single pintle
remaining in its gudgeon. A half hour’s
work was sufficient to repair the damage, and then
the two boats continued their journey toward the mouth
of the river up which those they sought had passed
the night before.
Inside the river’s mouth an
anchorage was found for the Ithaca near the very island
upon which the fierce battle between Number Thirteen
and Muda Saffir’s forces had occurred.
From the deck of the larger vessel the deserted prahu
which had borne Bulan across the strait was visible,
as were the bodies of the slain Dyaks and the misshapen
creatures of the white giant’s forces.
In excited tones the head hunters
called von Horn’s attention to these evidences
of conflict, and the doctor drew his boat up to the
island and leaped ashore, followed by Professor Maxon
and Sing. Here they found the dead bodies of
the four monsters who had fallen in an attempt to
rescue their creator’s daughter, though little
did any there imagine the real truth.
About the corpses of the four were
the bodies of a dozen Dyak warriors attesting to the
ferocity of the encounter and the savage prowess of
the unarmed creatures who had sold their poor lives
so dearly.
“Evidently they fell out about
the possession of the captive,” suggested von
Horn. “Let us hope that she did not fall
into the clutches of Number Thirteen— any
fate would be better than that.”
“God give that that has not
befallen her,” moaned Professor Maxon.
“The pirates might but hold her for ransom,
but should that soulless fiend possess her my prayer
is that she found the strength and the means to take
her own life before he had an opportunity to have
his way with her.”
“Amen,” agreed von Horn.
Sing Lee said nothing, but in his
heart he hoped that Virginia Maxon was not in the
power of Rajah Muda Saffir. The brief experience
he had had with Number Thirteen during the fight in
the bungalow had rather warmed his wrinkled old heart
toward the friendless young giant, and he was a sufficiently
good judge of human nature to be confident that the
girl would be comparatively safe in his keeping.
It was quickly decided to abandon
the small boat and embark the entire party in the
deserted war prahu. A half hour later saw the
strangely mixed expedition forging up the river, but
not until von Horn had boarded the Ithaca and discovered
to his dismay that the chest was not on board her.
Far above them on the right bank Muda
Saffir still squatted in his hiding place, for no
friendly prahu or sampan had passed his way since
dawn. His keen eyes roving constantly up and
down the long stretch of river that was visible from
his position finally sighted a war prahu coming toward
him from down stream. As it drew closer he recognized
it as one which had belonged to his own fleet before
his unhappy encounter with the wild white man and
his abhorrent pack, and a moment later his heart leaped
as he saw the familiar faces of several of his men;
but who were the strangers in the stern, and what
was a Chinaman doing perched there upon the bow?
The prahu was nearly opposite him
before he recognized Professor Maxon and von Horn
as the white men of the little island. He wondered
how much they knew of his part in the raid upon their
encampment. Bududreen had told him much concerning
the doctor, and as Muda Saffir recalled the fact that
von Horn was anxious to possess himself of both the
treasure and the girl he guessed that he would be
safe in the man’s hands so long as he could
hold out promises of turning one or the other over
to him; and so, as he was tired of squatting upon
the uncomfortable bank and was very hungry, he arose
and hailed the passing prahu.
His men recognized his voice immediately
and as they knew nothing of the defection of any of
their fellows, turned the boat’s prow toward
shore without waiting for the command from von Horn.
The latter, fearing treachery, sprang to his feet
with raised rifle, but when one of the paddlers explained
that it was the Rajah Muda Saffir who hailed them
and that he was alone von Horn permitted them to draw
nearer the shore, though he continued to stand ready
to thwart any attempted treachery and warned both
the professor and Sing to be on guard.
As the prahu’s nose touched
the bank Muda Saffir stepped aboard and with many
protestations of gratitude explained that he had fallen
overboard from his own prahu the night before and
that evidently his followers thought him drowned,
since none of his boats had returned to search for
him. Scarcely had the Malay seated himself before
von Horn began questioning him in the rajah’s
native tongue, not a word of which was intelligible
to Professor Maxon. Sing, however, was as familiar
with it as was von Horn.
