登陆注册
25734800000081

第81章 The Walled City.(4)

Tarzan had noticed that the roofs of most of the buildings were flat, the few exceptions being those of what he imagined to be the more pretentious public structures. How this city had come to exist in this forgotten part of unexplored Africa the ape-man could not conceive. Better than another, he realized something of the unsolved secrets of the Great Dark Continent, enormous areas of which have as yet been un-touched by the foot of civilized man. Yet he could scarce believe that a city of this size and apparently thus well con-structed could have existed for the generations that it must have been there, without intercourse with the outer world.

Even though it was surrounded by a trackless desert waste, as he knew it to be, he could not conceive that generation after generation of men could be born and die there without at-tempting to solve the mysteries of the world beyond the confines of their little valley.

And yet, here was the city surrounded by tilled land and filled with people!

With the coming of night there arose throughout the jungle the cries of the great cats, the voice of Numa blended with that of Sheeta, and the thunderous roars of the great males reverberated through the forest until the earth trembled, and from within the city came the answering roars of other lions.

A ****** plan for gaining entrance to the city had occurred to Tarzan, and now that darkness had fallen he set about to put it into effect. Its success hinged entirely upon the strength of the vines he had seen surmounting the wall toward the east. In this direction he made his way, while from out of the forest about him the cries of the flesh-eaters increased in volume and ferocity. A quarter of a mile intervened between the forest and the city wall -- a quarter of a mile of cultivated land unrelieved by a single tree. Tarzan of the Apes realized his limitations and so he knew that it would undoubtedly spell death for him to be caught in the open space by one of the great black lions of the forest if, as he had already sur-mised, Numa of the pit was a specimen of the forest lion of the valley.

He must, therefore, depend entirely upon his cunning and his speed, and upon the chance that the vine would sustain his weight.

He moved through the middle terrace, where the way is always easiest, until he reached a point opposite the vine-clad portion of the wall, and there he waited, listening and scenting, until he might assure himself that there was no Numa within his immediate vicinity, or, at least, none that sought him. And when he was quite sure that there was no lion close by in the forest, and none in the clearing between himself and the wall, he dropped lightly to the ground and moved stealthily out into the open.

The rising moon, just topping the eastern cliffs, cast its bright rays upon the long stretch of open garden beneath the wall. And, too, it picked out in clear relief for any curious eyes that chanced to be cast in that direction, the figure of the giant ape-man moving across the clearing. It was only chance, of course, that a great lion hunting at the edge of the forest saw the figure of the man halfway between the forest and the wall. Suddenly there broke upon Tarzan's ears a menacing sound. It was not the roar of a hungry lion, but the roar of a lion in rage, and, as he glanced back in the direction from which the sound came, he saw a huge beast moving out from the shadow of the forest toward him.

Even in the moonlight and at a distance Tarzan saw that the lion was huge; that it was indeed another of the black-maned monsters similar to Numa of the pit. For an instant he was impelled to turn and fight, but at the same time the thought of the helpless girl imprisoned in the city flashed through his brain and, without an instant's hesitation, Tarzan of the Apes wheeled and ran for the wall. Then it was that Numa charged.

Numa, the lion, can run swiftly for a short distance, but he lacks endurance. For the period of an ordinary charge he can cover the ground with greater rapidity possibly than any other creature in the world. Tarzan, on the other hand, could run at great speed for long distances, though never as rapidly as Numa when the latter charged.

The question of his fate, then, rested upon whether, with his start he could elude Numa for a few seconds; and, if so, if the lion would then have sufficient stamina remaining to pursue him at a reduced gait for the balance of the distance to the wall.

Never before, perhaps, was staged a more thrilling race, and yet it was run with only the moon and stars to see. Alone and in silence the two beasts sped across the moonlit clearing.

Numa gained with appalling rapidity upon the fleeing man, yet at every bound Tarzan was nearer to the vine-clad wall.

Once the ape-man glanced back. Numa was so close upon him that it seemed inevitable that at the next bound he should drag him down; so close was he that the ape-man drew his knife as he ran, that he might at least give a good account of himself in the last moments of his life.

But Numa had reached the limit of his speed and endurance.

Gradually he dropped behind but he did not give up the pursuit, and now Tarzan realized how much hinged upon the strength of the untested vines.

If, at the inception of the race, only Goro and the stars had looked down upon the contestants, such was not the case at its finish, since from an embrasure near the summit of the wall two close-set black eyes peered down upon the two.

Tarzan was a dozen yards ahead of Numa when he reached the wall. There was no time to stop and institute a search for sturdy stems and safe handholds. His fate was in the hands of chance and with the realization he gave a final spurt and running catlike up the side of the wall among the vines, sought with his hands for something that would sustain his weight. Below him Numa leaped also.

