summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
path: root/old/tzntr11.txt
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
authorRoger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org>2025-10-15 05:18:12 -0700
committerRoger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org>2025-10-15 05:18:12 -0700
commit5055fb56c351fe06a5d3e5e3da79476e0ce3623e (patch)
tree6edb3dc3eaa481b02f3f6b34a44277230831ce20 /old/tzntr11.txt
initial commit of ebook 2020HEADmain
Diffstat (limited to 'old/tzntr11.txt')
-rw-r--r--old/tzntr11.txt10824
1 files changed, 10824 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/old/tzntr11.txt b/old/tzntr11.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..26b1d68
--- /dev/null
+++ b/old/tzntr11.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,10824 @@
+The Project Gutenberg Etext of Tarzan the Terrible
+by Edgar Rice Burroughs
+(#8 in The Tarzan Tales by Edgar Rice Burroughs)
+
+Copyright laws are changing all over the world, be sure to check
+the laws for your country before redistributing these files!!!
+
+Please take a look at the important information in this header.
+We encourage you to keep this file on your own disk, keeping an
+electronic path open for the next readers.
+
+Please do not remove this.
+
+This should be the first thing seen when anyone opens the book.
+Do not change or edit it without written permission. The words
+are carefully chosen to provide users with the information they
+need about what they can legally do with the texts.
+
+
+**Welcome To The World of Free Plain Vanilla Electronic Texts**
+
+**Etexts Readable By Both Humans and By Computers, Since 1971**
+
+*****These Etexts Are Prepared By Thousands of Volunteers!*****
+
+Information on contacting Project Gutenberg to get Etexts, and
+further information is included below, including for donations.
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a 501(c)(3)
+organization with EIN [Employee Identification Number] 64-6221541
+
+Title: Tarzan the Terrible
+
+Author: Edgar Rice Burroughs
+
+Release Date: January, 2000 [Etext #2020]
+[Date last updated: February 1, 2004]
+
+Edition: 11
+
+Language: English
+
+The Project Gutenberg Etext of Tarzan the Terrible
+by Edgar Rice Burroughs
+******This file should be named tzntr11.txt or tzntr11.zip******
+
+Corrected EDITIONS of our etexts get a new NUMBER, tzntr12.txt
+VERSIONS based on separate sources get new LETTER, tzntr11a.txt
+
+Prepared by Judy Boss, Omaha, NE.
+
+Project Gutenberg Etexts are usually created from multiple editions,
+all of which are in the Public Domain in the United States, unless a
+copyright notice is included. Therefore, we usually do NOT keep any
+of these books in compliance with any particular paper edition.
+
+We are now trying to release all our books one year in advance
+of the official release dates, leaving time for better editing.
+Please be encouraged to send us error messages even years after
+the official publication date.
+
+Please note neither this listing nor its contents are final til
+midnight of the last day of the month of any such announcement.
+The official release date of all Project Gutenberg Etexts is at
+Midnight, Central Time, of the last day of the stated month. A
+preliminary version may often be posted for suggestion, comment
+and editing by those who wish to do so.
+
+Most people start at our sites at:
+http://gutenberg.net
+http://promo.net/pg
+
+
+Those of you who want to download any Etext before announcement
+can surf to them as follows, and just download by date; this is
+also a good way to get them instantly upon announcement, as the
+indexes our cataloguers produce obviously take a while after an
+announcement goes out in the Project Gutenberg Newsletter.
+
+http://www.ibiblio.org/gutenberg/etext03
+or
+ftp://ftp.ibiblio.org/pub/docs/books/gutenberg/etext03
+
+Or /etext02, 01, 00, 99, 98, 97, 96, 95, 94, 93, 92, 92, 91 or 90
+
+Just search by the first five letters of the filename you want,
+as it appears in our Newsletters.
+
+
+Information about Project Gutenberg (one page)
+
+We produce about two million dollars for each hour we work. The
+time it takes us, a rather conservative estimate, is fifty hours
+to get any etext selected, entered, proofread, edited, copyright
+searched and analyzed, the copyright letters written, etc. This
+projected audience is one hundred million readers. If our value
+per text is nominally estimated at one dollar then we produce $2
+million dollars per hour this year as we release fifty new Etext
+files per month, or 500 more Etexts in 2000 for a total of 3000+
+If they reach just 1-2% of the world's population then the total
+should reach over 300 billion Etexts given away by year's end.
+
+The Goal of Project Gutenberg is to Give Away One Trillion Etext
+Files by December 31, 2001. [10,000 x 100,000,000 = 1 Trillion]
+This is ten thousand titles each to one hundred million readers,
+which is only about 4% of the present number of computer users.
+
+At our revised rates of production, we will reach only one-third
+of that goal by the end of 2001, or about 4,000 Etexts unless we
+manage to get some real funding.
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation has been created
+to secure a future for Project Gutenberg into the next millennium.
+
+We need your donations more than ever!
+
+As of 10/17/01 contributions are only being solicited from people in:
+Alabama, Arkansas, Connecticut, Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Idaho,
+Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maine, Michigan,
+Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New
+Mexico, New York, North Carolina, Ohio, Oklahoma, Oregon,
+Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee,
+Texas, Utah, Vermont, Virginia, Washington, Wisconsin, and Wyoming
+
+We have filed in about 45 states now, but these are the only ones
+that have responded.
+
+As the requirements for other states are met,
+additions to this list will be made and fund raising
+will begin in the additional states. Please feel
+free to ask to check the status of your state.
+
+In answer to various questions we have received on this:
+
+We are constantly working on finishing the paperwork
+to legally request donations in all 50 states. If
+your state is not listed and you would like to know
+if we have added it since the list you have, just ask.
+
+While we cannot solicit donations from people in
+states where we are not yet registered, we know
+of no prohibition against accepting donations
+from donors in these states who approach us with
+an offer to donate.
+
+
+International donations are accepted,
+but we don't know ANYTHING about how
+to make them tax-deductible, or
+even if they CAN be made deductible,
+and don't have the staff to handle it
+even if there are ways.
+
+All donations should be made to:
+
+Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
+PMB 113
+1739 University Ave.
+Oxford, MS 38655-4109
+
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a 501(c)(3)
+organization with EIN [Employee Identification Number] 64-6221541,
+and has been approved as a 501(c)(3) organization by the US Internal
+Revenue Service (IRS). Donations are tax-deductible to the maximum
+extent permitted by law. As the requirements for other states are met,
+additions to this list will be made and fund raising will begin in the
+additional states.
+
+We need your donations more than ever!
+
+You can get up to date donation information at:
+
+http://www.gutenberg.net/donation.html
+
+
+***
+
+If you can't reach Project Gutenberg,
+you can always email directly to:
+
+Michael S. Hart <hart@pobox.com>
+
+hart@pobox.com forwards to hart@prairienet.org and archive.org
+if your mail bounces from archive.org, I will still see it, if
+it bounces from prairienet.org, better resend later on. . . .
+
+Prof. Hart will answer or forward your message.
+
+We would prefer to send you information by email.
+
+
+***
+
+
+Example command-line FTP session:
+
+ftp ftp.ibiblio.org
+login: anonymous
+password: your@login
+cd pub/docs/books/gutenberg
+cd etext90 through etext99 or etext00 through etext02, etc.
+dir [to see files]
+get or mget [to get files. . .set bin for zip files]
+GET GUTINDEX.?? [to get a year's listing of books, e.g., GUTINDEX.99]
+GET GUTINDEX.ALL [to get a listing of ALL books]
+
+
+**The Legal Small Print**
+
+
+(Three Pages)
+
+***START**THE SMALL PRINT!**FOR PUBLIC DOMAIN ETEXTS**START***
+Why is this "Small Print!" statement here? You know: lawyers.
+They tell us you might sue us if there is something wrong with
+your copy of this etext, even if you got it for free from
+someone other than us, and even if what's wrong is not our
+fault. So, among other things, this "Small Print!" statement
+disclaims most of our liability to you. It also tells you how
+you may distribute copies of this etext if you want to.
+
+*BEFORE!* YOU USE OR READ THIS ETEXT
+By using or reading any part of this PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm
+etext, you indicate that you understand, agree to and accept
+this "Small Print!" statement. If you do not, you can receive
+a refund of the money (if any) you paid for this etext by
+sending a request within 30 days of receiving it to the person
+you got it from. If you received this etext on a physical
+medium (such as a disk), you must return it with your request.
+
+ABOUT PROJECT GUTENBERG-TM ETEXTS
+This PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm etext, like most PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm etexts,
+is a "public domain" work distributed by Professor Michael S. Hart
+through the Project Gutenberg Association (the "Project").
+Among other things, this means that no one owns a United States copyright
+on or for this work, so the Project (and you!) can copy and
+distribute it in the United States without permission and
+without paying copyright royalties. Special rules, set forth
+below, apply if you wish to copy and distribute this etext
+under the "PROJECT GUTENBERG" trademark.
+
+Please do not use the "PROJECT GUTENBERG" trademark to market
+any commercial products without permission.
+
+To create these etexts, the Project expends considerable
+efforts to identify, transcribe and proofread public domain
+works. Despite these efforts, the Project's etexts and any
+medium they may be on may contain "Defects". Among other
+things, Defects may take the form of incomplete, inaccurate or
+corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other
+intellectual property infringement, a defective or damaged
+disk or other etext medium, a computer virus, or computer
+codes that damage or cannot be read by your equipment.
+
+LIMITED WARRANTY; DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES
+But for the "Right of Replacement or Refund" described below,
+[1] Michael Hart and the Foundation (and any other party you may
+receive this etext from as a PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm etext) disclaims
+all liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including
+legal fees, and [2] YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE OR
+UNDER STRICT LIABILITY, OR FOR BREACH OF WARRANTY OR CONTRACT,
+INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE
+OR INCIDENTAL DAMAGES, EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE
+POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGES.
+
+If you discover a Defect in this etext within 90 days of
+receiving it, you can receive a refund of the money (if any)
+you paid for it by sending an explanatory note within that
+time to the person you received it from. If you received it
+on a physical medium, you must return it with your note, and
+such person may choose to alternatively give you a replacement
+copy. If you received it electronically, such person may
+choose to alternatively give you a second opportunity to
+receive it electronically.
+
+THIS ETEXT IS OTHERWISE PROVIDED TO YOU "AS-IS". NO OTHER
+WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, ARE MADE TO YOU AS
+TO THE ETEXT OR ANY MEDIUM IT MAY BE ON, INCLUDING BUT NOT
+LIMITED TO WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A
+PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
+
+Some states do not allow disclaimers of implied warranties or
+the exclusion or limitation of consequential damages, so the
+above disclaimers and exclusions may not apply to you, and you
+may have other legal rights.
+
+INDEMNITY
+You will indemnify and hold Michael Hart, the Foundation,
+and its trustees and agents, and any volunteers associated
+with the production and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm
+texts harmless, from all liability, cost and expense, including
+legal fees, that arise directly or indirectly from any of the
+following that you do or cause: [1] distribution of this etext,
+[2] alteration, modification, or addition to the etext,
+or [3] any Defect.
+
+DISTRIBUTION UNDER "PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm"
+You may distribute copies of this etext electronically, or by
+disk, book or any other medium if you either delete this
+"Small Print!" and all other references to Project Gutenberg,
+or:
+
+[1] Only give exact copies of it. Among other things, this
+ requires that you do not remove, alter or modify the
+ etext or this "small print!" statement. You may however,
+ if you wish, distribute this etext in machine readable
+ binary, compressed, mark-up, or proprietary form,
+ including any form resulting from conversion by word
+ processing or hypertext software, but only so long as
+ *EITHER*:
+
+ [*] The etext, when displayed, is clearly readable, and
+ does *not* contain characters other than those
+ intended by the author of the work, although tilde
+ (~), asterisk (*) and underline (_) characters may
+ be used to convey punctuation intended by the
+ author, and additional characters may be used to
+ indicate hypertext links; OR
+
+ [*] The etext may be readily converted by the reader at
+ no expense into plain ASCII, EBCDIC or equivalent
+ form by the program that displays the etext (as is
+ the case, for instance, with most word processors);
+ OR
+
+ [*] You provide, or agree to also provide on request at
+ no additional cost, fee or expense, a copy of the
+ etext in its original plain ASCII form (or in EBCDIC
+ or other equivalent proprietary form).
+
+[2] Honor the etext refund and replacement provisions of this
+ "Small Print!" statement.
+
+[3] Pay a trademark license fee to the Foundation of 20% of the
+ gross profits you derive calculated using the method you
+ already use to calculate your applicable taxes. If you
+ don't derive profits, no royalty is due. Royalties are
+ payable to "Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation"
+ the 60 days following each date you prepare (or were
+ legally required to prepare) your annual (or equivalent
+ periodic) tax return. Please contact us beforehand to
+ let us know your plans and to work out the details.
+
+WHAT IF YOU *WANT* TO SEND MONEY EVEN IF YOU DON'T HAVE TO?
+Project Gutenberg is dedicated to increasing the number of
+public domain and licensed works that can be freely distributed
+in machine readable form.
+
+The Project gratefully accepts contributions of money, time,
+public domain materials, or royalty free copyright licenses.
+Money should be paid to the:
+"Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."
+
+If you are interested in contributing scanning equipment or
+software or other items, please contact Michael Hart at:
+hart@pobox.com
+
+[Portions of this header are copyright (C) 2001 by Michael S. Hart
+and may be reprinted only when these Etexts are free of all fees.]
+[Project Gutenberg is a TradeMark and may not be used in any sales
+of Project Gutenberg Etexts or other materials be they hardware or
+software or any other related product without express permission.]
+
+*END THE SMALL PRINT! FOR PUBLIC DOMAIN ETEXTS*Ver.07/27/01*END*
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Prepared by Judy Boss, Omaha, NE.
+
+
+
+
+
+Tarzan the Terrible
+
+By Edgar Rice Burroughs
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER
+ I The Pithecanthropus
+ II "To the Death!"
+ III Pan-at-lee
+ IV Tarzan-jad-guru
+ V In the Kor-ul-gryf
+ VI The Tor-o-don
+ VII Jungle Craft
+ VIII A-lur
+ IX Blood-Stained Altars
+ X The Forbidden Garden
+ XI The Sentence of Death
+ XII The Giant Stranger
+ XIII The Masquerader
+ XIV The Temple of the Gryf
+ XV "The King Is Dead!"
+ XVI The Secret Way
+ XVII By Jad-bal-lul
+XVIII The Lion Pit of Tu-lur
+ XIX Diana of the Jungle
+ XX Silently in the Night
+ XXI The Maniac
+ XXII A Journey on a Gryf
+XXIII Taken Alive
+ XXIV The Messenger of Death
+ XXV Home
+ Glossary
+
+
+
+
+
+1
+
+The Pithecanthropus
+
+
+
+
+Silent as the shadows through which he moved, the great beast
+slunk through the midnight jungle, his yellow-green eyes round and
+staring, his sinewy tail undulating behind him, his head lowered
+and flattened, and every muscle vibrant to the thrill of the hunt.
+The jungle moon dappled an occasional clearing which the great cat
+was always careful to avoid. Though he moved through thick verdure
+across a carpet of innumerable twigs, broken branches, and leaves,
+his passing gave forth no sound that might have been apprehended
+by dull human ears.
+
+Apparently less cautious was the hunted thing moving even as silently
+as the lion a hundred paces ahead of the tawny carnivore, for
+instead of skirting the moon-splashed natural clearings it passed
+directly across them, and by the tortuous record of its spoor
+it might indeed be guessed that it sought these avenues of least
+resistance, as well it might, since, unlike its grim stalker, it
+walked erect upon two feet--it walked upon two feet and was hairless
+except for a black thatch upon its head; its arms were well shaped
+and muscular; its hands powerful and slender with long tapering
+fingers and thumbs reaching almost to the first joint of the index
+fingers. Its legs too were shapely but its feet departed from the
+standards of all races of men, except possibly a few of the lowest
+races, in that the great toes protruded at right angles from the
+foot.
+
+Pausing momentarily in the full light of the gorgeous African moon
+the creature turned an attentive ear to the rear and then, his
+head lifted, his features might readily have been discerned in the
+moonlight. They were strong, clean cut, and regular--features that
+would have attracted attention for their masculine beauty in any
+of the great capitals of the world. But was this thing a man? It
+would have been hard for a watcher in the trees to have decided
+as the lion's prey resumed its way across the silver tapestry that
+Luna had laid upon the floor of the dismal jungle, for from beneath
+the loin cloth of black fur that girdled its thighs there depended
+a long hairless, white tail.
+
+In one hand the creature carried a stout club, and suspended at its
+left side from a shoulder belt was a short, sheathed knife, while
+a cross belt supported a pouch at its right hip. Confining these
+straps to the body and also apparently supporting the loin cloth
+was a broad girdle which glittered in the moonlight as though
+encrusted with virgin gold, and was clasped in the center of the
+belly with a huge buckle of ornate design that scintillated as with
+precious stones.
+
+Closer and closer crept Numa, the lion, to his intended victim,
+and that the latter was not entirely unaware of his danger was
+evidenced by the increasing frequency with which he turned his
+ear and his sharp black eyes in the direction of the cat upon his
+trail. He did not greatly increase his speed, a long swinging walk
+where the open places permitted, but he loosened the knife in its
+scabbard and at all times kept his club in readiness for instant
+action.
+
+Forging at last through a narrow strip of dense jungle vegetation
+the man-thing broke through into an almost treeless area of
+considerable extent. For an instant he hesitated, glancing quickly
+behind him and then up at the security of the branches of the great
+trees waving overhead, but some greater urge than fear or caution
+influenced his decision apparently, for he moved off again across
+the little plain leaving the safety of the trees behind him.
+At greater or less intervals leafy sanctuaries dotted the grassy
+expanse ahead of him and the route he took, leading from one to
+another, indicated that he had not entirely cast discretion to the
+winds. But after the second tree had been left behind the distance
+to the next was considerable, and it was then that Numa walked from
+the concealing cover of the jungle and, seeing his quarry apparently
+helpless before him, raised his tail stiffly erect and charged.
+
+Two months--two long, weary months filled with hunger, with thirst,
+with hardships, with disappointment, and, greater than all, with
+gnawing pain--had passed since Tarzan of the Apes learned from
+the diary of the dead German captain that his wife still lived. A
+brief investigation in which he was enthusiastically aided by the
+Intelligence Department of the British East African Expedition
+revealed the fact that an attempt had been made to keep Lady Jane
+in hiding in the interior, for reasons of which only the German
+High Command might be cognizant.
+
+In charge of Lieutenant Obergatz and a detachment of native German
+troops she had been sent across the border into the Congo Free
+State.
+
+Starting out alone in search of her, Tarzan had succeeded in finding the
+village in which she had been incarcerated only to learn that she
+had escaped months before, and that the German officer had disappeared
+at the same time. From there on the stories of the chiefs and the
+warriors whom he quizzed, were vague and often contradictory. Even
+the direction that the fugitives had taken Tarzan could only guess
+at by piecing together bits of fragmentary evidence gleaned from
+various sources.
+
+Sinister conjectures were forced upon him by various observations
+which he made in the village. One was incontrovertible proof that
+these people were man-eaters; the other, the presence in the village
+of various articles of native German uniforms and equipment. At
+great risk and in the face of surly objection on the part of the
+chief, the ape-man made a careful inspection of every hut in the
+village from which at least a little ray of hope resulted from the
+fact that he found no article that might have belonged to his wife.
+
+Leaving the village he had made his way toward the southwest,
+crossing, after the most appalling hardships, a vast waterless
+steppe covered for the most part with dense thorn, coming at last
+into a district that had probably never been previously entered
+by any white man and which was known only in the legends of the
+tribes whose country bordered it. Here were precipitous mountains,
+well-watered plateaus, wide plains, and vast swampy morasses,
+but neither the plains, nor the plateaus, nor the mountains were
+accessible to him until after weeks of arduous effort he succeeded
+in finding a spot where he might cross the morasses--a hideous
+stretch infested by venomous snakes and other larger dangerous
+reptiles. On several occasions he glimpsed at distances or by night
+what might have been titanic reptilian monsters, but as there were
+hippopotami, rhinoceri, and elephants in great numbers in and about
+the marsh he was never positive that the forms he saw were not of
+these.
+
+When at last he stood upon firm ground after crossing the morasses
+he realized why it was that for perhaps countless ages this territory
+had defied the courage and hardihood of the heroic races of the
+outer world that had, after innumerable reverses and unbelievable
+suffering penetrated to practically every other region, from pole
+to pole.
+
+From the abundance and diversity of the game it might have appeared
+that every known species of bird and beast and reptile had sought
+here a refuge wherein they might take their last stand against the
+encroaching multitudes of men that had steadily spread themselves
+over the surface of the earth, wresting the hunting grounds from
+the lower orders, from the moment that the first ape shed his hair
+and ceased to walk upon his knuckles. Even the species with which
+Tarzan was familiar showed here either the results of a divergent
+line of evolution or an unaltered form that had been transmitted
+without variation for countless ages.
+
+Too, there were many hybrid strains, not the least interesting
+of which to Tarzan was a yellow and black striped lion. Smaller
+than the species with which Tarzan was familiar, but still a most
+formidable beast, since it possessed in addition to sharp saber-like
+canines the disposition of a devil. To Tarzan it presented evidence
+that tigers had once roamed the jungles of Africa, possibly giant
+saber-tooths of another epoch, and these apparently had crossed with
+lions with the resultant terrors that he occasionally encountered
+at the present day.
+
+The true lions of this new, Old World differed but little from
+those with which he was familiar; in size and conformation they
+were almost identical, but instead of shedding the leopard spots
+of cubhood, they retained them through life as definitely marked
+as those of the leopard.
+
+Two months of effort had revealed no slightest evidence that
+she he sought had entered this beautiful yet forbidding land. His
+investigation, however, of the cannibal village and his questioning
+of other tribes in the neighborhood had convinced him that if Lady
+Jane still lived it must be in this direction that he seek her,
+since by a process of elimination he had reduced the direction of
+her flight to only this possibility. How she had crossed the morass
+he could not guess and yet something within seemed to urge upon him
+belief that she had crossed it, and that if she still lived it was
+here that she must be sought. But this unknown, untraversed wild
+was of vast extent; grim, forbidding mountains blocked his way,
+torrents tumbling from rocky fastnesses impeded his progress, and
+at every turn he was forced to match wits and muscles with the
+great carnivora that he might procure sustenance.
+
+Time and again Tarzan and Numa stalked the same quarry and now one,
+now the other bore off the prize. Seldom however did the ape-man
+go hungry for the country was rich in game animals and birds and
+fish, in fruit and the countless other forms of vegetable life upon
+which the jungle-bred man may subsist.
+
+Tarzan often wondered why in so rich a country he found no evidences
+of man and had at last come to the conclusion that the parched,
+thorn-covered steppe and the hideous morasses had formed a sufficient
+barrier to protect this country effectively from the inroads of
+mankind.
+
+After days of searching he had succeeded finally in discovering a
+pass through the mountains and, coming down upon the opposite side,
+had found himself in a country practically identical with that which
+he had left. The hunting was good and at a water hole in the mouth
+of a canon where it debouched upon a tree-covered plain Bara, the
+deer, fell an easy victim to the ape-man's cunning.
+
+It was just at dusk. The voices of great four-footed hunters rose
+now and again from various directions, and as the canon afforded
+among its trees no comfortable retreat the ape-man shouldered the
+carcass of the deer and started downward onto the plain. At its
+opposite side rose lofty trees--a great forest which suggested to
+his practiced eye a mighty jungle. Toward this the ape-man bent
+his step, but when midway of the plain he discovered standing alone
+such a tree as best suited him for a night's abode, swung lightly
+to its branches and, presently, a comfortable resting place.
+
+Here he ate the flesh of Bara and when satisfied carried the balance
+of the carcass to the opposite side of the tree where he deposited
+it far above the ground in a secure place. Returning to his crotch
+he settled himself for sleep and in another moment the roars of
+the lions and the howlings of the lesser cats fell upon deaf ears.
+
+The usual noises of the jungle composed rather than disturbed the
+ape-man but an unusual sound, however imperceptible to the awakened
+ear of civilized man, seldom failed to impinge upon the consciousness
+of Tarzan, however deep his slumber, and so it was that when the
+moon was high a sudden rush of feet across the grassy carpet in
+the vicinity of his tree brought him to alert and ready activity.
+Tarzan does not awaken as you and I with the weight of slumber still
+upon his eyes and brain, for did the creatures of the wild awaken
+thus, their awakenings would be few. As his eyes snapped open,
+clear and bright, so, clear and bright upon the nerve centers of his
+brain, were registered the various perceptions of all his senses.
+
+Almost beneath him, racing toward his tree was what at first glance
+appeared to be an almost naked white man, yet even at the first
+instant of discovery the long, white tail projecting rearward did
+not escape the ape-man. Behind the fleeing figure, escaping, came
+Numa, the lion, in full charge. Voiceless the prey, voiceless the
+killer; as two spirits in a dead world the two moved in silent
+swiftness toward the culminating tragedy of this grim race.
+
+Even as his eyes opened and took in the scene beneath him--even in
+that brief instant of perception, followed reason, judgment, and
+decision, so rapidly one upon the heels of the other that almost
+simultaneously the ape-man was in mid-air, for he had seen a
+white-skinned creature cast in a mold similar to his own, pursued
+by Tarzan's hereditary enemy. So close was the lion to the fleeing
+man-thing that Tarzan had no time carefully to choose the method
+of his attack. As a diver leaps from the springboard headforemost
+into the waters beneath, so Tarzan of the Apes dove straight for
+Numa, the lion; naked in his right hand the blade of his father
+that so many times before had tasted the blood of lions.
+
+A raking talon caught Tarzan on the side, inflicting a long, deep
+wound and then the ape-man was on Numa's back and the blade was
+sinking again and again into the savage side. Nor was the man-thing
+either longer fleeing, or idle. He too, creature of the wild, had
+sensed on the instant the truth of the miracle of his saving, and
+turning in his tracks, had leaped forward with raised bludgeon to
+Tarzan's assistance and Numa's undoing. A single terrific blow upon
+the flattened skull of the beast laid him insensible and then as
+Tarzan's knife found the wild heart a few convulsive shudders and
+a sudden relaxation marked the passing of the carnivore.
+
+Leaping to his feet the ape-man placed his foot upon the carcass
+of his kill and, raising his face to Goro, the moon, voiced the
+savage victory cry that had so often awakened the echoes of his
+native jungle.
+
+As the hideous scream burst from the ape-man's lips the man-thing
+stepped quickly back as in sudden awe, but when Tarzan returned his
+hunting knife to its sheath and turned toward him the other saw in
+the quiet dignity of his demeanor no cause for apprehension.
+
+For a moment the two stood appraising each other, and then the
+man-thing spoke. Tarzan realized that the creature before him was
+uttering articulate sounds which expressed in speech, though in a
+language with which Tarzan was unfamiliar, the thoughts of a man
+possessing to a greater or less extent the same powers of reason
+that he possessed. In other words, that though the creature before
+him had the tail and thumbs and great toes of a monkey, it was, in
+all other respects, quite evidently a man.
+
+The blood, which was now flowing down Tarzan's side, caught the
+creature's attention. From the pocket-pouch at his side he took a
+small bag and approaching Tarzan indicated by signs that he wished
+the ape-man to lie down that he might treat the wound, whereupon,
+spreading the edges of the cut apart, he sprinkled the raw flesh
+with powder from the little bag. The pain of the wound was as
+nothing to the exquisite torture of the remedy but, accustomed to
+physical suffering, the ape-man withstood it stoically and in a
+few moments not only had the bleeding ceased but the pain as well.
+
+In reply to the soft and far from unpleasant modulations of
+the other's voice, Tarzan spoke in various tribal dialects of the
+interior as well as in the language of the great apes, but it was
+evident that the man understood none of these. Seeing that they
+could not make each other understood, the pithecanthropus advanced
+toward Tarzan and placing his left hand over his own heart laid
+the palm of his right hand over the heart of the ape-man. To the
+latter the action appeared as a form of friendly greeting and, being
+versed in the ways of uncivilized races, he responded in kind as
+he realized it was doubtless intended that he should. His action
+seemed to satisfy and please his new-found acquaintance, who
+immediately fell to talking again and finally, with his head tipped
+back, sniffed the air in the direction of the tree above them
+and then suddenly pointing toward the carcass of Bara, the deer,
+he touched his stomach in a sign language which even the densest
+might interpret. With a wave of his hand Tarzan invited his guest
+to partake of the remains of his savage repast, and the other, leaping
+nimbly as a little monkey to the lower branches of the tree, made
+his way quickly to the flesh, assisted always by his long, strong
+sinuous tail.
+
+The pithecanthropus ate in silence, cutting small strips from the
+deer's loin with his keen knife. From his crotch in the tree Tarzan
+watched his companion, noting the preponderance of human attributes
+which were doubtless accentuated by the paradoxical thumbs, great
+toes, and tail.
+
+He wondered if this creature was representative of some strange race
+or if, what seemed more likely, but an atavism. Either supposition
+would have seemed preposterous enough did he not have before him
+the evidence of the creature's existence. There he was, however, a
+tailed man with distinctly arboreal hands and feet. His trappings,
+gold encrusted and jewel studded, could have been wrought only by
+skilled artisans; but whether they were the work of this individual
+or of others like him, or of an entirely different race, Tarzan
+could not, of course, determine.
+
+His meal finished, the guest wiped his fingers and lips with leaves
+broken from a nearby branch, looked up at Tarzan with a pleasant
+smile that revealed a row of strong white teeth, the canines of
+which were no longer than Tarzan's own, spoke a few words which
+Tarzan judged were a polite expression of thanks and then sought
+a comfortable place in the tree for the night.
+
+The earth was shadowed in the darkness which precedes the dawn when
+Tarzan was awakened by a violent shaking of the tree in which he
+had found shelter. As he opened his eyes he saw that his companion
+was also astir, and glancing around quickly to apprehend the cause
+of the disturbance, the ape-man was astounded at the sight which
+met his eyes.
+
+The dim shadow of a colossal form reared close beside the tree
+and he saw that it was the scraping of the giant body against the
+branches that had awakened him. That such a tremendous creature
+could have approached so closely without disturbing him filled
+Tarzan with both wonderment and chagrin. In the gloom the ape-man
+at first conceived the intruder to be an elephant; yet, if so, one
+of greater proportions than any he had ever before seen, but as the
+dim outlines became less indistinct he saw on a line with his eyes
+and twenty feet above the ground the dim silhouette of a grotesquely
+serrated back that gave the impression of a creature whose each
+and every spinal vertebra grew a thick, heavy horn. Only a portion
+of the back was visible to the ape-man, the rest of the body being
+lost in the dense shadows beneath the tree, from whence there now
+arose the sound of giant jaws powerfully crunching flesh and bones.
+From the odors that rose to the ape-man's sensitive nostrils he
+presently realized that beneath him was some huge reptile feeding
+upon the carcass of the lion that had been slain there earlier in
+the night.
+
+As Tarzan's eyes, straining with curiosity, bored futilely into the
+dark shadows he felt a light touch upon his shoulder, and, turning,
+saw that his companion was attempting to attract his attention.
+The creature, pressing a forefinger to his own lips as to enjoin
+silence, attempted by pulling on Tarzan's arm to indicate that they
+should leave at once.
+
+Realizing that he was in a strange country, evidently infested by
+creatures of titanic size, with the habits and powers of which he
+was entirely unfamiliar, the ape-man permitted himself to be drawn
+away. With the utmost caution the pithecanthropus descended the
+tree upon the opposite side from the great nocturnal prowler, and,
+closely followed by Tarzan, moved silently away through the night
+across the plain.
+
+The ape-man was rather loath thus to relinquish an opportunity to
+inspect a creature which he realized was probably entirely different
+from anything in his past experience; yet he was wise enough to
+know when discretion was the better part of valor and now, as in
+the past, he yielded to that law which dominates the kindred of the
+wild, preventing them from courting danger uselessly, whose lives
+are sufficiently filled with danger in their ordinary routine of
+feeding and mating.
+
+As the rising sun dispelled the shadows of the night, Tarzan found
+himself again upon the verge of a great forest into which his guide
+plunged, taking nimbly to the branches of the trees through which
+he made his way with the celerity of long habitude and hereditary
+instinct, but though aided by a prehensile tail, fingers, and
+toes, the man-thing moved through the forest with no greater ease
+or surety than did the giant ape-man.
+
+It was during this journey that Tarzan recalled the wound in his
+side inflicted upon him the previous night by the raking talons
+of Numa, the lion, and examining it was surprised to discover that
+not only was it painless but along its edges were no indications
+of inflammation, the results doubtless of the antiseptic powder
+his strange companion had sprinkled upon it.
+
+They had proceeded for a mile or two when Tarzan's companion came
+to earth upon a grassy slope beneath a great tree whose branches
+overhung a clear brook. Here they drank and Tarzan discovered
+the water to be not only deliciously pure and fresh but of an icy
+temperature that indicated its rapid descent from the lofty mountains
+of its origin.
+
+Casting aside his loin cloth and weapons Tarzan entered the little
+pool beneath the tree and after a moment emerged, greatly refreshed
+and filled with a keen desire to breakfast. As he came out of the
+pool he noticed his companion examining him with a puzzled expression
+upon his face. Taking the ape-man by the shoulder he turned him
+around so that Tarzan's back was toward him and then, touching the
+end of Tarzan's spine with his forefinger, he curled his own tail
+up over his shoulder and, wheeling the ape-man about again, pointed
+first at Tarzan and then at his own caudal appendage, a look of
+puzzlement upon his face, the while he jabbered excitedly in his
+strange tongue.
+
+The ape-man realized that probably for the first time his companion
+had discovered that he was tailless by nature rather than by
+accident, and so he called attention to his own great toes and thumbs
+to further impress upon the creature that they were of different
+species.
+
+The fellow shook his head dubiously as though entirely unable
+to comprehend why Tarzan should differ so from him but at last,
+apparently giving the problem up with a shrug, he laid aside his
+own harness, skin, and weapons and entered the pool.
+
+His ablutions completed and his meager apparel redonned he seated
+himself at the foot of the tree and motioning Tarzan to a place
+beside him, opened the pouch that hung at his right side taking from
+it strips of dried flesh and a couple of handfuls of thin-shelled
+nuts with which Tarzan was unfamiliar. Seeing the other break them
+with his teeth and eat the kernel, Tarzan followed the example thus
+set him, discovering the meat to be rich and well flavored. The
+dried flesh also was far from unpalatable, though it had evidently
+been jerked without salt, a commodity which Tarzan imagined might
+be rather difficult to obtain in this locality.
+
+As they ate Tarzan's companion pointed to the nuts, the dried meat,
+and various other nearby objects, in each instance repeating what
+Tarzan readily discovered must be the names of these things in the
+creature's native language. The ape-man could but smile at this
+evident desire upon the part of his new-found acquaintance to impart
+to him instructions that eventually might lead to an exchange of
+thoughts between them. Having already mastered several languages
+and a multitude of dialects the ape-man felt that he could readily
+assimilate another even though this appeared one entirely unrelated
+to any with which he was familiar.
+
+So occupied were they with their breakfast and the lesson that
+neither was aware of the beady eyes glittering down upon them from
+above; nor was Tarzan cognizant of any impending danger until the
+instant that a huge, hairy body leaped full upon his companion from
+the branches above them.
+
+
+
+
+
+2
+
+"To the Death!"
+
+
+
+
+In the moment of discovery Tarzan saw that the creature was almost
+a counterpart of his companion in size and conformation, with the
+exception that his body was entirely clothed with a coat of shaggy
+black hair which almost concealed his features, while his harness
+and weapons were similar to those of the creature he had attacked.
+Ere Tarzan could prevent the creature had struck the ape-man's
+companion a blow upon the head with his knotted club that felled
+him, unconscious, to the earth; but before he could inflict further
+injury upon his defenseless prey the ape-man had closed with him.
+
+Instantly Tarzan realized that he was locked with a creature of
+almost superhuman strength. The sinewy fingers of a powerful hand
+sought his throat while the other lifted the bludgeon above his
+head. But if the strength of the hairy attacker was great, great
+too was that of his smooth-skinned antagonist. Swinging a single
+terrific blow with clenched fist to the point of the other's chin,
+Tarzan momentarily staggered his assailant and then his own fingers
+closed upon the shaggy throat, as with the other hand he seized the
+wrist of the arm that swung the club. With equal celerity he shot
+his right leg behind the shaggy brute and throwing his weight forward
+hurled the thing over his hip heavily to the ground, at the same
+time precipitating his own body upon the other's chest.
+
+With the shock of the impact the club fell from the brute's hand
+and Tarzan's hold was wrenched from its throat. Instantly the two
+were locked in a deathlike embrace. Though the creature bit at
+Tarzan the latter was quickly aware that this was not a particularly
+formidable method of offense or defense, since its canines were scarcely
+more developed than his own. The thing that he had principally to
+guard against was the sinuous tail which sought steadily to wrap
+itself about his throat and against which experience had afforded
+him no defense.
+
+Struggling and snarling the two rolled growling about the sward at
+the foot of the tree, first one on top and then the other but each
+more occupied at present in defending his throat from the other's
+choking grasp than in aggressive, offensive tactics. But presently
+the ape-man saw his opportunity and as they rolled about he forced
+the creature closer and closer to the pool, upon the banks of which
+the battle was progressing. At last they lay upon the very verge of
+the water and now it remained for Tarzan to precipitate them both
+beneath the surface but in such a way that he might remain on top.
+
+At the same instant there came within range of Tarzan's vision,
+just behind the prostrate form of his companion, the crouching,
+devil-faced figure of the striped saber-tooth hybrid, eyeing him
+with snarling, malevolent face.
+
+Almost simultaneously Tarzan's shaggy antagonist discovered
+the menacing figure of the great cat. Immediately he ceased his
+belligerent activities against Tarzan and, jabbering and chattering
+to the ape-man, he tried to disengage himself from Tarzan's hold
+but in such a way that indicated that as far as he was concerned
+their battle was over. Appreciating the danger to his unconscious
+companion and being anxious to protect him from the saber-tooth
+the ape-man relinquished his hold upon his adversary and together
+the two rose to their feet.
+
+Drawing his knife Tarzan moved slowly toward the body of his
+companion, expecting that his recent antagonist would grasp the
+opportunity for escape. To his surprise, however, the beast, after
+regaining its club, advanced at his side.
+
+The great cat, flattened upon its belly, remained motionless except
+for twitching tail and snarling lips where it lay perhaps fifty
+feet beyond the body of the pithecanthropus. As Tarzan stepped over
+the body of the latter he saw the eyelids quiver and open, and in
+his heart he felt a strange sense of relief that the creature was
+not dead and a realization that without his suspecting it there
+had arisen within his savage bosom a bond of attachment for this
+strange new friend.
+
+Tarzan continued to approach the saber-tooth, nor did the shaggy
+beast at his right lag behind. Closer and closer they came until
+at a distance of about twenty feet the hybrid charged. Its rush was
+directed toward the shaggy manlike ape who halted in his tracks
+with upraised bludgeon to meet the assault. Tarzan, on the contrary,
+leaped forward and with a celerity second not even to that of the
+swift-moving cat, he threw himself headlong upon him as might a
+Rugby tackler on an American gridiron. His right arm circled the
+beast's neck in front of the right shoulder, his left behind the
+left foreleg, and so great was the force of the impact that the
+two rolled over and over several times upon the ground, the cat
+screaming and clawing to liberate itself that it might turn upon
+its attacker, the man clinging desperately to his hold.
+
+Seemingly the attack was one of mad, senseless ferocity unguided by
+either reason or skill. Nothing, however, could have been farther
+from the truth than such an assumption since every muscle in
+the ape-man's giant frame obeyed the dictates of the cunning mind
+that long experience had trained to meet every exigency of such an
+encounter. The long, powerful legs, though seemingly inextricably
+entangled with the hind feet of the clawing cat, ever as by a miracle,
+escaped the raking talons and yet at just the proper instant in the
+midst of all the rolling and tossing they were where they should be
+to carry out the ape-man's plan of offense. So that on the instant
+that the cat believed it had won the mastery of its antagonist it
+was jerked suddenly upward as the ape-man rose to his feet, holding
+the striped back close against his body as he rose and forcing it
+backward until it could but claw the air helplessly.
+
+Instantly the shaggy black rushed in with drawn knife which it
+buried in the beast's heart. For a few moments Tarzan retained his
+hold but when the body had relaxed in final dissolution he pushed
+it from him and the two who had formerly been locked in mortal
+combat stood facing each other across the body of the common foe.
+
+Tarzan waited, ready either for peace or war. Presently two shaggy
+black hands were raised; the left was laid upon its own heart and
+the right extended until the palm touched Tarzan's breast. It was
+the same form of friendly salutation with which the pithecanthropus
+had sealed his alliance with the ape-man and Tarzan, glad of every
+ally he could win in this strange and savage world, quickly accepted
+the proffered friendship.
+
+At the conclusion of the brief ceremony Tarzan, glancing in the
+direction of the hairless pithecanthropus, discovered that the
+latter had recovered consciousness and was sitting erect watching
+them intently. He now rose slowly and at the same time the shaggy
+black turned in his direction and addressed him in what evidently
+was their common language. The hairless one replied and the
+two approached each other slowly. Tarzan watched interestedly the
+outcome of their meeting. They halted a few paces apart, first one
+and then the other speaking rapidly but without apparent excitement,
+each occasionally glancing or nodding toward Tarzan, indicating
+that he was to some extent the subject of their conversation.
+
+Presently they advanced again until they met, whereupon was repeated
+the brief ceremony of alliance which had previously marked the
+cessation of hostilities between Tarzan and the black. They then
+advanced toward the ape-man addressing him earnestly as though
+endeavoring to convey to him some important information. Presently,
+however, they gave it up as an unprofitable job and, resorting to
+sign language, conveyed to Tarzan that they were proceeding upon
+their way together and were urging him to accompany them.
+
+As the direction they indicated was a route which Tarzan had not
+previously traversed he was extremely willing to accede to their
+request, as he had determined thoroughly to explore this unknown
+land before definitely abandoning search for Lady Jane therein.
+
+For several days their way led through the foothills parallel to the
+lofty range towering above. Often were they menaced by the savage
+denizens of this remote fastness, and occasionally Tarzan glimpsed
+weird forms of gigantic proportions amidst the shadows of the
+nights.
+
+On the third day they came upon a large natural cave in the face
+of a low cliff at the foot of which tumbled one of the numerous
+mountain brooks that watered the plain below and fed the morasses
+in the lowlands at the country's edge. Here the three took up their
+temporary abode where Tarzan's instruction in the language of his
+companions progressed more rapidly than while on the march.
+
+The cave gave evidence of having harbored other manlike forms
+in the past. Remnants of a crude, rock fireplace remained and the
+walls and ceiling were blackened with the smoke of many fires.
+Scratched in the soot, and sometimes deeply into the rock beneath,
+were strange hieroglyphics and the outlines of beasts and birds and
+reptiles, some of the latter of weird form suggesting the extinct
+creatures of Jurassic times. Some of the more recently made
+hieroglyphics Tarzan's companions read with interest and commented
+upon, and then with the points of their knives they too added to
+the possibly age-old record of the blackened walls.
+
+Tarzan's curiosity was aroused, but the only explanation at which
+he could arrive was that he was looking upon possibly the world's
+most primitive hotel register. At least it gave him a further insight
+into the development of the strange creatures with which Fate had
+thrown him. Here were men with the tails of monkeys, one of them
+as hair covered as any fur-bearing brute of the lower orders, and
+yet it was evident that they possessed not only a spoken, but a
+written language. The former he was slowly mastering and at this
+new evidence of unlooked-for civilization in creatures possessing
+so many of the physical attributes of beasts, Tarzan's curiosity
+was still further piqued and his desire quickly to master their
+tongue strengthened, with the result that he fell to with even
+greater assiduity to the task he had set himself. Already he knew
+the names of his companions and the common names of the fauna and
+flora with which they had most often come in contact.
+
+Ta-den, he of the hairless, white skin, having assumed the role of
+tutor, prosecuted his task with a singleness of purpose that was
+reflected in his pupil's rapid mastery of Ta-den's mother tongue.
+Om-at, the hairy black, also seemed to feel that there rested upon
+his broad shoulders a portion of the burden of responsibility for
+Tarzan's education, with the result that either one or the other of
+them was almost constantly coaching the ape-man during his waking
+hours. The result was only what might have been expected--a rapid
+assimilation of the teachings to the end that before any of them
+realized it, communication by word of mouth became an accomplished
+fact.
+
+Tarzan explained to his companions the purpose of his mission but
+neither could give him any slightest thread of hope to weave into
+the fabric of his longing. Never had there been in their country a
+woman such as he described, nor any tailless man other than himself
+that they ever had seen.
+
+"I have been gone from A-lur while Bu, the moon, has eaten
+seven times," said Ta-den. "Many things may happen in seven times
+twenty-eight days; but I doubt that your woman could have entered
+our country across the terrible morasses which even you found
+an almost insurmountable obstacle, and if she had, could she have
+survived the perils that you already have encountered beside those
+of which you have yet to learn? Not even our own women venture into
+the savage lands beyond the cities."
+
+"'A-lur,' Light-city, City of Light," mused Tarzan, translating
+the word into his own tongue. "And where is A-lur?" he asked. "Is
+it your city, Ta-den, and Om-at's?"
+
+"It is mine," replied the hairless one; "but not Om-at's. The
+Waz-don have no cities--they live in the trees of the forests and
+the caves of the hills--is it not so, black man?" he concluded,
+turning toward the hairy giant beside him.
+
+"Yes," replied Om-at, "We Waz-don are free--only the Hodon imprison
+themselves in cities. I would not be a white man!"
+
+Tarzan smiled. Even here was the racial distinction between white
+man and black man--Ho-don and Waz-don. Not even the fact that
+they appeared to be equals in the matter of intelligence made any
+difference--one was white and one was black, and it was easy to
+see that the white considered himself superior to the other--one
+could see it in his quiet smile.
+
+"Where is A-lur?" Tarzan asked again. "You are returning to it?"
+
+"It is beyond the mountains," replied Ta-den. "I do not return to
+it--not yet. Not until Ko-tan is no more."
+
+"Ko-tan?" queried Tarzan.
+
+"Ko-tan is king," explained the pithecanthropus. "He rules this
+land. I was one of his warriors. I lived in the palace of Ko-tan
+and there I met O-lo-a, his daughter. We loved, Likestar-light,
+and I; but Ko-tan would have none of me. He sent me away to fight
+with the men of the village of Dak-at, who had refused to pay his
+tribute to the king, thinking that I would be killed, for Dak-at is
+famous for his many fine warriors. And I was not killed. Instead
+I returned victorious with the tribute and with Dak-at himself my
+prisoner; but Ko-tan was not pleased because he saw that O-lo-a
+loved me even more than before, her love being strengthened and
+fortified by pride in my achievement.
+
+"Powerful is my father, Ja-don, the Lion-man, chief of the largest
+village outside of A-lur. Him Ko-tan hesitated to affront and so
+he could not but praise me for my success, though he did it with
+half a smile. But you do not understand! It is what we call a smile
+that moves only the muscles of the face and affects not the light
+of the eyes--it means hypocrisy and duplicity. I must be praised
+and rewarded. What better than that he reward me with the hand of
+O-lo-a, his daughter? But no, he saves O-lo-a for Bu-lot, son of
+Mo-sar, the chief whose great-grandfather was king and who thinks
+that he should be king. Thus would Ko-tan appease the wrath of
+Mo-sar and win the friendship of those who think with Mo-sar that
+Mo-sar should be king.
+
+"But what reward shall repay the faithful Ta-den? Greatly do we
+honor our priests. Within the temples even the chiefs and the king
+himself bow down to them. No greater honor could Ko-tan confer
+upon a subject--who wished to be a priest, but I did not so wish.
+Priests other than the high priest must become eunuchs for they
+may never marry.
+
+"It was O-lo-a herself who brought word to me that her father had
+given the commands that would set in motion the machinery of the
+temple. A messenger was on his way in search of me to summon me
+to Ko-tan's presence. To have refused the priesthood once it was
+offered me by the king would have been to have affronted the temple
+and the gods--that would have meant death; but if I did not appear
+before Ko-tan I would not have to refuse anything. O-lo-a and I
+decided that I must not appear. It was better to fly, carrying in
+my bosom a shred of hope, than to remain and, with my priesthood,
+abandon hope forever.
+
+"Beneath the shadows of the great trees that grow within the palace
+grounds I pressed her to me for, perhaps, the last time and then,
+lest by ill-fate I meet the messenger, I scaled the great wall that
+guards the palace and passed through the darkened city. My name and
+rank carried me beyond the city gate. Since then I have wandered
+far from the haunts of the Ho-don but strong within me is the urge
+to return if even but to look from without her walls upon the city
+that holds her most dear to me and again to visit the village of
+my birth, to see again my father and my mother."
+
+"But the risk is too great?" asked Tarzan.
+
+"It is great, but not too great," replied Ta-den. "I shall go."
+
+"And I shall go with you, if I may," said the ape-man, "for I must
+see this City of Light, this A-lur of yours, and search there for
+my lost mate even though you believe that there is little chance
+that I find her. And you, Om-at, do you come with us?"
+
+"Why not?" asked the hairy one. "The lairs of my tribe lie in the
+crags above A-lur and though Es-sat, our chief, drove me out I should
+like to return again, for there is a she there upon whom I should
+be glad to look once more and who would be glad to look upon me.
+Yes, I will go with you. Es-sat feared that I might become chief
+and who knows but that Es-sat was right. But Pan-at-lee! it is she
+I seek first even before a chieftainship."
+
+"We three, then, shall travel together," said Tarzan.
+
+"And fight together," added Ta-den; "the three as one," and as he
+spoke he drew his knife and held it above his head.
+
+"The three as one," repeated Om-at, drawing his weapon and duplicating
+Ta-den's act. "It is spoken!"
+
+"The three as one!" cried Tarzan of the Apes. "To the death!" and
+his blade flashed in the sunlight.
+
+"Let us go, then," said Om-at; "my knife is dry and cries aloud
+for the blood of Es-sat."
+
+The trail over which Ta-den and Om-at led and which scarcely could
+be dignified even by the name of trail was suited more to mountain
+sheep, monkeys, or birds than to man; but the three that followed
+it were trained to ways which no ordinary man might essay. Now, upon
+the lower slopes, it led through dense forests where the ground was
+so matted with fallen trees and over-rioting vines and brush that
+the way held always to the swaying branches high above the tangle;
+again it skirted yawning gorges whose slippery-faced rocks gave
+but momentary foothold even to the bare feet that lightly touched
+them as the three leaped chamois-like from one precarious foothold
+to the next. Dizzy and terrifying was the way that Om-at chose
+across the summit as he led them around the shoulder of a towering
+crag that rose a sheer two thousand feet of perpendicular rock above
+a tumbling river. And when at last they stood upon comparatively
+level ground again Om-at turned and looked at them both intently
+and especially at Tarzan of the Apes.
+
+"You will both do," he said. "You are fit companions for Om-at,
+the Waz-don."
+
+"What do you mean?" asked Tarzan.
+
+"I brought you this way," replied the black, "to learn if either
+lacked the courage to follow where Om-at led. It is here that the
+young warriors of Es-sat come to prove their courage. And yet,
+though we are born and raised upon cliff sides, it is considered
+no disgrace to admit that Pastar-ul-ved, the Father of Mountains,
+has defeated us, for of those who try it only a few succeed--the
+bones of the others lie at the feet of Pastar-ul-ved."
+
+Ta-den laughed. "I would not care to come this way often," he said.
+
+"No," replied Om-at; "but it has shortened our journey by at least
+a full day. So much the sooner shall Tarzan look upon the Valley of
+Jad-ben-Otho. Come!" and he led the way upward along the shoulder
+of Pastar-ul-ved until there lay spread below them a scene of mystery
+and of beauty--a green valley girt by towering cliffs of marble
+whiteness--a green valley dotted by deep blue lakes and crossed
+by the blue trail of a winding river. In the center a city of the
+whiteness of the marble cliffs--a city which even at so great a
+distance evidenced a strange, yet artistic architecture. Outside
+the city there were visible about the valley isolated groups
+of buildings--sometimes one, again two and three and four in a
+cluster--but always of the same glaring whiteness, and always in
+some fantastic form.
+
+About the valley the cliffs were occasionally cleft by deep gorges,
+verdure filled, giving the appearance of green rivers rioting
+downward toward a central sea of green.
+
+"Jad Pele ul Jad-ben-Otho," murmured Tarzan in the tongue of the
+pithecanthropi; "The Valley of the Great God--it is beautiful!"
+
+"Here, in A-lur, lives Ko-tan, the king, ruler over all Pal-ul-don,"
+said Ta-den.
+
+"And here in these gorges live the Waz-don," exclaimed Om-at, "who
+do not acknowledge that Ko-tan is the ruler over all the Land-of-man."
+
+Ta-den smiled and shrugged. "We will not quarrel, you and I," he said
+to Om-at, "over that which all the ages have not proved sufficient
+time in which to reconcile the Ho-don and Waz-don; but let me
+whisper to you a secret, Om-at. The Ho-don live together in greater
+or less peace under one ruler so that when danger threatens them
+they face the enemy with many warriors, for every fighting Ho-don
+of Pal-ul-don is there. But you Waz-don, how is it with you? You
+have a dozen kings who fight not only with the Ho-don but with
+one another. When one of your tribes goes forth upon the fighting
+trail, even against the Ho-don, it must leave behind sufficient
+warriors to protect its women and its children from the neighbors
+upon either hand. When we want eunuchs for the temples or servants
+for the fields or the homes we march forth in great numbers upon
+one of your villages. You cannot even flee, for upon either side
+of you are enemies and though you fight bravely we come back with
+those who will presently be eunuchs in the temples and servants in
+our fields and homes. So long as the Waz-don are thus foolish the
+Ho-don will dominate and their king will be king of Pal-ul-don."
+
+"Perhaps you are right," admitted Om-at. "It is because our neighbors
+are fools, each thinking that his tribe is the greatest and should
+rule among the Waz-don. They will not admit that the warriors of
+my tribe are the bravest and our shes the most beautiful."
+
+Ta-den grinned. "Each of the others presents precisely the same
+arguments that you present, Om-at," he said, "which, my friend, is
+the strongest bulwark of defense possessed by the Ho-don."
+
+"Come!" exclaimed Tarzan; "such discussions often lead to quarrels
+and we three must have no quarrels. I, of course, am interested
+in learning what I can of the political and economic conditions
+of your land; I should like to know something of your religion;
+but not at the expense of bitterness between my only friends in
+Pal-ul-don. Possibly, however, you hold to the same god?"
+
+"There indeed we do differ," cried Om-at, somewhat bitterly and
+with a trace of excitement in his voice.
+
+"Differ!" almost shouted Ta-den; "and why should we not differ?
+Who could agree with the preposterous----"
+
+"Stop!" cried Tarzan. "Now, indeed, have I stirred up a hornets'
+nest. Let us speak no more of matters political or religious."
+
+"That is wiser," agreed Om-at; "but I might mention, for your
+information, that the one and only god has a long tail."
+
+"It is sacrilege," cried Ta-den, laying his hand upon his knife;
+"Jad-ben-Otho has no tail!"
+
+"Stop!" shrieked Om-at, springing forward; but instantly Tarzan
+interposed himself between them.
+
+"Enough!" he snapped. "Let us be true to our oaths of friendship
+that we may be honorable in the sight of God in whatever form we
+conceive Him."
+
+"You are right, Tailless One," said Ta-den. "Come, Om-at, let us
+look after our friendship and ourselves, secure in the conviction
+that Jad-ben-Otho is sufficiently powerful to look after himself."
+
+"Done!" agreed Om-at, "but----"
+
+"No 'buts,' Om-at," admonished Tarzan.
+
+The shaggy black shrugged his shoulders and smiled. "Shall we make
+our way down toward the valley?" he asked. "The gorge below us is
+uninhabited; that to the left contains the caves of my people. I
+would see Pan-at-lee once more. Ta-den would visit his father in
+the valley below and Tarzan seeks entrance to A-lur in search of the
+mate that would be better dead than in the clutches of the Ho-don
+priests of Jad-ben-Otho. How shall we proceed?"
+
+"Let us remain together as long as possible," urged Ta-den. "You,
+Om-at, must seek Pan-at-lee by night and by stealth, for three,
+even we three, may not hope to overcome Es-sat and all his warriors.
+At any time may we go to the village where my father is chief, for
+Ja-don always will welcome the friends of his son. But for Tarzan
+to enter A-lur is another matter, though there is a way and he has
+the courage to put it to the test--listen, come close for Jad-ben-Otho
+has keen ears and this he must not hear," and with his lips close
+to the ears of his companions Ta-den, the Tall-tree, son of Ja-don,
+the Lion-man, unfolded his daring plan.
+
+And at the same moment, a hundred miles away, a lithe figure,
+naked but for a loin cloth and weapons, moved silently across a
+thorn-covered, waterless steppe, searching always along the ground
+before him with keen eyes and sensitive nostrils.
+
+
+
+
+
+3
+
+Pan-at-lee
+
+
+
+
+Night had fallen upon unchartered Pal-ul-don. A slender moon, low
+in the west, bathed the white faces of the chalk cliffs presented
+to her, in a mellow, unearthly glow. Black were the shadows in
+Kor-ul-ja, Gorge-of-lions, where dwelt the tribe of the same name
+under Es-sat, their chief. From an aperture near the summit of the
+lofty escarpment a hairy figure emerged--the head and shoulders
+first--and fierce eyes scanned the cliff side in every direction.
+
+It was Es-sat, the chief. To right and left and below he looked
+as though to assure himself that he was unobserved, but no other
+figure moved upon the cliff face, nor did another hairy body protrude
+from any of the numerous cave mouths from the high-flung abode of
+the chief to the habitations of the more lowly members of the tribe
+nearer the cliff's base. Then he moved outward upon the sheer face
+of the white chalk wall. In the half-light of the baby moon it
+appeared that the heavy, shaggy black figure moved across the face
+of the perpendicular wall in some miraculous manner, but closer
+examination would have revealed stout pegs, as large around as a
+man's wrist protruding from holes in the cliff into which they were
+driven. Es-sat's four handlike members and his long, sinuous tail
+permitted him to move with consummate ease whither he chose--a
+gigantic rat upon a mighty wall. As he progressed upon his way he
+avoided the cave mouths, passing either above or below those that
+lay in his path.
+
+The outward appearance of these caves was similar. An opening from
+eight to as much as twenty feet long by eight high and four to six
+feet deep was cut into the chalklike rock of the cliff, in the back
+of this large opening, which formed what might be described as the
+front veranda of the home, was an opening about three feet wide
+and six feet high, evidently forming the doorway to the interior
+apartment or apartments. On either side of this doorway were smaller
+openings which it were easy to assume were windows through which
+light and air might find their way to the inhabitants. Similar
+windows were also dotted over the cliff face between the entrance
+porches, suggesting that the entire face of the cliff was honeycombed
+with apartments. From many of these smaller apertures small streams
+of water trickled down the escarpment, and the walls above others
+was blackened as by smoke. Where the water ran the wall was eroded
+to a depth of from a few inches to as much as a foot, suggesting
+that some of the tiny streams had been trickling downward to the
+green carpet of vegetation below for ages.
+
+In this primeval setting the great pithecanthropus aroused no
+jarring discord for he was as much a part of it as the trees that
+grew upon the summit of the cliff or those that hid their feet
+among the dank ferns in the bottom of the gorge.
+
+Now he paused before an entrance-way and listened and then,
+noiselessly as the moonlight upon the trickling waters, he merged
+with the shadows of the outer porch. At the doorway leading into
+the interior he paused again, listening, and then quietly pushing
+aside the heavy skin that covered the aperture he passed within a
+large chamber hewn from the living rock. From the far end, through
+another doorway, shone a light, dimly. Toward this he crept with
+utmost stealth, his naked feet giving forth no sound. The knotted
+club that had been hanging at his back from a thong about his neck
+he now removed and carried in his left hand.
