XXII
The Search Party
When dawn broke upon the little camp of Frenchmen
in the heart of the jungle it found a sad and disheartened
group.
As soon as it was light enough to see their
surroundings Lieutenant Charpentier sent men in groups of three in
several directions to locate the trail, and in ten minutes it was
found and the expedition was hurrying back toward the beach.
It was slow work, for they bore the bodies of six
dead men, two more having succumbed during the night, and several
of those who were wounded required support to move even very
slowly.
Charpentier had decided to return to camp for
reinforcements, and then make an attempt to track down the natives
and rescue D’Arnot.
It was late in the afternoon when the exhausted men
reached the clearing by the beach, but for two of them the return
brought so great a happiness that all their suffering and
heartbreaking grief was forgotten on the instant.
As the little party emerged from the jungle the
first person that Professor Porter and Cecil Clayton saw was Jane,
standing by the cabin door.
With a little cry of joy and relief she ran forward
to greet them, throwing her arms about her father’s neck and
bursting into tears for the first time since they had been cast
upon this hideous and adventurous shore.
Professor Porter strove manfully to suppress his
own emotions, but the strain upon his nerves and weakened vitality
were too much for him, and at length, burying his old face in the
girl’s shoulder, he sobbed quietly like a tired child.
Jane led him toward the cabin, and the Frenchmen
turned toward the beach from which several of their fellows were
advancing to meet them.
Clayton, wishing to leave father and daughter
alone, joined the sailors and remained talking with the officers
until their boat pulled away toward the cruiser whither Lieutenant
Charpentier was bound to report the unhappy outcome of his
adventure.
Then Clayton turned back slowly toward the cabin.
His heart was filled with happiness. The woman he loved was
safe.
He wondered by what manner of miracle she had been
spared. To see her alive seemed almost unbelievable.
As he approached the cabin he saw Jane coming out.
When she saw him she hurried forward to meet him.
“Jane!” he cried, “God has been good to us, indeed.
Tell me how you escaped—what form Providence took to save you
for—us.”
He had never before called her by her given name.
Forty-eight hours before it would have suffused Jane with a soft
glow of pleasure to have heard that name from Clayton’s lips—now it
frightened her.
“Mr. Clayton,” she said quietly, extending her
hand, “first let me thank you for your chivalrous loyalty to my
dear father. He has told me how noble and self-sacrificing you have
been. How can we repay you!”
Clayton noticed that she did not return his
familiar salutation, but he felt no misgivings on that score. She
had been through so much. This was no time to force his love upon
her, he quickly realized.
“I am already repaid,” he said. “Just to see you
and Professor Porter both safe, well, and together again. I do not
think that I could much longer have endured the pathos of his quiet
and uncomplaining grief.
“It was the saddest experience of my life, Miss
Porter; and then, added to it, there was my own grief—the greatest
I have ever known. But his was so hopeless—his was pitiful. It
taught me that no love, not even that of a man for his wife may be
so deep and terrible and self-sacrificing as the love of a father
for his daughter.”
The girl bowed her head. There was a question she
wanted to ask, but it seemed almost sacrilegious in the face of the
love of these two men and the terrible suffering they had endured
while she sat laughing and happy beside a godlike creature of the
forest, eating delicious fruits and looking with eyes of love into
answering eyes.
But love is a strange master; and human nature is
still stranger, so she asked her question.
“Where is the forest man who went to rescue you?
Why did he not return?”
“I do not understand,” said Clayton. “Whom do you
mean?”
“He who has saved each of us—who saved me from the
gorilla.”
“Oh,” cried Clayton, in surprise. “It was he who
rescued you? You have not told me anything of your adventure, you
know.”
“But the wood man,” she urged. “Have you not seen
him? When we heard the shots in the jungle, very faint and far
away, he left me. We had just reached the clearing, and he hurried
off in the direction of the fighting. I know he went to aid
you.”
Her tone was almost pleading—her manner tense with
suppressed emotion. Clayton could not but notice it, and he
wondered, vaguely, why she was so deeply moved—so anxious to know
the whereabouts of this strange creature.