“Where are the girl and the treasure?”
he asked.
“What girl, Tuan Besar?”
inquired the wily Malay innocently. “And
what treasure? The white man speaks in riddles.”
“Come, come,” cried von
Horn impatiently. “Let us have no foolishness.
You know perfectly well what I mean— it
will go far better with you if we work together as
friends. I want the girl—if she is
unharmed—and I will divide the treasure
with you if you will help me to obtain them; otherwise
you shall have no part of either. What do you
say? Shall we be friends or enemies?”
“The girl and the treasure were
both stolen from me by a rascally panglima, Ninaka,”
said Muda Saffir, seeing that it would be as well
to simulate friendship for the white man for the time
being at least—there would always be an
opportunity to use a kris upon him in the remote fastness
of the interior to which Muda Saffir would lead them.
“What became of the white man
who led the strange monsters?” asked von Horn.
“He killed many of my men, and
the last I saw of him he was pushing up the river
after the girl and the treasure,” replied the
Malay.
“If another should ask you,”
continued von Horn with a meaningful glance toward
Professor Maxon, “it will be well to say that
the girl was stolen by this white giant and that you
suffered defeat in an attempt to rescue her because
of your friendship for us. Do you understand?”
Muda Saffir nodded. Here was
a man after his own heart, which loved intrigue and
duplicity. Evidently he would be a good ally
in wreaking vengeance upon the white giant who had
caused all his discomfiture— afterward there
was always the kris if the other should become inconvenient.
At the long-house at which Barunda
and Ninaka had halted, Muda Saffir learned all that
had transpired, his informants being the two Dyaks
who had led Bulan and his pack into the jungle.
He imparted the information to von Horn and both
men were delighted that thus their most formidable
enemy had been disposed of. It would be but a
question of time before the inexperienced creatures
perished in the dense forest— that they
ever could retrace their steps to the river was most
unlikely, and the chances were that one by one they
would be dispatched by head hunters while they slept.
Again the party embarked, reinforced
by the two Dyaks who were only too glad to renew their
allegiance to Muda Saffir while he was backed by the
guns of the white men. On and on they paddled
up the river, gleaning from the dwellers in the various
long-houses information of the passing of the two
prahus with Barunda, Ninaka, and the white girl.
Professor Maxon was impatient to hear
every detail that von Horn obtained from Muda Saffir
and the various Dyaks that were interviewed at the
first long-house and along the stretch of river they
covered. The doctor told him that Number Thirteen
still had Virginia and was fleeing up the river in
a swift prahu. He enlarged upon the valor shown
by Muda Saffir and his men in their noble attempt
to rescue his daughter, and through it all Sing Lee
sat with half closed eyes, apparently oblivious to
all that passed before him. What were the workings
of that intricate celestial brain none can say.
Far in the interior of the jungle
Bulan and his five monsters stumbled on in an effort
to find the river. Had they known it they were
moving parallel with the stream, but a few miles from
it. At times it wound in wide detours close
to the path of the lost creatures, and again it circled
far away from them.
As they travelled they subsisted upon
the fruits with which they had become familiar upon
the island of their creation. They suffered
greatly for lack of water, but finally stumbled upon
a small stream at which they filled their parched
stomachs. Here it occurred to Bulan that it
would be wise to follow the little river, since they
could be no more completely lost than they now were
no matter where it should lead them, and it would
at least insure them plenty of fresh water.
As they proceeded down the bank of
the stream it grew in size until presently it became
a fair sized river, and Bulan had hopes that it might
indeed prove the stream that they had ascended from
the ocean and that soon he would meet with the prahus
and possibly find Virginia Maxon herself. The
strenuous march of the six through the jungle had
torn their light cotton garments into shreds so that
they were all practically naked, while their bodies
were scratched and bleeding from countless wounds
inflicted by sharp thorns and tangled brambles through
which they had forced their way.
