Chapter Twelve
The son of The First Woman strode proudly through the forest. He carried
a spear, jauntily, and there were a bow and arrows slung to his back.
Behind him came ten other males of his species, similarly armed, and each
walked as though he owned the earth he trod. Toward them along the trail,
though still beyond their sight, or hearing, or smell, came a woman of
their kind. She, too, walked with fearless step. Presently her eyes
narrowed and she paused, up-pricking her great, flat ears to listen;
sniffing the air. Men! She increased her gait to a trot, bearing down
upon them. There was more than one--there were several. If she came upon
them suddenly they would be startled, filled with confusion, and no doubt
she could seize one of them before they took to flight. If not--the
feathered pebbles at her girdle would seek one out.
For some time men had been scarce. Many women of her tribe who had gone
out into the forest to capture mates had never returned. She had seen the
corpses of several of these herself, lying in the forest. She had
wondered what had killed them. But here were men at last, the first she
had discovered in two moons, and this time she would not return
empty-handed to her cave.
At a sudden turning of the forest trail she came within sight of them,
but saw, to her dismay, that they were still a long way off. They would
be sure to escape if they saw her, and she was upon the point of hiding
when she realized that already it was too late. One of them was pointing
at her. Loosing a missile from her girdle and grasping her cudgel more
firmly she started toward them at a rapid, lumbering run. She was both
surprised and pleased when she saw that they made no attempt to escape.
How terrified they must be to stand thus docilely while she approached
them. But what was this? They were advancing to meet her! And now she saw
the expressions upon their faces. No fear there--only rage and menace.
What were the strange things they carried in their hands? One who was
running toward her, the nearest, paused and hurled a long pointed stick
at her. It was sharp and when it grazed her shoulder it brought blood.
Another paused and holding a little stick across a longer stick, the ends
of which were bent back with a piece of gut, suddenly released the
smaller stick, which leaped through the air and pierced the flesh beneath
one of her arms. And behind these two the others were rushing upon her
with similar weapons. She recalled the corpses of women she had seen in
the forest and the dearth of men for the past several moons, and though
she was dull of wit yet she was not without reasoning faculties and so
she compared these facts with the occurrences of the past few seconds
with a resultant judgment that sent her lumbering away, in the direction
from which she had come, as fast as her hairy legs could carry her, nor
did she once pause in her mad flight until she sank exhausted at the
mouth of her own cave.
The men did not pursue her. As yet they had not reached that stage in
their emancipation that was to give them sufficient courage and
confidence in themselves to entirely overcome their hereditary fear of
women. To chase one away was sufficient. To pursue her would have been
tempting Providence.
When the other women of the tribe saw their fellow stagger to her cave
and sensed that her condition was the result of terror and the physical
strain of long flight they seized their cudgels and ran forth, prepared
to meet and vanquish her pursuer, which they immediately assumed to be a
lion. But no lion appeared and then some of them wandered to the side of
the woman who lay panting on her threshold.
"From what did you run?" they asked her in their simple sign language.
"Men," she replied.
Disgust showed plainly upon every face, and one of them kicked her and
another spat upon her.
"There were many," she told them, "and they would have killed me with
flying sticks. Look!" and she showed them the spear wound, and the arrow
still embedded in the flesh beneath her arm. "They did not run from me,
but came forward to attack me. Thus have all the women been killed whose
corpses we have seen in the forest during the past few moons."
This troubled them. They ceased to annoy the prostrate woman. Their
leader, the fiercest of them, paced to and fro, making hideous faces.
Suddenly she halted.
"Come!" she signaled. "We shall go forth together and find these men, and
bring them back and punish them." She shook her cudgel above her head and
grimaced horribly.
The others danced about her, imitating her expression and her actions,
and when she started off toward the forest they trooped behind her, a
savage, bloodthirsty company--all but the woman who still lay panting
where she had fallen. She had had enough of man--she was through with him
forever.
"For this you shall die!" screamed Caraftap, as he rushed upon Tarzan of
the Apes in the long gallery of the slaves' quarters in the quarry of
Elkomeolhago, king of Veltopismakus.
The ape-man stepped quickly aside, avoiding the other, and tripped him
with a foot, sending him sprawling, face downward, upon the floor.
Caraftap, before he arose, looked about as though in search of a weapon
and, his eyes alighting upon the hot brazier, he reached forth to seize
it. A murmur of disapproval rose from the slaves who, having been
occupied nearby, had seen the inception of the quarrel.
"No weapons!" cried one. "It is not permitted among us. Fight with your
bare hands or not at all."
But Caraftap was too drunk with hate and jealousy to hear them or to
heed, and so he grasped the brazier and, rising, rushed at Tarzan to hurl
it in his face. Now it was another who tripped him and this time two
slaves leaped upon him and wrenched the brazier from his hand. "Fight
fair!" they admonished him, and dragged him to his feet.