+
+Beyond the second doorway was a corridor running parallel with the
+cliff face. In this corridor were three more doorways, one at each
+end and a third almost opposite that in which Es-sat stood. The
+light was coming from an apartment at the end of the corridor at his
+left. A sputtering flame rose and fell in a small stone receptacle
+that stood upon a table or bench of the same material, a monolithic
+bench fashioned at the time the room was excavated, rising massively
+from the floor, of which it was a part.
+
+In one corner of the room beyond the table had been left a dais
+of stone about four feet wide and eight feet long. Upon this were
+piled a foot or so of softly tanned pelts from which the fur had
+not been removed. Upon the edge of this dais sat a young female
+Waz-don. In one hand she held a thin piece of metal, apparently
+of hammered gold, with serrated edges, and in the other a short,
+stiff brush. With these she was occupied in going over her smooth,
+glossy coat which bore a remarkable resemblance to plucked sealskin.
+Her loin cloth of yellow and black striped jato-skin lay on the
+couch beside her with the circular breastplates of beaten gold,
+revealing the symmetrical lines of her nude figure in all its beauty
+and harmony of contour, for even though the creature was jet black
+and entirely covered with hair yet she was undeniably beautiful.
+
+That she was beautiful in the eyes of Es-sat, the chief, was
+evidenced by the gloating expression upon his fierce countenance and
+the increased rapidity of his breathing. Moving quickly forward he
+entered the room and as he did so the young she looked up. Instantly
+her eyes filled with terror and as quickly she seized the loin
+cloth and with a few deft movements adjusted it about her. As she
+gathered up her breastplates Es-sat rounded the table and moved
+quickly toward her.
+
+"What do you want?" she whispered, though she knew full well.
+
+"Pan-at-lee," he said, "your chief has come for you."
+
+"It was for this that you sent away my father and my brothers to
+spy upon the Kor-ul-lul? I will not have you. Leave the cave of my
+ancestors!"
+
+Es-sat smiled. It was the smile of a strong and wicked man who knows
+his power--not a pleasant smile at all. "I will leave, Pan-at-lee,"
+he said; "but you shall go with me--to the cave of Es-sat, the
+chief, to be the envied of the shes of Kor-ul-ja. Come!"
+
+"Never!" cried Pan-at-lee. "I hate you. Sooner would I mate with
+a Ho-don than with you, beater of women, murderer of babes."
+
+A frightful scowl distorted the features of the chief. "She-jato!"
+he cried. "I will tame you! I will break you! Es-sat, the chief,
+takes what he will and who dares question his right, or combat his
+least purpose, will first serve that purpose and then be broken
+as I break this," and he picked a stone platter from the table and
+broke it in his powerful hands. "You might have been first and most
+favored in the cave of the ancestors of Es-sat; but now shall you
+be last and least and when I am done with you you shall belong to
+all of the men of Es-sat's cave. Thus for those who spurn the love
+of their chief!"
+
+He advanced quickly to seize her and as he laid a rough hand upon
+her she struck him heavily upon the side of his head with her
+golden breastplates. Without a sound Es-sat, the chief, sank to
+the floor of the apartment. For a moment Pan-at-lee bent over him,
+her improvised weapon raised to strike again should he show signs
+of returning consciousness, her glossy breasts rising and falling
+with her quickened breathing. Suddenly she stooped and removed
+Es-sat's knife with its scabbard and shoulder belt. Slipping it
+over her own shoulder she quickly adjusted her breastplates and
+keeping a watchful glance upon the figure of the fallen chief,
+backed from the room.
+
+In a niche in the outer room, just beside the doorway leading to the
+balcony, were neatly piled a number of rounded pegs from eighteen
+to twenty inches in length. Selecting five of these she made them
+into a little bundle about which she twined the lower extremity of
+her sinuous tail and thus carrying them made her way to the outer
+edge of the balcony. Assuring herself that there was none about
+to see, or hinder her, she took quickly to the pegs already set in
+the face of the cliff and with the celerity of a monkey clambered
+swiftly aloft to the highest row of pegs which she followed in
+the direction of the lower end of the gorge for a matter of some
+hundred yards. Here, above her head, were a series of small round
+holes placed one above another in three parallel rows. Clinging only
+with her toes she removed two of the pegs from the bundle carried
+in her tail and taking one in either hand she inserted them in
+two opposite holes of the outer rows as far above her as she could
+reach. Hanging by these new holds she now took one of the three
+remaining pegs in each of her feet, leaving the fifth grasped securely
+in her tail. Reaching above her with this member she inserted the
+fifth peg in one of the holes of the center row and then, alternately
+hanging by her tail, her feet, or her hands, she moved the pegs
+upward to new holes, thus carrying her stairway with her as she
+ascended.
+
+At the summit of the cliff a gnarled tree exposed its time-worn
+roots above the topmost holes forming the last step from the sheer
+face of the precipice to level footing. This was the last avenue
+of escape for members of the tribe hard pressed by enemies from
+below. There were three such emergency exits from the village and it
+were death to use them in other than an emergency. This Pan-at-lee
+well knew; but she knew, too, that it were worse than death to
+remain where the angered Es-sat might lay hands upon her.
+
+When she had gained the summit, the girl moved quickly through
+the darkness in the direction of the next gorge which cut the
+mountain-side a mile beyond Kor-ul-ja. It was the Gorge-of-water,
+Kor-ul-lul, to which her father and two brothers had been sent by
+Es-sat ostensibly to spy upon the neighboring tribe. There was a
+chance, a slender chance, that she might find them; if not there
+was the deserted Kor-ul-gryf several miles beyond, where she might
+hide indefinitely from man if she could elude the frightful monster
+from which the gorge derived its name and whose presence there had
+rendered its caves uninhabitable for generations.
+
+Pan-at-lee crept stealthily along the rim of the Kor-ul-lul.
+Just where her father and brothers would watch she did not know.
+Sometimes their spies remained upon the rim, sometimes they watched
+from the gorge's bottom. Pan-at-lee was at a loss to know what to
+do or where to go. She felt very small and helpless alone in the
+vast darkness of the night. Strange noises fell upon her ears. They
+came from the lonely reaches of the towering mountains above her,
+from far away in the invisible valley and from the nearer foothills
+and once, in the distance, she heard what she thought was the bellow
+of a bull gryf. It came from the direction of the Kor-ul-gryf. She
+shuddered.
+
+Presently there came to her keen ears another sound. Something
+approached her along the rim of the gorge. It was coming from above.
+She halted, listening. Perhaps it was her father, or a brother.
+It was coming closer. She strained her eyes through the darkness.
+She did not move--she scarcely breathed. And then, of a sudden,
+quite close it seemed, there blazed through the black night two
+yellow-green spots of fire.
+
+Pan-at-lee was brave, but as always with the primitive, the darkness
+held infinite terrors for her. Not alone the terrors of the known
+but more frightful ones as well--those of the unknown. She had
+passed through much this night and her nerves were keyed to the
+highest pitch--raw, taut nerves, they were, ready to react in an
+exaggerated form to the slightest shock.
+
+But this was no slight shock. To hope for a father and a brother and
+to see death instead glaring out of the darkness! Yes, Pan-at-lee
+was brave, but she was not of iron. With a shriek that reverberated
+among the hills she turned and fled along the rim of Kor-ul-lul and
+behind her, swiftly, came the devil-eyed lion of the mountains of
+Pal-ul-don.
+
+Pan-at-lee was lost. Death was inevitable. Of this there could be
+no doubt, but to die beneath the rending fangs of the carnivore,
+congenital terror of her kind--it was unthinkable. But there was
+an alternative. The lion was almost upon her--another instant and
+he would seize her. Pan-at-lee turned sharply to her left. Just
+a few steps she took in the new direction before she disappeared
+over the rim of Kor-ul-lul. The baffled lion, planting all four
+feet, barely stopped upon the verge of the abyss. Glaring down into
+the black shadows beneath he mounted an angry roar.
+
+Through the darkness at the bottom of Kor-ul-ja, Om-at led the way
+toward the caves of his people. Behind him came Tarzan and Ta-den.
+Presently they halted beneath a great tree that grew close to the
+cliff.
+
+"First," whispered Om-at, "I will go to the cave of Pan-at-lee.
+Then will I seek the cave of my ancestors to have speech with my
+own blood. It will not take long. Wait here--I shall return soon.
+Afterward shall we go together to Ta-den's people."
+
+He moved silently toward the foot of the cliff up which Tarzan
+could presently see him ascending like a great fly on a wall. In
+the dim light the ape-man could not see the pegs set in the face
+of the cliff. Om-at moved warily. In the lower tier of caves there
+should be a sentry. His knowledge of his people and their customs
+told him, however, that in all probability the sentry was asleep.
+In this he was not mistaken, yet he did not in any way abate
+his wariness. Smoothly and swiftly he ascended toward the cave of
+Pan-at-lee while from below Tarzan and Ta-den watched him.
+
+"How does he do it?" asked Tarzan. "I can see no foothold upon that
+vertical surface and yet he appears to be climbing with the utmost
+ease."
+
+Ta-den explained the stairway of pegs. "You could ascend easily,"
+he said, "although a tail would be of great assistance."
+
+They watched until Om-at was about to enter the cave of Pan-at-lee
+without seeing any indication that he had been observed and then,
+simultaneously, both saw a head appear in the mouth of one of the
+lower caves. It was quickly evident that its owner had discovered
+Om-at for immediately he started upward in pursuit. Without a word
+Tarzan and Ta-den sprang forward toward the foot of the cliff. The
+pithecanthropus was the first to reach it and the ape-man saw him
+spring upward for a handhold on the lowest peg above him. Now Tarzan
+saw other pegs roughly paralleling each other in zigzag rows up
+the cliff face. He sprang and caught one of these, pulled himself
+upward by one hand until he could reach a second with his other
+hand; and when he had ascended far enough to use his feet, discovered
+that he could make rapid progress. Ta-den was outstripping him,
+however, for these precarious ladders were no novelty to him and,
+further, he had an advantage in possessing a tail.
+
+Nevertheless, the ape-man gave a good account of himself, being
+presently urged to redoubled efforts by the fact that the Waz-don
+above Ta-den glanced down and discovered his pursuers just before
+the Ho-don overtook him. Instantly a wild cry shattered the silence
+of the gorge--a cry that was immediately answered by hundreds of
+savage throats as warrior after warrior emerged from the entrance
+to his cave.
+
+The creature who had raised the alarm had now reached the recess
+before Pan-at-lee's cave and here he halted and turned to give
+battle to Ta-den. Unslinging his club which had hung down his back
+from a thong about his neck he stood upon the level floor of the
+entrance-way effectually blocking Ta-den's ascent. From all directions
+the warriors of Kor-ul-ja were swarming toward the interlopers.
+Tarzan, who had reached a point on the same level with Ta-den but
+a little to the latter's left, saw that nothing short of a miracle
+could save them. Just at the ape-man's left was the entrance to
+a cave that either was deserted or whose occupants had not as yet
+been aroused, for the level recess remained unoccupied. Resourceful
+was the alert mind of Tarzan of the Apes and quick to respond were the
+trained muscles. In the time that you or I might give to debating
+an action he would accomplish it and now, though only seconds
+separated his nearest antagonist from him, in the brief span of
+time at his disposal he had stepped into the recess, unslung his
+long rope and leaning far out shot the sinuous noose, with the
+precision of long habitude, toward the menacing figure wielding
+its heavy club above Ta-den. There was a momentary pause of the
+rope-hand as the noose sped toward its goal, a quick movement of
+the right wrist that closed it upon its victim as it settled over
+his head and then a surging tug as, seizing the rope in both hands,
+Tarzan threw back upon it all the weight of his great frame.
+
+Voicing a terrified shriek, the Waz-don lunged headforemost from
+the recess above Ta-den. Tarzan braced himself for the coming
+shock when the creature's body should have fallen the full length
+of the rope and as it did there was a snap of the vertebrae that
+rose sickeningly in the momentary silence that had followed the
+doomed man's departing scream. Unshaken by the stress of the suddenly
+arrested weight at the end of the rope, Tarzan quickly pulled the
+body to his side that he might remove the noose from about its
+neck, for he could not afford to lose so priceless a weapon.
+
+During the several seconds that had elapsed since he cast the
+rope the Waz-don warriors had remained inert as though paralyzed
+by wonder or by terror. Now, again, one of them found his voice
+and his head and straightway, shrieking invectives at the strange
+intruder, started upward for the ape-man, urging his fellows to
+attack. This man was the closest to Tarzan. But for him the ape-man
+could easily have reached Ta-den's side as the latter was urging
+him to do. Tarzan raised the body of the dead Waz-don above his
+head, held it poised there for a moment as with face raised to the
+heavens he screamed forth the horrid challenge of the bull apes of
+the tribe of Kerchak, and with all the strength of his giant sinews
+he hurled the corpse heavily upon the ascending warrior. So great
+was the force of the impact that not only was the Waz-don torn from
+his hold but two of the pegs to which he clung were broken short
+in their sockets.
+
+As the two bodies, the living and the dead, hurtled downward
+toward the foot of the cliff a great cry arose from the Waz-don.
+"Jad-guru-don! Jad-guru-don!" they screamed, and then: "Kill him!
+Kill him!"
+
+And now Tarzan stood in the recess beside Ta-den. Jad-guru-don!"
+repeated the latter, smiling--"The terrible man! Tarzan the Terrible!
+They may kill you, but they will never forget you."
+
+"They shall not ki--What have we here?" Tarzan's statement as to
+what "they" should not do was interrupted by a sudden ejaculation
+as two figures, locked in deathlike embrace, stumbled through the
+doorway of the cave to the outer porch. One was Om-at, the other a
+creature of his own kind but with a rough coat, the hairs of which
+seemed to grow straight outward from the skin, stiffly, unlike
+Om-at's sleek covering. The two were quite evidently well matched
+and equally evident was the fact that each was bent upon murder.
+They fought almost in silence except for an occasional low growl
+as one or the other acknowledged thus some new hurt.
+
+Tarzan, following a natural impulse to aid his ally, leaped forward
+to enter the dispute only to be checked by a grunted admonition
+from Om-at. "Back!" he said. "This fight is mine, alone."
+
+The ape-man understood and stepped aside.
+
+"It is a gund-bar," explained Ta-den, "a chief-battle. This fellow
+must be Es-sat, the chief. If Om-at kills him without assistance
+Om-at may become chief."
+
+Tarzan smiled. It was the law of his own jungle--the law of the
+tribe of Kerchak, the bull ape--the ancient law of primitive man
+that needed but the refining influences of civilization to introduce
+the hired dagger and the poison cup. Then his attention was drawn
+to the outer edge of the vestibule. Above it appeared the shaggy
+face of one of Es-sat's warriors. Tarzan sprang to intercept the
+man; but Ta-den was there ahead of him. "Back!" cried the Ho-don
+to the newcomer. "It is gund-bar." The fellow looked scrutinizingly
+at the two fighters, then turned his face downward toward his fellows.
+"Back!" he cried, "it is gund-bar between Es-sat and Om-at." Then
+he looked back at Ta-den and Tarzan. "Who are you?" he asked.
+
+"We are Om-at's friends," replied Ta-den.
+
+The fellow nodded. "We will attend to you later," he said and
+disappeared below the edge of the recess.
+
+The battle upon the ledge continued with unabated ferocity, Tarzan
+and Ta-den having difficulty in keeping out of the way of the
+contestants who tore and beat at each other with hands and feet and
+lashing tails. Es-sat was unarmed--Pan-at-lee had seen to that--but
+at Om-at's side swung a sheathed knife which he made no effort to
+draw. That would have been contrary to their savage and primitive
+code for the chief-battle must be fought with nature's weapons.
+
+Sometimes they separated for an instant only to rush upon each other
+again with all the ferocity and nearly the strength of mad bulls.
+Presently one of them tripped the other but in that viselike embrace
+one could not fall alone--Es-sat dragged Om-at with him, toppling
+upon the brink of the niche. Even Tarzan held his breath. There they
+surged to and fro perilously for a moment and then the inevitable
+happened--the two, locked in murderous embrace, rolled over the
+edge and disappeared from the ape-man's view.
+
+Tarzan voiced a suppressed sigh for he had liked Om-at and then,
+with Ta-den, approached the edge and looked over. Far below, in
+the dim light of the coming dawn, two inert forms should be lying
+stark in death; but, to Tarzan's amazement, such was far from the
+sight that met his eyes. Instead, there were the two figures still
+vibrant with life and still battling only a few feet below him.
+Clinging always to the pegs with two holds--a hand and a foot, or
+a foot and a tail, they seemed as much at home upon the perpendicular
+wall as upon the level surface of the vestibule; but now their
+tactics were slightly altered, for each seemed particularly bent
+upon dislodging his antagonist from his holds and precipitating
+him to certain death below. It was soon evident that Om-at, younger
+and with greater powers of endurance than Es-sat, was gaining an
+advantage. Now was the chief almost wholly on the defensive. Holding
+him by the cross belt with one mighty hand Om-at was forcing his
+foeman straight out from the cliff, and with the other hand and
+one foot was rapidly breaking first one of Es-sat's holds and then
+another, alternating his efforts, or rather punctuating them, with
+vicious blows to the pit of his adversary's stomach. Rapidly was
+Es-sat weakening and with the knowledge of impending death there
+came, as there comes to every coward and bully under similar
+circumstances, a crumbling of the veneer of bravado which had long
+masqueraded as courage and with it crumbled his code of ethics. Now
+was Es-sat no longer chief of Kor-ul-ja--instead he was a whimpering
+craven battling for life. Clutching at Om-at, clutching at the
+nearest pegs he sought any support that would save him from that
+awful fall, and as he strove to push aside the hand of death,
+whose cold fingers he already felt upon his heart, his tail sought
+Om-at's side and the handle of the knife that hung there.
+
+Tarzan saw and even as Es-sat drew the blade from its sheath he
+dropped catlike to the pegs beside the battling men. Es-sat's tail
+had drawn back for the cowardly fatal thrust. Now many others saw
+the perfidious act and a great cry of rage and disgust arose from
+savage throats; but as the blade sped toward its goal, the ape-man
+seized the hairy member that wielded it, and at the same instant
+Om-at thrust the body of Es-sat from him with such force that its
+weakened holds were broken and it hurtled downward, a brief meteor
+of screaming fear, to death.
+
+
+
+
+
+4
+
+Tarzan-jad-guru
+
+
+
+
+As Tarzan and Om-at clambered back to the vestibule of Pan-at-lee's
+cave and took their stand beside Ta-den in readiness for whatever
+eventuality might follow the death of Es-sat, the sun that topped the
+eastern hills touched also the figure of a sleeper upon a distant,
+thorn-covered steppe awakening him to another day of tireless
+tracking along a faint and rapidly disappearing spoor.
+
+For a time silence reigned in the Kor-ul-ja. The tribesmen waited,
+looking now down upon the dead thing that had been their chief,
+now at one another, and now at Om-at and the two who stood upon his
+either side. Presently Om-at spoke. "I am Om-at," he cried. "Who
+will say that Om-at is not gund of Kor-ul-ja?"
+
+He waited for a taker of his challenge. One or two of the larger
+young bucks fidgeted restlessly and eyed him; but there was no
+reply.
+
+"Then Om-at is gund," he said with finality. "Now tell me, where
+are Pan-at-lee, her father, and her brothers?"
+
+An old warrior spoke. "Pan-at-lee should be in her cave. Who
+should know that better than you who are there now? Her father and
+her brothers were sent to watch Kor-ul-lul; but neither of these
+questions arouse any tumult in our breasts. There is one that does:
+Can Om-at be chief of Kor-ul-ja and yet stand at bay against his
+own people with a Ho-don and that terrible man at his side--that
+terrible man who has no tail? Hand the strangers over to your
+people to be slain as is the way of the Waz-don and then may Om-at
+be gund."
+
+Neither Tarzan nor Ta-den spoke then, they but stood watching Om-at
+and waiting for his decision, the ghost of a smile upon the lips
+of the ape-man. Ta-den, at least, knew that the old warrior had
+spoken the truth--the Waz-don entertain no strangers and take no
+prisoners of an alien race.
+
+Then spoke Om-at. "Always there is change," he said. "Even the old
+hills of Pal-ul-don appear never twice alike--the brilliant sun,
+a passing cloud, the moon, a mist, the changing seasons, the sharp
+clearness following a storm; these things bring each a new change
+in our hills. From birth to death, day by day, there is constant
+change in each of us. Change, then, is one of Jad-ben-Otho's laws.
+
+"And now I, Om-at, your gund, bring another change. Strangers who
+are brave men and good friends shall no longer be slain by the
+Waz-don of Kor-ul-ja!"
+
+There were growls and murmurings and a restless moving among the
+warriors as each eyed the others to see who would take the initiative
+against Om-at, the iconoclast.
+
+"Cease your mutterings," admonished the new gund. "I am your chief.
+My word is your law. You had no part in making me chief. Some of
+you helped Es-sat to drive me from the cave of my ancestors; the
+rest of you permitted it. I owe you nothing. Only these two, whom
+you would have me kill, were loyal to me. I am gund and if there
+be any who doubts it let him speak--he cannot die younger."
+
+Tarzan was pleased. Here was a man after his own heart. He admired
+the fearlessness of Om-at's challenge and he was a sufficiently good
+judge of men to know that he had listened to no idle bluff--Om-at
+would back up his words to the death, if necessary, and the chances
+were that he would not be the one to die. Evidently the majority
+of the Kor-ul-jaians entertained the same conviction.
+
+"I will make you a good gund," said Om-at, seeing that no one appeared
+inclined to dispute his rights. "Your wives and daughters will be
+safe--they were not safe while Es-sat ruled. Go now to your crops
+and your hunting. I leave to search for Pan-at-lee. Ab-on will be
+gund while I am away--look to him for guidance and to me for an
+accounting when I return--and may Jad-ben-Otho smile upon you."
+
+He turned toward Tarzan and the Ho-don. "And you, my friends," he
+said, "are free to go among my people; the cave of my ancestors is
+yours, do what you will."
+
+"I," said Tarzan, "will go with Om-at to search for Pan-at-lee."
+
+"And I," said Ta-den.
+
+Om-at smiled. "Good!" he exclaimed. "And when we have found her we
+shall go together upon Tarzan's business and Ta-den's. Where first
+shall we search?" He turned toward his warriors. "Who knows where
+she may be?"
+
+None knew other than that Pan-at-lee had gone to her cave with the
+others the previous evening--there was no clew, no suggestion as
+to her whereabouts.
+
+"Show me where she sleeps," said Tarzan; "let me see something that
+belongs to her--an article of her apparel--then, doubtless, I can
+help you."
+
+Two young warriors climbed closer to the ledge upon which Om-at
+stood. They were In-sad and O-dan. It was the latter who spoke.
+
+"Gund of Kor-ul-ja," he said, "we would go with you to search for
+Pan-at-lee."
+
+It was the first acknowledgment of Om-at's chieftainship and
+immediately following it the tenseness that had prevailed seemed
+to relax--the warriors spoke aloud instead of in whispers, and the
+women appeared from the mouths of caves as with the passing of
+a sudden storm. In-sad and O-dan had taken the lead and now all
+seemed glad to follow. Some came to talk with Om-at and to look more
+closely at Tarzan; others, heads of caves, gathered their hunters
+and discussed the business of the day. The women and children
+prepared to descend to the fields with the youths and the old men,
+whose duty it was to guard them.
+
+"O-dan and In-sad shall go with us," announced Om-at, "we shall
+not need more. Tarzan, come with me and I shall show you where
+Pan-at-lee sleeps, though why you should wish to know I cannot
+guess--she is not there. I have looked for myself."
+
+The two entered the cave where Om-at led the way to the apartment
+in which Es-sat had surprised Pan-at-lee the previous night.
+
+"All here are hers," said Om-at, "except the war club lying on the
+floor--that was Es-sat's."
+
+The ape-man moved silently about the apartment, the quivering of
+his sensitive nostrils scarcely apparent to his companion who only
+wondered what good purpose could be served here and chafed at the
+delay.
+
+"Come!" said the ape-man, presently, and led the way toward the
+outer recess.
+
+Here their three companions were awaiting them. Tarzan passed to
+the left side of the niche and examined the pegs that lay within
+reach. He looked at them but it was not his eyes that were examining
+them. Keener than his keen eyes was that marvelously trained sense
+of scent that had first been developed in him during infancy under
+the tutorage of his foster mother, Kala, the she-ape, and further
+sharpened in the grim jungles by that master teacher--the instinct
+of self-preservation.
+
+From the left side of the niche he turned to the right. Om-at was
+becoming impatient.
+
+"Let us be off," he said. "We must search for Pan-at-lee if we
+would ever find her."
+
+"Where shall we search?" asked Tarzan.
+
+Om-at scratched his head. "Where?" he repeated. "Why all Pal-ul-don,
+if necessary."
+
+"A large job," said Tarzan. "Come," he added, "she went this way,"
+and he took to the pegs that led aloft toward the summit of the
+cliff. Here he followed the scent easily since none had passed that
+way since Pan-at-lee had fled. At the point at which she had left
+the permanent pegs and resorted to those carried with her Tarzan
+came to an abrupt halt. "She went this way to the summit," he called
+back to Om-at who was directly behind him; "but there are no pegs
+here."
+
+"I do not know how you know that she went this way," said Om-at;
+"but we will get pegs. In-sad, return and fetch climbing pegs for
+five."
+
+The young warrior was soon back and the pegs distributed. Om-at
+handed five to Tarzan and explained their use. The ape-man returned
+one. "I need but four," he said.
+
+Om-at smiled. "What a wonderful creature you would be if you were
+not deformed," he said, glancing with pride at his own strong tail.
+
+"I admit that I am handicapped," replied Tarzan. "You others go ahead
+and leave the pegs in place for me. I am afraid that otherwise it
+will be slow work as I cannot hold the pegs in my toes as you do."
+
+"All right," agreed Om-at; "Ta-den, In-sad, and I will go first,
+you follow and O-dan bring up the rear and collect the pegs--we
+cannot leave them here for our enemies."
+
+"Can't your enemies bring their own pegs?" asked Tarzan.
+
+"Yes; but it delays them and makes easier our defense and--they
+do not know which of all the holes you see are deep enough for
+pegs--the others are made to confuse our enemies and are too shallow
+to hold a peg."
+
+At the top of the cliff beside the gnarled tree Tarzan again took
+up the trail. Here the scent was fully as strong as upon the pegs
+and the ape-man moved rapidly across the ridge in the direction of
+the Kor-ul-lul.
+
+Presently he paused and turned toward Om-at. "Here she moved swiftly,
+running at top speed, and, Om-at, she was pursued by a lion."
+
+"You can read that in the grass?" asked O-dan as the others gathered
+about the ape-man.
+
+Tarzan nodded. "I do not think the lion got her," he added; "but
+that we shall determine quickly. No, he did not get her--look!"
+and he pointed toward the southwest, down the ridge.
+
+Following the direction indicated by his finger, the others presently
+detected a movement in some bushes a couple of hundred yards away.
+
+"What is it?" asked Om-at. "It is she?" and he started toward the
+spot.
+
+"Wait," advised Tarzan. "It is the lion which pursued her."
+
+"You can see him?" asked Ta-den.
+
+"No, I can smell him."
+
+The others looked their astonishment and incredulity; but of the
+fact that it was indeed a lion they were not left long in doubt.
+Presently the bushes parted and the creature stepped out in full
+view, facing them. It was a magnificent beast, large and beautifully
+maned, with the brilliant leopard spots of its kind well marked and
+symmetrical. For a moment it eyed them and then, still chafing at
+the loss of its prey earlier in the morning, it charged.
+
+The Pal-ul-donians unslung their clubs and stood waiting the onrushing
+beast. Tarzan of the Apes drew his hunting knife and crouched in
+the path of the fanged fury. It was almost upon him when it swerved
+to the right and leaped for Om-at only to be sent to earth with
+a staggering blow upon the head. Almost instantly it was up and
+though the men rushed fearlessly in, it managed to sweep aside their
+weapons with its mighty paws. A single blow wrenched O-dan's club
+from his hand and sent it hurtling against Ta-den, knocking him
+from his feet. Taking advantage of its opportunity the lion rose
+to throw itself upon O-dan and at the same instant Tarzan flung
+himself upon its back. Strong, white teeth buried themselves in
+the spotted neck, mighty arms encircled the savage throat and the
+sinewy legs of the ape-man locked themselves about the gaunt belly.
+
+The others, powerless to aid, stood breathlessly about as the great
+lion lunged hither and thither, clawing and biting fearfully and
+futilely at the savage creature that had fastened itself upon him.
+Over and over they rolled and now the onlookers saw a brown hand
+raised above the lion's side--a brown hand grasping a keen blade.
+They saw it fall and rise and fall again--each time with terrific
+force and in its wake they saw a crimson stream trickling down ja's
+gorgeous coat.
+
+Now from the lion's throat rose hideous screams of hate and rage
+and pain as he redoubled his efforts to dislodge and punish his
+tormentor; but always the tousled black head remained half buried
+in the dark brown mane and the mighty arm rose and fell to plunge
+the knife again and again into the dying beast.
+
+The Pal-ul-donians stood in mute wonder and admiration. Brave men
+and mighty hunters they were and as such the first to accord honor
+to a mightier.
+
+"And you would have had me slay him!" cried Om-at, glancing at
+In-sad and O-dan.
+
+"Jad-ben-Otho reward you that you did not," breathed In-sad.
+
+And now the lion lunged suddenly to earth and with a few spasmodic
+quiverings lay still. The ape-man rose and shook himself, even as
+might ja, the leopard-coated lion of Pal-ul-don, had he been the
+one to survive.
+
+O-dan advanced quickly toward Tarzan. Placing a palm upon his own
+breast and the other on Tarzan's, "Tarzan the Terrible," he said,
+"I ask no greater honor than your friendship."
+
+"And I no more than the friendship of Om-at's friends," replied
+the ape-man simply, returning the other's salute.
+
+"Do you think," asked Om-at, coming close to Tarzan and laying a
+hand upon the other's shoulder, "that he got her?"
+
+"No, my friend; it was a hungry lion that charged us."
+
+"You seem to know much of lions," said In-sad.
+
+"Had I a brother I could not know him better," replied Tarzan.
+
+"Then where can she be?" continued Om-at.
+
+"We can but follow while the spoor is fresh," answered the ape-man
+and again taking up his interrupted tracking he led them down the
+ridge and at a sharp turning of the trail to the left brought them
+to the verge of the cliff that dropped into the Kor-ul-lul. For
+a moment Tarzan examined the ground to the right and to the left,
+then he stood erect and looking at Om-at pointed into the gorge.
+
+For a moment the Waz-don gazed down into the green rift at the bottom
+of which a tumultuous river tumbled downward along its rocky bed,
+then he closed his eyes as to a sudden spasm of pain and turned
+away.
+
+"You--mean--she jumped?" he asked.
+
+"To escape the lion," replied Tarzan. "He was right behind her--look,
+you can see where his four paws left their impress in the turf as
+he checked his charge upon the very verge of the abyss."
+
+"Is there any chance--" commenced Om-at, to be suddenly silenced
+by a warning gesture from Tarzan.
+
+"Down!" whispered the ape-man, "many men are coming. They are
+running--from down the ridge." He flattened himself upon his belly
+in the grass, the others following his example.
+
+For some minutes they waited thus and then the others, too, heard
+the sound of running feet and now a hoarse shout followed by many
+more.
+
+"It is the war cry of the Kor-ul-lul," whispered Om-at--"the
+hunting cry of men who hunt men. Presently shall we see them
+and if Jad-ben-Otho is pleased with us they shall not too greatly
+outnumber us."
+
+"They are many," said Tarzan, "forty or fifty, I should say; but
+how many are the pursued and how many the pursuers we cannot even
+guess, except that the latter must greatly outnumber the former,
+else these would not run so fast."
+
+"Here they come," said Ta-den.
+
+"It is An-un, father of Pan-at-lee, and his two sons," exclaimed
+O-dan. "They will pass without seeing us if we do not hurry," he
+added looking at Om-at, the chief, for a sign.
+
+"Come!" cried the latter, springing to his feet and running rapidly
+to intercept the three fugitives. The others followed him.
+
+"Five friends!" shouted Om-at as An-un and his sons discovered
+them.
+
+"Adenen yo!" echoed O-dan and In-sad.
+
+The fugitives scarcely paused as these unexpected reinforcements
+joined them but they eyed Ta-den and Tarzan with puzzled glances.
+
+"The Kor-ul-lul are many," shouted An-un. "Would that we might
+pause and fight; but first we must warn Es-sat and our people."
+
+"Yes," said Om-at, "we must warn our people."
+
+"Es-sat is dead," said In-sad.
+
+"Who is chief?" asked one of An-un's sons.
+
+"Om-at," replied O-dan.
+
+"It is well," cried An-un. "Pan-at-lee said that you would come
+back and slay Es-sat."
+
+Now the enemy broke into sight behind them.
+
+"Come!" cried Tarzan," let us turn and charge them, raising a great
+cry. They pursued but three and when they see eight charging upon
+them they will think that many men have come to do battle. They
+will believe that there are more even than they see and then one
+who is swift will have time to reach the gorge and warn your people."
+
+"It is well," said Om-at. "Id-an, you are swift--carry word to the
+warriors of Kor-ul-ja that we fight the Kor-ul-lul upon the ridge
+and that Ab-on shall send a hundred men."
+
+Id-an, the son of An-un, sped swiftly toward the cliff-dwellings
+of the Kor-ul-ja while the others charged the oncoming Kor-ul-lul,
+the war cries of the two tribes rising and falling in a certain
+grim harmony. The leaders of the Kor-ul-lul paused at sight of the
+reinforcements, waiting apparently for those behind to catch up
+with them and, possibly, also to learn how great a force confronted
+them. The leaders, swifter runners than their fellows, perhaps,
+were far in advance while the balance of their number had not yet
+emerged from the brush; and now as Om-at and his companions fell
+upon them with a ferocity born of necessity they fell back, so that
+when their companions at last came in sight of them they appeared
+to be in full rout. The natural result was that the others turned
+and fled.
+
+Encouraged by this first success Om-at followed them into the
+brush, his little company charging valiantly upon his either side,
+and loud and terrifying were the savage yells with which they
+pursued the fleeing enemy. The brush, while not growing so closely
+together as to impede progress, was of such height as to hide the
+members of the party from one another when they became separated
+by even a few yards. The result was that Tarzan, always swift and
+always keen for battle, was soon pursuing the enemy far in the lead
+of the others--a lack of prudence which was to prove his undoing.
+
+The warriors of Kor-ul-lul, doubtless as valorous as their foemen,
+retreated only to a more strategic position in the brush, nor were
+they long in guessing that the number of their pursuers was fewer
+than their own. They made a stand then where the brush was densest--an
+ambush it was, and into this ran Tarzan of the Apes. They tricked
+him neatly. Yes, sad as is the narration of it, they tricked the
+wily jungle lord. But then they were fighting on their own ground,
+every foot of which they knew as you know your front parlor, and
+they were following their own tactics, of which Tarzan knew nothing.
+
+A single black warrior appeared to Tarzan a laggard in the rear of
+the retreating enemy and thus retreating he lured Tarzan on. At
+last he turned at bay confronting the ape-man with bludgeon and
+drawn knife and as Tarzan charged him a score of burly Waz-don
+leaped from the surrounding brush. Instantly, but too late, the giant
+Tarmangani realized his peril. There flashed before him a vision
+of his lost mate and a great and sickening regret surged through
+him with the realization that if she still lived she might no longer
+hope, for though she might never know of the passing of her lord
+the fact of it must inevitably seal her doom.
+
+And consequent to this thought there enveloped him a blind frenzy
+of hatred for these creatures who dared thwart his purpose and menace
+the welfare of his wife. With a savage growl he threw himself upon
+the warrior before him twisting the heavy club from the creature's
+hand as if he had been a little child, and with his left fist backed
+by the weight and sinew of his giant frame, he crashed a shattering
+blow to the center of the Waz-don's face--a blow that crushed the
+bones and dropped the fellow in his tracks. Then he swung upon the
+others with their fallen comrade's bludgeon striking to right and
+left mighty, unmerciful blows that drove down their own weapons
+until that wielded by the ape-man was splintered and shattered. On
+either hand they fell before his cudgel; so rapid the delivery of
+his blows, so catlike his recovery that in the first few moments
+of the battle he seemed invulnerable to their attack; but it could
+not last--he was outnumbered twenty to one and his undoing came
+from a thrown club. It struck him upon the back of the head. For
+a moment he stood swaying and then like a great pine beneath the
+woodsman's ax he crashed to earth.
+
+Others of the Kor-ul-lul had rushed to engage the balance of Om-at's
+party. They could be heard fighting at a short distance and it was
+evident that the Kor-ul-ja were falling slowly back and as they
+fell Om-at called to the missing one: "Tarzan the Terrible! Tarzan
+the Terrible!"
+
+"Jad-guru, indeed," repeated one of the Kor-ul-lul rising from
+where Tarzan had dropped him. "Tarzan-jad-guru! He was worse than
+that."
+
+
+
+
+
+5
+
+In the Kor-ul-gryf
+
+
+
+
+As Tarzan fell among his enemies a man halted many miles away upon
+the outer verge of the morass that encircles Pal-ul-don. Naked he
+was except for a loin cloth and three belts of cartridges, two of
+which passed over his shoulders, crossing upon his chest and back,
+while the third encircled his waist. Slung to his back by its leathern
+sling-strap was an Enfield, and he carried too a long knife, a bow
+and a quiver of arrows. He had come far, through wild and savage
+lands, menaced by fierce beasts and fiercer men, yet intact to the
+last cartridge was the ammunition that had filled his belts the
+day that he set out.
+
+The bow and the arrows and the long knife had brought him thus far
+safely, yet often in the face of great risks that could have been
+minimized by a single shot from the well-kept rifle at his back.
+What purpose might he have for conserving this precious ammunition?
+in risking his life to bring the last bright shining missile to his
+unknown goal? For what, for whom were these death-dealing bits of
+metal preserved? In all the world only he knew.
+
+When Pan-at-lee stepped over the edge of the cliff above Kor-ul-lul
+she expected to be dashed to instant death upon the rocks below;
+but she had chosen this in preference to the rending fangs of ja.
+Instead, chance had ordained that she make the frightful plunge at
+a point where the tumbling river swung close beneath the overhanging
+cliff to eddy for a slow moment in a deep pool before plunging madly
+downward again in a cataract of boiling foam, and water thundering
+against rocks.
+
+Into this icy pool the girl shot, and down and down beneath the
+watery surface until, half choked, yet fighting bravely, she battled
+her way once more to air. Swimming strongly she made the opposite
+shore and there dragged herself out upon the bank to lie panting
+and spent until the approaching dawn warned her to seek concealment,
+for she was in the country of her people's enemies.
+
+Rising, she moved into the concealment of the rank vegetation that
+grows so riotously in the well-watered kors(1) of Pal-ul-don.
+
+_______________________________________________________________
+
+(1) I have used the Pal-ul-don word for gorge with the English
+plural, which is not the correct native plural form. The latter,
+it seems to me, is awkward for us and so I have generally ignored
+it throughout my manuscript, permitting, for example, Kor-ul-ja
+to answer for both singular and plural. However, for the benefit
+of those who may be interested in such things I may say that the
+plurals are formed simply for all words in the Pal-ul-don language
+by doubling the initial letter of the word, as k'kor, gorges, pronounced
+as though written kakor, the a having the sound of a in sofa. Lions,
+d' don.
+
+_______________________________________________________________
+
+Hidden amidst the plant life from the sight of any who might
+chance to pass along the well-beaten trail that skirted the river
+Pan-at-lee sought rest and food, the latter growing in abundance
+all about her in the form of fruits and berries and succulent tubers
+which she scooped from the earth with the knife of the dead Es-sat.
+
+Ah! if she had but known that he was dead! What trials and risks
+and terrors she might have been saved; but she thought that he
+still lived and so she dared not return to Kor-ul-ja. At least not
+yet while his rage was at white heat. Later, perhaps, her father
+and brothers returned to their cave, she might risk it; but not
+now--not now. Nor could she for long remain here in the neighborhood
+of the hostile Kor-ul-lul and somewhere she must find safety from
+beasts before the night set in.
+
+As she sat upon the bole of a fallen tree seeking some solution
+of the problem of existence that confronted her, there broke upon
+her ears from up the gorge the voices of shouting men--a sound that
+she recognized all too well. It was the war cry of the Kor-ul-lul.
+Closer and closer it approached her hiding place. Then, through
+the veil of foliage she caught glimpses of three figures fleeing
+along the trail, and behind them the shouting of the pursuers rose
+louder and louder as they neared her. Again she caught sight of
+the fugitives crossing the river below the cataract and again they
+were lost to sight. And now the pursuers came into view--shouting
+Kor-ul-lul warriors, fierce and implacable. Forty, perhaps fifty
+of them. She waited breathless; but they did not swerve from the
+trail and passed her, unguessing that an enemy she lay hid within
+a few yards of them.
+
+Once again she caught sight of the pursued--three Waz-don warriors
+clambering the cliff face at a point where portions of the summit
+had fallen away presenting a steep slope that might be ascended by
+such as these. Suddenly her attention was riveted upon the three.
+Could it be? O Jad-ben-Otho! had she but known a moment before. When
+they passed she might have joined them, for they were her father
+and two brothers. Now it was too late. With bated breath and tense
+muscles she watched the race. Would they reach the summit? Would the
+Kor-ul-lul overhaul them? They climbed well, but, oh, so slowly.
+Now one lost his footing in the loose shale and slipped back!
+The Kor-ul-lul were ascending--one hurled his club at the nearest
+fugitive. The Great God was pleased with the brother of Pan-at-lee,
+for he caused the club to fall short of its target, and to fall,
+rolling and bounding, back upon its owner carrying him from his
+feet and precipitating him to the bottom of the gorge.
+
+Standing now, her hands pressed tight above her golden breastplates,
+Pan-at-lee watched the race for life. Now one, her older brother,
+reached the summit and clinging there to something that she could
+not see he lowered his body and his long tail to the father beneath
+him. The latter, seizing this support, extended his own tail
+to the son below--the one who had slipped back--and thus, upon
+a living ladder of their own making, the three reached the summit
+and disappeared from view before the Kor-ul-lul overtook them. But
+the latter did not abandon the chase. On they went until they too
+had disappeared from sight and only a faint shouting came down to
+Pan-at-lee to tell her that the pursuit continued.
+
+The girl knew that she must move on. At any moment now might come
+a hunting party, combing the gorge for the smaller animals that
+fed or bedded there.
+
+Behind her were Es-sat and the returning party of Kor-ul-lul that
+had pursued her kin; before her, across the next ridge, was the
+Kor-ul-gryf, the lair of the terrifying monsters that brought the
+chill of fear to every inhabitant of Pal-ul-don; below her, in the
+valley, was the country of the Ho-don, where she could look for only
+slavery, or death; here were the Kor-ul-lul, the ancient enemies of
+her people and everywhere were the wild beasts that eat the flesh
+of man.
+
+For but a moment she debated and then turning her face toward
+the southeast she set out across the gorge of water toward the
+Kor-ul-gryf--at least there were no men there. As it is now, so
+it was in the beginning, back to the primitive progenitor of man
+which is typified by Pan-at-lee and her kind today, of all the
+hunters that woman fears, man is the most relentless, the most
+terrible. To the dangers of man she preferred the dangers of the
+gryf.
+
+Moving cautiously she reached the foot of the cliff at the far
+side of Kor-ul-lul and here, toward noon, she found a comparatively
+easy ascent. Crossing the ridge she stood at last upon the brink
+of Kor-ul-gryf--the horror place of the folklore of her race. Dank
+and mysterious grew the vegetation below; giant trees waved their
+plumed tops almost level with the summit of the cliff; and over
+all brooded an ominous silence.
+
+Pan-at-lee lay upon her belly and stretching over the edge scanned
+the cliff face below her. She could see caves there and the stone
+pegs which the ancients had fashioned so laboriously by hand. She
+had heard of these in the firelight tales of her childhood and of
+how the gryfs had come from the morasses across the mountains and
+of how at last the people had fled after many had been seized and
+devoured by the hideous creatures, leaving their caves untenanted
+for no man living knew how long. Some said that Jad-ben-Otho, who
+has lived forever, was still a little boy. Pan-at-lee shuddered;
+but there were caves and in them she would be safe even from the
+gryfs.
+
+She found a place where the stone pegs reached to the very summit
+of the cliff, left there no doubt in the final exodus of the tribe
+when there was no longer need of safeguarding the deserted caves
+against invasion. Pan-at-lee clambered slowly down toward the
+uppermost cave. She found the recess in front of the doorway almost
+identical with those of her own tribe. The floor of it, though,
+was littered with twigs and old nests and the droppings of birds,
+until it was half choked. She moved along to another recess and
+still another, but all were alike in the accumulated filth. Evidently
+there was no need in looking further. This one seemed large and
+commodious. With her knife she fell to work cleaning away the debris
+by the simple expedient of pushing it over the edge, and always
+her eyes turned constantly toward the silent gorge where lurked the
+fearsome creatures of Pal-ul-don. And other eyes there were, eyes
+she did not see, but that saw her and watched her every move--fierce
+eyes, greedy eyes, cunning and cruel. They watched her, and a
+red tongue licked flabby, pendulous lips. They watched her, and a
+half-human brain laboriously evolved a brutish design.
+
+As in her own Kor-ul-ja, the natural springs in the cliff had been
+developed by the long-dead builders of the caves so that fresh,
+pure water trickled now, as it had for ages, within easy access to
+the cave entrances. Her only difficulty would be in procuring food
+and for that she must take the risk at least once in two days,
+for she was sure that she could find fruits and tubers and perhaps
+small animals, birds, and eggs near the foot of the cliff, the
+last two, possibly, in the caves themselves. Thus might she live
+on here indefinitely. She felt now a certain sense of security
+imparted doubtless by the impregnability of her high-flung sanctuary
+that she knew to be safe from all the more dangerous beasts, and
+this one from men, too, since it lay in the abjured Kor-ul-gryf.
+
+Now she determined to inspect the interior of her new home. The sun
+still in the south, lighted the interior of the first apartment.
+It was similar to those of her experience--the same beasts and
+men were depicted in the same crude fashion in the carvings on the
+walls--evidently there had been little progress in the race of
+Waz-don during the generations that had come and departed since
+Kor-ul-gryf had been abandoned by men. Of course Pan-at-lee thought
+no such thoughts, for evolution and progress existed not for her,
+or her kind. Things were as they had always been and would always
+be as they were.
+
+That these strange creatures have existed thus for incalculable
+ages it can scarce be doubted, so marked are the indications of
+antiquity about their dwellings--deep furrows worn by naked feet in
+living rock; the hollow in the jamb of a stone doorway where many
+arms have touched in passing; the endless carvings that cover,
+ofttimes, the entire face of a great cliff and all the walls and
+ceilings of every cave and each carving wrought by a different hand,
+for each is the coat of arms, one might say, of the adult male who
+traced it.
+
+And so Pan-at-lee found this ancient cave homelike and familiar.
+There was less litter within than she had found without and what
+there was was mostly an accumulation of dust. Beside the doorway
+was the niche in which wood and tinder were kept, but there remained
+nothing now other than mere dust. She had however saved a little
+pile of twigs from the debris on the porch. In a short time she had
+made a light by firing a bundle of twigs and lighting others from
+this fire she explored some of the inner rooms. Nor here did she
+find aught that was new or strange nor any relic of the departed
+owners other than a few broken stone dishes. She had been looking
+for something soft to sleep upon, but was doomed to disappointment
+as the former owners had evidently made a leisurely departure,
+carrying all their belongings with them. Below, in the gorge were
+leaves and grasses and fragrant branches, but Pan-at-lee felt no
+stomach for descending into that horrid abyss for the gratification
+of mere creature comfort--only the necessity for food would drive
+her there.
+
+And so, as the shadows lengthened and night approached she prepared
+to make as comfortable a bed as she could by gathering the dust
+of ages into a little pile and spreading it between her soft body
+and the hard floor--at best it was only better than nothing. But
+Pan-at-lee was very tired. She had not slept since two nights before
+and in the interval she had experienced many dangers and hardships.
+What wonder then that despite the hard bed, she was asleep almost
+immediately she had composed herself for rest.
+
+She slept and the moon rose, casting its silver light upon the
+cliff's white face and lessening the gloom of the dark forest and
+the dismal gorge. In the distance a lion roared. There was a long
+silence. From the upper reaches of the gorge came a deep bellow.
+There was a movement in the trees at the cliff's foot. Again the
+bellow, low and ominous. It was answered from below the deserted
+village. Something dropped from the foliage of a tree directly
+below the cave in which Pan-at-lee slept--it dropped to the ground
+among the dense shadows. Now it moved, cautiously. It moved toward
+the foot of the cliff, taking form and shape in the moonlight.
+It moved like the creature of a bad dream--slowly, sluggishly. It
+might have been a huge sloth--it might have been a man, with so
+grotesque a brush does the moon paint--master cubist.
+
+Slowly it moved up the face of the cliff--like a great grubworm
+it moved, but now the moon-brush touched it again and it had hands
+and feet and with them it clung to the stone pegs and raised itself
+laboriously aloft toward the cave where Pan-at-lee slept. From the
+lower reaches of the gorge came again the sound of bellowing, and
+it was answered from above the village.
+
+Tarzan of the Apes opened his eyes. He was conscious of a pain in
+his head, and at first that was about all. A moment later grotesque
+shadows, rising and falling, focused his arousing perceptions.
+Presently he saw that he was in a cave. A dozen Waz-don warriors
+squatted about, talking. A rude stone cresset containing burning oil
+lighted the interior and as the flame rose and fell the exaggerated
+shadows of the warriors danced upon the walls behind them.
+
+"We brought him to you alive, Gund," he heard one of them saying,
+"because never before was Ho-don like him seen. He has no tail--he
+was born without one, for there is no scar to mark where a tail had
+been cut off. The thumbs upon his hands and feet are unlike those
+of the races of Pal-ul-don. He is more powerful than many men put
+together and he attacks with the fearlessness of ja. We brought
+him alive, that you might see him before he is slain."
+
+The chief rose and approached the ape-man, who closed his eyes and
+feigned unconsciousness. He felt hairy hands upon him as he was
+turned over, none too gently. The gund examined him from head to
+foot, making comments, especially upon the shape and size of his
+thumbs and great toes.
+
+"With these and with no tail," he said, "it cannot climb."
+
+"No," agreed one of the warriors, "it would surely fall even from
+the cliff pegs."
+
+"I have never seen a thing like it," said the chief. "It is neither
+Waz-don nor Ho-don. I wonder from whence it came and what it is
+called."
+
+"The Kor-ul-ja shouted aloud, 'Tarzan-jad-guru!' and we thought
+that they might be calling this one," said a warrior. "Shall we
+kill it now?"
+
+"No," replied the chief, "we will wait until it's life returns into
+its head that I may question it. Remain here, In-tan, and watch
+it. When it can again hear and speak call me."
+
+He turned and departed from the cave, the others, except In-tan,
+following him. As they moved past him and out of the chamber
+Tarzan caught snatches of their conversation which indicated that
+the Kor-ul-ja reinforcements had fallen upon their little party
+in great numbers and driven them away. Evidently the swift feet
+of Id-an had saved the day for the warriors of Om-at. The ape-man
+smiled, then he partially opened an eye and cast it upon In-tan.
+The warrior stood at the entrance to the cave looking out--his back
+was toward his prisoner. Tarzan tested the bonds that secured his
+wrists. They seemed none too stout and they had tied his hands in
+front of him! Evidence indeed that the Waz-don took few prisoners--if
+any.
+
+Cautiously he raised his wrists until he could examine the thongs
+that confined them. A grim smile lighted his features. Instantly he
+was at work upon the bonds with his strong teeth, but ever a wary
+eye was upon In-tan, the warrior of Kor-ul-lul. The last knot had
+been loosened and Tarzan's hands were free when In-tan turned to
+cast an appraising eye upon his ward. He saw that the prisoner's
+position was changed--he no longer lay upon his back as they had
+left him, but upon his side and his hands were drawn up against
+his face. In-tan came closer and bent down. The bonds seemed very
+loose upon the prisoner's wrists. He extended his hand to examine
+them with his fingers and instantly the two hands leaped from
+their bonds--one to seize his own wrist, the other his throat.
+So unexpected the catlike attack that In-tan had not even time to
+cry out before steel fingers silenced him. The creature pulled him
+suddenly forward so that he lost his balance and rolled over upon
+the prisoner and to the floor beyond to stop with Tarzan upon his
+breast. In-tan struggled to release himself--struggled to draw his
+knife; but Tarzan found it before him. The Waz-don's tail leaped
+to the other's throat, encircling it--he too could choke; but his
+own knife, in the hands of his antagonist, severed the beloved
+member close to its root.
+
+The Waz-don's struggles became weaker--a film was obscuring his
+vision. He knew that he was dying and he was right. A moment later
+he was dead. Tarzan rose to his feet and placed one foot upon
+the breast of his dead foe. How the urge seized him to roar forth
+the victory cry of his kind! But he dared not. He discovered that
+they had not removed his rope from his shoulders and that they had
+replaced his knife in its sheath. It had been in his hand when he
+was felled. Strange creatures! He did not know that they held a
+superstitious fear of the weapons of a dead enemy, believing that
+if buried without them he would forever haunt his slayers in search
+of them and that when he found them he would kill the man who killed
+him. Against the wall leaned his bow and quiver of arrows.
+
+Tarzan stepped toward the doorway of the cave and looked out.
+Night had just fallen. He could hear voices from the nearer caves
+and there floated to his nostrils the odor of cooking food. He looked
+down and experienced a sensation of relief. The cave in which he
+had been held was in the lowest tier--scarce thirty feet from the
+base of the cliff. He was about to chance an immediate descent when
+there occurred to him a thought that brought a grin to his savage
+lips--a thought that was born of the name the Waz-don had given
+him Tarzan-jad-guru--Tarzan the Terrible--and a recollection of
+the days when he had delighted in baiting the blacks of the distant
+jungle of his birth. He turned back into the cave where lay the
+dead body of In-tan. With his knife he severed the warrior's head
+and carrying it to the outer edge of the recess tossed it to the
+ground below, then he dropped swiftly and silently down the ladder
+of pegs in a way that would have surprised the Kor-ul-lul who had
+been so sure that he could not climb.
+
+At the bottom he picked up the head of In-tan and disappeared among
+the shadows of the trees carrying the grisly trophy by its shock
+of shaggy hair. Horrible? But you are judging a wild beast by the
+standards of civilization. You may teach a lion tricks, but he
+is still a lion. Tarzan looked well in a Tuxedo, but he was still
+a Tarmangani and beneath his pleated shirt beat a wild and savage
+heart.
+
+Nor was his madness lacking in method. He knew that the hearts of
+the Kor-ul-lul would be filled with rage when they discovered the
+thing that he had done and he knew too, that mixed with the rage
+would be a leaven of fear and it was fear of him that had made
+Tarzan master of many jungles--one does not win the respect of the
+killers with bonbons.
+
+Below the village Tarzan returned to the foot of the cliff searching
+for a point where he could make the ascent to the ridge and thus
+back to the village of Om-at, the Kor-ul-ja. He came at last to a
+place where the river ran so close to the rocky wall that he was
+forced to swim it in search of a trail upon the opposite side and
+here it was that his keen nostrils detected a familiar spoor. It
+was the scent of Pan-at-lee at the spot where she had emerged from
+the pool and taken to the safety of the jungle.
+
+Immediately the ape-man's plans were changed. Pan-at-lee lived,
+or at least she had lived after the leap from the cliff's summit.
+He had started in search of her for Om-at, his friend, and for Om-at
+he would continue upon the trail he had picked up thus fortuitously
+by accident. It led him into the jungle and across the gorge and
+then to the point at which Pan-at-lee had commenced the ascent
+of the opposite cliffs. Here Tarzan abandoned the head of In-tan,
+tying it to the lower branch of a tree, for he knew that it would
+handicap him in his ascent of the steep escarpment. Apelike he
+ascended, following easily the scent spoor of Pan-at-lee. Over the
+summit and across the ridge the trail lay, plain as a printed page
+to the delicate senses of the jungle-bred tracker.
+
+Tarzan knew naught of the Kor-ul-gryf. He had seen, dimly in the
+shadows of the night, strange, monstrous forms and Ta-den and Om-at
+had spoken of great creatures that all men feared; but always,
+everywhere, by night and by day, there were dangers. From infancy
+death had stalked, grim and terrible, at his heels. He knew little
+of any other existence. To cope with danger was his life and he
+lived his life as simply and as naturally as you live yours amidst
+the dangers of the crowded city streets. The black man who goes
+abroad in the jungle by night is afraid, for he has spent his life
+since infancy surrounded by numbers of his own kind and safeguarded,
+especially at night, by such crude means as lie within his powers.
+But Tarzan had lived as the lion lives and the panther and the
+elephant and the ape--a true jungle creature dependent solely upon
+his prowess and his wits, playing a lone hand against creation.
+Therefore he was surprised at nothing and feared nothing and so he
+walked through the strange night as undisturbed and unapprehensive
+as the farmer to the cow lot in the darkness before the dawn.
+
+Once more Pan-at-lee's trail ended at the verge of a cliff; but this
+time there was no indication that she had leaped over the edge and
+a moment's search revealed to Tarzan the stone pegs upon which she
+had made her descent. As he lay upon his belly leaning over the
+top of the cliff examining the pegs his attention was suddenly
+attracted by something at the foot of the cliff. He could not
+distinguish its identity, but he saw that it moved and presently
+that it was ascending slowly, apparently by means of pegs similar
+to those directly below him. He watched it intently as it rose
+higher and higher until he was able to distinguish its form more
+clearly, with the result that he became convinced that it more
+nearly resembled some form of great ape than a lower order. It had
+a tail, though, and in other respects it did not seem a true ape.
+
+Slowly it ascended to the upper tier of caves, into one of which
+it disappeared. Then Tarzan took up again the trail of Pan-at-lee.
+He followed it down the stone pegs to the nearest cave and then
+further along the upper tier. The ape-man raised his eyebrows when
+he saw the direction in which it led, and quickened his pace. He
+had almost reached the third cave when the echoes of Kor-ul-gryf
+were awakened by a shrill scream of terror.
+
+
+
+
+
+6
+
+The Tor-o-don
+
+
+
+
+Pan-at-lee slept--the troubled sleep, of physical and nervous
+exhaustion, filled with weird dreamings. She dreamed that she slept
+beneath a great tree in the bottom of the Kor-ul-gryf and that one
+of the fearsome beasts was creeping upon her but she could not open
+her eyes nor move. She tried to scream but no sound issued from
+her lips. She felt the thing touch her throat, her breast, her arm,
+and there it closed and seemed to be dragging her toward it. With
+a super-human effort of will she opened her eyes. In the instant
+she knew that she was dreaming and that quickly the hallucination
+of the dream would fade--it had happened to her many times before.
+But it persisted. In the dim light that filtered into the dark
+chamber she saw a form beside her, she felt hairy fingers upon her
+and a hairy breast against which she was being drawn. Jad-ben-Otho!
+this was no dream. And then she screamed and tried to fight the
+thing from her; but her scream was answered by a low growl and
+another hairy hand seized her by the hair of the head. The beast
+rose now upon its hind legs and dragged her from the cave to the
+moonlit recess without and at the same instant she saw the figure
+of what she took to be a Ho-don rise above the outer edge of the
+niche.
+
+The beast that held her saw it too and growled ominously but it
+did not relinquish its hold upon her hair. It crouched as though
+waiting an attack, and it increased the volume and frequency of
+its growls until the horrid sounds reverberated through the gorge,
+drowning even the deep bellowings of the beasts below, whose mighty
+thunderings had broken out anew with the sudden commotion from the
+high-flung cave. The beast that held her crouched and the creature
+that faced it crouched also, and growled--as hideously as the other.
