LIONS IN THE NIGHT
Shouting, screaming, imploring their
deities in general, and the white men in particular
for protection, the band of frightened natives broke
and ran through the jungle, caring little where they
went so long as they escaped the awful terror of the
pursuing herd of maddened elephants. Behind them
came Tom Swift and the others, for it were folly to
stop in the path of the infuriated brutes.
“Our only chance is to get on
their flank and try to turn them!” yelled Mr.
Durban. “We may beat them in getting to
the clearing, for the trail is narrow. Run, everybody!”
No one needed his excited advice to
cause them to hurry. They scudded along, Mr.
Damon’s cap falling off in his haste. But
he did not stop to pick it up.
The hunters had one advantage.
They were on a narrow but well-cleared trail through
the jungle, which led from the village where they
were encamped, to another, several miles away.
This trail was too small for the elephants, and, indeed,
had to be taken in single file by the travelers.
But it prevented the elephants making
the same speed as did our friends, for the jungle,
at this point, consisted of heavy trees, which halted
the progress of even the strongest of the powerful
beasts. True, they could force aside the frail
underbrush and the small trees, but the others impeded
their progress.
“We’ll get there ahead
of them!” cried Tom. “Have you got
your rifle in working order yet, Mr. Durban?”
“No, something has broken, I
fear. We’ll have to depend on your electric
gun, Tom. Have you many charges left?”
“A dozen or so. But Ned
and the others have plenty of ammunition.”
“Don’t count—on—me!”
panted Mr. Damon, who was well-nigh breathless from
the run. “I—can’t—aim—straight—any—more!”
“I’ll give ’em a
few more bullets!” declared Mr. Anderson.
The fleeing natives were now almost
lost to sight, for they could travel through the jungle,
ignoring the trail, at high speed. They were
almost like snakes or animals in this respect.
Their one thought was to get to their village, and,
if possible, protect their huts and fields of grain
from annihilation by the elephants.
Behind our friends, trumpeting, bellowing
and crashing came the pachyderms. They seemed
to be gaining, and Tom, looking back, saw one big
brute emerge upon the trail, and follow that.
“I’ve got to stop him,
or some of the others will do the same,” thought
the young inventor. He halted and fired quickly.
The elephant seemed to melt away, and Tom with regret,
saw a pair of fine tusks broken to bits. “I
used too heavy a charge,” he murmured, as he
took up the retreat again.
In a few minutes the party of hunters,
who were now playing more in the role of the hunted,
came out into the open. They could hear the natives
beating on their big hollow tree drums, and on tom-toms,
while the witch-doctors and medicine men were chanting
weird songs to drive the elephants away.
But the beasts came on. One by
one they emerged from the jungle, until the herd was
gathered together again in a compact mass. Then,
under the leadership of some big bulls, they advanced.
It seemed as if they knew what they were doing, and
were determined to revenge themselves by trampling
the natives’ huts under their ponderous feet.
But Tom and the others were not idle.
Taking a position off to one side, the young inventor
began pouring a fusillade of the electric bullets
into the mass of slate-colored bodies. Mr. Anderson
was also firing, and Ned, who had gotten over some
of his excitement, was also doing execution.
Mr. Durban, after vainly trying to get his rifle to
work, cast it aside. “Here! Let me
take your gun!” he cried to Mr. Damon, who,
panting from the run, was sitting beneath a tree.
“Bless my cartridge belt!
Take it and welcome!” assented the eccentric
man. It still had several shots in the magazine,
and these the old hunter used with good effect.
At first it seemed as if the elephants
could not be turned back. They kept on rushing
toward the village, which was not far away, and Tom
and the others followed at one side, as best they could,
firing rapidly. The electric rifle did fearful
execution.
Emboldened by the fear that all their
possessions would be destroyed a body of the natives
rushed out, right in front of the elephants, and beat
tom-toms and drums, almost under their feet, at the
same time singing wild songs.
“I’m afraid we can’t
stop them!” muttered Mr. Anderson. “We’d
better hurry to the airship, and protect that, Tom.”
But, almost as he spoke, the tide
of battle turned. The elephants suddenly swung
about, and began a retreat. They could not stand
the hot fire of the four guns, including Tom’s
fearful weapon. With wild trumpetings they fled
back into the jungle, leaving a number of their dead
behind.
“A close call,” murmured
Tom, as he drew a breath of relief. Indeed this
was true, for the tide had turned when the foremost
elephants were not a hundred feet away from the first
rows of native huts.
“I should say it was,”
agreed Ned Newton, wiping his face with his handkerchief.
He, as well as the others, was an odd-looking sight.
They were blackened by powder smoke, scratched by briars,
and red from exertion.
“But we got more ivory in this
hour than I could have secured in a week of ordinary
hunting” declared Mr. Durban. “If
this keeps up we won’t have to get much more,
except that I don’t think any of the tusks to-day
are large enough for the special purpose of my customer.”
“The sooner we get enough ivory
the quicker we can go to the rescue of the missionaries,”
said Mr. Anderson.
“That’s so,” remarked
Tom. “We must not forget the red pygmies.”
The natives were now dancing about,
wild in delight at the prospect of unlimited eating,
and also thankful for what the white men had done
for them. Alone, the blacks would never have been
able to stop the stampede. They were soon busy
cutting up the elephants ready for a big feast, and
runners were sent to tell neighboring tribes, in adjoining
villages, of the delights awaiting them.
Mr. Durban gave instructions about
saving the ivory tusks, and the valuable teeth, each
pair worth about $1,000, were soon cut out and put
away for our friends. Some had been lost by the
excessive power of Tom’s gun, but this could
not be helped. It was necessary to stop the rush
at any price.
There was soon a busy scene at the
native village, and with the arrival of other tribesmen
it seemed as if Bedlam had broken loose. The
blacks chattered like so many children as they prepared
for the feast.
“Do white men ever eat elephant
meat?” asked Mr. Damon, as the adventurers were
gathered about the airship.
“Indeed they do,” declared
Mr. Durban. “Baked elephant foot is a delicacy
that few appreciate. I’ll have the natives
cook some for us.”
He gave the necessary orders, and
the travelers had to admit that it was worth coming
far to get.
For the next few days and nights there
was great feasting in that African village, and the
praises of the white men, and power of Tom Swift’s
electric rifle, were sung loud and long.
Our friends had resumed work on repairing
the airship, and the young inventor declared, one
night, that they could proceed the next day.
They were seated around a small campfire,
watching the dancing and antics of some natives who
were at their usual work of eating meat. All
about our friends were numerous blazes for the cooking
of the feasts, and some were on the very edge of the
jungle.
Suddenly, above the uncouth sounds
of the merry-making, there was heard a deep vibration
and roar, not unlike the distant rumble of thunder
or the hum of a great steamer’s whistle heard
afar in the fog.
“What’s that?” cried Ned.
“Lions,” said Mr. Durban
briefly. “They have been attracted by the
smell of cooking.”
At that moment, and instantly following
a very loud roar, there was an agonized scream of
pain and terror. It sounded directly in back
of the airship.
“A lion!” cried Mr. Anderson.
“One of the brutes has grabbed a native!”
Tom Swift caught up his rifle, and
darted off toward the dark jungle.