Erbzine.com Homepage
Official Edgar Rice Burroughs Tribute and Weekly Webzine Site
Since 1996 ~ Over 15,000 Webpages in Archive
Volume 7021d

ERB’S JUNGLE LOVE:
TARZAN AND THE JEWELS OF OPAR
Part Five by
Woodrow Edgar Nichols, Jr.
Welcome back.  For a change this chapter is a direct continuation of the last one.  The focus is now, of course, on the jewels of Opar.  Not to mention Tarzan’s continued confusion over his identity.  Still, this chapter has many diversions which are usual in an ERB crafted story.

IX: The Theft of the Jewels
For two days Werper sought for the party that had accompanied him from the camp to the barrier cliffs; but not until late in the afternoon of the second day did he find clew to its whereabouts, and then in such gruesome form that he was totally unnerved by the sight.

In an open glade he came upon the bodies of three of the blacks, terribly mutilated, nor did it require considerable deductive power to explain their murder.  Of the little party only these three had not been slaves.  The others, evidently tempted to hope for freedom from their cruel Arab master, had taken advantage of their separation from the main camp, to slay the three representatives of the hated power which held them in slavery, and vanish into the jungle.

Cold sweat exuded from Werper’s forehead as he contemplated the fate which chance had permitted him to escape, for had he been present when the conspiracy bore fruit, he, too, must have been of the garnered.

Tarzan showed not the slightest surprise or interest in the discovery.  Inherent in him was a calloused familiarity with violent death.  The refinements of his recent civilization expunged by the force of the sad calamity which had befallen him, left only the primitive sensibilities which his childhood’s training had imprinted indelibly upon the fabric of his mind.

The training of Kala, the examples and precepts of Kerchak, of Tublat, and of Terkoz now formed the basis of his every thought and action.  He retained a mechanical knowledge of French and English speech.  Werper had spoken to him in French, and Tarzan had replied in the same tongue without conscious realization that he had departed from the anthropoidal speech in which he had addressed La.  Had Werper used English, the result would have been the same.

Again, that night, as the two sat before their camp fire, Tarzan played with his shiny baubles.  Werper asked him what they were and where he had found them.  The ape-man replied that they were gay-colored stones, with which he purposed fashioning a necklace, and that he had found them far beneath the sacrificial court of the temple of the Flaming God.

Werper was relieved to find that Tarzan had no conception of the value of the gems.  This would make it easier for the Belgian to obtain possession of them.  Possibly the man would give them to him for the asking.  Werper reached out his hand toward the little pile that Tarzan had arranged upon a piece of flat wood before him.

“Let me see them,” said the Belgian.

Tarzan placed a large palm over his treasure.  He bared his fighting fangs, and growled. Werper withdrew his hand more quickly that he had advanced it.  Tarzan resumed his playing with the gems, and his conversation with Werper as though nothing unusual had occurred.  He had but exhibited the beast’s jealous protective instinct for a possession.  When he killed he shared the meat with Werper; but had Werper ever, by accident, laid a hand upon Tarzan’s share, he would have aroused the same savage, and resentful warning.

From that occurrence dated the beginning of a great fear in the breast of the Belgian for his savage companion.  He had never understood the transformation that had been wrought in Tarzan by the blow upon his head, other than to attribute it to a form of amnesia.  That Tarzan had once been, in truth, a savage, jungle beast.  Werper had not known, and so, of course, he could not guess that the man had reverted to the state in which his childhood and young manhood had been spent.


Whew!  I’m sure most red-blooded males were in a state of wonder when La offered herself to Tarzan and he had shown no reaction to her near perfect nakedness.  But his reversion back to childhood could account for this.  In fact, his first childhood love – documented in Jungle Tales – was for another female Great Ape!  The danger for him is that once he begins to remember being adult, the fact that he still can’t remember being married, may prove to be detrimental to his instinct to be faithful to his wife.  ERB will play with his readers with this idea.
Now Werper saw in the Englishman a dangerous maniac, whom the slightest ontoward accident might turn upon him with rending fangs.  Not for a moment did Werper attempt to delude himself into the belief that he could defend himself successfully against an attack by the ape-man.  His one hope lay in eluding him, and making for the far distant camp of Achmet Zek as rapidly as he could; but armed only with the sacrificial knife, Werper shrank from attempting the journey through the jungle.  Tarzan constituted a protection that was by no means despicable, even in the face of the larger carnivora, as Werper had reason to acknowledge from the evidence he had witnessed in the Oparian temple.