+Pan-at-lee trembled. This was no Ho-don and though she feared the
+Ho-don she feared this thing more, with its catlike crouch and its
+beastly growls. She was lost--that Pan-at-lee knew. The two things
+might fight for her, but whichever won she was lost. Perhaps, during
+the battle, if it came to that, she might find the opportunity to
+throw herself over into the Kor-ul-gryf.
+
+The thing that held her she had recognized now as a Tor-o-don, but
+the other thing she could not place, though in the moonlight she
+could see it very distinctly. It had no tail. She could see its
+hands and its feet, and they were not the hands and feet of the
+races of Pal-ul-don. It was slowly closing upon the Tor-o-don and
+in one hand it held a gleaming knife. Now it spoke and to Pan-at-lee's
+terror was added an equal weight of consternation.
+
+"When it leaves go of you," it said, "as it will presently to
+defend itself, run quickly behind me, Pan-at-lee, and go to the
+cave nearest the pegs you descended from the cliff top. Watch from
+there. If I am defeated you will have time to escape this slow
+thing; if I am not I will come to you there. I am Om-at's friend
+and yours."
+
+The last words took the keen edge from Pan-at-lee's terror; but she
+did not understand. How did this strange creature know her name?
+How did it know that she had descended the pegs by a certain cave?
+It must, then, have been here when she came. Pan-at-lee was puzzled.
+
+"Who are you?" she asked, "and from whence do you come?"
+
+"I am Tarzan," he replied, "and just now I came from Om-at, of
+Kor-ul-ja, in search of you."
+
+Om-at, gund of Kor-ul-ja! What wild talk was this? She would have
+questioned him further, but now he was approaching the Tor-o-don
+and the latter was screaming and growling so loudly as to drown
+the sound of her voice. And then it did what the strange creature
+had said that it would do--it released its hold upon her hair as
+it prepared to charge. Charge it did and in those close quarters
+there was no room to fence for openings. Instantly the two beasts
+locked in deadly embrace, each seeking the other's throat. Pan-at-lee
+watched, taking no advantage of the opportunity to escape which
+their preoccupation gave her. She watched and waited, for into
+her savage little brain had come the resolve to pin her faith to
+this strange creature who had unlocked her heart with those four
+words--"I am Om-at's friend!" And so she waited, with drawn knife,
+the opportunity to do her bit in the vanquishing of the Tor-o-don.
+That the newcomer could do it unaided she well knew to be beyond
+the realms of possibility, for she knew well the prowess of the
+beastlike man with whom it fought. There were not many of them in
+Pal-ul-don, but what few there were were a terror to the women of
+the Waz-don and the Ho-don, for the old Tor-o-don bulls roamed the
+mountains and the valleys of Pal-ul-don between rutting seasons
+and woe betide the women who fell in their paths.
+
+With his tail the Tor-o-don sought one of Tarzan's ankles, and
+finding it, tripped him. The two fell heavily, but so agile was the
+ape-man and so quick his powerful muscles that even in falling he
+twisted the beast beneath him, so that Tarzan fell on top and now
+the tail that had tripped him sought his throat as had the tail of
+In-tan, the Kor-ul-lul. In the effort of turning his antagonist's
+body during the fall Tarzan had had to relinquish his knife that
+he might seize the shaggy body with both hands and now the weapon
+lay out of reach at the very edge of the recess. Both hands were
+occupied for the moment in fending off the clutching fingers that
+sought to seize him and drag his throat within reach of his foe's
+formidable fangs and now the tail was seeking its deadly hold with
+a formidable persistence that would not be denied.
+
+Pan-at-lee hovered about, breathless, her dagger ready, but there
+was no opening that did not also endanger Tarzan, so constantly
+were the two duelists changing their positions. Tarzan felt the
+tail slowly but surely insinuating itself about his neck though he
+had drawn his head down between the muscles of his shoulders in an
+effort to protect this vulnerable part. The battle seemed to be
+going against him for the giant beast against which he strove would
+have been a fair match in weight and strength for Bolgani, the
+gorilla. And knowing this he suddenly exerted a single super-human
+effort, thrust far apart the giant hands and with the swiftness of
+a striking snake buried his fangs in the jugular of the Tor-o-don.
+At the same instant the creature's tail coiled about his own throat
+and then commenced a battle royal of turning and twisting bodies as
+each sought to dislodge the fatal hold of the other, but the acts
+of the ape-man were guided by a human brain and thus it was that the
+rolling bodies rolled in the direction that Tarzan wished--toward
+the edge of the recess.
+
+The choking tail had shut the air from his lungs, he knew that
+his gasping lips were parted and his tongue protruding; and now
+his brain reeled and his sight grew dim; but not before he reached
+his goal and a quick hand shot out to seize the knife that now lay
+within reach as the two bodies tottered perilously upon the brink
+of the chasm.
+
+With all his remaining strength the ape-man drove home the
+blade--once, twice, thrice, and then all went black before him as
+he felt himself, still in the clutches of the Tor-o-don, topple
+from the recess.
+
+Fortunate it was for Tarzan that Pan-at-lee had not obeyed his
+injunction to make good her escape while he engaged the Tor-o-don,
+for it was to this fact that he owed his life. Close beside the
+struggling forms during the brief moments of the terrific climax
+she had realized every detail of the danger to Tarzan with which
+the emergency was fraught and as she saw the two rolling over the
+outer edge of the niche she seized the ape-man by an ankle at the
+same time throwing herself prone upon the rocky floor. The muscles
+of the Tor-o-don relaxed in death with the last thrust of Tarzan's
+knife and with its hold upon the ape-man released it shot from
+sight into the gorge below.
+
+It was with infinite difficulty that Pan-at-lee retained her hold
+upon the ankle of her protector, but she did so and then, slowly,
+she sought to drag the dead weight back to the safety of the niche.
+This, however, was beyond her strength and she could but hold on
+tightly, hoping that some plan would suggest itself before her powers
+of endurance failed. She wondered if, after all, the creature was
+already dead, but that she could not bring herself to believe--and
+if not dead how long it would be before he regained consciousness.
+If he did not regain it soon he never would regain it, that she
+knew, for she felt her fingers numbing to the strain upon them and
+slipping, slowly, slowly, from their hold. It was then that Tarzan
+regained consciousness. He could not know what power upheld him,
+but he felt that whatever it was it was slowly releasing its hold
+upon his ankle. Within easy reach of his hands were two pegs and
+these he seized upon just as Pan-at-lee's fingers slipped from
+their hold.
+
+As it was he came near to being precipitated into the gorge--only
+his great strength saved him. He was upright now and his feet
+found other pegs. His first thought was of his foe. Where was he?
+Waiting above there to finish him? Tarzan looked up just as the
+frightened face of Pan-at-lee appeared over the threshold of the
+recess.
+
+"You live?" she cried.
+
+"Yes," replied Tarzan. "Where is the shaggy one?"
+
+Pan-at-lee pointed downward. "There," she said, "dead."
+
+"Good!" exclaimed the ape-man, clambering to her side. "You are
+unharmed?" he asked.
+
+"You came just in time," replied Pan-at-lee; "but who are you and
+how did you know that I was here and what do you know of Om-at and
+where did you come from and what did you mean by calling Om-at,
+gund?"
+
+"Wait, wait," cried Tarzan; "one at a time. My, but you are all
+alike--the shes of the tribe of Kerchak, the ladies of England, and
+their sisters of Pal-ul-don. Have patience and I will try to tell
+you all that you wish to know. Four of us set out with Om-at from
+Kor-ul-ja to search for you. We were attacked by the Kor-ul-lul
+and separated. I was taken prisoner, but escaped. Again I stumbled
+upon your trail and followed it, reaching the summit of this cliff
+just as the hairy one was climbing up after you. I was coming to
+investigate when I heard your scream--the rest you know."
+
+"But you called Om-at, gund of Kor-ul-ja," she insisted. "Es-sat
+is gund."
+
+"Es-sat is dead," explained the ape-man. "Om-at slew him and now
+Om-at is gund. Om-at came back seeking you. He found Es-sat in your
+cave and killed him."
+
+"Yes," said the girl, "Es-sat came to my cave and I struck him down
+with my golden breastplates and escaped."
+
+"And a lion pursued you," continued Tarzan, "and you leaped from
+the cliff into Kor-ul-lul, but why you were not killed is beyond
+me."
+
+"Is there anything beyond you?" exclaimed Pan-at-lee. "How could
+you know that a lion pursued me and that I leaped from the cliff
+and not know that it was the pool of deep water below that saved
+me?"
+
+"I would have known that, too, had not the Kor-ul-lul come then
+and prevented me continuing upon your trail. But now I would ask
+you a question--by what name do you call the thing with which I
+just fought?"
+
+"It was a Tor-o-don," she replied. "I have seen but one before. They
+are terrible creatures with the cunning of man and the ferocity of
+a beast. Great indeed must be the warrior who slays one single-handed."
+She gazed at him in open admiration.
+
+"And now," said Tarzan, "you must sleep, for tomorrow we shall
+return to Kor-ul-ja and Om-at, and I doubt that you have had much
+rest these two nights."
+
+Pan-at-lee, lulled by a feeling of security, slept peacefully into
+the morning while Tarzan stretched himself upon the hard floor of
+the recess just outside her cave.
+
+The sun was high in the heavens when he awoke; for two hours it
+had looked down upon another heroic figure miles away--the figure
+of a godlike man fighting his way through the hideous morass that
+lies like a filthy moat defending Pal-ul-don from the creatures of
+the outer world. Now waist deep in the sucking ooze, now menaced
+by loathsome reptiles, the man advanced only by virtue of Herculean
+efforts gaining laboriously by inches along the devious way that
+he was forced to choose in selecting the least precarious footing.
+Near the center of the morass was open water--slimy, green-hued
+water. He reached it at last after more than two hours of such
+effort as would have left an ordinary man spent and dying in the
+sticky mud, yet he was less than halfway across the marsh. Greasy
+with slime and mud was his smooth, brown hide, and greasy with slime
+and mud was his beloved Enfield that had shone so brightly in the
+first rays of the rising sun.
+
+He paused a moment upon the edge of the open water and then throwing
+himself forward struck out to swim across. He swam with long, easy,
+powerful strokes calculated less for speed than for endurance, for
+his was, primarily, a test of the latter, since beyond the open
+water was another two hours or more of gruelling effort between it
+and solid ground. He was, perhaps, halfway across and congratulating
+himself upon the ease of the achievement of this portion of his task
+when there arose from the depths directly in his path a hideous
+reptile, which, with wide-distended jaws, bore down upon him,
+hissing shrilly.
+
+Tarzan arose and stretched, expanded his great chest and drank in
+deep draughts of the fresh morning air. His clear eyes scanned the
+wondrous beauties of the landscape spread out before them. Directly
+below lay Kor-ul-gryf, a dense, somber green of gently moving tree
+tops. To Tarzan it was neither grim, nor forbidding--it was jungle,
+beloved jungle. To his right there spread a panorama of the lower
+reaches of the Valley of Jad-ben-Otho, with its winding streams and
+its blue lakes. Gleaming whitely in the sunlight were scattered
+groups of dwellings--the feudal strongholds of the lesser chiefs
+of the Ho-don. A-lur, the City of Light, he could not see as it was
+hidden by the shoulder of the cliff in which the deserted village
+lay.
+
+For a moment Tarzan gave himself over to that spiritual enjoyment
+of beauty that only the man-mind may attain and then Nature asserted
+herself and the belly of the beast called aloud that it was hungry.
+Again Tarzan looked down at Kor-ul-gryf. There was the jungle! Grew
+there a jungle that would not feed Tarzan? The ape-man smiled and
+commenced the descent to the gorge. Was there danger there? Of
+course. Who knew it better than Tarzan? In all jungles lies death,
+for life and death go hand in hand and where life teems death reaps
+his fullest harvest. Never had Tarzan met a creature of the jungle
+with which he could not cope--sometimes by virtue of brute strength
+alone, again by a combination of brute strength and the cunning of
+the man-mind; but Tarzan had never met a gryf.
+
+He had heard the bellowings in the gorge the night before after
+he had lain down to sleep and he had meant to ask Pan-at-lee this
+morning what manner of beast so disturbed the slumbers of its
+betters. He reached the foot of the cliff and strode into the jungle
+and here he halted, his keen eyes and ears watchful and alert,
+his sensitive nostrils searching each shifting air current for the
+scent spoor of game. Again he advanced deeper into the wood, his
+light step giving forth no sound, his bow and arrows in readiness.
+A light morning breeze was blowing from up the gorge and in this
+direction he bent his steps. Many odors impinged upon his organs
+of scent. Some of these he classified without effort, but others
+were strange--the odors of beasts and of birds, of trees and shrubs
+and flowers with which he was unfamiliar. He sensed faintly the
+reptilian odor that he had learned to connect with the strange,
+nocturnal forms that had loomed dim and bulky on several occasions
+since his introduction to Pal-ul-don.
+
+And then, suddenly he caught plainly the strong, sweet odor of Bara,
+the deer. Were the belly vocal, Tarzan's would have given a little
+cry of joy, for it loved the flesh of Bara. The ape-man moved
+rapidly, but cautiously forward. The prey was not far distant and
+as the hunter approached it, he took silently to the trees and
+still in his nostrils was the faint reptilian odor that spoke of
+a great creature which he had never yet seen except as a denser
+shadow among the dense shadows of the night; but the odor was of
+such a faintness as suggests to the jungle bred the distance of
+absolute safety.
+
+And now, moving noiselessly, Tarzan came within sight of Bara
+drinking at a pool where the stream that waters Kor-ul-gryf crosses
+an open place in the jungle. The deer was too far from the nearest
+tree to risk a charge, so the ape-man must depend upon the accuracy
+and force of his first arrow, which must drop the deer in its tracks
+or forfeit both deer and shaft. Far back came the right hand and
+the bow, that you or I might not move, bent easily beneath the
+muscles of the forest god. There was a singing twang and Bara,
+leaping high in air, collapsed upon the ground, an arrow through
+his heart. Tarzan dropped to earth and ran to his kill, lest the
+animal might even yet rise and escape; but Bara was safely dead.
+As Tarzan stooped to lift it to his shoulder there fell upon his
+ears a thunderous bellow that seemed almost at his right elbow,
+and as his eyes shot in the direction of the sound, there broke
+upon his vision such a creature as paleontologists have dreamed as
+having possibly existed in the dimmest vistas of Earth's infancy--a
+gigantic creature, vibrant with mad rage, that charged, bellowing,
+upon him.
+
+When Pan-at-lee awoke she looked out upon the niche in search of
+Tarzan. He was not there. She sprang to her feet and rushed out,
+looking down into Kor-ul-gryf guessing that he had gone down in
+search of food and there she caught a glimpse of him disappearing
+into the forest. For an instant she was panic-stricken. She knew
+that he was a stranger in Pal-ul-don and that, so, he might not
+realize the dangers that lay in that gorge of terror. Why did she
+not call to him to return? You or I might have done so, but no
+Pal-ul-don, for they know the ways of the gryf--they know the weak
+eyes and the keen ears, and that at the sound of a human voice
+they come. To have called to Tarzan, then, would but have been to
+invite disaster and so she did not call. Instead, afraid though she
+was, she descended into the gorge for the purpose of overhauling
+Tarzan and warning him in whispers of his danger. It was a brave act,
+since it was performed in the face of countless ages of inherited
+fear of the creatures that she might be called upon to face. Men
+have been decorated for less.
+
+Pan-at-lee, descended from a long line of hunters, assumed that
+Tarzan would move up wind and in this direction she sought his
+tracks, which she soon found well marked, since he had made no effort
+to conceal them. She moved rapidly until she reached the point at
+which Tarzan had taken to the trees. Of course she knew what had
+happened; since her own people were semi-arboreal; but she could
+not track him through the trees, having no such well-developed
+sense of scent as he.
+
+She could but hope that he had continued on up wind and in this
+direction she moved, her heart pounding in terror against her ribs,
+her eyes glancing first in one direction and then another. She
+had reached the edge of a clearing when two things happened--she
+caught sight of Tarzan bending over a dead deer and at the same
+instant a deafening roar sounded almost beside her. It terrified
+her beyond description, but it brought no paralysis of fear.
+Instead it galvanized her into instant action with the result that
+Pan-at-lee swarmed up the nearest tree to the very loftiest branch
+that would sustain her weight. Then she looked down.
+
+The thing that Tarzan saw charging him when the warning bellow
+attracted his surprised eyes loomed terrifically monstrous before
+him--monstrous and awe-inspiring; but it did not terrify Tarzan,
+it only angered him, for he saw that it was beyond even his powers
+to combat and that meant that it might cause him to lose his
+kill, and Tarzan was hungry. There was but a single alternative to
+remaining for annihilation and that was flight--swift and immediate.
+And Tarzan fled, but he carried the carcass of Bara, the deer, with
+him. He had not more than a dozen paces start, but on the other hand
+the nearest tree was almost as close. His greatest danger lay, he
+imagined, in the great, towering height of the creature pursuing
+him, for even though he reached the tree he would have to climb high
+in an incredibly short time as, unless appearances were deceiving,
+the thing could reach up and pluck him down from any branch under
+thirty feet above the ground, and possibly from those up to fifty
+feet, if it reared up on its hind legs.
+
+But Tarzan was no sluggard and though the gryf was incredibly
+fast despite its great bulk, it was no match for Tarzan, and when
+it comes to climbing, the little monkeys gaze with envy upon the
+feats of the ape-man. And so it was that the bellowing gryf came
+to a baffled stop at the foot of the tree and even though he reared
+up and sought to seize his prey among the branches, as Tarzan
+had guessed he might, he failed in this also. And then, well out
+of reach, Tarzan came to a stop and there, just above him, he saw
+Pan-at-lee sitting, wide-eyed and trembling.
+
+"How came you here?" he asked.
+
+She told him. "You came to warn me!" he said. "It was very brave
+and unselfish of you. I am chagrined that I should have been thus
+surprised. The creature was up wind from me and yet I did not sense
+its near presence until it charged. I cannot understand it."
+
+"It is not strange," said Pan-at-lee. "That is one of the peculiarities
+of the gryf--it is said that man never knows of its presence until
+it is upon him--so silently does it move despite its great size."
+
+"But I should have smelled it," cried Tarzan, disgustedly.
+
+"Smelled it!" ejaculated Pan-at-lee. "Smelled it?"
+
+"Certainly. How do you suppose I found this deer so quickly? And I
+sensed the gryf, too, but faintly as at a great distance." Tarzan
+suddenly ceased speaking and looked down at the bellowing creature
+below them--his nostrils quivered as though searching for a scent.
+"Ah!" he exclaimed. "I have it!"
+
+"What?" asked Pan-at-lee.
+
+"I was deceived because the creature gives off practically no
+odor," explained the ape-man. "What I smelled was the faint aroma
+that doubtless permeates the entire jungle because of the long
+presence of many of the creatures--it is the sort of odor that
+would remain for a long time, faint as it is.
+
+"Pan-at-lee, did you ever hear of a triceratops? No? Well this thing
+that you call a gryf is a triceratops and it has been extinct for
+hundreds of thousands of years. I have seen its skeleton in the
+museum in London and a figure of one restored. I always thought
+that the scientists who did such work depended principally upon an
+overwrought imagination, but I see that I was wrong. This living
+thing is not an exact counterpart of the restoration that I saw;
+but it is so similar as to be easily recognizable, and then, too,
+we must remember that during the ages that have elapsed since the
+paleontologist's specimen lived many changes might have been wrought
+by evolution in the living line that has quite evidently persisted
+in Pal-ul-don."
+
+"Triceratops, London, paleo--I don't know what you are talking
+about," cried Pan-at-lee.
+
+Tarzan smiled and threw a piece of dead wood at the face of the
+angry creature below them. Instantly the great bony hood over the
+neck was erected and a mad bellow rolled upward from the gigantic
+body. Full twenty feet at the shoulder the thing stood, a dirty
+slate-blue in color except for its yellow face with the blue bands
+encircling the eyes, the red hood with the yellow lining and the
+yellow belly. The three parallel lines of bony protuberances down
+the back gave a further touch of color to the body, those following
+the line of the spine being red, while those on either side
+are yellow. The five- and three-toed hoofs of the ancient horned
+dinosaurs had become talons in the gryf, but the three horns, two
+large ones above the eyes and a median horn on the nose, had persisted
+through all the ages. Weird and terrible as was its appearance
+Tarzan could not but admire the mighty creature looming big below
+him, its seventy-five feet of length majestically typifying those
+things which all his life the ape-man had admired--courage and
+strength. In that massive tail alone was the strength of an elephant.
+
+The wicked little eyes looked up at him and the horny beak opened
+to disclose a full set of powerful teeth.
+
+"Herbivorous!" murmured the ape-man. "Your ancestors may have been,
+but not you," and then to Pan-at-lee: "Let us go now. At the cave
+we will have deer meat and then--back to Kor-ul-ja and Om-at."
+
+The girl shuddered. "Go?" she repeated. "We will never go from
+here."
+
+"Why not?" asked Tarzan.
+
+For answer she but pointed to the gryf.
+
+"Nonsense!" exclaimed the man. "It cannot climb. We can reach the
+cliff through the trees and be back in the cave before it knows
+what has become of us."
+
+"You do not know the gryf," replied Pan-at-lee gloomily.
+
+"Wherever we go it will follow and always it will be ready at the
+foot of each tree when we would descend. It will never give us up."
+
+"We can live in the trees for a long time if necessary," replied
+Tarzan, "and sometime the thing will leave."
+
+The girl shook her head. "Never," she said, "and then there are the
+Tor-o-don. They will come and kill us and after eating a little will
+throw the balance to the gryf--the gryf and Tor-o-don are friends,
+because the Tor-o-don shares his food with the gryf."
+
+"You may be right," said Tarzan; "but even so I don't intend waiting
+here for someone to come along and eat part of me and then feed
+the balance to that beast below. If I don't get out of this place
+whole it won't be my fault. Come along now and we'll make a try at
+it," and so saying he moved off through the tree tops with Pan-at-lee
+close behind. Below them, on the ground, moved the horned dinosaur
+and when they reached the edge of the forest where there lay fifty
+yards of open ground to cross to the foot of the cliff he was there
+with them, at the bottom of the tree, waiting.
+
+Tarzan looked ruefully down and scratched his head.
+
+
+
+
+
+7
+
+Jungle Craft
+
+
+
+
+Presently he looked up and at Pan-at-lee. "Can you cross the gorge
+through the trees very rapidly?" he questioned.
+
+"Alone?" she asked.
+
+"No," replied Tarzan.
+
+"I can follow wherever you can lead," she said then.
+
+"Across and back again?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Then come, and do exactly as I bid." He started back again through the
+trees, swiftly, swinging monkey-like from limb to limb, following
+a zigzag course that he tried to select with an eye for the
+difficulties of the trail beneath. Where the underbrush was heaviest,
+where fallen trees blocked the way, he led the footsteps of the
+creature below them; but all to no avail. When they reached the
+opposite side of the gorge the gryf was with them.
+
+"Back again," said Tarzan, and, turning, the two retraced their
+high-flung way through the upper terraces of the ancient forest
+of Kor-ul-gryf. But the result was the same--no, not quite; it was
+worse, for another gryf had joined the first and now two waited
+beneath the tree in which they stopped.
+
+The cliff looming high above them with its innumerable cave mouths
+seemed to beckon and to taunt them. It was so near, yet eternity
+yawned between. The body of the Tor-o-don lay at the cliff's foot
+where it had fallen. It was in plain view of the two in the tree.
+One of the gryfs walked over and sniffed about it, but did not
+offer to devour it. Tarzan had examined it casually as he had passed
+earlier in the morning. He guessed that it represented either a
+very high order of ape or a very low order of man--something akin
+to the Java man, perhaps; a truer example of the pithecanthropi than
+either the Ho-don or the Waz-don; possibly the precursor of them
+both. As his eyes wandered idly over the scene below his active
+brain was working out the details of the plan that he had made
+to permit Pan-at-lee's escape from the gorge. His thoughts were
+interrupted by a strange cry from above them in the gorge.
+
+"Whee-oo! Whee-oo!" it sounded, coming closer.
+
+The gryfs below raised their heads and looked in the direction of
+the interruption. One of them made a low, rumbling sound in its
+throat. It was not a bellow and it did not indicate anger. Immediately
+the "Whee-oo!" responded. The gryfs repeated the rumbling and at
+intervals the "Whee-oo!" was repeated, coming ever closer.
+
+Tarzan looked at Pan-at-lee. "What is it?" he asked.
+
+"I do not know," she replied. "Perhaps a strange bird, or another
+horrid beast that dwells in this frightful place."
+
+"Ah," exclaimed Tarzan; "there it is. Look!"
+
+Pan-at-lee voiced a cry of despair. "A Tor-o-don!"
+
+The creature, walking erect and carrying a stick in one hand,
+advanced at a slow, lumbering gait. It walked directly toward the
+gryfs who moved aside, as though afraid. Tarzan watched intently.
+The Tor-o-don was now quite close to one of the triceratops. It
+swung its head and snapped at him viciously. Instantly the Tor-o-don
+sprang in and commenced to belabor the huge beast across the face
+with his stick. To the ape-man's amazement the gryf, that might
+have annihilated the comparatively puny Tor-o-don instantly in any
+of a dozen ways, cringed like a whipped cur.
+
+"Whee-oo! Whee-oo!" shouted the Tor-o-don and the gryf came slowly
+toward him. A whack on the median horn brought it to a stop. Then
+the Tor-o-don walked around behind it, clambered up its tail and
+seated himself astraddle of the huge back. "Whee-oo!" he shouted
+and prodded the beast with a sharp point of his stick. The gryf
+commenced to move off.
+
+So rapt had Tarzan been in the scene below him that he had given
+no thought to escape, for he realized that for him and Pan-at-lee
+time had in these brief moments turned back countless ages to
+spread before their eyes a page of the dim and distant past. They
+two had looked upon the first man and his primitive beasts of
+burden.
+
+And now the ridden gryf halted and looked up at them, bellowing.
+It was sufficient. The creature had warned its master of their
+presence. Instantly the Tor-o-don urged the beast close beneath
+the tree which held them, at the same time leaping to his feet upon
+the horny back. Tarzan saw the bestial face, the great fangs, the
+mighty muscles. From the loins of such had sprung the human race--and
+only from such could it have sprung, for only such as this might
+have survived the horrid dangers of the age that was theirs.
+
+The Tor-o-don beat upon his breast and growled horribly--hideous,
+uncouth, beastly. Tarzan rose to his full height upon a swaying
+branch--straight and beautiful as a demigod--unspoiled by the
+taint of civilization--a perfect specimen of what the human race
+might have been had the laws of man not interfered with the laws
+of nature.
+
+The Present fitted an arrow to his bow and drew the shaft far back.
+The Past basing its claims upon brute strength sought to reach the
+other and drag him down; but the loosed arrow sank deep into the
+savage heart and the Past sank back into the oblivion that had
+claimed his kind.
+
+"Tarzan-jad-guru!" murmured Pan-at-lee, unknowingly giving him out
+of the fullness of her admiration the same title that the warriors
+of her tribe had bestowed upon him.
+
+The ape-man turned to her. "Pan-at-lee," he said, "these beasts may
+keep us treed here indefinitely. I doubt if we can escape together,
+but I have a plan. You remain here, hiding yourself in the foliage,
+while I start back across the gorge in sight of them and yelling
+to attract their attention. Unless they have more brains than I
+suspect they will follow me. When they are gone you make for the
+cliff. Wait for me in the cave not longer than today. If I do not
+come by tomorrow's sun you will have to start back for Kor-ul-ja
+alone. Here is a joint of deer meat for you." He had severed one
+of the deer's hind legs and this he passed up to her.
+
+"I cannot desert you," she said simply; "it is not the way of my
+people to desert a friend and ally. Om-at would never forgive me."
+
+"Tell Om-at that I commanded you to go," replied Tarzan.
+
+"It is a command?" she asked.
+
+"It is! Good-bye, Pan-at-lee. Hasten back to Om-at--you are a fitting
+mate for the chief of Kor-ul-ja." He moved off slowly through the
+trees.
+
+"Good-bye, Tarzan-jad-guru!" she called after him. "Fortunate are
+my Om-at and his Pan-at-lee in owning such a friend."
+
+Tarzan, shouting aloud, continued upon his way and the great gryfs,
+lured by his voice, followed beneath. His ruse was evidently proving
+successful and he was filled with elation as he led the bellowing
+beasts farther and farther from Pan-at-lee. He hoped that she would
+take advantage of the opportunity afforded her for escape, yet at
+the same time he was filled with concern as to her ability to survive
+the dangers which lay between Kor-ul-gryf and Kor-ul-ja. There
+were lions and Tor-o-dons and the unfriendly tribe of Kor-ul-lul
+to hinder her progress, though the distance in itself to the cliffs
+of her people was not great.
+
+He realized her bravery and understood the resourcefulness that
+she must share in common with all primitive people who, day by day,
+must contend face to face with nature's law of the survival of the
+fittest, unaided by any of the numerous artificial protections that
+civilization has thrown around its brood of weaklings.
+
+Several times during this crossing of the gorge Tarzan endeavored
+to outwit his keen pursuers, but all to no avail. Double as he
+would he could not throw them off his track and ever as he changed
+his course they changed theirs to conform. Along the verge of the
+forest upon the southeastern side of the gorge he sought some point
+at which the trees touched some negotiable portion of the cliff,
+but though he traveled far both up and down the gorge he discovered
+no such easy avenue of escape. The ape-man finally commenced to
+entertain an idea of the hopelessness of his case and to realize
+to the full why the Kor-ul-gryf had been religiously abjured by
+the races of Pal-ul-don for all these many ages.
+
+Night was falling and though since early morning he had sought
+diligently a way out of this cul-de-sac he was no nearer to liberty
+than at the moment the first bellowing gryf had charged him as he
+stooped over the carcass of his kill: but with the falling of night
+came renewed hope for, in common with the great cats, Tarzan was,
+to a greater or lesser extent, a nocturnal beast. It is true he
+could not see by night as well as they, but that lack was largely
+recompensed for by the keenness of his scent and the highly developed
+sensitiveness of his other organs of perception. As the blind follow
+and interpret their Braille characters with deft fingers, so Tarzan
+reads the book of the jungle with feet and hands and eyes and ears
+and nose; each contributing its share to the quick and accurate
+translation of the text.
+
+But again he was doomed to be thwarted by one vital weakness--he
+did not know the gryf, and before the night was over he wondered if
+the things never slept, for wheresoever he moved they moved also,
+and always they barred his road to liberty. Finally, just before
+dawn, he relinquished his immediate effort and sought rest in a
+friendly tree crotch in the safety of the middle terrace.
+
+Once again was the sun high when Tarzan awoke, rested and refreshed.
+Keen to the necessities of the moment he made no effort to locate
+his jailers lest in the act he might apprise them of his movements.
+Instead he sought cautiously and silently to melt away among the
+foliage of the trees. His first move, however, was heralded by a
+deep bellow from below.
+
+Among the numerous refinements of civilization that Tarzan had
+failed to acquire was that of profanity, and possibly it is to be
+regretted since there are circumstances under which it is at least
+a relief to pent emotion. And it may be that in effect Tarzan
+resorted to profanity if there can be physical as well as vocal
+swearing, since immediately the bellow announced that his hopes
+had been again frustrated, he turned quickly and seeing the hideous
+face of the gryf below him seized a large fruit from a nearby
+branch and hurled it viciously at the horned snout. The missile
+struck full between the creature's eyes, resulting in a reaction
+that surprised the ape-man; it did not arouse the beast to a show
+of revengeful rage as Tarzan had expected and hoped; instead the
+creature gave a single vicious side snap at the fruit as it bounded
+from his skull and then turned sulkily away, walking off a few
+steps.
+
+There was that in the act that recalled immediately to Tarzan's mind
+similar action on the preceding day when the Tor-o-don had struck
+one of the creatures across the face with his staff, and instantly
+there sprung to the cunning and courageous brain a plan of escape
+from his predicament that might have blanched the cheek of the most
+heroic.
+
+The gambling instinct is not strong among creatures of the wild;
+the chances of their daily life are sufficient stimuli for the
+beneficial excitement of their nerve centers. It has remained for
+civilized man, protected in a measure from the natural dangers of
+existence, to invent artificial stimulants in the form of cards
+and dice and roulette wheels. Yet when necessity bids there are
+no greater gamblers than the savage denizens of the jungle, the
+forest, and the hills, for as lightly as you roll the ivory cubes
+upon the green cloth they will gamble with death--their own lives
+the stake.
+
+And so Tarzan would gamble now, pitting the seemingly wild deductions
+of his shrewd brain against all the proofs of the bestial ferocity
+of his antagonists that his experience of them had adduced--against
+all the age-old folklore and legend that had been handed down for
+countless generations and passed on to him through the lips of
+Pan-at-lee.
+
+Yet as he worked in preparation for the greatest play that man can
+make in the game of life, he smiled; nor was there any indication
+of haste or excitement or nervousness in his demeanor.
+
+First he selected a long, straight branch about two inches in
+diameter at its base. This he cut from the tree with his knife,
+removed the smaller branches and twigs until he had fashioned
+a pole about ten feet in length. This he sharpened at the smaller
+end. The staff finished to his satisfaction he looked down upon
+the triceratops.
+
+"Whee-oo!" he cried.
+
+Instantly the beasts raised their heads and looked at him. From
+the throat of one of them came faintly a low rumbling sound.
+
+"Whee-oo!" repeated Tarzan and hurled the balance of the carcass
+of the deer to them.
+
+Instantly the gryfs fell upon it with much bellowing, one of them
+attempting to seize it and keep it from the other: but finally
+the second obtained a hold and an instant later it had been torn
+asunder and greedily devoured. Once again they looked up at the
+ape-man and this time they saw him descending to the ground.
+
+One of them started toward him. Again Tarzan repeated the weird cry
+of the Tor-o-don. The gryf halted in his track, apparently puzzled,
+while Tarzan slipped lightly to the earth and advanced toward
+the nearer beast, his staff raised menacingly and the call of the
+first-man upon his lips.
+
+Would the cry be answered by the low rumbling of the beast of
+burden or the horrid bellow of the man-eater? Upon the answer to
+this question hung the fate of the ape-man.
+
+Pan-at-lee was listening intently to the sounds of the departing
+gryfs as Tarzan led them cunningly from her, and when she was sure
+that they were far enough away to insure her safe retreat she dropped
+swiftly from the branches to the ground and sped like a frightened
+deer across the open space to the foot of the cliff, stepped over
+the body of the Tor-o-don who had attacked her the night before and
+was soon climbing rapidly up the ancient stone pegs of the deserted
+cliff village. In the mouth of the cave near that which she had
+occupied she kindled a fire and cooked the haunch of venison that
+Tarzan had left her, and from one of the trickling streams that
+ran down the face of the escarpment she obtained water to satisfy
+her thirst.
+
+All day she waited, hearing in the distance, and sometimes close at
+hand, the bellowing of the gryfs which pursued the strange creature
+that had dropped so miraculously into her life. For him she felt
+the same keen, almost fanatical loyalty that many another had
+experienced for Tarzan of the Apes. Beast and human, he had held
+them to him with bonds that were stronger than steel--those of them
+that were clean and courageous, and the weak and the helpless; but
+never could Tarzan claim among his admirers the coward, the ingrate
+or the scoundrel; from such, both man and beast, he had won fear
+and hatred.
+
+To Pan-at-lee he was all that was brave and noble and heroic and,
+too, he was Om-at's friend--the friend of the man she loved. For
+any one of these reasons Pan-at-lee would have died for Tarzan,
+for such is the loyalty of the simple-minded children of nature.
+It has remained for civilization to teach us to weigh the relative
+rewards of loyalty and its antithesis. The loyalty of the primitive
+is spontaneous, unreasoning, unselfish and such was the loyalty of
+Pan-at-lee for the Tarmangani.
+
+And so it was that she waited that day and night, hoping that he
+would return that she might accompany him back to Om-at, for her
+experience had taught her that in the face of danger two have a
+better chance than one. But Tarzan-jad-guru had not come, and so
+upon the following morning Pan-at-lee set out upon her return to
+Kor-ul-ja.
+
+She knew the dangers and yet she faced them with the stolid indifference
+of her race. When they directly confronted and menaced her would
+be time enough to experience fear or excitement or confidence. In
+the meantime it was unnecessary to waste nerve energy by anticipating
+them. She moved therefore through her savage land with no greater
+show of concern than might mark your sauntering to a corner drug-store
+for a sundae. But this is your life and that is Pan-at-lee's and
+even now as you read this Pan-at-lee may be sitting upon the edge
+of the recess of Om-at's cave while the ja and jato roar from the
+gorge below and from the ridge above, and the Kor-ul-lul threaten
+upon the south and the Ho-don from the Valley of Jad-ben-Otho far
+below, for Pan-at-lee still lives and preens her silky coat of jet
+beneath the tropical moonlight of Pal-ul-don.
+
+But she was not to reach Kor-ul-ja this day, nor the next, nor for
+many days after though the danger that threatened her was neither
+Waz-don enemy nor savage beast.
+
+She came without misadventure to the Kor-ul-lul and after descending
+its rocky southern wall without catching the slightest glimpse of
+the hereditary enemies of her people, she experienced a renewal of
+confidence that was little short of practical assurance that she
+would successfully terminate her venture and be restored once more
+to her own people and the lover she had not seen for so many long
+and weary moons.
+
+She was almost across the gorge now and moving with an extreme caution
+abated no wit by her confidence, for wariness is an instinctive
+trait of the primitive, something which cannot be laid aside even
+momentarily if one would survive. And so she came to the trail that
+follows the windings of Kor-ul-lul from its uppermost reaches down
+into the broad and fertile Valley of Jad-ben-Otho.
+
+And as she stepped into the trail there arose on either side of her
+from out of the bushes that border the path, as though materialized
+from thin air, a score of tall, white warriors of the Ho-don. Like
+a frightened deer Pan-at-lee cast a single startled look at these
+menacers of her freedom and leaped quickly toward the bushes in
+an effort to escape; but the warriors were too close at hand. They
+closed upon her from every side and then, drawing her knife she
+turned at bay, metamorphosed by the fires of fear and hate from a
+startled deer to a raging tiger-cat. They did not try to kill her,
+but only to subdue and capture her; and so it was that more than a
+single Ho-don warrior felt the keen edge of her blade in his flesh
+before they had succeeded in overpowering her by numbers. And still
+she fought and scratched and bit after they had taken the knife from
+her until it was necessary to tie her hands and fasten a piece of
+wood between her teeth by means of thongs passed behind her head.
+
+At first she refused to walk when they started off in the direction
+of the valley but after two of them had seized her by the hair and
+dragged her for a number of yards she thought better of her original
+decision and came along with them, though still as defiant as her
+bound wrists and gagged mouth would permit.
+
+Near the entrance to Kor-ul-lul they came upon another body of
+their warriors with which were several Waz-don prisoners from the
+tribe of Kor-ul-lul. It was a raiding party come up from a Ho-don
+city of the valley after slaves. This Pan-at-lee knew for the
+occurrence was by no means unusual. During her lifetime the tribe
+to which she belonged had been sufficiently fortunate, or powerful,
+to withstand successfully the majority of such raids made upon
+them, but yet Pan-at-lee had known of friends and relatives who had
+been carried into slavery by the Ho-don and she knew, too, another
+thing which gave her hope, as doubtless it did to each of the other
+captives--that occasionally the prisoners escaped from the cities
+of the hairless whites.
+
+After they had joined the other party the entire band set forth
+into the valley and presently, from the conversation of her captors,
+Pan-at-lee knew that she was headed for A-lur, the City of Light;
+while in the cave of his ancestors, Om-at, chief of the Kor-ul-ja,
+bemoaned the loss of both his friend and she that was to have been
+his mate.
+
+
+
+
+
+8
+
+A-lur
+
+
+
+
+As the hissing reptile bore down upon the stranger swimming in
+the open water near the center of the morass on the frontier of
+Pal-ul-don it seemed to the man that this indeed must be the futile
+termination of an arduous and danger-filled journey. It seemed,
+too, equally futile to pit his puny knife against this frightful
+creature. Had he been attacked on land it is possible that he might
+as a last resort have used his Enfield, though he had come thus
+far through all these weary, danger-ridden miles without recourse
+to it, though again and again had his life hung in the balance in
+the face of the savage denizens of forest, jungle, and steppe. For
+whatever it may have been for which he was preserving his precious
+ammunition he evidently held it more sacred even than his life,
+for as yet he had not used a single round and now the decision was
+not required of him, since it would have been impossible for him
+to have unslung his Enfield, loaded and fired with the necessary
+celerity while swimming.
+
+Though his chance for survival seemed slender, and hope at its lowest
+ebb, he was not minded therefore to give up without a struggle.
+Instead he drew his blade and awaited the oncoming reptile. The
+creature was like no living thing he ever before had seen although
+possibly it resembled a crocodile in some respects more than it
+did anything with which he was familiar.
+
+As this frightful survivor of some extinct progenitor charged
+upon him with distended jaws there came to the man quickly a full
+consciousness of the futility of endeavoring to stay the mad rush
+or pierce the armor-coated hide with his little knife. The thing
+was almost upon him now and whatever form of defense he chose must
+be made quickly. There seemed but a single alternative to instant
+death, and this he took at almost the instant the great reptile
+towered directly above him.
+
+With the celerity of a seal he dove headforemost beneath the
+oncoming body and at the same instant, turning upon his back, he
+plunged his blade into the soft, cold surface of the slimy belly as
+the momentum of the hurtling reptile carried it swiftly over him;
+and then with powerful strokes he swam on beneath the surface for
+a dozen yards before he rose. A glance showed him the stricken
+monster plunging madly in pain and rage upon the surface of the
+water behind him. That it was writhing in its death agonies was
+evidenced by the fact that it made no effort to pursue him, and so,
+to the accompaniment of the shrill screaming of the dying monster,
+the man won at last to the farther edge of the open water to take
+up once more the almost superhuman effort of crossing the last
+stretch of clinging mud which separated him from the solid ground
+of Pal-ul-don.
+
+A good two hours it took him to drag his now weary body through
+the clinging, stinking muck, but at last, mud covered and spent,
+he dragged himself out upon the soft grasses of the bank. A hundred
+yards away a stream, winding its way down from the distant mountains,
+emptied into the morass, and, after a short rest, he made his way
+to this and seeking a quiet pool, bathed himself and washed the mud
+and slime from his weapons, accouterments, and loin cloth. Another
+hour was spent beneath the rays of the hot sun in wiping, polishing,
+and oiling his Enfield though the means at hand for drying it
+consisted principally of dry grasses. It was afternoon before he
+had satisfied himself that his precious weapon was safe from any
+harm by dirt, or dampness, and then he arose and took up the search
+for the spoor he had followed to the opposite side of the swamp.
+
+Would he find again the trail that had led into the opposite side
+of the morass, to be lost there, even to his trained senses? If he
+found it not again upon this side of the almost impassable barrier
+he might assume that his long journey had ended in failure. And so
+he sought up and down the verge of the stagnant water for traces of
+an old spoor that would have been invisible to your eyes or mine,
+even had we followed directly in the tracks of its maker.
+
+As Tarzan advanced upon the gryfs he imitated as closely as he could
+recall them the methods and mannerisms of the Tor-o-don, but up to
+the instant that he stood close beside one of the huge creatures
+he realized that his fate still hung in the balance, for the thing
+gave forth no sign, either menacing or otherwise. It only stood
+there, watching him out of its cold, reptilian eyes and then Tarzan
+raised his staff and with a menacing "Whee-oo!" struck the gryf a
+vicious blow across the face.
+
+The creature made a sudden side snap in his direction, a snap that
+did not reach him, and then turned sullenly away, precisely as it
+had when the Tor-o-don commanded it. Walking around to its rear as
+he had seen the shaggy first-man do, Tarzan ran up the broad tail
+and seated himself upon the creature's back, and then again imitating
+the acts of the Tor-o-don he prodded it with the sharpened point of
+his staff, and thus goading it forward and guiding it with blows,
+first upon one side and then upon the other, he started it down
+the gorge in the direction of the valley.
+
+At first it had been in his mind only to determine if he could
+successfully assert any authority over the great monsters, realizing
+that in this possibility lay his only hope of immediate escape from
+his jailers. But once seated upon the back of his titanic mount
+the ape-man experienced the sensation of a new thrill that recalled
+to him the day in his boyhood that he had first clambered to the
+broad head of Tantor, the elephant, and this, together with the
+sense of mastery that was always meat and drink to the lord of
+the jungle, decided him to put his newly acquired power to some
+utilitarian purpose.
+
+Pan-at-lee he judged must either have already reached safety or
+met with death. At least, no longer could he be of service to her,
+while below Kor-ul-gryf, in the soft green valley, lay A-lur, the
+City of Light, which, since he had gazed upon it from the shoulder
+of Pastar-ul-ved, had been his ambition and his goal.
+
+Whether or not its gleaming walls held the secret of his lost mate
+he could not even guess but if she lived at all within the precincts
+of Pal-ul-don it must be among the Ho-don, since the hairy black
+men of this forgotten world took no prisoners. And so to A-lur he
+would go, and how more effectively than upon the back of this grim
+and terrible creature that the races of Pal-ul-don held in such
+awe?
+
+A little mountain stream tumbles down from Kor-ul-gryf to be joined
+in the foothills with that which empties the waters of Kor-ul-lul
+into the valley, forming a small river which runs southwest,
+eventually entering the valley's largest lake at the City of A-lur,
+through the center of which the stream passes. An ancient trail,
+well marked by countless generations of naked feet of man and beast,
+leads down toward A-lur beside the river, and along this Tarzan
+guided the gryf. Once clear of the forest which ran below the
+mouth of the gorge, Tarzan caught occasional glimpses of the city
+gleaming in the distance far below him.
+
+The country through which he passed was resplendent with the riotous
+beauties of tropical verdure. Thick, lush grasses grew waist high
+upon either side of the trail and the way was broken now and again
+by patches of open park-like forest, or perhaps a little patch of
+dense jungle where the trees overarched the way and trailing creepers
+depended in graceful loops from branch to branch.
+
+At times the ape-man had difficulty in commanding obedience upon the
+part of his unruly beast, but always in the end its fear of the
+relatively puny goad urged it on to obedience. Late in the afternoon
+as they approached the confluence of the stream they were skirting
+and another which appeared to come from the direction of Kor-ul-ja
+the ape-man, emerging from one of the jungle patches, discovered a
+considerable party of Ho-don upon the opposite bank. Simultaneously
+they saw him and the mighty creature he bestrode. For a moment they
+stood in wide-eyed amazement and then, in answer to the command of
+their leader, they turned and bolted for the shelter of the nearby
+wood.
+
+The ape-man had but a brief glimpse of them but it was sufficient
+indication that there were Waz-don with them, doubtless prisoners
+taken in one of the raids upon the Waz-don villages of which Ta-den
+and Om-at had told him.
+
+At the sound of their voices the gryf had bellowed terrifically
+and started in pursuit even though a river intervened, but by dint
+of much prodding and beating, Tarzan had succeeded in heading the
+animal back into the path though thereafter for a long time it was
+sullen and more intractable than ever.
+
+As the sun dropped nearer the summit of the western hills Tarzan
+became aware that his plan to enter A-lur upon the back of a gryf
+was likely doomed to failure, since the stubbornness of the great
+beast was increasing momentarily, doubtless due to the fact that
+its huge belly was crying out for food. The ape-man wondered if the
+Tor-o-dons had any means of picketing their beasts for the night,
+but as he did not know and as no plan suggested itself, he determined
+that he should have to trust to the chance of finding it again in
+the morning.
+
+There now arose in his mind a question as to what would be their
+relationship when Tarzan had dismounted. Would it again revert to
+that of hunter and quarry or would fear of the goad continue to hold
+its supremacy over the natural instinct of the hunting flesh-eater?
+Tarzan wondered but as he could not remain upon the gryf forever,
+and as he preferred dismounting and putting the matter to a final
+test while it was still light, he decided to act at once.
+
+How to stop the creature he did not know, as up to this time his
+sole desire had been to urge it forward. By experimenting with
+his staff, however, he found that he could bring it to a halt by
+reaching forward and striking the thing upon its beaklike snout.
+Close by grew a number of leafy trees, in any one of which the
+ape-man could have found sanctuary, but it had occurred to him
+that should he immediately take to the trees it might suggest to
+the mind of the gryf that the creature that had been commanding him
+all day feared him, with the result that Tarzan would once again
+be held a prisoner by the triceratops.
+
+And so, when the gryf halted, Tarzan slid to the ground, struck the
+creature a careless blow across the flank as though in dismissal
+and walked indifferently away. From the throat of the beast came
+a low rumbling sound and without even a glance at Tarzan it turned
+and entered the river where it stood drinking for a long time.
+
+Convinced that the gryf no longer constituted a menace to him the
+ape-man, spurred on himself by the gnawing of hunger, unslung his
+bow and selecting a handful of arrows set forth cautiously in search
+of food, evidence of the near presence of which was being borne up
+to him by a breeze from down river.
+
+Ten minutes later he had made his kill, again one of the Pal-ul-don
+specimens of antelope, all species of which Tarzan had known since
+childhood as Bara, the deer, since in the little primer that had
+been the basis of his education the picture of a deer had been the
+nearest approach to the likeness of the antelope, from the giant
+eland to the smaller bushbuck of the hunting grounds of his youth.
+
+Cutting off a haunch he cached it in a nearby tree, and throwing
+the balance of the carcass across his shoulder trotted back toward
+the spot at which he had left the gryf. The great beast was just
+emerging from the river when Tarzan, seeing it, issued the weird
+cry of the Tor-o-don. The creature looked in the direction of the
+sound voicing at the same time the low rumble with which it answered
+the call of its master. Twice Tarzan repeated his cry before the
+beast moved slowly toward him, and when it had come within a few
+paces he tossed the carcass of the deer to it, upon which it fell
+with greedy jaws.
+
+"If anything will keep it within call," mused the ape-man as he
+returned to the tree in which he had cached his own portion of his
+kill, "it is the knowledge that I will feed it." But as he finished
+his repast and settled himself comfortably for the night high among
+the swaying branches of his eyrie he had little confidence that he
+would ride into A-lur the following day upon his prehistoric steed.
+
+When Tarzan awoke early the following morning he dropped lightly
+to the ground and made his way to the stream. Removing his weapons
+and loin cloth he entered the cold waters of the little pool, and
+after his refreshing bath returned to the tree to breakfast upon
+another portion of Bara, the deer, adding to his repast some fruits
+and berries which grew in abundance nearby.
+
+His meal over he sought the ground again and raising his voice in
+the weird cry that he had learned, he called aloud on the chance
+of attracting the gryf, but though he waited for some time and
+continued calling there was no response, and he was finally forced
+to the conclusion that he had seen the last of his great mount of
+the preceding day.
+
+And so he set his face toward A-lur, pinning his faith upon his
+knowledge of the Ho-don tongue, his great strength and his native
+wit.
+
+Refreshed by food and rest, the journey toward A-lur, made in the
+cool of the morning along the bank of the joyous river, he found
+delightful in the extreme. Differentiating him from his fellows
+of the savage jungle were many characteristics other than those
+physical and mental. Not the least of these were in a measure
+spiritual, and one that had doubtless been as strong as another in
+influencing Tarzan's love of the jungle had been his appreciation
+of the beauties of nature. The apes cared more for a grubworm in a
+rotten log than for all the majestic grandeur of the forest giants
+waving above them. The only beauties that Numa acknowledged were
+those of his own person as he paraded them before the admiring eyes
+of his mate, but in all the manifestations of the creative power
+of nature of which Tarzan was cognizant he appreciated the beauties.
+
+As Tarzan neared the city his interest became centered upon the
+architecture of the outlying buildings which were hewn from the
+chalklike limestone of what had once been a group of low hills,
+similar to the many grass-covered hillocks that dotted the valley
+in every direction. Ta-den's explanation of the Ho-don methods of
+house construction accounted for the ofttimes remarkable shapes
+and proportions of the buildings which, during the ages that must
+have been required for their construction, had been hewn from the
+limestone hills, the exteriors chiseled to such architectural forms
+as appealed to the eyes of the builders while at the same time
+following roughly the original outlines of the hills in an evident
+desire to economize both labor and space. The excavation of the
+apartments within had been similarly governed by necessity.
+
+As he came nearer Tarzan saw that the waste material from these
+building operations had been utilized in the construction of outer
+walls about each building or group of buildings resulting from
+a single hillock, and later he was to learn that it had also been
+used for the filling of inequalities between the hills and the
+forming of paved streets throughout the city, the result, possibly,
+more of the adoption of an easy method of disposing of the quantities
+of broken limestone than by any real necessity for pavements.
+
+There were people moving about within the city and upon the narrow
+ledges and terraces that broke the lines of the buildings and which
+seemed to be a peculiarity of Ho-don architecture, a concession,
+no doubt, to some inherent instinct that might be traced back to
+their early cliff-dwelling progenitors.
+
+Tarzan was not surprised that at a short distance he aroused no
+suspicion or curiosity in the minds of those who saw him, since,
+until closer scrutiny was possible, there was little to distinguish
+him from a native either in his general conformation or his color.
+He had, of course, formulated a plan of action and, having decided,
+he did not hesitate in the carrying out his plan.
+
+With the same assurance that you might venture upon the main street
+of a neighboring city Tarzan strode into the Ho-don city of A-lur.
+The first person to detect his spuriousness was a little child
+playing in the arched gateway of one of the walled buildings. "No
+tail! no tail!" it shouted, throwing a stone at him, and then it
+suddenly grew dumb and its eyes wide as it sensed that this creature
+was something other than a mere Ho-don warrior who had lost his
+tail. With a gasp the child turned and fled screaming into the
+courtyard of its home.
+
+Tarzan continued on his way, fully realizing that the moment was
+imminent when the fate of his plan would be decided. Nor had he
+long to wait since at the next turning of the winding street he
+came face to face with a Ho-don warrior. He saw the sudden surprise
+in the latter's eyes, followed instantly by one of suspicion, but
+before the fellow could speak Tarzan addressed him.
+
+"I am a stranger from another land," he said; "I would speak with
+Ko-tan, your king."
+
+The fellow stepped back, laying his hand upon his knife. "There
+are no strangers that come to the gates of A-lur," he said, "other
+than as enemies or slaves."
+
+"I come neither as a slave nor an enemy," replied Tarzan. "I come
+directly from Jad-ben-Otho. Look!" and he held out his hands that
+the Ho-don might see how greatly they differed from his own, and
+then wheeled about that the other might see that he was tailless,
+for it was upon this fact that his plan had been based, due to
+his recollection of the quarrel between Ta-den and Om-at, in which
+the Waz-don had claimed that Jad-ben-Otho had a long tail while
+the Ho-don had been equally willing to fight for his faith in the
+taillessness of his god.
+
+The warrior's eyes widened and an expression of awe crept into
+them, though it was still tinged with suspicion. "Jad-ben-Otho!"
+he murmured, and then, "It is true that you are neither Ho-don nor
+Waz-don, and it is also true that Jad-ben-Otho has no tail. Come,"
+he said, "I will take you to Ko-tan, for this is a matter in which
+no common warrior may interfere. Follow me," and still clutching
+the handle of his knife and keeping a wary side glance upon the
+ape-man he led the way through A-lur.
+
+The city covered a large area. Sometimes there was a considerable
+distance between groups of buildings, and again they were quite
+close together. There were numerous imposing groups, evidently hewn
+from the larger hills, often rising to a height of a hundred feet
+or more. As they advanced they met numerous warriors and women, all
+of whom showed great curiosity in the stranger, but there was no
+attempt to menace him when it was found that he was being conducted
+to the palace of the king.
+
+They came at last to a great pile that sprawled over a considerable
+area, its western front facing upon a large blue lake and evidently
+hewn from what had once been a natural cliff. This group of
+buildings was surrounded by a wall of considerably greater height
+than any that Tarzan had before seen. His guide led him to a
+gateway before which waited a dozen or more warriors who had risen
+to their feet and formed a barrier across the entrance-way as Tarzan
+and his party appeared around the corner of the palace wall, for
+by this time he had accumulated such a following of the curious as
+presented to the guards the appearance of a formidable mob.
+
+The guide's story told, Tarzan was conducted into the courtyard
+where he was held while one of the warriors entered the palace,
+evidently with the intention of notifying Ko-tan. Fifteen minutes
+later a large warrior appeared, followed by several others, all of
+whom examined Tarzan with every sign of curiosity as they approached.
+
+The leader of the party halted before the ape-man. "Who are you?"
+he asked, "and what do you want of Ko-tan, the king?"
+
+"I am a friend," replied the ape-man, "and I have come from the
+country of Jad-ben-Otho to visit Ko-tan of Pal-ul-don."
+
+The warrior and his followers seemed impressed. Tarzan could see
+the latter whispering among themselves.
+
+"How come you here," asked the spokesman, "and what do you want of
+Ko-tan?"
+
+Tarzan drew himself to his full height. "Enough!" he cried. "Must
+the messenger of Jad-ben-Otho be subjected to the treatment that
+might be accorded to a wandering Waz-don? Take me to the king at
+once lest the wrath of Jad-ben-Otho fall upon you."
+
+There was some question in the mind of the ape-man as to how far
+he might carry his unwarranted show of assurance, and he waited
+therefore with amused interest the result of his demand. He did not,
+however, have long to wait for almost immediately the attitude of
+his questioner changed. He whitened, cast an apprehensive glance
+toward the eastern sky and then extended his right palm toward
+Tarzan, placing his left over his own heart in the sign of amity
+that was common among the peoples of Pal-ul-don.
+
+Tarzan stepped quickly back as though from a profaning hand, a
+feigned expression of horror and disgust upon his face.
+
+"Stop!" he cried, "who would dare touch the sacred person of the
+messenger of Jad-ben-Otho? Only as a special mark of favor from
+Jad-ben-Otho may even Ko-tan himself receive this honor from me.
+Hasten! Already now have I waited too long! What manner of reception
+the Ho-don of A-lur would extend to the son of my father!"
+
+At first Tarzan had been inclined to adopt the role of Jad-ben-Otho
+himself but it occurred to him that it might prove embarrassing
+and considerable of a bore to be compelled constantly to portray
+the character of a god, but with the growing success of his scheme
+it had suddenly occurred to him that the authority of the son of
+Jad-ben-Otho would be far greater than that of an ordinary messenger
+of a god, while at the same time giving him some leeway in the
+matter of his acts and demeanor, the ape-man reasoning that a young
+god would not be held so strictly accountable in the matter of his
+dignity and bearing as an older and greater god.
+
+This time the effect of his words was immediately and painfully
+noticeable upon all those near him. With one accord they shrank back,
+the spokesman almost collapsing in evident terror. His apologies,
+when finally the paralysis of his fear would permit him to voice
+them, were so abject that the ape-man could scarce repress a smile
+of amused contempt.
+
+"Have mercy, O Dor-ul-Otho," he pleaded, "on poor old Dak-lot.
+Precede me and I will show you to where Ko-tan, the king, awaits
+you, trembling. Aside, snakes and vermin," he cried pushing his
+warriors to right and left for the purpose of forming an avenue
+for Tarzan.
+
+"Come!" cried the ape-man peremptorily, "lead the way, and let
+these others follow."
+
+The now thoroughly frightened Dak-lot did as he was bid, and Tarzan
+of the Apes was ushered into the palace of Kotan, King of Pal-ul-don.
+
+
+
+
+
+9
+
+Blood-Stained Altars
+
+
+
+
+The entrance through which he caught his first glimpse of the
+interior was rather beautifully carved in geometric designs, and
+within the walls were similarly treated, though as he proceeded
+from one apartment to another he found also the figures of animals,
+birds, and men taking their places among the more formal figures
+of the mural decorator's art. Stone vessels were much in evidence
+as well as ornaments of gold and the skins of many animals, but
+nowhere did he see an indication of any woven fabric, indicating
+that in that respect at least the Ho-don were still low in the
+scale of evolution, and yet the proportions and symmetry of the
+corridors and apartments bespoke a degree of civilization.