Yet a feeling of apprehension of some impending
sorrow haunted him, and in his breast, unknown to himself, was
implanted the first germ of jealousy and suspicion of the ape-man,
to whom he owed his life.
“We did not see him,” he replied quietly. “He did
not join us.” And then after a moment of thoughtful pause:
“Possibly he joined his own tribe—the men who attacked us.” He did
not know why he had said it, for he did not believe it.
The girl looked at him wide eyed for a
moment.
“No!” she exclaimed vehemently, much too vehemently
he thought. “It could not be. They were savages.”
Clayton looked puzzled.
“He is a strange, half-savage creature of the
jungle, Miss Porter. We know nothing of him. He neither speaks nor
understands any European tongue—and his ornaments and weapons are
those of the West Coast savages.”
Clayton was speaking rapidly.
“There are no other human beings than savages
within hundreds of miles, Miss Porter. He must belong to the tribes
which attacked us, or to some other equally savage—he may even be a
cannibal.”
Jane blanched.
“I will not believe it,” she half whispered. “It is
not true. You shall see,” she said, addressing Clayton, “that he
will come back and that he will prove that you are wrong. You do
not know him as I do. I tell you that he is a gentleman.”
Clayton was a generous and chivalrous man, but
something in the girl’s breathless defense of the forest man
stirred him to unreasoning jealousy, so that for the instant he
forgot all that they owed to this wild demi-god, and he answered
her with a half sneer upon his lip.
“Possibly you are right, Miss Porter;” he said,
“but I do not think that any of us need worry about our
carrion-eating acquaintance. The chances are that he is some
half-demented castaway who will forget us more quickly, but no more
surely, than we shall forget him. He is only a beast of the jungle,
Miss Porter.”
The girl did not answer, but she felt her heart
shrivel within her.
She knew that Clayton spoke merely what he thought,
and for the first time she began to analyze the structure which
supported her new-found love, and to subject its object to a
critical examination.
Slowly she turned and walked back to the cabin. She
tried to imagine her wood-god by her side in the saloon of an ocean
liner. She saw him eating with his hands, tearing his food like a
beast of prey, and wiping his greasy fingers upon his thighs. She
shuddered.
She saw him as she introduced him to her
friends—uncouth, illiterate—a boor; and the girl winced.
She had reached her room now, and as she sat upon
the edge of her bed of ferns and grasses, with one hand resting
upon her rising and falling bosom, she felt the hard outlines of
the man’s locket.
She drew it out, holding it in the palm of her hand
for a moment with tear-blurred eyes bent upon it. Then she raised
it to her lips, and crushing it there buried her face in the soft
ferns, sobbing.
“Beast?” she murmured. “Then God make me a beast;
for, man or beast, I am yours.”
She did not see Clayton again that day. Esmeralda
brought her supper to her, and she sent word to her father that she
was suffering from the reaction following her adventure.
The next morning Clayton left early with the relief
expedition in search of Lieutenant d’Arnot. There were two hundred
armed men this time, with ten officers and two surgeons, and
provisions for a week.
They carried bedding and hammocks, the latter for
transporting their sick and wounded.
It was a determined and angry company—a punitive
expedition as well as one of relief. They reached the sight of the
skirmish of the previous expedition shortly after noon, for they
were now traveling a known trail and no time was lost in
exploring.
From there on the elephant-track led straight to
Mbonga’s village. It was but two o’clock when the head of the
column halted upon the edge of the clearing.
Lieutenant Charpentier, who was in command,
immediately sent a portion of his force through the jungle to the
opposite side of the village. Another detachment was dispatched to
a point before the village gate, while he remained with the balance
upon the south side of the clearing.
It was arranged that the party which was to take
its position to the north, and which would be the last to gain its
station should commence the assault, and that their opening volley
should be the signal for a concerted rush from all sides in an
attempt to carry the village by storm at the first charge.
For half an hour the men with Lieutenant
Charpentier crouched in the dense foliage of the jungle, waiting
the signal. To them it seemed like hours. They could see natives in
the fields, and others moving in and out of the village gate.
