<SPAN name="chap15"></SPAN>
<h3> Chapter 15 </h3>
<h3> From Ape to Savage </h3>
<p>The noise of their battle with Numa had drawn an excited horde of
savages from the nearby village, and a moment after the lion's death
the two men were surrounded by lithe, ebon warriors, gesticulating and
jabbering—a thousand questions that drowned each ventured reply.</p>
<p>And then the women came, and the children—eager, curious, and, at
sight of Tarzan, more questioning than ever. The ape-man's new friend
finally succeeded in making himself heard, and when he had done talking
the men and women of the village vied with one another in doing honor
to the strange creature who had saved their fellow and battled
single-handed with fierce Numa.</p>
<p>At last they led him back to their village, where they brought him
gifts of fowl, and goats, and cooked food. When he pointed to their
weapons the warriors hastened to fetch spear, shield, arrows, and a
bow. His friend of the encounter presented him with the knife with
which he had killed Numa. There was nothing in all the village he
could not have had for the asking.</p>
<p>How much easier this was, thought Tarzan, than murder and robbery to
supply his wants. How close he had been to killing this man whom he
never had seen before, and who now was manifesting by every primitive
means at his command friendship and affection for his would-be slayer.
Tarzan of the Apes was ashamed. Hereafter he would at least wait until
he knew men deserved it before he thought of killing them.</p>
<p>The idea recalled Rokoff to his mind. He wished that he might have the
Russian to himself in the dark jungle for a few minutes. There was a
man who deserved killing if ever any one did. And if he could have
seen Rokoff at that moment as he assiduously bent every endeavor to the
pleasant task of ingratiating himself into the affections of the
beautiful Miss Strong, he would have longed more than ever to mete out
to the man the fate he deserved.</p>
<p>Tarzan's first night with the savages was devoted to a wild orgy in his
honor. There was feasting, for the hunters had brought in an antelope
and a zebra as trophies of their skill, and gallons of the weak native
beer were consumed. As the warriors danced in the firelight, Tarzan
was again impressed by the symmetry of their figures and the regularity
of their features—the flat noses and thick lips of the typical West
Coast savage were entirely missing. In repose the faces of the men
were intelligent and dignified, those of the women ofttimes
prepossessing.</p>
<p>It was during this dance that the ape-man first noticed that some of
the men and many of the women wore ornaments of gold—principally
anklets and armlets of great weight, apparently beaten out of the solid
metal. When he expressed a wish to examine one of these, the owner
removed it from her person and insisted, through the medium of signs,
that Tarzan accept it as a gift. A close scrutiny of the bauble
convinced the ape-man that the article was of virgin gold, and he was
surprised, for it was the first time that he had ever seen golden
ornaments among the savages of Africa, other than the trifling baubles
those near the coast had purchased or stolen from Europeans. He tried
to ask them from whence the metal came, but he could not make them
understand.</p>
<p>When the dance was done Tarzan signified his intention to leave them,
but they almost implored him to accept the hospitality of a great hut
which the chief set apart for his sole use. He tried to explain that
he would return in the morning, but they could not understand. When he
finally walked away from them toward the side of the village opposite
the gate, they were still further mystified as to his intentions.</p>
<p>Tarzan, however, knew just what he was about. In the past he had had
experience with the rodents and vermin that infest every native
village, and, while he was not overscrupulous about such matters, he
much preferred the fresh air of the swaying trees to the fetid
atmosphere of a hut.</p>
<p>The natives followed him to where a great tree overhung the palisade,
and as Tarzan leaped for a lower branch and disappeared into the
foliage above, precisely after the manner of Manu, the monkey, there
were loud exclamations of surprise and astonishment. For half an hour
they called to him to return, but as he did not answer them they at
last desisted, and sought the sleeping-mats within their huts.</p>
<p>Tarzan went back into the forest a short distance until he had found a
tree suited to his primitive requirements, and then, curling himself in
a great crotch, he fell immediately into a deep sleep.</p>
<p>The following morning he dropped into the village street as suddenly as
he had disappeared the preceding night. For a moment the natives were
startled and afraid, but when they recognized their guest of the night
before they welcomed him with shouts and laughter. That day he
accompanied a party of warriors to the nearby plains on a great hunt,
and so dexterous did they find this white man with their own crude
weapons that another bond of respect and admiration was thereby wrought.</p>
<p>For weeks Tarzan lived with his savage friends, hunting buffalo,
antelope, and zebra for meat, and elephant for ivory. Quickly he
learned their simple speech, their native customs, and the ethics of
