Classic Audiobook Collection - The Cave Girl by Edgar Rice Burroughs ~ Full Audiobook [adventure]
Episode Date: July 5, 2023The Cave Girl by Edgar Rice Burroughs audiobook. Genre: adventure Blueblooded mama's boy Waldo Emerson Smith-Jones is swept overboard during a south seas voyage for his lifelong ill health. He finds ...himself on a jungle island. His bookish education has not prepared him to cope with these surroundings, and he is a coward. He is terrified when he encounters primitive, violent men, ape-like throwbacks in mankind's evolutionary history. He runs from them, but when he reaches a dead end, he successfully makes a stand, astonishing himself. While keeping the hairy brutes at bay, he meets a beautiful girl, Nadara, also on the run. In an uncharacteristic gesture, he saves her from the grasp of one ape-man during their escape. For ad-free listening try our premium subscription Chapters (Approximate) (00:00:00) Chapter 01 (00:20:37) Chapter 02 (00:37:01) Chapter 03 (00:59:40) Chapter 04 (01:23:25) Chapter 05 (01:49:03) Chapter 06 (02:03:11) Chapter 07 (02:19:15) Chapter 08 (02:30:10) Chapter 09 (02:50:59) Chapter 10 (03:11:52) Chapter 11 (03:42:45) Chapter 12 (04:04:00) Chapter 13 (04:27:53) Chapter 14 (04:47:38) Chapter 15 (05:09:03) Chapter 16 (05:25:31) Chapter 17 (05:46:14) Chapter 18 (06:18:10) Chapter 19 (06:41:25) Chapter 20 (07:06:29) Chapter 21 (07:27:32) Chapter 22 (07:54:02) Chapter 23 (08:21:49) Chapter 24 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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The Cave Girl by Edgar Rice Burroughs.
Flotsam
The dim shadow of the thing was but a blur
against the dim shadows of the wood behind it.
The young man could distinguish no outline
that might mark the presence as either brute or human.
He could see no eyes,
yet he knew that somewhere from out of that noiseless mass,
stealthy eyes were fixed upon him.
This was the fourth time that the thing had crept from out the wood as darkness was settling,
the fourth time during those three horrible weeks, since he had been cast upon that lonely shore,
that he had watched, terror-stricken, while night engulfed the shadowy form that lurked at the forest's edge.
It had never attacked him, but to his distorted imagination, it seemed to slink closer and closer as night fell,
Waiting, always waiting for the moment that it might find him unprepared.
Waldo Emerson Smith-Jones was not overly courageous.
He had been reared among surroundings of culture plus and ultra-intellectuality
in the exclusive back-bay home of his ancestors.
He had been taught to look with contempt upon all that savored of muscular superiority.
Such things were gross, brutal, primitive.
It had been a giant intellect only that he had craved,
he and a fond mother, and their wishes had been fulfilled.
At 21, Waldo was an animated encyclopedia,
and about as muscular as a real one.
Now he slunk shivering with fright at the very edge of the beach,
as far from the grim forest as he could get.
Cold sweat broke from every pore of his long, length six-foot-two body.
His skinny arms and legs trembled as with palsy.
Occasionally he coughed.
It had been the cough that had banished him upon this ill-starred sea voyage.
As he crouched in the sand, staring with wide, horror-dilated eyes into the black night,
great tears rolled down his thin white cheeks.
It was with difficulty that he restrained an overpowering desire to shriek.
His mind was filled with forlorn regrets that he had not remained at home
to meet the wasting death that the doctor had predicted,
a peaceful death at least, not the brutal end which faced him now.
The lazy swell of the South Pacific lapped his legs,
stretched upon the sand,
for he had retreated before that menacing shadow as far as the ocean would permit.
As the slow minutes dragged into age-long hours,
the nervous strain told so heavily upon the weak boy
that toward midnight he lapsed into merciful unconsciousness.
The warm sun awoke him the following morning,
but it brought with it but a faint renewal of courage.
Things could not creep to his side,
unseen now, but still they could come, for the sun would not protect him. Even now, some savage
beast might be lurking just within the forest. The thought unnerved him to such an extent that he
dared not venture to the woods for the fruit that had formed the major portion of his
sustenance. Along the beach he picked up a few mouthfuls of seafood, but that was all. The day passed,
as had the other terrible days which had preceded it,
in scanning alternately the ocean and the forest's edge,
the one for a ship,
and the other for the cruel death
which he momentarily expected
to see stock out of the dreary shades to claim him.
A more practical and a braver man
would have constructed some manner of shelter
in which he might have spent his nights
in comparative safety and comfort,
but Waldo Emerson's education had been conducted along lines of undiluted intellectuality.
Pursuits and knowledge which were practical were commonplace, and commonplaces were vulgar.
It was preposterous that a Smith-Jones should ever have need of vulgar knowledge.
For the twenty-second time since the great wave had washed him from the steamer's deck
and hurled him choking and sputtering upon this inhospitable shore,
Waldo Emerson saw the sun sinking rapidly toward the western horizon.
As it descended, the young man's terror increased,
and he kept his eyes glued upon the spot from which the shadow had emerged the previous evening.
He felt that he could not endure another night of the torture he had passed through four times before,
that he should go mad he was positive.
And he commenced to tremble and whimper, even while daylight yet remained.
For a time he tried turning his back to the forest,
and then he sat huddled up, gazing out upon the ocean,
but the tears which rolled down his cheeks so blurred his eyes that he saw nothing.
Finally he could endure it no longer,
and with a sudden gasp of horror he wheeled toward the wood.
There was nothing visible, yet he broke down and sobbed like a child for loneliness and terror.
When he was able to control his tears for a moment, he took the opportunity to scan the deepening shadows once more.
The first glance brought a piercing shriek from his white lips.
The thing was there.
The young man did not fall grovelling to the sand this time.
Instead, he stood staring with protruding eyes at the vague form,
while shriek after shriek broke from his grinning lips.
Reason was tottering.
The thing, whatever it was, halted at the first blood-curdling cry,
and then when the cries continued, it slunk back toward the wood.
With what remained of his ebbing mentality,
Waldo Emerson realized that it were better to die at once
than face the awful fears of the black night.
He would rush to meet his fate
and thus end this awful agony of suspense.
With the thought came action,
so that, still shrieking,
he rushed headlong toward the thing at the woods rim.
As he ran, it turned and fled into the forest,
and after it went Waldo Emerson, his long, skinny legs, carrying his emaciated body in great leaps and bounds,
through the tearing underbrush. He emitted shriek after shriek, ear-piercing shrieks that ended in long,
drawn-out whales, more wolfish than human. And the thing that fled through the night before him was
shrieking too, now. Time and again the young man stumbled and fell. Thorns and brambles tore his clothing
and his soft flesh. Blood smeared him from head to feet. Yet on and on he rushed through the
semi-darkness of the now moonlit forest. At first impelled by the mad desire to embrace death
and rest the peace of oblivion from its cruel clutch,
Waldo Emerson had come to pursue the screaming shadow before him
from an entirely different motive.
Now it was for companionship.
He screamed now because of a fear that the thing would elude him
and that he should be left alone in the depth of this weird wood.
Slowly but surely it was drawing away from him,
and as Waldo Emerson realized the fact, he redoubled his efforts to overtake it.
He had stopped screaming now, for the strain of his physical exertion,
found his weak lungs barely adequate to the needs of his gasping respiration.
Suddenly the pursuit emerged from the forest to cross a little moonlit clearing,
at the opposite side of which towered a high and rocky cliff.
Toward this the fleeing creature sped, and in an instant more was swallowed, apparently, by the face of the cliff.
Its disappearance was as mysterious and awesome as its identity had been, and left the young man in blank despair.
With the object of pursuit gone, the reaction came, and Waldo Emerson sank trembling and exhausted at the foot of the cliff,
A paroxysm of coughing seized him, and thus he lay in an agony of apprehension, fright, and misery,
until from very weakness he sank into a deep sleep.
It was daylight when he awoke, stiff, lame, sore, hungry, and miserable, but withal,
refreshed and sane.
His first consideration was prompted by the craving of a stone.
starved stomach, yet it was with the utmost difficulty that he urged his cowardly brain to direct
his steps toward the forest, where hung fruit in abundance. At every little noise he halted in
tense silence, poised to flee. His knees trembled so violently that they knocked together,
but at length he entered the dim shadows and presently was gorging himself with ripe
fruits. To reach some of the more luscious viands, he had picked from the ground a piece of fallen
limb, which tapered from a diameter of four inches at one end to a trifle over an inch at the other.
It was the first practical thing that Waldo Emerson had done since he had been cast upon the
shore of his new home. In fact, it was, in all likelihood, the nearest approximation to a practical
thing which he had ever done in all his life.
Waldo had never been allowed to read fiction,
nor had he ever cared to so waste his time or impoverish his brain,
and nowhere in the fund of deep erudition which he had accumulated
could he recall any condition analogous to those which now confronted him.
Waldo, of course, knew that there were such things as step-ladders, and had he had one,
he would have used it as a means to reach the fruit above his hand's reach.
But that he could knock the delicacies down with a broken branch seemed indeed a mighty discovery,
a valuable addition to the sum total of human knowledge.
Aristotle himself had never reasoned more logically.
Waldo had taken the first step in his life toward independent mental action.
Heretofore, his ideas, his thoughts, his acts even, had been borrowed from the musty writing
of the ancients, or directed by the immaculate mind of his superior mother, and he clung to his
discovery as a child clings to a new toy.
When he emerged from the forest, he brought to his first.
his stick with him. He determined to continue the pursuit of the creature that had eluded him
the night before. It would, indeed, be curious to look upon a thing that feared him.
In all his life he had never imagined it possible that any creature could flee from him in fear.
A little glow suffused the young man as the idea timorously sought to take root.
Could it be that there was a trace of swagger, and that long, bony figure as Waldo directed his steps toward the cliff,
perish the thought, pride and vulgar physical prowess, a long line of Smith Joneses
would have risen in their graves and rent their shrouds at the various hint of such an idea?
For a long time Waldo walked back and forth along the foot of the cliff,
searching for the avenue of escape used by the fugitive of yesternight.
A dozen times he passed a well-defined trail that led, winding, up the cliff's face,
but Waldo knew nothing of trails.
He was looking for a flight of steps or a doorway.
Finding neither, he stumbled by accident.
accident into the trail, and, although the evident signs that marked it as such, revealed nothing
to him, yet he followed it upward for the simple reason that it was the only place upon the
cliff-side where he could find a foothold. Some distance up he came to a narrow cleft in the cliff
into which the trail led. Rocks dislodged from above had fallen into it, and, becoming wedged
a few feet from the bottom, left only a small cave-like hole into which Waldo peered.
There was nothing visible, but the interior was dark and forbidding.
Waldo felt cold and clammy.
He began to tremble.
Then he turned and looked back toward the forest.
The thought of another night spent within sight of that dismal place almost overcame him.
No, a thousand times no. Any fate were better than that. And so, after several futile efforts,
he forced his unwilling body through the small aperture. He found himself on a path between two rocky walls,
a path that rose before him at a steep angle. At intervals the blue sky was visible above
through openings that had not been filled with debris.
To another it would have been apparent that the cleft had been kept open by human beings,
that it was a thoroughfare which was used, if not frequently,
at least sufficiently often, to warrant considerable labor,
having been expended upon it, to keep it free from the debris
which must be constantly falling from above.
Where the path led, or what he expected,
to find at the other end, Waldo had not the remotest idea. He was not an imaginative youth,
but he kept on up the ascent in the hope that at the end he would find the creature which had
escaped him the night before. As it had fled for a brief instant across the clearing
beneath the moon's soft rays, Waldo had thought that it bore a remarkable resemblance to a human
figure, but of that he could not be positive. At last his path broke suddenly into the sunlight.
The walls on either side were but little higher than his head, and a moment later he emerged from the
cleft onto a broad and beautiful plateau. Before him stretched a wide, grassy plain,
and beyond towered a range of mighty hills. Between them and him,
him lay a belt of forest. A new emotion welled in the breast of Waldo Emerson-Smith
Jones. It was akin to that which Balboa may have felt when he gazed for the first time
upon the mighty Pacific from the Sierra de Quarequa. For the moment, as he contemplated this
new and beautiful scene of rolling meadowland, distant forest, and serrated hilltops, he all
almost forgot to be afraid.
And on the impulse of the instant he set out across the table-land to explore the unknown which lay
beyond the forest.
Well it was for Waldo Emerson's peace of mind that no faint conception of what lay there entered
his unimaginative mind.
To him a land without civilization, without cities and towns, peopleed by humans with
manners and customs similar to those which obtain in Boston, was beyond belief.
As he walked, he strained his eyes in every direction for some indication of human habitation,
a fence, a chimney, anything that would be man-built, but his efforts were unrewarded.
At the verge of the forest he halted, fearing to enter, but at last when he saw that the
was more open than that near the ocean, and that there was but little underbrush, he mustered
sufficient courage to step timidly within. On careful tiptoe he threaded his way through the
park-like grove, stopping every few minutes to listen, and ready at the first note of danger to fly
screaming toward the open plain. Notwithstanding his fears, he reached the opposite battle,
of the forest, without seeing or hearing anything to arouse suspicion, and, emerging from
the cool shade, found himself a little distance from a perpendicular white cliff, the face of which
was honeycombed with the mouths of many caves. There was no living creature in sight,
nor did the very apparent artificiality of the caves, suggest to the impractical Waldo that they
might be the habitations of perhaps savage human beings.
With the spell of discovery still upon him, he crossed open toward the cliffs,
but he had by no means forgotten his chronic state of abject fear.
Ears and eyes were alert for hidden dangers.
Every few steps were punctuated by a timid halt and a searching survey of his surroundings.
It was during one of these halts when he had crossed half the distance between the forest and the cliff
that he discerned a slight movement in the wood behind him.
For an instant he stood staring and frozen, unable to determine whether he had been mistaken
or really had seen a creature moving in the forest.
He had about decided that he had but imagined a presence when a great hairy brute of a man
stepped suddenly from behind the bowl of a tree.
End of Chapter 1.
Chapter 2 of The Cave Girl by Edgar Rice Burrows.
This Libravox recording is in the public domain.
Read by Gerald Moe.
The Wild People
The creature was naked except for a bit of hide
that hung from a leathern waist thong.
If Waldo viewed the newcomer with wonder, it was no less than to wonder which the sight of him
inspired in the breast of the hairy one, for what he saw was as truly remarkable to his eyes
as was his appearance to those of the cultured Bostonian.
And Waldo did indeed present a most startling exterior.
His six feet two was accentuated by his extreme skinniness,
His gray eyes looked weak and watery within the inflamed circles which rimmed them,
and which had been produced by loss of sleep and much weeping.
His yellow hair was tangled and matted and streaked with dirt and blood,
blood-stained his soiled and tattered ducks,
his shirt was but a mass of frayed ribbons held to him at all only by the neckband.
As he stood helplessly staring with bulging eyes at the awful figure glowering at him from the forest,
his jaw dropped, his knees trembled, and he seemed about to collapse from sheer terror.
Then the hideous man crouched and came creeping warily toward him.
With an agonized scream, Waldo turned and fled toward the cliff.
A quick glance over his shrews.
shoulder brought another series of shrieks from the frightened fugitive, for it revealed not alone
the fact that the awful man was pursuing him, but that behind him raced at least a dozen more
equally frightful. Waldo ran toward the cliffs only because that direction lay straight away from
his pursuers. He had no idea what he should do when he reached the rocky barrier. He was far too frightened
to think. His pursuers were gaining upon him, their savage yells mingling with his piercing cries
and spurring him on to undreamed-of pinnacles of speed. As he ran, his knees came nearly to his
shoulders at each frantic bound. His left hand was extended far ahead, clutching wildly at the air
as though he were endeavoring to pull himself ahead, while his right hand,
still grasping the cudgel, described a rapid circle, like the arm of a windmill gone mad.
In action, Walda was an inspiring spectacle.
At the foot of the cliff he came to a momentary halt,
while he glanced hurriedly about for a means of escape.
But now he saw that the enemy had spread out toward the right and left,
leaving no means of escape except up the precipitous side of the cliff.
Up this narrow trails led steeply from ledge to ledge.
In places crude ladders scaled perpendicular heights
from one tier of caves to the next above.
But to Waldo, the thing which confronted him seemed absolutely unscalable.
And then another backward glance,
showed him the rapidly nearing enemy, and he launched himself at the face of that seemingly impregnable
barrier, clutching desperately with fingers and toes. His progress was impeded by the cudgel,
to which he still clung, but he did not drop it, though why it would have been difficult to tell,
unless it was that his acts were now purely mechanical, there being no room in his mind for aught else than
terror. Close behind him came the foremost caveman, yet, though he had acquired the agility of a
monkey through a lifetime of practice, he was amazed at the uncanny speed with which Waldo Emerson
clawed his shrieking way aloft. Halfway up the ascent, however, a great hairy hand came almost to his
ankle. It was during the perilous negotiation of one of those loose and wobbly ladders,
little more than small trees leaning precariously against the perpendicular rocky surface,
that the nearest foeman came so close to the fugitive. But at the top, chance intervened to
save Waldo, for a time at least. It was at the moment that he scrambled frantically to a tiny ledge
from the frightfully slipping sapling.
In his haste, he did by accident
what a resourceful man would have done by intent.
In pushing himself on to the ledge,
he kicked the ladder outward,
for a second it hung toppling in the balance,
and then, with a lunge crashed down the cliff's face
with its human burden,
in its fall, scraping others of the pursuing horde with it.
A chorus of rage came up from below him, but Waldo had not even turned his head to learn of his temporary good fortune.
Up, ever up, he sped, until at length he stood upon the topmost ledge,
facing an overhanging wall of blank rock that towered another twenty-five feet above him to the summit of the bluff.
Time and again he leaped futilely against the smooth search.
surface, tearing at it with his nails in a mad endeavor to climb still higher.
At his right was the low opening to a black cave, but he did not see it.
His mind could cope with but the single idea, to clamber from the horrible creatures which
pursued him.
But finally it was borne in on his half-mad brain that this was the end.
He could fly no farther.
Here, in a moment more, death would overtake him.
He turned to meet it, and below saw a number of the cavemen placing another ladder in lieu of that which had fallen.
In a moment they were resuming the ascent after him.
On the narrow ledge above them, the young man stood, chattering and grinning like a madman.
His pitiful cries were now punctuated with the hollow coughing, which his violent exercise had induced.
Tears rolled down his begrimed face, leaving crooked, muddy streaks in their wake.
His knees smote together so violently that he could barely stand,
and it was into the face of this apparition of cowardice that the first of the cavemen looked,
as he scrambled above the ledge on which Waldo stood.
And then, of a sudden, there rose within the breast of Waldo Emerson-Smith Jones
a spark that generations of over-refinement and emasculating culture had all but extinguished,
the instinct of self-preservation by force.
Heretofore it had been purely by flight.
With the frenzy of the fernsion of the first, the first,
fear of death upon him, he raised his cudgel, and, swinging it high above his head, brought it down
full upon the unprotected skull of his enemy. Another took the fallen man's place. He too went down
with a broken head. Waldo was fighting now like a cornered rat, and through it all he chattered
and gibbered, but he no longer wept. At first he was horrible.
at the bloody havoc he wrought with his crude weapon. His nature revolted at the sight of blood,
and when he saw it mixed with matted hair along the side of his cudgel, and realized that it was
human hair and human blood, and that he, Waldo Emerson Smith Jones, had struck the blows that had
plastered it there so thickly in all its hideousness, a wave of nausea swept over him, so that he
almost toppled from his dizzy perch.
For a few minutes there was a lull in hostilities,
while the cavemen congregated below,
shaking their fists at Waldo and crying out threats and challenges.
The young man stood looking down upon them,
scarcely able to realize that alone he had met savage men
in physical encounter and defeated them.
He was shocked and horrified.
Not, odd to say, because of the thing he had done,
but rather because of a strange and unaccountable glow of pride
in his brutal supremacy over brutes.
What would his mother have thought
could she have seen her precious boy now?
Suddenly Waldo became conscious from the corner of his eye
that something was creeping upon him
from behind out of the dark cave before which he had fought.
Simultaneously with the realization of it, he swung his cudgel in a wicked blow at this new enemy as he turned to meet it.
The creature dodged back, and the blow that would have crushed its skull grazed a hair breath from its face.
Waldo struck no second blow, and the cold sweat sprang to his forehead when he realized how nearly he had come to murdering a young girl.
She crouched now in the mouth of the cave, eyeing him fearfully.
Waldo removed his tattered cap, bowing low.
I crave your pardon, he said.
I had no idea that there was a lady here.
I am very glad that I did not injure you.
There must have been something either in his tone or manner that reassured her,
for she smiled and came out upon the ledge beside him.
As she did so, a scarlet flush mantled Waldo's face and neck and ears.
He could feel them burning.
With a nervous cough, he turned and became intently occupied with the distant scenery.
Presently he cast a surreptitious glance behind him.
Shocking.
She was still there.
Again he coughed nervously.
Excuse me, he said, but er, uh,
you, I am a total stranger, you know. Hadn't you better go back in and, er, get your clothes?
She made no reply, and so he forced himself to turn toward her once more.
She was smiling at him. Waldo had never been so horribly embarrassed in all his life before.
It was a distinct shock to him to realize that the girl
was not embarrassed at all.
He spoke to her a second time, and at last she answered, but in a tongue which he did not understand.
It bore not the slightest resemblance to any language, modern or dead, with which he was
familiar, and Waldo was more or less master of them all, especially the dead ones.
He tried not to look at her after that, for he realized that he realized that he was more or less master of them all,
tried not to look at her after that, for he realized that he must appear very ridiculous.
But now his attention was required by more pressing affairs.
The cavemen were returning to the attack.
They carried stones this time, and, while some of them threw the missiles at Waldo,
others attempted to rash his position.
It was then that the girl hurried back into the cave,
only to reappear a moment later carrying some stone utensils in her arms.
There was a huge mortar in which she had collected a pestle and several smaller pieces of stone.
She pushed them along the ledge to Waldo.
At first he did not grasp the meaning of her act,
but presently she pretended to pick up an imaginary missile
and hurl it down upon the creatures below.
Then she pointed to the things she had brought and to Waldo.
He understood, so she was upon his side.
He did not understand why, but he was glad.
Following her suggestion, he gathered up a couple of the smaller objects
and hurled them down upon the men beneath.
But on and on they came.
Waldo was not a very good shot.
The girl was busy now gathering such of the cave men's missiles as fell upon the ledge.
These she placed in a pile beside Waldo.
Occasionally the young man would strike an enemy by accident,
and then she would give a little scream of pleasure,
clapping her hands and jumping up and down.
It was not long before Waldo was surprised to find that this applause fell sweetly upon his ears.
It was then that he began to take better aim.
In the midst of it all there flashed suddenly upon him
a picture of his devoted mother
and select coterie of intellectual young people
with which she had always surrounded him.
Waldo felt a new pang of horror
as he tried to realize with what emotions
they would look upon him now
as he stood upon the face of a towering cliff
beside an almost naked girl hurling rocks down upon the heads of hairy men who hopped about screaming with rage below him.
It was awful. A great billow of mortification rolled over him. He turned to cast a look of disapprobation
at the shameless young woman behind him. She should not think that he countenanced such coarse and vulgar
proceedings. Their eyes met. In hers he saw the sparkle of excitement and the joy of life and such a look
of comradeship as he never before had seen in the eyes of another mortal. Then she pointed excitedly
over the edge of the ledge. Waldo looked. A great brute of a caveman had crawled unseen almost to
their refuge. He was but five feet below them.
And at the moment that he looked up, Waldo dropped a 50-pound stone mortar full upon his upturned face.
The young woman emitted a little shriek of joy, and Waldo Emerson Smith Jones,
his face bisected by a broad grin, turned toward her.
End of Chapter 2
Chapter 3 of the Cave Girl by Edgar Rice Burroughs.
This Libravox recording is in the public domain, read by Gerald Moe.
The Little Eden
The mortar ended hostilities, temporarily at least, but the cavemen loitered about the base
of the cliff during the balance of the afternoon, occasionally shouting taunts at the two
above them. These the girl answered evidently in kind. Sometimes she would point to Waldo and make
ferocious signs, doubtless indicative of the horrible slaughter which awaited them at his hands if they
did not go away and leave their betters alone. When the young man realized the significance of her
pantomime, he felt his heart swell with an emotion which he feared was pride in brutal,
primitive, vulgar physical prowess.
As the long day wore on, Waldo became both very hungry and very thirsty.
In the valley below, he could see a tiny brooklet purling, clear and beautiful, toward the south.
The sight of it drove him nearly mad, as did also that of the fruit which he glimpsed
hanging ripe for eating at the edge of the forest.
By means of signs he asked the girl if she too were hungry,
for he had come to a point now where he could look at her
almost without visible signs of mortification.
She nodded her head, and, pointing toward the descending sun,
made it plain to him that after dark they would descend and eat.
The cavemen had not left when darkness came,
and it seemed to Waldo a very foolhardy thing,
to venture down while they might be about.
But the girl made it so evident that she considered him an invincible warrior,
that he was torn with the conflicting emotions of cowardice
and an unaccountable desire to appear well in her eyes,
that he might by his acts justify her belief in him.
It seemed very wonderful to Waldo that anyone should look upon him
in the light of a tower of strength and a haven of refuge.
He was not quite certain in his own mind,
but that the reputation might lead him into most uncomfortable and embarrassing situations.
Incidentally, he wondered if the girl was a good runner.
He hoped so.
It must have been quite near midnight when his companion intimated
that the time had arrived when they should fare forth and dine.
Waldo wanted her to go first, but she shrank close to him, timidly, and held back.
There was nothing else for it, then, than to take the plunge.
Though had the sun been shining, it would have revealed a very pale and wide-eyed champion,
who slipped gingerly over the side of the ledge to grope with his feet for a foothold below.
Halfway down the moon rose above the forest, a great full tropic moon that lighted the face of the cliff
almost as brilliantly as might the sun itself. It shone into the mouth of a cave upon the ledge
that Waldo had just reached in his descent, revealing to the horrified eyes of the young man
a great, hairy form,
stretched in slumber not a yard from him.
As he looked, the wicked little eyes opened
and looked straight into his.
With difficulty, Waldo suppressed a shriek of dismay
as he turned to plunge madly down the precipitous trail.
The girl had not yet descended from the ledge above.
She must have sensed what had happened,
for as Waldo turned to fly,
she gave a little cry of terror.
At the same instant the caveman leaped to his feet,
but the girl's voice had touched something in the breast of Waldo Emerson,
which generations of disuse had almost atrophied,
and for the first time in his life he did a brave and courageous thing.
He could easily have escaped the caveman and reached the valley, alone,
but at the first note of the young girl's cry,
He wheeled and scrambled back to the ledge to face the burly primitive man,
who could have crushed him with a single blow.
Waldo Emerson no longer trembled.
His nerves and muscles were very steady,
as he swung his cudgel in an arc that brought it crashing down
upon the upraised guarding arm of the caveman.
There was a snapping of bone beneath the blow, a scream of pain.
The man staggered back, the girl sprang to Waldo's side from the ledge above, and hand in hand they turned and fled down the face of the cliff.
From a dozen cave mouths above issued a score of cavemen, but the fleeing pair were halfway across the clearing before the slow-witted brutes were fully aware of what had happened.
By the time they had taken up the pursuit, Waldo and the girl had entered,
the forest. For a few yards the latter led Waldo straight into the shadows of the wood,
then she turned abruptly toward the north, at right angles to the course they had been pursuing.
She still clung to the young man's hand, nor did she slacken her speed the least after they
had entered the darkness beneath the trees. She ran as surely and confidently through the
impenetrable night of the forest, as though the way had been lighted by flaming arcs.
But Waldo was continually stumbling and falling.
The sound of pursuit presently became fainter.
It was apparent that the cavemen had continued on straight into the wood,
but the girl raced on with the panting Waldo for what seemed to the winded young man
and eternity.
Presently, however, they came to the banks of the bank's of the moment of the moment of the moment of
the little stream that had been visible from the caves. Here the girl fell into a walk,
and a moment later dragged the Bostonian down a shelving bank into water that came above his knees.
Up the bed of the stream, she led him, sometimes floundering through holes so deep that they were entirely
submerged. Waldo had never learned the vulgar art of swimming, so it was that he would have drowned but
but for the strong brown hand of his companion, which dragged him, spluttering and coughing,
through one awful hole after another, until, half strangled and entirely panic-stricken,
she hauled him safely upon a low, grassy bank at the foot of a rocky wall,
which formed one side of a gorge, through which the river boiled.
It must not be assumed that when Waldo Emerson returned to face the her,
brute, who threatened to separate him from his new-found companion, that by a miracle he had
been transformed from a hare into a lion, far from it. Now that he had a moment in which to
lie quite still and speculate upon the adventures of the past hour, the reaction came, and
Waldo Emerson thanked the kindly knight that obscured from the eyes of the girl the pitiable
spectacle of his palsied limbs and trembling lip.
Once again he was in a blue funk with shattered nerves that begged to cry aloud in the
extremity of their terror. It was not warm in the damp canyon, through which the wind swept over
the cold water, so that to Waldo's mental anguish was added the physical discomfort of cold
and wet. He was indeed a miserable figure.
as he lay huddled upon the sward, praying for the rising of the sun, yet dreading the
daylight that might reveal him to his enemies. But at last dawn came, and after a fitful sleep,
Waldo awoke to find himself in a snug and beautiful little paradise, hemmed in by the high
cliffs that flanked the river, upon a sloping grassy shore that was all but invisible, except from a
short stretch of cliff-top upon the farther side of the stream.
A few feet from him lay the girl.
She was still asleep.
Her head was pillowed upon one firm brown arm.
Her soft black hair fell in disorder across one cheek and over the other arm
to spread gracefully upon the green grass about her.
As Waldo looked, he saw that she was very comely.
Never before had he seen a girl just like her.
His young women friends had been rather prim and plain,
with long white faces and thin lips that scarcely ever dared to smile
and scorned to unbend in plebeian laughter.
The girl's lips seemed to have been made for laughing,
and for something else,
though at the time it is only fair to Waldo
to say that he did not realize the full possible,
that they presented. As his eyes wandered along the lines of her young body, his puritanical
training brought a hot flush of embarrassment to his face, and he deliberately turned his back upon
her. It was indeed awful to Waldo Emerson to contemplate, to say the least, the unconventional
position into which fate had forced him. The longer he pondered it, the redder he became,
It was frightful.
What would his mother say when she heard of it?
What would this girl's mother say?
But more to the point, and horrible thought,
what would her father or her brothers do to Waldo,
if they found them thus together,
and she with only a scanty garment of skin about her waist,
a garment which reached scarcely below her knees at any point,
and at others terminated far off.
above. Waldo was chagrined. He could not understand what the girl could be thinking of. For in other
respects, she seemed quite nice, and he was sure that the great eyes of her reflected only goodness
and innocence. While he sat thus, thinking, the girl awoke with a merry laugh and addressed
him. Good morning, said Waldo quite severely. He wished that he could speak her language, so that
that he could convey to her a suggestion of the disapprobation which he felt for her attire.
He was on the point of attempting it by signs, when she rose, lithe and graceful as a
tigress, and walked to the river's brim. With a deft movement of her fingers, she loosened
the thong that held her single garment, and as it fell to the ground, Waldo, with a horrified
gasp, turned upon his face, burying his tightly closed eyes and his hands. Then the girl dived
into the cool waters for her Matutinal bath. She called to him several times to join her,
but Waldo could not look at the spectacle presented. His soul was scandalized. It was some time
after she emerged from the river before he dared risk a hesitating glance. With a sigh of
relief, he saw that she had donned her single garment, and thereafter he could look at her
unashamed when she was thus clothed. He felt that by comparison it constituted a most modest gown.
Together they strolled along the river's edge, gathering such fruits and roots as the girl
knew to be edible. Waldo Emerson gathered those she indicated. With all his learning,
he found it necessary to depend upon the untutored mind of this little primitive maiden for guidance.
Then she taught him how to catch fish with a bent twig and a lightning-like movement of her brown hands,
or rather tried to teach him, for he was far too slow and awkward to succeed.
afterward they sat upon the soft grass beneath the shade of a wild fig tree to eat the fish she had caught.
Waldo wondered how in the world the girl could make fire without matches, for he was quite sure that she had none,
and even should she be able to make fire, it would be quite useless since she had neither cooking utensils nor stove.
He was not left long in wonderment.
She arranged the fish in a little pile between them, and with a sweet smile motioned to the man to partake.
Then she selected one for herself, and while Waldo Emerson looked on in horror, sunk her firm white teeth into the raw fish.
Waldo turned away in sickening disgust.
The girl seemed surprised and worried that he did not eat.
time and again she tried to coax him by signs to join her, but he could not even look at her.
He had tried, after the first wave of revolt had subsided,
but when he discovered that she ate the entire fish,
without bothering to clean it or remove the scales,
he became too ill to think of food.
Several times during the following week they ventured from their hiding place,
and at these times it was evident,
from the girl's actions, that she was endeavoring to elude their enemies and reach a place of safety
other than that in which they were concealed. But at each venture, her quick ears or sensitive
nostrils warned her of the proximity of danger, so that they had been compelled to hurry back
into their little Eden. During this period she taught Waldo many words of her native tongue,
so that by means of signs to bridge the gaps between,
they were able to communicate with a fair degree of satisfaction.
Waldo's mastery of the language was rapid.
On the tenth day the girl was able to make him understand
that she wished to escape with him to her own people,
that these men among whom he had found her were enemies of her tribe,
and that she had been hiding from them
when Waldo stumbled upon her cave.
I fled, she said.
My mother was killed.
My father took another mate, always cruel to me.
But when I had wandered into the land of these enemies,
I was afraid and would have returned to my father's cave.
But I had gone too far.
I would have to run very fast to escape them.
Once I ran down a narrow path to the ocean,
It was dark.
As I wandered through the woods, I came suddenly out upon a beach,
and there I saw a strange figure on the sand.
It was you.
I wanted to learn what manner of man you were,
but I was very much afraid,
so that I dared only watch you from a distance.
Five times I came down to look at you.
You never saw me until the last time.
Then you set out after me,
roaring in a horrible voice.
I was very much afraid, for I knew that you must be very brave to live all alone by the edge of the forest,
without any shelter, or even a stone to hurl at Nagula should he come out of the woods to devour you.
Waldo Emerson shuddered, who is Nagula? he asked.
You do not know Nagula, the girl exclaimed in surprise.
"'Not by that name,' replied Waldo.
"'He is as large,' she began in description,
"'as two men, and black with glossy coat.
"'He has two yellow eyes which see as well by night as by day.
"'His great paws are armed with mighty claws.
"'He, a rustling from the bushes which fringed the opposite cliff-top,
"'caused her to turn instantly alert.
Ah, she whispered, there is Nagula now.
Waldo looked in the direction of her gaze.
It was well that the girl did not see his pallid face and popping eyes
as he looked into the evil mask of the great black panther
that crouched watching them from the river's further bank.
Into Waldo's breast came great panic.
It was only because his fear-prostrated muscles refused
to respond to his will, that he did not scurry screaming from the sight of that ferocious
continents.
Then, through the fog of his cowardly terror, he heard again the girl's sweet voice.
I knew that you must be very brave to live all alone by the edge of that wicked forest.
For the first time in his life a wave of shame swept over Waldo Emerson.
The girl called and...
in a taunting voice to the panther,
and then turned, smiling, toward Waldo.
"'How brave I am now,' she laughed.
"'I am no longer afraid of Nagula.
You are with me.'
"'No,' said Waldo Emerson, in a very weak voice.
"'You need not fear while I am with you.'
"'Oh,' she cried, slay him,
"'how proud I should be to return to my people
with one who vanquished Nagula and wore his hide about his loins as proof of his prowess.
Ah, yes, acquiesced Waldo faintly.
But, continued the girl, you have slain many of Nagula's brothers and sisters.
It is no longer sport to kill one of his kind.
Yes, yes, cried Waldo.
Yes, that is it.
Panthers bore me now.
Oh, the girl clasped her hands and,
ecstasy. How many have you slain?
Or, why, let me see, the young man blundered.
As a matter of fact, I never kept any record of the Panthers I killed.
Waldo was becoming frantic.
He had never lied before in all his life.
He hated a lie and loathed a liar.
He wondered why he had lied now.
Surely it were nothing to boast of, to have butchered one of
God's creatures, and as for claiming to have killed so many that he could not recall the number,
it was little short of horrible.
Yet he became conscious of a poignant regret that he had not killed a thousand panthers
and preserved all the peltz as evidence of his valor.
The panther still regarded them from the safety of the farther shore.
The girl drew quite close to Waldo in the instinctive plea for protection
that belongs to her sex.
She laid a timid hand upon his skinny arm
and raised her great, trusting eyes
to his face in reverent adoration.
How do you kill them, she whispered, tell me.
Then it was that Waldo determined to make a clean breast of it
and admit that he never before had seen a live panther.
But as he opened his mouth to make the humiliating control,
confession, he realized, quite suddenly, why it was that he had lied. He wished to appear well
in the eyes of this savage, half-clothed girl. He, Waldo Emerson Smith-Jones, craved the
applause of a barbarian, and to win it had simulated that physical prowess, which generations of
Smith-Jones' had viewed from afar, disgusted, disapproving.
The girl repeated her question.
Oh, said Waldo, it is really quite simple.
After I catch them, I beat them severely with a stick.
The girl sighed.
How wonderful, she said.
Waldo became the victim of a number of unpleasant emotions.
Mortification for this suddenly developed moral turptitude.
apprehension for the future, when the girl might discover him in his true colors,
fear, consuming terrible fear, that she might insist upon his going forth at once to slay
Nagula. But she did nothing of the kind, and presently the panther tired of watching them,
and turned back into the tangle of bushes behind him. It was with a sigh of relief that Waldo
saw him depart.
End of chapter three.
Chapter 4 of the Cave Girl by Edgar Rice Burroughs.
This Libravox recording is in the public domain.
Read by Gerald Moe.
Death's Doorway
Late in the afternoon, the girl suggested that they start that night upon the
journey toward her village.
The bad men will not.
not be abroad after dark, she said. With you at my side, I shall not fear Nagula.
How far is it to your village? asked Waldo. It will take us three nights, she replied.
By day we must hide, for even you could not vanquish a great number of bad men should they
attack you at once. No, said Waldo, I presume not. It was very wonderful to watch you, though,
She went on.
When you battled upon the cliffside, beating them down as they came upon you, how brave you were,
how terrible.
You trembled from rage.
Yes, admitted Waldo, I was quite angry.
I always tremble like that when my ire is excited.
Sometimes I get so bad that my knees knock together.
If you ever see them do that, you will realize how it gets.
exceedingly angry I am.
Yes, murmured the girl.
Presently Waldo saw that she was laughing quietly to herself.
A great fear rose in his breast.
Could it be that she was less gullible than she had appeared?
Did she, after all, penetrate the bombast with which he had sought to cloak his cowardice?
He finally mustered sufficient courage to ask,
Why do you laugh?
I think of the surprise that awaits old flatfoot and corth and the others when I lead you to them.
Why will they be surprised? asked Waldo.
At the way you will crack their heads.
Waldo shuddered.
Why should I crack their heads? he asked.
Why should you crack their heads?
It was apparently incredible to the girl that he should not understand.
