A
Note from the Author
I would like to extend my gratitude to Edgar
Rice Burroughs, Inc., for their kindness in allowing me to introduce Dawn and
Bunduki, adoptive great-granddaughter and adopted son of Lord Greystoke, TARZAN
OF THE APES.
I would also like to thank
Philip Jose Farmer, whose book TARZAN ALIVE supplied
much useful information and details of the Greystoke family's lineage. Also
Fred Bear of Grayling, Michigan, Ben Pearson of Pine Bluff, Arkansas, and
William D. Randall of Orlando, Florida (listed alphabetically) for supplying
my heroine's and hero's bows, arrows and knives. I wanted them to have the
best.
—J. T. Edson
BUNDUKI
J. T. Edson
DAW BOOKS, INC.
DONALD
A. WOLLHEIM, PUBLISHER
1301 Avenue of the Americas
New York, N. Y. 10019
Copyright ©, 1975, by J. T. Edson A
DAW Book, by arrangement with Transworld Publishers, Ltd.
All Rights Reserved. Cover art by Michael
Whelan.
first printing, july 1976
123456789
B O CD K S
PRINTED IN U.S.A.
This
book is dedicated to the memory of the world's greatest
action-escapism-adventure writer:— EDGAR RICE
BURROUGHS
CHAPTER
ONE
Where
Is Dawn?
THE
screaming of monkeys aroused James Allenvale Gunn, better known throughout
Europe, Africa, Asia, North and South America and Australia as
"Bunduki" —the Swahili word which means a firearm of any kind —as he
lay on a crotch formed by the junction of two thick branches. Like a wild animal,
or a man who had lived long under dangerous conditions, he came from the depths
of sleep to instant and complete awakeful-ness without any dull-witted,
fumbling transitory period. With an agile movement, he rose to his feet. Balancing
himself instinctively, he looked around him so as to find out what, if anything, had disturbed the monkeys.
Suddenly, a realization of what he was seeing
flooded through him!
It was followed by
amazement and disbelief!
Shaking
his head, as if to try and clear it, he discovered that his first impressions
were unchanged.
He
really was standing high in a tree, surrounded by what
was obviously a tropical jungle!
Surely his eyes must be
playing tricks upon him?
Even
as that thought came, it was replaced by other and more alarming questions!
Where
was the Land Rover, with old M'Bili slumped dead over the steering-wheel, the
struggling, terror-stricken impala ram and the sheer walls of the Gambuti Gorge
into which they had all been tumbling?
And,
infinitely more important, where could Dawn be?
Bunduki recollected with frightening clarity
that his adoptive cousin had been with him, helping to restrain the impala,
when their vehicle had toppled over the edge of the Gorge to what ought to have
been certain destruction.
Yet Dawn was nowhere in
sight!
Only the leaves, branches, creepers, trees
and undergrowth of the jungle met his searching eyes.
There was, as Bunduki had good cause to know,
no such jungle anywhere within five hundred miles of the Ambagasali Wild Life
Reserve.
Holding
his churning emotions in check with an effort of will, Bunduki took stock of
his surroundings and drew certain conclusions.
According to the position of the sun, the
time was early morning. That suggested a night had passed since his last
conscious memory. Or it could have been longer, he
had no way of knowing.
Yesterday
afternoon, if that was when it had been, Dawn and Bunduki had been carrying out
a routine patrol of the Reserve. It had been the normal, practically everyday
task for him in his capacity as Chief Warden; except that his adoptive
cousin did not often have the opportunity to accompany him. As the University
of Ambagasali—at which she was a physical education instructress—was on
vacation, she had taken advantage of it to spend a few days with him. Accompanied
by the Head Ranger, M'Bili, they had been checking on the condition of the
animals and searching for evidence that poachers had been at work.
Circling
vultures had guided them to where an impala ram was struggling in the clutch
of a wire snare. Its body had been cut badly, but they had felt that it could
be healed. So they had freed it and carried it to the vehicle.
Fate had started to weave its web from that
moment!
When loading the Land Rover that morning,
M'Bili had forgotten to include the first aid bag. So they had not been
carrying the means to render the frightened animal unconscious. Telling the
aged Head Ranger to drive, Bunduki had ridden in the back with Dawn. It had
required both their efforts and knowledge of wild creatures to control the
terrified animal and prevent its struggles from inflicting further injuries
upon itself. If it had not been for that, they would have been occupying the
front seat.
They had been returning to Headquarters along
the trail which ran parallel to the edge of the Gambuti Gorge and the charge
from a shotgun had torn through the windshield of the Land Rover. The attack had
probably been the work of a native poacher who had seen and identified the
official vehicle and was afraid that his own presence would be detected.
Caught
in the head by some of the buckshot balls, M'Bili had collapsed on to the
steering-wheel. At the same time, he had inadvertantly turned the vehicle towards
the Gorge and had trodden upon the accelerator. Before Bunduki or Dawn—neither
of whom had been hit by the missiles—could make a move to avert the
catastrophe, the speeding Land Rover had carried them over the edge.
They had been falling to their deaths!
Over three hundred feet below, the jagged
rocks and raging current of the Gambuti River had been awaiting their arrival.
If one failed to kill them, the other was certain to do it.
Yet,
as Bunduki was still alive, it appeared that neither the rocks nor the
swiftly-flowing water had done its work.
Where was his adoptive cousin?
"Dawn!"
Bunduki bellowed, with all the power and volume he could muster. "Dawn,
can you hear me?"
There was no reply!
The
silence was only broken by the sudden rustling, crackling, crashing and shaking
of the foliage above him as the monkeys fled.
Instinctively, Bunduki looked upwards. He
hoped that he might learn something from the animals' behaviour which would
help him to understand the almost inexplicable situation in which he found
himself.
Using
their long tails as aids to their hands and feet, the reddish-brown coloured
monkeys went racing nimbly away through the foliage. Unless he missed his
guess, it had been his voice and nothing else that had frightened them away.
For all that, something was
wrong!
A
moment's consideration informed Bunduki what it was.
No
species of monkey in Africa had a prehensile tail, such a thick reddish coat, beard and body shape.
If
Bunduki did not know it was impossible, he would have sworn that the departing
animals were red howler monkeys.
A species found only in
South America!
Staring
with greater concentration, Bunduki double-checked the details of the
creatures' appearances. They had not gone far, but had come to a halt in a
nearby tree and were staring back with an equal curiosity. No matter how much
he sought for evidence to the contrary, he found only further proof that he
was correct. They were a family of Alouatta Seviculus, the South American red howler monkey.
Frowning in bewilderment, Bunduki raised his
right hand with the intention of thrusting back his hair. It was an instinctive
gesture which he always employed when perturbed or puzzled. However, on this
occasion, it went unfinished.
As
the hand came into his range of vision, he saw that it was covered by the
ventilated pigskin glove which he always wore when hunting with his bow and
arrows.
The discovery caused other sensations to
register in his mind.
His feet were bare!
The slight breeze felt as if it was blowing
on predominantly naked flesh!
Looking down, so as to ascertain the reason
for this phenomenon, Bunduki could not prevent a startled exclamation from
bursting out of his lips.
The garments which he had been wearing in the
Land
Rover—a khaki bush-shirt, slacks and calf-high hunting boots—were all gone.
Instead, he had on the glove, a brown leather archer's armguard strapped to his
left wrist* and a loincloth made from a leopard's skin and held up by a
two-and-a-quarter-inch broad leather belt. In its sheath, on
the left side of the belt, hung a big knife that looked very familiar.
Drawing the knife, Bunduki stared in
puzzlement at it. There was no doubt why he recognized it. It had been
presented to him on his twenty-first birthday by his adoptive parents, Lord and
Lady Greystoke. Made by the master cuder, W.D. Randall Jr., of Orlando,
Florida, it was called a Model 12 "Smithsonian Bowie." Weighing
forty-three ounces, it had an overall length of sixteen and a half inches. Its
eleven inches long, two-and-a-quarter-inches wide, clip pointed** blade was
three-eighths of an inch thick at the stock and had been modelled on the
original weapon made in the 1820's by the Arkansas blacksmith, James Black, for
the legendary James Bowie.
A
slight movement to Bunduki's left attracted his attention. Instinctively, as
he turned his head to investigate, his right hand crossed to grasp the concave
ivory hilt—the lugged guard, scolloped collar and butt cap of which were made
of brass—ready to draw the knife if necessary. He did not find any danger was
threatening him, only the cause of yet another puzzle. Suspended from a
broken branch, close above where he had been lying, were a bow and a quiver
filled with arrows.
And not just any bow!
It
was Bunduki's own, produced to his specifications by the Bear Archery Division
of Grayling, Michigan. Sixty inches long, it was a black Super Kodiak with
*The armguard is used to protect the flesh of
the inner arm from the slap of the bow's string.
**Clip point: one where the back of the blade
curves to meet the cutting edge in a concave arc. In the case of Bunduki's
Model 12, the "false," or top cutting edge was five and a quarter
inches in length and as sharp as the main cutting edge.
fiber
glass limbs which gave a draw of one hundred pounds. Attached to its right side
was a bow-quiver holding eight arrows. Their buff coloured fiber glass shafts
told him that each had a Bear Four-Blade Razorhead hunting point.
The same applied to the fourteen arrows in
the leather back-quiver which was hanging alongside the bow. All were equipped
with hunting heads. There was not one of the type he
used when catching animals alive for examination. Out of curiosity, he opened
the pouch on the front of the quiver. He found that it held the stone which he
used for keeping exceptionally sharp edges on the points of his hunting arrows.
There were also six new, double-loop, braided black Dacron bowstrings. While
he always carried the stone, he could not recollect having put the spare
strings in the pouch.
Nor,
if it came to that, had he been carrying his archery equipment with him
when he and his adoptive cousin had set off on the fateful patrol.
"Where is Dawn?"
The question returned to take precedence over
all others.
Compared with the very deep concern that
Bunduki was experiencing over his adoptive cousin's welfare, the strange
situation in which he found himself was of minor importance.
Slowly,
but inexorably, a thought began to creep into Bunduki's mind. It refused to be
ignored and suggested that Dawn had been rescued in that same unexplained,
practically miraculous fashion as himself. Not only
that. She was somewhere to the north-west—taking the position of the sun as an
aid to compass directions—alive, uninjured—but possibly in great danger!
Bunduki
was at a loss to explain the reason for the feeling that he was experiencing.
Certainly it was something completely outside all his previous knowledge and
nothing like it had ever happened to him before. He could not shake off the
compulsion to go and investigate the validity of the thought.
Nor did he try to do so.
Dawn was alive and might be in peril!
Bunduki needed to know no
more than that!
For the time being, nothing
else mattered!
How the rescue had been performed, by whom,
for what purpose—the way in which he was dressed and armed implied that it was
probably for more than reasons of humanity—even where Dawn and he had been
transported, all faded into unimportance.
Dawn was not dead!
So Bunduki must go and find
her!
Once
they were reunited, they could try to discover the answers to the questions
which must be plaguing her as well as himself.
Taking down the quiver, Bunduki swung its
strap over his head and settled it on his back so that the arrows would be
readily accessible to his gloved hand as it reached over his right shoulder.
Then he lifted the immensely powerful, recurved* hunting bow from the branch.
It was already strung, which suggested that whoever had rescued him must have
considerable knowledge of archery. Even a new string had been fitted. Never had
the smooth, carefully contoured hardwood of the handle-riser felt so comforting as when his left thumb and forefinger enfolded
it.
No matter who, or what, BunduM's saviours
proved to be, he considered that they had given him adequate means of survival
in any kind of jungle that he had ever seen. It was almost as if they had known
his skills and capabilities, and had supplied him with
what, in his case, were the basic necessities to stay alive.
Standing on the crotch, Bunduki looked
ideally suited to meet the challenge of his surroundings. Six-foot three-inches
in height, he had blond hair taken straight back and a tanned, exceptionally
handsome face. While his blue eyes could twinkle with merriment, they were at
that moment as cold and chilling as a June sky just before a storm. He had a
tremendous
"Recurved bow: one that is bent back
from the straight line at the end of its limbs.
spread to
his shoulders, with massive biceps and forearms to match. His bronzed torso
slimmed down at the waist, with the stomach ridged by cords of powerful
muscles, then spread to long legs which were so well-developed that they could
carry his two hundred and twenty pounds weight with a light-footed and
effortless-seeming agility.
For
all his great size and enormous strength, Bunduki could have come close to
world record class as a sprinter, long distance runner, swimmer and gymnast.
There was, however, more than sheer physical prowess to his make-up. Most of
his education and upbringing had been a superb preparation for whatever might
lie ahead.
Having
learned that a gang of Mau Mau terrorists were planning to attack their friend
Major Roger Gunn's farm, Lord Greystoke, his son, Sir Paul John Clayton—Clayton
being the Greystoke's family name —adopted son, Sir John Drummond-Clayton and
his son, Armand John Drummond-Clayton,* had rushed to the rescue.
Unfortunately, by the time they had arrived, Major Gunn and his wife had been
murdered. Bunduki, then only three years old, had been saved by a loyal
servant. With her usual compassion, Lady Jane Greystoke had adopted the orphan
and he was raised as one of their family.
During
the years which had followed, Bunduki was given a very thorough formal and
practical education. However, he had become disenchanted with the so-called
permissive society in England. So, instead of entering a university after he
had left Eton, he had returned to Kenya. From there, he had accompanied Lord
Greystoke, Sir Paul, Sir John and Armand Drummond-Clayton on the various
expeditions—which had
•For
those who have read Addendum 3 (The Greystroke Lineage) in fictionist
genealogist Philip Jos6 Farmer's TARZAN ALIVE, to avoid confusion, the author
has transposed the Christian names of Sir John Paul Clayton and John Armand
Drummond-Clayton.
taken
them into many primitive parts of the world— undertaken on behalf of bodies
like the International Union For Conservation and Natural Resources.
While travelling and when at home on the
Grey-stokes' property in Kenya, even before leaving school, Bunduki had gained
a vast amount of experience in a variety of subjects. In his hands, the
Smithsonian bowie knife was an even more effective weapon than James Bowie had
found the original to be. Armand had taught him the techniques employed by
British Commandos, American Rangers and European resistance fighters in World
War II, but which had been unknown in Bowie's day. With his bow and arrows he
had performed many of the feats attributed to Robin Hood. Although his
mysterious rescuers had not provided him with either, he could handle an assegai—short, stabbing spear—and shield like a Zulu warrior, or hurl a m'kuki —long, throwing spear—as well as any Masai or Sam-buru moran.* His instructor, Muviro, chief of the
Waziri—who had served with members of all three nations in the Kings African
Rifles and had learned their fighting arts—had also taught him the use of a simi,** battle-axe and war club. He was also
well-versed in boxing, judo,
karate and plain, old
fashioned rough-house brawling.
From the male members of his adopted family,
experts all, Bunduki had learned to read tracks that were barely discernible
to less skilled eyes. He had been taught how to move as silently as any great
cat, even through thick undergrowth. He also knew much about animals; how to
hunt them for food when necessary, or how to avoid becoming a meal for a
predator.
So a jungle, even such a one as he awoke to
find himself in, held no terrors for a man who had been raised by John Clayton,
Lord Greystoke—who was far better known as Tarzan of the Apes.
*Moran:
A member of a Masai or Samburu war clan. **Simi: East African sword with no
guard to the hilt and a pear-shaped blade.
Looking at his weapons, Bunduki hoped that
his unknown rescuers had equipped his adoptive cousin at least as well. Given
her Ben Pearson Marauder Take-Down hunting bow—custom built to a draw weight of
seventy pounds—a supply of arrows and the Randall Model 1 Fighting knife which
he had brought her as a Christmas present, Dawn could feed and, to a certain
extent, protect herself until he could find her. The blood of Sir John and Lady
Meriem Drummond-Clay-ton flowed through her veins and their jungle knowledge
was bettered only by that of Lord and Lady Grey-stoke. Always a tomboy, Dawn
had been on several of the family's expeditions before taking up her post at
the University of Ambagasali and was capable of taking care of herself.
Eager
as the blond giant might be to commence his search for Dawn,
he was too wise to set about it in a hurried or impatient manner. The rash and
incautious did not survive for long in a jungle. His every instinct warned him
that the rule might apply even more strongly in his present situation. He was
in a strange and unfamiliar type of country.
Just how strange,
he could not yet say.
Seeing
the red howler monkeys had suggested that he was no longer in Africa. Yet it
was impossible for him to be anywhere else. He realized, however, that under
the circumstances, he could not be sure of what was—or was not—possible.
He should not be dressed in the leopardskin
loincloth. The big knife could have been hanging on his belt as he always
carried it when on patrol, but the bow and arrows should have been locked in
his study at the Wild Life Reserve's Headquarters.
So what was the answer?
Had Dawn and he been snatched from certain
death and, in some equally miraculous manner, been transported without their
knowledge to the jungles of South America?
If so, why had it been done
and who could have had the technical knowledge and equipment capable of doing
it?
Even
while thinking on those lines, Bunduki became conscious of the sensation of
being watched. Instantly, he grew alert and started to search for the watcher.
There
was a movement in an adjacent tree. Reaching for his bow, the blond giant
turned his head to make a closer study. What he saw brought an even more puzzled
frown to his face. He found himself looking at a predatory animal, but it was
over thirty yards away and not a source of danger. The surprise came from a
different reason. While the creature was feline, it was not—as might have been
expected in a jungle that had red howler monkeys—a jaguar, mountain lion or
ocelot. An ashy-grey in colour, its short-legged body was dappled with large,
deeper grey areas which enclosed small dark spots and its tail looked long in
proportion to its build.
As if becoming aware that it had been seen,
the animal turned and darted away through the branches with as much ease and as
swift as if it had been on the ground. That was, Bunduki
realized, hardly surprising. Neofelis nebulosa, the clouded leopard, was arboreal by nature and only rarely descended to
the ground. However, there were no clouded leopards in Africa, or South
America. They were only found in the jungles of the East Indies and South-East
Asia.
After continuing with what proved to be an
abortive search for the watcher, whom he felt sure still had him under observation,
Bunduki thrust the question, along with the puzzle of a jungle that held red
howler monkeys and
clouded leopards, from his
mind. In the former case, he was willing to let the watcher take the
initiative in making a closer acquaintance. The incessant inner suggestion that
Dawn was somewhere to the north-west was too urgent for him to waste
time on less vital considerations.
There was, Bunduki suddenly realized, one way
in which he might learn of Dawn's exact whereabouts.
Although
the Mangani*—with whom Lord Greystoke had lived until
young manhood, following the death of his parents while he was still a baby—had
become extinct in the early 1950's, Tarzan and his family had made use of
their calls as a means of signalling to each other. Some acoustic quality in
the vocal range of the Mangani
allowed the sounds to carry
for vast distances through a jungle. So, even if Dawn was beyond the range of a
human voice, the challenge of a bull Mangani—being
the farthest carrying of the calls, as it was issued to give a warning of
territorial rights—might reach her. If she heard it, she would be able to
identify his voice and would know that he was looking for her.
Filling
his lungs, Bunduki flung back his head and thundered out the awesome, roaring
call. Twice more, with an unabated volume, he sent the challenge echoing
through the jungle. Then he listened hopefully. A small flock of greater
curassows which were feeding at the foot of the tree took off and flapped
hurriedly away. Nearby, a black rhinoceros lurched up from where it had been
sleeping and, with an explosive snort, crashed away through the undergrowth.
Not far away, in another direction, what could only be a tiger gave its throaty
roar in answer to the challenge. At a greater distance, elephants began to
trumpet their defiance.
And
then, from a long way off in the north-west, rose a
cry similar to that which Bunduki had given.
*Due
to a lack of details when Mr. Commissioner Sanders, C.M.G. (see the various
volumes of biography by Edgar Wallace for information regarding Sanders of the
River's career) told Edgar Rice Burroughs about Tarzan and, later, in deference
to Lord Greystoke's wishes—to prevent the Mangani from interference and exploitation by human
beings—they were described as being giant Anthropoid Apes. Since they are now
extinct, Lord Greystoke has lifted his restrictions and it can be stated that
they were a species of Australopithecus.
Neither E.R.B. nor Mr.
Wallace disclosed the true identity of the informant, for reasons not
unconnected with the British Government's Official Secrets Act.
For a moment, the blond giant wondered if his
ears were playing tricks upon him. Then, as the distant call was repeated, he
had the brief hope that it might be originating from a male member of his
adoptive family. Certainly it had not been made by Dawn. She would have used
the cry of a female Mangani.
Nor was it likely to have
come from Tarzan, Sir Paul, Korak the Killer,* or Armand. When Kenya had been
granted its independence, they had known that there was no future for them if
they had stayed there. So they had accepted David Innes' offer to join him and
make a new life for themselves and their families in Pellucidar** Dawn and
Bunduki had been included in the invitation. Being employed under contract by
the Amba-gasali Government, they had honored the agreements by staying on until
suitable replacements could be hired.
So,
with the rest of the Greystoke family already settled in their new homes at the
Earth's core, the response to his challenge could not have been made by one of
them. Yet Tarzan's exhaustive investigations during the mid-1960's had led him
to believe that the Mangani
were extinct.
That
was, Bunduki concluded, just one more mystery to add to those which had
already come to his attention since he awoke. It certainly did nothing to help him locate
Dawn, unless she too had heard the distant call and was making her way towards
it. So he decided that he would not allow the speculation to distract him any
longer from his search.
Having
reached his decision, the blond giant picked up his bow and climbed nimbly to
the ground. On his arrival, still conscious of the feeling that his every move
was being scrutinized, his right hand reached up and slid an arrow from the
quiver on his back. Without
*Korak "The Killer," the Manganis*
name for Sir John Drum-mond -Clayton.
**The
story of David Innes is told in Edgar Rice Burroughs' "Pellucidar"
books and Lord Greystoke's first visit there is described in: TARZAN AT THE EARTH'S CORE.
the need
for him to look at what he was doing, he rested its shaft on the arrow-shelf of
the bow's handle and and slipped the groove of the nock over the string.
Once again, failing to locate the watcher,
Bunduki. put the matter from his thoughts. However, he remained
alert and his eyes were constantly on the move as he started to walk in a
north-westerly direction. As he did so, he became aware of the pangs of a deep
hunger. It was as if he had nothing in his stomach and intestines. Identifying
a number of plants, bushes and trees, although some were unfamiliar, he
selected such fruit and berries as he knew to be edible and ate them while on
the move. There was, however, a more urgent need in the food line. From what he
saw, filling it should not be difficult for a man with his skill as a hunter.
The
variety of animals which Bunduki came across proved to be an unending source of
amazement and conjecture. Once a troop of black and white
Colobus monkeys, like those in the Abedare Forest of Kenya, hurled abuse at him
from the trees. At the same time, a small herd of white-spotted Axis
deer fled as he had seen their kind do during an expedition to India. Not a
mile away, while Hooloock gibbons swung from the branches and fed in a fig
tree, a large sounder of white-lipped peccaries were foraging at its foot on
the fruit which were being dislodged. Later he heard the calls of chimpanzees
and of Asian jungle fowl. He saw tracks left by bongo, giant forest hog and
buffalo as well as identifying—by sight—a South American three-toed sloth and a
Malayan tapir. Still further on, a bull guided its harem and young away as a
jaguar appeared at the edge of the clearing in which they had been grazing.
Birds, reptiles and smaller mammals were also
present in a similar geographically-confusing profusion. By their lack of
fear, they were none of them used to human beings. The only creatures that appeared
to be absent, he noticed with relief, were bothersome insects, ticks, leeches
and other parasites.
It
seemed to Bunduki that he had stumbled into a kind of vast zoological gardens,
in which creatures from every continent had been gathered and were allowed to
roam at will. Even Mangani, unless
his imagination had been playing tricks upon him. That was possible, he
had to admit. There had been no signs, nor sounds, of them apart from the very
distant answer to his challenge.
Altogether the environment through which the
blond giant was passing struck him as being something Dawn and he had
frequently discussed and hoped to find as children. He could not even start to
guess where on Earth it might be, which aroused another possibility—
far-fetched as it might appear to be—for him to consider.
The
time was almost noon and the continuing pangs of hunger caused Bunduki to set
aside the train of thought which his summation had brought to mind. Instead,
he started to hunt in deadly earnest. Gliding silently between the trees and
through the undergrowth, with keen blue eyes constantly flickering glances from
side to side, ears straining to catch the softest sound and nostrils testing
the air—although his sense of smell was not so well developed as that of the
other members of his adoptive family—he looked more like a predatory jungle
creature than a civilized human being.
At last Bunduki found his prey. Halting in
cover at the edge of a large clearing, he looked to where half a dozen greyish,
somewhat squarely built creatures were feeding on the banks of a stream. They
were capybara and, although rather large for his needs, made good eating. There
was another point that appealed to him, as the former Chief Warden of a game
reserve. Their species bred in such numbers that, particularly if his theory
regarding his location was correct, the death of one would not seriously
deplete the stock.
Standing
erect and relaxed, with his left foot pointing towards the target, the blond
giant extended his left arm and turned the bow from the nearly horizontal
carrying position almost to vertical. The fingers of
his bow-hand were curled around the pistol grip of the handle-riser, taking the
pressure of the draw against the base of the thumb. His right elbow was raised
outwards to shoulder level. Tucking the little finger of the draw-hand out of
the way, he folded the remainder—with the nock of the arrow between the first
and second digits—over the string. Utilizing his tremendously strong back and
shoulder muscles, rather than those of his right arm, he drew the string and
arrow rearwards.
Being a hunter, as opposed to a
tournament-target archer, Bunduki favoured the high, or cheek draw. Tilting his
head slightly to the right, until the second finger of his draw-hand was
touching his cheeck just over the last tooth in his lower jaw, he attained his
anchor point. He took aim swiftly and carefully, holding his breath to avoid
the motion of his chest disturbing his posture. Then he relaxed the fingers of
his right hand to accomplish a smooth release. Uncoiling from the arcs into
which they had been drawn, the bow's upper and lower limbs caused the string to
straighten and thrust the arrow forward.
Retaining his stance, the blond giant watched
the thirty-one inch long arrow whistling through he
air. It flew true and the capybara at which he had
aimed, a young male, gave a convulsive bound as the one hundred and
twenty-five grain, needle-sharp point spiked into its body. The razor-edged
quadruple blades of the head cut onwards and collapsed the lungs in passing.
Down went the stricken animal, its legs kicking. It was dead before its alarmed
companions had plunged into the stream and swam away.
Resuming a more relaxed attitude, Bunduki
strolled across the clearing. It was fringed by dense undergrowth that was
pierced at several points by game trails. Reaching his prey, he lay the bow on the ground. Slipping off the quiver, as he
meant to take a dip in the stream after he had eaten, he placed it alongside
the
bow. Then, as his right hand reached across to the Randall knife, he heard
something which drove all thoughts of food from his head.
There
was a rustling in the undergrowth.to his left. A savage, snarling bellow rang
out—followed by the scream of a terrified woman!
CHAPTER
TWO
Are
You Also A Great Warrior?.
SEEING
a shape appear at the top of the slope, the large black-maned lion rose from
where it had been lazing in the shade of a clump of bushes. At its low,
challenging growl, the rest of its pride interrupted their feeding on the
carcass of the cow bison which they had killed.
At
the sight of the lion, Dawn Drummond-Clayton came to a halt. It was, she told
herself bitterly, her own fault that she should find herself in a such a precarious situation. After all she had seen that
day, and with her practical experience, she ought to have been more careful.
Instead of walking along engrossed in her thoughts, she should have stayed
alert. If she had, the noises being made by the feeding pride would have warned
her of their presence and she could have avoided them.
Of course, she went on, her preoccupation
might be considered excusable under the circumstances.
Ever
since Dawn had woken at sunrise, to find that she was lying on a ledge half way
up the side of a rocky kopje,*
she had been forcing
herself to accept very peculiar conditions. She had remembered M'Bili's murder
and the Land Rover plunging into the Gam-buti Gorge, but nothing more until
waking to discover that she was alive and uninjured.
On
first looking around, she had thought that she might be somewhere in the
Ambagasali Wild Life Re-
* Kopje: Afrikaans word
meaning a peak.
serve;
although she could not imagine how she had come to be there. At every side the
plains rolled away in gende, undulating folds which were speckled with herds of
herbivorous animals of many kinds and punctuated by kopjes, clumps of bushes and the occasional tree. The
terrain was, in fact, reminiscent of what the male members of her family had
jokingly referred to as the M.M.B.AA.; the Miles and Miles of Bloody Awful
Africa.
Having
studied her surroundings, Dawn realized that she was not within the familiar
bounds of the Reserve. The Reserve would have been hard put to equal the
numbers of animals she had observed, and certainly could not have offered such
a diversity of species. The very unusual variety of animals had caused her to
have doubts as to whether she was even still in Africa. All of the normal
plains' creatures had been in evidence; ostriches, secretary birds, kori
bustards, wart-hogs, giraffes, buffalo and numerous types of antelope and
gazelle from different parts of her home continent. Scattered among them had
been nilgai and blackbuck from India. Giant anteaters, pronghorns, pampas and
white-tail deer that were normally residents of North or South America had been
mingling with them.
Various
thoughts had been passing through her head as she stood identifying the
different kinds of animals.
Could
she be suffering from a dying illusion, or dreaming while unconscious from the
injuries she had sustained in the crash?
Dawn
doubted whether either supposition was the answer.
Then what had happened?
Where was she?
And,
equally important, why had Bunduki not been brought with her?
Almost as a reply to the last question, the
girl experienced a growing subconscious suggestion that her adoptive cousin
was also alive and that she could find him somewhere in a jungle to the south-east.
Like the blond giant, Dawn
had been puzzled by the sensation. She had never felt anything so utterly
demanding and compulsive. It was as if she had been subjected to post-hypnotic
suggestion. While it was almost beyond her comprehension, she decided that it
was no more so than any of the other inexplicable circumstances in which she
found herself.
There
was, Dawn had concluded, only one way to deal with the mystery. Accept the
suggestion as valid aid go to try and find Bunduki, who was almost certainly
looking for her. Between them, they ought to be able to solve the other
puzzles.
Having accepted that as her best course of action, Dawn had reviewed the
situation in a calm and positive manner.
Whoever,
or whatever, had saved her life must have had a sound and logical reason for
doing so. Certainly they had given her adequate means of self-protection. In
some way they had found and assembled her Ben Pearson Marauder Take-Down
hunting bow. It had been at her side, with the eight-arrow bow-quiver attached
and her shoulder-quiver. Altogether, they had supplied her with twenty-two
fibre glass Micro-Flite arrows with four-blade Bear Razorhead points, all of
which were most acceptable in her present situation. Nor would her Randall
Model 1 fighting knife come amiss. It was hanging sheathed on the belt of the
garments which had replaced the blouse, jeans and moccasins she had been
wearing in the Land Rover.
In addition to arming her, the mysterious
rescuers had given her a way of satisfying the sensation of complete emptiness
in her stomach. There had been a small packet, wrapped in the skin of a
Thomson's gazelle, with her bow. Opening it, she had found that it contained
some biltong* and pemmican.** There had even
♦Biltong: Afrikaans' name for sun-dried
meat. The Americans call it "jerky."
**Pemmican: A North American Indian food made
from buffalo meat, or venison, which is dried, mixed with tallow—the harder,
coarser of the body's fats—and berries, all pounded and been a small stream near the foot of the kopje so that she had been able to quench her thirst.
Leaving
the vicinity of the kopje,
after having eaten a good
meal, Dawn had started to walk in a southeasterly direction. She had had the
sensation of being watched by something other than the animals, but had not
been able to locate the person, or persons, responsible. Although the scrutiny
had continued, nothing had come of it. So she had decided to let the observers
make the first move in the matter of establishing contact. They had not
offered to do so, but she soon had other things to require her attention. In
addition to the herbivorous animals, there were other and more dangerous
creatures to be taken into consideration. There had been other lions, a couple
of cheetahs, a family of Cape hunting dogs and, far away, what she had taken to
be a pack of wolves, but she had avoided coming too close to any of them.
With
the exception of the modern materials used in the construction of her weapons,
Dawn seemed to blend perfectly into the primitive nature of her surroundings.
Five foot eight inches in height, with the kind of a figure that many a
sex-symbol movie star needed artificial aids to attain—bust, 38; waist, 20;
hips, 36—she presented a picture of primitive, savage womanhood. Kept short for
convenience, her curly tawny hair formed a frame to set off classically
beautiful features. Tanned to a rich golden bronze, hke all the exposed
portions of her gorgeous body and legs, her face denoted breeding,
intelligence, strength of will and determination. Power-packed, yet not
unfeminine muscles, rippled under her sleek skin and she moved with the fluid
grace of a trained athlete.
While most flattering to her appearance, the clothing which had
replaced her garments was anything but civilized. She was now wearing a very short, simple
dress made from the soft hide of a cow eland. It was
pressed tightly together to form a cake. Like
biltong, or jerky, it is nutritious and will keep in good condition for a long
time without refrigeration.
one-piece,
sleeveless from the waist to its extremely daring décolleté, laced with leather
thongs and clung to the splendid contours of her torso and hips as if moulded
upon them. The dress, a pair of leopard-skin briefs, an archer's armguard, a
pigskin bowman's glove and the belt were her sole ensemble.
Despite
the scanty nature of her attire, armed as she was, Dawn felt sure that she
could survive until she had found her adoptive cousin. If she could not, she
would be unworthy of her heritage. Not only had her mother
and father been espionage agents in German-occupied Europe throughout much of
World War II, facing great dangers and living in the shadow of a very painful
death if they had been captured, but her grandparents had survived for many
years during their youth in the jungles of Africa. With a bloodline like
that, she ought to be self-sufficient even in such puzzling and disturbing
circumstances. What was more, she had had excellent
training for whatever might lie ahead.
Always
something of a tomboy, Dawn had insisted upon duplicating the lessons in self
defense and weapon handling received by her—at that time—almost inseparable
companion, Bunduki. On being sent to Roe-dean for her education, she had thrown
herself wholeheartedly into every permissible kind of sport and had excelled
at them all. However, like her adoptive cousin, she had grown disenchanted by
the blatantly onesided political bias of the international sporting bodies.
So, although of world class as an athlete, gymnast and swimmer, she too had
refused to enter competitions. For all that, she had kept up her training and
was in the peak of physical condition.
There
were, however, limits to how far her physical prowess could protect her. It
would not, for instance, save her if the big, black-maned lion should attack.
Despite the perilous nature of her
predicament, Dawn did not panic. Instead, she turned her attention to thinking
of how she might extract herself from it. To turn and run would almost
certainly arouse the instinct which every predatory creature had to chase
anything that fled from it. During a charge, a lion could attain a speed of
around fifty miles per hour. So, especially while she was encumbered by the bow
and arrows— which she had no desire to discard—even though a distance of
slightly over thirty yards was separating them, she could not hope to outrun
the lion. Nor was there a tree close enough for her to be able to seek refuge
in its branches.
Standing
perfectly still, Dawn made no attempt to raise her bow into the shooting
position. While she had not been so incautious that she had been carrying it
without an arrow nocked to the string, she realized that it would be inadequate
in the event of the lion making a charge.
No
arrow, even when loosed from a bow which drew seventy pounds and carrying a
modern four-bladed hunting point, had the stopping power of a medium to heavy calibre rifle. If
a lion was hit by a heavy enough bullet, it would be knocked from its feet and
so allow the delivery of a second round. An arrow could not do that, as the
force of the powder charge behind the bullet was far greater than the propulsive
effect of any practical bow.
Of course, the killing power of an arrow's four-bladed point was
even more effective than that of a bullet under certain conditions. Cutting a
path almost two inches wide as it entered the animal's body, the arrow was
almost certain to cause death by bleeding—but, unless it was placed with great
accuracy and into a vital area, not quickly enough to end a charge.
A hit in the head, providing it caught the
brain, or through the chest cavity to tear apart the heart or the lungs, would
cause almost instant death. However, she felt disinclined to chance aiming for
such small targets when they would be approaching her at speed. Even a slight
error in alignment would be fatal to her. While the wounded beast might—in
fact, probably would— die, it would not do so before having reached and either
seriously injured or killed her.
Studying the great cat, Dawn began to draw
conclusions based upon her past experiences and what she had been taught about
the habits of Panthera
Leo. As one of her
instructors had been her adoptive greatgrandfather—who had raised and trained Jad-Bal-Ja, the Golden Lion and had had plenty to do with
them in the wild—she felt sure that she could rely upon the information.
Taking into consideration the big male's
obviously well filled stomach and the fact that the rest of the pride were being
allowed to feed from the kill—which, even in the stress of the moment, she had
noticed appeared to be a North American bison—she decided that it must already
have eaten its fill. In which case, unless it differed greatly from those
others of its kind with which she had come into contact, it was no longer
hungry, and would be disinclined to exert itself without considerable
provocation.
"All
right, numa," Dawn breathed, using the Man-gams' word for a lion. "I won't provoke you.
I'm going away and, unless you want this arrow down your throat, you won't try
to stop me."
Having delivered the sotto voce comment,
although she knew that the beast would not have understood even if it had
heard, the girl made a slow and tentative step to the rear. At her first movement, the lion tensed and
its tail began to swing from side to side.
