<SPAN name="chap22"></SPAN>
<h3> Chapter 22 </h3>
<h3> The Treasure Vaults of Opar </h3>
<p>It was quite dark before La, the high priestess, returned to the
Chamber of the Dead with food and drink for Tarzan. She bore no light,
feeling with her hands along the crumbling walls until she gained the
chamber. Through the stone grating above, a tropic moon served dimly
to illuminate the interior.</p>
<p>Tarzan, crouching in the shadows at the far side of the room as the
first sound of approaching footsteps reached him, came forth to meet
the girl as he recognized that it was she.</p>
<p>"They are furious," were her first words. "Never before has a human
sacrifice escaped the altar. Already fifty have gone forth to track
you down. They have searched the temple—all save this single room."</p>
<p>"Why do they fear to come here?" he asked.</p>
<p>"It is the Chamber of the Dead. Here the dead return to worship. See
this ancient altar? It is here that the dead sacrifice the living—if
they find a victim here. That is the reason our people shun this
chamber. Were one to enter he knows that the waiting dead would seize
him for their sacrifice."</p>
<p>"But you?" he asked.</p>
<p>"I am high priestess—I alone am safe from the dead. It is I who at
rare intervals bring them a human sacrifice from the world above. I
alone may enter here in safety."</p>
<p>"Why have they not seized me?" he asked, humoring her grotesque belief.</p>
<p>She looked at him quizzically for a moment. Then she replied:</p>
<p>"It is the duty of a high priestess to instruct, to
interpret—according to the creed that others, wiser than herself, have
laid down; but there is nothing in the creed which says that she must
believe. The more one knows of one's religion the less one
believes—no one living knows more of mine than I."</p>
<p>"Then your only fear in aiding me to escape is that your fellow mortals
may discover your duplicity?"</p>
<p>"That is all—the dead are dead; they cannot harm—or help. We must
therefore depend entirely upon ourselves, and the sooner we act the
better it will be. I had difficulty in eluding their vigilance but now
in bringing you this morsel of food. To attempt to repeat the thing
daily would be the height of folly. Come, let us see how far we may go
toward liberty before I must return."</p>
<p>She led him back to the chamber beneath the altar room. Here she
turned into one of the several corridors leading from it. In the
darkness Tarzan could not see which one. For ten minutes they groped
slowly along a winding passage, until at length they came to a closed
door. Here he heard her fumbling with a key, and presently came the
sound of a metal bolt grating against metal. The door swung in on
scraping hinges, and they entered.</p>
<p>"You will be safe here until tomorrow night," she said.</p>
<p>Then she went out, and, closing the door, locked it behind her.</p>
<p>Where Tarzan stood it was dark as Erebus. Not even his trained eyes
could penetrate the utter blackness. Cautiously he moved forward until
his out-stretched hand touched a wall, then very slowly he traveled
around the four walls of the chamber.</p>
<p>Apparently it was about twenty feet square. The floor was of concrete,
the walls of the dry masonry that marked the method of construction
above ground. Small pieces of granite of various sizes were
ingeniously laid together without mortar to construct these ancient
foundations.</p>
<p>The first time around the walls Tarzan thought he detected a strange
phenomenon for a room with no windows but a single door. Again he
crept carefully around close to the wall. No, he could not be
mistaken! He paused before the center of the wall opposite the door.