+
+The way led through several apartments and long corridors, up at
+least three flights of stone stairs and finally out upon a ledge
+upon the western side of the building overlooking the blue lake.
+Along this ledge, or arcade, his guide led him for a hundred yards,
+to stop at last before a wide entrance-way leading into another
+apartment of the palace.
+
+Here Tarzan beheld a considerable concourse of warriors in an
+enormous apartment, the domed ceiling of which was fully fifty feet
+above the floor. Almost filling the chamber was a great pyramid
+ascending in broad steps well up under the dome in which were a
+number of round apertures which let in the light. The steps of the
+pyramid were occupied by warriors to the very pinnacle, upon which
+sat a large, imposing figure of a man whose golden trappings shone
+brightly in the light of the afternoon sun, a shaft of which poured
+through one of the tiny apertures of the dome.
+
+"Ko-tan!" cried Dak-lot, addressing the resplendent figure at
+the pinnacle of the pyramid. "Ko-tan and warriors of Pal-ul-don!
+Behold the honor that Jad-ben-Otho has done you in sending as his
+messenger his own son," and Dak-lot, stepping aside, indicated
+Tarzan with a dramatic sweep of his hand.
+
+Ko-tan rose to his feet and every warrior within sight craned his
+neck to have a better view of the newcomer. Those upon the opposite
+side of the pyramid crowded to the front as the words of the old
+warrior reached them. Skeptical were the expressions on most of the
+faces; but theirs was a skepticism marked with caution. No matter
+which way fortune jumped they wished to be upon the right side
+of the fence. For a moment all eyes were centered upon Tarzan and
+then gradually they drifted to Ko-tan, for from his attitude would
+they receive the cue that would determine theirs. But Ko-tan was
+evidently in the same quandary as they--the very attitude of his
+body indicated it--it was one of indecision and of doubt.
+
+The ape-man stood erect, his arms folded upon his broad breast,
+an expression of haughty disdain upon his handsome face; but to
+Dak-lot there seemed to be indications also of growing anger. The
+situation was becoming strained. Dak-lot fidgeted, casting apprehensive
+glances at Tarzan and appealing ones at Ko-tan. The silence of the
+tomb wrapped the great chamber of the throneroom of Pal-ul-don.
+
+At last Ko-tan spoke. "Who says that he is Dor-ul-Otho?" he asked,
+casting a terrible look at Dak-lot.
+
+"He does!" almost shouted that terrified noble.
+
+"And so it must be true?" queried Ko-tan.
+
+Could it be that there was a trace of irony in the chief's tone?
+Otho forbid! Dak-lot cast a side glance at Tarzan--a glance that
+he intended should carry the assurance of his own faith; but that
+succeeded only in impressing the ape-man with the other's pitiable
+terror.
+
+"O Ko-tan!" pleaded Dak-lot, "your own eyes must convince you that
+indeed he is the son of Otho. Behold his godlike figure, his hands,
+and his feet, that are not as ours, and that he is entirely tailless
+as is his mighty father."
+
+Ko-tan appeared to be perceiving these facts for the first time
+and there was an indication that his skepticism was faltering. At
+that moment a young warrior who had pushed his way forward from the
+opposite side of the pyramid to where he could obtain a good look
+at Tarzan raised his voice.
+
+"Ko-tan," he cried, "it must be even as Dak-lot says, for I am
+sure now that I have seen Dor-ul-Otho before. Yesterday as we were
+returning with the Kor-ul-lul prisoners we beheld him seated upon
+the back of a great gryf. We hid in the woods before he came too
+near, but I saw enough to make sure that he who rode upon the great
+beast was none other than the messenger who stands here now."
+
+This evidence seemed to be quite enough to convince the majority of
+the warriors that they indeed stood in the presence of deity--their
+faces showed it only too plainly, and a sudden modesty that caused
+them to shrink behind their neighbors. As their neighbors were
+attempting to do the same thing, the result was a sudden melting
+away of those who stood nearest the ape-man, until the steps of
+the pyramid directly before him lay vacant to the very apex and
+to Ko-tan. The latter, possibly influenced as much by the fearful
+attitude of his followers as by the evidence adduced, now altered
+his tone and his manner in such a degree as might comport with
+the requirements if the stranger was indeed the Dor-ul-Otho while
+leaving his dignity a loophole of escape should it appear that he
+had entertained an impostor.
+
+"If indeed you are the Dor-ul-Otho," he said, addressing Tarzan, "you
+will know that our doubts were but natural since we have received
+no sign from Jad-ben-Otho that he intended honoring us so greatly,
+nor how could we know, even, that the Great God had a son? If you
+are he, all Pal-ul-don rejoices to honor you; if you are not he,
+swift and terrible shall be the punishment of your temerity. I,
+Ko-tan, King of Pal-ul-don, have spoken."
+
+"And spoken well, as a king should speak," said Tarzan, breaking
+his long silence, "who fears and honors the god of his people. It
+is well that you insist that I indeed be the Dor-ul-Otho before
+you accord me the homage that is my due. Jad-ben-Otho charged me
+specially to ascertain if you were fit to rule his people. My first
+experience of you indicates that Jad-ben-Otho chose well when he
+breathed the spirit of a king into the babe at your mother's breast."
+
+The effect of this statement, made so casually, was marked in the
+expressions and excited whispers of the now awe-struck assemblage.
+At last they knew how kings were made! It was decided by Jad-ben-Otho
+while the candidate was still a suckling babe! Wonderful! A
+miracle! and this divine creature in whose presence they stood knew
+all about it. Doubtless he even discussed such matters with their
+god daily. If there had been an atheist among them before, or an
+agnostic, there was none now, for had they not looked with their
+own eyes upon the son of god?
+
+"It is well then," continued the ape-man, "that you should assure
+yourself that I am no impostor. Come closer that you may see that I
+am not as are men. Furthermore it is not meet that you stand upon
+a higher level than the son of your god." There was a sudden scramble
+to reach the floor of the throne-room, nor was Ko-tan far behind
+his warriors, though he managed to maintain a certain majestic
+dignity as he descended the broad stairs that countless naked feet
+had polished to a gleaming smoothness through the ages. "And now,"
+said Tarzan as the king stood before him, "you can have no doubt
+that I am not of the same race as you. Your priests have told you
+that Jad-ben-Otho is tailless. Tailless, therefore, must be the
+race of gods that spring from his loins. But enough of such proofs
+as these! You know the power of Jad-ben-Otho; how his lightnings
+gleaming out of the sky carry death as he wills it; how the rains
+come at his bidding, and the fruits and the berries and the grains,
+the grasses, the trees and the flowers spring to life at his divine
+direction; you have witnessed birth and death, and those who honor
+their god honor him because he controls these things. How would
+it fare then with an impostor who claimed to be the son of this
+all-powerful god? This then is all the proof that you require, for
+as he would strike you down should you deny me, so would he strike
+down one who wrongfully claimed kinship with him."
+
+This line of argument being unanswerable must needs be convincing.
+There could be no questioning of this creature's statements
+without the tacit admission of lack of faith in the omnipotence of
+Jad-ben-Otho. Ko-tan was satisfied that he was entertaining deity,
+but as to just what form his entertainment should take he was
+rather at a loss to know. His conception of god had been rather a
+vague and hazy affair, though in common with all primitive people
+his god was a personal one as were his devils and demons. The
+pleasures of Jad-ben-Otho he had assumed to be the excesses which
+he himself enjoyed, but devoid of any unpleasant reaction. It
+therefore occurred to him that the Dor-ul-Otho would be greatly
+entertained by eating--eating large quantities of everything that
+Ko-tan liked best and that he had found most injurious; and there
+was also a drink that the women of the Ho-don made by allowing
+corn to soak in the juices of succulent fruits, to which they had
+added certain other ingredients best known to themselves. Ko-tan
+knew by experience that a single draught of this potent liquor
+would bring happiness and surcease from worry, while several would
+cause even a king to do things and enjoy things that he would
+never even think of doing or enjoying while not under the magical
+influence of the potion, but unfortunately the next morning
+brought suffering in direct ratio to the joy of the preceding day.
+A god, Ko-tan reasoned, could experience all the pleasure without
+the headache, but for the immediate present he must think of the
+necessary dignities and honors to be accorded his immortal guest.
+
+No foot other than a king's had touched the surface of the apex
+of the pyramid in the throneroom at A-lur during all the forgotten
+ages through which the kings of Pal-ul-don had ruled from its high
+eminence. So what higher honor could Ko-tan offer than to give place
+beside him to the Dor-ul-Otho? And so he invited Tarzan to ascend
+the pyramid and take his place upon the stone bench that topped it.
+As they reached the step below the sacred pinnacle Ko-tan continued
+as though to mount to his throne, but Tarzan laid a detaining hand
+upon his arm.
+
+"None may sit upon a level with the gods," he admonished, stepping
+confidently up and seating himself upon the throne. The abashed
+Ko-tan showed his embarrassment, an embarrassment he feared to
+voice lest he incur the wrath of the king of kings.
+
+"But," added Tarzan, "a god may honor his faithful servant by
+inviting him to a place at his side. Come, Ko-tan; thus would I
+honor you in the name of Jad-ben-Otho."
+
+The ape-man's policy had for its basis an attempt not only to
+arouse the fearful respect of Ko-tan but to do it without making
+of him an enemy at heart, for he did not know how strong a hold
+the religion of the Ho-don had upon them, for since the time that
+he had prevented Ta-den and Om-at from quarreling over a religious
+difference the subject had been utterly taboo among them. He was
+therefore quick to note the evident though wordless resentment of
+Ko-tan at the suggestion that he entirely relinquish his throne to
+his guest. On the whole, however, the effect had been satisfactory
+as he could see from the renewed evidence of awe upon the faces of
+the warriors.
+
+At Tarzan's direction the business of the court continued where
+it had been interrupted by his advent. It consisted principally in
+the settling of disputes between warriors. There was present one
+who stood upon the step just below the throne and which Tarzan was
+to learn was the place reserved for the higher chiefs of the allied
+tribes which made up Ko-tan's kingdom. The one who attracted Tarzan's
+attention was a stalwart warrior of powerful physique and massive,
+lion-like features. He was addressing Ko-tan on a question that is
+as old as government and that will continue in unabated importance
+until man ceases to exist. It had to do with a boundary dispute
+with one of his neighbors.
+
+The matter itself held little or no interest for Tarzan, but
+he was impressed by the appearance of the speaker and when Ko-tan
+addressed him as Ja-don the ape-man's interest was permanently
+crystallized, for Ja-don was the father of Ta-den. That the knowledge
+would benefit him in any way seemed rather a remote possibility
+since he could not reveal to Ja-don his friendly relations with
+his son without admitting the falsity of his claims to godship.
+
+When the affairs of the audience were concluded Ko-tan suggested
+that the son of Jad-ben-Otho might wish to visit the temple in
+which were performed the religious rites coincident to the worship
+of the Great God. And so the ape-man was conducted by the king
+himself, followed by the warriors of his court, through the corridors
+of the palace toward the northern end of the group of buildings
+within the royal enclosure.
+
+The temple itself was really a part of the palace and similar
+in architecture. There were several ceremonial places of varying
+sizes, the purposes of which Tarzan could only conjecture. Each had
+an altar in the west end and another in the east and were oval in
+shape, their longest diameter lying due east and west. Each was
+excavated from the summit of a small hillock and all were without
+roofs. The western altars invariably were a single block of stone
+the top of which was hollowed into an oblong basin. Those at
+the eastern ends were similar blocks of stone with flat tops and
+these latter, unlike those at the opposite ends of the ovals were
+invariably stained or painted a reddish brown, nor did Tarzan need
+to examine them closely to be assured of what his keen nostrils
+already had told him--that the brown stains were dried and drying
+human blood.
+
+Below these temple courts were corridors and apartments reaching
+far into the bowels of the hills, dim, gloomy passages that Tarzan
+glimpsed as he was led from place to place on his tour of inspection
+of the temple. A messenger had been dispatched by Ko-tan to announce
+the coming visit of the son of Jad-ben-Otho with the result that
+they were accompanied through the temple by a considerable procession
+of priests whose distinguishing mark of profession seemed to consist
+in grotesque headdresses; sometimes hideous faces carved from wood
+and entirely concealing the countenances of their wearers, or again,
+the head of a wild beast cunningly fitted over the head of a man.
+The high priest alone wore no such head-dress. He was an old man
+with close-set, cunning eyes and a cruel, thin-lipped mouth.
+
+At first sight of him Tarzan realized that here lay the greatest danger
+to his ruse, for he saw at a glance that the man was antagonistic
+toward him and his pretensions, and he knew too that doubtless of
+all the people of Pal-ul-don the high priest was most likely to
+harbor the truest estimate of Jad-ben-Otho, and, therefore, would
+look with suspicion on one who claimed to be the son of a fabulous
+god.
+
+No matter what suspicion lurked within his crafty mind, Lu-don,
+the high priest of A-lur, did not openly question Tarzan's right
+to the title of Dor-ul-Otho, and it may be that he was restrained
+by the same doubts which had originally restrained Ko-tan and
+his warriors--the doubt that is at the bottom of the minds of all
+blasphemers even and which is based upon the fear that after all
+there may be a god. So, for the time being at least Lu-don played
+safe. Yet Tarzan knew as well as though the man had spoken aloud
+his inmost thoughts that it was in the heart of the high priest to
+tear the veil from his imposture.
+
+At the entrance to the temple Ko-tan had relinquished the guidance
+of the guest to Lu-don and now the latter led Tarzan through those
+portions of the temple that he wished him to see. He showed him
+the great room where the votive offerings were kept, gifts from
+the barbaric chiefs of Pal-ul-don and from their followers. These
+things ranged in value from presents of dried fruits to massive
+vessels of beaten gold, so that in the great main storeroom and
+its connecting chambers and corridors was an accumulation of wealth
+that amazed even the eyes of the owner of the secret of the treasure
+vaults of Opar.
+
+Moving to and fro throughout the temple were sleek black Waz-don
+slaves, fruits of the Ho-don raids upon the villages of their less
+civilized neighbors. As they passed the barred entrance to a dim
+corridor, Tarzan saw within a great company of pithecanthropi of
+all ages and of both sexes, Ho-don as well as Waz-don, the majority
+of them squatted upon the stone floor in attitudes of utter dejection
+while some paced back and forth, their features stamped with the
+despair of utter hopelessness.
+
+"And who are these who lie here thus unhappily?" he asked of Lu-don.
+It was the first question that he had put to the high priest since
+entering the temple, and instantly he regretted that he had asked
+it, for Lu-don turned upon him a face upon which the expression of
+suspicion was but thinly veiled.
+
+"Who should know better than the son of Jad-ben-Otho?" he retorted.
+
+"The questions of Dor-ul-Otho are not with impunity answered with
+other questions," said the ape-man quietly, "and it may interest
+Lu-don, the high priest, to know that the blood of a false priest
+upon the altar of his temple is not displeasing in the eyes of
+Jad-ben-Otho."
+
+Lu-don paled as he answered Tarzan's question. "They are the offerings
+whose blood must refresh the eastern altars as the sun returns to
+your father at the day's end."
+
+"And who told you," asked Tarzan, "that Jad-ben-Otho was pleased that
+his people were slain upon his altars? What if you were mistaken?"
+
+"Then countless thousands have died in vain," replied Lu-don.
+
+Ko-tan and the surrounding warriors and priests were listening
+attentively to the dialogue. Some of the poor victims behind the
+barred gateway had heard and rising, pressed close to the barrier
+through which one was conducted just before sunset each day, never
+to return.
+
+"Liberate them!" cried Tarzan with a wave of his hand toward the
+imprisoned victims of a cruel superstition, "for I can tell you in
+the name of Jad-ben-Otho that you are mistaken."
+
+
+
+
+
+10
+
+The Forbidden Garden
+
+
+
+
+Lu-don paled. "It is sacrilege," he cried; "for countless ages
+have the priests of the Great God offered each night a life to the
+spirit of Jad-ben-Otho as it returned below the western horizon
+to its master, and never has the Great God given sign that he was
+displeased."
+
+"Stop!" commanded Tarzan. "It is the blindness of the priesthood
+that has failed to read the messages of their god. Your warriors
+die beneath the knives and clubs of the Wazdon; your hunters are
+taken by ja and jato; no day goes by but witnesses the deaths of
+few or many in the villages of the Ho-don, and one death each day
+of those that die are the toll which Jad-ben-Otho has exacted for
+the lives you take upon the eastern altar. What greater sign of
+his displeasure could you require, O stupid priest?"
+
+Lu-don was silent. There was raging within him a great conflict
+between his fear that this indeed might be the son of god and his
+hope that it was not, but at last his fear won and he bowed his
+head. "The son of Jad-ben-Otho has spoken," he said, and turning
+to one of the lesser priests: "Remove the bars and return these
+people from whence they came."
+
+He thus addressed did as he was bid and as the bars came down the
+prisoners, now all fully aware of the miracle that had saved them,
+crowded forward and throwing themselves upon their knees before
+Tarzan raised their voices in thanksgiving.
+
+Ko-tan was almost as staggered as the high priest by this ruthless
+overturning of an age-old religious rite. "But what," he cried, "may
+we do that will be pleasing in the eyes of Jad-ben-Otho?" turning
+a look of puzzled apprehension toward the ape-man.
+
+"If you seek to please your god," he replied, "place upon your
+altars such gifts of food and apparel as are most welcome in the
+city of your people. These things will Jad-ben-Otho bless, when
+you may distribute them among those of the city who need them most.
+With such things are your storerooms filled as I have seen with
+mine own eyes, and other gifts will be brought when the priests
+tell the people that in this way they find favor before their god,"
+and Tarzan turned and signified that he would leave the temple.
+
+As they were leaving the precincts devoted to the worship of their
+deity, the ape-man noticed a small but rather ornate building that
+stood entirely detached from the others as though it had been cut
+from a little pinnacle of limestone which had stood out from its
+fellows. As his interested glance passed over it he noticed that
+its door and windows were barred.
+
+"To what purpose is that building dedicated?" he asked of Lu-don.
+"Who do you keep imprisoned there?"
+
+"It is nothing," replied the high priest nervously, "there is no
+one there. The place is vacant. Once it was used but not now for
+many years," and he moved on toward the gateway which led back
+into the palace. Here he and the priests halted while Tarzan with
+Ko-tan and his warriors passed out from the sacred precincts of
+the temple grounds.
+
+The one question which Tarzan would have asked he had feared to
+ask for he knew that in the hearts of many lay a suspicion as to
+his genuineness, but he determined that before he slept he would
+put the question to Ko-tan, either directly or indirectly--as to
+whether there was, or had been recently within the city of A-lur
+a female of the same race as his.
+
+As their evening meal was being served to them in the banquet
+hall of Ko-tan's palace by a part of the army of black slaves upon
+whose shoulders fell the burden of all the heavy and menial tasks
+of the city, Tarzan noticed that there came to the eyes of one of
+the slaves what was apparently an expression of startled recognition,
+as he looked upon the ape-man for the first time in the banquet
+hall of Ko-tan. And again later he saw the fellow whisper to another
+slave and nod his head in his direction. The ape-man did not recall
+ever having seen this Waz-don before and he was at a loss to account
+for an explanation of the fellow's interest in him, and presently
+the incident was all but forgotten.
+
+Ko-tan was surprised and inwardly disgusted to discover that his
+godly guest had no desire to gorge himself upon rich foods and
+that he would not even so much as taste the villainous brew of the
+Ho-don. To Tarzan the banquet was a dismal and tiresome affair,
+since so great was the interest of the guests in gorging themselves
+with food and drink that they had no time for conversation, the
+only vocal sounds being confined to a continuous grunting which,
+together with their table manners reminded Tarzan of a visit he
+had once made to the famous Berkshire herd of His Grace, the Duke
+of Westminster at Woodhouse, Chester.
+
+One by one the diners succumbed to the stupefying effects of the
+liquor with the result that the grunting gave place to snores, so
+presently Tarzan and the slaves were the only conscious creatures
+in the banquet hall.
+
+Rising, the ape-man turned to a tall black who stood behind him.
+"I would sleep," he said, "show me to my apartment."
+
+As the fellow conducted him from the chamber the slave who had
+shown surprise earlier in the evening at sight of him, spoke again
+at length to one of his fellows. The latter cast a half-frightened
+look in the direction of the departing ape-man. "If you are right,"
+he said, "they should reward us with our liberty, but if you are
+wrong, O Jad-ben-Otho, what will be our fate?"
+
+"But I am not wrong!" cried the other.
+
+"Then there is but one to tell this to, for I have heard that he
+looked sour when this Dor-ul-Otho was brought to the temple and that
+while the so-called son of Jad-ben-Otho was there he gave this one
+every cause to fear and hate him. I mean Lu-don, the high priest."
+
+"You know him?" asked the other slave.
+
+"I have worked in the temple," replied his companion.
+
+"Then go to him at once and tell him, but be sure to exact the
+promise of our freedom for the proof."
+
+And so a black Waz-don came to the temple gate and asked to see
+Lu-don, the high priest, on a matter of great importance, and though
+the hour was late Lu-don saw him, and when he had heard his story
+he promised him and his friend not only their freedom but many
+gifts if they could prove the correctness of their claims.
+
+And as the slave talked with the high priest in the temple at
+A-lur the figure of a man groped its way around the shoulder of
+Pastar-ul-ved and the moonlight glistened from the shiny barrel of
+an Enfield that was strapped to the naked back, and brass cartridges
+shed tiny rays of reflected light from their polished cases where
+they hung in the bandoliers across the broad brown shoulders and
+the lean waist.
+
+Tarzan's guide conducted him to a chamber overlooking the blue
+lake where he found a bed similar to that which he had seen in the
+villages of the Waz-don, merely a raised dais of stone upon which
+was piled great quantities of furry pelts. And so he lay down to
+sleep, the question that he most wished to put still unasked and
+unanswered.
+
+With the coming of a new day he was awake and wandering about the
+palace and the palace grounds before there was sign of any of the
+inmates of the palace other than slaves, or at least he saw no
+others at first, though presently he stumbled upon an enclosure
+which lay almost within the center of the palace grounds surrounded
+by a wall that piqued the ape-man's curiosity, since he had determined
+to investigate as fully as possible every part of the palace and
+its environs.
+
+This place, whatever it might be, was apparently without doors or
+windows but that it was at least partially roofless was evidenced
+by the sight of the waving branches of a tree which spread above
+the top of the wall near him. Finding no other method of access,
+the ape-man uncoiled his rope and throwing it over the branch of
+the tree where it projected beyond the wall, was soon climbing with
+the ease of a monkey to the summit.
+
+There he found that the wall surrounded an enclosed garden in which
+grew trees and shrubs and flowers in riotous profusion. Without
+waiting to ascertain whether the garden was empty or contained
+Ho-don, Waz-don, or wild beasts, Tarzan dropped lightly to the
+sward on the inside and without further loss of time commenced a
+systematic investigation of the enclosure.
+
+His curiosity was aroused by the very evident fact that the place
+was not for general use, even by those who had free access to other
+parts of the palace grounds and so there was added to its natural
+beauties an absence of mortals which rendered its exploration all
+the more alluring to Tarzan since it suggested that in such a place
+might he hope to come upon the object of his long and difficult
+search.
+
+In the garden were tiny artificial streams and little pools of water,
+flanked by flowering bushes, as though it all had been designed by
+the cunning hand of some master gardener, so faithfully did it carry
+out the beauties and contours of nature upon a miniature scale.
+
+The interior surface of the wall was fashioned to represent the
+white cliffs of Pal-ul-don, broken occasionally by small replicas
+of the verdure-filled gorges of the original.
+
+Filled with admiration and thoroughly enjoying each new surprise
+which the scene offered, Tarzan moved slowly around the garden, and
+as always he moved silently. Passing through a miniature forest he
+came presently upon a tiny area of flowerstudded sward and at the
+same time beheld before him the first Ho-don female he had seen
+since entering the palace. A young and beautiful woman stood in
+the center of the little open space, stroking the head of a bird
+which she held against her golden breastplate with one hand. Her
+profile was presented to the ape-man and he saw that by the standards
+of any land she would have been accounted more than lovely.
+
+Seated in the grass at her feet, with her back toward him, was a
+female Waz-don slave. Seeing that she he sought was not there and
+apprehensive that an alarm be raised were he discovered by the two
+women, Tarzan moved back to hide himself in the foliage, but before
+he had succeeded the Ho-don girl turned quickly toward him as though
+apprised of his presence by that unnamed sense, the manifestations
+of which are more or less familiar to us all.
+
+At sight of him her eyes registered only her surprise though there
+was no expression of terror reflected in them, nor did she scream
+or even raise her well-modulated voice as she addressed him.
+
+"Who are you," she asked, "who enters thus boldly the Forbidden
+Garden?"
+
+At sound of her mistress' voice the slave maiden turned quickly,
+rising to her feet. "Tarzan-jad-guru!" she exclaimed in tones of
+mingled astonishment and relief.
+
+"You know him?" cried her mistress turning toward the slave and
+affording Tarzan an opportunity to raise a cautioning finger to
+his lips lest Pan-at-lee further betray him, for it was Pan-at-lee
+indeed who stood before him, no less a source of surprise to him
+than had his presence been to her.
+
+Thus questioned by her mistress and simultaneously admonished to
+silence by Tarzan, Pan-at-lee was momentarily silenced and then
+haltingly she groped for a way to extricate herself from her dilemma.
+"I thought--" she faltered, "but no, I am mistaken--I thought that
+he was one whom I had seen before near the Kor-ul-gryf."
+
+The Ho-don looked first at one and then at the other an expression
+of doubt and questioning in her eyes. "But you have not answered
+me," she continued presently; "who are you?"
+
+"You have not heard then," asked Tarzan, "of the visitor who arrived
+at your king's court yesterday?"
+
+"You mean," she exclaimed, "that you are the Dor-ul-Otho?" And now
+the erstwhile doubting eyes reflected naught but awe.
+
+"I am he," replied Tarzan; "and you?"
+
+"I am O-lo-a, daughter of Ko-tan, the king," she replied.
+
+So this was O-lo-a, for love of whom Ta-den had chosen exile rather
+than priesthood. Tarzan had approached more closely the dainty
+barbarian princess. "Daughter of Ko-tan," he said, "Jad-ben-Otho
+is pleased with you and as a mark of his favor he has preserved
+for you through many dangers him whom you love."
+
+"I do not understand," replied the girl but the flush that mounted
+to her cheek belied her words. "Bu-lat is a guest in the palace of
+Ko-tan, my father. I do not know that he has faced any danger. It
+is to Bu-lat that I am betrothed."
+
+"But it is not Bu-lat whom you love," said Tarzan.
+
+Again the flush and the girl half turned her face away. "Have I
+then displeased the Great God?" she asked.
+
+"No," replied Tarzan; "as I told you he is well satisfied and for
+your sake he has saved Ta-den for you."
+
+"Jad-ben-Otho knows all," whispered the girl, "and his son shares
+his great knowledge."
+
+"No," Tarzan hastened to correct her lest a reputation for omniscience
+might prove embarrassing. "I know only what Jad-ben-Otho wishes me
+to know."
+
+"But tell me," she said, "I shall be reunited with Ta-den? Surely
+the son of god can read the future."
+
+The ape-man was glad that he had left himself an avenue of escape.
+"I know nothing of the future," he replied, "other than what
+Jad-ben-Otho tells me. But I think you need have no fear for the
+future if you remain faithful to Ta-den and Ta-den's friends."
+
+"You have seen him?" asked O-lo-a. "Tell me, where is he?"
+
+"Yes," replied Tarzan, "I have seen him. He was with Om-at, the
+gund of Kor-ul-ja."
+
+"A prisoner of the Waz-don?" interrupted the girl.
+
+"Not a prisoner but an honored guest," replied the ape-man.
+
+"Wait," he exclaimed, raising his face toward the heavens; "do not
+speak. I am receiving a message from Jad-ben-Otho, my father."
+
+The two women dropped to their knees, covering their faces with
+their hands, stricken with awe at the thought of the awful nearness
+of the Great God. Presently Tarzan touched O-lo-a on the shoulder.
+
+"Rise," he said. "Jad-ben-Otho has spoken. He has told me that this
+slave girl is from the tribe of Kor-ul-ja, where Ta-den is, and
+that she is betrothed to Om-at, their chief. Her name is Pan-at-lee."
+
+O-lo-a turned questioningly toward Pan-at-lee. The latter nodded,
+her simple mind unable to determine whether or not she and her
+mistress were the victims of a colossal hoax. "It is even as he
+says," she whispered.
+
+O-lo-a fell upon her knees and touched her forehead to Tarzan's feet.
+"Great is the honor that Jad-ben-Otho has done his poor servant,"
+she cried. "Carry to him my poor thanks for the happiness that he
+has brought to O-lo-a."
+
+"It would please my father," said Tarzan, "if you were to cause
+Pan-at-lee to be returned in safety to the village of her people."
+
+"What cares Jad-ben-Otho for such as she?" asked O-lo-a, a slight
+trace of hauteur in her tone.
+
+"There is but one god," replied Tarzan, "and he is the god of the
+Waz-don as well as of the Ho-don; of the birds and the beasts and
+the flowers and of everything that grows upon the earth or beneath
+the waters. If Pan-at-lee does right she is greater in the eyes
+of Jad-ben-Otho than would be the daughter of Ko-tan should she do
+wrong."
+
+It was evident that O-lo-a did not quite understand this
+interpretation of divine favor, so contrary was it to the teachings
+of the priesthood of her people. In one respect only did Tarzan's
+teachings coincide with her belief--that there was but one god. For
+the rest she had always been taught that he was solely the god of
+the Ho-don in every sense, other than that other creatures were
+created by Jad-ben-Otho to serve some useful purpose for the benefit
+of the Ho-don race. And now to be told by the son of god that she
+stood no higher in divine esteem than the black handmaiden at her
+side was indeed a shock to her pride, her vanity, and her faith.
+But who could question the word of Dor-ul-Otho, especially when
+she had with her own eyes seen him in actual communion with god in
+heaven?
+
+"The will of Jad-ben-Otho be done," said O-lo-a meekly, "if it lies
+within my power. But it would be best, O Dor-ul-Otho, to communicate
+your father's wish directly to the king."
+
+"Then keep her with you," said Tarzan, "and see that no harm befalls
+her."
+
+O-lo-a looked ruefully at Pan-at-lee. "She was brought to me but
+yesterday," she said, "and never have I had slave woman who pleased
+me better. I shall hate to part with her."
+
+"But there are others," said Tarzan.
+
+"Yes," replied O-lo-a, "there are others, but there is only one
+Pan-at-lee."
+
+"Many slaves are brought to the city?" asked Tarzan.
+
+"Yes," she replied.
+
+"And many strangers come from other lands?" he asked.
+
+She shook her head negatively. "Only the Ho-don from the other
+side of the Valley of Jad-ben-Otho," she replied, "and they are
+not strangers."
+
+"Am I then the first stranger to enter the gates of A-lur?" he
+asked.
+
+"Can it be," she parried, "that the son of Jad-ben-Otho need question
+a poor ignorant mortal like O-lo-a?"
+
+"As I told you before," replied Tarzan, "Jad-ben-Otho alone is
+all-knowing."
+
+"Then if he wished you to know this thing," retorted O-lo-a quickly,
+"you would know it."
+
+Inwardly the ape-man smiled that this little heathen's astuteness
+should beat him at his own game, yet in a measure her evasion
+of the question might be an answer to it. "There have been other
+strangers here then recently?" he persisted.
+
+"I cannot tell you what I do not know," she replied. "Always is
+the palace of Ko-tan filled with rumors, but how much fact and how
+much fancy how may a woman of the palace know?"
+
+"There has been such a rumor then?" he asked.
+
+"It was only rumor that reached the Forbidden Garden," she replied.
+
+"It described, perhaps, a woman of another race?" As he put the
+question and awaited her answer he thought that his heart ceased
+to beat, so grave to him was the issue at stake.
+
+The girl hesitated before replying, and then. "No," she said, "I
+cannot speak of this thing, for if it be of sufficient importance
+to elicit the interest of the gods then indeed would I be subject
+to the wrath of my father should I discuss it."
+
+"In the name of Jad-ben-Otho I command you to speak," said Tarzan.
+"In the name of Jad-ben-Otho in whose hands lies the fate of Ta-den!"
+
+The girl paled. "Have mercy!" she cried, "and for the sake of Ta-den
+I will tell you all that I know."
+
+"Tell what?" demanded a stern voice from the shrubbery behind them.
+The three turned to see the figure of Ko-tan emerging from the
+foliage. An angry scowl distorted his kingly features but at sight
+of Tarzan it gave place to an expression of surprise not unmixed
+with fear. "Dor-ul-Otho!" he exclaimed, "I did not know that it
+was you," and then, raising his head and squaring his shoulders
+he said, "but there are places where even the son of the Great God
+may not walk and this, the Forbidden Garden of Ko-tan, is one."
+
+It was a challenge but despite the king's bold front there was a
+note of apology in it, indicating that in his superstitious mind
+there flourished the inherent fear of man for his Maker. "Come,
+Dor-ul-Otho," he continued, "I do not know all this foolish child
+has said to you but whatever you would know Ko-tan, the king, will
+tell you. O-lo-a, go to your quarters immediately," and he pointed
+with stern finger toward the opposite end of the garden.
+
+The princess, followed by Pan-at-lee, turned at once and left them.
+
+"We will go this way," said Ko-tan and preceding, led Tarzan
+in another direction. Close to that part of the wall which they
+approached Tarzan perceived a grotto in the miniature cliff into
+the interior of which Ko-tan led him, and down a rocky stairway to
+a gloomy corridor the opposite end of which opened into the palace
+proper. Two armed warriors stood at this entrance to the Forbidden
+Garden, evidencing how jealously were the sacred precincts of the
+place guarded.
+
+In silence Ko-tan led the way back to his own quarters in the
+palace. A large chamber just outside the room toward which Ko-tan
+was leading his guest was filled with chiefs and warriors awaiting
+the pleasure of their ruler. As the two entered, an aisle was
+formed for them the length of the chamber, down which they passed
+in silence.
+
+Close to the farther door and half hidden by the warriors who
+stood before him was Lu-don, the high priest. Tarzan glimpsed him
+but briefly but in that short period he was aware of a cunning
+and malevolent expression upon the cruel countenance that he was
+subconsciously aware boded him no good, and then with Ko-tan he
+passed into the adjoining room and the hangings dropped.
+
+At the same moment the hideous headdress of an under priest
+appeared in the entrance of the outer chamber. Its owner, pausing
+for a moment, glanced quickly around the interior and then having
+located him whom he sought moved rapidly in the direction of Lu-don.
+There was a whispered conversation which was terminated by the high
+priest.
+
+"Return immediately to the quarters of the princess," he said,
+"and see that the slave is sent to me at the temple at once." The
+under priest turned and departed upon his mission while Lu-don also
+left the apartment and directed his footsteps toward the sacred
+enclosure over which he ruled.
+
+A half-hour later a warrior was ushered into the presence of
+Ko-tan. "Lu-don, the high priest, desires the presence of Ko-tan,
+the king, in the temple," he announced, "and it is his wish that
+he come alone."
+
+Ko-tan nodded to indicate that he accepted the command which even
+the king must obey. "I will return presently, Dor-ul-Otho," he
+said to Tarzan, "and in the meantime my warriors and my slaves are
+yours to command."
+
+
+
+
+
+11
+
+The Sentence of Death
+
+
+
+
+But it was an hour before the king re-entered the apartment and
+in the meantime the ape-man had occupied himself in examining the
+carvings upon the walls and the numerous specimens of the handicraft
+of Pal-ul-donian artisans which combined to impart an atmosphere
+of richness and luxury to the apartment.
+
+The limestone of the country, close-grained and of marble whiteness
+yet worked with comparative ease with crude implements, had been
+wrought by cunning craftsmen into bowls and urns and vases of
+considerable grace and beauty. Into the carved designs of many of
+these virgin gold had been hammered, presenting the effect of a rich
+and magnificent cloisonne. A barbarian himself the art of barbarians
+had always appealed to the ape-man to whom they represented a natural
+expression of man's love of the beautiful to even a greater extent
+than the studied and artificial efforts of civilization. Here was
+the real art of old masters, the other the cheap imitation of the
+chromo.
+
+It was while he was thus pleasurably engaged that Ko-tan returned.
+As Tarzan, attracted by the movement of the hangings through which
+the king entered, turned and faced him he was almost shocked by
+the remarkable alteration of the king's appearance. His face was
+livid; his hands trembled as with palsy, and his eyes were wide as
+with fright. His appearance was one apparently of a combination of
+consuming anger and withering fear. Tarzan looked at him questioningly.
+
+"You have had bad news, Ko-tan?" he asked.
+
+The king mumbled an unintelligible reply. Behind there thronged
+into the apartment so great a number of warriors that they choked
+the entrance-way. The king looked apprehensively to right and left.
+He cast terrified glances at the ape-man and then raising his face
+and turning his eyes upward he cried: "Jad-ben-Otho be my witness
+that I do not this thing of my own accord." There was a moment's
+silence which was again broken by Ko-tan. "Seize him," he cried to
+the warriors about him, "for Lu-don, the high priest, swears that
+he is an impostor."
+
+To have offered armed resistance to this great concourse of warriors
+in the very heart of the palace of their king would have been worse
+than fatal. Already Tarzan had come far by his wits and now that
+within a few hours he had had his hopes and his suspicions partially
+verified by the vague admissions of O-lo-a he was impressed with
+the necessity of inviting no mortal risk that he could avoid.
+
+"Stop!" he cried, raising his palm against them. "What is the
+meaning of this?"
+
+"Lu-don claims he has proof that you are not the son of Jad-ben-Otho,"
+replied Ko-tan. "He demands that you be brought to the throneroom
+to face your accusers. If you are what you claim to be none knows
+better than you that you need have no fear in acquiescing to his
+demands, but remember always that in such matters the high priest
+commands the king and that I am only the bearer of these commands,
+not their author."
+
+Tarzan saw that Ko-tan was not entirely convinced of his duplicity
+as was evidenced by his palpable design to play safe.
+
+"Let not your warriors seize me," he said to Ko-tan, "lest
+Jad-ben-Otho, mistaking their intention, strike them dead." The
+effect of his words was immediate upon the men in the front rank
+of those who faced him, each seeming suddenly to acquire a new
+modesty that compelled him to self-effacement behind those directly
+in his rear--a modesty that became rapidly contagious.
+
+The ape-man smiled. "Fear not," he said, "I will go willingly to
+the audience chamber to face the blasphemers who accuse me."
+
+Arrived at the great throneroom a new complication arose. Ko-tan
+would not acknowledge the right of Lu-don to occupy the apex of
+the pyramid and Lu-don would not consent to occupying an inferior
+position while Tarzan, to remain consistent with his high claims,
+insisted that no one should stand above him, but only to the ape-man
+was the humor of the situation apparent.
+
+To relieve the situation Ja-don suggested that all three of them
+occupy the throne, but this suggestion was repudiated by Ko-tan
+who argued that no mortal other than a king of Pal-ul-don had ever
+sat upon the high eminence, and that furthermore there was not room
+for three there.
+
+"But who," said Tarzan, "is my accuser and who is my judge?"
+
+"Lu-don is your accuser," explained Ko-tan.
+
+"And Lu-don is your judge," cried the high priest.
+
+"I am to be judged by him who accuses me then," said Tarzan. "It
+were better to dispense then with any formalities and ask Lu-don to
+sentence me." His tone was ironical and his sneering face, looking
+straight into that of the high priest, but caused the latter's
+hatred to rise to still greater proportions.
+
+It was evident that Ko-tan and his warriors saw the justice
+of Tarzan's implied objection to this unfair method of dispensing
+justice. "Only Ko-tan can judge in the throneroom of his palace,"
+said Ja-don, "let him hear Lu-don's charges and the testimony of
+his witnesses, and then let Ko-tan's judgment be final."
+
+Ko-tan, however, was not particularly enthusiastic over the prospect
+of sitting in trial upon one who might after all very possibly be
+the son of his god, and so he temporized, seeking for an avenue
+of escape. "It is purely a religious matter," he said, "and it is
+traditional that the kings of Pal-ul-don interfere not in questions
+of the church."
+
+"Then let the trial be held in the temple," cried one of the chiefs,
+for the warriors were as anxious as their king to be relieved of
+all responsibility in the matter. This suggestion was more than
+satisfactory to the high priest who inwardly condemned himself for
+not having thought of it before.
+
+"It is true," he said, "this man's sin is against the temple. Let
+him be dragged thither then for trial."
+
+"The son of Jad-ben-Otho will be dragged nowhere," cried Tarzan.
+"But when this trial is over it is possible that the corpse of
+Lu-don, the high priest, will be dragged from the temple of the
+god he would desecrate. Think well, then, Lu-don before you commit
+this folly."
+
+His words, intended to frighten the high priest from his position
+failed utterly in consummating their purpose. Lu-don showed no
+terror at the suggestion the ape-man's words implied.
+
+"Here is one," thought Tarzan, "who, knowing more of his religion
+than any of his fellows, realizes fully the falsity of my claims
+as he does the falsity of the faith he preaches."
+
+He realized, however, that his only hope lay in seeming indifference
+to the charges. Ko-tan and the warriors were still under the spell
+of their belief in him and upon this fact must he depend in the
+final act of the drama that Lu-don was staging for his rescue from
+the jealous priest whom he knew had already passed sentence upon
+him in his own heart.
+
+With a shrug he descended the steps of the pyramid. "It matters
+not to Dor-ul-Otho," he said, "where Lu-don enrages his god, for
+Jad-ben-Otho can reach as easily into the chambers of the temple
+as into the throneroom of Ko-tan."
+
+Immeasurably relieved by this easy solution of their problem
+the king and the warriors thronged from the throneroom toward the
+temple grounds, their faith in Tarzan increased by his apparent
+indifference to the charges against him. Lu-don led them to the
+largest of the altar courts.
+
+Taking his place behind the western altar he motioned Ko-tan to a
+place upon the platform at the left hand of the altar and directed
+Tarzan to a similar place at the right.
+
+As Tarzan ascended the platform his eyes narrowed angrily at the
+sight which met them. The basin hollowed in the top of the altar was
+filled with water in which floated the naked corpse of a new-born
+babe. "What means this?" he cried angrily, turning upon Lu-don.
+
+The latter smiled malevolently. "That you do not know," he replied,
+"is but added evidence of the falsity of your claim. He who poses
+as the son of god did not know that as the last rays of the setting
+sun flood the eastern altar of the temple the lifeblood of an adult
+reddens the white stone for the edification of Jad-ben-Otho, and
+that when the sun rises again from the body of its maker it looks
+first upon this western altar and rejoices in the death of a
+new-born babe each day, the ghost of which accompanies it across
+the heavens by day as the ghost of the adult returns with it to
+Jad-ben-Otho at night.
+
+"Even the little children of the Ho-don know these things, while
+he who claims to be the son of Jad-ben-Otho knows them not; and if
+this proof be not enough, there is more. Come, Waz-don," he cried,
+pointing to a tall slave who stood with a group of other blacks
+and priests on the temple floor at the left of the altar.
+
+The fellow came forward fearfully. "Tell us what you know of this
+creature," cried Lu-don, pointing to Tarzan.
+
+"I have seen him before," said the Waz-don. "I am of the tribe
+of Kor-ul-lul, and one day recently a party of which I was one
+encountered a few of the warriors of the Kor-ul-ja upon the ridge
+which separates our villages. Among the enemy was this strange
+creature whom they called Tarzan-jad-guru; and terrible indeed was
+he for he fought with the strength of many men so that it required
+twenty of us to subdue him. But he did not fight as a god fights,
+and when a club struck him upon the head he sank unconscious as
+might an ordinary mortal.
+
+"We carried him with us to our village as a prisoner but he escaped
+after cutting off the head of the warrior we left to guard him
+and carrying it down into the gorge and tying it to the branch of
+a tree upon the opposite side."
+
+"The word of a slave against that of a god!" cried Ja-don, who had
+shown previously a friendly interest in the pseudo godling.
+
+"It is only a step in the progress toward truth," interjected
+Lu-don. "Possibly the evidence of the only princess of the house
+of Ko-tan will have greater weight with the great chief from the
+north, though the father of a son who fled the holy offer of the
+priesthood may not receive with willing ears any testimony against
+another blasphemer."
+
+Ja-don's hand leaped to his knife, but the warriors next him
+laid detaining fingers upon his arms. "You are in the temple of
+Jad-ben-Otho, Ja-don," they cautioned and the great chief was forced
+to swallow Lu-don's affront though it left in his heart bitter
+hatred of the high priest.
+
+And now Ko-tan turned toward Lu-don. "What knoweth my daughter of
+this matter?" he asked. "You would not bring a princess of my house
+to testify thus publicly?"
+
+"No," replied Lu-don, "not in person, but I have here one who will
+testify for her." He beckoned to an under priest. "Fetch the slave
+of the princess," he said.
+
+His grotesque headdress adding a touch of the hideous to the scene,
+the priest stepped forward dragging the reluctant Pan-at-lee by
+the wrist.
+
+"The Princess O-lo-a was alone in the Forbidden Garden with but this
+one slave," explained the priest, "when there suddenly appeared from
+the foliage nearby this creature who claims to be the Dor-ul-Otho.
+When the slave saw him the princess says that she cried aloud in startled
+recognition and called the creature by name--Tarzan-jad-guru--the
+same name that the slave from Kor-ul-lul gave him. This woman is
+not from Kor-ul-lul but from Kor-ul-ja, the very tribe with which
+the Kor-ul-lul says the creature was associating when he first
+saw him. And further the princess said that when this woman, whose
+name is Pan-at-lee, was brought to her yesterday she told a strange
+story of having been rescued from a Tor-o-don in the Kor-ul-gryf by
+a creature such as this, whom she spoke of then as Tarzan-jad-guru;
+and of how the two were pursued in the bottom of the gorge by two
+monster gryfs, and of how the man led them away while Pan-at-lee
+escaped, only to be taken prisoner in the Kor-ul-lul as she was
+seeking to return to her own tribe.
+
+"Is it not plain now," cried Lu-don, "that this creature is no god.
+Did he tell you that he was the son of god?" he almost shouted,
+turning suddenly upon Pan-at-lee.
+
+The girl shrank back terrified. "Answer me, slave!" cried the high
+priest.
+
+"He seemed more than mortal," parried Pan-at-lee.
+
+"Did he tell you that he was the son of god? Answer my question,"
+insisted Lu-don.
+
+"No," she admitted in a low voice, casting an appealing look of
+forgiveness at Tarzan who returned a smile of encouragement and
+friendship.
+
+"That is no proof that he is not the son of god," cried Ja-don.
+"Dost think Jad-ben-Otho goes about crying 'I am god! I am god!'
+Hast ever heard him Lu-don? No, you have not. Why should his son
+do that which the father does not do?"
+
+"Enough," cried Lu-don. "The evidence is clear. The creature is
+an impostor and I, the head priest of Jad-ben-Otho in the city of
+A-lur, do condemn him to die." There was a moment's silence during
+which Lu-don evidently paused for the dramatic effect of his
+climax. "And if I am wrong may Jad-ben-Otho pierce my heart with
+his lightnings as I stand here before you all."
+
+The lapping of the wavelets of the lake against the foot of the
+palace wall was distinctly audible in the utter and almost breathless
+silence which ensued. Lu-don stood with his face turned toward the
+heavens and his arms outstretched in the attitude of one who bares
+his breast to the dagger of an executioner. The warriors and the
+priests and the slaves gathered in the sacred court awaited the
+consuming vengeance of their god.
+
+It was Tarzan who broke the silence. "Your god ignores you Lu-don,"
+he taunted, with a sneer that he meant to still further anger the
+high priest, "he ignores you and I can prove it before the eyes of
+your priests and your people."
+
+"Prove it, blasphemer! How can you prove it?"
+
+"You have called me a blasphemer," replied Tarzan, "you have proved
+to your own satisfaction that I am an impostor, that I, an ordinary
+mortal, have posed as the son of god. Demand then that Jad-ben-Otho
+uphold his godship and the dignity of his priesthood by directing
+his consuming fires through my own bosom."
+
+Again there ensued a brief silence while the onlookers waited for
+Lu-don to thus consummate the destruction of this presumptuous
+impostor.
+
+"You dare not," taunted Tarzan, "for you know that I would be struck
+dead no quicker than were you."
+
+"You lie," cried Lu-don, "and I would do it had I not but just
+received a message from Jad-ben-Otho directing that your fate be
+different."
+
+A chorus of admiring and reverential "Ahs" arose from the priesthood.
+Ko-tan and his warriors were in a state of mental confusion. Secretly
+they hated and feared Lu-don, but so ingrained was their sense of
+reverence for the office of the high priest that none dared raise
+a voice against him.
+
+None? Well, there was Ja-don, fearless old Lion-man of the north.
+"The proposition was a fair one," he cried. "Invoke the lightnings
+of Jad-ben-Otho upon this man if you would ever convince us of his
+guilt."
+
+"Enough of this," snapped Lu-don. "Since when was Ja-don created high
+priest? Seize the prisoner," he cried to the priests and warriors,
+"and on the morrow he shall die in the manner that Jad-ben-Otho
+has willed."
+
+There was no immediate movement on the part of any of the warriors
+to obey the high priest's command, but the lesser priests on the
+other hand, imbued with the courage of fanaticism leaped eagerly
+forward like a flock of hideous harpies to seize upon their prey.
+
+The game was up. That Tarzan knew. No longer could cunning and
+diplomacy usurp the functions of the weapons of defense he best
+loved. And so the first hideous priest who leaped to the platform
+was confronted by no suave ambassador from heaven, but rather a
+grim and ferocious beast whose temper savored more of hell.
+
+The altar stood close to the western wall of the enclosure. There
+was just room between the two for the high priest to stand during
+the performance of the sacrificial ceremonies and only Lu-don stood
+there now behind Tarzan, while before him were perhaps two hundred
+warriors and priests.
+
+The presumptuous one who would have had the glory of first laying
+arresting hands upon the blasphemous impersonator rushed forward
+with outstretched hand to seize the ape-man. Instead it was he who
+was seized; seized by steel fingers that snapped him up as though
+he had been a dummy of straw, grasped him by one leg and the harness
+at his back and raised him with giant arms high above the altar.
+Close at his heels were others ready to seize the ape-man and drag
+him down, and beyond the altar was Lu-don with drawn knife advancing
+toward him.
+
+There was no instant to waste, nor was it the way of the ape-man
+to fritter away precious moments in the uncertainty of belated
+decision. Before Lu-don or any other could guess what was in
+the mind of the condemned, Tarzan with all the force of his great
+muscles dashed the screaming hierophant in the face of the high
+priest, and, as though the two actions were one, so quickly did
+he move, he had leaped to the top of the altar and from there to a
+handhold upon the summit of the temple wall. As he gained a footing
+there he turned and looked down upon those beneath. For a moment
+he stood in silence and then he spoke.
+
+"Who dare believe," he cried, "that Jad-ben-Otho would forsake his
+son?" and then he dropped from their sight upon the other side.
+
+There were two at least left within the enclosure whose hearts
+leaped with involuntary elation at the success of the ape-man's
+maneuver, and one of them smiled openly. This was Ja-don, and the
+other, Pan-at-lee.
+
+The brains of the priest that Tarzan had thrown at the head of
+Lu-don had been dashed out against the temple wall while the high
+priest himself had escaped with only a few bruises, sustained in
+his fall to the hard pavement. Quickly scrambling to his feet he
+looked around in fear, in terror and finally in bewilderment, for
+he had not been a witness to the ape-man's escape. "Seize him," he
+cried; "seize the blasphemer," and he continued to look around in
+search of his victim with such a ridiculous expression of bewilderment
+that more than a single warrior was compelled to hide his smiles
+beneath his palm.
+
+The priests were rushing around wildly, exhorting the warriors to
+pursue the fugitive but these awaited now stolidly the command of
+their king or high priest. Ko-tan, more or less secretly pleased
+by the discomfiture of Lu-don, waited for that worthy to give the
+necessary directions which he presently did when one of his acolytes
+excitedly explained to him the manner of Tarzan's escape.
+
+Instantly the necessary orders were issued and priests and warriors
+sought the temple exit in pursuit of the ape-man. His departing
+words, hurled at them from the summit of the temple wall, had had
+little effect in impressing the majority that his claims had not
+been disproven by Lu-don, but in the hearts of the warriors was
+admiration for a brave man and in many the same unholy gratification
+that had risen in that of their ruler at the discomfiture of Lu-don.
+
+A careful search of the temple grounds revealed no trace of the
+quarry. The secret recesses of the subterranean chambers, familiar
+only to the priesthood, were examined by these while the warriors
+scattered through the palace and the palace grounds without the
+temple. Swift runners were dispatched to the city to arouse the
+people there that all might be upon the lookout for Tarzan the
+Terrible. The story of his imposture and of his escape, and the
+tales that the Waz-don slaves had brought into the city concerning
+him were soon spread throughout A-lur, nor did they lose aught
+in the spreading, so that before an hour had passed the women and
+children were hiding behind barred doorways while the warriors
+crept apprehensively through the streets expecting momentarily to
+be pounced upon by a ferocious demon who, bare-handed, did victorious
+battle with huge gryfs and whose lightest pastime consisted in
+tearing strong men limb from limb.
+
+
+
+
+
+12
+
+The Giant Stranger
+
+
+
+
+And while the warriors and the priests of A-lur searched the temple
+and the palace and the city for the vanished ape-man there entered
+the head of Kor-ul-ja down the precipitous trail from the mountains, a
+naked stranger bearing an Enfield upon his back. Silently he moved
+downward toward the bottom of the gorge and there where the ancient
+trail unfolded more levelly before him he swung along with easy
+strides, though always with the utmost alertness against possible
+dangers. A gentle breeze came down from the mountains behind
+him so that only his ears and his eyes were of value in detecting
+the presence of danger ahead. Generally the trail followed along
+the banks of the winding brooklet at the bottom of the gorge, but
+in some places where the waters tumbled over a precipitous ledge
+the trail made a detour along the side of the gorge, and again it
+wound in and out among rocky outcroppings, and presently where it
+rounded sharply the projecting shoulder of a cliff the stranger
+came suddenly face to face with one who was ascending the gorge.
+
+Separated by a hundred paces the two halted simultaneously. Before
+him the stranger saw a tall white warrior, naked but for a loin
+cloth, cross belts, and a girdle. The man was armed with a heavy,
+knotted club and a short knife, the latter hanging in its sheath at
+his left hip from the end of one of his cross belts, the opposite
+belt supporting a leathern pouch at his right side. It was Ta-den
+hunting alone in the gorge of his friend, the chief of Kor-ul-ja.
+He contemplated the stranger with surprise but no wonder, since he
+recognized in him a member of the race with which his experience
+of Tarzan the Terrible had made him familiar and also, thanks to
+his friendship for the ape-man, he looked upon the newcomer without
+hostility.
+
+The latter was the first to make outward sign of his intentions,
+raising his palm toward Ta-den in that gesture which has been
+a symbol of peace from pole to pole since man ceased to walk upon
+his knuckles. Simultaneously he advanced a few paces and halted.
+
+Ta-den, assuming that one so like Tarzan the Terrible must be a
+fellow-tribesman of his lost friend, was more than glad to accept
+this overture of peace, the sign of which he returned in kind as
+he ascended the trail to where the other stood. "Who are you?" he
+asked, but the newcomer only shook his head to indicate that he
+did not understand.
+
+By signs he tried to carry to the Ho-don the fact that he was
+following a trail that had led him over a period of many days from
+some place beyond the mountains and Ta-den was convinced that the
+newcomer sought Tarzan-jad-guru. He wished, however, that he might
+discover whether as friend or foe.
+
+The stranger perceived the Ho-don's prehensile thumbs and great toes
+and his long tail with an astonishment which he sought to conceal,
+but greater than all was the sense of relief that the first inhabitant
+of this strange country whom he had met had proven friendly, so
+greatly would he have been handicapped by the necessity for forcing
+his way through a hostile land.
+
+Ta-den, who had been hunting for some of the smaller mammals, the
+meat of which is especially relished by the Ho-don, forgot his
+intended sport in the greater interest of his new discovery. He
+would take the stranger to Om-at and possibly together the two would
+find some way of discovering the true intentions of the newcomer.
+And so again through signs he apprised the other that he would
+accompany him and together they descended toward the cliffs of
+Om-at's people.
+
+As they approached these they came upon the women and children
+working under guard of the old men and the youths--gathering the
+wild fruits and herbs which constitute a part of their diet, as well
+as tending the small acres of growing crops which they cultivate. The
+fields lay in small level patches that had been cleared of trees
+and brush. Their farm implements consisted of metal-shod poles
+which bore a closer resemblance to spears than to tools of peaceful
+agriculture. Supplementing these were others with flattened blades
+that were neither hoes nor spades, but instead possessed the
+appearance of an unhappy attempt to combine the two implements in
+one.
+
+At first sight of these people the stranger halted and unslung his
+bow for these creatures were black as night, their bodies entirely
+covered with hair. But Ta-den, interpreting the doubt in the other's
+mind, reassured him with a gesture and a smile. The Waz-don, however,
+gathered around excitedly jabbering questions in a language which
+the stranger discovered his guide understood though it was entirely
+unintelligible to the former. They made no attempt to molest him
+and he was now sure that he had fallen among a peaceful and friendly
+people.
+
+It was but a short distance now to the caves and when they reached
+these Ta-den led the way aloft upon the wooden pegs, assured that
+this creature whom he had discovered would have no more difficulty
+in following him than had Tarzan the Terrible. Nor was he mistaken
+for the other mounted with ease until presently the two stood within
+the recess before the cave of Om-at, the chief.
+
+The latter was not there and it was mid-afternoon before he
+returned, but in the meantime many warriors came to look upon the
+visitor and in each instance the latter was more thoroughly impressed
+with the friendly and peaceable spirit of his hosts, little guessing
+that he was being entertained by a ferocious and warlike tribe who
+never before the coming of Ta-den and Tarzan had suffered a stranger
+among them.
+
+At last Om-at returned and the guest sensed intuitively that he
+was in the presence of a great man among these people, possibly
+a chief or king, for not only did the attitude of the other black
+warriors indicate this but it was written also in the mien and
+bearing of the splendid creature who stood looking at him while
+Ta-den explained the circumstances of their meeting. "And I believe,
+Om-at," concluded the Ho-don, "that he seeks Tarzan the Terrible."
+
+At the sound of that name, the first intelligible word that had
+fallen upon the ears of the stranger since he had come among them,
+his face lightened. "Tarzan!" he cried, "Tarzan of the Apes!" and
+by signs he tried to tell them that it was he whom he sought.
+
+They understood, and also they guessed from the expression of his
+face that he sought Tarzan from motives of affection rather than
+the reverse, but of this Om-at wished to make sure. He pointed to
+the stranger's knife, and repeating Tarzan's name, seized Ta-den
+and pretended to stab him, immediately turning questioningly toward
+the stranger.
+
+The latter shook his head vehemently and then first placing a hand
+above his heart he raised his palm in the symbol of peace.
+
+"He is a friend of Tarzan-jad-guru," exclaimed Ta-den.
+
+"Either a friend or a great liar," replied Om-at.
+
+"Tarzan," continued the stranger, "you know him? He lives? O God,
+if I could only speak your language." And again reverting to sign
+language he sought to ascertain where Tarzan was. He would pronounce
+the name and point in different directions, in the cave, down into
+the gorge, back toward the mountains, or out upon the valley below,
+and each time he would raise his brows questioningly and voice
+the universal "eh?" of interrogation which they could not fail to
+understand. But always Om-at shook his head and spread his palms
+in a gesture which indicated that while he understood the question
+he was ignorant as to the whereabouts of the ape-man, and then the
+black chief attempted as best he might to explain to the stranger
+what he knew of the whereabouts of Tarzan.