Dawn
came to an immediate halt, ready to raise and draw the bow!
Standing like a statue, the girl kept her hazel eyes on the lion's, fixing them in a stare as
unblinking as its own. Almost thirty seconds dragged by on leaden feet, seeming
to be much longer, before the great cat's tail ceased
its swinging and it looked away from her unremitting scrutiny.
Dawn took another step!
Although
the lion's eyes returned to her, there was no other response from it. So,
without turning her back on it, she continued to retreat. She went unhurriedly, wanting to make sure that she did not trip and
fall as much as to avoid any sudden motions that would alarm it. The lion
watched her go and, as she had hoped, made no attempt to follow. Instead, even
before she had passed out of sight over the top of the slope, it slumped back
into the shade of the bushes. Seeing that the head of their pride was settling
down, the three lionesses and their cubs resumed the interrupted meal.
Once
beyond the lion's range of vision, Dawn stopped and sucked in a long, deep
breath. Although she had extracted herself from the predicament without
difficulty, she did not rninimize how dangerous it had been. If the lion had
been hungry, she would not have escaped so easily. Taking her right hand from
the bow's string and supporting the arrow with her left, she wiped away the
film of perspiration that had formed on her brow. While she was doing it, the
memory of something that she had been told as a child came to mind.
"If Esmeralda* was right and servants
sweat, gentlemen perspire, but ladies only glow," Dawn thought with a
smile, "I can't be a lady. This is either sweat,
or the wettest 'glow' I've ever seen."
Having delivered that sentiment, which served
to relieve the tension left by what she knew had been a narrow escape, Dawn
returned her hand to the nock of the arrow and resumed her journey. However,
she had taken the warning to heart, and let neither her curiosity over the strange
circumstances of her rescue from the Land Rover, nor the continuing sensation
of being kept under observation, interfere with her vigilance.
After about an hour had passed without
incident, other than seeing game in the same bewildering profusion, a column
of smoke attracted Dawn's attention. It was some distance away, to the east,
but had the appearance of rising from a camp fire.
The
sight presented Dawn with a problem. To go to the source of the smoke would
take her away from
♦Esmeralda Moreland,
Lady Greystoke's nurse and maid.
the
direction in which her instincts suggested she would find Bunduki. However,
unless a certain theory which she had been considering just before the meeting
with the lion should prove to be correct, whoever had made the fire might help
her in the search. Even if her supposition was right, provided she exercised
caution, she could gain some useful information. With that in mind, she turned
to the east and made for the smoke.
Long before Dawn was within sight of her destination, her way was barred by a wide chasm through
which raced the waters of a river. To the south-east, about a mile away, the
plains began to merge with scrub and woodland that she sensed was the outer
limits of the jungle in which—if her subconscious feelings were true—she would
locate Bunduki. So she paused, undecided as to whether she should go there or
try to find a way across the river and make for the fire.
While
the girl was considering what to do, she became aware that three mounted figures
had come into view at the top of a slope on the other side of the chasm.
Watching them riding towards the edge and tliinking of the theory which she had
been formulating with regards to her whereabouts, she was not sorry that a gap
of about fifty yards would be separating her from them. While everything about
them seemed to be further evidence that she was no longer in any part of Africa
as she knew it, nothing supplied a clue as to where she might be.
The trio, a woman and two men,
were mounted on horse-like animals. The ears, mane and patterning of black and
white stripes on the smaller man's beast were suggestive of a Grant's zebra.
Brown in colour, taller and of better quality, the other two animals had black
and cream striping on the head, neck and shoulders only. The long extinct
quaggas of South Africa had been coloured and marked in such a fashion. In
fact, they all bore the same kind of resemblance to wild zebras as a
thoroughbred Arabian stallion bore to a tarpon or a Przewalski's horse, the progenitors
of the domestic breeds. Apparently the three riders' mounts had evolved from
varieties of zebra which had been bred for long enough in captivity to have
developed into riding strains far superior to the original wild stock.
Not
that Dawn devoted too much of her attention to the animals. She was finding the
appearances of their riders to be of even greater interest.
Sitting
her mount with the easy grace of an excellent rider, the woman was bronzed,
black-haired and very beautiful. Yet, for all the sensual
pout to her full hps, her dark eyes and expression suggested a cruel and
imperious nature. She was about an inch taller than Dawn and would
probably exceed the girl's age, twenty-one, by six or seven years. Her
shoulder long tresses were held back by a broad band of what looked like gold lamé fabric. The halter which was flimsily covering the full, firm
thirty-nine inches of her bosom and the brief skirt which emphasised the
contours of her thirty-seven inch hips and buttocks were made from a mesh of
the same material. Her legs were in keeping with the rest of her magnificent
figure. Criss-crossing her calves to just below the knees, the straps of her
sandals were gold in colour. About her bare, twenty inch, waist was a belt
comprised of gold and silver discs. It supported the scabbard of an ivory
hilted sword shaped like a Roman soldier's gladius. Apart from a wide gold bracelet on her right
wrist, she had no jewellery. Her right hand was holding the reins and the left
rested on the hilt of the sword as she arrogantly returned the girl's
scrutiny.
The
man on the woman's left was tall, middle-aged and well built. Covering his
skull, so that only his hard, cruel face was exposed, his metal helmet was
embossed on each side with a zebra's head. It was topped by a crest that might
have come from the mane of his mount. His swarthy features had harsh lines, and
a long, drooping moustache did little to soften the cruel set of his thin lips.
He had on a breast-plate of polished leather carved ornately with some kind of
design, over what appeared to be a white silk shirt. The kilt he was wearing
looked as though it was made of leather. Greaves of that material, etched
decoratively, protected his shins and he had sandals on his feet. The sword
sheathed on the left side of his belt, which was formed from all gold discs,
was of the same design as the woman's, but heavier and longer. Grasped at its
point of balance, the butt of a nine foot long lance was resting in the cup
attached for that purpose to his right side stirrup.
Although
dressed in much the same way as the tall man, the second male rider was
middle-sized, stocky and obviously of a lower social status. No crest adorned
his helmet, nor was there any engraving on his breast-plate and greaves. The
sword he was carrying had a plain wooden hilt and was his only weapon.
Not
only the man's dress and mount suggested that he was of a subordinate rank, his
behaviour proved it. Althugh his companions had halted and were staring across
the chasm, he directed only the briefest glance at Dawn. Then he reined his
zebra—she had decided to give the animals such a title—around in a half circle
and stopped it within reaching distance of the woman's right hand.
The girl had no need to ponder over the
second man's actions. A wooden framework was attached to the cantle of his
saddle, which—like those of his companions, although theirs were of a better
quality—resembled a low horned, double girthed Texas range rig, extending to
rest on the zebra's rump. On the crossbar, with its head covered by a finely
decorated leather hood that was designed to display its prominent crest of
feathers, perched an enormous bird of prey. Its great size, body's shape,
mottled grey upper surfaces, black chest, white
underparts, shortish, powerful, very deep but comparatively narrow curved beak,
thick legs and massive claws told her that it was a harpy eagle of some kind.
Ignoring the third member of their party and
the bird, the woman and the taller man were subjecting Dawn to mutually long
examinations. Then they exchanged glances, each nodding as if they had reached
some unspoken agreement. Having done so, the man returned his gaze to the girl,
raking her from head to foot. There was lust and worse in his scrutiny. Then he
stiffened slightly and swung his eyes to look north on her side of the chasm.
Before Dawn could turn her head in that
direction, more riders came into sight on the rim. Two women and four men,
clad, armed and mounted in a similar manner
to her examiners, but in a slightly less opulent fashion. The women, both
beautiful and shapely, had on garments of silver lamé. While the taller of the women, and all the men, wore greaves, the second
woman copied, in silver, the gold-clad beauty's taste in footwear. The animals
they were sitting looked like the larger Grevy's species of zebra; having
numerous narrow black stripes, but no gridiron pattern of transverse bars on
the hind quarters that identified the Grant's variety.
Studying the newcomers, Dawn was relieved to
see that none of them carried bows and arrows. They all appeared to be
interested in her, but did not offer to ride any closer. Instead, they began to
talk quietly amongst themselves. Then the woman without the greaves rose on her
stirrups. Shielding her eyes with her right hand, she stared in a more
noticeable fashion than the tall man had done across the chasm and to the
north.
"Who are you?" called the man,
bringing his attention back to the girl.
The words served to jolt Dawn's thoughts away
from the manner in which the shorter of the women on the rim was acting.
They had been spoken in
English!
Or had they?
Dawn sensed that her brain had been translating
the man's question automatically, as it did when she was using one of the
foreign languages with which she was acquainted.
"My name is TDawn,' " the girl
found herself ansering and guessed that, no matter what language she was
using, the people across the chasm could understand her.
That
was, Dawn decided, pretty conclusive proof of her theory's validity.
"Are
you alone?" demanded the black-haired woman, in a husky contralto voice
that contrived to be domineering as well as sultry, scanning the terrain around
Dawn.
"My
cousin—and many of our warriors—are close by," the girl bluffed, wishing
she had avoided the slight hesitation while increasing the size of hers and
Bun-duki's party. "If I call for them, they will come
quick-
iy."
"To
which nation do you belong?" the man inquired, continuing to dart glances
at the north as if expecting to see something in that direction. "You
don't dress like an Amazon and you're not a Gruziak, or a Telonga."
Although
Dawn knew that the original Amazons had been a nation of female warriors in
Ancient Greece, she had never heard of peoples called the Gruziak or the
Telonga.
"I
belong to the people of Tarzan of the Apes," the girl replied, hoping to
obtain some clue as to where she was.
In
the course of an exceptionally eventful life, Lord Greystoke had travelled
extensively and had been in contact with several strange, previously
undiscovered races. Perhaps he had come across the people to whom her
interrogators belonged, although she could not recollect him ever having
mentioned them.
"And
who, or what might
this Tarzan of the—Apes —be?" the woman asked haughtily, fumbling with the
word "Apes" as if it was not familiar.
Once again, Dawn decided not to tell the
exact truth. It would take too long to tell the full story and describe her
exact relationship with Lord and Lady Greystoke. In fact, the latter might be
beyond her audience's comprehension. With their parents dead,
Captain
Hugh "Bulldog" Drummond* had not been able to raise or care for his
younger brother, John, in an adequate manner. So his second cousin, Lord
Grey-stoke,** had adopted the youngster as his son and
given him the name Drummond-Clayton.t
However,
Dawn doubted whether the couple would appreciate such a relationship as an
adoptive great-granddaughter. That would be particularly so if the woman was
only pretending to be ignorant of Tarzan's identity and had actually met him.
Few people knew about the Kavurus' longevity pDls that had come into his
possession and had been shared amongst his family. These tablets had halted the
aging processes of the human body and had granted the recipients—barring accidental
death, suicide or murder—what amounted to immortality. To avoid arousing
unwanted interest, due to the fact that they all appeared to be in their late
twenties and showed no signs of getting older, the family had resorted to
make-up when receiving visits by any but very close and trusted friends or when
travelling. Dawn had often thought, not without amusement, that her mother, grandmother
and Lady Grey-stoke must be almost the only women in the world who deliberately
sought to make themselves look older.
"He
is my father and the chief of all our people," Dawn answered, having
decided that such a relationship—the latter part of which was true—might be
more
♦Captain Hugh "Bulldog"
Drummond's biography is recorded in the books of H.C. "Sapper"
Melville and Gerald Fairlie, although they were requested not to make any
mention of his younger brother to avoid reprisals against John by Carl Petersen.
**The family ties between Lord Greystoke and
the Drummond brothers are explained in detail by hedonist genealogist Philip José Farmer in: TARZAN ALIVE.
tAt Lord Greystoke's request and in the
interests of producing a fast-moving story without extensive explanations, Mr.
Burroughs did not reveal John Drummond-Clayton's exact status when writing THE SON OF TARZAN. However, permission now having been granted, this has been clarified in
the above mentioned work by Mr. Farmer.
acceptable
and suitably impressive. "He and all my people are great warriors and
mighty archers."
As
the girl said the final words, she gestured with the bow to emphasise their
meaning. None of the riders were armed in such a fashion and she did not know
if they would understand the term. However, having had his attention drawn to
it, the tall man was staring at the powerful weapon and displaying great
interest. Clearly he knew what it was, but now realized that it differed from
any other bow that he had seen. That, Dawn told herself, was not surprising.
"Are you also a great warrior?" the woman challenged.
"If I need to be," Dawn answered,
her feminine feelings bristling with annoyance at the other's attitude.
Raising
his eyes from the bow, the tall man subjected Dawn to another scrutiny. She
noticed the difference in his behaviour. It seemed that he was no longer
primarily interested in her physical attractions, but was sizing her up in the
light of her statement.
"Why don't you call for your cousin and
his warriors to join you?" he finally suggested, twisting his features
into what he probably imagined was a friendly smile. "If you came
upstream, there is a place where we can cross and make friends."
On
hearing the girl's response to her question, the woman had snapped her gaze to
the tall man and was studying him in a calculating, almost suspicious seeming,
fashion. Then she stared back at Dawn, but in a less mocking and more hostile
manner.
"Yes,
why don't you?" the gold-clad beauty went on, but there was neither
friendship nor a welcome in her voice. "We have had a successful hunt and
there is more than enough meat for you, your cousin—and all his many warriors."
There was something in the contralto tones
that warned Dawn that her bluff had failed and the speaker realized she was
alone. No matter how genuine the man's invitation might have been, the woman
did not duplicate it. For some reason, she had turned from being mocking and
derisive into a bitter enemy. Apparently she had detected some motive of which
she did not approve in the man's change of attitude towards the girl.
In
addition to carrying on the conversation, Dawn had been keeping the second
party of riders under observation. They were, in her opinion, still paying too
much attention to the north of her position. It was as if, like the tall man,
they were expecting to see something in that direction.
Or somebody!
Suddenly, the smaller of the women in the
silver garments pointed in an excited manner. Looking in the direction she was
indicating, Dawn realized that the couple had been holding her attention
deliberately. They had hoped to prevent her noticing a pair of riders who had
topped a ridge about half a mile away. Mounted on zebras, the two men were
dressed in the same way as the eagle's attendant and were armed with lances.
Even as the girl located them, they urged their mounts forward at a faster
pace.
All too well Dawn realized what the riders'
presence on her side of the river meant. Her every instinct gave warning that
it would be unwise to fall into their hands. Up to that moment, she had
believed that she had nothing to fear from the zebra-riding people. None of
them were carrying bows and the distance was too great for a lance, even if it
had been designed for throwing, to be of any serious danger. She could have
watched its flight and dodged it.
The
approaching pair had changed the situation drastically. They were on Dawn's
side of the chasm and would travel much faster than she could on foot. For all
that, she intended to try and reach the woodland. If their mounts were
anything to go by, the people were plainsdwellers and, once among the trees,
she would have an advantage over them.
With
that in mind, Dawn swung on her heel and started to run. She was still carrying
the bow with an arrow nocked to the string. To have removed and returned it to
the quiver on her back would have taken seconds which might prove vital to her
escape. So she accepted the awkwardness of running with it in a position of readiness.
Letting out a furious exclamation, the tall
man signalled for the riders to move faster. With her beautiful features
twisted into lines of savage satisfaction, the woman by his side let the
one-piece reins fall on to her mount's neck. Reaching out with her right hand,
she plucked the hood from the head of the harpy eagle.
"Gaze-ho!" she
snapped.
Hearing the familiar command, following the
removal of the hood which had acted as a blindfold, the enormous bird crouched
on its perch. Its powerful body was quivering with eagerness and its head swung
until the cruel red eyes were attracted by Dawn's fleeing figure.
"What are you do--------- ?" the tall man began, twist-
ing on his saddle to glare at his female companion.
Seeing what she was doing, he continued hastily, "No! I
want her ali-------- !"
"Kill!" ordered the woman, ignoring
the protest.
Concentrating on the ground over which she
was speeding, so as to avoid stepping into a hole or on a stone that might turn under her foot and cause her to stumble, Dawn
suddenly became aware of the danger that was approaching. It was coming from a source much closer than the two riders who were galloping in her
direction. She heard the swishing of heavy wings and knew instantly what the
sound portended.
It was, the girl
told herself, something that she ought to have expected and taken into account.
Everything about the eagle had pointed to it having been trained for falconry.
Instead of thinking about the ease with which she could have avoided a thrown lance, or growing complacent because the riders did not carry
bows, she should have guessed how they could attempt to ensure her capture.
While she might be safe from the lances, the eagle could fly across the chasm
and reach her without any difficulty.
Throwing a quick glance at the two riders,
Dawn wondered if she could turn, deal with the bird, and still beat them to the
woodland. Not that, she realized, she had any real choice in the matter. She
might—and it would only just be might—outrun
the men, but the bird would be upon her long before she attained the safety of
the trees.
However, if Dawn halted for long enough to
drive away or kill the eagle, the two men would arrive and cut her off.
CHAPTER
THREE
You
Take Woman. Go!
ALMOST
before the echoes of the scream had ceased, Bunduki was bending to retrieve his
bow. This time, however, he liberated an arrow from the bow-quiver and made his
weapon ready for use. All the time his hands were moving, he watched the left
side of the clearing.
As
yet, the dense nature of the bushes was preventing the blond giant from seeing
the person who had screamed. Nor could he discover the cause of her alarm. With
the wind, what there was of it, blowing from the north, his sense of smell was
of no assistance in gathering further information. However, his ears suggested
that there was more than one pursuer.
Suddenly,
a feminine figure dashed from the mouth of the game trail. Although Bunduki had
not expected her to be Dawn, it was still something of a relief when a stranger
came into view.
Long, straight black hair streamed behind the
running girl and her very pretty face was distorted by an expression of
horror. She was brown skinned, like a Polynesian, about five-foot-three in
height and possessed exceptionally well-developed contours. They were made all
the more obvious due to the skimpy manner in which she was dressed. Her
clothing consisted of a short skirt made from twisted strands of grass—and not
too many of them—and a small halter that looked like a strip of colobus
monkey's skin. Unarmed, and clearly very frightened, she sped recklessly
across the open ground. Instead of giving any indica-
tion
that she was aware of the blond giant's presence, she ran towards the river.
"This way!" Bunduki called, hoping that she would
understand.
At the sound of his voice, the girl showed
her first sign of realizing that another human being was close by. Staring at
Bunduki, she gave a croaking cry of mingled alarm and relief. She started to
swerve in his direction, tripped and went sprawling to the ground. After
rolling over a couple of times, she halted in a crouching posture and covered
her face with her arms. Sobs of terror and exhaustion shook at her scantily
covered and voluptuous little body.
Striding forward, Bunduki had just reached
the girl when the first of her pursuers emerged from the undergrowth. Studying
the creature, he could understand the reason for her panic-stricken flight.
Bunduki's
first thought was that the creature might be a gorilla, but a second look led
him to revise his opinion. While it was coated with coarse brown hair and had
the short-necked, projecting face of an ape, it ran with an upright stance and
with an ease that no gorilla or chimpanzee could duplicate.
Other
details began to leap to Bunduki's attention. The creature's broad shoulders
and heavily muscled arms suggested that it travelled by bracbiation, swinging
from branch to branch through the trees. Yet its legs were long and straight,
with feet more suited to bipedal walking or running on the ground. In height,
it just topped six foot. While anything but puny, weighing maybe three hundred
pounds, it lacked the massive bulk of a bull gorilla. Still more significantly,
as far as identification was concerned, it was carrying a six foot long, fairly
straight branch which had been broken to leave a sharp point at the forward
end. From the way the creature was handling the branch, he— there was no doubt
as to the sex—was aware of its potential as a rudimentary, yet effective spear.
No gorilla knew how to make, nor use,
weapons. Even the more intelligent chimpanzee would only throw or wield a
stick, wildly, and none too effectively for defense.
The fact that the creature was armed in such
a way might prove it was not a gorilla, but it also produced an argument to the
alternative which had come to Bunduki's mind. If he had not seen the
branch-spear, he would have thought that it was an Australopithecus. One of the same species which his adoptive
father's American biographer had always referred to as the Great Anthropoid
Apes, but who had really been an omnivorous pre-human phase of hominid evolution. Somewhat smaller and lighter than
the gorilla, which had frequently shared their domains,* the Mangani had possessed a higher standard of
intelligence. However, although Lord Greystoke had once taught some of them to
row a boat, those of the race with whom he had been associated did not know how
to make, or even use, such a simple weapon as the branch-spear.
Thrusting
aside his thoughts on the creature's possible identity, the blond giant
prepared to deal with him Whether he was a more advanced kind of Australopithecus, or some later species like Homo Erectus Erectus** —which, it has been established, was capable
of making and using primitive tools—he was certainly dangerous.
At
the sight of Bunduki moving protectively between him and the girl, the
man-ape—which was the most apt description the blond giant could think of—came
to a halt.
Three
more of the creatures, all just as obviously masculine, lumbered from the game
trail. Two were smaller than the first, reddish brown in colour and armed with
branch-spears. Larger and heavier than the
*Due to the similarity to
their appearances and because the true status of the Mangani had yet to be discovered, it is possible
that they were responsible for most of the reports of gorillas attacking
natives and abducting their women.
♦♦Bunduki later established that
they were a transitory stage between Australopithecus and Homo Erectus Erectus and not the type of Mangani known to Tarzan.
rest,
the fourth was almost black and grasped a thick, knobbly three-foot length of
tree root in the manner of a club. Clearly he was the leader of the group. Although
he had been bringing up the rear, he pushed to the front. From his lips, as
they advanced, came three rumbling, almost grunting sounds.
Much
to Bunduki's surprise, he found that he could understand the big male's
guttural words.
"Bul-Mok
kill!" the man-ape had
announced, his name meaning, "Big Father."
"Keep away, or Tar-Ara kill!"
To
add to Bunduki's astonishment, he found that he was able to answer the threat
in the same kind of primitive tongue. Although he had been encouraged by his
adoptive parents to make the most of his facility for learning languages, he
had not had the opportunity to acquire any extensive knowledge of Mangani. Nor, with them being so close to extinction,
had mere seemed to be any point in him doing so.
Not
that the blond giant believed he was consciously speaking the Mangani dialect when he gave the warning and
translated his name as "White Lightning." For some reason that he
could not comprehend, his brain was registering the thoughts in English and
they were leaving his mouth in the form of simple, yet alien word-sounds.
Clearly
the men-apes were puzzled at meeting a human being who was able to address them
in their own primitive tongue. They came to a stop, with the younger males
lowering their weapons. They were waiting to see how their father wanted the
situation handled.
Deep growls rumbled in Bul-Mok's throat and he swayed uncertainly on his spread
apart feet. Glaring at the blond giant, he tried to
decide what would be his best line of action. Faced with a dangerous creature
of another species, the usual thing would have been for him and his sons to
launch a mass attack. However, against one of their own kind who had strayed
into their territory, Bul-Mok—in his capacity as dominant male of the
family—alone must assert his authority.
Although
Bunduki did not know it, Bul-Mok had
never seen a human being until coming across the girl. While puzzled by the
blond giant's hairless body and strange features, the big man-ape was unable to
decide whether he could be classed as a Mangani or
not. The answer to the puzzle would tell Bul-Mok how
to deal with the intruder.
"This Bul-Mok's land!" the dominant male stated, beating
at hus chest with his left fist. "Bul-Mok kill!"
"Tar-Ara mighty fighter," Bunduki countered, although
holding the bow prevented him from repeating the other's gesture. "Not
afraid of Bul-Mok!"
Throwing
back his head, the dominant male thundered out a challenge. There was no doubt
about it, Bunduki told himself. It was the call of a bull Mangani. What was more, he
knew how he must respond. While he had learned only a little of the Manganis' simple language, he could make all of the various
signal calls. So he replied in kind and his deep-throated roar shattered the
air.
Hearing the awesome sound so close above her,
the girl crouching at Bunduki's feet looked up. A low moan burst from her as
she realized that the second bellow, no less savage in timbre than the one
which had preceded it, must have been made by the giant white man. Burying her
face in her hands once more, she moaned incoherently and tried to make herself
even smaller.
Discovering that the strange white creature
not only spoke Mangani
but made the correct
response to the challenge roar was disconcerting to Bul-Mok. It presented a situation which severely
taxed his limited intelligence and reasoning powers.
Should he order his sons to
charge?
Or
must he treat the intruder as a trespasser of their own kind, strange-looking
but a Mangani for all that, who must be dealt with by
himself?
All Bul-Mok's instincts
warned him that the big stranger was a powerful and dangerous challenger.
Bearing that in mind, the man-ape sought for a way to avoid a direct
confrontation—but without letting it be apparent to the other members of his
family that he was doing so. His eyes roamed the clearing, avoiding having to
meet Tar-Ara's gaze, coining to rest on the dead capybara.
Returning his attention to the blond giant, he decided to offer a compromise
which, if accepted, would leave the next move to his oldest son.
It
was a shrewd piece of reasoning for a Mangani. Bal-Tak, 'First Born,' was rapidly approaching the point when he would make a bid
to overthrow Bul-Mok
and assume control of the
family group. Seeing how he fared against Tar-Ara would allow the dominant male to estimate
his potential as a rival.
"We take food," Bul-Mok offered. "You take woman. Go!"
"Woman mine. Food mine!"
Bunduki snapped back. "You
go!"
Greed and selfishness had not prompted the
hostile answer. While Bunduki still was not absolutely sure of the kind of
sub-human hominids
he was up against, he could
imagine how they would react to any suggestion of weakness on his part. That
was how the younger males would have regarded his acceptance of their father's
offer. Like most primates, the Mangani lived
in social groups controlled by a male hierarchy. The largest, strongest male
was the leader with the next toughest ranking second and so on down the scale.
Each member could only retain, or improve, his position in the community by
bluff or actual fighting prowess.
For Bunduki to have yielded would have been
construed as an admission of inferiority to Bul-Mok, Even if he had allowed the big blond and the
girl to go, the next largest of the males would have been compelled to make a
challenge and establish his standing in the group. By acting as he had, Bunduki
was hoping that he would have only the leader to contend with.
Confronted with such open and direct
defiance, Bul-Mok
was placed in a difficult
position. His superiority was being threatened in the fashion of the Mangani. That ruled out the possibility of him
ordering his sons to attack Tar-Ara.
So he must act on his own,
or he would be in danger of losing his dominance over the family group. With
that not unimportant consideration in mind, he took a firmer grip on his club.
"Bul-Mok
kill!" the Mangani thundered, swinging the heavy weapon over his
head and lumbering forward.
Instantly, Bunduki brought the bow to the
shooting position and made his draw with smoothly flowing speed. With the arrow
at its anchor point, he sighted on the centre of Bul-Mok's broad chest.
Still
too far away for his club to be of any use, the dominant Mangani's life hung on a very delicate balance. If any
of his sons had made a move to help him, he would have died. As it was, having
no desire to kill him if it could be avoided, the blond giant did not release
the arrow. The three younger bulls seemed content to leave matters in their
father's hands. Bul-Mok's
lack of concern over the
threat of the arrow suggested that such a weapon was unknown to him. If he was
killed in what his sons might regard as an inexplicable manner, they could be
frightened into making a mass attack. Even utilizing the benefits of the
bow-quiver for rapidity of reloading, or wielding bis
bowie knife—which would probably be an equally unknown factor to the Mangani—he doubted whether he would be able to fight off all three of them.
Certainly, while doing it, and in the event of being successful, he would
receive wounds which could incapacitate him and prevent him from continuing
his search for Dawn until he had recovered.
Bunduki decided that he could avert the
possibility by impressing them with his physical prowess. It would have a far
greater effect than would be achieved by killing with a means that they might
not be able to comprehend. To defeat the dominant male with his bare hands was
the best way to attain his ends.
Changing
his point of aim, Bunduki loosed the arrow. It flashed forward to strike the
bulbous upper end of the club. Impaling it, the buff-coloured fiber glass shaft
wrenched the weapon from Bul-Mok's hands.
A startled, almost barking exclamation burst from the dominant male's hps and
he sprang backwards in alarm. Staring at the arrow, which was projecting
through the head of the club, the other three bulls retreated just as
hurriedly.
Having
regained her breath and discovered that she was still alive and unharmed, the
girl had remained in the crouching position, but she was now watching her
defender with awe and considerable interest. Although her people told stories
about them, few could claim to have seen the "Hairy Men" and then
only from a distance and with the width of the Big River between them.
Certainly not even the most boastful could claim to be able to speak the
"Hairy Men's" language, yet the blond stranger apparently could do
so.
Knowing
the purpose of the bow, although she had never seen one as powerful as that
held by her giant rescuer, the girl had expected him to send its arrow into the
"Hairy Man's" chest. She was puzzled when he deliberately contented
himself with knocking the club from the advancing bull's hands. What he did
next changed her perturbation into active alarm.
Without taking his eyes from the Mangani, Bunduki laid his bow on the ground alongside
the girl and walked by her. To her horror, he made no attempt to draw the big
knife that was hanging from his belt.
"Go!"
the blond giant ordered, pointing to the left side of the clearing.
Bul-Mok had been afraid of the intruder's strange
weapon, realizing that it had qualities beyond anything his club or a
branch-spear possessed. Seeing that Tar-Ara
had laid it down, the dominant male decided that he could take the
chance of making another attack.
At
six-foot-five, size and weight were in his favour. So were the big canine teeth
in his powerful jaws. Once he came to close quarters, he would be avenged. With
a menacing roar, he bounded forward and his huge hands reached out ready to
take hold.
Watching
Bul-Mok bearing down on him, Bunduki felt confident
of victory. The Mangani
might have learned how to
make and use primitive weapons, but they obviously still relied upon brute
strength when fighting bare-handed. With his very thorough education in various
forms of self defense and unarmed combat, the blond giant knew a number of
excellent ways to handle such bull-headed tactics.
Taking a couple of long strides, to make sure
he was well clear of the girl, Bunduki flashed up his hands to grasp Bul-Mok's right wrist. Turning the trapped hand palm
upwards, he pivoted swiftly until his back was to the Mangani and the elbow of the fur-covered arm rested
on his left shoulder. By sinking to his right knee and levering on the arm, he
catapulated Bul-Mok
over him. Turning a half
somersault, with the blond giant still holding his wrist, the Mangani alighted on his back with a bone-jarring
thud. Nor were his troubles at an end.
Retaining his hold, Bunduki stepped over the
supine Bul-Mok and rolled him on to his stomach.
Before the winded Mangani
recovered his breath or
scattered wits, his captor had dropped to ram both knees on to the base of his
spine. Having done so, Bunduki transferred his hands and cupped them under Bul-Mok's chin. Interlacing his fingers, he drew the
head back and forced downwards with his knees.
Massive
muscles bulged and writhed as the blond giant bent his victim's spine in an
agonizing and dangerous fashion. Half-strangled, winded and partially dazed, Bul-Mok could do no more than beat his fists futilely
on the ground in a frenzy of pain.
Even
as Bunduki started to apply what would have been the final, fatal pressure, he
once more had the sensation of being watched. Not just by the other occupants
of the clearing either, although they were taking a considerable interest in
what was going on. The scrutiny seemed to be
originating elsewhere, possibly from among the trees that encircled the
clearing, but he refused to permit it to distract him. Instead of trying to
locate the unknown observers, he concentrated his attention on matters closer
at hand.
Showing
an ever-increasing excitement, the three young males—particularly Bal-Tak—watched their father's predicament. Squealing and grunting without the
sounds forming understandable words, they jumped up and down like excited
gorillas or chimpanzees. Despite that, they kept their distance. There could,
they all realized, be no intervention in such a conflict. As Bul-mok had clearly accepted the strange-looking
white creature as a Mangani,
it must be settled between
the two participants.
The younger brothers were merely restive and
excited, but Bal-Tak
had an even deeper
interest. Being second in the line of the hierarchy, he could recognize the
threat to his status and position. If the strange white skin, who clearly knew
the ways of the Mangani,
defeated Bul-Mok—which now seemed very likely—he could assume command of the family.
That would mean he became the dominant male whom Bal-Tak must eventually challenge and overthrow to
assume command.
Although possessing less than a human being's
powers of reasoning, Bal-Tak's
sentience warned him that,
being younger, Tar-Ara
would be much more difficult
than Bul-Mok to depose. Having managed to draw that
conclusion, however, his intelligence was insufficient to find a solution.
Certainly the thought of going to his father's assistance never occurred to him.
Assuming a kneeling posture, the girl stared
at the giant man who had saved her. She feasted her eyes on his handsome face
and wonderfully well-developed body, rapidly losing her fear of the "Hairy
Men." The fright was being replaced by another, more pleasurable
sensation.
Ever since the girl could remember, she had
been told stories of a great jungle god who rescued Telonga maidens in
distress. Although she had never really believed that such a person existed,
for nobody had ever seen him, she now felt compelled to change her mind. The
magnificent white-haired giant had certainly come to her aid in a time of
greater danger than she had ever previously known. Apart from his light colour,
he was assuredly all that she would have expected of a jungle god. No man of
her people—not even At-Vee,
the Hunter—could equal her
saviour's handsome features, enormous size and exceptional muscular development.
As
the girl recollected what the legends claimed would happen after the maiden was
saved, she wriggled her shapely body in ecstatic anticipation. Excitedly and
eagerly, she thought of the love making which she felt sure was coming once the
jungle god had driven away the "Hairy Men."
With the Mangani's spine on the point of breaking, Bunduki
refrained from applying the final pressure. He had no wish to kill, or
seriously injure—which would most likely have the same result—Bul-Mok unless there was no other choice. It was
possible that the need to do so would not arise. In all forms of
status-conflict between males of the same species, there were ways of bringing
the affair to an end without the need to kill the loser. From what Tarzan and
Korak had told him, Bunduki knew what he could do to avoid terminating the Mangani's life.
"Surrender?" the blond giant
demanded, loosening his grip slightly without entirely relinqtiishing the painful
hold.
"Surrender!" Bul-Mok
conceded, after a moment's
pause, knowing that the offer was unlikely to be repeated.
Although
each had made the same phonetic word-sound, "Ka-goda," the difference in the timbre of their voices
showed that one had asked a question and the other had given an answer.
Separating his hands on receiving Bul-Mok's reply, Bunduki leapt to his feet and stood
astride his defeated rival's recumbent body. Watched by the girl and the three
younger males, he tossed back his head and roared forth the victory call of a
bull Mangani. There was no immediate response from Bal-Tak or his brothers, but somewhere to the
north-west came a distant reply and another sounded faintly from the east. That
implied there were other bands of Mangani in
the jungle. However, both groups were much too far away to concern him.
Having signalled his victory in the accepted
manner, Bunduki turned his back on the three young males. Smiling and
apparently satisfied that he had achieved his purpose, he started to walk
towards the kneeling gjrl.
Letting
out a snarl of rage, Bal-Tak
leapt into motion. He swung
the branch-spear above his head in both hands, intending to drive its sharpened
end into the unsuspecting blond giant's back.
CHAPTER
FOUR
/'// Let You Have Your Revenge
REALIZING
that she had no other choice, Dawn Drummond-Clayton came to a halt and turned.
She was not a moment too soonl
In fact, she had almost
left it too late!
Already the harpy eagle's broad, shortish
wings were lifting it higher, in preparation for the deadly downwards plunge
onto its prey. From its powerful curved beak burst a hideous shriek that was
intended to paralyse its victim with fright during the final stages of the
attack.
Reversing its wing beats and spreading its
tail feathers, the eagle inclined its body almost vertically. It thrust the
sturdy yellow legs forward, directing the deadly implements with which it made
its kill towards its prey. The huge, hooked claws—the ones at the rear not
quite as long but thicker than those of a Kodiak bear, the largest carnivorous
land animal in the world —opened to a span as great as the hand of a big man.
They were ready to drive into and clamp hold of its victim's flesh.
For
once, the terror-inducing scream was failing to achieve its purpose. The
creature at which it was flying was far more dangerous than the arboreal
animals and large jungle birds that formed the eagle's natural prey. Nor was
the girl a slave with bound arms, as the other human beings at whom it had been
flown invariably were. They had been unable to fight back, but she could.
Adopting her shooting stance, Dawn made ready
to 54
defend
herself. While her left hand started to raise the bow, the fingers of her right
were manipulating the string and arrow. A draw of twenty-eight inches was
required to flex the limbs sufficiently to obtain their full power. Before she
had attained a quarter of that distance, she knew there would not be enough
time for her to achieve it.
Ever
nearer swooped the huge bird. The six-foot-six-inch spread of the broad wings,
the width of its breast and the great fan of the rather long, squared-off tail
seemed to be blocking out the sky. Its enormous curved talons appeared to be
growing bigger as they rushed in the girl's direction.
After
having gained no more than seventeen inches of the draw, Dawn did not dare wait
any longer. She was aiming
by instinctive alignment.
However, at such short range, it would be accurate enough for her needs.
Unhooking her fingers, she released the straining string.
The
arrow was propelled forward, but at far less than the full seventy pounds'
pressure.
Would
it have gathered sufficient momentum to achieve its purpose?
Across
the chasm, the riders were watching with considerable interest and mixed
emotions.
Dryaka, High Priest of the Mun-Gatah nation,
had been furious when Charole sent her harpy eagle after the girl. Although his
original thoughts had been of the libidinous pleasures he would have at the
expense of the beautiful stranger after her capture, he had decided that she
might serve an even more useful purpose. Clearly she was strong and had claimed
to be a warrior. Perhaps she could help him to dispose of the greatest threat to the
powerful position which he held among his people.