their wild, primitive tribal life. He found that they were not
cannibals—that they looked with loathing and contempt upon men who ate
men.</p>
<p>Busuli, the warrior whom he had stalked to the village, told him many
of the tribal legends—how, many years before, his people had come many
long marches from the north; how once they had been a great and
powerful tribe; and how the slave raiders had wrought such havoc among
them with their death-dealing guns that they had been reduced to a mere
remnant of their former numbers and power.</p>
<p>"They hunted us down as one hunts a fierce beast," said Busuli. "There
was no mercy in them. When it was not slaves they sought it was ivory,
but usually it was both. Our men were killed and our women driven away
like sheep. We fought against them for many years, but our arrows and
spears could not prevail against the sticks which spit fire and lead
and death to many times the distance that our mightiest warrior could
place an arrow. At last, when my father was a young man, the Arabs
came again, but our warriors saw them a long way off, and Chowambi, who
was chief then, told his people to gather up their belongings and come
away with him—that he would lead them far to the south until they
found a spot to which the Arab raiders did not come.</p>
<p>"And they did as he bid, carrying all their belongings, including many
tusks of ivory. For months they wandered, suffering untold hardships
and privations, for much of the way was through dense jungle, and
across mighty mountains, but finally they came to this spot, and
although they sent parties farther on to search for an even better
location, none has ever been found."</p>
<p>"And the raiders have never found you here?" asked Tarzan.</p>
<p>"About a year ago a small party of Arabs and Manyuema stumbled upon us,
but we drove them off, killing many. For days we followed them,
stalking them for the wild beasts they are, picking them off one by
one, until but a handful remained, but these escaped us."</p>
<p>As Busuli talked he fingered a heavy gold armlet that encircled the
glossy hide of his left arm. Tarzan's eyes had been upon the ornament,
but his thoughts were elsewhere. Presently he recalled the question he
had tried to ask when he first came to the tribe—the question he could
not at that time make them understand. For weeks he had forgotten so
trivial a thing as gold, for he had been for the time a truly primeval
man with no thought beyond today. But of a sudden the sight of gold
awakened the sleeping civilization that was in him, and with it came
the lust for wealth. That lesson Tarzan had learned well in his brief
experience of the ways of civilized man. He knew that gold meant power
and pleasure. He pointed to the bauble.</p>
<p>"From whence came the yellow metal, Busuli?" he asked.</p>
<p>The black pointed toward the southeast.</p>
<p>"A moon's march away—maybe more," he replied.</p>
<p>"Have you been there?" asked Tarzan.</p>
<p>"No, but some of our people were there years ago, when my father was
yet a young man. One of the parties that searched farther for a
location for the tribe when first they settled here came upon a strange
people who wore many ornaments of yellow metal. Their spears were
tipped with it, as were their arrows, and they cooked in vessels made
all of solid metal like my armlet.</p>
<p>"They lived in a great village in huts that were built of stone and
surrounded by a great wall. They were very fierce, rushing out and
falling upon our warriors before ever they learned that their errand
was a peaceful one. Our men were few in number, but they held their
own at the top of a little rocky hill, until the fierce people went
back at sunset into their wicked city. Then our warriors came down
from their hill, and, after taking many ornaments of yellow metal from
the bodies of those they had slain, they marched back out of the
valley, nor have any of us ever returned.</p>
<p>"They are wicked people—neither white like you nor black like me, but
covered with hair as is Bolgani, the gorilla. Yes, they are very bad
people indeed, and Chowambi was glad to get out of their country."</p>
<p>"And are none of those alive who were with Chowambi, and saw these
strange people and their wonderful city?" asked Tarzan.</p>
<p>"Waziri, our chief, was there," replied Busuli. "He was a very young
man then, but he accompanied Chowambi, who was his father."</p>
<p>So that night Tarzan asked Waziri about it, and Waziri, who was now an
old man, said that it was a long march, but that the way was not
difficult to follow. He remembered it well.</p>
<p>"For ten days we followed this river which runs beside our village. Up
toward its source we traveled until on the tenth day we came to a
little spring far up upon the side of a lofty mountain range. In this
little spring our river is born. The next day we crossed over the top
of the mountain, and upon the other side we came to a tiny rivulet
which we followed down into a great forest. For many days we traveled
along the winding banks of the rivulet that had now become a river,
until we came to a greater river, into which it emptied, and which ran
down the center of a mighty valley.</p>
<p>"Then we followed this large river toward its source, hoping to come to
more open land. After twenty days of marching from the time we had