Bulan still carried his heavy bull
whip while his five companions were armed with the
parangs they had taken from the Dyaks they had overpowered
upon the island at the mouth of the river. It
was upon this strange and remarkable company that
the sharp eyes of a score of river Dyaks peered through
the foliage. The head hunters had been engaged
in collecting camphor crystals when their quick ears
caught the noisy passage of the six while yet at a
considerable distance, and with ready parangs the
savages crept stealthily toward the sound of the advancing
party.
At first they were terror stricken
at the hideous visages of five of the creatures they
beheld, but when they saw how few their numbers, and
how poorly armed they were, as well as the awkwardness
with which they carried their parangs, denoting their
unfamiliarity with the weapons, they took heart and
prepared to ambush them.
What prizes those terrible heads would
be when properly dried and decorated! The savages
fairly trembled in anticipation of the commotion they
would cause in the precincts of their long-house when
they returned with six such magnificent trophies.
Their victims came blundering on through
the dense jungle to where the twenty sleek brown warriors
lay in wait for them. Bulan was in the lead,
and close behind him in single file lumbered his awkward
crew. Suddenly there was a chorus of savage
cries close beside him and simultaneously he found
himself in the midst of twenty cutting, slashing parangs.
Like lightning his bull whip flew
into action, and to the astonished warriors it was
as though a score of men were upon them in the person
of this mighty white giant. Following the example
of their leader the five creatures at his back leaped
upon the nearest warriors, and though they wielded
their parangs awkwardly the superhuman strength back
of their cuts and thrusts sent the already blood stained
blades through many a brown body.
The Dyaks would gladly have retreated
after the first surprise of their initial attack,
but Bulan urged his men on after them, and so they
were forced to fight to preserve their lives at all.
At last five of them managed to escape into the jungle,
but fifteen remained quietly upon the earth where
they had fallen—the victims of their own
over confidence. Beside them lay two of Bulan’s
five, so that now the little party was reduced to
four—and the problem that had faced Professor
Maxon was so much closer to its own solution.
From the bodies of the dead Dyaks
Bulan and his three companions, Number Three, Number
Ten, and Number Twelve, took enough loin cloths, caps,
war-coats, shields and weapons to fit them out completely,
after discarding the ragged remnants of their cotton
pajamas, and now, even more terrible in appearance
than before, the rapidly vanishing company of soulless
monsters continued their aimless wandering down the
river’s brim.
The five Dyaks who had escaped carried
the news of the terrible creatures that had fallen
upon them in the jungle, and of the awful prowess
of the giant white man who led them. They told
of how, armed only with a huge whip, he had been a
match and more than a match for the best warriors of
the tribe, and the news that they started spread rapidly
down the river from one long-house to another until
it reached the broad stream into which the smaller
river flowed, and then it travelled up and down to
the headwaters above and the ocean far below in the
remarkable manner that news travels in the wild places
of the world.
So it was that as Bulan advanced he
found the long-houses in his path deserted, and came
to the larger river and turned up toward its head
without meeting with resistance or even catching a
glimpse of the brown-skinned people who watched him
from their hiding places in the brush.
That night they slept in the long-house
near the bank of the greater stream, while its rightful
occupants made the best of it in the jungle behind.
The next morning found the four again on the march
ere the sun had scarcely lighted the dark places of
the forest, for Bulan was now sure that he was on
the right trail and that the new river that he had
come to was indeed the same that he had traversed
in the Prahu with Barunda.
It must have been close to noon when
the young giant’s ears caught the sound of the
movement of some animal in the jungle a short distance
to his right and away from the river. His experience
with men had taught him to be wary, for it was evident
that every man’s hand was against him, so he
determined to learn at once whether the noise he heard
came from some human enemy lurking along his trail
ready to spring upon him with naked parang at a moment
that he was least prepared, or merely from some jungle
brute.