For a moment he stood quite motionless, then he moved a few feet to one
side. Again he returned, only to move a few feet to the other side.</p>
<p>Once more he made the entire circuit of the room, feeling carefully
every foot of the walls. Finally he stopped again before the
particular section that had aroused his curiosity. There was no doubt
of it! A distinct draft of fresh air was blowing into the chamber
through the intersection of the masonry at that particular point—and
nowhere else.</p>
<p>Tarzan tested several pieces of the granite which made up the wall at
this spot, and finally was rewarded by finding one which lifted out
readily. It was about ten inches wide, with a face some three by six
inches showing within the chamber. One by one the ape-man lifted out
similarly shaped stones. The wall at this point was constructed
entirely, it seemed, of these almost perfect slabs. In a short time he
had removed some dozen, when he reached in to test the next layer of
masonry. To his surprise, he felt nothing behind the masonry he had
removed as far as his long arm could reach.</p>
<p>It was a matter of but a few minutes to remove enough of the wall to
permit his body to pass through the aperture. Directly ahead of him he
thought he discerned a faint glow—scarcely more than a less
impenetrable darkness. Cautiously he moved forward on hands and knees,
until at about fifteen feet, or the average thickness of the foundation
walls, the floor ended abruptly in a sudden drop. As far out as he
could reach he felt nothing, nor could he find the bottom of the black
abyss that yawned before him, though, clinging to the edge of the
floor, he lowered his body into the darkness to its full length.</p>
<p>Finally it occurred to him to look up, and there above him he saw
through a round opening a tiny circular patch of starry sky. Feeling
up along the sides of the shaft as far as he could reach, the ape-man
discovered that so much of the wall as he could feel converged toward
the center of the shaft as it rose. This fact precluded possibility of
escape in that direction.</p>
<p>As he sat speculating on the nature and uses of this strange passage
and its terminal shaft, the moon topped the opening above, letting a
flood of soft, silvery light into the shadowy place. Instantly the
nature of the shaft became apparent to Tarzan, for far below him he saw
the shimmering surface of water. He had come upon an ancient well—but
what was the purpose of the connection between the well and the dungeon
in which he had been hidden?</p>
<p>As the moon crossed the opening of the shaft its light flooded the
whole interior, and then Tarzan saw directly across from him another
opening in the opposite wall. He wondered if this might not be the
mouth of a passage leading to possible escape. It would be worth
investigating, at least, and this he determined to do.</p>
<p>Quickly returning to the wall he had demolished to explore what lay
beyond it, he carried the stones into the passageway and replaced them
from that side. The deep deposit of dust which he had noticed upon the
blocks as he had first removed them from the wall had convinced him
that even if the present occupants of the ancient pile had knowledge of
this hidden passage they had made no use of it for perhaps generations.</p>
<p>The wall replaced, Tarzan turned to the shaft, which was some fifteen
feet wide at this point. To leap across the intervening space was a
small matter to the ape-man, and a moment later he was proceeding along
a narrow tunnel, moving cautiously for fear of being precipitated into
another shaft such as he had just crossed.</p>
<p>He had advanced some hundred feet when he came to a flight of steps
leading downward into Stygian gloom. Some twenty feet below, the level
floor of the tunnel recommenced, and shortly afterward his progress was
stopped by a heavy wooden door which was secured by massive wooden bars
upon the side of Tarzan's approach. This fact suggested to the ape-man
that he might surely be in a passageway leading to the outer world, for
the bolts, barring progress from the opposite side, tended to
substantiate this hypothesis, unless it were merely a prison to which
it led.</p>
<p>Along the tops of the bars were deep layers of dust—a further
indication that the passage had lain long unused. As he pushed the
massive obstacle aside, its great hinges shrieked out in weird protest
against this unaccustomed disturbance. For a moment Tarzan paused to
listen for any responsive note which might indicate that the unusual
night noise had alarmed the inmates of the temple; but as he heard
nothing he advanced beyond the doorway.</p>
<p>Carefully feeling about, he found himself within a large chamber, along
the walls of which, and down the length of the floor, were piled many
tiers of metal ingots of an odd though uniform shape. To his groping
hands they felt not unlike double-headed bootjacks. The ingots were
quite heavy, and but for the enormous number of them he would have been
positive that they were gold; but the thought of the fabulous wealth
these thousands of pounds of metal would have represented were they in
reality gold, almost convinced him that they must be of some baser
metal.</p>
<p>At the far end of the chamber he discovered another barred door, and
again the bars upon the inside renewed the hope that he was traversing
an ancient and forgotten passageway to liberty. Beyond the door the
passage ran straight as a war spear, and it soon became evident to the
ape-man that it had already led him beyond the outer walls of the
temple. If he but knew the direction it was leading him! If toward
the west, then he must also be beyond the city's outer walls.</p>
<p>With increasing hopes he forged ahead as rapidly as he dared, until at
the end of half an hour he came to another flight of steps leading
upward. At the bottom this flight was of concrete, but as he ascended
his naked feet felt a sudden change in the substance they were
treading. The steps of concrete had given place to steps of granite.