+
+He called the newcomer Jar-don, which in the language of Pal-ul-don
+means "stranger," and he pointed to the sun and said as. This he
+repeated several times and then he held up one hand with the fingers
+outspread and touching them one by one, including the thumb, repeated
+the word adenen until the stranger understood that he meant five.
+Again he pointed to the sun and describing an arc with his forefinger
+starting at the eastern horizon and terminating at the western, he
+repeated again the words as adenen. It was plain to the stranger
+that the words meant that the sun had crossed the heavens five
+times. In other words, five days had passed. Om-at then pointed to
+the cave where they stood, pronouncing Tarzan's name and imitating
+a walking man with the first and second fingers of his right hand
+upon the floor of the recess, sought to show that Tarzan had walked
+out of the cave and climbed upward on the pegs five days before,
+but this was as far as the sign language would permit him to go.
+
+This far the stranger followed him and, indicating that he understood
+he pointed to himself and then indicating the pegs leading above
+announced that he would follow Tarzan.
+
+"Let us go with him," said Om-at, "for as yet we have not punished
+the Kor-ul-lul for killing our friend and ally."
+
+"Persuade him to wait until morning," said Ta-den, "that you may take
+with you many warriors and make a great raid upon the Kor-ul-lul,
+and this time, Om-at, do not kill your prisoners. Take as many
+as you can alive and from some of them we may learn the fate of
+Tarzan-jad-guru."
+
+"Great is the wisdom of the Ho-don," replied Om-at. "It shall be as
+you say, and having made prisoners of all the Kor-ul-lul we shall
+make them tell us what we wish to know. And then we shall march
+them to the rim of Kor-ul-gryf and push them over the edge of the
+cliff."
+
+Ta-den smiled. He knew that they would not take prisoner all the
+Kor-ul-lul warriors--that they would be fortunate if they took one
+and it was also possible that they might even be driven back in
+defeat, but he knew too that Om-at would not hesitate to carry out
+his threat if he had the opportunity, so implacable was the hatred
+of these neighbors for each other.
+
+It was not difficult to explain Om-at's plan to the stranger or to
+win his consent since he was aware, when the great black had made
+it plain that they would be accompanied by many warriors, that
+their venture would probably lead them into a hostile country and
+every safeguard that he could employ he was glad to avail himself
+of, since the furtherance of his quest was the paramount issue.
+
+He slept that night upon a pile of furs in one of the compartments
+of Om-at's ancestral cave, and early the next day following the
+morning meal they sallied forth, a hundred savage warriors swarming
+up the face of the sheer cliff and out upon the summit of the ridge,
+the main body preceded by two warriors whose duties coincided with
+those of the point of modern military maneuvers, safeguarding the
+column against the danger of too sudden contact with the enemy.
+
+Across the ridge they went and down into the Kor-ul-lul and there
+almost immediately they came upon a lone and unarmed Waz-don who
+was making his way fearfully up the gorge toward the village of
+his tribe. Him they took prisoner which, strangely, only added to
+his terror since from the moment that he had seen them and realized
+that escape was impossible, he had expected to be slain immediately.
+
+"Take him back to Kor-ul-ja," said Om-at, to one of his warriors,
+"and hold him there unharmed until I return."
+
+And so the puzzled Kor-ul-lul was led away while the savage company
+moved stealthily from tree to tree in its closer advance upon the
+village. Fortune smiled upon Om-at in that it gave him quickly what
+he sought--a battle royal, for they had not yet come in sight of
+the caves of the Kor-ul-lul when they encountered a considerable
+band of warriors headed down the gorge upon some expedition.
+
+Like shadows the Kor-ul-ja melted into the concealment of the foliage
+upon either side of the trail. Ignorant of impending danger, safe
+in the knowledge that they trod their own domain where each rock
+and stone was as familiar as the features of their mates, the
+Kor-ul-lul walked innocently into the ambush. Suddenly the quiet
+of that seeming peace was shattered by a savage cry and a hurled
+club felled a Kor-ul-lul.
+
+The cry was a signal for a savage chorus from a hundred Kor-ul-ja
+throats with which were soon mingled the war cries of their enemies.
+The air was filled with flying clubs and then as the two forces
+mingled, the battle resolved itself into a number of individual
+encounters as each warrior singled out a foe and closed upon him.
+Knives gleamed and flashed in the mottling sunlight that filtered
+through the foliage of the trees above. Sleek black coats were
+streaked with crimson stains.
+
+In the thick of the fight the smooth brown skin of the stranger
+mingled with the black bodies of friend and foe. Only his keen
+eyes and his quick wit had shown him how to differentiate between
+Kor-ul-lul and Kor-ul-ja since with the single exception of apparel
+they were identical, but at the first rush of the enemy he had
+noticed that their loin cloths were not of the leopard-matted hides
+such as were worn by his allies.
+
+Om-at, after dispatching his first antagonist, glanced at Jar-don.
+"He fights with the ferocity of jato," mused the chief. "Powerful
+indeed must be the tribe from which he and Tarzan-jad-guru come,"
+and then his whole attention was occupied by a new assailant.
+
+The fighters surged to and fro through the forest until those
+who survived were spent with exhaustion. All but the stranger who
+seemed not to know the sense of fatigue. He fought on when each
+new antagonist would have gladly quit, and when there were no more
+Kor-ul-lul who were not engaged, he leaped upon those who stood
+pantingly facing the exhausted Kor-ul-ja.
+
+And always he carried upon his back the peculiar thing which Om-at
+had thought was some manner of strange weapon but the purpose of
+which he could not now account for in view of the fact that Jar-don
+never used it, and that for the most part it seemed but a nuisance
+and needless encumbrance since it banged and smashed against its
+owner as he leaped, catlike, hither and thither in the course of
+his victorious duels. The bow and arrows he had tossed aside at
+the beginning of the fight but the Enfield he would not discard,
+for where he went he meant that it should go until its mission had
+been fulfilled.
+
+Presently the Kor-ul-ja, seemingly shamed by the example of Jar-don
+closed once more with the enemy, but the latter, moved no doubt
+to terror by the presence of the stranger, a tireless demon who
+appeared invulnerable to their attacks, lost heart and sought to
+flee. And then it was that at Om-at's command his warriors surrounded
+a half-dozen of the most exhausted and made them prisoners.
+
+It was a tired, bloody, and elated company that returned victorious
+to the Kor-ul-ja. Twenty of their number were carried back and six
+of these were dead men. It was the most glorious and successful
+raid that the Kor-ul-ja had made upon the Kor-ul-lul in the memory
+of man, and it marked Om-at as the greatest of chiefs, but that
+fierce warrior knew that advantage had lain upon his side largely
+because of the presence of his strange ally. Nor did he hesitate
+to give credit where credit belonged, with the result that Jar-don
+and his exploits were upon the tongue of every member of the tribe
+of Kor-ul-ja and great was the fame of the race that could produce
+two such as he and Tarzan-jad-guru.
+
+And in the gorge of Kor-ul-lul beyond the ridge the survivors spoke
+in bated breath of this second demon that had joined forces with
+their ancient enemy.
+
+Returned to his cave Om-at caused the Kor-ul-lul prisoners to be
+brought into his presence singly, and each he questioned as to the
+fate of Tarzan. Without exception they told him the same story--that
+Tarzan had been taken prisoner by them five days before but that he
+had slain the warrior left to guard him and escaped, carrying the
+head of the unfortunate sentry to the opposite side of Kor-ul-lul
+where he had left it suspended by its hair from the branch of
+a tree. But what had become of him after, they did not know; not
+one of them, until the last prisoner was examined, he whom they
+had taken first--the unarmed Kor-ul-lul making his way from the
+direction of the Valley of Jad-ben-Otho toward the caves of his
+people.
+
+This one, when he discovered the purpose of their questioning,
+bartered with them for the lives and liberty of himself and his
+fellows. "I can tell you much of this terrible man of whom you ask,
+Kor-ul-ja," he said. "I saw him yesterday and I know where he is,
+and if you will promise to let me and my fellows return in safety
+to the caves of our ancestors I will tell you all, and truthfully,
+that which I know."
+
+"You will tell us anyway," replied Om-at, "or we shall kill you."
+
+"You will kill me anyway," retorted the prisoner, "unless you make
+me this promise; so if I am to be killed the thing I know shall go
+with me."
+
+"He is right, Om-at," said Ta-den, "promise him that they shall
+have their liberty."
+
+"Very well," said Om-at. "Speak Kor-ul-lul, and when you have told
+me all, you and your fellows may return unharmed to your tribe."
+
+"It was thus," commenced the prisoner. "Three days since I was
+hunting with a party of my fellows near the mouth of Kor-ul-lul not
+far from where you captured me this morning, when we were surprised
+and set upon by a large number of Ho-don who took us prisoners and
+carried us to A-lur where a few were chosen to be slaves and the
+rest were cast into a chamber beneath the temple where are held for
+sacrifice the victims that are offered by the Ho-don to Jad-ben-Otho
+upon the sacrificial altars of the temple at A-lur.
+
+"It seemed then that indeed was my fate sealed and that lucky were
+those who had been selected for slaves among the Ho-don, for they
+at least might hope to escape--those in the chamber with me must
+be without hope.
+
+"But yesterday a strange thing happened. There came to the temple,
+accompanied by all the priests and by the king and many of his
+warriors, one whom all did great reverence, and when he came to the
+barred gateway leading to the chamber in which we wretched ones
+awaited our fate, I saw to my surprise that it was none other
+than that terrible man who had so recently been a prisoner in the
+village of Kor-ul-lul--he whom you call Tarzan-jad-guru but whom
+they addressed as Dor-ul-Otho. And he looked upon us and questioned
+the high priest and when he was told of the purpose for which we
+were imprisoned there he grew angry and cried that it was not the
+will of Jad-ben-Otho that his people be thus sacrificed, and he
+commanded the high priest to liberate us, and this was done.
+
+"The Ho-don prisoners were permitted to return to their homes and
+we were led beyond the City of A-lur and set upon our way toward
+Kor-ul-lul. There were three of us, but many are the dangers that
+lie between A-lur and Kor-ul-lul and we were only three and unarmed.
+Therefore none of us reached the village of our people and only
+one of us lives. I have spoken."
+
+"That is all you know concerning Tarzan-jad-guru?" asked Om-at.
+
+"That is all I know," replied the prisoner, "other than that he
+whom they call Lu-don, the high priest at A-lur, was very angry,
+and that one of the two priests who guided us out of the city said
+to the other that the stranger was not Dor-ul-Otho at all; that
+Lu-don had said so and that he had also said that he would expose
+him and that he should be punished with death for his presumption.
+That is all they said within my hearing.
+
+"And now, chief of Kor-ul-ja, let us depart."
+
+Om-at nodded. "Go your way," he said, "and Ab-on, send warriors to
+guard them until they are safely within the Kor-ul-lul.
+
+"Jar-don," he said beckoning to the stranger, "come with me," and
+rising he led the way toward the summit of the cliff, and when they
+stood upon the ridge Om-at pointed down into the valley toward the
+City of A-lur gleaming in the light of the western sun.
+
+"There is Tarzan-jad-guru," he said, and Jar-don understood.
+
+
+
+
+
+13
+
+The Masquerader
+
+
+
+
+As Tarzan dropped to the ground beyond the temple wall there was
+in his mind no intention to escape from the City of A-lur until he
+had satisfied himself that his mate was not a prisoner there, but
+how, in this strange city in which every man's hand must be now
+against him, he was to live and prosecute his search was far from
+clear to him.
+
+There was only one place of which he knew that he might find even
+temporary sanctuary and that was the Forbidden Garden of the king.
+There was thick shrubbery in which a man might hide, and water
+and fruits. A cunning jungle creature, if he could reach the spot
+unsuspected, might remain concealed there for a considerable time,
+but how he was to traverse the distance between the temple grounds
+and the garden unseen was a question the seriousness of which he
+fully appreciated.
+
+"Mighty is Tarzan," he soliloquized, "in his native jungle, but in
+the cities of man he is little better than they."
+
+Depending upon his keen observation and sense of location he felt
+safe in assuming that he could reach the palace grounds by means
+of the subterranean corridors and chambers of the temple through
+which he had been conducted the day before, nor any slightest
+detail of which had escaped his keen eyes. That would be better, he
+reasoned, than crossing the open grounds above where his pursuers
+would naturally immediately follow him from the temple and quickly
+discover him.
+
+And so a dozen paces from the temple wall he disappeared from sight
+of any chance observer above, down one of the stone stairways that
+led to the apartments beneath. The way that he had been conducted
+the previous day had followed the windings and turnings of numerous
+corridors and apartments, but Tarzan, sure of himself in such
+matters, retraced the route accurately without hesitation.
+
+He had little fear of immediate apprehension here since he believed
+that all the priests of the temple had assembled in the court above
+to witness his trial and his humiliation and his death, and with
+this idea firmly implanted in his mind he rounded the turn of the
+corridor and came face to face with an under priest, his grotesque
+headdress concealing whatever emotion the sight of Tarzan may have
+aroused.
+
+However, Tarzan had one advantage over the masked votary
+of Jad-ben-Otho in that the moment he saw the priest he knew his
+intention concerning him, and therefore was not compelled to delay
+action. And so it was that before the priest could determine on
+any suitable line of conduct in the premises a long, keen knife
+had been slipped into his heart.
+
+As the body lunged toward the floor Tarzan caught it and snatched
+the headdress from its shoulders, for the first sight of the creature
+had suggested to his ever-alert mind a bold scheme for deceiving
+his enemies.
+
+The headdress saved from such possible damage as it must have
+sustained had it fallen to the floor with the body of its owner,
+Tarzan relinquished his hold upon the corpse, set the headdress
+carefully upon the floor and stooping down severed the tail of the
+Ho-don close to its root. Near by at his right was a small chamber
+from which the priest had evidently just emerged and into this
+Tarzan dragged the corpse, the headdress, and the tail.
+
+Quickly cutting a thin strip of hide from the loin cloth of the
+priest, Tarzan tied it securely about the upper end of the severed
+member and then tucking the tail under his loin cloth behind him,
+secured it in place as best he could. Then he fitted the headdress
+over his shoulders and stepped from the apartment, to all appearances
+a priest of the temple of Jad-ben-Otho unless one examined too
+closely his thumbs and his great toes.
+
+He had noticed that among both the Ho-don and the Waz-don it was
+not at all unusual that the end of the tail be carried in one hand,
+and so he caught his own tail up thus lest the lifeless appearance
+of it dragging along behind him should arouse suspicion.
+
+Passing along the corridor and through the various chambers
+he emerged at last into the palace grounds beyond the temple. The
+pursuit had not yet reached this point though he was conscious of
+a commotion not far behind him. He met now both warriors and slaves
+but none gave him more than a passing glance, a priest being too
+common a sight about the palace.
+
+And so, passing the guards unchallenged, he came at last to the
+inner entrance to the Forbidden Garden and there he paused and
+scanned quickly that portion of the beautiful spot that lay before
+his eyes. To his relief it seemed unoccupied and congratulating
+himself upon the ease with which he had so far outwitted the
+high powers of A-lur he moved rapidly to the opposite end of the
+enclosure. Here he found a patch of flowering shrubbery that might
+safely have concealed a dozen men.
+
+Crawling well within he removed the uncomfortable headdress and
+sat down to await whatever eventualities fate might have in store
+for him the while he formulated plans for the future. The one
+night that he had spent in A-lur had kept him up to a late hour,
+apprising him of the fact that while there were few abroad in the
+temple grounds at night, there were yet enough to make it possible
+for him to fare forth under cover of his disguise without attracting
+the unpleasant attention of the guards, and, too, he had noticed
+that the priesthood constituted a privileged class that seemed to
+come and go at will and unchallenged throughout the palace as well
+as the temple. Altogether then, he decided, night furnished the
+most propitious hours for his investigation--by day he could lie
+up in the shrubbery of the Forbidden Garden, reasonably free from
+detection. From beyond the garden he heard the voices of men calling
+to one another both far and near, and he guessed that diligent was
+the search that was being prosecuted for him.
+
+The idle moments afforded him an opportunity to evolve a more
+satisfactory scheme for attaching his stolen caudal appendage.
+He arranged it in such a way that it might be quickly assumed or
+discarded, and this done he fell to examining the weird mask that
+had so effectively hidden his features.
+
+The thing had been very cunningly wrought from a single block of
+wood, very probably a section of a tree, upon which the features
+had been carved and afterward the interior hollowed out until only
+a comparatively thin shell remained. Two-semicircular notches had
+been rounded out from opposite sides of the lower edge. These fitted
+snugly over his shoulders, aprons of wood extending downward a few
+inches upon his chest and back. From these aprons hung long tassels
+or switches of hair tapering from the outer edges toward the center
+which reached below the bottom of his torso. It required but the
+most cursory examination to indicate to the ape-man that these
+ornaments consisted of human scalps, taken, doubtless, from the
+heads of the sacrifices upon the eastern altars. The headdress
+itself had been carved to depict in formal design a hideous face
+that suggested both man and gryf. There were the three white horns,
+the yellow face with the blue bands encircling the eyes and the
+red hood which took the form of the posterior and anterior aprons.
+
+As Tarzan sat within the concealing foliage of the shrubbery
+meditating upon the hideous priest-mask which he held in his hands
+he became aware that he was not alone in the garden. He sensed
+another presence and presently his trained ears detected the slow
+approach of naked feet across the sward. At first he suspected that
+it might be one stealthily searching the Forbidden Garden for him
+but a little later the figure came within the limited area of his
+vision which was circumscribed by stems and foliage and flowers.
+He saw then that it was the princess O-lo-a and that she was alone
+and walking with bowed head as though in meditation--sorrowful
+meditation for there were traces of tears upon her lids.
+
+Shortly after his ears warned him that others had entered the
+garden--men they were and their footsteps proclaimed that they
+walked neither slowly nor meditatively. They came directly toward
+the princess and when Tarzan could see them he discovered that both
+were priests.
+
+"O-lo-a, Princess of Pal-ul-don," said one, addressing her, "the
+stranger who told us that he was the son of Jad-ben-Otho has but
+just fled from the wrath of Lu-don, the high priest, who exposed him
+and all his wicked blasphemy. The temple, and the palace, and the
+city are being searched and we have been sent to search the Forbidden
+Garden, since Ko-tan, the king, said that only this morning he
+found him here, though how he passed the guards he could not guess."
+
+"He is not here," said O-lo-a. "I have been in the garden for some
+time and have seen nor heard no other than myself. However, search
+it if you will."
+
+"No," said the priest who had before spoken, "it is not necessary
+since he could not have entered without your knowledge and the
+connivance of the guards, and even had he, the priest who preceded
+us must have seen him."
+
+"What priest?" asked O-lo-a.
+
+"One passed the guards shortly before us," explained the man.
+
+"I did not see him," said O-lo-a.
+
+"Doubtless he left by another exit," remarked the second priest.
+
+"Yes, doubtless," acquiesced O-lo-a, "but it is strange that I did
+not see him." The two priests made their obeisance and turned to
+depart.
+
+"Stupid as Buto, the rhinoceros," soliloquized Tarzan, who considered
+Buto a very stupid creature indeed. "It should be easy to outwit
+such as these."
+
+The priests had scarce departed when there came the sound of feet
+running rapidly across the garden in the direction of the princess
+to an accompaniment of rapid breathing as of one almost spent,
+either from fatigue or excitement.
+
+"Pan-at-lee," exclaimed O-lo-a, "what has happened? You look as
+terrified as the doe for which you were named!"
+
+"O Princess of Pal-ul-don," cried Pan-at-lee, "they would have killed
+him in the temple. They would have killed the wondrous stranger
+who claimed to be the Dor-ul-Otho."
+
+"But he escaped," said O-lo-a. "You were there. Tell me about it."
+
+"The head priest would have had him seized and slain, but when they
+rushed upon him he hurled one in the face of Lu-don with the same
+ease that you might cast your breastplates at me, and then he
+leaped upon the altar and from there to the top of the temple wall
+and disappeared below. They are searching for him, but, O Princess,
+I pray that they do not find him."
+
+"And why do you pray that?" asked O-lo-a. "Has not one who has so
+blasphemed earned death?"
+
+"Ah, but you do not know him," replied Pan-at-lee.
+
+"And you do, then?" retorted O-lo-a quickly. "This morning you
+betrayed yourself and then attempted to deceive me. The slaves
+of O-lo-a do not such things with impunity. He is then the same
+Tarzan-jad-guru of whom you told me? Speak woman and speak only
+the truth."
+
+Pan-at-lee drew herself up very erect, her little chin held high,
+for was not she too among her own people already as good as a
+princess? "Pan-at-lee, the Kor-ul-ja does not lie," she said, "to
+protect herself."
+
+"Then tell me what you know of this Tarzan-jad-guru," insisted
+O-lo-a.
+
+"I know that he is a wondrous man and very brave," said Pan-at-lee,
+"and that he saved me from the Tor-o-don and the gryf as I told
+you, and that he is indeed the same who came into the garden this
+morning; and even now I do not know that he is not the son of
+Jad-ben-Otho for his courage and his strength are more than those
+of mortal man, as are also his kindness and his honor: for when he
+might have harmed me he protected me, and when he might have saved
+himself he thought only of me. And all this he did because of his
+friendship for Om-at, who is gund of Kor-ul-ja and with whom I
+should have mated had the Ho-don not captured me."
+
+"He was indeed a wonderful man to look upon," mused O-lo-a, "and
+he was not as are other men, not alone in the conformation of his
+hands and feet or the fact that he was tailless, but there was that
+about him which made him seem different in ways more important than
+these."
+
+"And," supplemented Pan-at-lee, her savage little heart loyal
+to the man who had befriended her and hoping to win for him the
+consideration of the princess even though it might not avail him;
+"and," she said, "did he not know all about Ta-den and even his
+whereabouts. Tell me, O Princess, could mortal know such things as
+these?"
+
+"Perhaps he saw Ta-den," suggested O-lo-a.
+
+"But how would he know that you loved Ta-den," parried Pan-at-lee.
+"I tell you, my Princess, that if he is not a god he is at least
+more than Ho-don or Waz-don. He followed me from the cave of Es-sat
+in Kor-ul-ja across Kor-ul-lul and two wide ridges to the very cave
+in Kor-ul-gryf where I hid, though many hours had passed since I
+had come that way and my bare feet left no impress upon the ground.
+What mortal man could do such things as these? And where in all
+Pal-ul-don would virgin maid find friend and protector in a strange
+male other than he?"
+
+"Perhaps Lu-don may be mistaken--perhaps he is a god," said O-lo-a,
+influenced by her slave's enthusiastic championing of the stranger."
+
+"But whether god or man he is too wonderful to die," cried Pan-at-lee.
+"Would that I might save him. If he lived he might even find a way
+to give you your Ta-den, Princess."
+
+"Ah, if he only could," sighed O-lo-a, "but alas it is too late
+for tomorrow I am to be given to Bu-lot."
+
+"He who came to your quarters yesterday with your father?" asked
+Pan-at-lee.
+
+"Yes; the one with the awful round face and the big belly," exclaimed
+the Princess disgustedly. "He is so lazy he will neither hunt nor
+fight. To eat and to drink is all that Bu-lot is fit for, and he
+thinks of naught else except these things and his slave women. But
+come, Pan-at-lee, gather for me some of these beautiful blossoms.
+I would have them spread around my couch tonight that I may carry
+away with me in the morning the memory of the fragrance that I
+love best and which I know that I shall not find in the village of
+Mo-sar, the father of Bu-lot. I will help you, Pan-at-lee, and we
+will gather armfuls of them, for I love to gather them as I love
+nothing else--they were Ta-den's favorite flowers."
+
+The two approached the flowering shrubbery where Tarzan hid, but
+as the blooms grew plentifully upon every bush the ape-man guessed
+there would be no necessity for them to enter the patch far enough
+to discover him. With little exclamations of pleasure as they found
+particularly large or perfect blooms the two moved from place to
+place upon the outskirts of Tarzan's retreat.
+
+"Oh, look, Pan-at-lee," cried O-lo-a presently; "there is the king
+of them all. Never did I see so wonderful a flower--No! I will get
+it myself--it is so large and wonderful no other hand shall touch
+it," and the princess wound in among the bushes toward the point
+where the great flower bloomed upon a bush above the ape-man's
+head.
+
+So sudden and unexpected her approach that there was no opportunity
+to escape and Tarzan sat silently trusting that fate might be kind
+to him and lead Ko-tan's daughter away before her eyes dropped from
+the high-growing bloom to him. But as the girl cut the long stem
+with her knife she looked down straight into the smiling face of
+Tarzan-jad-guru.
+
+With a stifled scream she drew back and the ape-man rose and faced
+her.
+
+"Have no fear, Princess," he assured her. "It is the friend of
+Ta-den who salutes you," raising her fingers to his lips.
+
+Pan-at-lee came now excitedly forward. "O Jad-ben-Otho, it is he!"
+
+"And now that you have found me," queried Tarzan, "will you give
+me up to Lu-don, the high priest?"
+
+Pan-at-lee threw herself upon her knees at O-lo-a's feet. "Princess!
+Princess!" she beseeched, "do not discover him to his enemies."
+
+"But Ko-tan, my father," whispered O-lo-a fearfully, "if he knew
+of my perfidy his rage would be beyond naming. Even though I am a
+princess Lu-don might demand that I be sacrificed to appease the
+wrath of Jad-ben-Otho, and between the two of them I should be
+lost."
+
+"But they need never know," cried Pan-at-lee, "that you have seen
+him unless you tell them yourself for as Jad-ben-Otho is my witness
+I will never betray you."
+
+"Oh, tell me, stranger," implored O-lo-a, "are you indeed a god?"
+
+"Jad-ben-Otho is not more so," replied Tarzan truthfully.
+
+"But why do you seek to escape then from the hands of mortals if
+you are a god?" she asked.
+
+"When gods mingle with mortals," replied Tarzan, "they are no less
+vulnerable than mortals. Even Jad-ben-Otho, should he appear before
+you in the flesh, might be slain."
+
+"You have seen Ta-den and spoken with him?" she asked with apparent
+irrelevancy.
+
+"Yes, I have seen him and spoken with him," replied the ape-man.
+"For the duration of a moon I was with him constantly."
+
+"And--" she hesitated--"he--" she cast her eyes toward the ground
+and a flush mantled her cheek--"he still loves me?" and Tarzan knew
+that she had been won over.
+
+"Yes," he said, "Ta-den speaks only of O-lo-a and he waits and
+hopes for the day when he can claim her."
+
+"But tomorrow they give me to Bu-lot," she said sadly.
+
+"May it be always tomorrow," replied Tarzan, "for tomorrow never
+comes."
+
+"Ah, but this unhappiness will come, and for all the tomorrows
+of my life I must pine in misery for the Ta-den who will never be
+mine."
+
+"But for Lu-don I might have helped you," said the ape-man. "And
+who knows that I may not help you yet?"
+
+"Ah, if you only could, Dor-ul-Otho," cried the girl, "and I know
+that you would if it were possible for Pan-at-lee has told me how
+brave you are, and at the same time how kind."
+
+"Only Jad-ben-Otho knows what the future may bring," said Tarzan.
+"And now you two go your way lest someone should discover you and
+become suspicious."
+
+"We will go," said O-lo-a, "but Pan-at-lee will return with food.
+I hope that you escape and that Jad-ben-Otho is pleased with what
+I have done." She turned and walked away and Pan-at-lee followed
+while the ape-man again resumed his hiding.
+
+At dusk Pan-at-lee came with food and having her alone Tarzan put
+the question that he had been anxious to put since his conversation
+earlier in the day with O-lo-a.
+
+"Tell me," he said, "what you know of the rumors of which O-lo-a
+spoke of the mysterious stranger which is supposed to be hidden in
+A-lur. Have you too heard of this during the short time that you
+have been here?"
+
+"Yes," said Pan-at-lee, "I have heard it spoken of among the other
+slaves. It is something of which all whisper among themselves but
+of which none dares to speak aloud. They say that there is a strange
+she hidden in the temple and that Lu-don wants her for a priestess
+and that Ko-tan wants her for a wife and that neither as yet dares
+take her for fear of the other."
+
+"Do you know where she is hidden in the temple?" asked Tarzan.
+
+"No," said Pan-at-lee. "How should I know? I do not even know that
+it is more than a story and I but tell you that which I have heard
+others say."
+
+"There was only one," asked Tarzan, "whom they spoke of?"
+
+"No, they speak of another who came with her but none seems to know
+what became of this one."
+
+Tarzan nodded. "Thank you Pan-at-lee," he said. "You may have helped
+me more than either of us guess."
+
+"I hope that I have helped you," said the girl as she turned back
+toward the palace.
+
+"And I hope so too," exclaimed Tarzan emphatically.
+
+
+
+
+
+14
+
+The Temple of the Gryf
+
+
+
+
+When night had fallen Tarzan donned the mask and the dead tail of
+the priest he had slain in the vaults beneath the temple. He judged
+that it would not do to attempt again to pass the guard, especially
+so late at night as it would be likely to arouse comment and
+suspicion, and so he swung into the tree that overhung the garden
+wall and from its branches dropped to the ground beyond.
+
+Avoiding too grave risk of apprehension the ape-man passed through
+the grounds to the court of the palace, approaching the temple from
+the side opposite to that at which he had left it at the time of
+his escape. He came thus it is true through a portion of the grounds
+with which he was unfamiliar but he preferred this to the danger
+of following the beaten track between the palace apartments and
+those of the temple. Having a definite goal in mind and endowed as
+he was with an almost miraculous sense of location he moved with
+great assurance through the shadows of the temple yard.
+
+Taking advantage of the denser shadows close to the walls and of
+what shrubs and trees there were he came without mishap at last
+to the ornate building concerning the purpose of which he had
+asked Lu-don only to be put off with the assertion that it was
+forgotten--nothing strange in itself but given possible importance
+by the apparent hesitancy of the priest to discuss its use and the
+impression the ape-man had gained at the time that Lu-don lied.
+
+And now he stood at last alone before the structure which was three
+stories in height and detached from all the other temple buildings.
+It had a single barred entrance which was carved from the living
+rock in representation of the head of a gryf, whose wide-open mouth
+constituted the doorway. The head, hood, and front paws of the
+creature were depicted as though it lay crouching with its lower
+jaw on the ground between its outspread paws. Small oval windows,
+which were likewise barred, flanked the doorway.
+
+Seeing that the coast was clear, Tarzan stepped into the darkened
+entrance where he tried the bars only to discover that they
+were ingeniously locked in place by some device with which he was
+unfamiliar and that they also were probably too strong to be broken
+even if he could have risked the noise which would have resulted.
+Nothing was visible within the darkened interior and so, momentarily
+baffled, he sought the windows. Here also the bars refused to
+yield up their secret, but again Tarzan was not dismayed since he
+had counted upon nothing different.
+
+If the bars would not yield to his cunning they would yield to
+his giant strength if there proved no other means of ingress, but
+first he would assure himself that this latter was the case. Moving
+entirely around the building he examined it carefully. There were
+other windows but they were similarly barred. He stopped often to
+look and listen but he saw no one and the sounds that he heard were
+too far away to cause him any apprehension.
+
+He glanced above him at the wall of the building. Like so many of
+the other walls of the city, palace, and temple, it was ornately
+carved and there were too the peculiar ledges that ran sometimes
+in a horizontal plane and again were tilted at an angle, giving
+ofttimes an impression of irregularity and even crookedness to
+the buildings. It was not a difficult wall to climb, at least not
+difficult for the ape-man.
+
+But he found the bulky and awkward headdress a considerable handicap
+and so he laid it aside upon the ground at the foot of the wall.
+Nimbly he ascended to find the windows of the second floor not only
+barred but curtained within. He did not delay long at the second
+floor since he had in mind an idea that he would find the easiest
+entrance through the roof which he had noticed was roughly dome
+shaped like the throneroom of Ko-tan. Here there were apertures.
+He had seen them from the ground, and if the construction of the
+interior resembled even slightly that of the throneroom, bars would
+not be necessary upon these apertures, since no one could reach
+them from the floor of the room.
+
+There was but a single question: would they be large enough to
+admit the broad shoulders of the ape-man.
+
+He paused again at the third floor, and here, in spite of the
+hangings, he saw that the interior was lighted and simultaneously
+there came to his nostrils from within a scent that stripped from
+him temporarily any remnant of civilization that might have remained
+and left him a fierce and terrible bull of the jungles of Kerchak.
+So sudden and complete was the metamorphosis that there almost
+broke from the savage lips the hideous challenge of his kind, but
+the cunning brute-mind saved him this blunder.
+
+And now he heard voices within--the voice of Lu-don he could have
+sworn, demanding. And haughty and disdainful came the answering
+words though utter hopelessness spoke in the tones of this other
+voice which brought Tarzan to the pinnacle of frenzy.
+
+The dome with its possible apertures was forgotten. Every consideration
+of stealth and quiet was cast aside as the ape-man drew back his
+mighty fist and struck a single terrific blow upon the bars of the
+small window before him, a blow that sent the bars and the casing
+that held them clattering to the floor of the apartment within.
+
+Instantly Tarzan dove headforemost through the aperture carrying
+the hangings of antelope hide with him to the floor below. Leaping
+to his feet he tore the entangling pelt from about his head only
+to find himself in utter darkness and in silence. He called aloud
+a name that had not passed his lips for many weary months. "Jane,
+Jane," he cried, "where are you?" But there was only silence in
+reply.
+
+Again and again he called, groping with outstretched hands through
+the Stygian blackness of the room, his nostrils assailed and his
+brain tantalized by the delicate effluvia that had first assured
+him that his mate had been within this very room. And he had heard
+her dear voice combatting the base demands of the vile priest. Ah,
+if he had but acted with greater caution! If he had but continued
+to move with quiet and stealth he might even at this moment be
+holding her in his arms while the body of Lu-don, beneath his foot,
+spoke eloquently of vengeance achieved. But there was no time now
+for idle self-reproaches.
+
+He stumbled blindly forward, groping for he knew not what till
+suddenly the floor beneath him tilted and he shot downward into a
+darkness even more utter than that above. He felt his body strike
+a smooth surface and he realized that he was hurtling downward as
+through a polished chute while from above there came the mocking
+tones of a taunting laugh and the voice of Lu-don screamed after
+him: "Return to thy father, O Dor-ul-Otho!"
+
+The ape-man came to a sudden and painful stop upon a rocky floor.
+Directly before him was an oval window crossed by many bars, and
+beyond he saw the moonlight playing on the waters of the blue lake
+below. Simultaneously he was conscious of a familiar odor in the air
+of the chamber, which a quick glance revealed in the semidarkness
+as of considerable proportion.
+
+It was the faint, but unmistakable odor of the gryf, and now Tarzan
+stood silently listening. At first he detected no sounds other than
+those of the city that came to him through the window overlooking
+the lake; but presently, faintly, as though from a distance he
+heard the shuffling of padded feet along a stone pavement, and as
+he listened he was aware that the sound approached.
+
+Nearer and nearer it came, and now even the breathing of the beast
+was audible. Evidently attracted by the noise of his descent into
+its cavernous retreat it was approaching to investigate. He could
+not see it but he knew that it was not far distant, and then,
+deafeningly there reverberated through those gloomy corridors the
+mad bellow of the gryf.
+
+Aware of the poor eyesight of the beast, and his own eyes now grown
+accustomed to the darkness of the cavern, the ape-man sought to
+elude the infuriated charge which he well knew no living creature
+could withstand. Neither did he dare risk the chance of experimenting
+upon this strange gryf with the tactics of the Tor-o-don that he
+had found so efficacious upon that other occasion when his life
+and liberty had been the stakes for which he cast. In many respects
+the conditions were dissimilar. Before, in broad daylight, he
+had been able to approach the gryf under normal conditions in its
+natural state, and the gryf itself was one that he had seen subjected
+to the authority of man, or at least of a manlike creature; but
+here he was confronted by an imprisoned beast in the full swing
+of a furious charge and he had every reason to suspect that this
+gryf might never have felt the restraining influence of authority,
+confined as it was in this gloomy pit to serve likely but the single
+purpose that Tarzan had already seen so graphically portrayed in
+his own experience of the past few moments.
+
+To elude the creature, then, upon the possibility of discovering
+some loophole of escape from his predicament seemed to the ape-man
+the wisest course to pursue. Too much was at stake to risk an
+encounter that might be avoided--an encounter the outcome of which
+there was every reason to apprehend would seal the fate of the
+mate that he had just found, only to lose again so harrowingly.
+Yet high as his disappointment and chagrin ran, hopeless as his
+present estate now appeared, there tingled in the veins of the
+savage lord a warm glow of thanksgiving and elation. She lived!
+After all these weary months of hopelessness and fear he had found
+her. She lived!
+
+To the opposite side of the chamber, silently as the wraith of
+a disembodied soul, the swift jungle creature moved from the path
+of the charging Titan that, guided solely in the semi-darkness by
+its keen ears, bore down upon the spot toward which Tarzan's noisy
+entrance into its lair had attracted it. Along the further wall the
+ape-man hurried. Before him now appeared the black opening of the
+corridor from which the beast had emerged into the larger chamber.
+Without hesitation Tarzan plunged into it. Even here his eyes,
+long accustomed to darkness that would have seemed total to you or
+to me, saw dimly the floor and the walls within a radius of a few
+feet--enough at least to prevent him plunging into any unguessed
+abyss, or dashing himself upon solid rock at a sudden turning.
+
+The corridor was both wide and lofty, which indeed it must
+be to accommodate the colossal proportions of the creature whose
+habitat it was, and so Tarzan encountered no difficulty in moving
+with reasonable speed along its winding trail. He was aware as he
+proceeded that the trend of the passage was downward, though not
+steeply, but it seemed interminable and he wondered to what distant
+subterranean lair it might lead. There was a feeling that perhaps
+after all he might better have remained in the larger chamber
+and risked all on the chance of subduing the gryf where there was
+at least sufficient room and light to lend to the experiment some
+slight chance of success. To be overtaken here in the narrow confines
+of the black corridor where he was assured the gryf could not see
+him at all would spell almost certain death and now he heard the
+thing approaching from behind. Its thunderous bellows fairly shook
+the cliff from which the cavernous chambers were excavated. To halt
+and meet this monstrous incarnation of fury with a futile whee-oo!
+seemed to Tarzan the height of insanity and so he continued along
+the corridor, increasing his pace as he realized that the gryf was
+overhauling him.
+
+Presently the darkness lessened and at the final turning of the
+passage he saw before him an area of moonlight. With renewed hope
+he sprang rapidly forward and emerged from the mouth of the corridor
+to find himself in a large circular enclosure the towering white
+walls of which rose high upon every side--smooth perpendicular
+walls upon the sheer face of which was no slightest foothold. To
+his left lay a pool of water, one side of which lapped the foot
+of the wall at this point. It was, doubtless, the wallow and the
+drinking pool of the gryf.
+
+And now the creature emerged from the corridor and Tarzan retreated
+to the edge of the pool to make his last stand. There was no staff
+with which to enforce the authority of his voice, but yet he made
+his stand for there seemed naught else to do. Just beyond the
+entrance to the corridor the gryf paused, turning its weak eyes in
+all directions as though searching for its prey. This then seemed
+the psychological moment for his attempt and raising his voice in
+peremptory command the ape-man voiced the weird whee-oo! of the
+Tor-o-don. Its effect upon the gryf was instantaneous and complete--with
+a terrific bellow it lowered its three horns and dashed madly in
+the direction of the sound.
+
+To right nor to left was any avenue of escape, for behind him lay
+the placid waters of the pool, while down upon him from before
+thundered annihilation. The mighty body seemed already to tower
+above him as the ape-man turned and dove into the dark waters.
+
+Dead in her breast lay hope. Battling for life during harrowing
+months of imprisonment and danger and hardship it had fitfully
+flickered and flamed only to sink after each renewal to smaller
+proportions than before and now it had died out entirely leaving
+only cold, charred embers that Jane Clayton knew would never again
+be rekindled. Hope was dead as she faced Lu-don, the high priest,
+in her prison quarters in the Temple of the Gryf at A-lur. Both time
+and hardship had failed to leave their impress upon her physical
+beauty--the contours of her perfect form, the glory of her radiant
+loveliness had defied them, yet to these very attributes she owed
+the danger which now confronted her, for Lu-don desired her. From
+the lesser priests she had been safe, but from Lu-don, she was
+not safe, for Lu-don was not as they, since the high priestship of
+Pal-ul-don may descend from father to son.
+
+Ko-tan, the king, had wanted her and all that had so far saved her
+from either was the fear of each for the other, but at last Lu-don
+had cast aside discretion and had come in the silent watches of the
+night to claim her. Haughtily had she repulsed him, seeking ever
+to gain time, though what time might bring her of relief or renewed
+hope she could not even remotely conjecture. A leer of lust and
+greed shone hungrily upon his cruel countenance as he advanced
+across the room to seize her. She did not shrink nor cower, but
+stood there very erect, her chin up, her level gaze freighted with
+the loathing and contempt she felt for him. He read her expression
+and while it angered him, it but increased his desire for possession.
+Here indeed was a queen, perhaps a goddess; fit mate for the high
+priest.
+
+"You shall not!" she said as he would have touched her. "One of us
+shall die before ever your purpose is accomplished."
+
+He was close beside her now. His laugh grated upon her ears. "Love
+does not kill," he replied mockingly.
+
+He reached for her arm and at the same instant something clashed
+against the bars of one of the windows, crashing them inward to
+the floor, to be followed almost simultaneously by a human figure
+which dove headforemost into the room, its head enveloped in the
+skin window hangings which it carried with it in its impetuous
+entry.
+
+Jane Clayton saw surprise and something of terror too leap to the
+countenance of the high priest and then she saw him spring forward
+and jerk upon a leather thong that depended from the ceiling of the
+apartment. Instantly there dropped from above a cunningly contrived
+partition that fell between them and the intruder, effectively
+barring him from them and at the same time leaving him to grope
+upon its opposite side in darkness, since the only cresset the room
+contained was upon their side of the partition.
+
+Faintly from beyond the wall Jane heard a voice calling, but whose
+it was and what the words she could not distinguish. Then she saw
+Lu-don jerk upon another thong and wait in evident expectancy of
+some consequent happening. He did not have long to wait. She saw
+the thong move suddenly as though jerked from above and then Lu-don
+smiled and with another signal put in motion whatever machinery it
+was that raised the partition again to its place in the ceiling.
+
+Advancing into that portion of the room that the partition had
+shut off from them, the high priest knelt upon the floor, and down
+tilting a section of it, revealed the dark mouth of a shaft leading
+below. Laughing loudly he shouted into the hole: "Return to thy
+father, O Dor-ul-Otho!"
+
+Making fast the catch that prevented the trapdoor from opening
+beneath the feet of the unwary until such time as Lu-don chose the
+high priest rose again to his feet.
+
+"Now, Beautiful One!" he cried, and then, "Ja-don! what do you
+here?"
+
+Jane Clayton turned to follow the direction of Lu-don's eyes and
+there she saw framed in the entrance-way to the apartment the mighty
+figure of a warrior, upon whose massive features sat an expression
+of stern and uncompromising authority.
+
+"I come from Ko-tan, the king," replied Ja-don, "to remove the
+beautiful stranger to the Forbidden Garden."
+
+"The king defies me, the high priest of Jad-ben-Otho?" cried Lu-don.
+
+"It is the king's command--I have spoken," snapped Ja-don, in whose
+manner was no sign of either fear or respect for the priest.
+
+Lu-don well knew why the king had chosen this messenger whose heresy
+was notorious, but whose power had as yet protected him from the
+machinations of the priest. Lu-don cast a surreptitious glance
+at the thongs hanging from the ceiling. Why not? If he could but
+maneuver to entice Ja-don to the opposite side of the chamber!
+
+"Come," he said in a conciliatory tone, "let us discuss the matter,"
+and moved toward the spot where he would have Ja-don follow him.
+
+"There is nothing to discuss," replied Ja-don, yet he followed the
+priest, fearing treachery.
+
+Jane watched them. In the face and figure of the warrior she found
+reflected those admirable traits of courage and honor that the
+profession of arms best develops. In the hypocritical priest there
+was no redeeming quality. Of the two then she might best choose
+the warrior. With him there was a chance--with Lu-don, none. Even
+the very process of exchange from one prison to another might offer
+some possibility of escape. She weighed all these things and decided,
+for Lu-don's quick glance at the thongs had not gone unnoticed nor
+uninterpreted by her.
+
+"Warrior," she said, addressing Ja-don, "if you would live enter
+not that portion of the room."
+
+Lu-don cast an angry glance upon her. "Silence, slave!" he cried.
+
+"And where lies the danger?" Ja-don asked of Jane, ignoring Lu-don.
+
+The woman pointed to the thongs. "Look," she said, and before the
+high priest could prevent she had seized that which controlled the
+partition which shot downward separating Lu-don from the warrior
+and herself.
+
+Ja-don looked inquiringly at her. "He would have tricked me neatly
+but for you," he said; "kept me imprisoned there while he secreted
+you elsewhere in the mazes of his temple."
+
+"He would have done more than that," replied Jane, as she pulled
+upon the other thong. "This releases the fastenings of a trapdoor
+in the floor beyond the partition. When you stepped on that you
+would have been precipitated into a pit beneath the temple. Lu-don
+has threatened me with this fate often. I do not know that he speaks
+the truth, but he says that a demon of the temple is imprisoned
+there--a huge gryf."
+
+"There is a gryf within the temple," said Ja-don. "What with it
+and the sacrifices, the priests keep us busy supplying them with
+prisoners, though the victims are sometimes those for whom Lu-don
+has conceived hatred among our own people. He has had his eyes upon
+me for a long time. This would have been his chance but for you.
+Tell me, woman, why you warned me. Are we not all equally your
+jailers and your enemies?"
+
+"None could be more horrible than Lu-don," she replied; "and you
+have the appearance of a brave and honorable warrior. I could not
+hope, for hope has died and yet there is the possibility that among
+so many fighting men, even though they be of another race than mine,
+there is one who would accord honorable treatment to a stranger
+within his gates--even though she be a woman."
+
+Ja-don looked at her for a long minute. "Ko-tan would make you
+his queen," he said. "That he told me himself and surely that were
+honorable treatment from one who might make you a slave."
+
+"Why, then, would he make me queen?" she asked.
+
+Ja-don came closer as though in fear his words might be overheard.
+"He believes, although he did not tell me so in fact, that you
+are of the race of gods. And why not? Jad-ben-Otho is tailless,
+therefore it is not strange that Ko-tan should suspect that only
+the gods are thus. His queen is dead leaving only a single daughter.
+He craves a son and what more desirable than that he should found
+a line of rulers for Pal-ul-don descended from the gods?"
+
+"But I am already wed," cried Jane. "I cannot wed another. I do
+not want him or his throne."
+
+"Ko-tan is king," replied Ja-don simply as though that explained
+and simplified everything.
+
+"You will not save me then?" she asked.
+
+"If you were in Ja-lur," he replied, "I might protect you, even
+against the king."
+
+"What and where is Ja-lur?" she asked, grasping at any straw.
+
+"It is the city where I rule," he answered. "I am chief there and
+of all the valley beyond."
+
+"Where is it?" she insisted, and "is it far?"
+
+"No," he replied, smiling, "it is not far, but do not think of
+that--you could never reach it. There are too many to pursue and
+capture you. If you wish to know, however, it lies up the river that
+empties into Jad-ben-lul whose waters kiss the walls of A-lur--up
+the western fork it lies with water upon three sides. Impregnable
+city of Pal-ul-don--alone of all the cities it has never been entered
+by a foeman since it was built there while Jad-ben-Otho was a boy."
+
+"And there I would be safe?" she asked.
+
+"Perhaps," he replied.
+
+Ah, dead Hope; upon what slender provocation would you seek to glow
+again! She sighed and shook her head, realizing the inutility of
+Hope--yet the tempting bait dangled before her mind's eye--Ja-lur!
+
+"You are wise," commented Ja-don interpreting her sigh. "Come now,
+we will go to the quarters of the princess beside the Forbidden
+Garden. There you will remain with O-lo-a, the king's daughter. It
+will be better than this prison you have occupied."
+
+"And Ko-tan?" she asked, a shudder passing through her slender
+frame.
+
+"There are ceremonies," explained Ja-don, "that may occupy several
+days before you become queen, and one of them may be difficult of
+arrangement." He laughed, then.
+
+"What?" she asked.
+
+"Only the high priest may perform the marriage ceremony for a king,"
+he explained.
+
+"Delay!" she murmured; "blessed delay!" Tenacious indeed of life
+is Hope even though it be reduced to cold and lifeless char--a
+veritable phoenix.
+
+
+
+
+
+15
+
+"The King Is Dead!"
+
+
+
+
+As they conversed Ja-don had led her down the stone stairway that
+leads from the upper floors of the Temple of the Gryf to the chambers
+and the corridors that honeycomb the rocky hills from which the
+temple and the palace are hewn and now they passed from one to the
+other through a doorway upon one side of which two priests stood
+guard and upon the other two warriors. The former would have halted
+Ja-don when they saw who it was that accompanied him for well known
+throughout the temple was the quarrel between king and high priest
+for possession of this beautiful stranger.
+
+"Only by order of Lu-don may she pass," said one, placing himself
+directly in front of Jane Clayton, barring her progress. Through
+the hollow eyes of the hideous mask the woman could see those of
+the priest beneath gleaming with the fires of fanaticism. Ja-don
+placed an arm about her shoulders and laid his hand upon his knife.
+
+"She passes by order of Ko-tan, the king," he said, "and by virtue
+of the fact that Ja-don, the chief, is her guide. Stand aside!"
+
+The two warriors upon the palace side pressed forward. "We are here,
+gund of Ja-lur," said one, addressing Ja-don, "to receive and obey
+your commands."
+
+The second priest now interposed. "Let them pass," he admonished
+his companion. "We have received no direct commands from Lu-don
+to the contrary and it is a law of the temple and the palace that
+chiefs and priests may come and go without interference."
+
+"But I know Lu-don's wishes," insisted the other.
+
+"He told you then that Ja-don must not pass with the stranger?"
+
+"No--but--"
+
+"Then let them pass, for they are three to two and will pass
+anyway--we have done our best."
+
+Grumbling, the priest stepped aside. "Lu-don will exact an accounting,"
+he cried angrily.
+
+Ja-don turned upon him. "And get it when and where he will," he
+snapped.
+
+They came at last to the quarters of the Princess O-lo-a where, in
+the main entrance-way, loitered a small guard of palace warriors
+and several stalwart black eunuchs belonging to the princess, or
+her women. To one of the latter Ja-don relinquished his charge.
+
+"Take her to the princess," he commanded, "and see that she does
+not escape."
+
+Through a number of corridors and apartments lighted by stone
+cressets the eunuch led Lady Greystoke halting at last before a
+doorway concealed by hangings of jato skin, where the guide beat
+with his staff upon the wall beside the door.
+
+"O-lo-a, Princess of Pal-ul-don," he called, "here is the stranger
+woman, the prisoner from the temple."
+
+"Bid her enter," Jane heard a sweet voice from within command.
+
+The eunuch drew aside the hangings and Lady Greystoke stepped within.
+Before her was a low-ceiled room of moderate size. In each of the
+four corners a kneeling figure of stone seemed to be bearing its
+portion of the weight of the ceiling upon its shoulders. These
+figures were evidently intended to represent Waz-don slaves and were
+not without bold artistic beauty. The ceiling itself was slightly
+arched to a central dome which was pierced to admit light by day,
+and air. Upon one side of the room were many windows, the other
+three walls being blank except for a doorway in each. The princess
+lay upon a pile of furs which were arranged over a low stone dais
+in one corner of the apartment and was alone except for a single
+Waz-don slave girl who sat upon the edge of the dais near her feet.
+
+As Jane entered O-lo-a beckoned her to approach and when she stood
+beside the couch the girl half rose upon an elbow and surveyed her
+critically.
+
+"How beautiful you are," she said simply.
+
+Jane smiled, sadly; for she had found that beauty may be a curse.
+
+"That is indeed a compliment," she replied quickly, "from one so
+radiant as the Princess O-lo-a."
+
+"Ah!" exclaimed the princess delightedly; "you speak my language!
+I was told that you were of another race and from some far land of
+which we of Pal-ul-don have never heard."
+
+"Lu-don saw to it that the priests instructed me," explained Jane;
+"but I am from a far country, Princess; one to which I long to
+return--and I am very unhappy."
+
+"But Ko-tan, my father, would make you his queen," cried the girl;
+"that should make you very happy."
+
+"But it does not," replied the prisoner; "I love another to whom I
+am already wed. Ah, Princess, if you had known what it was to love
+and to be forced into marriage with another you would sympathize
+with me."
+
+The Princess O-lo-a was silent for a long moment. "I know," she said
+at last, "and I am very sorry for you; but if the king's daughter
+cannot save herself from such a fate who may save a slave woman?
+for such in fact you are."
+
+The drinking in the great banquet hall of the palace of Ko-tan,
+king of Pal-ul-don had commenced earlier this night than was usual,
+for the king was celebrating the morrow's betrothal of his only
+daughter to Bu-lot, son of Mo-sar, the chief, whose great-grandfather
+had been king of Pal-ul-don and who thought that he should be king,
+and Mo-sar was drunk and so was Bu-lot, his son. For that matter
+nearly all of the warriors, including the king himself, were drunk.
+In the heart of Ko-tan was no love either for Mo-sar, or Bu-lot, nor
+did either of these love the king. Ko-tan was giving his daughter
+to Bu-lot in the hope that the alliance would prevent Mo-sar from
+insisting upon his claims to the throne, for, next to Ja-don, Mo-sar
+was the most powerful of the chiefs and while Ko-tan looked with
+fear upon Ja-don, too, he had no fear that the old Lion-man would
+attempt to seize the throne, though which way he would throw his
+influence and his warriors in the event that Mo-sar declare war
+upon Ko-tan, the king could not guess.
+
+Primitive people who are also warlike are seldom inclined toward
+either tact or diplomacy even when sober; but drunk they know not
+the words, if aroused. It was really Bu-lot who started it.
+
+"This," he said, "I drink to O-lo-a," and he emptied his tankard
+at a single gulp. "And this," seizing a full one from a neighbor,
+"to her son and mine who will bring back the throne of Pal-ul-don
+to its rightful owners!"
+
+"The king is not yet dead!" cried Ko-tan, rising to his feet; "nor
+is Bu-lot yet married to his daughter--and there is yet time to
+save Pal-ul-don from the spawn of the rabbit breed."
+
+The king's angry tone and his insulting reference to Bu-lot's
+well-known cowardice brought a sudden, sobering silence upon the
+roistering company. Every eye turned upon Bu-lot and Mo-sar, who
+sat together directly opposite the king. The first was very drunk
+though suddenly he seemed quite sober. He was so drunk that for an
+instant he forgot to be a coward, since his reasoning powers were
+so effectually paralyzed by the fumes of liquor that he could not
+intelligently weigh the consequences of his acts. It is reasonably
+conceivable that a drunk and angry rabbit might commit a rash
+deed. Upon no other hypothesis is the thing that Bu-lot now did
+explicable. He rose suddenly from the seat to which he had sunk
+after delivering his toast and seizing the knife from the sheath
+of the warrior upon his right hurled it with terrific force at
+Ko-tan. Skilled in the art of throwing both their knives and their
+clubs are the warriors of Pal-ul-don and at this short distance
+and coming as it did without warning there was no defense and but
+one possible result--Ko-tan, the king, lunged forward across the
+table, the blade buried in his heart.
+
+A brief silence followed the assassin's cowardly act. White with
+terror, now, Bu-lot fell slowly back toward the doorway at his rear,
+when suddenly angry warriors leaped with drawn knives to prevent
+his escape and to avenge their king. But Mo-sar now took his stand
+beside his son.
+
+"Ko-tan is dead!" he cried. "Mo-sar is king! Let the loyal warriors
+of Pal-ul-don protect their ruler!"
+
+Mo-sar commanded a goodly following and these quickly surrounded
+him and Bu-lot, but there were many knives against them and now
+Ja-don pressed forward through those who confronted the pretender.
+
+"Take them both!" he shouted. "The warriors of Pal-ul-don will
+choose their own king after the assassin of Ko-tan has paid the
+penalty of his treachery."
+
+Directed now by a leader whom they both respected and admired those
+who had been loyal to Ko-tan rushed forward upon the faction that
+had surrounded Mo-sar. Fierce and terrible was the fighting, devoid,
+apparently, of all else than the ferocious lust to kill and while
+it was at its height Mo-sar and Bu-lot slipped unnoticed from the
+banquet hall.
+
+To that part of the palace assigned to them during their visit to
+A-lur they hastened. Here were their servants and the lesser warriors
+of their party who had not been bidden to the feast of Ko-tan.
+These were directed quickly to gather together their belongings
+for immediate departure. When all was ready, and it did not take
+long, since the warriors of Pal-ul-don require but little impedimenta
+on the march, they moved toward the palace gate.
+
+Suddenly Mo-sar approached his son. "The princess," he whispered.
+"We must not leave the city without her--she is half the battle
+for the throne."
+
+Bu-lot, now entirely sober, demurred. He had had enough of fighting
+and of risk. "Let us get out of A-lur quickly," he urged, "or we
+shall have the whole city upon us. She would not come without a
+struggle and that would delay us too long."
+
+"There is plenty of time," insisted Mo-sar. "They are still fighting
+in the pal-e-don-so. It will be long before they miss us and, with
+Ko-tan dead, long before any will think to look to the safety of
+the princess. Our time is now--it was made for us by Jad-ben-Otho.
+Come!"
+
+Reluctantly Bu-lot followed his father, who first instructed
+the warriors to await them just inside the gateway of the palace.
+Rapidly the two approached the quarters of the princess. Within the
+entrance-way only a handful of warriors were on guard. The eunuchs
+had retired.
+
+"There is fighting in the pal-e-don-so," Mo-sar announced in feigned
+excitement as they entered the presence of the guards. "The king
+desires you to come at once and has sent us to guard the apartments
+of the princess. Make haste!" he commanded as the men hesitated.
+
+The warriors knew him and that on the morrow the princess was to
+be betrothed to Bu-lot, his son. If there was trouble what more
+natural than that Mo-sar and Bu-lot should be intrusted with the
+safety of the princess. And then, too, was not Mo-sar a powerful
+chief to whose orders disobedience might prove a dangerous thing?
+They were but common fighting men disciplined in the rough school
+of tribal warfare, but they had learned to obey a superior and so
+they departed for the banquet hall--the place-where-men-eat.
+
+Barely waiting until they had disappeared Mo-sar crossed to the
+hangings at the opposite end of the entrance-hall and followed by
+Bu-lot made his way toward the sleeping apartment of O-lo-a and a
+moment later, without warning, the two men burst in upon the three
+occupants of the room. At sight of them O-lo-a sprang to her feet.
+
+"What is the meaning of this?" she demanded angrily.
+
+Mo-sar advanced and halted before her. Into his cunning mind had
+entered a plan to trick her. If it succeeded it would prove easier
+than taking her by force, and then his eyes fell upon Jane Clayton
+and he almost gasped in astonishment and admiration, but he caught
+himself and returned to the business of the moment.
+
+"O-lo-a," he cried, "when you know the urgency of our mission you
+will forgive us. We have sad news for you. There has been an uprising
+in the palace and Ko-tan, the king, has been slain. The rebels are
+drunk with liquor and now on their way here. We must get you out
+of A-lur at once--there is not a moment to lose. Come, and quickly!"
+
+"My father dead?" cried O-lo-a, and suddenly her eyes went wide.
+"Then my place is here with my people," she cried. "If Ko-tan is
+dead I am queen until the warriors choose a new ruler--that is the
+law of Pal-ul-don. And if I am queen none can make me wed whom I
+do not wish to wed--and Jad-ben-Otho knows I never wished to wed
+thy cowardly son. Go!" She pointed a slim forefinger imperiously
+toward the doorway.
+
+Mo-sar saw that neither trickery nor persuasion would avail now
+and every precious minute counted. He looked again at the beautiful
+woman who stood beside O-lo-a. He had never before seen her but he
+well knew from palace gossip that she could be no other than the
+godlike stranger whom Ko-tan had planned to make his queen.