For
her part, Charole had guessed what the High Priest had had in mind when she
noticed the change in the way he had been studying the girl across the chasm.
Charole could only retain her rights and title of Protectress of the Quagga God
as long as no other woman could wrest them from her. Just as she constantly
hoped to find a man who would destroy Dryaka for her, so the High Priest was
forever seeking a woman capable of deposing her. Knowing that her removal from
office was the main reason for Dryaka's desire to see Dawn captured, Charole
had been determined that the girl would be seriously injured—or killed—before
she fell into their hands.
Having launched the eagle, the Protectress
settled comfortably on her saddle. Real cruelty showed on her beautiful face as
the bird sped upon its mission and she ignored Dryaka's obvious displeasure at
her actions.
There were few of the Mun-Gatah people, brave
warriors as many of them undoubtedly were, who would have dared to deliberately
incur the High Priest's wrath. However, while Dryaka possessed great power,
Charole could claim to be of equal importance. As Protectress of the Quagga God,
particularly while she had the active support of three out of the six members
of the ruling Council of Elders, she had little to fear from the scowling man
by her side. In fact, as long as she held her high office and could claim the
backing of sufficient followers, she was virtually the co-ruler of the
Mun-Gatah nation.
Watching the eagle swooping towards Dawn, Charole
smiled. It had been trained to tackle human beings, although they had up to
that point always been bound and helpless slaves. The results had always been
highly entertaining and she felt sure that they would be even more so on this
occasion. Having seen the terrible damage that the bird could inflict with its
talons and beak, she doubted whether the stranger would pose any further threat
to her after the completion of the attack.
Realizing that Charole had deduced the real
reason for his interest in Dawn, Dryaka was equally aware of the girl's danger.
Much as he would have liked to call a warning when Dawn had not appeared to
know that the eagle was following her, he had known better than to do so. The
balance of power between himself and the Protectress
was so even that it might easily be tilted in either's favour. If he had helped
a foreigner, especially should she escape as a result of it, he would be placing
a powerful lever in his rival's hands. Nor would she be slow in making use of
it. As always, the hunting party was comprised of an equal number of his and
her supporters. Let him lose control of his adherents' loyalty and he might never again see the
Temple of the Quagga God.
With that in mind, Dryaka drew what
consolation he could as he saw the girl had become aware of her peril and was
turning to meet it. If she could not protect herself, then she lacked the
qualities which he required. To handle that unusual, powerful-looking bow
would call for strength and skill. If those qualities were matched by fighting
prowess—and, apart from the Telonga, most of the nations had their share of
women warriors—her capture might provide him with the means to remove Charole.
When that had been brought about, he would ensure the next Protectress was somebody
more amenable to his will. He hoped that Dawn would prove worthy of his
confidence.
Dryaka would very soon know the answer!
Holding
her breath, Dawn watched the arrow and the diving eagle as they converged and
met. Their combined speeds caused the four-blade Bear Razor-head's needle-sharp
point to impale the black-plumed breast and its quadruple cutting edges slashed
their way through to reach the vital organs.
Almost as soon as the arrow had passed beyond
the bow's handle-riser, Dawn flung herself aside. She saw the eagle jerk upon
being hit. Screaming in agony, its controlled diving flight turned into a dying
plunge earthwards. One wildly flailing wing brushed her shoulder in passing,
but she had avoided any serious—or even minor—injury. Swinging around and
reaching to pivot an arrow from the bow-quiver, she watched the bird's death
throes as it crashed to the ground and felt a touch of sympathetic sorrow for
having been the cause of them.
"May the Quagga God stamp you dead,
foreign bitch!"
Redolent
of feminine hatred and anger, the screamed out words reached Dawn's ears and
drew her attention from the magnificent creature that she had been compelled
to kill. Nocking the arrow to the bow's string, she swung her gaze to the
people on the other side of the chasm. The second group were
riding down the slope and, having leapt from his zebra, the eagle's attendant
started shaking his fists furiously at the girl.
However,
it was the gold-clad beauty and the tall man who were of the most interest to
Dawn. The woman was screaming more curses and seemed almost besides
herself with rage. Although the girl could not be certain at that distance, she
got the impression that the man was pleased by her escape from the eagle.
Cold
anger started to surge through Dawn as she listened to some of the vile threats
that the woman was shrieking at her. She became filled with an almost uncontrollable
desire to silence the other's raging voice by serving her in the same way that
she had treated the eagle. Before Dawn could stop herself, she raised and began
to draw the bow.
Charole's
furious tirade died away as she saw what the girl was doing. Alarm bit at her
as she realized just how vulnerable to reprisals she was. The powerful looking
bow would propel its arrow at her as easily as the eagle had winged across the
chasm and be even more deadly if it struck home.
For a moment Charole was tempted to fling
herself from the saddle and hide behind her quagga's body. She restrained the
impulse just in time, being aware of how Dryaka's clique and, even more
important, her own followers would react to such a display of cowardice. Flickering a glance at the High Priest, she found that he
was watching her. The mocking sneer of his face implied that he had noticed her
fear and deduced what she had been contemplating. In which case, there was no
easy way in which she could avoid the danger.
With the bow in the shooting position and its
arrow
BVNDUKI
59
almost
drawn to the full, reason returned to Dawn. The two riders were drawing closer
and every second's delay was decreasing her already slim chances of reaching
the woodland. Turning her head, she discovered that they were less than a
quarter of a mile away.
Forgetting
her intention of taking revenge on the woman who had been reviling her, the
girl swung away and resumed her flight. Although she allowed the arrow to
slide forward under control, she once again left it in position. She was
accepting the difficulty of running like that against the benefit of having it
ready for immediate use.
"It is a pity that your eagle failed to stop her, Charole," Dryaka
remarked, in tones of mock commiseration. "If you wish, I'll let you have
your revenge when Tomlu catches her."
"That is kind of you," the Protectress answered, with a poison-sweet politeness.
"And when Ragbuf brings her to me, I'll let you have her—after I've finished with her."
Neither Charole nor Dryaka would willingly
allow their respective factions to become the weaker, so each had sent one man
to scout for game across the river. Whichever reached the departing girl first
would be able to claim her for his leader.
Having heard the brief exchange of comments,
the six riders from the ridge separated into their two factions. They moved
into position behind their leaders and watched the scouts galloping recklessly
in pursuit of the foreign girl.
Being fully aware of the rivalry between
their leaders, Ragbuf and Tomlu did not need to be told that the Protectress
and the High Priest would each want to take the girl for his, or her, own use.
So the scouts were mutually determined to be the one who made the capture.
Considerably smaller and lighter than his companion, Ragbuf began to draw
ahead. Snarling a curse, Tomlu tried ot force more
speed out of his zebra.
"What
will you do with her, Charole?" asked the woman whose footwear followed
the style worn by the
Protectress,
throwing a triumphant glance at her opposite number in Dryaka's faction as
Ragbuf gained a full length's lead on Tomlu.
Before
any reply could be made, Ragbufs mount dropped its right front hoof into a
hole. Screaming with agony as the leg snapped, it went down and pitched its
rider over its head. Concentrating on the girl, he was unable to save himself and
was catapulted helplessly to the ground. The lance flew from his hand as he
made a belated attempt to break his fall. Failing to do so, he landed head
first. There was a sharp pop as his neck broke and his body slid onwards for a
few feet Whooping derisively and not offering to stop
to see how badly the other man was injured, Tomlu galloped by.
"You
don't seem to have the Quagga God's favour today, Charole," commented the
sultry, beautiful brunette from her place at the High Priest's left side.
"Perhaps
you would like to see how far He has withdrawn
his favour, Elidor?" the Protectress spat back viciously and her right
hand crossed to the hilt of her sword.
"Tomlu will soon have her," Elidor
said, without meeting Charole's challenging gaze. Instead, as she was not ready
to take up the other's offer and yet was equally unwilling to make her refusal
obvious, she pretended to be wholly absorbed in the pursuit.
If
the Protectress had been less interested in the result of the chase, she might
have forced the issue. Elidor was her most prominent rival and Dryaka's choice
to be her successor. As yet, they had not clashed but Charole knew that it was
only a matter of time before they must. However, she intended to be the one who
chose when, where and how it took place. Believing herself to be the better
swordswoman, she was determined that they would be the weapons selected when
the confrontation happened. For the moment, she decided to forego the
opportunity and continued to stare across the chasm.
Hearing the scream of the zebra, followed by
the crashes as it and its rider struck the ground, Dawn threw a glance over her
shoulder. One of her pursuers was down, but the other showed no sign of
stopping to help him.
Striding
along as fast as her legs would carry her, the girl
accepted that she could not hope to reach the trees. Nor, if she kept running
at that pace, would she be in any condition to defend herself should the need
arise—which it was practically certain to do.
With
her bosom heaving and straining at the dress's fastenings as she sought to
replenish her lungs, Dawn halted and turned towards her pursuer. He was big,
burly, very muscular and had a surly, brutal face.
Even with the extensive knowledge of various forms of unarmed combat acquired
during her formative tomboy years and never forgotten, she doubted whether she
could fight him off with her bare hands. Nor was she enamoured with the idea of
using her knife.
That
left her with the Ben Pearson Marauder bow and its fiber glass arrows.
Dawn
felt considerable qualms about the possibility of having to take another human
being's life. Watching the man galloping closer, she forced herself to accept
that she might not have any other choice. Nothing in his attitude, particularly
the way in which he had ignored his fallen companion, suggested that he might
be disposed towards mercy and compassion. In fact, his whole demeanour implied
exactly the opposite. If his expression was any guide, he was already savouring
the pleasures which he felt sure would be his after he had made her a captive.
At that moment, the girl
started to experience a sensation similar to one she had felt when competing
before spectators in some athletic event. She was being watched and not just
by the burly pursuer, or even the rest of his party beyond the chasm. Yet the
man gave no indication of being aware of the mysterious observers. Nor had
Dawn seen anything of them during her flight. Concluding, from the way they
were keeping themselves concealed, that she could not count on them to help her
she knew that she must deal with the man unaided.
Lifting
the butt of his lance from the socket on the stirrup, Tomlu turned it forward
instead of to the rear. Although he had not received any advice or instructions,
he knew that Dryaka would want the girl taken alive and with as little
permanent injury as possible. That was understandable. The people preferred
active sacrifices for the Quagga God, such being more entertaining to watch as
the victims tried to escape or to make a fight to save their lives. While a
blow to the stomach with the butt of the lance would render her helpless for
long enough to let him secure her, it would not seriously incapacitate her.
Grimly
setting her teeth, Dawn started to raise the bow. While doing so, she did her
best to control her heavy breathing. The way it was causing her chest to heave,
she could not hope to do any accurate shooting. In fact, it might even
seriously impede her ability to handle the far from inconsiderable draw weight
of the powerful hunting bow.
Being aware of the problems, the girl watched
the approaching rider. She sensed that she could not expect to bluff or
intimidate the burly man, but hoped he might recognize the danger and keep his
distance.
The hope did not
materialize!
The man was continuing to
ride straight at her!
Leaning
sideways at an angle of almost forty-five degrees on the saddle of his
well-trained zebra, Tomlu was studying his potential victim. He watched her presenting
her weapon at him, but did not feel unduly alarmed. An experienced warrior, he
had come into contact with archers on several occasions and was satisfied that
he knew their limitations.
The
girl, Tomlu noticed, was showing signs of having run both fast and far since
killing Charole's eagle. What was more, as she began to draw the bow, he observed
with satisfaction that she was taking the easiest target and aiming at the
centre of his broad chest. That reduced the danger to him and he was grateful
that she was not making his mount her target. No arrow, even when discharged by
a man, had contrived to pierce his breastplate of one and a half inch thick,
sun-dried and specially hardened rhinoceros hide.* So he believed, with some
justification in the light of past events, that he had nothing to fear from a
woman.
While
she was drawing back the arrow towards its anchor point, Dawn was all too
conscious of the way in which it was moving in concert with the rising and
falling of her bosom. Try as she might, she could not keep the weapon steady.
Dawn realized that, in a very short time, the
man would be in striking distance. Nor did she draw any erroneous conclusions
from the way he was holding the lance. Its butt would prove as effective as the
point of it should make contact. Even more so, if—as she suspected—it was his
intention to take her alive.
Forcing herself to remain calm and striving
desperately to control her breathing, the girl finally yielded to the
inevitable. There was, she realized, no hope of the man turning away. For all
that, she still hesitated. If she should miss with the arrow, she was all too
aware that she would not have sufficient time to extract a replacement, even
from the more readily accessible bow-quiver, nock, draw,
take aim and loose it at her assailant
♦The
immunity offered against archers by their breastplates was the reason why the
Mun-Gatah nation had never bothered to make use of bows and arrows, even for
hunting. The shields of the Masai in Kenya gave a similar protection from
Wa-Kamba or Kikuyu bowmen so they too took no interest in archery as a means of
defense and attack.
CHAPTER FIVE
// You Follow, Tar-Ara
Kill!
"LOOK
behind you!" the brown-skinned girl screamed, pointing a finger in the
hope that it would help to explain what she meant if the "jungle
god" did not understand the Telonga language.
Awe,
reverence—and something more earthy—had come to the
girl's pretty and expressive face as, having watched her rescuer deal with Bul-Mok and turn in her direction, she had started to
rise. However, seeing the second of the "Hairy Men" commencing an
attack on the blond giant—who did not appear to appreciate the danger his
incautious behaviour had created—she was determined to alert him to it. Once he
had extricated himself from the predicament, which she felt sure he could do,
he would be suitably grateful for the warning.
The
girl's words had not been necessary, even though—in some mysterious way—Bunduki
had been able to understand them. He had known there was nothing more to fear
from Bul-Mok after having received the surrender, but he
intended to establish a similar sense of inferiority upon the rest of the
bulls. If there was to be a further challenge, he had known it would come from
the second largest male.
Glancing at Bal-Tak after having given his victory roar, the
blond giant had guessed that he was building up his courage but was not quite
ready to make his move. That was why Bunduki had turned his back on the three
young bulls. He was hoping that his disdainful attitude would goad Bal-Tak into trying to take
advantage of
the opportunity and attack. So he had been alert for the first hint that he had
succeeded.
Having
heard the Mangani's
growl and the sound of his
approaching feet, Bunduki was already starting to rum as the words were leaving
the girl's hps.
"Bal-Tak
kill!" the young Mangani bellowed, despite his surprise at seeing his
intended victim swinging to face him.
Roaring
out the threat, despite an inclination to retreat from his obviously prepared
foe, Bal-Tak continued to rush forward. Instead of
following what would have been the most sensible course and retreating, he
raised and prepared to deliver a powerful downwards thrust with his
branch-spear when he came within striking distance.
The
young bull was not allowed to complete his proposed attack.
Tlunking
and moving at a much faster speed than the Mangani was capable of, Bunduki sprang at him. Out
drove the blond giant's clenched right fist. It ploughed with terrible force into
Bal-Tak's solar plexus before he could bring down the spear. Halted
in his tracks by the power of the blow, the Mangani acted as a human being would under the
circumstances. Letting go of his branch-spear, he folded over at the waist and
his hands flew to the point of impact in an instinctive, if futile, attempt to
lessen the suffering he was experiencing.
Stepping forward a pace and pivoting on his
right foot to gain extra impetus, Bunduki swung and propelled his left knee
upward. It caught the Mangani
in the centre of the chest.
Lifted erect and from his feet by the impact, Bal-Tak pitched over to land winded and helpless on
his back.
"Ka—Ka-goda!" Bal-Tak managed to gasp out as his assailant loomed
above him.
Accepting the surrender, Bunduki went by his
fallen foe. He wanted to complete the establishment of his superiority over the
other two young males. From the perturbed way they were watching him approach,
he did not anticipate any great difficulty in doing so.
"You
fight?" Bunduki demanded, glaring at the third largest bull.
"No!" was the immediate reply,
followed by a rapid retreat for several feet
Without
even waiting to be challenged, the smallest of the quartet dropped his
branch-spear and scuttled away.
Satisfied that he had attained an absolute
moral and physical ascendancy over the Mangani, at
least for the time being, the blond giant once more turned and went towards the
girl. He glanced at Bul-Mok
and Bal-Tak in passing. Although the former had risen, he
slunk away holding his back with one hand and avoided meeting Bunduki's eyes.
The latter was sitting up in a painful manner and was too concerned with his
woeful feelings to even look at the man who had caused them.
It was Bunduki's intention to retrieve his
bow and then question the girl. Before he could do either, she flung herself
into his arms. Once there, she clung hold and wriggled
her warm, almost naked and very curvaceous body in a way that suggested relief
over her escape was not her only reason for coming so close.
"Don't
be afraid," Bunduki said, guessing that he was speaking a language she
could understand. He removed her arms from around his neck and eased her
gently away. "They won't harm you now."
"I
am not afraid now that Tm with you, great god of the jungle," the girl
replied, attempting to come close but held beyond her arms' length by his hands
on her shoulders. "I am Joar-Fane. Do you like me?"
" "The Loving One,'" the blond giant
translated silently, keeping the girl at a distance. "I bet you live up
to it." Aloud, he went on, "Where do you five, I will take you
there."
Even as Bunduki made the offer, he realized
that carrying it out might delay his search for Dawn. The Manganis' attitudes had suggested that they had had
little or
no contact with human begins. So the girl's home would probably be a long way
off.
A disappointed frown came to Joar-Fane's
features. When a woman was rescued by a jungle god, she did not expect him to
be in such a hurry to return her to her village. Perhaps he required a hint to
assure nim of her feelings.
"I don't know where it is and I don't
care," the girl stated with a toss of her head. "I will stay with
you, jungle god. I'll make you a fine wife, you'll see."
Still
holding Joar-Fane away from nim, Bunduki wondered what he could do with her.
If he tried to locate her village, she might deliberately mislead him. Or she
could really be lost and have no idea of the direction in which her home was
situated. In either event, he would be delayed—possibly for days—in his attempt
to find Dawn. That was something which he did not care to contemplate. He had
seen sufficient to realize that the jungle contained many perils, some of
which—such as the presence of Mangani—were
different from anything she might be expecting.
"What is your name, great god of the
jungle?" Joar-Fane continued, when her words failed to elicit the desired
response.
"Bunduki,"
the blond giant replied, being able to say his name while speaking the girl's language
although it had been impossible when using the much more primitive speech of
the Manganis. "But I'm not a god. I'm just a
man."
"Bunduki," Joar-Fane repeated,
speaking the word
slowly. Then she returned on her most winning smile.
"Bunduki. Bunduki. I like it. I've never seen such a
beautiful man as you, Bunduki, and I'll make you a
very fine wi----------- ."
Hoping
to chill the girl's ardour by a display of indifference, the blond giant
pushed her gentiy aside. Her words had been trailing away even before he did so, and she was
staring past him in an alarmed fashion. He swung around, wanting to find out
what had at-traced—or diverted—her attention.
Several more Mangani were coming from the game trail. There were
five females; one big and old, the others younger but fully developed. A dozen
children of various ages were trailing along and two immature bulls brought up
the rear. Joining the newcomers, the two youngest members of the first party
started to explain—as well as their limited vocabulary would allow —what had
happened. The females and the youngsters did not listen with any great display
of interest. In fact, long before the explanations were completed, they were
beginning to scatter and forage for food in the bushes and grass at the edge of
the clearing.
Bunduki
decided that it might be advisable to leave. There was a chance that the
presence of Bul-Mok's
family would arouse his
protective instincts and cause him to lead a mass attack by the other
bulls.
Gathering
up bis bow, the blond giant went to retrieve the arrow from Bul-Mok's ruined club. If his suspicions regarding the
jungle were correct, it would be impossible for him to obtain replacements of
such quality and materials. The girl scuttled after him, darting frightened
glances at the Mangani.
Having advanced with the
intention of attempting to reach the dead capybara, the largest of the young
females gave a snarl and rushed towards Joar-Fane.
"Back!" Bunduki roared, reverting to Mangani and
placing himself between the girl and the female.
Ignoring
the command, the &he-Mangani continued to advance. The big blond did not
hesitate in his response. Stepping forward and dropping the club with the
arrow still in it, he delivered a right hand cuff to the side of the
disobedient female's head that was hard enough to knock her sprawling. After
that, none of the others tried to come near and, on regaining her feet, the
first one hurried away.
Handing his bow to Joar-Fane who was staring
at him with an expression that—under the circumstances —he found disconcerting,
Bunduki picked up the club and drew free his arrow.
Tossing the club aside, he
led
the way to the capybara he had killed. Looking at it, the girl let out a gasp.
"No
Telonga could have done this!" the girl declared, indicating the arrow
which had sunk to cresting1" so that its head had emerged on
the other side. Then another, more pressing thought diverted her and she ran
the tip of her tongue across her full red lips. "The water-pig is good
meat. Even a wild one."
"Are
you hungry?" Bunduki inquired, looking at her as he was kneeling by the
carcass.
"I
have not eaten more than berries and fruit since I escaped from the Mun-Gatahs'
People-Taker three days ago," Joar-Fane replied.
"Who is he?" Bunduki asked, removing
the broad-head from the adapter on the bluff-coloured arrow's shaft.
"He comes to our villages with his men
and women and takes the people."
"Don't your men stop them?"
"The
hunters sometimes say they should, but the Elders put them away before the
People-Taker comes so there won't be any trouble," Joar-Fane explained.
"I don't know what happens to those who are taken. None of them have ever
come back."
"You say that you escaped," the
blond giant prompted, drawing the headless arrow free from the capybara and
standing up. "Did anybody come after you?"
"Three of his men and a woman," the
girl replied. "Where are they now?"
"I
don't know. They followed me across the Big River after I had fallen in, but I
haven't seen them today."
Although
Bunduki was interested in the girl's story, he decided that they would postpone
continuing with it until they had crossed the stream and left the Mangani behind. So, having fitted the head back on
the
•Cresting:
the bands of colour painted for the .purpose of identification around the
arrow's shaft just in front of the fletching.
shaft, he returned the arrow to the quiver and
swung it across his back. Taking the bowie knife from its sheath, he used it to
sever a hind leg from the capybara.
"This
ought to be enough meat for us," he told the girl as he cleaned the blade
of the knife with a handful of grass. Sheathing it, he went on, "If we
leave the rest for the 'Hairy People,' they won't trouble us."
"Very well, Bunduki,'' Joar-Fane
assented. "Ill carry
the meat."
"There
is food," the blond giant announced in Man-garti, indicating the remains of his prey. "We
go. If you follow, Tar-Ara
kill!"
Having
delivered the warning, Bunduki took his bow from the girl and strode towards
the stream. Collecting the bloody leg, she glided after him. There was pride
in her sensual, graceful posture and she darted a triumphant glance at the big
female who had attempted to attack her. Seeing the other bare her teeth,
Joar-Fane hurried to the blond gianf s side. Although encumbered by their
meat, she attempted to take hold of his empty right hand. He avoided being
trapped and, after a warning that he wanted the hand free in case they should
be attacked, she desisted.
With
its bed consisting of firm, clean gravel and a depth of no more than three
feet, the stream presented no dimculty for the girl or Bunduki. Its waters were
clear and the current mild, allowing him to make sure there were no
dangerous creatures or fish.
"Shall
we take off our clothes and let them dry?" Joar-Fane inquired hopefully as
they reached the opposite bank and walked ashore.
"No," Bunduki said, hiding the grin
which Was caused by knowing what prompted the
suggestion. "We'll keep going. The sun will dry them."
Ignoring the girl's disappointed pout, the
big blond looked back across the stream. The Mangani were eagerly approaching his kill. Moving
stiffly, Bul-Mok
let out a furious bellow as
one of the younger males tried to precede him. Although his son backed away,
Bunduki
guessed that the dominant bull would have to reassert his ascendancy after
suffering his defeat.
"Where
do you live, Joar-Fane?" the blond giant asked, putting the Mangani from his thoughts and starting to walk
towards the north-west.
"Beyond the Big River," the girl
replied vaguely, trotting at his side.
"Where is that?"
"I don't know."
Striding along, Bunduki looked down at the
girl and silently admitted that she might be speaking the truth. In the jungle
it was too easy for an inexperienced person to lose all sense of direction.
That did nothing to reduce his predicament. He did not want to postpone his
search for Dawn while trying to return Joar-Fane to her village. So, he
concluded, he must take the little girl with him. Once they had found his
adoptive cousin, the pair of them could escort Joar-Fane to her home.
"Something
tells me that I might need a chaperone," the big blond mused, glancing at
the pretty girl as her hot little hand closed on his. "Or a bodyguard
might be better."
Allowing
Joar-Fane to retain her grip, much to her delight and satisfaction, Bunduki
guided her through the jungle. The warmth of the sun soon dried their garments,
as he had said it would.
Although
the girl claimed that the area through which they were passing had always been
notorious for the numbers and ferocity of the "Hairy People" who
occupied it, they neither saw nor heard any more of the Mangani. There were plenty of other creatures, but
nothing that posed a threat to their safety even though Joar-Fane behaved in a
frightened manner no matter how harmless a beast they saw. After a short time,
Bunduki suspected that her behaviour was merely an excuse to nestle up to him.
From
her comments, the girl clearly knew little about animals. In fact, she
confessed that she had very rarely left her village. When forced to make a
journey it had always been accompanied by older people. They
72
J.
T. Edson
had
stuck to clearly marked trails and never ventured into the jungles.
There
was, however, little conversation as they walked along. While Bunduki would
have liked to learn more about the land in which he found himself, the girl had
something very
different in mind as a
topic of conversation. It was one which did not meet with his approval under
the circumstances. So he instructed her to keep quiet until they stopped for a
rest. When she began to protest he warned her that some wild beast or the
"Hairy People" might stalk them and take them by surprise unless he
could hear and prevent it. The ruse served its purpose. She stopped her
chatter, but continued to cling to his hand and stare nervously about her.
After
they had covered about six miles, Bunduki was satisfied that Bul-Mok and his family were not following them. They
were descending into a wide valley, through which ran a small stream.
"I'm
hungry and tired," Joar-Fane hinted, breaking her silence.
"Then we'll eat and
rest," Bunduki answered.
Hurrying
to the banks of the stream, Joar-Fane set down the capybara's leg and knelt to
drink. She was genuinely tired and hungry, but had another idea in mind when
she mentioned the fact. After they had fed and rested, she felt sure that she
could persuade her rescuer to take a much greater interest in her than he had
been doing so far.
If she could not, the little girl told herself grimly, then she had no right to the name, "The
Loving One."
CHAPTER
SIX
/
Want To Catch That Girl!
"TOMLU has her!' Dryaka enthused as he
watched his adherent charging towards Dawn Drumrnond-Clayton. "Shell soon be mine!"
Hearing the excited chatter of agreement from
the other members of the High Priest's faction, Charole darted a glance filled
with disappointment and bitter ajrumosity at him. From the moment that Ragbufs
mount had fallen, she had been aware that Tomlu was almost certain to make the
capture. What was more, the way in which he had turned the butt of his lance to
the front had warned her that he was intending to take the prisoner alive.
Watching Dawn swing around, raise and start
to draw the bow, the Protectress of the Quagga God found herself torn between
two conflicting desires. While she would have liked to lay her hands on the
beautiful stranger—towards whom she had formed an instant and implacable
hatred—she wanted it to be on her own terms. Certainly she did not wish Dryaka
to gain the satisfaction and—if, as seemed likely, Dawn should prove an
entertaining sacrifice—the acclaim of the population for having brought in such
a prisoner.
Charole
found herself on the verge of hoping that the girl would escape. However, even
though she guessed that the High Priest could read her thoughts, she knew
better than to voice them aloud.
Making
an effort, Dawn managed to hold her breath. She had the arrow drawn to its
anchor point, with the fletching brushing against her cheek. With the man so
close
and the need for haste, she aimed in the style known as "gap
shooting." She concentrated her full attention upon the centre of his
chest, although still conscious of, and taking into consideration, the amount
of space between the arrow's point and its target. The
size of the space, or "gap," became a guide to the angle of elevation
that was required and she could if necessary adjust her weapon accordingly. The
necessity did not arise!
In fact, Tomlu was so near by that time that
the tip of Dawn's arrow was sighted straight on its intended mark.
He was at her point blank range!
Even
as the girl relaxed her fingers, she felt disconcerted by her attacker's
attitude. He was leering at her and showing neither fear nor concern for his
safety, despite the fact that he could see she was aiming the arrow at him
Either he did not know what a bow was, or for some
reason he clearly felt that he was in no danger.
There was no time for Dawn to ponder on the
phenomenon. Released from her restraint, the arrow was sent on its way.
Tomlu was still grinning when the missile
struck the centre of his breastplate, sent there with the full propulsive
power of the bow's draw weight of seventy pounds. Instead of bouncing back, or
being deflected, the point passed through the rhinoceros hide as if it was so
much wet, soft paper. Shock and amazement mingled with the agony that was
distorting the burly man's brutish features as the arrow's quadruple blades cut
deeper and deeper into his chest cavity.
While the Mun-Gatah scout had been correct in
his estimation of the point at which the girl was aiming, all of his other
caclulations had been woefully, completely and fatally wrong. Yet it had been
an understandable error, bom out of his ignorance of the full facts regarding
her weapons.
The
archers against whom Tomlu had previously been brought into conflict all used
primitive wooden bows of, at most, a forty pounds'
draw weight. No all wood "self' bow could match the tensile strength of a
unidirectional fiber glass precision implement such as the Ben Pearson
Marauder.* That was particularly true when, as was the
case with the Mun-Gatahs' usual enemies, it was discharged from a chest draw.
Nor did his previous foes possess arrows to equal
those used by the girl. The exceptionally fine temper of the steel used to
manufacture the four-blade head was far superior to anything that Tomlu had
come across. So, instead of being halted or turned aside by his erstwhile
protective breastplate, the girl's shaft had been able to slice through it and
into his torso.
Although
the burly scout did not remain in error for long regarding his assumptions, the
lesson he learned was of no use to him.
An
involuntary jerk by the stricken man's left hand caused his fast-moving zebra,
trained to be instantly obedient to such signals, to swerve in that direction.
With its rider already starting to lose his balance and allowing the lance to
slip from his grasp, the alteration toppled him from the saddle.
Slipping out of the stirrup-irons, his feet did nothing to help him
retain his seat. Falling, he landed on his right shoulder and bounced three
times before coming to a halt on his back. It had been such a close thing that
Dawn was compelled to leap into the air to avoid being struck by his body.
Turning,
the girl started to reach for an arrow from the bow-quiver. While doing so, she
dropped her gaze to Tomlu. He lay supine, with the arrow buried almost to its
cresting in his chest. There was, she realized, nothing more to be feared from
him.
Staring
down, Dawn sucked in a long and deep breath as a full understanding of what she
had been compelled to do struck her. For a moment she felt close to nausea.
Slowly the sensation ebbed away. Com-
♦The
Marauder and other bows of its kind have fiber glass limbs and a wooden handle.
Earlier "composite" bows were constructed from layers comprising of
combinations of horn, sinew, strips of leather and springy wood.
mon
sense told her that here had been no other acceptable course left to her. She
was no longer in the civilized world which she had known all her life. Wherever
she might be, it was a primitive environment in which a person had to be
prepared for defense against human enemies.
The remorse which the girl had started to
experience faded away all the more rapidly as she recollected the events that
had preceded the killing Her assailant had meant to capture her and that
might, probably would, have resulted in a fate worse than death. Even if he had
not raped her, she did not doubt that she would have been badly treated by his
companions; particularly the beautiful owner of the harpy eagle. So Dawn
considered that she had been completely justified in protecting herself, even
to the extent of taking her assailant's life.
Lifting her eyes from the dead man, Dawn
turned her attention to his companions on the other side of the chasm. They
seemed to have formed into two distinct groups behind the tall man and the
gold-clad beauty. All of them appeared to be interested and perturbed by what
they had seen. However, the girl had run so far before halting to deal with her
remaining pursuer that she could not hear what was being said.
As
Dawn suspected, the death of Tomlu had caused considerable consternation among
the rest of the Mun-Gatah hunting party. They had shared his confidence in the
immunity from the arrow offered by his breastplate. So none
of them had been expecting his death.
"Wh—!" Charole gasped, watching Tomlu sliding
sideways from the fast-moving zebra. "What's happened?"
None of the others replied, for the very good
reason that they were all as surprised as the Protectress and were asking each
other similar questions. Also they were all staring at Dawn as she leaped over
the scout's body which was bouncing along the ground. The zebra galloped by
her.
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"She killed him!" Elidor gasped,
watching the foreign girl jump and turn. "Lord Dryaka, she killed him!"
"But
how could she?" asked Sabart, Charole's half-sister and supporter.
"He must have fallen off. Or his grar-gatah* threw
him when it swerved."
"Fallen off!" Elidor snorted, more because the statement
had been made by a member of the rival faction than out of any respect for
Tomlu's capabilities. Being a banar-gatah
rider herself, she would
normally have regarded him as a social inferior and beneath her support.
"He's never been knocked
off, much less fallen or been thrown.
I tell you that she killed him
with her bow. Didn't she, my lord?"
"She certainly hit him with it,"
Dryaka confirmed, automatically corroborating one of his adherents against a follower and kinswoman of the Protectress.
Even
as the High Priest was speaking, he began to realize the full implications of
what he was saying. A skilled warrior in his own right, he had ridden against
and watched Tomlu taking part in training sessions or competitive jousts with
the lance. So he could visualize the scout's method and posture during his
attack upon the dismounted and, apparently, not too dangerous enemy who was to be captured alive.
Leaning sideways, so as to make a thrust
downwards with the lance, Tomlu would have presented only his head, torso,
right arm and leg to the foreign girl. Being an experienced fighting man, he
would not have offered himself in such a way
unless he had felt confident he
•Being dwellers on the open plains, the
Mun-Gatah people were dependent upon their domesticated zebras to such an extent
that their whole culture was based upon the different subspecies of Equus Quagga that they bred. The lowest social order rode
the grar-gatah, which had the striping of a Grant's zebra.
People of the next grade had the ocha-gatah, with
the orange and black stripes of the Burchell's. While the
aristocracy made use of the banar-gatah, that
had been developed from the larger Grevy's. Only the six members of the
Council of Elders, the High Priest and the Protectress of the Quagga God had
the right to ride a quagga; its name being onomatopoeic and derived from the
animal's snort of alarm.
could do
so in comparative safety. Which meant he had believed Dawn
would miss, or that her arrow was going to strike something upon which it
would have no effect. There was only one part of his body that he would
regard in that light.
Unless Dawn had been aware of how futile such
an action would be and had changed her target at the last moment, giving the
scout no indication of her intentions until it was too late for him to counter
the motion, she must have been aiming at his chest. So, unless she had sent the
arrow into his head, it must have struck and penetrated his breastplate.
Dryaka found the latter prospect both
disconcerting and alarming, particularly in view of the grandiose plans which
he was formulating. The superiority that the Mun-Gatah had over their
neighbours was founded in the main upon the protection given by their breastplates.
So, if Dawn's nation—whoever they might— be—had a weapon that was capable of
penetrating the erstwhile inviolate garments, they would be very dangerous
enemies and a serious threat to his scheme.
"Come
on!" the High Priest barked, his normally harsh tones made even sharper by
the urgency of the situation.
"Where
are you going?" Charole inquired, noticing his agitation.
"Across
the river," Dryaka answered setting his mount into motion and turning it
upstream. "I want to catch that girl!"
Starting
her quagga moving, Charole rode alongside the High Priest and covertly studied
him. However, she was drawing the wrong conclusions regarding his motives for
pursuit. While he still wanted to take Dawn prisoner and use her in a bid to
depose the Protectress, he was now more interested in learning the full potential
of her bow and arrows.
The
rest of the party set off after their leaders. Giving a last furious shake of
his fist at the girl, the eagle's attendant vaulted astride his grar-gatah and followed.
Watching the riders, Dawn
guessed what they had in mind and knew that the danger from them might not yet
be over. The man had told her that the river could be forded above the chasm,
which suggested they were intending to cross there and take up the chase themselves.
Having reached that decision, Dawn directed
her thoughts towards escaping. From what she had seen from the edge of the
chasm, the crossing place was not too close. So she ought to be able to reach
the woodland before they arrived on her side of the river. However, while they
were showing no indication of taking precautions against her, they might send
one of their number to a point of vantage and keep her under observation until the others were
over. There was nothing she could do about it if they did and so she must take
her chances on outdistancing them.
Deciding
that there would not be time to retrieve the arrows which she had expended—in
Tomlu's case, she felt disinclined even to try—the girl swung on her heel.
Being a skilled horsewoman, she had hoped that she might be able to make use of
the man's zebra to carry her away more swiftly than on foot, but it had kept
running after losing its rider and there was no hope of catching it.
Setting
off at a fast walk, Dawn found herself wondering where Bunduki might be. With
him at her side, she would have little to fear from the zebra-riders.
Was her adopted cousin feeling as lonely as
she was, finding himself in this strange land and confronted by such
inexplicable circumstances?
What
conclusions had Bunduki drawn regarding their whereabouts and the means which
had brought them there?
