<h2><SPAN name="chap16"></SPAN>CHAPTER XVI.<br/> In the Darkness of the Night</h2>
<p>When Tarzan of the Apes realized that he was in the grip of the great jaws of a
crocodile he did not, as an ordinary man might have done, give up all hope and
resign himself to his fate.</p>
<p>Instead, he filled his lungs with air before the huge reptile dragged him
beneath the surface, and then, with all the might of his great muscles, fought
bitterly for freedom. But out of his native element the ape-man was too greatly
handicapped to do more than excite the monster to greater speed as it dragged
its prey swiftly through the water.</p>
<p>Tarzan’s lungs were bursting for a breath of pure fresh air. He knew that
he could survive but a moment more, and in the last paroxysm of his suffering
he did what he could to avenge his own death.</p>
<p>His body trailed out beside the slimy carcass of his captor, and into the tough
armour the ape-man attempted to plunge his stone knife as he was borne to the
creature’s horrid den.</p>
<p>His efforts but served to accelerate the speed of the crocodile, and just as
the ape-man realized that he had reached the limit of his endurance he felt his
body dragged to a muddy bed and his nostrils rise above the water’s
surface. All about him was the blackness of the pit—the silence of the
grave.</p>
<p>For a moment Tarzan of the Apes lay gasping for breath upon the slimy,
evil-smelling bed to which the animal had borne him. Close at his side he could
feel the cold, hard plates of the creature’s coat rising and falling as
though with spasmodic efforts to breathe.</p>
<p>For several minutes the two lay thus, and then a sudden convulsion of the giant
carcass at the man’s side, a tremor, and a stiffening brought Tarzan to
his knees beside the crocodile. To his utter amazement he found that the beast
was dead. The slim knife had found a vulnerable spot in the scaly armour.</p>
<p>Staggering to his feet, the ape-man groped about the reeking, oozy den. He
found that he was imprisoned in a subterranean chamber amply large enough to
have accommodated a dozen or more of the huge animals such as the one that had
dragged him thither.</p>
<p>He realized that he was in the creature’s hidden nest far under the bank
of the stream, and that doubtless the only means of ingress or egress lay
through the submerged opening through which the crocodile had brought him.</p>
<p>His first thought, of course, was of escape, but that he could make his way to
the surface of the river beyond and then to the shore seemed highly improbable.
There might be turns and windings in the neck of the passage, or, most to be
feared, he might meet another of the slimy inhabitants of the retreat upon his
journey outward.</p>
<p>Even should he reach the river in safety, there was still the danger of his
being again attacked before he could effect a safe landing. Still there was no
alternative, and, filling his lungs with the close and reeking air of the
chamber, Tarzan of the Apes dived into the dark and watery hole which he could
not see but had felt out and found with his feet and legs.</p>
<p>The leg which had been held within the jaws of the crocodile was badly
lacerated, but the bone had not been broken, nor were the muscles or tendons
sufficiently injured to render it useless. It gave him excruciating pain, that
was all.</p>
<p>But Tarzan of the Apes was accustomed to pain, and gave it no further thought
when he found that the use of his legs was not greatly impaired by the sharp
teeth of the monster.</p>
<p>Rapidly he crawled and swam through the passage which inclined downward and
finally upward to open at last into the river bottom but a few feet from the
shore line. As the ape-man reached the surface he saw the heads of two great
crocodiles but a short distance from him. They were making rapidly in his
direction, and with a superhuman effort the man struck out for the overhanging
branches of a near-by tree.</p>
<p>Nor was he a moment too soon, for scarcely had he drawn himself to the safety
of the limb than two gaping mouths snapped venomously below him. For a few
minutes Tarzan rested in the tree that had proved the means of his salvation.