+
+"Bu-lot," he cried to his son, "take you your own woman and I will
+take--mine!" and with that he sprang suddenly forward and seizing
+Jane about the waist lifted her in his arms, so that before O-lo-a
+or Pan-at-lee might even guess his purpose he had disappeared
+through the hangings near the foot of the dais and was gone with
+the stranger woman struggling and fighting in his grasp.
+
+And then Bu-lot sought to seize O-lo-a, but O-lo-a had her
+Pan-at-lee--fierce little tiger-girl of the savage Kor-ul-ja--Pan-at-lee
+whose name belied her--and Bu-lot found that with the two of them
+his hands were full. When he would have lifted O-lo-a and borne
+her away Pan-at-lee seized him around the legs and strove to drag
+him down. Viciously he kicked her, but she would not desist, and
+finally, realizing that he might not only lose his princess but be
+so delayed as to invite capture if he did not rid himself of this
+clawing, scratching she-jato, he hurled O-lo-a to the floor and
+seizing Pan-at-lee by the hair drew his knife and--
+
+The curtains behind him suddenly parted. In two swift bounds a
+lithe figure crossed the room and before ever the knife of Bu-lot
+reached its goal his wrist was seized from behind and a terrific
+blow crashing to the base of his brain dropped him, lifeless,
+to the floor. Bu-lot, coward, traitor, and assassin, died without
+knowing who struck him down.
+
+As Tarzan of the Apes leaped into the pool in the gryf pit of
+the temple at A-lur one might have accounted for his act on the
+hypothesis that it was the last blind urge of self-preservation to
+delay, even for a moment, the inevitable tragedy in which each some
+day must play the leading role upon his little stage; but no--those
+cool, gray eyes had caught the sole possibility for escape that the
+surroundings and the circumstances offered--a tiny, moonlit patch
+of water glimmering through a small aperture in the cliff at
+the surface of the pool upon its farther side. With swift, bold
+strokes he swam for speed alone knowing that the water would in no
+way deter his pursuer. Nor did it. Tarzan heard the great splash
+as the huge creature plunged into the pool behind him; he heard
+the churning waters as it forged rapidly onward in his wake. He
+was nearing the opening--would it be large enough to permit the
+passage of his body? That portion of it which showed above the
+surface of the water most certainly would not. His life, then,
+depended upon how much of the aperture was submerged. And now it
+was directly before him and the gryf directly behind. There was
+no alternative--there was no other hope. The ape-man threw all the
+resources of his great strength into the last few strokes, extended
+his hands before him as a cutwater, submerged to the water's level
+and shot forward toward the hole.
+
+Frothing with rage was the baffled Lu-don as he realized how neatly
+the stranger she had turned his own tables upon him. He could of
+course escape the Temple of the Gryf in which her quick wit had
+temporarily imprisoned him; but during the delay, however brief,
+Ja-don would find time to steal her from the temple and deliver her
+to Ko-tan. But he would have her yet--that the high priest swore in
+the names of Jad-ben-Otho and all the demons of his faith. He hated
+Ko-tan. Secretly he had espoused the cause of Mo-sar, in whom he
+would have a willing tool. Perhaps, then, this would give him the
+opportunity he had long awaited--a pretext for inciting the revolt
+that would dethrone Ko-tan and place Mo-sar in power--with Lu-don
+the real ruler of Pal-ul-don. He licked his thin lips as he sought
+the window through which Tarzan had entered and now Lu-don's only
+avenue of escape. Cautiously he made his way across the floor,
+feeling before him with his hands, and when they discovered that
+the trap was set for him an ugly snarl broke from the priest's
+lips. "The she-devil!" he muttered; "but she shall pay, she shall
+pay--ah, Jad-ben-Otho; how she shall pay for the trick she has
+played upon Lu-don!"
+
+He crawled through the window and climbed easily downward to the
+ground. Should he pursue Ja-don and the woman, chancing an encounter
+with the fierce chief, or bide his time until treachery and intrigue
+should accomplish his design? He chose the latter solution, as
+might have been expected of such as he.
+
+Going to his quarters he summoned several of his priests--those
+who were most in his confidence and who shared his ambitions for
+absolute power of the temple over the palace--all men who hated
+Ko-tan.
+
+"The time has come," he told them, "when the authority of the temple
+must be placed definitely above that of the palace. Ko-tan must
+make way for Mo-sar, for Ko-tan has defied your high priest. Go
+then, Pan-sat, and summon Mo-sar secretly to the temple, and you
+others go to the city and prepare the faithful warriors that they
+may be in readiness when the time comes."
+
+For another hour they discussed the details of the coup d'etat that
+was to overthrow the government of Pal-ul-don. One knew a slave
+who, as the signal sounded from the temple gong, would thrust a
+knife into the heart of Ko-tan, for the price of liberty. Another
+held personal knowledge of an officer of the palace that he could
+use to compel the latter to admit a number of Lu-don's warriors
+to various parts of the palace. With Mo-sar as the cat's paw, the
+plan seemed scarce possible of failure and so they separated, going
+upon their immediate errands to palace and to city.
+
+As Pan-sat entered the palace grounds he was aware of a sudden
+commotion in the direction of the pal-e-don-so and a few minutes
+later Lu-don was surprised to see him return to the apartments of
+the high priest, breathless and excited.
+
+"What now, Pan-sat?" cried Lu-don. "Are you pursued by demons?"
+
+"O master, our time has come and gone while we sat here planning.
+Ko-tan is already dead and Mo-sar fled. His friends are fighting
+with the warriors of the palace but they have no head, while Ja-don
+leads the others. I could learn but little from frightened slaves
+who had fled at the outburst of the quarrel. One told me that Bu-lot
+had slain the king and that he had seen Mo-sar and the assassin
+hurrying from the palace."
+
+"Ja-don," muttered the high priest. "The fools will make him king
+if we do not act and act quickly. Get into the city, Pan-sat--let
+your feet fly and raise the cry that Ja-don has killed the king and
+is seeking to wrest the throne from O-lo-a. Spread the word as you
+know best how to spread it that Ja-don has threatened to destroy
+the priests and hurl the altars of the temple into Jad-ben-lul.
+Rouse the warriors of the city and urge them to attack at once.
+Lead them into the temple by the secret way that only the priests
+know and from here we may spew them out upon the palace before they
+learn the truth. Go, Pan-sat, immediately--delay not an instant."
+
+"But stay," he called as the under priest turned to leave the
+apartment; "saw or heard you anything of the strange white woman
+that Ja-don stole from the Temple of the Gryf where we have had
+her imprisoned?"
+
+"Only that Ja-don took her into the palace where he threatened the
+priests with violence if they did not permit him to pass," replied
+Pan-sat. "This they told me, but where within the palace she is
+hidden I know not."
+
+"Ko-tan ordered her to the Forbidden Garden," said Lu-don, "doubtless
+we shall find her there. And now, Pan-sat, be upon your errand."
+
+In a corridor by Lu-don's chamber a hideously masked priest leaned
+close to the curtained aperture that led within. Were he listening
+he must have heard all that passed between Pan-sat and the high priest,
+and that he had listened was evidenced by his hasty withdrawal to
+the shadows of a nearby passage as the lesser priest moved across
+the chamber toward the doorway. Pan-sat went his way in ignorance
+of the near presence that he almost brushed against as he hurried
+toward the secret passage that leads from the temple of Jad-ben-Otho,
+far beneath the palace, to the city beyond, nor did he sense the
+silent creature following in his footsteps.
+
+
+
+
+
+16
+
+The Secret Way
+
+
+
+
+It was a baffled gryf that bellowed in angry rage as Tarzan's sleek
+brown body cutting the moonlit waters shot through the aperture in
+the wall of the gryf pool and out into the lake beyond. The ape-man
+smiled as he thought of the comparative ease with which he had
+defeated the purpose of the high priest but his face clouded again
+at the ensuing remembrance of the grave danger that threatened his
+mate. His sole object now must be to return as quickly as he might
+to the chamber where he had last seen her on the third floor of
+the Temple of the Gryf, but how he was to find his way again into
+the temple grounds was a question not easy of solution.
+
+In the moonlight he could see the sheer cliff rising from the water
+for a great distance along the shore--far beyond the precincts of
+the temple and the palace--towering high above him, a seemingly
+impregnable barrier against his return. Swimming close in, he
+skirted the wall searching diligently for some foothold, however
+slight, upon its smooth, forbidding surface. Above him and quite
+out of reach were numerous apertures, but there were no means at
+hand by which he could reach them. Presently, however, his hopes
+were raised by the sight of an opening level with the surface of the
+water. It lay just ahead and a few strokes brought him to it--cautious
+strokes that brought forth no sound from the yielding waters. At
+the nearer side of the opening he stopped and reconnoitered. There
+was no one in sight. Carefully he raised his body to the threshold
+of the entrance-way, his smooth brown hide glistening in the
+moonlight as it shed the water in tiny sparkling rivulets.
+
+Before him stretched a gloomy corridor, unlighted save for the faint
+illumination of the diffused moonlight that penetrated it for but
+a short distance from the opening. Moving as rapidly as reasonable
+caution warranted, Tarzan followed the corridor into the bowels of
+the cave. There was an abrupt turn and then a flight of steps at
+the top of which lay another corridor running parallel with the
+face of the cliff. This passage was dimly lighted by flickering
+cressets set in niches in the walls at considerable distances apart.
+A quick survey showed the ape-man numerous openings upon each side
+of the corridor and his quick ears caught sounds that indicated that
+there were other beings not far distant--priests, he concluded, in
+some of the apartments letting upon the passageway.
+
+To pass undetected through this hive of enemies appeared quite
+beyond the range of possibility. He must again seek disguise and
+knowing from experience how best to secure such he crept stealthily
+along the corridor toward the nearest doorway. Like Numa, the
+lion, stalking a wary prey he crept with quivering nostrils to the
+hangings that shut off his view from the interior of the apartment
+beyond. A moment later his head disappeared within; then his
+shoulders, and his lithe body, and the hangings dropped quietly into
+place again. A moment later there filtered to the vacant corridor
+without a brief, gasping gurgle and again silence. A minute passed;
+a second, and a third, and then the hangings were thrust aside and
+a grimly masked priest of the temple of Jad-ben-Otho strode into
+the passageway.
+
+With bold steps he moved along and was about to turn into a
+diverging gallery when his attention was aroused by voices coming
+from a room upon his left. Instantly the figure halted and crossing
+the corridor stood with an ear close to the skins that concealed
+the occupants of the room from him, and him from them. Presently
+he leaped back into the concealing shadows of the diverging gallery
+and immediately thereafter the hangings by which he had been listening
+parted and a priest emerged to turn quickly down the main corridor.
+The eavesdropper waited until the other had gained a little distance
+and then stepping from his place of concealment followed silently
+behind.
+
+The way led along the corridor which ran parallel with the face
+of the cliff for some little distance and then Pan-sat, taking a
+cresset from one of the wall niches, turned abruptly into a small
+apartment at his left. The tracker followed cautiously in time to
+see the rays of the flickering light dimly visible from an aperture
+in the floor before him. Here he found a series of steps, similar
+to those used by the Waz-don in scaling the cliff to their caves,
+leading to a lower level.
+
+First satisfying himself that his guide was continuing upon his
+way unsuspecting, the other descended after him and continued his
+stealthy stalking. The passageway was now both narrow and low,
+giving but bare headroom to a tall man, and it was broken often by
+flights of steps leading always downward. The steps in each unit
+seldom numbered more than six and sometimes there was only one or
+two but in the aggregate the tracker imagined that they had descended
+between fifty and seventy-five feet from the level of the upper
+corridor when the passageway terminated in a small apartment at
+one side of which was a little pile of rubble.
+
+Setting his cresset upon the ground, Pan-sat commenced hurriedly
+to toss the bits of broken stone aside, presently revealing a small
+aperture at the base of the wall upon the opposite side of which
+there appeared to be a further accumulation of rubble. This he
+also removed until he had a hole of sufficient size to permit the
+passage of his body, and leaving the cresset still burning upon
+the floor the priest crawled through the opening he had made and
+disappeared from the sight of the watcher hiding in the shadows of
+the narrow passageway behind him.
+
+No sooner, however, was he safely gone than the other followed,
+finding himself, after passing through the hole, on a little ledge
+about halfway between the surface of the lake and the top of the
+cliff above. The ledge inclined steeply upward, ending at the rear
+of a building which stood upon the edge of the cliff and which the
+second priest entered just in time to see Pan-sat pass out into
+the city beyond.
+
+As the latter turned a nearby corner the other emerged from the
+doorway and quickly surveyed his surroundings. He was satisfied the
+priest who had led him hither had served his purpose in so far as
+the tracker was concerned. Above him, and perhaps a hundred yards
+away, the white walls of the palace gleamed against the northern
+sky. The time that it had taken him to acquire definite knowledge
+concerning the secret passageway between the temple and the city
+he did not count as lost, though he begrudged every instant that
+kept him from the prosecution of his main objective. It had seemed
+to him, however, necessary to the success of a bold plan that he
+had formulated upon overhearing the conversation between Lu-don
+and Pan-sat as he stood without the hangings of the apartment of
+the high priest.
+
+Alone against a nation of suspicious and half-savage enemies he
+could scarce hope for a successful outcome to the one great issue
+upon which hung the life and happiness of the creature he loved
+best. For her sake he must win allies and it was for this purpose
+that he had sacrificed these precious moments, but now he lost no
+further time in seeking to regain entrance to the palace grounds
+that he might search out whatever new prison they had found in
+which to incarcerate his lost love.
+
+He found no difficulty in passing the guards at the entrance to
+the palace for, as he had guessed, his priestly disguise disarmed
+all suspicion. As he approached the warriors he kept his hands behind
+him and trusted to fate that the sickly light of the single torch
+which stood beside the doorway would not reveal his un-Pal-ul-donian
+feet. As a matter of fact so accustomed were they to the comings
+and goings of the priesthood that they paid scant attention to him
+and he passed on into the palace grounds without even a moment's
+delay.
+
+His goal now was the Forbidden Garden and this he had little
+difficulty in reaching though he elected to enter it over the wall
+rather than to chance arousing any suspicion on the part of the
+guards at the inner entrance, since he could imagine no reason why
+a priest should seek entrance there thus late at night.
+
+He found the garden deserted, nor any sign of her he sought. That
+she had been brought hither he had learned from the conversation
+he had overheard between Lu-don and Pan-sat, and he was sure that
+there had been no time or opportunity for the high priest to remove
+her from the palace grounds. The garden he knew to be devoted
+exclusively to the uses of the princess and her women and it was
+only reasonable to assume therefore that if Jane had been brought
+to the garden it could only have been upon an order from Ko-tan.
+This being the case the natural assumption would follow that he
+would find her in some other portion of O-lo-a's quarters.
+
+Just where these lay he could only conjecture, but it seemed
+reasonable to believe that they must be adjacent to the garden, so
+once more he scaled the wall and passing around its end directed
+his steps toward an entrance-way which he judged must lead to that
+portion of the palace nearest the Forbidden Garden.
+
+To his surprise he found the place unguarded and then there fell
+upon his ear from an interior apartment the sound of voices raised
+in anger and excitement. Guided by the sound he quickly traversed
+several corridors and chambers until he stood before the hangings
+which separated him from the chamber from which issued the sounds
+of altercation. Raising the skins slightly he looked within. There
+were two women battling with a Ho-don warrior. One was the daughter
+of Ko-tan and the other Pan-at-lee, the Kor-ul-ja.
+
+At the moment that Tarzan lifted the hangings, the warrior threw
+O-lo-a viciously to the ground and seizing Pan-at-lee by the hair
+drew his knife and raised it above her head. Casting the encumbering
+headdress of the dead priest from his shoulders the ape-man leaped
+across the intervening space and seizing the brute from behind
+struck him a single terrible blow.
+
+As the man fell forward dead, the two women recognized Tarzan
+simultaneously. Pan-at-lee fell upon her knees and would have bowed
+her head upon his feet had he not, with an impatient gesture, commanded
+her to rise. He had no time to listen to their protestations of
+gratitude or answer the numerous questions which he knew would soon
+be flowing from those two feminine tongues.
+
+"Tell me," he cried, "where is the woman of my own race whom Ja-don
+brought here from the temple?"
+
+"She is but this moment gone," cried O-lo-a. "Mo-sar, the father
+of this thing here," and she indicated the body of Bu-lot with a
+scornful finger, "seized her and carried her away."
+
+"Which way?" he cried. "Tell me quickly, in what direction he took
+her."
+
+"That way," cried Pan-at-lee, pointing to the doorway through
+which Mo-sar had passed. "They would have taken the princess and
+the stranger woman to Tu-lur, Mo-sar's city by the Dark Lake."
+
+"I go to find her," he said to Pan-at-lee, "she is my mate. And if
+I survive I shall find means to liberate you too and return you to
+Om-at."
+
+Before the girl could reply he had disappeared behind the hangings
+of the door near the foot of the dais. The corridor through which
+he ran was illy lighted and like nearly all its kind in the Ho-don
+city wound in and out and up and down, but at last it terminated
+at a sudden turn which brought him into a courtyard filled with
+warriors, a portion of the palace guard that had just been summoned
+by one of the lesser palace chiefs to join the warriors of Ko-tan
+in the battle that was raging in the banquet hall.
+
+At sight of Tarzan, who in his haste had forgotten to recover his
+disguising headdress, a great shout arose. "Blasphemer!" "Defiler
+of the temple!" burst hoarsely from savage throats, and mingling
+with these were a few who cried, "Dor-ul-Otho!" evidencing the fact
+that there were among them still some who clung to their belief in
+his divinity.
+
+To cross the courtyard armed only with a knife, in the face of
+this great throng of savage fighting men seemed even to the giant
+ape-man a thing impossible of achievement. He must use his wits
+now and quickly too, for they were closing upon him. He might have
+turned and fled back through the corridor but flight now even in
+the face of dire necessity would but delay him in his pursuit of
+Mo-sar and his mate.
+
+"Stop!" he cried, raising his palm against them. "I am the Dor-ul-Otho
+and I come to you with a word from Ja-don, who it is my father's
+will shall be your king now that Ko-tan is slain. Lu-don, the
+high priest, has planned to seize the palace and destroy the loyal
+warriors that Mo-sar may be made king--Mo-sar who will be the tool
+and creature of Lu-don. Follow me. There is no time to lose if you
+would prevent the traitors whom Lu-don has organized in the city
+from entering the palace by a secret way and overpowering Ja-don
+and the faithful band within."
+
+For a moment they hesitated. At last one spoke. "What guarantee
+have we," he demanded, "that it is not you who would betray us and
+by leading us now away from the fighting in the banquet hall cause
+those who fight at Ja-don's side to be defeated?"
+
+"My life will be your guarantee," replied Tarzan. "If you find
+that I have not spoken the truth you are sufficient in numbers to
+execute whatever penalty you choose. But come, there is not time
+to lose. Already are the lesser priests gathering their warriors
+in the city below," and without waiting for any further parley
+he strode directly toward them in the direction of the gate upon
+the opposite side of the courtyard which led toward the principal
+entrance to the palace ground.
+
+Slower in wit than he, they were swept away by his greater initiative
+and that compelling power which is inherent to all natural leaders.
+And so they followed him, the giant ape-man with a dead tail dragging
+the ground behind him--a demi-god where another would have been
+ridiculous. Out into the city he led them and down toward the
+unpretentious building that hid Lu-don's secret passageway from
+the city to the temple, and as they rounded the last turn they
+saw before them a gathering of warriors which was being rapidly
+augmented from all directions as the traitors of A-lur mobilized
+at the call of the priesthood.
+
+"You spoke the truth, stranger," said the chief who marched at
+Tarzan's side, "for there are the warriors with the priests among
+them, even as you told us."
+
+"And now," replied the ape-man, "that I have fulfilled my promise I
+will go my way after Mo-sar, who has done me a great wrong. Tell
+Ja-don that Jad-ben-Otho is upon his side, nor do you forget to
+tell him also that it was the Dor-ul-Otho who thwarted Lu-don's
+plan to seize the palace."
+
+"I will not forget," replied the chief. "Go your way. We are enough
+to overpower the traitors."
+
+"Tell me," asked Tarzan, "how I may know this city of Tu-lur?"
+
+"It lies upon the south shore of the second lake below A-lur,"
+replied the chief, "the lake that is called Jad-in-lul."
+
+They were now approaching the band of traitors, who evidently
+thought that this was another contingent of their own party since
+they made no effort either toward defense or retreat. Suddenly the
+chief raised his voice in a savage war cry that was immediately
+taken up by his followers, and simultaneously, as though the cry
+were a command, the entire party broke into a mad charge upon the
+surprised rebels.
+
+Satisfied with the outcome of his suddenly conceived plan and sure
+that it would work to the disadvantage of Lu-don, Tarzan turned
+into a side street and pointed his steps toward the outskirts of
+the city in search of the trail that led southward toward Tu-lur.
+
+
+
+
+
+17
+
+By Jad-bal-lul
+
+
+
+
+As Mo-sar carried Jane Clayton from the palace of Ko-tan, the king,
+the woman struggled incessantly to regain her freedom. He tried
+to compel her to walk, but despite his threats and his abuse she
+would not voluntarily take a single step in the direction in which
+he wished her to go. Instead she threw herself to the ground each
+time he sought to place her upon her feet, and so of necessity he
+was compelled to carry her though at last he tied her hands and
+gagged her to save himself from further lacerations, for the beauty
+and slenderness of the woman belied her strength and courage. When
+he came at last to where his men had gathered he was glad indeed
+to turn her over to a couple of stalwart warriors, but these too
+were forced to carry her since Mo-sar's fear of the vengeance of
+Ko-tan's retainers would brook no delays.
+
+And thus they came down out of the hills from which A-lur is carved,
+to the meadows that skirt the lower end of Jad-ben-lul, with Jane
+Clayton carried between two of Mo-sar's men. At the edge of the lake
+lay a fleet of strong canoes, hollowed from the trunks of trees,
+their bows and sterns carved in the semblance of grotesque beasts
+or birds and vividly colored by some master in that primitive school
+of art, which fortunately is not without its devotees today.
+
+Into the stern of one of these canoes the warriors tossed their
+captive at a sign from Mo-sar, who came and stood beside her as
+the warriors were finding their places in the canoes and selecting
+their paddles.
+
+"Come, Beautiful One," he said, "let us be friends and you shall
+not be harmed. You will find Mo-sar a kind master if you do his
+bidding," and thinking to make a good impression on her he removed
+the gag from her mouth and the thongs from her wrists, knowing well
+that she could not escape surrounded as she was by his warriors, and
+presently, when they were out on the lake, she would be as safely
+imprisoned as though he held her behind bars.
+
+And so the fleet moved off to the accompaniment of the gentle
+splashing of a hundred paddles, to follow the windings of the rivers
+and lakes through which the waters of the Valley of Jad-ben-Otho
+empty into the great morass to the south. The warriors, resting
+upon one knee, faced the bow and in the last canoe Mo-sar tiring
+of his fruitless attempts to win responses from his sullen captive,
+squatted in the bottom of the canoe with his back toward her and
+resting his head upon the gunwale sought sleep.
+
+Thus they moved in silence between the verdure-clad banks of the
+little river through which the waters of Jad-ben-lul emptied--now
+in the moonlight, now in dense shadow where great trees overhung
+the stream, and at last out upon the waters of another lake, the
+black shores of which seemed far away under the weird influence of
+a moonlight night.
+
+Jane Clayton sat alert in the stern of the last canoe. For months
+she had been under constant surveillance, the prisoner first of one
+ruthless race and now the prisoner of another. Since the long-gone
+day that Hauptmann Fritz Schneider and his band of native German
+troops had treacherously wrought the Kaiser's work of rapine
+and destruction on the Greystoke bungalow and carried her away to
+captivity she had not drawn a free breath. That she had survived
+unharmed the countless dangers through which she had passed
+she attributed solely to the beneficence of a kind and watchful
+Providence.
+
+At first she had been held on the orders of the German High Command
+with a view of her ultimate value as a hostage and during these
+months she had been subjected to neither hardship nor oppression,
+but when the Germans had become hard pressed toward the close of
+their unsuccessful campaign in East Africa it had been determined
+to take her further into the interior and now there was an element
+of revenge in their motives, since it must have been apparent that
+she could no longer be of any possible military value.
+
+Bitter indeed were the Germans against that half-savage mate of hers
+who had cunningly annoyed and harassed them with a fiendishness of
+persistence and ingenuity that had resulted in a noticeable loss
+in morale in the sector he had chosen for his operations. They had
+to charge against him the lives of certain officers that he had
+deliberately taken with his own hands, and one entire section of
+trench that had made possible a disastrous turning movement by the
+British. Tarzan had out-generaled them at every point. He had met
+cunning with cunning and cruelty with cruelties until they feared
+and loathed his very name. The cunning trick that they had played
+upon him in destroying his home, murdering his retainers, and covering
+the abduction of his wife in such a way as to lead him to believe
+that she had been killed, they had regretted a thousand times,
+for a thousandfold had they paid the price for their senseless
+ruthlessness, and now, unable to wreak their vengeance directly upon
+him, they had conceived the idea of inflicting further suffering
+upon his mate.
+
+In sending her into the interior to avoid the path of the victorious
+British, they had chosen as her escort Lieutenant Erich Obergatz
+who had been second in command of Schneider's company, and who
+alone of its officers had escaped the consuming vengeance of the
+ape-man. For a long time Obergatz had held her in a native village,
+the chief of which was still under the domination of his fear
+of the ruthless German oppressors. While here only hardships and
+discomforts assailed her, Obergatz himself being held in leash by
+the orders of his distant superior but as time went on the life in
+the village grew to be a veritable hell of cruelties and oppressions
+practiced by the arrogant Prussian upon the villagers and the members
+of his native command--for time hung heavily upon the hands of the
+lieutenant and with idleness combining with the personal discomforts
+he was compelled to endure, his none too agreeable temper found
+an outlet first in petty interference with the chiefs and later in
+the practice of absolute cruelties upon them.
+
+What the self-sufficient German could not see was plain to Jane
+Clayton--that the sympathies of Obergatz' native soldiers lay with
+the villagers and that all were so heartily sickened by his abuse
+that it needed now but the slightest spark to detonate the mine
+of revenge and hatred that the pig-headed Hun had been assiduously
+fabricating beneath his own person.
+
+And at last it came, but from an unexpected source in the form of
+a German native deserter from the theater of war. Footsore, weary,
+and spent, he dragged himself into the village late one afternoon,
+and before Obergatz was even aware of his presence the whole
+village knew that the power of Germany in Africa was at an end. It
+did not take long for the lieutenant's native soldiers to realize
+that the authority that held them in service no longer existed and
+that with it had gone the power to pay them their miserable wage.
+Or at least, so they reasoned. To them Obergatz no longer represented
+aught else than a powerless and hated foreigner, and short indeed
+would have been his shrift had not a native woman who had conceived
+a doglike affection for Jane Clayton hurried to her with word of
+the murderous plan, for the fate of the innocent white woman lay
+in the balance beside that of the guilty Teuton.
+
+"Already they are quarreling as to which one shall possess you,"
+she told Jane.
+
+"When will they come for us?" asked Jane. "Did you hear them say?"
+
+"Tonight," replied the woman, "for even now that he has none to
+fight for him they still fear the white man. And so they will come
+at night and kill him while he sleeps."
+
+Jane thanked the woman and sent her away lest the suspicion of her
+fellows be aroused against her when they discovered that the two
+whites had learned of their intentions. The woman went at once to
+the hut occupied by Obergatz. She had never gone there before and
+the German looked up in surprise as he saw who his visitor was.
+
+Briefly she told him what she had heard. At first he was inclined
+to bluster arrogantly, with a great display of bravado but she
+silenced him peremptorily.
+
+"Such talk is useless," she said shortly. "You have brought upon
+yourself the just hatred of these people. Regardless of the truth
+or falsity of the report which has been brought to them, they
+believe in it and there is nothing now between you and your Maker
+other than flight. We shall both be dead before morning if we are
+unable to escape from the village unseen. If you go to them now
+with your silly protestations of authority you will be dead a little
+sooner, that is all."
+
+"You think it is as bad as that?" he said, a noticeable alteration
+in his tone and manner.
+
+"It is precisely as I have told you," she replied. "They will come
+tonight and kill you while you sleep. Find me pistols and a rifle
+and ammunition and we will pretend that we go into the jungle to
+hunt. That you have done often. Perhaps it will arouse suspicion
+that I accompany you but that we must chance. And be sure my dear
+Herr Lieutenant to bluster and curse and abuse your servants unless
+they note a change in your manner and realizing your fear know
+that you suspect their intention. If all goes well then we can go
+out into the jungle to hunt and we need not return.
+
+"But first and now you must swear never to harm me, or otherwise
+it would be better that I called the chief and turned you over to
+him and then put a bullet into my own head, for unless you swear
+as I have asked I were no better alone in the jungle with you than
+here at the mercies of these degraded blacks."
+
+"I swear," he replied solemnly, "in the names of my God and my
+Kaiser that no harm shall befall you at my hands, Lady Greystoke."
+
+"Very well," she said, "we will make this pact to assist each other
+to return to civilization, but let it be understood that there
+is and never can be any semblance even of respect for you upon my
+part. I am drowning and you are the straw. Carry that always in
+your mind, German."
+
+If Obergatz had held any doubt as to the sincerity of her word it
+would have been wholly dissipated by the scathing contempt of her
+tone. And so Obergatz, without further parley, got pistols and an
+extra rifle for Jane, as well as bandoleers of cartridges. In his
+usual arrogant and disagreeable manner he called his servants,
+telling them that he and the white kali were going out into the brush
+to hunt. The beaters would go north as far as the little hill and
+then circle back to the east and in toward the village. The gun
+carriers he directed to take the extra pieces and precede himself
+and Jane slowly toward the east, waiting for them at the ford about
+half a mile distant. The blacks responded with greater alacrity
+than usual and it was noticeable to both Jane and Obergatz that
+they left the village whispering and laughing.
+
+"The swine think it is a great joke," growled Obergatz, "that the
+afternoon before I die I go out and hunt meat for them."
+
+As soon as the gun bearers disappeared in the jungle beyond the
+village the two Europeans followed along the same trail, nor was
+there any attempt upon the part of Obergatz' native soldiers, or
+the warriors of the chief to detain them, for they too doubtless
+were more than willing that the whites should bring them in one
+more mess of meat before they killed them.
+
+A quarter of a mile from the village, Obergatz turned toward the
+south from the trail that led to the ford and hurrying onward the
+two put as great a distance as possible between them and the village
+before night fell. They knew from the habits of their erstwhile
+hosts that there was little danger of pursuit by night since the
+villagers held Numa, the lion, in too great respect to venture
+needlessly beyond their stockade during the hours that the king of
+beasts was prone to choose for hunting.
+
+And thus began a seemingly endless sequence of frightful days and
+horror-laden nights as the two fought their way toward the south
+in the face of almost inconceivable hardships, privations, and
+dangers. The east coast was nearer but Obergatz positively refused
+to chance throwing himself into the hands of the British by returning
+to the territory which they now controlled, insisting instead upon
+attempting to make his way through an unknown wilderness to South
+Africa where, among the Boers, he was convinced he would find willing
+sympathizers who would find some way to return him in safety to
+Germany, and the woman was perforce compelled to accompany him.
+
+And so they had crossed the great thorny, waterless steppe and
+come at last to the edge of the morass before Pal-ul-don. They had
+reached this point just before the rainy season when the waters of
+the morass were at their lowest ebb. At this time a hard crust is
+baked upon the dried surface of the marsh and there is only the
+open water at the center to materially impede progress. It is a
+condition that exists perhaps not more than a few weeks, or even
+days at the termination of long periods of drought, and so the two
+crossed the otherwise almost impassable barrier without realizing
+its latent terrors. Even the open water in the center chanced to
+be deserted at the time by its frightful denizens which the drought
+and the receding waters had driven southward toward the mouth
+of Pal-ul-don's largest river which carries the waters out of the
+Valley of Jad-ben-Otho.
+
+Their wanderings carried them across the mountains and into the
+Valley of Jad-ben-Otho at the source of one of the larger streams
+which bears the mountain waters down into the valley to empty them
+into the main river just below The Great Lake on whose northern
+shore lies A-lur. As they had come down out of the mountains they
+had been surprised by a party of Ho-don hunters. Obergatz had
+escaped while Jane had been taken prisoner and brought to A-lur.
+She had neither seen nor heard aught of the German since that time
+and she did not know whether he had perished in this strange land,
+or succeeded in successfully eluding its savage denizens and making
+his way at last into South Africa.
+
+For her part, she had been incarcerated alternately in the palace
+and the temple as either Ko-tan or Lu-don succeeded in wresting
+her temporarily from the other by various strokes of cunning and
+intrigue. And now at last she was in the power of a new captor,
+one whom she knew from the gossip of the temple and the palace to
+be cruel and degraded. And she was in the stern of the last canoe,
+and every enemy back was toward her, while almost at her feet
+Mo-sar's loud snores gave ample evidence of his unconsciousness to
+his immediate surroundings.
+
+The dark shore loomed closer to the south as Jane Clayton, Lady
+Greystoke, slid quietly over the stern of the canoe into the chill
+waters of the lake. She scarcely moved other than to keep her
+nostrils above the surface while the canoe was yet discernible in
+the last rays of the declining moon. Then she struck out toward
+the southern shore.
+
+Alone, unarmed, all but naked, in a country overrun by savage beasts
+and hostile men, she yet felt for the first time in many months
+a sensation of elation and relief. She was free! What if the next
+moment brought death, she knew again, at least a brief instant of
+absolute freedom. Her blood tingled to the almost forgotten sensation
+and it was with difficulty that she restrained a glad triumphant
+cry as she clambered from the quiet waters and stood upon the silent
+beach.
+
+Before her loomed a forest, darkly, and from its depths came those
+nameless sounds that are a part of the night life of the jungle--the
+rustling of leaves in the wind, the rubbing together of contiguous
+branches, the scurrying of a rodent, all magnified by the darkness
+to sinister and awe-inspiring proportions; the hoot of an owl, the
+distant scream of a great cat, the barking of wild dogs, attested
+the presence of the myriad life she could not see--the savage life,
+the free life of which she was now a part. And then there came to
+her, possibly for the first time since the giant ape-man had come
+into her life, a fuller realization of what the jungle meant to him,
+for though alone and unprotected from its hideous dangers she yet
+felt its lure upon her and an exaltation that she had not dared
+hope to feel again.
+
+Ah, if that mighty mate of hers were but by her side! What utter
+joy and bliss would be hers! She longed for no more than this. The
+parade of cities, the comforts and luxuries of civilization held
+forth no allure half as insistent as the glorious freedom of the
+jungle.
+
+A lion moaned in the blackness to her right, eliciting delicious
+thrills that crept along her spine. The hair at the back of
+her head seemed to stand erect--yet she was unafraid. The muscles
+bequeathed her by some primordial ancestor reacted instinctively
+to the presence of an ancient enemy--that was all. The woman moved
+slowly and deliberately toward the wood. Again the lion moaned;
+this time nearer. She sought a low-hanging branch and finding it
+swung easily into the friendly shelter of the tree. The long and
+perilous journey with Obergatz had trained her muscles and her
+nerves to such unaccustomed habits. She found a safe resting place
+such as Tarzan had taught her was best and there she curled herself,
+thirty feet above the ground, for a night's rest. She was cold
+and uncomfortable and yet she slept, for her heart was warm with
+renewed hope and her tired brain had found temporary surcease from
+worry.
+
+She slept until the heat of the sun, high in the heavens, awakened
+her. She was rested and now her body was well as her heart was warm.
+A sensation of ease and comfort and happiness pervaded her being.
+She rose upon her gently swaying couch and stretched luxuriously,
+her naked limbs and lithe body mottled by the sunlight filtering
+through the foliage above combined with the lazy gesture to impart
+to her appearance something of the leopard. With careful eye she
+scrutinized the ground below and with attentive ear she listened for
+any warning sound that might suggest the near presence of enemies,
+either man or beast. Satisfied at last that there was nothing
+close of which she need have fear she clambered to the ground. She
+wished to bathe but the lake was too exposed and just a bit too far
+from the safety of the trees for her to risk it until she became
+more familiar with her surroundings. She wandered aimlessly through
+the forest searching for food which she found in abundance. She
+ate and rested, for she had no objective as yet. Her freedom was
+too new to be spoiled by plannings for the future. The haunts of
+civilized man seemed to her now as vague and unattainable as the
+half-forgotten substance of a dream. If she could but live on here
+in peace, waiting, waiting for--him. It was the old hope revived.
+She knew that he would come some day, if he lived. She had always
+known that, though recently she had believed that he would come too
+late. If he lived! Yes, he would come if he lived, and if he did
+not live she were as well off here as elsewhere, for then nothing
+mattered, only to wait for the end as patiently as might be.
+
+Her wanderings brought her to a crystal brook and there she drank
+and bathed beneath an overhanging tree that offered her quick asylum
+in the event of danger. It was a quiet and beautiful spot and she
+loved it from the first. The bottom of the brook was paved with
+pretty stones and bits of glassy obsidian. As she gathered a handful
+of the pebbles and held them up to look at them she noticed that
+one of her fingers was bleeding from a clean, straight cut. She fell
+to searching for the cause and presently discovered it in one of
+the fragments of volcanic glass which revealed an edge that was
+almost razor-like. Jane Clayton was elated. Here, God-given to
+her hands, was the first beginning with which she might eventually
+arrive at both weapons and tools--a cutting edge. Everything was
+possible to him who possessed it--nothing without.
+
+She sought until she had collected many of the precious bits
+of stone--until the pouch that hung at her right side was almost
+filled. Then she climbed into the great tree to examine them at
+leisure. There were some that looked like knife blades, and some
+that could easily be fashioned into spear heads, and many smaller
+ones that nature seemed to have intended for the tips of savage
+arrows.
+
+The spear she would essay first--that would be easiest. There was
+a hollow in the bole of the tree in a great crotch high above the
+ground. Here she cached all of her treasure except a single knifelike
+sliver. With this she descended to the ground and searching out a
+slender sapling that grew arrow-straight she hacked and sawed until
+she could break it off without splitting the wood. It was just the
+right diameter for the shaft of a spear--a hunting spear such as
+her beloved Waziri had liked best. How often had she watched them
+fashioning them, and they had taught her how to use them, too--them
+and the heavy war spears--laughing and clapping their hands as her
+proficiency increased.
+
+She knew the arborescent grasses that yielded the longest and
+toughest fibers and these she sought and carried to her tree with
+the spear shaft that was to be. Clambering to her crotch she bent
+to her work, humming softly a little tune. She caught herself and
+smiled--it was the first time in all these bitter months that song
+had passed her lips or such a smile.
+
+"I feel," she sighed, "I almost feel that John is near--my John--my
+Tarzan!"
+
+She cut the spear shaft to the proper length and removed the twigs
+and branches and the bark, whittling and scraping at the nubs
+until the surface was all smooth and straight. Then she split one
+end and inserted a spear point, shaping the wood until it fitted
+perfectly. This done she laid the shaft aside and fell to splitting
+the thick grass stems and pounding and twisting them until she had
+separated and partially cleaned the fibers. These she took down
+to the brook and washed and brought back again and wound tightly
+around the cleft end of the shaft, which she had notched to receive
+them, and the upper part of the spear head which she had also
+notched slightly with a bit of stone. It was a crude spear but the
+best that she could attain in so short a time. Later, she promised
+herself, she should have others--many of them--and they would be
+spears of which even the greatest of the Waziri spear-men might be
+proud.
+
+
+
+
+
+18
+
+The Lion Pit of Tu-lur
+
+
+
+
+Though Tarzan searched the outskirts of the city until nearly dawn
+he discovered nowhere the spoor of his mate. The breeze coming down
+from the mountains brought to his nostrils a diversity of scents
+but there was not among them the slightest suggestion of her whom
+he sought. The natural deduction was therefore that she had been
+taken in some other direction. In his search he had many times
+crossed the fresh tracks of many men leading toward the lake and
+these he concluded had probably been made by Jane Clayton's abductors.
+It had only been to minimize the chance of error by the process of
+elimination that he had carefully reconnoitered every other avenue
+leading from A-lur toward the southeast where lay Mo-sar's city of
+Tu-lur, and now he followed the trail to the shores of Jad-ben-lul
+where the party had embarked upon the quiet waters in their sturdy
+canoes.
+
+He found many other craft of the same description moored along the
+shore and one of these he commandeered for the purpose of pursuit.
+It was daylight when he passed through the lake which lies next
+below Jad-ben-lul and paddling strongly passed within sight of the
+very tree in which his lost mate lay sleeping.
+
+Had the gentle wind that caressed the bosom of the lake been blowing
+from a southerly direction the giant ape-man and Jane Clayton would
+have been reunited then, but an unkind fate had willed otherwise
+and the opportunity passed with the passing of his canoe which
+presently his powerful strokes carried out of sight into the stream
+at the lower end of the lake.
+
+Following the winding river which bore a considerable distance to
+the north before doubling back to empty into the Jad-in-lul, the
+ape-man missed a portage that would have saved him hours of paddling.
+
+It was at the upper end of this portage where Mo-sar and his warriors
+had debarked that the chief discovered the absence of his captive.
+As Mo-sar had been asleep since shortly after their departure from
+A-lur, and as none of the warriors recalled when she had last been
+seen, it was impossible to conjecture with any degree of accuracy
+the place where she had escaped. The consensus of opinion was,
+however, that it had been in the narrow river connecting Jad-ben-lul
+with the lake next below it, which is called Jad-bal-lul, which
+freely translated means the lake of gold. Mo-sar had been very wroth
+and having himself been the only one at fault he naturally sought
+with great diligence to fix the blame upon another.
+
+He would have returned in search of her had he not feared to meet
+a pursuing company dispatched either by Ja-don or the high priest,
+both of whom, he knew, had just grievances against him. He would
+not even spare a boatload of his warriors from his own protection
+to return in quest of the fugitive but hastened onward with as
+little delay as possible across the portage and out upon the waters
+of Jad-in-lul.
+
+The morning sun was just touching the white domes of Tu-lur when
+Mo-sar's paddlers brought their canoes against the shore at the
+city's edge. Safe once more behind his own walls and protected
+by many warriors, the courage of the chief returned sufficiently
+at least to permit him to dispatch three canoes in search of Jane
+Clayton, and also to go as far as A-lur if possible to learn what
+had delayed Bu-lot, whose failure to reach the canoes with the
+balance of the party at the time of the flight from the northern
+city had in no way delayed Mo-sar's departure, his own safety being
+of far greater moment than that of his son.
+
+As the three canoes reached the portage on their return journey
+the warriors who were dragging them from the water were suddenly
+startled by the appearance of two priests, carrying a light canoe
+in the direction of Jad-in-lul. At first they thought them the
+advance guard of a larger force of Lu-don's followers, although
+the correctness of such a theory was belied by their knowledge that
+priests never accepted the risks or perils of a warrior's vocation,
+nor even fought until driven into a corner and forced to do so.
+Secretly the warriors of Pal-ul-don held the emasculated priesthood
+in contempt and so instead of immediately taking up the offensive
+as they would have had the two men been warriors from A-lur instead
+of priests, they waited to question them.
+
+At sight of the warriors the priests made the sign of peace and
+upon being asked if they were alone they answered in the affirmative.
+
+The leader of Mo-sar's warriors permitted them to approach. "What
+do you here," he asked, "in the country of Mo-sar, so far from your
+own city?"
+
+"We carry a message from Lu-don, the high priest, to Mo-sar,"
+explained one.
+
+"Is it a message of peace or of war?" asked the warrior.
+
+"It is an offer of peace," replied the priest.
+
+"And Lu-don is sending no warriors behind you?" queried the fighting
+man.
+
+"We are alone," the priest assured him. "None in A-lur save Lu-don
+knows that we have come upon this errand."
+
+"Then go your way," said the warrior.
+
+"Who is that?" asked one of the priests suddenly, pointing toward
+the upper end of the lake at the point where the river from
+Jad-bal-lul entered it.
+
+All eyes turned in the direction that he had indicated to see
+a lone warrior paddling rapidly into Jad-in-lul, the prow of his
+canoe pointing toward Tu-lur. The warriors and the priests drew
+into the concealment of the bushes on either side of the portage.
+
+"It is the terrible man who called himself the Dor-ul-Otho,"
+whispered one of the priests. "I would know that figure among a
+great multitude as far as I could see it."
+
+"You are right, priest," cried one of the warriors who had seen
+Tarzan the day that he had first entered Ko-tan's palace. "It is
+indeed he who has been rightly called Tarzan-jad-guru."
+
+"Hasten priests," cried the leader of the party. "You are two paddles
+in a light canoe. Easily can you reach Tu-lur ahead of him and warn
+Mo-sar of his coming, for he has but only entered the lake."
+
+For a moment the priests demurred for they had no stomach for an
+encounter with this terrible man, but the warrior insisted and even
+went so far as to threaten them. Their canoe was taken from them
+and pushed into the lake and they were all but lifted bodily from
+their feet and put aboard it. Still protesting they were shoved
+out upon the water where they were immediately in full view of the
+lone paddler above them. Now there was no alternative. The city
+of Tu-lur offered the only safety and bending to their paddles the
+two priests sent their craft swiftly in the direction of the city.
+
+The warriors withdrew again to the concealment of the foliage. If
+Tarzan had seen them and should come hither to investigate there
+were thirty of them against one and naturally they had no fear
+of the outcome, but they did not consider it necessary to go out
+upon the lake to meet him since they had been sent to look for the
+escaped prisoner and not to intercept the strange warrior, the
+stories of whose ferocity and prowess doubtless helped them to
+arrive at their decision to provoke no uncalled-for quarrel with
+him.
+
+If he had seen them he gave no sign, but continued paddling steadily
+and strongly toward the city, nor did he increase his speed as the
+two priests shot out in full view. The moment the priests' canoe
+touched the shore by the city its occupants leaped out and hurried
+swiftly toward the palace gate, casting affrighted glances behind
+them. They sought immediate audience with Mo-sar, after warning
+the warriors on guard that Tarzan was approaching.
+
+They were conducted at once to the chief, whose court was a smaller
+replica of that of the king of A-lur. "We come from Lu-don, the
+high priest," explained the spokesman. "He wishes the friendship
+of Mo-sar, who has always been his friend. Ja-don is gathering
+warriors to make himself king. Throughout the villages of the
+Ho-don are thousands who will obey the commands of Lu-don, the high
+priest. Only with Lu-don's assistance can Mo-sar become king, and
+the message from Lu-don is that if Mo-sar would retain the friendship
+of Lu-don he must return immediately the woman he took from the
+quarters of the Princess O-lo-a."
+
+At this juncture a warrior entered. His excitement was evident.
+"The Dor-ul-Otho has come to Tu-lur and demands to see Mo-sar at
+once," he said.
+
+"The Dor-ul-Otho!" exclaimed Mo-sar.
+
+"That is the message he sent," replied the warrior, "and indeed he
+is not as are the people of Pal-ul-don. He is, we think, the same
+of whom the warriors that returned from A-lur today told us and
+whom some call Tarzan-jad-guru and some Dor-ul-Otho. But indeed
+only the son of god would dare come thus alone to a strange city,
+so it must be that he speaks the truth."
+
+Mo-sar, his heart filled with terror and indecision, turned
+questioningly toward the priests.
+
+"Receive him graciously, Mo-sar," counseled he who had spoken before,
+his advice prompted by the petty shrewdness of his defective brain
+which, under the added influence of Lu-don's tutorage leaned always
+toward duplicity. "Receive him graciously and when he is quite
+convinced of your friendship he will be off his guard, and then
+you may do with him as you will. But if possible, Mo-sar, and you
+would win the undying gratitude of Lu-don, the high-priest, save
+him alive for my master."
+
+Mo-sar nodded understandingly and turning to the warrior commanded
+that he conduct the visitor to him.
+
+"We must not be seen by the creature," said one of the priests.
+"Give us your answer to Lu-don, Mo-sar, and we will go our way."
+
+"Tell Lu-don," replied the chief, "that the woman would have been
+lost to him entirely had it not been for me. I sought to bring
+her to Tu-lur that I might save her for him from the clutches of
+Ja-don, but during the night she escaped. Tell Lu-don that I have
+sent thirty warriors to search for her. It is strange you did not
+see them as you came."
+
+"We did," replied the priests, "but they told us nothing of the
+purpose of their journey."
+
+"It is as I have told you," said Mo-sar, "and if they find her,
+assure your master that she will be kept unharmed in Tu-lur for
+him. Also tell him that I will send my warriors to join with his
+against Ja-don whenever he sends word that he wants them. Now go,
+for Tarzan-jad-guru will soon be here."
+
+He signaled to a slave. "Lead the priests to the temple," he
+commanded, "and ask the high priest of Tu-lur to see that they are
+fed and permitted to return to A-lur when they will."
+
+The two priests were conducted from the apartment by the slave
+through a doorway other than that at which they had entered, and
+a moment later Tarzan-jad-guru strode into the presence of Mo-sar,
+ahead of the warrior whose duty it had been to conduct and announce
+him. The ape-man made no sign of greeting or of peace but strode
+directly toward the chief who, only by the exertion of his utmost
+powers of will, hid the terror that was in his heart at sight of
+the giant figure and the scowling face.
+
+"I am the Dor-ul-Otho," said the ape-man in level tones that carried
+to the mind of Mo-sar a suggestion of cold steel; "I am Dor-ul-Otho,
+and I come to Tu-lur for the woman you stole from the apartments
+of O-lo-a, the princess."
+
+The very boldness of Tarzan's entry into this hostile city had had
+the effect of giving him a great moral advantage over Mo-sar and
+the savage warriors who stood upon either side of the chief. Truly
+it seemed to them that no other than the son of Jad-ben-Otho would
+dare so heroic an act. Would any mortal warrior act thus boldly,
+and alone enter the presence of a powerful chief and, in the midst
+of a score of warriors, arrogantly demand an accounting? No, it
+was beyond reason. Mo-sar was faltering in his decision to betray
+the stranger by seeming friendliness. He even paled to a sudden
+thought--Jad-ben-Otho knew everything, even our inmost thoughts.
+Was it not therefore possible that this creature, if after all it
+should prove true that he was the Dor-ul-Otho, might even now be
+reading the wicked design that the priests had implanted in the
+brain of Mo-sar and which he had entertained so favorably? The
+chief squirmed and fidgeted upon the bench of hewn rock that was
+his throne.
+
+"Quick," snapped the ape-man, "Where is she?"
+
+"She is not here," cried Mo-sar.
+
+"You lie," replied Tarzan.
+
+"As Jad-ben-Otho is my witness, she is not in Tu-lur," insisted
+the chief. "You may search the palace and the temple and the entire
+city but you will not find her, for she is not here."
+
+"Where is she, then?" demanded the ape-man. "You took her from
+the palace at A-lur. If she is not here, where is she? Tell me not
+that harm has befallen her," and he took a sudden threatening step
+toward Mo-sar, that sent the chief shrinking back in terror.
+
+"Wait," he cried, "if you are indeed the Dor-ul-Otho you will know
+that I speak the truth. I took her from the palace of Ko-tan to
+save her for Lu-don, the high priest, lest with Ko-tan dead Ja-don
+seize her. But during the night she escaped from me between here
+and A-lur, and I have but just sent three canoes full-manned in
+search of her."
+
+Something in the chief's tone and manner assured the ape-man that
+he spoke in part the truth, and that once again he had braved
+incalculable dangers and suffered loss of time futilely.
+
+"What wanted the priests of Lu-don that preceded me here?" demanded
+Tarzan chancing a shrewd guess that the two he had seen paddling
+so frantically to avoid a meeting with him had indeed come from
+the high priest at A-lur.
+
+"They came upon an errand similar to yours," replied Mo-sar; "to
+demand the return of the woman whom Lu-don thought I had stolen
+from him, thus wronging me as deeply, O Dor-ul-Otho, as have you."
+
+"I would question the priests," said Tarzan. "Bring them hither."
+His peremptory and arrogant manner left Mo-sar in doubt as to
+whether to be more incensed, or terrified, but ever as is the way
+with such as he, he concluded that the first consideration was his
+own safety. If he could transfer the attention and the wrath of
+this terrible man from himself to Lu-don's priests it would more
+than satisfy him and if they should conspire to harm him, then Mo-sar
+would be safe in the eyes of Jad-ben-Otho if it finally developed
+that the stranger was in reality the son of god. He felt uncomfortable
+in Tarzan's presence and this fact rather accentuated his doubt,
+for thus indeed would mortal feel in the presence of a god. Now he
+saw a way to escape, at least temporarily.
+
+"I will fetch them myself, Dor-ul-Otho," he said, and turning,
+left the apartment. His hurried steps brought him quickly to the
+temple, for the palace grounds of Tu-lur, which also included the
+temple as in all of the Ho-don cities, covered a much smaller area
+than those of the larger city of A-lur. He found Lu-don's messengers
+with the high priest of his own temple and quickly transmitted to
+them the commands of the ape-man.
+
+"What do you intend to do with him?" asked one of the priests.
+
+"I have no quarrel with him," replied Mo-sar. "He came in peace
+and he may depart in peace, for who knows but that he is indeed
+the Dor-ul-Otho?"
+
+"We know that he is not," replied Lu-don's emissary. "We have
+every proof that he is only mortal, a strange creature from another
+country. Already has Lu-don offered his life to Jad-ben-Otho if he
+is wrong in his belief that this creature is not the son of god.
+If the high priest of A-lur, who is the highest priest of all the
+high priests of Pal-ul-don is thus so sure that the creature in an
+impostor as to stake his life upon his judgment then who are we to
+give credence to the claims of this stranger? No, Mo-sar, you need
+not fear him. He is only a warrior who may be overcome with the
+same weapons that subdue your own fighting men. Were it not for
+Lu-don's command that he be taken alive I would urge you to set
+your warriors upon him and slay him, but the commands of Lu-don are
+the commands of Jad-ben-Otho himself, and those we may not disobey."
+
+But still the remnant of a doubt stirred within the cowardly breast
+of Mo-sar, urging him to let another take the initiative against
+the stranger.
+
+"He is yours then," he replied, "to do with as you will. I have
+no quarrel with him. What you may command shall be the command of
+Lu-don, the high priest, and further than that I shall have nothing
+to do in the matter."
+
+The priests turned to him who guided the destinies of the temple
+at Tu-lur. "Have you no plan?" they asked. "High indeed will he
+stand in the counsels of Lu-don and in the eyes of Jad-ben-Otho
+who finds the means to capture this impostor alive."
+
+"There is the lion pit," whispered the high priest. "It is now
+vacant and what will hold ja and jato will hold this stranger if
+he is not the Dor-ul-Otho."
+
+"It will hold him," said Mo-sar; "doubtless too it would hold a
+gryf, but first you would have to get the gryf into it."
+
+The priests pondered this bit of wisdom thoughtfully and then one
+of those from A-lur spoke. "It should not be difficult," he said,
+"if we use the wits that Jad-ben-Otho gave us instead of the
+worldly muscles which were handed down to us from our fathers and
+our mothers and which have not even the power possessed by those
+of the beasts that run about on four feet."
+
+"Lu-don matched his wits with the stranger and lost," suggested
+Mo-sar. "But this is your own affair. Carry it out as you see best."
+
+"At A-lur, Ko-tan made much of this Dor-ul-Otho and the priests
+conducted him through the temple. It would arouse in his mind
+no suspicion were you to do the same, and let the high priest of
+Tu-lur invite him to the temple and gathering all the priests make
+a great show of belief in his kinship to Jad-ben-Otho. And what
+more natural then than that the high priest should wish to show
+him through the temple as did Lu-don at A-lur when Ko-tan commanded
+it, and if by chance he should be led through the lion pit it would
+be a simple matter for those who bear the torches to extinguish them
+suddenly and before the stranger was aware of what had happened,
+the stone gates could be dropped, thus safely securing him."
+
+"But there are windows in the pit that let in light," interposed
+the high priest, "and even though the torches were extinguished
+he could still see and might escape before the stone door could be
+lowered."
+
+"Send one who will cover the windows tightly with hides," said the
+priest from A-lur.
+
+"The plan is a good one," said Mo-sar, seeing an opportunity for
+entirely eliminating himself from any suspicion of complicity, "for
+it will require the presence of no warriors, and thus with only
+priests about him his mind will entertain no suspicion of harm."
+
+They were interrupted at this point by a messenger from the palace
+who brought word that the Dor-ul-Otho was becoming impatient and
+if the priests from A-lur were not brought to him at once he would
+come himself to the temple and get them. Mo-sar shook his head.
+He could not conceive of such brazen courage in mortal breast and
+glad he was that the plan evolved for Tarzan's undoing did not
+necessitate his active participation.
+
+And so, while Mo-sar left for a secret corner of the palace by a
+roundabout way, three priests were dispatched to Tarzan and with
+whining words that did not entirely deceive him, they acknowledged
+his kinship to Jad-ben-Otho and begged him in the name of the high
+priest to honor the temple with a visit, when the priests from
+A-lur would be brought to him and would answer any questions that
+he put to them.
+
+Confident that a continuation of his bravado would best serve his
+purpose, and also that if suspicion against him should crystallize
+into conviction on the part of Mo-sar and his followers that he
+would be no worse off in the temple than in the palace, the ape-man
+haughtily accepted the invitation of the high priest.
+
+And so he came into the temple and was received in a manner befitting
+his high claims. He questioned the two priests of A-lur from whom
+he obtained only a repetition of the story that Mo-sar had told
+him, and then the high priest invited him to inspect the temple.
+
+They took him first to the altar court, of which there was only one
+in Tu-lur. It was almost identical in every respect with those at
+A-lur. There was a bloody altar at the east end and the drowning
+basin at the west, and the grizzly fringes upon the headdresses of
+the priests attested the fact that the eastern altar was an active
+force in the rites of the temple. Through the chambers and corridors
+beneath they led him, and finally, with torch bearers to light
+their steps, into a damp and gloomy labyrinth at a low level and
+here in a large chamber, the air of which was still heavy with
+the odor of lions, the crafty priests of Tu-lur encompassed their
+shrewd design.
+
+The torches were suddenly extinguished. There was a hurried confusion
+of bare feet moving rapidly across the stone floor. There was a
+loud crash as of a heavy weight of stone falling upon stone, and
+then surrounding the ape-man naught but the darkness and the silence
+of the tomb.
+
+
+
+
+
+19
+
+Diana of the Jungle
+
+
+
+
+Jane had made her first kill and she was very proud of it. It was
+not a very formidable animal--only a hare; but it marked an epoch
+in her existence. Just as in the dim past the first hunter had
+shaped the destinies of mankind so it seemed that this event might
+shape hers in some new mold. No longer was she dependent upon the
+wild fruits and vegetables for sustenance. Now she might command
+meat, the giver of the strength and endurance she would require
+successfully to cope with the necessities of her primitive existence.
+
+The next step was fire. She might learn to eat raw flesh as had
+her lord and master; but she shrank from that. The thought even
+was repulsive. She had, however, a plan for fire. She had given
+the matter thought, but had been too busy to put it into execution
+so long as fire could be of no immediate use to her. Now it was
+different--she had something to cook and her mouth watered for the
+flesh of her kill. She would grill it above glowing embers. Jane
+hastened to her tree. Among the treasures she had gathered in the
+bed of the stream were several pieces of volcanic glass, clear as
+crystal. She sought until she had found the one in mind, which was
+convex. Then she hurried to the ground and gathered a little pile
+of powdered bark that was very dry, and some dead leaves and grasses
+that had lain long in the hot sun. Near at hand she arranged a
+supply of dead twigs and branches--small and large.
+
+Vibrant with suppressed excitement she held the bit of glass above
+the tinder, moving it slowly until she had focused the sun's rays
+upon a tiny spot. She waited breathlessly. How slow it was! Were
+her high hopes to be dashed in spite of all her clever planning?