How little you know, she said.
you cannot swim, you do not know the language which men may understand, you would be lost in the woods
where I to leave you, and now you say that you do not know that when you come to a strange tribe
they will try to kill you, and only take you as one of them, when you have proven your worth
by killing at least one of their strongest men.
At least one, said Waldo, half to himself.
He was dazed by this information.
He had expected to be welcomed with open arms
into the best society that the girls' community afforded.
He had thought of it in just this way,
for he had not even yet learned
that there might be a whole people
living under entirely different conditions
than those which existed in Boston, Massachusetts.
Her reference to his ignorance also came as a distinct shock
to him. He had always considered himself a man of considerable learning. It had been his secret
boast and his mother's open pride. And now to be pitied for his ignorance by one who probably
thought the earth flat, if she ever thought about such matters at all, by one who could neither
read nor write. And the worst of it all was that her indictment was correct, only she had not gone
far enough.
There was little of practical value that he did know.
With the realization of his limitations,
Waldo Emerson took, unknown to himself,
a great stride toward a broader wisdom
than his narrow soul had ever conceived.
That night, after the sun had set
and the stars and moon come out,
the two set forth from their retreat toward the northwest,
where the girl said that the village of her people lay.
They walked hand in hand through the dark wood,
the girl directing their steps,
the young man grasping his long cudgel in his right hand,
and searching into the shadows
for the terrible creatures conjured by his cowardly brain,
but mostly for the two awesome spots of fire
which he had gathered from the girl's talk
would mark the presence of Nagu.
Strange noises assailed his ears, and once the girl crouched close to him as her quick ears caught
the sound of the movement of a great body through the underbrush at their left. Waldo Emerson
was almost paralyzed by terror, but at length the creature, whatever it may have been,
turned off into the forest without molesting them. For several hours thereafter,
they suffered no alarm, but the constant tension of apprehension on the man's already overwrought nerves
had reduced him to a state of such abject nervous terror that he was no longer master of himself.
So it was that when the girl suddenly halted him with an affrighted little gasp and pointing straight ahead,
whispered, Nagula!
He went momentarily mad with fear.
For a bare instant he paused in his tracks,
and then, breaking away from her,
he raised his club above his head,
and with an awful shriek dashed, straight toward the panther.
In the minds of some, there may be a doubt as to which of the two,
the sleek, silent black cat, or the grinning- screaming Waldo,
was the most awe-inspiring.
Be that as it may, it was quite evident that no doubt assailed the mind of the cat,
for with a single answering scream he turned and faded into the blackness of the black night.
But Waldo did not see him go.
Still shrieking, he raced on through the forest until he tripped over a creeper
and fell exhausted to the earth.
There he lay panting, twitching, and trembling
until the girl found him an hour after sunrise.
At the sound of her voice,
he would have struggled to his feet and dashed on into the woods,
for he felt that he could never face her again
after the spectacle of cowardice
with which he had treated her a few hours before.
But even as he gained his feet,
her first words reassured,
him and dissipated every vestige of his intention to elude her.
Did you catch him?
She cried.
No, banted Waldo Emerson quite truthfully.
He got away.
They rested a little while, and then Waldo insisted that they resume their journey by day
instead of by night.
He had positively determined that he never should or could endure another such night of
mental torture. He would much rather take the chance of meeting with the bad men than suffer the
constant feeling that unseen enemies were peering out of the darkness at him every moment.
In the day they would at least have the advantage of seeing their foes before they were struck.
He did not give these reasons to the girl, however. Under the circumstances, he felt that another
explanation would be better adapted to her ears.
"'You see,' he said,
"'if it hadn't been so dark,
Nagula might not have escaped me.
"'It is too bad. Too bad.'
"'Yes,' agreed the girl.
"'It is too bad.
"'We shall travel by day.
"'It will be safe now.
"'We have left the country of the bad men,
"'and there are few men living between us and my people.'
"'That night they spent,
spent in a cave they found in the steep bank of a small river.
It was damp and muddy and cold, but they were both very tired, and so they fell asleep,
and slept as soundly as though the best of mattresses lay beneath them.
The girl probably slept better, since she had never been accustomed to anything much
superior to this in all her life.
The journey required five days instead of three, and during all the time Waldo was learning
more and more woodcraft from the girl. At first, his attitude had been such that he could profit
but little from her greater practical knowledge, for he had been inclined to look down upon her
as an untutored savage. Now, however, he was a willing student, and when Waldo Emerson,
elected to study, there was nothing that he could not master and retain in a remarkable manner.
He had a well-trained mind, the principal trouble with it being that it had been crammed full of
useless knowledge. His mother had always made the error of confusing knowledge with wisdom.
Waldo was not the only one to learn new things upon this journey. The girl learned something, too,
something which had been threatening for days to rise above the threshold of her conscious mind,
and now she realized that it had lain in her heart almost ever since the first moment
that she had been with this strange young man.
Waldo Emerson had been endowed by nature with a chivalrous heart,
and his training had been such that he mechanically accorded to all women the gallant little
courtesies and consideration, which are of the fine things that go with breeding.
Nor was he one whit less punctilious in his relations with this wild cave-girl than he would
have been with the daughter of the finest family of his own aristocracy.
He had been kind and thoughtful and sympathetic always, and to the girl, who had never been
accustomed to such treatment from men, nor had ever seen a man.
and accord it to any woman, it seemed little short of miraculous that such gentle tenderness
could belong to a nature so warlike and ferocious as that with which she had endowed
Waldo Emerson. But she was quite satisfied that it should be so. She would not have cared for
him, had he been gentle with her, yet cowardly, had she dreamed of the real truth, had she had the
slightest suspicion that Waldo Emerson was at heart the most errant paltroon upon whom the son had ever shown,
she would have loathed and hated him, for in the primitive code of ethics which governed the savage
community, which was her world, there was no place for the craven or the weakling, and Waldo
Emerson was both. As the realization of her growing sentiment toward the man, a
awakened, it imparted to her ways with him a sudden coyness and maidenly aloofness which had been
entirely wanting before.
Until then, their companionship, insofar as the girl was concerned, had been rather
that of one youth toward another.
But now that she found herself thrilling at his slightest careless touch, she became aware
of a paradoxical impulse to avoid him.
For the first time in her life, too, she realized her nakedness and was ashamed.
Possibly this was due to the fact that Waldo appeared so solicitous in endeavoring to coerce his rags
into the impossible feat of entirely covering his body.
As they neared their journey's end, Waldo became more and more perturbed.
During the last night, horrible visions of full.
Flatfoot and Corth haunted his dreams. He saw the great hairy beasts rushing upon him in all the
ferocity of their primeval savagery, tearing him limb from limb in their beastial rage. With a shriek he
awoke. To the girl's startled inquiry, he replied that he had been but dreaming. Did you dream of
flatfoot and corth? She laughed. Of the things that you will do.
to them tomorrow?
Yes, replied Waldo, I dreamed of flatfoot and corth.
But the girl did not see how he trembled and hid his head in the hollow of his arm.
The last day's march was the most agonizing experience of Waldo Emerson's life.
He was positive that he was going to his death, but to him the horror of the thing
lay more in the manner of his coming death than in the thought of death itself.
As a matter of fact, he had again reached a point where he would have welcomed death.
The future held for him nothing but a life of discomfort and misery and constant mental anguish,
superinduced by the condition of awful fear under which he must drag out his existence
in this strange and terrible land.
Waldo had not the slightest conception as to whether he was upon some mainland or an unknown island,
that the tidal wave had come upon them somewhere in the South Pacific was all that he knew.
But long since he had given up hope that Secur would reach him
in time to prevent him perishing miserably far from his home and his poor mother.
He could not dwell long upon this dismal theme,
because it always brought tears of self-pity to his eyes,
and for some unaccountable reason,
Waldo shrunk from the thought of exhibiting this unmanly weakness before the girl.
All day long he racked his brain for some valid excuse,
whereby he might persuade his companion to lead him elsewhere than to her village.
A thousand times better would be some secluded little garden,
such as that which had harbored them for the ten days following their escape from the cavemen.
If they could but come upon such a place near the coast,
where Waldo could keep a constant watch for passing vessels,
he would have been as happy as he ever expected it would be possible for him in such a savage land.
He wanted the girl with him for companionship.
He was more afraid when he was alone.
Of course, he realized that she was no fit companion for a man of his mental attainments,
but then she was a human being, and her society much better than none at all.
While hope had still lingered that he might live to escape and return to his beloved Boston,
he had often wondered whether he would dare tell his mother of his unconventional acquaintance
with this young woman.
Of course it would be out of the question for him to go at all into details.
He would not, for example, dare to attempt a description of her toilet to his prim parent.
The fact that they had been alone together day and night for weeks was another item which troubled
Waldo considerably.
He knew that the shock of such information might prostrate his mother, and for a long time
he debated the wisdom of omitting any mention of the girl whatever.
At length he decided that a little white lie would be permissible,
and as much as his mother's health and the girl's reputation were both at stake.
So he had decided to mention that the girl's aunt had been with them in the capacity of chaperone.
That fixed it nicely, and on this point Waldo's mind was more at ease.
Late in the afternoon they wound down a narrow trail that led from the plateau into a narrow,
beautiful valley. A tree-bordered river meandered through the center of the level plain that formed
the valley's floor, while beyond rose precipitous cliffs, which trailed off in either direction
as far as the eye could reach.
"'There live my people,' said the girl, pointing toward the distant barrier.
"'Waldo groaned inwardly.
"'Let us rest here,' he said,
"'until tomorrow that we might come upon your home rested and refreshed.
"'Oh, no!' cried the girl.
"'We can reach the caves before dark.
"'I can scarcely wait until I shall have seen how you shall slay flatfoot,
"'and maybe Corth also.
"'Though I think that after one of them has felt your might,
"'the others will be glad to take.
take you into the tribe at the price of your friendship.
Is there not some way, ventured the distracted Waldo, that I may come into your village without
fighting, I should dislike to kill one of your friends, said Waldo solemnly.
The girl laughed.
Neither Flatfoot nor course are friends of mine, she replied.
I hate them both.
They are terrible men.
It would be better for all the tribe were they killed.
They are so strong and cruel that we all hate them,
since they use their strength to abuse those who are weaker.
They make us all work very hard for them.
They take other men's mates,
and if the other men object, they kill them.
There is scarcely a moon passes that does not see either corth or flatfoot kill someone,
nor is it always men they kill.
Often when they are angry,
they kill women and little children
just for the pleasure of killing.
But when you come among us,
there will be no more of that,
for you will kill them both if they be not good.
Waldo was too horrified
by this description of his soon-to-be antagonists
to make any reply.
His tongue claved to the roof of his mouth,
all his vocal organs seemed paralyzed.
But the girl did not notice.
She went on joyously,
ripping Waldo's nervous system out of him
and tearing it into shreds.
"'You see,' she continued,
"'flat-foot and corth are greater
than the other men of my tribe.
They can do as they will.
They are frightful to look upon,
and I have often thought
that the hearts of others dried up when they saw either of them coming for them.
And they are so strong.
I have seen Corth crush the skull of a full-grown man
with a single blow from his open palm,
while one of Flatfoot's amusements is the breaking of men's arms and legs with his bare hands.
They had entered the valley now,
and in silence they continued on toward the first.
fringe of trees which grew beside the little river.
Nadara led the way toward a ford, which they quickly crossed.
All the way across the valley, Waldo had been searching for some avenue of escape.
He dared not enter that awful village and face those terrible men,
and he was almost equally averse to admitting to the girl that he was afraid.
He would gladly have died to have escaped either of.
alternative, but he preferred to choose the manner of his death.
The thought of entering the village and meeting a horrible end at the hands of the brutes who
awaited him there, and of being compelled to demonstrate before the girl's eyes that he was
neither a mighty fighter nor a hero was more than he could endure. Occupied with these
harrowing speculations, Waldo and Nadara came to the farther
side of the forest, once they could see the towering cliffs rising steeply from the valley's bed
three hundred yards away. Along their face and at their feet, Waldo described a host of half-naked
men, women, and children, moving about in the consummation of their various duties. Involuntarily,
he halted. The girl came to his side. Together they looked out upon the
scene, the like of which Waldo Emerson never before had seen. It was as though he had been suddenly
snatched back through countless ages to a long dead past and dropped into the midst of the
prehistoric life of his paleolithic progenitors. Upon the narrow ledges before their caves,
women with long flowing hair ground food in rude stone mortars. Naked children,
played about them, perilously close to the precipitous cliff edge.
Hairy men squatted gorilla-like before pieces of flat stone, upon which green hides were stretched,
while they scraped, scraped, scraped, scraped, with the sharp edge of smaller bits of stone.
There was no laughter and no song.
occasionally Waldo saw one of the fierce creatures address another
and sometimes one would raise his thick lips in a nasty snarl
that exposed his fighting fangs
but they were too far away for their words to reach the young man
End of Chapter 4
Chapter 5 of the Cave Girl by Edgar Rice Burroughs
This Libravox recording is in the public domain.
Read by Gerald Moe.
Awakening
Come, said the girl, let us make haste.
I cannot wait to be home again.
How good it looks!
Waldo gazed at her in horror.
It did not seem credible that this beautiful young creature
could be of such clay as that he looked upon.
It was revolting to believe that she had sprung from the loin,
of one of those half brutes, or that a woman as fierce, repulsive, such as those he saw before him,
could have borne her. It made him sick with disgust. He turned from her.
Go to your people, Nadara, he said, for an idea had come to him. He had evolved a scheme for
escaping a meeting with Flatfoot and Corth, and the sudden disgust which he felt for the girl
made it easier for him to carry out his design.
Are you not coming with me? she cried.
Not at once, replied Waldo, quite truthfully.
I wish you to go first. Were we to go together,
they might harm you when they rushed out to attack me.
The girl had no fear of this,
but she felt that it was very thoughtful of the man
to consider her welfare so tenderly.
To humor him, she exceeded to his request,
"'As you wish, Thandar,' she answered, smiling.
"'Thandar was a name of her own choosing,
"'after Waldo had informed her an answer to a request for his name
"'that she might call him Mr. Waldo Emerson Smith Jones.
"'I shall call you Thandar,' she had replied.
"'It is shorter, more easily remembered, and describes you.
"'It means the brave one.'
"'And so Thandar he had become.'
The girl had scarcely emerged from the forest on her way toward the cliffs
when Thandar, the brave one, turned and ran at top speed in the opposite direction.
When he came to the river, he gave immediate evidence of the strides he had taken in woodcraft
during the brief weeks that he had been under the girl's tutorage.
For he plunged immediately into the water, setting out upstream upon the gravelly bottom,
where he would leave no spore to be tracked down by the eagle eyes of these primitive men.
He supposed that the girl would search for him,
but he felt no compunction at having deserted her so scurvely.
Of course he had no suspicion of her real sentiments toward him.
It would have shocked him to have imagined that a low-born person, such as she,
had become infatuated with him.
It would have been embarrassing and unfortunate,
but, of course, quite impossible, since Waldo Emerson Smith-Jones could never form an alliance beneath him,
as for the girl herself, he might as readily have considered the possibility of marrying a cow,
so far from any such thoughts of her had he been.
On and on he stumbled through the cold water.
Sometimes it was above his head, but Waldo had learned to swim,
the girl had made him, partly by pleas, but largely by the fear that she would ridicule him.
As night came on, he commenced to become afraid, but his fear now was not such a horribly prostrating
thing as it had been a few weeks before. Without being aware of the fact, Waldo had grown a trifle
less timid, though he was still far from lion-like. That night he slept in the crotch of a tree. He
selected a small one, which, though less comfortable, was safer from the approach of Nagula
than a larger tree would have been. This also he had learned from Nadara. Had he paused to
consider, he would have discovered that all he knew that was worthwhile he had from the savage
little girl whom he, from the high pinnacle of his erudition, regarded with such pity. But
Waldo had not as yet learned enough to realize how very little he knew. In the morning he
continued his flight, gathering his breakfast from tree and shrub as he fled. Here again he was
wholly indebted to Nadara, for without her training he would have been restricted to a couple of
fruits, whereas now he had a great variety of fruits, roots, berries, and nuts to choose from in safety.
The stream that he had been following had now become a narrow, rushing mountain torrent.
It leaped suddenly over little precipices in wild and picturesque waterfalls,
it rioted in foaming cascades, and Everett led Waldo farther into high and rugged country.
The climbing was difficult and oftentimes dangerous.
Waldo was surprised at the steeps he negotiated, perilousestest.
sense from which he would have shrunk in palsied fear a few weeks earlier. Waldo was coming on.
Another fact which struck him with amazement at the same time that it filled him with rejoicing
was that he no longer coughed. It was quite beyond belief, too, since never in his life had he been
so exposed to cold and wet and discomfort. At home, he realized, he would long since have curled up
and died had he been subjected to one-tenth the exposure that he had undergone since the
great wave had lifted him bodily from the deck of the steamer to land him unceremoniously
in the midst of this new life of hardships and terrors. Toward noon Waldo began to travel with
less haste. He had seen or heard no evidence of pursuit. At times he stopped to look back
along the trail he had passed, but though he could see the little valley below him for a considerable
distance, he discovered nothing to arouse alarm. Presently he realized that he was very lonely. A dozen
times in his many minutes he had thought of observations he would have been glad to make had there
been someone with him to hear. There were queries, too, relative to this new country, that he should
have liked very much to propound, and it flashed upon him that in all the world there was only one
whom he knew who could give him correct answers to these queries. He wondered what the girl had
thought when he did not follow her into the village, and set upon flat-foot and corth,
at the thought he found himself flushing in a most unaccountable manner. What would the girl think?
Would she guess the truth? Well, what?
difference if she did. What was her opinion to a cultured gentleman such as Waldo Emerson
Smith Jones? But yet he found his mind constantly reverting to this unhappy speculation. It was
most annoying. As he thought of her, he discovered with what distinctness he recalled every
feature of her piquant little face, her olive skin tinged beautifully by the ruddy glow of health,
her fine, straight nose and delicate nostrils, her perfect eyes, soft yet filled with the fire
of courage and intelligence. Waldo wondered why it was that he recalled these things now,
and dwelt upon them. He had been with her for weeks without realizing that he had particularly
noticed them. But most vividly he conjured again the memory of her soft liquid speech,
her ready retorts, her bright, interesting observations on the little happenings of their daily life,
her thoughtful kindliness to him, a stranger within her gates, and, again he flushed hotly,
her sincere, though remarkable, belief in his prowess.
It took Waldo a long time to admit to himself that he missed the girl.
It must have been weeks before he finally did so unreservedly.
Simultaneously he determined to return to her village and find her.
He had even gone so far as to start the return journey
when the memory of her description of Flatfoot and Corth brought him to a sudden halt,
a most humiliating halt.
The blood surged to his face.
He could feel it burning there,
and then Waldo did two things which he had never done before.
He looked at his soul and saw himself as he was.
and he swore.
Waldo Emerson Smith Jones, he said aloud,
you're a darned coward.
Worse than that, you're an unthinkable cad.
That girl is kind to you.
She treated you with the tender solicitude of a mother,
and how have you returned her kindness
by looking down upon her with arrogant condescension,
by pitying her?
Pitying her,
you, you miserable weakling, ingrate, pitying that fine, intelligent, generous girl,
you, with your pitiful little store of second-hand knowledge, pitying that girl's ignorance,
why she's forgotten more real things than you ever heard of, you, you, words utterly failed him.
Waldo's awakening was thorough, painfully thorough, it left him.
no tiny hidden recess of his contemptible little soul unrevealed from his searching self-analysis.
Looking back over the 21 years of his uneventful life, he failed to resurrect but a single act
of which he might now be proud, and that, strange to say, in the light of his past training,
had to do neither with culture, intellect, birth, breeding, nor knowledge. It was a purely growing,
physical act. It was hideously, violently, repulsively animal. It was no other than the
instant of heroism, in which he had turned back upon the cliff's face to battle with the horrible,
hairy man who had threatened to prevent Nadara's escape. Even now, Waldo could not realize
that it had been he who ventured so foolhardy an act. But nonetheless, his breast swelled with
pride as he recalled it. It put into the heart of the man a new hope and into his head a new purpose,
a purpose that would have caused his back bay mother to seek an early grave, could she have known of it.
Nor did Waldo Emerson lose any time in initiating the new regime, which was eventually to fit
him for the consummation of his splendid purpose. He thought of it as splendid now, though a few
weeks before, the vulgar atrocity of it would have nauseated him. Far up in the hills,
near the source of the little river, Waldo had found a rocky cave. This he had chosen as
his new home. He cleaned it out with scrupulous care, littering the floor with leaves and
grasses. Before the entrance, he piled a dozen large boulders, so arranged that three of them
could be removed or replaced, either from within or without,
thus forming a means of egress and ingress which could be effectually closed against intruders.
From the top of a high promontory, a half mile beyond his cave,
Waldo could obtain a view of the ocean some eight or ten miles distant.
It was always in his mind that someday a ship would come,
and Waldo longed to return to the haunts of civilization,
but he did not expect the ship before his plans had properly matured and been put into execution.
He argued that he could not sail away from this shore forever without first seeing Nadara,
and restoring the confidence in him which he felt his recent desertion had unquestionably shaken to its foundations.
As part of his new regime, Waldo required exercise, and to this end he set about making a trip to
the ocean at least once each week. The way was rough and hazardous, and the first few times,
Waldo found it almost beyond his strength to make even one leg of the journey between sunrise and
dark. This necessitated sleeping out overnight, but this too, accorded with the details of the
task he had set himself, and so he did it quite cheerfully and with a sense of martyrdom, that he
found effectually stilled his most poignant fits of cowardice. As time went on, he was able to cover
the whole distance to the ocean and return in a single day. He never coughed now, nor did he glance
fearfully from side to side as he strode through the woods and open places of his wild domain.
His eyes were bright and clear, his head and shoulders were thrown well back, and the mountain
climbing had expanded his chest to a degree that appalled him, the while it gave him much secret
satisfaction. It was a very different Waldo from the miserable creature which had been vomited up
by the ocean upon the sand of that distant beach. The days that Waldo did not make a trip to the ocean
he spent in rambling about the hills in the vicinity of his cave. He knew every rock and tree within
five miles of his lair. He knew where Nagula hid by day, and the path that he took down to the valley
by night, nor did he longer tremble at sight of the great black cat. True, Waldo avoided him,
but it was through cool and deliberate caution, which is quite another thing from the senseless panic of fear.
Waldo was biting his time. He would not always avoid Nagula. Nagula, Nagula was.
was a part of Waldo's great plan, but Waldo was not ready for him yet. The young man still bore his
cudgel, and in addition he had practiced throwing rocks until he could almost have hit a nearby bird upon
the wing. Besides these weapons, Waldo was working upon a spear. It had occurred to him that a spear
would be a mighty handy weapon against either man or beast, and so he had set to work to fashion one.
He found a very straight young sapling, a little over an inch in diameter and ten feet long.
By means of a piece of edged flint, he succeeded in tapering it to a sharp point.
A rawhide thong plated from many pieces of small bits of hide,
taken from the little animals that had fallen before his missiles,
served to sling the crude weapon across his shoulders when he walked.
With his spear he practiced hour upon hour each day
Until he could transix a fruit the size of an apple
Three times out of five at a distance of fifty feet
And at a hundred hit a target the size of a man
Almost without a miss
Six months had passed since he had fled from an encounter with flatfoot and corth
Then Waldo had been a skinny cowardly weakling
Now his great frame had found
filled out with healthy flesh, while beneath his skin, hard muscles rolled, as he bent to one of
the many Herculian tasks he had set for himself. For six months he had worked with a single purpose in
view, but still he felt that the day was not yet come when he might safely venture to put his
newfound manhood to the test. Down, far down in the depth of his soul, he feared that he was yet a coward at
heart, and he dared not take the risk. It was too much to expect, he told himself, that a man
should be entirely metamorphosed in a brief half-year. He would wait a little longer.
It was about this time that Waldo first saw a human being after his last sight of Nadara.
It was while he was on his way to the ocean, on one of the trips that had by this time become
thrice weekly affairs, that he suddenly came face to face with a skulking hairy brute.
Waldo halted to see what would happen. The man eyed him with those small, cunning,
red-rimmed eyes that reminded Waldo of the eyes of a pig.
Finally, Waldo spoke in the language of Nadara.
Who are you? he asked. Sag the killer, replied the man. Who are you?
Thandar, answered Wald.
"'I do not know you,' said Sag,
"'but I can kill you.'
He lowered his bullhead and came for Waldo like a battering ram.
The young man dropped the point of his ready spear, bracing his feet.
The point entered Sag's breast, below the collarbone,
stopping only after it had passed entirely through the savage heart.
Waldo had not moved.
The momentum of the man's body had been sufficient to impede.
him. As the body rolled over, stiffening after a few convulsive kicks, Waldo withdrew his spear
from it. Blood smeared its point for a distance of a foot, but Waldo showed no sign of loathing or
disgust. Instead, he smiled. It had been so much easier than he had anticipated. Leaving sag where he
had fallen, he continued toward the ocean. An hour later, he heard unusual noises behind him.
He stopped to listen.
He was being pursued.
From the sounds he estimated that there must be several in the party,
and a moment later, as he was crossing a clearing,
he got his first view of them as they emerged from the forest he had just quitted.
There were at least twenty powerfully muscled brutes.
In skin bags thrown across their shoulders,
each carried a supply of stones,
and these they began to hurl at Waldo as they raced
toward him. For a moment the man held his ground, but he quickly realized the futility of pitting
himself against such odds. Turning, he ran toward the forest upon the other side of the clearing,
while a shower of rocks whizzed about him. Once within the shelter of the trees there was
less likelihood of his being hit by one of the missiles, but occasionally a well-aimed rock
would strike him a glancing blow. Waldo hoped that they would tire of the chance to be.
before the beach was reached, for he knew that there could be but one outcome of a battle in which
one man faced twenty. As the pursued and the pursuers raced on through the forest, one of
the latter, fleeter than his companions, commenced to close up the gap which had existed
between Waldo and the twenty. On and on he came, until a backward glance showed Waldo that
in another moment his swift foeman would be upon him.
He was younger than his fellows, and more active, and having thrown all his stones was free
from any burden of weight other than the single garment about his hips.
Waldo still clung to his tattered ducks, which from lack of support and more or less rapid
disintegration were continually slipping down from his hips, so that they tended to hinder
his movements and reduce his speed.
Had he been as naked as his pursuer, he would doubtless
have distanced him, but he was not, and it was evident that because of this fact he must take a chance
in a hand-to-hand encounter that might delay him sufficiently to permit the balance of the
horde to reach him. That would be the end of everything. But Waldo Emerson neither screamed in
terror nor trembled. When he wheeled to meet the now close savage, there was a smile upon his
lips, for Waldo Emerson had killed his man, and there was no longer the haunting fear within his
soul that at heart he was a coward. As he turned with couched spear, the caveman came to a sudden
stop. This was not what Waldo had anticipated. The other savages were running rapidly toward him,
but the fellow who had first overhauled him remained at a safe twenty feet from the point of his
weapon. Waldo was being cleverly held until the remainder of the enemy could arrive and overwhelm him.
He knew that if he turned to run, the fellow who danced and yelled just beyond his reach would
plunge forward and be upon his back in an instant. He tried rushing the man, but the other
retreated nimbly, drawing Waldo still closer to those who were coming on. There was no time to be
lost. A moment more and the entire twenty would be upon him, but there were possibilities in a
spear that the caveman and his ignorance dreamed not of. There was a lightning-like movement of
Waldo's arm, and the Aborigines saw the spear darting swiftly through space toward his breast.
He tried to dodge, but it was too late. Down he went, clutching madly at the slender thing which
protruded from his heart. Although one of the dead man's companion was now quite close,
Waldo could not relinquish his weapon without an effort. It had cost him considerable time to make,
and twice today it had saved his life. Forgetful that he had ever been a coward,
he leaped toward the fallen man, reaching his side at the same instant as his foremost pursuer.
The two came together like mad bulls, the savage reaching for Waldo's throat,
Waldo wielding his light cudgel. For a moment they struggled backward and forward,
turning and twisting, the caveman in an effort to close upon Waldo's wind,
Waldo to hold the other at arm's length for the brief instant that would be necessary for one
sudden, effective blow from the cudgel. The other savages were almost upon,
them when the young man found his antagonist's throat. Throwing all his weight and strength into
the effort, Waldo forced the caveman back until there was room between them for the play of the
stick. A single blow was sufficient. As the limp body of his foeman slipped from his grasp,
Waldo snatched his precious spear from the heart of its victim, and with the hands of the infuriated
pack almost upon him, turned once more into his floges.
toward the ocean. The howling band was close upon his heels now, nor could he greatly increase the
distance that separated him from them. He wondered what the outcome of the matter was to be. He did not
wish to die. His thoughts kept reverting to his boyhood home, to his indulgent mother, to the
friends that had been his. He felt that at the last moment he was about to lose his nerve, that after all,
his hard-earned manliness was counterfeit.
Then there came to him a vision of an oval olive face
framed by a mass of soft black hair,
and before it the fear of death dissolved into a grim smile.
He did not pause to analyze the reason for it,
nor could he have done so then had he tried.
He only knew that with those eyes upon him
he could not be aught else than courageous.
A moment later he burst through the last fringe of underbrush
to emerge upon the clearing that faced the sea.
There, by a tiny rivulet,
he saw a sight that filled him with thanksgiving,
and farther out upon the ocean,
that which he had been waiting and hoping for
all these long, hard months.
A ship.
End of Chapter 5.
Chapter 6 of the Cave Girl by Edgar Rice Burroughs.
This Libravox recording is in the public domain.
Read by Gerald Moe.
A Choice
Seamen upon the beach were filling water casks.
There were a dozen of them, and as Waldo plunged from the forest,
they looked with startled apprehension at the strange apparition.
A great brown giant they saw, clad in a few rations.
ragged strings of white duck, for Waldo had kept his apparel as immaculately clean as hard
rubbing in cold water would permit. In one hand the strange creature carried a long, bloody spear,
and the other a light cudgel. Long yellow hair streamed back over his broad shoulders. Several of the
men, those who were armed, leveled guns and revolvers at him, but when, as he drew closer, they saw a
broad grin upon his face, and heard in perfectly good English,
Don't shoot, I'm a white man. They lowered their weapons and awaited him.
He had scarcely reached them when they saw a swarm of naked men dash from the forest in his wake.
Waldo saw their eyes directed past him and knew that his pursuers had come into view.
You'll have to shoot at them, I imagine, he said. They're not exactly domesticated.
Try firing over their heads at first.
Maybe you can scare them away without hurting any of them.
He disliked the idea of seeing the poor savages slaughtered.
It didn't seem just like fair play to mow them down with bullets.
The sailors followed his suggestion.
At the first reports the cavemen halted in surprise and consternation.
"'Let's rush them!' suggested one of the men,
and this was all that was needed to send them scurrying back into the woods.
Waldo found that the ship was English
and that all the men spoke his mother tongue in more or less understandable fashion.
The second mate, who was in charge of the landing party,
proved to have originated in Boston.
It was much like being at home again.
Waldo was so excited and wanted to ask so many questions all at once
that he became almost unintelligible.
It seemed scarcely possible that a ship had really come.
He realized now that he had never actually entertained
any very definite belief that a ship would ever come
to this out-of-the-way corner of the world.
He had hoped and dreamed,
but down in the bottom of his heart,
he must have felt that years might elapse before he would be rescued.
Even now it was difficult,
to believe that these were really civilized beings like himself.
They were on their way to a civilized world.
They would soon be surrounded by their families and friends,
and he,
Waldo Emerson Smith-Jones, was going with them.
In a few months he would see his mother and his father and all his friends.
He would be among his books once more.
Even as the last thought flashed through his mind,
it was succeeded by mild wonderment that this outlook failed to raise his temperature as he might have expected that it would.
His books had been his real life in the past. Could it be that they had lost something of their glamour?
Had his brief experience with the realities of life dulled the edge of his appetite for second-hand hopes, aspirations, deeds, and emotions?
It had.
Waldo yet craved his books, but they alone would no longer suffice.
He wanted something bigger, something more real and tangible.
He wanted to read and study, but even more he wanted to do.
And back there in his own world, there would be plenty awaiting the doing.
His heart thrilled at the possibilities that lay before the new Waldo Emerson,
possibilities of which he would never have dreamed, but for the strange chance which had snatched
him bodily from one life to throw him into this new one, which had forced upon him the
development of attributes of self-reliance, courage, initiative, and resourcefulness that would
have lain dormant within him, always, but for the necessity which had given birth to them.
Yes, Waldo realized that he owed a great deal to this experience, a great deal to,
and then a sudden realization of the truth rushed in upon him.
He owed everything to Nadara.
I was never shipwrecked on a desert island, said the second mate, breaking in upon Waldo's
reveries, but I can imagine just about how good you feel at the thought that you are at last
rescued, and that in an hour or so you will see the shoreline of your prison growing smaller and
smaller upon the southern horizon.
Yes, acquiesced Waldo in a faraway voice.
It's awfully good of you, but I am not going with you.
Two hours later, Waldo Emerson stood alone upon the beach, watching the diminishing
hull of a great ship as it dropped over the rim of the world far to the north.
A vague hint of tears dimmed his vision,
then he threw back his shoulders,
swallowed that thing that had risen into his throat,
and with high-held head turned back into the forest.
In one hand he carried a razor and a plug of tobacco,
the sole mementos of his recent brief contact with the world of civilization.
The kindly sailors had urged him to reconsider his decision,
but when he remained obdurate they had insisted that they be permitted to leave some of the comforts of life with him.
The only thing that he could think of that he wanted very badly was a razor.
Firearms he would not accept, for he had worked out a rather fine chivalry of his own here in this savage world,
a chivalry which would not permit him to take any advantage over the primeval inhabitants he had found here,
other than what his own hands and head might give him.
At the last moment, one of the seamen,
prompted by a generous heart and a keen realization
of what life must be without even bare necessities,
had thrust upon Waldo the plug of tobacco.
As he looked at it now, the young man smiled.
That would indeed be the last step, according to Mother's ideas,
he soliloquized, no lower could I sink.
The ship that bore away Waldo's chance of escape carried also a long letter to Waldo's mother.
In portions it was rather vague and rambling.
It mentioned, among other things, that he had an obligation to fulfill before he could leave his present habitat,
but that the moment he was free, he should take the first steamer for Boston.
The skipper of the ship, which had just sailed away, had told Waldo that,
so far as he knew, there might never be another ship touch his island, which was so far out of the
beaten course that only the shoreline of it had ever been explored, and scarce a score of
vessels had reported it since Captain Cook discovered it in 1773.
Yet it was in the face of this that Waldo had refused to leave.
As he walked slowly through the wood on his way back toward his cave, he tried to convince himself
that he had acted purely from motives of gratitude and fairness,
that as a gentleman he could do no less than see Nadara and thank her
for the friendly services she had rendered him.
But for some reason, this seemed a very futile and childish excuse
for relinquishing what might easily be his only opportunity to return to civilization.
His final decision was that he had acted the part of a fool.
yet as he walked he hummed a joyous tune, and his heart was full of happiness and pleasant expectations of what he could not have told.
To one thing he had made up his mind, and that was that the next son would see him on his way to the village of Nadara.
His experience with the savages that day had convinced him that he might with reasonable safety face flatfoot and corth.
The more he dwelt upon this idea,
the more light-hearted he became. He could not understand it. He should be plunged into the blackest
despair, for had he not but just relinquished a chance to return home, and was he not within a day
or two to enter the village of the ferocious flatfoot and the mighty corth? Even so his heart
sang. Waldo saw nothing of his enemies of the earlier part of the day, as he moved cautiously
through the forest or crossed the little plains and meadows, which lay along the root between
the ocean and his lair. But his thoughts often reverted to them and to his adventures of the
morning, and the result was that he became aware of a deficiency in his equipment, a deficiency which
his recent battle made glaringly apparent. In fact, there were two points that might be
easily remedied. One was the lack of a shield. Had he had he,
He had protection of this nature, he would have been in comparatively little danger from the shower
of missiles that the savages had flung at him.
The other was a sword.
With a sword and shield he could have let his enemies come to very close quarters with perfect
impunity to himself, and then have run them through with infinite ease.
This new idea would necessitate a delay in his plans.
He must finish both shield and sword.
before he departed for the village of Flatfoot.
What with his meditation and his planning,
Waldo had made poor time on the return journey from the coast,
so that it was after sunset when he entered the last deep ravine
beyond the farther summit of which lay his rocky home.
In the depths of the ravine it was already quite dark,
though a dim twilight still hung upon the surrounding hilltops.
He had about completed the arduous ascent of the last steep trail, at the crest of which was his journey's end,
when above him, silhouetted against the darkening sky, loomed a great black crouching mass,
from the center of which blazed two balls of fire.
It was Nagula, and he occupied the center of the only trail that led over the edge of the ridge from the ravine below.
I had almost forgotten you, Nogula, murmured Waldo Emerson.
I could never have gone upon my journey without first interviewing you,
but I could have wished a different time and place than this.
Let us postpone the matter for a day or so.
He concluded aloud, but the only response from Nogula was an ominous growl.
Waldo felt rather uncomfortable.
He could not have come upon the Great Black Panther at a more inoperable,
pertuned time or place. It was too dark for Waldo's human eyes, and the cat was above him,
and Waldo upon a steep hillside, that under the best of conditions, offered but a precarious foothold.
He tried to shoe the formidable beast away by shouts and menacing gesticulations, but Nagula would
not shoe. Instead, he crept slowly forward, edging his sinuous body inch by inch along the rocky
trail until it hung poised above the waiting man a dozen feet below him.
Six months before, Waldo would long since have been shrieking in meteor-like flight down
the bed of the ravine behind him, that a wonderful transformation had been wrought within him,
was evident from the fact that no cry of fright escaped him, and that, far from fleeing,
he edged inch by inch upward toward the menacing creature hanging.
there above him. He carried his spear with the point leveled a trifle below those baleful eyes.
He had advanced but a foot or two, however, when, with an awful shriek, the terrible beast
launched itself full upon him. As the heavy body struck him, Waldo went over backward down
the cliff, and with him went Nagula. Clawing, tearing, and scratching, the two rolled and bounded
down the rocky hillside, until, near the bottom, they came to a sudden stop against a large tree.
The growling and screeching ceased, the clawing paws and hands were still.
Presently the tropic moon rose over the hilltop to look down upon a little tangled mound
of man and beast that lay very quiet against the bowl of a great tree near the bottom of a dark ravine.
End of Chapter 6.
Chapter 7 of The Cave Girl by Edgar Rice Burroughs.
This Libravox recording is in the public domain.
Read by Gerald Moe.
Thandar, the Seeker.
For a long time, there was no sign of life
in that strange pile of flesh and bone and brawn and glossy black fur
and long yellow hair and blood.
But toward dawn it moved a little,
down near the bottom of the heap,
and a little later there was a groan,
and then all was still again for many minutes.
Presently it moved again,
this time more energetically,
and after several efforts,
a yellow head streaked and matted with blood
emerged from beneath.
It required the better part of an hour,
for the stunned and lacerated Waldo to extricate himself from the entangling embrace of Nagula.
When, finally, he staggered to his feet, he saw that the great cat lay dead before him,
the broken shaft of the spear protruding from the sleek black breast.
It was quite evident that the beast had lived but the barest fraction of an instant
after it had launched itself upon the man.
But during that brief interval of time,
it had wrought sore havoc with its mighty talons,
though fortunately for Waldo,
the great jaws had not found him.