Had
he too made contact with inhabitants of the strange, alien land?
Thinking
about the blond giant was helping to divert Dawn's mind from the memory of
Tomlu's evil face as the arrow had driven into his chest.
Keeping moving, Dawn threw several glances towards
the chasm. To her relief, all of the riders had gone upstream. They were not
making any especial efforts to keep her under observation. Of course, providing
that they were capable of doing so, they could follow her tracks. That was
highly likely, as tracking was an art in which most primitive people had considerable
proficiency. Being experienced in such matters, she realized that she would be
travelling faster, even on foot, than they could read the signs which she was
making. What was more, if the woodland proved to be suitable, she could take to
the trees and avoid leaving traces of her passing on the ground.
On the fringe of the woodland, Dawn paused
and studied the land which she had just traversed. Although circling vultures
marked the spot, she could no longer see the area around the chasm. Nor, apart
from the inevitable wild animals, was there any sign of life along her back
trail.
Suddenly,
Dawn heard something which drove all thoughts of pursuit from her mind.
Faintly,
from a long way off, rose the challenge roar of a bull Mangani as he warned others of his kind to stay away
from his territory.
For
a moment Dawn felt excitement and relief. However, just as she was on the point
of replying, a sobering thought struck her.
The call had originated from much too far
away for her to identify its maker. There was a possibility that it had been
Bunduki, trying to locate her. Yet there was also another alternative. The Mangani were extinct in every part of Africa which
her family had searched for them, but some might have survived in the unknown
jungle beyond the open woodland that she was on the point of entering.
So
Dawn kept quiet, knowing that it would be unwise to announce her presence
until she was sure of whom she was calling. Instead, she would continue to
follow her instincts and keeping going in the direction in which they guided
her. Not until she was certain that it was Bunduki giving the challenge would
she respond.
Directing a final glance across the plains,
without seeing any sign of pursuit, the girl resumed her journey to the
south-east. At first, she retained the arrow on the bow's string. Then, feeling
hungry and having neither seen nor heard anything to alarm her, she replaced
it on the bow-quiver. Laying down the bow, she removed the shoulder-quiver. She
had put the remains of the pemmican and
biltong in the pouch of the quiver. Opening it, she
reached inside.
Before
Dawn could extract the meal, a movement caught the corner of her eye and caused
her to look in its direction.
Gripping
a spear ready for use, a tall, muscular brown-skinned man clad in a jaguarskin
loincloth stepped from behind a tree and confronted her.
CHAPTER SEVEN
What
Kind Of Wood Is This?
ALTHOUGH
they could not see each other due to the intervening terrain, at about the time
that Dawn Drum-mond-Clayton reached the edge of the woodland, Dry-aka, High
Priest of the Mun-Gatah—which meant the Riders of the Zebras—nation, was
leading his hunting party over the ridge upon which Tomlu and Ragbuf had made
their appearances.
Having glided to the ground on almost
motionless wings, several vultures were assembling around the two human bodies
and the crippled zebra. Attracted in their uncannily efficient manner, a number
of spotted hyenas had come loping up. Ignoring the corpses, they made for the
injured animal as it tried desperately to rise and escape their attentions.
Although
the winged scavengers were as yet too cautious to go any closer, not being
sure that tie two motionless figures really were dead, they would soon have
summoned sufficient courage to commence their gruesome, but necessary, work.
However, before they could do so, the appearance of Dryaka's party sent them
back into the air and caused the hyenas to make a hurried withdrawal.
The
division between the two factions was more marked than it had been when Dawn
had last seen them. Talking as they rode upstream, the High Priest complained
that it was bad luck that the girl had seen the scouts approaching while they
were still so far away. Immediately, Elidor stated that Dawn would not have
known they were there but for Sabart having
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pointed to
them thus, warning her of their presence. That had almost caused a physical
confrontation between the buxom and pretty Sabart and her accuser. Although he
was confident that Elidor could defeat Sabart, Dryaka had used his authority
to prevent a fight. He was so determined to capture Dawn that he had not wanted
to be delayed while the women setded their disagreement, particularly as the
fight could have become general.
Having
shared the High Priest's summation regarding the result of a duel between her
half-sister and his adherent, Charole had also been willing for it to be
averted. She too was very eager to catch Dawn. Having lost face by the death of
her eagle, the only way she could regain it was by extracting revenge on the
girl.
There
was, however, more to it than that. The Protectress was intrigued at the
interest shown by Dryaka in going after the girl. While she suspected that he
wanted to use Dawn as a means of deposing her, she also believed that there was
some other, even more compelling motive. It was, she felt sure, to do with
Tomlu's death.
When
Charole raised the matter, the High Priest claimed that he wanted to obtain a
worthy sacrifice for the Quagga God. She did not believe him. That was the duty
of the People-Taker, or—as very few of the Telongas he brought in were suitable
for sacrificial purposes—the raiding parties who were sent to collect victims
from the more warlike nations and, as such, the task was beneath the dignity of
his high office.
Nor
was Charole inclined to accept Dryaka's other reason, that
he wished to avenge the deaths of the two scouts. The social distinctions of
the Mun-Gatah were long established and rigidly enforced. Neither of the men
had been even ocha-gatah
riders, so he was hardly
likely to put himself to any great inconvenience on their account.
If
anything, the unacceptable excuses served to increase her suspicions. She felt
even more certain that his interest went beyond obtaining a challenger who
would justify his confidence. To her way of thinking, anything to which the
High Priest attached so much importance was worth learning. She might be able
to turn it to her advantage. So she had added her support to keeping the peace
between the two women.
For
all their mutual desire to hunt the girl down, neither the Protectress nor the
High Priest would weaken their factions by leaving a member to keep watch and
see which direction she was taking as she fled. Nor, in case she had told them
the truth about having friends in the vicinity, had they been inclined to
reduce their force as a whole by each supplying an observer. They had realized
that the omission might lessen their chances of catching Dawn, but neither
would yield on the matter.
Bringing
his high-spirited, seventeen hand quagga stallion to a halt, Dryaka scanned the
expanse of the plains around him. His cold, but very keen eyes located every
detail except the one which he had hoped —yet had not really expected—to see. A
low snort of disappointment and annoyance burst from him. It was as he had
feared. The beautiful stranger had already disappeared.
When
last seen, the girl had given the impression that she was making for the
woodland. However, he had already discarded the idea of going there by the most
direct route. It was possible that she had turned aside before arriving at the
trees. In which case, going there could cause them to miss her trail.
The question was,
would Dawn take the chance of entering the woodland?
The fact that the girl had been on foot
suggested she belonged to a nation who made their home in such terrain, or
even in the dense jungle that lay beyond it. If such was the case, she would
have a decided advantage over his party while they were all moving among the
trees and bushes of the woodland. While they were skilled hunters and excellent
trackers, the Mun-Ga-tahs preferred to seek their prey from the backs of their
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zebras.
That was always difficult in woodland and frequently impossible in the jungle.
However,
having given much thought to the matter as he was riding along, the High Priest
believed they might find the girl in the savannah rather than the woodland
proper or the jungle. The area towards which she had been heading when last
seen was inhabited by the brutish, sub-human "Hairy Men." From what
he had seen of their ferocity when occasional specimens had been brought in by
raiding parties, he doubted whether the girl would dare to enter their domain.
She was, in his opinion, more likely to remain in the type of country which the
"Hairy Men" usually avoided.
Not
that Dryaka had mentioned his conclusions to the others. He would only do so
when he could be reasonably sure they were correct. He had a reputation for
being right more often than wrong and for rarely making mistakes. It was most
useful in retaining the loyalty of his adherents. So, keeping quiet, he turned
his attention to try and solve a point which had arisen during the course of
his theorizing. It was one that, if he could produce the answer, might supply a
clue to the direction Dawn would have to take if she was returning to her
homeland.
To
which nation did the beautiful, tawny-haired girl belong?
At
his first sight of Dawn, Dryaka had thought that she might be an Amazon. Her
hair and light-coloured skin had suggested she could be a warrior of that race,
but her clothing and armament had been against it. From what
he had remembered about the Amazons, those who wore the skins of antelope—being
swift-running messengers-r-were invariably slender. Women who were of
Dawn's build and heavier were clad in the skins of a black
panther, leopard, Hon or tiger. What was more, whether armed with a
spear and shield, war-axe or bow, they always carried a sword to augment their
knives. No Amazon archer he had ever seen had possessed a bow of the kind so
ably wielded by the girl. In fact, he had never come across such a weapon in
all his dealings with members of other nations.
Thinking
about Dawn's reply when she had been questioned about her origins got the High
Priest nowhere. Unknowingly, she had said the word "Apes" in English
instead of translating it as "Hairy Men." Naturally, Dryaka had
never heard of a nation called the "Apes." Whoever they were, and
wherever they made their homes, he told himself, their "Supplier" had
given them very special kind of archery equipment.
Even before Tomlu's death, the girl's bow had
been a source of interest and speculation to Dryaka. He had been a soldier,
raider, temple-guard and People-Taker before attaining his present high office
and he had recognized it as something out of the ordinary. If his suspicion
about how the scout had been killed was correct, it was definitely an unusual,
even remarkable weapon.
Although Dryaka had no intention of letting
Charole know, the bow was now his main reason for desiring to make the girl his
prisoner.
"Finding her won't be easy," Dryaka
warned, at the end of his scrutiny.
"We
won't do it by sitting here," Charole answered, impatient as always,
moving restlessly on the.saddle of her equally large and fine-looking mount.
"Where
do you think you're going?" Dryaka challenged, as the Protectress set her
quagga into motion.
"After
her, of course."
"Where do you intend
to start looking?"
Always
wary when dealing with the High Priest, Charole read a warning in the tone of
his voice. It implied that she was on the point of making a mistake. There
must be some fault in her line of reasoning, but she failed to see what it
might be. If she went ahead and they should not capture the foreign girl, which she realized was quite likely, Dryaka would claim it
was her error of judgment that caused their failure. To have that happen would
add to her loss of face over the eagle and might seriously weaken her position
by causing the waverers among the population to rum in the High Priest's favour. So, much as it went against the grain, she knew what
must be done. However, she saw a way in which she might be able to make the
High Priest responsible if things went wrong.
"Where
do you say we should start looking?" the
Protectress inquired, halting her mount and turning her head.
"We'll go to Tomlu's body, then find and
follow her tracks from there," Dryaka replied without hesitation. Having
seen the trap that had been set for him, he went on, "Even then, we may
not catch her. But we may as well try."
Although
Charole would have bitten off her tongue rather than have said so, she silently
conceded that the High Priest had given sound advice. Going directly to the
woodland, as she had intended, without knowing at least approximately where
Dawn had entered would have been futile as it would have made finding her
tracks difficult and time consuming if not completely impossible. She also
noted bitterly that he had avoided the pitfall which she had intended for him.
Without
waiting to discover what Charole thought of his suggestion, Dryaka started his
quagga moving. The others followed him in silence. There had been little
conversation since the quarrel between Elidor and Sa-bart had ended. Once they
had crossed the river, the whole party were too
engrossed in scanning the terrain over which they were riding to speak. While
there had been no sign of the foreign girl's cousin and his warriors, they
could be in the vicinity. Having seen the girl's arrow kill Tomlu, the
Mun-Gatahs had had no desire to let themselves be ambushed by several equally
well armed and capable archers. So they had considered that unceasing vigilance
was of greater importance than talking.
Coming
up to Ragbuf s crippled grar-gatah, neither the Protectress nor the High Priest deigned to give it or its
lifeless rider a single glance. It was left to one of Charole's male adherents
to use his lance and put the animal out of its misery. Dryaka was dividing his
attention between the transfixed eagle and Tomlu's body, with most of it
directed at the latter. Duplicating his actions, Charole was at first unable to
decide what he expected to see.
"By
the Quagga God!" one of the male riders ejaculated, his voice throbbing
with something close to superstitious awe. "Her arrow went through his
breastplate!"
Even
as the comment was being made, Dryaka was placing over his saddlehorn the loop
that was attached to his lance at its point of balance. With its butt in the
cup of the stirrup, the weapon was suspended and his hands were free. Swinging
to the ground, he flipped the reins over the quagga's head and allowed them to
dangle. Then he went to kneel alongside the body. The quagga stood motionless,
ground-hitched by the hanging reins as effectively as if he had tied them to
an immovable object. Oblivious of everything else, Dryaka studied the shaft
that rose from Tomlu's chest.
Apart from the eagle's attendant, who had
turned aside and was riding towards his dead charge, only Charole had continued
to advance after Dryaka—who had put on a short spurt—dismounted. The rest of
the party came to a halt some feet away. They divided their attention between
keeping watch for possible enemies and staring at the scout, or rather at the
thing which had killed him. Realizing that she must be missing something of
importance, Charole joined the High Priest on the ground. Schooling her
features into an expression of bored disinterest, she stood and watched him.
"Look at this!" Dryaka could not prevent himself from saying,
after he had studied and felt at the shaft of the arrow.
"I've seen dead men before," the
Protectress sniffed, with a well simulated air of
indifference which she felt sure would elicit further information.
"But
you've never seen one who was killed like this!" Dryaka protested, so stung by the woman's
attitude that he said more than he had intended. "Look at how deeply the
arrow has penetrated."
Once
it had been brought to her attention, Charole understood the full implications
of the High Priest's statements and guessed that she had unearthed his main
reason for wanting to capture the foreign girl.
Then
another thought struck the Protectress, causing a slight shudder which she
instandy suppressed. Everything pointed to Dawn being an expert archer, with
sufficient skill to have hit her mark across the width of the chasm. She
remembered the look of hatred on the girl's face when starting to aim the bow
at her and realized that she had been very close
to death at that moment. Without the protection of a leather breastplate, or
possibly even if she had had one, Dawn's arrow would have been lethal at the
distance which was separating them.
Having no desire to allow the High Priest to
see how she was affected by what she saw and thought, the Protectress continued
with her pretence of indifference.
"He
must have fallen on the arrow and driven it in deeper," Charole commented
and pointed to where the attendant was standing glaring at the dead bird.
"If her bow was so powerful, it would have sent the arrow straight
through my eagle."
"She
didn't have time to draw it fully when she loosed it at the bird," Dryaka
explained and turned the body on to its side. "Look here! The head has
come through the back. No other arrow has ever pierced one of our breastplates,
much less gone in this deep and—" he let the corpse go and tapped the nock
of the shaft— "there's no dirt here, so he can't have fallen on it."
With
that, the High Priest gripped the arrow and tried to withdraw it. Charole was
much too interested to comment. Even when he failed to extract the shaft, she
remained silent. Opening his hand, he scratched at the cresting with a
fingernail and his face took on a deeper, more puzzled frown.
"Fetch me the bird, Elidorl" Dryaka
ordered, coming to his feet.
Urging her banar-gatah to a gallop, the brunette made her way to
where the attendant was crouching over the bird and crooning the Mun-Gatah
death chant. She guided the animal in such a way that it was heading straight
at the man, causing him to make a hurried leap to the rear to avoid being
ridden down. Leaning over without slackening her mount's speed, she bent and
scooped up the eagle as she passed. Ignoring the man, who had tripped and was
sitting on the ground, she returned to the rest of the party. She brought the
zebra to a rump-sliding halt at the High Priest's side and leapt from the
saddle almost before its forward motion had ceased. All in all, it had been an
excellent piece of riding.
"Here,
my lord!" Elidor said and held out the carcass.
Cold anger flickered across Charole's face.
She knew that Elidor's behaviour while making the collection was a deliberate
affront to her. However, she was too curious about the arrow to take the
matter further. Instead, she advanced until she was between the woman and
Dryaka. In doing so, she forced Elidor to take a pace to the rear and presented
her back to the brunette. She was, nevertheless, confident that her faction
would warn her if Elidor made any attempt to take advantage of the opportunity
she was offering.
Watching
the by-play between the women, the High Priest darted a prohibitive glare at
Elidor. Although there was a red flush to her cheeks, she read his meaning
correctly. So she kept quiet and stood still.
Plucking
the arrow free, Dryaka tossed the dead bird aside. Slowly he rolled the shaft
between his fingers, staring intently at it. Then he ran the ball of his left
thumb delicately over the tip and cutting edges of the four-bladed point Having done so, he grasped the shaft at the cresting and
just below the point, flexing it to an extent that would have snapped any other
arrow he had ever seen.
"What kind of wood is this?" the
High Priest said, half to himself, as he felt the arrow's supple strength
and
watched it return to its former shape when he relaxed his grip. "I've
never seen the like of it."
"Let
me see," Charole requested and it was indicative of Dryaka's puzzlement
that he complied without hesitation. On receiving the arrow, she started to get
an inkling of exacdy what he meant However, she could
not help yielding to her natural inclination to try and discount any statement
made by her rival. "It's just ordinary painted wood."
"Just
ordinary painted wood?" Dryaka challenged.
"Yes,"
the Protectress confirmed and, seeing that the rest of the party had moved to
positions which allowed them to watch what was going on, she grasped the shaft
at each end. Starting to bend it, she continued, 'Til show you."
Much
to her amazement, Charole found that the arrow would bend but not break. She
heard Elidor's snigger and grimly set her teeth. Laying the shaft across her
left thigh, she applied added pressure, but with no greater success. Wild with
fury, she jerked out her sword. Taking no notice of the brunette, who backed
away a couple of paces and reached towards her own weapon, the Protectress
slashed at the arrow. The razor sharp blade hit in at an angle and cut it in
two.
"There!"
Charole spat out, hoping that she was sounding more triumphant than she felt as
she held out the segment which remained in her hand.
"But
what kind of tree did this come from?" Dryaka insisted,
taking and staring at the hollow tube of fiber glass with an understandable
lack of comprehension. "I've
never seen wood like
it."
"Or
me," Charole conceded, having sheathed her sword and retrieved the other
piece of the arrow. Examining the razorhead as the High
Priest had done, she went on, "Nor have I seen an arrow's head to equal
this one for sharpness."
If Dryaka
felt any satisfaction at hearing the Protectress's admission, he gave no sign
of it. In fact, he hardly seemed to be aware that she had spoken. His eyes
went from the portion of the arrow in his hand, via the section she was
holding, to Tomlu's body. When he looked up, there was more than a suggestion
of worry on his face. Charole experienced no pleasure at this evidence of his
perturbation, although under different conditions she would have. She knew what
was disturbing him and she shared his concern.
Dryaka was a ruthless and ambitious man. Born
in a grar-gatah riding family, he had clawed his way upwards
until attaining his present status. The social distinctions
of the Mun-Gatah were controlled by physical prowess, but rising was far from
easy. Apart from becoming a member of the Council of Elders when a vacancy
occurred, he could go no higher. While subject to the Council's control, he had
plans for his own and their nation's aggrandizement beyond anything the six
Elders suspected. In fact, outside of his immediate supporters only Charole
knew—although he did not suspect it—that he wanted to conquer and rule all the
nations with whom his people came into contact. She had learned by seducing,
then murdering—making it look like an accident—one of his most loyal supporters.
In the opinion of the Council (when answering
Dry-aka's tentative proposal), going to war against the various fighting
nations—as opposed to raiding them and dealing with their retaliatory
attacks—would be too costly to be contemplated. Not to the Mun-Gatah warriors,
whose metal helmets and leather breastplates gave considerable protection if
not complete immunity, but to their mounts. Many of the zebras were sure to be
killed in the battles, as enemies frequentiy shot or cut them down to make
their riders fight on foot. Such loses would displease the Quagga God and He
would not give His people the blessing they required to be assured of victory.
Less
enamoured by the religion of his people than the members of the Council of
Elders, although he realized its value as a means of controlling and dominating
the population, Dryaka considered that the loss of the animals would be a small enough price if he
achieved
his desires. He had been confident that, with the aid of their protective
clothing and superior organization, the Mun-Gatah could defeat every other nation
in turn.
The meeting with Dawn had caused the High
Priest to revise that conclusion.
From
his first view of the girl's bow, Dryaka had sensed that its unusual design
made it exceptionally powerful. That it had killed Tomlu was very convincing evidence of its full potential.
Until
coming close enough to examine the scout's body, the High Priest had not
appreciated just how unusual and powerful the tawny-haired beauty's weapon
must be. Certainly the "wood" from which the arrow had been
constructed was a very strange kind, but vastly superior to that used by the
nations with whom he was acquainted. Nor had any of them
possessed arrowheads of such high quality.
Apparently
the mysterious "Suppliers," whose identity and purpose Dryaka had
never been able to discover, had seen fit to equip the "Apes" with
weapons that were far better than those given to any other nation. The thought
gave rise to another that was even more intriguing.
What
if Dawn should be one of the "Suppliers?"
Such
a supposition would explain why Dryaka had never heard of her nation by its
true name. It was also likely that their own arms would be far superior to
those supplied to other people.
If
Dryaka's theory should prove correct and he captured the girl, the secrets to
which she might be a party would be of the greatest value. He felt sure that,
once he had her in his power, he could make her divulge all her information.
Even
if the High Priest was wrong in assuming that Dawn was one of the
"Suppliers," holding her would still serve a very useful purpose.
Recollecting what she had said about her people being great archers, he could
see that they might be a major barrier against his plans for dominance. Apart
from the Amazons, the other nations tended to regard their bows as tools for
hunting rather than as weapons of war. When fighting, they relied upon swords,
war-axes, clubs or spears and shields. So the long lances wielded by the
mounted Mun-Gatahs generally out-ranged the arms of their enemies. That would
not apply to the "Apes." If their warriors were so minded, their
arrows would slaughter the Mun-Gatahs long before the lances could reach them.
So having Dawn as a hostage would be of use in dealing with her
"father."
"I
wouldn't care to fight against her people, whoever they are," Charole
remarked, cutting in on Dryaka's train of thought.
"Or
me," the High Priest conceded, darting a glance at the woman to see if
there might be some deeper meaning to her comment. He had never been entirely
satisfied that Lagdok, to whom he had told his plans, had been killed by
accident after having attended a banquet at the home of an Elder. Charole had
also been a guest and the man had always been susceptible to f enunine wiles.
However, reading nothing in the beautiful features, he went on, "Of
course, there's no reason why we should have to."
Before
Charole could reply, a rider appeared on the ridge beyond the chasm. Reining
his lathered banar-gatah
to a halt at the edge, he
yelled and waved a hand. Identifying the newcomer by his small size and scarlet
tunic as one of the Council's messengers, Dry-aka scowled. Letting the section
of the arrow fall, he stalked to his quagga and mounted it. Moving almost as
quickly, but retaining the portion of arrow which she had been examining,
Charole returned to her mount and boarded it. They rode towards the chasm
together and the rest of the party followed.
"What
is it?" the High Priest demanded, on reaching the chasm.
"Zongaffa
sent me to ask you if you would return to the camp immediately, my lord,"
the messenger answered.
"Why?" Charole
asked.
"That he did not tell me, my lady,"
the small man replied.
Although
the Protectress had failed to gather any information, she sensed that Dryaka
was relieved by the message. So he was. When he had seen the messenger, he had
wondered whether the Council of Elders had heard and taken exception to the
orders he had given to the People-Taker. As yet he could not claim sufficient
support to challenge the authority of the Elders and must yield to their
desires.
The news the High Priest had been given was
interesting. It implied that there were developments in something which he
believed could be important and very useful. Ever since Zongaffa, the aged
herbalist, had made an accidental discovery, Dryaka had believed that it could
be put to practical and effective use. Perhaps the herbalist had discovered a
means of doing so. If that had happened, Dryaka wanted to hear about it as soon
as possible. There was only one problem. By returning to the camp, he would
lose any chance of capturing Dawn and learning her secrets.
CHAPTER
EIGHT
Are
The Others Coming After You?,
LOOKING
at the man who had come from his place of concealment, Dawn Drummond-Clayton
took stock of the situation and reacted swiftly. Although she had been taken by
surprise and was startled at his appearance, she was not unduly alarmed. He
was holding a spear, but the shape of its blade and its
thick handle suggested that it was better suited to thrusting than throwing.
What was more, as he was a good thirty yards away and she had already started
to arm herself, she did not consider him to be too much of a threat.
Letting
go of her shoulder-quiver, the girl scooped up the bow. Having done so, she
liberated an arrow from the quiver that was attached to it. Setting the shaft
on the handle-riser's arrow rest, she nocked the slot at its end to the string
without taking her eyes from the man. Straightening and adopting her shooting
posture, she commenced her draw.
Clearly
the man knew what a bow and arrow was. He had started to move forward, but came
to a halt as the four-bladed point was lined on his chest. While he did not
have the clothing or appearance of one of the zebra riders, Dawn felt
disinclined to take chances. So she retained her weapon at its position of
readiness.
Holding
the fetching at its anchor point, the girl studied the man. Six foot in height,
he had brown skin, black hair cut after the fashion of Prince Valiant and pleasant
features which reminded her of the Polynesians she had met during her travels.
Broad shouldered and heavily muscled, he did not slim down at
the
waist as well as Bunduki. For all that, he did not convey an impression of being
slow and cumbersome. His only garment was a loincloth of jaguarskin. At the left side of its belt hung a sheathed knife. Thrust
through a loop on the right was a strange weapon like a short handled pole-axe.
The small, hammer-like head was backed by a long, narrow, slightly curved
spike. Dawn decided that it resembled a czdkan* Matching
his height, the spear had a stout handle with a strong crossguard attached
about two feet below a head that looked as though it had been made from the
blade of a knife.
"Who are you?" the man inquired and
once again the girl found that she could understand what was being said.
"My
name is Dawn," she replied, allowing the bow's string to go forward under
control but ready to draw it again if the need should arise. "Who are
you?"
"I am one who is called At-Vee, the
Hunter," the
man answered, without making any attempt to move
closer. "If you are one of the People-Taker's es-
cort------- ."
"I'm
not," Dawn assured him. "In fact, I don't know who the People-Taker
is."
"Then you aren't a
Mun-Gatah?" asked the man.
"I
am not!" Dawn declared firmly, deducing from the sound
of his voice that he did not care for the "Riders of the Zebras" and
guessing who he meant, "But I've seen some of them.
"Where
are they?" At-Vee demanded, glaring around in a hostile manner which gave
added confirmation that he did not regard the Mun-Gatahs as friends.
"Beyond
the woodland, on the plains," Dawn replied and hoped to gain an ally.
"I had to kill one of them when they tried to capture me."
"Are the others coming after you?"
the man asked.
"They may be,"
the girl admitted. "But, if so, they
♦Czdkan:
a Polish horseman's war-hammer of the late 16th and early 17th Centuries.
aren't
too close behind. I've neither seen nor heard anything of them."
"Did
they have any prisoners with them?" At-Vee wanted to know, resting the
butt of his spear on the ground.
"I
didn't see any," Dawn confessed and, as an expression of disappointment
came to his face, went on, "But I never went near their camp. It must have
been on the other side of a river and was out of sight."
"Then
they couldn't be the People-Taker and his escort," At-Vee said quietly and
half to himself. "Joar-Fane won't be with them."
Even
as the man was speaking, he started to walk slowly forward. A slight swaying of
some bushes some thirty feet beyond htm attracted Dawn's attention. Turning her
gaze in that direction, she discovered an animal was emerging stealthily from
its place of concealment. With a sensation of alarm, she identified it as a
full grown tiger and knew that it was stalking At-Vee.
Crouching
so low that its stomach was brashing against the ground, the great striped
beast had its eyes fixed on At-Vee's broad back and its tail was whisking from
side to side. Dawn knew that it would very soon be launching its attack.
Already its muscles were bunching and the unsheathed claws of the hind feet dug
into the ground so as to give added propulsive power when it charged.
Unlike
many of her generation, probably because she had greater practical knowledge
and experience, Dawn did not pretend to believe that predatory creatures never
hunted and preyed upon human beings. She knew that, particularly in a primitive
environment where they had not learned the deadly effects of firearms, the
larger carnivores would kill and eat men, women or children just as willingly
as they would animals.
With that in mind, the girl
did not hesitate. Taking a long bound to her right, so as to have an unrestricted
BVNDVKI
99
aim at
the tiger, she brought up her bow and commenced the draw.
"Behind
you!"
Dawn shouted as she started to move.
With
a deep, throaty roar, the tiger thrust itself into motion!
Although
at first puzzled and not a little alarmed by the girl's behaviour, At-Vee
quickly realized that she was looking at something to his rear. Obviously, she
was giving a genuine warning. The roar which came to his ears, as he was
already starting to turn, confirmed it. What he saw and heard told him that he
was in deadly peril. The tiger was bounding towards him and would soon be close
enough to make its final, killing, spring.
Dropping
the butt of the spear to the ground as he completed his turn, At-Vee grasped
the handle in both hands below the crossguard. At the same time, he slid his
right foot forward and bent his left leg. He doubted whether he would have time
to adopt his kneeling posture and brace himself correctiy before the tiger was
upon him.
A skilled hunter, At-Vee had on several
occasions goaded a leopard or a jaguar into attacking him as he crouched
behind his spear, thus allowing the beast to impale itself. There were,
however, two major differences between those efforts and his present
situation. Firstly, he had always been ready and had brought about the charge
at his own convenience. Secondly, and even more important, the tiger was much
larger and heavier than even the largest jaguar that he had dealt with.
Having adopted her shooting stance as soon as
she came to a halt, Dawn completed her draw. Feeling the eold steel of the
arrowhead touch her left forefinger, she aimed slightly ahead of the onrushing
tiger so as to allow for its continued forward motion. Loosing the arrow, she
saw it flashing away on a converging course as the great beast started to rise
in the bound that would carry it onto its prey. After what seemed like an age,
she heard the thud of the Razorhead meeting the animal's body just behind its
shoulder. The four blades carved their way to cut a swathe through its vital organs,
but that alone would not be sufficient to halt its leap.
Watching the tiger hurtling towards nim, At-Vee expected to be killed. He had his left knee on the ground and
the spear rose before him, but he was not as firmly positioned as he would have
been if granted a few more seconds. His posture might have been suitable when
receiving the charge of a leopard, or even a jaguar. It would not stand up
against the weight of the tiger. There was, however, nothing he could do except
brace himself as securely as possible and hope for a miracle.
The miracle happened!
Feeling
the agony caused by the arrow driving through its flesh, even though there was
not the solid impact and shock force of a bullet, the tiger gave a choking howl
and its body curved in mid-flight While it still went
towards the man, its forelegs and great, hook-like claws were directed away
from him. Instead of hitting the chest, the point of the spear spiked home
alongside the arrow but entered at a less acute angle.
When
the tiger collided with the spear, its weight threw At-Vee off balance. He felt
pain sear through his right leg as the ankle buckled under him. Fortunately it
was not so severe that it numbed his thought processes. Releasing the spear as
soon as the tiger was impaled, he threw himself to the right. On landing, he
sent his right hand to the head of the war-hammer on his belt and slid it from
its retaining loop.
Reaching for another arrow, Dawn watched the
great beast land on the spear and At-Vee fling himself from underneath it. The
tip of the blade was just emerging from the striped flank when the crossguard
prevented it from going any further. Crashing to the ground, the stricken tiger
roared and thrashed wildly in an agonized frenzy. Then it went limp.
"Are you hurt?" Dawn inquired,
turning her eyes from the tiger and looking to where the man was trying to
rise.
"It's my leg," At-Vee replied,
sinking back to sit on the ground. "I think it's broken!"
"Let me look at it," Dawn offered,
walking forward.
"Why
would you want to help me?" At-Vee challenged, a wary glint coming into
his eyes as he tightened his grip on the war-hammer's handle.
"I helped you against the tiger,"
Dawn reminded him. "And I believe that the Mun-Gatah are
enemies of both of us."
Turning his gaze to the great striped shape,
At-Vee noticed for the first time that the fletching of an arrow thrust out of
it close to his spear. Then, apart from one detail, everything became clear to
him. He realized why the tiger had behaved so oddly while springing at him. If
the girl had not used her bow with such deadly effect, it would have come down
upon the spear with its forelegs thrust ahead and claws positioned so that they
could have found his flesh.
The
only pigling point was why his rescuer had loosed her arrow. There would
have been little or no danger of the tiger turning on her if she had fled, as
it would have been fully occupied with him. So he wondered why she had helped
him. Nothing in the few contacts he had had with members of other nations had
led him to expect friendship or help at a foreigner's hands.
"I'll
put down my bow and let you hold my knife," Dawn went on with a smile,
"if that will prove I'm a friend."
"There's
no need for that," At-Vee stated, and placed his war-hammer on the ground,
sensing that he could trust her. He also realized that, if his leg should be
broken, retaining her assistance would be all that stood between him and almost
certain death. "Thank you for offering to help."
Before
starting to examine the man's leg, Dawn collected her shoulder-quiver. She
laid it and her bow alongside his weapons and knelt down. Placing her left hand
under his right calf, she raised and studied his swollen ankle. Taking hold of
his foot with the other hand, she moved it gentiy. Although perspiration beaded
his face and he half closed his eyes in pain, he made no sound.
"It's not broken," Dawn announced,
lowering the limb gently to the ground. "But it is badly sprained and you
won't be able to use it for some time."
"I have to do and find Joar-Fanel"
At-Vee gritted, sitting up.
"Who is that?" Dawn asked, looking
around for the means to render further aid.
"She was to be my wife. I had brought
back a jaguar's skin for her father to make my claim," At-Vee explained,
trying to rise. "But when I arrived, I found that the Mun-Gatahs'
People-Taker had taken her."
"You
stay where you are!" Dawn commanded, laying a hand on his shoulder.
"If you try to walk, you'll only make your ankle worse."
"But Joar-Fane—1"
At-Vee began, sinking back.
"She
won't be any better off if you cripple yourself and can't walk at all,"
Dawn pointed out. "Where is the nearest water?"
"I passed a stream not
far away."
"Do
you think that you can walk there with my help?"
"lean."
"That's
good," Dawn said. "When we get there, I'll see what I can do about
your ankle."
"Can you get my spear
for me?" At-Vee requested.
"I'll
try," the girl promised and glanced atthe empty place on her bow-quiver.
"And I'll see if I can pull my arrow out while I'm doing it."
Going
to the tiger, Dawn examined it. Her arrow had buried itself in the body almost
to the fletching which would make removal difficult. If she gripped the part
that showed, she would crush the feathers of the fletching and ruin them. Yet
she had no desire to lose another arrow. There were not a
commodity which she could replenish in the primitive jungle. Certainly
there would be no way in which she could obtain any fiber glass Micro-Flites,
particularly if her theory regarding her whereabouts should prove true.
Putting
the arrow from her mind for the moment, Dawn took hold of the spear's hand with
both hands. Placing her right foot on the carcass, she began to pull with all
her far from inconsiderable strength. Conscious of At-Vee studying her and
sensing the admiration he was feeling towards her, she continued to exert her
full muscular power. At first the weapon held firm. Then, slowly, an inch at a
time, it began to move. With a final heave, she drew it out.
With the spear removed, Dawn laid it aside
and drew her knife. Knowing what she must do next, she made a wry face and set
to work cutting the arrow free. Even with the razor edge of the Randall Model 1
fighting knife's eight-inch long, clip-pointed blade, it was a lengthy and
messy task. She was not sorry when she had accomplished it.
Wiping
her hands, the knife's blade, the arrow and the spear as clean as she could on
the grass, Dawn turned her attention to At-Vee. He was sitting with her bow in
his hands and studying it with rapt attention.
"I've
never seen the like of this before," the man declared, in tones of awe,
laying the bow down as she returned. "Do all your people have such
weapons?"
"Yes,"
Dawn replied, which was true as far as it went. Being keen archers, every
member of her family owned a modern hunting bow of similar quality. Handing him
his spear, she knelt and attached the arrow to the bow-quiver. 'Til help you to
the stream if you're ready."
Giving
his assent to the suggestion, At-Vee allowed the girl to help him rise. He
placed his left arm across her shoulders and used the spear with the right for
extra support.
"Who
are your people?" At-Vee inquired, being genuinely interested and also
wanting to take his mind from the pain that walking, even with assistance, was
causing.
"You wouldn't know them," Dawn
answered. "Our chief is Tarzan of the Apes."
"I
have never heard of him, or of your people," At-Vee stated, which was what
the girl had expected although hoping that she would receive the opposite information.
"Are all the 'Apes' great hunters?"
Remembering
the gold-clad woman's use of the name "Apes," the significance of the
way her companion's question had been worded struck Dawn. It implied that, no
matter what language they were employing, she had given Tarzan's name in
English.
"Yes," Dawn confirmed truthfully,
putting the phenomenon aside to be considered and discussed when she was reuinited
with Bunduki.
"Are your people near
by?" At-Vee asked.
"My—husband—Bunduki
isn't too far way," Dawn answered. While she believed that she could trust
the man, she also felt it was advisable to let him think
she was married and her 'husband' was in the vicinity. "He is one of the
greatest hunters and fighters of the 'Apes'."
Much
as At-Vee would have liked to satisfy his curiosity regarding the girl's
weapons, he refrained. All of them, including the knife (if the ease with which
it had cut out the arrow was anything to go by), were far superior to anything
he had ever seen. The point was verified when, changing the subject, he
inquired about her escape from the Mun-Gatahs and learned she had killed one by
sending an arrow through his leather breastplate. According to the Telonga
legends, such a garment was so strong that its wearer could not be harmed.
