Ogdli opened the gate and herded them through into the narrow, rocky cleft, beyond which they could see what appeared to be an open valley; but when they reached the far end of the cleft they found themselves in a box canyon entirely surrounded by lofty cliffs.
A small stream of clear water wound down through the canyon and out through the cleft and the village where it was entirely bridged over at the outer gate as well as in the cleft leading into the canyon.
The floor of the canyon appeared extremely fertile, supporting numerous large trees and growing crops. In the small fields Jane saw men laboring beneath the watchful eyes of Kavuru warriors. At first she paid little heed to the workers in the fields, as Ogdli led her and Annette toward a massive pile of buildings standing in the center of the canyon, but presently her attention was attracted to one of the laborers who was irrigating a small patch of Kaffir corn.
Suddenly he threw down the crude wooden hoe he was using and stood upon his head in the mud. 'I am a tree,' he screamed in the Bukena dialect, 'and they have planted me upside down. Turn me over, put my roots in the ground, irrigate me, and I will grow to the moon.'
The Kavuru warrior who was guarding the workers in the vicinity stepped up to the man and struck him a sharp blow across the shins with the haft of his spear. 'Get down and go to work,' he growled.
The worker cried out in pain; but he immediately came to his feet, picked up his hoe, and continued to work as though there had been no interruption.
A little farther on another worker, looking up and catching sight of the two white girls, rushed toward them. Before the guard could interfere he was close to Jane. 'I am the king of the world,' he whispered; 'but don't tell them. They would kill me if they knew, but they can't know because I tell everyone not to tell them.'
Ogdli leaped at the fellow and struck him over the head with his spear just as the guard arrived to drag him back to his work.
'They are all bewitched,' explained Ogdli. 'Demons have entered their heads and taken possession of their brains; but it is well to have them around, as they frighten away other evil spirits. We keep them and take care of them. If they die a natural death, the demons die with them; if we were to kill them the demons would escape from their heads and might enter ours. As it is, they can't get out in any other way.'
'And these workers are all madmen?' asked Jane.
'Each has a demon in his head, but that doesn't keep them from working for us. Kavandavanda is very wise; he knows how to use everything and everybody.'
Now they had arrived before closed gates in the wall surrounding the building that they had seen when they first entered the canyon. Two Kavuru warriors stood on guard at the entrance to Kavandavanda's stronghold, but at the approach of Ogdli and his prisoners they opened the gates and admitted them.
Between the outer wall and the buildings was an open space corresponding to the ballium of a medieval castle. In it grew a few large trees, a few clumps of bamboo, and patches of brush and weeds. It was ill-kept and unsightly. The buildings themselves were partially of unbaked brick and partially of bamboo and thatch, a combination which produced a pleasing texture, enhancing the general effect of the low, rambling buildings that seemed to have been put together at different times and according to no predetermined plan, the whole achieving an unstudied disharmony that was most effective.
As they crossed to the entrance to what appeared to be the main building, a leopard rose from a patch of weeds, bared its fangs at them, and slunk away toward a clump of bamboo. Then another and another of the treacherous beasts, disturbed by their passage, moved sinuously out of their path.
Annette, her eyes wide with fright, pressed close to Jane. 'I am so afraid!' she said.
'They're ugly looking brutes,' agreed Jane. 'I wouldn't imagine this to be a very safe place. Perhaps that is why there are no people here.'
'Only the guards at the entrance ahead of us,' said Annette. 'Ask Ogdli if the leopards are dangerous.'
'Very,' replied the Kavuru in reply to the question that Jane put to him.
'Then why are they allowed to run at large?' demanded Jane.
'They do not bother us much in the day time, partially because they are fairly well fed, partially because only armed men cross this court yard, and partially because they are, after all, cowardly beasts that prefer to sneak upon their prey in the dark. But it is after dark that they best serve the purpose of Kavandavanda. You may be sure that no one escapes from the temple by night.'
'And that is all that they are kept for?' asked the girl.
'That is not all,' replied Ogdli. Jane waited for him to continue, but he remained silent.
'What else, then?' she asked.
He gazed at her for a moment before he replied. There was a light in his eyes that appeared strange to Jane, for it seemed to reflect something that was almost compassion. He shook his head. 'I cannot tell,' he said; 'but you will know soon enough another reason that the leopards are here in the outer court.'
They were almost at the entrance when a weird, wailing scream broke the stillness that seemed to brood like an evil thing above the temple of Kavandavanda . The sound seemed to come either from the interior of the mass of buildings or from beyond them—sinister, horrible.
Instantly it was answered by the snarls and growls of leopards that appeared suddenly from amongst the weeds, the brush, or the bamboo and bounded off to disappear around the ends of the buildings.
'Something called to them,' whispered Annette, shuddering.
'Yes,' said Jane, 'something unclean—that was the impression conveyed to me.'
At the entrance there were two more guards to whom Ogdli spoke briefly; then they were admitted. As they passed the portal and came into the interior they heard muffled screams and growls and snarls as of many leopards fighting, and to the accompaniment of this savage chorus the two girls were conducted through the dim rooms and corridors of the temple of Kavandavanda .
Kavandavanda! Who, or what, was he? To what mysterious fate was he summoning them? Such were the questions constantly recurring in the thoughts of the girls. Jane felt that they would soon find answers, and she anticipated only the worst. There seemed to be no hope of escape from whatever fate lay in store for them.
That one hope that had given her strength to carry on through danger-fraught situations many times in the past was denied her now, for she felt that Tarzan must be wholly ignorant of her whereabouts. How could he know where, in the vast expanse of the African wilderness, the ship had crashed? He would be searching for her—she knew that; for he must have long since received her cablegram, but he could never find her—at least, not in time. She must depend wholly upon her own resources, and these were pitifully meager. At present there was only the frail straw of Ogdli's seeming infatuation. This she must nurse. But how? Perhaps when he had delivered her to Kavandavanda he would return to the village and she would never see him again; then even the single straw to which her hope clung in the deluge of dangers that threatened to engulf her would be snatched from her.
'Ogdli,' she said, suddenly, 'do you live here in the temple or back in the village?'
'I live where Kavandavanda commands,' he replied. 'Sometimes in the village, again in the temple.'
'And now! Where do you live now?'
'In the village.'
Jane mused. Ogdli would be of no good to her unless he were in the temple. 'You have lived here all your life, Ogdli?'
'No.'
'How long?'
'I do not remember. Perhaps a hundred rains have come and gone, perhaps two hundred; I have lost count. It makes no difference, for I shall be here forever—unless I am killed. I shall never die otherwise.'
Jane looked at him in astonishment. Was he another maniac? Were they all maniacs in this terrible city? But she determined to humor him.
'Then if you have been here so long,' she said, 'you must be on very friendly terms with Kavandavanda. If you asked him a favor he'd grant it.'
'Perhaps,' he agreed, 'but one must be careful what one asks of Kavandavanda.'
'Ask him if you can remain in the temple,' suggested the girl.
'Why?' demanded Ogdli, suspiciously.
'Because you are my only friend here, and I am afraid without you.'
The man's brows knit into an angry scowl. 'You are trying to bewitch me again,' he growled.
'You have bewitched yourself, Ogdli,' she sighed; 'and you have bewitched me. Do not be angry with me.