<SPAN name="chap22"></SPAN>
<h3> Chapter 22 </h3>
<p>As Meriem struggled with Malbihn, her hands pinioned to her sides by
his brawny grip, hope died within her. She did not utter a sound for
she knew that there was none to come to her assistance, and, too, the
jungle training of her earlier life had taught her the futility of
appeals for succor in the savage world of her up-bringing.</p>
<p>But as she fought to free herself one hand came in contact with the
butt of Malbihn's revolver where it rested in the holster at his hip.
Slowly he was dragging her toward the blankets, and slowly her fingers
encircled the coveted prize and drew it from its resting place.</p>
<p>Then, as Malbihn stood at the edge of the disordered pile of blankets,
Meriem suddenly ceased to draw away from him, and as quickly hurled her
weight against him with the result that he was thrown backward, his
feet stumbled against the bedding and he was hurled to his back.
Instinctively his hands flew out to save himself and at the same
instant Meriem leveled the revolver at his breast and pulled the
trigger.</p>
<p>But the hammer fell futilely upon an empty shell, and Malbihn was again
upon his feet clutching at her. For a moment she eluded him, and ran
toward the entrance to the tent, but at the very doorway his heavy hand
fell upon her shoulder and dragged her back. Wheeling upon him with
the fury of a wounded lioness Meriem grasped the long revolver by the
barrel, swung it high above her head and crashed it down full in
Malbihn's face.</p>
<p>With an oath of pain and rage the man staggered backward, releasing his
hold upon her and then sank unconscious to the ground. Without a
backward look Meriem turned and fled into the open. Several of the
blacks saw her and tried to intercept her flight, but the menace of the
empty weapon kept them at a distance. And so she won beyond the
encircling boma and disappeared into the jungle to the south.</p>
<p>Straight into the branches of a tree she went, true to the arboreal
instincts of the little mangani she had been, and here she stripped off
her riding skirt, her shoes and her stockings, for she knew that she
had before her a journey and a flight which would not brook the burden
of these garments. Her riding breeches and jacket would have to serve
as protection from cold and thorns, nor would they hamper her over
much; but a skirt and shoes were impossible among the trees.</p>
<p>She had not gone far before she commenced to realize how slight were
her chances for survival without means of defense or a weapon to bring
down meat. Why had she not thought to strip the cartridge belt from
Malbihn's waist before she had left his tent! With cartridges for the
revolver she might hope to bag small game, and to protect herself from
all but the most ferocious of the enemies that would beset her way back
to the beloved hearthstone of Bwana and My Dear.</p>
<p>With the thought came determination to return and obtain the coveted
ammunition. She realized that she was taking great chances of
recapture; but without means of defense and of obtaining meat she felt
that she could never hope to reach safety. And so she turned her face
back toward the camp from which she had but just escaped.</p>
<p>She thought Malbihn dead, so terrific a blow had she dealt him, and she
hoped to find an opportunity after dark to enter the camp and search
his tent for the cartridge belt; but scarcely had she found a hiding
place in a great tree at the edge of the boma where she could watch
without danger of being discovered, when she saw the Swede emerge from
his tent, wiping blood from his face, and hurling a volley of oaths and
questions at his terrified followers.</p>
<p>Shortly after the entire camp set forth in search of her and when
Meriem was positive that all were gone she descended from her hiding
place and ran quickly across the clearing to Malbihn's tent. A hasty
survey of the interior revealed no ammunition; but in one corner was a
box in which were packed the Swede's personal belongings that he had
sent along by his headman to this westerly camp.</p>
<p>Meriem seized the receptacle as the possible container of extra
ammunition. Quickly she loosed the cords that held the canvas covering
about the box, and a moment later had raised the lid and was rummaging
through the heterogeneous accumulation of odds and ends within. There
were letters and papers and cuttings from old newspapers, and among
other things the photograph of a little girl upon the back of which was
pasted a cutting from a Paris daily—a cutting that she could not read,
yellowed and dimmed by age and handling—but something about the
photograph of the little girl which was also reproduced in the
newspaper cutting held her attention. Where had she seen that picture
before? And then, quite suddenly, it came to her that this was a
picture of herself as she had been years and years before.</p>
<p>Where had it been taken? How had it come into the possession of this
man? Why had it been reproduced in a newspaper? What was the story
that the faded type told of it?</p>
<p>Meriem was baffled by the puzzle that her search for ammunition had
revealed. She stood gazing at the faded photograph for a time and then
bethought herself of the ammunition for which she had come. Turning
again to the box she rummaged to the bottom and there in a corner she
came upon a little box of cartridges. A single glance assured her that
they were intended for the weapon she had thrust inside the band of her
riding breeches, and slipping them into her pocket she turned once more
for an examination of the baffling likeness of herself that she held in
her hand.</p>
<p>As she stood thus in vain endeavor to fathom this inexplicable mystery
the sound of voices broke upon her ears. Instantly she was all alert.