Too, Werper had his covetous soul set upon the pouch of gems, and so he was torn between the various emotions of avarice and fear.  But avarice it was that burned most strongly in his breast, to the end that he dared the dangers and suffered the terrors of constant association with him of obtaining possession of the fortune which the contents of the little pouch represented.

Achmet Zek should know nothing of these – these would be for Werper alone, and so soon as he could encompass his design he would reach the coast and take passage for America, where he could conceal himself beneath the veil of a new identity and enjoy to some measure the fruits of his theft.  He had it all planned out, did Lieutenant Albert Werper, living in anticipation the luxurious life of the idle rich.  He even found himself regretting that America was so provincial, and that nowhere in the new world was a city that might compare with his beloved Brussels.

It was upon the third day of their progress from Opar that the keen ears of Tarzan caught the sound of men behind them.  Werper heard nothing above the humming of the jungle insects, and the chattering of the lesser monkeys and the birds.

For a time Tarzan stood in statuesque silence, listening, his sensitive nostrils dilating as he assayed each passing breeze.  Then he withdrew Werper into the concealment of thick brush, and waited.  Presently, along the game trail that Werper and Tarzan had been following, there came in sight a sleek, black warrior, alert and watchful.

In single file behind him, there followed, one after another, near fifty others, each burdened with two dull-yellow ingots lashed upon his back.  Werper recognized the party immediately as that which had accompanied Tarzan on his journey to Opar.  He glanced at the ape-man; but in the savage, watchful eyes he saw no recognition of Basuli and those other loyal Waziri.


This is one of ERB’s favorite devices when writing a story, one I first came to realize when I watched I Love Lucy as a kid back in the Fifties.  The parties are striving to meet each other, but circumstances prevent this from happening right on the verge of them passing.  Lucy used elevators to accomplish most of these near misses, which would drive the audiences crazy. But that’s all part of Jungle Love.  This dramatic device must have a name, but, alas, I know it not.
When all had passed, Tarzan rose and emerged from concealment.  He looked down the trail in the direction the party had gone.  Then he turned to Werper.

“We will follow and slay them,” he said.

“Why?” asked the Belgian.

“They are black,” explained Tarzan.  “It was a black who killed Kala.  They are the enemies of the Manganis.”

Werper did not relish the idea of engaging in a battle with Basuli and his fierce fighting men.  And, again, he had welcomed the sight of them returning toward the Greystoke bungalow, for he had begun to have doubts as to his ability to retrace his steps to the Waziri country. Tarzan, he knew, had not the remotest idea of whither they were going.  By keeping at a safe distance behind the laden warriors, they would have no difficulty in following them home.  Once at the bungalow, Werper knew the way to the camp of Achmet Zek.  There was still another reason why he did not wish to interfere with the Waziri – they were bearing the great burden of treasure in the direction he wished it borne.  The farther they took it, the less the distance that he and Achmet Zek would have to transport it.

He argued with the ape-man therefore, against the latter’s desire to exterminate the blacks, and at last he prevailed upon Tarzan to follow them in peace, saying that he was sure they would lead them out of the forest into a rich country, teeming with game.

It was many marches from Opar to the Waziri country; but at last came the hour when Tarzan and the Belgian, following the trail of the warriors, topped the last rise, and saw before them the broad Waziri plain, the winding river, and the distant forests to the north and west.

A mile or more ahead of them, the line of warriors was creeping like a giant caterpillar through the tall grasses of the plain.  Beyond, grazing herds of zebra, hartebeest, and topi dotted the level landscape, while closer to the river a bull buffalo, his head and shoulders protruding from the reeds, watched the advancing blacks for a moment, only to turn at last and disappear into the safety of his dank and gloomy retreat.

Tarzan looked out across the familiar vista with no faintest gleam of recognition in his eyes.  He saw the game animals, and his mouth watered; but he did not look in the direction of his bungalow.   Werper, however, did.  A puzzled expression entered the Belgian’s eyes.  He shaded them with his palms and gazed long and earnestly toward the spot where the bungalow had stood.  He could not credit the testimony of his eyes – there was no bungalow – no barns – no outhouses.  The corrals, the haystacks – all were gone.  What could it mean?

