'And so did I,' said a fourth, 'but it was you I had. He must have run for the tunnel. Come, we'll go after him.'
'No,' objected the first warrior. 'It is too late. He has a good start. We could not catch him before he reached the forest.'
'We could not find him there at night,' agreed another. 'It will soon be daylight; then we can go after him.'
'We'll see what Kavandavanda says when we take the women to him,' said the first warrior. 'Bring them along.'
Once again the girls were led through the corridors of the temple this time to an apartment adjoining the throne-room. Two warriors stood before the door. When they saw the girls and were told what had happened, one of them knocked on the door. Presently it was opened by a black slave, sleepily rubbing his eyes.
'Who disturbs Kavandavanda at this hour of the night?' he demanded.
'Tell him we have come with the two white girls. He will understand.'
The black turned back into the apartment, but in a few moments he returned.
'Bring your prisoners in,' he said; 'Kavandavanda will see you.'
They were led through a small antechamber lighted by a crude cresset to a larger apartment similarly illuminated. Here Kavandavanda received them, lying on a bed covered with leopard skins.
His large eyes fixed themselves upon Jane. 'So you thought you could escape?' he asked, a crooked smile twisting his weak lips. 'You were going to run off with Ogdli and be his mate, were you? Where is Ogdli?' he demanded suddenly, as he realized that the man was not with the others.
'He escaped—through the tunnel,' reported a warrior.
'He must have thought Kavandavanda a fool,' sneered the high priest. 'I knew what was in his mind. There are only six men beside myself who know about the tunnel. Ogdli was one of them; the other five are here.' He was addressing Jane. 'I sent these five to wait at the entrance to the tunnel until Ogdli came, for I knew he would come.' He paused and gazed long at Jane; then he turned to the others. 'Take this other one back to the room of the three snakes,' he ordered, 'and see that she does not escape again.' He indicated Annette with a gesture. 'This one I will keep here to question further; there may have been others concerned in the plot. Go!'
Annette cast a despairing look at Jane as she was led from the room, but the other could give her no reassurance nor encouragement. Their position seemed utterly without hope now.
'Good-by, Annette.' That was all.
'May the good God be with us both, madame,' whispered the French girl as the door was closing behind her.
'So,' said Kavandavanda when the others had left, 'you were going to run off into the jungle with Ogdli and be his mate? He was going to break his vow because of you!'
The shadow of a sneer curled the girl's lip. 'Perhaps Ogdli thought so,' she said.
'But you were going with him,' Kavandavanda insisted.
'As far as the jungle,' replied Jane; 'then I should have found some means to escape him; or, failing that, I should have killed him.'
'Why?' demanded the high priest. 'Have you, too, taken a vow?'
'Yes—a vow of fidelity.'
He leaned toward her eagerly. 'But you could break it—for love; or, if not for love, for a price.'
She shook her head. 'Not for anything.'
'I could break mine. I had thought that I never could, but since I have seen you—' He paused; and then, peremptorily, 'if I, Kavandavanda, am willing to break mine, you can break yours. The price you will receive is one for which any woman might be willing to sell her soul—eternal youth, eternal beauty.' Again he paused as though to permit the magnitude of his offer to impress itself upon her.
But again she shook her head. 'No, it is out of the question.'
'You spurn Kavandavanda?' His cruel mouth imparted some of its cruelty to his eyes. 'Remember that I have the power to destroy you, or to take you without giving anything in return; but I am generous. And do you know why?'
'I cannot imagine.'
'Because I love you. I have never known love before. No living creature has ever affected me as do you. I will keep you here forever; I will make you high priestess; I will keep you young through the ages; I will keep you beautiful. You and I will live forever. We will reach out. With my power to rejuvenate mankind, we shall have the world at our feet. We shall be deities—I, a god; you, a goddess. Look.' He turned to a cabinet built into the wall of the apartment. It was grotesquely carved and painted—human figures, mostly of women; grinning skulls, leopards, snakes, and weird symbolic designs composed the decorations. From his loin-cloth he took a great key, hand wrought, and unlocked the cabinet.
'Look,' he said again. 'Come here and look.'
Jane crossed the room and stood beside 'him at the cabinet. Within it were a number of boxes and jars. One large box, carved and painted similarly to the outside of the cabinet, Kavandavanda took in his hands.
'You see this?' he asked. 'Look inside.' He raised the lid revealing a quantity of black pellets about the size of peas. 'Do you know what these are?' he demanded.
'I have no idea.'
'These will give eternal youth and beauty to a thousand people. You are free to use them if you say the word. One taken each time that the moon comes full will give you what all mankind has craved since man first trod this earth.' He seized her arm and tried to draw her to him.
With an exclamation of repugnance she sought to pull away, but he held her firmly; then she struck him heavily across the face. Surprised, he relaxed his grasp; and the girl tore herself away and ran from the room. Into the antechamber she ran, seeking to gain the corridor.
With a cry of rage, Kavandavanda pursued her; and just at the doorway leading into the corridor he overtook her. He seized her roughly, tangling his ringers in her hair; and though she fought to extricate herself, he dragged her slowly back toward the inner apartment.
Chapter 30 'The Dead Men Fly!'
TARZAN and Brown had talked late into the night in an attempt to formulate a feasible plan whereby they might gain entrance to the village of the Kavuru, with the result that the ape-man had finally suggested a mad scheme as the only possible solution of their problem.
Brown shrugged and grinned. 'We could sure get in that way, of course, though it all depends. But how we goin' to get out again?'
'Our problem now,' replied Tarzan, 'is to get in. We shall not have the problem of getting out until later. Perhaps we shall not come out. It really is not necessary that you come in with me if—'
'Skip it,' interrupted Brown. 'Annette's in there. That's enough for me to know. When do we start?'
'We can't do much until just before dawn. You need rest. Lie down. I'll wake you in time.'
Tarzan slept, too—a little way from the others on the edge of the clearing where he had a view of the village. He slept in a low crotch a few feet above the ground; and he slept well, yet he slept lightly, as was his wont. The habitual noises of the jungle did not disturb him; but as the time approached when he must awaken Brown, he himself came suddenly awake, conscious of something unusual that disturbed the monotonous harmony of the forest.
Alert and watchful, he rose silently to his feet, listening. Every faculty, crystal sharp, was attuned to the faint note of discord that had aroused him. What was it?
Swiftly he moved through the trees, for now his sensitive nose had identified the author of the stealthy sound that his ears had detected—a Kavuru.
Presently the ape-man saw the dim figure of a man walking through the forest. He was walking rapidly, almost at a trot; and he was breathing heavily, as one who had been running. Tarzan paused above him for an instant and then dropped upon his shoulders, bearing him to the ground.