Cautiously he threaded his way through
the matted vegetation in the direction of the sound.
Although a parang from the body of a vanquished Dyak
hung at his side he grasped his bull whip ready in
his right hand, preferring it to the less accustomed
weapon of the head hunter. For a dozen yards
he advanced without sighting the object of his search,
but presently his efforts were rewarded by a glimpse
of a reddish, hairy body, and a pair of close set,
wicked eyes peering at him from behind a giant tree.
At the same instant a slight movement
at one side attracted his attention to where another
similar figure crouched in the underbrush, and then
a third, fourth and fifth became evident about him.
Bulan looked in wonderment upon the strange, man-like
creatures who eyed him threateningly from every hand.
They stood fully as high as the brown Dyak warriors,
but their bodies were naked except for the growth
of reddish hair which covered them, shading to black
upon the face and hands.
The lips of the nearest were raised
in an angry snarl that exposed wicked looking fighting
fangs, but the beasts did not seem inclined to initiate
hostilities, and as they were unarmed and evidently
but engaged upon their own affairs Bulan decided to
withdraw without arousing them further. As he
turned to retrace his steps he found his three companions
gazing in wide-eyed astonishment upon the strange
new creatures which confronted them.
Number Ten was grinning broadly, while
Number Three advanced cautiously toward one of the
creatures, making a low guttural noise, that could
only be interpreted as peaceful and conciliatory—more
like a feline purr it was than anything else.
“What are you doing?”
cried Bulan. “Leave them alone. They
have not offered to harm us.”
“They are like us,” replied
Number Three. “They must be our own people.
I am going with them.”
“And I,” said Number Ten.
“And I,” echoed Number
Twelve. “At last we have found our own,
let us all go with them and live with them, far away
from the men who would beat us with great whips, and
cut us with their sharp swords.”
“They are not human beings,”
exclaimed Bulan. “We cannot live with
them.”
“Neither are we human beings,”
retorted Number Twelve. “Has not von Horn
told us so many times?”
“If I am not now a human being,”
replied Bulan, “I intend to be one, and so I
shall act as a human being should act. I shall
not go to live with savage beasts, nor shall you.
Come with me as I tell you, or you shall again taste
the bull whip.”
“We shall do as we please,”
growled Number Ten, baring his fangs. “You
are not our master. We have followed you as
long as we intend to. We are tired of forever
walking, walking, walking through the bushes that tear
our flesh and hurt us. Go and be a human being
if you think you can, but do not longer interfere
with us or we shall kill you,” and he looked
first at Number Three and then at Number Twelve for
approval of his ultimatum.
Number Three nodded his grotesque
and hideous head— he was so covered with
long black hair that he more nearly resembled an ourang
outang than a human being. Number Twelve looked
doubtful.
“I think Number Ten is right,”
he said at last. “We are not human.
We have no souls. We are things. And while
you, Bulan, are beautiful, yet you are as much a soulless
thing as we—that much von Horn taught us
well. So I believe that it would be better were
we to keep forever from the sight of men. I
do not much like the thought of living with these
strange, hairy monsters, but we might find a place
here in the jungle where we could live alone and in
peace.”
“I do not want to live alone,”
cried Number Three. “I want a mate, and
I see a beautiful one yonder now. I am going
after her,” and with that he again started toward
a female ourang outang; but the lady bared her fangs
and retreated before his advance.
“Even the beasts will have none
of us,” cried Number Ten angrily. “Let
us take them by force then,” and he started after
Number Three.
“Come back!” shouted Bulan,
leaping after the two deserters.
As he raised his voice there came
an answering cry from a little distance ahead—a
cry for help, and it was in the agonized tones of
a woman’s voice.
“I am coming!” shouted
Bulan, and without another glance at his mutinous
crew he sprang through the line of menacing ourang
outangs.
12