They were coming closer! A second later she recognized the lurid
profanity of the Swede. Malbihn, her persecutor, was returning!
Meriem ran quickly to the opening of the tent and looked out. It was
too late! She was fairly cornered! The white man and three of his
black henchmen were coming straight across the clearing toward the
tent. What was she to do? She slipped the photograph into her waist.
Quickly she slipped a cartridge into each of the chambers of the
revolver. Then she backed toward the end of the tent, keeping the
entrance covered by her weapon. The man stopped outside, and Meriem
could hear Malbihn profanely issuing instructions. He was a long time
about it, and while he talked in his bellowing, brutish voice, the girl
sought some avenue of escape. Stooping, she raised the bottom of the
canvas and looked beneath and beyond. There was no one in sight upon
that side. Throwing herself upon her stomach she wormed beneath the
tent wall just as Malbihn, with a final word to his men, entered the
tent.</p>
<p>Meriem heard him cross the floor, and then she rose and, stooping low,
ran to a native hut directly behind. Once inside this she turned and
glanced back. There was no one in sight. She had not been seen. And
now from Malbihn's tent she heard a great cursing. The Swede had
discovered the rifling of his box. He was shouting to his men, and as
she heard them reply Meriem darted from the hut and ran toward the edge
of the boma furthest from Malbihn's tent. Overhanging the boma at this
point was a tree that had been too large, in the eyes of the
rest-loving blacks, to cut down. So they had terminated the boma just
short of it. Meriem was thankful for whatever circumstance had
resulted in the leaving of that particular tree where it was, since it
gave her the much-needed avenue of escape which she might not otherwise
have had.</p>
<p>From her hiding place she saw Malbihn again enter the jungle, this time
leaving a guard of three of his boys in the camp. He went toward the
south, and after he had disappeared, Meriem skirted the outside of the
enclosure and made her way to the river. Here lay the canoes that had
been used in bringing the party from the opposite shore. They were
unwieldy things for a lone girl to handle, but there was no other way
and she must cross the river.</p>
<p>The landing place was in full view of the guard at the camp. To risk
the crossing under their eyes would have meant undoubted capture. Her
only hope lay in waiting until darkness had fallen, unless some
fortuitous circumstance should arise before. For an hour she lay
watching the guard, one of whom seemed always in a position where he
would immediately discover her should she attempt to launch one of the
canoes.</p>
<p>Presently Malbihn appeared, coming out of the jungle, hot and puffing.
He ran immediately to the river where the canoes lay and counted them.
It was evident that it had suddenly occurred to him that the girl must
cross here if she wished to return to her protectors. The expression
of relief on his face when he found that none of the canoes was gone
was ample evidence of what was passing in his mind. He turned and
spoke hurriedly to the head man who had followed him out of the jungle
and with whom were several other blacks.</p>
<p>Following Malbihn's instructions they launched all the canoes but one.
Malbihn called to the guards in the camp and a moment later the entire
party had entered the boats and were paddling up stream.</p>
<p>Meriem watched them until a bend in the river directly above the camp
hid them from her sight. They were gone! She was alone, and they had
left a canoe in which lay a paddle! She could scarce believe the good
fortune that had come to her. To delay now would be suicidal to her
hopes. Quickly she ran from her hiding place and dropped to the
ground. A dozen yards lay between her and the canoe.</p>
<p>Up stream, beyond the bend, Malbihn ordered his canoes in to shore. He
landed with his head man and crossed the little point slowly in search
of a spot where he might watch the canoe he had left at the landing
place. He was smiling in anticipation of the almost certain success of
his stratagem—sooner or later the girl would come back and attempt to
cross the river in one of their canoes. It might be that the idea
would not occur to her for some time. They might have to wait a day,
or two days; but that she would come if she lived or was not captured
by the men he had scouting the jungle for her Malbihn was sure. That
she would come so soon, however, he had not guessed, and so when he
topped the point and came again within sight of the river he saw that
which drew an angry oath from his lips—his quarry already was half way
across the river.</p>
<p>Turning, he ran rapidly back to his boats, the head man at his heels.