Feeling with his hands, the ape-man discovered that these latter were
evidently hewed from rock, for there was no crack to indicate a joint.</p>
<p>For a hundred feet the steps wound spirally up, until at a sudden
turning Tarzan came into a narrow cleft between two rocky walls. Above
him shone the starry sky, and before him a steep incline replaced the
steps that had terminated at its foot. Up this pathway Tarzan
hastened, and at its upper end came out upon the rough top of a huge
granite bowlder.</p>
<p>A mile away lay the ruined city of Opar, its domes and turrets bathed
in the soft light of the equatorial moon. Tarzan dropped his eyes to
the ingot he had brought away with him. For a moment he examined it by
the moon's bright rays, then he raised his head to look out upon the
ancient piles of crumbling grandeur in the distance.</p>
<p>"Opar," he mused, "Opar, the enchanted city of a dead and forgotten
past. The city of the beauties and the beasts. City of horrors and
death; but—city of fabulous riches." The ingot was of virgin gold.</p>
<p>The bowlder on which Tarzan found himself lay well out in the plain
between the city and the distant cliffs he and his black warriors had
scaled the morning previous. To descend its rough and precipitous face
was a task of infinite labor and considerable peril even to the
ape-man; but at last he felt the soft soil of the valley beneath his
feet, and without a backward glance at Opar he turned his face toward
the guardian cliffs, and at a rapid trot set off across the valley.</p>
<p>The sun was just rising as he gained the summit of the flat mountain at
the valley's western boundary. Far beneath him he saw smoke arising
above the tree-tops of the forest at the base of the foothills.</p>
<p>"Man," he murmured. "And there were fifty who went forth to track me
down. Can it be they?"</p>
<p>Swiftly he descended the face of the cliff, and, dropping into a narrow
ravine which led down to the far forest, he hastened onward in the
direction of the smoke. Striking the forest's edge about a quarter of
a mile from the point at which the slender column arose into the still
air, he took to the trees. Cautiously he approached until there
suddenly burst upon his view a rude BOMA, in the center of which,
squatted about their tiny fires, sat his fifty black Waziri. He called
to them in their own tongue:</p>
<p>"Arise, my children, and greet thy king!"</p>
<p>With exclamations of surprise and fear the warriors leaped to their
feet, scarcely knowing whether to flee or not. Then Tarzan dropped
lightly from an overhanging branch into their midst. When they
realized that it was indeed their chief in the flesh, and no
materialized spirit, they went mad with joy.</p>
<p>"We were cowards, oh, Waziri," cried Busuli. "We ran away and left you
to your fate; but when our panic was over we swore to return and save
you, or at least take revenge upon your murderers. We were but now
preparing to scale the heights once more and cross the desolate valley
to the terrible city."</p>
<p>"Have you seen fifty frightful men pass down from the cliffs into this
forest, my children?" asked Tarzan.</p>
<p>"Yes, Waziri," replied Busuli. "They passed us late yesterday, as we
were about to turn back after you. They had no woodcraft. We heard
them coming for a mile before we saw them, and as we had other business
in hand we withdrew into the forest and let them pass. They were
waddling rapidly along upon short legs, and now and then one would go
upon all fours like Bolgani, the gorilla. They were indeed fifty
frightful men, Waziri."</p>
<p>When Tarzan had related his adventures and told them of the yellow
metal he had found, not one demurred when he outlined a plan to return
by night and bring away what they could carry of the vast treasure; and
so it was that as dusk fell across the desolate valley of Opar fifty
ebon warriors trailed at a smart trot over the dry and dusty ground
toward the giant bowlder that loomed before the city.</p>
<p>If it had seemed a difficult task to descend the face of the bowlder,
Tarzan soon found that it would be next to impossible to get his fifty
warriors to the summit. Finally the feat was accomplished by dint of
herculean efforts upon the part of the ape-man. Ten spears were
fastened end to end, and with one end of this remarkable chain attached
to his waist, Tarzan at last succeeded in reaching the summit.</p>
<p>Once there, he drew up one of his blacks, and in this way the entire
party was finally landed in safety upon the bowlder's top. Immediately
Tarzan led them to the treasure chamber, where to each was allotted a
load of two ingots, for each about eighty pounds.</p>
<p>By midnight the entire party stood once more at the foot of the
bowlder, but with their heavy loads it was mid-forenoon ere they
reached the summit of the cliffs. From there on the homeward journey
was slow, as these proud fighting men were unaccustomed to the duties