And then, slowly there filtered into Werper’s consciousness an explanation of the havoc that had been wrought in the peaceful valley since last his eyes had rested upon it – Achmet Zek had been there!

Basuli and his warriors had noted the devastation the moment they had come in sight of the farm.  Now they hastened on toward it talking excitingly among themselves in animated speculation upon the cause and meaning of the catastrophe.

When, at last they crossed the trampled garden and stood before the charred ruins of their master’s bungalow, their greatest fears became convictions in the light of the evidence about them.

Remnants of human dead, half devoured by prowling hyenas and others of the carnivors which infested the region, lay rotting upon the ground, and among the corpses remained sufficient remnants of their clothing and ornaments to make clear to Basuli the frightful story of the disaster that had befallen his master’s house.

“The Arabs,” he said, as his men clustered about him.

The Waziri gazed about in mute rage for several minutes.  Everywhere they encountered only further evidence of the ruthlessness of the cruel enemy that had come during the Great Bwana’s absence and laid waste his property.

“What did they with ‘Lady’?” asked one of the blacks.

They had always called Lady Greystoke thus.

“The women they would have taken with them,” said Basuli.  “Our women and his.”

A giant black raised his spear above his head, and gave voice to a savage cry of rage and hate.  The others followed his example.  Basuli silenced them with a gesture.

“This is no time for useless noises of the mouth,” he said.  “The Great Bwana has taught us that it is acts by which things are done, not words.  Let us save our breath – we shall need it all to follow up the Arabs and slay them.  If ‘Lady’ and our women live the greater the need of haste, and warriors cannot travel fast upon empty lungs.”

From the shelter of the reeds along the river, Werper and Tarzan watched the blacks. They saw them dig a trench with their knives and fingers.  They saw them lay their yellow burdens in it and scoop the overturned earth back over the tops of the ingots.

Tarzan seemed little interested, after Werper had assured him that that which they buried was not good to eat; but Werper was intensely interested.  He would have given much had he had his own followers with him, that he might take away the treasure as soon as the blacks left, for he was sure that they would leave this scene of desolation and death as soon as possible.
The treasure buried, the blacks removed themselves a short distance up wind from the fetid corpses, where they made camp, that they might rest before setting out in pursuit of the Arabs.  It was already dusk.  Werper and Tarzan sat devouring some pieces of meat they had brought from their last camp.  The Belgian was occupied with his plans for the immediate future. He was positive that the Waziri would pursue Achmet Zek, for he knew enough of savage warfare, and of the characteristics of the Arabs and their degraded followers to guess that they had carried the Waziri women off into slavery.  This alone was assure immediate pursuit by so warlike a people as the Waziri.

Werper felt that he should find the means and the opportunity to push on ahead, that he might warn Achmet Zek of the coming of Basuli, and also of the location of the buried treasure. What the Arab would now do with Lady Greystoke in view of the mental affliction of her husband, Werper neither knew nor cared.  It was enough that the golden treasure buried upon the site of the burned bungalow was infinitely more valuable than any ransom that would have occurred even to the avaricious mind of the Arab, and if Werper could persuade the raider to share even a portion of it with him he would be well satisfied.

But by far the most important consideration, to Werper, at least, was the incalculable valuable treasure in the little leathern pouch at Tarzan’s side.  If he could but obtain possession of this!  He must!  He would!

His eyes wandered to the object of his greed.  They measured Tarzan’s giant frame, and rested upon the rounded muscles of his arms.  It was hopeless.  What could he, Werper, hope to accomplish, other than his own death, by an attempt to wrest the gems from their savage owner?

Disconsolate, Werper threw himself upon his side.  His head was pillowed on one arm, the other rested across his face in such a way that his eyes were hidden from the ape-man, though one of them was fastened upon him from beneath the shadow of the Belgian’s forearm.  For a time he lay thus, glowering at Tarzan, and originating for plundering him of his treasure – schemes that were discarded as futile as rapidly as they were born.

Tarzan presently let his own eyes rest upon Werper.  The Belgian saw that he was being watched, and lay very still.  After a few moments he simulated the regular breathing of deep slumber.