However, among his people, the matter of the mysterious "Suppliers"
was tabu except to the Elders of each village and must not be discussed by
anybody else.
On
reaching the banks of the small stream, Dawn helped At-Vee to seat himself and,
while he was dangling the injured foot in the water, sought for a means of
treating it. Finding a plant with broad leaves, of a kind which she had never
seen before, she gathered some of them. Then she collected some of a moss-like
growth and thin reeds, using them all to make a cold compress which she applied
to his ankle.
With his ankel bandaged by the plants, At-Vee
accepted Dawn's offer of a meal. He was puzzled by the pemmican and biltong that
she produced from her quiver, but after tasting them
admitted they were good. Then he told her what had
brought him to that part of the woodland.
On learning that the Mun-Gatahs' People-Taker
had claimed his intended wife, Joar-Fane, in his absence, At-Vee had set off to
try to rescue her. However, he had found tracks which suggested that she had escaped
from her captors and fled into the jungle pursued by some of them. Following,
he had crossed what he called the Big River which served as a boundary between
the Telongas' country and that of the "Hairy People." The previous
evening he had lost the tracks due to a herd of elephants passing over and
obliterating them. Knowing that the Mun-Gatahs lived somewhere on the plains,
he had been heading in that direction hoping to pick up the trail again.
There were a number of questions which Dawn
would have liked to have put to At-Vee, but the opportunity did not arise.
Faint noises came to their ears, causing them to stare in the direction from
which they had come. The giri's eyes turned to meet the man's. Although the
sounds were still a good distance away, both knew that they were hearing hooves
and human voices.
"It
must be the Mun-Gatahs!" Dawn breathed. "They're following my
tracks."
"How
many of them are there?" At-Vee asked, glancing at his injured ankle.
"At
least nine, if they've all crossed the river," Dawn answered, speaking no
louder than the man. "There may be even more for all I know."
"We
can't fight them, even if there are only nine," At-Vee declared bitterly.
"And with my ankle like this, I can't run fast enough to escape. But you
must go. They'll show you no mercy now you've killed one of them."
Dawn did not reply for several seconds, but
she was thinking fast. As At-Vee had pointed out, they could not hope to beat
off a determined attack by the Mun-Gatahs and she still retained sufficient of
her civilized upbringing to want to avoid further killing if it was possible.
Although she felt sure that she could escape from her mounted pursuers, given
that much of a start and in wooded country, flight was out of the question for
her companion.
There was, the girl
realized, only one answer.
"Take
my bow and arrows, At-Vee!" Dawn said urgently. "Then go and hide in
the bushes."
"What are you doing to
do?" the man asked.
"Draw them away from
you," Dawn replied.
"But—!" At-Vee
began.
"It's
our only chance," the girl declared, and smiled confidently. "They
might be riding, but I can travel faster than them through this type of
country. Particularly as I won't be hampered with my
bow."
Without
waiting for any further debate on the matter, Dawn darted off towards the
sounds of the riders. She wanted to come into contact with them before they
found the tiger's body and discovered that she had a companion. If they were
following her trail, whoever was doing the tracking would be able to deduce
that At-Vee was injured from the signs he and she had left and might guess what
she was trying to do.
Clearly
the Mun-Gatahs were not travelling at any speed. That was only to be expected.
Although Dawn had not made any determined effort to hide the signs of her
passage, following the marks left by her bare feet would not be easy.
Travelling at a fast walk, wanting to conserve her strength and energy for the
flight that would come when they saw her, she had gone about fifty yards beyond
the tiger when she received her first sight of them.
Halting behind a tree, Dawn studied the
composition of the party. Neither of the quagga riders were present, but that
still left two women and five men to contend with. The eagle's attendant was in
the lead,
walking
and studying the ground, with his zebra following on his heels like a
well-trained dog. All his companions were mounted and, although the girl could
not hear what was being said, the women appeared to be talking in low but
heated tones. She wondered whether she was the topic of their conversation and
concluded that it was likely.
There
was no time for Dawn to dwell on such futile speculation. Although the
Mun-Gatahs were still about a hundred yards away, the terrain through which
they were passing would still favour them. She had known it when making her
suggestion to At-Vee but was willing to take a chance if it would prevent them
from finding the helpless hunter.
Drawing
in a breath, Dawn walked from behind the tree as if she did not know her
pursuers were so close. Hearing a shout, which informed her that she had been
seen, she threw a look at them. Then, as she turned and started to run, she
wished that BunduM was in the vicinity. She also hoped that, wherever he was, he
was not in any kind of danger. Hearing the commotion behind her, she put all
such thoughts from her head.
The
chase was on and she would need all her wits about her if she was to avoid
being captured, or killed!
CHAPTER
NINE
She
Isn't As Good A Lover As Me
AT about the time that Dawn was starting to
run away from the Mun-Gatahs, Bunduki and Joar-Fane were finishing their meal.
While the blond giant could have made a fire
easily enough, even though he had no matches, he had not wished to do so. The
rising smoke would have been a sure indication to any hostile force such as the
Mun-Gatahs' People-Takers—whoever, or whatever, they might be—or other human
beings in the vicinity. When he had explained this to the girl, he had discovered
that it would not be necessary. Delighted at being able to talk after the
silence which he had insisted upon as they were walking, she had said that her
people frequently ate raw meat. So had he, on expeditions when his adoptive
family had reverted to living in a primitive fashion.
"Never
have I seen such a beautiful man as you, Bunduki," Joar-Fane purred after
they had eaten and washed their hands and face in the stream. She smiled at him
in a way that had never failed to win over any man she was trying to attract.
"That's what Dawn tells me," the
blond giant replied.
"Do
you already have a wife?" Joar-Fane asked, sounding
disappointed but not unduly perturbed. "Or have you many?"
"I've
never needed more than one," Bunduki stated, hoping to kill off any
notions that the girl was harbouring.
"She isn't as good a lover as me,"
Joar-Fane declared. "I can make love better than any other Telonga
maiden. Shall I show you, Bunduki?"
"Not
right now," the big blond growled hastily, for her hands were hooking
under the monkey-skin halter.
"At-Vee
has told me many times how well I can make love," Joar-Fane protested.
"Who is that?"
Bunduki inquired.
"A
hunter," the girl replied, pouting but refraining from removing the
garment. "The best in our village— but he is not as great as you."
"Is he your
husband?"
"No!"
"Does he want to
be?"
"Of
course," Joar-Fane confirmed, sounding as if that was a foregone
conclusion. "He has brought much meat to my father's house and many skins.
We have made love many times."
"Have you had
children?" Bunduki asked.
"No!"
the girl yelped, displaying shock at such a suggestion. "That would not
be proper until we are married. How many children have you and Dawn?"
"None
yet," the blond giant admitted, hiding his amusement at her indignation.
He decided that, in view of her reply, a change of subject might be advisable.
"Did the People-Taker claim At-Vee too?"
"No.
He was away from the village, or the Elders would have put him away
with the rest of the hunters," Joar-Fane answered, moving closer and
reaching to take hold of BunduM's hands in her own. "Must we talk about
such things?"
"Dawn
is very good at talking and always explains the things I want to know,"
the big blond said craftily, freeing himself and
sitting down. "That is one of the reasons why I love her."
"I'm
very good at explaining things," Joar-Fane declared, looking at him in
a calculating manner and doing as he had hoped she would. Sitting by his side,
she went on, "What do you want to know?"
Guided by Bunduki's
questions and determined to prove that she was superior to Dawn—who she assumed
was his wife—the girl started to tell him about her own people.
The
Telonga were in general a pleasure-seeking nation much given to such peaceful
pursuits as singing, dancing and making love. In all of these, particularly the
last, Joar-Fane claimed to have no equal.
When
her hint failed to elicit the response she was hoping for, the girl continued
with her description. Her people lived in several large villages scattered
through an area of jungle bounded by the "Land With No Trees," two
wide rivers and what, from her account, was either a large lake or an ocean,
possibly the latter, as she said men who had been there claimed the water
tasted salty.
With
the majority of their needs in life supplied by a bounteous nature, most of the
Telongas were content to follow a leisurely existence not overburdened by hard
work. There were, however, a few hunters in every community. Restless, active
men, they were regarded with suspicion by the rest of the population despite
having such uses as suppliers of meat and skins, or defenders against any wild
beasts which plagued the villages. Joar-Fane declared that, as they were
excellent lovers when so inclined, on the whole she approved of them.
From
what she said when Bunduki brought the matter up, there was no kind of organized
fighting force for the protection of their homes and territory.
"We
don't need such a thing," Joar-Fane insisted. *'We don't have any
enemies."
"How about the Mun-Gatahs'
People-Taker?" Bunduki challenged.
Apparently
the Telonga villagers, with a few exceptions, took the periodic visits by the
People-Taker and his escort for granted, regarding them as a small price to pay
for an otherwise untroubled existence. They came, selected several—but never
too many—maidens and young men, departing without disruption of the remainder's
pleasures.
Only the hunters were inclined to resist the
levy, but they were invariably "put away" by the Elders before the
People-Taker arrived. Joar-Fane neither knew nor cared how the "putting away"
was accomplished. The hunters were always returned alive, unharmed, and in good
loving condition, which was good enough for her even if the subject had not
been tabu as a matter for discussion.
Nor
did the girl have any idea why the People-Taker collected the young men and
women. It was obvious to Bunduki, from what she said, that she had hoped the
selected maidens were destined to become the wives of handsome and lusty
Mun-Gatah men; but she had been disillusioned on that point. At first, having
had a quarrel with At-Vee because he had insisted on leaving the village
instead of remaining
and attending a dance that
was being given by one of her friends, she had been delighted at being among
those selected. However, once away from the village, she had found that the
male members of the People-Taker's escort were not interested in making love
and her attempts at stimulating such a desire had been thwarted in a painful
manner by one of the Mun-Gatah women.
What
was more, the Mun-Gatahs had proved to be harsh and cruel. Remarks which
Joar-Fane had overheard had warned her that she might not be going to the
pleasant life which she had anticipated. So, showing more courage and
initiative than Bunduki would have imagined her to possess, she had escaped
after they had made camp for the night. Unfortunately for her, she had got
hopelessly lost. Then, with the party sent after her by the People-Taker on her
trail, she had been driven even deeper into the jungle. She had fallen into the
Big River and, although she could swim well enough to have been in no danger of
drowning, the strength of the current had carried her across.
Knowing
that she was in the land of the "Hairy People," about whom the
hunters had told so many frightening stories, the girl had been forced to
leave the river because of the persistence of her pursuers. Although she had
not seen any sign of them that day, she had kept moving in the hope of
returning to the river and swimming over, then finding her way home. Instead,
she had been located by Bul-Mok
and his family. Fleeing
from them, Bunduki had saved her.
While
eager to please the blond giant by explaining about the People-Taker, Joar-Fane
forgot to mention two points of interest. She had said that the Mun-Gatahs made
visits twice a year, following the ends of the two rainy seasons. In her
eagerness to start the business of love-making, she overlooked the fact that
the latest collection had been made in the dry season and also that it had
consisted of more maidens and young men than was usual.
"What
do you know about the Mun-Gatahs?" Bunduki asked, as the girl lay on her
back in an attitude which implied that she had talked enough and felt it was
time for her reward.
Annoyance
flickered across Joar-Fane's face and she sat up. Then she smiled in a knowing
manner. At-Vee had been a much more satisfactory love maker than the blond
giant was proving. However, he too had also been slow at getting down to the
serious business of wooing. When he finally did, the results had always been
worth waiting for. That would, she felt sure, apply just as much in Bunduki's
case. Being shrewd in such matters, she decided that she would have to humour
him until he was ready to commence.
Sitting
at the side of the small girl, Bunduki had to admit that she was superbly
proportioned and voluptuous. As a healthy young man in the peak of physical
condition, he could not help being attracted by her. However, he was determined
to hold himself in check. Joar-Fane's race and colour had nothing to do with
the decision. None of his adoptive kinsmen had been promiscuous. In fact, they
had all been notable for their unswerving loyalty and devotion to their
respective wives. Nor had Bunduki ever become embroiled in the so-called New
Morality which had infested the western world. Even during the short period he
had spent in
England,
he had avoided becoming entangled in its meshes. Having always had to be
self-reliant instead of dependent upon the British Welfare State, he did not
need to use sexual prowess to conceal a lack of other masculine achievements.
What was more, at that moment, he had other tilings
of greater importance on his mind.
Suddenly,
Bunduld found his thoughts turning to Dawn; but not in the way that they had
done constantly since waking in the tree. Up to that moment he had always
regarded her almost as a younger sister; a delightful playmate and a tomboy
who was willing to try anything that he was attempting. While aware that she
had grown into a very beautiful, shapely and attractive young woman, his
opinions along that line had previously been those a brother might have felt.
Looking at Joar-Fane, he started to think of his adoptive cousin for the
first time as a most desirable member of the opposite sex.
The
little Telonga girl would have been furious if she had guessed the kind of
thoughts which she had brought about. Being unaware of them, she did her best
to stimulate her rescuer's interest and desire to make love.
There was little enough that Jor-Fane could
tell Bun-duM about the Mun-Gatah people. According to what she had heard, the
men were big, muscular and very fierce. Although the People-Taker and his
escort had never arrived at her village clad in such garments, the hunters
claimed they wore metal helmets and breastplates of leather that no weapon
could pierce. They were armed with what she described as long knives and
spears. Although the women she had seen were not exactly ugly—she refused to
admit that they had been beautiful and curvaceous—they did not appear to be
interested in making love. She regarded that as being most peculiar. More so,
in fact, than that the party invariably arrived
riding on strange hornless animals with black and white striped skins. At-Vee
had said that all the Mun-Gatah people had such animals and many more roamed wild in the "Land With
No Trees," but they were never seen in the jungle except when brought by
the People-Taker's party.
Bunduki
found the girl's information, scanty as it was, more baffling than helpful. In fact, nothing he had heard
made sense. The strange, hornless black and white animals sounded like zebras,
which implied he was somewhere near the plains of Africa as did the description,
the "Land With No Trees." Except that no
wild zebra had a suitable physical confirmation of riding or draught work. Nor
was there any sizeable area of the African plains that had not been explored,
or at least flown over. A tribe, or a nation, who rode zebras would surely
have been discovered.
If
it came to the point, there was little or no undiscovered land of any kind
left in the world; certainly not one of sufficient size that could offer
jungles, plains, big rivers and such a diversity of human and animal life.
Counting the Mangani
the blond giant had already
heard of three nations.
"Are
there any other people?" Bunduki asked when the girl once more stopped
speaking and looked at him hopefully. "I mean apart from the Telonga,
Mun-Ga-tah and the 'Hairy Men'?"
"The old men tell us about somebody they
called the Gruziak who used to come to our villages," Joar-Fane sighed,
wishing that the blond giant would stop asking such uninteresting questions and
make love instead. "They were warriors with red skins and rode animals
like the Mun-Gatahs', except they weren't striped and were of different
colours. I've never seen them. The Mun-Gatahs drove them away. And I have heard
it said that there is another nation of nothing but women. They don't have any
men at all. But I don't believe there is anybody like that"
"You wouldn't,"
Bunduki thought and smiled.
"Do
you want to tell me about your people?" Joar-Fane inquired, having seen
the smile and hoping it heralded what she had been waiting for. "Where are
they?"
"That's what I'd like to know," the
blond giant said to himself.
The
reference to the red-skinned Gruziaks, with their mounts that looked like the
Mun-Gatahs' zebras —if that was the identity of the creatures—but variously
coloured and not striped, suggested a nation of horsemen. Perhaps the girl was
making them and the female warriors—who apart from their men-less state were
suggestive of the Grecian Amazons*—up out of her imagination in order to
impress him and bring him to a suitable frame of mind for her purposes.
When
BunduM did not reply to her question, Joar-Fane felt that success and
fulfilment were within her grasp. She was certain that the time had come for
something far more interesting and diverting than chattering about other
people. Smiling, she reached across and laid a hot little hand on Bunduki's
left bicep.
Even
as the blond giant was seeking a way to refuse which would not offend the
girl, one was presented to him. From far away to the north-west came an eerie,
high-pitched and almost wailing cry.
Instantly,
BunduM sprang to his feet. Ignoring Joar-Fane's squeak of mingled annoyance,
protest and frustration, he stared in the direction from which the sound had
originated. Faint though it had been, he knew it was
the distress call of a female Mangani.
However,
the call was from such a long distance that the blond giant could not make a
positive identification. Nor was it repeated, so he was unable to gain further
information.
BunduM found himself faced with a difficult
decision. While the distress call had come from the direction in which his
instincts suggested that Dawn could be found, there
were Mangani in the jungle. Any reply he made would be
heard by the family who claimed the
•According to the legends, the Grecian
Amazons maintained their race by having intercourse with men from neighbouring
districts. After which, any male children were either killed or returned to
their fathers.
territory
and would almost certainly be investigated if they were close enough.
There was more to the problem than the danger
from the territorial bull. The call had originated from so far away that, even
if he did not have Joar-Fane with him, the blond giant knew he could not get
there in time to deal with whatever was threatening his adoptive cousin, should she be the one who had made it.
CHAPTER TEN
Don't
Kill Her, Damn Youl
"I don't like it," Sabart stated,
glancing around her in a worried manner. "The foreign bitch is going into
the land of the 'Hairy People'."
"You can always turn back," Elidor
spat out. While equally perturbed, her rival's words had the effect of making
her determined to keep going. A malicious smile flickered on her face as she
continued, "I don't intend to. And, anyway, there shouldn't be any danger.
Charole told us the foreign bitch wouldn't dare enter the jungle."
When Dryaka had ordered his faction to follow
Dawn, the Protectress had said that her adherents would accompany them. As the
High Priest had known that the eagle's attendant was a very capable tracker and
might be useful in following Dawn, and as he was not enamoured with the idea of
riding to the main camp in the company of Charole's supporters, even with the
Council of Elders' messenger present, he had agreed.
Discussing how the foreign girl might act,
Charole had proved to share Dryaka's theory that she would, in all probability,
avoid penetrating too deeply into the woodland. Unfortunately, the Mun-Gatahs'
party found that she was doing so, and was showing no sign of turning towards
the plains. Instead, she seemed to be determined to enter the jungle, even
though it was the domain of the "Hairy People."
Already the terrain was becoming difficult
for the Mun-Gatahs to traverse it in a compact group. If the
trees
and bushes should grow in closer proximity, they would be compelled to ride in
single file. Doing so would render them even more vulnerable to ambush and
attack, especially if the girl belonged to a warrior race which made its home
in such country. None of them had any desire to fight against archers as
skilled as she had been, particularly when they were armed with bows of the
kind that had killed Tomlu. However, as neither faction would allow their
rivals to see they were worried, each waited and hoped the other would suggest
that they went back.
"Look!"
snapped one of Dryaka's male adherents, pointing ahead. "It's her!"
Following
the direction indicated by the speaker, the rest of the party saw Dawn. They
were relieved to notice that she was no longer carrying the bow and quiver of
arrows, although there was no time for them to consider and discuss the
omission. Becoming aware of their presence, she turned and started to run away.
"Get after her!"
Sabart screamed.
Despite
the rest of the party's eagerness to follow the order, there was some confusion
for a few seconds. To allow the eagle's attendant an unrestricted view of the
girl's tracks, the rest of the party had been compelled to let him take
the lead and walk ahead of them. On seeing the killer of his bird, belatedly,
as his eyes had been on her trail rather than watching his surroundings, he
let out a shriek of rage that was reminiscent of the cry the eagle had given as
it was plunging towards its intended victim. Turning, he leapt towards his
well-trained zebra. Obediently, knowing what was expected of it, the grar-gatah swung at an angle which would allow him to
reach the saddle. Vaulting astride, without touching the stirrups, he snatched
the reins from the saddlehom. In mounting as he had, he was blocking his
companions' paths and preventing them from giving chase.
"Get out of the way, you stupid grar-gatah!" Elidor screeched, having sent her mount
bounding forward in an attempt to get ahead of the other woman.
Ignoring the angry yell, particularly because
it had emanated from a member of the rival faction, the attendant set his
zebra into motion. Behind him, the angry banw-gatah riders
combined in heaping invective on his head as they followed. Hot for revenge,
he took no more notice than he had of Elidor's comment. Instead, he urged his grar-gatah to a reckless gallop.
Although the two women and four men sat
animals which were superior to the attendant's mount, the nature of their
surroundings was against them in their efforts to overtake him. Skilled riders
as they all were, none was willing to exhibit the complete disregard for danger
displayed by the small man as he guided his fast-moving grar-gatah through the trees.
Elidor
and Sabart began to draw ahead of the male banar-gatah riders. Not only were they lighter, but their
armament also gave them an advantage. Each had a short throwing spear, which
Dawn had not been able to see from her side of the chasm. It was carried in two
loops that were attached to the bottom of the saddle's left side skirt so as to
leave the owner's hands free. The men's nine foot lances could not be carried
in such a fashion. Ideal as they were for hunting or fighting on the plains,
the lances were poorly adapted for use in even comparatively open woodland.
Running
swiftly through the trees, Dawn could hear the hooves of her pursuers' mounts
and sensed that one was approaching much faster than the rest. She fought down
the temptation to look behind, knowing that she must devote all her attention
to watching where she was going. At that moment, she was in two minds over the
wisdom of having left her bow and arrows with the injured Telonga hunter.
Without them, she could move at a faster pace and more easily. However, she did
not have them to use if she needed to defend herself.
About fifty yards ahead, there was an
extensive area of fairly dense bushes. Dawn made for it, growing more and more
aware that one of her pursuers was rapidly closing with her. For all that, she
resisted the temptation to increase her pace. If she did so prematurely, she
would run herself into such a state of exhaustion that she would collapse.
Instead, she scanned the wall of foliage. It would offer her concealment and
could not be ridden through.
First,
however, Dawn had to find a way to enter the bushes!
Having
done so, she had to reach it before the first of the riders caught up with her!
Not
far to her right, Dawn detected the entrance to a game trail. It was fairly
wide, probably having been made by rhinoceros, elephants, or buffalo for she
had seen evidence that all three species occupied the woodland. If she was to
make use of the track, her pursuers would be able to ride along it.
Searching
for an alternative, the girl saw that there was a smaller path on her left.
Unfortunately, it was at a greater distance than the one at her right.
Would Dawn have sufficient time to reach the
more suitable entrance?
The hooves were getting very close now!
"Don't kill her, damn you!"
screamed an irate feminine voice from beyond the girl's nearest pursuer.
Hearing
the words, Dawn chanced a quick glance over her shoulder. She had expected the
leading rider to be fairly near, but not in such close proximity. It was, as
she had guessed, the eagle's attendant. Rage and hatred distorted his face as
he bore down on her as swiftly as his hard-driven zebra could travel. His right
hand was grasping a sword ready for use.
Dawn
doubted, from his expression, whether the man would heed the woman's shouted
instructions. So she started to think how she might avoid being cut down.
Having
seen the attendant draw his sword and being aware of how bitterly he had
resented the death of his eagle, Elidor had screamed out her warning. When it
did not appear to have any effect, she turned her head to glare at the smaller
but equally voluptuous woman who was riding stirrup to stirrup with her.
"If that damned grar-gatah kills her, I'll see him sent to the Quagga
God!" the brunette warned her rival. "Dryaka wants her alive!"
"So
does Charole," Sabart answered and looked back at the male banar-gatah riders. "Chanak!
Make him stop!"
With the man who had been addressed bawling a
warning, the two women swerved to pass on either side of a tree's trunk. They
did not attempt to resume the conversation when they came in sight of each
other again. Instead, they watched as the attendant drew closer to the fleeing
girl. From what they could see, he had no intention of taking advice or orders
and had forgotten that both the High Priest and the Protectress wanted her
captured alive and uninjured if possible.
Measuring
the rapidly diminishing distance between himself and
the girl, the attendant rose on his stirrups so that he could get added force
behind a blow. In his fury at seeing her, he had completely forgotten that his
party were supposed to take her prisoner and was preparing to cut her down
with his sword.
Waiting
until the head of his zebra was almost level with her left shoulder, thus
approaching the ideal position from which to deliver a slash at her, for she
believed he might choose to ignore the commands that had been yelled at him—Dawn
suddenly changed direction. Implementing the scheme which she had thought out,
she swerved in front of the animal. In passing, she whipped her left hand
around to slap the near side of the zebra's muzzle and let out the most hideous
shriek she could manage after having run so far and fast.
The
unexpected blow and the yell startled the little grar-gatah and caused it to shy. Tossing its head
wildly, it threw up its front legs and went into a rearing turn. Tensed ready
to deliver a blow that would have cleft open his victim's skull, the attendant
watched her disappear ahead of his mount. A moment later he was almost toppled
backwards by its erratic behaviour. Only by dropping his sword and grabbing the
horn in both hands, while his legs clamped tightly against the saddle's skirts,
did he prevent himself from falling onto the rack that had been used as a perch
for the eagle. Recovering his equilibrium with an effort that demanded every
bit of his riding skill, he found that he was being carried away from the girl.
Muttering invective, he reined the grar-gatah around
in a hurried and brutal fashion. By the time he was once more facing her, she
was far beyond his reach.
Satisfied
that she had averted the danger of being struck down by the man's sword, Dawn lengthened
her stride. With the sheath of the Randall knife slapping against her bare
thigh, she built up her speed as if she had been sprinting for the finishing
line in a foot-race. Conscious of her pursuers' angry shouts, she reached the
bushes. The mouth of the second game trail, towards which her evasion had
allowed her to head, was barely wide enough for her to enter. With the foliage
bmshing her arms on either side, she knew that the Mun-Gatahs would not be able
to ride in after her. On foot, she was sure that she could hold her own.
As Dawn had expected, the bushes were higher
than the top of her yead and the trail wound in such a fashion that she was
soon hidden from the entrance. Moving on at a slower pace, she replenished her
lungs and wiped the perspiration from her brow. She did not allow herself to
grow over confident and she remained alert for any evidence that the pursuit
was being continued.
Leaning
over, without slackening his grar-gatah's pace,
the attendant scooped up his sword from where it had fallen, its point stuck in
the ground. Then he made for the opening into which the girl had disappeared.
The rest of his party were rapidly approaching but he
ignored them. Seeing that there was no way of riding after her, he sprang from
his saddle. He felt uneasy, for the girl had already passed out of sight and he
had the Mun-Gatahs' inborn distrust of thickly overgrown terrain. However,
hatred overrode his other emotions and he plunged forward.
BVNDUK1
123
"Warn him not to kill her, Sabart!"
Elidor ordered, being determined to fix the blame on the other woman if the
attendant repeated his attempted disobedience of their leaders' wishes.
"Take her alive, Shanu!" Sabart
shouted, knowing what had prompted the brunette's words. "If you kill her,
I'll have you and all your family given to the Quagga God!"
For all the notice he took, the attendant
might have been stone deaf. Without so much as a glance at his companions as
they dashed up, he went along the track beyond their range of vision.
Bringing their banar-gatahs to a halt at the edge of the bushes, the two
women gazed at the mouth of the track. They did not offer to dismount, but
waited for their four male companions to join them.
"Can
you see anything of the girl, Elidor?" asked the senior of the High
Priest's adherents, standing on his stirrups as he tried to peer over the
bushes.
"No,
Mador," the brunette answered. "Charole's man has gone in after her.
If he catches her, he'll kill her. Lord Dryaka doesn't want her dead."
"I've
tried shouting to him, but
he's so angry he won't listen," Sabart protested petulantly and looked in
a pointed fashion at the rival faction. "Somebody should go in and make
him do as he's told."
"He's Charole's man," Mador pointed out, the words
having been aimed chiefly at him. "So if he kills
her------- ."
"He's
not likely to catch her in there, she's used to that kind of country,"
Chanak answered, as leader of the Protectress's faction. Like the other man, he
did not relish the thought of entering the narrow trail. "We'd better go
around and be waiting for her when she comes out."
"The
bushes look as if they go for a fair way in each direction," Mador
objected. "Even if she goes straight through, she'll probably have left
before we get to the other side."
"She's not likely to stay in there, Shanu
will drive her out even if he doesn't catch her," Chanak countered.
"I'm going around."
"We'll
leave a man each to watch this side, then the rest of
us can split up and go around," Mador suggested. "Come on. She'll
get away for sure if we sit talking."
With
that, the High Priest's male and female adherents turned to the right. Leaving
their companion, Eli-dor and Mador rode off at a trot.
"Stay
here, Stafak!" Chanak ordered, swinging his banar-gatah to the left.
"I
hope that fool doesn't kill her," Sabart remarked, nodding towards the
bushes as she and Chanak went along the edge. "But he will if he catches
her. If that
happens, none of them must
get back alive to tell Dryaka about it."
Walking
swiftiy along the trail, which was widening slightiy, Dawn wondered what to do
for the best. Clearly the Mun-Gatahs were determined to capture her. So they
would come in after her, or try to prevent her from leaving until she was
driven out by hunger and thirst. Most probably they would adopt the former
alternative. The latter would take far too long and was likely to offer her too
many opportunities to escape.
Even
as she came to that conclusion, the girl heard certain significant sounds on
the path behind her. Her bare feet made no noise, so she had little difficulty
in detecting those made by a pursuer's sandals.
One, or more?
Turning
around, Dawn could not see whoever was following her. However, she decided it
was only one man. Probably the eagle's attendant. The
expression of hatred on his face when he was trying to kill her from the back
of his zebra suggested that he would not have given up because the attempt had
failed.
Swinging
around and walking on, Dawn placed her right hand on the Sambar staghorn
"finger-grip" handle of her Randall knife.
For a moment, she toyed with the idea of taking cover and springing on the man
as he went by. Then her civilized instincts revolted against such an act.
Instead, she thought there might be another course of action that would serve
her purpose.
While talking as they had walked to the
stream, At-Vee had expressed much concern over Joar-Fane being alone in the
land of the "Hairy People." From his description, which she
suspected might have been somewhat highly-coloured regarding their
blood-thirsty habits and ferocity, she believed that
he was referring to the Mangani.
He had claimed that all of
his people feared them. That might apply even more to a nation of plains'
dwellers like the Mun-Gatah, provided they knew of the "Hairy People"
and were aware that they were very close to that mysterious race's domain.
Deciding that she had nothing to lose by
putting her idea to the test, for the man's footsteps warned he was coming
nearer, Dawn halted and tossed back her head. From her lips burst the distress
cry of a she-Mangani.
While the female's call
lacked the deep and awesome menace of a bull's challenge or victory roars, it
was still an ear-tingling and eerie sound.
Almost
before the last note of Dawn's call died away, nearly drowning the startled
exclamation which came from very close behind her, she heard an explosive
"whoof' not far in front of her.
It was the sound made by a black rhinoceros
that had been disturbed!
There was a crackling of broken foliage and
the bushes ahead of Dawn were agitated violently as the huge beast lurched to
its feet.
As
its kind always did when surprised, disturbed or alarmed, the rhinoceros rushed
forward. Pure chance directed it towards the girl. She knew that it was not
making a deliberate charge, but merely trying to escape and avoid contact with
whatever creature had caused the unexpected noise. For all that, its actions
were just as dangerous as if it was meaning to attack her.
Despite
the trail having widened slightly, Dawn knew that there was not sufficient room
for her to spring aside at the last moment and allow the beast to
blunder by. Nor would turning and running away
by of any greater use. Even if the Mun-Gatah had not been blocking her
retreat, the rhinoceros was capable of much greater speed than she could
attain.
CHAPTER
ELEVEN
They've
Caught The Foreign Bitch!
DISCARDING
the idea of flight, Dawn took the only action which was left to her. Darting
forward as if to meet the onrushing black rhinoceros, she watched until its
head dropped ready to hook up at her. Timing the move perfectly, she leapt high
into the air. Spreading her legs apart, she passed over the long anterior horn
as it jerked upwards. Her hands slapped on to the huge beast's back and helped
to thrust her onwards almost as if she was playing leapfrog. Aided by her own
and the animal's forward momentum, she was propelled over its rump to land on
the ground-There was a startled yell from somewhere to the girl's rear as she
ran forward the few steps needed to let her regain her equilibrium. Another
furious snort burst from the rhinoceros, followed by a piercing and
agony-filled human scream. Having recovered control of her movements, she came
to a halt and spun around. She found that the eagle's attendant must have
dashed around the curve of the game trail and straight into the path of the
enormous animal.
Having
missed the first object of its wrath, the rhinoceros did not bother to
differentiate between Dawn and the Mun-Gatah. Instead, its horn had been lowered
and snapped upwards with all its might. Taking him between
the thighs, the solid mass of hard-packed fibres sank into the man's body.
Blood gushed from the wound as he was thrown over the animal's head. Although
he landed on and bounced helplessly from the beast's back, the rhinoceros did
not attempt to turn.
Instead, it continued to rush straight ahead,
shattering a way through the undergrowth as though the foliage did not exist.
Dawn looked at the man and knew that he was
beyond any human aid. Then she glanced around in the hope of locating his
sword. As its scabbard was empty, he must have been carrying the weapon. In
which case, as it was nowhere to be seen, it must have left his hand when he
was tossed and landed among the bushes. Concluding that trying to find it would
be a waste of time, she turned and walked onwards.
On
reaching the fringe of the bushes, after having had to wind about due to the
vagaries of the trail, Dawn paused to survey her surroundings before emerging.
She looked to the right without finding anything to disturb her. However, as
her gaze turned in the opposite direction, she discovered that the smaller of
the women and one of the men were sitting their zebras about two hundred yards
away. They had either found a way through, or had passed around the end of the
bushes and were now scanning the edge in search of her.
Deciding that she had not decoyed her pursuers
far enough away from the injured Telonga hunter, Dawn ignored her first impulse
to withdraw into the comparative safety of the bushes. Instead, she walked out
in a cautious manner. It would, she hoped, lead the couple to believe that she
was unaware of their presence. The land ahead was still fairly open. However,
beyond a small stream which she suspected might be the one that had supplied
the means to bandage At-Vee's sprained ankle, the
trees began to grow more closely together.
"There she is!" shrieked the woman.
"Madorl Eli-dor! She's between us!"
"Stupid bitch!" Dawn thought, as the excited words reached
her ears.
Chanak was uttering a similar sentiment,
although —because of his companion's relationship with the Protectress of the
Quagga God—he too did not put it into words. What annoyed him was the fact that
Sabart's
shout would do more than just warn the foreign girl that she had been seen. It
would also bring the High Priest's adherents onto the scene. They had not yet
come into sight at the other end of the bushes and, but for Sabart's stupidity,
might not have appeared until after the quarry had been captured.
Acting as she believed the Mun-Gatahs would
expect of her, Dawn started to run. She had already gained some ground on her
pursuers. So she went at a swift lope which would allow her to carry on for a
long distance, or to increase speed if necessary. Hearing the sound of hooves
and voices to her right, she chanced a glance in that direction. At a somewhat
greater distance than the small woman and her companion, the brunette and
another of the men were turning from around the end of the bushes.
Coming
to the stream, Dawn built up her speed and leapt across. On landing, she
continued to run. Weaving through the trees, she found that she could hear
enough to make it unnecessary to look back at her pursuers. They were coming
closer, but not sufficiently so for her to feel any alarm. In fact, if the
cursing which occasionally reached her ears meant anything, now they had passed
over the stream, the men were finding increasing difficulty in moving through
the denser growth.
Having
covered about another quarter of a mile, Dawn decided that she had created
enough of a diversion. The terrain was becoming more densely overgrown and
she guessed that she must be approaching the transitory zone between the
woodland and the jungle. If the Mun-Gatahs lost her, they might be disinclined
to continue the search. Living as they did on the open plains, they could even
be afraid of getting lost if they penetrated any deeper into such an alien
environment. In which case, they would most likely take the easiest way out
and return along their tracks. If so, they would miss finding any trace of her
meeting with At-Vee and she would have achieved her purpose.
Fortune appeared to be continuing to smile on
Dawn.
Ahead, a tree had started to fall for some reason. It had been prevented from
doing so by its crown having become entangled with the foliage of a neighbour.
Leaning at an angle, it offered her the means by which she could travel as she
had been taught—and had frequently practiced—in her tomboy childhood. What was
more, although at least some of her pursuers were fairly close, a glance to her
rear informed her that she was hidden from their view.
In which case, she ought to be able to make a complete disappearance.
Alert
for shouts, or anything else that would suggest she had been seen, Dawn ran up
the inclined trunk. She went with the agility of a cat, but was not sorry that
she had left her bow and quiver of arrows with At-Vee. Useful as they
undoubtedly would have been if it had come to a fight, they would have made
climbing and the mode of progression that she was contemplating very
difficult. On reaching the branches of the supporting tree without having heard
anything to disturb her, she prepared to continue her flight in a way which she
felt sure would baffle the Mun-Gatahs. Even if she could not go very far, she
believed it would suffice for her needs.
As
always when about to start travelling through the branches, Dawn found herself
thinking with wry amusement of how this particular activity had invariably
been portrayed in the fictitious movies about Tarzan. If she could only find a
succession of conveniently positioned vines, everything would be so much
easier. Unfortunately that mode of passage through the trees had never existed
outside a movie production unit's sets.*
With the thought come and gone, for she would
need all her wits about her, the girl ran along a
sturdy branch until she felt it bending under her weight. While doing so, she
studied the nearest tree and selected a
*At no time in his twenty-four biographical
books on the life of Lord Greystoke does Edgar Rice Burroughs suggest that
Tarzan made use of vines when traveling through the trees.
suitable
place to alight. Then, making use of the bough's springiness, she leapt
forward. On arriving in the next tree, she deftly regained her balance and
darted to its trunk. Mounting higher, she picked out a limb which would allow
her to reach the foliage of the neighbouring tree.