+No! A thin thread of smoke rose gracefully into the quiet air.
+Presently the tinder glowed and broke suddenly into flame. Jane
+clasped her hands beneath her chin with a little gurgling exclamation
+of delight. She had achieved fire!
+
+She piled on twigs and then larger branches and at last dragged a
+small log to the flames and pushed an end of it into the fire which
+was crackling merrily. It was the sweetest sound that she had heard
+for many a month. But she could not wait for the mass of embers
+that would be required to cook her hare. As quickly as might be she
+skinned and cleaned her kill, burying the hide and entrails. That
+she had learned from Tarzan. It served two purposes. One was the
+necessity for keeping a sanitary camp and the other the obliteration
+of the scent that most quickly attracts the man-eaters.
+
+Then she ran a stick through the carcass and held it above the
+flames. By turning it often she prevented burning and at the same
+time permitted the meat to cook thoroughly all the way through.
+When it was done she scampered high into the safety of her tree to
+enjoy her meal in quiet and peace. Never, thought Lady Greystoke,
+had aught more delicious passed her lips. She patted her spear
+affectionately. It had brought her this toothsome dainty and with
+it a feeling of greater confidence and safety than she had enjoyed
+since that frightful day that she and Obergatz had spent their
+last cartridge. She would never forget that day--it had seemed one
+hideous succession of frightful beast after frightful beast. They
+had not been long in this strange country, yet they thought that
+they were hardened to dangers, for daily they had had encounters
+with ferocious creatures; but this day--she shuddered when she
+thought of it. And with her last cartridge she had killed a black
+and yellow striped lion-thing with great saber teeth just as it was
+about to spring upon Obergatz who had futilely emptied his rifle
+into it--the last shot--his final cartridge. For another day they
+had carried the now useless rifles; but at last they had discarded
+them and thrown away the cumbersome bandoleers, as well. How they
+had managed to survive during the ensuing week she could never quite
+understand, and then the Ho-don had come upon them and captured her.
+Obergatz had escaped--she was living it all over again. Doubtless
+he was dead unless he had been able to reach this side of the valley
+which was quite evidently less overrun with savage beasts.
+
+Jane's days were very full ones now, and the daylight hours seemed
+all too short in which to accomplish the many things she had
+determined upon, since she had concluded that this spot presented
+as ideal a place as she could find to live until she could fashion
+the weapons she considered necessary for the obtaining of meat and
+for self-defense.
+
+She felt that she must have, in addition to a good spear, a knife,
+and bow and arrows. Possibly when these had been achieved she
+might seriously consider an attempt to fight her way to one of
+civilization's nearest outposts. In the meantime it was necessary
+to construct some sort of protective shelter in which she might
+feel a greater sense of security by night, for she knew that there
+was a possibility that any night she might receive a visit from a
+prowling panther, although she had as yet seen none upon this side
+of the valley. Aside from this danger she felt comparatively safe
+in her aerial retreat.
+
+The cutting of the long poles for her home occupied all of the
+daylight hours that were not engaged in the search for food. These
+poles she carried high into her tree and with them constructed a
+flooring across two stout branches binding the poles together and
+also to the branches with fibers from the tough arboraceous grasses
+that grew in profusion near the stream. Similarly she built walls
+and a roof, the latter thatched with many layers of great leaves.
+The fashioning of the barred windows and the door were matters of
+great importance and consuming interest. The windows, there were
+two of them, were large and the bars permanently fixed; but the
+door was small, the opening just large enough to permit her to
+pass through easily on hands and knees, which made it easier to
+barricade. She lost count of the days that the house cost her; but
+time was a cheap commodity--she had more of it than of anything
+else. It meant so little to her that she had not even any desire to
+keep account of it. How long since she and Obergatz had fled from
+the wrath of the Negro villagers she did not know and she could
+only roughly guess at the seasons. She worked hard for two reasons;
+one was to hasten the completion of her little place of refuge, and
+the other a desire for such physical exhaustion at night that she
+would sleep through those dreaded hours to a new day. As a matter
+of fact the house was finished in less than a week--that is, it
+was made as safe as it ever would be, though regardless of how long
+she might occupy it she would keep on adding touches and refinements
+here and there.
+
+Her daily life was filled with her house building and her hunting,
+to which was added an occasional spice of excitement contributed
+by roving lions. To the woodcraft that she had learned from Tarzan,
+that master of the art, was added a considerable store of practical
+experience derived from her own past adventures in the jungle and
+the long months with Obergatz, nor was any day now lacking in some
+added store of useful knowledge. To these facts was attributable
+her apparent immunity from harm, since they told her when ja was
+approaching before he crept close enough for a successful charge
+and, too, they kept her close to those never-failing havens of
+retreat--the trees.
+
+The nights, filled with their weird noises, were lonely and depressing.
+Only her ability to sleep quickly and soundly made them endurable.
+The first night that she spent in her completed house behind barred
+windows and barricaded door was one of almost undiluted peace and
+happiness. The night noises seemed far removed and impersonal and
+the soughing of the wind in the trees was gently soothing. Before,
+it had carried a mournful note and was sinister in that it might
+hide the approach of some real danger. That night she slept indeed.
+
+She went further afield now in search of food. So far nothing but
+rodents had fallen to her spear--her ambition was an antelope,
+since beside the flesh it would give her, and the gut for her bow,
+the hide would prove invaluable during the colder weather that she
+knew would accompany the rainy season. She had caught glimpses of
+these wary animals and was sure that they always crossed the stream
+at a certain spot above her camp. It was to this place that she
+went to hunt them. With the stealth and cunning of a panther she
+crept through the forest, circling about to get up wind from the
+ford, pausing often to look and listen for aught that might menace
+her--herself the personification of a hunted deer. Now she moved
+silently down upon the chosen spot. What luck! A beautiful buck
+stood drinking in the stream. The woman wormed her way closer. Now
+she lay upon her belly behind a small bush within throwing distance
+of the quarry. She must rise to her full height and throw her spear
+almost in the same instant and she must throw it with great force
+and perfect accuracy. She thrilled with the excitement of the
+minute, yet cool and steady were her swift muscles as she rose and
+cast her missile. Scarce by the width of a finger did the point
+strike from the spot at which it had been directed. The buck leaped
+high, landed upon the bank of the stream, and fell dead. Jane
+Clayton sprang quickly forward toward her kill.
+
+"Bravo!" A man's voice spoke in English from the shrubbery
+upon the opposite side of the stream. Jane Clayton halted in her
+tracks--stunned, almost, by surprise. And then a strange, unkempt
+figure of a man stepped into view. At first she did not recognize
+him, but when she did, instinctively she stepped back.
+
+"Lieutenant Obergatz!" she cried. "Can it be you?"
+
+"It can. It is," replied the German. "I am a strange sight, no doubt;
+but still it is I, Erich Obergatz. And you? You have changed too,
+is it not?"
+
+He was looking at her naked limbs and her golden breastplates, the
+loin cloth of jato-hide, the harness and ornaments that constitute
+the apparel of a Ho-don woman--the things that Lu-don had dressed
+her in as his passion for her grew. Not Ko-tan's daughter, even,
+had finer trappings.
+
+"But why are you here?" Jane insisted. "I had thought you safely
+among civilized men by this time, if you still lived."
+
+"Gott!" he exclaimed. "I do not know why I continue to live. I
+have prayed to die and yet I cling to life. There is no hope. We
+are doomed to remain in this horrible land until we die. The bog!
+The frightful bog! I have searched its shores for a place to cross
+until I have entirely circled the hideous country. Easily enough
+we entered; but the rains have come since and now no living man
+could pass that slough of slimy mud and hungry reptiles. Have I not
+tried it! And the beasts that roam this accursed land. They hunt
+me by day and by night."
+
+"But how have you escaped them?" she asked.
+
+"I do not know," he replied gloomily. "I have fled and fled and
+fled. I have remained hungry and thirsty in tree tops for days
+at a time. I have fashioned weapons--clubs and spears--and I have
+learned to use them. I have slain a lion with my club. So even will
+a cornered rat fight. And we are no better than rats in this land
+of stupendous dangers, you and I. But tell me about yourself. If it
+is surprising that I live, how much more so that you still survive."
+
+Briefly she told him and all the while she was wondering what she
+might do to rid herself of him. She could not conceive of a prolonged
+existence with him as her sole companion. Better, a thousand
+times better, to be alone. Never had her hatred and contempt for
+him lessened through the long weeks and months of their constant
+companionship, and now that he could be of no service in returning
+her to civilization, she shrank from the thought of seeing him
+daily. And, too, she feared him. Never had she trusted him; but now
+there was a strange light in his eye that had not been there when
+last she saw him. She could not interpret it--all she knew was that
+it gave her a feeling of apprehension--a nameless dread.
+
+"You lived long then in the city of A-lur?" he said, speaking in
+the language of Pal-ul-don.
+
+"You have learned this tongue?" she asked. "How?"
+
+"I fell in with a band of half-breeds," he replied, "members of
+a proscribed race that dwells in the rock-bound gut through which
+the principal river of the valley empties into the morass. They
+are called Waz-ho-don and their village is partly made up of cave
+dwellings and partly of houses carved from the soft rock at the
+foot of the cliff. They are very ignorant and superstitious and
+when they first saw me and realized that I had no tail and that my
+hands and feet were not like theirs they were afraid of me. They
+thought that I was either god or demon. Being in a position where
+I could neither escape them nor defend myself, I made a bold
+front and succeeded in impressing them to such an extent that they
+conducted me to their city, which they call Bu-lur, and there they
+fed me and treated me with kindness. As I learned their language
+I sought to impress them more and more with the idea that I was a
+god, and I succeeded, too, until an old fellow who was something of
+a priest among them, or medicine-man, became jealous of my growing
+power. That was the beginning of the end and came near to being the
+end in fact. He told them that if I was a god I would not bleed if
+a knife was stuck into me--if I did bleed it would prove conclusively
+that I was not a god. Without my knowledge he arranged to stage
+the ordeal before the whole village upon a certain night--it was
+upon one of those numerous occasions when they eat and drink to
+Jad-ben-Otho, their pagan deity. Under the influence of their vile
+liquor they would be ripe for any bloodthirsty scheme the medicine-man
+might evolve. One of the women told me about the plan--not with
+any intent to warn me of danger, but prompted merely by feminine
+curiosity as to whether or not I would bleed if stuck with a dagger.
+She could not wait, it seemed, for the orderly procedure of the
+ordeal--she wanted to know at once, and when I caught her trying
+to slip a knife into my side and questioned her she explained the
+whole thing with the utmost naivete. The warriors already had
+commenced drinking--it would have been futile to make any sort of
+appeal either to their intellects or their superstitions. There
+was but one alternative to death and that was flight. I told the
+woman that I was very much outraged and offended at this reflection
+upon my godhood and that as a mark of my disfavor I should abandon
+them to their fate.
+
+"'I shall return to heaven at once!' I exclaimed.
+
+"She wanted to hang around and see me go, but I told her that her
+eyes would be blasted by the fire surrounding my departure and
+that she must leave at once and not return to the spot for at least
+an hour. I also impressed upon her the fact that should any other
+approach this part of the village within that time not only they,
+but she as well, would burst into flames and be consumed.
+
+"She was very much impressed and lost no time in leaving, calling
+back as she departed that if I were indeed gone in an hour she and
+all the village would know that I was no less than Jad-ben-Otho
+himself, and so they must thank me, for I can assure you that I was
+gone in much less than an hour, nor have I ventured close to the
+neighborhood of the city of Bu-lur since," and he fell to laughing
+in harsh, cackling notes that sent a shiver through the woman's
+frame.
+
+As Obergatz talked Jane had recovered her spear from the carcass of
+the antelope and commenced busying herself with the removal of the
+hide. The man made no attempt to assist her, but stood by talking
+and watching her, the while he continually ran his filthy fingers
+through his matted hair and beard. His face and body were caked
+with dirt and he was naked except for a torn greasy hide about his
+loins. His weapons consisted of a club and knife of Waz-don pattern,
+that he had stolen from the city of Bu-lur; but what more greatly
+concerned the woman than his filth or his armament were his cackling
+laughter and the strange expression in his eyes.
+
+She went on with her work, however, removing those parts of the buck
+she wanted, taking only as much meat as she might consume before
+it spoiled, as she was not sufficiently a true jungle creature to
+relish it beyond that stage, and then she straightened up and faced
+the man.
+
+"Lieutenant Obergatz," she said, "by a chance of accident we have
+met again. Certainly you would not have sought the meeting any
+more than I. We have nothing in common other than those sentiments
+which may have been engendered by my natural dislike and suspicion
+of you, one of the authors of all the misery and sorrow that I
+have endured for endless months. This little corner of the world
+is mine by right of discovery and occupation. Go away and leave me
+to enjoy here what peace I may. It is the least that you can do to
+amend the wrong that you have done me and mine."
+
+The man stared at her through his fishy eyes for a moment in silence,
+then there broke from his lips a peal of mirthless, uncanny laughter.
+
+"Go away! Leave you alone!" he cried. "I have found you. We are
+going to be good friends. There is no one else in the world but
+us. No one will ever know what we do or what becomes of us and now
+you ask me to go away and live alone in this hellish solitude."
+Again he laughed, though neither the muscles of his eyes or his
+mouth reflected any mirth--it was just a hollow sound that imitated
+laughter.
+
+"Remember your promise," she said.
+
+"Promise! Promise! What are promises? They are made to be broken--we
+taught the world that at Liege and Louvain. No, no! I will not go
+away. I shall stay and protect you."
+
+"I do not need your protection," she insisted. "You have already
+seen that I can use a spear."
+
+"Yes," he said; "but it would not be right to leave you here
+alone--you are but a woman. No, no; I am an officer of the Kaiser
+and I cannot abandon you."
+
+Once more he laughed. "We could be very happy here together," he
+added.
+
+The woman could not repress a shudder, nor, in fact, did she attempt
+to hide her aversion.
+
+"You do not like me?" he asked. "Ah, well; it is too sad. But some
+day you will love me," and again the hideous laughter.
+
+The woman had wrapped the pieces of the buck in the hide and this
+she now raised and threw across her shoulder. In her other hand
+she held her spear and faced the German.
+
+"Go!" she commanded. "We have wasted enough words. This is my country
+and I shall defend it. If I see you about again I shall kill you.
+Do you understand?"
+
+An expression of rage contorted Obergatz' features. He raised his
+club and started toward her.
+
+"Stop!" she commanded, throwing her spear-hand backward for a cast.
+"You saw me kill this buck and you have said truthfully that no
+one will ever know what we do here. Put these two facts together,
+German, and draw your own conclusions before you take another step
+in my direction."
+
+The man halted and his club-hand dropped to his side. "Come," he
+begged in what he intended as a conciliatory tone. "Let us be friends,
+Lady Greystoke. We can be of great assistance to each other and I
+promise not to harm you."
+
+"Remember Liege and Louvain," she reminded him with a sneer. "I
+am going now--be sure that you do not follow me. As far as you can
+walk in a day from this spot in any direction you may consider the
+limits of my domain. If ever again I see you within these limits
+I shall kill you."
+
+There could be no question that she meant what she said and the
+man seemed convinced for he but stood sullenly eyeing her as she
+backed from sight beyond a turn in the game trail that crossed the
+ford where they had met, and disappeared in the forest.
+
+
+
+
+
+20
+
+Silently in the Night
+
+
+
+
+In A-lur the fortunes of the city had been tossed from hand to hand.
+The party of Ko-tan's loyal warriors that Tarzan had led to the
+rendezvous at the entrance to the secret passage below the palace
+gates had met with disaster. Their first rush had been met with
+soft words from the priests. They had been exhorted to defend the
+faith of their fathers from blasphemers. Ja-don was painted to
+them as a defiler of temples, and the wrath of Jad-ben-Otho was
+prophesied for those who embraced his cause. The priests insisted
+that Lu-don's only wish was to prevent the seizure of the throne
+by Ja-don until a new king could be chosen according to the laws
+of the Ho-don.
+
+The result was that many of the palace warriors joined their fellows
+of the city, and when the priests saw that those whom they could
+influence outnumbered those who remained loyal to the palace, they
+caused the former to fall upon the latter with the result that many
+were killed and only a handful succeeded in reaching the safety of
+the palace gates, which they quickly barred.
+
+The priests led their own forces through the secret passageway
+into the temple, while some of the loyal ones sought out Ja-don
+and told him all that had happened. The fight in the banquet hall
+had spread over a considerable portion of the palace grounds and had
+at last resulted in the temporary defeat of those who had opposed
+Ja-don. This force, counseled by under priests sent for the purpose
+by Lu-don, had withdrawn within the temple grounds so that now
+the issue was plainly marked as between Ja-don on the one side and
+Lu-don on the other.
+
+The former had been told of all that had occurred in the apartments
+of O-lo-a to whose safety he had attended at the first opportunity
+and he had also learned of Tarzan's part in leading his men to the
+gathering of Lu-don's warriors.
+
+These things had naturally increased the old warrior's former
+inclinations of friendliness toward the ape-man, and now he regretted
+that the other had departed from the city.
+
+The testimony of O-lo-a and Pan-at-lee was such as to strengthen
+whatever belief in the godliness of the stranger Ja-don and others
+of the warriors had previously entertained, until presently there
+appeared a strong tendency upon the part of this palace faction
+to make the Dor-ul-otho an issue of their original quarrel with
+Lu-don. Whether this occurred as the natural sequence to repeated
+narrations of the ape-man's exploits, which lost nothing by repetition,
+in conjunction with Lu-don's enmity toward him, or whether it was
+the shrewd design of some wily old warrior such as Ja-don, who
+realized the value of adding a religious cause to their temporal
+one, it were difficult to determine; but the fact remained that
+Ja-don's followers developed bitter hatred for the followers of
+Lu-don because of the high priest's antagonism to Tarzan.
+
+Unfortunately however Tarzan was not there to inspire the followers
+of Ja-don with the holy zeal that might have quickly settled the
+dispute in the old chieftain's favor. Instead, he was miles away
+and because their repeated prayers for his presence were unanswered,
+the weaker spirits among them commenced to suspect that their cause
+did not have divine favor. There was also another and a potent cause
+for defection from the ranks of Ja-don. It emanated from the city
+where the friends and relatives of the palace warriors, who were
+largely also the friends and relatives of Lu-don's forces, found
+the means, urged on by the priesthood, to circulate throughout the
+palace pernicious propaganda aimed at Ja-don's cause.
+
+The result was that Lu-don's power increased while that of Ja-don
+waned. Then followed a sortie from the temple which resulted in the
+defeat of the palace forces, and though they were able to withdraw
+in decent order withdraw they did, leaving the palace to Lu-don,
+who was now virtually ruler of Pal-ul-don.
+
+Ja-don, taking with him the princess, her women, and their slaves,
+including Pan-at-lee, as well as the women and children of his
+faithful followers, retreated not only from the palace but from the
+city of A-lur as well and fell back upon his own city of Ja-lur. Here
+he remained, recruiting his forces from the surrounding villages
+of the north which, being far removed from the influence of the
+priesthood of A-lur, were enthusiastic partisans in any cause that
+the old chieftain espoused, since for years he had been revered as
+their friend and protector.
+
+And while these events were transpiring in the north, Tarzan-jad-guru
+lay in the lion pit at Tu-lur while messengers passed back and
+forth between Mo-sar and Lu-don as the two dickered for the throne
+of Pal-ul-don. Mo-sar was cunning enough to guess that should an
+open breach occur between himself and the high priest he might use
+his prisoner to his own advantage, for he had heard whisperings
+among even his own people that suggested that there were those who
+were more than a trifle inclined to belief in the divinity of the
+stranger and that he might indeed be the Dor-ul-Otho. Lu-don wanted
+Tarzan himself. He wanted to sacrifice him upon the eastern altar
+with his own hands before a multitude of people, since he was
+not without evidence that his own standing and authority had been
+lessened by the claims of the bold and heroic figure of the stranger.
+
+The method that the high priest of Tu-lur had employed to trap
+Tarzan had left the ape-man in possession of his weapons though
+there seemed little likelihood of their being of any service to
+him. He also had his pouch, in which were the various odds and ends
+which are the natural accumulation of all receptacles from a gold
+meshbag to an attic. There were bits of obsidian and choice feathers
+for arrows, some pieces of flint and a couple of steel, an old
+knife, a heavy bone needle, and strips of dried gut. Nothing very
+useful to you or me, perhaps; but nothing useless to the savage
+life of the ape-man.
+
+When Tarzan realized the trick that had been so neatly played upon
+him he had awaited expectantly the coming of the lion, for though
+the scent of ja was old he was sure that sooner or later they would
+let one of the beasts in upon him. His first consideration was a
+thorough exploration of his prison. He had noticed the hide-covered
+windows and these he immediately uncovered, letting in the light,
+and revealing the fact that though the chamber was far below the
+level of the temple courts it was yet many feet above the base of
+the hill from which the temple was hewn. The windows were so closely
+barred that he could not see over the edge of the thick wall in
+which they were cut to determine what lay close in below him. At
+a little distance were the blue waters of Jad-in-lul and beyond,
+the verdure-clad farther shore, and beyond that the mountains. It
+was a beautiful picture upon which he looked--a picture of peace
+and harmony and quiet. Nor anywhere a slightest suggestion of the
+savage men and beasts that claimed this lovely landscape as their
+own. What a paradise! And some day civilized man would come
+and--spoil it! Ruthless axes would raze that age-old wood; black,
+sticky smoke would rise from ugly chimneys against that azure sky;
+grimy little boats with wheels behind or upon either side would
+churn the mud from the bottom of Jad-in-lul, turning its blue waters
+to a dirty brown; hideous piers would project into the lake from
+squalid buildings of corrugated iron, doubtless, for of such are
+the pioneer cities of the world.
+
+But would civilized man come? Tarzan hoped not. For countless
+generations civilization had ramped about the globe; it had dispatched
+its emissaries to the North Pole and the South; it had circled
+Pal-ul-don once, perhaps many times, but it had never touched her.
+God grant that it never would. Perhaps He was saving this little
+spot to be always just as He had made it, for the scratching of
+the Ho-don and the Waz-don upon His rocks had not altered the fair
+face of Nature.
+
+Through the windows came sufficient light to reveal the whole
+interior to Tarzan. The room was fairly large and there was a door
+at each end--a large door for men and a smaller one for lions.
+Both were closed with heavy masses of stone that had been lowered
+in grooves running to the floor. The two windows were small and closely
+barred with the first iron that Tarzan had seen in Pal-ul-don. The
+bars were let into holes in the casing, and the whole so strongly
+and neatly contrived that escape seemed impossible. Yet within a
+few minutes of his incarceration Tarzan had commenced to undertake
+his escape. The old knife in his pouch was brought into requisition
+and slowly the ape-man began to scrape and chip away the stone from
+about the bars of one of the windows. It was slow work but Tarzan
+had the patience of absolute health.
+
+Each day food and water were brought him and slipped quickly beneath
+the smaller door which was raised just sufficiently to allow the
+stone receptacles to pass in. The prisoner began to believe that
+he was being preserved for something beside lions. However that
+was immaterial. If they would but hold off for a few more days they
+might select what fate they would--he would not be there when they
+arrived to announce it.
+
+And then one day came Pan-sat, Lu-don's chief tool, to the city
+of Tu-lur. He came ostensibly with a fair message for Mo-sar from
+the high priest at A-lur. Lu-don had decided that Mo-sar should
+be king and he invited Mo-sar to come at once to A-lur and then
+Pan-sat, having delivered the message, asked that he might go to
+the temple of Tu-lur and pray, and there he sought the high priest
+of Tu-lur to whom was the true message that Lu-don had sent. The
+two were closeted alone in a little chamber and Pan-sat whispered
+into the ear of the high priest.
+
+"Mo-sar wishes to be king," he said, "and Lu-don wishes to be
+king. Mo-sar wishes to retain the stranger who claims to be the
+Dor-ul-Otho and Lu-don wishes to kill him, and now," he leaned even
+closer to the ear of the high priest of Tu-lur, "if you would be
+high priest at A-lur it is within your power."
+
+Pan-sat ceased speaking and waited for the other's reply. The high
+priest was visibly affected. To be high priest at A-lur! That was
+almost as good as being king of all Pal-ul-don, for great were the
+powers of him who conducted the sacrifices upon the altars of A-lur.
+
+"How?" whispered the high priest. "How may I become high priest at
+A-lur?"
+
+Again Pan-sat leaned close: "By killing the one and bringing the
+other to A-lur," replied he. Then he rose and departed knowing chat
+the other had swallowed the bait and could be depended upon to do
+whatever was required to win him the great prize.
+
+Nor was Pan-sat mistaken other than in one trivial consideration.
+This high priest would indeed commit murder and treason to attain
+the high office at A-lur; but he had misunderstood which of
+his victims was to be killed and which to be delivered to Lu-don.
+Pan-sat, knowing himself all the details of the plannings of
+Lu-don, had made the quite natural error of assuming that the ocher
+was perfectly aware that only by publicly sacrificing the false
+Dor-ul-Otho could the high priest at A-lur bolster his waning power
+and that the assassination of Mo-sar, the pretender, would remove
+from Lu-don's camp the only obstacle to his combining the offices
+of high priest and king. The high priest at Tu-lur thought that he
+had been commissioned to kill Tarzan and bring Mo-sar to A-lur. He
+also thought that when he had done these things he would be made
+high priest at A-lur; but he did not know that already the priest
+had been selected who was to murder him within the hour that
+he arrived at A-lur, nor did he know that a secret grave had been
+prepared for him in the floor of a subterranean chamber in the very
+temple he dreamed of controlling.
+
+And so when he should have been arranging the assassination of
+his chief he was leading a dozen heavily bribed warriors through
+the dark corridors beneath the temple to slay Tarzan in the lion
+pit. Night had fallen. A single torch guided the footsteps of the
+murderers as they crept stealthily upon their evil way, for they
+knew that they were doing the thing that their chief did not want
+done and their guilty consciences warned them to stealth.
+
+In the dark of his cell the ape-man worked at his seemingly endless
+chipping and scraping. His keen ears detected the coming of footsteps
+along the corridor without--footsteps that approached the larger
+door. Always before had they come to the smaller door--the footsteps
+of a single slave who brought his food. This time there were many
+more than one and their coming at this time of night carried a
+sinister suggestion. Tarzan continued to work at his scraping and
+chipping. He heard them stop beyond the door. All was silence broken
+only by the scrape, scrape, scrape of the ape-man's tireless blade.
+
+Those without heard it and listening sought to explain it. They
+whispered in low tones making their plans. Two would raise the door
+quickly and the others would rush in and hurl their clubs at the
+prisoner. They would take no chances, for the stories that had
+circulated in A-lur had been brought to Tu-lur--stories of the great
+strength and wonderful prowess of Tarzan-jad-guru that caused the
+sweat to stand upon the brows of the warriors, though it was cool
+in the damp corridor and they were twelve to one.
+
+And then the high priest gave the signal--the door shot upward
+and ten warriors leaped into the chamber with poised clubs. Three
+of the heavy weapons flew across the room toward a darker shadow
+that lay in the shadow of the opposite wall, then the flare of the
+torch in the priest's hand lighted the interior and they saw that
+the thing at which they had flung their clubs was a pile of skins
+torn from the windows and that except for themselves the chamber
+was vacant.
+
+One of them hastened to a window. All but a single bar was gone and
+to this was tied one end of a braided rope fashioned from strips
+cut from the leather window hangings.
+
+To the ordinary dangers of Jane Clayton's existence was now added
+the menace of Obergatz' knowledge of her whereabouts. The lion
+and the panther had given her less cause for anxiety than did the
+return of the unscrupulous Hun, whom she had always distrusted
+and feared, and whose repulsiveness was now immeasurably augmented
+by his unkempt and filthy appearance, his strange and mirthless
+laughter, and his unnatural demeanor. She feared him now with a new
+fear as though he had suddenly become the personification of some
+nameless horror. The wholesome, outdoor life that she had been
+leading had strengthened and rebuilt her nervous system yet it
+seemed to her as she thought of him that if this man should ever
+touch her she should scream, and, possibly, even faint. Again and
+again during the day following their unexpected meeting the woman
+reproached herself for not having killed him as she would ja or
+jato or any other predatory beast that menaced her existence or
+her safety. There was no attempt at self-justification for these
+sinister reflections--they needed no justification. The standards
+by which the acts of such as you or I may be judged could not
+apply to hers. We have recourse to the protection of friends and
+relatives and the civil soldiery that upholds the majesty of the
+law and which may be invoked to protect the righteous weak against
+the unrighteous strong; but Jane Clayton comprised within herself
+not only the righteous weak but all the various agencies for the
+protection of the weak. To her, then, Lieutenant Erich Obergatz
+presented no different problem than did ja, the lion, other than
+that she considered the former the more dangerous animal. And so
+she determined that should he ignore her warning there would be
+no temporizing upon the occasion of their next meeting--the same
+swift spear that would meet ja's advances would meet his.
+
+That night her snug little nest perched high in the great tree
+seemed less the sanctuary that it had before. What might resist the
+sanguinary intentions of a prowling panther would prove no great
+barrier to man, and influenced by this thought she slept less well
+than before. The slightest noise that broke the monotonous hum of the
+nocturnal jungle startled her into alert wakefulness to lie with
+straining ears in an attempt to classify the origin of the disturbance,
+and once she was awakened thus by a sound that seemed to come from
+something moving in her own tree. She listened intently--scarce
+breathing. Yes, there it was again. A scuffing of something soft
+against the hard bark of the tree. The woman reached out in the
+darkness and grasped her spear. Now she felt a slight sagging of
+one of the limbs that supported her shelter as though the thing,
+whatever it was, was slowly raising its weight to the branch. It
+came nearer. Now she thought that she could detect its breathing.
+It was at the door. She could hear it fumbling with the frail
+barrier. What could it be? It made no sound by which she might
+identify it. She raised herself upon her hands and knees and crept
+stealthily the little distance to the doorway, her spear clutched
+tightly in her hand. Whatever the thing was, it was evidently
+attempting to gain entrance without awakening her. It was just
+beyond the pitiful little contraption of slender boughs that she
+had bound together with grasses and called a door--only a few inches
+lay between the thing and her. Rising to her knees she reached out
+with her left hand and felt until she found a place where a crooked
+branch had left an opening a couple of inches wide near the center
+of the barrier. Into this she inserted the point of her spear. The
+thing must have heard her move within for suddenly it abandoned its
+efforts for stealth and tore angrily at the obstacle. At the same
+moment Jane thrust her spear forward with all her strength. She
+felt it enter flesh. There was a scream and a curse from without,
+followed by the crashing of a body through limbs and foliage. Her
+spear was almost dragged from her grasp, but she held to it until
+it broke free from the thing it had pierced.
+
+It was Obergatz; the curse had told her that. From below came
+no further sound. Had she, then, killed him? She prayed so--with
+all her heart she prayed it. To be freed from the menace of this
+loathsome creature were relief indeed. During all the balance of
+the night she lay there awake, listening. Below her, she imagined,
+she could see the dead man with his hideous face bathed in the cold
+light of the moon--lying there upon his back staring up at her.
+
+She prayed that ja might come and drag it away, but all during
+the remainder of the night she heard never another sound above the
+drowsy hum of the jungle. She was glad that he was dead, but she
+dreaded the gruesome ordeal that awaited her on the morrow, for
+she must bury the thing that had been Erich Obergatz and live on
+there above the shallow grave of the man she had slain.
+
+She reproached herself for her weakness, repeating over and over
+that she had killed in self-defense, that her act was justified;
+but she was still a woman of today, and strong upon her were the
+iron mandates of the social order from which she had sprung, its
+interdictions and its superstitions.
+
+At last came the tardy dawn. Slowly the sun topped the distant
+mountains beyond Jad-in-lul. And yet she hesitated to loosen the
+fastenings of her door and look out upon the thing below. But it
+must be done. She steeled herself and untied the rawhide thong that
+secured the barrier. She looked down and only the grass and the
+flowers looked up at her. She came from her shelter and examined
+the ground upon the opposite side of the tree--there was no dead man
+there, nor anywhere as far as she could see. Slowly she descended,
+keeping a wary eye and an alert ear ready for the first intimation
+of danger.
+
+At the foot of the tree was a pool of blood and a little trail of
+crimson drops upon the grass, leading away parallel with the shore
+of Jad-ben-lul. Then she had not slain him! She was vaguely aware
+of a peculiar, double sensation of relief and regret. Now she
+would be always in doubt. He might return; but at least she would
+not have to live above his grave.
+
+She thought some of following the bloody spoor on the chance that
+he might have crawled away to die later, but she gave up the idea
+for fear that she might find him dead nearby, or, worse yet badly
+wounded. What then could she do? She could not finish him with
+her spear--no, she knew that she could not do that, nor could she
+bring him back and nurse him, nor could she leave him there to
+die of hunger or of thirst, or to become the prey of some prowling
+beast. It were better then not to search for him for fear that she
+might find him.
+
+That day was one of nervous starting to every sudden sound. The
+day before she would have said that her nerves were of iron; but
+not today. She knew now the shock that she had suffered and that
+this was the reaction. Tomorrow it might be different, but something
+told her that never again would her little shelter and the patch
+of forest and jungle that she called her own be the same. There
+would hang over them always the menace of this man. No longer would
+she pass restful nights of deep slumber. The peace of her little
+world was shattered forever.
+
+That night she made her door doubly secure with additional thongs
+of rawhide cut from the pelt of the buck she had slain the day that
+she met Obergatz. She was very tired for she had lost much sleep
+the night before; but for a long time she lay with wide-open eyes
+staring into the darkness. What saw she there? Visions that brought
+tears to those brave and beautiful eyes--visions of a rambling
+bungalow that had been home to her and that was no more, destroyed
+by the same cruel force that haunted her even now in this remote,
+uncharted corner of the earth; visions of a strong man whose protecting
+arm would never press her close again; visions of a tall, straight
+son who looked at her adoringly out of brave, smiling eyes that were
+like his father's. Always the vision of the crude simple bungalow
+rather than of the stately halls that had been as much a part of
+her life as the other. But he had loved the bungalow and the broad,
+free acres best and so she had come to love them best, too.
+
+At last she slept, the sleep of utter exhaustion. How long it
+lasted she did not know; but suddenly she was wide awake and once
+again she heard the scuffing of a body against the bark of her
+tree and again the limb bent to a heavy weight. He had returned!
+She went cold, trembling as with ague. Was it he, or, O God! had
+she killed him then and was this--? She tried to drive the horrid
+thought from her mind, for this way, she knew, lay madness.
+
+And once again she crept to the door, for the thing was outside
+just as it had been last night. Her hands trembled as she placed
+the point of her weapon to the opening. She wondered if it would
+scream as it fell.
+
+
+
+
+
+21
+
+The Maniac
+
+
+
+
+The last bar that would make the opening large enough to permit
+his body to pass had been removed as Tarzan heard the warriors
+whispering beyond the stone door of his prison. Long since had the
+rope of hide been braided. To secure one end to the remaining bar
+that he had left for this purpose was the work of but a moment,
+and while the warriors whispered without, the brown body of the
+ape-man slipped through the small aperture and disappeared below
+the sill.
+
+Tarzan's escape from the cell left him still within the walled
+area that comprised the palace and temple grounds and buildings.
+He had reconnoitered as best he might from the window after he
+had removed enough bars to permit him to pass his head through the
+opening, so that he knew what lay immediately before him--a winding
+and usually deserted alleyway leading in the direction of the outer
+gate that opened from the palace grounds into the city.
+
+The darkness would facilitate his escape. He might even pass out
+of the palace and the city without detection. If he could elude the
+guard at the palace gate the rest would be easy. He strode along
+confidently, exhibiting no fear of detection, for he reasoned that
+thus would he disarm suspicion. In the darkness he easily could pass
+for a Ho-don and in truth, though he passed several after leaving
+the deserted alley, no one accosted or detained him, and thus he
+came at last to the guard of a half-dozen warriors before the palace
+gate. These he attempted to pass in the same unconcerned fashion
+and he might have succeeded had it not been for one who came running
+rapidly from the direction of the temple shouting: "Let no one pass
+the gates! The prisoner has escaped from the pal-ul-ja!"
+
+Instantly a warrior barred his way and simultaneously the fellow
+recognized him. "Xot tor!" he exclaimed: "Here he is now. Fall upon
+him! Fall upon him! Back! Back before I kill you."
+
+The others came forward. It cannot be said that they rushed forward.
+If it was their wish to fall upon him there was a noticeable lack
+of enthusiasm other than that which directed their efforts to
+persuade someone else to fall upon him. His fame as a fighter had
+been too long a topic of conversation for the good of the morale of
+Mo-sar's warriors. It were safer to stand at a distance and hurl
+their clubs and this they did, but the ape-man had learned something
+of the use of this weapon since he had arrived in Pal-ul-don. And
+as he learned great had grown his respect for this most primitive
+of arms. He had come to realize that the black savages he had known
+had never appreciated the possibilities of their knob sticks, nor
+had he, and he had discovered, too, why the Pal-ul-donians had
+turned their ancient spears into plowshares and pinned their faith
+to the heavy-ended club alone. In deadly execution it was far more
+effective than a spear and it answered, too, every purpose of
+a shield, combining the two in one and thus reducing the burden
+of the warrior. Thrown as they throw it, after the manner of the
+hammer-throwers of the Olympian games, an ordinary shield would
+prove more a weakness than a strength while one that would be
+strong enough to prove a protection would be too heavy to carry.
+Only another club, deftly wielded to deflect the course of an enemy
+missile, is in any way effective against these formidable weapons
+and, too, the war club of Pal-ul-don can be thrown with accuracy
+a far greater distance than any spear.
+
+And now was put to the test that which Tarzan had learned from
+Om-at and Ta-den. His eyes and his muscles trained by a lifetime of
+necessity moved with the rapidity of light and his brain functioned
+with an uncanny celerity that suggested nothing less than prescience,
+and these things more than compensated for his lack of experience
+with the war club he handled so dexterously. Weapon after weapon
+he warded off and always he moved with a single idea in mind--to
+place himself within reach of one of his antagonists. But they were
+wary for they feared this strange creature to whom the superstitious
+fears of many of them attributed the miraculous powers of deity.
+They managed to keep between Tarzan and the gateway and all the time
+they bawled lustily for reinforcements. Should these come before
+he had made his escape the ape-man realized that the odds against
+him would be unsurmountable, and so he redoubled his efforts to
+carry out his design.
+
+Following their usual tactics two or three of the warriors were
+always circling behind him collecting the thrown clubs when Tarzan's
+attention was directed elsewhere. He himself retrieved several
+of them which he hurled with such deadly effect as to dispose of
+two of his antagonists, but now he heard the approach of hurrying
+warriors, the patter of their bare feet upon the stone pavement and
+then the savage cries which were to bolster the courage of their
+fellows and fill the enemy with fear.
+
+There was no time to lose. Tarzan held a club in either hand and,
+swinging one he hurled it at a warrior before him and as the man
+dodged he rushed in and seized him, at the same time casting his
+second club at another of his opponents. The Ho-don with whom he
+grappled reached instantly for his knife but the ape-man grasped
+his wrist. There was a sudden twist, the snapping of a bone and an
+agonized scream, then the warrior was lifted bodily from his feet
+and held as a shield between his fellows and the fugitive as the
+latter backed through the gateway. Beside Tarzan stood the single
+torch that lighted the entrance to the palace grounds. The warriors
+were advancing to the succor of their fellow when the ape-man raised
+his captive high above his head and flung him full in the face of
+the foremost attacker. The fellow went down and two directly behind
+him sprawled headlong over their companion as the ape-man seized the
+torch and cast it back into the palace grounds to be extinguished
+as it struck the bodies of those who led the charging reinforcements.
+
+In the ensuing darkness Tarzan disappeared in the streets of Tu-lur
+beyond the palace gate. For a time he was aware of sounds of pursuit
+but the fact that they trailed away and died in the direction
+of Jad-in-lul informed him that they were searching in the wrong
+direction, for he had turned south out of Tu-lur purposely to throw
+them off his track. Beyond the outskirts of the city he turned
+directly toward the northwest, in which direction lay A-lur.
+
+In his path he knew lay Jad-bal-lul, the shore of which he was
+compelled to skirt, and there would be a river to cross at the
+lower end of the great lake upon the shores of which lay A-lur.
+What other obstacles lay in his way he did not know but he believed
+that he could make better time on foot than by attempting to steal
+a canoe and force his way up stream with a single paddle. It was
+his intention to put as much distance as possible between himself
+and Tu-lur before he slept for he was sure that Mo-sar would not
+lightly accept his loss, but that with the coming of day, or possibly
+even before, he would dispatch warriors in search of him.
+
+A mile or two from the city he entered a forest and here at last
+he felt such a measure of safety as he never knew in open spaces
+or in cities. The forest and the jungle were his birthright.
+No creature that went upon the ground upon four feet, or climbed
+among the trees, or crawled upon its belly had any advantage over
+the ape-man in his native heath. As myrrh and frankincense were
+the dank odors of rotting vegetation in the nostrils of the great
+Tarmangani. He squared his broad shoulders and lifting his head filled
+his lungs with the air that he loved best. The heavy fragrance of
+tropical blooms, the commingled odors of the myriad-scented life
+of the jungle went to his head with a pleasurable intoxication
+far more potent than aught contained in the oldest vintages of
+civilization.
+
+He took to the trees now, not from necessity but from pure love of
+the wild freedom that had been denied him so long. Though it was
+dark and the forest strange yet he moved with a surety and ease
+that bespoke more a strange uncanny sense than wondrous skill. He
+heard ja moaning somewhere ahead and an owl hooted mournfully to
+the right of him--long familiar sounds that imparted to him no sense
+of loneliness as they might to you or to me, but on the contrary
+one of companionship for they betokened the presence of his fellows
+of the jungle, and whether friend or foe it was all the same to
+the ape-man.
+
+He came at last to a little stream at a spot where the trees did
+not meet above it so he was forced to descend to the ground and
+wade through the water and upon the opposite shore he stopped as
+though suddenly his godlike figure had been transmuted from flesh
+to marble. Only his dilating nostrils bespoke his pulsing vitality.
+For a long moment he stood there thus and then swiftly, but with
+a caution and silence that were inherent in him he moved forward
+again, but now his whole attitude bespoke a new urge. There was
+a definite and masterful purpose in every movement of those steel
+muscles rolling softly beneath the smooth brown hide. He moved
+now toward a certain goal that quite evidently filled him with far
+greater enthusiasm than had the possible event of his return to
+A-lur.
+
+And so he came at last to the foot of a great tree and there he
+stopped and looked up above him among the foliage where the dim
+outlines of a roughly rectangular bulk loomed darkly. There was a
+choking sensation in Tarzan's throat as he raised himself gently
+into the branches. It was as though his heart were swelling either
+to a great happiness or a great fear.
+
+Before the rude shelter built among the branches he paused listening.
+From within there came to his sensitive nostrils the same delicate
+aroma that had arrested his eager attention at the little stream
+a mile away. He crouched upon the branch close to the little door.
+
+"Jane," he called, "heart of my heart, it is I."
+
+The only answer from within was as the sudden indrawing of a breath
+that was half gasp and half sigh, and the sound of a body falling
+to the floor. Hurriedly Tarzan sought to release the thongs which
+held the door but they were fastened from the inside, and at last,
+impatient with further delay, he seized the frail barrier in one
+giant hand and with a single effort tore it completely away. And
+then he entered to find the seemingly lifeless body of his mate
+stretched upon the floor.
+
+He gathered her in his arms; her heart beat; she still breathed,
+and presently he realized that she had but swooned.
+
+When Jane Clayton regained consciousness it was to find herself
+held tightly in two strong arms, her head pillowed upon the broad
+shoulder where so often before her fears had been soothed and her
+sorrows comforted. At first she was not sure but that it was all
+a dream. Timidly her hand stole to his cheek.
+
+"John," she murmured, "tell me, is it really you?"
+
+In reply he drew her more closely to him. "It is I," he replied.
+"But there is something in my throat," he said haltingly, "that
+makes it hard for me to speak."
+
+She smiled and snuggled closer to him. "God has been good to us,
+Tarzan of the Apes," she said.
+
+For some time neither spoke. It was enough that they were reunited
+and that each knew that the other was alive and safe. But at
+last they found their voices and when the sun rose they were still
+talking, so much had each to tell the other; so many questions
+there were to be asked and answered.
+
+"And Jack," she asked, "where is he?"
+
+"I do not know," replied Tarzan. "The last I heard of him he was
+on the Argonne Front."
+
+"Ah, then our happiness is not quite complete," she said, a little
+note of sadness creeping into her voice.
+
+"No," he replied, "but the same is true in countless other English
+homes today, and pride is learning to take the place of happiness
+in these."
+
+She shook her head, "I want my boy," she said.
+
+"And I too," replied Tarzan, "and we may have him yet. He was safe
+and unwounded the last word I had. And now," he said, "we must plan
+upon our return. Would you like to rebuild the bungalow and gather
+together the remnants of our Waziri or would you rather return to
+London?"
+
+"Only to find Jack," she said. "I dream always of the bungalow and
+never of the city, but John, we can only dream, for Obergatz told
+me that he had circled this whole country and found no place where
+he might cross the morass."
+
+"I am not Obergatz," Tarzan reminded her, smiling. "We will rest
+today and tomorrow we will set out toward the north. It is a savage
+country, but we have crossed it once and we can cross it again."
+
+And so, upon the following morning, the Tarmangani and his mate
+went forth upon their journey across the Valley of Jad-ben-Otho,
+and ahead of them were fierce men and savage beasts, and the lofty
+mountains of Pal-ul-don; and beyond the mountains the reptiles and
+the morass, and beyond that the arid, thorn-covered steppe, and
+other savage beasts and men and weary, hostile miles of untracked
+wilderness between them and the charred ruins of their home.
+
+Lieutenant Erich Obergatz crawled through the grass upon all fours,
+leaving a trail of blood behind him after Jane's spear had sent
+him crashing to the ground beneath her tree. He made no sound after
+the one piercing scream that had acknowledged the severity of his
+wound. He was quiet because of a great fear that had crept into
+his warped brain that the devil woman would pursue and slay him.
+And so he crawled away like some filthy beast of prey, seeking a
+thicket where he might lie down and hide.
+
+He thought that he was going to die, but he did not, and with the
+coming of the new day he discovered that his wound was superficial.
+The rough obsidian-shod spear had entered the muscles of his side
+beneath his right arm inflicting a painful, but not a fatal wound.
+With the realization of this fact came a renewed desire to put as
+much distance as possible between himself and Jane Clayton. And
+so he moved on, still going upon all fours because of a persistent
+hallucination that in this way he might escape observation. Yet
+though he fled his mind still revolved muddily about a central
+desire--while he fled from her he still planned to pursue her,
+and to his lust of possession was added a desire for revenge. She
+should pay for the suffering she had inflicted upon him. She should
+pay for rebuffing him, but for some reason which he did not try
+to explain to himself he would crawl away and hide. He would come
+back though. He would come back and when he had finished with her,
+he would take that smooth throat in his two hands and crush the
+life from her.
+
+He kept repeating this over and over to himself and then he fell
+to laughing out loud, the cackling, hideous laughter that had
+terrified Jane. Presently he realized his knees were bleeding and
+that they hurt him. He looked cautiously behind. No one was in
+sight. He listened. He could hear no indications of pursuit and so
+he rose to his feet and continued upon his way a sorry sight--covered
+with filth and blood, his beard and hair tangled and matted and
+filled with burrs and dried mud and unspeakable filth. He kept no
+track of time. He ate fruits and berries and tubers that he dug
+from the earth with his fingers. He followed the shore of the lake
+and the river that he might be near water, and when ja roared or
+moaned he climbed a tree and hid there, shivering.
+
+And so after a time he came up the southern shore of Jad-ben-lul
+until a wide river stopped his progress. Across the blue water a
+white city glimmered in the sun. He looked at it for a long time,
+blinking his eyes like an owl. Slowly a recollection forced itself
+through his tangled brain. This was A-lur, the City of Light. The
+association of ideas recalled Bu-lur and the Waz-ho-don. They had
+called him Jad-ben-Otho. He commenced to laugh aloud and stood
+up very straight and strode back and forth along the shore. "I am
+Jad-ben-Otho," he cried, "I am the Great God. In A-lur is my temple
+and my high priests. What is Jad-ben-Otho doing here alone in the
+jungle?"
+
+He stepped out into the water and raising his voice shrieked loudly
+across toward A-lur. "I am Jad-ben-Otho!" he screamed. "Come
+hither slaves and take your god to his temple." But the distance
+was great and they did not hear him and no one came, and the feeble
+mind was distracted by other things--a bird flying in the air, a
+school of minnows swimming around his feet. He lunged at them trying
+to catch them, and falling upon his hands and knees he crawled
+through the water grasping futilely at the elusive fish.
+
+Presently it occurred to him that he was a sea lion and he forgot
+the fish and lay down and tried to swim by wriggling his feet in
+the water as though they were a tail. The hardships, the privations,
+the terrors, and for the past few weeks the lack of proper nourishment
+had reduced Erich Obergatz to little more than a gibbering idiot.
+
+A water snake swam out upon the surface of the lake and the man
+pursued it, crawling upon his hands and knees. The snake swam toward
+the shore just within the mouth of the river where tall reeds grew
+thickly and Obergatz followed, making grunting noises like a pig.
+He lost the snake within the reeds but he came upon something
+else--a canoe hidden there close to the bank. He examined it with
+cackling laughter. There were two paddles within it which he took
+and threw out into the current of the river. He watched them for a
+while and then he sat down beside the canoe and commenced to splash
+his hands up and down upon the water. He liked to hear the noise
+and see the little splashes of spray. He rubbed his left forearm
+with his right palm and the dirt came off and left a white spot
+that drew his attention. He rubbed again upon the now thoroughly
+soaked blood and grime that covered his body. He was not attempting
+to wash himself; he was merely amused by the strange results.
+"I am turning white," he cried. His glance wandered from his body
+now that the grime and blood were all removed and caught again the
+white city shimmering beneath the hot sun.
+
+"A-lur--City of Light!" he shrieked and that reminded him again of
+Tu-lur and by the same process of associated ideas that had before
+suggested it, he recalled that the Waz-ho-don had thought him
+Jad-ben-Otho.
+
+"I am Jad-ben-Otho!" he screamed and then his eyes fell again upon
+the canoe. A new idea came and persisted. He looked down at himself,
+examining his body, and seeing the filthy loin cloth, now water
+soaked and more bedraggled than before, he tore it from him and
+flung it into the lake. "Gods do not wear dirty rags," he said aloud.
+"They do not wear anything but wreaths and garlands of flowers and
+I am a god--I am Jad-ben-Otho--and I go in state to my sacred city
+of A-lur."
+
+He ran his fingers through his matted hair and beard. The water
+had softened the burrs but had not removed them. The man shook his
+head. His hair and beard failed to harmonize with his other godly
+attributes. He was commencing to think more clearly now, for the
+great idea had taken hold of his scattered wits and concentrated
+them upon a single purpose, but he was still a maniac. The only
+difference being that he was now a maniac with a fixed intent. He
+went out on the shore and gathered flowers and ferns and wove them
+in his beard and hair--blazing blooms of different colors--green
+ferns that trailed about his ears or rose bravely upward like the
+plumes in a lady's hat.
+
+When he was satisfied that his appearance would impress the most
+casual observer with his evident deity he returned to the canoe,
+pushed it from shore and jumped in. The impetus carried it into
+the river's current and the current bore it out upon the lake. The
+naked man stood erect in the center of the little craft, his arms
+folded upon his chest. He screamed aloud his message to the city:
+"I am Jad-ben-Otho! Let the high priest and the under priests attend
+upon me!"
+
+As the current of the river was dissipated by the waters of the
+lake the wind caught him and his craft and carried them bravely
+forward. Sometimes he drifted with his back toward A-lur and sometimes
+with his face toward it, and at intervals he shrieked his message
+and his commands. He was still in the middle of the lake when
+someone discovered him from the palace wall, and as he drew nearer,
+a crowd of warriors and women and children were congregated there
+watching him and along the temple walls were many priests and
+among them Lu-don, the high priest. When the boat had drifted close
+enough for them to distinguish the bizarre figure standing in it
+and for them to catch the meaning of his words Lu-don's cunning
+eyes narrowed. The high priest had learned of the escape of Tarzan
+and he feared that should he join Ja-don's forces, as seemed likely,
+he would attract many recruits who might still believe in him, and
+the Dor-ul-Otho, even if a false one, upon the side of the enemy
+might easily work havoc with Lu-don's plans.
+
+The man was drifting close in. His canoe would soon be caught in
+the current that ran close to shore here and carried toward the
+river that emptied the waters of Jad-ben-lul into Jad-bal-lul. The
+under priests were looking toward Lu-don for instructions.
+
+"Fetch him hither!" he commanded. "If he is Jad-ben-Otho I shall
+know him."
+
+The priests hurried to the palace grounds and summoned warriors.
+"Go, bring the stranger to Lu-don. If he is Jad-ben-Otho we shall
+know him."
+
+And so Lieutenant Erich Obergatz was brought before the high priest
+at A-lur. Lu-don looked closely at the naked man with the fantastic
+headdress.
+
+"Where did you come from?" he asked.
+
+"I am Jad-ben-Otho," cried the German. "I came from heaven. Where
+is my high priest?"
+
+"I am the high priest," replied Lu-don.
+
+Obergatz clapped his hands. "Have my feet bathed and food brought
+to me," he commanded.
+
+Lu-don's eyes narrowed to mere slits of crafty cunning. He bowed
+low until his forehead touched the feet of the stranger. Before
+the eyes of many priests, and warriors from the palace he did it.
+
+"Ho, slaves," he cried, rising; "fetch water and food for the Great
+God," and thus the high priest acknowledged before his people the
+godhood of Lieutenant Erich Obergatz, nor was it long before the
+story ran like wildfire through the palace and out into the city
+and beyond that to the lesser villages all the way from A-lur to
+Tu-lur.
+
+The real god had come--Jad-ben-Otho himself, and he had espoused
+the cause of Lu-don, the high priest. Mo-sar lost no time in placing
+himself at the disposal of Lu-don, nor did he mention aught about
+his claims to the throne. It was Mo-sar's opinion that he might
+consider himself fortunate were he allowed to remain in peaceful
+occupation of his chieftainship at Tu-lur, nor was Mo-sar wrong in
+his deductions.
+
+But Lu-don could still use him and so he let him live and sent word
+to him to come to A-lur with all his warriors, for it was rumored
+that Ja-don was raising a great army in the north and might soon
+march upon the City of Light.
+
+Obergatz thoroughly enjoyed being a god. Plenty of food and peace
+of mind and rest partially brought back to him the reason that
+had been so rapidly slipping from him; but in one respect he was
+madder than ever, since now no power on earth would ever be able to
+convince him that he was not a god. Slaves were put at his disposal
+and these he ordered about in godly fashion. The same portion of
+his naturally cruel mind met upon common ground the mind of Lu-don,
+so that the two seemed always in accord. The high priest saw in the
+stranger a mighty force wherewith to hold forever his power over
+all Pal-ul-don and thus the future of Obergatz was assured so long
+as he cared to play god to Lu-don's high priest.
+
+A throne was erected in the main temple court before the eastern
+altar where Jad-ben-Otho might sit in person and behold the sacrifices
+that were offered up to him there each day at sunset. So much did
+the cruel, half-crazed mind enjoy these spectacles that at times
+he even insisted upon wielding the sacrificial knife himself and
+upon such occasions the priests and the people fell upon their
+faces in awe of the dread deity.
+
+If Obergatz taught them not to love their god more he taught them
+to fear him as they never had before, so that the name of Jad-ben-Otho
+was whispered in the city and little children were frightened into
+obedience by the mere mention of it. Lu-don, through his priests and
+slaves, circulated the information that Jad-ben-Otho had commanded
+all his faithful followers to flock to the standard of the high
+priest at A-lur and that all others were cursed, especially Ja-don
+and the base impostor who had posed as the Dor-ul-Otho. The curse
+was to take the form of early death following terrible suffering,
+and Lu-don caused it to be published abroad that the name of any
+warrior who complained of a pain should be brought to him, for such
+might be deemed to be under suspicion, since the first effects of
+the curse would result in slight pains attacking the unholy. He
+counseled those who felt pains to look carefully to their loyalty.
+The result was remarkable and immediate--half a nation without a
+pain, and recruits pouring into A-lur to offer their services to
+Lu-don while secretly hoping that the little pains they had felt
+in arm or leg or belly would not recur in aggravated form.
+
+
+
+
+
+22
+
+A Journey on a Gryf
+
+
+
+
+Tarzan and Jane skirted the shore of Jad-bal-lul and crossed the
+river at the head of the lake. They moved in leisurely fashion
+with an eye to comfort and safety, for the ape-man, now that he
+had found his mate, was determined to court no chance that might
+again separate them, or delay or prevent their escape from Pal-ul-don.
+How they were to recross the morass was a matter of little concern
+to him as yet--it would be time enough to consider that matter when
+it became of more immediate moment. Their hours were filled with
+the happiness and content of reunion after long separation; they
+had much to talk of, for each had passed through many trials and
+vicissitudes and strange adventures, and no important hour might
+go unaccounted for since last they met.
+
+It was Tarzan's intention to choose a way above A-lur and the
+scattered Ho-don villages below it, passing about midway between
+them and the mountains, thus avoiding, in so far as possible, both
+the Ho-don and Waz-don, for in this area lay the neutral territory
+that was uninhabited by either. Thus he would travel northwest
+until opposite the Kor-ul-ja where he planned to stop to pay his
+respects to Om-at and give the gund word of Pan-at-lee, and a plan
+Tarzan had for insuring her safe return to her people. It was upon
+the third day of their journey and they had almost reached the
+river that passes through A-lur when Jane suddenly clutched Tarzan's
+arm and pointed ahead toward the edge of a forest that they were
+approaching. Beneath the shadows of the trees loomed a great bulk
+that the ape-man instantly recognized.
+
+"What is it?" whispered Jane.
+
+"A gryf," replied the ape-man, "and we have met him in the worst
+place that we could possibly have found. There is not a large tree
+within a quarter of a mile, other than those among which he stands.
+Come, we shall have to go back, Jane; I cannot risk it with you
+along. The best we can do is to pray that he does not discover us."
+
+"And if he does?"
+
+"Then I shall have to risk it."
+
+"Risk what?"
+
+"The chance that I can subdue him as I subdued one of his fellows,"
+replied Tarzan. "I told you--you recall?"
+
+"Yes, but I did not picture so huge a creature. Why, John, he is
+as big as a battleship."
+
+The ape-man laughed. "Not quite, though I'll admit he looks quite
+as formidable as one when he charges."
+
+They were moving away slowly so as not to attract the attention of
+the beast.
+
+"I believe we're going to make it," whispered the woman, her voice
+tense with suppressed excitement. A low rumble rolled like distant
+thunder from the wood. Tarzan shook his head.
+
+"'The big show is about to commence in the main tent,'" he quoted,
+grinning. He caught the woman suddenly to his breast and kissed
+her. "One can never tell, Jane," he said. "We'll do our best--that
+is all we can do. Give me your spear, and--don't run. The only
+hope we have lies in that little brain more than in us. If I can
+control it--well, let us see."
+
+The beast had emerged from the forest and was looking about through
+his weak eyes, evidently in search of them. Tarzan raised his voice
+in the weird notes of the Tor-o-don's cry, "Whee-oo! Whee-oo!
+Whee-oo!" For a moment the great beast stood motionless, his attention
+riveted by the call. The ape-man advanced straight toward him, Jane
+Clayton at his elbow. "Whee-oo!" he cried again peremptorily. A
+low rumble rolled from the gryf's cavernous chest in answer to the
+call, and the beast moved slowly toward them.
+
+"Fine!" exclaimed Tarzan. "The odds are in our favor now. You can
+keep your nerve?--but I do not need to ask."
+
+"I know no fear when I am with Tarzan of the Apes," she replied
+softly, and he felt the pressure of her soft fingers on his arm.