crossed the mountains and passed out of our own country we came again
to another range of mountains. Up their side we followed the great
river, that had now dwindled to a tiny rivulet, until we came to a
little cave near the mountain-top. In this cave was the mother of the
river.</p>
<p>"I remember that we camped there that night, and that it was very cold,
for the mountains were high. The next day we decided to ascend to the
top of the mountains, and see what the country upon the other side
looked like, and if it seemed no better than that which we had so far
traversed we would return to our village and tell them that they had
already found the best place in all the world to live.</p>
<p>"And so we clambered up the face of the rocky cliffs until we reached
the summit, and there from a flat mountain-top we saw, not far beneath
us, a shallow valley, very narrow; and upon the far side of it was a
great village of stone, much of which had fallen and crumbled into
decay."</p>
<p>The balance of Waziri's story was practically the same as that which
Busuli had told.</p>
<p>"I should like to go there and see this strange city," said Tarzan,
"and get some of their yellow metal from its fierce inhabitants."</p>
<p>"It is a long march," replied Waziri, "and I am an old man, but if you
will wait until the rainy season is over and the rivers have gone down
I will take some of my warriors and go with you."</p>
<p>And Tarzan had to be contented with that arrangement, though he would
have liked it well enough to have set off the next morning—he was as
impatient as a child. Really Tarzan of the Apes was but a child, or a
primeval man, which is the same thing in a way.</p>
<p>The next day but one a small party of hunters returned to the village
from the south to report a large herd of elephant some miles away. By
climbing trees they had had a fairly good view of the herd, which they
described as numbering several large tuskers, a great many cows and
calves, and full-grown bulls whose ivory would be worth having.</p>
<p>The balance of the day and evening was filled with preparation for a
great hunt—spears were overhauled, quivers were replenished, bows were
restrung; and all the while the village witch doctor passed through the
busy throngs disposing of various charms and amulets designed to
protect the possessor from hurt, or bring him good fortune in the
morrow's hunt.</p>
<p>At dawn the hunters were off. There were fifty sleek, black warriors,
and in their midst, lithe and active as a young forest god, strode
Tarzan of the Apes, his brown skin contrasting oddly with the ebony of
his companions. Except for color he was one of them. His ornaments
and weapons were the same as theirs—he spoke their language—he
laughed and joked with them, and leaped and shouted in the brief wild
dance that preceded their departure from the village, to all intent and
purpose a savage among savages. Nor, had he questioned himself, is it
to be doubted that he would have admitted that he was far more closely
allied to these people and their life than to the Parisian friends
whose ways, apelike, he had successfully mimicked for a few short
months.</p>
<p>But he did think of D'Arnot, and a grin of amusement showed his strong
white teeth as he pictured the immaculate Frenchman's expression could
he by some means see Tarzan as he was that minute. Poor Paul, who had
prided himself on having eradicated from his friend the last traces of
wild savagery. "How quickly have I fallen!" thought Tarzan; but in his
heart he did not consider it a fall—rather, he pitied the poor
creatures of Paris, penned up like prisoners in their silly clothes,
and watched by policemen all their poor lives, that they might do
nothing that was not entirely artificial and tiresome.</p>
<p>A two hours' march brought them close to the vicinity in which the
elephants had been seen the previous day. From there on they moved
very quietly indeed searching for the spoor of the great beasts. At
length they found the well-marked trail along which the herd had passed
not many hours before. In single file they followed it for about half
an hour. It was Tarzan who first raised his hand in signal that the
quarry was at hand—his sensitive nose had warned him that the
elephants were not far ahead of them.</p>
<p>The blacks were skeptical when he told them how he knew.</p>
<p>"Come with me," said Tarzan, "and we shall see."</p>
<p>With the agility of a squirrel he sprang into a tree and ran nimbly to
the top. One of the blacks followed more slowly and carefully. When
he had reached a lofty limb beside the ape-man the latter pointed to
the south, and there, some few hundred yards away, the black saw a
number of huge black backs swaying back and forth above the top of the
lofty jungle grasses. He pointed the direction to the watchers below,
indicating with his fingers the number of beasts he could count.</p>
<p>Immediately the hunters started toward the elephants. The black in the
tree hastened down, but Tarzan stalked, after his own fashion, along
the leafy way of the middle terrace.</p>
<p>It is no child's play to hunt wild elephants with the crude weapons of
primitive man. Tarzan knew that few native tribes ever attempted it,
and the fact that his tribe did so gave him no little pride—already he
was commencing to think of himself as a member of the little community.