From breast to knees, ghastly wounds
were furrowed in the man's brown skin,
where the powerful hind feet of the beast had raped him.
That he owed his life
to the chance that had brought about the
encounter upon a steep hillside rather than on the level seemed quite apparent.
For during their tumble down the declivity, Nagula had been unable to score with any degree of
accuracy. As Waldo looked down upon himself, he was at first horrified by the frightful
appearance of his wounds. But when a closer examination showed them to be superficial,
he realized that the only danger lay an infection.
Every bone and muscle in his body ached
from the manhandling and the fall,
and the wounds themselves were painful,
almost excruciatingly so
when a movement of his body stretched or tore them.
But notwithstanding his suffering,
he found himself smiling
as he contemplated the remnants of his long-suffering ducks.
There remained of their once stylish glory, not a shred.
The panther's sharp claws had finished what time and brambles had so well commenced.
And of their linen partner, the white outing shirt, only the neckband remained,
with a single fragment as large as one's hand depending behind.
Nature is a wonderful leveler, thought Waldo, it is evident that she hates art
artificiality as she does a vacuum.
I shall really need you now, he concluded, looking at the beautiful black coat of Nagula.
Despite his suffering, Waldo crawled to his lair, where he selected a couple of sharp-edged
stones from his collection and returned to the side of Nagula.
Leaving his tools there, he went on down to the bottom of the ravine, where in a little
crystal stream, he bathed his wounds. Then he returned once more to his kill.
After half a day of the most arduous labor, Waldo succeeded in removing the panther's hide,
which he dragged laboriously to his lair where he fell exhausted, unable even to crawl within.
The next day, Waldo worked upon the inner surface of the hide, removing every particle of flesh,
by scraping it with a sharp stone
so that there might be no danger of decomposition.
He was still very weak and sore,
but he could not bear the thought of losing the pelt
that had cost him so much to obtain.
When the last vestige of flesh had been scraped away,
he crawled into his lair,
where he remained for a week,
only emerging for food and water.
At the end of that time,
his wounds were almost healed, and he had entirely recovered from his lameness and the shock of
the adventure, so that it was with real pleasure and exultation that he gloated over his beautiful
trophy. Always, as he thought of the time that he should have it made ready for girding about his
loins, he saw himself, not through his own eyes, but as he imagined that another would see him,
and that other was Nadara.
For many days Waldo scraped and pounded the great skin
as he had seen the caveman scrape and pound
in the brief instant he had watched them with Nadara
from the edge of the forest before the village of Flatfoot.
At last he was rewarded with a pelt sufficiently pliable
for the purpose of the rude apparel he contemplated.
A strip an inch wide he trimmed
off to form a supporting belt. With this he tied the black skin about his waist, passed one arm
through a hole he had made for that purpose near the upper edge. Bringing the four paws forward
about his chest, he crossed and fastened them to secure the garment from falling from the upper
part of his body. It was a very proud Waldo that strutted forth in the finery of his new apparel.
but the pride was in the prowess that had won the thing for him.
Vulgar, gross, brutal, physical prowess,
the very attribute upon which he had looked with supercilious contempt six months before.
Next, Waldo turned his attention toward the fashioning of a sword, a new spear, and a shield.
The first two were comparatively easy of accomplishment.
he had them both completed in half a day,
and from a two-inch strip of panther hide,
he made also a sword belt
to pass over his right shoulder
and support his sword at his left side.
But the shield almost defied his small skill
and newborn ingenuity.
With small twigs and grasses,
he succeeded, after nearly a week of painstaking endeavor,
in weaving a rude,
oval buckler some three feet long by two wide, which he covered with the skins of several small
animals that had fallen before his death-dealing stones. A strip of hide fastened upon the back of the
shield, held it to his left arm. With it, Waldo felt more secure against the swiftly thrown
missiles of the savages he knew he should encounter on his forthcoming expedition. At last,
Last came the morning for departure.
Rising with the sun,
Waldo took his morning tub in the cold spring
that rose a few yards from his cave.
Then he got out the razor that the sailor had given him,
and after scraping off his scanty yellow beard,
hacked his tawny hair
until it no longer fell about his shoulders and in his eyes.
Then he gathered up his weapons,
rolled the boulders before the entrance to his cave,
and turning his back upon his rough hoe,
set off down the little stream
toward the distant valley
where it wound through the forest
along the face of the cliffs
to flat-footing corth.
As he stepped lightly along the hazardous trail,
leaping from ledge to ledge
in the descent of the many sheer drops
over which the stream fell,
he might have been a reincarnation
of some primeval humphal,
hunter, from whose savage loins had sprung the warriors and the strong men of a world.
The tall, well-muscled brown body, the clear bright eyes, the high-held head,
the sword, the spear, the shield were all a far cry from the weak and futile thing
that had lain grovelling in the sand upon the beach, sweating and shrieking in terror six
short months before, and yet it was the same.
What one good but mistaken woman had smothered, another had brought out,
and the result of the influence of both was a much finer specimen of manhood
than either might have evolved alone.
In the afternoon of the third day, Waldo came to the forest opposite the cliffs where lay
the home of Nadara.
cautiously he stole from tree to tree
until he could look out unseen
upon the honey-combed face of the lofty escarpment.
All was lifeless and deserted.
The cave mouths looked out upon the valley,
sad and lonely.
There was no sign of life in any direction
as far as Waldo could see.
Coming from the forest,
he crossed the clearing and approached the cliffs,
His eye, now become alert in woodcraft,
detected the young grass growing in what had once been well-beaten trails.
He needed no further evidence
to assure him that the caves were deserted
and had been for some time.
One by one he entered and explored several of the cliff dwellings.
All gave the same mute corroboration
of what was everywhere apparent.
The village had been in fact.
without haste in an orderly manner.
Everything of value had been removed,
only a few broken utensils remaining
as indication that it had ever constituted human habitation.
Waldo was utterly confounded.
He had not the remotest idea in which direction to search.
During the balance of the afternoon,
he wandered along the various ledges,
entering first one cave and then another.
He wondered which had been Nadara's.
He tried to imagine her life among these crude, primitive surroundings,
among the beast-like men and women who were her people.
She did not seem to harmonize with either.
He was convinced that she was more out of place here
than Flatfoot would have been in a back bay drawing room.
The more his mind dwelt upon her, the sadder he became.
He tried to convince himself that it was purely disappointment
in being thwarted in his desire to thank her for her kindness to him
and demonstrate that her confidence in his prowess had not been misplaced.
But always he discovered that his thoughts returned to Nadara
rather than to the ostensible object of his adventure.
In short, he began to realize, rather vaguely it is true, that he had come because he wanted to see the girl again.
But why he wanted to see her he did not know.
That night he slept in one of the deserted caves, and the next morning sat forth upon his quest for Nadara.
For three days he searched the little valley, but without results, there was no sign of any
other village within it. Then he passed over into another valley to the north. For weeks he wandered
hither and tither without being rewarded by even a sight of a human being. Early one afternoon as
he was topping a barrier in search of other valleys he came suddenly face to face with a great hairy man.
Both stopped, the hairy one glaring with his nasty little eyes.
I can kill you, growled the savage.
Waldo had no desire to fight.
It was information he was searching,
but he almost smiled at the ready greeting of the man.
It was the same that Sag the killer had accorded him
that day he had gone down to the sea for the last time.
It came as readily and as glibly from these primitive men
as good morning falls from the lips of the civilized races.
Yet among the latter, he realized that it had its counterpart
and the stony stairs which Anglo-Saxon strangers fauchiff one another.
I have no quarrel with you, replied Waldo, let us be friends.
You are afraid, taunted the hairy one.
Waldo pointed to his sable garment.
Ask Nagula, he said.
The man looked at the trophy. There could be no mightier argument for a man's valor than that.
He came a step closer that he might scrutinize it more carefully.
Full grown and imperfect health, he grunted to himself.
This is no worn and mangy hide peeled from the rotting carcass of one dead of sickness.
How did you slay Nagula? he asked suddenly.
Waldo indicated his spear.
then he drew his garment aside and pointed to the vivid, new-heeled scars that striped his body.
We met at dusk at a cliff-top. He was above, I below. When we reached the bottom of the ravine,
Nagula was dead. But it was nothing for Thandar. I am Thandar.
Waldo rightly suspected that a little bravado would make a good impression on the intellect primeval,
Nor was he mistaken.
What do you hear in my country? asked the man,
but his tone was less truculent than before.
I am searching for Flatfoot and Corth, and Nadara, said Waldo.
The other's eyes narrowed.
What would you of them? he asked.
Nadara was good to me, I would repay her.
But Flatfoot and Corth, what of them?
insisted the man.
My business is with them.
them. When I see them, I shall transact it, Waldo Perry, for he had seen the cunning look in the man's
eyes, and he did not like it. Can you lead me to them? I can tell you where they are, but I am not
bound tither, replied the man. Three days toward the setting sun will bring you to the village of
Flatfoot. There you will find Korth also, and Nadara. And without further parley, the
The savage turned and trotted toward the east.
End of Chapter 7.
Chapter 8 of the Cave Girl by Edgar Rice Burroughs.
This Libravox recording is in the public domain.
Read by Gerald Moe.
Nadara again.
Waldo watched him out of sight, half-minded to follow,
for he was far from satisfied that the fellow had been entirely honest with him.
Why he should have been otherwise, Waldo could not imagine, but nevertheless there had been
an indefinable suggestion of duplicity in the man's behavior that had puzzled him.
However, Waldo took up his search toward the west, passing down from the hills into a deep
valley, the bottom of which was overgrown by a thick tangle of tropical jungle.
He had forced his way through this for nearly half a mile when he came to the bank of a wide,
slow-moving river. Its water was thick with sediment, not clean, sparkling, and inviting,
as were the little mountain streams of the hills and valleys farther south.
Waldo traveled along the edge of the river in a north-westerly direction,
searching for a ford. The steep, muddy banks offered no,
foothold, so he dared not venture a crossing until he could be sure of a safe landing upon
the opposite shore. A couple of hundred yards from the point at which he had come upon the stream,
he found a broad trail leading down into the water and on the other side saw a similar track
cutting up through the bank. This evidently was the Ford he sought, but as he started toward the
river, he noticed the imprints of the feet of many animals, human and brute.
Waldo stooped to examine them minutely. There were the broad pads of Nagula, the smaller
imprints of countless rodents, but back and forth among them all, were old and new signs of
man. There were the great flat-foot prints of huge adult males, the smaller but equally flat-footed
impresses of the women and children, but one there was that caught his eye particularly.
It was the fine and dainty outline of a perfect foot with the arch well-defined.
It was new, as were many of the others, and, like the other newer ones, it led down to the river
and then back again, as though she who made it had come for water and then returned from whence
she had come. Waldo knew that the tracks leading away from the river were the newer,
because where the two trails overlapped, those coming up from the ford were always over those
which led downward. The multiplicity of signs indicated a considerable community,
and their newness, the proximity of the makers. Waldo hesitated but a moment before he reached
a decision, and then he turned up the trail away from the river, and at a rapid trot followed
the spore along its winding course through the jungle, to where it emerged at the base of
the foothills, to wind upward toward their crest. He found that the trail he was following
crossed the hills but a few yards from the spot at which he had met the caveman a short time
before. Evidently the man had been returning from the river when he had espied Waldo.
The young man could see where the fellow's tracks had left the main trail, and he followed
them to the point where the man had stood during his conversation with Waldo. From there,
they led toward the east for a short distance, and then turned suddenly north to re-enter the main
trail. Waldo could see that as soon as the man had reached a point from which he would be safe
from the stranger's observation, he had broken into a rapid trot, and as he already had two hours
start, Waldo felt that he would have to hurry were he to overtake him. Just why he wished to do so
he did not consider, but intuitively possibly, he felt that the surly brute could give him much more
and accurate information than he had.
Nor could Waldo eliminate the memory of those dainty feminine footprints.
It was foolish, of course, and he fully realized the fact,
but his silly mind would insist upon attributing them to the cave girl, Nadara.
For two hours he trotted doggedly along the trail,
which for the most part was well defined.
There were places, of course, which taxed his trailing
ability, but by circling widely from these points, he always was able to pick up the tracks
again. He had come down from the hills and entered an open forest, where the trail was entirely
lost in the mossy carpet that lay beneath the trees, when he was startled by a scream,
a woman's scream, and the hoarse gutturals of two men, deep and angry. Hastening toward the sound,
Waldo came upon the authors of the commotion
in a little glade half hidden by surrounding bushes.
There were three actors in the hideous tragedy,
a hairy brute dragging a protesting girl by her long black hair
and an old man who followed protesting futilely
against the outrage that threatened the young woman.
None of them saw Waldo as he ran toward them
until he was almost upon them,
and then the beast who grasped the girl looked up, and Waldo recognized him as the same
who had sent him toward the west earlier in the day. At the same instant he saw the girl
was Nadara. In the brief interval that the recognition required, there sloughed from the heart
and mind and soul of Waldo Emerson Smith-Jones, every particle of the civilization and culture and
refinement that had required countless ages in the building, stripping him naked, age on age,
down to the primordial beast that had begot his first human progenitor. He saw red through blood
as he leaped for the throat of the man-beast whose ruthless hands were upon Nadara. His lip curled
in the fighting snarl that exposed his long unused canine fangs. He forgot sword and shield and
spear. He was no longer a man, but a terrible beast, and the hairy brute that witnessed the metamorphosis
blanched and shrank back in fear. But he could not escape the fury of that mad charge or the raging
creature that sought his throat. For a moment they struggled in a surging, swaying embrace,
and then toppled to the ground, the hairy one beneath. Rolling, tearing, and biting, they battled,
each seeking a death-hold upon the other.
Time and again the gleaming teeth of the once fastidious Bostonian
sank into the breast and shoulder of his antagonist,
but it was the jugular his primal instinct sought.
The girl and the old man had drawn away
where they could watch the battle in safety.
Nadara's eyes were wide in fascination.
Her slim brown hands were tight-pressed
against her rapidly rising and falling breasts, as she leaned a little forward with parted lips,
drinking in every detail of the conflict between the two beasts.
Ah, but was the yellow-haired giant really fighting for possession of her, or merely in protection,
because she was a woman?
She could readily conceive, from her knowledge of him, that he might be acting now solely
from some peculiar sense of duty, which she really had really.
that he might entertain, although she could not herself understand it.
Yes, that was it, and when he had conquered his rival he would run away again, as he had
months before.
At the thought, Nadara felt herself flush with mortification.
No, he should never have another opportunity to repeat that terrible affront.
As she allowed her mind to dwell on the humiliating moment that had witnessed the discovery that
Fandar had fled from her at the very threshold of her home, Nadara found herself hating him again
as fiercely as she had all those long months, a hatred that had almost dissolved at sight of him
as he rushed out of the underbrush a moment before to rest her from the clutches of her hideous
tormentor. Waldo and his antagonist were still tearing futile at one another and mad efforts to maim or kill.
The giant muscles of the caveman gave him but little, if any, advantage over his agile,
though slightly less powerful, adversary.
The hairy one used his teeth to better advantage, with the result that Waldo was badly torn
and bleeding from a dozen wounds.
Both were weakening now, and it seemed to the girl who watched that the younger man would
be the first to succumb to the terrific strain under which both both were weakening now, and it seemed to the girl who watched, that the younger man would be the first to succumb to the terrific strain
under which both had been.
She took a step forward, and stooping, picked up a stone.
Her small strength would be ample to turn the scales as she might choose.
A sharp blow upon the head of either would give his adversary the trifling advantage
that would spell death for the one she struck.
The two men had struggled to their feet again as she approached with raised weapon.
At the very moment that it left her hand, they swung completely round, so that Waldo faced her,
and in the instant before the missile struck his forehead, he saw Nadara in the very active throwing,
upon her face an expression of hatred and loathing.
Then he lost consciousness and went down, dragging with him the caveman,
upon whose throats his fingers had just found their hold.
End of Chapter 8
Chapter 9 of the Cave Girl by Edgar Rice Burroughs
This Libravox recording is in the public domain
Read by Gerald Moe
The Seeker
When the old man saw what had happened
He ran forward and grasped Nadara by the wrist
Quick he cried, quick my daughter
You have killed him who would have saved you
and now nothing but flight may keep course from having his way with you.
As in a trance the girl turned and departed with him.
They had scarcely disappeared within the underbrush,
when Waldo returned to consciousness,
so slight had been the effect of the blow upon his head.
To his surprise, he found the caveman lying very still beside him,
but an instant later he read the reason for it,
in the little projecting ridge of rock, upon which lay his foes forehead.
In falling, the savage man had struck thus and lost consciousness.
Almost immediately the hairy one opened his eyes,
but before he could gather his scattered senses,
sinewy fingers found his throat,
and he lapsed once more into oblivion,
from which there was no awakening.
As Waldo staggered to his,
feet, he saw that the girl had vanished, and there swept back into his mind the memory of the
hate that had been in her face as she struck him down. It seemed incredible that she should have
turned against him so, and at the very moment, too, when he had risked his life in her service.
But that she had there could be no doubt, for he had seen her cast the stone. With his own eyes he
had seen her, and, too, he had seen the hatred and loathing in her face as she looked straight
into his.
But what he had not seen was the look of horror that followed as the missile struck him instead
of corth, sending him crumpling to the earth.
Slowly Waldo turned away from the scene of battle, and without even a second look at his
vanquished enemy, limped painfully into the brush.
His heart was very heavy, and he was weak from exhaustion and loss of blood, but he staggered on,
back toward his mountain lair, as he thought, until unable to go further he sank down upon a
little grassy knoll and slept.
When Nadara recovered from the shock of the thing she had done sufficiently to reason for
herself, she realized that after all Thandar might not be dead, and though the
old man protested long and loudly against it, she insisted upon retracing her steps toward the
spot where they had left the yellow giant in the clutches of corth. Very cautiously, the girl
threaded her way through the maze of shrubbery and creepers that filled the intervening space
between the forest trees, until she came silently to the edge of the clearing in which the two
had fought. As she peered anxiously through the last curtain of foliage, she saw a single body
lying quiet and still upon the sward, and an instant later recognized it as corths.
For several minutes she watched it before she became convinced that the man who had so terrorized
her whole childish life could never again offer her harm.
She looked about for Thandar, but he was nowhere to be seen.
Nadara could scarcely believe that her eyes were not deceiving her.
It was incredible that the yellow one could have gone down to unconsciousness
before her unintentional blow, and yet have mastered the mighty Korth,
but how else could Korth have met his death and Thandar be gone?
She approached quite close to the dead man,
turning the body over with her foot until the throat was visible.
There she saw the finger-marks that had done the work,
and with a little thrill of pride she turned back into the forest,
calling Thandar's name aloud.
But Thandar did not hear, half a mile away he lay weak and unconscious from loss of blood.
Morning found Nadara sleeping in a sturdy tree,
upon the trail along which Waldo had followed.
followed Korth. She had discovered the footprints of the two men the evening before, while she had
been searching unsuccessfully for the trail which Waldo had followed after the battle.
She hoped now that the spore might lead her to Thandar's cave, to which she felt it quite
possible, he might have returned by another way. When the girl awoke, she again took up her
journey, following the tracks as unerringly as a hound up through the hilly country,
across the divide, and down into the jungle, to the very watering place, at which her tribe had
drank a few days earlier. Here she made a brief stay. Then on again down the river,
back through the jungle, and on to the divide once more. She was much mystified by the windings of
the trail, but for days she followed the fading spore, until, becoming fainter and fainter as it grew
older, she lost it entirely at last. She was quite sure by now, however, that it led from her
tribe's former territory, and so she kept on, hoping against hope, that soon she would come across
the fresh track of Thandar, where he had passed her on his return journey to his home.
Nadara had eluded the old man when she started upon her search for Thandar,
so it was that the old fellow returned to the dwellings of his people alone the following day.
Flatfoot was the first to greet him.
Where is the girl? he growled, and where is Corth?
Has he taken her?
Answer me the truth, or I will break every bone in your carcass.
I do not know where the girl is, answered the old man truthfully enough.
but corth lies dead in the little glade beyond the three great trees a mighty man killed him as he was dragging nadara off into the thicket
and the man has taken the girl for himself yold flatfoot you old thief you this is some of your work always have you tried to cheat me of this girl since first you knew that i desired her whither went they quick before i kill you i do not know-i do not know
replied the old man. For hours I searched, until darkness came, but neither of them could I find,
and my old eyes are no longer keen for trailing, so I was forced to abandon my hunt and return here
when morning came.
By the three trees the trail starts, you say, cried Flatfoot. That is enough. I shall find
them, and when I return with the girl it will be time enough to kill you. Now it would delay me,
too much.
And with that the caveman hurried away into the forest.
It took him half a day to find Nadara's trail, but at last his search was rewarded,
and as she had made no effort to hide it, he moved rapidly along in the wake of the
unsuspecting girl.
But he was not as swift as she, and the chase bid fair to be a long one.
When Waldo woke he found the sun beating down
upon his face, and though he was lame and sore, he felt quite strong enough to continue his
journey. But whither he should go he did not know. Now that Nadara had turned against him,
the island held nothing for him, and he was on the point of starting back toward his far
distant lair, from where he might visit the ocean often to watch for a passing ship,
when the sudden decision came to him to see the girl again,
regardless of her evident hostility,
and learn from her own lips the exact reason of her hatred for him.
He had had no idea that the loss of her friendship
would prove such a blow to him,
so that his pride suffered as well as his heart
as he contemplated his harrowed emotions.
Of course he was reasonably sure that Nadara's
his attitude was due to his ungallant desertion, for which act he had long suffered the most
acute pains of remorse and contrition. Yet he felt that her apparent vindictiveness was not warranted
by even the grave offense against chivalry and gratitude of which he had been guilty. It presently
occurred to him that by the treitorious act which he believed that she had made upon him while he was
acting in her defense, she had forfeited every claim which her former kindness might have given
her upon him. But with this realization came another, a humiliating thought, he still wished to see
her. He, Waldo Emerson Smith-Jones, had become so devoid of pride that he would voluntarily
search out one who had wronged and outraged his friendship, with the avowed determination of
seeking a reconciliation. It was unthinkable, and yet, as he admitted the impossibility of it,
he set forth in search of her. Waldo wondered not a little at the strange emotion, inherent
gregarious instinct, he thought it, which drew him toward Nadara. It did not occur to him
that during all the past solitary months he had scarcely missed the old companionship of his
back-bay friends, that for once that they had been the subject of his reveries, the cave-girl
had held the center of that mental stage a thousand times. He failed to realize that it was not
the companionship of the many that he craved, that it was not the community instinct, or that his
strange longing could be satisfied by but a single individual. No, Waldo Emerson did not know
what was the matter with him, nor was it likely that he ever would find out before it was too late.
The young man attempted to retrace his steps to the battleground of the previous day,
but he had been so dazed after the encounter that he had no clear recollection of the direction
he had taken after he quitted the glade. So it was that he stumbled in precisely the opposite
direction, presently emerging from the underbrush, almost at the foot of a low cliff,
tunneled with many caves. All about were the morose, unhappy community, whose savage lives
were spent an almost continual wandering from one filthy, comfortless Warren to another
equally foul and wretched. At sight of them, Waldo did not flee in dismay, as most certainly would have
been the case a few months earlier. Instead, he walked confidently toward them. As he approached,
they ceased whatever work they were engaged upon and eyed him suspiciously. Then several
burly males approached him warily. At a hundred yards they halted,
What do you want? They cried. If you come to our village, we can kill you. Before Waldo
could reply, an old man crawled from a cave near the
face of the cliff, and as his eyes fell upon the stranger, he hurried as rapidly as his ancient
limbs would carry him to the little knot of ruffians who composed the reception committee.
He spoke to them for a moment in a low tone, and as he was talking, Waldo recognized him
as the old man who had accompanied Nadara on the previous day at the Battle in the Glade.
When he had finished speaking, one of the cavemen assented to whatever proposal the decrepit one had made,
and Waldo saw that each of the others nodded his head in approval.
Then the old man advanced slowly toward Waldo.
When he had come quite close, he spoke.
I am an old man, he said.
Thandar would not kill an old man.
Of course not, but how know you that my name is Thandar?
replied Waldo.
"'Nadara, she who is my daughter, has spoken of you often.
"'Yesterday we saw you as you battled with that son of Nagula.
"'Nadara told me then that it was you.
"'What would Thandar among the people of Flatfoot?'
"'I come as a friend,' replied Waldo, among the friends of Nadara.
"'For Flatfoot, I care nothing.
"'He is no friend of Nadara, whose friends are Thandar's friends,
and whose enemies are Thandar's enemies.
Where is Nadara?
But first, where is Flatfoot?
I have come to kill him.
The words in the savage challenge
slipped as easily from the cultured tongue
of Waldo Emerson Smith-Jones
as though he had been born and reared
in the most rocky and barren cave of this savage island.
Nor did they sound strange or unusual to him.
It seemed that he had said,
the most natural and proper thing under the circumstances that there was to say.
Flatfoot is not here, said the old man, nor is Nadara. She, but here Waldo interrupted him.
Corth, then, he demanded, where is Corth? I can kill him first, and Flatfoot when he returns.
The old man looked at the speaker in unfeigned surprise.
Corth, he exclaimed, Corth is dead.
Can it be that you do not know that he, whom you killed yesterday, was Corth?
Waldo's eyes opened as wide and surprise as had the old man's.
Corth, he had killed the redoubtable Corth with his bare hands.
Corth, who could crush the skull of a full-grown man with a single blow from his open palm.
Clearly he recollected the very words in which Nadara had described this horrible brute,
that time she had harrowed his poor, coward nerves as they approached the village of Flatfoot.
And now he, Waldo Emerson Smith-Jones, had met and killed the creature from whom he had so fearfully fled a few months ago.
And, wonder of wonders, he had not even thought to use the weapons upon which he had spent so many hours of handicraft and months of practice in preparation for,
for just this occasion.
Of a sudden, he recalled the old man's statement that Nadara was not there.
Where is she? Nadara, he cried, turning so suddenly upon the ancient one that the old fellow
drew back in alarm.
I have done nothing to harm her, he cried.
I followed and would have brought her back, but I am old and could not find her.
Once, when I was young, there was no better trailer or mighty warrior.
among my people than I.
But—
Yes, yes, exclaimed Waldo impatiently.
But Nadara, where is she?
I do not know, replied the old man.
She has gone, and I could not find her.
Well, do I remember how, years ago,
when the trail of an enemy was faint
or the signs of game hard to find,
men would come to ask me to help them.
But now—
Of course, interrupted Waldo.
But Nadara—
Do you not even know in what direction she has gone?
No, but since Flatfoot has set forth upon her trail,
it should be easy to track the two of them.
Flatfoot set out after Nadara, cried Waldo.
Why?
For many moons he has craved her for his mate,
as has Corth, explained Nadara's father.
But I think that each feared the other,
and because of that fact, Nadara was saved from both.
But at last, Korth came upon us alone and away from the village, and then he grasped
Nadara and would have taken her away, for Flatfoot was not about to prevent.
You came then, and the rest you know. If I had been younger, neither Flatfoot nor
Korth would have dared menace Nadara. For when I was a young man, I was very terrible,
and the record of my kills was a—' How long since did Flatfoot set out after—'
Nadara, Waldo broke in.
But a few hours since, replied the old man,
it would be an easy thing for me to overtake him by night
at I the speed of my youth, for I well remember,
From where did Flatfoot start upon the trail? cried the young man,
lead me to the place.
This way, then, Thandar, said the other, starting off toward the forest.
I will show you if you will save Nadara from Flatara from Flatwater.
I love her. She has been very kind and good to me. She is unlike the rest of our people.
I should die happy if I knew that you have saved her from Flatfoot, but I am an old man and may not live
until Nadara returns. Ah, that reminds me. There is that in my cave which belongs to Nadara,
and were I to die, there would be none to protect it for her. Will you wait for the moment that it will
take me to run and fetch it, that you may carry it to her, for I am sure that you will find her,
though I am not as sure that you will overcome Flatfoot if you meet him. He is a very terrible
man. Waldo hated to waste a minute of the precious time that was allowing Flatfoot to win
nearer and nearer Nadara. But if it were in a service for the girl who had been so kind to him
and for the happiness of her old father he could not refuse,
so he waited impatiently while the old fellow tottered off toward the caves.
Those who had come halfway to meet Waldo
had hovered at a safe distance while he had been speaking to Nadara's father,
and when the two turned toward the forest,
all had returned to their work in evident relief.
For the old man had told them that the stranger was the mighty,
warrior who had killed the terrible corth with his bare hands, nor had the story lost anything in the
telling. After what seemed hours to the waiting Waldo, the old man returned with a little package
carefully wrapped in the skin of a small rodent, the seams laboriously sewed in a manner of lacing
with pieces of gut. This is Nadaras, he said as they continued their way toward the forest,
It contains many strange things of which I know not the meaning or purpose.
They all were taken from the body of her mother when the woman died.
You will give them to her?
Yes, said Waldo.
I will give them to Nadara or die in the trying of it.
End of Chapter 9.
Chapter 10 of the Cave Girl by Edgar Rice Burrough.
This Libravox recording is in the public domain.
Read by Gerald Moe.
The Trails End
Soon they came upon the trail of Flatfoot in the glade by the three great trees.
They had not searched for it sooner,
for the old man knew that it would start from that point upon its quest for the girl.
The tracks circled the glade a dozen times in widening laps,
until at last, at the point where Flatfoot must have picked up the spore of Nadara,
they broke suddenly away into the underbrush.
Once the way was plain, Waldo bid the old man be of good heart,
for he would surely bring his daughter back to him unharmed
if the thing lay in the power of man.
Then he hurried off upon the new-made trail that lay as plain and readable before him,
as had the printed page of his former life.
But never had he bent with such keen interest
to the reading of his favorite author
as he did to this absorbing drama
written in the turned leaves,
the scattered twigs, and the soft mud
of a primeval forest
by the feet of a savage man and a savage maid.
Toward mid-afternoon,
Waldo became aware that he was much weaker
from the effects of his battle with corth than he had supposed.
He had lost much blood from his wounds,
and the exertion of following the trail at a swift pace
had reopened some of the worse ones,
so that now, as he ran, he was leaving a little trail of blood behind him.
The discovery made him almost frantic,
for it seemed to presage failure.
His condition would handicap him
in the race after the two along whose track he pursued,
so that it would be a miracle
where he to reach flatfoot before the brute overtook Nadara.
And if he did overtake him in time,
what then, would he be physically able to cope with the brawny monster?
He feared that he would not,
but that he kept doggedly to the grueling chase,
argued well for the new manhood that had been so recently born within him.
On and on he stumbled, until at dusk he slipped and fell exhausted to the earth.
Twice he struggled to his feet in an attempt to go on, but he was forced to give in,
lying where he was until morning.
Slightly refreshed, he ate of the roots and fruit which abounded in the forest,
taking up the chase again, but this time more slowly.
He was now convinced that the way led back along the same trail which he had followed into the country,
and when he reached the point at which he had first met Korth on the previous day,
he cut across the little space which intervened between the caveman's tracks,
and the point at which he had stood before he went down over the divide into the jungle toward the river and the ford.
A moment later he was rewarded by the sight of Nadara's dainty footprints, as well as those of flatfoot,
leading away along his old trail. The act had saved him several miles of needless tracking.
All that day he followed as rapidly as his weakened condition would permit,
but his best efforts seemed dismally snail-like.
Along the way he bowled over a couple of large rodents which he ate raw,
for he had long since learned the desirability of a meat diet
for one undergoing severe physical exertion,
and had conquered his natural aversion for the uncooked flesh.
He even had come to relish it,
though often as he dined thus upon meat,
a broad grin illumined his continents at the thought of the horrid,
with which his mother and his Boston friends would view such a hideous performance.
As he continued trailing the two, he was at first surprised to discover the fidelity
with which Nadara had clung to his old trail, and because of this fact, he often was able
to save miles at a time by taking cross-cuts where, on his way in, he had made wide detours.
But at last on the third day, when he attempted this at a place which would have saved him fully ten miles,
he was dismayed by the discovery that he could not again pick up either Nadara's trail or that of the caveman.
Even his own old trail was entirely obliterated.
It was this fact which caused him the greatest concern,
for it meant that if Nadara really had been following it,
it, she must now be wandering rather aimlessly, possibly in an attempt to again locate it.
In which event, her speed would be materially reduced, and the probability of her capture
by flatfoot much enhanced. It was possible, too, that the beast already had overtaken her.
This, in fact, might be the true cause of the cessation of the pursuit
along the way which it had proceeded up to this point.
The thought set Waldo back along his former route,
which he was able to follow by recollection,
though the spore was seldom visible.
He came upon no sign of those he sought that day,
but the next morning he found the point
at which Nadara had lost his old trail upon a rocky ridge.
The girl evidently assumed that it would lead into the valley below,
where she might pick it up again in the soft earth.
And so her footprints led down a shelving bluff,
while plain above them showed the huge imprints of Flatfoot.
Up to this point, at least he had not caught up with her.
Waldo breathed a sigh of relief at the discovery.
The trail was at least two days old,
for Nadara and Flatfoot had traveled much more rapidly
than the wounded man who hunted.
their footsteps like a grim shadow.
About noon, Waldo came to a little stream,
at which both those who preceded him
had evidently stopped to drink.
He could see where they had knelt in the soft grass
at the water's edge.
As Waldo stopped to quench his own thirst,
his eyes rested for an instant upon the farther bank,
which at that point was little more than ten feet from him.
He saw that the opposite shore was less grassy,
and that it sloped down to the water,
forming a muddy beach partially submerged.
But what riveted his attention were several deep imprints in the mud.
He could not be certain, of course, at that distance,
but he was sure enough that he had recognized them
to cause him to leap to his feet, forgetful of his thirst,
and plunge through the stream for a closer inspection.
As he bent to examine the spore at close range, he could scarce repress a cry of exultation.
They had been made by the hands and knees of Nadara as she had stooped to drink at the very spot,
not twenty-four hours before.
She must have circled back toward the brook for some reason,
but by far the greatest cause for rejoicing was the fact that Nadara's trail alone was there.
Flatfoot had not yet come upon her, and Waldo now was between them.
The knowledge that he might yet be in time, and that he was gaining sufficiently in strength
to make it reasonably certain that he could overhaul the girl eventually, filled Waldo with
renewed vigor. He hastened along Nadara's trail now with something of the energy that had been
his directly before his battle with Korth.
His wounds had ceased bleeding, and for several days he had eaten well, and by night slept soundly,
for he had reasoned that only by conserving his energy and fortifying himself in every way possible
could he succor the girl.
That night he slept in a little thicket which had evidently harbored Nadara the night before.
The following day the way lay across a rolling country, cut by night.
numerous deep ravines and lofty divides, that the pace was telling on the girl
Waldo could read in the tell-tale spore that revealed her lagging footsteps.
Upon each eminence the man halted to strain his eyes ahead for a sight of her.
About noon he discerned far ahead a shimmering line which he knew must be the sea.
Surely his long pursuit must end there.
As he was about to plunge on again along Nadara's trail,
something drew his eyes toward the rear,
and there upon another hilltop, a mile or two behind,
he saw the stocky figure of a half-naked man.
It was flat-foot.
The caveman must have seen Waldo at the same instant,
for, with a menacing wave of his huge fist,
he increased his gait to a run,
an instant later disappearing into the ravine which lay at the bottom of the hill upon which he had come into view.
Waldo was undecided whether to wait for the encounter where he was or hasten on in an effort to overtake Nadara
that she might not escape him entirely.
He knew that he stood a good chance of being killed in the conflict,
and he also knew that were he victorious it might easily be at such a terrible,
price, that he would be physically incapable of continuing his search for the girl for many days.
As he meditated, his eyes wandered back and forth across the landscape before him,
searching for Nadara. To his right lay, at a little distance, a level plain, which stretched
to the foot of low-lying cliffs at the valley's southern rim, some three or four miles distant.
In this direction his view was almost unobstructed, but it was not in the direction of the
girl's flight, so that it was but by accident that Waldo's eyes swept casually across the
peaceful scene which would, at another time, have chained his attention with its quiet and
alluring beauty. It was as he swept a backward glance in the direction of Flatfoot, that his
eye was arrested by the hint of something far out across the valley, a little behind his own
position. To the Waldo of a few months previous, it would not have been visible, but the new
woodcraft of the man scented the abnormal in the vague suggestion of movement out among the long
waving grasses of the plain. And now, with every sense alert and riveted upon the spot,
he was quick to perceive that it was an animal moving slowly toward the cliffs at the upper end of the valley.
Presently a little rise of ground, less thickly grasped, brought the creature into full view for an instant.
But in that instant, Waldo saw that the thing he watched was a woman.
As he turned to hurry after her, he saw flatfoot top another hill a half mile nearer than he had.
had before been, and as the caveman came into view, he turned his eyes in the direction that Waldo
had been looking. A second later, and he had abandoned the pursuit of Waldo, and was running rapidly
toward the woman. Nadara had apparently circled back once more, this time from the sea,
and coming up the valley, had passed Waldo and come opposite Flatfoot, before either of them had
discovered her. The young man gave a little cry of alarm, as he realized that the caveman was
nearer to the girl than he, by a good half-mile he judged, and so he put every ounce of his speed
into the wild dash he made down the hill into a gully which led out upon the valley.
On and on he raced, unable to see either flatfoot or Nadara, hoping ever ever.
hoping that he would be the first to win to her side.
For Nadara had told him of the atrocities that such a creature as Flatfoot
might perpetrate upon a woman rather than permit her to escape him or fall into the hands of
another.
Nadara, being upwind, caught neither the scent nor noise of the two who were racing madly toward
her.
The first knowledge she had that she was not alone in the vassive.
was the sight of Flatfoot as he broke suddenly through a clump of tall grass not fifty paces from her.
She gave a little scream and started to run, but she was very tired from the days of unremitting flight,
which had so sorely taxed her endurance, and thus it was no wonder that she slipped and fell
before she had taken a dozen steps.
Scarcely had she gained her feet when Flatfoot was upon her.
her, one hand grasping her by the arm.
Come with me in peace, or I will kill you, he cried.
Kill me then, retorted the despairing girl, for I shall never come with you.
First will I kill myself.
Flatfoot did not wish to kill her, nor did he wish her to escape, as she would be
very likely to do, should he be interrupted by the fellow who must even now be quite
close to them.
Possibly if he could keep the girl quiet, they might hide in the grass until their pursuer had
gone by, and so flatfoot, acting upon the idea, clapped a rough hand over Nadara's mouth,
and dragged her back along the trail he had just made.
The girl struggled, striking and clawing at the hairy brute that pulled her along at his side,
but she was as helpless in his clutches as if she had been a day-old babe.
She did not know that help was so close at hand,
or she would have found the means to free her mouth and cry out once at least.
As it was, she wondered that Flatfoot should attempt to silence her in this way
if there were none to hear her screams.
For days she had known that the caveman was on her trail,
for once in doubling back upon herself,
she had passed but a short distance from a ridge
she had traversed the preceding day,
and had seen the man's squat figure
and recognized his awkward shuffling trot.
It was this knowledge that had turned her away from the old village
toward which she had been traveling since she lost Thandar's trail
and sent her in search of a new country
in which she might lose herself from flatfoot.
As the man dragged her roughly on through the grass,
Nadara racked her brain for some means of escape
or a way to end her misery before the beast could have his way with her.
But there came no ray of hope to her poor, unhappy heart.