Tarzan had been thinking.  He had seen the Waziri bury their belongings.  Werper had told him that they were hiding them lest some one find them and take them away.  This seemed to Tarzan a splendid plan for safeguarding valuables.  Since Werper had evinced a desire to possess his glittering pebbles, Tarzan, with the suspicions of a savage, had guarded the baubles, of whose worth he was entirely ignorant, as zealously as though they spelled life or death to him.

For a long time the ape-man sat watching his companion.  At last, convinced that he slept, Tarzan withdrew his hunting knife and commenced to dig a hole in the ground before him.  With the blade he loosened up the earth, and with his handle he scooped it out until he had excavated a little cavity a few inches in diameter, and five or six inches in depth.  Into this he placed the pouch of jewels.  Werper almost forgot to breathe after the fashion of a sleeper as he saw what the ape-man was doing – he scarce repressed an ejaculation of satisfaction.



From the treasure chest in the Jewel Room of Opar, to the pouch of Tarzan, to the hole in the ground.  Are you following the jewels so far?  Great, keep it up.
Tarzan became suddenly rigid as his keen ears noted the cessation of the regular inspirations and expirations of his companion.  His narrow eyes bored straight down upon the Belgian.  Werper felt that he was lost – his must risk all on his ability to carry on the deception. He sighed, threw both arms outward, and turned over on his back mumbling as though in the throes of a bad dream.  A moment later he resumed the regular breathing.

Now he could not watch Tarzan, but he was sure that the man sat for a long time looking at him.  Then, faintly, Werper heard the other’s hands scraping dirt, and later patting it down.  He knew then that the jewels were buried.

It was an hour before Werper moved again, then he rolled over facing Tarzan and opened his eyes.  The ape-man slept.  By reaching out his hand Werper could touch the spot where the pouch was buried.

For a long time he lay watching and listening.  He moved about, making more noise than necessary, yet Tarzan did not awaken.  He drew the sacrificial knife from his belt, and plunged it into the ground.  Tarzan did not move.  Cautiously the Belgian pushed the blade downward through the loose earth above the pouch.  He felt the point touch the soft, tough fabric of the leather.  Then he pried down upon the handle.  Slowly the little mound of loose earth rose and parted.  An instance later a corner of the pouch came into view.  Werper pulled it from its hiding place, and tucked it in his shirt.  Then he refilled the hole and pressed the dirt carefully down as it had been before.

Greed had prompted him to an act, the discovery of which by his companion could lead only to the most frightful consequences for Werper.  Already he could almost feel those strong, white fangs burying themselves in his neck.  He shuddered.  Far out across the plain a leopard screamed, and in the dense reeds behind him some great beast moved on padded feet.
Werper feared those prowlers of the night; but infinitely more he feared the just wrath of the human beast sleeping at his side.  With utmost caution the Belgian arose.  Tarzan did not move.  Werper took a few steps toward the plain and the distant forest to the northwest, then he paused and fingered the hilt of the long knife in his belt.  He turned and looked down upon the sleeper.

“Why not?” he mused.  “Then I should be safe.”

He returned and bent above the ape-man.  Clutched tightly in his hand was the sacrificial knife of the High Priestess of the Flaming God!


And from the hole in the ground to Werper’s shirt.  So far, so good.  Well, we will have to wait to discover Tarzan’s fate, for the next chapter returns us to Mugambi’s pursuit.

X: Achmet Zek Sees the Jewels
Mugambi, weak and suffering, had dragged his painful way along the trail of the retreating raiders.  He could move but slowly, resting often; but savage hatred and an equally savage desire for vengeance kept him to his task.  As the days passed his wounds healed and his strength returned, until at last his giant frame had regained all of its former mighty powers.  Now he went more rapidly; but the mounted Arabs had covered a great distance while the wounded black had been painfully crawling after them.

They had reached their fortified camp, and there Achmet Zek awaited the return of his lieutenant, Albert Werper.  During the long, rough journey, Jane Clayton had suffered more in anticipation of her impending fate than from the hardships of the road.


Like I said, ERB was pushing the fear of black on white rape as more horrible than death. After all, Jane is no longer a virgin and would be worth less as a result.  There was really very little to prevent her from being gang raped by the raiders.  But who knows, perhaps some sultan somewhere would welcome a beautiful blonde babe into his harem even if she was soiled as an item of property.
Achmet Zek had not deigned to acquaint her with his intentions regarding her future.  She prayed that she had been captured in the hope of ransom, for if such should prove the case, no great harm would befall her at the hands of the Arabs; but there was the chance, the horrid chance, that another fate awaited her.  She had heard of many women, among whom were white women, who had been sold by outlaws such as Achmet Zek into the slavery of black harems, or taken further north into the almost equally hideous existence of some Turkish seraglio.