At length the signal came—a sharp rattle of
musketry, and like one man, an answering volley tore from the
jungle to the west and to the south.
The natives in the field dropped their implements
and broke madly for the palisade. The French bullets mowed them
down, and the French sailors bounded over their prostrate bodies
straight for the village gate.
So sudden and unexpected the assault had been that
the whites reached the gates before the frightened natives could
bar them, and in another minute the village street was filled with
armed men fighting hand to hand in an inextricable tangle.
For a few moments the blacks held their ground
within the entrance to the street, but the revolvers, rifles and
cutlasses of the Frenchmen crumpled the native spearmen and struck
down the black archers with their bows half drawn.
Soon the battle turned to a wild rout, and then to
a grim massacre; for the French sailors had seen bits of D’Arnot’s
uniform upon several of the black warriors who opposed them.
They spared the children and those of the women
whom they were not forced to kill in self-defense, but when at
length they stopped, panting, blood covered and sweating, it was
because there lived to oppose them no single warrior of all the
savage village of Mbonga.
Carefully they ransacked every hut and corner of
the village, but no sign of D‘Arnot could they find. They
questioned the prisoners by signs, and finally one of the sailors
who had served in the French Congo found that he could make them
understand the bastard tongue that passes for language between the
whites and the more degraded tribes of the coast, but even then
they could learn nothing definite regarding the fate of
D’Arnot.
Only excited gestures and expressions of fear could
they obtain in response to their inquiries concerning their fellow;
and at last they became convinced that these were but evidences of
the guilt of these demons who had slaughtered and eaten their
comrade two nights before.
At length all hope left them, and they prepared to
camp for the night within the village. The prisoners were herded
into three huts where they were heavily guarded. Sentries were
posted at the barred gates, and finally the village was wrapped in
the silence of slumber, except for the wailing of the native women
for their dead.
The next morning they set out upon the return march. Their original
intention had been to burn the village, but this idea was abandoned
and the prisoners were left behind, weeping and moaning, but with
roofs to cover them and a palisade for refuge from the beasts of
the jungle.
Slowly the expedition retraced its steps of the
preceding day. Ten loaded hammocks retarded its pace. In eight of
them lay the more seriously wounded, while two swung beneath the
weight of the dead.
Clayton and Lieutenant Charpentier brought up the
rear of the column; the Englishman silent in respect for the
other’s grief, for D’Arnot and Charpentier had been inseparable
friends since boyhood.
Clayton could not but realize that the Frenchman
felt his grief the more keenly because D‘Arnot’s sacrifice had been
so futile, since Jane had been rescued before D’Arnot had fallen
into the hands of the savages, and again because the service in
which he had lost his life had been outside his duty and for
strangers and aliens; but when he spoke of it to Lieutenant
Charpentier, the latter shook his head.
“No, Monsieur,” he said, “D’Arnot would have chosen
to die thus. I only grieve that I could not have died for him, or
at least with him. I wish that you could have known him better,
Monsieur. He was indeed an officer and a gentleman—a title
conferred on many, but deserved by so few.
“He did not die futilely, for his death in the
cause of a strange American girl will make us, his comrades, face
our ends the more bravely, however they may come to us.”
Clayton did not reply, but within him rose a new
respect for Frenchmen which remained undimmed ever after.
It was quite late when they reached the cabin by
the beach. A single shot before they emerged from the jungle had
announced to those in camp as well as on the ship that the
expedition had been too late—for it had been prearranged that when
they came within a mile or two of camp one shot was to be fired to
denote failure, or three for success, while two would have
indicated that they had found no sign of either D’Arnot or his
black captors.
So it was a solemn party that awaited their coming,
and few words were spoken as the dead and wounded men were tenderly
placed in boats and rowed silently toward the cruiser.
Clayton, exhausted from his five days of laborious
marching through the jungle and from the effects of his two battles
with the blacks, turned toward the cabin to seek a mouthful of food
and then the comparative ease of his bed of grasses after two
nights in the jungle.