Although effective in allowing Dawn to move
without leaving tracks on the ground, her passage through the lower terraces
of the jungle was of necessity a noisy process. She had to crash through the
leaves, breaking twigs and small branches to attain a safe point of arrival.
So she stopped in the third tree and found a position from which she could see
the ground.
From all appearances, the two parties had not
yet come together. While the smaller woman and her companion were already
passing the partially fallen tree, there was no sign of the second couple. Dawn
found that she could see the first pair and, although she could not hear what
they were saying, guessed that they had been attracted by the noise she had been
making as she moved onwards through the branches. They were staring upwards,
paying more attention to the foliage than the ground. The man had either lost,
or discarded, his lance, for he no longer had it with him. The woman was
looking nervously upwards, alternating the scrutiny with glances darted from
side to side at the bushes and tree trunks.
Passing around the bole of the tree, Dawn
found that it was on the edge of a small clearing. Measuring the distance to be
crossed, she decided that she ought to be able to leap over. There was a
convenient, sturdy branch that she could catch hold of and, by using simple
brachiation, swing from it to a more secure perch.
After
a moment's thought, the girl considered that the chance might be worth taking.
Once in the other tree, she would give the distress call of a she-Mangani. There was just a slight chance that Bunduki
would hear and identify it. In which case, he would come as quickly as possible
to her aid. Even if he did not, the cry might serve a useful purpose. From the
look of the woman, she was already nervous. Hearing the far from pleasant
scream emanating out of the foliage, she and her companions might be frightened
into turning back.
Once
again utilizing the resilience of the branch along which she was advancing as a
means of added propulsion, Dawn threw herself forward
and up as if diving from a spring board. As she was flying through the air, she
thrust her arms ahead of her. Just before her hands—with the fingers bent and
the thumbs tucked in but of the way—came into contact with the branch, she saw
a slight movement on it.
It was a snake!
Dawn
did not have any unreasoning fear of reptiles, but she had a very sensible
caution regarding some of them. She knew that out of the 2,300 species of
living snakes, divided into twelve families, only about a third were poisonous
to a greater or lesser degree. Of those which were venomous, a mere
seven-per-cent were capable of causing death to a human being. However, despite
the odds favouring the snake being harmless, she felt disinclined to take the
chance. Nor could she prevent the involuntary withdrawal of her left hand,
which would have descended on to the reptile.
Although the girl's right fingers hooked over
the branch clear of the snake, she had been thrown off balance. Swinging by the
one arm, she felt her grasp slipping. Then her head struck the limb a glancing
blow, but it was sufficient to stun her. Losing her hold, she toppled into the
denser foliage below her. It began to bend under her limp and unresisting
weight.
Down
and down Dawn went. Although vaguely aware of the predicament she was in, her
mind refused to function. In a way, her dazed state was fortunate. If she had
tried to halt her progress, she could easily have made things worse. Instead, she
was tumbling limply and with her body yielding rather than trying to resist
when it came up against the branches.
Dropping the final ten feet, the girl was
lucky in that she came down on a thick layer of leaves and moss. Being so
relaxed, the worse effects of the fall were broken. For all that, her landing
jarred all the breath from her body. After a brief period when everything
appeared to explode into a brilliant burst of colours, blackness descended like
a cloud over her and she lay still.
Having
heard the commotion as Dawn fell and noticing the silence that followed it,
Sabart and Chanak advanced in a wary and watchful fashion. As yet, Elidor and
Mador had not caught up with them. Nor did they offer to wait until the High
Priest's adherents could do so. Chanak had discarded his lance soon after
crossing the stream, having found it more of a hindrance while passing through
the denser growth, especially as he wanted to keep ahead of the other two. So
he was riding with his sword unsheathed and in his right hand.
For
her part, Sabart was perturbed and not a little afraid. Ever since the eerie
cry had arisen from the depths of the bushes, followed by sounds such as a
rhinoceros made when it was attacking and the scream of a man—the eagle's
attendant, Shanu, most likely— in mortal agony, she had been experiencing a
sensation of superstitious dread. Nor had it grown less at the events which had
followed.
According
to Chanak, the foreign girl's tracks had disappeared in a way that suggested
she had climbed the inclined trunk of a tree. However, there had been no sign
of her among the foliage. Instead, they had heard noises from the branches of
the nearby trees which had been suggestive of those made by a monkey leaping
from one to another—except that something larger and heavier was responsible
for them.
Remembering the various stories she had heard
about the "Hairy People" and being uncomfortably aware that she was
approaching what was said to be their domain, Sabart was troubled by her
thoughts. She could not forget how Tomlu had been killed, with the arrow sunk
so deeply into his chest through his
breastplate.
No ordinary human being could have done such
a thing!
What if------- ?
"There she is!"
Chanak's
excited comment cut through Sabart's uneasy sequence of thoughts. Looking in
the direction which he was indicating, she let out a sigh of relief and urged
her banar-gatah forward with a greater willingness than she
had up to now been displaying.
Crossing
the small clearing, Sabart and Chanak halted the zebras. After a quick glance
around, they dismounted and stood over Dawn's unconscious body. They could
hear Elidor and Mador approaching and exchanged delighted glances.
"We've
got her, Chanak!" Sabart enthused, unaware that a similar sentiment was being
expressed by her rival.
Elidor
and Mador had not made any special effort to catch up with the Protectress's
supporters. Instead, they had been content to follow at a distance which would
have allowed them to retire if the foreign girl had led them into an ambush.
They had closed the gap somewhat, due to the other two slowing down when they
reached the place where Dawn had taken to the trees.
"May the Quagga God curse them!" Elidor spat out, glaring furiously through the
undergrowth and across the clearing. "They've caught the foreign
bitch!"
"Dryaka
won't be pleased when we go back and say Charole's got her," Mador
answered, scowling malevolently and making what his companion considered to be
an understatement.
"I
wouldn't want to have to go back and tell him," Elidor declared, bringing
her banar-gatah to a halt. "And I've no intention of doing it"
In the clearing by Dawn's body, Chanak nodded
his agreement with Sabart's statement. Then he turned to his zebra. He opened
the left side saddlebag and removed a long rawhide thong. Going to Dawn and
kneeling at her side, he rolled her onto her stomach.
After
pulling her hands behind her back, ignoring her groan and feeble movements as
she struggled to regain consciousness, he used the thong to secure her wrists.
Having done so, he drew the Randall knife from its sheath.
Although Chanak's primary intention had been
to disarm the girl, the look and feel of the weapon attracted his attention.
He did not realize that he was holding an example of what Judge Roy S. Tinney,
secretary of the American Academy of Arms, had described as "a refined
and perfected Bowie," or that the eight-inch-long, clip-pointed blade was
hand-made from the finest Swedish tool steel. However, he could tell that it
might be as special and unusual as the bow and arrows with which she had
dispatched Charole's. eagle and Tomlu.
"This
is mine!" the man
stated, showing the knife to Sabart.
"Charole
will see that you get it when we deliver this bitch to her," the woman
answered, stirring the weakly struggling and groaning girl with her left toe.
"I can hardly wait to see what she'll do to her."
Being so full of themselves
and absorbed in their respective sources of delight—Sabart because Dawn had
been captured, and Chanak because he had gained almost certain possession of
something which he knew was very special—two very important matters had slipped
right out of their minds.
When
sending the party to capture Dawn, Dryaka had deliberately avoided any mention
of the importance that he attached to also obtaining her bow and arrows. For
all that, her captors ought to have given thought to the fact that she was no
longer carrying them.
Of
infinitely greater importance to them personally was the fact that neither was
giving any consideration to how their rivals might react when learning that
they had achieved their purpose.
The latter omission was to
cost them dearly.
Sabart
was the first to become aware that they were being remiss in their behaviour.
Hearing the sound of hooves behind her, she turned with the intention of
displaying her triumph to her rival. What she saw drove all thoughts of
enjoyment and satisfaction from her head. One glance was all she needed to
realize that she and her companion were in grave danger.
While
Elidor and Mador had entered the clearing side by side, only the man was
mounted. That the woman was on foot of her own free will was shown by the thing
which she was carrying in her right hand. That, and the way in which Mador was
sitting on his banar-gatah
gave a grim warning that
they did not intend to surrender their claim to the prisoner, despite her
having fallen into their rivals' hands.
"Chanakl" Sabart screamed, sending
her right hand
across towards the hit of her sword. "Look behi------------- !"
Darting
forward, Elidor drew back and snapped forward her right arm. The spear which
she had drawn from its retaining loops on the skirt of her saddle left her hand
and flashed across the clearing. Its point struck Sabart just below the left
breast and impaled her before she could even start to draw the sword or to
attempt any kind of evasion.
With
her warning ending in a shriek of agony, the stricken woman spun around and
bumped into Chanak. It could not have happened at a worse moment. Having
glanced around, he too had appreciated the peril and was preparing to counter
it. He was thrusting himself erect, letting Dawn's knife drop as he reached
for the sword—a more familiar weapon—that he had sheathed before securing their
prisoner. Rebounding after having knocked her companion off balance, Sabart
clutched ineffectually at the spear's handle and fell alongside Dawn.
As the spear was leaving Elidor's hand, a
touch from Mador's heels gave his well-trained banar-gatah the signal which it had been expecting since
its rider had lowered his lance to the "ready" position. The animal
bounded forward, guided by knee pressure rather than control from the reins
held in the man's left hand. It
BVNDVKI
137
built up
speed rapidly, making for what its instincts said was the object of its
master's attentions.
Watching Chanak staggering from the collision
with Sabart, Mador let out a hiss of triumph. The mishap had put the Protectress's
adherent at his mercy. However, he knew better than to take chances with a man
as experienced as Chanak was in fighting on foot against a mounted,
lance-carrying opponent. With the banar-gatah carrying
him into striking distance, he aligned his weapon at a downwards angle.
Chanak
recognized his terrible predicament, but could do nothing to avert it.
Nor did he have any false hopes about surviving the encounter.
While
a Mun-Gatah's breastplate would turn aside the usual kind of arrows with which
the wearer was brought into conflict, their own lances were a very different
proposition. At the end of the nine foot shaft of male bamboo, the head had a
twelve-inches-long, diamond-section steel blade that was two-and-a-half-inches
at its widest and tapered to an acute point. It was retained in position by a
pair of steel languets some three feet long which extended down the pole and
were secured by six screws on each side.* All in all, it made a very deadly
weapon and was one which the Mun-Gatah warriors had brought to the peak of efficiency.
Before
Chanak could regain his equilibrium, the point of Mador's lance met the centre
of his chest. The High Priest's supporter had the rear end of the shaft tucked
under his right arm and was pressing it tight against his ribs. In addition to
his hand grasping the shaped grip at the point of balance, greater firmness
and security was achieved from the rawhide loop that was attached just above it
and encircled his wrist.
Aided
by the banar-gatah's onrushing impetus, the lance's head cut
through Chanak's breastplate and into
♦The languets of the British Army's
1848 Pattern lance, which has similar dimensions, were secured by only five
screws.
the
flesh below. The impact threw him backwards and form his feet. Turning his hand
as his victim went down and his mount rushed by, Mador released bis hold and
slipped his wrist from the loop. Reining the banar-gatah around, he drew his sword and, when the turn
was completed, sprang from the saddle. He knew there would be no need for the
second weapon. Pinned to the ground by the lance, Chanak lay supine with his
limbs flailing spasmodically. Even that movement ended before Mador reached
him.
"She's
ours now, Mador!" Elidor stated delightedly, placing her foot on Sabart's
lifeless body as an aid in retrieving her spear. "We'll have to do
something about Staf ak, though."
"We'll give him the same as these
two," Mador stated. "Then, when we get back, we'll say that we were
separated and pretend to be surprised that they aren't back."
"She could spoil that for us,"
Elidor warned, indicating the still unconscious girl.
"Not if she doesn't know that's
happened," Mador pointed out. "Take them and their banar-gatahs into the woods where she'll not be able to
see them Then go and km Stafak. Ill look after her."
"Make sure that look is all you do," Elidor advised, knowing the man. "Dryaka
wanted her for himself."
CHAPTER
TWELVE
I'll
Break Every Bone In Your Body
'•BUNDUKI!
Bunduki! Help!"
Standing on the crotch of the tree into which
he had climbed to make preparations for spending the night, the blond giant
dropped the leaves he had gathered on to the pile of branches as he heard
Joar-Fane's terror-filled voice screaming the words.
Having
heard Dawn's distress call, without having realized that it was she who had
given it, Bunduki had—much to Joar-Fane's annoyance—insisted upon resuming
their journey. He had reduced her irritation by explaining to her his plans for
ensuring their safety from prowling carnivores during the hours of darkness.
Accepting the situation with what good grace she could muster, she had
apparently consoled herself by considering and anticipating the pleasures which
she felt sure lay ahead. Certainly, she had been cheerful enough as she had
walked along at his side.
By the time the sun had started to set,
Bunduki and Joar-Fane had been approaching the more open woodland. Completely
unaware that Dawn had been taken captive by the Mun-Gatahs, although he still
had the subconscious belief that she was somewhere to the north-west and might
be in danger, the blond giant had realized that trying to continue the search
after night had fallen would be futile. So he had selected a tree which met his
requirements and, while Joar-Fane had taken the remains of the capybara's leg
to wash it in a stream they had passed a short while earlier, he had
set
about making the kind of a bed that chimpanzees and the Mangani used in the branches of trees.
Looking downwards, Bunduki found that the undergrowth
prevented him from discovering the cause of Joar-Fane's cry for help. So he did
not waste time in making useless speculation. Instead, he grabbed the vine
which he had cut so that its end was dangling to the ground in order to help
the girl attain their bed-platform. Going down hand over hand at considerable
speed, he let go and dropped when certain he could do so without risk of
injury. Although his bow and arrows were lying at the foot of the tree, he did
not pause to gather them up. As soon as he alighted, he started to run towards
the point from which he had last heard the girl.
Bunduki
did not know what to expect as he sprinted through the bushes. Nor was there
anything to supply a clue. After her first shouted words, Joar-Fane had been
silent. Nor had he heard any other sounds that might have accounted for her
state of alarm. It was possible that she had fallen foul of Bui-Mole's family, or another group of Mangani. Or it might be some kind of animal which was
stalking her. No matter what it was, there was nothing to suggest that it had
caught or was attacking her.
Passing around the edge of a clump of bushes,
the blond giant received the answer.
At the far side of the clearing, Joar-Fane
was standing with her back against the trunk of a tree. She was grasping a
thick piece of a branch in the manner of a club and glaring at the tall,
shapely, black-haired woman who was stalking arrogantly towards her. Nor was
the woman alone. There were three men present. The largest was standing with
his back to the blond giant, watching Joar-Fane and the woman. Advancing along
the edges of the clearing, the other two were positioned to cut off the girl if
she tried to run either way.
All
of the quartet were dressed and armed in much the same manner. While the
woman's hair had no covering, the men had on leather helmets decorated on each
side by the embossed head of a horse—or a zebra. All wore one piece, short,
white tunics—the woman's being sleeveless—and had a sword shaped like the gladius of a Roman soldier in a scabbard on the left
side of the belt. They had sandals on their feet and leather greaves protected
their shins.
Ground hitched by their dangling one-piece
reins, the four saddled animals among the trees at the left side of the
clearing supplied the blond giant with a clue to the quartet's identity. He had
already suspected that they might be the party sent by the Mun-Gatahs' People-Taker
to recapture Joar-Fane. There was a white garment of some kind hanging from
each saddle's can-tie, but he did not waste time in trying to decide what they
might be.
"Watch her, Latica!" called the
biggest man, drawing Bunduki's attention from the zebras. He was clearly more
amused than perturbed by the girl's threatening attitude. "She might be
an Amazon in disguise."
"I'll 'Amazon' her!" the woman
answered, without looking back or offering to draw her sword. "Put that
stick down, damn you, or I'll break every bone in your
body."
"You
try it and see what I'll do!" Joar-Fane replied spiritedly, seeing the
blond giant at the edge of the clearing and wanting to prevent the Mun-Gatahs
from becoming aware of his presence. "Fm not afraid of
you."
Having
reached his conclusion regarding the identity of the quartet, Bunduki was
taking advantage of their preoccupation with the girl and was moving forward.
Noticing that she had seen him, he was pleased by the way she was acting. She
was behaving in a much braver and more intelligent manner than he. would have expected.
Remembering
what Joar-Fane had told him about the Mun-Gatahs, the blond giant doubted
whether he could save her by peaceful means. Nor, if he was correct in his
assumption of where he had been transported by his unknown saviours, could he
follow the dictates of the civilized society in which he had been born and
raised. He must be ready to fight and kill if he wanted to survive and rescue
the girl.
Accepting that there was no other choice,
Bun-duki ran towards the largest of the men. His bare feet made littie sound on
the springy turf and the man, who almost matched him in size and bulk, was not
aware of his approach. That was all to the good and the big blond hoped to turn
it to his advantage. If he could take the man by surprise and use him as a hostage,
it might still be possible to avoid bloodshed.
"You're up against a fierce one th-------------- 1"
the war-
rior at the right commenced.
The
words died away as the speaker became aware of a figure coming from the bushes
ahead of him. Dressed in a jaguar-skin loincloth, the newcomer had his right
leg bandaged by leaves and was limping along using a stout spear as a crutch.
In his left hand, he held a weapon of a kind the Mun-Gatah had never seen. He
looked like a Telonga, except that those with whom the People-Taker's party had
come into contact were never armed, nor so muscular.
Studying
the newcomer's black hair, dark skin and Polynesian features, Bunduki assumed
that he belonged to Joar-Fane's people. However, despite the thing like a czdkan that he was carrying, his injured leg would reduce his effectiveness in
a fight.
"An
armed Telonga, as I live and breathe!" the warrior
on the right shouted derisively and looked behind
him.
"I'll need your he----------- !" Once, again he did not
complete a speech. Instead, he started to swing
around and his right hand went to the hilt of the sword as he shouted,
"Behind you!"
Hearing
and seeing the change in his companion's words and behaviour, the third male member
of the party glanced back. What he saw caused him to duplicate the
second's actions. The woman threw a look to her rear and half-turned, reaching
for her sword. Unaware of At-Vee's arrival on the scene, as he was coming
from behind her, Joar-Fane let out a yell and, swinging the club above her head
in both hands, sprang forward.
Seeing first one, then the other warrior
turning and preparing to arm themselves, Bunduki abandoned bis ideas of trying
to take the nearest man as a hostage. The other two appeared to be devoting
their attentions to him and ignoring the newcomer. Nor, if the painful way in
which he was moving meant anything, would the Telonga be of much use. Certainly
he could not come quickly enough to be of assistance. So Bunduki put aside his
original notion of giving the largest man a chance to turn and fight The odds were sufficientiy high without him adding to them
by pandering to ideals of fair play and chivalry. He knew that such sentiments
would not be accorded to him if their positions were reversed.
Increasing
his speed, Bunduki hurled himself into the air in such a way that his body was
almost horizontal. His left shoulder rammed into the centre of the man's back.
Struck by the full force of the blond giant's two hundred and twenty pound
frame, the Mun-Gatah was knocked from his feet. Nor did it end there. There was
a sharp crack, followed by a scream of pain, as his spine snapped.
Going
down with the stricken man, Bunduki rolled clear and started to rise. His right
hand flashed across to close on the ivory hilt of the bowie knife, sliding it
from its sheath. There was not a second to lose. Already the two warriors were
converging upon him.
Alerted
by Joar-Fane's yell, the woman looked back at her. Finding that the girl was
attempting to attack her, she let out an angry snort. Swivelling around swiftly,
she stepped forward and, before Joar-Fane could bring the weapon down, lashed
around her right arm. Caught at the side of the head by a powerful backhand
blow, the little Telonga went spinning. The club flew from her hand and she
measured her length, dazed and helpless, on the ground.
Still
in the process of rising, Bunduki analyzed the situation with great rapidity.
There was, he decided, one thing in his favour. The man to his left was much
closer than the other warrior and showed no sign of slowing down. Therefore
they could not launch a concerted attack.
Wanting
to gain the acclaim that would accrue from avenging what he guessed had been a
fatal assault on his leader, the first warrior had no
intention of taking the sensible course of co-operating with his companion.
Instead, he bounded onwards at an increased pace. Arriving within range, he
launched a savage downwards chop with his sword at the side of the blond
giant's neck.
Thrusting
himself erect, BunduM held the bowie knife with its blade projecting in front
of his thumb and forefinger. It was a grip that allowed him to utilize the
weapon to the best advantage, permitting a cut, thrust, or backhand slash with
equal facility.
Bringing
the knife across, the blond giant let the flat of the blade meet and sweep
aside the Mun-Gatah's sword. Then, disengaging his weapon, he delivered a
devastatingly effective counter attack. Hissing to the right,
the knife—which had an edge as sharp as a barber's razor—passed under the man's
chin. The steel sliced inwards, laying open the Mun-Gatah's throat to
the bone with a force that twisted him aside. The sword fell from his
fingers and they rose to clutch at the hideous, blood-spurting mortal wound.
Collapsing to his knees, he fell forward on to his face.
Seeing the second of his party struck down by
the big blond did not deter the last of the warriors. He continued to rush
towards Bunduki and was so close that he felt sure he could make his attack
before there would be any chance of evasion or reprisals.
Alert
to the danger, the blond giant prepared to defend himself. He saw that the man
was adopting almost identical tactics to those of the first assailant. Once
again, the attack came in the form of a round-house swing. Except that this
time it was travelling horizontally rather than at a downwards angle.
Pivoting to face his
assailant, Bunduki bent his right knee and thrust his left leg backwards in a
long stride. Doing so caused him to sink below the arc of the sword's swing.
Even as it went over his head, stirring his hair it passed so close, he turned
the knuckles of his right hand uppermost. Out drove the bowie knife in an
almost classic lunge. Carried onwards by his momentum, the man paid the price
of failure. Spiking its clip point into his stomach, the bowie's
blade sank almost to its brass lugged guard.
While
dealing with the third male Mun-Gatah, Bun-duki did not forget the woman. Even
as his knife was entering the man's body, he looked to find out what she was
doing. Like her companions, she appeared to consider him a greater
danger than the Telonga hunter. That was true. Due to the "putting
away," the People-Taker and his escort had only come into contact with
the placid, unresisting male members of the Telonga nation. So she was
discounting the Telonga hunter as a serious factor—as the two warriors had— and
felt that he could be disposed of easily enough once the blond giant had been
killed.
With
the latter thought in mind, and ignoring the Telonga hunter and the motionless
girl, the woman advanced across the clearing towards Bunduki. Judging from the
way she held her sword she might prove as dangerous as either of the warriors,
or possibly more so if she had taken a warning from the results of their rash
behaviour and was skilled with the weapon. Bunduki straightened his right leg
and, driving himself erect, he swung the stricken man to the left in a way
that ripped the bowie's blade through flesh and freed
it.
Practically disembowelled and letting go of
his sword, the dying man tottered in a half circle until he was facing the
woman. She stared in horror at the intestines which were oozing from the
gaping tear in his stomach and came to an involuntary halt. Then, as she
watched him crumpling like a rag doll that had had its stuffing removed, her
nerve failed her. Instead of continuing with her advance, she fled at an angle
that would take her to the waiting zebras but would at the same time keep her
well beyond the reach of the blond giant who had felled all of her companions.
Throwing
a glance at Joar-Fane, Bunduki was relieved to see that she was moving and
that there was no blood to suggest she had been stabbed. The hunter was
hurrying towards her with his face showing mingled anxiety and pain. Feeling
sure that the girl was not seriously hurt, the blond giant started to go
towards the woman.
Having no desire for further tolling, Bunduki
did not want to catch and deal with Latica. Nor did he wish to be encumbered by
a prisoner. He had something else in mind. Being an excellent horseman, he was
hoping to gain possession of at least one of the zebras. He felt sure that he
could ride it. In which case, it could prove very useful in his search for his
adoptive cousin.
On reaching the animals, having seen that the
blond giant was following her and misinterpreting his motives, the woman acted
with panic-induced speed. Dropping her sword instead of sheathing it, she
grabbed the reins of her ocha-gatah. Taking
them over its head, she caught hold of the saddlehorn and vaulted on to its
back. Almost as soon as her rump hit the leather, she sent her mount bounding
forward without as much as a glance at the dead companions she was leaving
behind.
Deciding
that the woman was too frightened to come back, Bunduki hurried towards the
three remaining zebras. Although they appeared to have been made a Utde restless by her hurried departure, none of them
showed any signs of bolting. Studying them as he was cleaning the blood from
his knife and remrning it to its sheath, he unconsciously matched Dawn's summation
regarding their physical conformation and possible relationship to wild zebras.
One reminded him of the subspecies Equus Grevy, but
the other two had the colours and striping of Equus Burchelli.
A
glance across the clearing reassured Bunduki that Joar-Fane had not been
seriously injured. The hunter was kneeling somewhat awkwardly, holding her in
his arms and she was behaving much as she had after the blond giant had saved
her from the Mangani.
Pleased to find that the girl was unharmed
and obviously on good terms with the man, Bunduki turned his attention to the
zebras. Going to the banar-gatah,
although he did not
identify it by its Mun-Gatah name, he acted as he would if he had been
approaching a strange horse. Speaking in a low, soothing voice and avoiding any
sudden movements, he reached out slowly with his right hand. The banar-gatah snorted, tossed its head, then calmed and
allowed him to stroke its sleek neck.
With
friendly relations established, the blond giant examined the banar-gatah's furnishings. The saddle had a low horn,
double girths and wide, iron-bound wooden stirrups much like a Texas range rig.
There was a throwing spear in two loops attached to the left side of its skirt,
suggesting that its rider mounted on that flank. The bridle was made so that,
by unbuckling the straps, the bit, snaffle and reins could be removed but the
head-stall—from which a coiled tether-rope was dangling—would remain in place.
There
was, Bunduki decided, something strange about the three animals' equipment. It
was not the fact that the Mun-Gatahs had stirrups. These had been invented in
China about 400 b.c. and were in widespread use throughout the
known world by 700 a.d. What puzzled him was the way in which the
rigs had been manufactured. While the gear on the other two zebras suggested
ownership by persons of a lower social standing, there was a similarity
between them that was rare in hand-made products. Obviously the Mun-Gatahs had
very skilful craftsmen to produce such good quality work. Yet it almost seemed
that they had been using modern machinery and techniques; but that was impossible.
Turning
his attention to the white garment that was rolled and passed through two loops
on the cantle of the saddle, Bunduki drew it out. It had the smooth, silky,
shiny appearance of the wool, cotton, or acetate rayon fabrics known as
"sharkskin." Opening it out, he found it to be a kind of sleeveless
over-tunic with a cowl for the head. Emblazoned on its front was a remarkably
well drawn and coloured illustration of a rearing, horse-like animal. After a
moment's study, he decided that it was supposed to be a quagga such as had been
extinct for many years. He was fascinated, not only by the portrayal of a long
deceased kind of creature but at the way the design was imprinted on the
material. The latter exceeded anything he had seen produced by primitive
people.
With
his curiosity aroused, the blond giant hung the garment over the banar-gathah's saddle and picked up the woman's sword. He
found it both interesting and puzzling. While the metal of its blade could not
compare with the Swedish high carbon tool steel from which his Smithsonian bowie had been created, it was a much better temper than he
had expected. What was more, the design and finish of
the weapon suggested a high standard of workmanship. So much
so that it, like the garment and the zebras' equipment, might have been
produced by machines rather than hand. Yet nothing he had seen about the
Mun-Gatahs had implied that they belonged to a race that was capable of
designing, manufacturing or even operating a piece of sophisticated modern
machinery. It was, of course, possible that they bought, looted or traded their
weapons from a more advanced nation. •
Once more, the urgency of Bunduki's desire to
find his adoptive cousin caused him to turn his thoughts from a puzzling
aspect. His handling of the banar-gatah had
so far been successful. Realizing that the same might not apply when he
attempted to ride it, he decided to take precautions against losing them all.
Dropping the sword and opening out the tether ropes of the two ocha-gatahs, he fastened them to stout branches of the
bushes. With the spare animals secured and prevented from escaping, even if the
other should throw him and bolt, he took its reins and led it into the clearing.
On
his return, the blond giant found Joar-Fane and the man kneeling facing each
other and talking. Suddenly, the girl gave a gasp and turned her head in his
direction.
"Bunduki!" Joar-Fane gasped. "At-Vee has met
Dawn------- ."
"Where
is she?" the blond giant demanded, striding forward.
"I don't know," At-Vee admitted,
then explained
the circumstances of his meeting with, and separation
from, Dawn. "I heard the call of a 'Hairy Woman,'
then the sound of a rhinoceros attacking and a
scream------- ."
"Was it Dawn?"
Bunduki growled.
"I
don't think so," At-Vee replied. "It sounded like a man. But she
hasn't come back, nor have I heard anything else until Joar-Fane called for
help."
"Where did you hear the call of the
'Hairy Woman'?" Bunduki inquired. "Which direction, I mean."
"There," At-Vee answered, pointing
to the west. "It was a long way off, but not in the jungle."
Looking
in the direction indicated by the hunter, Bunduki decided to try and make
contact with his adoptive cousin by the same means which he had employed
shortly after waking that morning. If she was in the vicinity, she ought to be
able to identify his voice. Provided she could do so, she would respond and
guide him to her. Without thinking to warn his companions, he threw back his
head and thundered out the challenge roar of a bull Mangani.
Startled
exclamations burst from Joar-Fane and At-Vee, but the effect of the awesome
bellow was even more marked in the reactions of the zebras. Letting out snorts
of alarm, they all began to rear. Before the banar-gatah could bolt, Bunduki sprang forward and caught
hold of its reins. He brought its wildly pawing forelegs back to earth and hung
on grimly, being determined not to lose such a valuable means of transport.
While doing so, he also tried to listen for any answering call from Dawn. A
bull Mangani replied from far off in the jungle, but the
sound he was hoping to hear did not reach him.
Having brought the banar-gatah back under control and looked around to make
sure that the two ocha-gatahs
had neither torn free from
the bushes nor injured themselves in their attempts to do so, the blond giant
turned to Joar-Fane and At-Vee.
"Did you hear
anything?" Bunduki asked.
"Only
the 'Hairy Man' in the jungle," At-Vee answered, realizing what the big
blond had been trying to do. "Dawn hasn't answered."
"Perhaps
she didn't hear you, Bunduki," Joar-Fane suggested. "She might be too
far away."
"She might," the
blond giant agreed.
"Or they could have captured her and
won't let her reply," At-Vee offered. "I should never have let her
"From what I know about Dawn, you
couldn't have stopped her once she'd made up her mind," Bunduki replied.
"I'll have to go and look for her."
Even
as the blond giant spoke, he glanced at the rapidly darkening sky. Any search
that he commenced would be of short duration before the coming of night
brought it to a halt. So he decided that he would have to leave it until
daybreak. The decision did not come easily. While either of the possibilities
mentioned by his companions could explain Dawn's failure to respond to his call,
there was another alternative. Much as he hated the thought, his adoptive
cousin could be dead.
CHAPTER
THIRTEEN
Let
Me Make Her Talk, Lord Dryaka
SITTING
astride the grar-gatah
that had belonged to the
eagle's attendant, with her wrists secured by a set of rawhide hobbles—the
metal swivel connecting link of which was fastened to the saddlehorn—and ankles
tied to the stirrups, Dawn Drunimond-Clayton surveyed her surroundings with
considerable misgivings.
Leading
their captive's mount by its tether rope, Elidor rode along oozing pride and
arrogance. She was delighted by the interest her party's arrival was causing as
they passed through the Mun-Gatahs' hunting camp. Displaying an equal
satisfaction, Mador and the second male warrior rode one on either side of
their tawny-haired prisoner.
On
returning to full consciousness the previous afternoon, Dawn had become aware
that she was in a terrible predicament and had sought for a way out of it. Only
Mador had been with her when she had regained the use of her faculties.
However, although she had been ready to resist most strenuously if he had attempted
to take advantage of her hands being bound behind her back, she had realized
the futility of trying to attack him. So she had not attempted to. Instead, she
had remained passive in the hope that she might lull him into a sense of
over-confidence thus offering her an opportunity to escape. Before it could
happen, Elidor and the second of the High Priest's male adherents had
returned. They had been leading the grar-gatah and,
after changing Dawn's bonds for the hobbles, the men had lifted her onto its
saddle and fastened
her
there. With that done, they had led her back in the direction from which they
had come.
At first, while awaiting
whatever might be in store for her, Dawn had been puzzled by the absence of her
original pair of pursuers. Noticing two patches of freshly spilled blood on
the ground, she guessed what had happened but kept her thoughts to herself.
That had been a wise decision. Wanting to avoid having their lies exposed by
the girl when they reached the hunting camp, Elidor and Mador had removed the
bodies and their victims' mounts before she had recovered. Then the woman had
gone and disposed of Charole's third supporter while collecting the last member
of her party.
Although
Dawn had had no difficulty in sitting the grar-gatah, its gait being similar to that of an ordinary
riding horse, she had contrived to hide the fact from her captors. By
pretending to have no knowledge of equestrian matters, she had managed to delay
them and reduce the speed at which they were travelling. Night had found them
on the plains and they made camp on the banks of a small stream.
While lifting Dawn from the saddle, the men's
hands had wandered over her private parts. However, neither had attempted to go
any further than feeling her body. Despite her relief at not having been
sexually assaulted, she had found the omission disturbing. To her way of
thinking, it had suggested she might be being reserved for some other fate.
Dawn
had heard and recognized Bunduki's challenge roar, but had known that to try
and answer would be inadvisable. If she had made the attempt, she would have
been quickly, and, in all probability, painfully silenced. So she remained
silent. She noticed how nervous the awesome bellow had made the zebras, even
though it had been a long way off.
Knowing that Bunduki was searching for her
had heartened Dawn. She had deduced that he might have been guided by a similar
subconscious impulse to that which had brought her to the woodland. However,
she had accepted that there was little likelihood of him finding her that
night. Even if he should meet At-Vee and learn what had happened, he could not
follow her tracks in the dark.
At sunrise, after having spent an
uncomfortable night, Dawn had been given a meal of what she had guessed was the
Mun-Gatahs' equivalent of biltong. Then
she was placed on the grar-gatah
and the journey was
resumed. She had continued with her delaying tactics and had contrived to watch
their back trail without making her interest in it obvious to her captors.
Unfortunately, she had seen nothing to even suggest that Bunduki was following
her tracks.
Shortly
after noon, the party came into sight of the Mun-Gatahs' hunting camp. It was
situated in the bottom of a large hollow and on the banks of a lake. Studying
the way that the camp was laid out, Dawn had formed
conclusions which were aided by the various comments she had heard passed
between her captors. From what they had said, the nation was divided in its
loyalties between the man and woman whom she had seen and spoken with at the
edge of the chasm. Nor had there been any doubt as to which faction the trio
supported.
The camp had been set up in the form of an
open ended square. On the left and right sides, the tents grew in size until
the far ones were of the pavilion type. The third side, which backed on to the
lake, consisted of two more large pavilions with several smaller tents between
them and the water. Watched over by youngsters wearing one piece white tunics,
the majority of the party's zebras were grazing near the camp. However, several
mounts were standing saddled outside various tents. Lances, with pennants
flying, were thrust into the ground alongside the animals. Few of the men wore
breastplates and only the woman showed any evidence of which factions they
supported. Those whose were adherents of the Protectress of the Quagga God followed
Charole's style of footwear. The supporters of the High Priest either wore
greaves, or sandals of the slip-on variety.
Darting a look towards the pavilion on the
left side, Elidor was disappointed to find that Charole was not coming from it.
She did not doubt that the Protectress had been told of her arrival and she had
been looking forward to flaunting her success. Sniffing in mingled annoyance
and derision over Charole's failure to appear, the woman guided her captive to
the right and stopped alongside the High Priest's quagga stallion.
Having
been told that his party were returning, Dryaka strode
majestically from his quarters. He had removed his breastplate and his helmet,
exposing short-cropped black hair that was turning grey at the temples. He
wore the usual white tunic, but with an illustration of a rearing quagga
emblazoned on its chest. Halting just outside the pavilion, he gazed at Dawn
with very evidence of satisfaction. Then he threw a glance across to the
Protectress's temporary dwelling. Even as he noted that she had not come to the
entrance, a thought struck him. His head swivelled back to the riders, going
from one to another. His expression of triumph faded as he failed to see Dawn's
bow and arrows.
"We've brought the foreign bitch as you
told us, Lord Dryaka," Elidor announced, but she was puzzled and uneasy at
the evidence of the High Priest's displeasure.
Before any more could be said the four
members of the Council of Elders, who were on the hunt, emerged in pairs from their
respective tents. Tall, bulky men with shoulder long white hair, they had on
white toga-like garments that carried the rampant quagga insignia.
