brutal savages of the lowest order.  Baynes buried his face in his hands and rocked back and forth as the hideous picture of her fate burned itself into his consciousness.  And it was he who had brought this fate upon her!  His wicked desire had snatched a pure and innocent girl from the protection of those who loved her to hurl her into the clutches of the bestial Swede and his outcast following!  And not until it had become too late had he realized the magnitude of the crime he himself had planned and contemplated.  Not until it had become too late had he realized that greater than his desire, greater than his lust, greater than any passion he had ever felt before was the newborn love that burned within his breast for the girl he would have ruined.

The Hon. Morison Baynes did not fully realize the change that had taken place within him.  Had one suggested that he ever had been aught than the soul of honor and chivalry he would have taken umbrage forthwith.  He knew that he had done a vile thing when he had plotted to carry Meriem away to London, yet he excused it on the ground of his great passion for the girl having temporarily warped his moral standards by the intensity of its heat.  But, as a matter of fact, a new Baynes had been born.  Never again could this man be bent to dishonor by the intensity of a desire.  His moral fiber had been strengthened by the mental suffering he had endured. His mind and his soul had been purged by sorrow and remorse.

His one thought now was to atone—win to Meriem’s side and lay down his life, if necessary, in her protection.  His eyes sought the length of the canoe in search of the paddle, for a determination had galvanized him to immediate action despite his weakness and his wound.  But the paddle was gone.  He turned his eyes toward the shore.  Dimly through the darkness of a moonless night he saw the awful blackness of the jungle, yet it touched no responsive chord of terror within him now as it had done in the past.  He did not even wonder that he was unafraid, for his mind was entirely occupied with thoughts of another’s danger.

Drawing himself to his knees he leaned over the edge of the canoe and commenced to paddle vigorously with his open palm.  Though it tired and hurt him he kept assiduously at his self imposed labor for hours.  Little by little the drifting canoe moved nearer and nearer the shore.  The Hon. Morison could hear a lion roaring directly opposite him and so close that he felt he must be almost to the shore.  He drew his rifle closer to his side; but he did not cease to paddle.

After what seemed to the tired man an eternity of time he felt the brush of branches against the canoe and heard the swirl of the water about them.  A moment later he reached out and clutched a leafy limb.  Again the lion roared—very near it seemed now, and Baynes wondered if the brute could have been following along the shore waiting for him to land.

He tested the strength of the limb to which he clung.  It seemed strong enough to support a dozen men.  Then he reached down and lifted his rifle from the bottom of the canoe, slipping the sling over his shoulder.  Again he tested the branch, and then reaching upward as far as he could for a safe hold he drew himself painfully and slowly upward until his feet swung clear of the canoe, which, released, floated silently from beneath him to be lost forever in the blackness of the dark shadows down stream.

He had burned his bridges behind him.  He must either climb aloft or drop back into the river; but there had been no other way.  He struggled to raise one leg over the limb, but found himself scarce equal to the effort, for he was very weak.  For a time he hung there feeling his strength ebbing.  He knew that he must gain the branch above at once or it would be too late.

Suddenly the lion roared almost in his ear.  Baynes glanced up. He saw two spots of flame a short distance from and above him. The lion was standing on the bank of the river glaring at him, and—waiting for him.  Well, thought the Hon. Morison, let him wait.  Lions can’t climb trees, and if I get into this one I shall be safe enough from him.

The young Englishman’s feet hunt almost to the surface of the water—closer than he knew, for all was pitch dark below as above him.  Presently he heard a slight commotion in the river beneath him and something banged against one of his feet, followed almost instantly by a sound that he felt he could not have mistaken—the click of great jaws snapping together.

“By George!” exclaimed the Hon. Morison, aloud.  “The beggar nearly got me,” and immediately he struggled again to climb higher and to comparative safety; but with that final effort he knew that it was futile.  Hope that had survived persistently until now began to wane.  He felt his tired, numbed fingers slipping from their hold—he was dropping back into the river—into the jaws of the frightful death that awaited him there.

And then he heard the leaves above him rustle to the movement of a creature among them.  The branch to which he clung bent beneath an added weight—and no light weight, from the way it sagged; but still Baynes clung desperately—he would not give up voluntarily either to the death above or the death below.

He felt a soft, warm pad upon the fingers of one of his hands where they circled the branch to which he clung, and then something reached down out of the blackness above and dragged him up among the branches of the tree.

Chapter 24

 Sometimes lolling upon Tantor’s back, sometimes roaming the jungle in solitude, Korak made his way slowly toward the West and South. He made but a few miles a day, for he had a whole lifetime before him and no place in particular to go. Possibly he would have moved more rapidly but for the thought which continually haunted him that each mile he traversed carried him further and further away from Meriem—no longer his Meriem, as of yore, it is true! but still as dear to him as ever.

Thus he came upon the trail of The Sheik’s band as it traveled down river from the point where The Sheik had captured Meriem to his own stockaded village.  Korak pretty well knew who it was that had passed, for there were few in the great jungle with whom he was not familiar, though it had been years since he had come this far north.  He had no particular business, however, with the old Sheik and so he did not propose following him—the further from men he could stay the better pleased he would be—he wished that he might never see a human face again.  Men always brought him sorrow and misery.

The river suggested fishing and so he waddled upon its shores, catching fish after a fashion of his own devising and eating them raw. When night came he curled up in a great tree beside the stream—the one from which he had been fishing during the afternoon—and was soon asleep.  Numa, roaring beneath him, awoke him.  He was about to call out in anger to his noisy neighbor when something else caught his attention.  He listened.  Was there something in the tree beside himself?  Yes, he heard the noise of something below him trying to clamber upward.  Presently he heard the click of a crocodile’s jaws in the waters beneath, and then, low but distinct: “By George!  The beggar nearly got me.”  The voice was familiar.

Korak glanced downward toward the speaker.  Outlined against the faint luminosity of the water he saw the figure of a man clinging to a lower branch of the tree.  Silently and swiftly the ape-man clambered downward.  He felt a hand beneath his foot.  He reached down and clutched the figure beneath him and dragged it up among the branches.  It struggled weakly and struck at him; but Korak paid no more attention than Tantor to an ant.  He lugged his burden to the higher safety and greater comfort of a broad crotch, and there he propped it in a sitting position against the bole of the tree. Numa still was roaring beneath them, doubtless in anger that he had been robbed of his prey.  Korak shouted down at him, calling him, in the language of the great apes, “Old green-eyed eater of carrion,” “Brother of Dango,” the hyena, and other choice appellations of jungle opprobrium.

The Hon. Morison Baynes, listening, felt assured that a gorilla had seized upon him.  He felt for his revolver, and as he was drawing it stealthily from its holster a voice asked in perfectly good English, “Who are you?”

Baynes started so that he nearly fell from the branch.

“My God!” he exclaimed.  “Are you a man?”

“What did you think I was?” asked Korak.

“A gorilla,” replied Baynes, honestly.

Korak laughed.

“Who are you?” he repeated.

“I’m an Englishman by the name of Baynes; but who the devil are you?” asked the Hon. Morison.

“They call me The Killer,” replied Korak, giving the English translation of the name that Akut had given him.  And then after a pause during which the Hon. Morison attempted to pierce the darkness and catch a glimpse of the features of the strange being into whose hands he had fallen, “You are the same whom I saw kissing the girl at the edge of the great plain to the East, that time that the lion charged you?”

“Yes,” replied Baynes.

“What are you doing here?”

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