Jane Clayton was of sterner stuff than that which bends in spineless terror before danger. Until hope proved futile, she would not give it up; nor did she entertain thoughts of selfdestruction only as a final escape from dishonor.  So long as Tarzan lived there was every reason to expect succor.  No man or beast who roamed the savage continent could boast the cunning and powers of her lord and master.  To her, he was little short of omnipotent in his native world – the world of savage beasts and savage men.  Tarzan would come, and she should be rescued and avenged, of that she was certain.  She counted the days that must elapse before he would return from Opar and discover what had transpired during his absence.  After that it would be but a short time before he had surrounded the Arab stronghold and punished the motley crew of wrongdoers who inhabited it.


After all, who can forget the wonderful fight for her liberty in The Beasts of Tarzan, her actions winning most of the hearts of her readers?  This is one of the reasons the editors fought ERB over the killing of Jane a year later.  ERB is also pressing the irony here, for Tarzan has already witnessed the cruel fate of his estate and felt absolutely nothing over it.  Yes, more black humor.
That he could find her she had no slightest doubt.  No spoor, however faint, could elude the keen vigilance of his senses.  To him, the trail of the raiders would be as plain as the printed page of an open book to her.

And while she hoped, there came through the dark jungle another.  Terrified by night and by day, came Albert Werper.  A dozen times he had escaped the claws and fangs of the giant carnivores only by what seemed a miracle to him.  Armed with nothing more than the knife he had brought with him from Opar, he had made his way through as savage a country as yet exists upon the face of the globe.

By night he had slept in trees.  By day he had stumbled fearfully on, often taking refuge among the branches when sight or sound of some great cat warned him from danger.  But at last he had come within sight of the palisade behind which were his fierce companions.

At almost the same time Mugambi came out of the jungle before the walled village.  As he stood in the shadow of a great tree, reconnoitering, he saw a man, ragged and disheveled emerge from the jungle almost at his elbow.  Instantly he recognized the newcomer as he who had been a guest of his master before the latter had departed for Opar.

The black was upon the point of hailing the Belgian when something stayed him.  He saw the white man walking confidently across the clearing toward the village gate.  No sane man thus approached a village in this part of Africa unless he was sure of a friendly welcome.  Mugambi waited.  His suspicions were aroused.

He heard Werper halloo; he saw the gates swing open, and he witnessed the surprised and friendly welcome that was accorded the erstwhile guest of Lord and Lady Greystoke.  A light broke upon the understanding of Mugambi.  This white man had been a traitor and a spy.  It was to him they owed the raid during the absence of the Great Bawana.  To his hate of the Arabs, Mugambi added a still greater hate for this white spy.

Within the village Werper passed hurriedly toward the silken tent of Achmet Zek.  The Arab arose as his lieutenant entered.  His face showed surprise as he viewed the tattered apparel of the Belgian.

“What has happened?” he asked.

Werper narrated all, save the little matter of the pouch of gems which were now tightly strapped about his waist, beneath his clothing.  The Arab’s eyes narrowed greedily as his henchman described the treasure that the Waziri had buried beside the ruins of the Greystoke bungalow.

“It will be a simple matter now to return and get it,” said Achmet Zek.  “First we will await the coming of the rash Waziri, and after we have slain them we may take our time to the treasure – none will disturb it where it lies, for we shall leave none alive who knows of its existence.”

“And the woman?” asked Werper.

“I shall sell her in the north,” replied the raider.  “She should bring a good price.”

The Belgian nodded.  He was thinking rapidly.  If he could persuade Achmet Zek to send him in command of the party which took Lady Greystoke north it would give him the opportunity he craved to make his escape from the chief.  He would forgo a share of the gold, if he could but get away unscathed with the jewels.

He knew Achmet Zek well enough by this time to know that no member of his band ever was voluntarily released from the service of Achmet Zek.  Most of the few who deserted were recaptured.  More than once had Werper listened to their agonized screams as they were tortured before being put to death.  The Belgian had no wish to take the slightest chance of recapture.