Throwing themselves in, Malbihn urged his paddlers to their most
powerful efforts. The canoes shot out into the stream and down with
the current toward the fleeing quarry. She had almost completed the
crossing when they came in sight of her. At the same instant she saw
them, and redoubled her efforts to reach the opposite shore before they
should overtake her. Two minutes' start of them was all Meriem cared
for. Once in the trees she knew that she could outdistance and elude
them. Her hopes were high—they could not overtake her now—she had
had too good a start of them.</p>
<p>Malbihn, urging his men onward with a stream of hideous oaths and blows
from his fists, realized that the girl was again slipping from his
clutches. The leading canoe, in the bow of which he stood, was yet a
hundred yards behind the fleeing Meriem when she ran the point of her
craft beneath the overhanging trees on the shore of safety.</p>
<p>Malbihn screamed to her to halt. He seemed to have gone mad with rage
at the realization that he could not overtake her, and then he threw
his rifle to his shoulder, aimed carefully at the slim figure
scrambling into the trees, and fired.</p>
<p>Malbihn was an excellent shot. His misses at so short a distance were
practically non-existent, nor would he have missed this time but for an
accident occurring at the very instant that his finger tightened upon
the trigger—an accident to which Meriem owed her life—the
providential presence of a water-logged tree trunk, one end of which
was embedded in the mud of the river bottom and the other end of which
floated just beneath the surface where the prow of Malbihn's canoe ran
upon it as he fired. The slight deviation of the boat's direction was
sufficient to throw the muzzle of the rifle out of aim. The bullet
whizzed harmlessly by Meriem's head and an instant later she had
disappeared into the foliage of the tree.</p>
<p>There was a smile on her lips as she dropped to the ground to cross a
little clearing where once had stood a native village surrounded by its
fields. The ruined huts still stood in crumbling decay. The rank
vegetation of the jungle overgrew the cultivated ground. Small trees
already had sprung up in what had been the village street; but
desolation and loneliness hung like a pall above the scene. To Meriem,
however, it presented but a place denuded of large trees which she must
cross quickly to regain the jungle upon the opposite side before
Malbihn should have landed.</p>
<p>The deserted huts were, to her, all the better because they were
deserted—she did not see the keen eyes watching her from a dozen
points, from tumbling doorways, from behind tottering granaries. In
utter unconsciousness of impending danger she started up the village
street because it offered the clearest pathway to the jungle.</p>
<p>A mile away toward the east, fighting his way through the jungle along
the trail taken by Malbihn when he had brought Meriem to his camp, a
man in torn khaki—filthy, haggard, unkempt—came to a sudden stop as
the report of Malbihn's rifle resounded faintly through the tangled
forest. The black man just ahead of him stopped, too.</p>
<p>"We are almost there, Bwana," he said. There was awe and respect in
his tone and manner.</p>
<p>The white man nodded and motioned his ebon guide forward once more. It
was the Hon. Morison Baynes—the fastidious—the exquisite. His face
and hands were scratched and smeared with dried blood from the wounds
he had come by in thorn and thicket. His clothes were tatters. But
through the blood and the dirt and the rags a new Baynes shone forth—a
handsomer Baynes than the dandy and the fop of yore.</p>
<p>In the heart and soul of every son of woman lies the germ of manhood
and honor. Remorse for a scurvy act, and an honorable desire to right
the wrong he had done the woman he now knew he really loved had excited
these germs to rapid growth in Morison Baynes—and the metamorphosis
had taken place.</p>
<p>Onward the two stumbled toward the point from which the single rifle
shot had come. The black was unarmed—Baynes, fearing his loyalty had
not dared trust him even to carry the rifle which the white man would
have been glad to be relieved of many times upon the long march; but
now that they were approaching their goal, and knowing as he did that
hatred of Malbihn burned hot in the black man's brain, Baynes handed
him the rifle, for he guessed that there would be fighting—he intended
that there should, for he had come to avenge. Himself, an excellent
revolver shot, would depend upon the smaller weapon at his side.</p>
<p>As the two forged ahead toward their goal they were startled by a
volley of shots ahead of them. Then came a few scattering reports,
some savage yells, and silence. Baynes was frantic in his endeavors to
advance more rapidly, but there the jungle seemed a thousand times more
tangled than before. A dozen times he tripped and fell. Twice the
black followed a blind trail and they were forced to retrace their
steps; but at last they came out into a little clearing near the big
afi—a clearing that once held a thriving village, but lay somber and
desolate in decay and ruin.</p>
<p>In the jungle vegetation that overgrew what had once been the main
village street lay the body of a black man, pierced through the heart
with a bullet, and still warm. Baynes and his companion looked about
in all directions; but no sign of living being could they discover.