By the cabin door stood Jane.
“The poor lieutenant?” she asked. “Did you find no
trace of him?”
“We were too late, Miss Porter,” he replied
sadly.
“Tell me. What had happened?” she asked.
“I cannot, Miss Porter, it is too horrible.”
“You do not mean that they had tortured him?” she
whispered.
“We do not know what they did to him before they
killed him,” he answered, his face drawn with fatigue and the
sorrow he felt for poor D’Arnot and he emphasized the word
before.
“Before they killed him! What do you mean?
They are not—? They are not—?”
She was thinking of what Clayton had said of the
forest man’s probable relationship to this tribe and she could not
frame the awful word.
“Yes, Miss Porter they were—cannibals,” he said,
almost bitterly, for to him too had suddenly come the thought of
the forest man, and the strange, unaccountable jealousy he had felt
two days before swept over him once more.
And then in sudden brutality that was as unlike
Clayton as courteous consideration is unlike an ape, he blurted
out:
“When your forest god left you he was doubtless
hurrying to the feast.”
He was sorry ere the words were spoken though he
did not know how cruelly they had cut the girl. His regret was for
his baseless disloyalty to one who had saved the lives of every
member of his party, and offered harm to none.
The girl’s head went high.
“There could be but one suitable reply to your
assertion, Mr. Clayton,” she said icily, “and I regret that I am
not a man, that I might make it.”8 She
turned quickly and entered the cabin.
Clayton was an Englishman, so the girl had passed
quite out of sight before he deduced what reply a man would have
made.
“Upon my word,” he said ruefully, “she called me a
liar. And I fancy I jolly well deserved it,” he added thoughtfully.
“Clayton, my boy, I know you are tired out and unstrung, but that’s
no reason why you should make an ass of yourself You’d better go to
bed.”
But before he did so he called gently to Jane upon
the opposite side of the sailcloth partition, for he wished to
apologize, but he might as well have addressed the Sphinx. Then he
wrote upon a piece of paper and shoved it beneath the
partition.
Jane saw the little note and ignored it, for she
was very angry and hurt and mortified, but—she was a woman, and so
eventually she picked it up and read it.
My Dear Miss Porter:
I had no reason to insinuate what I
did. My only excuse is that my nerves must be
unstrung-which is no excuse at all.
Please try and think that I
did not say it. I am very sorry. I would not have
hurt you, above all others in the world. Say that you
forgive me.
WM. CECIL CLAYTON.
“He did think it or he never would have said it,”
reasoned the girl, “but it cannot be true—oh, I know it is not
true!”
One sentence in the letter frightened her: “I would
not have hurt you above all others in the world.”
A week ago that sentence would have filled her with
delight, now it depressed her.
She wished she had never met Clayton. She was sorry
that she had ever seen the forest god. No, she was glad. And there
was that other note she had found in the grass before the cabin the
day after her return from the jungle, the love note signed by
Tarzan of the Apes.
Who could be this new suitor? If he were another of
the wild denizens of this terrible forest what might he not do to
claim her?
“Esmeralda! Wake up,” she cried.
“You make me so irritable, sleeping there
peacefully when you know perfectly well that the world is filled
with sorrow.”
“Gaberelle!” screamed Esmeralda, sitting up. “What
is it now? A hipponocerous? Where is he, Miss Jane?”
“Nonsense, Esmeralda, there is nothing. Go back to
sleep. You are bad enough asleep, but you are infinitely worse
awake.”
“Yes honey, but what’s the matter with you,
precious? You acts sort of disgranulated this evening.”
“Oh, Esmeralda, I’m just plain ugly to-night,” said
the girl. “Don’t pay any attention to me—that’s a dear.”
“Yes, honey; now you go right to sleep. Your nerves
are all on edge. What with all these ripotamuses and man eating
geniuses that Mister Philander been telling about—Lord, it ain’t no
wonder we all get nervous prosecution.”
Jane crossed the little room, laughing, and kissing
the faithful woman, bid Esmeralda good night.