If Thandar were but there,
he would save her, even if it were but to desert her the next instant,
But did she wish to be saved again by him?
Now that she pondered the idea,
she was quite sure that she would rather die than see him again,
for had he not twice run away from her?
In her misery she put this interpretation
upon the remarkable disappearance of Thandar
after his battle with Corth.
He had waited until she was out of sight,
and then he had risen and fled for fear
she might return and discover him.
She wondered why he should dislike her so much.
She was quite sure that she had been very good to him,
and had tried not to annoy him while they were together.
Maybe he looked down upon her,
for surely he was of a superior race.
Of that she was quite positive.
And so Nadara was very miserable and unhappy and hopeless
as the brutal flatfoot dragged her forehead,
far into the tall jungle grass.
Presently she noticed that the caveman repeatedly cast glances toward the rear.
What could he expect from that direction, or from any direction whatever, so far as that was
concerned?
Were they not days and days from their own people, in a land where there seemed no men at all?
Flatfoot heard no sign of pursuit.
He was growing more confident.
the stranger had lost their trail.
The caveman moved less rapidly,
and as he went,
he looked now for a burrow into which he might crawl with the maiden.
Then there would be no further danger whatever.
Tomorrow Flatfoot would come out and find the fellow and kill him,
but now he had pleasanter work in view,
nor did he wish to be disturbed.
And at that very moment he caught a stealthy movement
in the grasses a few yards to his right.
Waldo had come upon the spot at which Flatfoot had overtaken Nadara,
but a few moments after the brute had dragged her away,
and on the instant had sought a higher piece of ground
from which he could overlook the tall grass.
Nor had he been long in finding a spot that, coupled with his six feet too,
brought his eyes above the level of the surrounding jungle.
There he watched for a little until he discerned a movement of the grass-tops at a little distance from him.
After that it was but a matter of trailing.
When Flatfoot saw what he took to be his enemy, he threw Nadara across his shoulder
and started on a run in the opposite direction, at right angles to the way he had been going.
The ruse proved good, for when Waldo came to the point at which he had figured his path,
would cross the caveman's, he found no sign of the ladder, and in searching about to locate
the trail, lost many minutes of valuable time. But at last he came upon that which he sought,
and with redoubled speed set out at a rapid run through the tall grasses. He had proceeded
but a short distance when the trail broke suddenly into the open, close by the base of the cliffs
that he had seen from the hill that had given him his fleeting glimpse of Nadara.
Ahead of him he saw the two he sought,
Nadara across the burly shoulders of Flatfoot,
and the caveman was making for the caves that dotted the face of the cliff.
Were he to reach these, he might defend one of them
against a single antagonist indefinitely.
End of Chapter 10.
Chapter 11 of the Cave Girl by Edgar Rice Burrows.
This Libravox recording is in the public domain.
Read by Gerald Moe.
Capture
Almost at the moment that Waldo emerged from the jungle,
Nadara saw him and with a lunge threw herself from Flatfoot's shoulder.
The man turned with a fierce growl of rage,
and his eyes fell upon the giant rushing toward them.
The girl was now struggling madly to escape or delay her captor.
There could be but one outcome, as Flatfoot knew.
He must fight now, but the girl should never escape him.
Raising the huge fist that had killed many a full-grown man with a single blow,
he aimed a wicked one at the side of Nadara's head.
The first one she dodged, and as the arm went up to strike again,
Thandar threw his spear-arm far back,
and with a mighty forward surge drove his light weapon across the hundred feet
that separated him from flatfoot.
It was an awful risk.
There was not a foot to spare between the hairy breast that was his target
and the beautiful head of the fair captive.
Should either move between the time the spear,
left his hand, and the instant that it found its mark, it might pierce the one it had been sped
to save.
Flatfoot's fist was crashing down toward that lovely face at the instant that the spear found
him, but he had moved just enough to place his arm before his breast, so that it was the
falling arm that received the weapon instead of the heart that it had been intended for.
But it served its purpose.
With a howl of pain and rage,
Flatfoot, forgetful of the girl in the madness of his anger,
dropped her and sprang toward Waldo.
The latter had drawn his sword,
not but a sharpened stick of hard wood,
and stood waiting to receive his foe.
It was his first attempt to put either sword or shield into practical use,
and he was anxious to discover their value.
As Flatfoot came toward his antagonist, he pulled the spear from the muscles of his arm,
and stooping, gathered up one of the many rocks that lay scattered about at the base of the cliff.
The caveman was roaring like a mad bull, hate and murder shot from his close-set eyes.
His upper lip curled back, showing his fighting fangs, and a light froth flecked his bristling
beard. Waldo was sure there had never existed a more fearsome creature, and he marveled that he
was not afraid. The very thought of what the effect of this terrible monster's mad charge would have
been upon him a short while ago brought a smile to his lips. At sight of that taunting smile,
flatfoot hurled the rock full at the maddening face, with a quick movement of his left
arm, Waldo caught the missile on his buckler from once it dropped harmlessly to the ground.
Flatfoot did not throw again, and an instant later he was upon the Bostonian, the pride and hope
of the cultured and aristocratic Back Bay Smith-Jones. When he reached for the agile, blonde giant, he found a
thin sheet of hide-covered twigs in his way, and when he tried to tear down this barrier,
the point of a sharpened stick was thrust into his abdomen.
This was no way to fight.
Flatfoot was scandalized.
He jumped back a few feet and glared at Waldo.
Then he lowered his head and came at him once more,
with the very evident intention of rushing him off his feet
by the very weight and impetuosity of his charge.
This time the sharp stick slipped quickly over the top
of the hide-covered atrocity and pierced.
flatfoot's neck just where it joined his thick skull.
Burying a foot of its point beneath the muscles of the shoulder,
it brought a scream of pain and rage from the hairy beast.
Before Waldo could withdraw his weapon from the tough sinews,
Flatfoot had straightened up with a sudden jerk that snapped the sword short,
leaving but a short stub in his antagonist's hand.
Nadara had been watching the battle breathlessly, ready to flee should it turn against her champion,
yet at the same time searching for an opportunity to aid him.
Like Flatfoot, the girl had never before seen spear or sword or shield in use,
and while she marveled at the advantage which they gave Thandar,
she became dubious as to the result of the encounter when she saw the sword broken,
for the spear had been snapped into kindling wood by flatfoot when he tore it from his arm.
But Waldo still had his cudgel, fastened by a thong to his sword belt,
and as the caveman rushed upon him again, he swung a mighty blow to the low, brutal forehead.
Momentarily stunned, the fellow reeled backward for a step,
and again Waldo wielded his new weapon.
Flatfoot trembled, his knees smote together, and he staggered drunkenly,
and then, when Waldo looked to see him go down, the brute power that was in him,
responding to nature's first law, sent him hurtling at the Bostonian's throat,
and the snarling blind rage of the death-smitten beast.
Catapulted by all the enormous strength of his mighty muscles,
the squat bear-like animal bore Waldo to earth,
and at the same instant each found the other's throat
with sinewy vice-like fingers.
They lay very still now,
choking with firm, relentless clutch.
Every ounce of muscle was needed,
every grain of endurance.
Waldo was suffering agonies
after a moment of that awful death grip.
He could feel his,
his gasping pain-racked lungs struggling for air. He tried to wriggle free from those horrible fingers,
but not once did he loosen his own hold upon the throat of Flatfoot. Instead, he tried to
close a little tighter each second that he felt his own life ebbing. He became weaker and weaker.
The pain was unendurable now. A haze obscured his vision. Everything became black.
His brain was whizzing about at frightful velocity
within the awful darkness of his skull.
The girl was bending close above them now,
for both were struggling less violently.
She had been minded to come to Thandar's rescue
when suddenly she recalled his desertion of her
and all the wild hatred of the primitive mind surged through her.
Let him die, she thought.
He had spurned her,
cast her off. He looked down upon her. Well, let him take care of himself then, and she turns deliberately
away to leave the two men to decide the outcome of their own battle, and started back upon the trail
in the direction of her tribe's village. But she had taken scarce a score of steps when something
flamed up in her heart that withered the last remnant of her malice toward Thandar.
As she turned back again toward the combatants, she attempted to justify this new weakness
by the thought that it was only fair that she should give the Yellow One aid in return for the aid
that he had rendered her. That done, she could go on her way with a clear conscience. She wished
never to see him again, but she could not have his blood upon her hands. At that thought she gave a little
cry and ran to where the men lay. Both were almost quiet now. Their struggles had nearly ceased.
Just as she reached them, flat-foot relaxed, his hands slipped from Waldo's throat, and he lay entirely
motionless. Then the fair giant struggled convulsively once or twice, he gasped, his eyes
rolled up and set, and with a sudden twitching of his muscles, he stiffened rigidly.
and was very still.
Nadara gave one horrified look
at the ghastly face of her champion
and fled into the jungle.
She stumbled on for a quarter of a mile
as fast as her tired limbs would carry her
through the entangling grasses,
and then she came to that which she sought,
a little stream winding slowly through the valley
down toward the ocean.
Dropping to her,
knees beside it, she filled her mouth with the refreshing water. In an instant she was up again
and off in the direction from which she had just come. Throwing herself at Waldo's side,
she wet his face with the water from her mouth. She chafed his hands, shook him,
blew upon his face when the water was exhausted, and then, tears streaming from her eyes,
she threw herself upon him, covering his face with kisses,
and moaning inarticulate words of love and endearment
that were half-stifled by anguish sobs of grief.
Suddenly her lamentations ceased as quickly as they had begun.
She raised her head from where it had been buried beside the man's
and looked intently into his face.
Then she placed her ear upon his breast,
With a delighted cry, she resumed chafing his hands, for she had heard the beating of his heart.
Presently Waldo gasped, and for a moment suffered the agonies of returning respiration.
When he opened his eyes in consciousness, he saw Nadara bending over him,
a severely disinterested expression upon her beautiful face.
He turned his head to one side, there lay flat foot,
Quite dead.
It was several moments before he could speak.
Then he rose very unsteadily to his feet.
Nadara, he said,
Korth lies dead beside the three great trees
in the glade that is near the village that was Flatfoot's.
Here is the dead body of Flatfoot,
and about my loins hangs the pelt of Nagula,
taken in fair fight.
I have done all that you desired of me, I have tried to repay you for your kindness to me when I was a stranger in your land. I do not know why you should have tried to kill me when I battled with Corth.
No more do I know why you have allowed me to live today when it would have been so easy to have dispatched me as I lay unconscious here beside Flatfoot. I read dislike upon your face, and I am sorry,
for I would have parted with you in friendship,
so that when the time comes that I return to my own land,
I should be able to carry away with me only the pleasant memory of it.
When we have rested and are refreshed,
I shall take you back to your father.
All that had been surging to the girl's lips of love and gratitude
from a heart that was filled with both
was congealed by the cold tone which marked this dispassified,
recital of the discharge of a moral obligation.
Possibly Waldo's tone was colored by the vivid memory of the look of hate that he had
seen in the girl's eyes at the instant that he went down before her missile as he battled
with corth, for it was not even tinged with friendliness. And so the girl's manner was equally
distant when she replied, in fact it was even colder,
for it was fraught with bitterness.
Thandar owed nothing to Nadara, she said,
and though it matters not at all,
it is only fair to say
that the stone that struck you
as you battled in the glade
was intended for corth.
Waldo's face brightened,
a load that he had not realized lay there
was lifted from his heart.
You did not want to hurt me then,
he cried.
Why should I want to hurt him?
hurt you, returned the girl.
I thought, and here Waldo spoiled the fair start they had made at a reconciliation.
I thought, he said, that you were angry because I ran away from you after we had come to your
village that time months ago.
Nadara's head went high and she laughed aloud.
I, angry!
I was surprised that you did not come to the village, but after an hour,
I had forgotten the matter. It was with difficulty that I recognized you when I next saw you,
so utterly had the occurrence departed from my thoughts. Waldo wondered why he should feel such
humiliation at this Frank of vowel. Of what moment to him was this girl's estimation of him?
Why did he feel the flush suffuse his face at the knowledge that he was of so little moment to her
that she had entirely forgotten him within a few months.
Waldo was mortified and angry.
He changed the subject brusquely.
Hereafter, he should esue personalities.
Let us find a cave at a distance from the dead man, he said,
and there we may rest until you are ready to attempt the return journey.
I am ready now, replied Nadara,
nor do I need or desire your
company. I can return alone as I came.
No, remonstrated Waldo doggedly,
I shall go with you whether you wish it or not.
I shall see you safely with your father.
I promised him.
Nadara had been delighted with the first clause of his reply,
but when it became evident that his only desire to return with her
was to fulfill a promise made to her father,
she became furious, though she was careful not to let him see it.
Very well, she replied, you may come if you wish, though it is neither necessary nor as I would have it.
I prefer being alone.
I shall not force my company upon you, said Waldo haughtingly.
I can follow a few paces behind you.
There was an injured air in his last words which did not escape
the girl. She wondered if he really deserved the harsh attitude she had maintained.
They found a cave a half mile down the valley, where they took up their quarters against the
time that Waldo should be rested, for the girl insisted that she was fully able to commence
the return journey at once. The man knew better, and so he let her have it that the delay was
on his account rather than hers, for he doubted her a bit of her.
to cope with the hardships of the long journey without an interval for recuperation.
The next morning found them both rested and in better spirits, so that there was no return
to their acrimonious encounter of the previous day.
As they walked out toward the forest that laid down the valley in the direction of the
ocean, Waldo dropped a few paces behind the girl in polite deference to her expressed
wish of the day before.
As he walked, he watched the graceful movements of her life figure and the lines of her
clear-cut profile as she turned her head this way and that in search of food.
How beautiful she was!
It was incredible that this wild cave-girl should have greater beauty and a more regal
carriage than the queens and beauties of civilization, and yet Walder was forced to admit
that he had never even dreamed, much less seen, such absolute physical perfection.
He wished that he could say as much for her disposition.
That was atrocious.
It was unbelievable that such a wondrous exterior could harbor so much in gratitude and coldness.
Presently they came among the trees where the ripe fruit hung,
and as Waldo climbed nimbly among the branches, and talked,
the most luscious down to her, the girl in her turn watched him.
She noted more closely the marvelous change that a few months had wrought.
She had thought him wonderful before, but now he was a very God.
She did not think just this, for she know nothing of gods,
other than the demons that were supposed to enter the bodies of the sick,
but she thought of him as some superior creature,
and then she ceased to feel aggrieved that he should care so little for her.
He was not a man, he was something more than a man,
and she had been very wicked to have treated him so shamefully.
She would make amends.
She tried to be more kind thereafter,
though there still remained a trace of aloofness.
Together they sat upon the turf and ate their fruit,
and as they ate they talked a little,
for it is difficult for two young people to harbor animosity for a great time,
especially when there is none other for them to talk to.
When you have returned with me to my father, Thandar, the girl asked,
where shall you go then?
I shall return to the sea, where I may watch for a ship to take me back to my own land,
he replied,
I have seen but one ship in all my life, said Nadav.
and that was years ago. It was when we lived close by the big water that it stopped a long way from
shore and sent many smaller boats to land. There were many men in the boats, and when they landed,
my father and mother took me far into the forest, away from the sea, and there we stayed for many
days until the strangers had sailed. They wandered up and down the coast, and came back, and
into the forests and the jungles for a few miles.
My mother said that they were searching for me,
and that if they found me, they would take me away.
I was very much frightened.
At the mention of her mother,
Waldo recalled the little parcel that Nadara's father
had given into his custody for the girl.
He unfastened it from the thong that circled his waist,
where it had hung beneath his panther-skin garment.
"'Here is something your father asked me to bring you,' he said,
handing the package to Nadara.
The girl took it and examined it as though it was entirely unfamiliar.
"'What is it?' she asked.
"'Your father did not say, other than that it contained articles that your mother wore when she died,'
he said tenderly, for a great pity had welled up in his heart for this poor motherless girl.
That my mother wore, Nadara repeated, her brows contracted in a puzzled frown.
When my mother died, she wore nothing but a single garment of many small skins,
very old and worn, and that was buried with her. I do not understand.
She made no effort to open the package, but sat gazing far off toward the ocean,
which was just visible through the trees, entirely absorbed in the package.
the reverie which Waldo's words had engendered.
"'Could the thing the old woman told me have been true?'
the girl mused half aloud.
"'Could it have been because it was true
"'that my mother fell upon her with tooth and nail
"'until she had nearly killed her?
"'I wonder if—'
"'But here she stopped,
"'her eyes riveted and sudden fear and hopelessness
"'upon a thing that she had just espied in the distance,
A great lump rose in her throat, tears came to her eyes, and with them the full measure of
realization of what that thing beyond the forest meant to her.
She turned her eyes toward the man.
He was sitting with bowed head, playing idly with a large beetle that he had penned within a
tiny palisade of small twigs.
At length he made an opening in the barrier.
"'Go your way, poor thing,' he murmured.
"'Heaven knows I realized too well the horrors of captivity
"'to keep any other creature from its fellows and its home.'
"'A choking sigh that was almost a sob racked the girl.
"'At the sound, Waldo looked up to see her pathetic, unhappy eyes upon him.
"'Of a sudden there enveloped him a great desire
"'to take her in his arms and comfort her,
He knew not why she was unhappy, but her sorrow cried aloud to him, as he thought simply to the
protective instinct that was merely an attribute of his sex.
Nadara raised her hand slowly and pointed through the trees. It was as though she had torn her heart
from her breast, so harrowing she felt the consequences of her act would be, but it was for his
sake, for the sake of the man she loved.
As Waldo's eyes followed the direction of her pointing finger,
he came suddenly to his feet with a wild cry of joy.
Through the trees, out upon the shimmering surface of the placid sea,
there lay a graceful white yacht.
Thank God, cried the man fervently,
and sinking to his knees,
he raised his hands aloft toward the lest.
author of joy and sorrow.
A moment later he sprang to his feet.
Home, Nadara, home, he cried.
Can't you realize it?
I am going home.
I am saved.
Oh, Nadara, child, can't you realize what it means to me?
Home, home, home!
He had been looking toward the yacht as he spoke,
but now he turned toward the girl.
She was crouching upon the ground, her face in her hands, her slender figure shaken by convulsive tears.
He came toward her, and, kneeling, laid his hand upon her shoulder.
Nadara, he said gently, why do you cry, child?
What is the matter?
But she only shook her head, moaning.
He raised her to her feet, and as he supported her,
his arm circled her shoulders.
Tell me, Nadara, why are you unhappy? he urged.
But still she could not speak for sobbing, and only buried her face upon his breast.
He was holding her very close now, and with the pressure of her body against his,
a fire that, unknown, had been smoldering in his heart for months, burst into sudden flame.
and in the heat of it there were consumed the mists that had been before the eyes of his heart all that time.
Nadara, he asked in a very low voice,
Is it because I am going that you cry?
But at that she pulled away from him, and through her tears her eyes blazed.
No, she cried, I shall be glad when you have gone.
I wish that you had never come.
I hate you. She turned and fled back up the valley, forgetful of the little packet Thandar had brought
her, which lay forgotten upon the ground where she had dropped it. Without so much as a backward
glance toward the yacht, Waldo was off in pursuit of her, but Nadara was as fleet as a hare,
so that it was a much-winded Waldo who finally overhauled her halfway up the face of a cliff two miles from
the ocean. Go away, cried the girl. Go back with your own kind, to your own home.
Waldo did not answer. Waldo was no more. It was Thandar, the caveman, who took Nadara in his
strong arms and crushed her to him. My girl, he cried, my girl, I love you. And because I am a
fool, I did not learn until it was almost too late.
He did not ask if she loved him, for he was Thandar the caveman, nor, a moment later, did he need to ask,
since her strong brown arms crept up about his neck and drew his lips down to hers.
It was quite half an hour later before either thought of the yacht again.
From where they stood upon the cliff's face, they could see the ocean and the beach.
Several boats were drawn up, and a number of men were coming toward the forest.
Presently they would discover the two upon the cliff.
We shall go back together now, said Thandar.
I am afraid, replied Nadara.
For a time the man stood gazing at the dainty yacht,
and far beyond it into the civilization which it represented,
and he saw there, swave men and sneering women,
and among them was a slender brown beauty who shrank from the cruel glances of the women,
and Waldo writhed at this, and at the greedy eyes of the suave men as they appraised the girl,
and he too was afraid.
Come, he said, taking Nadara by the hand,
let us hurry back into the hills before they discover us.
Just as the men from the yacht, which Mr. John Alder,
Smith Jones had dispatched to the South Seas in search of his missing sun,
emerged from the forest into a view of the valley and the cliffs.
A caveman and his mate clambered over the brow of the ladder and disappeared toward the hills
beyond. It was nearly dusk as the searchers from the yacht were returning toward the beach.
They had found no sign of human habitation in the little valley, nor any of the sea.
along the coast that they had so carefully explored.
The commander of the expedition, Captain Cecil Burlingham, a retired naval officer,
was in advance. They had penetrated the woods nearly to the beach when his foot struck
against a package wrapped in the skin of a small rodent. He stooped and picked it up.
Here is the first evidence that another human being than ourselves has ever been.
set foot upon this island, he said as he cut the gut lacing with his pocket-knife.
Within the first wrapping, he found a chamois bag such as women sometimes used to carry jewels
about their persons. From this he emptied into his palm, a dozen priceless rings, a few
old-fashioned brooches, bracelets, and lockets. In one of the latter he discovered the
ivory miniature of a woman, a very beautiful woman.
And the other side of the locket was engraved
to Eugenie Marie Celeste de la Valois,
Countess of Crecy, from Henry, her husband,
17th January, 18.
God, cried the old captain,
now what do you make of that?
The Count and Countess of Cresy were returning to Paris
from their honeymoon trip round the world,
world in the steam yacht dolphin nearly twenty years ago, and after they touched at Australia
were never heard of again. What tragedy, what mystery, what romance might not these sparkling
gems disclose had they but tongues. End of Chapter 11.
is in the public domain.
Read by Gerald Moe.
King Big Fist
Waldo Emerson Smith-Jones,
scion of the aristocratic house
of the John Alden-Smith-Jones of Boston,
clambered up the rocky face of the precipitous cliff
with the agility of a monkey.
His right hand clasped the slim brown fingers
of his half-naked mate,
assisting her over the more dangerous or difficult stretches.
At the summit the two turned their faces back toward the sea.
Beyond the gently waving forest trees stretched the broad expanse of shimmering ocean.
In the foreground, upon the bosom of a tiny harbor lay a graceful yacht,
a beautiful toy it looked from the distance of the cliff-top.
For the first time the man obtained an unobstructed view,
of the craft. Before, when they had first discovered it, the bowls of the forest trees had revealed
it but in part. Now he saw it fully from stem to stern with all its well-known, graceful lines
standing out distinctly against the deep blue of the water. The shock of recognition
brought an involuntary exclamation from his lips. The girl looked quickly up into his face.
What is it, Thandar? she asked.
What do you see?
The yacht, he whispered.
It is the Priscilla, my father's.
He is searching for me.
And you wish to go?
For some time he did not speak, only stood there gazing at the distant yacht.
And the young girl at his side remained quite motionless and silent, too,
looking up at the man's profile, watching the expression upon his face with a look of dumb misery upon
her own. Quickly through the man's mind was running the gamut of his past. He recalled his careful
and tender upbringing, the time, the money, the fond pride that had been expended upon his
education. He thought of the result, the narrow-minded, weakling egoist, the pusillanimous
coward that had been washed from the deck of a passing steamer upon the sandy beach of this
savage forgotten shore. And yet it had been love, solicitous, and tender, that had prompted
his parents to their misguided efforts. He was their only son. They were doubtless grieving for
him. They were no longer young, and in their declining years it appeared to him a pathetic thing
that they should be robbed of the happiness which he might bring them by returning to the old life.
But could he ever return to the bookish existence that once had seemed so pleasant?
Had not this brief year, into which had been crowded so much of wild, primitive life,
made impossible a return to the narrow, self-centered existence?
Had it not taught him that there was infinitely more in life than ever had been written,
into the dry and musty pages of books.
It had taught him to want life at first hand,
not through the proxy of the printed page,
It and Nadara.
He glanced toward the girl.
Could he give her up?
No, a thousand times, no.
He read in her face the fear that lurked in her heart.
No, he could not give her up.
He owed to her all that he possessed,
of which he was most proud, his mighty physique, his new-found courage, his woodcraft,
his ability to cope primitively with the primitive world, her savage world which he had learned
to love.
No, he could not give her up, but what?
His gaze lingered upon her sweet face.
Slowly there sank into his understanding something of the reason for his love of this wild
half-savage cave-girl, other than the primitive passion of the sexes.
He saw now not only the physical beauty of her face and figure,
but the sweet, pure innocence of her girlishness,
and, most of all, the wondrous tenderness of her love of him
that was mirrored in her eyes.
To remain and take her as his mate after the manner and customs of her own people
would reflect no shame upon himself or her.
But was she not deserving of the highest honor
that it lay within his power to offer
at the altar of her love?
She, his wonderful Nadara,
must become his through the most solemn and dignified ceremony
that civilized man had devised.
What the young woman of his past life demanded
was none too good for her.
Again the girl voiced her question.
You wish to go?
Yes, Nadara, he replied,
I must go back to my own people,
and you must go with me.
Her face lighted with pleasure and happiness,
as she heard his last words,
but the expression was quickly followed by one of doubt and fear.
I am afraid, she said,
but if you wish it, I will go.
you need not fear nadara none will harm you by word or deed while thandar is with you come let us return to the sea and the yacht before she sails
hand in hand they retraced their steps down the steep cliff across the little valley toward the forest and the sea nadara walked very close to thandar her hand snuggled in his and her shoulder pressed tightly against his side for she was
afraid of the new life among the strange creatures of civilization. At the far side of the valley,
just before one enters the forest, there grows a thick jungle of bamboo, really but a narrow
strip, not more than a hundred feet through at its greatest width, but so dense as to quite
shut out from view any creature even a few feet within its narrow, gloomy avenues.
Into this the two plunged, Thandar in the lead, Nadara close behind him,
stepping exactly in his footprints, an involuntary concession to training,
for there was no need here either of deceiving a pursuer or taking advantage of easier going.
The trail was well marked and smooth-beaten by many a padded paw.
It wound erratically, following the line of least resistance.
It forked, and there were other trails which entered it from time to time or crossed it.
The hundred feet it traversed seemed much more when measured by the trail.
The two had come almost to the forest side of the jungle when a sharp turn in the path
brought Thandar face to face with a huge, bear-like man.
The fellow wore a g-string of soft hide,
and over one shoulder dangled an old and filthy leper.
skin. Otherwise, he was naked. His thick, coarse hair was matted low over his forehead. The balance of
his face was covered by a bushy red beard. At the sight of Thandar, his close-set little eyes
burned with sudden rage and cunning. From his thick lips burst a savage yell. It was the
preliminary challenge. Ordinarily, a certain amount of vitupuration and coarse insults must
pass between strangers meeting upon this inhospitable isle before they fly at one another's throat.
I am third, bellowed the brute, I can kill you, and then followed a volley of vulgar illusions to
Thandar's possible origin and the origin of his ancestors. The bad men, whispered
Nadara. With her words there swept into the man's memory the scene upon the face of the cliff
that night a year before, when, even in the throes of cowardly terror, he had turned to do battle with a
huge caveman that the fellow might not prevent the escape of Nadara. He glanced at the right
forearm of the creature who faced him. A smile touched Thandar's lips. The arm was crooked as from the
knitting of a broken bone, poorly set.
You would kill Thandar again, he asked tauntingly, pointing toward the deformed member.
Then came recognition to the red-rimmed eyes of Thurg as, with another ferocious bellow,
he launched himself toward the author of his old hurt.
Thandar met the charge with his short stick of pointed hard wood, his sword, he called it.
it entered the fleshy part of thurg's breast calling forth a howl of pain and a trickling stream of crimson thirg retreated this was no way to fight he was scandalized
for several minutes he stood glaring at his foe screaming hideous threats and insults at him then once more he charged again the painful point entered his body
but this time he pressed in clutching madly at the goad and for a hold upon thandar's body the latter held thurg at arm's length prodding him with the fire-hardened point of his wooden sword
the cave man's little brain wondered at the skill and prowess of this stranger who had struck him a single blow with a cudgel many moons before and then run like a rabbit to escape his wrath
why was it that he did not run now what strange change had taken place in him he had expected an easy victim when he finally had recognized his foe but instead he had met with brawn and ferocity equal to his own and with a strange weapon
the like of which he never before had seen thandar was puncturing him rapidly now and thurg was screaming in rage and suffering
presently he could endure it no longer with a sudden wrench he tore himself loose and ran bellowing through the jungle thandar did not pursue it was enough that he had rid himself of his enemy he turned toward nadara smiling
it will seem very tame in boston he said but though she gave him an answering smile she did not understand for to her boston was but another land of primeval forests and dense jungles
of hairy battling men and fierce beasts at the edge of the forest they came again upon thurg but this time he was surrounded by a score of his burly tribesmen
thandar knew better than to pit himself against so many thurg came rushing down upon them his fellows at his heels in loud tones he screamed anew his challenge and the beasts behind him took it up until the forest echoed to their hideous bellowing
he had seen nadara as he had battled with thandar and recognized her as the girl he had desired a year before the girl whom this stranger
had robbed him of. Now he was determined to wreak vengeance on the man and at the same time recapture
the girl. Thandar and Nadara turned back into the jungle where but a single enemy could attack
them at a time in the narrow trails. Here they managed to elude pursuit for several hours,
coming again into the forest nearly a mile below the beach where the Priscilla had lain at anchor.
thirg and his fellows had apparently given up the chase they had neither seen nor heard aught of them for some time now the two hastened back through the wood to reach a point on the shore opposite the yacht
at last they came in sight of the harbour thandar halted a look of horror and disappointment supplanted the expression of pleasurable anticipation that had lighted his continents the yacht was not there
A mile out they discerned her, steaming rapidly north.
Thandar ran to the beach.
He tore the Black Panthers hide from his shoulders,
waving it frantically above his head,
the while he shouted in futile endeavor
to attract attention from the dwindling craft.
Then, quite suddenly,
he collapsed upon the beach,
burying his face in his hands.
Presently Dandara crept close to,
to his side. Her soft arms encircled his shoulders as she drew his cheek close to hers in an
attempt to comfort him. "'Is it so terrible?' she asked, to be left here alone with your Nadara.
"'It is not that,' he answered. "'If you were mine, I should not care so much. But you cannot be
mine until we have reached civilization, and you have been made mine in accordance with the laws and
customs of civilized men.
And now who knows when another ship may come, if ever another will come.
But I am yours, Thandar, insisted the girl.
You are my man, you have told me that you love me, and I have replied that I would be your
mate.
Who can give us to each other better than we can give ourselves?
He tried as best he could to explain to her the marriage customs and
ceremonies of his own world, but she found it difficult to understand how it might be that a
stranger, whom neither might possibly ever have seen before, could make it right for her to love
Thandar, or that it should be wrong for her to love him without the stranger's permission.
To Thandar, the future looked most black and hopeless. With his sudden determination to take
Nadara back to his own people, he had been overwhelmed with a mad yearning for home.
He realized that his past apathy to the idea of returning to Boston had been due solely
to the recollection of Boston as he had known it, Boston without Nadara.
But now that she was to have gone back with him, Boston seemed the most desirable spot in
the world.
As he sat pondering the unfortunate happenings,
that had so delayed them that the yacht had sailed before they reached the shore,
he also cast about for some plan to mitigate their disappointment.
To live forever upon this savage island did not seem such an appalling thing as it had a year before,
but then he had not realized his love for the wild young creature at his side.
Ah, if she could but be made his wife, then his exile here would be a happy rather than a doleful
lot. What if he had been born here, too? With the thought came a new idea that seemed to offer an
avenue from his dilemma. Had he, too, been native-born, how would he have wed Nadara? Why, through
the ceremony of their own people, of course, and if men and women were thus wed here,
living together in faithfulness throughout their lives, what more sacred a union could civilization
offer. He sprang to his feet. Come, Nadara, he cried, we shall return to your people,
and there you shall become my wife. Nadara was puzzled, but she made no comment, content simply
to leave the future to her lord and master, to do whatever would bring Thandar the greatest
happiness. The return to the dwellings of Nadara's people occupied three never-to-be-forgotten
days. How different this journey by comparison with that of a year since, when the cave-girl had
been leading the terror-stricken Waldo Emerson in flight from the bad men, toward, to him,
an equally horrible fate at the hands of corth and flatfoot. Then the forest glades echoed to
the pads of fierce beasts and the stealthy passage of naked human horrors. No twigues, no twigues. No twigues.
snapped that did not portend instant and terrifying death.
Now Corth and Flatfoot were dead at the hands of the metamorphosed Waldo.
The racking cough was gone.
He had encountered the bad men and others like them and come away with honors.
Even Nagula, the sleek black devil cat of the hideous knights,
no longer sent the slightest tremor through the rehabilitated nerves.
Did not Thandar wear Nagula's pelt about his shoulder and loins?
A pelt that he had taken in hand-to-hand encounter with the dread beast?
Slowly they walked beneath the shade of giant trees,
beside pleasant streams, or, again,
across open valleys where the grass grew knee-high,
and countless perfumed wildflowers
opened a pathway before their naked feet.
At night they slept where night-fewed,
found them, sometimes in the deserted lair of a wild beast, or again perched among the branches
of a spreading tree where parallel branches permitted the construction of rude platforms.
And Thandar was always most solicitous to see that Nodara's couch was of the softest grasses,
and that his own lay at a little distance from hers and in a position where he might best
protect her from prowling beasts. Again was Nadara puzzled, but still she made no comment.
Finally they came to her village. Several of the younger men came forth to meet them,
but when they saw that the man was he who had slain corth, they bridled their truculence,
all but one, Big Fist, who had assumed the role of King since Flatfoot had left.
I can kill you, he announced by way of greeting, for I am Big Fist, and until Flatfoot returns,
I am king, and maybe afterward, for some day I shall kill Flatfoot.
I do not wish to fight you, replied Thandar, already have I killed Korth, and Flatfoot will
return no more, for Flatfoot I have killed also.
And I can kill Big Fist, but what is the use?
Why should we fight?
Let us be friends, for we must live together,
and if we do not kill one another,
there will be more of us to meet the bad men,
should they come, and kill them.
When Big Fist heard that Flatfoot was dead
and by the hand of this stranger,
he pined less to measure his strength with that of the newcomer.
He saw the knot-hole that the other offered,
and promptly he sought to crawl through it,
but with honor.
Very well, he said,
I shall not kill you.
You need not be afraid.
But you must know that I am king,
and do as I say that you shall do.
Afraid, Thandar laughed.
You may be king, he said,
but as for doing what you say,
and again he laughed.
It was a very different Waldo Emerson-Smith Jones
from the thing that the sea had spewed up
12 months before.
End of Part 2, Chapter 1.
Part 2, Chapter 2 of the Cave Girl by Edgar Rice Burroughs.
This Libravox recording is in the public domain.
Read by Gerald Moe.
King Thandar
The first thing that Thandar did after he entered the village was to seek out Nadara's father.
They found the old man in the old man in the city.
the poorest and least protected cave in the cliffside,
exposed to the attack of the first prowling carnivore or skulking foeman.
He was sick, and there was none to care for him.
But he did not complain.
That was the way of his people.
When a man became too old to be of service to the community,
it were better that he died,
and so they did nothing to delay the inevitable.
When one became an absolute burden upon his fellows, it was customary to hasten the end.
A carefully delivered blow with a heavy rock was calculated quickly to relieve the burdens of the
community and the suffering of the invalid.
Thandar and Nadara came in and sat down beside him.
The old fellow seemed glad to see them.
I am Thandar, said the young man.
I wish to take your daughter as my mate.
The old man looked at him questioningly for a moment.
You have killed Corthand Flatfoot,
who is to prevent you from taking Nadara.
I wish to be joined to her with your permission
and in accordance with the marriage ceremonies of your people,
said Thandar.
The old man shook his head.
I do not understand you, he replied at last.
There are several fine caves that are not occupied.
If you wish a better one, you have but to slay the present occupants
if they do not get out when you tell them to.
But I think they will get out when the slayer of Corth and Flatfoot tells them to.
I am not worried about a cave, said Thandar.
Tell me how men take their wives among you.
If they do not come with us willingly, we take them by the hair and drag them with us,
replied Nadara's father.
My mate would not come with me, he continued,
and even after I caught her and dragged her to my cave,
she broke away and fled from me.
But again I overhauled her,
for when I was young none could run more swiftly.
And this time I did what I should have done at first.
I beat her upon the head until she went to sleep.
When she awoke she was in my own cave,
and it was night, and she did not try to.
to run away any more. For a long time, Thandar sat in thought. Presently he spoke, addressing
Nadara. In my country, we do not take our wives in any such way, nor shall I take you thus.
We must be married properly, according to the customs and laws of civilization.
Nadara made no reply. To her it seems that Thandar must care very little for her,
that was about the only explanation she could put upon his strange behavior.
It made her sad, and then the other women would laugh at her,
of that she was quite certain, and that too made her feel very badly.
They would see that Thandar did not want her.
The old man, lying upon his scant bed of matted, filthy grasses,
had heard the conversation.
He was as much at sea.
as Nadara. At last he spoke, very feebly now, for rapidly he was nearing dissolution.
I am a very old man, he said to Thandar. I have not long to live. Before I die I should like to
know that Nadara has a mate who will protect her. I love her, though, he hesitated.
Though what, asked Thandar. I have never told, whispered the old fellow,
My mate would not let me.
But now that I am about to die, it can do no harm.
Nadara is not my daughter.
The girl sprang to her feet.
Not your daughter.
Then who am I?
I do not know who you are, except that you are not even of my people.
All I know I will tell you now before I die.
Come close, for my voice is dying faster than my body.
The young man and the girl came nearer to his side, and squatting there leaned close that they might catch each faintly articulated syllable.
My mate and I, commenced the old man, were childless, though many moons had passed since I took her to my cave.
She wanted a little one, for thus only may women have aught upon which to lavish their love.
We had been hunting together for several days alone and far from the village,
for I was a great hunter when I was young, no greater ever lived among our people.
And one day we came down to the great water, and there, a short distance from the shore,
we saw a strange thing that floated upon the surface of the water,
and when it was blown closer to us, we saw that it was hollow and that in it were too
people, a man and a woman, both appeared to be dead.
Finally I waited out to meet the thing, dragging it to shore, and there, sure enough,
was a man and a woman, and the man was dead, quite dead. He must have been dead for a long
time, but the woman was not dead. She was very fair, though her eyes and hair were black.
We carried her ashore, and that night a little girl was born to her, but the woman died before morning.
We put her back into the strange thing that had brought her, she and the dead man who had come with her,
and shoved them off upon the great water, where the breeze which had changed overnight,
together with the water which runs away from the land twice each day, carried them out of sight,
nor ever did we see them again.
But before we sent them off,
my mate took from the body of the woman her strange coverings,
and a little bag of skin which contained many sparkling stones of different colors,
and metals of yellow and white,
made into things the purposes of which we could not guess.
It was evident that the woman had come from a strange land,
for she and all her belongings were unlike anything that
either of us ever had seen before. She herself was different, as Nadara is different.
Nadara looks as her mother looked, for Nadara is the little babe that was born that night.
We brought her back to our people after another moon, saying that she was born to my mate,
but there was one woman who knew better, for it seemed that she had seen us when we found the boat,
having been running away from a man who wanted her as his mate.