“Who will go north with the woman?” he asked, “while we are returning for the gold that the Waziri buried by the bungalow of the Englishman?”

Achmet Zek thought for a moment.  The buried gold was of much greater value than the price the woman would bring.  It was necessary to rid himself of her as quickly as possible and it was also well to obtain the gold with the least possible delay.  Of all his followers, the Belgian was the most logical lieutenant to intrust with the command of one of the parties.  An Arab, as familiar with the trails and tribes as Achmet Zek himself, might collect the woman’s price and make good his escape into the far north.  Werper, on the other hand, could scarce make his escape alone through a country hostile to Europeans while the men he would send with the Belgian could be carefully selected with a view to preventing Werper from persuading any considerable portion of his command to accompany him should he contemplate desertion of his chief.

At last the Arab spoke.  “It is not necessary that we both return for the gold.  You shall go north with the woman carrying a letter to a friend of mine who is always in touch with the best markets for such merchandise, while I return for the gold.  We can meet again here when our business is concluded.”

Werper could scarce conceal the joy with which he received this welcome decision.   And that he did entirely disguise it from the keen and suspicious eyes of Achmet Zek is open to question.  However, the decision reached, the Arab and his lieutenant discussed the details of their forthcoming ventures for a short time further, when Werper made his excuses and returned to his own tent for the comforts and luxury of a long-desired bath and shave.

Having bathed, the Belgian tied a small hand mirror to a cord sewn to the rear wall of his tent, placed a rude chair beside an equally rude table that stood beside the glass, and proceeded to remove the rough stubble from his face.

In the catalog of masculine pleasures there is scarce one which imparts a feeling of greater comfort and refreshment that follows a clean shave, and now, with weariness temporarily banished, Albert Werper sprawled in his rickety chair to enjoy a final cigaret before retiring.  His thumbs, tucked in his belt in lazy support of the weight of his arms, touched the belt which held the jewel pouch about his waist.  He tingled with excitement as he let his mind dwell upon the value of the treasure, which, unknown to all save himself, lay his beneath his clothing.

What would Achmet Zek say, if he knew?  Werper grinned.  How the old rascal’s eyes would pop could he but have a glimpse of those scintillating beauties!  Werper had never yet had an opportunity to feast his eyes for any great length of time upon them.  He had not even counted them – only roughly had he guessed at their value.

He unfastened the belt and drew the pouch from its hiding place.  He was alone.  The balance of the camp, save the sentries, had retired – none would enter the Belgian’s tent.  He fingered the pouch, feeling out the shapes and sizes of the precious, little nodules within.  He hefted the bag, first in one palm, then in the other, and at last he wheeled his chair slowly around before the table, and in the rays of his small lamp let the glittering gems roll out upon the rough wood.

The refulgent rays transformed the interior of the soiled and squalid canvas to the splendor of a palace in the eyes of the dreaming man.  He saw the gilded halls of pleasure that would open their portals to the possessor of the wealth which lay scattered upon this stained and dented table top.  He dreamed of joys and luxuries and power which always had been beyond his grasp, and as he dreamed his gaze lifted from the table, as the gaze of a dreamer will, to a far distant goal above the mean horizon of terrestrial commonplaceness.

Unseeing, his eyes rested upon the shaving mirror which still hung upon the tent wall above the table; but his sight was focused far beyond.  And then a reflection moved within the polished surface of the tiny glass, the man’s eyes shot back out of space to the mirror’s face, and in it he saw reflected the grim visage of Achmet Zek framed in the flaps of the tent doorway behind him.

Werper stifled a gasp of dismay.  With rare self-possession he let his gaze drop, without appearing to have halted upon the mirror, until it rested again upon the gems.  Without haste, he replaced them in the pouch, tucked the latter into his shirt, selected a cigaret from his case, lighted it and rose.  Yawning, and stretching his arms above his head, he turned slowly toward the opposite end of the tent.  The face of Achmet Zek had disappeared from the opening.

To say that Albert Werper was terrified would be putting it mildly.  He realized that he not only had sacrificed his treasure; but his life as well.  Achmet Zek would never permit the wealth that he had discovered to slip through his fingers, nor would he forgive the duplicity of a lieutenant who had gained possession of such a treasure without offering to share it with his chief.