Tarzan had stood smiling and indifferent, for the rage of others amused
him where it was greater than circumstances warranted, and now he waited
for Caraftap and when his adversary saw the smile upon his face it but
increased his spleen, so that he fairly leaped upon the ape-man in his
madness to destroy him, and Tarzan met him with the most surprising
defense that Caraftap, who for long had been a bully among the slaves,
ever had encountered. It was a doubled fist at the end of a straight arm
and it caught Caraftap upon the point of his chin, stretching him upon
his back. The slaves, who had by this time gathered in considerable
numbers to watch the quarrel, voiced then--approval in the shrill,
"Ee-ah-ee-ah," that constituted one form of applause.
Dazed and groggy, Caraftap staggered to his feet once more and with
lowered head looked about him as though in search of his enemy. The girl,
Talaskar, had come to Tarzan's side and was standing there looking up
into his face.
"You are very strong," she said, but the expression in her eyes said
more, or at least it seemed to Caraftap to say more. It seemed to speak
of love, whereas it was only the admiration that a normal woman always
feels for strength exercised in a worthy cause.
Caraftap made a noise in his throat that sounded much like the squeal of
an angry pig and once again he rushed upon the ape-man. Behind them some
slaves were being let into the corridor and as the aperture was open one
of the warriors beyond it, who chanced to be stooping down at the time,
could see within. He saw but little, though what he saw was enough--a
large slave with a shock of black hair raising another large slave high
above his head and dashing him to the hard floor. The warrior, pushing
the slaves aside, scrambled through into the corridor and ran forward
toward the center. Before they were aware of his presence he stood facing
Tarzan and Talaskar. It was Kalfastoban.
"What is the meaning of this?" he cried in a loud voice, and then: "Ah,
ha! I see. It is The Giant. He would show the other slaves how strong he
is, would he?" He glanced at Caraftap, struggling to rise from the floor,
and his face grew very dark--Caraftap was a favorite of his. "Such things
are not permitted here, fellow!" he cried, shaking his fist in the
ape-man's face, and forgetting in his anger that the new slave neither
spoke nor understood. But presently he recollected and motioned Tarzan to
follow him. "A hundred lashes will explain to him that he must not
quarrel," he said aloud to no one in particular, but he was looking at
Talaskar.
"Do not punish him," cried the girl, still forgetful of herself. "It was
all Caraftap's fault, Zuanthrol but acted in self-defense."
Kalfastoban could not take his eyes from the girl's face and presently
she sensed her danger and flushed, but still she stood her ground,
interceding for the ape-man. A crooked smile twisted Kalfastoban's mouth
as he laid a familiar hand upon her shoulder.
"How old are you?" he asked.
She told him, shuddering.
"I shall see your master and purchase you," he announced. "Take no mate."
Tarzan was looking at Talaskar and it seemed that he could see her wilt,
as a flower wilts in noxious air, and then Kalfastoban turned upon him.
"You cannot understand me, you stupid beast," he said; "but I can tell
you, and those around you may listen and, perhaps, guide you from danger.
This time I shall let you off, but let it happen again and you shall have
a hundred lashes, or worse, maybe; and if I hear that you have had aught
to do with this girl, whom I intend to purchase and take to the surface,
it will go still harder with you," with which he strode to the entrance
and passed through into the corridor beyond.
After the Vental had departed and the door of the chamber had been closed
a hand was laid upon Tarzan's shoulder from behind and a man's voice
called him by name: "Tarzan!" It sounded strange in his ears, far down in
this buried chamber beneath the ground, in an alien city and among an
alien people, not one of whom ever had heard his name, but as he turned
to face the man who had greeted him a look of recognition and a smile of
pleasure overspread his features.
"Kom-!" he started to ejaculate, but the other placed a finger to his
lips. "Not here," he said. "Here I am Aoponato."
"But your stature! You are as large as I. It is beyond me. What has
happened to swell the race of Minunians to such relatively gigantic
proportions?"
Komodoflorensal smiled. "Human egotism would not permit you to attribute
this change to an opposite cause from that to which you have ascribed
it," he said.
Tarzan knit his brows and gazed long and thoughtfully at his royal
friend. An expression that was of mingled incredulity and amusement crept
gradually over his countenance.
"You mean," he asked slowly, "that I have been reduced in size to the
stature of a Minunian?"
Komodoflorensal nodded. "Is it not easier to believe that than to think
that an entire race of people and all their belongings, even their
dwellings and the stones that they were built of, and all their weapons
and their diadets, had been increased in size to your own stature?"
"But I tell you it is impossible!" cried the ape-man.
"I should have said the same thing a few moons ago," replied the prince.
"Even when I heard the rumor here that they had reduced you I did not
believe it, not for a long time, and I was still a bit skeptical until I
entered this chamber and saw you with my own eyes."
"How was it accomplished?" demanded Tarzan.
"The greatest mind in Veltopismakus, and perhaps in all Minuni, is
Zoanthrohago," explained Komodoflorensal. "We have recognized this for
many moons, for, during the occasional intervals that we are at peace
with Veltopismakus, there is some exchange of ideas as well as goods
between the two cities, and thus we heard of many marvels attributed to
this greatest of walmaks."