But my mate did not want anyone to say that Nadara was not hers,
for it is a great disgrace, as you well know, for a woman to be barren,
and so she several times nearly killed this woman,
who knew the truth, to keep her from telling it to the whole village.
But I love Nadara as well as though she had been my own,
and so I should like to see her well-mated before I die.
Thandar had gone white during the narration of the story of Nadara's birth.
He could scarce restrain an impulse to go upon his knees
and thank his God that he had hearted to the call of his civilized training
rather than have given in to the easier way,
the way these primitive beast-like people offered.
Providence, he thought, must indeed have sent him here to rescue her.
The old man, turning upon his rough palate, fastened his sunken eyes questioningly upon Thandar.
Nadara, too, with parted lips, waited for him to speak.
The old man gasped for breath.
There was a strange rattling sound in his throat.
Thandar leaned above him, raising his head and his head.
and shoulders slightly. The young man never had heard that sound before, but now that he heard it,
he needed no interpreter. The locust, rubbing his legs among his wings,
startles the uninitiated into the belief that a hidden rattler lurks in the pathway.
But when the great diamond back breaks forth in warning, none mistakes him for a locust.
And so it is with a death rattle in the human throat.
thandar knew that it was the end he saw the old man's mighty effort to push back the grim reaper that he might speak once more and the dying eyes were a question and a plea thandar could not misunderstand he reached forward and took nadara's hand
in my own land we shall be mated he said none other shall wed with nadara and as proof that she is thandars she shall wear this always and from his finger he slipped a splendid solitaire to the third finger of nadara's left hand
the old man saw a look of relief and contentment that was almost a smile settled upon his features as with a gasping sigh he
sank limply into Thandar's arms, dead. That afternoon, several of the younger men carried the
body of Nadara's foster father to the top of the cliff, depositing it about half a mile from the caves.
There was no ceremony. In it, though, Waldo Emerson saw what might have been the first human
funeral cortege, simple, sensible, and utilitarian, from which the human human
race has retrograded to the ostentatious, ridiculous, pestilent burials of present-day civilization.
The young men, acting under Big Fist's orders, carried the worthless husk to a safe distance from the
caves, leaving it there to the rapid disintegration provided by the beasts and birds of prey.
Nadara wept silently, an elderly lady with a single tooth,
spying her, moaned in sympathy. Presently other females, attracted by the moaning, joined them,
and, becoming affected by the strange hysteria to which womankind is heir,
mingled their moans with those of the toothless one.
Excited by their own noise, they soon were shrieking and screaming in hideous chorus.
Then came Bigfist and others of the men. The din annoyed them.
they set upon the mourners with their fists and teeth, scattering them in all directions.
Thus ended the festivities, or would have had not Big Fist made the fatal mistake of launching a blow at Nadara.
Thandar had been standing nearby looking with wonder upon the strange scene.
He had noted the quiet grief of the young girl, real grief,
and he had witnessed the hysterical variety of the mourners, not sham grief,
precisely because they made no pretense to grief, it was noise to which they aspired,
and as the fiendish din had set his own nerves on edge,
he wondered not at all that big fist and the other men should take steps to quell the tumult.
The female half-brutes were theirs, and Waldo Emerson had reverted sufficiently
to the primitive, to feel no incentive to interfere.
But Nadara was not theirs, she was not of them,
and even had she not belonged to him,
the American would have felt bound to stand between her
and the savage creatures among whom fate had cast her.
That she did belong to him, however,
sent him hot with the bloodlust of the killer
as he sprang to intercept the rush of big fist toward her,
Waldo Emerson Smith-Jones had learned nothing of the manly art of self-defense
and that other life that had been so zealously guarded from the rude and vulgar.
This was unfortunate, since it would have given him a great advantage over the man-brute.
A single well-timed swing to that unguarded chin would have ended hostilities at once,
But of hooks and jabs and jolts scientific, Thandar knew nothing.
Except for his crude weapons, he was as primeval in battle as his original anthropoid progenitor,
and quite as often as not, he forgot all about his sword, his knife,
his bow and arrows, and his spear, when, half stooped, he crouched to meet the charge of a foeman.
Now he sprang for big fists hairy throat.
There was a sullen thud as the two bodies met,
and then, rolling, biting and tearing,
they struggled hither and tither upon the rocky ground at the base of the cliff.
The other men desisted from their attack upon the women.
The women ceased their vocal mourning.
In a little circle they formed about the contestants,
A circle which moved this way and that as the fighters moved, keeping them always in the center.
Nadara forced her way through them to the front. She wished to be near Thandar.
In her hand she carried a jagged bit of granite. One could never tell. Big fist was burly,
mountainous, but Thandar was muscled like Nagula the Black Panther. His movements were all grace
and ease, but oh so irresistible.
A sudden and unexpected blow upon the side of Big Fist's head bent that bullet-shaped thing
sidewards with a jerk that almost dislocated the neck.
Big Fist shrieked with the pain of it.
Thandard, delighted by the result of the accidental blow, repeated it.
Big Fist bellowed, agonized.
He made a last supreme effort.
to close with his agile foeman, and succeeded.
His teeth sought Thandar's throat,
but the act brought his own jugular close to Thandar's jaws.
The strong white teeth of Waldo Emerson-Smith Jones
closed upon it as naturally as though no countless ages
had rolled their snail-like way between himself
and the last of his progenitors to bury bloody fangs
in the soft flesh of an antagonist.
Wasted ages.
Fleeing from the primitive and the brute
toward the neoteric and the human.
In a brief instant your labors are undone,
the veneer of eons crumbles
in the heat of some pristine passion,
revealing again,
naked and unashamed,
the primitive and the brute.
Big Fist,
white now from terror at impending death,
struggled to be free. Thandar buried his teeth more deeply. There was a sudden rush of spirting blood
that choked him. Big fist relaxed, inert. Thandar, drenched crimson, rose to his feet. The huge body
on the ground before him floundered spasmodically once or twice as the lifeblood gushed from the severed
jugular. The eyes rolled up and set. There was a final twitch, and
Big Fist was dead.
Thandar turned toward the circle of interested spectators.
He singled out a burly quartet.
Bear Big Fist to the cliff-top, he commanded.
When you return, we shall choose a king.
The men did as they were bid.
They did not at all understand what Thandar meant by choosing a king.
Having slain Big Fist, Thandar was king, unless some ambitious one desired to dispute his
right to reign. But all had seen him slay big fist, and all knew that he had killed
Corth and Flatfoot, so who was there would dare question his kingship. When they had come
back to the village, Thandar gathered them beneath a great tree that grew close to the base of
the cliff. Here they squatted upon their haunches in a rough circle. Behind them stood the
women and children, wide-eyed and curious. Let us choose a king,
said Thandar when all had come.
There was a long silence, then one of the older men spoke.
I am an old man.
I have seen many kings.
They come by killing.
They go by killing.
Thandar has killed two kings.
Now he is king.
Who wishes to kill Thandar and become king?
There was no answer.
The old man arose.
It was foolish to come here to choose
a king, he said, when a king we already have.
Wait, commanded Thandar, let us choose a king properly.
Because I have killed Flatfoot and Big Fist does not prove that I can make a good king.
Was Flatfoot a good king?
He was a bad man, replied the ancient one.
Has a good man ever been king? asked Thandar.
The old fellow puckered his brow and thought,
"'Not for a long time,' he said.
"'That is because you always permit a bully and a brute to rule you,' said Thandar.
"'That is not the proper way to choose a king.
Rather you should come together as we are come,
and among you talk over the needs of the tribe,
and when you are decided as to what measures are best for the welfare of the members of the tribe,
then you should select the man best fitted to carry out your plans,
That is a better way to choose a king.
The old man laughed,
and then, he said,
would come a big fist or a flat foot,
and slay our king,
that he might be king in his place.
Have you ever seen a man who could slay
all the other men of the tribe at the same time?
The old man looked puzzled.
That is my answer to your argument, said Thandar.
Those who choose the king can protect him from his enemies,
so long as he is a good king they should do so,
but when he becomes a bad king,
they can then select another,
and if the bad king refuses to obey the new,
it would be an easy matter for several men to kill him or drive him away,
no matter how mighty a fighter he might be.
Several of the men nodded understandingly,
"'We had not thought of that,' they said.
"'Fandar is indeed wise.'
So now, continued the American,
let us choose a king who the majority of us want,
and then, so long as he is a good king,
the majority of us must fight for him and protect him.
Let us choose a man whom we know to be a good man,
regardless of his ability to kill his fellows.
For if he has the majority of the tribe to fight for him,
what need will he have to fight for himself?
What we want is a one.
wise man, one who can lead the tribe to fertile lands and good hunting, and in times of battle,
direct the fighting intelligently. Flatfoot and Big Fist had not brains enough between them
to do aught but steal the mates of other men. Such should not be the business of kings,
your king should protect your mates from such as Flatfoot, and he should punish those who would
steal them.
But how may he do these things? asked a young man, if he is not the best fighter in the tribe.
Have I not shown you how? asked Thandar.
We who make him king shall be his fighters. He will not need to fight with his own hands.
Again there was a long silence. Then the old man spoke again.
There is wisdom in the talk of Thandar. Let us choose a king who will have
to be good to us if he wishes to remain king. It is very bad for us to have a king whom we fear.
I, for one, said the young man who had previously spoken, do not care to be ruled by a king unless he is
able to defeat me in battle. If I can defeat him, then I should be king. And so they took sides,
but at last they compromised by selecting one whom they knew to be wise,
and a great fighter as well.
Thus they chose Thandar King.
Once each week, said the new king,
we shall gather here and talk among ourselves
of the things which are for the best good of the tribe,
and what seems best to the majority shall be done.
The tribe will tell the king what to do,
the king will carry out the work,
and all must fight when the king says fight,
and all must work when the king says fight, and all must work
when the king says work, for we shall all be fighting or working for the whole tribe,
and I, Thandar, your king, shall fight and work the hardest of you all.
It was a new idea to them, and placed the kingship in a totally different light from any by which
they had previously viewed it, that it would take a long time for them to really absorb the idea
Thandar knew, and he was glad that in the meantime they had a king who could command their respect
according to their former standards, and he smiled when he thought of the change that had taken
place in him, since first he had sat trembling, weeping and coughing upon the lonely shore
before the terrifying forest.
End of Part 2 Chapter 2
Part 2, Chapter 3 of the Cave Girl by Edgar Rice Burrows.
This Libravox recording is in the public domain.
Read by Gerald Moe.
The Great Nagula
Waldo Emerson Smith-Jones had gladly embraced the opportunity
which chance had offered him to assume the kingship of the little tribe of troglodytes.
First, because his position would assure Nadarok,
greater safety, and second, because of the opening it would give him for the exercise of his
newfound initiative.
Where before he had shrunk from responsibility, he now found himself anxious to assume it.
He longed to do, where formerly he had been content to but read of the accomplishments of
others.
To his chagrin, however, he soon discovered that the classical education to which his
earlier life had been devoted under the guidance of a fond and ultra-cultured mother,
was to prove a most inadequate foundation upon which to build a practical scheme of life
for himself and his people. He wished to teach his tribe to construct permanent and comfortable
houses, but he could not recollect any practical hints on carpentry that he had obtained from
Ovid. His people lived by hunting small,
rodents, robbing birds' nests, and gathering wild fruits and vegetables.
Thandar desired to institute a scheme of community farming, but the works of the cyclic poets,
with which he was quite familiar, seemed to offer little of value along agricultural lines.
He regretted that he had not matriculated at an agricultural college west of the Alleghenies
rather than at Harvard.
However, he determined to do the best he could
with the meager knowledge he possessed of things practical,
a knowledge so meager that it consisted almost entirely
of the bare definition of the word agriculture.
It was a germ, however,
for it presupposed a knowledge of the results
that might be obtained through agriculture.
So Thandar found himself a step ahead of the earliest of his
progenitors, who had thought to plant purposely the seeds that nature heretofore had distributed
haphazard through the agencies of wind and bird and beast, but only a step ahead.
He realized that he occupied a very remarkable position in the march of ages. He had known and seen and
benefited by all the accumulated knowledge of ages of progression from the Stone Age,
to the twentieth century, and now, suddenly, fate had snatched him back into the Stone Age,
or possibly a few eons farther back, only to show him that all that he had from a knowledge of
other men's knowledge was keen dissatisfaction with the Stone Age. He had lived in houses of
wood and brick and looked through windows of glass. He had read in the light of gas, he had read in the light of
gas and electricity, and he even knew of candles. But he could not fashion the tools to build a
house. He could not have made a brick to have saved his life. Glass had suddenly become one of the
wonders of the world to him, and as for gas and electricity and candles, they had become one with
the mystery of the Sphinx. He could write verse in excellent Greek, but he was no longer proud of that
fact. He would much rather that he had been able to tan a hide or make fire without matches.
Waldo Emerson Smith-Jones had a year ago been exceedingly proud of his intellect and his learning,
but for a year his ego had been shrinking until now he felt himself the most pitiful
ignoramus on earth.
Criminally ignorant, he said to Nadara, for I have thrown away the opportunity.
of a lifetime devoted to the accumulation of useless erudition when I might have been profiting
by the practical knowledge which has dragged the world from the black bit of barbarism to the
light of modern achievement. I might not only have done this, but myself added something to the
glory and welfare of mankind. I am no good, Nadara, worse than useless. The girl touched his
strong brown hand caressingly, looking proudly into his eyes.
To me you are very wonderful, Thandar, she said.
With your own hands you slew Nagula, the most terrible beast in the world,
and corth and flatfoot and big fist lie dead beneath the vultures because of your might.
Single-handed you killed them all.
Three awesome men.
No, my Thandar is greater than all.
other men.
Nor could Waldo Emerson repress the swelling tide of pride that surged through him as the girl he loved
recounted his exploits.
No longer did he think of his achievements as vulgar physical prowess.
The old Waldo Emerson, whose temperature had risen regularly at three o'clock each afternoon,
whose pitifully skinny body had been racked by coughing continually,
whose eyes had been terror filled by day and by night at the rustling of dry leaves,
was dead.
In his place stood a great, full-blooded man, brown-skinned and steel-thewed,
fearless, self-reliant, almost brutal in his pride of power,
Thandar, the caveman.
The months that passed as Thandar led his people from one honeycombed cliff to another,
as he sought a fitting place for a permanent village,
were filled with happiness for Nadara and the king.
The girl's happiness was slightly alloyed
by the fact that Thandar failed to claim her as his own.
She could not yet quite understand the ethics which separated them.
Thandar tried repeatedly to explain to her
that someday they were to return to his own world
and that that world would not accept her unless she had been joined to him according to the rights and ceremonies which it had originated.
Will this marriage ceremony of which you tell me make you love me more? asked Nadara.
Thandar laughed and took her in his arms.
I could not love you more, he replied.
Then of what good is it?
Thandar shook his head.
It is difficult.
to explain, he said, especially to such a lovable little pagan as my Nadara.
You must be satisfied to know, accept my word for it, that it is because I love you that we must wait.
Now it was the girl's turn to shake her head.
I cannot understand, she said.
My people take their mates as they will, and they are satisfied, and everybody is satisfied,
and all is well.
But their king, who may mate as he chooses, waits until a man whom he does not know,
and who lives across the great water where we may never go,
gives him permission to mate with one who loves him, with one whom he says he loves.
Thandar noticed the emphasis which Nadara put upon the word says,
"'Someday,' he said,
"'when we have reached my world, you will know that I was right, and you will thank me.'
until then, Nadara, you must trust me.
And, he added half to himself,
God knows I have earned your trust,
even if you do not know it.
And so Nadara made believe that she was satisfied,
but in her heart of hearts,
she still feared that Thandar did not really love her,
nor did the half-veiled comments of the women
add at all to her peace of mind.
During all the time that Thandar was with her, he had been teaching her his language,
for he had set his heart upon taking her home,
and he wished her to be as well prepared for her introduction to Boston and civilization
as he could make her.
Thandar's plan was to find a suitable location within sight of the sea
that he might always be upon the lookout for a ship.
At last he found such a place, a level meadow land upon a low plateau overlooking the ocean.
He had come upon it while he wandered alone several miles from the temporary cliff dwellings the tribe was occupying.
The soil, when he dug into it, he found to be rich and black.
There was timber upon one side and upon the other overhanging cliffs of soft limestone.
it was thandar's plan to build a village partly of logs against the face of the cliff burrowing inward behind the dwellings for such additional apartments as each family might require
the caves alone would have proved sufficient shelter but the man hoped by compelling his people to construct a portion of each dwelling of logs to engender within each family a certain feeling of ownership and pride
and personal possession, as would make it less easy for them to give up their abodes than in the
past, when it had been necessary but to move to another cliff to find caves equally as
comfortable as those which they so easily abandoned. In other words, he hoped to give them a word
which their vocabulary had never held. Home. Whether or not he would have succeeded, we may
never know, for fate stepped in at the last moment to alter with a single stroke his every plan and
aspiration. As he returned to his people that afternoon, filled with the enthusiasm of his hopes,
a burly, hairy figure crept warily after him. As Thandar emerged from the brush, which reaches
close to the cliffs where the temporary encampment had been made,
Nadara, watching for him, ran forward to meet him.
The creature upon Thandar's trail, halted at the edge of the bush,
as his close-set eyes fell upon the girl,
his flabby lips vibrated to the quick intaking of his breath,
and his red lids half-closed in cunning and desire.
For a few moments he watched,
watched the man and the maid as they turned and walked slowly toward the cliffs, the arm of the
former about the brown shoulders of the ladder. Then he too turned and melted into the tangled
branches behind him. That evening Thandar gathered the members of the tribe about him at the foot of
the cliff. They sat around a great fire, while Thandar, their king, explained to them in minutest
detail the future that he had mapped out for them.
Some of the old men shook their heads, for here was an unheard-of thing, a change from the
accustomed ordering of their lives, and they were loath to change regardless of the benefits
which might accrue.
But for the most part the people welcomed the idea of comfortable and permanent habitations,
though their anticipatory joy,
Thandar reasoned,
was due largely to a childish eagerness
for something new and different.
Whether their enthusiasm would survive
the additional labors,
which the new life was sure to entail,
was another question.
So Thandar laid down the new laws
that were to guide his people thereafter.
The men were to make all implements and weapons,
for he had already taught them to use
arrows and spears, the women were to keep all-edged tools sharp. The men were to hew the logs and
build the houses. The women make garments, cook, and keep the houses in order. The men were to
turn up the soil, the women were to sow the seeds, and cultivate the growing crops, which,
later, all hands must turn to and harvest. The hunting and the fighting devolved upon the men,
but the fighting must be confined to enemies of the tribe.
A man who killed another member of the tribe,
except in defense of his home or his own person,
was to suffer death.
Other laws he made, good laws,
which even these primitive people could see were good.
It was quite late when the last of them crawled into his comfortless cave
to dream of large, airy rooms built of the trees of the forest,
of good food in plenty just before the rains as well as after, of security from the periodic raids of the bad men.
Thandar and Nadara were the last to go. Together they sat upon a narrow ledge before Nadara's cave,
the moonlight falling upon their glistening naked shoulders while they talked and dreamed
together of the future. Thandar had been talking of the wonderful plan.
which seemed to fill his whole mind, of the future of the tribe, of the great strides towards civilization
they could make in a few brief years if they could but be made to follow the simple plans he had in mind.
Why, he said, in ten years they should have bridged a gulf that it must have required ages for our ancestors to span.
"'And you are planning ten years ahead, Thandar?' she asked.
"'When only yesterday you were saying that once beside the sea
"'you hoped it would be but a short time before we might sight a passing vessel
"'that would bear us away to your civilization.
"'Must we wait ten years, Thandar?'
"'I am planning for them,' he replied.
"'We may not be here to witness the changes,
but I wish to start them upon the road, and when we go I shall see to it that a king is chosen in my place,
who has the courage and the desire to carry out my plans.
Yet, he added musingly, it would be splendid, could we but return to complete our work.
Never, Nadara, have I performed a single constructive act for the benefit of my fellow man,
but now I see an opportunity to do something, however small it may seem, to what was that?
A low rumbling muttered threateningly out of the west.
Deep and ominous it sounded, yet so low that it failed to awaken any member of the sleeping tribe.
Before either could again speak, there came a slight trembling of the earth beneath them,
scarcely sufficient to have been noticeable had it not been preceded by the distant grumbling of the earth's bowels.
The two upon the moonlit ledge came to their feet, and Nadara drew close to Thandar,
the man's arm encircling her shoulders protectingly.
The great Nagula, she whispered, again he seeks to escape.
What do you mean? asked Thandar.
It is an earthquake.
distant and quite harmless to us.
No, it is the great Nagula, insisted Nadara.
Long time ago, when our father's fathers were yet unborn,
the great Nagula roamed the land,
devouring all that chanced to come in his way,
men, beasts, birds, everything.
One day my people came upon him,
sleeping in a deep gorge between two mountains.
They were mighty men in those days, and when they saw their great enemy asleep there in the gorge,
half of them went upon one side and half upon the other, and they pushed the two mountains over into the
gorge upon the sleeping beast, imprisoning him there.
It is all true, for my mother had it from her mother, who in turn was told it by her mother.
Thus has it been handed down, truthfully, since it happened long time ago.
And even to this day is occasionally heard the growling of the great Nagula in his anger,
and the earth shakes and trembles as he strives far, far beneath,
to shake the mountains from him and escape.
Did you not hear his voice and feel the ground rock?
Thandar laughed.
Well, we are quite safe, then, he cried,
for with two mountains piled upon him, he cannot escape.
Who knows? asked Nadara.
He is huge, as huge himself as a small mountain.
Someday, they say, he will escape,
and then not will pacify his rage
until he has destroyed every living creature upon the land.
"'Do not worry, little one,' said Thandar.
"'The great Nagula will have to grumble louder and struggle more fiercely
"'before ever he may dislodge the two mountains.
"'Even now he is quiet again,
"'so run to your cave, sweetheart,
"'nor bother your pretty head with useless worries.
"'It is time that all good people were asleep.'
"'And he stooped and kissed her as she turned to go.
For a moment she clung to him.
I am afraid, Thandar, she whispered.
Why, I do not know.
I only know that I am afraid with a great fear that will not be quiet.
End of Part 2, Chapter 3.
Part 2, Chapter 4 of the Cave Girl by Edgar Rice Burroughs.
This Libravox recording is in the public domain.
Read by Gerald Moe.
The Battle
Early the following morning,
while several of the women and children were at the river,
drawing water,
the balance of the tribe of Thandar
was startled into wakefulness
by piercing shrieks from the direction the water carriers had taken.
Before the great, hairy men,
led by the smooth-skinned Thandar,
had reached the foot of the cliff
in their rush to the rescue of the women, several of the latter,
appeared at the edge of the forest, running swiftly toward the caves.
Mingled with their screams of terror were cries of,
The bad men, the bad men!
But these were not needed to acquaint the rescuers with the cause of the commotion,
for at the heels of the women came thurg and a score of his vicious brutes,
Little better than anthropoid apes were they,
long-armed, hairy, skulking monsters
whose close-set eyes and retreating foreheads
proclaimed more intimate propinquity
to the higher orders of brutes than to civilized man.
Woe betide male or female
who fell into their remorseless clutches,
since to these base passions unrestrained
that mark the primordial, they were addicted to the foulest forms of cannibalism.
In the past, their raids upon their neighbors for meat and women had met with but slight resistance,
the terrified cave-dwellers, scampering to the safety of their dizzy ledges from whence they
might hurl stones and roll boulders down, to the confusion of any foe, however ferocious.
Always the bad men caught a few unwary victims before the safety of the ledges could be attained.
But this time there was a difference.
Thurg was delighted.
The men were rushing downward to meet him.
Great indeed would be the feast which should follow this day's fighting,
for with the men disposed of there would be but little difficulty in storming the cliff
and carrying off all the women and children,
and as he thought upon these things,
there floated in his little brain
the image of the beautiful girl he had watched
come down the evening before,
from the caves,
to meet the smooth-skinned warrior
who twice now had bested Thurg in battle.
That Thandar's men might turn the tables upon him
never for a moment occurred to Thurg.
Nor was their little,
little wonder, since, mighty as were the muscles of the cavemen, they were weaklings by comparison
with the half-brutes of Thurg. Only the smooth-skinned stranger troubled the muddy mind of the near man.
It puzzled him a little, though, to see the long, slim sticks that the enemy carried, and the little
slivers and skin bags upon their backs, and the strange curved branches whose ends were connected by
slender bits of gut. What were these things for? Soon he was to know, this and other things.
Thandar's warriors did not rush upon Thurg and his brutes in a close-packed yelling mob.
Instead, they trotted slowly forward in a long, thin line that stretched out parallel with the
base of the cliff. In the center, directly in front of the charging bad men, was Thurts,
Thandar calling directions to his people, first upon one hand and then upon the other.
And in accordance with his commands, the ends of the line began to quicken the pace,
so that quickly Thurgs saw that there were men before him and men upon either hand,
and now, at fifty feet, while all were advancing cautiously, crouched for the final hand-to-hand
encounter, he saw the enemy slip each a sliver into the gut of the bent branches, there was a sudden
chorus of twangs, and Thurg felt a sharp pain in his neck. Involuntarily he clapped his hand to the
spot to find one of the slivers sticking there, scarce an inch from his jugular. With a howl of
rage he snatched the thing from him, and as he leaped to the charge to
punish these audacious madmen. He noted a dozen of his henchmen plucking slivers from various
portions of their bodies, while two lay quite still upon the grass with just the ends of slivers
protruding from their breasts. The sight brought the beast man to a momentary halt. He saw his fellows
charging in upon the foe. He saw another volley of slivers speed from the bent branches. Down went
another of his fighters, and then the enemy cast aside their strange weapons at a shouted
command from the smooth-skinned one, and grasping their long, slim sticks, ran forward to
meet Thurg's people. Thurg smiled. It would soon be over now. He turned toward one who was
bearing down upon him. It was Thandar. Thurg crouched to meet the charge. Rage, revenge,
the lust for blood fired his beastial brain. With his huge paws, he would tear the puny stick from this
creature's grasp, and this time he would gain his hold upon that smooth throat. He licked his lips,
and then out of the corner of his eye he glanced to the right. What strange sight was this,
his people flying? It was incredible. And yet it was true.
And wailing and raging in pain and anger, they were running a gauntlet of fire-sharpened lances.
Three lay dead.
The others were streaming blood as they fled before the relentless prodding devils at their backs.
It was enough for Thurg.
He did not wait to close with Thandar.
A single howl of dismay broke from his flabby lips,
and then he wheeled and dashed for the wood.
He was the last to pass through the rapidly converging ends of Thandar's primitive battle line.
He was running so fast that, afterward, Nadara, who was watching the battle from the cliffside,
insisted that his feet flew higher than his head at each frantic leap.
Thandar and his victorious army pursued the enemy through the wood for a mile or more,
then they returned, laughing and shouting,
to receive the plaudits of the old men, the women, and the children.
It was a happy day, there was feasting,
and Thandar, having in mind things he had read of savage races,
improvised a dance in honor of the victory.
He knew little more of savage dances than his tribesmen did of the Two-Step and the waltz,
but he knew that dancing in song and play marked in themselves a great step upward in the evolution of man from the lower orders,
and so he meant to teach these things to his people.
A red flush spread to his temples as he thought of his dignified father and his stately mother,
and with what horrified emotions they would view him now could they but see him,
naked but for a G-string and a panther skin,
moving with leaps and bounds,
and now stately waltz steps in a great circle,
clapping his hands in time to his movements,
while behind him strung a score of lusty, naked warriors,
mimicking his every antic with the fidelity of apes.
About them squatted the balance of the tribe,
more intensely interested in this, the first ceremonial function of their lives,
than with any other occurrence that had ever befallen them.
They, too, now clapped their hands in time with the dancers.
Nadara stood with parted lips and wide eyes watching the strange scene.
Within her it seemed that something was struggling for expression,
something that she must have known long, long ago,
something that she had forgotten,
but that she presently must recall.
With it came an insistent urge.
Her feet could scarce remain quietly upon the ground,
and great waves of melody and song
welled into her heart and throat,
though what they were and what they meant she did not know.
She only knew that she was intending,
intensely excited and happy, and that her whole being seemed as light and airy as the soft wind
that blew across the gently swaying treetops of the forest.
Now the dance was done.
Thandar had led the warriors back to the feast, in the center of the circle where the naked bodies
of the men had leaped and swirled to the clapping of many hands was an open space deserted.
it, Nadara ran, drawn by some subtle excitement of the soul which she could not have fathomed had she
tried, which she did not try to fathom. Around her slim, graceful figure was draped the glossy
black pelt of Nogula, another trophy of the prowess of her man. It half concealed but to accentuate
the beauties of her form. With eyes half closed, she took a half-dozen
graceful tentative steps. Now the eyes of Thandar and several others were upon her, but she did not
see them. Suddenly, with outthrown arms, she commenced to dance, bending her life body, swaying from
side to side as she fell, with graceful abandon, into steps and poses that seemed as natural to her
as repose.
About the little circle she wove her simple yet intricate way, and now every eye was upon her,
as every savage heart leaped in unison with her shapely feet, rising and falling in harmony
with her lithe brown limbs.
And of all the hearts that leaped, fastest leaped the heart of Thandar, for he saw in the poetry
of motion of the untutored girl the proof of her birthright, the truth of all that he had guessed
of her origin, since her foster father had related the story of her birth upon his deathbed.
None but a child of an age-old culture could possess this inherent talent.
Any moment he expected her lips to break forth in song, nor was he to be disappointed,
for presently, as the circling cave folk commenced to clap their palms and time to her steps,
Nadara lifted her voice in clear and bird-like notes,
a wordless pan of love and life and happiness.
At last, exhausted, she paused, and as her eyes fell upon Thandar, they broke into a merry laugh.
The king is not the only one who can leap and please.
Clay upon his feet, she cried.
Thandar came to the center of the circle, and, kneeling at her feet,
took one of her hands in his and kissed it.
The king is only mortal and a man, he said.
It is no reproach that he cannot equal the divine grace of a goddess.
You are very wonderful, my Nadara, he continued.
From loving you, I am coming to worship you.
And within the deep and silent wood, another was stirred with mighty emotions by the sight of the half-naked, graceful girl.
It was Thurg, the bad man, who had sneaked back alone to the edge of the forest,
that he might seek an opportunity to be revenged upon Thandar and his people.
Half formed in his evil brain had been a certain plan,
which the sight of Nadara dancing in the firelight had turned to concrete resolution.
With the dancing and the feasting over, the tribe of Thandar betook itself by ones and twos
to the rocky caves that they expected so soon to desert for the more comfortable village
which they were to build under the direction of their king, to the east beside the great water.
At last all was still, the village slept.
No sentry guarded their slumbers,
for Thandar, steeped in book-learning,
must needs add to his stock of practical knowledge
by bitter experience,
and never yet had the cause arisen for a night-guard about his village.
Having defeated Thurg and his people,
he thought that they would not return again,
and certainly not by night, for the people of this wild island roamed seldom by night,
having too much respect for the teeth and talons of Nagula to venture forth after darkness had
settled upon the grim forests and the lonely plains.
But a tempest of uncontrolled emotions surged through the hairy breast of Thurg.
He forgot Nagula.
He thought only of revenge.
revenge and the black-haired beauty who had so many times eluded him.
And as he saw her dancing in the circle of hand-clapping tribesmen,
in the light of the brushwood fire,
his desire for her became a veritable frenzy.
He could scarce restrain himself from rushing single-handed among his foes
and snatching the girl before their faces.
However, caution came to his.
his rescue, and so he waited, albeit impatiently, until the last of the cave-folk had retired to his
cavern. He had seen into which Nandara had withdrawn, one that lay far up the face of the steep
cliff and directly above the cave occupied by Thandar. The moon was overcast, the fire at the foot of
the cliff had died to glowing embers, all was wrapped in darkness and
in shadow. Far in the depths of the wood, Nagula coughed and cried. The weird sound raised the
coarse hair at the nape of Thurg's bull neck. He cast an apprehensive backward glance,
then, crouching low, he moved quickly and silently across the clearing toward the base of the
cliff. Flattened against a protruding boulder there, he waited, listening, for a moment.
No sound broke the stillness of the sleeping village.
None had seen his approach.
Of that he was convinced.
Carefully he began the ascent of the cliff face,
made difficult by the removal of the rough ladders
that led from ledge to ledge by day,
but which were withdrawn with the retiring of the community
to their dark holes.
But Thurg had dragged with him from the forest a slim sap
this he leaned against the face of the cliff. Its up-tilted end just topped the lowest edge.
Thurg was almost as large and quite as clumsy in appearance as a gorilla,
yet he was not as far removed from his true arboreal ancestors as is the great Simeon,
and so he accomplished in silence and with evident ease what his great bulk might have seemed
to have relegated to the impossible. Like a huge cat he scrambled up the frail pole until his fingers
clutched the ledge edge above him. Ape-like he drew himself to a squatting position there. Then he groped
for the ladder that the cave folk had drawn up from below. This he erected to the next ledge above.
Thereafter the way was easy, for the balance of the ledges were connected by steep.
steeply inclined trails cut into the cliff face. This had been an innovation of Thandars,
who considered the rickety ladders not only a nuisance, but extremely dangerous to life and limb,
for scarce a day passed that some child or woman did not receive a bad fall because of them.
So Thurg, with Thandar's unintentional aid, came easily to the mouth of Nadara's cave.
Great had been the temptation as he passed the cave below to enter and slay his enemy.
Never had Thurg so hated any creature as he hated this smooth-skinned interloper,
with all the venom of his mean soul he hated him.
Now he stooped, listening, just beside the entrance to the cave.
He could hear the regular breathing of the girl within.
The hot blood surged through his brute veins.
His huge paws opened and closed spasmodically.
His breath sucked hot between his flabby lips.
Just beneath him, Thandar lay dreaming.
He saw a wonderful vision of a beautiful nymph dancing in the firelight.
In a circle about her sat the Smith-Joneses, the Percy Standishes, the Livingston Browns,
and the quincy adams cootses and a hundred more equally aristocratic families of boston it did not seem strange to thandar that there was not enough clothing among the entire assemblage to have recently draped the laocoon
his father wore a becoming loincloth while the stately mrs john alden smith jones his mother was tastefully arrayed in a scant robe of
the skins of small rodents sewn together with bits of gut. As the nymph dance the audience kept time
to her steps with loudly clapping palms, and when she was done they approached her one by one,
crawling upon their hands and knees, and kissed her hand. Suddenly he saw that the nymph was
Nadara, and as he sprang forward to claim her, a large man with a coarse-matted beard,
a slanted forehead, and close-get eyes, leapt out from among the others, seized Nadara
and fled with her toward a waiting trolley car. He recognized the man as Thurg,
and even in his dream it seemed rather incongruous that he should be clothed in well-fitting evening
clothes. Nadara screamed once, and the scream roused Thandar from his dream. Raising upon one elbow
he looked toward the entrance of his cave. The recollection of the dream swept back into his memory.
With a little sigh of relief that it had been but a dream, he settled back once more upon his
bed of grasses, and soon was wrapped in dreamless slumber.
End of Part 2, Chapter 4.
Part 2, Chapter 5 of The Cave Girl by Edgar Rice Burrows.
This Libravox recording is in the public domain.
Read by Gerald Moe.
The Abduction of Nadara
Cautiously Thurg crawled into the cave where Nadara slept upon her couch of soft
grasses, wrapped in the glossy pelt of Nagara.
Gula the Black Panther. The hulking form of the beast man blotted out the faint light that filtered
from the lesser darkness of the night without, through the jagged entrance to the cave.
All within was Stygian gloom. Grooping with his hands, Thurg came at last upon a corner of the
grassy palate. Softly he wormed inch by inch closer to the sleeper. Now his ferned,
fingers felt the thick fur of the panther skin.
Lightly, for so gross a thing,
his touch followed the recumbent figure of the girl
until his giant paws felt the silky luxuriance of her raven hair.
For an instant he paused,
then, quickly and silently,
one great palm clapped roughly over Nadara's mouth,
while the other arm encircled her waist,
lifting her from her bed.
Awakened and terrified,
Nadara struggled to free herself and to scream,
but the giant hand across her mouth
effectually sealed her lips,
while the arm about her waist
held her as firmly as might iron bands.
Thurg spoke no word,
but as Nadara's hands came in contact
with his hairy breast and matted beard
as she fought for freedom, she guessed the identity of her abductor and shuddered.
Waiting only to assure himself that his hold upon his prisoner was secure
and that no trailing end of her robe might trip him and his flight down the cliff face,
Thurg commenced the descent.
Opposite the entrance to Thandar's cave,
Nadara redoubled her efforts to free her mouth,
that she might scream aloud, but,
but once. Thurg, guessing her desire, pressed his palm the tighter, and in a moment the two had
passed unnoticed to the ledge below. Down the winding trail of the upper ledges Thurg's task
was comparatively easy, thanks to Thandar, but at the second ledge from the bottom of the cliff
he was compelled to take to the upper of the two ladders, which completed the way to the
ground below. And here it was necessary to remove his hand from Nadara's mouth. In a low growl he
warned her to silence with threats of instant death, then he removed his hand from across her face,
grasped the top of the ladder, and swung over the dangerous height with his burden under his arm.
For an instant, Nadara was too paralyzed with terror to take advantage of her.
her opportunity, but just as Thurg set foot upon the ledge at the bottom of the ladder,
she screamed aloud once. Instantly Thurg's hand fell roughly across her lips.
Brutally he shook her, squeezing her body in his mighty grip until she gasped for breath,
and each minute expected to feel her ribs snap to the terrific strain.
For a moment Thurg stood silently upon the ledge, compressing the tortured body of his victim and listening for signs of pursuit from above.
Presently the agony of her suffering overcame Nadara. She swooned. Thurg felt her form relaxed,
and his flabby lips twisted to a hideous grin. The cliff was quiet, the girl's scream had not disturbed the slum.
of her tribesmen. Thurg swung the ladder he had just descended over the edge of the cliff below,
and a moment later he stood at the bottom with his burden. Without noise he removed the ladder and
the sapling that he had used in his ascent, laying them upon the ground at the foot of the cliff.
This would halt temporarily any pursuit, until the cavemen could bring other ladders from the
higher levels where they doubtless had them hidden. But no pursuit developed, and Thurg disappeared
into the dark forest with his prize. For a long distance he carried her, his little pig eyes
searching and straining to right and left into the black night for the first sign of savage
beast. The half-atrophied muscles of his little ears, still responding to an almost
dead instinct, strove to prick those misshapen members forward that they might catch the first
crackling of dead leaves beneath the padded paw of the fanged night prowlers.
But the wood seemed dead. No living creature appeared to thwart the beast man's evil intent.
Far behind him, Thandar slept. Thur grinned. The moon broke through the clouds, splotching the
ground all silver green beneath the forest trees. Nadara awoke from her swoon. They were in a little
open glade. Instantly she recalled the happenings that had immediately preceded her unconsciousness.
In the moonlight she recognized Thurg. He was smirking horribly down into her upturned face.
Thandar had often talked with her of religion. He had taught her of his God, and now
Now the girl thanked him that Thurg was still too low in the scale of evolution to have learned
to kiss.
To have had that matted beard, those flabby pendulous lips pressed to hers, it was too horrible.
She closed her eyes and disgust.
Thurg lowered her to her feet.
With one hand he still clutched her shoulder.