His eyes scanned the river as far down-stream as the tortuous channel would
permit, but there was no sign of the Russian or his dugout.</p>
<p>When he had rested and bound up his wounded leg he started on in pursuit of the
drifting canoe. He found himself upon the opposite of the river to that at
which he had entered the stream, but as his quarry was upon the bosom of the
water it made little difference to the ape-man upon which side he took up the
pursuit.</p>
<p>To his intense chagrin he soon found that his leg was more badly injured than
he had thought, and that its condition seriously impeded his progress. It was
only with the greatest difficulty that he could proceed faster than a walk upon
the ground, and in the trees he discovered that it not only impeded his
progress, but rendered travelling distinctly dangerous.</p>
<p>From the old negress, Tambudza, Tarzan had gathered a suggestion that now
filled his mind with doubts and misgivings. When the old woman had told him of
the child’s death she had also added that the white woman, though
grief-stricken, had confided to her that the baby was not hers.</p>
<p>Tarzan could see no reason for believing that Jane could have found it
advisable to deny her identity or that of the child; the only explanation that
he could put upon the matter was that, after all, the white woman who had
accompanied his son and the Swede into the jungle fastness of the interior had
not been Jane at all.</p>
<p>The more he gave thought to the problem, the more firmly convinced he became
that his son was dead and his wife still safe in London, and in ignorance of
the terrible fate that had overtaken her first-born.</p>
<p>After all, then, his interpretation of Rokoff’s sinister taunt had been
erroneous, and he had been bearing the burden of a double apprehension
needlessly—at least so thought the ape-man. From this belief he garnered
some slight surcease from the numbing grief that the death of his little son
had thrust upon him.</p>
<p>And such a death! Even the savage beast that was the real Tarzan, inured to the
sufferings and horrors of the grim jungle, shuddered as he contemplated the
hideous fate that had overtaken the innocent child.</p>
<p>As he made his way painfully towards the coast, he let his mind dwell so
constantly upon the frightful crimes which the Russian had perpetrated against
his loved ones that the great scar upon his forehead stood out almost
continuously in the vivid scarlet that marked the man’s most relentless
and bestial moods of rage. At times he startled even himself and sent the
lesser creatures of the wild jungle scampering to their hiding places as
involuntary roars and growls rumbled from his throat.</p>
<p>Could he but lay his hand upon the Russian!</p>
<p>Twice upon the way to the coast bellicose natives ran threateningly from their
villages to bar his further progress, but when the awful cry of the bull-ape
thundered upon their affrighted ears, and the great white giant charged
bellowing upon them, they had turned and fled into the bush, nor ventured
thence until he had safely passed.</p>
<p>Though his progress seemed tantalizingly slow to the ape-man whose idea of
speed had been gained by such standards as the lesser apes attain, he made, as
a matter of fact, almost as rapid progress as the drifting canoe that bore
Rokoff on ahead of him, so that he came to the bay and within sight of the
ocean just after darkness had fallen upon the same day that Jane Clayton and
the Russian ended their flights from the interior.</p>
<p>The darkness lowered so heavily upon the black river and the encircling jungle
that Tarzan, even with eyes accustomed to much use after dark, could make out
nothing a few yards from him. His idea was to search the shore that night for
signs of the Russian and the woman who he was certain must have preceded Rokoff
down the Ugambi. That the Kincaid or other ship lay at anchor but a hundred
yards from him he did not dream, for no light showed on board the steamer.</p>
<p>Even as he commenced his search his attention was suddenly attracted by a noise
that he had not at first perceived—the stealthy dip of paddles in the
water some distance from the shore, and about opposite the point at which he
stood. Motionless as a statue he stood listening to the faint sound.</p>
<p>Presently it ceased, to be followed by a shuffling noise that the
ape-man’s trained ears could interpret as resulting from but a single
cause—the scraping of leather-shod feet upon the rounds of a ship’s
monkey-ladder. And yet, as far as he could see, there was no ship
there—nor might there be one within a thousand miles.</p>
<p>As he stood thus, peering out into the darkness of the cloud-enshrouded night,
there came to him from across the water, like a slap in the face, so sudden and
unexpected was it, the sharp staccato of an exchange of shots and then the
scream of a woman.</p>
<p>Wounded though he was, and with the memory of his recent horrible experience
still strong upon him, Tarzan of the Apes did not hesitate as the notes of that
frightened cry rose shrill and piercing upon the still night air. With a bound
he cleared the intervening bush—there was a splash as the water closed
about him—and then, with powerful strokes, he swam out into the
impenetrable night with no guide save the memory of an illusive cry, and for
company the hideous denizens of an equatorial river.</p>
<p class="p2">
The boat that had attracted Jane’s attention as she stood guard upon the
deck of the Kincaid had been perceived by Rokoff upon one bank and Mugambi and
the horde upon the other. The cries of the Russian had brought the dugout first
to him, and then, after a conference, it had been turned toward the Kincaid,
but before ever it covered half the distance between the shore and the steamer
a rifle had spoken from the latter’s deck and one of the sailors in the
bow of the canoe had crumpled and fallen into the water.</p>
<p>After that they went more slowly, and presently, when Jane’s rifle had
found another member of the party, the canoe withdrew to the shore, where it
lay as long as daylight lasted.</p>
<p>The savage, snarling pack upon the opposite shore had been directed in their