"I have never heard a wizard spoken of in Minuni until now," said Tarzan,
for he thought that that was the meaning of the word walmak, and perhaps
it is, as nearly as it can be translated into English. A scientist who
works miracles would be, perhaps, a truer definition.
"It was Zoanthrohago who captured you," continued Aoponato,
"encompassing your fall by means at once scientific and miraculous. After
you had fallen he caused you to lose consciousness and while you were in
that condition you were dragged hither by a score of diadets hitched to a
hastily improvised litter built of small trees tied securely one to the
other, after their branches had been removed. It was after they had you
safely within Veltopismakus that Zoanthrohago set to work upon you to
reduce your stature, using apparatus that he has built himself. I have
heard them discussing it and they say that it did not take him long."
"I hope that Zoanthrohago has the power to undo that which he has done,"
said the ape-man.
"They say that that is doubtful. He has never been able to make a
creature larger than it formerly was, though in his numerous experiments
he has reduced the size of many of the lower animals. The fact of the
matter is," continued Aoponato, "that he has been searching for a means
to enlarge the Veltopismakusians so that they may overcome all the other
peoples of Minuni, but he has only succeeded in developing a method that
gives precisely opposite results from that which they seek, so, if he
cannot make others larger, I doubt if he can make you any larger than you
now are."
"I would be rather helpless among the enemies of my own world," said
Tarzan, ruefully.
"You need not worry about that, my friend," said the prince gently.
"Why?" asked the ape-man.
"Because you have very little chance of reaching your own world again,"
said Komodoflorensal a trifle sadly. "I have no hope of ever seeing
Trohanadalmakus again. Only by the utter overthrow of Veltopismakus by my
father's warriors could I hope for rescue, since nothing less could
overcome the guard in the quarry mouth. While we often capture slaves of
the white tunic from the enemies' cities, it is seldom that we gather in
any of the green tunic. Only in the rare cases of utter surprise attacks
by daylight do any of us catch an enemies' green slaves above ground, and
surprise day attacks may occur once in the lifetime of a man, or never."
"You believe that we will spend the rest of our lives in this underground
hole?" demanded Tarzan.
"Unless we chance to be used for labor above ground during the daytime,
occasionally," replied the prince of Trohanadalmakus, with a wry smile.
The ape-man shrugged. "We shall see," he said.
After Kalfastoban had left, Caraftap had limped away to the far end of
the chamber, muttering to himself, his ugly face black and scowling.
"I am afraid that he will make you trouble," Talaskar said to Tarzan,
indicating the disgruntled slave with a nod of her shapely head, "and I
am sorry, for it is all my fault."
"Your fault?" demanded Komodoflorensal.
"Yes," said the girl. "Caraftap was threatening me when Aopontando
interfered and punished him."
"Aopontando?" queried Komodoflorensal.
"That is my number," explained Tarzan.
"And it was on account of Talaskar that you were fighting? I thank you,
my friend. I am sorry that I was not here to protect her. Talaskar cooks
for me. She is a good girl." Komodoflorensal was looking at the girl as
he spoke and Tarzan saw how her eyes lowered beneath his gaze and the
delicate flush that mounted her cheeks, and he realized that he was
downwind from an idea, and smiled.
"So this is the Aoponato of whom you told me?" he said to Talaskar.
"Yes, this is he."
"I am sorry that he was captured, but it is good to find a friend here,"
said the ape-man. "We three should be able to hit upon some plan of
escape," but they shook their heads, smiling sadly.
For a while, after they had eaten, they sat talking together, being
joined occasionally by other slaves, for Tarzan had many friends here now
since he had chastized Caraftap and they would have talked all night had
not the ape-man questioned Komodoflorensal as to the sleeping
arrangements of the slaves.
Komodoflorensal laughed, and pointed here and there about the chamber at
recumbent figures lying upon the hard earthen floor; men, women and
children sleeping, for the most part, where they had eaten their evening
meal.
"The green slaves are not pampered," he remarked laconically.
"I can sleep anywhere," said Tarzan, "but more easily when it is dark. I
shall wait until the lights are extinguished."
"You will wait forever, then," Komodoflorensal told him.
"The lights are never extinguished?" demanded the ape-man.
"Were they, we should all be soon dead," replied the prince. "These
flames serve two purposes--they dissipate the darkness and consume the
foul gases that would otherwise quickly asphyxiate us. Unlike the
ordinary flame, that consumes oxygen, these candles, perfected from the
discoveries and inventions of an ancient Minunian scientist, consume the
deadly gases and liberate oxygen. It is because of this even more than
for the light they give that they are used exclusively throughout Minuni.
Even our domes would be dark, ill-smelling, noxious places were it not
for them, while the quarries would be absolutely unworkable."
"Then I shall not wait for them to be extinguished," said Tarzan,
stretching himself at full length upon the dirt floor, with a nod and a
"Tuano!"--a Minunian "Good night!"--to Talaskar and Komodoflorensal.