She saw him standing there before her, his greedy,
bloodshot eyes devouring her. His awful lips shook and trembled as his hot breath sucked quickly
in and out and excited gasps. She knew that the end was coming. Frantically, she cast about her
for some means of defense or escape. Thurg was drawing her toward him. Suddenly she drew back her
clenched fist and struck him full in the mouth. Then, tearing herself from his grasp,
she turned and fled. But in a moment he was upon her. Seizing her roughly by the shoulders,
he shook her viciously, hurling her to the ground. The blood from his wounded lips
dropped upon her face and throat. From the distance came a deep-toned, thunderous rumbling.
Thurg raised his head and listened.
Again and again came that awesome sound.
The great Nagula is coming to punish you, whispered Nadara.
Thurg still remained squatting beside her.
She had ceased to fight, for now she felt that a greater power than hers was intervening
to save her.
The ground beneath them trembled, shook and then tossed frightfully.
The rumbling and the roaring became deafening.
Thurg, his passion frozen in the face of this new terror, rose to his feet.
For a moment there was a lull, then came another and more terrific shock.
The earth rose and fell sickeningly.
Fissures opened, engulfing trees, and then closed like hungry mouths gulping food long denied.
Thurg was thrown to the ground. Now he was terror-stricken. He screamed aloud in his fear.
Again there came a lull, and this time the beastman leaped to his feet and dashed away into the forest.
Nadara was alone. Presently the earth commenced to tremble again, and the voice of the great Nagula
rumbled across the world. Frightened animals scampered past Nadara, fleeing in all directions.
Little deer, foxes, squirrels, and other rodents and countless numbers scurried, terrified about.
A great black panther and his mate trotted shoulder to shoulder into the glade,
where Nadara still stood too bewildered to know which way to fly.
They eyed her for a moment, as they paused in the moonlight.
Then, without a second glance, they loped away into the brush.
Directly behind them came three deer.
Nadara realized that she had felt no fear of the Panthers,
as she would have under ordinary circumstances.
Even the little deer ran with their natural enemies.
Every lesser fear was submerged in the overwhelming
terror of the earthquake. Dawn was breaking in the east, the rumblings were diminishing,
the tremors at greater intervals and of lessening violence. Nadara started to retrace
her steps toward the village. Momentarily she looked to see Thandar coming in search of her,
but she came to the edge of the forest, and no sign of Thandar or another of her tribesmen
had come to cheer her.
At last she stepped into the open.
Before her was the cliff.
A cry of anguish broke from her lips at the sight that met her eyes.
Torn, tortured, and crumpled were the lofty crags that had been her home,
the home of the tribe of Thandar.
The overhanging cliff-top had broken away and lay piled in a jagged heap at the
foot of the cliff. The caves had disappeared. The ledges had crumbled before the titanic
struggles of the great Nagula. All was desolation and ruin. She approached more closely.
Here and there in the awful jumble of shattered rock were wedged the crushed and mangled forms of
men, women, and children. Tears coursed down Nadara's cheeks.
Sobs racked her slender figure.
And Thandar, where was he?
With utmost difficulty the girl picked her way aloft over the tumbled debris.
She could only guess at the former location of Thandar's cave,
but now no sign of cave remained, only the same blank waste of silent stone.
Frantically she tugged and tore at massive heaps of sharp-edged,
Her fingers were cut and bruised and bleeding.
She called aloud the name of her man, but there was no response.
It was late in the afternoon before, weak and exhausted, she gave up her futile search.
That night she slept in a crevice between two broken boulders,
and the next morning she set out in search of a cave,
where she might live out the remainder of her lonely life,
in what safety and meager comfort a lone girl could ring from this savage world for a week she wandered hither and tither only to find most of the caves she had known in the past demolished as had been those of her people
at last she stumbled upon the very cliff which thandar had chosen as the permanent home of his people here the wrath of the earthquake seemed to have
been less severe, and Nadara found, high in the cliff's face, a safe and comfortable cavern.
The last span to it required the use of a slender sapling, which she could draw up after her,
effectually barring the approach of Nagula and his people. To further protect herself against
the chance of wandering men, the girl carried a quantity of small bits of rock to the ledge
beside the entrance to her cave.
Fruit and nuts and vegetables she took there too,
and a great gourd of water from the spring below.
As she completed her last trip and sat resting upon the ledge,
her eyes wandering over the landscape and out across the distant ocean,
she thought she saw something move in the shadows of the trees
across the open plain beneath her.
Could it have been?
been a man, Nadara drew her sapling ladder to the ledge beside her.
Thurg, fleeing from the wrath of the great Nagula, had come at daybreak to the spot
where his people had been camped, but there he found no sign of them, only the ragged edges of a
great fissure, half-closed, that might have swallowed his entire tribe, as he had seen the
Fissures in the forest swallow many, many trees at a single bite.
For some time he sought for signs of his tribesmen, but without success.
Then his fear of the earthquake allayed, he started back into the forest to find the girl.
For days he sought her, he came to the ruins of the cliff that had housed her people,
and there he discovered signs that the girl had been there,
since the demolition of the cliff he saw the print of her dainty feet in the soft earth at the base of the rocks he saw how she had searched the debris for thandar
he saw her bed of grasses in the crevice between the two boulders and then after diligent search he found her spore leading away to the east for many days he followed her until at last close by the
the sea, he came to a level plain at the edge of a forest.
Across the narrow plain rose lofty cliffs,
and what was that clambering aloft toward the dark mouth of a cave?
Could it be a woman?
Thurg's eyes narrowed as he peered intently toward the cliff.
Yes, it was a woman, it was the woman, it was she he sought, and she was alone.
With a whoop of exultation, Thurg broke from the forest into the plain, running swiftly
toward the cliff where Nadara crouched beside her little pile of jagged missiles, prepared to
once more battle with this hideous monster for more than life.
End of Part 2, Chapter 5.
Burroughs. This Libravox recording is in the public domain.
Read by Gerald Moe.
The Search
A year had elapsed since Waldo Emerson Smith-Jones had departed from the back-bay home
of his aristocratic parents to seek in a long sea voyage a cure for the hacking cough
and hectic cheeks, which had in themselves proclaimed the almost incurable.
Two months later had come the first meager press notices of the narrow escape of the steamer,
upon which Waldo Emerson had been touring the South seas, from utter destruction by a huge tidal wave.
The dispatch read,
The captain reports that the great wave swept entirely over the steamer, momentarily submerging her.
Two members of the crew, the officer upon the bridge, and one passenger were washing,
away. The latter was an American traveling for his health, Waldo E. Smith Jones, son of John
Alden Smith Jones of Boston. The steamer came about, cruising back and forth for some time,
but as the wave had washed her perilously close to a dangerous shore, it seemed unsafe to remain
longer in the vicinity, for fear of a recurrence of the tidal wave, which would have meant the utter annihilation,
of the vessel upon the nearby beach.
No sign of any of the poor unfortunates was seen.
Mrs. Smith-Jones is prostrated.
Immediately John Alden Smith-Jones had fitted out his yacht,
Priscilla, dispatching her under Captain Burlingham,
a retired naval officer and an old friend of Mr. Smith-Jones,
to the far distant coast in search of the body of his son,
which the captain of the steamer was of the opinion might very possibly have been washed upon the beach.
And now Burlingham was back to report the failure of his mission.
The two men were sitting in the John Alden Smith-Jones Library.
Mrs. Smith-Jones was with them.
We searched the beach diligently at the point opposite which the tidal wave struck the steamer,
Captain Burlingham was saying,
for miles up and down the coast we patrolled every inch of the sand.
We found at one spot upon the edge of the jungle and above the beach, the body of one of the sailors.
It was not and could not have been Waldo's.
The clothing was that of a seaman.
The frame was much shorter and stockier than your sons.
There was no sign of any other body along that entire coast.
Thinking it possible one of the men might,
have been washed ashore alive, we sent parties into the interior. Here we found a wild and savage
country, and on two occasions met with fierce white savages who hurled rocks at us and fled at the first
report of our firearms. We continued our search all around the island, which is of considerable
extent. Upon the east coast I found this, and here the captain handed Mr.
Smith Jones, the bag of jewels, which Nadara had forgotten as she fled from Thandar.
Briefly he narrated what he knew of the history of the poor woman to whom it had belonged.
I recall the incident well, said Mrs. Smith Jones, I had the pleasure of entertaining the
count and countess when they stopped here upon their honeymoon. They were lovely people,
and to think that they met so tragic an end. The three lapsed into,
silence. Burlingham did not know whether he was glad or sorry that he had not found the bones
of Waldo Emerson. That would have meant the end of hope for his parents. Perhaps much the same
thoughts were running through the minds of the others. Somewhere in the nether regions of the
great house, an electric bell sounded. Still the three sat on in silence. They heard the houseman
opened the front door. They heard low voices, and presently there came a deferential tap upon the
door of the library. Mr. Smith-Jones looked up and nodded. It was the houseman. He held a letter
in his hand. "'What is it, Cruts?' asked the master in a tired voice. It seemed that nothing ever again
would interest him. "'A special delivery letter, sir,' replied the servant. "'The boy says you must sign for it
yourself, sir.
Ah, yes, replied Mr. Smith-Jones, as he reached for the letter and the receipt-blank.
He glanced at the postmark, San Francisco.
Idily, he cut the envelope.
Pardon me, he glanced first at his wife, and then at Captain Burlingham.
The two nodded.
Mr. John Alden-Smith-Jones opened the letter.
There was a single written sheet and an enclosure in another envelope.
He had read but a couple of lines when he came suddenly upright in his chair.
Captain Burlingham and Mrs. Smith-Jones looked at him in polite and surprised questioning.
My God! exclaimed Mr. Smith-Jones. He is alive. Waldo is alive.
Mrs. Smith-Jones and Captain Burlingham sprang from their chairs and ran toward the speaker.
With trembling hands that made it difficult to read the words that his
trembling voice could scarce utter, John Alden Smith-Jones read aloud.
On board the Sally Corwith, San Francisco, California, Mr. John Alden Smith-Jones,
Boston, Massachusetts, dear sir, just reached Port and hastened to forward letter your son gave me
for his mother. He wouldn't come with us. We found him on, island, latitude, 10 degrees south,
longitude 150 degrees west.
He seemed in good health and able to look out for himself.
Didn't want anything, he said, except a razor,
so we gave him that and one of the men gave him a plug of chewing tobacco.
Urged him to come, but he wouldn't.
The enclosed letter will doubtless tell you all about him.
Yours truly, Henry Dobbs, master.
Ten south, 150 West, mused Captain Burlingham, that's the same island we searched.
Where could he have been?
Mrs. Smith-Jones had opened the letter, addressed to her, and was reading it breathlessly.
My dear mother, I feel rather selfish in remaining and possibly causing you further anxiety,
but I have certain duties to perform to several of the inhabitants which I feel obligated to
fulfill before I depart. My treatment here has been all that anyone might desire. Even more,
I might say. The climate is delightful. My cough has left me, and I am entirely a well man,
more robust than I ever recall having been in the past. At present I am sojourning in the mountains,
having but run down to the seashore today, where, happily, I chanced to find the Sally Corwith in
the harbor, and am taking advantage of Captain Dobbs's kindness to forward this letter to you.
Do not worry, dearest mother, my obligations will soon be fulfilled, and then I shall hasten to take
the first steamer for Boston. I have met a number of interesting people here, the most interesting
people I have ever met. They quite overwhelm one with their attentions. And now, as Captain Dobbs is
anxious to be away, I will close with every assurance of my deepest love for you and father,
ever affectionately your son, Waldo.
Mrs. Smith-Jones' eyes were dim with tears, tears of thanksgiving and happiness,
and to think, she exclaimed, that after all he is alive and well, quite well.
His cough has left him, that is the best part of it, and he is surrounded.
by interesting people, just what Waldo needed.
For some time I feared, before he sailed,
that he was devoting himself too closely to his studies
and to the little cotier of our own set which surrounded him.
This experience will be broadening.
Of course these people may be slightly provincial,
but it is evident that they possess a certain culture and refinement.
Otherwise, my Waldo would never have described them as
interesting. The coarse, illiterate or vulgar could never prove interesting to a Smith-Jones.
Captain Cecil Burlingham nodded politely. He was thinking of the naked, hairy man-brutes he had
seen within the interior of the island. It is evident, Burlingham, said Mr. Smith-Jones,
that you overlooked a portion of this island. It would seem, from Waldo's letter,
that there must be a colony of civilized men and women,
somewhere upon it. Of course it is possible that it may be further inland than you penetrated.
Burlingham shook his head. I am puzzled, he said. We circled the entire coast, yet nowhere did we see
any evidence of a man-improved harbor, such as one might have reason to expect, were there really
a colony of advanced humans in the interior. There would have been at least a shack near the beach
in one of the several natural harbors which indent the coastline,
was there even an occasional steamer touching for purposes of commerce with the colonists?
No, my friends, he continued,
as much as I should like to believe it,
my judgment will not permit me to place any such translation upon Waldo's letter.
That he is safe and happy seems evident,
and that is enough for us to know.
Now it should be a simple matter for us to find,
him, if it is still your desire to send for him.
He may already have left for Boston, said Mrs. Smith-Jones.
His letter was written several months ago.
Again Burlingham shook his head.
Do not bank on that, my dear madam, he said kindly.
It may be fifty years before another vessel touches that forgotten shore,
unless it be one which you yourselves send.
John Alden Smith-Jones sprang to his feet and commenced pacing up and down the library.
How soon can the Priscilla be put in shape to make the return voyage to the island?
He asked.
It can be done in a week, if necessary, replied Burlingham.
And you will accompany her in command?
Gladly.
Good, exclaimed Mr. Smith-Jones.
And now, my friend, let us lose no time in starting our prelain.
preparations. I intend accompanying you.
And I shall go, too, said Mrs. Smith-Jones.
The two men looked at her in surprise.
But, my dear, cried her husband,
there is no telling what hardships and dangers we may encounter.
You could never stand such a trip.
I am going, said Mrs. Smith-Jones firmly.
I know my Waldo.
I know his refined and sensitive nature.
I know that I am fully capable,
of enduring whatever he may have endured. He tells me that he is among interesting people.
Evidently there is nothing to fear then, from the inhabitants of the island,
and furthermore, I wish personally to meet the people he has been living with.
I have always been careful to surround Waldo with only the nicest people,
and if any vulgarizing influences have been brought to bear upon him,
since he has been beyond my mature guidance,
I wish to know it, that I may determine how to combat their results.
That was the end of it.
If Mrs. Smith-Jones knew her son,
Mr. Smith-Jones certainly knew his wife.
A week later, the Priscilla sailed from Boston Harbor
on her long journey around the Horn to the South Seas.
Most of the old crew had been retained,
the first and second officers were new men,
the former William Stark,
had come to Burlingham well recommended,
from the first he seemed an intelligent and experienced officer,
that he was inclined to tecturnity,
but enhanced his value in the eyes of Burlingham.
Stark was inclined to be something of a martinet,
so that the crew soon took to hating him cordially,
but as his display of this unpleasant trait,
was confined wholly to trivial acts, the men contented themselves with grumbling among themselves,
which is the prerogative and pleasure of every good sailor man. Their loyalty to the splendid
Burlingham, however, was not to be shaken by even a dozen starks. The monotonous and uneventful
journey to the vicinity of ten south and 150 West was finally terminated. At last,
land showed on the starboard bow.
Excitement reigned supreme throughout the trim white Priscilla.
Mrs. Smith-Jones peered anxiously and almost constantly through her binoculars,
momentarily expecting to see the well-known, thin and emaciated figure of her Waldo Emerson,
standing upon the beach awaiting them.
For two weeks they sailed along the coast, stopping here and there for a day,
while parties tramped inland in search of sides of civilized habitation.
They lay two days in the harbor where the Sally Corwith had lain.
There they pressed farther inland than at any other point, but all without avail.
It was Burlingham's plan to first make a cursory survey of the entire coast,
with only short incursions toward the center of the island.
Should this fail to discover the missing Waldo,
the party was then to go over the ground once more,
remaining weeks or months, as might be required,
to thoroughly explore every foot of the island.
It was during the pursuit of the initial portion of the program
that they dropped anchor in the self-same harbor
upon whose waters Waldo Emerson and Nadara
had seen the Priscilla lying only to fly from her.
Burlingham recalled it as the spot at which the bag of jewels
had been picked up. Next to the Sally Corwith Harbor, as they came to call the other anchorage,
this seemed the most fraught with possibilities of success. They christened it, Eugenie Bay,
after that poor, unfortunate Lady Eugenie Marie Celeste de la Valois, Countess of Crecy,
whose jewels had been recovered upon its shore. Burlingham and Waldo's father,
with half a dozen officers and men of the Priscilla
had spent the day searching the woods, the plain, and the hills,
for some slight sign of human habitation.
Shortly afternoon, first Officer Stark stumbled upon the whitened skeleton of a man.
In answer to his shouts, the other members of the party hastened to his side.
They found the grim thing lying in a little barren spot among the tall grasses.
About it, the liquids of decomposition had killed vegetation, leaving the thing alone in all its grisly repulsiveness,
as though shocked, nature had withdrawn in terror.
Stark stood pointing toward it without a word as the others came up.
Burlingham was the first to reach Stark's side.
He bent low over the bones, examining the skull carefully.
John Alden Smith-Jones came panting up.
instantly he saw what Burlingham was examining he turned deathly white.
Burlingham looked up at him.
It's not, he said.
Look at that skull.
Either a gorilla or some very low type of man.
Mr. Smith Jones breathed a sigh of relief.
What an awful creature it must have been, he said,
when he had fully taken in the immense breath of the squat skeleton.
It cannot be that Waldo has suffered.
survived in a wilderness peopled by such creatures as this, imagine him confronted by such a beast.
Timid by nature and never robust, he would have perished of fright at the very sight of this thing
charging down upon him. Captain Cecil Burlingham acquiesced with a nod.
He knew Waldo Emerson well, and so he could not even imagine a meeting between the frail and
cowardly youth, and such a beast as this bleaching frame must once have supported.
And at their feet the bones of Flatfoot lay mute witness to the impossible.
Presently a shout from one of the sailors attracted their attention toward the far side of the
valley. The man was standing upon a rise of ground, waving his arms and gesticulating violently
toward the lofty cliffs, which rose sheer from the rank jungle grasses.
all eyes turned in the direction indicated by the excited sailor at first they saw nothing but presently a figure came in sight upon a little elevation it was the figure of a human being and even at the distance they were from it all were assured that it was the figure of a female
She was running toward the cliffs with the speed of a deer, and now behind her came another figure.
Thick set and squat was the thing that pursued the woman.
It might have been the reanimated skeleton that they had just discovered.
Would the creature catch her before she reached the cliff?
Would she find sanctuary even there?
Already Burlingham and Stark had started toward the cliff on a run.
John Alden-Smith Jones followed more slowly.
The men raced after their officers.
The girl had reached the rocks and was scampering up their precipitous face like a squirrel.
Close behind her came the man.
They saw the girl reach a ledge just below the mouth of a cave,
in which she evidently expected to find safety.
They saw her clambering up the rickety sapling that answered for a ladder.
They breathed sighs of relief, for it seemed that she was now quite safe.
The man was still one ledge below her.
But in another moment the watchers were filled with horror.
The brute pursuing her had reached forth a giant hand and seized the base of the sapling.
He was dragging it over the edge of the cliff.
In another moment the girl would be precipitated either into his arms
or to a horrible death upon the jagged rocks,
her.
Burlingham and Stark halted simultaneously.
At once, two rifles leapt to their shoulders.
There were two reports so close together that they seemed as one.
End of Part 2, Chapter 6.
Part 2, Chapter 7 of The Cave Girl by Edgar Rice Burroughs.
This Libravox recording is in the public domain.
read by Gerald Moe
First mate Stark
Upon the day that Thurg discovered Nadara
He had come racing to the foot of the cliff
Roaring and bellowing like a mad bull
Upward he clambered half the distance to the girl's lofty perch
Then a bit of jagged rock, well aimed
Had brought him to a sudden halt
Spitting blood and teeth from his injured mouth
He looked up at Nadara and shrieked out his rage and his threats of vengeance.
Nadara launched another missile at him that caught him full upon one eye,
dropping him like a stone to the narrow ledge upon which he had been standing.
Quickly the girl started to descend to his side to finish the work she had commenced,
for she knew that there could be no peace or safety for her,
now that Thurg had discovered her hiding place while the monster lived.
But she had scarce more than lowered her sapling to the ledge beneath her
when the giant form of the man moved, and Thurg sat up.
Quickly Nadara clambered back to her ledge, again drawing her sapling after her.
She was about to hurl another missile at the man when he spoke to her.
We are alone in the world, he said.
said, All your people and all my people have been slain by the great Nagula.
Come down. Let us live together in peace. There is no other left in all the world.
Nadara laughed at him. Come down to you, she cried mockingly.
Live with you. I would rather live with the pigs that root in the forest.
Go away, or I will finish what I have commenced and kill you.
I would not live with you, though I knew that you were the last human being on earth.
Thurg pleaded and threatened, but all to no avail. Again he tried to clamber to her side,
but again he was repulsed with well-armed missiles. At last he withdrew, growling and threatening.
For weeks he haunted the vicinity of the cliff. Naderah's meager food supply was soon exhausted.
She was forced to descend to replenish her lard and fill her gourd, or die of starvation and thirst.
She made her trips to the forest at night, though black Nagula prowled and a menace of Thurg loomed through the darkness.
At last the man discovered her in one of these nocturnal expeditions, and almost caught her before she reached her ledge of safety.
For three days he kept her a close prisoner,
Again her stock of provisions was exhausted.
She was desperate.
Twice had Nagula nearly trapped her in the forest.
She dared not again tempt fate in the gloomy wood by night.
There was nothing left but to risk all in one last effort to elude thurg by day
and find another asylum in some far distant corner of the island.
Carefully she watched her opportunity,
and while the beast man was temporarily absent seeking food for himself,
the girl slid swiftly to the base of the cliff
and started through the tall grasses for the opposite side of the valley.
Upon this day Thurg had fallen upon the spore of deer
as he had searched the forest for certain berries that were in season
and which he particularly enjoyed.
The trail led along the edge of the wood to the opposite side,
of the valley, and over the hills into the region beyond. All day Thurg followed the fleet
animals, until at last, not having come up with them, he was forced to give up the pursuit and
return to the cliffs, lest his more valuable quarry should escape. Halfway between the hills and
the cliff, he came suddenly face to face with Nadara. Not twenty paces separated them. With a howl of
satisfaction, Thurg leaped to seize her, but she turned and fled before he could lay his hand upon her.
If Thurg had found his other quarry of that day swift, so too he now found Nadara,
for Terra gave wings to her flying feet.
Lumbering after her came Thurg, and had the distance been less, he would have been left
far behind. But it was a long distance from the spot where they had met,
to Nadara's cliffs.
The girl could outrun the man for a short distance,
but when victory depended upon endurance,
the advantage was all upon the side of the brute.
As they neared the goal,
Nadara realized that the lead she had gained at first
was rapidly being overcome by the horrid creature,
panting so close behind her.
She strained every nerve and muscle
in a last mad effort to distance the fate that was closing upon her.
She reached the cliff. Thurg was just behind her.
Half spent, she stumbled upward in, what seemed to her, pitiful slowness.
At last her hand grasped the sapling that led to the mouth of her cave.
In another instant she would be safe.
But her newborn hope went out as she felt the sapling slipping
and glanced downward to see Thurg dragging it from its position.
She shut her eyes that she might not see the depths below,
into which she was about to be hurled,
and then there smote upon her ears the most terrific burst of sound
that had ever assailed them,
other than the thunders that rolled down out of the heavens when the rains came,
but this sound did not come from above that came from the valley beneath,
The latter ceased to slip.
She opened her eyes and glanced downward.
Far below her lay the body of Thurg.
She could see that he was quite dead.
He lay upon his face, and from his back trickled two tiny streams of blood from little holes.
Nadara clambered upward to her ledge, drawing her sapling after her,
and then she looked about for an explanation of the strange noise and
the sudden death of Thurg, for she could not but connect the one with the other.
Below in the valley she saw a number of men strangely garbed. They were coming toward her cliff.
She gathered her missiles closely about her, ready to her hand. Now they were below and calling
up to her. Her eyes dilated in wonder. They spoke the strange tongue that Thandar had tried to
teach her. She called down to them in her own tongue, but they shook their heads, motioning her to
descend. She was afraid. All her life she had been afraid of men, and with reason, of all except her old
foster father and Thandar, these evidently were men. She could only expect from them the same treatment
that Thurg would have accorded her. One of them had started up the face of the cliff. It was
Stark. Nadara seized a bit of rock and hurled it down at him. He barely dodged the missile,
but he desisted in his attempt to ascend to her. Now Burlingham advanced, raising his hand,
palm toward her and a sign that she should not assault him. She recalled some of the language
that Thandar had taught her. Maybe they would understand it. Go away, she cried.
"'Go way! Nadara kill bad men!'
A look of pleasure overspread Burlingham's face. The girl spoke English.
"'We are not bad men,' he called up to her. "'We will not harm you.'
"'What you want?' asked Nadara, still unconvinced by mere words.
"'We want to talk with you,' replied Burlingham.
"'We are looking for a friend who was shipwrecked upon this island.
Come down, we will not harm you. Have we not already proved our friendship by killing this fellow who pursued you?
The man spoke precisely the tongue of Thandar. Nadara could understand every word, for Thandar had talked to her much in English.
She could understand it better than she could speak it. If they talked the same tongue as Thandar,
they must be from the same country. Maybe they were Thandar's friends.
Anyway, they were like him, and Thandar never harmed women. She could trust them.
Slowly she lowered her sapling and began the descent. Several times she hesitated,
as though minded to return to her ledge, but Burlingham's kindly voice and encouragement
at last prevailed, and presently Nadara stood before them.
The officers and men of the Priscilla,
crowded around the girl. They were struck with her beauty and the simple dignity of her manner and her
carriage. The great black panther skin that fell from her left shoulder, she wore with the majesty
of a queen and with the naturalness that cast no reflection upon her modesty, though it revealed
quite as much of her figure as it hid. William Stark, first officer of the Priscilla, caught his breath,
Never he was positive had God made a more lovely creature.
From the top of the cliff, a shaggy man peered down upon the strange scene.
He blinked his little eyes, scratched his matted head,
and once he picked up a large stone that lay near him,
but he did not hurl it upon those below,
for he had heard the loud report of the rifles,
and seen the smoke belched from the muzzles,
and witnessed the sudden and miraculous collapse of Thurg.
Burlingham was speaking to Nadara.
Who are you, he asked.
Nadara, replied the girl,
where do you live?
Nadara jerked her thumb over her shoulder
toward the cliff at her back.
Burlingham searched the rocky escarpment with his eyes,
but saw no sign of another living being there.
Where are your people?
Dead!
All of them?
Nadara nodded affirmatively.
How long have they been dead and what killed them?
Continued Burlingham.
Almost a moon.
The great Nagula killed them.
In answer to other questions,
Nadara related all that had transpired since the night of the earthquake.
Her description of the catastrophe
convinced the Americans that a violent quake
had recently occurred to shake the island to its foundations.
Ask her about Waldo,
whispered Mr. Smith-Jones,
himself dreading to put the question.
We are looking for a young man, said Burlingham,
who was lost overboard from a steamer
on the west coast of this island.
We know that he reached the shore alive,
for we have heard from him.
Have you ever seen or heard of this stranger?
His name is Waldo Emerson Smith Jones.
This gentleman is his father, indicating Mr. Smith Jones.
Nadara looked with wide eyes at John Alden Smith Jones.
So this man was Thandar's father.
She felt very sorry for him, for she knew that he loved Thandar.
Thandar had often told her so.
She did not know how to tell him.
She shrank from causing another.
the anguish and misery that she had endured.
Did you know of him? asked Burlingham.
Nadara nodded her head.
Where is he? cried Waldo's father.
Where are the people with whom he lived here?
Nadara came close to John Alden Smith-Jones.
There was no fear in her innocent young heart
for this man who was Thandar's father,
who loved Thandar,
only a great compassion for him and the sorrow that she was about to inflict.
Gently she took his hand in hers, raising her sad eyes to his.
Where is he? Where is my boy?
Whispered Mr. Smith-Jones.
He is with his people.
Who were my people?
The people of whom I have just told you, replied Nadara softly,
he is dead.
And then she dropped her face upon the people.
the man's hand and wept.
The shock staggered John Alden-Smith Jones.
It seemed incredible, impossible,
that Waldo could have lived through all that he must have lived through
to perish at last, but a few short weeks before Secure reached him.
For a moment he forgot the girl.
It was her hot tears upon his hand that aroused him to a consciousness of the present.
Why do you weep, he cried almost roughly.
For you, she replied, who loved him too.
You loved Waldo? asked the boy's father.
Nadara nodded her tumbled mass of raven hair.
John Alden Smith-Jones looked down upon the bent head of the sobbing girl in silence for several minutes.
Many things were racing through his patrician brain.
He was by training, environment and heredity, narrow and puritanical.
He saw the meager apparel of the girl,
he saw her nut-brown skin,
but he did not see her nakedness,
for something in his heart told him that sweet virtue clothed her more effectually
than could silks and satins without virtue.
Gently he placed an arm about her, drawing her to him.
"'My daughter,' he said, and pressed his lips to her forehead.
It was a solemn and sorrow-ridden party that boarded the Priscilla an hour later.
Mrs. Smith-Jones had seen them coming.
Some intuitive sense may have warned her of the sorrow that lay in store for her upon their return.
At any rate, she did not meet them at the rail as in the past.
Instead, she retired to her cabin to await her husband there.
When he joined her, he brought with him a half-naked young woman.
Mrs. Smith-Jones looked upon the girl with ill-concealed horror.
Waldo's mother met the shock of her husband's news
with much greater fortitude than he had expected.
As a matter of fact, she had been prepared for this from the first.
She had never really believed that Waldo could survive for any considerable time,
far from the comforts and luxuries of his Boston home and the watchful care of herself.
And who is this a person? she asked coldly at last,
holding her pince-nez before her eyes, as with elevated brows,
she cast a look of disapproval upon Nadara.
The girl, reading more in the older woman's manner than her words, drew herself up proudly.
Mr. Smith Jones coughed and colored. He stepped to Nadara's side, placing his arm about her shoulders.
She loved Waldo, he said simply, the brazen hussy, exclaimed Mrs. Smith Jones, to dare to love a Smith
Jones. Come, come, Louisa, ejaculated her husband.
husband. Remember that she too is suffering. Do not add to her sorrow. She loved our boy,
and he returned her love. How do you know that? She has told me, replied the man.
It is not true, cried Mrs. Smith-Jones. It is not true. Waldo Emerson would never stoop to love one
out of his own high class. Who is she, and what proof have you that Waldo loved her?
I am Nadara, said the girl proudly, answering for herself.
And this is the proof that he loved me.
He told me that this was the pledge token between us
until we could come to his land and be mated according to the customs there.
She held out her left hand, upon the third finger of which
sparkled a great solitaire, a solitaire which Mrs. John Alden-Smith-Jones
recognized instantly.
He gave you that?
She asked.
Then she turned toward her husband.
What do you intend doing with this girl?
She asked.
I shall take her back home, replied he.
She should be as a daughter to us,
for Waldo would have made her such had he lived.
She cannot remain upon the island.
All her people were killed by the earthquake that destroyed Waldo.
She is in constant danger
of attack by wild beasts and wilder men. We cannot leave her here, and even if we could,
I should not do so, for we owe a duty to our dead boy to care for her, as he would have cared for
her, and we owe a greater duty to her. I must be alone, was all that Mrs. Smith-Jones replied.
Please take her away, John. Give her the cabin next to this, and have,
Marie clothes her properly.
Marie's clothes should about fit her.
There was more of tired anguish in her voice now than of anger.
Mr. Smith-Jones led Nadara out and summoned Marie,
but Nadara upset his plans by announcing that she wished to return to shore.
She does not like me, she said, nodding toward Mrs. Smith-Jones,
and I will not stay.
It took John Alden-Smith Jones a long time to persuade the girl to change her mind.
He pointed out that his wife was greatly overwrought by the shock of the news of Waldo's death.
He assured Nadara that at heart she was a kindly woman,
and that eventually she would regret her attitude toward the girl,
and at last Nadara consented to remain aboard the Priscilla,
but when Marie would have clothed her in the garments of civilization, she absolutely refused,
scorning the hideous and uncomfortable clothing.
It was two days before Mrs. Smith-Jones sent for her.
When she entered that lady's cabin, the latter exclaimed at once against her barbarous attire.
I gave instructions that Marie should dress you properly, she said.
you are not decently clothed. That bear skin is shocking.
Nadara tossed her head, and her eyes flashed fire.
I shall never wear your silly clothes, she cried.
This Fandar gave me. He slew Nagula the Black Panther with his own hands,
and gave the skin to me who was to be his mate.
Do you think I would exchange it for such foolish garments as
those? And she waved a contemptuous gesture toward Mrs. Smith-Jones' expensive morning gown.
The elder woman forgot her outraged dignity in the suggestion the girl had given her for an excuse
to be rid of her at the first opportunity. She had mentioned a party named Thandar. She had brazenly
boasted that this Thandar had killed the beast whose pelt she wore and given her the thing for a
garment. She had admitted that she was to become this person's mate.
Mrs. Smith Jones shuddered at the primitive word. At this moment, Mr. Smith
Jones entered the cabin. He smiled pleasantly at Nadara, and then, seeing in the
attitudes of the two women that he had stepped within a theater of war, he looked questioningly
at his wife. Now what, Louisa? He asked somewhat sharply.
sufficient john exclaimed that lady to bear out my original contention that it was a very unwise move to bring this woman with us she has just admitted that she was the promised mate of a person she calls thandar she is brazen
i refuse to permit her to enter my home nor shall she remain upon the priscilla longer than as necessary to land her at the first civilized port
mr smith jones looked questioningly at nadara the girl had guessed the erroneous reasoning that had caused mrs smith jones's excitement she had forgotten that they did not know that waldo and thandar were won
now she could scarce repress a smile of amusement nor resist the temptation to take advantage of mrs smith jones's ignorance to bait her further you had another lover beside waldo asked mr smith jones
i loved thandar she replied thandar was king of my people he loved me he slew nagula for me and gave me his skin he slew
Korth and Flatfoot also. They wanted me, but Thandar slew them. And Big Fist he slew,
and sag the killer. Oh, Thandar was a mighty fighter. Can you wonder that I loved him?
He was a hideous murderer, cried Mrs. Smith-Jones, and to think that my poor Waldo,
poor, timid, gentle Waldo, was condemned to live among such savage brutes.
it is too terrible.
Nadara's eyes went wide.
It was her turn to suffer a shock.
Poor, timid, gentle Waldo!
Had she heard aright,
could it be that they were describing the same man?
There must be some mistake.
Did Waldo know that you loved Thandar?
asked Mr. Smith-Jones.
Thandar was Waldo, she replied.
Thandar is the name I gave him. It means the brave one.
He was very brave, she cried.
He was not timid, and he was only gentle, with women and children.
Mrs. Smith-Jones had never been so shocked in all her life.
She sprang to her feet.
Leave my cabin, she cried.
I see through your shallow deception.
You thoughtlessly betrayed yourself, and your
vulgar immoralities, and now you try to hide behind a base columny that pictures my dear dead boy
as one with your hideous, brutal chief. You shall not deceive me longer. Leave my cabin, please.
Mr. Smith-Jones stood as one paralyzed. He could not believe in the perfidy of the girl.
It seemed impossible that she could have so deceived him, nor,
yet, could he question the integrity of his own ears.
It was, of course, too far beyond the pale of reason,
to attempt to believe that Waldo Emerson and the terrible Fandar were one and the same.
The girl had gone too far, and yet he could not believe that she was bad.
There must be some explanation.
In the meantime, Nadara had left the room,
her little chin high in air.
Never again, she determined,
would she subject herself to the insults of Thandar's mother.
She went on deck.
She had found it difficult to remain below during the day.
She craved the fresh air and the excitement to be found above.
The officers had been very nice to her.
Stark was much with her.
The man had fallen desperately in love with the half-savage
girl. As she reached the deck, after leaving Mrs. Smith-Jones' cabin, Stark was the first she
chanced to meet. She would have preferred being alone with her sorrow and her anger, but the man
joined her. Together they stood by the rail watching the approach of heavy clouds. A storm was
about to break over them that had been brewing for several days. Stark knew nothing of what had
taken place below, but he saw that the girl was unhappy. He attempted to cheer her. At last he took
her hand and stroked it caressingly as he talked with her. Before she could guess his intention,
he was pouring words of love and passion into her ears. Nadara drew away. A puzzled frown contracted
her brows. Do not talk so to Nadara, she said. She does not love you. And,
Then she moved away and went to her cabin.
Stark looked after her as she departed.
He was thoroughly aroused.
Who was this savage girl to repulse him?
What would have been her fate but for his well-directed shot?
Was not the man who had been pursuing her,
but acting after the customs of her wild people?
He would have taken her by force.
That was the only way she would have been taken
had she been left upon her own island.
That was the only kind of betrothal she knew.
It was what she expected.
He had been a fool to approach her with the soft words of civilization.
They had made her despise him.
She would have understood force and loved him for it.
Well, he would show her that he could be as primitive as any of her savage lovers.
The storm broke.
the wind became a hurricane. The Priscilla was forced to turn and flee before the anger of the elements,
so that she retraced her course of the past two days and then was blown to the north.
Stark saw nothing of Nadara during this period. At the end of 36 hours, the wind had died and the sea
was settling to its normal quiet. It was the first evening after the storm. The deck of the Priscilla,
was almost deserted. The yacht was moving slowly along, not far off the shore of one of the many
islands that dot that part of the South Seas. Nadara came on deck for a walk before retiring.
Stark and two sailors were on watch. At sight of the girl, the first officer approached her.
He spoke pleasantly as though nothing had occurred to mar their friendly relations. He talked,
He talked of the storm and pointed out the black outlines of the nearby shore,
and as he talked he led her toward the stern, out of sight of the sailors forward.
Suddenly he turned upon her and grasped her in his arms.
With brutal force he crushed her to him, covering her face with kisses.
She fought to free herself, but Stark was a strong man.
Slowly he forced her to the deck.
She beat him in the face and upon the breast, and at last, in the extreme of desperation,
she screamed for help.
Instantly he struck her a heavy blow upon the jaw.
The slender form of the girl relaxed upon the deck in unconsciousness.
Now Stark came to a sudden realization of the gravity of the thing he had done.
He knew that when Nadara regained consciousness, his perfidy would come
to the attention of Captain Burlingham, and he feared the quiet ex-naval officer more than he did the devil.
He looked over the rail. It would be an easy thing to dispose of the girl. He had only to drop her
unconscious body into the still waters below. He raised her in his arms and bore her to the rail.
The moon shone down upon her face. He looked out over the water and saw her.
the shore so close at hand.
There would be a thorough investigation, and the sailors, who had no love for him, as he well knew,
would lose no time in reporting that he had been the last to be seen with the girl.
Evidently he was in for it one way or the other.
Again he looked down into Nadara's face.
She was very beautiful.
He wanted her badly.
Slowly his glance,
to the calm waters of the ocean, and on to the quiet shoreline.
Then back to the girl.
For a moment he stood irresolute, then he stepped to the side of the cabin
where hung a life-preserver to which was attached a long line.
He put the life-preserver about Nadara, then he lowered her into the ocean.