of porters. But they bore their burdens uncomplainingly, and at the
end of thirty days entered their own country.</p>
<p>Here, instead of continuing on toward the northwest and their village,
Tarzan guided them almost directly west, until on the morning of the
thirty-third day he bade them break camp and return to their own
village, leaving the gold where they had stacked it the previous night.</p>
<p>"And you, Waziri?" they asked.</p>
<p>"I shall remain here for a few days, my children," he replied. "Now
hasten back to thy wives and children."</p>
<p>When they had gone Tarzan gathered up two of the ingots and, springing
into a tree, ran lightly above the tangled and impenetrable mass of
undergrowth for a couple of hundred yards, to emerge suddenly upon a
circular clearing about which the giants of the jungle forest towered
like a guardian host. In the center of this natural amphitheater, was
a little flat-topped mound of hard earth.</p>
<p>Hundreds of times before had Tarzan been to this secluded spot, which
was so densely surrounded by thorn bushes and tangled vines and
creepers of huge girth that not even Sheeta, the leopard, could worm
his sinuous way within, nor Tantor, with his giant strength, force the
barriers which protected the council chamber of the great apes from all
but the harmless denizens of the savage jungle.</p>
<p>Fifty trips Tarzan made before he had deposited all the ingots within
the precincts of the amphitheater. Then from the hollow of an ancient,
lightning-blasted tree he produced the very spade with which he had
uncovered the chest of Professor Archimedes Q. Porter which he had
once, apelike, buried in this selfsame spot. With this he dug a long
trench, into which he laid the fortune that his blacks had carried from
the forgotten treasure vaults of the city of Opar.</p>
<p>That night he slept within the amphitheater, and early the next morning
set out to revisit his cabin before returning to his Waziri. Finding
things as he had left them, he went forth into the jungle to hunt,
intending to bring his prey to the cabin where he might feast in
comfort, spending the night upon a comfortable couch.</p>
<p>For five miles toward the south he roamed, toward the banks of a
fair-sized river that flowed into the sea about six miles from his
cabin. He had gone inland about half a mile when there came suddenly
to his trained nostrils the one scent that sets the whole savage jungle
aquiver—Tarzan smelled man.</p>
<p>The wind was blowing off the ocean, so Tarzan knew that the authors of
the scent were west of him. Mixed with the man scent was the scent of
Numa. Man and lion. "I had better hasten," thought the ape-man, for
he had recognized the scent of whites. "Numa may be a-hunting."</p>
<p>When he came through the trees to the edge of the jungle he saw a woman
kneeling in prayer, and before her stood a wild, primitive-looking
white man, his face buried in his arms. Behind the man a mangy lion
was advancing slowly toward this easy prey. The man's face was
averted; the woman's bowed in prayer. He could not see the features of
either.</p>
<p>Already Numa was about to spring. There was not a second to spare.
Tarzan could not even unsling his bow and fit an arrow in time to send
one of his deadly poisoned shafts into the yellow hide. He was too far
away to reach the beast in time with his knife. There was but a single
hope—a lone alternative. And with the quickness of thought the
ape-man acted.</p>
<p>A brawny arm flew back—for the briefest fraction of an instant a huge
spear poised above the giant's shoulder—and then the mighty arm shot
out, and swift death tore through the intervening leaves to bury itself
in the heart of the leaping lion. Without a sound he rolled over at
the very feet of his intended victims—dead.</p>
<p>For a moment neither the man nor the woman moved. Then the latter
opened her eyes to look with wonder upon the dead beast behind her
companion. As that beautiful head went up Tarzan of the Apes gave a
gasp of incredulous astonishment. Was he mad? It could not be the
woman he loved! But, indeed, it was none other.</p>
<p>And the woman rose, and the man took her in his arms to kiss her, and
of a sudden the ape-man saw red through a bloody mist of murder, and
the old scar upon his forehead burned scarlet against his brown hide.</p>
<p>There was a terrible expression upon his savage face as he fitted a
poisoned shaft to his bow. An ugly light gleamed in those gray eyes as
he sighted full at the back of the unsuspecting man beneath him.</p>
<p>For an instant he glanced along the polished shaft, drawing the
bowstring far back, that the arrow might pierce through the heart for
which it was aimed.</p>
<p>But he did not release the fatal messenger. Slowly the point of the
arrow drooped; the scar upon the brown forehead faded; the bowstring
relaxed; and Tarzan of the Apes, with bowed head, turned sadly into the
jungle toward the village of the Waziri.</p>
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