同类推荐
  • 素问病机气宜保命集

    素问病机气宜保命集

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 御制神僧传

    御制神僧传

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 雪堂集

    雪堂集

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 知言

    知言

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • The Smalcald Articles

    The Smalcald Articles

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 全能大导演

    全能大导演

    一觉醒来的苏叶晨发现自己的床上多了一个绝色美女,而且还是一个当红的女明星,美女醒来非常淡定地对苏叶晨提出两个要求。“一,三年内成为比她还红的明星!”“二,完成上面的条件后给她一个豪华奢侈的婚礼!”“以上若有一条没有达成,给她无条件当仆人五十年!”迫于美女惊人的背景,苏叶晨只能咬着牙签了这份不平等条约。
  • 邪宠绝世杀手.夜家四小姐

    邪宠绝世杀手.夜家四小姐

    她,幽狐,杀手界的王者。因组织的背叛而死……夜幽狐,夜府的废物+白痴,四岁时因被人推荷花池中灵池受损成了不能修炼的废物,受了惊吓,神智保留在四步。当清冷的眸子睁开……呵,很好。白痴是吧!那个什么郡主,我让你也试试白痴的感觉可好?废物?哼!我幽狐全系灵力,天赋九阶,还自带空间!有神兽做小弟、圣阶丹药做糖豆、阵法?远古阵法多的跟个大白菜似的。为人运气不错,可是……老天!快来收了这妖孽吧!这玩意咋就是阴魂不散呢?他,南宫云殇。笑面虎一只,错是笑面狐一只。(云殇:嗯哼?)一代邪王,腹黑、毒舌、脸皮厚(自遇幽狐后)、哎,这丫头咋这么难追呢?总之这是个不错的小说,希望大家支持
  • 雪入夜心

    雪入夜心

    这是一个从古代穿越到现代的爱情悬疑故事。女主是异世大陆的医术世家的传人,一手医术能使人起死回生,是有名的小医仙。男主是现代冷家的大少爷,也是冷氏集团的总裁,是A市所有女人的国名老公。然而,一次意外,使两个原本不应该有任何交集的人遇到了一起,他们之间所发生的一切,好像一场梦,可又那么真实。一个个的谜团接踵而来,让她措手不及,防不胜防……一个个的真相浮出水面,让他惊讶不已,思绪混乱……本以为能这样幸福地生活下去,可突然地回归使她不知所措,也使他疯狂寻找……(最后不会虐,只为我的第二部做铺垫!)
  • 穿越之玩转大唐

    穿越之玩转大唐

    见过在古代卖彩票的吗?见过在古代开火锅店的吗?他就是,带着两个披着天使皮囊的小恶魔,精彩的演绎着盛世唐朝。--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 离以茗记于心

    离以茗记于心

    他是欧阳嫡长子,却不意属皇位只爱美人不爱江山。他是殷国未来皇上,谋略过人也只为得到她。他是项族少主,天下人他只要她不惜毁掉一切。他是大云甫王,拥有无数美人却只爱她。她身上有太多秘密,她将承担太多痛苦。即使她的国家不复存在,也不代表她可以任人摆布!“喂,娶你就那么难吗?”“不难,江山为聘就好。”曾以为安宁一时,却不料指点江山。
  • 异世领主之路

    异世领主之路

    本书主人公奥德因一场交通意外重生来到异界大陆,为了能更好的生存下去,奥德一边隐瞒修为,一边图谋发展,获取更多的资源来修炼。在得到一块领地后,大力发展领地,游刃于众多权势者中,展开一场利益争夺战。在领主的道路上,奥德坑蒙拐骗,无所不用其至,只为手握一方权势,占一方资源,踏无上巅峰。
  • 尚七录

    尚七录

    我,姓尚,名七。本来就应该普普通通,随波逐流的一生,但因为祖上琐事,变了命数。学校鬼楼,神秘组织,贩毒集团,奇妖异兽,将领,军衔,六道轮回……我,曾为了爱情拼过命,曾经为了我该守护的人直到倒下,曾为了祖国的荣耀而战于江海……
  • 走出走进

    走出走进

    陈文龙趁乱爬上了九米的高墙,用钳子熟练的剪断电网,就好像当年在部队训练时一样,他知道这一走就再也回不了头,其实就算呆在监狱这一辈子也完了,他跳下墙,消失在黑暗中……
  • 末世之亲啊我是旁观者

    末世之亲啊我是旁观者

    她穿越的这个身体恰好是末世原著中女主的第一块踏脚石,原主是世界上第一恶毒的炮灰女配,用卑鄙手段想得到男主而谋杀女主,最后被男主女主灭亡了。她努力远离了男主女主,她为了求生之路,身为旁观者,平安地过舒适的日子。她忍不住赞叹这剧本君竟然强大啊!算是无论努力远离男主女主,还是遇见了,差点炮死……我摔!身为伟大的旁观者,好好做旁观者,还是无幸被卷入争强斗胜,啊啊啊!这对她说是幸运还是倒霉,撞见男主女主的对敌强大恐怖反派的BOSS男主的阴谋,被他抓住威胁……“我们一起颠覆天下,祸害众人!”男主阴测测地微笑地说。“亲啊,我是旁观者,好不好吗?”一脸无幸地望着他……
  • 茅山道士传记

    茅山道士传记

    他们无处不在,他们是什么东西?他们是鬼!我——一名茅山道士,惹上了全世界最大的邪教组织。他们的目的是什么?答案尽在此书中