The moment he felt her weight transferred from the lowering rope to the life-preserver,
he vaulted over the yacht's rail into the dark waters beneath her stern.
End of Part 2, Chapter 7.
Part 2, Chapter 8 of the Cave Girl by Edgar Rice Burrows.
This Libravox recording is in the public domain.
Read by Gerald Moe.
The Wild Men
Nadara did not regain consciousness until
Stark had reached shore and was dragging her out upon the beach above the surf.
For several minutes after she had opened her eyes, she had difficulty in recalling the events
that had immediately preceded Stark's attack upon her. She felt the life belt still about her,
and as Stark stooped above her to remove it, she knew that it was he, though she could not
distinguish his features. What had happened? Slowly a realization,
of the man's bold act forced itself upon her.
He had leaped overboard from the Priscilla
and swam ashore with her
rather than faced the consequences of his brutal conduct toward her.
To a girl reared within the protective influences of civilization,
Nadara's position would have seemed hopeless,
but Nadara knew not of other protection
than that afforded by her own quick wits
and the agility of her swift young muscles.
To her it would have seemed infinitely more appalling
to have been confined within the narrow limits of the yacht with this man,
for there all was strange and new.
She still had half feared and mistrusted all aboard the Priscilla,
except Thandar's father and Captain Burlingham.
But would they have protected her from Stark?
She did not know.
Among her own people, only a father, brother, or mate, protected a woman from one who sought
her against her will, and of these she had none upon the little vessel. But now it was different.
Intuitively she knew that upon a savage shore, however strange and unfamiliar it might be,
she would have every advantage over the first officer of the Priscilla.
His life had been spent close to the haunts of civilization.
He knew nothing of the woodcraft that was second nature to her.
He might perish in a land of plenty
through ignorance of where to search for food
and of what was edible and what was not.
This much, her early experience with Waldo Emerson had taught her.
When their paths had first crossed,
Waldo had been as ignorant as a newborn babe in the craft of life primeval.
Nadara had had to teach him everything.
Behind them, Nadara heard the gentle sawing of trees,
the myriad noises of the teeming jungle night, and she smiled.
It was inky black about them.
Stark had removed the life belt and placed it beneath the girl's head.
He thought her still unconscious,
perhaps dead. Now he was wringing the water from his clothes, his back toward her.
Nadara rose to her feet, noiseless as Nagula. Like a shadow, she melted into the blackness of the
jungle that fringed the shore. Careful and alert, she picked her way within the tangled mass
for a few yards. At the hole of a large tree she halted, listening. Then she was,
She made a low, weird sound with her lips, listening again for a moment after.
This she repeated thrice, and then, seemingly satisfied that no danger lurked above,
she swung herself into the low-hanging branches, quickly ascending until she found a comfortable seat
where she might rest in ease. Down upon the beach, Stark, having wrung the surplus water from his
garments, turned to examine and revive the girl if she still lived.
Even in the darkness her form had been plainly visible, against the yellow sand, but now
she was not there. Stark was dumbfounded. His eyes leaped quickly from one point to another,
yet nowhere could they discover the girl. There was the beach, the sea, and the jungle,
which had she chosen for her flight.
It did not take Stark long to guess, and immediately he turned his steps toward the shapeless,
gloomy mass that marked the forest's fringe. As he approached, he went more slowly.
The thought of entering that forbidding wood sent cold shivers creeping through him.
Could a mere girl have dared its nameless horrors? She must have, and with the decision came
new resolution. What a girl had dared, certainly he might dare.
Again he strode briskly toward the jungle. Just at its verge he heard a low, weird sound,
not a dozen paces within the black hideous tangle. It was Nadara, voicing the two notes which
some ancient forbearer of her tribe had discovered would ring an answering growl from Nagula,
and an uneasy hiss from that other arch-enemy of man,
the great slimy serpent whose sinuous coils twined threateningly above them in the branches of the trees.
Only these, Nadara feared, these and man.
So, before entering a tree at night,
it was her custom to assure herself that neither Nagula nor Koorva
lurked in the branches of the tree she had chosen,
for sanctuary. Stark beat a hasty retreat, nor did he again venture from the beach during the
balance of the long, dismal night. When dawn broke it found Nadara much refreshed by the
sleep she had enjoyed within the comparative safety of the great tree, and Stark haggard and
exhausted by a sleepless night of terror and regret. He cursed himself, the girl, and his
beastial passion, and then, as his thoughts conjured her lovely face and perfect figure before his
mind's eye, he leaped to his feet and swung briskly toward the jungle. He would find her. All that he had
sacrificed should not be in vain. He would find her and keep her. Together they would make a home upon this
tropical shore. He would get everything out of life that there was to get. He had taken but a few
few steps before he discovered, plain in the damp sand before him, the prince of Nadara's
naked feet in a well-defined trail leading toward the wood. With a smile of satisfaction and
victory, the man followed it into the maze of vegetation, dank and gloomy, even beneath
the warm light of the morning sun. By chance he stumbled directly upon Nadara. She had descended
from her tree to search for water.
They saw each other simultaneously.
The girl turned and fled farther into the forest.
Close behind her came the man.
For several hundred yards, the chase led through the thick jungle,
which terminated abruptly at the edge of a narrow rock-covered clearing,
beyond which loomed sheer precipitous cliffs,
raising their lofty heads three hundred feet above the forest.
forest. A half-smile touched Stark's lips as he saw the barrier that nature had placed in the
path of his quarry, but almost instantly it froze into an expression of horror as a slight noise
to his right attracted his attention from the girl fleeing before him. For an instant he stood
bewildered, then a quick glance toward the girl revealed her scaling the steep cliff with the agility
of a monkey, and with a cry to attract her attention, he leaped after her once more,
but this time himself the quarry. The hunter become the hunted, for after him raced a score
of painted savages, brandishing long, slim spears, or waving keen-edged parangs.
Nadara had not needed Stark's warning cry to apprise her of the proximity of the wild men.
she had seen them the instant that she cleared the jungle, and with the sight of them,
she knew that she need no longer harbor fear of the white man.
In them, though, she saw a graver danger for herself, since they, doubtless, would have
little difficulty in overhauling her in their own haunts, while she had not had much cause
for worry as to her ability to elude the white man indefinitely.
Partway up the cliffs she paused to look back.
Stark had reached the foot of the lowering escarpment,
a short distance ahead of his pursuers.
He had chosen this route because of the ease with which the girl had clambered up the rocky barrier.
But he had reckoned without taking into consideration the lifetime of practice
which lay back of Nadara's agility.
From earliest infancy, she had lived upon the faith
and within the caves of steep cliffs. Her first toddling baby footsteps had been along the edge of
narrow shelving ledges. When the man reached the cliff, however, he found confronting him an
apparently unscalable wall. He cast a frightened, appealing glance at the girl far above him.
Twice he assayed to scramble out of reach of the advancing savages, whose tattooed
faces, pendulous slit ears, and sharp, filed, blackened teeth, lent to them a more horrid aspect
than even that imparted by their murderous weapons or warlike whoops and actions.
Each time he slipped back, clutching frantically at rocky projections, and such hardy vegetation
as had found foothold in the crevices of the granite. His hands were torn and bleeding, his face
scratched in his clothing rent. And now the savages were upon him. They had seen that he was unarmed.
No need as yet for spear or parang, they would take him alive. And the girl? They had watched
her in amazement as she clambered swiftly up the steep ascent. With all their primitive accomplishments
this was beyond even them. They were a forest people and a river people. They were a forest people.
They dwelt in thatched houses, raised high upon long piles.
They knew little or nothing of the arts of the cliff-dwellers.
To them the feet of this strange white girl was little short of miraculous.
Nadara saw them seize roughly upon the terror-stricken stark.
She saw them bind his hands behind his back,
and then she saw them turn their attention once more toward herself.
Three of the warriors attempted to scale the cliff after her.
Slowly they ascended.
She smiled at their manifest fear and their awkwardness.
She need have no fear of these.
They never could reach her.
She permitted them to approach within a dozen feet of her,
and then, loosening a bit of crumbling granite,
she hurled it full at the head of the foremost.
With a yell of pain and terror he toppled backward,
those below him, the three tumbling, screaming and pawing to the rocks at the base of the cliff.
None of them was killed, though all were badly bruised, and he who had received her missile
bled profusely from a wound upon his forehead. Their fellows laughed at them. It was scant comfort
they received for being bested by a girl. Then they withdrew a short distance, and squatting in a
circle commenced a lengthy palaver. Their repeated gestures in her direction convinced Nadara that
she was the subject of their debate. Presently one of their number arose and approached the foot of the
cliff. There he harangued the girl for several minutes. When he was done, he awaited, evidently for a reply
from her. But as Nadara had not been able to understand a word of the fellow's language, she could but
shake her head.
The spokesman returned to his fellows, and once again a lengthy council was held.
During it, Nadara climbed farther aloft that she might be out of range of the slender spears.
Upon a narrow ledge she halted, gathering about her such loose bits of rock as she could dislodge
from the face of the cliff.
She would be prepared for a sudden onslaught, nor for a moment.
did she doubt the outcome of the battle.
She felt that but for the lack of food and water
she could hold this cliff face forever
against innumerable savages.
Could they climb no better than these?
But the wild men did not again attempt to storm her citadel.
Instead they leaped suddenly from their counsel
and without a glance toward her,
disappeared in the forest,
taking their prisoner with them.
Out of sight of the girl, they stationed two of their number just within the screening verdure
to capture the girl should she descend.
The others hastened parallel with the cliff until a sudden turn inland,
took them to a point from which they could again emerge into the clearing out of the side of Nadara.
Here they took immediately to a well-worn path that led back and forth upward across the face of the cliff.
Stark was dragged and prodded forward with them in their ascent.
Sharp spears and the points of keen parangues urged him to haste.
By the time the party reached the summit,
the white man was bleeding from a score of superficial wounds.
Now the party turned back along the top of the bluff
in the direction from which they had come.
Nadara, unable to fathom their reason for having abandoned the attempt
to capture her, was, however, not lulled into any feeling of false security.
She knew the cliff was the safest place for her, and yet the pangs of thirst and hunger
warned her that she must soon leave it to seek sustenance. She was about to descend to
the jungle below in search of food and water, when the faintest of movements of the earth-sweeping
creepers depending from a giant buttress tree below her, and just within the verge of the forest,
arrested her acute attention.
She knew that the movement had been caused by some animal beneath the tree, and finally,
as she watched intently for a moment or two, she described through an opening in the
wall of verdure the long feathers of an argus pheasant, with which the war-caps of the savages had been adorned.
Though she knew now that she was washed, she also knew that she could reach the top of the cliff
and possibly find both food and drink, if it chanced to be near, before the savages could overtake her.
Then she must depend upon her wits and her speed to regain the safety of the cliff ahead of them,
that they would attempt to scale the barrier at the same point at which she had climbed it, she doubted,
for she had seen that they were comparatively unaccustomed to this sort of going,
and so she guessed that if they followed her upward at all,
it would be by means of some beaten trail of which they had knowledge,
and so Nadara scaled the heights,
passing over and around obstacles that would have blanched the cheek of the hardiest mountain climber
with the ease and speed of a chamois.
At the summit she found an open,
park-like forest, and into this she plunged, running forward in quest of food and drink.
A few familiar fruits and nuts assuaged the keenest pangs of hunger,
but nowhere could she find water or signs of water.
She had travelled for almost a mile, directly inland from the coast,
when she stumbled, purely by chance, upon a little spring hidden in a leafy bower.
The cool, clear water refreshed her, imparting to her new life and energy.
After drinking her fill, she sought some means of carrying a little supply of the priceless
liquid back to her cliffside refuge, but though she searched diligently,
she could discover no growing thing which might be transformed into a vessel.
There was nothing for it, then, other than to return without the water,
trusting to her wits to find the means of eluding the savages from time to time,
as it became necessary for her to quench her thirst.
Later, she was sure she should discover some form of gourd,
or the bladder of an animal, in which she could hoard a few precious drops.
Her woodcraft, combined with her almost uncanny sense of direction,
led her directly back to the spot at which she had topped the cliff.
There was no sign of the savages.
She breathed a sigh of relief as she stepped to the edge of the forest,
and then, all about her, from behind trees and bushes, rose the main body of the wild men.
With shouts of savage glee they leaped upon her.
There was no chance for flight.
In every direction, brutal faces and murderous weapons barred her way.
With greater consideration than she had looked forward,
to, they signaled her to accompany them.
Stark was with them.
To him, slight humanity was shown.
If he lagged, a spear-point, already red with his blood,
urged him to greater speed.
But to the girl no cruelty nor indignity was shown.
In single file, the prisoners in the center of the column,
the party made its way inland.
All day they marched, until,
Stark, unused to this form of exertion, staggered and fell a dozen times in each mile.
Nadara could almost have found it in her heart to be sorry for him, had it not been for
the fact that she realized all too keenly that but for his own beastial brutality, neither of them
need have been there to be subjected to the present torture, and to be tortured by anticipation
of the horrors to come.
To the girl, it seemed that her fate must be a thousandfold more terrible
than the mere death the man was to suffer.
For that these degraded savages would let him live
seemed beyond the pale of reason.
She prayed to the God of which her Thandar had taught her
for a quick and merciful death,
yet while she prayed,
she well knew that no such boon could be
expected. She compared her captors with corth and flatfoot, with big fist and thurg,
nor did she look for greater compassion in them than in the men she had known best.
Late in the afternoon it became evident that Stark could proceed no farther unless the
savages carried him. That they had any intention of doing so was soon disproved. The first officer of
the Priscilla had fallen for the twentieth time. A dozen vicious spear-thrusts had failed to bring him
staggering and tottering to his feet as in the past. The chief of the party approached the fallen white,
kicking him in the sides and face, and at last pricking him with the sharp point of his parang.
Stark but lay an inert mass of suffering flesh and groaned. The chief grew angry.
He grasped the white man around the body and raised him to his feet,
but the moment that he released him, Stark fell to earth once more.
At last the warrior could evidently control his rage no further.
With a savage whoop, he swung his parang aloft, bringing it down full upon the neck of the prostrate white.
The head, grinning horribly, rolled to Nadara's feet.
She looked at it, lying there staring up at her out of its blank and sightless eyes,
without the slightest trace of emotion.
Nadara, the cave girl, was accustomed to death in all its most horrible and sudden forms.
She saw before her but the head of an enemy.
It was nothing to her.
Stark had only himself to thank.
The chief gathered the severed head into a bit of bark cloth,
and fastening it to the end of his spear signalled his followers to resume the journey on and on they went farther into the interior and with them went nadara born to what nameless fate she could but guess
End of Part 2, Chapter 8. Part 2, Chapter 9 of The Cave Girl by Edgar Rice Burrows.
This Libravox recording is in the public domain.
Read by Gerald Moe. Building the Boat
Two days after the earthquake that had saved Nadara from Thurg
and wiped out the people of the girl's tribe, a man moved feebly beneath
the tumbled debris from the rooftop of his clogged cavern.
It was Thandar.
The tons of rock that had toppled from above
and buried the entrance to his cave
had passed him by unscathed,
while the few pounds shaken from the ceiling
had stunned him into a long, enduring insensibility.
Slowly he regained consciousness,
but it was a long time
before he could marshal his faculties to even a slight appreciation of the catastrophe that had overwhelmed him.
Then his first thought was of Nadara.
He crawled to what had once been the entrance of his cave.
He had not as yet linked the darkness to its real cause.
He thought at night.
It had been night when he closed his eyes.
How could he guess that that had been three nights before,
or all the cruel blows that fate had struck him since he slept.
At the opening from the cave he met his first surprise and set back.
The way was blocked.
What was the meaning of it?
He tugged and pushed weakly upon the mass that barred him from escape.
Who had imprisoned him?
He recalled the vivid dream in which he had seen Nadara stolen away by Thurg.
The recollection sent him frantically at the pile of shattered rock and loose debris which choked the doorway.
To his chagrin he found himself too weak to direct any long-sustained effort against the obstacle.
It occurred to him that he must have been injured.
Whoever imprisoned him must first have beaten him.
He felt of his head.
Yes, there was a great gash, but his touch told him that,
it was not a new one. How long then had he been imprisoned? As he sat pondering this thing,
he became aware of the gnawing of hunger and the craving of thirst within his slowly awakening
body. The sensations were almost painful, so much so that they forced him to a realization of the
fact that he must have been without food or water for a considerable time. Again he has
assailed the mass that held him prisoner, and as he burrowed slowly into it the truth dawned upon
him, he recalled the rumblings of the great Nagula that had frightened Nadara the night of the
council. A terrific quake had done this thing. Thandar shuddered, as he thought of Nadara,
was she too imprisoned in her cave, or had the worst happened to her? Frantically now, he tore at the
close-packed rubble. But he soon discovered that not in ill-directed haste lay his means of escape.
Slowly and carefully, piece by piece, he must remove the broken rock until he had tunneled through
to the outer world. Reason told him that he was not deeply buried, for the fact that he lived
and could breathe was sufficient proof that fresh air was finding its way through the debris,
which it could not have done did the stuff lie before the cave in any considerable thickness.
Weak as he was, he could work but slowly,
so that it was several hours later before he caught the first glimpse of daylight beyond the obstacle.
After that he progressed more rapidly,
and presently he crawled through a small opening to view the wreckage of the shattered cliff.
A flock of vultures rose from their hideous feast as the sight of Thandar disturbed them.
The man shuddered as he looked down upon the grisly things from which they had risen.
For getting his hunger and his thirst, he scrambled up over the tortured cliff face to where
Naderas' cave had been. Its mouth was buried as his had been. Again he set to work,
but this time it was easier.
When at last he had opened away within,
he hesitated for fear of the blighting sorrow that awaited him.
At last, nerving himself to the ordeal,
he crawled within the cave that had been Nadaras,
groping about in the darkness,
expecting each moment to feel the body of his loved one cold in death,
he at last covered the entire floor.
There was no body within.
Hastily he made his way to the face of the cliff again,
and then commenced a horrible and pitiful search
among the ghastly remnants of men and women
that lay scattered about among the tumbled rocks.
But even here his search was vain,
for the ghoulish scavengers had torn from their prey
every shred of their former likenesses.
Weak, exhausted, sorrow-ridden and broken,
Thandar dragged himself painfully to the little river.
Here he quenched his thirst and bathed his body.
After, he sought food,
and then he crawled to a hole he knew of in the riverbank,
and curling up upon the dead grasses within,
slept the sun around.
Refreshed and strengthened,
by his sleep and the food that he had taken, Thandar emerged from his dark warren with renewed hope.
Nadara could not be dead. It was impossible. She must have escaped and be wandering about the island.
He would search for her until he found her. But as day followed day and still no sign of Nadara
or any other living human being, he became painfully convinced that he alone of the inhabitants,
inhabitants of the island had survived the cataclysm.
The thought of living on through a long life without her
cast him into the blackest pit of despair.
He reproached heaven for not having taken him as well.
For without Nadara, life was not worth the living.
With the passage of time, his grief grew more rather than less acute.
As it increased, so too increased the horror of his loneliness.
the island became a hated thing, life a mockery.
The chances that a vessel would touch the shore again during his lifetime seemed remote indeed,
unless his father sent out a relief party, but in his despair he did not even hope for such a contingency.
He would not take his own life, though the temptation was great,
but he courted death in every form that the savage island owned.
He slept out upon the ground at night.
He sought Nagula in his lair,
and armed only with his light lance,
he leaped to close quarters with every one of the great cats he could find.
The wild boars, often as formidable as Nagula himself,
were hunted now as they never had been hunted before.
Thandar lived high those days, and many were the panther pelts that lined his new-found cave in the cliff beside the sea.
The same cliff in which Nadara had found shelter, and from whence she had gone away with the search party from the Priscilla.
One day as Thandar was returning from the beach, where he often went to scan the horizon for a sail,
he saw something moving at the foot of his cliff.
Thandar dropped behind a bush watching.
A moment later the thing moved again,
and Thandar saw that it was a man.
Instantly he sprang to his feet and ran forward.
The days that he had been without human companionship
had seemed to drag themselves into as many weary months.
Now he had reached the pinnacle of lonely,
from which he would gladly have embraced the devil had he come in human guise.
Thandar ran noiselessly.
He was almost upon the man, a great hairy brute, before the fellow was aware of his presence.
At first the fellow turned to run, but when he saw that Thandar was alone, he remained to fight.
"'I am roof,' he cried, "'and I can kill you.'
The familiar primitive greeting no longer raised Thandar's temperature or filled him with the fire of battle.
He wanted companionship now, not a quarrel.
I am Thandar, he replied.
The slow-witted, hulking brute recognized him and stepped back a pace.
He was not so keen to fight now that he had learned the identity of the man who faced him.
he had seen Thandar in battle.
He had witnessed Thurg's defeat at the hands of this smooth-skinned stranger.
"'Let us not fight,' continued Thandar.
"'We are alone upon the island.
I have seen no other than you since the great Nagula came forth and destroyed the people.
Let us be friends hunting together in peace.
Otherwise one of us must kill the other,
and thereafter live always alone until death releases him from this terrible solitude.
Roof peered over Thandar's shoulder toward the wood behind him.
Are you alone? he asked.
Yes, have I not told you that all were killed but you and I?
All were not killed, replied Roof, but I will be friends with Thandar.
We will hunt together and cave together.
Ruf and Thandar are brothers.
He stooped, and gathering a handful of grass, advanced toward the American.
Thandar did likewise, and when each had taken the peace-offering of the other
and rubbed it upon his forehead, the ceremony of friendship was complete.
Simple but nonetheless effectual, for each knew that the other would rather die than
disregard the primitive pack.
You said that all were not killed, Roof, said Thandar, the ceremony over.
What do you mean?
All were not killed by the great Nagula, replied the bad man.
Thurg was not killed, nor was she who was Thandar's mate, she whom Thurg would have stolen.
What?
Thandar almost screamed the question.
Nadara not dead?
Look, said Roof, and he led the word.
and he led the way to the foot of the cliff.
See?
Yes, replied Thandar, I had noticed that body, but what of it?
It was Thurg, explained Roof.
He sought to reach your mate, who had taken refuge in that cave far above us.
Then came some strange men who made a great noise with sticks, and Thurg fell dead.
The loud noise had killed him from a great distance.
Then came the strange men, and she whom you call Nadara went away with them.
"'In which direction?' cried Thandar.
"'Where did they take her?'
They took her to the strange cliff in which they dwelt, the one in which they came.
Never saw man such a thing as this cliff.
It floated upon the face of the water.
About its face were many tiny caves, but the people did not come out of these,
they came from the top of the cliff,
and clambering down the sides
floated ashore in hollow things of wood.
On top of the cliff were two trees without leaves,
and only very short, straight branches.
When the cliff went away,
black smoke came out of it,
a short black stump of a tree between the two trees.
It was a very wonderful thing to see,
but the most wonderful of all were the noise sticks that killed Thurg and Nogula a long way off.
Not half of Roof's narrative did Thandar hear.
Through his brain roared and thundered a single mighty thought.
Nadara lives, Nadara lives.
Life took on a new meaning to him now.
He trembled at the thought of the chances he had been taking.
Now, indeed, must he live.
He leaped up and down, laughing and shouting.
He threw his arms about the astonished roof, whirling the troglodyte about in a mad waltz.
Nadara lives!
Nadara lives!
Once again the sun shone, the birds sang,
Nature was her old, happy, carefree self.
Nadara was alive and among civilized men, but then came a doubt.
Did Nadara go willingly with these strangers?
He asked Roof, or did they take her by force?
They did not take her by force, replied Roof.
They talked with her for a time,
and then she took the hand of one of the men in hers,
stroking it, and he placed his arm about her.
Afterward they walked slowly to the same,
edge of the great water, where they got into the strange things that had brought them to the land,
and returned to their floating cliff. Presently the smoke came out, as I have told you,
and the cliff went away toward the edge of the world. But they are all dead now.
What? yelled Thandar. Yes, I saw the cliff sink very slowly when it was a long way off,
until only the smoke was coming out of the water.
Thandar breathed a sigh of relief.
Point, he said, to the place where the cliff sank beneath the water.
Roof pointed almost due north.
There, he said.
For days Thandar puzzled over the possible identity of the ship and the men
with whom Nadara had gone so willingly.
Doubtless some kindly mariner, hearing her,
her story had taken her home away from the terrors and the loneliness of this unhappy island.
And now the man chafed to be after her that he might search the world for his lost love.
To wait for a ship appeared quite impossible to the impatient Thandar, for he knew that a ship
might never come. There was but one alternative, and had Waldo Emerson been a less impractical
man in the world to which he had been born, he would have cast aside that single alternative
as entirely beyond the pale of possibility. But Waldo was only practical and wise in the savage ways
of the primitive life to which circumstance had forced him to revert. And so he decided upon as
foolhardy and hair-brained adventure as the mind of man might conceive.
It was no less a thing than to build a boat and set out upon the broad Pacific in search of a civilized port or a vessel that might bear him to such.
To Waldo it seemed quite practical.
He realized, of course, that the venture would be fraught with peril,
but would it not be better to die in an attempt to find his Nadara than to live on forever in the hopelessness of this forgotten land?
and so he set to work to build a boat.
He had no tools but his crude knife and the razor,
the sailor of the Sally Corwith, had given him,
so it was quite impossible for him to construct a dugout.
The possibilities that lie in fire did not occur to him.
Finally, he hit upon what seemed the only feasible form of construction.
With his knife he cut long, client,
saplings and lesser branches. These he fashioned into the framework of a boat.
Roof helped him keenly interested in this new work. The ribs were fastened to the keel and
gunwale by thongs of panther skin, and when the framework was completed, panther skins were
stretched over it. The edges of the skin were sewn together with threads of gut, as tightly as
Thandar and roof could pull them. A mast was rigged well forward, and another panther skin from which
the fur had been scraped was fitted as a sail, square-rigged. For rudder, Thandar fashioned a long,
slender sapling, looped at one end, and the loop covered with skin laced tightly on. This, he
figured, would serve both as rudder and paddle, as necessity demanded.
At last all was done.
Together Thandar and Roof carried the light, crude skiff to the ocean.
They waited out beyond the surf,
and upon the crest of a receding swell they launched the thing,
Thandar leaping in as it floated upon the water.
The sail was not taken along for this trial.
Thandar merely wished to know that his craft would float,
and right side up.
For a moment it did so, until the sea rushing in at the loose seams filled it with water.
Fandar and Roof had great difficulty in dragging it out again upon the beach.
Roof now would have given up, but not so Fandar.
It is true that he was slightly disheartened, for he had set great store upon the success of his little vessel.
After they had carried the frail thing beyond high tide,
Thandar sat down upon the ground,
and for an hour he did not but stare at the leaky craft.
Then he arose, and calling to Roof, led him into the forest.
For a mile they walked,
and then Thandar halted before a tree
from the side of which a thick and sticky stream was slowly oozing.
Thandar had brought along a gourd, and now with a small branch he commenced transferring the mass from the side of the tree to the gourd.
Roof helped him.
In an hour the gourd was filled.
Then they returned to the skiff.
Leaving the gourd there, Thandar and Roof walked to a clump of heavy jungle grasses,
not far from the cliff where their cave lay.
Here Thandar gathered a great armful of the yellow, ripened grass, telling Roof to do likewise.
This they took back to the skiff, where, by rolling it assiduously between their hands and pounding it with stones,
they reduced it to a mass of soft, tough fiber.
Now Thandar showed Roof how to twist this fiber into a loose, fluffy rope,
and when he had him well started, he dobed the rope with the rubbery fluid he had filched from the tree,
and with a sharp stick tucked it in every seam and crevice of the skiff.
It took the better part of two days to accomplish this,
and when it was done and the gourd empty, the two men returned to the tree and refilled it.
This time they built a fire upon their return to the skiff.
Roof spinning a hard wood splinter rapidly between toes and fingers and a little mass of
tinder that lay in a hollowed piece of wood. Presently a thin spiral of smoke arose from the
tinder, growing denser for a moment until of a sudden it broke into flame. The men piled twigs
and branches upon the blaze until the fire was well started. Then Thandar, taking a sudden,
the ball of the viscous matter from the gourd, heated it in the flames, immediately dobbing
the melting mass upon the outside of the skiff. In this way, slowly and with infinite patience,
the two at last succeeded in coating the entire outer surface of the canoe with a waterproof
substance that might defy the action of water almost indefinitely. For three days, Thandar
the coating dry, and then the craft was given another trial. The man's heart was in his throat,
as the canoe floated upon the crest of a great wave and he leaped into it. But a moment later
he shouted in relief and delight. The thing floated like a cork, nor was there the slightest leak
discernible. For half an hour Thandar paddled about the harbor, and then he returned for the sail.
This, too, though rather heavy and awkward, worked admirably, and the balance of the day he spent in sailing, even venturing out into the ocean.
Much of the time he paddled, for Waldo Emerson knew more of the galleys of ancient Greece than he did of sails or sailing,
so that for the most part he sailed with the wind, paddling when he wished to travel in another direction.
but withal his attempt filled him with delight,
and he could scarce wait to be off towards civilization and Nadara.
The next two days were spent in collecting food and water,
which Thandar packed in numerous gourds,
sealing the mouths with the rubbery substance
such as he had used to waterproof his craft.
The flesh of wild hog and deer and bird
he cut in narrow strips and dried over a slow fire.
In this work Roof assisted him,
and at last all was in readiness for the venture.
The day of his departure dawned bright and clear.
A gentle south wind gave promise of great speed toward the north.
Thandar was wild with hope and excitement.
Roof was to accompany him,
but at the last moment,
the nerve of the troglodyte failed him, and he ran away and hid in the forest.
It was just as well, thought Thandar, for now his provisions would last twice as long.
And so he set out upon his perilous adventure, braving the mighty Pacific in a frail and
unseaworthy cockle-shell with all the assurance and confidence that is ever born of ignorance.
End of Section 2, Chapter 9.
Part 2, Chapter 10, of the Cave Girl by Edgar Rice Burroughs.
This Libravox recording is in the public domain.
Read by Gerald Moe.
The Headhunters
Nature, so far, had been kind to Waldo Emerson Smith-Jones.
No high winds or heavy seas had assailed him,
and he had been upon the water for three days now.
The wind had held steadily out of the south, varying but a few points during this time,
but even so, Waldo Emerson was commencing to doubt and to worry.
His supply of water was running dangerously low,
his food supply would last but a few days longer,
and as yet he had sighted no sail nor seen any land.
Furthermore, he had not the remotest conception of how he might retrace his way to the island he had just quitted.
He could only sail before the wind.
Should the wind veer around into the north, he might, by chance, be blown back to the island.
Otherwise, he could never reach it.
And he was beginning to wonder if he had not been a trifle to precipitate in his abandonment of land.
In common with most other landsmen,
Waldo Emerson had little conception of the vastness of the broad reaches of unbroken water wildernesses
that roll in desolate immensity over three quarters of the globe.
His recollection of maps pictured the calm and level blue dotted,
especially in the South Seas, with many islands.
Their names often were quite reassuring.
He recollected, among others, such as the Society Islands, the Friendly Islands, Christmas Island,
he hoped that he would land upon one of these.
There were so many islands upon the maps, and they seemed so close together that he was not
a little mystified that he had failed to cite several hundred long before this.
And ships, it appeared incredible that he should have seen not a single sail.
He distinctly recalled the atlas he had examined prior to embarking upon his health crews.
The Pacific had been lined in all directions with the routes of long-established steamer lanes,
and in between Waldo had felt, the ocean must be dotted with the innumerable tramps
that come and go between the countless ports that fringe the major sea.
and yet for three days nothing had broken the dull monotony of the vast circle of which he was always the center and the sole occupant.
In three days, thought Waldo, he must have covered an immense distance.
And three more days dragged their weary lengths.
The wind had died to the faintest of breezes.
The canoe was just making headway, and that was all.
The water was gone, the food nearly so.
Waldo was suffering from lack of the former.
The pitiless sun beating down upon him increased his agony.
He stretched his panther skin across the stern
and hid beneath it from the torrid rays.
And there he lay until darkness brought relief.
During the night the wind sprang up again,
but this time from the west.
It rose, and with it rose the sea.
The man, clinging to his crude steering blade,
struggled to keep the light craft straight before the wind,
which was now howling fearfully while great waves,
hungry and wide jawed, raced after him like a pack of ravenous wolves.
Thandar knew that the unequal struggle against the mighty forces of the elements
could not endure for long.
It seemed that each fierce gust of brutal wind
must tear his frail boat to shreds,
and yet it was the very lightness of the thing that saved it,
for it rode upon the crests of waves,
blown forward at terrific velocity
like a feather before the hurricane.
In Thandar's heart was no terror,
only regret that he might never again see his mother,
his father or his Nadara.
Yet the night wore on and still he fled before the storm.
The sky was overcast, the darkness was impenetrable.
He imagined all about him still the same wide, tenetless circle of water,
only now storm torn and perpendicular and black
instead of peacefully horizontal and soothingly blue-green.
And then, even as he was thinking this, there rose before him a thunderous booming,
loud above the frenzied bedlam of the storm.
His boat was lifted high in air to dive head foremost into what might be a bottomless abyss
for all Fandar knew.
But it was not bottomless.
The canoe struck something and stopped suddenly, pitching Fandar out into a boiling maelstrom.
A great wave picked him up, carrying him with race-horse velocity within its crest.
He felt himself hurled pitilessly upon smooth, hard sand.
The water tried to drag him back, but he fought with toes and fingers, clutching at the
surface of the stuff upon which he had been dropped.
Then the wave abandoned him and raced swiftly back into the sea.
Thandar was exhausted, but he knew that he must crawl up out of the way of the surf, or be dragged back by the next roller.
What he had searched for in vain through six long days, he had run down in the midst of a Stygian night.
He had found land.
Or, to be more explicit, land had got in front of him, and he had run into it.
He had commenced to wonder if some terrible convulsion of nature had not swallowed up all the land in the world,
leaving only a waste of desolate water.
He forgot his hunger and his thirst in the happiness of the knowledge that once more he was upon land.
He wondered a little what land it might be.
He hoped that dawn would reveal the chimneys and steeples of a nearby city,
and then, exhausted, he fell into a deep sleep.
It was the sun shining down into his upturned face that awoke him.
He was lying upon his back beside a clump of bushes a little way above the beach.
He was about to rise and survey the new world into which fate and a hurricane had hurled him
when he heard a familiar sound upon the opposite side of his bush.
It was the movement of an animal creeping through long grass.
Thandar, the caveman, came noiselessly to his hands and knees,
peering cautiously through the intervening network of branches.
What he saw sent his hand groping for his wooden sword with its fire-hardened point.
There, not five paces from him, was a man going cautiously upon all fours.
It was the most horrible appearing man that Fandar had ever seen.
Even Thurg appeared lovely by comparison.
The creature's ears were split and heavy ornaments had dragged them down
until the lobes rested upon its shoulders.
The face was terribly marked with cicatrices and tattooing.
The teeth were black and pointed.
A headdress of long feathers waved and nodded
above the hideous face.
There was much tattooing upon the arms and legs and abdomen.
The breasts were circled with it.
In a belt about the waist lay a sword in its scabbard.
In the man's hand was a long spear.
The warrior was creeping stealthily upon something at Thandar's left.
The latter looked in the direction the other's savage gaze was bent.
Through the bushes he could barely.
discern a figure moving toward them along the edge of the beach.
The warrior had passed him now, and Thandar stood erect the better to obtain a view of the
fellow's quarry.
Now he saw it plainly, a man strangely garbed in many colors.
A yellow jacket, soiled and torn, covered the upper part of his body.
Strange designs, very elaborate, were embroidered upon the garment,
which reached barely to the fellow's waist.
Beneath was a red sash in which were stuck a long pistol and a wicked-looking knife.
Baggy blue trousers reached to the bare ankles and feet.
A strip of crimson cloth wound around the head,
completed the strange garmature.
The features of the man were Mongolian.
Vandar could see the warrior pause,
as it became evident that the other was approaching direct,
toward his place of concealment, but at the last moment the unconscious quarry turned sharply to his
right down upon the beach. He had discovered the wreck of Thandar's canoe and was going to investigate
it. The move placed Thandar almost between the two. Suddenly the native rose to his feet, his victim's
back was toward him. Grasping his spear in his left hand, he drew his wicked-looking sword
and emerged cautiously from the bushes. At the same moment, the man upon the beach wheeled quickly
as though suddenly warned of his danger. The native, discovered, leaped forward with raised sword.
The man snatched his pistol from his belt, leveled it at the onrushing warrior, and pulled the trigger.
was a futile click. That was all. The weapon had missed fire. Instantly a third element was projected
into the fray. Thandar, seeing a more direct link with civilization in the strangely appareled
Mongol than in the naked savage, leaped to the assistance of the former. Withdrawn sword,
he rushed out upon the savage. The wild man turned at Thandar's cry, which he had given to divert
the fellow's attention from his now almost helpless victim.
Thandar knew nothing of the finer points of swordplay.
He was ignorant of the wickedness of a Malay Parang,
the keen curved sword of the headhunter,
so he rushed in upon the savage
as he would have upon one of Thurg's near men.
The very impetuosity of his attack awed the native.
For a moment he stood his ground,
and then, with a cry of death,
terror turned to flee, but he had failed to turn soon enough. Thandar was upon him. The sharp point
entered his back beneath the left shoulder blade, and behind it were the weight and sinews of the
caveman. With a shriek the savage lunged forward, clutching at the cruel point that now protruded
from his breast. When he touched the earth, he was dead. Thandar drew his sword from the body of the
headhunter and turned toward the man he had rescued. The latter was approaching, talking excitedly.
It was evident that he was thanking Thandar, but no word of his strange tongue could the American
understand. Thandar shook his head to indicate that he was unfamiliar with the other's language,
and then the latter dropped into Pigeon English, which, while almost as unintelligible to the cultured Bostonian,
still contained the battered remnants of some few words with which he was familiar.
Thandard depreciated his act by means of gestures,
immediately following these with signs to indicate that he was hungry and thirsty.
The stranger evidently understood him, for he motioned him to follow,
leading the way back along the beach in the direction from which he had come.
Before starting, however, he pointed toward the wreck of Thurton,
Thandar's canoe and then toward Thandar, nodding his head questioningly, as if to ask if the
boat belonged to the caveman. Around the end of the promontory, they came upon a little cove beside the
beach of which Thandar saw a camp of nearly a score of men similar in appearance to his guide.
These were preparing breakfast beside the partially completed hull of a rather large boat they
seemed to have been building. At sight of Thandar they looked their astonishment, but after hearing
the story of their fellow, they greeted the caveman warmly, furnishing him with food and water in
abundance. For three days Thandar worked with these men upon their craft, picking up their
story slowly with a slow acquirement of a bowing acquaintance with the bastard tongue they used
when speaking with him.
He soon became aware of the fact
that fate had thrown him
among a band of pirates.
There were Chinese,
Japanese, and Malays
among them,
the offscorings of the South Seas,
men who had become discredited
even among the villainous pirates
of their own lands,
and had been forced to join their lots
in this remoter and less lucrative field,
under an unhung ruffian,
Sao Ming, the Chinaman whose life Thandar had saved.
He also learned that the storm that had cast him upon this shore
nearly a month before had demolished their prahu,
and what with the building of another
and numerous skirmishes with the savages,
they had had a busy time of it.
Only yesterday, while a party of them had been hunting a mile or two inland,
they had been attacked by savages who had killed two and captured one of their number.