They stood in silence listening intently.</p>
<p>What was that! Voices and the dip of paddles out upon the river?</p>
<p>Baynes ran across the dead village toward the fringe of jungle upon the
river's brim. The black was at his side. Together they forced their
way through the screening foliage until they could obtain a view of the
river, and there, almost to the other shore, they saw Malbihn's canoes
making rapidly for camp. The black recognized his companions
immediately.</p>
<p>"How can we cross?" asked Baynes.</p>
<p>The black shook his head. There was no canoe and the crocodiles made
it equivalent to suicide to enter the water in an attempt to swim
across. Just then the fellow chanced to glance downward. Beneath him,
wedged among the branches of a tree, lay the canoe in which Meriem had
escaped. The Negro grasped Baynes' arm and pointed toward his find.
The Hon. Morison could scarce repress a shout of exultation. Quickly
the two slid down the drooping branches into the boat. The black
seized the paddle and Baynes shoved them out from beneath the tree. A
second later the canoe shot out upon the bosom of the river and headed
toward the opposite shore and the camp of the Swede. Baynes squatted
in the bow, straining his eyes after the men pulling the other canoes
upon the bank across from him. He saw Malbihn step from the bow of the
foremost of the little craft. He saw him turn and glance back across
the river. He could see his start of surprise as his eyes fell upon
the pursuing canoe, and called the attention of his followers to it.</p>
<p>Then he stood waiting, for there was but one canoe and two men—little
danger to him and his followers in that. Malbihn was puzzled. Who was
this white man? He did not recognize him though Baynes' canoe was now
in mid stream and the features of both its occupants plainly
discernible to those on shore. One of Malbihn's blacks it was who
first recognized his fellow black in the person of Baynes' companion.
Then Malbihn guessed who the white man must be, though he could scarce
believe his own reasoning. It seemed beyond the pale of wildest
conjecture to suppose that the Hon. Morison Baynes had followed him
through the jungle with but a single companion—and yet it was true.
Beneath the dirt and dishevelment he recognized him at last, and in the
necessity of admitting that it was he, Malbihn was forced to recognize
the incentive that had driven Baynes, the weakling and coward, through
the savage jungle upon his trail.</p>
<p>The man had come to demand an accounting and to avenge. It seemed
incredible, and yet there could be no other explanation. Malbihn
shrugged. Well, others had sought Malbihn for similar reasons in the
course of a long and checkered career. He fingered his rifle, and
waited.</p>
<p>Now the canoe was within easy speaking distance of the shore.</p>
<p>"What do you want?" yelled Malbihn, raising his weapon threateningly.</p>
<p>The Hon. Morison Baynes leaped to his feet.</p>
<p>"You, damn you!" he shouted, whipping out his revolver and firing
almost simultaneously with the Swede.</p>
<p>As the two reports rang out Malbihn dropped his rifle, clutched
frantically at his breast, staggered, fell first to his knees and then
lunged upon his face. Baynes stiffened. His head flew back
spasmodically. For an instant he stood thus, and then crumpled very
gently into the bottom of the boat.</p>
<p>The black paddler was at a loss as to what to do. If Malbihn really
were dead he could continue on to join his fellows without fear; but
should the Swede only be wounded he would be safer upon the far shore.
Therefore he hesitated, holding the canoe in mid stream. He had come
to have considerable respect for his new master and was not unmoved by
his death. As he sat gazing at the crumpled body in the bow of the
boat he saw it move. Very feebly the man essayed to turn over. He
still lived. The black moved forward and lifted him to a sitting
position. He was standing in front of him, his paddle in one hand,
asking Baynes where he was hit when there was another shot from shore
and the Negro pitched head-long overboard, his paddle still clutched in
his dead fingers—shot through the forehead.</p>
<p>Baynes turned weakly in the direction of the shore to see Malbihn drawn
up upon his elbows levelling his rifle at him. The Englishman slid to
the bottom of the canoe as a bullet whizzed above him. Malbihn, sore
hit, took longer in aiming, nor was his aim as sure as formerly. With
difficulty Baynes turned himself over on his belly and grasping his
revolver in his right hand drew himself up until he could look over the
edge of the canoe.</p>
<p>Malbihn saw him instantly and fired; but Baynes did not flinch or duck.
With painstaking care he aimed at the target upon the shore from which
he now was drifting with the current. His finger closed upon the
trigger—there was a flash and a report, and Malbihn's giant frame
jerked to the impact of another bullet.</p>
<p>But he was not yet dead. Again he aimed and fired, the bullet
splintering the gunwale of the canoe close by Baynes' face. Baynes
fired again as his canoe drifted further down stream and Malbihn
answered from the shore where he lay in a pool of his own blood. And
thus, doggedly, the two wounded men continued to carry on their weird
duel until the winding African river had carried the Hon. Morison
Baynes out of sight around a wooded point.</p>
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