+
+And thus the two approached the giant monster of a forgotten
+epoch until they stood close in the shadow of a mighty shoulder.
+"Whee-oo!" shouted Tarzan and struck the hideous snout with the
+shaft of the spear. The vicious side snap that did not reach its
+mark--that evidently was not intended to reach its mark--was the
+hoped-for answer.
+
+"Come," said Tarzan, and taking Jane by the hand he led her around
+behind the monster and up the broad tail to the great, horned back.
+"Now will we ride in the state that our forebears knew, before which
+the pomp of modern kings pales into cheap and tawdry insignificance.
+How would you like to canter through Hyde Park on a mount like
+this?"
+
+"I am afraid the Bobbies would be shocked by our riding habits,
+John," she cried, laughingly.
+
+Tarzan guided the gryf in the direction that they wished to go.
+Steep embankments and rivers proved no slightest obstacle to the
+ponderous creature.
+
+"A prehistoric tank, this," Jane assured him, and laughing and
+talking they continued on their way. Once they came unexpectedly
+upon a dozen Ho-don warriors as the gryf emerged suddenly into
+a small clearing. The fellows were lying about in the shade of a
+single tree that grew alone. When they saw the beast they leaped
+to their feet in consternation and at their shouts the gryf issued
+his hideous, challenging bellow and charged them. The warriors
+fled in all directions while Tarzan belabored the beast across the
+snout with his spear in an effort to control him, and at last he
+succeeded, just as the gryf was almost upon one poor devil that
+it seemed to have singled out for its special prey. With an angry
+grunt the gryf stopped and the man, with a single backward glance
+that showed a face white with terror, disappeared in the jungle he
+had been seeking to reach.
+
+The ape-man was elated. He had doubted that he could control the
+beast should it take it into its head to charge a victim and had
+intended abandoning it before they reached the Kor-ul-ja. Now he
+altered his plans--they would ride to the very village of Om-at
+upon the gryf, and the Kor-ul-ja would have food for conversation
+for many generations to come. Nor was it the theatric instinct
+of the ape-man alone that gave favor to this plan. The element of
+Jane's safety entered into the matter for he knew that she would
+be safe from man and beast alike so long as she rode upon the back
+of Pal-ul-don's most formidable creature.
+
+As they proceeded slowly in the direction of the Kor-ul-ja, for the
+natural gait of the gryf is far from rapid, a handful of terrified
+warriors came panting into A-lur, spreading a weird story of the
+Dor-ul-Otho, only none dared call him the Dor-ul-Otho aloud. Instead
+they spoke of him as Tarzan-jad-guru and they told of meeting him
+mounted upon a mighty gryf beside the beautiful stranger woman whom
+Ko-tan would have made queen of Pal-ul-don. This story was brought
+to Lu-don who caused the warriors to be hailed to his presence,
+when he questioned them closely until finally he was convinced that
+they spoke the truth and when they had told him the direction in
+which the two were traveling, Lu-don guessed that they were on their
+way to Ja-lur to join Ja-don, a contingency that he felt must be
+prevented at any cost. As was his wont in the stress of emergency, he
+called Pan-sat into consultation and for long the two sat in close
+conference. When they arose a plan had been developed. Pan-sat
+went immediately to his own quarters where he removed the headdress
+and trappings of a priest to don in their stead the harness and
+weapons of a warrior. Then he returned to Lu-don.
+
+"Good!" cried the latter, when he saw him. "Not even your fellow-priests
+or the slaves that wait upon you daily would know you now. Lose no
+time, Pan-sat, for all depends upon the speed with which you strike
+and--remember! Kill the man if you can; but in any event bring the
+woman to me here, alive. You understand?"
+
+"Yes, master," replied the priest, and so it was that a lone warrior
+set out from A-lur and made his way northwest in the direction of
+Ja-lur.
+
+The gorge next above Kor-ul-ja is uninhabited and here the wily
+Ja-don had chosen to mobilize his army for its descent upon A-lur.
+Two considerations influenced him--one being the fact that could he
+keep his plans a secret from the enemy he would have the advantage
+of delivering a surprise attack upon the forces of Lu-don from a
+direction that they would not expect attack, and in the meantime he
+would be able to keep his men from the gossip of the cities where
+strange tales were already circulating relative to the coming of
+Jad-ben-Otho in person to aid the high priest in his war against
+Ja-don. It took stout hearts and loyal ones to ignore the implied
+threats of divine vengeance that these tales suggested. Already
+there had been desertions and the cause of Ja-don seemed tottering
+to destruction.
+
+Such was the state of affairs when a sentry posted on the knoll
+in the mouth of the gorge sent word that he had observed in the
+valley below what appeared at a distance to be nothing less than
+two people mounted upon the back of a gryf. He said that he had
+caught glimpses of them, as they passed open spaces, and they seemed
+to be traveling up the river in the direction of the Kor-ul-ja.
+
+At first Ja-don was inclined to doubt the veracity of his informant;
+but, like all good generals, he could not permit even palpably false
+information to go uninvestigated and so he determined to visit the
+knoll himself and learn precisely what it was that the sentry had
+observed through the distorting spectacles of fear. He had scarce
+taken his place beside the man ere the fellow touched his arm and
+pointed. "They are closer now," he whispered, "you can see them
+plainly." And sure enough, not a quarter of a mile away Ja-don saw
+that which in his long experience in Pal-ul-don he had never before
+seen--two humans riding upon the broad back of a gryf.
+
+At first he could scarce credit even this testimony of his own eyes,
+but soon he realized that the creatures below could be naught else
+than they appeared, and then he recognized the man and rose to his
+feet with a loud cry.
+
+"It is he!" he shouted to those about him. "It is the Dor-ul-Otho
+himself."
+
+The gryf and his riders heard the shout though not the words. The
+former bellowed terrifically and started in the direction of the
+knoll, and Ja-don, followed by a few of his more intrepid warriors,
+ran to meet him. Tarzan, loath to enter an unnecessary quarrel,
+tried to turn the animal, but as the beast was far from tractable
+it always took a few minutes to force the will of its master upon
+it; and so the two parties were quite close before the ape-man
+succeeded in stopping the mad charge of his furious mount.
+
+Ja-don and his warriors, however, had come to the realization that
+this bellowing creature was bearing down upon them with evil intent
+and they had assumed the better part of valor and taken to trees,
+accordingly. It was beneath these trees that Tarzan finally stopped
+the gryf. Ja-don called down to him.
+
+"We are friends," he cried. "I am Ja-don, Chief of Ja-lur. I and
+my warriors lay our foreheads upon the feet of Dor-ul-Otho and pray
+that he will aid us in our righteous fight with Lu-don, the high
+priest."
+
+"You have not defeated him yet?" asked Tarzan. "Why I thought you
+would be king of Pal-ul-don long before this."
+
+"No," replied Ja-don. "The people fear the high priest and now that
+he has in the temple one whom he claims to be Jad-ben-Otho many of
+my warriors are afraid. If they but knew that the Dor-ul-Otho had
+returned and that he had blessed the cause of Ja-don I am sure that
+victory would be ours."
+
+Tarzan thought for a long minute and then he spoke. "Ja-don," he
+said, "was one of the few who believed in me and who wished to accord
+me fair treatment. I have a debt to pay to Ja-don and an account
+to settle with Lu-don, not alone on my own behalf, but principally
+upon that of my mate. I will go with you Ja-don to mete to Lu-don
+the punishment he deserves. Tell me, chief, how may the Dor-ul-Otho
+best serve his father's people?"
+
+"By coming with me to Ja-lur and the villages between," replied
+Ja-don quickly, "that the people may see that it is indeed the
+Dor-ul-Otho and that he smiles upon the cause of Ja-don."
+
+"You think that they will believe in me more now than before?"
+asked the ape-man.
+
+"Who will dare doubt that he who rides upon the great gryf is less
+than a god?" returned the old chief.
+
+"And if I go with you to the battle at A-lur," asked Tarzan, "can
+you assure the safety of my mate while I am gone from her?"
+
+"She shall remain in Ja-lur with the Princess O-lo-a and my own
+women," replied Ja-don. "There she will be safe for there I shall
+leave trusted warriors to protect them. Say that you will come,
+O Dor-ul-Otho, and my cup of happiness will be full, for even now
+Ta-den, my son, marches toward A-lur with a force from the northwest
+and if we can attack, with the Dor-ul-Otho at our head, from the
+northeast our arms should be victorious."
+
+"It shall be as you wish, Ja-don," replied the ape-man; "but first
+you must have meat fetched for my gryf."
+
+"There are many carcasses in the camp above," replied Ja-don, "for
+my men have little else to do than hunt."
+
+"Good," exclaimed Tarzan. "Have them brought at once."
+
+And when the meat was-brought and laid at a distance the ape-man
+slipped from the back of his fierce charger and fed him with his
+own hand. "See that there is always plenty of flesh for him," he
+said to Ja-don, for he guessed that his mastery might be short-lived
+should the vicious beast become over-hungry.
+
+It was morning before they could leave for Ja-lur, but Tarzan found
+the gryf lying where he had left him the night before beside the
+carcasses of two antelope and a lion; but now there was nothing
+but the gryf.
+
+"The paleontologists say that he was herbivorous," said Tarzan as
+he and Jane approached the beast.
+
+The journey to Ja-lur was made through the scattered villages where
+Ja-don hoped to arouse a keener enthusiasm for his cause. A party
+of warriors preceded Tarzan that the people might properly be
+prepared, not only for the sight of the gryf but to receive the
+Dor-ul-Otho as became his high station. The results were all that
+Ja-don could have hoped and in no village through which they passed
+was there one who doubted the deity of the ape-man.
+
+As they approached Ja-lur a strange warrior joined them, one whom
+none of Ja-don's following knew. He said he came from one of the
+villages to the south and that he had been treated unfairly by
+one of Lu-don's chiefs. For this reason he had deserted the cause
+of the high priest and come north in the hope of finding a home
+in Ja-lur. As every addition to his forces was welcome to the old
+chief he permitted the stranger to accompany them, and so he came
+into Ja-lur with them.
+
+There arose now the question as to what was to be done with the
+gryf while they remained in the city. It was with difficulty that
+Tarzan had prevented the savage beast from attacking all who came
+near it when they had first entered the camp of Ja-don in the
+uninhabited gorge next to the Kor-ul-ja, but during the march to
+Ja-lur the creature had seemed to become accustomed to the presence
+of the Ho-don. The latter, however, gave him no cause for annoyance
+since they kept as far from him as possible and when he passed
+through the streets of the city he was viewed from the safety
+of lofty windows and roofs. However tractable he appeared to have
+become there would have been no enthusiastic seconding of a suggestion
+to turn him loose within the city. It was finally suggested that
+he be turned into a walled enclosure within the palace grounds and
+this was done, Tarzan driving him in after Jane had dismounted.
+More meat was thrown to him and he was left to his own devices, the
+awe-struck inhabitants of the palace not even venturing to climb
+upon the walls to look at him.
+
+Ja-don led Tarzan and Jane to the quarters of the Princess O-lo-a
+who, the moment that she beheld the ape-man, threw herself to the
+ground and touched her forehead to his feet. Pan-at-lee was there
+with her and she too seemed happy to see Tarzan-jad-guru again.
+When they found that Jane was his mate they looked with almost
+equal awe upon her, since even the most skeptical of the warriors
+of Ja-don were now convinced that they were entertaining a god and
+a goddess within the city of Ja-lur, and that with the assistance
+of the power of these two, the cause of Ja-don would soon be
+victorious and the old Lion-man set upon the throne of Pal-ul-don.
+
+From O-lo-a Tarzan learned that Ta-den had returned and that they
+were to be united in marriage with the weird rites of their religion
+and in accordance with the custom of their people as soon as Ta-den
+came home from the battle that was to be fought at A-lur.
+
+The recruits were now gathering at the city and it was decided
+that the next day Ja-don and Tarzan would return to the main body
+in the hidden camp and immediately under cover of night the attack
+should be made in force upon Lu-don's forces at A-lur. Word of
+this was sent to Ta-den where he awaited with his warriors upon
+the north side of Jad-ben-lul, only a few miles from A-lur.
+
+In the carrying out of these plans it was necessary to leave Jane
+behind in Ja-don's palace at Ja-lur, but O-lo-a and her women were
+with her and there were many warriors to guard them, so Tarzan
+bid his mate good-bye with no feelings of apprehension as to her
+safety, and again seated upon the gryf made his way out of the city
+with Ja-don and his warriors.
+
+At the mouth of the gorge the ape-man abandoned his huge mount since
+it had served its purpose and could be of no further value to him
+in their attack upon A-lur, which was to be made just before dawn
+the following day when, as he could not have been seen by the enemy,
+the effect of his entry to the city upon the gryf would have been
+totally lost. A couple of sharp blows with the spear sent the big
+animal rumbling and growling in the direction of the Kor-ul-gryf
+nor was the ape-man sorry to see it depart since he had never known
+at what instant its short temper and insatiable appetite for flesh
+might turn it upon some of his companions.
+
+Immediately upon their arrival at the gorge the march on A-lur was
+commenced.
+
+
+
+
+
+23
+
+Taken Alive
+
+
+
+
+As night fell a warrior from the palace of Ja-lur slipped into the
+temple grounds. He made his way to where the lesser priests were
+quartered. His presence aroused no suspicion as it was not unusual
+for warriors to have business within the temple. He came at last to
+a chamber where several priests were congregated after the evening
+meal. The rites and ceremonies of the sacrifice had been concluded
+and there was nothing more of a religious nature to make call upon
+their time until the rites at sunrise.
+
+Now the warrior knew, as in fact nearly all Pal-ul-don knew, that
+there was no strong bond between the temple and the palace at
+Ja-lur and that Ja-don only suffered the presence of the priests
+and permitted their cruel and abhorrent acts because of the fact
+that these things had been the custom of the Ho-don of Pal-ul-don
+for countless ages, and rash indeed must have been the man who would
+have attempted to interfere with the priests or their ceremonies.
+That Ja-don never entered the temple was well known, and that his
+high priest never entered the palace, but the people came to the
+temple with their votive offerings and the sacrifices were made
+night and morning as in every other temple in Pal-ul-don.
+
+The warriors knew these things, knew them better perhaps than a
+simple warrior should have known them. And so it was here in the
+temple that he looked for the aid that he sought in the carrying
+out of whatever design he had.
+
+As he entered the apartment where the priests were he greeted them
+after the manner which was customary in Pal-ul-don, but at the
+same time he made a sign with his finger that might have attracted
+little attention or scarcely been noticed at all by one who knew
+not its meaning. That there were those within the room who noticed
+it and interpreted it was quickly apparent, through the fact that
+two of the priests rose and came close to him as he stood just within
+the doorway and each of them, as he came, returned the signal that
+the warrior had made.
+
+The three talked for but a moment and then the warrior turned and
+left the apartment. A little later one of the priests who had talked
+with him left also and shortly after that the other.
+
+In the corridor they found the warrior waiting, and led him to
+a little chamber which opened upon a smaller corridor just beyond
+where it joined the larger. Here the three remained in whispered
+conversation for some little time and then the warrior returned to
+the palace and the two priests to their quarters.
+
+The apartments of the women of the palace at Ja-lur are all upon
+the same side of a long, straight corridor. Each has a single door
+leading into the corridor and at the opposite end several windows
+overlooking a garden. It was in one of these rooms that Jane slept
+alone. At each end of the corridor was a sentinel, the main body
+of the guard being stationed in a room near the outer entrance to
+the women's quarters.
+
+The palace slept for they kept early hours there where Ja-don ruled.
+The pal-e-don-so of the great chieftain of the north knew no such
+wild orgies as had resounded through the palace of the king at
+A-lur. Ja-lur was a quiet city by comparison with the capital, yet
+there was always a guard kept at every entrance to the chambers
+of Ja-don and his immediate family as well as at the gate leading
+into the temple and that which opened upon the city.
+
+These guards, however, were small, consisting usually of not more than
+five or six warriors, one of whom remained awake while the others
+slept. Such were the conditions then when two warriors presented
+themselves, one at either end of the corridor, to the sentries who
+watched over the safety of Jane Clayton and the Princess O-lo-a,
+and each of the newcomers repeated to the sentinels the stereotyped
+words which announced that they were relieved and these others sent
+to watch in their stead. Never is a warrior loath to be relieved
+of sentry duty. Where, under different circumstances he might
+ask numerous questions he is now too well satisfied to escape the
+monotonies of that universally hated duty. And so these two men
+accepted their relief without question and hastened away to their
+pallets.
+
+And then a third warrior entered the corridor and all of the
+newcomers came together before the door of the ape-man's slumbering
+mate. And one was the strange warrior who had met Ja-don and Tarzan
+outside the city of Ja-lur as they had approached it the previous
+day; and he was the same warrior who had entered the temple a short
+hour before, but the faces of his fellows were unfamiliar, even to
+one another, since it is seldom that a priest removes his hideous
+headdress in the presence even of his associates.
+
+Silently they lifted the hangings that hid the interior of the
+room from the view of those who passed through the corridor, and
+stealthily slunk within. Upon a pile of furs in a far corner lay
+the sleeping form of Lady Greystoke. The bare feet of the intruders
+gave forth no sound as they crossed the stone floor toward her.
+A ray of moonlight entering through a window near her couch shone
+full upon her, revealing the beautiful contours of an arm and
+shoulder in cameo-distinctness against the dark furry pelt beneath
+which she slept, and the perfect profile that was turned toward
+the skulking three.
+
+But neither the beauty nor the helplessness of the sleeper aroused
+such sentiments of passion or pity as might stir in the breasts of
+normal men. To the three priests she was but a lump of clay, nor
+could they conceive aught of that passion which had aroused men to
+intrigue and to murder for possession of this beautiful American
+girl, and which even now was influencing the destiny of undiscovered
+Pal-ul-don.
+
+Upon the floor of the chamber were numerous pelts and as the
+leader of the trio came close to the sleeping woman he stooped and
+gathered up one of the smaller of these. Standing close to her head
+he held the rug outspread above her face. "Now," he whispered and
+simultaneously he threw the rug over the woman's head and his two
+fellows leaped upon her, seizing her arms and pinioning her body
+while their leader stifled her cries with the furry pelt. Quickly
+and silently they bound her wrists and gagged her and during the
+brief time that their work required there was no sound that might
+have been heard by occupants of the adjoining apartments.
+
+Jerking her roughly to her feet they forced her toward a window
+but she refused to walk, throwing herself instead upon the floor.
+They were very angry and would have resorted to cruelties to compel
+her obedience but dared not, since the wrath of Lu-don might fall
+heavily upon whoever mutilated his fair prize.
+
+And so they were forced to lift and carry her bodily. Nor was the
+task any sinecure since the captive kicked and struggled as best
+she might, making their labor as arduous as possible. But finally
+they succeeded in getting her through the window and into the
+garden beyond where one of the two priests from the Ja-lur temple
+directed their steps toward a small barred gateway in the south
+wall of the enclosure.
+
+Immediately beyond this a flight of stone stairs led downward
+toward the river and at the foot of the stairs were moored several
+canoes. Pan-sat had indeed been fortunate in enlisting aid from
+those who knew the temple and the palace so well, or otherwise he
+might never have escaped from Ja-lur with his captive. Placing the
+woman in the bottom of a light canoe Pan-sat entered it and took up
+the paddle. His companions unfastened the moorings and shoved the
+little craft out into the current of the stream. Their traitorous
+work completed they turned and retraced their steps toward the
+temple, while Pan-sat, paddling strongly with the current, moved
+rapidly down the river that would carry him to the Jad-ben-lul and
+A-lur.
+
+The moon had set and the eastern horizon still gave no hint of
+approaching day as a long file of warriors wound stealthily through
+the darkness into the city of A-lur. Their plans were all laid and
+there seemed no likelihood of their miscarriage. A messenger had
+been dispatched to Ta-den whose forces lay northwest of the city.
+Tarzan, with a small contingent, was to enter the temple through
+the secret passageway, the location of which he alone knew, while
+Ja-don, with the greater proportion of the warriors, was to attack
+the palace gates.
+
+The ape-man, leading his little band, moved stealthily through the
+winding alleys of A-lur, arriving undetected at the building which
+hid the entrance to the secret passageway. This spot being best
+protected by the fact that its existence was unknown to others
+than the priests, was unguarded. To facilitate the passage of his
+little company through the narrow winding, uneven tunnel, Tarzan
+lighted a torch which had been brought for the purpose and preceding
+his warriors led the way toward the temple.
+
+That he could accomplish much once he reached the inner chambers
+of the temple with his little band of picked warriors the ape-man
+was confident since an attack at this point would bring confusion
+and consternation to the easily overpowered priests, and permit
+Tarzan to attack the palace forces in the rear at the same time
+that Ja-don engaged them at the palace gates, while Ta-den and his
+forces swarmed the northern walls. Great value had been placed by
+Ja-don on the moral effect of the Dor-ul-Otho's mysterious appearance
+in the heart of the temple and he had urged Tarzan to take every
+advantage of the old chieftain's belief that many of Lu-don's
+warriors still wavered in their allegiance between the high priest
+and the Dor-ul-Otho, being held to the former more by the fear which
+he engendered in the breasts of all his followers than by any love
+or loyalty they might feel toward him.
+
+There is a Pal-ul-donian proverb setting forth a truth similar to
+that contained in the old Scotch adage that "The best laid schemes
+o' mice and men gang aft a-gley." Freely translated it might
+read, "He who follows the right trail sometimes reaches the wrong
+destination," and such apparently was the fate that lay in the
+footsteps of the great chieftain of the north and his godlike ally.
+
+Tarzan, more familiar with the windings of the corridors than his
+fellows and having the advantage of the full light of the torch,
+which at best was but a dim and flickering affair, was some distance
+ahead of the others, and in his keen anxiety to close with the
+enemy he gave too little thought to those who were to support him.
+Nor is this strange, since from childhood the ape-man had been
+accustomed to fight the battles of life single-handed so that it
+had become habitual for him to depend solely upon his own cunning
+and prowess.
+
+And so it was that he came into the upper corridor from which opened
+the chambers of Lu-don and the lesser priests far in advance of his
+warriors, and as he turned into this corridor with its dim cressets
+flickering somberly, he saw another enter it from a corridor before
+him--a warrior half carrying, half dragging the figure of a woman.
+Instantly Tarzan recognized the gagged and fettered captive whom
+he had thought safe in the palace of Ja-don at Ja-lur.
+
+The warrior with the woman had seen Tarzan at the same instant that
+the latter had discovered him. He heard the low beastlike growl
+that broke from the ape-man's lips as he sprang forward to wrest
+his mate from her captor and wreak upon him the vengeance that was
+in the Tarmangani's savage heart. Across the corridor from Pan-sat
+was the entrance to a smaller chamber. Into this he leaped carrying
+the woman with him.
+
+Close behind came Tarzan of the Apes. He had cast aside his torch
+and drawn the long knife that had been his father's. With the
+impetuosity of a charging bull he rushed into the chamber in pursuit
+of Pan-sat to find himself, when the hangings dropped behind him,
+in utter darkness. Almost immediately there was a crash of stone
+on stone before him followed a moment later by a similar crash
+behind. No other evidence was necessary to announce to the ape-man
+that he was again a prisoner in Lu-don's temple.
+
+He stood perfectly still where he had halted at the first sound of
+the descending stone door. Not again would he easily be precipitated
+to the gryf pit, or some similar danger, as had occurred when Lu-don
+had trapped him in the Temple of the Gryf. As he stood there his
+eyes slowly grew accustomed to the darkness and he became aware that
+a dim light was entering the chamber through some opening, though
+it was several minutes before he discovered its source. In the roof
+of the chamber he finally discerned a small aperture, possibly three
+feet in diameter and it was through this that what was really only
+a lesser darkness rather than a light was penetrating its Stygian
+blackness of the chamber in which he was imprisoned.
+
+Since the doors had fallen he had heard no sound though his keen
+ears were constantly strained in an effort to discover a clue
+to the direction taken by the abductor of his mate. Presently he
+could discern the outlines of his prison cell. It was a small room,
+not over fifteen feet across. On hands and knees, with the utmost
+caution, he examined the entire area of the floor. In the exact
+center, directly beneath the opening in the roof, was a trap, but
+otherwise the floor was solid. With this knowledge it was only
+necessary to avoid this spot in so far as the floor was concerned.
+The walls next received his attention. There were only two openings.
+One the doorway through which he had entered, and upon the opposite
+side that through which the warrior had borne Jane Clayton. These
+were both closed by the slabs of stone which the fleeing warrior
+had released as he departed.
+
+Lu-don, the high priest, licked his thin lips and rubbed his bony
+white hands together in gratification as Pan-sat bore Jane Clayton
+into his presence and laid her on the floor of the chamber before
+him.
+
+"Good, Pan-sat!" he exclaimed. "You shall be well rewarded for this
+service. Now, if we but had the false Dor-ul-Otho in our power all
+Pal-ul-don would be at our feet."
+
+"Master, I have him!" cried Pan-sat.
+
+"What!" exclaimed Lu-don, "you have Tarzan-jad-guru? You have slain
+him perhaps. Tell me, my wonderful Pan-sat, tell me quickly. My
+breast is bursting with a desire to know."
+
+"I have taken him alive, Lu-don, my master," replied Pan-sat. "He
+is in the little chamber that the ancients built to trap those who
+were too powerful to take alive in personal encounter."
+
+"You have done well, Pan-sat, I--"
+
+A frightened priest burst into the apartment. "Quick, master, quick,"
+he cried, "the corridors are filled with the warriors of Ja-don."
+
+"You are mad," cried the high priest. "My warriors hold the palace
+and the temple."
+
+"I speak the truth, master," replied the priest, "there are warriors
+in the corridor approaching this very chamber, and they come from
+the direction of the secret passage which leads hither from the
+city."
+
+"It may be even as he says," exclaimed Pan-sat. "It was from that
+direction that Tarzan-jad-guru was coming when I discovered and
+trapped him. He was leading his warriors to the very holy of holies."
+
+Lu-don ran quickly to the doorway and looked out into the corridor.
+At a glance he saw that the fears of the frightened priest were
+well founded. A dozen warriors were moving along the corridor toward
+him but they seemed confused and far from sure of themselves. The
+high priest guessed that deprived of the leadership of Tarzan they
+were little better than lost in the unknown mazes of the subterranean
+precincts of the temple.
+
+Stepping back into the apartment he seized a leathern thong that
+depended from the ceiling. He pulled upon it sharply and through
+the temple boomed the deep tones of a metal gong. Five times the
+clanging notes rang through the corridors, then he turned toward
+the two priests. "Bring the woman and follow me," he directed.
+
+Crossing the chamber he passed through a small doorway, the others
+lifting Jane Clayton from the floor and following him. Through a
+narrow corridor and up a flight of steps they went, turning to right
+and left and doubling back through a maze of winding passageways
+which terminated in a spiral staircase that gave forth at the
+surface of the ground within the largest of the inner altar courts
+close beside the eastern altar.
+
+From all directions now, in the corridors below and the grounds
+above, came the sound of hurrying footsteps. The five strokes of
+the great gong had summoned the faithful to the defense of Lu-don
+in his private chambers. The priests who knew the way led the less
+familiar warriors to the spot and presently those who had accompanied
+Tarzan found themselves not only leaderless but facing a vastly
+superior force. They were brave men but under the circumstances
+they were helpless and so they fell back the way they had come,
+and when they reached the narrow confines of the smaller passageway
+their safety was assured since only one foeman could attack them
+at a time. But their plans were frustrated and possibly also their
+entire cause lost, so heavily had Ja-don banked upon the success
+of their venture.
+
+With the clanging of the temple gong Ja-don assumed that Tarzan
+and his party had struck their initial blow and so he launched his
+attack upon the palace gate. To the ears of Lu-don in the inner
+temple court came the savage war cries that announced the beginning
+of the battle. Leaving Pan-sat and the other priest to guard
+the woman he hastened toward the palace personally to direct his
+force and as he passed through the temple grounds he dispatched a
+messenger to learn the outcome of the fight in the corridors below,
+and other messengers to spread the news among his followers that
+the false Dor-ul-Otho was a prisoner in the temple.
+
+As the din of battle rose above A-lur, Lieutenant Erich Obergatz
+turned upon his bed of soft hides and sat up. He rubbed his eyes
+and looked about him. It was still dark without.
+
+"I am Jad-ben-Otho," he cried, "who dares disturb my slumber?"
+
+A slave squatting upon the floor at the foot of his couch shuddered
+and touched her forehead to the floor. "It must be that the enemy
+have come, O Jad-ben-Otho." She spoke soothingly for she had reason
+to know the terrors of the mad frenzy into which trivial things
+sometimes threw the Great God.
+
+A priest burst suddenly through the hangings of the doorway and
+falling upon his hands and knees rubbed his forehead against the
+stone flagging. "O Jad-ben-Otho," he cried, "the warriors of Ja-don
+have attacked the palace and the temple. Even now they are fighting
+in the corridors near the quarters of Lu-don, and the high priest
+begs that you come to the palace and encourage your faithful warriors
+by your presence."
+
+Obergatz sprang to his feet. "I am Jad-ben-Otho," he screamed.
+"With lightning I will blast the blasphemers who dare attack the
+holy city of A-lur."
+
+For a moment he rushed aimlessly and madly about the room, while
+the priest and the slave remained upon hands and knees with their
+foreheads against the floor.
+
+"Come," cried Obergatz, planting a vicious kick in the side of the
+slave girl. "Come! Would you wait here all day while the forces of
+darkness overwhelm the City of Light?"
+
+Thoroughly frightened as were all those who were forced to serve the
+Great God, the two arose and followed Obergatz towards the palace.
+
+Above the shouting of the warriors rose constantly the cries of
+the temple priests: "Jad-ben-Otho is here and the false Dor-ul-Otho
+is a prisoner in the temple." The persistent cries reached even to
+the ears of the enemy as it was intended that they should.
+
+
+
+
+
+24
+
+The Messenger of Death
+
+
+
+
+The sun rose to see the forces of Ja-don still held at the palace
+gate. The old warrior had seized the tall structure that stood
+just beyond the palace and at the summit of this he kept a warrior
+stationed to look toward the northern wall of the palace where
+Ta-den was to make his attack; but as the minutes wore into hours
+no sign of the other force appeared, and now in the full light of
+the new sun upon the roof of one of the palace buildings appeared
+Lu-don, the high priest, Mo-sar, the pretender, and the strange,
+naked figure of a man, into whose long hair and beard were woven
+fresh ferns and flowers. Behind them were banked a score of lesser
+priests who chanted in unison: "This is Jad-ben-Otho. Lay down your
+arms and surrender." This they repeated again and again, alternating
+it with the cry: "The false Dor-ul-Otho is a prisoner."
+
+In one of those lulls which are common in battles between forces
+armed with weapons that require great physical effort in their use,
+a voice suddenly arose from among the followers of Ja-don: "Show
+us the Dor-ul-Otho. We do not believe you!"
+
+"Wait," cried Lu-don. "If I do not produce him before the sun has
+moved his own width, the gates of the palace shall be opened to
+you and my warriors will lay down their arms."
+
+He turned to one of his priests and issued brief instructions.
+
+The ape-man paced the confines of his narrow cell. Bitterly he
+reproached himself for the stupidity which had led him into this
+trap, and yet was it stupidity? What else might he have done other
+than rush to the succor of his mate? He wondered how they had stolen
+her from Ja-lur, and then suddenly there flashed to his mind the
+features of the warrior whom he had just seen with her. They were
+strangely familiar. He racked his brain to recall where he had seen
+the man before and then it came to him. He was the strange warrior
+who had joined Ja-don's forces outside of Ja-lur the day that
+Tarzan had ridden upon the great gryf from the uninhabited gorge
+next to the Kor-ul-ja down to the capital city of the chieftain of
+the north. But who could the man be? Tarzan knew that never before
+that other day had he seen him.
+
+Presently he heard the clanging of a gong from the corridor without
+and very faintly the rush of feet, and shouts. He guessed that
+his warriors had been discovered and a fight was in progress. He
+fretted and chafed at the chance that had denied him participation
+in it.
+
+Again and again he tried the doors of his prison and the trap in the
+center of the floor, but none would give to his utmost endeavors.
+He strained his eyes toward the aperture above but he could see
+nothing, and then he continued his futile pacing to and fro like
+a caged lion behind its bars.
+
+The minutes dragged slowly into hours. Faintly sounds came to him
+as of shouting men at a great distance. The battle was in progress.
+He wondered if Ja-don would be victorious and should he be, would
+his friends ever discover him in this hidden chamber in the bowels
+of the hill? He doubted it.
+
+And now as he looked again toward the aperture in the roof there
+appeared to be something depending through its center. He came closer
+and strained his eyes to see. Yes, there was something there. It
+appeared to be a rope. Tarzan wondered if it had been there all the
+time. It must have, he reasoned, since he had heard no sound from
+above and it was so dark within the chamber that he might easily
+have overlooked it.
+
+He raised his hand toward it. The end of it was just within his
+reach. He bore his weight upon it to see if it would hold him.
+Then he released it and backed away, still watching it, as you have
+seen an animal do after investigating some unfamiliar object, one
+of the little traits that differentiated Tarzan from other men,
+accentuating his similarity to the savage beasts of his native
+jungle. Again and again he touched and tested the braided leather
+rope, and always he listened for any warning sound from above.
+
+He was very careful not to step upon the trap at any time and when
+finally he bore all his weight upon the rope and took his feet from
+the floor he spread them wide apart so that if he fell he would
+fall astride the trap. The rope held him. There was no sound from
+above, nor any from the trap below.
+
+Slowly and cautiously he drew himself upward, hand over hand. Nearer
+and nearer the roof he came. In a moment his eyes would be above
+the level of the floor above. Already his extended arms projected
+into the upper chamber and then something closed suddenly upon
+both his forearms, pinioning them tightly and leaving him hanging
+in mid-air unable to advance or retreat.
+
+Immediately a light appeared in the room above him and presently
+he saw the hideous mask of a priest peering down upon him. In the
+priest's hands were leathern thongs and these he tied about Tarzan's
+wrists and forearms until they were completely bound together
+from his elbows almost to his fingers. Behind this priest Tarzan
+presently saw others and soon several lay hold of him and pulled
+him up through the hole.
+
+Almost instantly his eyes were above the level of the floor he
+understood how they had trapped him. Two nooses had lain encircling
+the aperture into the cell below. A priest had waited at the end
+of each of these ropes and at opposite sides of the chamber. When
+he had climbed to a sufficient height upon the rope that had dangled
+into his prison below and his arms were well within the encircling
+snares the two priests had pulled quickly upon their ropes and he
+had been made an easy captive without any opportunity of defending
+himself or inflicting injury upon his captors.
+
+And now they bound his legs from his ankles to his knees and picking
+him up carried him from the chamber. No word did they speak to him
+as they bore him upward to the temple yard.
+
+The din of battle had risen again as Ja-don had urged his forces to
+renewed efforts. Ta-den had not arrived and the forces of the old
+chieftain were revealing in their lessened efforts their increasing
+demoralization, and then it was that the priests carried Tarzan-jad-guru
+to the roof of the palace and exhibited him in the sight of the
+warriors of both factions.
+
+"Here is the false Dor-ul-Otho," screamed Lu-don.
+
+Obergatz, his shattered mentality having never grasped fully the
+meaning of much that was going on about him, cast a casual glance
+at the bound and helpless prisoner, and as his eyes fell upon the
+noble features of the ape-man, they went wide in astonishment and
+fright, and his pasty countenance turned a sickly blue. Once before
+had he seen Tarzan of the Apes, but many times had he dreamed that
+he had seen him and always was the giant ape-man avenging the wrongs
+that had been committed upon him and his by the ruthless hands of
+the three German officers who had led their native troops in the
+ravishing of Tarzan's peaceful home. Hauptmann Fritz Schneider
+had paid the penalty of his needless cruelties; Unter-lieutenant
+von Goss, too, had paid; and now Obergatz, the last of the three,
+stood face to face with the Nemesis that had trailed him through
+his dreams for long, weary months. That he was bound and helpless
+lessened not the German's terror--he seemed not to realize that
+the man could not harm him. He but stood cringing and jibbering
+and Lu-don saw and was filled with apprehension that others might
+see and seeing realize that this bewhiskered idiot was no god--that
+of the two Tarzan-jad-guru was the more godly figure. Already the
+high priest noted that some of the palace warriors standing near
+were whispering together and pointing. He stepped closer to Obergatz.
+"You are Jad-ben-Otho," he whispered, "denounce him!"
+
+The German shook himself. His mind cleared of all but his great
+terror and the words of the high priest gave him the clue to safety.
+
+"I am Jad-ben-Otho!" he screamed.
+
+Tarzan looked him straight in the eye. "You are Lieutenant Obergatz
+of the German Army," he said in excellent German. "You are the
+last of the three I have sought so long and in your putrid heart
+you know that God has not brought us together at last for nothing."
+
+The mind of Lieutenant Obergatz was functioning clearly and rapidly
+at last. He too saw the questioning looks upon the faces of some
+of those around them. He saw the opposing warriors of both cities
+standing by the gate inactive, every eye turned upon him, and the
+trussed figure of the ape-man. He realized that indecision now meant
+ruin, and ruin, death. He raised his voice in the sharp barking
+tones of a Prussian officer, so unlike his former maniacal screaming
+as to quickly arouse the attention of every ear and to cause an
+expression of puzzlement to cross the crafty face of Lu-don.
+
+"I am Jad-ben-Otho," snapped Obergatz. "This creature is no son of
+mine. As a lesson to all blasphemers he shall die upon the altar
+at the hand of the god he has profaned. Take him from my sight,
+and when the sun stands at zenith let the faithful congregate in
+the temple court and witness the wrath of this divine hand," and
+he held aloft his right palm.
+
+Those who had brought Tarzan took him away then as Obergatz had
+directed, and the German turned once more to the warriors by the
+gate. "Throw down your arms, warriors of Ja-don," he cried, "lest
+I call down my lightnings to blast you where you stand. Those who
+do as I bid shall be forgiven. Come! Throw down your arms."
+
+The warriors of Ja-don moved uneasily, casting looks of appeal at
+their leader and of apprehension toward the figures upon the palace
+roof. Ja-don sprang forward among his men. "Let the cowards and
+knaves throw down their arms and enter the palace," he cried, "but
+never will Ja-don and the warriors of Ja-lur touch their foreheads
+to the feet of Lu-don and his false god. Make your decision now,"
+he cried to his followers.
+
+A few threw down their arms and with sheepish looks passed through
+the gateway into the palace, and with the example of these to
+bolster their courage others joined in the desertion from the old
+chieftain of the north, but staunch and true around him stood the
+majority of his warriors and when the last weakling had left their
+ranks Ja-don voiced the savage cry with which he led his followers
+to the attack, and once again the battle raged about the palace
+gate.
+
+At times Ja-don's forces pushed the defenders far into the palace
+ground and then the wave of combat would recede and pass out into
+the city again. And still Ta-den and the reinforcements did not come.
+It was drawing close to noon. Lu-don had mustered every available
+man that was not actually needed for the defense of the gate within
+the temple, and these he sent, under the leadership of Pan-sat,
+out into the city through the secret passageway and there they fell
+upon Ja-don's forces from the rear while those at the gate hammered
+them in front.
+
+Attacked on two sides by a vastly superior force the result was
+inevitable and finally the last remnant of Ja-don's little army
+capitulated and the old chief was taken a prisoner before Lu-don.
+"Take him to the temple court," cried the high priest. "He shall
+witness the death of his accomplice and perhaps Jad-ben-Otho shall
+pass a similar sentence upon him as well."
+
+The inner temple court was packed with humanity. At either end of
+the western altar stood Tarzan and his mate, bound and helpless.
+The sounds of battle had ceased and presently the ape-man saw Ja-don
+being led into the inner court, his wrists bound tightly together
+before him. Tarzan turned his eyes toward Jane and nodded in the
+direction of Ja-don. "This looks like the end," he said quietly.
+"He was our last and only hope."
+
+"We have at least found each other, John," she replied, "and our
+last days have been spent together. My only prayer now is that if
+they take you they do not leave me."
+
+Tarzan made no reply for in his heart was the same bitter thought
+that her own contained--not the fear that they would kill him but
+the fear that they would not kill her. The ape-man strained at
+his bonds but they were too many and too strong. A priest near him
+saw and with a jeering laugh struck the defenseless ape-man in the
+face.
+
+"The brute!" cried Jane Clayton.
+
+Tarzan smiled. "I have been struck thus before, Jane," he said,
+"and always has the striker died."
+
+"You still have hope?" she asked.
+
+"I am still alive," he said as though that were sufficient answer.
+She was a woman and she did not have the courage of this man who
+knew no fear. In her heart of hearts she knew that he would die
+upon the altar at high noon for he had told her, after he had been
+brought to the inner court, of the sentence of death that Obergatz
+had pronounced upon him, and she knew too that Tarzan knew that
+he would die, but that he was too courageous to admit it even to
+himself.
+
+As she looked upon him standing there so straight and wonderful
+and brave among his savage captors her heart cried out against
+the cruelty of the fate that had overtaken him. It seemed a gross
+and hideous wrong that that wonderful creature, now so quick with
+exuberant life and strength and purpose should be presently naught
+but a bleeding lump of clay--and all so uselessly and wantonly.
+Gladly would she have offered her life for his but she knew that
+it was a waste of words since their captors would work upon them
+whatever it was their will to do--for him, death; for her--she
+shuddered at the thought.
+
+And now came Lu-don and the naked Obergatz, and the high priest
+led the German to his place behind the altar, himself standing upon
+the other's left. Lu-don whispered a word to Obergatz, at the same
+time nodding in the direction of Ja-don. The Hun cast a scowling
+look upon the old warrior.
+
+"And after the false god," he cried, "the false prophet," and he
+pointed an accusing finger at Ja-don. Then his eyes wandered to
+the form of Jane Clayton.
+
+"And the woman, too?" asked Lu-don.
+
+"The case of the woman I will attend to later," replied Obergatz.
+"I will talk with her tonight after she has had a chance to meditate
+upon the consequences of arousing the wrath of Jad-ben-Otho."
+
+He cast his eyes upward at the sun. "The time approaches," he said
+to Lu-don. "Prepare the sacrifice."
+
+Lu-don nodded to the priests who were gathered about Tarzan. They
+seized the ape-man and lifted him bodily to the altar where they laid
+him upon his back with his head at the south end of the monolith,
+but a few feet from where Jane Clayton stood. Impulsively and
+before they could restrain her the woman rushed forward and bending
+quickly kissed her mate upon the forehead. "Good-bye, John," she
+whispered.
+
+"Good-bye," he answered, smiling.
+
+The priests seized her and dragged her away. Lu-don handed the
+sacrificial knife to Obergatz. "I am the Great God," cried the
+German, "thus falleth the divine wrath upon all my enemies!" He
+looked up at the sun and then raised the knife high above his head.
+
+"Thus die the blasphemers of God!" he screamed, and at the same
+instant a sharp staccato note rang out above the silent, spell-bound
+multitude. There was a screaming whistle in the air and Jad-ben-Otho
+crumpled forward across the body of his intended victim. Again the
+same alarming noise and Lu-don fell, a third and Mo-sar crumpled
+to the ground. And now the warriors and the people, locating the
+direction of this new and unknown sound turned toward the western
+end of the court.
+
+Upon the summit of the temple wall they saw two figures--a Ho-don
+warrior and beside him an almost naked creature of the race
+of Tarzan-jad-guru, across his shoulders and about his hips were
+strange broad belts studded with beautiful cylinders that glinted
+in the mid-day sun, and in his hands a shining thing of wood and
+metal from the end of which rose a thin wreath of blue-gray smoke.
+
+And then the voice of the Ho-don warrior rang clear upon the ears of
+the silent throng. "Thus speaks the true Jad-ben-Otho," he cried,
+"through this his Messenger of Death. Cut the bonds of the prisoners.
+Cut the bonds of the Dor-ul-Otho and of Ja-don, King of Pal-ul-don,
+and of the woman who is the mate of the son of god."
+
+Pan-sat, filled with the frenzy of fanaticism saw the power and
+the glory of the regime he had served crumpled and gone. To one
+and only one did he attribute the blame for the disaster that had
+but just overwhelmed him. It was the creature who lay upon the
+sacrificial altar who had brought Lu-don to his death and toppled
+the dreams of power that day by day had been growing in the brain
+of the under priest.
+
+The sacrificial knife lay upon the altar where it had fallen from
+the dead fingers of Obergatz. Pan-sat crept closer and then with
+a sudden lunge he reached forth to seize the handle of the blade,
+and even as his clutching fingers were poised above it, the strange
+thing in the hands of the strange creature upon the temple wall
+cried out its crashing word of doom and Pan-sat the under priest,
+screaming, fell back upon the dead body of his master.
+
+"Seize all the priests," cried Ta-den to the warriors, "and let
+none hesitate lest Jad-ben-Otho's messenger send forth still other
+bolts of lightning."
+
+The warriors and the people had now witnessed such an exhibition
+of divine power as might have convinced an even less superstitious
+and more enlightened people, and since many of them had but lately
+wavered between the Jad-ben-Otho of Lu-don and the Dor-ul-Otho of
+Ja-don it was not difficult for them to swing quickly back to the
+latter, especially in view of the unanswerable argument in the hands
+of him whom Ta-den had described as the Messenger of the Great God.
+
+And so the warriors sprang forward now with alacrity and surrounded
+the priests, and when they looked again at the western wall of the
+temple court they saw pouring over it a great force of warriors.
+And the thing that startled and appalled them was the fact that
+many of these were black and hairy Waz-don.
+
+At their head came the stranger with the shiny weapon and on his
+right was Ta-den, the Ho-don, and on his left Om-at, the black gund
+of Kor-ul-ja.
+
+A warrior near the altar had seized the sacrificial knife and cut
+Tarzan's bonds and also those of Ja-don and Jane Clayton, and now
+the three stood together beside the altar and as the newcomers
+from the western end of the temple court pushed their way toward
+them the eyes of the woman went wide in mingled astonishment,
+incredulity, and hope. And the stranger, slinging his weapon across
+his back by a leather strap, rushed forward and took her in his
+arms.
+
+"Jack!" she cried, sobbing on his shoulder. "Jack, my son!"
+
+And Tarzan of the Apes came then and put his arms around them both,
+and the King of Pal-ul-don and the warriors and the people kneeled
+in the temple court and placed their foreheads to the ground before
+the altar where the three stood.
+
+
+
+
+
+25
+
+Home
+
+
+
+
+Within an hour of the fall of Lu-don and Mo-sar, the chiefs and
+principal warriors of Pal-ul-don gathered in the great throneroom
+of the palace at A-lur upon the steps of the lofty pyramid and
+placing Ja-don at the apex proclaimed him king. Upon one side of the
+old chieftain stood Tarzan of the Apes, and upon the other Korak,
+the Killer, worthy son of the mighty ape-man.
+
+And when the brief ceremony was over and the warriors with upraised
+clubs had sworn fealty to their new ruler, Ja-don dispatched
+a trusted company to fetch O-lo-a and Pan-at-lee and the women of
+his own household from Ja-lur.
+
+And then the warriors discussed the future of Pal-ul-don and the
+question arose as to the administration of the temples and the fate
+of the priests, who practically without exception had been disloyal
+to the government of the king, seeking always only their own power
+and comfort and aggrandizement. And then it was that Ja-don turned
+to Tarzan. "Let the Dor-ul-Otho transmit to his people the wishes
+of his father," he said.
+
+"Your problem is a simple one," said the ape-man, "if you but wish
+to do that which shall be pleasing in the eyes of God. Your priests,
+to increase their power, have taught you that Jad-ben-Otho is a
+cruel god, that his eyes love to dwell upon blood and upon suffering.
+But the falsity of their teachings has been demonstrated to you
+today in the utter defeat of the priesthood.
+
+"Take then the temples from the men and give them instead to the
+women that they may be administered in kindness and charity and
+love. Wash the blood from your eastern altar and drain forever the
+water from the western.
+
+"Once I gave Lu-don the opportunity to do these things but he
+ignored my commands, and again is the corridor of sacrifice filled
+with its victims. Liberate these from every temple in Pal-ul-don.
+Bring offerings of such gifts as your people like and place them
+upon the altars of your god. And there he will bless them and the
+priestesses of Jad-ben-Otho can distribute them among those who
+need them most."
+
+As he ceased speaking a murmur of evident approval ran through the
+throng. Long had they been weary of the avarice and cruelty of the
+priests and now that authority had come from a high source with
+a feasible plan for ridding themselves of the old religious order
+without necessitating any change in the faith of the people they
+welcomed it.
+
+"And the priests," cried one. "We shall put them to death upon
+their own altars if it pleases the Dor-ul-Otho to give the word."
+
+"No," cried Tarzan. "Let no more blood be spilled. Give them their
+freedom and the right to take up such occupations as they choose."
+
+That night a great feast was spread in the pal-e-don-so and for
+the first time in the history of ancient Pal-ul-don black warriors
+sat in peace and friendship with white. And a pact was sealed
+between Ja-don and Om-at that would ever make his tribe and the
+Ho-don allies and friends.
+
+It was here that Tarzan learned the cause of Ta-den's failure to
+attack at the stipulated time. A messenger had come from Ja-don
+carrying instructions to delay the attack until noon, nor had they
+discovered until almost too late that the messenger was a disguised
+priest of Lu-don. And they had put him to death and scaled the
+walls and come to the inner temple court with not a moment to spare.
+
+The following day O-lo-a and Pan-at-lee and the women of Ja-don's
+family arrived at the palace at A-lur and in the great throneroom
+Ta-den and O-lo-a were wed, and Om-at and Pan-at-lee.
+
+For a week Tarzan and Jane and Korak remained the guests of Ja-don,
+as did Om-at and his black warriors. And then the ape-man announced
+that he would depart from Pal-ul-don. Hazy in the minds of their
+hosts was the location of heaven and equally so the means by which
+the gods traveled between their celestial homes and the haunts
+of men and so no questionings arose when it was found that the
+Dor-ul-Otho with his mate and son would travel overland across the
+mountains and out of Pal-ul-don toward the north.
+
+They went by way of the Kor-ul-ja accompanied by the warriors of
+that tribe and a great contingent of Ho-don warriors under Ta-den.
+The king and many warriors and a multitude of people accompanied
+them beyond the limits of A-lur and after they had bid them good-bye
+and Tarzan had invoked the blessings of God upon them the three
+Europeans saw their simple, loyal friends prostrate in the dust
+behind them until the cavalcade had wound out of the city and
+disappeared among the trees of the nearby forest.
+
+They rested for a day among the Kor-ul-ja while Jane investigated
+the ancient caves of these strange people and then they moved on,
+avoiding the rugged shoulder of Pastar-ul-ved and winding down the
+opposite slope toward the great morass. They moved in comfort and
+in safety, surrounded by their escort of Ho-don and Waz-don.
+
+In the minds of many there was doubtless a question as to how
+the three would cross the great morass but least of all was Tarzan
+worried by the problem. In the course of his life he had been
+confronted by many obstacles only to learn that he who will may
+always pass. In his mind lurked an easy solution of the passage
+but it was one which depended wholly upon chance.
+
+It was the morning of the last day that, as they were breaking camp
+to take up the march, a deep bellow thundered from a nearby grove.
+The ape-man smiled. The chance had come. Fittingly then would
+the Dor-ul-Otho and his mate and their son depart from unmapped
+Pal-ul-don.
+
+He still carried the spear that Jane had made, which he had prized
+so highly because it was her handiwork that he had caused a search
+to be made for it through the temple in A-lur after his release,
+and it had been found and brought to him. He had told her laughingly
+that it should have the place of honor above their hearth as the
+ancient flintlock of her Puritan grandsire had held a similar place
+of honor above the fireplace of Professor Porter, her father.
+
+At the sound of the bellowing the Ho-don warriors, some of whom had
+accompanied Tarzan from Ja-don's camp to Ja-lur, looked questioningly
+at the ape-man while Om-at's Waz-don looked for trees, since the
+gryf was the one creature of Pal-ul-don which might not be safely
+encountered even by a great multitude of warriors. Its tough,
+armored hide was impregnable to their knife thrusts while their
+thrown clubs rattled from it as futilely as if hurled at the rocky
+shoulder of Pastar-ul-ved.
+
+"Wait," said the ape-man, and with his spear in hand he advanced
+toward the gryf, voicing the weird cry of the Tor-o-don. The
+bellowing ceased and turned to low rumblings and presently the huge
+beast appeared. What followed was but a repetition of the ape-man's
+previous experience with these huge and ferocious creatures.
+
+And so it was that Jane and Korak and Tarzan rode through the morass
+that hems Pa-ul-don, upon the back of a prehistoric triceratops
+while the lesser reptiles of the swamp fled hissing in terror. Upon
+the opposite shore they turned and called back their farewells to
+Ta-den and Om-at and the brave warriors they had learned to admire
+and respect. And then Tarzan urged their titanic mount onward
+toward the north, abandoning him only when he was assured that the
+Waz-don and the Ho-don had had time to reach a point of comparative
+safety among the craggy ravines of the foothills.
+
+Turning the beast's head again toward Pal-ul-don the three dismounted
+and a sharp blow upon the thick hide sent the creature lumbering
+majestically back in the direction of its native haunts. For a time
+they stood looking back upon the land they had just quit--the land
+of Tor-o-don and gryf; of ja and jato; of Waz-don and Ho-don; a
+primitive land of terror and sudden death and peace and beauty; a
+land that they all had learned to love.
+
+And then they turned once more toward the north and with light
+hearts and brave hearts took up their long journey toward the land
+that is best of all--home.
+
+
+
+
+
+Glossary
+
+
+
+
+From conversations with Lord Greystoke and from his notes, there
+have been gleaned a number of interesting items relative to the
+language and customs of the inhabitants of Pal-ul-don that are not
+brought out in the story. For the benefit of those who may care
+to delve into the derivation of the proper names used in the text,
+and thus obtain some slight insight into the language of the race,
+there is appended an incomplete glossary taken from some of Lord
+Greystoke's notes.
+
+A point of particular interest hinges upon the fact that the names
+of all male hairless pithecanthropi begin with a consonant, have
+an even number of syllables, and end with a consonant, while the
+names of the females of the same species begin with a vowel, have
+an odd number of syllables, and end with a vowel. On the contrary,
+the names of the male hairy black pithecanthropi while having an
+even number of syllables begin with a vowel and end with a consonant;
+while the females of this species have an odd number of syllables
+in their names which begin always with a consonant and end with a
+vowel.
+
+
+A. Light.
+ab. Boy.
+Ab-on. Acting gund of Kor-ul-ja.
+Ad. Three.
+Adad. Six.
+Adadad. Nine.
+Adaden. Seven.
+Aden. Four.
+Adenaden. Eight.
+Adenen. Five.
+A-lur. City of light.
+An. Spear.
+An-un. Father of Pan-at-lee.
+As. The sun.
+At. Tail.
+
+Bal. Gold or golden.
+Bar. Battle.
+Ben. Great.
+Bu. Moon.
+Bu-lot (moon face). Son of chief Mo-sar.
+Bu-lur (moon city). The city of the Waz-ho-don.
+
+Dak. Fat.
+Dak-at (fat tail). Chief of a Ho-don village.
+Dak-lot. One of Ko-tan's palace warriors.
+Dan. Rock.
+Den. Tree.
+Don. Man.
+Dor. Son.
+Dor-ul-Otho
+(son of god). Tarzan.
+
+E. Where.
+Ed. Seventy.
+El. Grace or graceful.
+En. One.
+Enen. Two.
+Es. Rough.
+Es-sat (rough skin). Chief of Om-at's tribe of hairy blacks.
+Et. Eighty.
+
+Fur. Thirty.
+
+Ged. Forty.
+Go. Clear.
+Gryf. "Triceratops. A genus of huge
+ herbivorous dinosaurs of the group
+ Ceratopsia. The skull had two large
+ horns above the eyes, a median
+ horn on the nose, a horny beak, and a
+ great bony hood or transverse crest over
+ the neck. Their toes, five in front and
+ three behind, were provided with hoofs,
+ and the tail was large and strong."
+ Webster's Dict. The gryf of Pal-ul-don
+ is similar except that it is
+ omnivorous, has strong, powerfully
+ armed jaws and talons instead of hoofs.
+ Coloration: face yellow with blue bands
+ encircling the eyes; hood red on top,
+ yellow underneath; belly yellow; body a
+ dirty slate blue; legs same. Bony
+ protuberances yellow except along the
+ spine--these are red. Tail conforms with
+ body and belly. Horns, ivory.
+Gund. Chief.
+Guru. Terrible.
+
+Het. Fifty.
+Ho. White.
+Ho-don. The hairless white men of Pal-ul-don.
+
+Id. Silver.
+Id-an. One of Pan-at-lee's two brothers.
+In. Dark.
+In-sad. Kor-ul-ja warrior accompanying Tarzan, Om-at,
+ and Ta-den in search of Pan-at-lee.
+In-tan. Kor-ul-lul left to guard Tarzan
+
+Ja. Lion.
+Jad. The
+Jad-bal-lul. The golden lake.
+Jad-ben-lul. The big lake.
+Jad-ben-Otho. The Great God.
+Jad-guru-don. The terrible man.
+Jad-in-lul. The dark lake.
+Ja-don (the lion-man). Chief of a Ho-don village and father of Ta-den.
+Jad Pele ul
+Jad-ben-Otho. The valley of the Great God.
+Ja-lur (lion city). Ja-don's capital.
+Jar. Strange.
+Jar-don. Name given Korak by Om-at.
+Jato. Saber-tooth hybrid.
+
+Ko. Mighty.
+Kor. Gorge.
+Kor-ul-gryf. Gorge of the gryf.
+Kor-ul-ja. Name of Es-sat's gorge and tribe.
+Kor-ul-lul. Name of another Waz-don gorge and tribe.
+Ko-tan. King of the Ho-don.
+
+Lav. Run or running.
+Lee. Doe.
+Lo. Star.
+Lot. Face.
+Lu. Fierce.
+Lu-don (fierce man). High priest of A-lur.
+Lul. Water.
+Lur. City.
+
+Ma. Child.
+Mo. Short.
+Mo-sar (short nose). Chief and pretender.
+Mu. Strong.
+
+No. Brook.
+
+O. Like or similar.
+Od. Ninety.
+O-dan. Kor-ul-ja warrior accompanying Tarzan, Om-at,
+ and Ta-den in search of Pan-at-lee.
+Og. Sixty.
+O-lo-a
+(like-star-light). Ko-tan's daughter
+Om. Long.
+Om-at (long tail). A black.
+On. Ten.
+Otho. God.
+
+Pal. Place; land; country.
+Pal-e-don-so
+(place where men eat). Banquet hall.
+Pal-ul-don
+(land of man). Name of the country.
+Pal-ul-ja. Place of lions.
+Pan. Soft.
+Pan-at-lee. Om-at's sweetheart.
+Pan-sat (soft skin). A priest.
+Pastar. Father.
+Pastar-ul-ved. Father of Mountains.
+Pele. Valley.
+
+Ro. Flower.
+
+Sad. Forest.
+San. One hundred
+Sar. Nose.
+Sat. Skin.
+So. Eat.
+Sod. Eaten.
+Sog. Eating.
+Son. Ate.
+
+Ta. Tall.
+Ta-den (tall tree). A white.
+Tan. Warrior.
+Tarzan-jad-guru. Tarzan the Terrible.
+To. Purple.
+Ton. Twenty.
+Tor. Beast.
+Tor-o-don. Beastlike man.
+Tu. Bright.
+Tu-lur (bright city). Mo-sar's city.
+
+Ul. Of.
+Un. Eye.
+Ut. Corn.
+
+Ved. Mountain
+
+Waz. Black.
+Waz-don. The hairy black men of Pal-ul-don.
+Waz-ho-don
+(black white men). A mixed race
+
+Xot. One thousand.
+
+Yo. Friend.
+
+Za. Girl.
+
+
+End of The Project Gutenberg Etext of Tarzan the Terrible
+by Edgar Rice Burroughs
+