"So this is the foreign woman,
Dryaka," said Hul-kona, the senior Elder. He nodded his approval.
"She will make a worthy sacrifice for the Quagga God."
"Where
are Sabart and the others?" asked one of the second pair who was related
to Charole and was hardly able to conceal his resentment that the High Priest's
party had brought in the prisoner.
"Aren't they back
yet?" Mador inquired, with such
it
was of very high quality. "See to your mounts, Mador."
Swinging
from her banar-gatah's
saddle, the woman stalked
forward. Catching Dawn by the left arm, she pulled at it with the intention of
forcing the girl to enter the pavilion. For a moment, Dawn considered taking
advantage of the opportunity to make a reprisal against Elidor. Prudence
dictated against it. While she did not doubt that she could render Elidor hors-de-combat, the men, or some of the women who were
hovering nearby, would quickly subdue her. So she allowed herself to be guided
roughly into the entrance.
Dawn
found that she had been hustled into the main section of the large tent. A
padded mat of what appeared to be silk covered the ground. There were several
large cushions scattered on it and a low, long table was placed parallel to the
rear wall.
Receiving
a push in the back, Dawn staggered forward a few steps and almost fell. She
managed to remain on her feet and came to a halt in the centre of the floor.
Turning angrily, she glared at Elidor. Then her eyes went to Dryaka. The High
Priest had followed them inside and he was standing examining the Randall knife
with obvious interest.
"It's very good, isn't it, my
lord?" Elidor remarked, following in the direction that Dawn was looking.
"Their 'Suppliers' give them better weapons than we get."
"Where are her bow and arrows?"
Dryaka demanded, lowering the knife to his side.
"Her bow-------- ?" Elidor began and an expression of
perturbation came to her face. Suddenly she remembered the High Priest's interest
in the arrows which had killed the eagle and Tomlu. She also realized what had
caused Dryaka's annoyance when they had brought in the captive. "She—She must have thrown them away so she could run faster when
she saw us coming."
An angry snort burst from the High Priest
and, for a moment, he was on the point of striking the woman. He controlled his
inclination with an effort, but his temper was not made any sweeter by the
knowledge that he was partly to blame for the failure to gain possession of
the girl's bow and arrows. Because of his desire to avoid letting Charole's
supporters know how badly he wanted the weapons, he had not mentioned them when
sending the party to hunt for Dawn. He had hoped that, if his adherents caught
the girl, they would have sufficient sense to bring all her arms to him.
While
Elidor and the two men were banar-gatah riders,
they held their ranks by virtue of fighting ability rather than intelligence.
That was one of the reasons why Dryaka considered Elidor an ideal replacement
for Charole, whom he had helped to attain the position of Protectress of the
Quagga God and who had sub-sequendy proved too strong willed and clever to remain
subservient to his will. Believing that Elidor would be more amenable and less
ambitious, he had no wish to alienate her. So he decided to transfer his
annoyance elsewhere.
"Where
did you leave your bow and arrows?" Dryaka barked swinging his gaze to
their captive.
"Let
me ask her, Lord Dryaka," Elidor requested
when the girl did not reply, seeing a way in which she might return to the High
Priest's favour.
Dryaka looked from the woman to Dawn,
glancing for a moment at her manacled wrists and then raising his eyes to her
face. Finding no fear on the beautiful features, he said, "You'll find it
less painful to answer me."
"Answer the Lord Dryaka!" Elidor
commanded, and without giving Dawn an opportunity to do so she glided forward
and drew back her left fist, "or you'll get more of this!"
With
that, confident that she had little to fear from the girl, the woman shot her
fist forward in a straight punch. It did not reach its intended mark, the
centre of Dawn's face. Having read the other's intentions from her expression,
the girl was ready to counter them.
Stepping back a short
distance with her right foot and rarning it outwards, Dawn crossed her hobbled
wrists and threw them up. While the fetters did not allow her to separate her
hands, the connecting links gave her enough play to form a karate X-block. Intercepting Elidor's advancing arm, she forced it higher than
it was supposed to go. Simultaneously, the girl brought her left foot around
until it was almost touching the woman's left sandal. By bending her knees,
Dawn lowered her body a little. Then, freeing her wrists from the block, she
snapped around and propelled her left elbow into Elidor's midsection.
The woman might have counted herself
fortunate that Dawn could not put her full power into the blow. Even at reduced
force, it arrived hard enough to drive Elidor back a few steps and make her
fold over. However, she did not go down. Nor was she badly hurt, as was shown
by the way she lunged forward meaning to butt the girl in the chest.
Moving
aside, Dawn avoided the attack and, pivoting, delivered a kick to Elidor's
rump as she went by. Squawking in fury, the woman stumbled onwards and barely
avoided sprawling on to her face. She retained her equilibrium with an effort,
halted by the table and turned. With her beautiful features distorted by rage,
she sent her right hand flying to the hilt of her sword.
Hearing the commotion, the two women who were
preparing a meal in the kitchen portion of the pavilion ran in to investigate.
Standing by the entrance, Dryaka waved for them to keep back. He was watching
the fight with interest and enjoyment, so did not want it brought to an end by
their intervention. He considered that it was a good test for the foreign girl
and would give him an idea of how she might fare against
Charole.
Darting
in a curve towards Elidor, Dawn bounded into the air. Wrapping her legs around
the woman's head, she allowed herself to hang down. When her shoulders came
into contact with the silk covering of the pavilion's floor, she twisted
herself away from her opponent. Bowed forward by the girl's weight, Elidor
turned a
half somersault and alighted on her back with the sword flying from her hand.
In
performing the flying head-scissors, Dawn had failed to take into consideration
that her hands would not be available to help her break the fall. So, while the
throw was successful, the impact of her meeting with the floor had been more
severe than she anticipated. By the time she had shaken off its effects,
rolled on to her stomach and was starting to rise, Elidor had already come to
her feet.
Ignoring her sword in her eagerness to
retaliate for the punishment
she had been taking, Elidor
darted across the floor. While she was clenching her right hand ready to
strike, her left fingers dug into Dawn's tawny hair and heaved. Squealing an
involuntary protest at the pain being caused to her scalp, the girl reacted
fast. As she was being dragged erect, she thrust both her fists upwards and
into the base of the woman's imposing bosom. Although Dawn did not save
herself entirely, her attack reduced the force with which Elidor's right cross
connected against the side of her jaw. However, the left to her bust was harder
and it was followed by a straight right to the face which sent her reeling
backwards. Blood ran from the corner of her mouth, but she kept on her feet
Going after Dawn, Elidor was taking a warning
from her earlier attempts and knew that the other was anything but the easy
meat which she had anticipated. Wanting to distract the girl from her true
purpose, she swung up both hands as if she was meaning to plunge them into and
pull her hair. Having done so, on coming into range, she whipped forward her
right foot in a kick. To make sure of her aim, she glanced down.
It was a mistake!
Noticing Elidor's action, Dawn was not
fooled. Taking a stride to the rear with her left foot and lowering her hips
slightly, she drove her manacled wrists in a downwards swing that knocked the
rising leg aside. Returning her foot to the floor, Elidor lashed a left hook at
the girl's head. Forming the X-block again,
Dawn
once more deflected the blow over her head. Spitting out a curse, Elidor
fetched her right fist around in a hook aimed at the girl's stomach. Before it
could land, Dawn had interposed her crossed wrists and halted it. Having done
so, the girl twisted and flung her right elbow as hard as she could into
Elidor's solar
plexus.
Seeing the attack coming, Elidor tried to
jump clear. The elbow landed, but was almost at the end of its flight. She
grunted as it hit, then grabbed hold of Dawn's left wrist with her right hand.
Jerking in an attempt to pull the girl off balance, Elidor struck her in the
chest with the other fist.
Instead of trying to tear herself free, Dawn
fought to hold her equilibrium. Achieving her purpose, she stepped forward with
her left foot so that it pointed towards the outside of Elidor's advanced
right leg. While she was doing so, she twisted sharply to her right so that her
left elbow was exerting leverage against the woman's grasp. Dawn then took a
short, swift step to the right with her right foot. Setting her weight on that
leg, with its knee slightly bent, she leaned away from Elidor and stamped with
her left heel against the other's forward knee. Pain caused Elidor to release
her hold and retire a step. Pivoting before the woman had gone beyond her
reach, Dawn flung a second stamping kick that took her in the pit of the
stomach. It landed with all the driving thrust of the girl's gluteus muscles
behind it.
Letting
out a strangled gasp, Elidor folded over at the waist. Linking her fingers,
Dawn swung them as if wielding a baseball bat. Her knuckles caught the side of
the woman's head. Twirling around, Elidor crashed to and rolled over on the
floor.
"Stop
her!" Dryaka ordered, as Dawn went after her opponent.
Running
forward, the two women grabbed the girl by the arms from behind. They were
strong enough to restrain her. Nor did she struggle too hard, believing that
the fight was over. However, having halted on her hands and knees, Elidor
forced herself erect. For a moment, she stood swaying on spread apart feet. Then she stumbled forward with her hands crooked
like talons.
Bracing
herself against the two women's grasp, Dawn swung her legs from the floor. The
soles of her bare feet lashed up to meet Elidor's jaw. Back snapped the woman's
head and her charge turned into an even more rapid retreat. Twirling
helplessly, she collapsed face foremost on the table which buckled under her
weight. She made an involuntary attempt to rise, then slumped forward and lay
still.
The
women threw Dawn to the floor before she could return her feet to it. Already
breathing hard from her exertions, the landing winded her and she flopped
limply. However, before the women could do anything more to her, Dryaka barked
an order for them to leave her alone.
"Go and attend to Elidor," the High
Priest ordered. 'Then bring water and food for the foreign girl."
Waiting until the women had taken Elidor by
the arms and dragged her into the kitchen section of the pavilion, Dryaka
turned his gaze to Dawn. She was already sitting up and he studied her with
satisfaction. Despite the failure to obtain her bow and arrows, he felt sure
that she would serve his original purpose. If she could defeat Elidor while her
wrists were shackled together, she would have a good chance against Charole
with her hands free. Except that the end would be different. When Dawn fought
against the Protectress, it would be to the death.
CHAPTER
FOURTEEN
You're
Not A Mun-Gatah
The
Protectress of the Quagga God was in anything but a pleasant mood as she rode
alone across the plains about two miles from the Mun-Gatahs' hunting camp in
the late afternoon.
Ever since Charole had watched—through a slit
specially made in the wall of her pavilion tent's sleeping quarters—Elidor's
party returning with the foreign girl as their prisoner, she had been filled
with an evergrowing sense of annoyance and perturbation. Not even receiving
the news that Dawn had defeated the High Priest's main female adherent in a
fight despite having had her wrists secured by a pair of hobbles, made the
Protectress feel any better.
On
being told Mador's version of the hunt for the foreign girl, Charole had not
been surprised to hear that her half-sister's party had separated from the
other faction. So, although she was puzzled by Sabart and Chanak allowing their
rivals to take the grar-gatah
belonging to the dead
eagle's attendant, she had no suspicion of foul play having been done nor did
she fear that her supporters would not be coming back.
Just
about the only consolation Charole was able to draw from the situation was in
thinking of Dryaka's disappointment over his party's failure to bring the
girl's bow and arrows with them. Although he had not referred to the weapons
when sending the party after their owner, the Protectress had guessed that he
wanted to lay his hands upon them.
Wanting
to avoid having to put up with the High 162
Priest's
smug satisfaction, Charole had anticipated his invitation to go and see the
prisoner by taking her quagga and leaving the camp. She knew where to find a
party of her supporters who were hunting and was heading for them. However, she
was grateful for the opportunity to ride alone as it gave her time to think.
She was aware of the threat to her position. After the failure of her eagle, and of Ragbuf and Sabart's party, the people might
start to believe that she was no longer in the Quagga God's favour.
Something
had to be done to restore her prestige, Charole told herself. The problem she
must solve was what should she do? It would, she realized, have to be something
important or spectacular to off-set her string of misfortunes and failures.
Dryaka was building up too much superiority for anything of a trivial nature to
bring her back level with him.
Thinking
of the High Priest's recent successes brought up another matter upon which
Charole had not been able to gain any enlightenment. She was very curious about
the reason for him being called back to the camp the previous day. With his
interest in the foreign girl and her weapons, only a matter of considerable
importance would have made him leave the hunt for the girl in his adherents'
hands. Although Charole was aware that his recall was connected with Zongaffa,
that was the extent of her knowledge.
Despite
all her efforts, Charole had not yet been able to find out what it was that the
aged herbalist had discovered. All she could be sure of was that Dryaka
regarded it as being of the greatest importance. However, she had recently
been fortunate enough to have obtained the services of one of the High Priest's
serving-women. So, even if she could not gain possession of the secret, she
had hopes of solving the mystery that surrounded it.
Having
become engrossed in her thoughts, Charole was almost oblivious of her
surroundings and far less alert than usual. She was passing along the bottom of
a valley and approaching a fairly sharp bend. The gentle slopes on either side
were generously coated with large clumps of bushes, some of which effectively
concealed what lay around the curve. All in all, it was not the kind of terrain
through which she would normally have ridden in such an incautious fashion.
The
folly of the Protectress's behaviour was brought home to her in no uncertain
manner. If she had been less deeply involved in her thoughts, she would have
heard and been warned by various sounds which were emanating from the valley
beyond the bend.
Suddenly, when Charole was about a hundred
yards from the curve, something huge and black came dashing from beyond it.
Slammed out of her reverie, she realized that she was confronted by just about
the worst land of animal with which she could have come into contact under the
circumstances.
The Protectress's quagga stallion was a good
mount. Fast, agile, possessing stamina of a high order, under most conditions
it was steady and completely trustworthy. However, there was one creature
which terrified it and with good cause. During its training as a combined
hunting and war-charger, it had been attacked by a bull buffalo. Although it
had not been gored or even seriously injured, despite having been thrown, the
fright which it had received had made it unreliable in the presence of such an
animal.
Already being pursued by the party of hunters
whom Charole was meaning to join, the enormous bull buffalo took the gravest
exception to finding its path being blocked by yet another rider. Letting out a
thunderous bellow, it tossed the great, fifty-eight-inch span of its massive
curved horns and rushed onwards with the intention of removing the latest and
closest of its human foes.
Unfortunately for Charole, the realization of
her peril came just a moment too late.
Letting out a startled scream at the sight of
what it regarded as being a mortal enemy, the previously well-behaved quagga
displayed its antipathy. Its erstwhile leisurely walking gait changed abruptly
into a rearing pivot and lunge away from the source of its terror.
Such
was the violence of the quagga's panic-induced reaction and the change in its
motions that Charole, taken completely unawares, was unable to counter them.
Nor, excellent rider though she was, could she avert the disaster which befell
her.
Slipping backwards as the quagga reared, the
Protectress began to tighten her legs so that she would not slide over the
cantle. While she succeeded, the turning movement tilted her to the right and
as her mount started to run the propulsion of its hindquarters' powerful
thrust dislodged her. Instinctively kicking her left leg free as she felt
herself being thrown from the saddle, she found to her dismay that her right
foot had become entangled with the stirrup iron. So, while she had just enough
coordination to break some of the force with which she hit the ground, she
could not prevent herself from being dragged along as her mount bolted. Nor,
with the buffalo thundering after them, was there any likelihood of the quagga
heeding the gasped out commands to stop that she was giving it.
From
behind the clump of bushes, where he had halted and taken cover when Charole
first came into view, Bunduki watched what was happening. Although—even
dressed as he was—he had no wish to come into contact with a member of the
Mun-Gatah nation, he realized that the woman was in deadly peril and needed
help.
After
having spent a restless, anxious and worrying night, the blond giant had set
out to find his adoptive cousin as soon as day had broken. He had killed a
bush-buck before parting from Joar-Fane and At-Vee, leaving them with
sufficient meat to last until the hunter's ankle was healed. Promising that he
would return if he was successful in his bid to locate and rescue Dawn, he had
made preparations for the quest.
Having learned from At-Vee that the
Mun-Gatahs lived on the open plains, along with such other details as the
hunter could supply to augment the scanty information already given by Joar-Fane, Bunduki had appreciated the difficulties of tracking
Dawn's captors without being seen. That would apply particularly as he intended
to make use of the zebras which had belonged to Joar-Fane's late pursuers.
Returning
to the clearing where the fight had taken place, the blond giant had removed
the garments from the man whose back he had broken. He had known that his blond
hair and lighter skin would give him away, so he had also donned his
victim's sleeveless over-tunic with the rearing quagga insignia. According to
At-Vee, members of the People-Taker's escorts always wore them. With its cowl
drawn up, it would conceal his hair and face more effectively than one of the
leather helmets. The corpse's greaves and sandals, although the former were a
rather tight fit, had completed the disguise.
The
next problem to be faced had been that of armament. When discussing his plan
with the Telonga couple, Bunduki had reluctantly concluded that he could not
take along his bow and arrows if he wanted his disguise to serve its purpose.
The Mun-Gatahs never used such weapons. Even if they had, the bows would not
have been like the blond giant's fiber glass Bear Super Kodiak. If the
Mun-Gatah saw what appeared to be a member of their nation armed in such a
fashion it would arouse interest, if not outright suspicion, which it was
important that he should avoid.
Having
given the matter some thought and talked it over with At-Vee, Bunduki had
decided to restrict his weapons to the Smithsonian bowie knife and the spears
that were hanging from the three zebras' saddles. He had examined one of them
and felt sure he could use it effectively if the need arose. So he had left
Dawn's and his bows with the two Telongas. As At-Vee had disclaimed all
knowledge of archery, although some of his people's hunters practised it, the
blond giant had unstrung both of the bows.
Setting off upstream in the direction from
which At-Vee had heard Dawn give the distress call of a she-
Mangani,
Bunduki had ridden one of
the ocha-gatahs and led the other and the banar-gatah. That had been less difficult than he had anticipated
as all of the animals were used to being handled in such a fashion. He had
found Dawn's and her pursuers' tracks, following them to the clearing in which
she had been captured. The patches of dried blood on the ground had been
sufficiently disturbing for him to have investigated the bushes around and he
had found the two bodies. Realizing that Dawn could not have inflicted the
injuries, particularly as the corpses' zebras had been slaughtered in the
hiding place, he had deduced what must have happened.
Following
the signs left by Dawn and her captors, Bunduki had found the third of
Charole's murdered supporters along with his dead banar-gatah. The discovery had increased the blond
giant's deep concern for his adoptive cousin's welfare. Even without the
stories told by the Telonga couple, he realized that the Mun-Gatahs were a
ruthless race who had small regard for the sanctity of human life.
Pressing
on at the best speed his acquired mounts could manage, Bunduki rode relay on
the two ocha-gatahs.
He was reserving the banar-gatah, which was superior in quality, to be used in
case of an emergency.
Reading
the tracks had been somewhat easier out on the plains and the blond giant was
making good time. For all that, the party he was following had had such a lead, he had not caught even a distant glimpse of them. The
tracks appeared to be heading towards some smoke which was rising a long way
ahead, but he was disinclined to take the chance that it was their destination
and he continued following the trail.
Like
Dawn, Bunduki had been impressed by the vast quantity and variety of the wild
life that he had seen. However, such was the urgency of the situation and the
need to keep watch for human enemies that he had taken neither the interest nor
the pleasure in the animals which would have been the case in less demanding
circumstances.
Once Bunduki had crossed the river, after
having made a detour to examine what the hyenas and vultures had left of the
two dead Mun-Gatah
scouts and the zebra near
the chasm, he had ridden upstream to the ford. He had been almost certain that
the party he was following were going to the source of the smoke. Exercising
greater caudon because of the proof that there were other people—most probably
Mun-Gatahs—in the area, he avoided showing himself upon the sky-line without
first having scanned the terrain. As far as possible he kept to ground which
offered some kind of concealment
Bunduki had been descending into the valley
when he had seen Charole and he had taken cover behind a sizeable clump of
bushes. Such had been the Protectress's preoccupation with her various
problems that she had been unaware of the blond giant's presence. He had
considered that was all too the good. While his disguise would have been
satisfactory at a distance, it would not have stood up to an examination at
close range. The chief danger, to his way of thinking, had been that her mount
would catch his zebras' scent and warn her that he was there. However, before
she had gone far enough beyond his position, the buffalo had made its
appearance.
Seeing Charole thrown and dragged by the
animal which he identified as a quagga, Bunduki did not hesitate before going
to her assistance. Nor did he give any thought to various sounds that suggested
he might be doing the very thing he had hoped to avoid, allow himself to be seen by members of the Mun-Gatah nation.
Despite his size, Bunduki was a light rider
and capable of sitting his mount so as to take less out of it than would a
smaller, but less skilled, person. However, he had pushed the two ocha-gatahs hard and, about a quarter of an hour earlier,
he had finally transferred to the fresher and more powerful banar-gatah.
Releasing the ocha-gatahs" reins, the blond giant set his mount into
motion. It responded eagerly, showing no concern over being guided after the
charging buffalo. Urging it to go faster, he thought how he might rescue the
woman.
Obviously
the first priority was to deal with the buffalo.
How to do it was the
problem.
Bunduki's mother had been the granddaughter
of the legendary Texas cowhand and gun fighter Mark Counter, one of whose feats
had been to wrestle with and break the neck of a longhorn bull with his bare
hands. Bunduki knew that, although he had learned how to "bulldog" as
his illustrious forebear had done, it would not serve his purpose on this
occasion. The buffalo was bigger and bulkier than any domesticated bull. It
would have tipped the scales at more than the longhorn's nine hundred and
seventy-five pounds' weight.
Nor
did the blond giant consider that riding alongside the buffalo and trying to
stab it to death with the spear, even if he could draw the weapon while
travelling at speed, offered an acceptable solution. Having had to shoot some
of the Cape sub-species of Syncerus Caffer Cafler—to which the enormous bull appeared to belong—on occasion as part of
the Amagasali Wild Life Reserve's population control programme, he knew just
how hard they were to kill, even when he was armed with a modern,
double-barrelled .600 rifle. Dropping the great beast using a spear, quickly
enough to save the woman would be almost impossible.
There was, Bunduki concluded, only one way to
handle the situation.
It would be neither easy, safe, nor secure!
As a present for his seventeeth birthday, the
blond giant's adoptive parents had taken him for a vacation to a ranch that was
owned by his maternal grandparents in the Big Bend country of Texas. While
there, he had become the best of friends with his look-alike American cousin.
Although Bradford Counter's ambition had been to follow his
"Great-Grandpappy Mark's" example by becoming a peace officer
instead of entering the family's very lucrative oil
business, he was in addition to either of these professions, a skilled cowhand.
He had taught Bunduki to perform many of the tasks required for such work,
including a method of dealing with recalcitrant cattle. As a member of the Bovidae family, the buffalo might be said to come
into that category.
The
great beast was running fast in its eagerness to reach, trample on, or gore,
the quagga and the woman fleeing before it. However, even carrying Bunduki,
the banar-gatah was capable of travelling at a greater speed
than the buffalo's thirty-five miles per hour.
Measuring
the decreasing distance between himself and the buffalo with his eyes, the
blond giant settled himself more firmly in the saddle. If he had had a catch-rope
he would have used it to "take up the buffalo's toes," as he had
been taught by his Cousin Brad. Lacking the necessary tool for that purpose, he
was compelled to resort to an even more tricky,
demanding and risky procedure.
Closing
the gap at a racing gallop, Bunduki steered the still responsive banar-gatah at an angle that would take them to the right
of the buffalo. Like all of its kind, the bull was running with its tail
extended poker-stiff behind it and parallel to the ground. It was oblivious of
the rapidly approaching pursuer.
Out
stabbed the blond giant's left hand, to catch hold of the buffalo's tail.
Having obtained his hold, he gave a sudden jerk with all his strength.
Simultaneously, he let out a yell and kicked the banar-gatah's ribs with his heels. Receiving the signal,
the gallant animal lunged forward with an increased velocity. Even so, the
blond giant wondered if it could move fast enough to save both their lives.
Due to the speed that it was travelling the
massive beast was thrown off balance, despite its two thousand pounds' weight.
Its hind legs were snapped to the left and the fore limbs buckled. Turning
heels over head, it alighted with a shattering crash that knocked every atom of
air from its lungs.
For
all the apparent ease with which Bunduki had brought the buffalo down, his task
had been anything but simple. It had called for courage, skill and a
well-trained mount of the finest quality.
However, the blond giant knew that his task
was not yet at an end. The quagga was still racing along the valley, dragging
its helpless burden behind it. Steering the banar-gatah in the required direction, Bunduki gave
chase. Although he heard shouts from his rear, he did not look back.
Using all his skill, Bunduki acquired every
bit of speed he could from the banar-gatah. Even
so, he had to cover almost a hundred yards before he was drawing level with the
woman's panic-stricken quagga. She was hanging limply, barely conscious after
being dragged so far. For all that, she could count herself lucky. The short,
but thickly growing grass was springy enough to have reduced the effect of the
pounding.
Coming alongside the quagga from the left, so
as to avoid the danger of his mount trampling upon the woman, Bunduki leaned
across. The Mun-Gatahs used one piece reins, so they were hanging over the
animal's neck instead of trailing down. Having made his catch, he straightened
his legs and stood in the stirrups. Waiting until he felt that his mount's
hind legs were coming under him and its balance was to the rear, he drew back
on the reins.
"Whoa!" Bunduki yelled, sitting
down and inclining his torso to the rear while thrusting his feet forward.
Obviously the Mun-Gatahs adopted a similar
method when waiting to make a mount come to a halt quickly. Obediently the banar-gatah began to slide to a stop. Having no such
control being exerted over it, the quagga ignored the command until the pull of
its reins brought its head around. It swerved, tried to avoid the banar-gatah but failed to do so. They collided shoulder
to shoulder and both went down.
Seeing that the collision was imminent and
unavoidable, Bunduki snatched his feet from the stirrups and dived to the
left. He landed rolling, as he had learned to do when being thrown by a horse,
and regained his feet as quickly as he could.
Ignoring half a dozen male Mun-Gatahs who were galloping towards him,
while four more plunged lances into the still recumbent buffalo, Bunduki ran
behind the banar-gatah
as it and the quagga were
struggling to rise. When donning the dead warrior's garments, he had slit the tunic down
its left side so as to allow him unimpeded access to his bowie knife. Drawing
the weapon from its sheath, he bounded over the woman. As he halted, he bent
and grabbed her ankle with his left hand. Then he slashed through the stirrup
leather, liberating her as quickly as he could. There was need for haste. The
quagga was almost on its feet and he doubted whether it would be in an amiable
frame of mind when it stood up.
Releasing the woman's leg, the blond giant
threw himself forward. Fast as he moved, it was not quite rapid enough. The
quagga's hind hooves lashed towards him and one of them struck him a glancing
blow on the right elbow. Glancing, maybe, but it was
still hard enough to numb his arm momentarily and caused him to drop the knife.
Carried forward by the momentum of his leap, he advanced a couple of long
strides. When he had stopped himself, one look told him that
he could neither retrieve the weapon nor return and mount the banar-gatah before the approaching riders arrived.
He felt some slight
consolation when he noticed that none of the six had a lance, although each was
armed with a sword. Nor were any of the newcomers wearing a leather breastplate.* The foremost of them were
al-
*Only the distrust that existed between the
High Priest and the Protectress had caused their hunting party to wear breastplates.
They had pretended that their reason for doing so was the possibility of
meeting enemies.
BVNDVK1
173
ready
bringing their zebras to a stop and looking in the blond giant's direction.
Springing
from his banar-gatah's
saddle, the first man to
arrive ran to where the woman was beginning to
sit up and gaze dazedly about her. Her quagga had gone along the valley,
bounding and kicking up its heels. Snapping an order over his shoulder as he
knelt by Charole, the man sent one of the grar-gatah riders galloping after her mount The rest of the party dismounted and, appaemtly having
disposed of the buffalo, the others were approaching.
A
burly ocha-gatah rider detached himself from the quartet who
were on foot and slouched towards Bunduki. Glancing from the big blond to the
knife, the man did a double take as he realized belatedly that there was
something wrong.
"Heyl" the man yelped, springing
forward and
reaching for his sword. "You're not a Mun-Gatah!
Who------- ?"
The
question went unfinished. Instead of answering, Bunduki thrust out his left
fist. It caught the man just below the breast bone, halting and folding him onto
the right hook that was the blond gjanf s follow-up attack. Lifted upright,
the man went over on to his back.
Attracted
by their companion's yell, all but the banar-gatah rider
kneeling by Charole turned. Seeing their companion felled,
the three of them rushed at Bunduki. Looking around, the kneeling man realized
that the Protectress's rescuer was not a Mun-Gatah. Immediately he wanted to
know where he had acquired his garments. What was more, in addition to any information
the blond giant might possess, he would make a fine sacrifice for the Quagga
God.
"Take him alive!" roared the banar-gatah rider, coming to his feet and going to help
enforce his command.
That proved to be much easier said than done.
Hearing their leader and being aware of what
would happen if they should go against his wishes, the
men did not attempt to draw their swords. Instead, they fanned out and closed
on Bunduki from three different points. Like the other warriors with whom he
had fought, each of the trio wanted to gain the acclaim of capturing him. So
they were acting as individuals rather than a team.
Swifter
than his companions, the man coming from the blond giant's left was nearest and
received first attention. Catching the forward driving right wrist with his
left hand, Bunduki prevented it from reaching him and snapped a side kick into the man's ribs. Having done so, the big
blond threw up his right hand to deflect the punch being thrown by the nearest
warrior on that side and halted the advance of the other with a back kick to
the body.
Although
still shaken by her experience, Charole had recovered sufficiently to sit up
and take notice. She saw Bunduki dealing with the first three attackers. Then,
as the banar-gatah rider rushed up and the blond giant ducked
under his grabbing hands. Catching the man around the knees, Bunduki
straightened and pitched him head over heels.
Watched by the fascinated woman, the three
men flung themselves en
masse at the blond giant.
They were, as she knew, trained warriors as good as any in the Mun-Gatah
nation. Yet, for all their capability, they could not subude the big stranger,
even with the help of the banar-gatah rider.
It took the combined efforts of the entire
hunting party to quell Bunduki. Nor did they succeed for a good fifteen minutes
(as he measured time). Throughout it, he used every bit of skill and strength
he possessed, calling
upon the various unarmed
combat techniques which he had acquired. By the end of the fight, three of the
Mun-Gatahs were down with broken bones and a fourth lay
dead, his neck snapped like a rotten twig.
Standing and looking down at the blond
giant's mighty body, now bruised, bloody and stripped to only
the leopardskin loincloth, Charole felt a sense
of elation. At last, providing she could win him over, she was certain
she had found a man who was capable of helping her to overthrow the High Priest
CHAPTER FIFTEEN
ƒ Alone Stand Between You And Death
"YOU
fight very well, Dawn of the Apes," Dryaka remarked, entering the main
section of his pavilion tent carrying the Randall Model 1 fighting knife in his
right hand. "They tell me that Elidor's jaw is broken. She always did talk
too much, so it might be an improvement."
Dawn
Drummond-Clayton was puzzled and not a little
perturbed as she watched the High Priest of the Mun-Gatah nation approaching.
While the oil lamps which had been lit at sundown did nothing to soften the
savage lines of his features, he seemed almost jovial and friendly.
After
having defeated Elidor, the girl had expected to be beaten up by the two
serving women, or put to torture if not killed. Instead, apart from having been
kept manacled by the hobbles and under observation at all times to prevent her
from trying to remove them, she had practically been
treated like a guest.
On
their return from attending to the unconscious Elidor, the women had carried
out the High Priest's orders regarding the prisoner. They had bathed the dried
blood from Dawn's face, allowed her to drink and had given her a good meal.
From the way they had talked and acted, the girl had concluded that they were
not entirely averse to the beating she had given to their superior.
Accepting that—watched as she was by the
women and with male guards close by—there could be no hope of escape, Dawn had
not attempted to do so. After tie
meal,
she had made a bed from some of the pillows and rested on it. She had wanted to
rebuild her strength in case an opportunity to get away should present itself,
or to be ready if Elidor came back in search of revenge.
The
rest of the afternoon had passed without incident. Despite the reason Dryaka
had given to the Elders for having Dawn brought into his pavilion, he had not
attempted to question her. In fact, he had left her in the care of his
adherents and had gone off about some business of his own.
Night had fallen before the High Priest had returned.
From the expression on his face as he stalked from the main entrance to his
sleeping quarters, the girl concluded that whatever the business which had
occupied him had been it had failed to come up to his expectations.
However, apart from glancing at Dawn and asking the serving women if all was
well, he had taken no notice of her. She estimated that over an hour had
elapsed since she had last seen him.
"Bring food, then
leave us," Dryaka ordered, without giving the girl an opportunity to
answer his comment about Elidor.
"My father and his men will be coming to
rescue me," Dawn stated, as the High Priest sat on the cushion which one
of the serving women had placed in front of her. "You've seen how
effective even a woman's bow and arrows can be. Many of your people will die
if I'm harmed."
"Yes," Dryaka said, showing no
perturbation over the warning. Instead, he looked pointedly at the knife in his
hand and went on, "Your 'Suppliers' have given you excellent weapons. Far
better than anything we've received. Where and how do they make their deliveries?"
"I don't know---------- ," Dawn began, genuinely puz-
zled by the question.
"And
you claim to be the daughter of the Apes' leader!" Dryaka ejaculated,
before the girl could finish. "Don't trifle with me, or it will be the
worse for you.
I
alone stand between you and death. Charole wants your blood for killing her
eagle. Only I can give you the chance of fighting for your life instead of
being sacrificed to the Quagga God."
Dawn had been meaning to say that she did not
know what the High Priest had meant by "Suppliers." She had hoped to
obtain information about a matter which had been puzzling her.
After the girl had rested earlier in the day,
having no desire to let her muscles become stiffened by inactivity, she had
risen and started to walk around. Although she had not been permitted to leave,
she had studied the camp from the pavilion's front and rear entrances. Then she
had turned her attention to the interior of the tent.
Like Bunduki when he had been looking at the
property of the dead Mun-Gatah warriors, Dawn was puzzled by what she saw. The
materials from which the pavilion and its furnishings were made of a far higher
and more sophisticated quality than she would have believed her captors were
capable of producing. In fact, they had the feel and appearance of modern
synthetic fabrics. The lamps, weapons and other metallic objects that she had
examined also seemed to have been made by machines.
Apparently the Mun-Gatahs and, judging from
the High Priest's question, the other primitive nations had some source of
supply which was capable of manufacturing their requirements. Yet, even if such
a technically advanced people had wanted to
retain a monopoly on trading with the otherwise
undiscovered races, it was unlikely that they would be able to keep their
activities a secret
Unless, of course, Dawn's theory regarding
her whereabouts should be correct.
Fantastic
and unbelievable as it seemed, the girl was growing even more certain that she
had guessed the truth.
"Come now," Dryaka went on,
interrupting Dawn's train of thought and adopting a more placatory attitude
after having delivered the threat. He also dropped his voice and darted a
glance at the kitchen portion of the pavilion, continuing, "I'm willing to
tell you that our 'Suppliers' put them in the caves beneath the Quagga God's
temple."
"I
don't know where our 'Suppliers' make their deliveries," Dawn answered
and, seeing anger darken her interrogator's face, knew that she would have to
do better than that. Having noticed how he had behaved and spoken when giving
her the information, she had an inspiration. "I'm Tarzan's youngest daughter. Only he and his oldest son and
daughter are allowed to know the secret."
Being aware that the subject of the
mysterious "Suppliers" was tabu amongst his own people and the other
races with whom he had come into contact, Dryaka was
willing to accept the girl's explanation. However, he was disappointed as he
always was whenever he made an attempt to solve the mystery of the "Suppliers."
He had hoped that the "Apes" might have different beliefs on the
subject, or that Dawn—being the "daughter" of her nation's leader—had
access to the required information.
"Where is your home?" the High
Priest asked, raising his voice to its previous level as he left the
potentially dangerous business of discussing the "Suppliers."
"On the edge of the jungle, far to the
east," Dawn replied.
"What brought you to land of the
Mun-Gatahs?" Dryaka inquired.
"I had often heard of your people,"
the girl lied,
but so convincingly that she might have been speaking
the truth. "So I thought I would come and see what
you were really like. Then a lion frightened my
mount------- ."
"Your people are riders?" Dryaka
interrupted.
"We
are," Dawn confirmed, and decided, in view of his surprise, that a little
boasting might not come amiss. "But our mounts are bigger, and stronger
and faster than anything I've seen here."
"It's very strange that I've never heard of you," Dryaka said, pensively and
almost dubiously.
"Our
land is very far away," the girl countered. "And we guard its borders
jealously. We usually stay within them and kill any strangers who try to enter."
"I
see," the High Priest grunted. On various occasions, Mun-Gatah raiding
parties or individuals had disappeared without a trace. They could have fallen
foul of the "Apes." That would explain why none had returned to
brings news of a well-armed and dangerous nation. "How many of your people
are there?"
"We
have five large cities," Dawn told him, seeking a happy medium between
failing to impress him with her "nation's" numbers, and arousing
suspicion through over-exaggeration.
"Five!" Dryaka repeated, in a mixture of awe and
disbelief. "No other nation has more than one!"
"We aren't like the other nations,"
Dawn pointed out with complete conviction and well simulated disdain.