pursuit by the black warrior, Mugambi, chief of the Wagambi. Only he knew which
might be foe and which friend of their lost master.</p>
<p>Could they have reached either the canoe or the Kincaid they would have made
short work of any whom they found there, but the gulf of black water
intervening shut them off from farther advance as effectually as though it had
been the broad ocean that separated them from their prey.</p>
<p>Mugambi knew something of the occurrences which had led up to the landing of
Tarzan upon Jungle Island and the pursuit of the whites up the Ugambi. He knew
that his savage master sought his wife and child who had been stolen by the
wicked white man whom they had followed far into the interior and now back to
the sea.</p>
<p>He believed also that this same man had killed the great white giant whom he
had come to respect and love as he had never loved the greatest chiefs of his
own people. And so in the wild breast of Mugambi burned an iron resolve to win
to the side of the wicked one and wreak vengeance upon him for the murder of
the ape-man.</p>
<p>But when he saw the canoe come down the river and take in Rokoff, when he saw
it make for the Kincaid, he realized that only by possessing himself of a canoe
could he hope to transport the beasts of the pack within striking distance of
the enemy.</p>
<p>So it happened that even before Jane Clayton fired the first shot into
Rokoff’s canoe the beasts of Tarzan had disappeared into the jungle.</p>
<p>After the Russian and his party, which consisted of Paulvitch and the several
men he had left upon the Kincaid to attend to the matter of coaling, had
retreated before her fire, Jane realized that it would be but a temporary
respite from their attentions which she had gained, and with the conviction
came a determination to make a bold and final stroke for freedom from the
menacing threat of Rokoff’s evil purpose.</p>
<p>With this idea in view she opened negotiations with the two sailors she had
imprisoned in the forecastle, and having forced their consent to her plans,
upon pain of death should they attempt disloyalty, she released them just as
darkness closed about the ship.</p>
<p>With ready revolver to compel obedience, she let them up one by one, searching
them carefully for concealed weapons as they stood with hands elevated above
their heads. Once satisfied that they were unarmed, she set them to work
cutting the cable which held the Kincaid to her anchorage, for her bold plan
was nothing less than to set the steamer adrift and float with her out into the
open sea, there to trust to the mercy of the elements, which she was confident
would be no more merciless than Nikolas Rokoff should he again capture her.</p>
<p>There was, too, the chance that the Kincaid might be sighted by some passing
ship, and as she was well stocked with provisions and water—the men had
assured her of this fact—and as the season of storm was well over, she
had every reason to hope for the eventual success of her plan.</p>
<p>The night was deeply overcast, heavy clouds riding low above the jungle and the
water—only to the west, where the broad ocean spread beyond the
river’s mouth, was there a suggestion of lessening gloom.</p>
<p>It was a perfect night for the purposes of the work in hand.</p>
<p>Her enemies could not see the activity aboard the ship nor mark her course as
the swift current bore her outward into the ocean. Before daylight broke the
ebb-tide would have carried the Kincaid well into the Benguela current which
flows northward along the coast of Africa, and, as a south wind was prevailing,
Jane hoped to be out of sight of the mouth of the Ugambi before Rokoff could
become aware of the departure of the steamer.</p>
<p>Standing over the labouring seamen, the young woman breathed a sigh of relief
as the last strand of the cable parted and she knew that the vessel was on its
way out of the maw of the savage Ugambi.</p>
<p>With her two prisoners still beneath the coercing influence of her rifle, she
ordered them upon deck with the intention of again imprisoning them in the
forecastle; but at length she permitted herself to be influenced by their
promises of loyalty and the arguments which they put forth that they could be
of service to her, and permitted them to remain above.</p>
<p>For a few minutes the Kincaid drifted rapidly with the current, and then, with
a grinding jar, she stopped in midstream. The ship had run upon a low-lying bar
that splits the channel about a quarter of a mile from the sea.</p>
<p>For a moment she hung there, and then, swinging round until her bow pointed
toward the shore, she broke adrift once more.</p>
<p>At the same instant, just as Jane Clayton was congratulating herself that the
ship was once more free, there fell upon her ears from a point up the river
about where the Kincaid had been anchored the rattle of musketry and a
woman’s scream—shrill, piercing, fear-laden.</p>
<p>The sailors heard the shots with certain conviction that they announced the
coming of their employer, and as they had no relish for the plan that would
consign them to the deck of a drifting derelict, they whispered together a
hurried plan to overcome the young woman and hail Rokoff and their companions
to their rescue.</p>
<p>It seemed that fate would play into their hands, for with the reports of the
guns Jane Clayton’s attention had been distracted from her unwilling
assistants, and instead of keeping one eye upon them as she had intended doing,
she ran to the bow of the Kincaid to peer through the darkness toward the
source of the disturbance upon the river’s bosom.</p>
<p>Seeing that she was off her guard, the two sailors crept stealthily upon her
from behind.</p>
<p>The scraping upon the deck of the shoes of one of them startled the girl to a
sudden appreciation of her danger, but the warning had come too late.</p>
<p>As she turned, both men leaped upon her and bore her to the deck, and as she
went down beneath them she saw, outlined against the lesser gloom of the ocean,
the figure of another man clamber over the side of the Kincaid.</p>
<p>After all her pains her heroic struggle for freedom had failed. With a stifled
sob she gave up the unequal battle.</p>
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