They told Thandar that these savages were the most ferocious of headhunters,
but like the majority of their kind, preferred ambushing an unwary victim
to meeting him in fair fight in the open.
Thandar did not doubt but that the latter mode of warfare would have been entirely to the liking of his piratical friends,
for never in his life had he dreamed, even, of so ferocious and warlike a band
as was comprised in this villainous and bloodthirsty aggregation.
But the constant nervous tension under which they had worked,
never knowing at what instant an arrow or a lance would leap from the shades of the jungle,
to pierce them in the back, had reduced them to a state of fear
that only a speedy departure from the island could conquer.
Their boat was almost completed.
Two more days would see them safely launched upon the ocean,
and Sal Ming had promised Thandar
that he would carry him to a civilized port
from which he could take a steamer on his return to America.
Late in the afternoon of the third day
since his arrival among the pirates,
the men were suddenly startled
by the appearance of an exhausted and blood-smeared apparition amongst them.
From the nearby jungle, the man had staggered to fall
when halfway across the clearing, spent.
It was Balloon, he who had been captured by the headhunters
the day before Thandar had been cast upon the shore.
Revived with food and water, the fellow told a most extraordinary tale.
From the meager scraps that were afterward translated into pigeon English for Thandar,
the Bostonian learned that balloon had been dragged far inland to a village of considerable size.
Here he had been placed in a room of one of the long houses to await the pleasure of the chief.
It was hinted that he was to be tortured before his head was removed to grace the rafters of the chief's palace.
The remarkable portion of his tale
related to a strange temple
to which he had been dragged
and thrown at the feet of a white goddess.
Sal Ming and the other pirates
were much mystified by this part of the story,
for Balloon insisted that the goddess was white
with a mass of black hair
and that her body was covered by the pelt
of a magnificent black panther.
Though Sal Ming pointed out
that there were no panthers upon this island,
balloon could not be shaken.
He had seen with his own eyes, and he knew.
Furthermore, he argued,
there were no white goddesses upon the island,
and yet the woman he had seen was white.
When this strange tale was retold to Thandar,
he could not but recall that Nadara had worn a black panther skin,
but of course it could not be Nadara.
That was impossible.
But yet he asked for a further description of the goddess, the color of her eyes and hair, the proportions of her body, her height.
To all these questions, Balloon gave replies that but caused Thandar's excitement to wax stronger.
And then came the final statement that set him in a frenzy of hope and apprehension.
Upon her left hand was a great diamond, said Balloon.
Thandar turned toward Salming.
I go inland to the temple, he said, to see who this white goddess may be.
If you wait two days for me and I return, you shall have as much gold as you ask in payment.
If you do not wait, repair my canoe and hide it in the bushes where the man hid who would have killed you but for Thandar.
I shall wait three days, replied Salming, nor will I take a day.
a single fun and pay. You saved the life of Sal Ming. That is not soon to be forgotten.
I would send men with you, but they would not go. They are afraid of the headhunters.
Two, will I repair your canoe against your coming after the third day? But, and he shrugged,
you will not come upon the third day, nor upon the fourth, nor ever, Thandar. It is better that you
forget the foolish story of the frightened balloon and come away from this accursed land with
Sao Ming. But Thandar would not relinquish his intention, and so he parted with the pirates,
after receiving from Balloon explicit directions for his journey toward the mysterious
temple and the white goddess who might be Nadara, and yet who could not be.
Straight into the tangled jungle he plunged, carrying a little bit of the tangled jungle, carrying
the spear and the parang of the headhunter he had killed, and in the string about his loins,
one of the long pistols of a dead pirate. This latter, Salming, had forced upon him with a supply of
ammunition. End of Part 2, Chapter 10. Part 2, Chapter 11 of the Cave Girl by Edgar Rice
Burroughs. This Libra Box recording is in the public domain.
read by Gerald Moe
The Rescue
It was dusk of the second day
when Thandar,
following the directions given him by balloon,
came to the edge of the little clearing
within which rose the dingy outlines
of many long houses raised upon piles.
Before the village ran a river,
many times had Thandar crossed and recrossed this stream,
for he had become lost twice upon the way
and had to return partway each time to pick up his trail.
In the center of the village,
the man could see the outlines of a loftier structure
rearing its head above those of the others.
As darkness fell,
Thandar crept closer toward his goal,
the large building which Balloon had described as the temple.
Beneath the high-raised houses, the caveman crept, disturbing pigs and chickens as he went,
but their noise was no uncommon thing, and rather than being a menace to his safety, it safeguarded him,
for it hid the noise of his own advance.
At last he came beneath a house nearest the temple.
The moon was full and high.
Her brilliant light flooded the open spaces,
between the buildings, casting into black darkness the shadows beneath.
In one of these, Thandar lurked.
He saw that the temple was guarded,
before its only entrance squatted two warriors.
How was he to pass them?
He moved to the end of the shadow of the house beneath which he spied,
as far from the guards as possible,
but still discovery seemed certain,
were he to attempt to rush across the intervening space.
He was at a loss as to what next to do.
It seemed foolish to risk all now upon a bold advance.
The time for such a risk would be when he had found the goddess
and learned if she were Nadara or another.
But how might he cross that strip of moonlight
and enter the temple past the two guards without risk?
He moved silently to the far end of the building, in the shadows of which he watched.
For some time he stood looking across at his goal, so near and yet seemingly infinitely farther
from attainment than the day he had left the coast in search of it.
He noted the long poles stuck into the ground at irregular intervals about the structure.
He wondered at the significance of the rude carving upon them, of the barbaric capitals sometimes topped by the headdress of a savage warrior, again by a dried and grinning skull, or perhaps the rudely chiselled likeness of a hideous human face.
Upon many of the poles were hung shields, weapons, clothing, and earthenware vessels, one especially,
was so weighted down by its heterogeneous burden that it leaned drunkenly against the eaves of the temple.
Thandar's eye followed it upward to where it touched the crudely shingled roof. The suggestion was
sufficient. Where his eye had climbed, he would climb. There was only the moonlight to make the
attempt perilous, if the clouds would but come. But there was no indication of clouds in the star-shot
sky. He looked toward the guards. They lolled at the opposite end of the temple, only one of them
being visible. The other was hidden by the angle of the building. The back of the fellow whom
Thandar could see was turned toward the caveman. If they remained thus for a moment,
he could reach the roof unnoticed.
But then there was the danger of discovery from one of the other buildings.
An occasional whiff of tobacco smoke told him that some of the men were still awake
upon the verandas where most of the youths and bachelors slept.
Thandar crawled to where he could see the only veranda
which directly faced the portion of the temple he had chosen for his attempted entrance.
For an hour he watched the rising and falling glow of the cigarettes of two of the native men,
and listened to the low hum of their conversation.
The hour seemed to drag into an eternity,
but at last the glowing butt of first one cigarette and then another
was flicked over into the grass, and silence reigned upon the veranda.
For half an hour longer, Thandar would be able.
The guards before the temples still squatted as before, the one Thandar could see seemed to have fallen asleep, for his head drooped forward upon his breast.
The time had come. There was no need of further delay or reconnaissance. If he was to be discovered, that would be the end of it,
and it would not profit him one iota to know a second or so in advance of the alarm that he had.
had been detected. So he did not waste time and stealthy advance, or in much looking this way and
that. Instead, he moved swiftly, though silently, directly across the open, moonlit space to the
foot of the leaning pole. He did not cast a glance behind, nor to the right nor left. His whole
attention was riveted upon the thing in hand.
Andar had scaled the rickety toppling saplings of the cliff-dwellers for so long that this pole offered no greater difficulties to him than would an ordinary staircase to you or me.
First he tested it with eyes and hands to know that it rested securely at the top and that beneath his weight it would not move noisily out of its present position.
Assured that it seemed secure, Thandar ran up it with the noiseless salarity of a cat.
Gingerly he stepped upon the roof, not knowing the manner of its construction,
which might be weak thatching that would give beneath him and precipitate him into the interior beneath.
To his surprise and consternation, he found that the roof was of wood,
and quite as solid as one could imagine.
It had been his plan to enter the temple from above,
but now it seems that he was to be thwarted,
for he could not hope to cut silently through a wooden roof
with his prang in the few hours that intervened before dawn.
He stooped to examine the roof minutely with eyes and fingers.
The moonlight was brilliant.
In it he could see quirk.
quite well. He pulled away the thin palm-front thatch. Beneath were shingles hand-hewn
from Billion. In each was a small square hole through which was past a strip of Rattan that bound
the shingle to the frame of the roof. Thandar lifted away the that thatching over a little space
some two feet square. Then he inserted the point of his keen
parang beneath a ratan tie string, and an instant later had lifted aside a shingle.
Another and another followed the first until an opening in the roof had been made large enough
to easily admit his body. Thandar leaned over and peered into the darkness beneath. He could see
nothing. His own body was between the moon and the hole in the roof, shutting out the rays of the
satellite from the interior. The man lowered his legs cautiously over the edge of the hole.
Feeling about, his feet came in contact with a rafter. A moment later, his whole body had
disappeared within the temple. Clinging to the edge of the hole with one hand, Thandar squatted
upon the rafter above the temple floor. Now that his body no longer clogged the aperture in the
roof, the moonlight poured through it, throwing a brilliant flood upon a portion of the floor
at the opposite side of the interior. The balance was feebly lighted by the diffused moonlight.
The temple seemed to consist of a single large room. In the center was a raised platform,
and also about the walls. From the rafters hung baskets containing human skulls. One
swung directly in the moonlight beneath Thandar. He could see its grisly contents plainly.
His eyes followed the moonlight toward the area which it touched upon the far side of the room.
It reminded Waldo Emerson of a spotlight thrown from the gallery of a theater upon the stage.
Directly in the center of the light, a woman lay asleep upon the platform. Thandar's heart stood
still. About her figure was wrapped the glossy hide of Nagula. Over one bare, brown arm
billowed a wealth of thick black hair, fine as silk. Upon the third finger of the left hand
blazed a large solitaire. The woman's face was turned toward the wall, but Thandar knew that he
could not be mistaken. It was Nadara. From the rafter upon which,
he squatted to the floor below was not over twelve or fifteen feet. Thandar swung downward,
clinging to the rafter with his hands, and dropped, cat-like, upon his naked feet to the floor below.
The almost noiseless descent was sufficient, however, to awaken the sleeper. With the quickness
of a panther she swung around and was upon her feet, facing the man.
almost at the instant he alighted. The moonlight was now full upon her face. Thandar rushed forward to
take her in his arms. Nadara, he whispered. Thank God. The girl shraigraned back. She recognized the
voice and the figure, but her Thandar was dead. How could it be that he had returned from death?
She was frightened. The man saw the evidence.
terror of her action and paused.
What is the matter, Nadara? he asked.
Don't you know me?
Don't you know Thandar?
Thandar is dead, she whispered.
The man laughed.
In a few words he explained that he had been stunned but not killed by the earthquake.
Then he came to her side and took her in his arms.
Do I feel like a dead man?
He asked.
She put her arms.
arms about his neck and drew his face down to hers. She was sobbing. Thandar's back was toward the doorway
of the temple. Nadara was facing it. As she raised her eyes to his again, her face went deadly white,
and she dragged and pushed him suddenly cut of the brilliant patch of moonlight.
The guard, she whispered, I just saw something move beyond the door.
Thandar stepped behind one of the tree trunks that supported the roof, looking toward the entrance.
Yes, there was a man even now coming into the temple. His eyes were wide with surprise as he glanced
upward toward the hole in the roof. Then he looked in the direction of the platform upon which
Nadara had been sleeping. When he saw that it was empty, he ran back to the doorway and called his
companion. As he did so, Thandar grasped Nadara's hand and drew her around the opposite side of the
temple, where the shadows were blackest, toward the doorway. They had reached the end of the room
when the two warriors came running in, jabbering excitedly. One of them had passed halfway across
the temple, and Thandar and Nadara had almost reached the door when the second savage caught
sight of them. With a cry of warning to his companion, he turned upon them with drawn
Perang. As the fellow rushed forward, Thandar drew the pistol the pirates had given him,
and fired point-blank at the fellow's breast. With a howl, the man staggered back and collapsed
upon the floor. Then his fellow rushed to the attack. Thandar had no time to reload. He
handed the weapon to Nadara.
In the pouch at my right
side are cartridges, he
said. Get out several of
them, and when I can, I will
reload. As he spoke, they had been
edging toward the doorway.
From the street beyond,
they could already hear excited
voices, raised in questioning.
The shot had aroused
the village. Now
the fellow with the parang was upon
them. Thandar was
clumsy with the unaccustomed weapon, with which he tried to meet the attack of the skilled savage.
There could have been but one outcome to the unequal struggle, had not Nandara, always quick-witted
and resourceful, snatched a long spear from the temple wall.
As she dragged it down, there fell with it a clattering skull that broke upon the floor between
the fighters.
A howl of dismay and rage broke from the lips of the headhunter.
This was sacrilege.
The Holy of Holies had been profaned.
With renewed ferocity, he leaped to close quarters with Thandar,
but at the same instant, Nadara lunged the sharp-pointed spear into his side,
his guard dropped, and Thandar's parang fell full upon his skull.
"'Come,' cried Nadara,
"'make your escape the way you came.
There is no hope for you if you remain.
I will tell them that the two guards fought between themselves for me,
that one killed the other and that I shot the victor to save myself.
They will believe me.
I will tell them that I have always had the pistol hidden beneath my robe.
"'Good-bye, my Thandar.
We cannot both escape.
If you remain, we may both die.
You certainly.
Thandar shook his head vehemently.
We shall both go, or both die, he replied.
Nadara pressed his hand.
I am glad, was all that she said.
The savages were pouring from their long houses,
the street before the temple was filling with them,
to attempt to escape in that direction.
would have been but suicidal.
Is there no other exit? asked Thandar.
There is a small window in the back of the temple, replied Nadara,
in a little room that is sometimes used as a prison for those who are to die,
but it lets out into another street,
which by this time is probably filled with natives.
There is the floor, cried Thandar.
We will try the floor there.
He ran to the main entrance to the temple and closed the doors.
Then he dragged the two corpses before them and a long wooden bench.
There was no other movable thing in the temple that had any considerable weight.
This done he took Nadara's hand and together the two ran for the little room.
Here again they barricaded the door and Thandar turned toward the floor.
With his parang he pried up aboard.
It was laid but roughly upon the light logs that were the beams.
Another was removed with equal ease,
and then he lowered Nadara to the ground beneath the temple.
Clinging to the piling,
Thandar replaced the boards above his head
before he too dropped to the ground at Nadara's side.
The streets upon either side of the temple were filled with savages.
They could hear them congregating before the entrance of the temple,
where all was now quiet and still within.
They were bolstering their courage by much shouting
to the point that would permit them to enter and investigate.
They called the names of the guards, but there was no response.
Give me the pistol, said Thandar.
He loaded it, keeping several cartridges ready in his hand.
Then, with Nadara at his side, he crept to the back of the temple.
Pigs routed from their slumbers, grunted and complained.
A dog growled at them.
Thandar silenced it with a cut from his parang.
When they reached the edge of the shadow beneath the,
the temple, they saw that there were only a few natives upon this side of the structure,
and they were hurrying rapidly toward the front of the building.
A hundred yards away was the jungle.
Now a sudden quiet fell upon the horde before the temple doors.
There was the sound of hammering, then a pushing, scraping noise,
and presently shouts of savage rage.
The dead bodies of the guards.
men had been discovered. Now, from above, came the padding of naked feet running through the temple.
The street behind was momentarily deserted.
Now, whispered Thandar, he seized Nadara's hand, and together the two raced from beneath the temple,
out into the moonlight, and across the intervening space between the long houses toward the jungle.
Halfway across, a belated native emerging from the veranda of a nearby house saw them.
He set up a terrific yell and dashed toward them.
Thandar's pistol roared and the savage dropped,
but the signal had been given and before the two reached the jungle,
a screaming horde of warriors was upon their heels.
Thandar was confused.
He had lost his bearings since entering the village and the temple.
He turned toward Nadara.
I do not know the way to the coast, he cried.
The girl took his hand.
Follow me, she said, and to the memories of each
leaped the recollection of the night she had led him through the forest
from the cliffs of the bad men.
Once again was Waldo Emerson Smith Jones, the learned,
indebted to the greater wisdom of the unlettered cave girl for his salvation.
Unerringly Nadara ran through the tangled jungle in the direction of the coast.
Though she had been but once over the way,
she followed the direct line as unerringly as though each tree was blazed
and signposts marked each turn.
Behind them came the noise of the pursuit,
but always Nadara and Thandar fled ahead of it.
Not once did it gain upon them
during the long hours of flight.
It was noon before they reached the coast.
They came out at the camp of the pirates,
but to Thandar's dismay, it was deserted.
Sal Ming had waited the allotted time and gone.
If Thandar had but known it,
the picturesque cutthroat had overer,
had overstayed the promised period, and had but scarce left when the fugitives emerged from the
jungle beside the beach. In fact, his rude craft was but out of sight beyond the northern
promontory. A pistol shot would have recalled him, but Thandar did not know it, and so he turned
dejectedly to search for the hidden canoe. It lay behind the little
clump of bushes that had hidden Thandar the morning that he had saved Sal Ming's life
several hundred yards to the south. All signs of pursuit had now ceased, and so the two walked
slowly in the direction of the craft. They found it just where Sal Ming had promised that it would
be. It was well and staunchly repaired, and in addition contained a goodly supply of food and
water. Thandar blessed Sal Ming, the unhung murderer.
Together they dragged the frail thing to the water's edge, and were about to shove it out
when, with a chorus of savage yells, a score or more of the headhunters leaped from
the jungle and bore down upon them. Thandar turned to meet them with drawn pistol.
"'Get the canoe into the water, Nadara,' he called to the girl.
"'I will hold him off until it is launched,
then we may be able to reach deep water before they can overtake us.'
Nadara struggled with the unwieldy boat,
which the rollers picked up and hurled back upon her each time she essayed to launch it.
From the corner of his eye, Thandar saw the difficulties that the
girl was having. Already the horde was halfway across the beach, running rapidly toward them.
The man feared to fire except at close range, since his unfamiliarity with firearms rendered him
an extremely poor shot. However, it was evident that Nadara could not launch the thing alone,
and so Thandar turned his pistol upon the approaching savages, pulled the trigger, and
wheeled to assist the girl.
More by chance than skill,
the bullet lodged in the body of the foremost headhunter.
The fellow rolled screaming to the sand,
and as one his companions came to a sudden halt.
But seeing that Thandar was busy with the boat,
and not appearing to intend to follow up his shot,
they presently resumed the charge.
Thandar and Nadara were having all
that they could attend to with the canoe, and so the savages came to the water's edge before they
realized their proximity. When he saw them, Thandar wheeled and fired again, then, taking the canoe
up bodily above his head, he struggled out through the surf, Naderah walking by his side,
steadying him.
After them came the savages,
perhaps half a dozen of the boulder,
when suddenly a great roller
caught them all,
pursuers and pursued,
sweeping them out into deep water.
Thandar and Nadara clung to the canoe,
but the headhunters were dragged down by the undertow.
Upon the beach,
yelling, threatening, and gesticuling,
and gesticulating, danced thirty or forty baffled savages. But now Fandar and Nodara had crawled into the
craft, which the outgoing tide was carrying rapidly from shore, and with the aid of the paddle,
were soon safely out upon the bosom of the Pacific.
Safely
End of Part 2, Chapter 11. Part 2, Chapter 12. Part 2, Chapter 12.
Of the Cave Girl by Edgar Rice Burroughs.
This Libravox recording is in the public domain.
Read by Gerald Moe.
Pirates
As the tide and wind carried the light craft out to sea,
and the shoreline sank beneath the horizon behind them,
Waldo Emerson looked out upon the future,
as he did upon the tumbling waste of desolate water encircling them,
with utter hopelessness.
Once before he had passed by a miracle
through the many-sided menaces of the sea,
but that he should be so fortunate again he could not hope,
and now Nadara was with him.
Before only his own suffering and death had been possible.
Now he must face the greater agony of witnessing Nadaras.
The wind blowing a steady gale,
was raising a considerable sea.
The vast billows rolled one upon the heels of another,
with the regularity of infantry units doubling at review.
The wind and the sea seemed to have been made to order
for the frail vessel that bore Thandar and Nadara.
It rode the long, ponderous waves like a cork,
its crude sail caught the wind and bellied bravely to it, driving the boat swiftly over the water.
And scarce had the shore behind them sunk forever from their sight,
then dead ahead another shoreline showed.
Thandar could scarce believe his eyes.
He rubbed them and looked again.
Then he asked Nadara to look.
What is that ahead? he asked.
The girl half rose with an exclamation of joy.
Land, she cried.
And land it was.
The wind, driving them madly, carry them toward the north end of what appeared to be a large island.
Angry breakers pounded a rocky coastline.
To strike there would mean instant death to them both.
But would they strike?
As they neared the point of the island, it began.
became evident to Thandar that they would be borne past it. Could he hope to stem the speed of the
little craft and turn it back into the sheltered water in the lee of the land? The chances were more
than even that the canoe would capsize the instant he cut away the sail and attempted to paddle
across the wind, as would be necessary to come about the end of the island. But there seemed no other way.
He handed his parang to Nadara, telling her to be ready to cut the rawhide strips that supported the sail, the instant that he gave the word.
With his paddle clutched tightly in his hands, he knelt in the stern, watching the progress of the canoe past the rocky point.
At this extremity of the island, a narrow tongue of land ran far out into the sea.
It was past the outer point of this tongue that the canoe was racing.
When they had passed, Thandar realized the rashness of attempting to turn the canoe into the trough of the sea,
even for the little distance that would have been necessary to make the shelter of the point,
where, almost within reach, he could see the peaceful bosom of unruffled water lying safely behind the island.
and yet as he looked ahead upon the limitless waste of ocean before them,
he knew that one risk was no greater than the other,
and then an alternative plan occurred to him.
He would run a short distance past the point,
and then turn almost directly back
and attempt to paddle the canoe in the calm water,
running nearly into the face of the wind,
thus avoiding the dangers of the trough.
There was but a single drawback to this plan, the question of his ability to drive the canoe
against the gale. At least it was worth trying. He gave Nadara the word to cut down the sail,
and at the same instant, the canoe being upon the crest of a wave, he bent to the paddle.
As the panther skin tumbled at the foot of the rough mast, the nose of the craft swung around
in reply to Thandar's vigorous strokes.
So intent were both upon the life and death struggle
that they were waging with the elements
that neither saw the long, low-lying craft
that shot from the mouth of a small harbor behind them
as they came into view upon the lee side of the island.
For a moment the canoe hung broadside to the wind.
Thandar struggled frantically to carry it about.
Down they dropped into the trough of a great sea.
Above them hung the over-leaning tower of the wave's crest,
ready to topple upon them its tons of water.
The canoe rose, still broadside,
almost to the crest of the wave,
then the thing broke upon them.
When Thandar came to the surface,
his first thought was for Nadara.
He looked about as he shook the water from his eyes.
Almost at his side, Nadara's head rose from the sea.
As her eyes met his, a smile touched her lips.
"'This is better,' she shouted.
"'Now we can reach shore!'
And turning back she struck out for land.
Just behind her swam Thandar.
He knew that Nadara was like a fish in water,
but he doubted her ability, as he doubted his own,
to reach the shore in the face of both.
wind and tide. A wave carried them high in the air, and from its crest, both saw simultaneously
a long craft in the hollow beneath them, and noted the fierce aspect of her crew.
Nadara, fearing all men but Fandar, would have attempted to elude the craft, but the glimpse that
the man had had had of those aboard her had convinced him that he had fallen by good fortune,
into the company of Sal Ming and his crew.
They are friends, he screamed to Nadara,
and so they let the boat come alongside and pick them up.
But no sooner had Thandar obtained a good look at the occupants
than he discovered that never a face among them had he seen before.
They were of the same type as Sal Ming's motley horde,
nor did Waldo Emerson need inquire their vocation.
Thief and murderer were writ upon every continents.
They jabbered questions at Nadara and Thandar in an assortment of dialects, which neither could understand,
and it was only after the craft had been anchored in the little bay, and the party had waited to shore,
that Thandar tried speaking with them in Pigeon English.
Several among them understood him, and he was not long in making it plain to them,
that they would be paid well if they carried him and Nadara to a civilized port.
The leader, who seemed to be a full-blooded negro, laughed at him,
ridiculing the idea that an almost naked man could pay for his liberty.
At the same time, the fellow cast such greedy glances at Nadara
that Thandar became convinced that the fellow, for reasons of his own,
preferred not to believe that they could pay in money for their liberty.
It seemed that the party had been about to embark for another portion of the western coast of the island
where the main body of the horde lay.
They had but been waiting for three of their crew who had gone inland hunting
when they had seen the canoe and put out to capture its occupants.
Now they returned to the little harbor to pick up their fellows
and continue toward the main camp.
The black was for dispatching Thandar at once,
as their boat was already overcrowded, but there were others who counseled him against it,
reminding him of the probable anger of their chief, who saw only in a dead prisoner the loss of a
possible ransom. At last the hunters returned and all embarked. Soon the boat had passed
out of the bay and was making its way south along the west coast of the island. It was almost
dark when her nose was turned toward shore, and the long sweeps brought into play as the sail
sagged to the foot of the mast. Between two small, overlapping points that hid what lay behind,
they passed into a land-locked harbor. As the boat breasted the end of the inner point,
Thandar sprang to his feet with a cry of joy and amazement. Not a hundred yards away, riding quietly
upon the mirror-like surface of the water, lay the Priscilla.
The pirates looked at their prisoner in astonishment.
The black rose with clenched fists as though prepared to strike him.
Priscilla, ahoy, shrieked Waldo Emerson.
Help, help!
The Negro grinned.
There was no response from the white yacht.
Then the men told Thandar that they had captured the vessel several weeks before,
and were holding her crew prisoners upon land,
awaiting the return of the chief,
who had been unaccountably absent for a long time.
When Waldo Emerson told them that the yacht belonged to his father,
the black was glad that he had not killed him,
for he should bring a fat ransom.
It was dark when they landed,
and Thandar and Nadara were forced into squalid huts
that lay side by side with several,
others just above the beach. For a long time the man could not sleep. His mind was occupied
with doubts as to the fate of his father and mother. Nadara had told him that both had been
aboard the Priscilla. She had said nothing of the treatment accorded her by Mrs. Smith-Jones,
but Waldo had guessed near the truth, and he had seen that the sight of the Priscilla had awakened
and no enthusiasm or happiness in the girl.
After a while he dozed, only to be awakened by the sound of movement outside his hut.
There was something sinister and the stealthiness of the sound.
Silently Thandar rose and crept to the door.
The pirates had made no attempt to secure their prisoners.
There was no possibility of their escaping from the island.
Thandar put his head out into the lesser darkness of the night.
He muttered a little growl of rage and fear,
for what he saw was the huge, dark bulk of a man crawling into Nadara's hut.
Instantly the American followed.
At the door of the girl's shelter he paused to listen.
Within he heard a sudden exclamation of fright and the sound of a scuffle.
Then he was within the darkness, and a moment later stumbled against a man.
Thandar's fingers sought the throat. He made no sound. The other wheeled upon him with a knife.
Thandar had expected it. His forearm warded the first blow, and running down the forearm of the
other, his hand found the knife wrist. Then commenced the struggle within the stygian blackness of the
interior of the hut.
Back and forth across the mud floor the two staggered and reeled, the one attempting to wrench
free the hand that held the knife, the other seeking a hold upon the throat of his
antagonist while he strove to maintain his grip upon the other's wrist.
The heavy breathing of the two rose and fell upon the silence of the night.
That and the scuffling of their feet were the old.
only sounds of combat. Nadara could not assist Thandar. She knew that it was he who had come to her
rescue, though she could not see him. At last, with a superhuman effort, the night prowler broke
away from Thandar. For a moment silence reigned in the hut. None of the three could see the other.
From beneath his panther skin, Thandar drew the long pistol that Sal Ming had given him,
but he dared not fire for fear of hitting Nadara,
nor dared he ask her to speak that he might know her position,
for then would he have divulged his own to his antagonist.
For minutes that seemed hours,
the three stood in utter silence,
endeavoring to stifle their breathing.
Then Thandar heard a cautious movement
upon the opposite side of the room.
Was it his foe or Nadar?
He raised the pistol level with a man's breast, and then very cautiously he too moved to one side.
At the slight sound of his movement, there came a sudden flash and deafening roar from across the hut.
The enemy had fired, and in the flash of his gun, all within the interior was lighted for an instant,
and Thandar saw the giant black not two paces from him, and to the man's left stood Nodara,
safe from a shot from Thandar's pistol.
The black, not knowing that Thandar was armed, had not guessed that his chance shot
was to prove his own death messenger.
The instant that the flash of the other's gun revealed his whereabouts,
Thandar's pistol gave an answering roar,
and simultaneously Thandar leaped to one side, running swiftly to grapple with the black from the side,
but when he came to him, instead of meeting with ferocious resistance, as he had expected,
he stumbled over his dead body.
But now the whole camp was awake.
The pirates were running hither and tither, shouting questions and orders in their many tongues.
Confusion reigned supreme, and in the midst of it, Thandar grasped Nadara's hand and ran from the hut.
Back of the other huts he ran until he had passed the end of the camp.
Then he turned down toward the water.
It was his intention to reach a boat and make his way to the Priscilla.
Behind them the confusion of the camp grew, as the pirates searched the huts for an explanation.
of the two shots.
There could have been no better opportunity for escape.
Drawn up upon the beach was one of the Priscilla's own boats.
Together, Thandar and Nadara pushed it off,
and a moment later were rowing rapidly toward the yacht.
It was with a feeling of unbounded security and elation
that Waldo Emerson clambered over the side and drew Nadara after him,
but his elation was short-lived, for scarcely had he set foot upon the deck,
then he was seized from behind by half a dozen brawny villains,
who had been upon guard on board the Priscilla,
and had seen the two put off from the shore,
watched their flight toward the yacht,
and lain in wait for them as they clambered over the side.
The balance of the night they were kept prisoners upon the Priscilla,
but early the next morning they were taken ashore.
There they found all the pirates congregated outside one of the huts.
Within were the passengers and crew of the Priscilla.
As Thandar and Nadara approached,
they were seized and hustled toward the doorway,
with an accompaniment of oriental oaths they were pushed into the interior.
Standing about in disconsolate and unhappy,
groups were the crew of the Priscilla, Captain Burlingham, and Mr. and Mrs. Smith-Jones.
As his eyes fell upon the last, Waldo Emerson ran toward her with outstretched arms.
With a horrified shriek, Mrs. Smith-Jones dodged behind her husband and the captain.
Waldo came to a sudden halt. The two men eyed him threateningly. He looked straight into
his father's face.
"'Don't you know me, father?' he asked.
John Alden Smith Jones's jaw dropped.
Waldo Emerson, he cried,
"'It cannot be possible.'
Mrs. Smith Jones emerged from retreat.
Waldo Emerson, she echoed, it cannot be.
"'But it is, mother,' cried the young man.
"'What awful apparel!' said Mrs.
Mrs. Smith Jones after she had embraced her son.
Then her eyes wandered to Nadara,
who had been standing in demure silence just within the doorway.
You, she gasped, you are not dead!
Nadara shook her head,
and Waldo Emerson hastened to recount her adventures
since Stark's attack upon her on the deck of the Priscilla.
Mrs. Smith Jones approached the girl.
She placed a hand upon her shoulder.
I have been doing a great deal of thinking since last I saw you, she said.
And the result of it is that I am going to do something that I have never before done in my life.
I am going to ask your pardon.
I treated you shamefully.
I do not need to ask if my son loves you.
You have already told me that you love him,
and his eyes have told me where his heart.
heart lies. For long nights I lay awake thinking of the horror of it, and almost praying that
he might be dead, rather than come back to find you waiting for him in Boston. That was before you
went overboard. You had no birth or family, and that to me meant everything, but since I thought that
you were both dead, I discovered that I recalled many things about you that were infinitely
to be preferred over birth and breeding.
I cannot tell you just what they are, only I cannot blame my son for loving you.
Only you must discard that horrible garment for something presentable.
Mother, shouted Waldo Emerson as he threw his arms about her.
I knew that you would love her, too, if you ever knew her.
Just then the door opened, and one of the pirates entered.
come, he said.
They filed out past him.
From those outside they learned that it had been decided to kill them all,
and after looting the Priscilla, sink her,
as a man of war had been sighted cruising off the coast early in the morning.
In their terror they had decided to wait no longer for the absent chief,
and all thoughts of ransom were forgotten in the mad desire to erase every vestige
of their piracy. The victims looked at one another in horror. They were entirely surrounded by the
pirates, and one by one were securely bound that there might be no chance of any escaping.
The plan was to lead them inland to the densest part of the jungle, and there to cut their
throats and leave their corpses to the vultures. The pirates appeared to derive much pleasure
in recounting their plan to the prisoners.
At last all were bound and the death march commenced.
The last of the long line of hope-forsaken prisoners
and brutal, jibing cut-throats
had disappeared in the jungle
when a rude craft made its way into the harbor.
At sight of the Priscilla, it hesitated and prepared to fly,
but seeing no sign of life,
aboard it, approached, and finding the decks deserted, mounted. In the cabins the newcomers
discovered two malaise asleep. These they awoke with much laughter and rude jests.
The two guards leaped to their feet, feeling for their pistols, but when they saw who had
surprised them, they grinned broadly and jabbered volubly. They addressed all their remarks
to a huge and villainous fellow whom they called chief.
He it was, whom the pirates had awaited,
and whose prolonged absence had resulted in the determination
to execute the prisoners of the Priscilla.
When the chief learned of what was going on in the jungle,
he cursed and bellowed in rage.
He saw many thousand liangs of psyche evaporating before his eyes,
shouting orders to his fellows to follow him, he leaped into the craft that had brought them to the Priscilla,
and a moment later was pushing rapidly toward the shore.
Without waiting to draw the boat upon the beach, the chief plunged into the jungle,
his men at his heels.
Far ahead of him trudged the weary and fear-sickened prisoners,
lashed onwards with sticks and the flats of murderous parangs.
At last the pirates halted in a tangled mass of vegetation.
Here, said one, but another thought they should proceed a little further.
For a few minutes the two men argued, then the first drew his parang and advanced upon Thandar.
Here, he insisted, and swung the blade about his head.
A sudden crashing of the underbrush and loud and angry shouts caused him to
turn his eyes in the direction of the interruption. The prisoners, too, looked.
What they saw was not particularly reassuring. Only another very ferocious appearing and exceedingly
wrathful pirate, followed by half a dozen other villains. He rushed into the midst of the group,
knocking men to right and left, the wicked-looking fellows who had bullied and cowed the frightened
prisoners but a few moments before, now looked the picture of abject terror.
The chief came to a halt before the man with the bared parang.
His face was livid, and working spasmodically with rage and excitement.
He tried to speak, and then he turned his eyes upon Thandar, standing there bound ready for
decapitation.
As his gaze fell upon this prisoner,
his eyes went wide, and then he turned upon the would-be executioner, and with a mighty blow,
felled him. That seemed to loose his tongue, and from his mouth flowed a torrent of the most
awful abuse the prisoners had ever heard. It was directed toward the men who had dared
contemplate this thing without his sanction, and principally against the cowering unfortunate
who had not dared to rise from where his chief's heavy fist had sprawled him.
"'And you would have killed Thandar,' he shrieked, Thandar who saved my life.
And then he fell to kicking the prostrate man, until Thandar himself was forced to intercede
in the wretch's behalf. With the coming of Sal Ming, the troubles of the prisoners evaporated in
thin air, for when he found that the owner of the Priscilla was Thandar's father,
he restored the yacht and all the loot that his men had taken from it to their rightful
owners. Nor would he have stopped there had they permitted him to have his way,
which was no less than to behead half a dozen of his unfortunate lieutenants
who had been overzealous in the performance of their piratical duties.
Sal Ming's picturesque villains replenished the water casks of the Priscilla
and carried aboard her a sufficient stock of provisions
to ensure her company a plentiful table to Honolulu
the port they had chosen as their first stop.
And when the preparations were completed,
a dozen piratical Prahus escorted the white yacht
a hundred miles upon her northward journey,
firing a farewell salute with a folly after volley from the little brass six-pounders in their bows.
As the tiny fleet diminished to mere specks astern,
disappearing beneath the southern horizon,
a white flanneled man with close-cropped blonde hair,
and a slender, black-haired girl,
in simple shirt-waist and duck skirt,
watched them from the deck of the Priscilla,
An involuntary sigh escaped the lips of each, and they turned and looked into one another's
eyes.
"'We are leaving a cruel world that has been kind to us,' said the man,
"'for with all its cruelties it gave us each other and reunited us when we were separated.'
"'Will civilization be more kind?' asked the girl.
Thandar shook his head.
"'I do not know,' he replied.
replied.
End of Part 2, Chapter 12.
Part 2, Chapter 13, of the cave girl by Edgar Rice Burrows.
This Libravox recording is in the public domain.
Read by Gerald Moe.
Homeward Bound
At Honolulu, Waldo Emerson Smith-Jones and Nadara were married.
Before the ceremony, there had been some discreet.
as to what name should be used in describing Nadara in the formal contract.
Nadara alone seemed too brief and meaningless to the precise Mrs. Smith-Jones,
but Waldo Emerson and the girl insisted that it was her name and all-sufficient.
So, in lieu of another name, it was finally decided by all that Nadara could not be legally
improved upon. Prior to the ceremony, which took place on board the Priscilla, Mr. and Mrs. John
Alden Smith-Jones, Captain Cecil Burlingham, several invited guests from amongst officials
and friends in Honolulu, and the crew of the Priscilla presented gifts to the bride.
Captain Burlingham, in presenting his, proffered a few words and explanation of it.
"'To you, Nadara,' he said,
"'these trinkets will hold a deeper meaning
"'and a greater value than to another,
"'for they come from your own forgotten island,
"'where they lay for twenty years,
"'until, by chance, I picked them up close by the sea.
"'The poor lady to whom they once belonged,
"'you never knew.
"'It is quite possible that she never was upon your savage coast,
"'and how her jewels came there,
must always remain a mystery, but two things you hold in common with her, for she was a lady
and she was very beautiful. He held toward Nadara in his open palm, a little worn bag of
the skins of small rodents sewn together with bits of gut. At sight of it, both the girl
and Waldo Emerson exclaimed in astonishment. Nadara took the bag wonderingly in her hands
and dumped the contents into her palm.
Waldo pressed forward.
Do you know to whom those belonged?
He asked Burlingham.
To Eugenie Marie-Celeste de la Vallois,
Countess of Circe, replied the captain.
They belonged to Nadara's mother, returned Waldo.
Her foster parents were present at her birth
and took these jewels from the poor woman's body
after she had passed away.
She was washed ashore in a boat
In which there was only a dead man beside herself.
Nadara was born that night.
And so, when the clergyman had performed the marriage ceremony,
he entered upon the certificate
and the space provided there for the name of the woman,
Nadara de la Valois.
And they are living in Boston now
in a wonderful home
that you have seen if you ever have been
to Boston and been driven about in one of those great sight-seeing motor buses,
for the place is pointed out to all visitors because of the beauty of its architecture
and the fame that attaches to the historic and aristocratic name of its owner,
which, as it happens, is not Smith-Jones at all.
End of Part 2, Chapter 13.
End of the Cave Girl by
by Edgar Rice Burroughs.