From
the brief flicker of emotion which crossed the High Priest's swarthy face, the
girl guessed that her thrust had gone home. So it had. Dryaka dropped his gaze
to the Randall knife and remembered the quality of her bow and arrows,
realizing that all were far superior to anything that the Mun-Gatahs and other
nations owned.
"I'm
sorry for the way you were treated, Dawn," the High Priest declared,
trying to look contrite and pleasant. "It was all the fault of those fools
I sent to ask you to come and visit me in peace."
At
that moment, preventing Dryaka from continuing with the lying apology, the
flaps at the rear of the pavilion were opened. Looking about him in a nervous
manner, a short, chubby man entered. He wore the undecorated attire of a grar-gatah rider, but did not have the appearance of
being a warrior.
"I
bring news, Lord Dryaka!" the newcomer announced hurriedly, throwing a
glance towards the closed front entrance and speaking in a low voice.
Then
his gaze swung to Dawn and he pointed at her. "Charole has brought in a
prisoner. He is a very big man, dressed like a Telonga, but with skin like this
woman's. His hair is white, but he isn't old and he is very muscular. The knife
they took from him is almost as long as our swords and like no other I've ever
seen."
Only
by exercising all of her self control could Dawn hold her emotions in check.
Even so, she failed to prevent herself giving a little gasp as the import of
the man's information struck her. Unless she was mistaken, he had brought
terrible news. The person whom he described sounded very much like her adoptive
cousin.
If
it was Bunduki, he too had fallen into the hands of the Mun-Gatahs!
Fortunately
for the girl, her involuntary and brief response had gone unnoticed by the High
Priest. He was scowling malevolently at the newcomer, a spy whom he had planted
in the Protectress's retinue.
"I've
heard nothing of this," Dryaka protested, for the arrival of a
prisoner—particularly one as unusual as this man appeared to be—would normally
have attracted sufficient attention to be reported to him. "When did it
happen?"
"Soon after sundown," the spy
replied and went on hurriedly in exculpation. "I haven't been able to get
away until now, my lord. She had him brought to her pavilion secretly after it
was dark. He is still there and she is treating him as well as—very well."
"Is she?" Dryaka growled, guessing
that the man had intended to say, "as well as you
are treating this girl," or words to that effect. "And you say that
she's alone with him?"
"She was, my lord, but I couldn't hear
what they were saying. I mustn't stay long, my lord, or I may be missed. There
is something else I have to tell you."
"What is it?"
"Talgum and Altab came
a few minutes ago, although she had said she was not to be disturbed. They
brought a small bag which they said had come from your pavilion."
"A small
bag?" Dryaka spat out and Dawn could see that he
was deeply perturbed. "What was in it?"
"Only some black dust," the man
answered in an off-hand fashion, meaning to go on by explaining that he would
not have bothered to come and interrupt the High Priest except that Charole had
appeared to be very excited over the contents of the bag.
There was, however, nothing off-hand about
the way Dryaka responded on hearing the reply.
"The Thunder Powder!" the High
Priest almost bellowed, springing to his feet and dropping the Randall knife.
Without bothering to retrieve the weapon, he dashed towards his sleeping
quarters, snarling, "If she's got
any of it, I'll have somebody's life!"
"And just what might this be?" demanded Charole, staring disdainfully at the small pile of
black powder which the leader of the party who had captured Bun-duki was
pouring on to her pavilion's table.
"I don't know," Talgum answered,
speaking thickly due to his badly swollen mouth. Stopping the flow, he placed
the bag alongside the Smithsonian bowie knife on the table. For a moment, he
stared enviously at the weapon. Then, darting a hate-filled scowl at its owner,
he went on, "The woman said it was what Zon-gaffa was making for
Dryaka."
Lounging on the cushions which the
Protectress had placed near the table for him, with his wrists linked together
by a set of hobbles, but otherwise unfettered, Bunduki studied the powder. He
thought he recognized it. If he had, it might enable him to escape.
On
recovering consciousness, the blond giant had been surprised to find that he
had not received any more serious injuries than the various bruises and
abrasions gathered during the fighting. He had soon discovered that he owed his
salvation to the influence of the beautiful, sensual, if dishevelled woman
whose
life he
had saved. For all that, he had sensed there was more than gratitude behind her
protection.
Although
Bunduki had been taken to a nearby stream where his injuries were given the
same treatment as the warriors who had suffered at his hands, Charole had
insisted that they should delay rejoining their companions until after night
had fallen.
While they were waiting, Charole and Talgum
had questioned Bunduki about how he had come into possession of the Mun-Gatah
garments and zebras. Knowing that to refuse supplying the information could
have painful consequences, he had invented a story of how he had been attacked
by, and had killed, three members of the People-Taker's escort. Having
identified the animals as belonging to some of the High Priest's adherents, his
interrogators had seemed more pleased than angry at what he had told them
The blond giant had discovered, by listening
to his captors, that his adoptive cousin was already a prisoner of the
Mun-Gatahs. From what had been said, he had deduced that he was to be taken to
the camp in which she was being held. It had been that, even more than a
realization of the futility of trying to fight his way to freedom which had
caused him to put aside the notion of attempting to escape while he was still in
the hands of such a small party. He had wanted to be in a position where he
might be able to help Dawn before doing anything that would cause his captors
to increase the simple bonds of restraint which secured him
From the way Bunduki's captors had behaved as
they were bringing him into their camp, he had deduced that they wished to
keep his presence a secret. On coming into sight of their companions' zebras,
which were grazing and resting at liberty but under the eyes of guards, the banar-gatah rider—although as yet the blond giant had not
learned the Mun-Gatahs' social distinctions—had gone ahead. Returning, he had
warned that some of the High Priest's adherents were on duty watching over the
herd. At the Protectress's orders, Bunduki had been made to dismount. Escorted
by Talgum and two of the ocha-gatah riders,
he had been taken to the camp on foot by a route which had kept them out of
sight of the guards.
Once
Charole had the blond giant safely delivered to her pavilion, she had left him
in Talgum's charge while she made her preparations for trying to win him over.
Bathing in the sleeping portion of her pavilion, she had rejoined the men clad
in a very daring, diaphanous white gown. The way in which it had clung to the
magnificent contours of her gorgeous body had shown that it and the high heeled
pumps which had replaced her sandals were her sole garments.
Over a meal, with a scowling and obviously
jealous Talgum as the other guest, the Protectress had tried to learn what had
brought Bunduki to the Mun-Gatah country. On being questioned about other
members of his nation, he had been careful not to reveal his true purpose.
Charole had tried to find out if he was searching for Dawn, but his replies
had left her convinced that he was not.
Dismissing the banar-gatdh rider at the end of the meal, the Protectress
had produced Bunduki's Smithsonian bowie knife. Like Dryaka was doing with
Dawn, she had tried to elicit information regarding the means by which such
exceptional weapons had been procured. Unconsciously, Bunduki had adopted a
similar line to Dawn when explaining why he could not give details about their
"Suppliers." He had also left his questioner with a profound
impression of the strength, sagacity and numbers of the "Apes"
nation.
Having decided that such efficient and
capable warriors would make very useful allies, and believing that her captive
was a very important leader of the "Apes," Charole had been even more
determined to gain his support. She had used all her wiles and the full sensual
attraction of her voluptuous body to achieve her ends. Applying the same kind
of love-making techniques to which Bunduki was accustomed, she had
been
much more successful than Joar-Fane at learning his potential in that line.
Accepting
that he might be able to use the woman of a means of attaining freedom for Dawn
and himself, Bunduki had yielded to her seduction. The male Counters had
always been noted for their lusty and prodigious prowess as makers of love and
he had inherited the quality in full measure. So, even though his wrists were
held by the hobbles, he had contrived to satisfy Charole's passions in a way
that no other man had come close to doing.
Unfortunately, there had been an interruption
before the blond giant could persuade the panting and submissive Charole to
remove his bonds on the grounds that he would be able to do even better.
Entering and apparently taking no notice of the sight of her mistress sprawling
all but naked on the floor alongside the prisoner, one of the serving women had
said that Tal-gum was outside and wished to speak with the Protectress. At
first, Charole had been on the point of telling her maid to say she must wait.
However, on learning that he was accompanied by the woman who was spying on
Dryaka, the Protectress had changed her mind.
By the time Talgum had been granted
permission to enter, in addition to replacing the blond giant's loincloth,
Charole had dressed herself and tidied up her appearance. For all that, it had
been clear the banar-gatah
rider was aware of what had
passed between them and disapproved of it.
"What
do you think you're doing?" Talgum demanded suspiciously, reaching for
his sword as Bunduki knelt up and bent his torso towards the table.
Apparently
ignoring the question, but keeping his eye on the warrior, the blond .giant
held his hands out on the side furthest from the great bowie knife. Keeping
them there, he leaned closer to the small pile of gritty black powder and
sniffed at it. Despite the heavy aroma of Charole's perfume, a familiar smell
came to his nostrils.
Taking her eyes from
Bunduki at the evidence of his good intentions, Charole gave a sharp and
prohibitive shake of her head to Talgum. In the course of her successful
seduction, she had talked of her desire to form an alliance with the blond
giant and he had appeared to be fully favourable to.it. She did not want anything to
happen that might antagonize him against her and cause him to change his mind.
So she kept her eyes on the warrior until, showing his annoyance, he thrust the
half drawn sword back into its sheath.
"What are you doing, Bunduki?"
Charole inquired, returning her gaze to the blond giant after having enforced
her will on her supporter. "Do you know what it is?"
"I'm not sure," Bunduki answered,
keeping his voice flat and emotionless. He hardly dared hope that his nose was
not playing a trick upon him. Taking an even closer sniff, he felt a tingle of
excitement as once again the odour of saltpetre mixed with sulphur and charcoal
reached his ofactory organ. Still employing an even, almost disinterested tone,
he straightened up and went on, "But I think I might."
"What is it?" the Protectress
asked, hardly able to conceal her eagerness.
"I can't be certain," the blond
giant admitted. "Can I touch it without your man cutting my hand
off?"
"You can," Charole authorized,
throwing another glare at Talgum.
Having been granted permission, Bunduki
raised his hands. He wet the tip of his right forefinger and touched it lightly
on the heap of powder. Tasting the grains which had adhered to it, he knew that
he was correct. Seething with excitement, he made a wry face and spat. Then he
rubbed his tongue vigorously on the back of his left hand.
"What is it?" Charole.repeated and even Talgum looked impressed by the
vehemence of the blond giant's reaction.
"I think it could be a deadly poison
that the witch doctors of my people use," Bunduki answered and could see
that his audience understood his meaning.
"There's
one way to make certain. Put a lamp on the table."
"Why?"
Talgum challenged, but Charole was already going to obey.
"What
do you want it for, Bunduki?" the Protectress inquired, having taken down
a lamp and set it on the table.
"To
test the powder," the blond giant replied and reached for the bag.
"Here!" Talgum growled, stepping
forward. "I'll do it."
"Go
ahead," Bunduki sneered, knowing that such an attitude would probably
bring about the result he required. "If you know what to
do."
"Tell
me and Til do it," the warrior suggested,
snatching up the bag as the big blond had expected he would.
'Tip
the powder over the flame," Bunduki instructed and, when Talgum hesitated,
went on in a mocking voice, "Let me do it, if you're afraid."
Giving
an angry snort, the warrior up-ended the bag and a stream of black powder
flooded from its mouth to fall towards the naked flame of the lamp.
CHAPTER
SIXTEEN
Aaaah—-feee—Aaaah—fee—Aaagh!
LONG
before the birth of Christ philosophers in Cathay—as China was then known—had
learned that most spectacular and entertaining results could be produced from
a mixture comprised of 41.2% saltpetre and 29.4% each of charcoal and sulphur.*
Although Zongaffa had never heard of Cathay,
China, its philosophers, or Roger Bacon, q.v., he had in some way contrived to dulpicate their discovery. However, like
them, the aged Mun-Gatah herbalist had failed to appreciate the full potential
of the resultant powder.
Having
identified the "black dust" for what it was,
BunduM had been fully aware of its properties. Guess-in that the other
occupants of the pavilion tent were less well informed, he had paved the way
for turning his superior knowledge to his and, he hoped, his adoptive cousin's
advantage.
In addition to stepping away and allowing
Talgum to start pouring the black powder from the cloth bag, the blond giant
turned with his back to the table and closed his eyes. Being aware that
breathing the atmosphere was going to be unpleasant in a short time, he also
♦The figures quoted are actually those
of the formula which was described by English philosopher, scientist and
educational reformer, Roger Bacon, c. 1220-1292. There were many other prescriptions,
including 76.64% saltpetre, 13.51% charcoal, 11.85% sulphur which would produce
an ideal reaction and what came to be the universally standardized mixture. KNO«-75%, C-15% and S-10%.
filled
his lungs with air. So as to be ready if his plan should succeed, he pressed
his elbows against his ribs and bent his forearms parallel to the well-padded
floor of the pavilion.
Already suspicious of Bunduki's motives,
Talgum noticed how he was acting. Suddenly, the banar-gatah rider sensed that he might be falling into a
trap. Perhaps what he was doing could be very dangerous.
The realization came just a
split-second too late!
Even as Talgum tried to stop the flow of
powder, the first of the trickling grains reached the burning wick of the lamp.
In the light of what happened, he could consider himself fortunate that the bag
he was holding was not made of something stronger than cloth.
Bringing
dry gunpowder into contact with a naked flame causes one of two results. If the
grains are confined in a container which is capable of putting up resistance
against the tremendous volume of gasses created by their ignition, there is an
explosion. When the powder is weakly enclosed, or unconfined, the effects are
less violent—but equally spectacular.
A spurt of fire leapt
upwards from the lamp!
With
a "whoosh!" sound, the bag erupted into flames and a billowing,
rapidly increasing cloud of white gas!
Instantly, all was
pandemonium inside the pavilion!
Engulfed
by the full volume of the inferno, Talgum reeled backwards, his tunic alight.
Almost choked by the swirling fumes, he could not scream despite the agony that
he was suffering. Coughing in his attempts to do so, he twirled around. Going
in the direction of the main entrance, he collapsed to roll over and over in
the frenzy of his torment. His burning garments caused the silk-like padded
covering on the floor to ignite. Once started, the flames spread across the
inflammable material and reached, then began to consume, the front wall.
Being confident that she had won Bunduki
over, Charole had not suspected that he was trying to trick her. However,
seeing him turning his back, she sensed that the experiment could prove
dangerous. So, without attempting to stop the warrior, she had started to back
away. She was just far enough from the banar-gatah rider
to avoid being caught in the blaze when the bag ignited. Startled by the
effect, she let out a shriek which ended in a burst of coughing as the gasses
created by the burning powder reached her. Throwing herself involuntarily to
the rear, she tripped over a cushion and toppled backwards.
Without
needing to turn, as he heard the sound of the detonation and felt the rush of
heat strike his back, the blond giant put the rest of his scheme into operation.
Bracing himself for the effort, he jerked his wrists apart. Such was the power
exerted by his mighty muscles that the swivel link of the hobbles snapped as if
it had been made of thin thread instead of metal.
Attracted
by the commotion, Charole's maid and Talgum's companion dashed in from the
kitchen portion of the pavilion. Letting out a screech of terror at what she
saw, the woman rapidly retreated. Being made of sterner stuff, the man started
to draw his sword and run towards Bunduki. Despite his courage, he was startled
and not a little alarmed at the ease with which the blond giant broke free from
the hobbles' confinement.
Having liberated his wrists, Bunduki sprang
to the table. He saw the warrior approaching as his right hand closed on the
hilt of the Smithsonian bowie knife. Scooping up the lamp with his left hand,
he flung it at the man. Then, grasping the knife, he bounded over the table to
the rear wall.
Glancing to his right, the blond giant saw
the warrior deflect the lamp by knocking it aside with his left hand. It
crashed to the floor by the rear wall and shattered. Gushing out, the fuel
burst into flames and started a second blaze.
Swinging his right arm up and around in a
forward circle, Bunduki sank the blade of his knife into the wall with a
chopping motion. He could hear shouts of alarm being raised from various
points, warning him
that
the disturbance and fire were attracting attention. By thrusting his left leg
outwards and bending his right knee, he crouched and drew the knife downwards.
Its edge sliced through the material without any difficulty.
However,
even as the blond giant was cutting his way out, Talgum's companion was rushing
closer and raising the sword ready to strike. Outside, the guards at each end
of the pavilion saw what was happening. Grasping their lances, although they
were on foot, they converged upon the opening that Bunduki's knife was making.
* * * * * *
Watching Dryaka rushing across the pavilion
tent and into his sleeping accommodation, Dawn Drum-mond-Clayton wondered what
he had meant by his cryptic reference to the "Thunder Powder." She
could tell that he attributed a considerable amount of importance to it,
whatever it might be. So much so that he had not noticed that he had dropped
the Randall Model 1 fighting knife almost at her feet. What was more, his behaviour was causing the other occupant of the
main portion to ignore her. The man who had brought the news was staring after
the High Priest with his mouth hanging open was clearly oblivious of everything
else.
Dawn was alert for any chance that might
arise for her to escape. As yet, however, she could not see how she might turn
Dryaka's perturbation to any great advantage. At best, it offered her the
opportunity to arm herself. Reaching forward, keeping the spy and the flap
through which the High Priest had passed under observation, she closed her
hands around the hilt of the knife. It was her intention to hide the weapon
under the cushion upon which she was sitting. If she was luck it would not be
missed until the time came for her to make use of it.
Seeing Dryaka returning, Dawn knew she would
not be able to cany out her plan before he saw her. So she turned the knife,
hiding its hilt with her hands and, pushing aside the hobbles' connecting link,
concealed the blade with her forearms. Studying the cold anger on his face, she
decided he was so concerned by whatever he had discovered that he might not
notice her weapon was missing.
While
Zongaffa had not seen any practical application for the "Thunder
Powder," Dryaka had sensed that it might be put to military use. The
problem had been to find a way of utilizing it. Having sworn the old man to
secrecy and prevented anybody else, even the Council of Elders, from learning
of the experiments, Dryaka had been seeking some means of controlling the
explosive qualities of the powder. He had been asked to return the previous day
because the herbalist had believed they were approaching a break-through. For
various reasons they had not been able to put the idea to the test so far.
Their attempts to do so that afternoon had been frustrated, which had been the
cause of his annoyance when he arrived in the pavilion that evening.
Due to his belief that the "Thunder
Powder" would give him sufficient power to overthrow the Council of Elders
and let him assume sole control of the Mun-Gatah nation, Dryaka wanted to keep
all knowledge of its purpose and qualities to himself. Finding that one small
bag was missing was cause for alarm and anger.
"Who took it?" the High Priest
snarled, glaring at the spy.
"I—I d—don't kn—know," the' man
quavered,
showing his fright at having to deliver a negative reply.
"Talgum and------- ."
At that moment there was a dull
"whoosh!" from somewhere beyond the front wall of the pavilion. An
angry exclamation burst from the High Priest as he swung to stare in the
direction from which the sound had originated.
For a moment, Dawn wondered if her ears were
playing tricks on her. As a child, she had helped Bun-duki experiment with the
effects of igniting a pile of gunpowder. The noise it had made was almost identical
to that which she had just heard. Then, as shouts rang out from different parts
of the camp, she realized what the 'Thunder Powder" must be.
Letting
out a bellow of rage, Dryaka charged to and threw open the front entrance. As
he was going out, Dawn saw the red glow of a fire growing rapidly bigger from
the opposite pavilion. She knew that it was the one occupied by Charole.
Bunduki's captor!
Following
his master's, example, the spy dashed out of the pavilion without giving Dawn a
single thought. Coming to her feet, she changed the knife around so that its
blade would be available for use. While she was doing so her eyes darted
around. She guessed that Bunduki had contrived to set off the gunpowder as a
distraction to help him escape. Judging from the commotion outside, he
was having considerable success and she wanted to find some way of adding to
the confusion.
Dawn's
gaze went to the peak of the pavilion where a chandelier-like cluster of lamps
was hanging. The cord by which it could be raised or lowered slanted down and
was tied to one of the supports of the partition from the kitchen section.
Even as Dawn started towards the lower end of
the cord, the serving women came from the kitchen one behind the other. Seeing
the girl was not only standing, but was holding the knife, the leading woman
stopped and opened her mouth to scream for help. Darting forward, Dawn bounded
into the air to perform a drop-kick. Caught in the bosom by the girl's feet,
agony numbed the woman's mind and chopped off her words before they could be
spoken. What was more, the impact flung her backwards to collide with and
knock over her companion.
Rebounding
from delivering the attack, Dawn landed on her feet. Two strides took her to
the cord. Grasping the knife's hilt in both hands, she cut through the strands.
Down plunged the chandelier. On striking the floor, the four lamps burst and
flames began to lick hungrily around.
Satisfied with what she had
done, the girl ran to the rear wall. Plunging in the knife, she slit open a
gash long enough to form an exit. A glance through it told her that the
sentries who had been at the rear were no longer there. Deciding that they must
have gone to investigate the cause of the other disturbance, she stepped
outside. Before she had taken more than half a dozen strides, she heard a yell
from behind and to the left. A quick look that way warned her that at least one
of them had heard the chandelier fall and was returning. There was a second
yell, from the other side.
Without
bothering to look, Dawn started to run through the darkness and the two
sentries took up the pursuit.
******
With the approaching warrior's sword lashing
around at him, Bunduki dropped to the floor. Taken by surprise and missing his
mark, the man's impetus carried him onwards. He tripped over the blond
giant's legs and plunged headlong through the gap in the walL
Seeing
the warrior half in and half out of the tent, the guards did not wait to make
an identification. Raising their lances as he sprawled face down, they drove
the weapons to impale him before either realized he was making a mistake.
Leaping to his feet, Bunduki looked around
him. The two fires were raging with unabated fury. However, Charole was
already sitting up. Satisfied that she would be able to escape, he sprang
through the gap. His appearance took the guards by surprise. Their weapons were
still embedded in the warrior's body.
Noticing
the guards were wearing metal helmets and breastplates, the blond giant based bis strategy accordingly. Hurdling
the body so that he passed between them, he struck at both simultaneously. In
one respect, the man on the left fared somewhat better than his companion. He
received the heel of Bunduki's clenched fist in the centre of the face, while
the other guard was struck by the scalloped brass butt cap of the bowie's hilt. It was a small mercy, something like feeling
grateful that one had been kicked by a horse instead of a mule. Each recipient
was flung backwards with blood gushing from his smashed nostrils and mouth.
Going down, neither of them was in any condition to interfere with the blond
giant's departure.
Having
made good his own escape, Bunduki's next concern was to rescue Dawn. He knew
that she was being held in the High Priest's pavilion, or had been. There was a
possibility that she had been moved elsewhere. With the whole camp aroused by
the fire, searching for and reaching her would be
difficult. Unless he could create another diversion, it might even endanger
her life.
Hearing the snorting of the disturbed
zebras.not far away, Bunduki remembered something which his short acquaintance
with them had taught him. An idea sprang to his head. Knife in hand, he loped
swiftly towards the herd. Alert for any evidence that he was being pursued and
hearing none, he selected a route which would keep him hidden
from the animals' attendants. Keeping going until they were between him and
the camp, he came to a halt. He noticed that a second fire was burning near the
one that he had started. From its position, he guessed correctiy that it was at
the High Priest's pavilion.
Worried
in case Dawn should be trapped in the second blaze, although he was also
hoping that she might have caused it as an aid to escaping, the blond giant
tossed back his head and cupped his hands about his mouth.
"Aaaah—eeee—aaaah—eee—aaagh!"
Deep, awesome and threatening, the challenge
roar of a bull-Mangani
thundered into the air!
The
result was everything Bunduki had hoped to achieve!
Already made restless by the commotion at the
camp, the zebras were milling in a worried manner. Startled
by the menacing roar from so close at hand, they had one idea in their heads.
To get away from whatever had caused the sound. That
applied equally to the animals being used by the men who were guarding the
herd. Rearing and plunging in terror, the majority of them threw their riders.
Those which did not, bolted before the herd-guards on them could do anything
to avert the panic. Within seconds of the call having been made, all of the
zebras were stampeding recklessly towards the camp.
Having
achieved his purpose, Bunduki set off after the animals, but at an angle which
would take him to the rear of the second blazing pavilion.
Despite being encumbered by having her wrists
manacled and the knife in her right hand, Dawn contrived to draw ahead of the
two guards who were chasing her. They were carrying their long lances and had
less inducement to speed. When the challenge roar thundered out, the girl felt
her heart give a bound. There was no doubt in her mind as to who had made it.
From behind her came startled exclamations as the pursuing Mun-Gatahs heard
the call. Ahead, there were snorts of alarm, mingled with furious yells as men
were thrown from their mounts. Then hooves drummed as the mass of zebras took
flight
Taking
a chance of expanding much needed air from her lungs, Dawn answered Bunduki
with the distress call of a she-Mangani. Once
again, the pair of guards expressed their astonishment. Hoping to add to their
consternation, the girl stopped to confront them.
Crouching
slightly, grasping the knife with grim determination, Dawn peered through the
surrounding gloom. As soon as she saw the two vague shapes starting to form,
she repeated the call. From not too far away, although the sound of his running feet was being drowned by the rumbling caused
by the stampeding zebras, Bunduki gave his reply.
Staring
ahead of them, the two Mun-Gatahs could make out Dawn's figure. The faint light
thrown by the stars did not permit great clarity of vision, but tended to
distort it. To their eyes, the ill-seen form appeared to be very different from
that of the beautiful and shapely girl who had emerged from the tent. That
impression was increased by the sound which came from her.
Nor
did the response which it received do anything to steady their nerves.
Brave
enough under normal circumstances, the eerie sounds—associated with the
mysterious and dreaded "Hairy People"—filled the two warriors with
superstitious dread. Then they made out an even larger form that came looming
out of the blackness. It proved to be the final straw. Discarding their lances,
the pair spun around and fled toward the camp.
Dropping the knife as her pursuers ran away,
Dawn turned. A moment later, she was in Bunduki's arms.
"Dawn!" the blond giant said.
"Are you all right?"
"Yes," the girl
confirmed. "Are you?"
"I am," Bunduki replied and a
harder note crept into his voice. "Did any of them—?"
"No,"
Dawn assured him, knowing what the question had implied.
Releasing his adoptive cousin after having
satisfied himself that she had not been harmed or sexually assaulted, Bunduki
looked at the camp. Following the direction of his gaze, Dawn watched and
listened to the confusion and pandemonium as the zebras rushed through it.
Tents were collapsing and their erstwhile occupants were being scattered by the
panic-stricken animals.
"We'd better get going," Bunduki
suggested, after a few seconds. "I don't think they'll be coming after us
just yet, but we might as well build up as good a lead as we can before they
do."
"Can you get these hobbles off first,
please?" Dawn inquired, holding out her hands. "Then I'll find my
knife and we'll be going. It looks as if you've lost your bow and arrows, if
you had them with you."
"I
didn't," the blond giant answered, starting to unbuckle the hobbles.
While he was setting the girl free and she was retrieving her knife, he
explained why he had not been in possession of the weapons.
After
a final check that nobody from the disrupted and ruined camp was coming, Dawn
and Bunduki set off. Using the stars as a way of guiding themselves, they made
for the ford across the river. It was their intention to rejoin Joar-Fane and
At-Vee. Not only would they have a better chance of evading any pursuers from
the plains-dwelling Mun-Gatah nation in the jungle, but they would be in
possession of weapons with which to defend themselves and the two Telongas.
Knowing
the need to keep constantly alert against the possibility of meeting dangerous
animals, or so that they could detect any attempt that might be made to
recapture them, Dawn and Bunduki kept as quiet as possible while walking along.
Much as they would have liked to discuss the matter which was of such interest
and importance to them both, they agreed to put it off until a more suitable
occasion.
Daybreak found the girl and the blond giant
at the edge of the river. They had reached it without incident, or hearing
anything to suggest that the Mun-Gatahs were following them. Nor did they
anticipate any difficulty in making the crossing. Wading into the ford side by
side, they started to go over. As they were approaching the opposite bank, they
saw something which brought them to a halt and sent their hands to the hilts of
their knives.
Coming
from nowhere, or so it seemed, something started to glow about ten feet from
the river's edge. Faintly at first, it became brighter and brighter.
Neither
Dawn nor Bunduki had ever seen anything like it in all their fives.
CHAPTER
SEVENTEEN
Will
You Go Back, Or Stay Here?
DAWN
DRUMMOND-CLAYTON and Bunduki stared at the shimmering, intangible glow and wondered
what it might be. They were not kept waiting long for an answer, but when it
came neither of them was much the wiser. After a few seconds, the glow began
to take shape as a talL white-haired and venerable-looking old man clad in
long, flowing white robes.
"Good
morning, Miss Drummond-Clayton, Mr. Gunn," the figure said, in a gentle
and pleasant voice. "Or may I call you 'Bunduki,' sir?"
"What the—!" the blond giant began.
"Please
come out of the water," requested the man, or whatever it was.
"There's no cause for you to be alarmed and your knives won't be
needed."
"What shall we do, Bunduki?" Dawn
inquired, glancing at her adoptive cousin in perplexity.
"Get
out of the water," the blond giant answered, without taking his eyes from
the figure. "Who are you?"
"You can call me your 'Supplier,' "
the figure replied, still in friendly tones. "I
should explain that this is not my real form. It is merely an appearance for
your convenience, a conventionalization which allows you to see and
communicate with us."
"But what are you?" Dawn insisted
as she and Bunduki waded from the river.
"An alien life form so complex that you
could not understand it," the "Supplier" answered.
"Then it must have
been you who saved us when 199
the Land Rover went over the edge of the Gambuti
Gorge," Bunduki guessed.
"It
was," the "Supplier" confirmed. "And, as you both surmised,
transported you to the planet you may call Zillikian. You have never heard of
it. It lies exactly opposite Earth and follows the same orbit around the
sun."
"If you were so close," Dawn said
indignantly, "why didn't you stop whoever it was shooting M'Bili?"
"We are not permitted
to interfere in such matters."
"You saved us," Bunduki pointed out.
"Only
because there was no way in which you could have saved yourselves. I think it
would be advisable for me to give you a full explanation."
"Can
we walk while we're talking?" Bunduki requested. "If you're the one
who's been watching me, you'll know that we didn't exactly leave the Mun-Gatahs
in a peaceful and friendly manner."
"We
have been keeping both of you under observation," the
"Supplier" admitted, turning and starting to stride along between the
girl and the blond giant with the vigour of a young man despite his aged
appearance. "It is strange, but none of the others have ever been aware of
our scrutiny. However, throughout your ages, we "Suppliers" have
brought many life forms to Zillikian, including humanoids from Earth and other
planets.
"The Telongas were the first human
beings, brought from the South Sea island which had
always been their home just before it was destroyed by a volcanic eruption. We
settled them in villages in the jungle and began to supply their needs. As you
have noticed, there are no noxious, nor
disease-bearing insects here. Nor did the specimens—if you
will excuse me referring to human beings in such a fashion—bring harmful germs
and bacteria with them. During the transportation, we purged all such
from their bodies to ensure that they would have nothing to prevent them from
establishing their species.
"Incidentally, the
reason you both felt so hungry on recovering was that we subjected you to the
same treatment, which includes emptying out your stomachs and alimentary
tracts. "But I digress.
"The Telongas established themselves in
a way which exceeded our expectations. Given adequate protection against the
predatory beasts, with their needs supplied by us and the jungle, their
numbers increased at a truly amazing rate. Normally that could not have
happened, as illness, starvation or warfare would have held the population in
check.
"As the animals could not do it, we had
to find some
other means of control. So we decided that human
predators were the only solution. The other nations of
this continent maintain their own balances by raiding
and fighting with each other, but none of them had
come across the Telongas-------- ."
"So
you gave the Mun-Gatahs a similar kind of subconscious auto-suggestion, as you
did Dawn and I, letting them know about the Telongas," Bunduki interrupted.
"Was the People-Taker your idea too?"
"It
was," the "Supplier" admitted. "That was to prevent them
from de-populating the Telongas, who had been living in such ease that the
majority of them had lost all will, or knowledge, of how to defend themselves
against human foes. The People-Taker removes only sufficient of the population
to maintain a natural balance. In return, the Mun-Gatahs protect the Telongas
against the other nations."
"And
you supply them all with arms, clothing, equipment, most of their needs, in
fact," Dawn guessed.
"We
do. Each nation has its supply point, to which we deliver their needs."
"And
that means they never need to invent anything, or to advance technically,"
Bunduki stated.
"Is
that such a bad thing?" the "Supplier" challenged mildly.
"You have seen what technical advancement has done to Earth."
"You
could have a point there, sir," the blond giant conceded. "Your supplying them accounts for why their property looks as
though it has been made by more sophisticated machines than they seemed
capable of inventing. But why did you rescue Dawn and I
and fetch us here?"
"It
has long been our wish to do so with a pair from your family," the
"Supplier" replied. "But we are not permitted to remove any life
form from its natural habitat unless it is on the point of dying. Every time we
saw one of your family in danger, we computed that, no
matter how serious the situation might be, they would contrive to escape. There
was no way that you could have survived. So we collected you and equipped you
for your presence here. Your facility for learning languages was of the
greatest use, allowing us to give you the means to communicate with members of
any nation with whom you come into contact. For the rest, post-hypnotic
suggestion informed both of you that the other was alive and gave you rough
directions where to find each other. You might call it an initiative test and,
I may say, you have passed it with great success."
"Do
you mean that you manipulated the meetings we had with the Mangani and all the others?" Bunduki demanded
angrily.
"No,"
the "Supplier" assured the blond giant. "That was pure
chance."
"I'd
still like to know why you brought us here," Dawn insisted and Bunduki
nodded his agreement.
"To
offer you much the same position as you held in Ambagasali, Bunduki," the "Supplier" explained. "We want you
to be the Chief Warden of Zillikian."
"Have I any
choice?" asked the blond giant.
"We
can take you back to Earth, but you will have difficulty in explaining how you
came to escape from the Land Rover. I'm afraid that time travel, at least as
far as going back through it, is still only feasible in the works of your
science-fiction writers and a week has elapsed since the incident."
"Then
our people will have heard and think we're dead," Dawn gasped.
"We have already
informed them that you are alive,"
the "Supplier" said calmly. "Lord
Greystoke says that he leaves the decision to you. Will you go back, or stay
here?"
As
the "Supplier" dropped back a couple of steps, Dawn and Bunduki
looked at each other. It did not occur to them that he might have been lying,
even with regard to his having notified their families of what had happened to
them. Any nation, or culture, capable of doing what he had
claimed and clearly could do, would have no difficulty in communicating with
the Grey-stokes even though they were living in Pellucidar at the Earth's core.
Much
the same thoughts were running through Dawn's and Bunduki's minds.
Should they accept the offer and remain on
ZilliMan?
Except
for the absence of the other members of their family, the planet offered
everything that the girl and the blond giant had so often discussed and wished
that they could find. It was primitive, brutal perhaps, violent certainly; but
completely natural, unspoiled, free from the mental and physical pollution of
Earth and its bitter social conflicts.
To Bunduki, the prospect of staying was
intriguing. He would be in much the same position of Chief Warden as he had
been in the Ambagasali Wild Life Reserve. Yet here the task would be so much
more complex and interesting. It would be a challenge and he could never
resist a challenge.
Watching
her adoptive cousin, although she was already starting to consider him
less in that particular light, Dawn knew what he was thinking. Almost with
bated breath, she waited to hear his answer. On that depended her future.
"I don't wish to influence you, but if you decide to stay, you will be
everything here that Tarzan was on earth, the "Supplier" remarked,
after almost a minute's silence. "And, if you
decide to stay, at some time in the future we could arrange either for you to
visit your family, or for them to come to see you."
"What about it, Dawn?" Bunduki
asked.
"What do you think?" the girl countered, looking at his handsome if bruised
face.
"We have Joar-Fane and At-Vee to
consider," the blond giant pointed out. "With his
ankle sprained, he can neither travel, hunt nor protect her adequately.
So they'll be in danger until he's recovered. I'm going back to help him."
"Then so am I!" Dawn stated firmly
and her right hand reached out to take hold of BunduM's left.
When they looked behind them, the
"Supplier"— whoever, or whatever, he might be—was dissolving into
shimmering incandescence and disappeared in the same way that he had come.
"You
will not see me again," came the voice from the
fading glow. "Nor, while I can supply certain of your needs, can I render
any physical or actual assistance. What happens now is entirely up to
you."
"We wouldn't have it any other
way," Bunduki declared and the girl at his side nodded her agreement.
Hand
in hand, the blond giant and his beautiful companion walked onwards to their
new life.
B OO
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Is
this a novel about Tarzan of the Apes?
No. It is a novel about Tarzan's adopted son.
Is this a novel by Edgar Rice Burroughs?
No. It is a novel by J. T. Edson, by special
authorization of the son of Edgar Rice Burroughs. Is this a novel about lost lands
and savage beasts?
Yes. It most certainly is! Is there a
beautiful girl in frightful peril?
Yes — and what's more,
she's Tarzan's adopted
granddaughter! If I have enjoyed the Tarzan novels, will I like BUNDURI?
You bet you will! It's the next best thing to having ERB writing again!
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