As Tarzan moved silently through the trees he saw the warriors below
creeping in a half circle upon the still unsuspecting elephants.
Finally they were within sight of the great beasts. Now they singled
out two large tuskers, and at a signal the fifty men rose from the
ground where they had lain concealed, and hurled their heavy war spears
at the two marked beasts. There was not a single miss; twenty-five
spears were embedded in the sides of each of the giant animals. One
never moved from the spot where it stood when the avalanche of spears
struck it, for two, perfectly aimed, had penetrated its heart, and it
lunged forward upon its knees, rolling to the ground without a struggle.</p>
<p>The other, standing nearly head-on toward the hunters, had not proved
so good a mark, and though every spear struck not one entered the great
heart. For a moment the huge bull stood trumpeting in rage and pain,
casting about with its little eyes for the author of its hurt. The
blacks had faded into the jungle before the weak eyes of the monster
had fallen upon any of them, but now he caught the sound of their
retreat, and, amid a terrific crashing of underbrush and branches, he
charged in the direction of the noise.</p>
<p>It so happened that chance sent him in the direction of Busuli, whom he
was overtaking so rapidly that it was as though the black were standing
still instead of racing at full speed to escape the certain death which
pursued him. Tarzan had witnessed the entire performance from the
branches of a nearby tree, and now that he saw his friend's peril he
raced toward the infuriated beast with loud cries, hoping to distract
him.</p>
<p>But it had been as well had he saved his breath, for the brute was deaf
and blind to all else save the particular object of his rage that raced
futilely before him. And now Tarzan saw that only a miracle could save
Busuli, and with the same unconcern with which he had once hunted this
very man he hurled himself into the path of the elephant to save the
black warrior's life.</p>
<p>He still grasped his spear, and while Tantor was yet six or eight paces
behind his prey, a sinewy white warrior dropped as from the heavens,
almost directly in his path. With a vicious lunge the elephant swerved
to the right to dispose of this temerarious foeman who dared intervene
between himself and his intended victim; but he had not reckoned on the
lightning quickness that could galvanize those steel muscles into
action so marvelously swift as to baffle even a keener eyesight than
Tantor's.</p>
<p>And so it happened that before the elephant realized that his new enemy
had leaped from his path Tarzan had driven his iron-shod spear from
behind the massive shoulder straight into the fierce heart, and the
colossal pachyderm had toppled to his death at the feet of the ape-man.</p>
<p>Busuli had not beheld the manner of his deliverance, but Waziri, the
old chief, had seen, and several of the other warriors, and they hailed
Tarzan with delight as they swarmed about him and his great kill. When
he leaped upon the mighty carcass, and gave voice to the weird
challenge with which he announced a great victory, the blacks shrank
back in fear, for to them it marked the brutal Bolgani, whom they
feared fully as much as they feared Numa, the lion; but with a fear
with which was mixed a certain uncanny awe of the manlike thing to
which they attributed supernatural powers.</p>
<p>But when Tarzan lowered his raised head and smiled upon them they were
reassured, though they did not understand. Nor did they ever fully
understand this strange creature who ran through the trees as quickly
as Manu, yet was even more at home upon the ground than themselves; who
was except as to color like unto themselves, yet as powerful as ten of
them, and singlehanded a match for the fiercest denizens of the fierce
jungle.</p>
<p>When the remainder of the warriors had gathered, the hunt was again
taken up and the stalking of the retreating herd once more begun; but
they had covered a bare hundred yards when from behind them, at a great
distance, sounded faintly a strange popping.</p>
<p>For an instant they stood like a group of statuary, intently listening.
Then Tarzan spoke.</p>
<p>"Guns!" he said. "The village is being attacked."</p>
<p>"Come!" cried Waziri. "The Arab raiders have returned with their
cannibal slaves for our ivory and our women!"</p>
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