Slowly the Belgian prepared for bed.  If he were being watched, he could not know; but if so the watcher saw no indication of the nervous excitement which the European strove to conceal.  When ready for his blankets, the man crossed to the little table and extinguished the light.

It was two hours later that the flaps at the front of the tent separated silently and gave entrance to a dark-robed figure, which passed noiselessly from the darkness without to the darkness within.  Cautiously the prowler crossed the interior.  In one hand was a long knife.  He came at last to the pile of blankets spread upon several rugs close to one of the tent walls.

Lightly, his fingers sought and found the bulk beneath the blankets – the bulk that should be Albert Werper.  They traced out the figure of a man, and then an arm shot upward, poised for an instant and descended.  Again and again it rose and fell, and each time the long blade of the knife buried itself in the thing beneath the blankets.  But there was an initial lifelessness in the silent bulk, that gave the assassin momentary wonder.  Feverishly he threw back the coverlets, and searched with nervous hands for the pouch of jewels which he expected to find concealed upon his victim’s body.

An instant later he rose with a curse upon his lips.  It was Achmet Zek and he cursed because he had discovered beneath the blankets of his lieutenant only a pile of discarded clothing arranged in the form and semblance of a sleeping man – Albert Werper had fled.

Out into the village ran the chief, calling in angry tones to the sleepy Arabs, who tumbled from their tents in answer to his voice.  But though they searched the village again and again they found no trace of the Belgian.  Foaming with anger, Achmet Zek called his followers to horse, and though the night was pitchy black they set out to scour the adjoining forest for their quarry.

As they galloped from the open gates, Mugambi, hiding in a nearby bush, slipped unseen, within the palisade.  A score of blacks crowded about the entrance to watch the searchers depart, and as the last of them passed out of the village the blacks seized the portals and drew them to, and Mugambi lent a hand in the work as though the best of his life had been spent among the raiders.

In the darkness he passed, unchallenged, as one of their number, and they returned from the gates to their respective tents and huts, Mugambi melted into the shadows and disappeared.

For an hour he crept about in the rear of the various huts and tents in an effort to locate that in which he master’s mate was imprisoned.  One there was which he was reasonable assured contained her, for it was the only hut before the door of which a sentry had been posted. Mugambi was crouching in the shadow of this structure, just around the corner from the unsuspecting guard, when another approached to relieve his comrade.

“The prisoner is safe within?” asked the newcomer.

“She is,” replied the other, “for none has passed this doorway since I came.”

The new sentry squatted beside the door, while he whom he had relieved made his way to his own hut.  Mugambi slunk closer to the corner of the building.  In one powerful hand he gripped a heavy knob-stick.  No sign of elation disturbed his phlegmatic calm, yet inwardly he was aroused to joy by the proof he had just heard that “Lady” really was within.

The sentry’s back was toward the corner of the hut which hid the giant black.  The fellow did not see the huge form which silently loomed behind him.  The knob-stick swung upward in a curve, and downward again.  There was the sound of a dull thud, the crushing of heavy bone, and the sentry slumped into a silent, inanimate lump of clay.

A moment later Mugambi was searching the interior of the hut.  At first slowly, calling, “Lady!” in a low whisper, and finally with almost frantic haste, until the truth presently dawned upon him – the hut was empty!


Wow, I was not expecting that.  It looks like Werper got away not only with the jewels, but also with Jane.  Which leaves us with several different parties all pursuing differnt things. Werper with Jane trying to escape Achmet Zek, who is looking for Werper and the jewels.  Then there is Mugambi, empty handed in the village; not to mention Basuli, with the remainder of the Waziri warriors on the hunt for Achmet Zek.  Finally, there is Tarzan, sound asleep – maybe even the victim of Werper’s knife – but surely the victim of the theft of the jewels of Opar, still ignorant of most of his life.  Which leads us the title of the next chapter: “Tarzan Becomes a Beast Again.”  Till next time, then.


BILL HILLMAN
Visit our thousands of other sites at:
BILL AND SUE-ON HILLMAN ECLECTIC STUDIO
ERB Text, ERB Images and Tarzan® are ©Edgar Rice Burroughs, Inc.- All Rights Reserved.
All Original Work ©1996-2019 by Bill Hillman and/or Contributing Authors/Owners
No part of this web site may be reproduced without permission from the respective owners.